It shows how the rich and powerful (the tiny minority) have shaped the narrative of a sizeable portion of the majority. Taxation isnt a necessary evil, it is necessary. We don't have a truly progressive taxation system and we don't raise enough from taxation to fund things that would make a real difference to people's lives so we squabble over whether the disabled are deserving of their benefits and whether an additional 30 minutes from a breakfast club is a good use of taxpayer's money.
We live in a feudal system that we have called capitalism because it sounds better. The vast majority of wealth is held by a few, the vast majority of that wealth has been generated by workers and consumers with the extremely small amount of wealth that has trickled down.
But spend a little money on providing parents an extra 30 minutes is the problem? Doesn't matter how it is framed, who introduced it or what people use that 30 minutes for...it is a miniscule irrelevance in the great scheme of things.
Most of what is good in society has developed directly or indirectly from socialist ideas, paid for through taxation. Social security, social housing, NHS, education, public utilities...all subsequently victims of the feudal narrative of capitalism. Without the ideas of socialism, we wouldn't have a middle class. The provision of education, universal health care, decent housing, a safety net...all combined to provide opportunities for aspiration that capitalism does not. But 30 minutes for a cup of coffee is a waste?
So yes. Tax the wealthy and the rich and if they try to leave, tax them again. Stop the transfer of funds to offshore accounts and all the other "legal" avoidance schemes. And then maybe we can extend that 30 minutes to an hour.