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Thread: Election 2011 - General

  1. #301
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    Quote Originally Posted by dahamsta View Post
    Ah, I didn't realise he was Louth, that makes a lot of sense.

    Thanks for that osarusan. They're ok with him stealing their money then?
    Lowry's Tipp, it's bad enough on the border as it is!

    I am just suggesting that thanks to our mentality, alot of Irish admire the cute hoor and fella who gets things done. In any other country Bertie Ahern would be in jail, his former cellmate Haughey laid to rest in a prison graveyard. Instead they just retain their earning power.

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    I don't think Adams would poll him out though. Adams would get the SF vote in louth but probably nothing else from anywhere else in the county. alot of locals in louth dissappointed that adams is not local and would not stand for local issues or local interests. There is also the questions surrounding his brother, his IRA past, that would turn moderate voters off him. I thought tomas sharkey would of been a better SF candidate, as he was hi jacking the save the louth hospital campaign
    With the Louth Hospital amongst others being the biggest issue in dlk, ahern might of struggled but he would of pulled enough ff from around louth to be seen comfortably over the line.

    Louth is looking interesting though. O'Dowd (FG) will get in by his drogheda vote. Mid Louth will probably vote Mairead Mcguinnes (fg), Seamus kirk (ff) will be returned as ceann comhairle & they reckon sean gallagher is going to run on a ff ticket(probably will not get in as he isn't local), I don't think labour have a strong candidate, so the last seat will be an FF candidate, Adams, labour candidate. Mark Deary of the greens would be my pref but i doubt he will get enough to challenge for a seat. I reckon FF will still have enough hardcore and secret voters to have another FF in
    Long Live King Kenny

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    Quote Originally Posted by jinxy lilywhite
    I don't think Adams would poll him out though. Adams would get the SF vote in louth but probably nothing else from anywhere else in the county. alot of locals in louth dissappointed that adams is not local and would not stand for local issues or local interests. There is also the questions surrounding his brother, his IRA past, that would turn moderate voters off him. I thought tomas sharkey would of been a better SF candidate, as he was hi jacking the save the louth hospital campaign
    One of the more fundamental aspects of standing in a constituency should be, that you have some connection with the constituency. I've no doubt he'll be elected, but what is Adams' specific connection with Louth?

    The Lowry issue is strange alright. Former FG TD, now delaying them forming a new government by telling them to vote for the budget, rather than do it himself. Mad.
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    It's to do with proximity to the North, as in An Lu.
    Once the 10th county of Ulaidh....no way would things have worked out as they did, if they'd kept them in!

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    Quote Originally Posted by mypost View Post
    One of the more fundamental aspects of standing in a constituency should be, that you have some connection with the constituency.
    Totally agree - how would a TD know where the potholes are to get fixed without that local knowledge, never mind knowing where to deliver the passports...
    If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.

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  7. #306
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    Quote Originally Posted by mypost View Post
    One of the more fundamental aspects of standing in a constituency should be, that you have some connection with the constituency. I've no doubt he'll be elected, but what is Adams' specific connection with Louth?
    Bunkers and silos, diesel, safe houses...

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  9. #307
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    There are 33,000 tax dodging millionairs with a net worth of €121 billion euro. Going after public sector workers and social welfare recipients, who both took a hit last year is just plain wrong. The fact that Shell is still being allowed to remove natural resources worth €450 billion euro from our territory is also wrong. There is plenty of wealth around to sort out the country. These austerity measures are part of the Friedmanite agenda that has dominated mainstream economics for decades. What we are facing in terms of economic measures is a war on the working and middle class by big business sponsored governments who have been carrying out the transfer of wealth from working people to the rich. What we're facing is chicago school measures that were first implemented in Chile under Pinochet and led to skyrocketing inflation and mass unemployment. Don't buy the lie that we can't afford not to make cuts.
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    Pinochet was reckoned to be as thick as a brick when it came to economic matters, but even he kept the copper mines under State control.
    That policy in regards to valuable State assets would not be tolerated by the EU and Ireland. They would set out with gusto to scuttle a perfectly healthy State company, in the name of competitive openness and efficiency.

