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Facebook Paid 0.3% Taxes On $1.34 Billion Profits

theodp writes "Facebook is unlikely to make many new (non-investor) friends with reports that it paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion for 2011. 'Facebook operates a second subsidiary that is incorporated in Ireland but controlled in the Cayman Islands,' Kenneth Thomas explains. 'This subsidiary owns Facebook Ireland, but the setup allows the two companies to be considered as one for U.S. tax purposes, but separate for Irish tax purposes. The Caymans-operated subsidiary owns the rights to use Facebook's intellectual property outside the U.S., for which Facebook Ireland pays hefty royalties to use. This lets Facebook Ireland transfer the profits from low-tax Ireland to no-tax Cayman Islands.' In 2008, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg cited 'local world-class talent' as the motivation behind Facebook's choice of tax-haven Dublin for its international HQ. Similar tax moves by Google, Microsoft, and others who have sought the luck-of-the-Double-Irish present quite a dilemma for tax revenue-seeking governments. Invoking Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart's famous common sense definition of ethics ('Ethics is knowing the difference between what you have a right to do and what is right to do') is unlikely to sway corporations whose top execs send the message that tax avoidance is the right thing to do and something to be proud of."

592 comments

  1. People will say their duty is to shareholders... by KrazyDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but they're still actual human beings - not a faceless entity - who make the decisions and understand the ramifications, so they and all of the other corporations (and individuals) who seek tax havens are essentially privateers and definitely scumbags.

    --
    www.chihuahuarescue.com- Help to end dog abuse, abandonment and cruelty
  2. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol

  3. Luckily individual citizens don't do this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thats why Obama raising taxes on those that make 5 times more than the average citizen will solve all of our fiscal problems.

    In a simmilar way that his credit card legislation didn't result in banks raising fees and interest rates to recoup lost profits.

    1. Re:Luckily individual citizens don't do this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, you can't just say "Do the right thing" but have to sometimes tell the Marines to go kick in some doors and shoot some Limey bastards in the head.

      If Obama were half the tyrant that certain right-wing pundits make him out to be, he'd be doing some of the hard stuff rather than just pretending.

      It's not like they're going to come up with any worse criticisms. Might as well implement Agenda 10.5.

    2. Re:Luckily individual citizens don't do this. by Jeng · · Score: 1

      In a simmilar way that his credit card legislation didn't result in banks raising fees and interest rates to recoup lost profits.

      They didn't have to raise their fees, they raised their fees because they had an excuse to. If they thought they could charge more before that happened they would have charged more. Just because someone gives a reason as to why they are screwing you over that reason shouldn't be believed, but it should be acknowledged that you are being screwed over.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
  4. Re:Tax avoidance by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oh so you would like to pay for the police, the firemen, the roads, and everything else? We can argue about a bloated government, no doubt. But to argue that we should pay zero taxes make NO SENSE WHATSOEVER.

    For if we don't pay taxes you better be prepared to pay Vinny down the street a bit of money to make sure that you don't get mugged, robbed, or killed.

    Simply put, you sir are a nutter! Even Adam Smith knew we had to have a government and had to pay taxes!

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  5. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 5, Informative

    You live in a complex society where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life, where food is not full of melamine, where we have a military that enforces our economic interests, where roads improve the flow of goods and services.

    Pay for it.

    --
    BMO

  6. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    considering how asinine taxes have become, I can't blame them either.

    Taxes need to be reigned in to saner rates for the good of everyone.

  7. Simple solution, more government! by haystor · · Score: 2, Informative

    Government makes stupid laws.
    Companies follow those laws.
    This is the fault of the companies and requires more government.

    --
    t
    1. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't know why fixing the tax code, such that companies actually have to pay their goddamn taxes, is something we even fight over.

      The alternative is what we have now, where everyone fights tooth-and-nail over middle class tax hikes, which raises comparatively little revenue and actually affects those people. Why not just make the entities that are already supposed to pay their taxes, pay their taxes?

    2. Re:Simple solution, more government! by haystor · · Score: 1

      My point is that fixing the tax code is never in the direction of simplification. It always gets more complicated which means more people lobbying and more politicians taking more money.

      The low corporate taxes now *are* the result of many many fixes. Yet people go back to the government and want *more* fixes instead of rolling things back and simplifying it because they all want to keep their particular fixes (hey, I want my mortgage deduction!).

      --
      t
    3. Re:Simple solution, more government! by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      Government makes stupid laws.

      Ok, then maybe the government should just pass a Facebook user tax and be done with it? $100 a user id. Paid by any user in the US.

      Monty Python did an excellent sketch on taxes, with the point being that everyone wants to have taxes, that someone else has to pay. The pinnacle of the thought chain was:

      "I think we should tax foreigners living abroad!"

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    4. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Government makes stupid laws.
      Companies follow those laws.
      This is the fault of the companies and requires more government.

      The sad thing is the /tards don't recognize your sarcasm.

    5. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know why fixing the tax code, such that companies actually have to pay their goddamn taxes, is something we even fight over... Why not just make the entities that are already supposed to pay their taxes, pay their taxes?

      Did you even READ the fucking summary?

      "Facebook is unlikely to make many new (non-investor) friends with reports that it paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion for 2011.

      It's NON-US profits are what were subject to low rates. How does that affect it's US taxes?

    6. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes jackass. It's a double shelter. They escape being taxed on the revenue under US rates (35%) by opening up a shop in low-tax Ireland, then they fuck Ireland by paying a no-tax Cayman front-company for use of Facebook "intellectual property" to offset their liability in Ireland on non-US revenues. It's three entities that are all facebook, fucking the US, Ireland, and the taxpayers of both.

    7. Re:Simple solution, more government! by davester666 · · Score: 1

      You have just been nominated to lead the Republican party.

      You advocate:
      -corporations pay no tax
      -rich pay no more tax than poor [otherwise, why would they bother working at all]
      -poor people [say, households making less than 50K] will pay the vast majority of money

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    8. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Altrag · · Score: 2

      Or you know, enact laws to deincentivise the practice of tax havens. I couldn't begin to guess at the complexities needed to write it in useful legalese, but essentially: "money you earn in the country gets taxed in the country end of story."

      Of course, such a thing will never happen while a large number of politicians have ties (at least "campaign contributions" if not a direct link) to the very companies that benefit from tax havens.

    9. Re:Simple solution, more government! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'd tax Raquel Welch...and I have a feeling she'd tax me!"

    10. Re:Simple solution, more government! by MacDork · · Score: 1

      Companies write stupid laws.
      Government passes stupid laws.
      Companies follow those laws.
      This is the fault of the companies and requires better government.

      There, FTFY.

    11. Re:Simple solution, more government! by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      Liberals are OK with this, since Facebook is a liberal corporation. Tax breaks are only bad when used by conservative companies such as oil producers. This is the same reason you never hear liberals demonizing pro athletes or actors/singers for making a lot of money, but they will absolutely rip into wall streeters, many of which make less.

    12. Re:Simple solution, more government! by nobodie · · Score: 1

      It is true, so very true! Unfortunately you don't seem to really understand that the companies are following the laws, laws of the USA, laws of Ireland and laws of the Cayman Islands. The companies (plural, you understand plural, right?) are each sovereign corporations in those countries. They are free to act as any corporate individual can act under the laws of the country they are citizens of. So, the Google corp in the US chooses to pay the Google corp in Ireland crazy,massive amounts of cash to perform services for the US Google. They have the right to do that of course. The Google corp of Ireland choose to pay the Google corp in the Cayman Islands mad crazy insane cash to perform some other service for them. There is not problem with that either, it is their right.

      Unfortunately, my dear friends, no country has the right or the power to reach across the borders of a friendly, allied country (if you do it to an unfriendly country it is usually because of war) and tell them how to write their tax laws. I don't think you would want, say, the UK to reach into Washington DC and tell our lawmakers how they must write our tax laws do you?

      There is a solution to this of course. We could turn all tax law jurisdiction over to the United Nations so that we could have a unified tax system all over the world and the taxes could be utilized to improve the world for everyone. Wouldn't that be the best thing to do, for everyone?

      Hmm, funny, how much you hate that idea, very....funny...

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
  8. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's okay, peon weasels like you are just gonna have to pay more.

  9. FB tax avoidance by BancheroMedia · · Score: 2

    Tax avoidance is good business. But I would also want to make sure that USA companies don't totally offshore their revenues ... and jobs. This is why we need tax reform.

    1. Re:FB tax avoidance by hguorbray · · Score: 3, Informative

      If they are making money off US citizens who are in the US then it seems they should be paying US taxes, but I bet the line is blurred when they are selling 'services' such as allowing marketers access to FB users...

      Certainly when HP sells products overseas they are required by many of the countries in which they sell products to keep the bulk of the revenue for those products inside that country -it seems odd that US companies are allowed to get away with this in the US when they are not allowed to do this elsewhere?

      Here is something I found in the way of background -although the source is somewhat disreputable ;-)

      http://www.goldmansachs.com/our-thinking/topics/accounting-policy/tax-time-foreign-profits-PDF.pdf

      I guess one of the big differences is that most other countries use the 'Territorial' tax system in which the home country's taxation of foreign profits is only the difference between the foreign tax rate and the local one -afaiu

      Can someone without an axe to grind as far as laissez faire capitalism, etc explain how this works?

      thx

    2. Re:FB tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Real tax reform would be abolition of 99.4% of the IRS and the current unwieldy tax code. Crunch the tax code down to 10 or so pages (max) and watch compliance go through the roof if terms are reasonable. Bonus: less overhead from tens of thousands of useless highly paid IRS workers & mindless audits means businesses can focus more on productivity and driving this economy out of the rut this ginormous gov't has driven it into.

    3. Re:FB tax avoidance by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      Tax avoidance is good business.

      Wasn't the whole point of the American Revolution tax avoidance? Like, you know, "No taxation, without representation"? Take a look at Congress, do you feel represented?

      "The Economist" once wrote that taxation is like plucking geese for feathers. You want to get the maximum amount of feathers, with the minimum amount of fuss. If you pluck that goose too hard, it is going to fly off.

      Unfortunately for the small folks, only the rich folks and corporations can afford to fly to Ireland.

      And they don't fly Ryan Air, either.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    4. Re:FB tax avoidance by besalope · · Score: 2

      Home Country (Country A): Effective Tax Rate of 35%
      Foreign Country (Country B): Effective Tax Rate of 10%

      The company's operations grossed $100,000,000 (Home currency) in income (before taxes) while operating abroad in Country B. Based on the tax rates, the company would pay $10,000,000 to Country B for taxes. From there, that $10,000,000 is normally deducted from Country A's tax rate to avoid double taxing the income, so what would have been $35,000,000 becomes only $25,000,000 taken in by Country A.

      The Tax holidays in the Goldman article are playing off the above. In a tax holiday, Country A would not receive any tax revenue from foreign operations under the hope that the company would then reinvest that $25,000,000 as capital within Country A. While that works once in awhile, there is no way to guarantee where those funds will wind up. In the meantime, Country A has $25,000,000 less in tax revenue (not accounting for any taxation on funds that somehow make it back and incur charges either from Employee Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax for investors, or possible Sales Tax).

    5. Re:FB tax avoidance by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the whole point of the American Revolution tax avoidance? Like, you know, "No taxation, without representation"? Take a look at Congress, do you feel represented?

      Me? Oh hell no. But large corporations? They are certainly well represented! Where I only have one Representative (currently of the batshit teaparty variety), many corporations have dozens. And unlike me, they can actually get a face-to-face meeting whenever they want.

      Corporations and the wealthy pay such low tax rates precisely because they are well represented. In reply to some other arguments in this thread, this isn't "see! the government is so stupid it writes shitty laws." Instead, it's, "the government is so corrupt that these loopholes are intentional".

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    6. Re:FB tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure they are only following the tax laws. One thing that the Pres. Canidates never touched on is simply that business(es) will use the tax laws and their loopholes to pay only what is required and not one red cent more. People can bitch about the 1%ers all they want, but it is the tax codes and loopholes that need correction.

    7. Re:FB tax avoidance by Xeranar · · Score: 1

      But that's a really very poor metaphor in that you can still pluck that goose if you put a roof over it to stop it from flying. The ultimate answer is creating an incentive to stop the race to the bottom. Places like the caymans and other tax shelters should simply be ignored for international taxation. The largest corporations can play the shell game but they cannot hide profits all that well.

  10. Re:Tax avoidance by Nadaka · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tax avoidance impoverishes the job creators in order to transfer wealth to the leaching class.

    Job creators being the working people who actually create wealth through their labor, and consume goods to drive the capitalist system.

    Leaching class being the plutocrats who do nothing but extort and siphon off the labor of others.

  11. These aren't the rich you are looking for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, let's tax the wealthy people in the US making more than $125/$250k because they are the problem. In fact, please post more information about that top 1% causing the problem on Facebook using your iPhone again...

    The rich aren't the problem, these guys are the problem. If they want to do business in the US, they should be required to pay US tax rates for all income in the US. Period.

    1. Re:These aren't the rich you are looking for... by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      THANK-YOU!!! I used to work a hedge fund and talked to a guy who lived in Monaco and worked on tax avoidance schemes. He was not happy about the idea, but liked the work because it paid well. The issue here is that governments have to clamping down on this royalty kickback scheme.

      It is a really bogus idea. Here is how it works. You have a company, it does not matter what kind of company. This company produces a widget and sells it across the world. You open a subsidiary, and that subsidiary sells your widget. The subsidiary has to pay something for the widget. In the old days it was costs of subsidiary, and wholesale of the widget. Now its, wholesale of the widget, plus a royalty.

      The royalty is the kicker here. For it is a nebulous value that the company can define to be any feather I pull out of my arse. In most cases it basically eats all of the profits generated everywhere.

      Trying to get rid of this is hard for you would be circumventing tax law where you really need to be able to not be taxed on foreign income. What needs altering is the concept of royalty and the governments have to say, "royalty, see this middle finger, that is your royalty."

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    2. Re:These aren't the rich you are looking for... by besalope · · Score: 1

      These charges are known as "Transfer Pricing."

    3. Re:These aren't the rich you are looking for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they want to do business in the US, they should be required to pay US tax rates for all income in the US. Period.

      Apparently you were too lazy to even RTFS:

      "Facebook is unlikely to make many new (non-investor) friends with reports that it paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion for 2011.

