goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
dreamcatcher
- 10 Jun 2013 16:39
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Haystack
- 10 Jun 2013 17:05
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Do you want to hand the keys back to the people who crashed the car. Even worse it’s clear that Labour doesn’t even realise that it did crash the car.
Fred1new
- 10 Jun 2013 19:09
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Hays,
I don't think the present cons are doing better.
U-turns in one way streets, not watching the lights, reversing the "economy" at high speed and running out of fuel. Blaming the pedestrians for being on the pavement when they knock them down.
The government which will be remembered for corruption and tax avoidance, failure to act on Leveson and inability to govern.
This wasn't the government of yesterday's men, but the government of non-entities.
What a crew!
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Who are they going to blame next!
hilary
- 10 Jun 2013 19:23
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Corruption: Surely the last government were more corrupt than any other in the modern age. If I remember correctly, the number of Labour MPs and peers caught with their hands in the till for expenses fiddling and false accounting almost ran into double figures.
Tax avoidance: If it's legal, bring it on!
Leveson: The News International phone-hacking scandal occurred between 2005 and 2007 under a different watch. Leveson was a total waste of money that nobody really gave a sh!t about. But, for whatever reason, Cameron felt obliged to go through the motions. Are people really that thick that they think anything is going to change?
The economy: Looks like it's in pretty good shape to me. What's everyone moaning about?
The U-turns: A simple consequence of a coalition government. That's what the people voted for, so they shouldn't expect anything less. We live in a democracy - if people want cast iron rule, maybe they should bugger off to Zimbabwe.
Europe: It's just a shame that it'll take a few more years till we can get out. Hey ho.
cynic
- 10 Jun 2013 19:48
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hilary - fred doesn't actually believe in anything or any party as he thinks it beneath him to vote .... his posts are almost exclusively for pretentious effect and little more
more specifically, with regard to tax avoidance. you're absolutely right, much as its excesses tend to stick in the throat ..... tax collection has never been a moral issue, so if the gov't of any hue does not like the way such schemes are used, then change the rules
Fred1new
- 10 Jun 2013 20:11
- 25944 of 81564
It depends on your morality.
Tax rules are beginning to change.
It will be interesting to see the future checks on the flow of "cash" in an out of the country.
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Cameron is a motion.
Fred1new
- 10 Jun 2013 20:17
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For Cynic,
You never know Hague may be checking your accounts.
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2013 08:38
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Another 2 point increased gain for Labour........
electionista @electionista 1h
UK - YouGov/Sun: CON 28%, LAB 39%, LDEM 11%, UKIP 15%
Haystack
- 11 Jun 2013 08:46
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I see it predicts UKIP as not doing too well. At 15%, that's no MPs.
cynic
- 11 Jun 2013 08:54
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fred - since when did any tax law have a morality clause attaching, whether related to paying same or getting allowances? ..... sorry, but you cannot mix legality and morality ...... you can CHOOSE to pay more tax than you have to, by failing to take any legal avoidance measures, or you can CHOOSE to pay only the tax to which you are legally obligated ..... render unto Caesar etc etc
ahoj
- 11 Jun 2013 08:55
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I think by the time of election the order changes to LAB, UKIP, CON, LDEM
Cameron should stimulate the economy by spending on infrastructure.
Haystack
- 11 Jun 2013 09:06
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The order changes to CON,LAB,LDEM,...............UKIP
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2013 09:08
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Hes more interested in history and wants to set some personal landmarks for himself (before being kicked out) like being the PM who legalised gay marriage and the PM who defied all and spent money on Foreign Aid whilst at the same time robbing the poor and disabled off his own country.
Haystack
- 11 Jun 2013 09:11
- 25952 of 81564
One of the things that stops us charging the likes of Google, Amazon, Starbucks corporation tax on specific UK earning is membership of the EU. Outside the EU we can charge more corporation tax. The US for instance charges people on their worldwide earnings if they are US citizens no matter where they live.
cynic
- 11 Jun 2013 09:11
- 25953 of 81564
sticky - stick with something useful like your charts instead of making silly rubbish comment :-)
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hays - i'm sure your talking rubbish about eu tax law ...... even within eu, each country sets its own personal and corporate taxes ..... thus if there really is good reason why uk should change its tax laws to clamp down on "corporate escape" - i.e. taking good note of what really will be any knock-on effects by so doing - then it can
Haystack
- 11 Jun 2013 10:46
- 25954 of 81564
The knock on effects are not that serious in terms of the companies I mentioned as they would still be doing business here. Starbucks etc are not going to shut down business. They would just have to stump up.
Fred1new
- 11 Jun 2013 10:55
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Manuel,
"sorry, but you cannot mix legality and morality"
You do spout some rubbish.
It may have been "legally right" to put Jews in Concentration camps or Russian dissidents in gulags.
Laws have a moral basis. What that morality is, is often questionable, as is acquiescence to them.
Hiding behind an immoral law does not excuse the action if it is itself immoral.
But, one is legally entitled to have ones own personal morality.
Haystack
- 11 Jun 2013 10:58
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I have been checking on the EU aspects. Any tax laws including corporation tax must be compatible with EU laws and directives and cannot treat individuals or companies in a discriminatory way.
cynic
- 11 Jun 2013 11:31
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one is legally entitled to have ones own personal morality.
quite so, and you can choose to squander by giving extra money to the exchequer if you so choose (damn stupid) or, if legally avoiding tax sticks in your moral craw, then why not give the "extra" to a genuine charity of your choice (the moral alternative)?
TANKER
- 11 Jun 2013 12:35
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GF just for you have just had a phone call from the nhs and they are sending out some person to try out a new treatment for circulation problems but my wife must be their . 5pm tomorrow . its in its early days and I have agreed to try it out .