All of you who declare,
"What'll they tax next?
Air!" understand that as far as politicians go
nothing is sacred (except perhaps their pensions).
If it can be measured and assessed, it can be taxed.
Add a crazed emperor into the picture and you understand
how something like the Roman pee tax came into being.
Entering the world around the first century AD,
the Roman tax on urine apparently began with that fount
of all depravity, the Emperor Nero of Rome.
Not content with pissing off the Roman citizenry
by spending their collected tax dollars on every
sort of self-serving luxury imaginable,
Nero decided to squeeze just a little bit more out
of his countrymen -- by imposing the pee tax.
Now before you imagine coin operated valves pierced
onto your personal parts, or morning chamber pots
being weighed and measured by squeamish officials,
it's important to note that this tax was in reality
levied against urine toilets.
I wonder where spend a penny came from.
"What'll they tax next?
Air!" understand that as far as politicians go
nothing is sacred (except perhaps their pensions).
If it can be measured and assessed, it can be taxed.
Add a crazed emperor into the picture and you understand
how something like the Roman pee tax came into being.
Entering the world around the first century AD,
the Roman tax on urine apparently began with that fount
of all depravity, the Emperor Nero of Rome.
Not content with pissing off the Roman citizenry
by spending their collected tax dollars on every
sort of self-serving luxury imaginable,
Nero decided to squeeze just a little bit more out
of his countrymen -- by imposing the pee tax.
Now before you imagine coin operated valves pierced
onto your personal parts, or morning chamber pots
being weighed and measured by squeamish officials,
it's important to note that this tax was in reality
levied against urine toilets.
I wonder where spend a penny came from.
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