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This post originally came from the "What's With Walmart?" thread.  I thought the topic worthy of its own discussion.
There were a couple of posts before this one, but the quote here most clearly sets out a definition for being "an active member of society". My response follows the quote.
That's a silly measurement for being an active member of society.
If I had $400 million of inherited wealth, and paid no income tax at all, but spent thirty or more hours per week in volunteer work, by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.
If I were a church worker, with no taxable income, who spent forty to eighty hours a week working with the poor -- counseling, guiding them to health and other services, whatever -- by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.
I go through periods when I neither work nor pay taxes. In those periods, I spend most of my time working on a long-term conservation and safety project (http://www.shortbeachtrail.org/), helping elderly folks go shopping, watching over and doing upkeep for people from the church who are off on vacation, helping out the city and county parks with grunt labor (they can't accept volunteers for anything else ) because their budgets don't stretch to cover lots of downed trees, spreading dirt from emergency dredging, clearing brush for Habitat for Humanity, etc.
 ) because their budgets don't stretch to cover lots of downed trees, spreading dirt from emergency dredging, clearing brush for Habitat for Humanity, etc.
I've put in upwards of 2500 hours on that conservation and safety project over the last eight years, and upwards of 1200 with the other volunteer work. If that's all I ever did, and never paid taxes, then... by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			There were a couple of posts before this one, but the quote here most clearly sets out a definition for being "an active member of society". My response follows the quote.
So you actually have a job and pay income tax. Congratulations, you are an active member of society!
That's a silly measurement for being an active member of society.
If I had $400 million of inherited wealth, and paid no income tax at all, but spent thirty or more hours per week in volunteer work, by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.
If I were a church worker, with no taxable income, who spent forty to eighty hours a week working with the poor -- counseling, guiding them to health and other services, whatever -- by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.
I go through periods when I neither work nor pay taxes. In those periods, I spend most of my time working on a long-term conservation and safety project (http://www.shortbeachtrail.org/), helping elderly folks go shopping, watching over and doing upkeep for people from the church who are off on vacation, helping out the city and county parks with grunt labor (they can't accept volunteers for anything else
 ) because their budgets don't stretch to cover lots of downed trees, spreading dirt from emergency dredging, clearing brush for Habitat for Humanity, etc.
 ) because their budgets don't stretch to cover lots of downed trees, spreading dirt from emergency dredging, clearing brush for Habitat for Humanity, etc.I've put in upwards of 2500 hours on that conservation and safety project over the last eight years, and upwards of 1200 with the other volunteer work. If that's all I ever did, and never paid taxes, then... by your definition, I would not be an active member of society.


 
						 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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