      Kind of makes you a flaming idiot, eh?

  12. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right, actually. If the possibility is there, the smart thing is to take advantage of it. What's wrong is the tax system, not taking advantage of it.

  13. Re:Tax avoidance by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because it is flamebait! Some folks have this fantasy that you can get everything for nothing. Things cost money! As I was writing to the GP, sure we can argue about a bloated government. But to argue that tax avoidance is a good thing is not correct either.

    Police, military, firemen, judges, etc, etc all cost money. Adam Smith who was a capitalist wrote in his papers that government and taxes were needed. The question is how much government, not whether or not government there is a government.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  14. The solution to offshoring profits to tax havens by swb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...is to pass a law which states that the government will not provide material support or assistance to companies who offshore their profits.

    Your container ship full of product headed to Europe gets hijacked by Somali pirates? Well, you can either ask the Liberian government (your ship's flag of convenience) or the Cayman Islands government (your international HQ) to help rescue your ship.

    Website breached or attacked? The FBI isn't going to help.

    The Chinese pirating your IP out the back door? Sorry, the State Department won't be lobbying China on your behalf.

    You want a real government's help? OK, well then you have to pay taxes to the real government. Having a shiny sign on some skyscraper where 1% of your workforce lives, 50% of your profit is generated and nearly none of your income tax is paid means you're really not a local entity and won't get the government on your side.

  15. Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems logical to me. Ireland is happy to get 4 million that they wouldn't otherwise get at all. Ireland's simply undercutting other governments. Makes sense.

    But if you want to collect tax dollars from companies that operate in the .U.S.A., you might want to assess their global revenues, period. Global companies paying global rates makes perfect sense.

    Otherwise, you're looking at a future without tax revenue. Good luck with that. Let me know how it goes.

    On the other hand, you can look at this as simple capitalism. Ireland made a better offer. You lost. Suck it up, or learn to compete.

    Either way, don't bring ethics into it. You're talking about taking someone's money for "the greater good". And you're forcing them to participate. If you're going to discuss ethics, you might want to start with your own.

    1. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by BitterOak · · Score: 2

      But if you want to collect tax dollars from companies that operate in the .U.S.A., you might want to assess their global revenues, period. Global companies paying global rates makes perfect sense.

      Problem is, many of the large companies that operate in the U.S.A. operate in many countries. If all of them followed the same policy and taxed global revenues, the total tax rates they'd have to pay would exceed 100% pretty rapidly.

      Additionally, such a policy would make it extremely unattractive to operate in the U.S. at all. So Facebook, Google, etc., would simply close their U.S. campuses and move them into Canada. The U.S. would not only lose the employment those companies provide, but also the income tax revenues from the individuals who work there.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    2. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      why tax abstract entities at all? Set CIT to 0 and tax the money when it goes to live people if you really have to. People are material and it's them who use roads, police protection and what not. The corps on the other hand are an idea that can uproot and move with few strokes of a pen, good like pinning it down.

    3. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Exactly. So these global companies would need to choose a place to operated -- if all of the countries followed the same policy. That's the point. All of these tax games happen by splitting up a company into multiple places, and playing those places against each other.

      You can't have it all ways. You can't get money, allow everyone to get money, have the company pay money, and not control where they are.

      At some point, you need to either globalize the policy -- having all governments agree to an umbrella concept -- or globalize the company.

      Think about it this way. How would you tax a outerspace alien with customers on earth? You either wouldn't, or you'd have government enforcement on their site, or you'd be on their side.

      That last one is the easiest thing in this case. Having Facebook say that 30% of their customers are .U.S.A. citizens, would mean that 30% of their revenue is taxable by .U.S.A. governments. Then all you need to do is define a facebook customer, and count them. Since dollars are spent by customers, there's an audit trail every time.

      But doing nothing differently for decades is exactly what the .U.S.A. likes to do. Yesterday an episode of All in the Family was on from 1972. And it had the same arguments for and against gun control as CNN's had for the last two weeks. It's been 40 years, and not a damn thing has improved.

      If your laws don't get updated, then they become totally and completely useless. Welcome to personal privacy. Your laws say that you can't break into someone's house, but it's ok to watch from the street. So x-ray cameras from the street are perfectly ok -- even though they see through walls.

      Welcome to checks and balances.
      You've ensured that no one can screw with things by ensuring that those things can't be changed.

      Let's see what happens as a result of newtown over the next two months. I suspect that absolutely nothing will wind up changing.

      Leaving me with my new question for your country: what will it take to change things? If 20 children and millions of tax dollars and unemployment and failing banks and failing car companies and defaulting mortgages and falling dollar and finacial cliffs and reducing population, aren't enough to change things, just tell me what would be enough so I know what to expect.

    4. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

      Either way, don't bring ethics into it. You're talking about taking someone's money for "the greater good". And you're forcing them to participate.

      Taking someone's money for the "greater good" is called tithing, and it's optional in the U.S. Taxes are taking someone's money to fund the functions of government that the people deem necessary, such as providing armed forces to defend the natural resources from which businesses extract wealth, or highways so businesses can transport their goods at higher speeds and lower costs than any time in history, or a court system to enforce contracts and enable businesses to trust one another.

      So taxes are for your own good. By the way, in a democracy, sometimes the consensus decision is the one you disagree with. Suck it up, indeed.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    5. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats right, you can't have it both ways. You can't have the highest corporate tax rate on the planet, the harshest regulations on the planet, treat every corporation like they are the enemy, and then expect them to pay for stuff you want that they don't care about.

      So what you want, you get. Now you are complaining about the consequences of your decisions. Suck it up and take responsibility for your voting habits. Only idiots will now pay US corporate tax rates and those who can't get away like Facebook move to other coutries. Enjoy your unemployment and lack of tax revenue, its exactly what you asked for.

    6. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by icebike · · Score: 1

      THIS.

      Thankfully governments realize this, even when the naive tax payer doesn't.
      A 10% tax on global revenue by every country you do business in means zero revenue left for companies that have offices in 10 different countries.

      If the idea was to eliminate multi-national corporations this would be the tool of choice. There are a lot of people to whom this sounds just fine.
      But some of us like using Google even if we don't live in the US, and some of us like driving German cars even though we don't live in Germany.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    7. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      But it's illogical because you don't allow companies to opt out of something that they've designed their business to avoid. My business doesn't use roads, transport, or armed forces of any kind. Quite frankly, my business doesn't use the court system to enforce contracts either. But you have me still paying for those things as a business -- instead of encouraging others to become less dependent on such things.

    8. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming that when you say "you" you don't mean me. Since I don't live in your country and don't have any of your problems. I simply observe from an outside perspective -- nad I see a lot of carp in your drinking water.

    9. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The easy solution is to do what the US does for private citizens. Tax world-wide income, but give tax credit for foreign taxes paid for operating in those countries.

      You already paid $4 million to Ireland? No problem! You get a credit for that! Only $2.9 billion left to pay!

    10. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, what will happen is that Google would not be able to operate in Ireland, ie they would not be able to carry adverts for Irish businesses, other countries would then follow. People are still free to use Google, but their income source from adverts is removed, they could also not sell any of their pay for services, again loss of income. Googles income comes from economies where they have consumers, NOT from tax havens and they would prefer to loose the havens than the consumers.

      It comes down to would Google prefer to pay local taxes or be unable to operate in any all countries in the world. There is no point is showing the people in Ireland adverts for US only companies. And where Google drops out, Bing, Yahoo, Apple or someone else who figures that having 70% of the profit is better than having 0% of it makes a lot of sense will simply step in.

      Yes, governments will learn to compete, they after all are the ONLY ones who can make the rules.
      And the rules will go something like this " We have taxes, you will pay them, if you don't like them no one is forcing you into doing business in our country, if you do not pay them you will no longer be welcome in our country".

      And they can get away with doing this because they KNOW that if Google leaves there will be a lot of others willing to take up the slack who are willing to pay the taxes, a local company employing local people perhaps.

      Google and the other multinationals on the other have already lost, governments all around the world are waking up to how they are being ripped off and its only a matter of when, not if.

    11. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by olau · · Score: 2

      But it's illogical because you don't allow companies to opt out of something that they've designed their business to avoid.

      As the GP said: Suck it up. There's a balance between having people pay for what they use and having the government fund things. And that balance is not decided by you alone. Not paying is the same as going to a potluck and not bringing food. If you want to participate, you need to bring something even if you don't eat most of the stuff others bring. Otherwise people will dislike you.

      Also, your world-view seems a bit shortsighted. Maybe your business doesn't use roads, but chances are your customers do. Same with courts - there needs to be consequences for the misdemeanors, and the fact that courts exist probably also affects your business relations even if you never see the inside of a court room.

      You can't just pick individual elements out and pretend the world would be the same.

    12. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 0

      Can't have a rational discussion with a person who won't introduce themselves. So I'm not going to bother reading your post while you remain anonymous. Get a hello-my-name-is sticker, or I'm just not interested.

    13. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      You're making it sound as though I want the world to be the same. Or require it to be the same. Or wouldn't benefit from it being different.

      "If you're going to send someone to save the world, make sure they like it the way it is."

    14. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by CaptainLard · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ok so Ireland gets $4M they wouldn't have otherwise got as a tax haven. But how is that working out for them? Aren't they on the verge of bankruptcy? Did they become a tax haven before or after their economy went to shit? How is being a tax haven helping them out of it? I realize its a complex problem with many causes all interconnected through the global economy. But can someone tell me if its really a sound financial policy to reduce your tax rate to virtually nothing? A big point of contention for the US is it has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world (not counting exemptions, and breaks). Is that the only thing keeping us afloat? How are the tax havens doing financially when corporations just register their companies there for the low rates and don't actually hire anyone aside from the guy that checks the PO box?

    15. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by jd.schmidt · · Score: 1

      The ethical part isn't about using a loophole available, it is about preventing it from being fixed.

      We know about the problem and solutions are available (if you think it is a problem). The ethics come in when corporations use their power to protect favored loopholes that do net damage to the country even if they benefit themselves.

      For example the majority can use their voting power to deny rights to a minority, but depending on the situation we would likely consider it unethical to do so. In the very same manner rich or powerful interests can likewise get laws passed that help only themselves, but we would also consider this unethical in many cases.

      Of course not everyone things this a problem.

    16. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by obarel · · Score: 1

      Then make sure that corporations can have no assets. After all, they're just abstract entities.

    17. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by wish+bot · · Score: 1

      Who do you sell your products/services to?

      --
      lemonade was a popular drink and it still is
    18. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe your business doesn't use those things directly but it benefits greatly from the fact that its customers have access to those things.

    19. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      The US can always make a better offer through superior firepower, extraordinary rendition, and intelligence gathering if it really mattered. So the US hasnt lost anything and Ireland can lose whatever was improperly heading that direction.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    20. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      When those companies start heading for the exit, citizens eventually will ask for and get government action to halt that.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    21. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming that when you say "you" you don't mean me. Since I don't live in your country and don't have any of your problems. I simply observe from an outside perspective -- nad I see a lot of carp in your drinking water.

      Carpe diem^Hpecuniam.

    22. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by tftp · · Score: 1

      As the GP said: Suck it up.

      Sure; and sucking it up prevents you from hiring an additional employee. Instead the money goes to the government where it will be most likely wasted on one boondoggle or another. Last time I checked, there is not a single country in the world that even plans to attack the USA by means of armed forces - and there haven't been any since 1941. Still, the USA maintains the second largest army on the planet (second only to China, whose population is 4 times as large.) Why should the business pay for this army when it is perfectly clear to anyone with a brain that this expense is pointless at best, but commonly disastrous because it allows politicians to bomb other countries for no particular reason?

      These taxes that you pay are also redirecting the money from people who want to work (but there are no jobs for them) to people who don't want to work at all. This promotes laziness in the society. In the end nobody will be working, and everyone will be demanding his daily bread. Where will that bread come from?

      Nobody should reject reasonable taxes that are responsibly spent on the needs of the community (such as the country.) However taxes today are anything but reasonable, and they are not responsibly spent. The whole idea of armed presence in Iraq, for example, resulted in something that could have been achieved by just blowing Saddam up in his palace, with just one warhead (if you really were that itching to kill him - don't know what for.) In the end we have exactly the same outcome: another strongman.

      Maybe your business doesn't use roads, but chances are your customers do.

      Roads are paid for by road users; they pay for them through fuel taxes and through operating licenses. If your business needs UPS to deliver the goods, be sure that UPS is taxed through the nose for their fleet of trucks. Everyone only should pay for services that he actually consumes. If someone wants to also pay into a common insurance fund, they are welcome to do so - but the government should have no part in that.

      there needs to be consequences for the misdemeanors

      Wouldn't it be more logical to charge the people who use the court services? If John and Jane are having a divorce, why should Oracle pay for that?

      You can't just pick individual elements out and pretend the world would be the same.

      The world shouldn't be the same. As it is, the business in the "first world" countries is dying, smothered by the red tape. It is already more profitable to not work there than to work. This world has no future; but China, with its aggressive and largely unrestrained economy, had a lot of success already, and will be the next leader of the world within a decade. The USA will be known as the old, useless men with a beggar's bowl in one hand and a nuclear missile in another. (This will not last, by the way.)

    23. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by tftp · · Score: 1

      How are the tax havens doing financially when corporations just register their companies there for the low rates and don't actually hire anyone aside from the guy that checks the PO box?

      They are at very least getting the income from the rent of the PO box and taxes from the salary of the guy who checks the mail. Those monies would otherwise be not there at all. In reality there are more people involved; and since those tax-free havens are small countries, this constitutes a serious creation of jobs. Those companies need banks, modern communication, some offices (even small ones.) You cannot process a $1B of income without having at least some accountants there. There is absolutely no drawback for the host country.

    24. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      But that in itself is a problem. If your system is based on a vote where minority votes don't count, then it isn't democratic. That's been my complaint about most elections -- most votes don't count. All of the losing votes don't count -- in each district. And all additional winning votes don't count. So in the end, the majority of votes don't count.

      For example, in a simple 10-8 result, the 8 don't count, and the 10th doesn't count. 9-0 are the only votes that counted. so 9 votes counted, and 9 other votes didn't count. Spread that across districts or ridings or states or regions, and a huge percentage of the votes just don't count. That's not democracy. That's a country club.

