Is it PotG?
Thrifty non-licker
Indeed, the union bods are loving every moment.He doesn't need to punch hard with a 174 seat majority
Indeed, the union bods are loving every moment.He doesn't need to punch hard with a 174 seat majority
Indeed, the union bods are loving every moment.
He doesn't need to punch hard with a 174 seat majority
It's the same flippin' account!Whilst you and your friend Ronnie are back in tandem again getting ever more desperate by the day
Yes , a team that knows the art of negotiation unlike the Tories who have tried to avoid this for the last two years.Yes, he has such a tough negotiating team backing him up, what could go wrong.🫣
Me too....I often wonder.
Haha, yer ‘avin’ a larf!Yes , a team that knows the art of negotiation unlike the Tories who have tried to avoid this for the last two years.
It's the same flippin' account!
If it were on the other foot, I'd swear that you and 'H' had been separated at birth ....just shows you never can tell.Now I know that and you know that, but as long as you and Ronnie don't turn off your VPNs it will be our little secret
They're a non-profit organisation (ie. all their income is ultimately spent on their core activity) so they wouldn't pay tax on profits anyway, even if they weren't a charity. As for VAT, businesses don't pay it - their customers do. There is no VAT on rent of agricultural land or on the sale of it for housing, no VAT on rental of housing, no VAT on gifts received from the parishioners, so apart from a bit of VAT income from charging for admission to cathedrals (which would be more than lost for the VAT on repairs to said cathedrals) there would be not much in it for the government to gain.
Same with organisations like the RSPCA, though in a smaller way - they have assets of about a quarter of a billion, I believe. But they don't pay tax.
This doesn't really make sense. Regardless of how hard one has to (physically) work, pay is ultimately the determinant of how desirable a job is.
The key is that Eastern European migrants had a lower threshold of what is acceptable pay for the role, and thus filled the available jobs. Make the pay £1,000/day and there'd be a queue of locals demanding the work.
nothing there contradicts the point of them being run as non-profit. also sounds a lot like other charities. plead for money, pay people low rates and, hopefully, spend the difference on their cause.“They're a non-profit organisation (ie. all their income is ultimately spent on their core activity”:
Tell that to the parishioners of every church in the land that are told to cough up to pay for their vicar and church repairs or their church will be sold off. Tell that to the vicars that receive a pittance. Tell that to the thousands of church employees around the world trading the church assets and earning six figure salaries and bonuses. Tell that to the farmers that are evicted without compensation when the church receive millions for housing development but pay no capital gains.
Their net work increases by hundreds of millions annually (see their public accounts). So ‘not for profit’ is a smokescreen at best
And why does a religious org get this status anyway? We expect Amazon to pay tax, why not the church.
All the above written by someone with a faith by the way.
If it were on the other foot, I'd swear that you and 'H' had been separated at birth ....just shows you never can tell.
Just an observation mate, oddly I don't post for some sort of adulation.That would have been a great response had myself and @Harry Wilson's tackle not been constantly using VPNs or given all our separate bank details to NSC to support it and keep it running. Had it not been for that, it would have been a brilliant response
Perhaps a black hole in the finances could have a part to play in that, would it really be responsible to to give the massive pay rises they are asking for. Much respect has been lost for the greed public sector, this will only get worse when labour keep "saying how much would you like".Yes , a team that knows the art of negotiation unlike the Tories who have tried to avoid this for the last two years.
I'm not going to disagree that they waste an awful lot of money by spending it on the wrong things and people. Nor am I going to argue that they shouldn't be storing up treasure on earth. All am saying is that's why they don't pay tax, for the same reasons as the RSPCA don't pay tax and community sports clubs don't pay tax, albeit on a vastly larger scale.“They're a non-profit organisation (ie. all their income is ultimately spent on their core activity”:
Tell that to the parishioners of every church in the land that are told to cough up to pay for their vicar and church repairs or their church will be sold off. Tell that to the vicars that receive a pittance. Tell that to the thousands of church employees around the world trading the church assets and earning six figure salaries and bonuses. Tell that to the farmers that are evicted without compensation when the church receive millions for housing development but pay no capital gains.
Their net work increases by hundreds of millions annually (see their public accounts). So ‘not for profit’ is a smokescreen at best
And why does a religious org get this status anyway? We expect Amazon to pay tax, why not the church.
All the above written by someone with a faith by the way.
Just so I know, for future reference; am I poorly informed or uneducated?We have to face up to the fact there are a lot of people in this country that are easily persuaded to act against their own interests.
I would say poorly informed rather than uneducated
The likes of BP and Shell invest f**k all in renewables, circa 3-4%What could possibly go wrong?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cje2ynege5zo
Plan to hike windfall tax sparks energy jobs warning
Yep. Let's start by rtemoving the tax breaks and the suibsidies they are givenThe likes of BP and Shell invest f**k all in renewables, circa 3-4%
They can have tax breaks to invest in these but not inefficient fossil fuels. If we lose a few fossil fuel jobs so be it.