Originally posted by robinhood
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BN66 - Round 2 (Court of Appeal)
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Originally posted by Fireship View PostUtter BS Hartnett, it would be better for the Exchequer not to bankrupt me thus preventing me from ever working again in my field of expertise – as a result my family will become dependent on the state rather than contribute to it!!!! Now Dave “talks from the anus” Harnett, kindly explain to me how that’s better for the Exchequer….
Also, Mr Breath of farts Harnett, kindly compare the amount of backdated tax you and your cronies believe I owe as a result of BN66 to that you allowed Vodaphone to write off and explain to me how that’s fair!!! How is it fair to have one rule for big business and fat cats and another for individuals such as us who earn many orders of magnitude less, are less able to defend ourselves, and have more to lose!
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Originally posted by Tax_shouldnt_be_taxing View Post"Mr Hartnett believes that it is better to do deals with companies in order to bring in revenue for the Exchequer, rather than get caught up in lengthy and expensive court battles."
Did I read this right? So what's going on via the courts with BN66 Dave?'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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bloody nose
Taxman dealt 'bloody nose' in IR35 fight :: Contractor UK
nice, wonder how much that little lost cost the taxpayer to fight...lets hope we manage to break it rather than bloody it with the COA!Comment
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Originally posted by smalldog View PostTaxman dealt 'bloody nose' in IR35 fight :: Contractor UK
nice, wonder how much that little lost cost the taxpayer to fight...lets hope we manage to break it rather than bloody it with the COA!
They really are a bunch of fcukers. . . . .Comment
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tax tribunal
Originally posted by smalldog View PostTaxman dealt 'bloody nose' in IR35 fight :: Contractor UK
nice, wonder how much that little lost cost the taxpayer to fight...lets hope we manage to break it rather than bloody it with the COA!
This is why HMRC do not like tribunals, they would rather just change the lawComment
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In order to separate two different topics for the benefit of all I have started a new thread for Loan arrangements. Please make loan related posts on the new thread. Thanks
Link to Loan ThreadJoin the No To Retro Tax Campaign Now
"Tax evasion is easy: it involves breaking the law. By tax avoidance OECD means unacceptable avoidance ... This can be contrasted with acceptable tax planning. What is critical is transparency" - Donald Johnston, Secretary-General, OECDComment
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Meanwhile this MP thinks that VAT evaders should be banged up
BBC News - MP Ian Liddell-Grainger says VAT cheats should be jailed
.. on the basis that the penalty for evasion is a mere £30...
Presumably your penalty for avoidance must be no more than a tenner thenComment
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Originally posted by centurian View PostMeanwhile this MP thinks that VAT evaders should be banged up
BBC News - MP Ian Liddell-Grainger says VAT cheats should be jailed
.. on the basis that the penalty for evasion is a mere £30...
Presumably your penalty for avoidance must be no more than a tenner then
I'm inclined to agree with him. There is no such thing as "VAT evasion" or "VAT avoidance". It is theft. Claiming VAT when not VAT registered with the intention of pocketing it should be a prison sentence.
Yes there are way of reducing the VAT you send to HMRC such as the Flat Rate Scheme, but that is them letting you keep some of their VAT.
The risk here is such behaviour being branded "avoidance" such that "avoidance" comes to mean or imply "criminal activity" which it is not.Last edited by RichardCranium; 22 January 2011, 21:16.My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.Comment
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The point was that the MP thought/implied that these poeple get away with minimal fines, so how can it be that legal avoiders in this thread are facing bankruptcy.
He's right, but at the same time, he's being very dramatic in his use of numbers. Anyone doing this wouldn't get caught with one invoice, but year's worth, so would probably end up with a 6 figure fine.Comment
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