Enteebee said:
No I don't, I think if you told people "Either pay your taxes or you do not get to use our roads/hospitals/etc" they would pay them. What you have with VSU is people being told "Either pay your fees or don't get the benefits of the union" and they're not... so yeah I think they're quite different.
What if, as said above, taxes were optional on art galleries or other niche aspects of society that aren't commercially viable to stand on their own? Would that be okay, as clearly the majority are disinterested, so therefore why should it remain?
Such as? A little bit of extra happiness or whatever? Hell you let me keep the $200 and I'll have more money to pay for my textbooks, that'll make me loads more happy.
University education is massively overpriced, I'm not going to argue that, and the sooner the government accepts Whitlam had it right the better. At the very least, make HECS much cheaper and, as proposed before, have it absorb the price of union fees.
What about people showing up, learning, then going to work so they can pay for their learning, going to spend time with people in their life that they really care for etc so they can maintain a proper relationship with them? Not everyone wants the university club/society lifestyle, in fact if everyone did then the societies would be in the exact same position that they are now, the only reason they're strapped for cash is because they're not getting the excess funds of people who don't derive the same benefit.
I work to pay for my learning too. A great many people do. But I don't see how you can argue that someone who wants to make university a fun, social thing (as it's been for a very long time) should be financially punished and, basically, people who use it as a means for an occupation and nothing else should be rewarded for that. It's striving towards making us a far more disconnected, boring generation, embracing academia over any other attribute.
I dealt with this... Basically no you have to pay for things even if you don't like them you a) Like some things and see the need for such a government structure to exist and b) The majority of people tend to like most of the things.
I don't know if they do. I've lost count of the amount of people who think it a great injustice that their money, that they worked so hard for, is taken from them in taxes and given to poor people in welfare. It's a reason why so many people hate taxation - they see it as rewarding slothfulness.