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Previously on "Claiming back expenses"

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  • NotAllThere
    replied
    No. That's still small. The guys in the BN66 thread are getting close to the idea.

    Leave a comment:


  • FiveTimes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    It does seem a little foolish to commit tax fraud over such small amounts. If you're going to break the law, at least thing big.
    Like a £1000 scanner ?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    It does seem a little foolish to commit tax fraud over such small amounts. If you're going to break the law, at least thing big.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by Gonzo View Post
    This is what I was talking about.

    Don't view it as "your colleagues are getting away with paying less tax", you need to see it instead as "your colleagues are committing tax fraud".

    You'll feel better, believe me.
    I tend to view it as "Whatever, they won't be coming around taking away my furniture".

    Although looking at my furniture, that might help - I could get some decent stuff then

    Leave a comment:


  • Gonzo
    replied
    Originally posted by Damo1176 View Post
    I do the same job as these people, get the same rate as these people yet earn thousands less cos I follow the rules. On bad days it's makes me envious and very annoyed that they get away with it. Am I not allowed feel that way and vent mu fury Davie?
    This is what I was talking about.

    Don't view it as "your colleagues are getting away with paying less tax", you need to see it instead as "your colleagues are committing tax fraud".

    You'll feel better, believe me.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    I'm not. I take income solely though salary and allowed expenses. No divvies.

    And since that's what I do, you're a fantastic top bloke!

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post
    ... You are both reducing your tax liabilities by contriving to use a weakness in tax law. ...
    I'm not. I take income solely though salary and allowed expenses. No divvies. I don't live or work in the UK.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    Which goes back to my original point. If it's illegal it's more likely to be unethical than if it isn't.
    I think it is the individual's duty to pay, legally, as little tax as possible. It's the government's duty to get us to pay, legally, as much tax as possible. I don't find avoidance through loopholes unethical. I do find evasion unethical.
    And that's your opinion, and welcome to it. It doesn't make it an absolute truth though. Personally I don't see any difference between you and he. You are both reducing your tax liabilities by contriving to use a weakness in tax law. And that's my opinion, and welcome to it.

    That's the point - you'll never convince me, him or anyone else that you are right and we are wrong, we all go on our own ethical compasses, so why bother?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post
    I know I'm not going to convince you here...
    I am convinced (and already was) that there are immutable rights and wrong. C.S.Lewis said that they're written into the universe. It's your argument for that which I find unconvincing. "It's just so" seems to be as convincing as "God made it that way".

    Going back to my original point. If it's illegal it's more likely to be unethical than if it isn't.

    I think it is the individual's duty to pay, legally, as little tax as possible. It's the government's duty to get us to pay, legally, as much tax as possible. I don't find avoidance through loopholes unethical. I do find evasion unethical.
    Last edited by NotAllThere; 12 June 2008, 15:16.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    How do we know what's ethical or not without appeal to a higher authority? It's either that, it seems to me, or some vague hand-waving (hand-wringing? Won't someone think of the children) talk about society and consensus.
    There are basic principles which are givens in this world, we can't prove them, we just know they are true. Some are more obvious than others. Don't stab babies in the face = obvious. Don't screw the state out of money that could help the sick and infirm = less obvioius.

    All that anybody can do is decide for themselves what level they want to be at. No point pointing at other people

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    Well, the Romans and ancient Greeks considered slavery was perfectly proper. As did the nations around them.
    I'm sure the enslaved nations themselves had pretty strong views against it. history is written by the victors, remember. Also you're invoking a fallacious argument used sometimes in logic called an 'Ad Populam' (go look it up in a Logic textbook if you haven't heard of it) - it basically argues that because "a lot of people think a certain way" then that proves the axiom. It's a fallacious argument, logic isn't proved by popularity poll. I don't care if every Roman in Italy thought slavery was ethical. They are wrong, it's not.

    I'm sure in those societies, each would have thought that their ethical view was the immutable, unchanging and axiomatic. Who's to say which was right?
    Me. They were wrong. I'm sure there are things we do now that future, more enlightened generations would think were wrong too. I hope I don't do too many of them. We are all blinded by our cultural perspective. In future keeping chickens in your backyard (which i do) may be considered heinous cruelty. Who knows. All you can try to do is be honest, and try to live as well as you can.

