I was just reading up on Rand today, and reading the comments section of Objectivists and those who aren't.
I've got very limited knowledge on it, but from the outside looking in...
It is somewhat true to say that taking property/money from someone is immoral. However, I haven't read a good rebuttal to the idea that it might be MORE moral to tax that money and then use it to improve the lives of others. (As in, say, utilitarianism.)
Also, I see a free rider problem with the idea that taxation is inherently unjust. If a country wants to tax itself for, say, a national defense, and an individual household does not wish to pay, what is the resolution? Obviously, the person will get the effects of the defense, because there's no way to isolate said person's property. So what should be the resolution?
This is a bit asinine, having not actually read it yet, but on its face the idea that the 'brains' tire of the looters and make their own society is farcical at best. Owners and workers have a symbiotic relationship which should be fairly obvious.
Also, and I realize this is anecdotal evidence, but most Randians seem to be extremely shallow. The belief that a person's value in the world is equivalent to some sort of money-production is... diseased? That's the only way I know how to describe it.

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