Amazon also have a nice line in zero hour contracts. HSBC don't.
But of course Amazon is off line to criticism from the bold Emma as that is part of her revenue stream which allows her to have a Hampstead home with a school room in the back garden for her daughter who does not want to go to a sausage factory school.
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Previously on "Actress Emma Thompson and her husband refuse to pay 'a penny more' in taxes until HSB"
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Anyways, if she is so fecked off about companies not paying tax to the treasury tell her to get her films off Amazon Prime and ask them to pay UK tax on DVD sales she is credited in.
HSBC paid 245 million in corp tax in 2013, Amazon paid 3.2 million.
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The fiat punto will have a point of sale in the UK, VAT plus corporation tax payable from the dealership. The dealer will make a taxable salary from the sale. He will have to pay for petrol at a taxable amount.
I doubt his Slovakian women pay tax though.
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
I said it was far better for me to spend my money on fast cars, loose women and expensive holidays as this creates demand for engineering skills, mining workers, hotel staff, lap dancers etc etc.
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Emma Thompson and her husband Greg Wise have withdrawn their 15-year-old daughter from school and begun educating her at home.
Mr Wise, who starred in Sense and Sensibility, said their daughter Gaia had decided shortly before her GCSEs that school “wasn’t for her”.
He said: “She loves learning and she’s terribly focused and hardworking, but she didn’t like the sausage factory of formal education. I’ve no argument with that.”
Mr Wise and Ms Thompson have built a school room at the end of their garden in West Hampstead, north London, where tutors will teach Gaia.
He said: “Although I won’t be teaching her. We’ve got tutors and I’ve built her a school room in the garden.”
I say we throw her in a pond and if she floats burn her.
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Originally posted by zeitghostOne assumes that the Luvvies in the thread title have figured out some method of avoiding VAT, council tax, fuel duty, and all the rest.
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostIt should not be about morality. The left lost the moral argument over taxation years ago by squandering it and failing to deliver on public services. Furthermore the purveyors of the system (Labour MPS and councillors, heads of public services) have been proved to be equally self interest driven - I would argue more so, as any Tory. They are left with climate change and demonising the rich as a means to justifying the raising of taxes.
Nu Labour didn't have a problem with the rich. In fact those like Mandelson have openly come out and indicated they are against what Ed Milliband is saying. They know if a party isn't in the centre it doesn't get in government. However for some reason Ed's advisors think moving to the left and coming out with tulip like this will work.
Lots of younger voters have worked out rightly that they are all the same and no party can claim the high moral ground so won't vote.
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Originally posted by tomtomagain View PostShow Business a meritocracy? You are joking aren't?
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Originally posted by vetran View PostI'm not sure why you exclude those in Show business it seems to be a true meritocracy if the viewers don't like you then you don't make much money. Its not normally just who you are related to.
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I had a friend of mine who retired as a tax inspector at 55. I told him that I dedicated myself to paying a little tax as possible (I will add without going to the lengths of some of these dodgy offshoring/film partnership) schemes. He argued that the money was needed for schools and hospitals. To which I replied. No it goes to paying public servants pensions that enable them to retire at 55 without having to take any real responsibility in their jobs. It further goes to public servants to squander on producing s**t education for far too many kids.
I said it was far better for me to spend my money on fast cars, loose women and expensive holidays as this creates demand for engineering skills, mining workers, hotel staff, lap dancers etc etc.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostWhich is basically what I said.
Although where the letter of the law and the spirit of the law are different, it gets more difficult. As in sport, some things "just aren't cricket" and surely even you would say basic human decency should play some part?
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Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostSorry I thought that this discussion included HMRC, that statement isn't compatible.
Unless this turns into several million people in an organised tax revolt, which is not only absurdly unlikely, but about impossible to orchestrate as most pay tax PAYE then it's just bluster from a minor celeb.
I'll be genuinely surprised if it winds up with a prosecution for non payment.
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Originally posted by DodgyAgent View PostIt should not be about morality.
Although where the letter of the law and the spirit of the law are different, it gets more difficult. As in sport, some things "just aren't cricket" and surely even you would say basic human decency should play some part?
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostSeems a slippery slope when everyone can choose differently what is moral and just. Suddenly Labour voters claim a Tory government is immoral for not supporting the poor and so won't pay any tax. Then Labour get in and raise taxes, Tory voters claim it's immoral to punish the successful to pay for those who don't want to work, so they won't pay the increased tax.
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