I just think its laughable that nobody has the balls to ask the question why people are trying to avoid it in the first place....
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BN66 - Round 2 (Court of Appeal)
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Tax avoidance and evasion are unacceptable in the best of times but in today's circumstances it is morally indefensible.
Oh, yeah, and another thing: so the government are thinking of bringing in a lie detector to identify cheats and frauds? They don't need to because they already have one. It's called Hansard.Last edited by Morlock; 22 September 2010, 09:56.Comment
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The governments aren't here to serve us. We are here to serve them.
Apart from the wealthy elite of whom the government approve, the system has been designed to keep the ordinary man in his place.
Here's a fitting book that sums up my mood:
The_Road_to_Serfdom - F. A. Hayek
In this paragraph, simply read the enemy as "tax avoider":
Third, to weld together a closely coherent body of supporters, the leader must
appeal to a common human weakness. It seems to be easier for people to
agree on a negative program -- on the hatred of an enemy, on the envy of
those better off - than on any positive task. The contrast between the "we" and
the "they" is consequently always employed by those who seek the allegiance
of huge masses. The enemy may be internal, like the "Jew" in Germany or the
"kulak" in Russia, or he may be external. In any case, this technique has the
great advantage of leaving the leader greater freedom of action than would
almost any positive program.Last edited by SantaClaus; 21 September 2010, 12:28.'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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From the horse's mouth... well... his stable girl anyway
Received the following from David Cameron's office girl in response to my request for a constituency surgery meeting with the PM to discuss the topic of "Gauke's views on retrospective taxation: before and after".
"....David (Cameron) has seen the exchange of correspondence and has asked me to write to say that the point is that this legislation is in front of the Courts, under judicial review, and we have to wait the outcome of that before going further. "
..er... no we don't, if he had some bottle.Comment
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Originally posted by SantaClaus View PostThe governments aren't here to serve us. We are here to serve them.
Apart from the wealthy elite of whom the government approve, the system has been designed to keep the ordinary man in his place.
Here's a fitting book that sums up my mood:
The_Road_to_Serfdom - F. A. Hayek
In this paragraph, simply read the enemy as "tax avoider":
Third, to weld together a closely coherent body of supporters, the leader must
appeal to a common human weakness. It seems to be easier for people to
agree on a negative program -- on the hatred of an enemy, on the envy of
those better off - than on any positive task. The contrast between the "we" and
the "they" is consequently always employed by those who seek the allegiance
of huge masses. The enemy may be internal, like the "Jew" in Germany or the
"kulak" in Russia, or he may be external. In any case, this technique has the
great advantage of leaving the leader greater freedom of action than would
almost any positive program.
Cleggy: "The electorate scum have got bored of us bashing bankers and tax avoiders. What else can we drum up to keep their tiny minds off the real issues?"
Dave: "How about another war? North Korea's looking promising. Do you think they'll fall for the old 45-minute trick again?"Last edited by Morlock; 21 September 2010, 15:58.Comment
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Originally posted by normalbloke View Post"....David (Cameron) has seen the exchange of correspondence and has asked me to write to say that the point is that this legislation is in front of the Courts, under judicial review, and we have to wait the outcome of that before going further. "Comment
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Originally posted by Morlock View PostWhich makes you wonder whether all this recent stuff about hammering tax avoiders might be just another bunch of populist hyperbole, rather than having any serious substance to it.
This story is likely to run and run with a lot more fallout to come.
Perhaps all this fighting talk over bashing tax dodgers is a way of placating those who are soon to be on the receiving end of unexpected demands ie. "we're all in it together"Comment
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Originally posted by Morlock View PostMPs have no right nor mandate to preach to us about morality. They are elected to be our lawmakers, period. If they don't like the law they should change it (prospectively, of course), but until then I am more than happy to engage in lawful tax planning, and if other people find that to be "unacceptable" or "morally indefensible", well, they are entitled to their opinion, but tough.
Oh, yeah, and another thing: so the goverment are thinking of bringing in a lie detector to identify cheats and frauds? They don't need to because they already have one. It's called Hansard.Comment
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Originally posted by Morlock View PostWhich makes you wonder whether all this recent stuff about hammering tax avoiders might be just another bunch of populist hyperbole, rather than having any serious substance to it. What's the betting that it will all get quietly dropped in due course...
Cleggy: "The electorate scum have got bored of us bashing bankers and tax avoiders. What else can we drum up to keep their tiny minds off the real issues?"
Dave: "How about another war? North Korea's looking promising. Do you think they'll fall for the old 45-minute trick again?"'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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With thoughts starting to turn to Christmas, and whether or not I should be telling my children that Santa may not be generous (not our Santa, the other one), did we ever get any confirmation on whether or not HMRC my seek to collect if they win the appeal, or are they still waiting until at least the Supreme Court?Comment
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