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    Quote Originally Posted by geysir View Post
    Pinochet was reckoned to be as thick as a brick when it came to economic matters, but even he kept the copper mines under State control.
    That policy in regards to valuable State assets would not be tolerated by the EU and Ireland. They would set out with gusto to scuttle a perfectly healthy State company, in the name of competitive openness and efficiency.
    Yeah, the only reason the country didn't go under altogether. Friedmans disciples were advising him from day one so it's surprising they kept that public. Maybe they knew they were peddling a great steaming pile of sh*te after all.
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    Quote Originally Posted by BohsPartisan View Post
    There are 33,000 tax dodging millionairs with a net worth of €121 billion euro.
    Got evidence for that? According to Brendas Burgess of AAM, just 359 people earning over 250k paid 0-20% of tax last year. Now I'm not a fan of Brendan's opinions on taxation, by any stretch of the imagination, but he does post data to support his assertion.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dahamsta View Post
    Got evidence for that? According to Brendas Burgess of AAM, just 359 people earning over 250k paid 0-20% of tax last year. Now I'm not a fan of Brendan's opinions on taxation, by any stretch of the imagination, but he does post data to support his assertion.
    Cork IT Economics lecturer Tom O'Connor
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    Quote Originally Posted by Macy View Post
    Totally agree - how would a TD know where the potholes are to get fixed without that local knowledge, never mind knowing where to deliver the passports...
    But the fundamentals of politics is all about local issues being brought to the national agenda. it is the same all over the world.
    I don't think Adams will get in. That is my gut feeling.
    Though all the border constiteuncies do have a SF TD now.
    Long Live King Kenny

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    Quote Originally Posted by BohsPartisan View Post
    I think perhaps you're reading that article slightly different to me. To me, Tom hasn't gone anywhere near suggesting that those millionaires are dodging tax, he's simply suggesting that they should be paying more tax. Big, big difference.

    There's very little doubt that tax avoidance in Ireland is way too easy, but nearly all of us do it on some level. My company pays me a (very, very) small pension that would cost me more if I did it personally, and I check my entitlements every year and take advantage of them.

    Personally, I don't consider that tax avoidance; and equally personally, I couldn't afford it any other way. However the wealthy say exactly the same thing, because they have much higher expenses. They also have expensive accountants who can a) find more loopholes, and b) lobby for even more loopholes.

    That still doesn't make them tax dodgers though. Tax avoiders maybe. If you have a problem with it, lobby your TD to get the loopholes closed. Unfortunately that's how it works in Ireland.

    adam

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    From the article Bohspartisan linked to:

    This is the part I find galling (if true)

    These 33,000 millionaires have been the main beneficiaries of about €20bn in tax expenditures by the state since 2005 through various means: tax relief on pensions, which at one point was over €1m; a myriad of property tax reliefs; reliefs on private nursing homes and hospitals; capital allowances; the PRSI ceiling; and a whole raft of others.

    In fact Dr Michael Collins, a Trinity based Economist and member of the Commission on taxation, reiterated the view on 17 October this year that there are still 110 of these so called "loop holes" in place, costing the exchequer €11bn per annum.

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    I'd be very suprised if it wasn't. The fact remains that they're not doing anything wrong by availing of them. It could be argued that morally they should ignore them and just pay the taxes, but on one level that would be like us paying full whack on the bins, rent, mortgage, etc. Of course they can afford it better than we can, but they have as much "right" to those reliefs as we do. The answer is to revoke the spurious ones, pure and simple.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dahamsta View Post
    I'd be very suprised if it wasn't. The fact remains that they're not doing anything wrong by availing of them. It could be argued that morally they should ignore them and just pay the taxes, but on one level that would be like us paying full whack on the bins, rent, mortgage, etc. Of course they can afford it better than we can, but they have as much "right" to those reliefs as we do. The answer is to revoke the spurious ones, pure and simple.
    Oh I know, I'm not galled by those availing of them, as I'd expect no less (or no more?) of them. i'm galled by those allowing them to continue, as after all the comments about everybody taking a hit, something like this one pops up. you'd hope that the EU/IMF, with a fine-tooth comb through our finances, would notice something like this.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dahamsta View Post
    I think perhaps you're reading that article slightly different to me. To me, Tom hasn't gone anywhere near suggesting that those millionaires are dodging tax, he's simply suggesting that they should be paying more tax. Big, big difference.
    Okay, maybe I should have qualified that I didn't mean they were doing something illegal, but isn't dodging something just a more pro-active way of avoiding something? These guys haven't spent years making donations to the main political parties for nothing. They do it because they get to call the major policy shots, the ones you most certainly won't find in any manifesto (apart from the PDs and look what happened to them) because people don't want them. Me lobbying my TD on this matter is the equivelant of throwing a boomerang into the grand canyon and expecting it to come back. When money controls politics it controls what is legal and what is not and even when something is illegal money can find a way around it. Obviously not a level playing field. It's also virtually impossible for PAYE worker to avoid tax for example. Maybe we could avoid VAT by shoplifting but you'll find you get a harsher hand than the lads who slip a few quid to "the party".

    Here's an interesting little video about money and the US political system that is food for thought...
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    Quote Originally Posted by BohsPartisan View Post
    Okay, maybe I should have qualified that I didn't mean they were doing something illegal, but isn't dodging something just a more pro-active way of avoiding something?
    That's what "dodge" means, of course, but the term "tax dodger" is generally used to signify tax evasion rather than tax avoidance. The latter is morally questionable, the former is illegal and somewhat frowned upon by the Revenue. If you accuse someone of being a tax dodger - in particular if they're one of the aforementioned millionaires - you'd likely find yourself in court defending yourself against a defamation claim.

