If the tax man wanted his share, he'd get it. Barter is taxable exchange reportable at the monetary value of the exchange. That is, if you "sold" five carrots for five apples, and FMV of a carrot was 0.15 while an apple was 0.10, you'd be obligated to pay 0.25 profit worth of taxes, and the other would claim a loss of the same.
Obviously they wouldn't go after a quarter, the rules were made for exchanging bricks of gold for bricks of drugs, "barter" exchanges worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, but if the tax man wishes, the tax man can extract. The system is designed so that people can believe they escaped it, but never actually can: It's a two-layer Matrix system, those fighting the Machines outside the Matrix are just in a second Matrix, because who would ever believe it to be two-tiers deep?
If the King's men decide to raze your village and rape your women there's not much you can do. I think the trick is to not draw too much attention to yourself so that they don't feel compelled to do so.
If the tax-man wants a cut from the apples I trade for some milk from my neighbor's cow I suppose he can try to get it, but if me and my neighbor are two hours away from the nearest town let alone the tax-man, I don't know how he'd know he needed to collect tax on that.
"Noticed" is different than "will prosecute". In some states literally every car on the highway is going minimum 10 mph over the posted speed limit, and the state is incapable of citing let alone prosecuting everyone who does it. But if you go too much faster than everyone else or speed in addition to doing something else you'll get nailed.
I expect that over time pretty much all laws will become like speeding is in those jurisdictions
I take it you don't have cameras set up on every street where you live? I recently visited some family in TN, saw a few towns like this where they remotely enforced speed limits. Take pictures, read numbers, mail out a fine.
People there told me it "worked". Authorized vehicles obviously exempt, so you still get fire truck joyrides.
I expect over time for all laws to be technologically enforced like this.
If the tax man wanted his share, he'd get it. Barter is taxable exchange reportable at the monetary value of the exchange. That is, if you "sold" five carrots for five apples, and FMV of a carrot was 0.15 while an apple was 0.10, you'd be obligated to pay 0.25 profit worth of taxes, and the other would claim a loss of the same.
Obviously they wouldn't go after a quarter, the rules were made for exchanging bricks of gold for bricks of drugs, "barter" exchanges worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, but if the tax man wishes, the tax man can extract. The system is designed so that people can believe they escaped it, but never actually can: It's a two-layer Matrix system, those fighting the Machines outside the Matrix are just in a second Matrix, because who would ever believe it to be two-tiers deep?
If the King's men decide to raze your village and rape your women there's not much you can do. I think the trick is to not draw too much attention to yourself so that they don't feel compelled to do so.
If the tax-man wants a cut from the apples I trade for some milk from my neighbor's cow I suppose he can try to get it, but if me and my neighbor are two hours away from the nearest town let alone the tax-man, I don't know how he'd know he needed to collect tax on that.
If one man does it, and never accomplishes much with his life, The Man will not care about the man.
If a million do, however, it will be noticed.
"Noticed" is different than "will prosecute". In some states literally every car on the highway is going minimum 10 mph over the posted speed limit, and the state is incapable of citing let alone prosecuting everyone who does it. But if you go too much faster than everyone else or speed in addition to doing something else you'll get nailed.
I expect that over time pretty much all laws will become like speeding is in those jurisdictions
I take it you don't have cameras set up on every street where you live? I recently visited some family in TN, saw a few towns like this where they remotely enforced speed limits. Take pictures, read numbers, mail out a fine.
People there told me it "worked". Authorized vehicles obviously exempt, so you still get fire truck joyrides.
I expect over time for all laws to be technologically enforced like this.