• Flying Squid
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    671 month ago

    Fun part: Ask them to point to examples of such cases where the state lost in federal court.

  • @bleistift2@feddit.de
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    431 month ago

    ‘How does one make their property “private”?’ As opposed to public, as it seems to be now? Dude, you’re paying taxes because your property is private.

  • @YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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    151 month ago

    Don’t want to pay property taxes? Ok here’s all the services you won’t get or be able to use. If you do try, we’ll arrest you.

      • @Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de
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        161 month ago

        Maybe we should list all the services that they do get.

        It’s definitely not waste, water, sewer, electricity hookups, or even a certificate of habitability, which the mortgage company would want. Also no police, fire, or access to schools, parks, sidewalks, street plowing/sweeping, tow services for cars parked across your driveway, heck, the city would be okay with removing the driveway access to the road.

        I think what you’d get for free is very annoyed neighbors.

        • @onion@feddit.de
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          71 month ago

          They also don’t actually get any property, because the state isn’t enforcing any property rights

        • @Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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          31 month ago

          There are a lot of people who don’t pay properly tax and get all of those services, for example, people who rent.

          You still pay income tax and sales tax.

            • @Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Ok, so then the owner isn’t paying property tax.

              In reality, the renter is not actually paying the property tax. They may be paying for it, but they are not the one paying the bill at the end of the year.

              Edit: classic lemmy. The renter may be giving money to the landlord which covers the cost of the tax, however that is irrelevant. a renter by definition, does not own the property and therefore does not pay property taxes and yet, still is able to utilize public infrastructure. Just like how a person who doesn’t have income is still able to use public infrastructure. Your ability to pay into the system does not preclude you from participating.

        • @desktop_user
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          21 month ago

          water, sewer, electricity hookups

          These are, in many parts of the US, provided by utility companies and not exactly funded by property tax.

  • Blackout
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    141 month ago

    Step 1: Sell your property Step 2: Live on the street where there is no property taxes

  • stinerman [Ohio]
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    121 month ago

    I think at one time in Nevada (or possibly still) you can get allodial title to property. You don’t have to pay taxes on that. However in practice you’re simply pre-paying property taxes for a certain amount of time.

    IANAL, but I recall this being a thing in a few states.

  • @Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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    71 month ago

    At first I read these and laughed, now I just feel sad.

    FYI there’s a eighties movie where a guy does this, gov shows up. Huge standoff.

    Forget the ending and name though :(

  • @____@infosec.pub
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    61 month ago

    MF, i rent intentionally to avoid surprise roof bills and the like, and I still pay my property taxes as part of that. It’s built in, neither owner nor manager is taking it on as a cost of doing biz.

    Personally, because I WFH for a giant company, it matters not whether I live in RI or LA. It matters a great deal to me, however, and covering that expense monthly beats hell out of paying annually.

    If I can calculate why that makes sense to/for us and our lifestyle, so can these loons.

    I absolutely know that one way or another, it will get billed to me. But by not owning, I’ve the privilege of paying it as I prefer and literally (and legally) making the property taxes someone else’s problem.

    I don’t have to care, I just pay what I said I’d pay, and if things change and we need to up stakes for whatever (likely political) reason, I can do it without screwing around with house showings and RE agents.

    Conscious choice to simplify future bills and problems > blowing it off with bullshit.

  • @Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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    61 month ago

    This got me curious if one could buy land in some remote unicorporated area to avoid any tax jurisdictions, but it seems that there would at the very least be county level taxes.

  • @Mutterwitz@feddit.de
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    1 month ago

    Would be funny if there were still some old laws which would let new settlers just legally claim that plot from these “natives” after getting it off the records.