Also, my tax dollars are confiscated and turned over to homosexual activists against my will to brainwash young impressionable children in public schools.
You have a perfectly fair say in what your taxes are spent on - one vote, same as everybody else who pays 'em. As for "against your will", those taxes are collected as a result of the collective will, which you endorse and even contribute to as long as you remain a voting citizen, even if you do vote against everyone else. Welcome to democracy.
EDIT: Frankly, I sometimes wish the whole process of giving one's consent to taxation were a little more overt and explicit, rather than implicit in one's citizenship which is, itself, never formally verified or acknowledged for most people - upon reaching adulthood, when taxation and voting kick in, I wonder if it might be an idea for one to actually voluntarily sign a physical social contract asserting a desire to become a citizen, giving one's consent to taxation for the support of democratic government in exchange for both the benefits it brings and a fair say in how it's run. I believe foreign immigrants basically do have to go through such a process, and since reaching adulthood, with its onset of voting, taxation, cessation of lenient treatment by law as a child, etc, is effectively when one could truly be said to "enter" one's country, it might just help to make the average, naturally born citizen a bit less staggeringly clueless about where exactly they stand as a member of society - really, it seems almost immoral that a country should automatically lay claim to all children born within it as its own citizens, demanding taxation and observance of the law from them, upon their reaching adulthood without their explicit consent or even formally informing them of the position it assumes they accept. (Though I am by no means a Randroid, and a lot of their tenets seem to be sheer trash, I do think they're onto something when they talk about the importance of free consent and a lack of coercion, other than to enforce contracts and arrangements already consented to, in society) Only problem is, unlike immigrants, what do you do with them if they decide not to accept citizenship? You can't exactly deport them to their former state.