    25. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      My services are sold to my clients. Very little travel occurs, and none is fundamentally required. Payment is made either after completion based on client satisfaction, or contracts state that arbitration will settle disputes -- not courts.

    26. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      and it allso benefits greatly from the fact that other stars exist. however, we're talking about DIRECTLY benefiting. Not butterflies in Japan. My clients are not courthouses, not do they build roads.

      and if you believe what you're saying, you might try putting your name onto it.

    27. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      why tax abstract entities at all? Set CIT to 0 and tax the money when it goes to live people if you really have to.

      Do you at all believe that if corporations were completely untaxed that any more money would be going to anyone else but the shareholders? Who of course are citizens, but even then, it would be a very select subgroup. I give better odds of there really being a Santa Claus.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    28. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
      So I guess that you only have to obey laws that you like? You don't need the courts, or the roads. Perhaps ypou could move to Somalia, they don't even have any Government.

      Taxes are how we buy civilization. We need to make sure they are spent wisely, but somewhere over the years, they have becomed defined as an evil thing.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    29. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Do you at all believe that if corporations were completely untaxed that any more money would be going to anyone else but the shareholders?

      And since the shareholders are the owners of the corporation, this would be bad because?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    30. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      When those companies start heading for the exit, citizens eventually will ask for and get government action to halt that.

      What are you suggesting? A big electric fence?

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    31. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by beckett · · Score: 1

      how about laws limiting capital flight?

    32. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      how about laws limiting capital flight?

      Companies will just start keeping their money in foreign banks.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    33. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      you've totally missed the whole company vs citizen issue. read harder.

    34. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      The world shouldn't be the same. As it is, the business in the "first world" countries is dying, smothered by the red tape. It is already more profitable to not work there than to work. This world has no future; but China, with its aggressive and largely unrestrained economy, had a lot of success already, and will be the next leader of the world within a decade. The USA will be known as the old, useless men with a beggar's bowl in one hand and a nuclear missile in another. (This will not last, by the way.)

      So you advocate the return of company-town slavery by virtue of selectively giving freedoms to business while forgetting about the people that work for them? That economic "freedom" that you see in the Third World is not the kind of freedom that the US retains. Then again, you're probably in some country that receives ill-gotten production normally done in a First World country such as the US and hoping for a decline. That, or you're someone that has a strong distaste for the military-industrial complex that does its part to keep the country(and its allies) well-protected and well-geared.

      The worst that will happen is that the US will have a very strong military, a very pissed off populace, and the willingness to use a large stockpile of weapons to reclaim what was taken from them. China(and the rest of the multinational-enabled Third World) will have to contend with the idea that copying everyone else's stuff and using slave labor will not put them ahead of anyone. In no circumstance will the US be wanting for anything aside from a new enemy to vanquish - China will just have to be content with being the next deer on the wall.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    35. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by czth · · Score: 2

      If his customers use the roads, let his customers pay for them, and don't extort him.

      "You were robbed by a mugger, and he's threatening to burn down your house and rape your dog if you don't keep paying him? He's using the money he gets from you to mow my and my friend's lawn every Tuesday - we voted! - so SUCK IT UP!"

    36. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We had the low corporate taxes long before the economy died. The low taxes are generally seen to be responsible for jump starting our economy. Whats commonly referred to as the Celtic tiger. The tax is actually around 10%. (posting anonymous due to moderating)

    37. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You're talking about taking someone's money for "the greater good". And you're forcing them to participate."

      I seem to recall that that the "greater" community guaranteed the value of said money and forced everyone to participate already. And then all the peripheral services and enforcement and so on. It seems wise that it would do so for the "greater good" of itself, rather than specific members, because, again, *everyone* is already forced to participate.

    38. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "On the other hand, you can look at this as simple capitalism. Ireland made a better offer. You lost. Suck it up, or learn to compete."

      A race to the bottom? Eventually set your corporate tax rate to zero, or lose? That's the logical outcome.

      No thanks. I don't believe in corporate welfare, or in shifting ALL the tax burden to individual taxpayers rather than sharing it between companies and individuals. I'd sooner say a company is *banned* from doing any business in my country unless they set up an office that will be taxed at the local rate, and all revenue within the country will be subject to a minimum tax rate. If they don't want to do business in my country under those terms, they don't have to.

      That being said, I do believe corporate tax rates should be reasonably competitive, but there are limits.

    39. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Might want to introduce yourself, if you're going to express an opinion. If you aren't willing to put your name on it, you probably don't believe it.

    40. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Hmm, someone not willing to put their name onto their opinion. Hmm, I'm not willing to waste my time reading it.

    41. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by NewYork · · Score: 1

      Unlike capitalism, globalization is zero-sum.

    42. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Seems logical to me. Ireland is happy to get 4 million that they wouldn't otherwise get at all. Ireland's simply undercutting other governments. Makes sense.

      But if you want to collect tax dollars from companies that operate in the .U.S.A., you might want to assess their global revenues, period. Global companies paying global rates makes perfect sense.

      Otherwise, you're looking at a future without tax revenue. Good luck with that. Let me know how it goes.

      On the other hand, you can look at this as simple capitalism. Ireland made a better offer. You lost. Suck it up, or learn to compete.

      Either way, don't bring ethics into it. You're talking about taking someone's money for "the greater good". And you're forcing them to participate. If you're going to discuss ethics, you might want to start with your own.

      Especially as humans are already taxed on global revenue.

      If you let the lowest tax country win then no corporation anywhere will actually pay any tax.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    43. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by cavebison · · Score: 1

      Either way, don't bring ethics into it. You're talking about taking someone's money for "the greater good".

      That makes no sense. The whole idea of taxing income is to subsidise government which is - ideally - there to help everyone. Funding law enforcement, health, education, roads and other infrastructure for everyone to use. If that's not an exercise in ethics, then what is it?

    44. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      read harder. no one's talking about not taxing income.

    45. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Ireland is happy to get 4 million that they wouldn't otherwise get at all.

      If I were an Irish entrepreneur running some kind of social networking site and noticed that the biggest player in the market was making much more money but paying far less tax than me I wouldn't be very happy.

      Non-multinational companies that can't avoid taxes as efficiently lose out. High street retailers are not just upset because Amazon doesn't have their overheads, they are upset because where they pay 20% sales tax on a product Amazon can pay 0% by shipping from outside the country, and then avoid paying any corporation tax on top of that.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    46. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Like I said. You might want to change your tax laws.

      Don't just respond to one sentence. Stop quoting things and start having your own full opinion that can stand on its own.

      Next time, read harder.

    47. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Xeranar · · Score: 1

      Why do people assume anybody means 10% on the whole? It's always been clearly based on revenue generated inside of a country. So if facebook generated 80% of their profits here we could take taxes based on their profits made here.

    48. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Xeranar · · Score: 1

      Really? You're a liar. Now sit down and shut up. To put it bluntly your customers use them. You receive the benefit of the existence of it all. This is the problem of discussing economics on slashdot and non-economists as they tend to take the most literal and short-sighted view possible. Not to memtion on slashdot the idiotic ideology spewn. Facebook could have been created in another first world country but wasn't created there. The main owners and founders are in the US and the HQ is here. They should have no problem paying taxes for the benefits they received both before and after the fact. The same should apply to ireland.

    49. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      Then make sure that corporations can have no assets. After all, they're just abstract entities.

      As long as they pay sales tax to purchase their assets, why shouldn't they have them?

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    50. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by obarel · · Score: 1

      But how can a company buy assets if it doesn't have any money? Oh, sorry, of course it does, because it has income which is generated from selling things to customers. So why shouldn't it pay income tax on its income? Ah, because it's an abstract entity that should not pay tax (as the post I replied to suggested).

      Alternatively, if companies don't pay taxes, they shouldn't enjoy benefits such as protection of laws or electricity provided by infrastructure that is paid for by taxes. Why should the general public pay the salaries of lawmakers if they're going to pass laws in favour of companies that don't pay taxes?

      The concept of a corporation was invented to allow a group of people to shift the risk of enterprise into an abstract entity. But just because it's an abstract entity doesn't mean that it's not part of the economy.

    51. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point about ethics is just plain, silly. Ethics absolutely applies here and furthermore redistribution of wealth from fictitious entities (corporations since their charter is to progress non material goals) to real entities (government organizations since their charter is progress material goals, mainly me and you) is an ethical debate of grandiose magnitude.

    52. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      great job saying nothing with no argument to explain why. Maybe you should try putting your name onto your opinion; that may improve the specificity with which you make an argument.

    53. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      But how can a company buy assets if it doesn't have any money? Oh, sorry, of course it does, because it has income which is generated from selling things to customers. So why shouldn't it pay income tax on its income? Ah, because it's an abstract entity that should not pay tax (as the post I replied to suggested).

      Ultimately, the money is either paid as a salary to someone (in which case they pay income tax), or it is used to purchase something (in which case sales tax is paid).

      Alternatively, if companies don't pay taxes, they shouldn't enjoy benefits such as protection of laws or electricity provided by infrastructure that is paid for by taxes.

      The company should be paying real estate tax if it owns property. That should pay for infrastructure. If it uses electricity, I'm pretty sure it's paying for it.

      Why should the general public pay the salaries of lawmakers if they're going to pass laws in favour of companies that don't pay taxes?

      The concept of a corporation was invented to allow a group of people to shift the risk of enterprise into an abstract entity. But just because it's an abstract entity doesn't mean that it's not part of the economy.

      It is a part of the economy, but it's an intermediate part. The money is either spent to purchase something (sales tax), or paid to someone (personal income tax).

      Now, taxes can be used to incentivize behavior. Perhaps it's in the national interest for companies to spend their money immediately, in which case, it should be taxed, to incentivize companies to spend instead of turning a profit.

      Personally, I think some sort of fairly low tax, say maybe 10% of income, would be appropriate, based on employee pay. So if a company had most of its work force in the US but tried to shift the profit to an offshore subsidiary with only a couple people staffing an office, the bulk of it would still be taxable. And if a company tried to maliciously shift its profits to avoid paying taxes, it ought to be punitively taxed, say 50% of profit. Hopefully that would eliminate all the economic waste of the tax avoidance industry.

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    54. Re:Maybe your tax laws ought to be adjusted by joshio · · Score: 1

      why tax abstract entities at all? Set CIT to 0 and tax the money when it goes to live people if you really have to. People are material and it's them who use roads, police protection and what not. The corps on the other hand are an idea that can uproot and move with few strokes of a pen, good like pinning it down.

      I think that, in theory, this makes the most sense. However, doesn't corporate personhood mean that corporations would essentially be getting access to government resources free of charge?

  16. I applaud them by Gunfighter · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Tax avoidance is a good thing. Kudos to Google and every other company who keeps the government's thieving paws out of their coffers by any and all legal means available to them.

    --
    -- Stu

    /. ID under 2,000. I feel old now.
    1. Re:I applaud them by Wookact · · Score: 1

      Gunfighter does not use roads. Gunfighter does not depend on any sort of regulation. Gunfighter is a self made man, and has never relied on anything that society/civilization provides. Gunfighter is also either naive, or an idiot.

    2. Re:I applaud them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until a crime is committed against you where you then demand a government funded police force, a government funded justice system and a government funded penal system takes up your problem.

    3. Re:I applaud them by Gunfighter · · Score: 1

      I use roads, including both private and public roads.
      I depend on regulation from both the government and private entities.
      I am, in some ways, a self made man; however, that's not to say I have not relied on others to get to where I am today.
      You may think me naive or an idiot if you like. Keep in mind, though, that the government already taxes the income earned by the individuals who work at the company. The company's retained earnings will eventually be taxed when they are paid out in the form of dividends or wages down the line.... or I guess the company could just lay off a bunch of people and hand the money over to the government as a corporate tax now? Personally, I think the money is better off staying with the company and they owe it to their employees and other stakeholders to try and make sure they can continue to make payroll and deliver the goods and services expected of them. If that means taking legal steps to avoid taxes, then that's what needs to happen.

      P.S. Your comment made me laugh when it conjured up this image:
      http://184.173.194.236/~worm64/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/statistRoadsZombies.jpg

      --
      -- Stu

      /. ID under 2,000. I feel old now.
    4. Re:I applaud them by Mr.CRC · · Score: 1

      The problem with your argument is that you assume that the ONLY way these things can be provided is involuntarily by government via taxation. There is no basis for asserting that this assumption is valid. Thus, your argument is void.

    5. Re:I applaud them by obarel · · Score: 1

      So people get taxed at the point of earning, but companies get taxed at the point of spending? Why is that?

      I suggest amending the definition of a company so that it cannot own any assets (nor be liable for anything). Get the shareholders and/or employees to own the company, pay taxes at the point of earning, be directly liable for the company's actions etc. That'll solve many problems, and once that's done, I will see absolutely no reason to tax companies (because they will not earn anything and not own anything).

      And I'm sorry, but I don't buy the argument of "do you prefer that employees lose their jobs?" Many companies have folded and many people have already lost their jobs - having the abstract concept of a company doesn't guarantee anything. The concept was invented to allow people to invest in an enterprise, enjoy the profits and let it sink if it needs to (instead of the owners being directly liable). It's a great concept if you want humanity to take risks (on which progress depends), but it does have a price.

    6. Re:I applaud them by dryeo · · Score: 1

      It has been business that has demanded government provide roads, firefighters, schooling etc. Business demands socializing these things that aren't cost effective. Insurance companies used to pay for firefighters. Then there was a couple of bad fires and the insurance companies demanded government take care of it. Business wanted cheap roads to move their goods so they demanded government roads. They wanted an educated work force as workers who can read are more productive so they demanded government run schools.
      Here we are now, a society geared for socializing infrastructure for the benefit of business and they don't want to pay for it.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    7. Re:I applaud them by czth · · Score: 1

      I'd rather pay and use fair courts, or at least ones that pretend to it and can compete on reputation (hah, government "justice" system) and a protection service that doesn't spend most of its time and my money harassing people for using drugs and passing yet more laws against victimless "crime" to enrich public/pseudo-private prison owners/operators - but that same government "justice" system doesn't let me opt out of its depredations.

  17. Re:Tax avoidance by sqrt(2) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like to pay taxes, with them I buy civilization.

    That a lot of deluded "rugged individualists" falsely think they are entirely self-made and have no obligation to pay back into society amuses me. Seeing them frustrated and resentful at paying taxes makes me smile.

