Who did you vote for then? And abstaining from the vote is saying that you would rather let other people decide for you, in which case you deserve whichever leader you get.
Whom I voted for is irrelevant (if you must satiate your curiosity, it was Obama the first time, Gary Johnson the second). As for abstaining from the vote, that used to be the case, true. However, things have changed, and are continuing to change, in a way that allow me to abstain from the vote, AND from having to participate in the financial, regulatory, and tax environment. Basically, it's becoming easier and easier to abstain from government entirely.
Well, taxation is morally ambiguous as well, as we can see as by the presence of two sides. Being forced to pay is immoral in my opinion, but...
There is no but. Its immoral, and you're trying to justify it with "at least you get something for it." It's no more moral than if I was to steal your debit card, drain $10,000 out of your bank account, and send you a "Thank You!" fruit basket. You're free to rationalize it any way you want, though. I used to as well for a long time.
Where I live, the electricity and water companies are both state-owned. The water where I live is too toxic to drink so it has to be treated by a state-owned plant.
I see. Where I live, I think in most of my country, electricity company is privately owned, so obviously infrastructure can be provided by private companies as well. Are you really able to use and burn all the electricity you want, and never get an electric bill for it? You really should be mining bitcoin then! As for the toxic water, what exactly is it that the government is able to contribute to the treatment that a private entity would not be?
Also, private schools are much more expensive than public...
How do you know this? Have you compared the rates private schools charge to the portion of everyone's taxes that go to public schools? I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just wondering how you are sure.
I guess I could have several smaller bills, but then they would each be more expensive.
Maybe, but there would be way fewer of them, so the total sum would be way cheaper, and you would actually choose what you want your money to go to. Don't like Big Oil? Don't pay their subsidies. Don't like big banks? Don't pay their bailouts.
If every road was privately owned, I would have to pay a toll every time I passed a house as opposed to paying one sum and getting to use any road in the United States as much as I want.
Why can't roads be owned and administered by a single entity, like power lines, water pipes, gas pipes, or cell towers? You pay one entity that owns and maintains roads around a town or a large area, and pay extra to enter other towns. Plus, having to pay to use roads directly would allow people to see the true cost of roads (it's hidden as a tax now), meaning people would avoid driving, meaning there would be would have less sprawl around the country, people would be more tightly packed in cities, and other, likely faster and more convenient forms of transportation would become more popular (like rail for example).
If water was privately owned by an independent company, they could charge through the roof. There's no way that the water purification plant near me is cheap. I fail to see how the bills would be smaller, since they would be paying for the same thing but with less people paying.
What would you do if the water company started charging you through the roof? I have some ideas, but I'm curious as to how you would solve that problem.
Maybe it's just my location, but paying taxes is much cheaper than paying each individual private company.
Things cost money. It doesn't matter if that money comes from people paying for things personally, or from people being forced to pay taxes. In other words, what you are paying for with your tax dollars should, theoretically, cost exactly the same if you were all paying for it directly. So the only question is, what does the government do to make what you pay for cheaper? The underlying product costs the same to mine or produce. It costs the same to treat or to add features to. It costs the same to deliver to your house. So what does government add? Is it more efficient (stereotypically its not)? Does it pay employees less than a private company would? (well, yes, but that would also mean lower quality product).
I respect that you don't want to pay taxes, but I find it hard to believe that you would opt out of all of the public utilities. If you aren't getting use from them, then you are making a poor decision because it's not hard to get your money's worth in tax dollars.
Getting my moneys worth is exactly the problem though. I pay a lot in taxes, but A LOT of that money goes to the military to fight wars I don't want, CIA and NSA to spy on people I don't want spied on, farm subsidies to grow corn we don't need, financial regulations we don't need, environmental and other regulations that are so ineffective as to be wasteful and actually harmful, crime enforcement and encarceration for crimes that shouldn't be crimes in the first place, etc. etc. etc. I'm basically paying a ton of money, in exchange for a little "Thank You!" fruit basket of roads, security, fire departments, and garbage collections (all of which can and is privately owned in other parts of the country) just to make me feel better