| David F. Epstein - 2008 - 245 pages
...essential functions. A complete power, therefore, to procure a regular and adequate supply of revenue, as far as the resources of the community will permit,...an indispensable ingredient in every constitution. (30, p. 188) The view that taxation must be able to reach "as far as the resources of the community... | |
| Willard Cleon Skousen - 1985 - 888 pages
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| Theodore Dreiser - 1987 - 1168 pages
...be interwoven in the frame of the government, a general power of taxation in one shape or another. Money is with propriety considered as the vital principle...subjected to continual plunder as a substitute for a more elegible mode of supplying the public wants, or the government must sink into a fatal atrophy, and... | |
| Edward Millican - 292 pages
...the vital principle of the body politic" (187-93). It follows, he adds, that "a complete power ... to procure a regular and adequate supply of it, as...an indispensable ingredient in every constitution." A government without adequate funds, says Hamilton, is a pitiful sight. "How can it ever possess either... | |
| Walter F. Dimmick - 1994 - 284 pages
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| Roy T. Meyers - 1994 - 256 pages
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| Gyeorgos Ceres Hatonn - 1994 - 242 pages
...essential functions. A complete power, therefore, to procure a regular and adequate supply of revenue, as far as the resources of the community will permit,...constitution. From a deficiency in this particular, one or two evils must ensue: either the people must be subjected to continual plunder, as a substitute... | |
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