Originally posted by washed up contractor
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HMRC's time machine setting sights on all graduates!
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Originally posted by tiggat View PostSnowflake brigade out in force, if we have had to pay for our education why shouldn't our elders?Comment
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Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostWalk away from the discussion. Probably best. I can't work out if you have now worked out that there is no retrospective taxation, or if you're too stupid. Doesn't really matter, I guess.Comment
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Originally posted by tiggat View PostSnowflake brigade out in force, if we have had to pay for our education why shouldn't our elders?Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostBecause elders vote and young people do not.Comment
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Originally posted by Lance View PostI'm glad I dropped out. Simply wasting tax payers money on the education (I never turned up for) and all that lovely full grant money I spent on sex, drugs and rock'n'roll.
EDIT : Someone on the news earlier was saying that there is no record of who got a degree prior to 2005 anyway so there's a good cutoff date"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by vwdan View PostTrick question - as there's nobody around the monkey simply spends all day on AndyW's Mum
has to be an optionAlways forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Why is this an issue? I studied for my degree in the 80's and have absolutely no problem with this. If we expect the current generation to pay a tax for their degree it only seems fair that we do too. An extra 5% or so on future earnings isn't such a hardship for contractors on 100k + a year, surely?I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter manComment
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The proposal to retrospectively pay tax for university education is of course ridiculous and if you only pay tax for education or public services that you used, I want to pay less tax as well as my children have private education and my family has private health insuranceComment
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostWhy is this an issue? I studied for my degree in the 80's and have absolutely no problem with this. If we expect the current generation to pay a tax for their degree it only seems fair that we do too. An extra 5% or so on future earnings isn't such a hardship for contractors on 100k + a year, surely?Comment
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