Originally posted by darmstadt
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How to cause a run on the banks
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Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone -
Originally posted by doodab View PostIt's a stroke of genius. Persuade people that there money isn't safe anywhere. The only sensible course of action is to spend spend spend it. This will kickstart the economy in no time.Originally posted by Stevie Wonder BoyI can't see any way to do it can you please advise?
I want my account deleted and all of my information removed, I want to invoke my right to be forgotten.Comment
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostSo you think that this type of behaviour by the government is justifiable because they like you decide to make moral judgements about what is and what is not "justifiable"? So then we have taxation determined by people like you with their subjective opinions?
More than 40% of the money held by Cypriot banks is by foreign depositors which begs the question, why? Quite a large percentage of that 40% are UK citizens, why? Maybe the Cypriot government could start by taxing those depositors at a rate equivalent to what they would pay in their own countries, maybe then some of it would find its way back to the UK where it is needed. Maybe, just maybe a country might stand up to the financial community but don't hold your breath (if a country as powerful as the UK can't then Cyprus definitely won't be able to...)“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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Originally posted by Ignis Fatuus View PostBut - perhaps someone with a better memory can remind me - didn't Italy do something exactly like this some time ago? Possibly in the 1990s? From one Sunday night to Monday morning, 10% was taken from all Italian bank accounts. Not that politicians and men of respect would have had any advance knowledge of this coming.....<Insert idea here> will never be adopted because the politicians are in the pockets of the banks!Comment
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostMore than 40% of the money held by Cypriot banks is by foreign depositors which begs the question, why? Quite a large percentage of that 40% are UK citizens, why?While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Originally posted by doodab View PostBecause there are about 65,000 Cypriots in the UK?
Russia has expressed its anger about the levy, which would hit its nationals, some 30 of whom are reported to have been granted Cypriot citizenship after depositing at least €17m into local banks, making investments of €30m or registering businesses on the island.“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostAre they Cypriots or do they hold a UK passport?While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Originally posted by petergriffin View Post...However back in Blighty banks have de facto applied negative interest rates for years. It takes 2 years of nir to shave 10% off your account.Comment
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Originally posted by doodab View PostAbout 25,000 are Cypriot nationals, the rest were born there but hold UK passports or perhaps dual nationality. I'd guess a lot of them came here after the partition. I know a few people who's parents did just that. Of course, the children, being born here and holding UK passports, don't show up in the statistics, although they may still have ties to the place or 2nd homes there.
Anyway, why are many Europeans avoiding tax? Is it because our governments have become so huge and bloated that they can't pay for themselves without biting off great chunks of people's liberty and getting in the way of people who are trying to trade internationally?
It's quite convenient for European governments that some of the account holders are allegedly Russians who are suspected of avoiding taxes or having allegedly criminal incomes, because that makes it easy to **** over all of the international account holders and tell Joe Public, who has now even less means to secure his own modest wealth, that it's all about getting the money from those nasty tax evaders and criminals.
This is a stupid plan and it is bullying of the lowest kind; while banks all over Europe, in the big powerful countries, were rescued, let's pick on some tiny little country that can't really build any other major source of income than being a banking and trading centre for overtaxed businesses from elsewhere and drive it back to the poverty whence it came. It's like saying "you little upstarts should go back to farming olives and dragging them on rickety trailers to the market with lame old donkeys; we don't want sweaty little plebs like you in our world of shiny offices and luxurious social systems". Yuk. It makes me want to heave.Last edited by Mich the Tester; 20 March 2013, 09:17.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Originally posted by Doggy Styles View PostThat's irrelevant to what Germany wanted to do in Cyprus.“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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