    --
    If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  18. And you are surprised? by s.petry · · Score: 1

    Come on people, get with it! You realize that Facebook is owned by a member of the "family" right? Look at who the owner is related to, and what they are doing for the Government. I'll bet that after they get paid by the Government for spying, that US citizens actually pay them to exist and be a business.

    /sigh

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  19. EU and the rest screwing themselves over? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How long will it be until laws are enacted that income sales to entities in a given nation results in deemed presence in said nation? And moving money from external entity results in taxable income (minus tax already paid to other jurisdictions)

    The current setup is clearly unsustainable. It is nothing less than leeching of money from a nation without returning it back into circulation (which is done by either taxes or wages).

  20. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then have the military invade Cayman Islands, Ireland, and get back the said-to-be due money.

  21. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by mumblestheclown · · Score: 0

    naive.

  22. Re:Tax avoidance by Richy_T · · Score: 1

    Good luck with the police thing.

  23. You would do the same... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if you could.

    But we can't.

    That the rich and powerful get to step around (or plainly just stomp over) the law is the whole reason this is alarming.
    I, for one, am not complaining about the lack of "ethics" involved in tax evasion, but rather about how the system seems to be EXTREMELY BIASED towards the rich.

    There is something rotten when in a given system the more powerful/rich you get the less you contribute to its development(proportionally).
    It almost seems like the rules were designed to distance the elite from the commons, further pushing the former up and the later down.

  24. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by ohnocitizen · · Score: 1

    How about we just close the loopholes? If you have a US based company that is clearly operating a subsidiary, that subsidiary (even foreign) will be subject to US taxation. Far simpler strategy.

  25. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Some folks have this fantasy that you can get everything for nothing."

    Some folks wish they got a lot less from government.
    Some folks have this fantasy that they are entitled to someone else's money.

  26. Re:Tax avoidance by KiloByte · · Score: 2

    A vast majority of tax money, though, goes either to waste or to things that are outright harmful for the taxpayer. And even for police and judges, a big part is spent gathering the driving without disrupting traffic flow tax, and to patent/etc litigation, respectively.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  27. Re:Tax avoidance by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    You are raising an argument that does not exist. I wrote very clearly we can argue about a bloated government, but not about taxes. You are saying that I somehow want people to pay high taxes for other people. I did not make this point and thus please stick to the argument.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  28. Hypocrisy writ large by jmichaelg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I suspect the poster, as most people, choose not to pay more tax than they're required to pay.

    1. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by DRMShill · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The difference is the poster probably doesn't have powerful lobbying groups to make it that way.

    2. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, but I suspect the poster, like most people, doesn't have the option of transferring all his money to a shell corporation in the Cayman Islands so he doesn't have to pay tax on it. If he did that, the IRS would probably put him in jail.

      The law needs to be changed so that it is fair; either he should be able to do that, or Facebook should not.

    3. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by gbjbaanb · · Score: 3, Interesting

      actually, you're probably paying way more tax that you're required to pay - as seen by the recent scandals in the UK where various celebrities simply pay their money into an offshore account owned by a privately-held company and then take out a loan from said company, thus meaning their income is roughly 0, and therefore they don't have any tax to pay.

      See, these schemes are quite legal, and the celebrities involved weren't required to pay any tax on an income on nothing, so why do you pay tax?

      'course, said schemes are incredibly dodgy and caused a lot of backlash from the public who do see tax as a necessary evil, and rich people being able to scam their way to not paying anything as an even greater evil. The only real solution is to simplify the tax laws considerably so clever accountants cannot come up with these workarounds and loopholes. Oh, and to refuse to recognise the tax status of countries that have 0% tax systems, or to make companies that do "set up shop" (usually a post-office box) in these countries have a certain percentage of their workforce be employed there.

    4. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by jd.schmidt · · Score: 1

      You should ask if they contributed to the Presidential election fund. If so, they paid more taxes than required.

    5. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you being deliberately obtuse?
      There's a difference between underpaying what is expected and overpaying what is expected. I'm in the 40% income tax bracket in the UK, and will be careful not to pay 41%. That's not the same thing as paying 0% tax in the UK because I've rented a post box somewhere where I keep a pair of shoes and claim it's my main residence, and pay a rate of income tax which happens to be favourable. All the while expecting the government where I don't officially live to provide roads, police, fire, schools (and the NHS in my case).

      CAPTCHA: Morally - rather apt.

    6. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hypocrisy no.. Envy.. But, come on, who do you think writes tax law anyway?

    7. Re:Hypocrisy writ large by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also sure the poster paid more than 0.3% tax however.

  29. That's money that *didn't* fund the Patriot Act! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or warrantless wiretaps. Or hoovering every damn email, text, and phone call in the entire USA.

    Good for them.

    Because crap like the Patriot Act is what higher taxes are used for.

    So keep voting for candidates who want to "invest" your money. Keep telling yourself the candidates YOU vote for really want "good government". Sure they do.

  30. Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by pubwvj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Making corporations paying taxes on profits is double taxation and should not be done. Rather the profits should pass through to the owners (investors) and then the investors should pay taxes as if that was their earned income. Any retained earnings by the corporation (profits not passed through to investors) should be taxed as if it were earned income. This includes paying SS, Medicare, Medicate, workman's comp, federal, state and local income taxes.

    While we're at it lets eliminate all the loopholes, subsidies and deductibles on the personal income taxes as well.

    1. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US should get rid of all taxes and the IRS along with them. The federal government will simply PRINT (electronically) the money it needs. Anyone using US dollars will then be taxed. Don't like that? Then don't use US currency.

    2. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you're a billionaire yourself, and part of a group of similarly minded people with the same resources and influence, I don't see that happening. The people working that broken system, are the same ones that made it that way.

      But what I'm really surprised is why this is news at all, it's been done for decades.

    3. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by swillden · · Score: 2

      Any retained earnings by the corporation (profits not passed through to investors) should be taxed as if it were earned income.

      That's not necessary. Profits not paid out as dividends get passed through to investors another way, in the form of higher share values. If investors are taxed on capital gains, they'll pay those taxes when the gains are realized. Plus, eventually the corporation will either spend that money or pay it out, at which point it will be taxed.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    4. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      The tax system is the way it is because it gives power to legislators, who then "trade" their powers to all concentrations of capital.

      They will never give up that power.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    5. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by skelly33 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Making corporations paying taxes on profits is double taxation and should not be done. Rather the profits should pass through to the owners (investors) and then the investors should pay taxes as if that was their earned income."

      As I have no mod points I will simply bump this post with a response. This is an interesting assertion that I have not heard before. Anyone have any solid counter-arguments? I'm not sure I buy the whole "double-taxation" aspect - where is it doubled? If you are referring to the revenue coming into the company being taxed and then paying out to employees who are also taxed on income, then that situation is false. The cost of wages is a tax deduction for the company and they would not be taxed on those dollars that are paid out as an operating expense.

      Regardless, I think the premise falls in line with the argument that "corporations are not people", and therefore should not be able to own property, have rights, or, in this case, be taxable. It's the owners of the company who bear those resources/responsibilities.Personally, it seems to me that eliminating corporate tax on profits would substantially benefit the growth of a company and could consequently lead to a number of beneficial side effects including higher employment rates, higher wages, and overall national economic growth. It would most certainly help small businesses which struggle the most and which are among the top sources of employment in the U.S. Since the biggest players are already skirting around this responsibility anyway, why not formalize the model for the betterment of all?

    6. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The double taxation is because income is taxed first as corporate income and then as capital gains (by the shareholders).

      I'm surprised you've not heard this argument before. It's not exactly new. Another problem with corporate income taxes is that corporations don't pay taxes. Their customers and employees do, in the form of higher prices and reduced salaries respectively. A tax on a corporation is just a hidden flat tax on individuals. Not just a flat tax, either; a flat tax with no deductions, exemptions, credits, refunds, rebates, or any other way to stop it from screwing over the poor.

    7. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Eliminating corporate taxes might have some benefits (that is a BIG "if" though) but the employment rates and wages would not be effected by them at all.

      The companies will only hire someone if they bring in more money to the company than they cost which would not change with a change in the taxes for them at all. Neither would be change in wages, they pay as little as they can for most companies and so the most they would do is bump up the pay an extra 25 cents an hour as a way to show it helped and then lower it back down again.

      Companies right now are already showing record setting profit margins while employs in the US are showing record setting low wages. They could already virtually double employ wages in the US and still maintain profitability. They just refuse to do so. Look at Costco, you can make $40,000 a year out there as a cashier within 2 years of starting while at other places they only wish to pay about $14,000 a year even if they bring in more money than them.

      America has plenty of problems, none of it has to do with the fact that corporations are being taxed but plenty to do with how the same corporations are avoiding them taxes to force us to drag their dead weight across the finish line come tax time.

      Also, if you eliminated the corporate tax, it still wouldn't keep them from avoiding taxes when they are paid. They would have many purchases come directly from the company as to avoid it passing directly through their own hands to avoid the taxes and others would still launder the pay through overseas areas and have it look like they just transferred it from an existing account rather than just got paid and as such pay zero taxes on it.

      There are ways to fix it, but removing the corporate taxes are not one of them and would cause massive problems while fixing little to none of them in my opinion.

      Captcha: "Quagmire".

      Giggidy, Giggidy
      Giggidy, Goo

    8. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      From what I understand from Dutch taxation on corporations (not one man companies) are that they are allowed only a small amount of money in the bank to cover operations. Any excess money should be payed as bonuses, dividends for which eventually a person will pay income tax over.

      If the corporation decides to keep the excess it will have to pay income taxes over the profits (and income tax over the interest gained). If the corporation in the next year will spent this money (investments, bonuses, dividends) than this expenditure is subtracted from that year's profit, and through this, the tax is payed back (unless tax rates had changed in that year); so there is no double taxation.

      I am not sure if this works for corporations, but as a person (one man companies) we can average out the profit and losses over a three year period, this way we actually get income tax back when we have a loss year. Also useful when your salaries has changed substantially making it possible to get below certain tax bracket.

    9. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mitt Romney paid 13% taxes. I paid 29%. I live just above poverty level. Fuck you in your TIGHT REPUBLICAN ASS =)

    10. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " I'm not sure I buy the whole "double-taxation" aspect - where is it doubled? If you are referring to the revenue coming into the company being taxed and then paying out to employees who are also taxed on income, then that situation is false. The cost of wages is a tax deduction for the company and they would not be taxed on those dollars that are paid out as an operating expense.

      This isn't really a counter-argument so much as a possible explanation. Please keep in mind that I'm not an accountant or business owner, but am trying to be accurate.

      Say you have a business (no fancy stuff, just a sole proprietorship) and are filling out your federal income tax forms for the year. You deduct your expenses for running your business (including employee salaries and benefits, rent, contracted services, materials, reinvestment into the business,etc, etc, etc) from your gross receipts giving your taxable profit. You pay your required taxes on that amount, and pocket the remainder. I believe it would be taxed as regular income.

      Say this same business changes to a small corporation (five people own equal shares). Everything happens as above up to the taxable profit point. With no federal corporate income tax, the taxable profit is split five ways and disbursed to each person as a dividend. Each person pays income taxes on their dividend. This is taxed at capital gains rates (I think), which are currently lower than regular income rates.

      With a federal corporate income tax, the corporate income tax is first taken off the taxable profit from above. The remainder is then split and distributed to each person as a dividend. Each person then has to pay capital gains taxes on their dividend.

      This is equivalent to the original business paying a "federal business tax" on their taxable profits, and then paying federal income tax on the remainder. Or put another way, its as if a salaried person first paid a "federal worker tax" on their salary and then had to pay federal income tax on the remainder. I think that is where the double-taxation talk comes from.

      Salaried and hourly workers (in the private sector anyway) do have a "federal worker tax" of sorts in the form of federal social security/medicare/medicaid/unemployment insurance taxes so I guess you could argue that workers are already double taxed.

    11. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except capital gains pile up quicker than dividends and capital gains rate is much lower than one you pay on dividends (for corporations and shareholders, there's every incentive to NOT pay dividends)---and without dividends the stock market is mostly a ponzi scheme (as a shareholder, your only way to benefit from a corporation is to find yet-another-fool to pay you more for your shares, who will have to search for yet-another-fool eventually).

    12. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      look up payroll tax in the united states. Companies have to pay tax to have employees plus the employees pay, too. It's the number one reason upper management is paid so much in perks. Companies can right off a hundred percent for jets, limos, housing, when their employees are given them as perks giving the the equivalent income would make both parties subject to more taxes. So next time you see a CEO in a limo coming from a private jet, realize he is just a regular tax dodger.

    13. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like how sales tax is double taxation because I paid my income tax already, right? Brillliant!

    14. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >double taxation

      The thought goes like this:
      If I levy a 1% tax on Walmart, they will simply raise their prices 1%. This means you, the shopper, will end up paying enough money to cover that 1% increase. Thus this 1% tax on Walmart is simply passed onto the customer. You are being taxed both as a sales tax and as a 'hidden' tax that raises the 'cost' of an item.

    15. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 1

      In terms of investors with shares who get dividends, UK dividends come with a "tax credit" that can be subtracted from the individuals tax bill. I think the general idea is the tax credit is the amount of corporation tax that the original company has paid so it avoids being double taxed. Not sure if the USA does something similar.

      It is a nice idea to move the taxation onto the individuals. But I think it's a bit of a huge solution to a problem where a simpler fix would be to stop letting companies claim international consultancy as deductible and put a bit more rigor into checking their international costs for tax deductibles, e.g. if Facebook Cayman rents Facebook Ireland a $3k server for $300k/year then it's not quite right and can be looked at under the current laws for tax avoidance.

    16. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by swillden · · Score: 1

      except capital gains pile up quicker than dividends and capital gains rate is much lower than one you pay on dividends

      The GGP was proposing to tax retained earnings as income, so I thought it was obvious that to have the same effect you'd need to tax capital gains as income. Actually, they're taxed as income now, if they're short-term gains.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    17. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes every corporation the equivalent of a ROTH IRA with no contribution limits.

      It allows wealth to accumulate tax free.

    18. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by Patch86 · · Score: 2

      Why is "double taxation" a dirty word (phrase) when applied to corporations? I double, triple etc. pay taxes on my money.

      1) I get paid a salary, and pay income tax and national insurance (I'm UK).
      2) I buy something; let's say petrol. I pay VAT (or in this case, fuel duty).
      2a) Incidentally, the petrol supplier will have already paid import duties for this petrol.
      3) I put the petrol in a car and drive it away. To enable that I've paid Road Tax.
      4) On the way home, I cross a toll bridge, and pay the toll.

