Nothing to do with hosing money into a corrupt banking system or pursuing illegal foreign adventures then?
I take it you don't consider yourself part of a society?
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i guess that just the way things are, procreate and get rewarded.
In Canada here we got a thing called Baby Bonus, i forget how it actually works but i think like every 3 or 6 months people get a wade of cash for having kids.
As a fellow bachelor I do sympathize, on the other hand kids are expensive little bastards.
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Maybe we are speaking at cross purposes? In the UK we also have a debt problem caused, in part, by the very same reasons I mentioned above (i.e. greedy bankers and illegal foreign military adventures). Today we have had to listen to our (unelected) Prime Minister rabbiting on about the proposed changes to the health service (and education) here too.
I am happy to see my taxes used for providing good basic health care, education and social support, all marks in my view of a civilised society. I cannot get my head round the health system you seem to have. My son, who lives in Colorado, has to pay thousands in medical insurances and has to hope that none of his kids suffer, for example, mental health problems, because he can't afford to have all possible eventualities included in his plan. I guess it is down to what we are used to, but I don't see private health care (or private pensions, for that matter) providing as good a service for all as a decent properly funded state service paid for out of taxes. On the other hand, those who can afford to pay extra get to jump the queues for treatment. I guess I'm one of millions of Europeans who hear the fuss being stirred up by the prospect of health reform in the USA and are at a total loss as to why people are apparently so selfish as to not care what happens to others. As to the lies being told about our National Health Service by those opposed to Obama's proposals, let's not go there :mad:
I daresay I don't understand the issues, but it just seems weird that my son and his colleagues at his dental surgery only manage to see the people most in need of treatment on the special days they have when they work for free. :confused::confused::confused:
You don't say whether the tax system rewards each additional child or whether the tax advantages stop at two kids? I don't see a problem with that. I would want to know that there is an upcoming generation that can keep the country running when I'm too old to be useful. In these days, when deciding how to have a sustainable population is an important issue, I might wonder at the wisdom of unfettered tax relief for those families with thirteen kids ... but giving support for limited number seems reasonable ... surely?
I just think it is all a much more complicated picture than simply complaining about the amount of tax we pay. Sometimes I wish I had some understanding of economics so all this stuff made sense.
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Marshy, sorry to disagree but....
In the UK we do not have a debt problem, we have a deficit problem. The total debt of HMG as it stands at present including all the money we had to borrow to buy stakes in the banks is quite manageable. The deficit, the amount that HMG needs to keep borrowing each year, is the problem.
The bail-out of the banks may in time turn out to be profitable depending on what HMG manages to sell its stakes for. Certainly, they will get back the great majority of the money they spent. The problem with the bankers was not greed as such, but excessive risk taking and bonus structures which encouraged risk taking. The Defence budget is only about 6% of the total budget.
Fred
Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.
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Thanks, Fred. I knew you'd know the answers!
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If you really want to view your tax situation as a personal profit and loss account (and it really isn't like that) consider this. Those kids growing up today are being fed and nurtured by their parents so that they can grow up to usefull, productive....taxpayers.
When you're sixty five they'll be paying for your medicare and they'll be paying more tax if they've got good jobs and an education. Consider the money you pay now as savings for your future.
Tax is the price we pay to live in a civil society under the rule of law and if you don't pay an elected government to maintain that, you'll be paying someone else for sure.
If you have problems with the notion of government and taxation in general let me commend Somalia to you, they in effect have neither and the weather's nice.
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What happens if you go to the ER and can't/don't pay?
Fred
Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.
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