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  1. Apr 13, 2012 · Taxation for schools is American and democratic. “Taxation is the price of civilization.” “Only the savage pays no taxes.” In 1918 an article in the periodical Forum by Perley Morse said this [FRPM]: Taxes are the price of development and civilization, and it is worth it.

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    But as precedents survive like the clavicle in the cat, long after the use they once served is at an end, and the reason for them has been forgotten, the result of following them must often be fail...

    The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience... The law embodies the story of a nation's development through many centuries, and it cannot be dealt with as if it contained only th...

    As for us, our days of combat are over. Our swords are rust. Our guns will thunder no more. The vultures that once wheeled over our heads must be buried with their prey. Whatever of glory must be w...

    One has to try to strike the jugular and let the rest go.
    Nature has but one judgment on wrong conduct — if you can call that a judgment which seemingly has no reference to conduct as such — the judgment of death.
    Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society.
    Great cases like hard cases make bad law. For great cases are called great, not by reason of their importance in shaping the law of the future, but because of some accident of immediate overwhelmin...
    Constitutions are intended to preserve practical and substantial rights, not to maintain theories.
    I can't help preferring champagne to ditch water — I doubt if the universe does.

    Now and then, an extraordinary case may turn up, but constitutional law, like other mortal contrivances, has to take some chances, and in the great majority of instances, no doubt, justice will be...

    I always say, as you know, that if my fellow citizens want to go to Hell I will help them. It's my job.

    The elaborate argument against the constitutionality of the Act if interpreted as we read it, in accordance with its obvious meaning does not need an elaborate answer.

    Lawyers spend their professional careers shoveling smoke.
    Gentlemen, to the lady without whom I should never have survived for eighty, nor sixty, nor yet thirty years. Her smile has been my lyric, her understanding, the rhythm of the stanza. She has been...
    A second class mind, but a first class temperament.
  2. Jul 6, 2018 · A common sentiment among proponents of government and centralized authority is that “taxes are the price we pay to live in a civilized society.”. In reality, however, the state’s hunger for tax revenue and control directly undermines well-intentioned humans’ efforts to be civil to each other.

  3. Dec 4, 2021 · Government is (allegedly) the price we pay for civilization. People are too often fond of leaving out the middle term, which is a problem in the way we view taxes and civilization. On the other hand, I am fond of saying Government is the price we pay for having failed to be civilized.

  4. One is taxes are the “price we pay for a civilized society” (Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.). In this view taxes are not a necessary evil (as in the pairing of “death and taxes”) but a positive good as more taxes buy more “civilization.”.

  5. Oct 9, 2018 · “T axes are the price we pay for a civilized society.” This oft-repeated quotation is carved over the entrance of the national headquarters of the Internal Revenue Service in Washington, D.C. It is attributed, correctly, to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes.

  6. Apr 14, 2010 · 326. 35K views 13 years ago. "Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society," said legendary Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. As students of Buck v. Bell...

    • Apr 14, 2010
    • 36K
    • ReasonTV
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