Valkie wrote on Jan 28
th, 2022 at 10:12am:
I lost a particularly good employee a few years ago.
He was sorry he was leaving, saying he enjoyed his work and the people he worked for.
The problem was this.
His pay, while being above award, worked out to be less than his disposable income on welfare.
So... doesn't this suggest something is horribly wrong with pay scales compared with the cost of living? ie, we have
systems problem?
[I have commented on this many times, you prefer to blame the
victims of our dysfunctional system, rather than the dysfunctional system itself]
Quote:With 4 children, one being disabled.
His aboriginal links (great grandfather apparently)
And the cost of fuel to get to and from work.
It was some ways short of welfare, plus he could more easily get welfare housing that he couldnt get working.
This is the face of uncontrolled welfare in Australia.
And this is why working people pay more tax than they should.
Yes I addressed all this yesterday, which you ignored: I say you deserve the economic system you accept.
Quote:The rich will never pay more than they can afford.
Meanwhile parasite billionaires should hand over $5 trillion in loot gained while they were asleep in the pandemic, so that governments can at least afford to avoid nursing home residents lying in their own faeces...
Quote:One business owner i worked for years ago, told me tgat he employed an accountant full time to find ways to minimise his tax.
He said it was cheaper to pay $180,000.00 @ year for this accountant than to pay 10 times that in "avoidable" taxes.
Remember mr Alan Bond
Tge multimillionaire?
He often boasted tgat he only paid tax on $25,000.00 a year.
Then there is the Qantas pooftah.
Didnt pay a cent in tax for years, still looking for an out from what I hear.
Multinationals ship profits off shore.
For example,
Our high quality coal is sold for a fraction of what we got for it 20 years ago.
Why?
Because the owners do deals with themselves to buy it cheap.
Then, while on the ship to its final destination, it triples in value so that landed its worth several times what they bought it for in Australia.
They only pay tax on what they bought it for.
They get a tax break for expenses mining it.
And they pocket billions.
And this is only a couple of examples.
It wont change as long as we have corrupt public servants, corrupt multinationals and corrupt politicians.
In other words, it will never change.
You have failed to identify the true villains, namely, the
private financier of the current evil monetary system , who demand that
sovereign currency-issuing governments must tax or borrow from private citizens, in order to spend.
Hopefully the extended pandemic, or maybe a CO2 climate emergency, will bring the whole stinking edifice - of the current evil system - crashing down.
As long as grubberments exist.
As long as multinationals exist.
And as long as the people who make the rules are open to corruption.
The system will never change.
And its so established now, that nothing short of total annihilation of grubberments as they are today, will change the system.
I once read, I dont know where, but I read that the rich are happy to fork out a few million in bribes and generous contributions to politicians.
To allow them the ability to get away with 10 or 20 even 100 times tgat amout in evaded taxes.
No point in complaining.
No point in demanding the rich pay their way.