Elmarnieh wrote:
If the company valued it as "insurance" the market would provide for it, since they don't they wouldn't.
I'm not trying to be snarky, but your pronouns and antecedents are so confusing here that I'm really not quite sure what you're intending to say. Regardless, we don't
know what the market does or doesn't value in this case because of the government mandated unemployment tax. If that went away, maybe a private market would emerge because companies still valued it. We can't really say.
Elmarnieh wrote:
Once the resources become available in the market competition would move those funds into wages.
Again, this is speculative, based on your assumption that companies wouldn't be interested in private insurance against unemployment claims. It's also predicated on the idea that the employee side of the job market has the leverage to exact higher wages. That depends on the value of labor. Automatically assuming that the market favors higher wages is like assuming that the market favors higher prices on, say, lemons. It might; it might not.
Elmarnieh wrote:
The fact that coercion and theft are obfuscated does not cause them to become something other than theft and coercion.
Certainly it's coercive, but all taxes necessarily are. Whether it's theft or not hinges on a much larger debate about federal (and state) taxation powers. That said...
if (for the sake of argument) it
is theft, it doesn't necessarily follow that
you, as opposed to your
employer, are the victim.
As far as that goes, matters of law should be concerned with what
is, not what
could have been. Your employer paid these taxes out of
their assets, not
yours. Where they
might have spent the money had they not been required to pay it is ultimately irrelevant. It is speculation, and therefore unknowable and unprovable. You can't claim that money as yours just because you
think they should have or would have given it on you, otherwise.
Elmarnieh wrote:
I have no respect for those who think that any person should be a slave to others nor will I feign it.
Considering the liberties you're taking with accounting, I don't think you have any room to be lecturing other people about property rights.