      So there you have it; in order to do a car journey, I've earned money and paid taxes out of it 4 times at least. It might seem complex, but that's just the way we divvy up the load. I pay the toll on the bridge, and people who don't use the bridge don't. As a vehicle owner I pay Road Tax; people who don't, don't. I pay VAT on the luxuries I buy, and people who stick to VAT-free essentials do not.

      You could avoid "double taxing" me by abolishing all the secondary taxes, and upping my income tax to compensate. But that would mean that people would be paying for the thing that they're not using.

      Employees pay income tax (and investors pay Capital Gains tax) to pay for the services they use. Corporations pay Corporation Tax on their profits to pay for the government services that they use. Whether it be protection for their enterprise by the police, diplomacy from the government in their favour, or or the infrastructure that their company needs to function; it needs paying for somehow, and it only muddies the waters to assume that the employees and investors should cover it out of their taxes.

    19. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by redlemming · · Score: 1

      There are two big concerns that I am aware of with double taxation: the hidden tax aspect, and the fairness aspect.

      In practice, double taxes often work out to be a form of hidden tax.

      Some of us like the idea of knowing exactly how much of each year (what percentage) we spend working for the government, instead of working for ourselves. To know that we are living in a free country, one with strong individual rights, we should know this percentage, and the percentage really should be a low number.

      Anything else means that one is really not living in a free country with strong individual rights: after all, if somebody else owns a large amount of your labor, then you are not a free individual.

      A simple tax system, where there are no hidden taxes, is necessary (but perhaps not sufficient) to make this possible.

      Further, it is in the interests of politicians to be able to hide taxes. Hidden taxes allow the government to increase its income in ways that are not easily visible to the public. There is an ethical conflict of interest here: having more money to spend on non-essentials (which is a lot of the budget of government at various levels, at least here in the USA) allows for a bigger pie that said politicians can then return to those that give the biggest bribes, er, I meant to say those who lobby the best.

      From an ethics perspective, hidden taxes are bad, just as complex tax systems are bad.

      There is also an issue of fairness: while life may not be fair, we have a right to expect our government and legal system to be reasonably so. Hidden taxes tend to be associated with some people paying more than their share, possibly without even realizing it, while others get away with paying almost nothing.

      For that matter, hidden taxes are bad with respect to having general public oversight over government, as it makes it more difficult to understand what's going on.

      Hidden taxes also potentially increase the percentage of society involved in overhead, as opposed to those directly producing. This occurs when the hidden taxes are part of a complex tax system that creates jobs for people who can help others avoid the hidden taxes. Not a good thing. A certain number of lawyers and accountants is necessary for any society we can currently envision, but having too many, or allowing these people to have too much influence over the government or the legal system, causes all sorts of ethics problems (as people are slowly starting to realize in the USA).

      Ideally, the only taxes (aside from possible import taxes on items imported for business) should be individual income taxes, based upon a simple formula that most-everyone accepts and that doesn't change very often. It doesn't have to be a flat tax, but some simple formula should be possible.

      Another issue with double taxes: people tend to see these as equivalent to being robbed not just once, but twice. That tends to make people cranky.

    20. Re:Corporations should not pay taxes on profits by jwdb · · Score: 1

      Another problem with corporate income taxes is that corporations don't pay taxes. Their customers and employees do, in the form of higher prices and reduced salaries respectively. A tax on a corporation is just a hidden flat tax on individuals. Not just a flat tax, either; a flat tax with no deductions, exemptions, credits, refunds, rebates, or any other way to stop it from screwing over the poor.

      You know, I keep hearing this, but you could just as easily say exactly the opposite as well: all tax is paid by corporations. Sales tax raises prices, reducing sales and thus a company's revenue, and income tax reduces purchasing power, also reducing sales and revenue, or it reduces the net value of a particular job to a person, cutting in to a company's means of production.

      You can really only say that a corporate tax gets passed on to consumers when demand is inelastic, so that a price increase has little effect on sales.

  31. Simple Fix by maz2331 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wouldn't a simple fix for the countries involved just be to impose a tarrif on the importation of the "IP Rights"? Just set it to be equal to taxes on profits, and the problem is solved. So, FB UK doesn't make a paper profit of, say, 3 billion because their revenues of 3.2 billion are offset by "IP Licensing Costs" of 3 billion - just tax the importation of the right and collect the same amount as you would if they didn't try the shifting.

     

    1. Re:Simple Fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's mostly equal importing "IP Rights" from California to New York.

      EU has some extensive free trade agreements in place, there is no customs in place if you order from inside the EU. (The consumer doesn't have to care about VAT ect, if they company that sells is screws up, they end up getting the fines). This extends to business.

      On the whole, for both sides of the equation it's a good thing, the problem is the loop holes like Ireland's super low tax for companies. I'm sure there's other loop holes aswell, especially considering that the taxation between countries in the EU isn't exactly uniform, but as far as I know, neither is it in the US (aside from federal tax).

    2. Re:Simple Fix by mrsmiggs · · Score: 1

      Tariffs on IP licensing would just hinder the businesses that are genuinely licensing IP, the tax avoiders would switch to something else and the charade would continue. If the EU wants to play hard ball it should impose a levy on transactions with known tax havens and have a uniform corporation tax level across member states, this would of course require the member state who are tax havens to agree, so perhaps unlikely then.

    3. Re:Simple Fix by tftp · · Score: 1

      If the EU wants to play hard ball it should impose a levy on transactions with known tax havens

      Just wait until the WTO hears about it.

      The problem cannot be fixed until there are independent countries that have more favorable taxation. The modern economy is getting more and more data-oriented, which makes it possible to telecommute, "working" in any remote office on the planet. Will the tax man be breaking the doors down and checking what you are doing on your home computer? If not, your salary will be safely collecting offshore, available for a transfer (or a loan!) whenever you want. Already legal; there is no law against working for free. You will probably die from old age with a few million dollars of debt to your "creditor" overseas. Alternatively, you could be periodically receiving official documents that your loan had been paid in full, or cancelled... and you sit on them.

      If the Earth falls under control of the unified government (not any time soon, I presume) then off-planet sites will become the next tax haven (and not only due to the tax.) As a certain princess said once, "The more you tighten your grip, the more star systems will slip through your fingers." Free people and free corporations simply will not agree to unfair taxation.

    4. Re:Simple Fix by dkf · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't a simple fix for the countries involved just be to impose a tarrif on the importation of the "IP Rights"?

      The problem is that companies are being permitted to set the charge for "IP Rights" (and possibly other things) to a level to consume exactly the amount that would otherwise be the part on which taxation is assessed. It's that practice which is morally corrupt, not the fact that they are "IP Rights".

      In UK terminology, while it isn't "tax evasion" because it is currently legal, it is "tax avoidance" rather than "tax mitigation" because it is taking actions against the general intention of the related taxing authorities. (Contrast with making a contribution to charity to reduce tax, which is morally a lot cleaner and thus gets the term "tax mitigation".)

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    5. Re:Simple Fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod up.
      Two items are 'arms length' transactions, and that IP is somehow, treated differently.
      If you are the sole IP licencee - and that is never going to change,then it is a sham and contrivance.

      The fix is to ramp up the tax on sole and exclusive licences across the board.

  32. ACTA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If only all that time spent on ACTA would have been spent on international tax agreements to eliminate these kinds of ridiculous constructions.
    I know, not easy to do, but a whole lot more worthwhile. Until this happens it will only get worse and, honestly, if given the chance, I would do it too.

  33. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be a wonderful idea, highly likely to backfire.

    After all, lobbying the US is expensive by comparison.

  34. Re:Tax avoidance by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    Yeah, and? I wrote clearly, we can argue about the bloat, not about the argument of paying taxes. Vast amount of money goes to things that are harmful? Please check the budget of governments. The stuff you mention is peanuts compared to what really sucks up the cash. It is things like military (depends on the country), and pension benefits (most countries). Unemployment, etc do not suck up much cash. Those are just populist arguments as people and politicians want to keep things the way that they are.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  35. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck roads. We need to get rid of most of our cities and return them to a natural environment. Use trains for long distance travel.

  36. Ethics by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 0

    Is the submitter under the impression that taxes can be justified via ethics? I'd be impressed if it could be done without resorting to magical thinking, logical contradictions, non-seguirs, or appeals to force.

    1. Re:Ethics by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      They can be justified, just not by ethics. They are justified by force.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:Ethics by czth · · Score: 1

      I too would like to see someone take you up on this, and since I don't have mod points now, perhaps this response will produce something of a bump.

      I also feel compelled to ask you, sir, why you hate roads, want your house to burn down and/or be attacked by roving barbarians/British troops, and prefer to eat food which would indubitably kill you and everyone you have ever met instantly were it not for government food inspectors (blessings and peace upon them for-ever)?

    3. Re:Ethics by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 1

      I also feel compelled to ask you, sir, why you hate roads, want your house to burn down and/or be attacked by roving barbarians/British troops, and prefer to eat food which would indubitably kill you and everyone you have ever met instantly were it not for government food inspectors (blessings and peace upon them for-ever)?

      You forgot wanting to force children to work in the coal mines with no pay or education, and wishing to see piles of dead bodies in front of the doors to emergency rooms because they didn't have any cash on them to pay for treatment.

      This topic doesn't just provoke strawmen, it provokes entire straw block parties.

  37. Re:Tax avoidance by SolitaryMan · · Score: 1

    Only if you are a corporation. If you are an individual, you must support our troops.

    --
    May Peace Prevail On Earth
  38. Re:Tax avoidance by gewalker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is a fact of law in the US that the police are not required to protect you or your property (at least in most jurisdictions).

    In its landmark decision of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,” Stevens writes, “the U.S. Supreme Court declared that the Constitution does not impose a duty on the state and local governments to protect the citizens from criminal harm.

    In Warren v. District of Columbia, it is a "fundamental principle of American law that a government and its agents are under no general duty to provide public services, such as police protection, to any individual citizen."

    In Castle Rock v. Gonzales, "the police have no duty under federal law to protect the citizens."

    There are other cases that more or less have the same result.

    When seconds matter, the police are only minutes away. Maybe.

  39. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You are raising an argument that does not exist. I wrote very clearly we can argue about a bloated government, but not about taxes. You are saying that I somehow want people to pay high taxes for other people. I did not make this point and thus please stick to the argument.

    Facebook paying no taxes is the kind of crap you get when you get a large powerful government that makes it worthwhile for entities with a lot of money to bribe, err, lobby that government to make rules favorable to them.

    Don't like it?

    Quit voting for candidates who want more and bigger government.

    THAT'S the root cause of the problem.

  40. Re:Tax avoidance by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I get it. You don't like paying for lazy people. Fair point, neither do I.

    But what happens if you stop welfare? Crime rates go through the roof. People that can't eat get desperate and start doing things they'd never do otherwise. Poor people won't just starve and go away, they WILL rise up and take a lot more from you.

    People are only complacent when they have something to lose. If you give them a little something to lose, then you can control them better. Create a society of have's and have not's and eventually the have's are all destroyed by the have not's.. It's happened throughout history, and apparently people don't learn from it.

  41. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_v._District_of_Columbia

    where we have a military that enforces our economic interests

    did you just advocate colonialism 2.0?

  42. Re:Tax avoidance by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    The way this country was set up is if you're about to get mugged, robbed, or killed, you invoke your gun holding right and use it. This has been warped beyond recognition, but... if you've ever called the cops to come help you / do something for you that doesn't involve them harassing you... you're better off keeping your dollars and buying the gun.

    On another note, I think the state fixes most of the roads, so cali would benefit from taxing facebook / MS / etc... the most there.

    I'm sure the pro's of having the tech giants on shore with minimal taxes outweighs them moving most of their assets away as they're all about profits and stock holders. It would benefit us to see them pay more taxes, but it's a tough battle to win.

  43. So let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Basically small companies that provide most of the jobs in the US, but don't have the resources to mulit-nationally hide their profit have to subsidize those large companies that do now that the country is broke...

    Where are the democrats on this one? Oh yeah, some of those large companies are part of the "family", so they must be "exempt"...

  44. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet that all those companies are already paying their fair share of money to the government, senate, congress and many other agencies, but not with taxes. A win win situation for all the parties involved, not for common people who have to make up for the difference with higher taxes.

  45. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_v._District_of_Columbia

    where we have a military that enforces our economic interests

    did you just advocate colonialism 2.0?

  46. Moral obligation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Facebook has a moral obligation to its shareholders to maximize profit.

  47. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    sorry, meant to reply to another post

  48. Re:Tax avoidance by Synerg1y · · Score: 0

    First, the social security bubble needs to be solved, no more retirees getting 300k/y off the rest of us. The other big spender is the military and that's a little more complicated as historically you want the best military on your side, the dollar is just about worthless without it.

  49. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about we just start requiring executives to pony up the difference in taxes. Company should've paid 100mil in taxes, but used loopholes to only pay 15? Make the executives and board members cough up 85mil.

  50. Re:Tax avoidance by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

    When government spending is at a level where the bulk of it is for things that the overwhelming majority agree are important things for the government to do, then you would be correct that tax avoidance is wrong. However, the world we currently live in has few if any countries where the overwhelming majority agree that the bulk of government spending is on important things for the government to spend money on. There may be disagreement as to what the important things are, and you might not be able to get a majority to agree to cut any one thing (although I am pretty sure that if Congress were to start passing spending bills that each contained only one thing, the budget would drop in size overnight--not just because they would never have time to pass all of the bills).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  51. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >But what happens if you stop welfare? Crime rates go through the roof.

    Do you have a few historical examples of this?

  52. You think that's something? by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just WAIT til you find out how IKEA operates! Go on, look it up yourself, you wouldn't believe me if I told you!

    --
    Mostly random stuff.
    1. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yea, I read this, I know about it because I am Dutch and IKEA is a Dutch company (you thought it was Sweedish, didn't you) and a Dutch charity.

    2. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yep, I don't want to believe it. The whole complex thing is structured to have the money flow into a not-for-profit tax exempt entity - the Stichting INGKA Foundation - that is controlled by five board members including Ingvar Kamprad, his wife, his attorney, and two of his hired corporate goons. They manage their status by reinvesting all but .2% of the money. What is left is given to charity.