    I feel perfectly justified in saying that my tax avoidance is ethical, where as his tax evasion is not, by appealing to the law. In fact I'd appeal to a higher law - "It's justified because it's my money, and it must be right, because I'm doing it".
    I know I'm not going to convince you here, in fact I have done what you're doing in the past. My point wasn't that he was good and you were bad, or vice versa, but just that everybody suffers a certain level of non-ethical thinking in their lives, and everybody has to learn to live with that. if you're happy with what you do, great. He's happy with what he does, I expect. The point is that you shouldn't throw stones. For every thing you think he's doing "wrong" he could probably point to some stuff he thinks you are doing "wrong".

    Life is way WAY too short. Leave it to Universal Justice or Karma, or God, ar whatever floats your boat, to dole out the punishments. Or just dob him in. And then live with the ethics of that

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    I'm not a moral relativist - for precisely those reasons. I don't think that because a view is in the minority that it is wrong. But that's beside the point. How do we know what's ethical or not without appeal to a higher authority? It's either that, it seems to me, or some vague hand-waving (hand-wringing? Won't someone think of the children) talk about society and consensus.

    Leave a comment:


  • lambrini_socialist
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post

    I'm sure in those societies, each would have thought that their ethical view was the immutable, unchanging and axiomatic. Who's to say which was right?
    moral relativist bullsh1t of the type normally employed by the most despicable kind of Socialist Worker reader as justification for why we should be more "understanding" of certain cultures' alarming predilections for chopping criminals' hands off, mutilating the genitalia of young women, stealing elections, persecuting homosexuals etc. some things are just wrong, end of.*


    * gays is rong

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Well, the Romans and ancient Greeks considered slavery was perfectly proper. As did the nations around them. The southern states were also pretty much convinced. Did you read this article? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7417000.stm They've mucked up the title - the whole point is that this guy wasn't being self-justifying. He saw nothing to justify.

    But there are behaviours that throughout history and societies have been considered acceptable, normal and decent, possibly even a public duty or service, and at other times, or in other places are considered to be vile and disgusting, and worthy of the death penalty, possibly after terrible torture.

    I'm sure in those societies, each would have thought that their ethical view was the immutable, unchanging and axiomatic. Who's to say which was right?

    I feel perfectly justified in saying that my tax avoidance is ethical, where as his tax evasion is not, by appealing to the law. In fact I'd appeal to a higher law - "It's justified because it's my money, and it must be right, because I'm doing it".

    Leave a comment:


  • TheBigYinJames
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    That's like say "All right-thinking people think we should bring back the birch". If anyone disagrees with your idea of what's ethical, then they're either in the minority of intelligent people, or simply not intelligent.
    We're getting into philosophy here. Stabbing a baby in the face is unethical, not simply because "a lot of right thinking people agree" but because there's an inherent truth to it, an axiom, which is tied up with the human condition, society and the way that most people behave. Stabbing a baby in the face is simply unethical, and you can *see* it without being able to pove it. Of course there have been times in history, and right now*, when you can get a substantial part of a society who have a view which is not ethical but which is popular.

    So what is ethical is not just what *I* think, or even just what *a lot of people* think. It's tied up with an 'obviousness' and a 'rightness' which is bound to the human condition, evolution, moral senses etc. Most peopel can tap into this, some choose to ignore parts of it for their very own strong evolutionary purposes. Some young people choose to ignore the existence of a society where each person should contribute a percentage of their income in order to sustain that society. This is natural too. Young men are acquisitive by nature, they are building a fortress/fortune for their eventual breeding. How much money they can get is bound up entirely with their view of their own self worth. As they get older, they get family and interests, and possessions, this becomes less important. The ethics don't change, but their evolutionary drive to ignore or embrace certaion aspects of the underlyign societal ethics changes.

    What about former societies where slavery was perfectly acceptable, moral and decent?
    There are none. At no time has keeping another human being in bondage through power of force and fear of death been ethical. It may have been legal, it may have been socially acceptable by some in a very stratified layer of society, but it has never been ethical.

    Who says slavery is not and has never been and never will be ethical?
    I would hope you do. Unless I'm talking to a bona fide sociopath.

    If ethics are fixed and immutable, how do we decide which ones are temporal and which are eternal? To what authority do we appeal? God?
    Let's leave him out of it. Ethics are fixed and immutable, so we dno't get to choose which ones are temporal and which oens are eternal. They are all eternal, to all intents and purposes. As long as we are human, ethics will remain the same. We won't stab babies in the face.

    *read the BBC HYS forum, and you will see this contingent, who not only support 42 days without trial, but would probably support birching, skinning alive and general torture of anyone not born in Hemel hempstead or with funny coloued skin.

    Leave a comment:

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