Balls to chrystals
Boyz make a good observation. Out of 3000+ people there may be a few chancers. But the notion that I could have or should have seen this possibility is simply ridiculous. Why? Because the scheme was fully transparent and declared. That was a big consideration for me when joining. After all, nothing to hide nothing to fear. And if I knew as much about Padmore then as I do now, I'd have been even more inclined since Padmore specifically prevented retrospective taxation. It was engineered specifically to prevent a tax windfall. I bet if you look close enough, you'd even find IR documents stating this and even going as far as stating that using retrospection to make something that was legal yesterday illegal today would be objectionable if it caused a penality on folks.
No I'm sorry. The only reason retrospective penalties have been applied is because of HMRC incompetence. Should I have seen that? In hindsight yes. But the notion that they'd then make up for their own farce by penalising me for their failures is something I would not have considered then. Why, because that would be a breach of my Human Rights - to take "possessions" I had legally gained and then take them away later (retrosepctively) due to incompetence is penalising the wrong people.
In any event, it means anyone has to consider being penalised retrospectively if the authorities decide that something they simply don't like can be made illegal in the future as though it was today. Time travel is great aint it?
Boyz make a good observation. Out of 3000+ people there may be a few chancers. But the notion that I could have or should have seen this possibility is simply ridiculous. Why? Because the scheme was fully transparent and declared. That was a big consideration for me when joining. After all, nothing to hide nothing to fear. And if I knew as much about Padmore then as I do now, I'd have been even more inclined since Padmore specifically prevented retrospective taxation. It was engineered specifically to prevent a tax windfall. I bet if you look close enough, you'd even find IR documents stating this and even going as far as stating that using retrospection to make something that was legal yesterday illegal today would be objectionable if it caused a penality on folks.
No I'm sorry. The only reason retrospective penalties have been applied is because of HMRC incompetence. Should I have seen that? In hindsight yes. But the notion that they'd then make up for their own farce by penalising me for their failures is something I would not have considered then. Why, because that would be a breach of my Human Rights - to take "possessions" I had legally gained and then take them away later (retrosepctively) due to incompetence is penalising the wrong people.
In any event, it means anyone has to consider being penalised retrospectively if the authorities decide that something they simply don't like can be made illegal in the future as though it was today. Time travel is great aint it?
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