    3. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but *which* charity?

    4. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First they fill in expenditure form A, inserting it into accounting pile F...

      Long story short, there's a bit missing - the bit where they pay tax?

    5. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stichting INGKA Foundation, wow...

    6. Re:You think that's something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just WAIT til you find out how IKEA operates! Go on, look it up yourself, you wouldn't believe me if I told you!

      lol, it's set up as a charity! dedicated to “innovation in the field of architectural and interior design”.

      http://caps.fool.com/Blogs/how-ikea-manages-to-pay-almost/251411

      Yet, though control over IKEA is locked up, the money is not. Mr Kamprad left a trapdoor for getting funds out of the business, even if its ownership and control cannot change. The IKEA trademark and concept is owned by Inter IKEA Systems, another private Dutch company, but not part of the Ingka Holding group. Its parent company is Inter IKEA Holding, registered in Luxembourg. This, in turn, belongs to an identically named company in the Netherlands Antilles, run by a trust company in Curaçao. Although the beneficial owners remain hidden from view—IKEA refuses to identify them—they are almost certain to be members of the Kamprad family.

    7. Re:You think that's something? by LunaticTippy · · Score: 2

      You could have provided a synopsis and link, I'd have believed you after checking the link.

      They have a complex (even worse than their product assembly) ownership structure where most of the profits go to a nonprofit that gives away a few percent of income. Here is a quick overview.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
  53. Re:Tax avoidance by TigerTime · · Score: 1

    As an individual or a business, you are supposed to look for ways to pay the least amount of taxes. That's life and there's nothing really wrong with that. If someone didn't look for ways to get as many deductions as possible on their tax return, you'd wonder if they were mental and just enjoyed paying a higher rate. The same applies for businesses. The government so far has said that there is nothing wrong with what they are doing.

    The core problem here is with these loopholes. The tax system is a constantly changing cat/mouse game of people/companies finding loopholes and the government closing them. The REAL question is why hasn't this enormous loophole been closed yet?

  54. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Xarvh · · Score: 1

    This assumes that the govt officials are not in the corporation's pockets and have the taxpayers best interests at heart.
    Are you that naive?

  55. Start linking the IRS with the DoD already by sethstorm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Start using the NSA for some good and uncover the people involved.

    In addition, start taking advantage of the nature of these tax domiciles as being easily knocked over by a superpower's military. Offer to disclose each conquered country's information to other regions such as the UK and EU. In any case, move in a way that thwarts any effort to move out assets to "somewhere else".

    Finally, be willing to use extraordinary rendition to moot jurisdiction movement. This would be viable for cases such as Eduardo Saverin, and assets of companies sent offshore.

    In any of the cases, there will be no shortage of people willing to defend their country from tax jurisdiction abuse. With plenty of people out of work - more than a few leaving from good jobs - opportunity exists to discourage/deny the use of creative accounting.

    (If you really want to turn up the heat, ensure that nobody involved, whether directly or indirectly, will have any protection from the US)

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    1. Re:Start linking the IRS with the DoD already by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

      Linking the military with the IRS? What could possibly go wrong?

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
    2. Re:Start linking the IRS with the DoD already by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      Given how far some people will go to evade taxes, the DoD would be the appropriate entity for the IRS to use for foreign collections and repatriations - especially when the foreign entity is more likely to cooperate with the evasion.

      It isn't the most pleasant option, but it is available to the US given their military power.

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    3. Re:Start linking the IRS with the DoD already by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      I think people will take exception to the DoD being used to perform domestic operations against US citizens rather than its constitutionally mandate of operations to defend US citizens.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  56. Re:Tax avoidance by Pluvius · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And if there wasn't a large and powerful government, then corporations would suddenly have no power over the system? How does that work?

    Rob

  57. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >You live in a complex society where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life, where food is not full of melamine, where we have a military that enforces our economic interests, where roads improve the flow of goods and services.

    I don't want the police being the useless waste of money they are. I want to pay for better police with my own money.

    I want to have whatever food I wish rather than the listeria ridden shit the government pedals as just fine until someone finally has a freakout.

    And I don't believe in the military.

    Can I have a refund? Will you even let me leave the country? Stop holding me prisoner for pay for it.

  58. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

    Sure, that will go over well...right after the country that subsidiary is located in agrees to stop taxing it. Of course, if you pass that law and get other countries to agree to not tax the subsidiaries, pretty soon the "parent" company will be based in a no-tax country.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  59. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, some folks wish they got a lot less, because it gets in their way from screwing other people.

    And yes, some folks do have the fantasy that they are entitled to a lot of what someone else has, whether it be their money, their time, or their life.

    Ain't discussion of vague and non-particular things helpful? No reason to even see the other side, just stand by your empty rhetorical assertions.

  60. Re:Tax avoidance by Goose+In+Orbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem isn't "more" or "bigger" government - but having a government that has the balls to stand up and say "pay your fair share"

    Unfortunately - here in the UK we have the same problem... the people pay more while the corporations pay next-to-nothing

  61. Re:good idea by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

    If you are actually paying a higher percentage of your income than your workers, then you're doing it wrong. Yes, rates at your income level are higher, but you also (should) have more options with which to shelter your income. Warren Buffet pays a lower percentage of his income in taxes than his secretary. So I think your sense of indignation that you pay a higher rate is misguided.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  62. Re:That's money that *didn't* fund the Patriot Act by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +-1 ?

  63. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, because shiploads of FaceBook profiles are being shipped across the Indian Ocean all the time.

    It might make more sense if the government levied a special tax on assets of corporations held on our territory. FaceBook's likely response would be to move their HQ from Palo Alto to some island. They might not get all their employees to move with them; but they'd get enough.

    The government doen't have too much leverage here except to exert pressure on the other government that are leading the race to the bottom. First diplomacy, then gun boats.

  64. This is capitalism by Hentes · · Score: 1

    Corporations follow the laws of capitalism, not the laws of ethics. They will never pay more than they are legally required. If you don't like it, change the laws.

    1. Re:This is capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got this wrong. Laws follow capitalism, not ethics.

  65. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 2

    >did you just advocate colonialism 2.0?

    We've already had it ever since the end of WWII.

    What the fuck do you think the military is /for/?

    --
    BMO

  66. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, those things do cost money. Too bad I don't support all of them. Firemen, sure, we need them. The rest, not really.

  67. Re:Tax avoidance by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    Police, military, firemen, judges, etc, etc all cost money.

    Well, when a fire erupts at the Facebook HQ, simply don't send the firemen when Facebook calls and tell them to contract a private firefighting company. They will have the fire put down by that company and will simply pay an invoice for the services rendered. :-)

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  68. Tax the revenues of these companies ... by jschultz410 · · Score: 1

    Set up an AMT for corporations that operate in the US. If they are bigger than a certain size in terms of US revenues, then they have to pay a minimum tax rate on those revenues or the usual taxes on profits, whichever is higher.

    Yes, that sucks for low margin companies with lots of revenue, but it's likely better than letting very profitable companies like MS, Google, FB and many others get off essentially scot free through international tax games.

    1. Re:Tax the revenues of these companies ... by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Yes, that sucks for low margin companies with lots of revenue

      The oil industry, and the Insurance industry.

      Companies in both of these industries normally have single digit profit margins. Many people dont know that, but instead respond to headlines of "record profits" and "rising costs," neither of which actually tell a meaningful story.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:Tax the revenues of these companies ... by russotto · · Score: 1

      Set up an AMT for corporations that operate in the US.

      Why would the US care? RTFS -- this is all about international revenue, not domestic revenue for the US company. The US will re-tax that money if and only if it is repatriated (which of course it likely never will be). It doesn't matter to the US whether the companies involved pay German tax, Irish tax, or Cayman Islands (no) tax on international revenue.

  69. Re:Tax avoidance by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

    I think most of the disagreement depends on the definition of "society". Binning coarsely, we have group A who wants a libertarian anarchy. Group B wants to pay for shared infrastructure, but not the welfare state. Group C wants a social democracy with a variety of personal, non-infrastructure services guaranteed as rights. Lines blur of course, but that's the general idea.

    Choose your own definition of society. I'm not sure exactly who you mean with your comments - I agree with you on the group A nuts who think that private enterprise will develop useful markets, electrical grids, roads, etc. However, I agree with those who dearly want to pay for infrastructure, but don't want to have to pay everybody's personal bills as the cover charge into "society".

  70. Re:Tax avoidance by retchdog · · Score: 1

    so... in the castle rock v. gonzales case, we have the supreme court taking a federalist position (can't sue a town under a federal statute), which is something libertarians generally like (smaller government and laboratory of the states and all that). at the same time, you're using that case to argue that public services are ineffective, because they aren't enforced at the federal level.

    which one is it going to be, then? you can't have it both ways. (well, actually you can, but only because no one stops to think about it.)

    there's nothing stopping the individual states from, you know, requiring a duty of their police to provide public services to individual citizens. the warren v. district of columbia case was, unsurprisingly, restricted to the district of columbia, which is infamously fucked up anyway. any state, and d.c., could trivially legislate a greater duty to its police. but of course that would cost money, and the libertarians would crow on and on about how we should instead have private security for rich people.

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
  71. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Facebook paying no taxes is the kind of crap you get when you get a large powerful government that makes it worthwhile for entities with a lot of money to bribe, err, lobby that government to make rules favorable to them.

    Don't like it?

    Quit voting for candidates who want more and bigger government.

    THAT'S the root cause of the problem.

    No, that's what happens with free speech and a congress that is allowed to raise funds via taxes. Don't like it? Then don't vote for candidates who support democracy.

  72. Re:Tax avoidance by rroman · · Score: 1

    When talking about income taxes, yes, you are member of the society, you benefit from such things, you should pay taxes. Companies, however, don't benefit from army, from healthcare and from any other things that society provides. In fact, when nobody uses the company, the company ceases to exist. Taxing the companies only forces the companies to spend every year the most so they don't have to pay such high taxes. For me, it is not bad if for example Microsoft holds great untaxed amount of cash this year and invests it the next year or the year after. The company is already punished for not spending their money by inflation, the income tax is just bad tool and shouldn't be used.

  73. Re:Tax avoidance by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    300K per year?

    Have you ever actually seen an annual social security statement?

    I suspect not.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  74. Re:Tax avoidance by jedidiah · · Score: 2

    Even a libertarian can acknowledge the fact that you don't want Crassus Maximus as your fire chief.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  75. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cost of policing, prosecution, and of imprisonment is astronomically higher than the cost of welfare.

    Equally the harsher the penalties become, the more resentful the friends and family become.

    I have always considered it ironic that the far right who are for user pays always stop at law and order, why ?
    The crime was not committed against me, I did not ask for expensive imprisonment.
    Perhaps when crime and punishment also become user pays they will start seeing that there are better ways.

  76. Who should get the money and why? by ZombieBraintrust · · Score: 1

    The Caymans and Ireland are tax shelters. It is not clear in a just system why these goverments should get any of Facebooks profits. How are Irish roads or Cayman firefighters providing a service for Facebook? Facebook profits come from advertising. It might be smart for countries to focus their taxes on the ads. Tax advertisement revenue instead of profits. This would distribute the wealth to locations where Facebook is used and where profits are generated.

    1. Re:Who should get the money and why? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Facebook Ireland is at least partly a genuine operation; there are reasonable positions available: https://www.facebook.com/careers/locations/dublin and the European datacentre. It's annoying that Ireland has a low tax rate compared to much of the EU, but that can be fixed by intra-EU pressure.

      The Cayman Islands isn't even on the list of locations, and will be nothing more than a PO Box. Fixing that means taxing profit in the country it is generated (profit from Irish users/advertisers certainly should be taxed in Ireland).

  77. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    >Companies, however, don't benefit from army

    Bullshit.

    It's like the Banana Wars never existed, eh?

    --
    BMO

  78. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some folks have this fantasy that they are entitled to someone else's money.

    Sure. Please stop paying taxes. But then please do not expect cops, firefighters, public schools, roads, bridges, social security (yes, it is a tax too) etc to be available for you.

    But of course you are nothing but a selfish prick, and that is what is wrong with this world. Excuse me. "most of this world, especially USA..." Coz some countries doesn't have a problem with it [Scandinavia] and seem to do alright...

  79. Not this shit again by paiute · · Score: 1

    If the community spent half the energy we spend flaming each other with the same argument over and over and over calling their Congressmen to yell at them, faxing their Congressmen copies of large checks written to their opponent in the upcoming election, etc., then things might start to change.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  80. Re:Tax avoidance by Your.Master · · Score: 1

    Short distance travel, even without motor vehicles, is facilitated by roads too. Just ask the Romans.

    (do you live in some place that is perfectly flat for hundreds of kilometres?)

  81. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If someone didn't look for ways to get as many deductions as possible on their tax return, you'd wonder if they were mental and just enjoyed paying a higher rate?

    You mean like this: http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/OTUS/romney-paid-required-raising-tax-rate-141-percent/story?id=17291504#.UN4jLHc5dLk

  82. Another Famous Judge disagrees. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since we are going to argue based on judicial statements let me give you another. From the Honorable Judge Learned Hand
    "Anyone may arrange his affairs so that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which best pays the
    treasury. There is not even a patriotic duty to increase one's taxes.Over and over again the Courts have said that there is nothing sinister
    in so arranging affairs as to keep taxes as low as possible. Everyone does it, rich and poor alike and all do right, for nobody owes any
    public duty to pay more than the law demands."
    So long as the methods used are completely legal their is simply no room for complaint.Corporations are legal devices for making money, they posses no morality, and no ethics. These are human traits. Corporations, despite the legal treatment they receive, are not people. The executives of these corporations are legally tasked with maximizing the profitability of the corporations. It is their fiduciary duty to do so. If the law allows this arrangement then the executives of this corporation would be failing in their responsibilities to not take advantage of it. The government is entitled only to what the law allows. Since the government makes the law this is clearly fair. There is nothing immoral, illegal, unpatriotic, unfair, or wrong with any corporation, organization, or individual using the law as it is written to reduce their tax liability so that the tax payer keeps as much of the money they made for themselves.

  83. Avoidance IS the right thing to do, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a corporate sense it is the right thing to do as long as it is within the law. It's the only thing to do, really, if you're meeting the obligations to your investors.

