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| Speakers' Corner: Discuss How much do we spend on these people? in the Non-Diving Related Forums forums: lime pit in every town thats the answer and one at every port while we,re at it... |
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| lime pit in every town thats the answer and one at every port while we,re at it |
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What I like best is that nobody hear ever moans about, say, city bonuses or high level tax avoidance and fruad. The anti benefit fraud posters that crop up on bus shelters target a group whose shifty dealings are estimated to cost the country £850,000,000. Lots of money, until you realise that there are no posters in Canary Wharf warning city types to beware the investigators. Of course, dubious tax avoidance and evasion schemes only cost the country somewhere between £90,000,000,000 and £130,000,000,000 according to the treasury. Sod it, let's give the poor a really good kicking, just in case any of them get uppity. None of them needs that DVD player or pint as long as I can have my third and fourth homes. To the boss of Barclays: don't worry mate, I understand that you truly NEED that £22,000,000 bonus. At least I appreciate your work. |
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i have never claimed benefits of any sort , and you still get a big
__________________ Steve G Apparently not the only gay chimp in the village http://drinkingliberally.org/blogs/o...nzee-glock.gif http://www.scubatunes.com/audio/vol01/mp3/HiTech.mp3 |
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I don't think an intelligent and realistic discussion of a major social problem is out of order. As long as people discuss it rationally and don't shout "shoot the lot of them". A balanced arguement is always interesting as long as people base their opinions on reality and not on biased ranting.
__________________ Yvonne veni vidi scubici Please support http://www.scubatrust.org.uk/HTML/home.htm www.scubamed.net http://www.scimitardiving.co.uk/ |
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As for benefits system, yes, it's a good idea - of course it is. There will always be a few that cannot work for geniune reasons, but unfortunatley on the flipside, there will be those that will take the mickey. It's those that take the mickey that really wind me up.
__________________ LPG. BRING IT ON!!! Solar powered since 21-MarBuilding silt-castles since 2004 ![]() http://tinypic.com/player.php?v=2dawpp0&s=3 |
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How did a disdussion about able bodied people sponging off the state (and therefore from all tax payers) turn into an anti wealth argument? I didn't come from a priviliged background, I left school at 16 and worked insome very low paid jobs before carving a career for myself. I have worked extremely hard to get to a point where I pay an accountant to advise me on the most tax effecient way of managing my income (this is not tax evasion - that would be illegal). I do earn over the average wage but I'm not rich - I don't have a 2nd home or 3 cars. Do I feel guilty for having skills that employers are willing to pay a lot of money for? No. Why should I? I worked damn hard to get where I am. I made a decission not to pi$$ my life away and make something of it. Do I get annoyed that people abuse a welfare system that I help to fund. Absolutely. It's theft. It pi$$es me off that I have to work bl00dy hard to earn the money to buy TVs, cars or a house while others expect luxuries without any effort on their part. If I earn £50m next year, I will pay (a lot) more tax. They are still stealing. I'm not against a welfare system. There are many genuinely vulnerable people who need support, but it absolutely needs to be better managed. Being able to work but chosing not to because of the amount of benefits you are receiving is simply wrong. If you are able to work, you should not be getting benefits. Did the boss of Barclays deserve is massive bonus? I don't know. The companys shareholders obviously thought so though and I'm sure the treasury got a slice of it as well. People earning a lot of money do so for a reason. Most are not "lucky", they have worked hard to get where they are - and they pay their way. Paul Last edited by Paul Brookes : 06-09-07 at 12:16 PM. Reason: spotted grammer mistakes |
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However, I do understand the need to feel valued. That's why F1 stars get paid so much, otherwise they'd do it for nothing if their rides were competitive. I doubt the small shareholders think it's a hugely good plan. The renumeration committees (with the backing of pension fund shareholders) undoubtedly do, but there's a huge ammount of backscratching that goes on there. Think of the number of CEOs who've presided over company collapses and then walked away having trousered a few million as a thank you. Quote:
Some of the super-rich lie. Look at the way Al-Fayed managed to acquire loans etc. I absolutely disagree about paying their way. You're obviously not rich enough to enjoy the off-shore status that the truly rich do. See the example above. |
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That super rich category must only account of a tiny % of the population though. For the vast majority of people, most work hard for their lifestyles, pay taxes and IMO have a right to feel agrieved that those taxes are being spent (in some cases) to make life comfortable for people who can't be bothered to work. Maybe I'm just old fashioned, but to me if you want something, work for it. Beer, cigarettes, playstations, a car are not rights. They are luxuries. Regards, Paul |
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