It’s usually interesting to find the context for these quotes. In this case the language is a bit obscure, but he seems to have been arguing that taxing both income and sales is a form of double taxation? [1]
This is in a note about a book by Antoine Destutt de Tracy, who was apparently a philosopher who coined the word “ideology.”
Anyway, I guess it’s repeated because it sounds good, but most people don’t care what Jefferson meant and might not agree with his point about double taxation.
Thanks for doing that footwork. Ever since I was old enough to pay income taxes (started aged 14) it has burned me that my “share” of my income is then taxed at various steps along its way to some other citizen’s income, where the remainder is taxed yet again.
The cynic in me realizes that white collar criminals of Zuckerberg's stature really only likely serve time if it involves a huge amount of tax evasion. This money keeps Zuckerberg's name off of any official filings, but I don't think there was ever any real threat of him going to jail. So the $5b is, in a way, pure profit.
I'm not sure that we should be taking advice on "impartial justice" from a slaver -- especially one who helped craft one of the most deeply ironic sentences that a slaver has ever crafted in history:
>We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness
I only bring this up, because of how jarring the idea of "impartial justice" is in the context of Thomas Jefferson.
-Thomas Jefferson