    Correspondingly, terminating the tax and incorporation laws that allow this kind of corporate tax avoidance is the right thing for the ordinary citizens in multiple countries to do. The law is broken if this is the end result. Therefore, the law must change. No more big company free rides on the backs of the rest of individual taxpayers and small companies. They make billions in profit, and pay single-digit millions? Ridiculous. *I* pay more in taxes, and so do a lot of other people *and* smaller companies, so that Facebook or [insert huge multinational company here] can make huge profits. I'm paying more for the services that they receive from government, be it transportation, education, defense, or whatever. Some people complain about the "welfare state" and people taking advantage of it, but you head down to Wall Street and these shell companies are standard operating practice to get out of paying taxes. Crafty and smart they may be, but they're a bunch of free-loading corporate welfare bums to me. And unlike people who actually do need help, they aren't living below the poverty line. I have zero sympathy.

    This shouldn't be an ethical issue. The point isn't to shame companies into "doing the right thing" in an ethical rather than financial sense. That's nonsensical. The goal is to get the fricking broken tax laws fixed, so that big companies pay a fair amount on billions of profit rather than almost nothing. They're getting too good at socializing the costs of society while privatizing the profits. I'm not begrudging companies the ability to avoid whatever taxes they can within the law. That's their job. Good on them. But the law under which they do so must be fixed.

  84. Fiduciary Duties by Warhawke · · Score: 2

    At risk of being modded down -1: Disagree, there's an important counterpoint worth mentioning here:

    Companies have a legal duty to pay taxes according to the laws.
    Companies theoretically have a moral duty to pay taxes according to the spirit of the law.
    Companies have a legal duty to minimize expenses and maximize returns for their shareholders and investors.

    Accordingly, corporations have a legal duty to engage in legal-but-potentially-morally-questionable tax sheltering to minimize expenses and maximize returns for their shareholders. If a director is not using every tool at his disposal to make a business profitable, then at best he will be fired or reprimanded for being a bad director, and at worst he will be sued for breach of his fiduciary duties.

    It would appear that a better solution is simply to write simpler tax laws that don't create the loopholes in the first place rather than to try to patch the loopholes with more convoluted tax law. But that is so very much unlikely to happen while Congress is immune to the insider trading and securities exchange laws. Congress won't think that this is broken so long as they're the ones making money off of the loopholes, even if it's at the expense of the U.S. taxpayer.

    1. Re:Fiduciary Duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >Companies have a legal duty to minimize expenses and maximize returns for their shareholders and investors.

      I see this posted here quite often. Perhaps you can direct me to the precise law requiring this?

    2. Re:Fiduciary Duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had points to award you. This 110%. These are my thoughts exactly. In fact, I think this is the primary argument against the OP. All this bs about morals and ethics is simply a distraction. If the government was serious about raising revenue, it would close loopholes, simplify the tax code, and set rates at a globally fair and competitive level. It's not the corporation's duty to pay any more than required. Furthermore, as Schmidt said, why should any company pay more taxes to any particular country that it operates in? Should companies feel bad about one county over another and pay more to it?

    3. Re:Fiduciary Duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, and by the way, to all the people yelling that we should increase the tax rates further... Who do you suppose really pays the higher corporate tax rates? Is it he company? No. Companies will simply pass the increased expenses onto to the consumer. So really, higher corporate rates just mean higher expenses to you and me.

    4. Re:Fiduciary Duties by tftp · · Score: 1

      It would appear that a better solution is simply to write simpler tax laws that don't create the loopholes in the first place rather than to try to patch the loopholes with more convoluted tax law. But that is so very much unlikely to happen while Congress is immune to the insider trading and securities exchange laws.

      The Congress has no part in this, unless it is ready to compete with Cayman Islands on 0% corporate tax. A corporation may be started in the USA as an accident of being the initial home country of its founders. However at any point that company can be sold for $1 to a Cayman Islands corporation, and the founders will be hired (for another $1 per head) to their original positions. On the other hand, their corporate credit cards will be unlimited, and the business will generously contribute to certain trust funds that the founders have no official control over - and as such are insulated from, tax-wise.

    5. Re:Fiduciary Duties by czth · · Score: 1

      Companies theoretically have a moral duty to pay taxes according to the spirit of the law.

      Neither the letter nor the spirit of a law creates a moral duty.

    6. Re:Fiduciary Duties by c0lo · · Score: 1
      Aren't precedents law in US? If true, then here's the "law". The most explicit part is probably at the bottom of page 60:

      Having chosen a for-profit corporate form, the craigslist directors are bound by the fiduciary duties and standards that accompany that form. Those standards include acting to promote the value of the corporation for the benefit of its stockholders. The “Inc.” after the company name has to mean at least that. Thus, I cannot accept as valid [...] a corporate policy that specifically, clearly, and admittedly seeks not to maximize the economic value of a for-profit Delaware corporation for the benefit of its stockholders — no matter whether those stockholders are individuals of modest means or a corporate titan of online commerce.

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  85. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The term you use "Big government" is really meaningless, double-speak, Orwellian language. As an example 15-years ago there were far more government employees than there are know and the national debt was about 3-trillion dollars, yet now in 2012 after all the out-sourcing, and privatizations the national debt is approaching 16-trillion. So your argument is what? exactly, just pure double-speak.

  86. Flame on, McDude. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "NON-US income". I suppose you think then that the U.S. Government and YOU are entitled to some of that 'fair share'?

    Get a life, a career, and take your two arms and pull to both sides really hard. The light that you are seeing is that of your a-hole opening and your head emerging.

  87. British Overseas Territories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Cayman Islands are part of the British Overseas Territories -- could Parliament or the Queen change their tax laws, or appoint a governor who would?

  88. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 0

    >no more retirees getting 300k/y off the rest of us.

    You're a moron, through and through.

    Burning karma because you are an example of the dumbshits that call themselves Randians.

    --
    BMO

  89. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually there is. During Clinton's presidency they enacted Welfare Reform that required getting work to continue receiving welfare, no work meant no more welfare. We dropped welfare roles by record amounts and as far as I know there wasn't a spike in crime.

    Or were you looking for an example like the guy who brougt it up where cutting welfare was bad? I don't know of any examples like that except maybe for current day Greece.

  90. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >You live in a complex society where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life, where food is not full of melamine, where we have a military that enforces our economic interests, where roads improve the flow of goods and services.

    I don't want the police being the useless waste of money they are. I want to pay for better police with my own money.

    I want to have whatever food I wish rather than the listeria ridden shit the government pedals as just fine until someone finally has a freakout.

    And I don't believe in the military.

    Can I have a refund? Will you even let me leave the country? Stop holding me prisoner for pay for it.

    Here you go: http://travel.state.gov/law/citizenship/citizenship_776.html

    Now GTFO!

  91. No, the solution is admit they are tax collectors by Shivetya · · Score: 2

    The truth is, facebook only collected X million dollars while making a lot more. As in, all their services and such cost a certain amount of money plus that owed to the government. It is known as embedded taxes, this is a great tool of governments to use in avoiding the general population from understanding their true tax load.

    A tax on corporations is just an indirect tax on those who directly or indirect interact with that corporation. Any penny paid in taxes by the corporation comes from its customers and so on and so on.

    The real fixes are open honest taxation. Let people really know how much it costs them for what they receive.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  92. Re:Tax avoidance by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That tends to be the confusion. People forget that the US government is actually very weak. It feels powerful to average citizens, but is generally weaker then many of the quasi-state corporations living within its borders.

  93. Re:Tax avoidance by Dishevel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The less that a government can do the less that the power that the corporations have over the government matters to the rest of us.

    --
    Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
  94. Re:Tax avoidance by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But to argue that we should pay zero taxes make NO SENSE WHATSOEVER.

    Suggesting no corporate taxation is not the same as suggesting no taxation.

    For if we don't pay taxes you better be prepared to pay Vinny down the street a bit of money to make sure that you don't get mugged, robbed, or killed.

    Even if Facebook were paying more in taxes, that money wouldn't be paying police in my town. It wouldn't even be paying police in the town where Facebook's employees live. Or fire departments, or roads, etc. Taxes paid by Facebook employees, however, do pay for government services where they live.

    Focus on taxing the money at the point it gets transferred to individuals and the only way the taxes can be avoided is to move the people... but if they move the people they move the costs as well as the revenues. Note that companies can't work around this by giving employees (or executives) cars, houses, etc., because those sorts of benefits are treated as taxable income.

    Counties and cities can, and should, also use property taxes to get the cash required to maintain roads and other local infrastructure used by corporations and their employees.

    Set corporate taxes to zero and focus on taxing the money as it flows out. This would include taxing capital gains. Then corporations would have no reason to move to Dublin... unless they really are looking to use Irish labor.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  95. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rugged individualists

    How did we get from a huge dot com with a battalion of tax lawyers to "rugged individualists" that might not like having their "estate" wiped out to fund more vote buying programs?

    makes me smile

    They've trained a lot of hate into you.

  96. Re:Tax avoidance by Marxdot · · Score: 1

    Smith was not a capitalist.

  97. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 1, Troll

    When governments control more and more aspects of your life and take more and more of your money then of course the corporations that run the government have more power than ever. I don't mind paying taxes but I make less than 100,000 dollars a year and pay more than 50,000 a year in taxes by the time the Feds, State and local governments get through bleeding me. I remember when I was young and thought that 100,000 was a lot of money but after all these fuckers get through rifling my pockets it's a lot less. I can live on what they let me keep but don't think I'm happy at getting raped. My ass is sore and bleeding and I fucking hate those cocksuckers in DC....both sets of whores, Repukes and Dumbcrats.

  98. Kudos to govts that pursue tax evasion by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    ...and its equivalent called avoidance as well. Perhaps the US could do so more aggressively(read: go international) and allow regular citizens to help.

    Regardless of amount, purposeful evasion/avoidance shows contempt for a country and its constituents. That is, it makes you quite close(and blatant offenders like FB/Google already crossed it) to falling on the wrong side of the enemies foreign and domestic phrase.

    If you want to be on the wrong end of a very capable and effective hyperpower(the US), do not be surprised when it(and its citizens) acts against you. You're free to become a terrorist, but not free to evade the consequences of your choice(which is the primary goal of tax avoidance/evasion, consequence evasion).

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  99. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Tom · · Score: 1

    The problem to your solution is that you need to legally define "offshoring profits". You see, these systems get set up by lawyers in such a way that they are legal.

    The solution, of course, is to pay taxes on revenue, not on profit.

    But frankly, taxes are so heavily skewed towards corporations that I've thought about creating a company with the business purpose of running my life, only so that everything I do can be tax-deducted.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  100. Re:Tax avoidance by Gordo_1 · · Score: 1

    tax avoidance is wrong... blah, blah, blah

    So, are you willing to go on the record claiming that you personally pay more taxes than you have to (for the good of society)?

    An appocryphal quote comes to mind: Don't hate the player, hate the game.

  101. Re:Tax avoidance by swillden · · Score: 1

    the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life

    No, they're not. Numerous court rulings, all the way to the Supreme Court, make it clear that the police have no duty whatsoever to defend you. Lots of them are nice guys and will if they happen to be in the right place at the right time, but they have no obligation to do it, and many of them won't.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  102. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Roads should be smaller and mass transit / bike lanes only, or replaced with light rail.

  103. No IP Laws then? by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 2

    Some folks wish they got a lot less from government.

    How about the IP laws that seem to let these companies make all this money and/or let them fiddle the books so they pay almost no tax? The only reason a lot of these companies have such large profits is because our freedoms are restricted to let them do so. This is part of the social contract. We collectively agree to have our freedoms restricted in order for companies to make money. This lets them generate employment and contribute to public services through their taxes.

    It seems to me that these companies simply want to have it all: restricted freedoms for us and they make off like bandits without contributing some of those profits back to society. Not everyone agrees that the amount they are expected to pay is fair but likewise not everyone agrees with the freedoms we collectively give up. However what we seem to be getting is increasing demands to give up more and more freedom so companies can continue to make money while the same companies are using legal loop holes to dodge the social contribution part of the bargain. If we carry on in this direction it will not end well for either us or companies.

    1. Re:No IP Laws then? by czth · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes, the magic social contract, wholly undefined and signed by nobody, but always hand-waved at when someone wants to justify plunder or harm of any sort - followed closely by asserting things that "we" agree to, where there is no such agreement in evidence.

  104. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Unfortunately - here in the UK we have the same problem... the people pay more while the corporations pay next-to-nothing

    This is a complicated issue in my mind, I'm conflicted. One the one hand, my thought is that as long as we're going to tax corporations, we should do so effectively, limiting/eliminating the tricks that international companies use to avoid taxes like this. Note: To me tax avoidance is using legal means to lower your tax burden. Tax evasion is using illegal means. Using the former is shady, but not illegal, and we should expect companies to be immoral when it comes to saving millions of dollars.

    But I also have the thought of 'why bother taxing corporations'? We suck at it, and ultimately companies are owned by individuals, everybody from fat cat industrialists to the retired grandmother who bought $100 of IBM stock 50 years ago. That makes taxing corporations both regressive and ineffective - it's regressive in that it hits those who have low incomes and low amounts of stock(mostly in retirement accounts) as much as it hits the rich. Ineffective in that the big companies have all figured out how to shelter the vast majority of their profits legally. It's the small to mid sized companies that are handicapped by actually having to pay the high US taxes.

    Maybe make the corporations collect sales tax instead? What about VAT? Maybe put proper tiers on non-earned income(IE capital gains)?

    My idea is to split personal income taxes into two categories - earned and unearned. Earned is salaries, piece work, etc... IE you 'did' something to earn that money. Unearned is capital gains, interest, dividends, and such, money earned from the simple fact that you 'owned' something. Your first ~$10k of income in either category is taxed at 0%, after that it's tiered in parallel like the current system. Assuming an average return rate of 5%, that's $200k in investments before you start having to pay taxes on the return, which is a good amount for emergencies, college, early retirement, and what not.

    If you make as much as Romney though, you're going to be paying near the top rate, no matter how you structure your income.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  105. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by icebike · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How about we just close the loopholes? If you have a US based company that is clearly operating a subsidiary, that subsidiary (even foreign) will be subject to US taxation. Far simpler strategy.

    You miss the whole point of the story. This story isn't JUST about US tax being avoided.

    paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion

    The problem here is that Ireland offers ridiculously low tax rates to attract investment and employment.
    They realize that the spending and the taxes Ireland gains from income taxes and sales taxes paid by the employees and the jobs that are created helps Ireland more than the corporate tax. So they set crazy low rates cor corporate taxes and Facebook and Google set up data centers there.