    Me lobbying my TD on this matter is the equivelant of throwing a boomerang into the grand canyon and expecting it to come back.
    Sorry, but I have the same opinions on that as I do on not voting, starting with the simplistic:

    • If you're not in, you can't win.
    • If you're not in, you have no right to complain.
    • If you're not it, I have no interest in listening to you.
    • If you're not in, you're part of the problem.

    I could go on, but that's generally how I feel about non-voters, non-lobbyers. It takes about as much energy to send an email, fax or letter to all of your representives as it does to vote, which is pretty much feck all. Make a list after the election, make up a template, off you go. Rant and rave to your heart's content, most of the time they'll actually reply.

    When money controls politics
    I can understand your cynicism, but that's just not true. Money certainly has an enormous part to play, but if it was the be-all and end-all, you wouldn't see them tripping over themselves with all the u-turns. Of course the fact that they're as willing to jump because of public opinion is another source of cynicism, but that's politics for you...

    It's also virtually impossible for PAYE worker to avoid tax for example.
    You avoid tax exactly the way they do when you apply for tax relief on your bins, your rent, your mortgage, your child that lives with his mammy, etc, etc. As I said earlier, they just have more opportunities, and accountants to find them.

    As osarusan says, closing the loopholes is the answer. And lobbying your representatives is the only way you, personally, have of helping to affect that change. If you don't, they will assume you're a-ok with them.

    No offense, but I'm not going to watch the video. While I accept that we've replicated the excesses of America here, this remains a completely different country with completely different dynamics.

    adam
    Last edited by dahamsta; 01/12/2010 at 11:20 PM.

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    Tax loopholes are deliberate tax avoidance schemes, often brought in for some supposedly beneficial purpose for society. Does society ever receive benefit more than a small % of the benefit that is gained by the financial elite?

    There is also nothing wrong done when the government decides that bondholder debt becomes sovereign debt. The government is constitutionally entitled to make that decision. We don't blame the bondholders for saying yes. They would be pretty stupid if they decided voluntarily to take a 50% cut.
    Afaic, the same morale is used to justify the existence of legal tax loopholes for the financial elite/corporations, as is used to justify the bailing out the bondholders. That morale is, the public interest is served by serving the vast needs of the financial elite as a priority, even to the point of flogging the public.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dahamsta View Post
    That's what "dodge" means, of course, but the term "tax dodger" is generally used to signify tax evasion rather than tax avoidance. The latter is morally questionable, the former is illegal and somewhat frowned upon by the Revenue. If you accuse someone of being a tax dodger - in particular if they're one of the aforementioned millionaires - you'd likely find yourself in court defending yourself against a defamation claim.
    Again proves that there is one law for them, one for us.



    Sorry, but I have the same opinions on that as I do on not voting, starting with the simplistic:

    • If you're not in, you can't win.
    • If you're not in, you have no right to complain.
    • If you're not it, I have no interest in listening to you.
    • If you're not in, you're part of the problem.

    I could go on, but that's generally how I feel about non-voters, non-lobbyers. It takes about as much energy to send an email, fax or letter to all of your representives as it does to vote, which is pretty much feck all. Make a list after the election, make up a template, off you go. Rant and rave to your heart's content, most of the time they'll actually reply.
    Replying is one thing (and it isn't actually them who reply, don't cod yourself) acting is another. What they'll do is send one of their stack's of pre-prepared representations to a government department where a civil servant of middlemanagement grade will draft a standard reply on why x,y or z can't be done or what long drawn out process is going on to make it happen. The letter will go through a few higher hands to check and it will be signed off on by the minister. Or one of the constituency workers will write back to you. Nothing will happen though (unless it's a query about potholes or rough kids hanging around on the corner)


    I can understand your cynicism, but that's just not true. Money certainly has an enormous part to play, but if it was the be-all and end-all, you wouldn't see them tripping over themselves with all the u-turns. Of course the fact that they're as willing to jump because of public opinion is another source of cynicism, but that's politics for you...
    Don't see them jumping due to public opinion right now on austerity or on resigning from government before the budget. For one thing, a lot of the issues they vacilate on are the non economic ones, for another not all rich people have the same interests on every single issue so you will get conflicted policy making. The reason I posted the video is it doesn't give a simplistic "they give money, get what they want" explanation.

    You avoid tax exactly the way they do when you apply for tax relief on your bins, your rent, your mortgage, your child that lives with his mammy, etc, etc. As I said earlier, they just have more opportunities, and accountants to find them.
    I get your point but we're really talking a miniscule amount for those things compared to what the wealthy get away with.
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