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18
Indirect Legislation § 10
or less the policy of almost every modern european state
I mean that of drawing a revenue from the steps
which a man who has been injured must take in
order to procure justice: of all imaginable sources of taxation
the very worst. Other taxes are commonly taxes upon prosperity;
this [alone] is a tax upon misfortune
If When a man has had his house burned down
by the negligence, or his cattle seized by the
oppression, of a neighbour, he is taxed you tax him if he offers
to such relief a remedy at law: why not tax him for having
it burned down by lightning? When You tax him for having his cattle
have been taken from by an oppressive landlord the oppression of a
litigious landlord, you tax him again in this
tax case: why not tax him for having lost them
by the plague? You watch the moment
when a man is least able to bear the
burthen, and then you lay throw it on him. load him with it. But
taxes which have been already laid on can not
be abolished: what other would be better? the answer
is, any other whatsoever.
Identifier: | JB/087/131/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 87. |
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19-22 |
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087 |
indirect legislation |
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131 |
indirect legislation |
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002 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f17 / f18 / f19 / f20 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::r williams [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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c. hamilton |
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27656 |
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