Quoting Aiyunna, reply 139As a country's citizen, we have the obligation to pay Tax.
The obligations only extends for money used for the common good. Not for individual self enrichment.
I agree with the sentiment.
Taxes must be paid and government must use them for the common good. The common good can help the poor. In fact it should.
Government must finance itself, the police, the military, should finance fire brigades, emergency services, can finance schools, hospitals, and soup kitchens.
In fact I don't have a problem with government providing any service anyone might think the poor (or everyone) need.
But the government, I believe, MUST NOT give tax money to people. The government can and should provide services to EVERYONE, but not pay money to SPECIFIC people.
I can see four distinct positions when it comes to taxes (ignoring positions regarding what taxes there should be).
The first is people who argue against government and against taxes. They are anarchists.
The second is people who accept taxation and want minimal government.
The third is people who accept taxation and have no specific problem with the size of government. Within this group there can be stark differences as to how big government should be. I myself belong to this group and while I prefer small government, I have no ideological problem with big government.
The fourth is people who accept taxation and insist on big government and on government granting privileges (i.e. pay tax money) to certain people. This group consists of communists and other supporters of an aristocracy (government of the self-proclaimed most excellent).
The first and fourth group are the outliers, the extremists.
The second and third group cover the vast area of legitimate politics, ranging from Ayn Rand (who is not opposed to taxation and certainly not against the authority of the state) to Karl Marx (who did actually oppose a lot of what today's self-proclaimed Marxists demand).