So I assume you want to ignore the entire history of the US then?
Forget the US, property taxes have existed as long has there has been governance, in one form or another. What do people think tithes were?
Now i figured some people would just brag how good taxes are. Taxes are great to a point, but thx for missing the concept. This topic is not about what the taxes go for, it's what land taxes actually represent in a country where we have the right to own land. But i'll address the issue again.
THE LAND YOU PAID FOR IN FULL THAT YOU PAY TAXES ON IS NOT OWNED BY YOU. WHAT'S THE POINT ON PURCHASING LAND THAT YOU NEED TO PAY RENT ON AFTERWARDS TO KEEP IT?
This is what i mean by my whole communistic comment for america since in communistic government rule people don't get the right to own land. In this, paying taxes on land you own is anti-american. This would be like how suppressing free speech is anti-american.
That's it, it's time you had a history lesson.
The Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776, establishing in part the principles upon which the United States of America was founded. No mention was made as to the economic system it was to adopt. Adam Smith published "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations" also in 1776, arguing in favor of free market economic systems. By and large, Smith's principles were already at work in the economic systems of the larger 'Western' world. In essence, he described the evolution of the free-market capitalist system and its logical points of expansion.
Karl Marx didn't publish "The Manifesto of the Communist Party" until 1848, and only after he wrote The German Ideology, The Poverty of Philosophy, and Wage-Labour and Capital. It was followed by Grundrisse, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, and the various volumes of Das Kapital. I say this only to illustrate the following point: The Communist Manifesto, as it is known, was not his first, last, or most important work - AND, his descriptions of Communism cannot be understood without reading all of those works.
Here's the kicker: Communism, as Marx saw it, was about the elimination of the inherent gap between the lower class (workers) and the upper classes (bourgeois). He predicted that Germany or Britain would be the first countries to overthrow the inherent inequalities of the capitalist system, as it was then known, and produce a fairer society in which people returned to a connection with the things they produced (there is an extremely important connection between production and the quality of a person's life which is integral to Marx, but which I don't have the time or space to delve into here).
Any of this sound familiar? Equal and fair society? Elimination of exploitation of one class of people by another? Elimination of a class-based social system? Yeah, those would be the principles on which the United States not only strove towards but actually operated.
Marx proposed a Communist system because he didn't predict the evolution of the middle class, which gained the majority of the power in democracies like the United States and Britain shortly before the beginning of the First World War. Communism, as Marx saw it, could only work in an advance industrial economy like Britain or Germany (at the time). The evolution of the United States from a minor state to a global power and the evolution of the middle class within it offered a less-jarring change of social system than a complete upheaval and actually progressed significantly toward the system which Marx proposed. Russia botched that. Russia was a backward, agrarian country that was made infinitely worse by the "Communist" revolution that took place there. In point of fact, the revolution was Communist in name only - the Soviet Union bore virtually no resemblance to the Communism that Marx defined.
So, to spell it out: the United States was actually founded and operates on the same principles that are encompassed by Marxist Communist ideology. Communism isn't about no property rights or wealth redistribution or any of that crap that comes to mind in the average person's head when they hear the world - Communism is about an equal and fair society, things the United States purports to strive towards (though there have been some serious setbacks on the equality/fairness side of things in the last 30 years).
In short:
1. Stop saying that property taxes = no land ownership = Communist; simply not true.
2. Stop saying Communist = anti-American, because that's also patently false.
You're relying on revisionist Cold War-era ideological nonsense, and it's making you look like even more of a fool than usual.