Making tax obligations and reasoning visible to yourself and others as a practice of ethical accountability.
Zera Yacob valued clarity and truth-telling as foundations of ethical life. Opacity undermines human dignity by preventing reasoned judgment. This principle applies to taxation: both individuals and governments should be transparent about tax obligations and flows. For individuals, this means honest accounting, no hidden income, clear documentation of deductions. It means understanding your own financial picture and how taxes affect it. For governments, it means open budgets, clear allocation of resources, accountability for expenditures. Opacity creates space for corruption, injustice, and manipulation. When you navigate taxes with transparency—keeping clear records, understanding where your money goes, asking where government money goes—you practice an ethical virtue. You make judgment possible. You enable accountability. You honor the dignity of others by refusing to hide, deceive, or obscure. Yacob would see transparent tax practice as expression of respect for yourself and the shared system you participate in.
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