    I'm hard pressed to declare this a totally bad idea. If it works for Ireland, good for them. If it works for Facebook and Google, how can you blame them for doing exactly what the law was set up to encourage?

    The US can fix their tax laws too. They could easily make it more profitable to keep the investment mostly at home. Irish tax and legislation isn't exactly secret sauce. Washington State gives Boeing and Microsoft and Amazon astounding tax breaks just to keep its citizens employed. So do a lot of other states.

    Side note: There is a school of thought that says taxing corporations is counter productive, and taxing the compensation AND THE PERKS of people that work for the corporations makes more sense. (Lets not start the corporate owned cars, planes, yachts and houses rant m'Kay? I said "compensation"). When you get right down to it, the reasons corporations are taxed is to gain some measure of government control over them, not to gain any real tax revenue that would not otherwise be collected from shareholders or employees.

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  106. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Compare the US crime rate to the Western European Crime rates?

  107. Re:Tax avoidance by asylumx · · Score: 4, Informative

    Greece is a perfect example. Also, take a look at the French revolution. Why did that happen? Because the peasants had no bread.

  108. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I like to pay taxes

    I take it you routinely decline all of the deductions you're eligible for, come tax day?

  109. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    The REAL question is why hasn't this enormous loophole been closed yet?

    Because the companies are willing to spend millions lobbying politicians to make sure it isn't closed, and as most politicians own substantial amounts of stock in the companies doing this, closing the loopholes will cost THEM money.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  110. Re:Tax avoidance by Spaseboy · · Score: 2, Funny

    You can use the United States as a prime example. I'm not here to do the job of educating you, we have complimentary public schools for that. Since you couldn't be bothered to participate in your education, then you can just research crime rates in the US.

    Also, since you couldn't be bothered to participate in your education, you can research the Roman Empire and its welfare system and the reasoning behind it.

    In addition, since you couldn't be bothered to participate in your education, feel free to research communism and the reasoning behind it.

    --
    "I don't want more choice, I just want nicer things!"
    -Jennifer Saunders as Edina Monsoon
  111. Re:Tax avoidance by asylumx · · Score: 1

    Also, how about military ships patrolling trade routes to deter pirates?

  112. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But to argue that we should pay zero taxes make NO SENSE WHATSOEVER.

    You should look into the history of income tax in the United States of America.

    You will find that we got along JUST FUCKING FINE (sorry I had to mimic your use of caps) before the American Civil War, during which income taxes were first imposed.

    Yes, import tariffs is how the fucking government used to get most of its funding.

    I'm sorry I had to resort to caps and expletives, but you cocksucking SHILL FUD'sters are fucking SHILL FUD'sters.

  113. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    I agree we can't undo the welfare state overnight. The problem is that we give people incentive to have children they can't afford. Stop paying for more children that will have even more children that will also end up on Welfare because it's all they ever know. I don't really blame them, if I'd grown up under that system I'd no doubt fall right in with the path of least resistance too. I blame Lyndon Johnson and his stupid "Great Society." What a load of crap. He and others created this problem and now we're going to reap the pain.

  114. Re:Tax avoidance by Spaseboy · · Score: 1

    A vast majority of tax money, though, goes either to waste or to things that are outright harmful for the taxpayer

    Citation needed.

    --
    "I don't want more choice, I just want nicer things!"
    -Jennifer Saunders as Edina Monsoon
  115. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Modern economics demands unemployment.

    People are a resource, and when a resource (labour) becomes short its value rises (ie wages rise), so big business and the wealthy have a vested interest in there being a pool of unemployed to prevent wage rises.

    If they can then create the fictions that all people on a benefit are bludgers , lazy, and are the blame it diverts attention from the truth, they are there because the must be.

    Tax cuts for the wealthy also do not generate employment, it never has. What generates employment is demand, demand for goods or for services. Where there is demand, someone will invest to meet that demand.

    Large corporations are now playing one country off against the other to the detriment of everyone, a new taxation system needs to be worked out so where a corporation tried to take out large sums of money through these shells without paying taxes has a "finance exchange levy" of say 50% imposed, i.e. make it cheaper for them to pay the same taxes as local companies.

  116. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    He might be including medicare expenses in there, even then it'd only be the most expensive retirees getting $300k worth of medical benefits a year.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  117. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by asylumx · · Score: 1

    Could you please try explaining that again in a way that makes sense? I have no idea what you're trying to say here.

  118. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your forgetting they paid direct to head office, in advance, in order to get the option of not paying now.

    Your real government services are being sold cheap of the back of a lorry by your congress critters, good luck stopping it or even getting them to admit its wrong.

  119. Re:Tax avoidance by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

    Where would you like the populations found within these population centers to go? Did you want a few more neighbors in your rural backwater? I thought the rural folks were already up in arms about losing their land to suburban sprawl.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  120. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    I don't mind paying for that. I think everyone should pay a fair tax. Until the tax system is fixed so these loopholes are gone that will never happen. The working stiffs will continue to foot the bill for the welfare state while the Mitt Romney's of this country hide their money in the Cayman Islands.

  121. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    contractors are not included in the official headcount yet for all intents and purposes they are govt employees. And they are not cheap.

    It's simple - see through the bullshit and judge the size of the govt by what it spends.

  122. Re:Tax avoidance by rroman · · Score: 1

    Company is abstract construct. Company doesn't care about anything, it is the people that are controlling it. When we say Google did this or that, it means people in Google in the name of the company did this or that. When people in Google decide to destroy it, the company won't fight back. When the company has the money, nobody benefits from that and thus there should be no tax from that money (inflation is good enough).

  123. Re:Tax avoidance by Obfuscant · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I like to pay taxes, with them I buy civilization.

    Please feel free to hand your entire paycheck to the government. There is no law stopping you. It will make you much happier knowing that you are getting much more civilization than your neighbor.

    I suspect, however, that you really mean that you like the concept of taxes paid by others because it pays for the control over them that you appreciate (and that you call "civilization").

    That a lot of deluded "rugged individualists" falsely think they are entirely self-made and have no obligation to pay back into society amuses me.

    I have an obligation to pay back into society that which it asks me to pay and I have agreed to. There is no EULA or "shrink-wrap license"; no unilateral contract. If "society" wants to promote home ownership and does so by creating tax deductions, then I will use them and feel no sorrow at paying less in taxes. Ditto for energy-efficient appliances, weatherization, charitable donations, etc. If the sum of the deductions meets or exceeds the "tax liability", then why should I have any obligation to pay at all? After all, society has told me what it expects; I have met that expectation.

    This same concept applies to corporations. Obeying the laws and paying what is owed is their obligation; paying extra because you want "more civilization" isn't.

    Seeing them frustrated and resentful at paying taxes makes me smile.

    Why would anyone be resentful at having to pay for things that you think they should pay for but they don't? How silly of them. And isn't it such a wonderful feeling of accomplishment when you can force them to do so, and feel superior to them at the same time?

  124. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This is perfectly acceptable.

    You seem to be stating that having a company 1% in the USA is better than a company that's 0% in the USA. This clearly isn't true when the company in question is raking in 90% of it's money from the USA, and giving virtually none of it back. They soak up our real estate and resources. I'm sure a company that pays tax on 100% of its revenue would do a lot better for the USA in that plot of land than one that pays tax on 1% of its revenue.

    Let the tax evading bastards evade their taxes and fuck over the economy of a different country. Let the entire operation and everything regarding it run out of the Cayman Islands. SURELY those running the country will look kindly on this big, massive organization giving nothing back to the government, and no blood will be spilled by anyone corrupt.

  125. Re:Tax avoidance by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    That also puts the grandparent poster's real name(which is NOT Anonymous Coward) on a quarterly published list of people that have denounced their US citizenship. That, and it aggressively values assets to maximize collections(arguably it should include a few years back to discourage strategic transfers).

    I would not be surprised to see that used to track where prominent denouncers, such as the traitor Eduardo Saverin, go and what they do.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  126. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    You are thinking of a company in a vacuum. A simplistic construct in a gedankenexperiment, that owes nothing to the society and laws that allow it to operate.

    In short, your argument stinks.

    --
    BMO

  127. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need to leave the country to renounce your citizenship. Without citizenship somewhere else you're then fucked. Why can't I just move to a fucking country and live there as long as I register to pay taxes? Should be no more difficult than getting a lease for an apartment.

  128. Maybe a simple solution... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Maybe a simple solution is to not tax corporations income at all and to pass the taxable income to the owners of the corporations like a partnership. If you own 10% of the company, then you must claim 10% of the net income on your personal taxes. If you own .0001%, then you claim .0001%. In this modern age of computers, corporations can issue 1099 statements with your weighted average share of income.

    Doing so treats corporate income like any other business income for tax purposes and dividends just become a return on capital investment. The downside to all of this is that some very wealthy people won't be able to shelter their money in off shore corporations any more because they will have to claim it as personal income just like a sole proprietor or partner.

    1. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      You are thinking along the right line. I'm a big advocate of not taxing corporations, and instead taxing individuals.

      The current situation causes corporations to be far too involved in the political process and to make decisions such as location based on a venue shopping process that is generally quite corrupt.

      I think the result would be a much more efficient economy and better political process.

    2. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the Netherlands it works likes that (except for foreign companies of course). Owners pay income tax on dividends, salaries and bonuses. But if a company decides to hoard all the money in its own bank account that it has to pay the income tax itself; the tax is returned when the company spents its money, so no double taxation.

    3. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the sound of this.

      But I suspect a lot of the uber rich would move out of the U.S.

    4. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      > But I suspect a lot of the uber rich would move out of the U.S.

      There are two kinds of uber rich. Successful entrepreneurs and their children.

      The first kind would flock to the US because their corporations would be untaxed. The second kind might leave the US but who cares they don't do much useful. They still have to pay taxes on the income they earn in the US, just like I have to pay taxes in France on the dividends I receive from French companies that I own stock in.

    5. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by celle · · Score: 1

      "Maybe a simple solution is to not tax corporations income at all and to pass the taxable income to the owners of the corporations"

          Except corporations are legal citizens and should pay taxes given that legal status, just like the rest of us. Otherwise, strip them of their legal and other supports and treat them like simple businesses again with all the risk and direct accountability that goes with it.

    6. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 2

      "Maybe a simple solution is to not tax corporations income at all and to pass the taxable income to the owners of the corporations"

          Except corporations are legal citizens and should pay taxes given that legal status, just like the rest of us. Otherwise, strip them of their legal and other supports and treat them like simple businesses again with all the risk and direct accountability that goes with it.

      Corporations are not legal citizens. They are legal entities, there is a difference. Of course, these corporations are registered/incorporated in other countries, so that would make them foreign citizens. To take your approach a step further, then, they couldn't work/operate in the US without the appropriate visa, like any other foreigh citizen. Since they would be a special class of foreign citizen, the government could price that visa at a different rate, possibly to offset the loss tax revenues for seeking these tax havens or, just treat them like any other foreign national and any income earned in the US is taxable for the US, regardless of your country of origin. Of course, you could only net expenses incurred in the US to generate those revenues.

      That is somewhat more complicated, but if you want to go with the model that a corporation is a citizen, then treat them like any other citizen for tax purposes. However, I still think it would be much simpler to pass the net income of the corporation to the owners (shareholders) and tax it there.

      The original purpose of incorporating a business was to limit the liability of the owners/shareholders, not to shelter taxes.

    7. Re:Maybe a simple solution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you treat a company like Exxon under this scheme? I understand the profits can be distributed as dividends but can you force the board to do this? This might work for small LLCs - in actually its how some function, but for huge multinationals with millions of "owners" its going to be hard to work out the details. You would have to force distributions somehow. If they decide to keep the cash in the bank for operations, under this scheme they would pay no taxes because it wasn't actually distributed.

  129. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    What about the invasion of Iraq?

    It certainly wasn't because of WMDs. Obviously the reason was economic. For who? Well, that's a bit more obscure, but it certainly wasn't about the defense of the US.

    --
    BMO

  130. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But of course you are nothing but a selfish prick

    So, he's "selfish" because he wants to keep what he earns, and you're not because you want to rob him and give it to someone who didn't earn it?

    FUCK YOU.

  131. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    sure but if you want to convince anybody, you shouldn't mention global bullying as a beneficial way to spend tax revenue. That won't win you many allies.

  132. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pfft, as if that is going to mean shit to any of these companies.

    They could hire HITMEN to take care of this stuff if they wanted to, hell, they probably have more contacts than the FBI bloody does!

  133. Those are the real moochers and leeches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First they don't play any taxes, but use the luxuries of a country,
    then they expect huge profits but don't give them back to their employees,

    and then they have the audacity to call poor people "moochers" and "leeches".
    People that got poor because of them.

    IMO, they are America's actual number one enemy of the state.
    The "terrorists" are a freaking joke compared to the destruction those companies do to the country.

  134. Re:Tax avoidance by besalope · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When talking about income taxes, yes, you are member of the society, you benefit from such things, you should pay taxes. Companies, however, don't benefit from army, from healthcare and from any other things that society provides. In fact, when nobody uses the company, the company ceases to exist. Taxing the companies only forces the companies to spend every year the most so they don't have to pay such high taxes. For me, it is not bad if for example Microsoft holds great untaxed amount of cash this year and invests it the next year or the year after. The company is already punished for not spending their money by inflation, the income tax is just bad tool and shouldn't be used.

    Complete bullshit across the board.

    • Companies, however, don't benefit from army

      Example: Halliburton rebuilding the Middle East

    • Companies, however, don't benefit from...healthcare

      I work in the Healthcare analytics world, a healthy population has a DIRECT correlation to higher productivity from your workforce, ergo higher profits. This is why companies track Health and Productivity Management and implement programs designed to change employee lifestyles to be more healthy.

    • Companies, however, don't benefit from...any other things that society provides
      • Roads and other public infrastructures allow your employees to come to work and customers to purchase your product/service.
      • Police and Fire departments help to protect corporate assets from theft and destruction.
      • Patents and Trademarks should be self-explanatory
      • And the list goes on...

    Drop the corporate shill routine that companies don't benefit from the government. They benefit a hell of a lot more than most citizens and at a lower effective tax rate.

  135. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no such thing as a job creator. Jobs come from demand.

    Nick Hanauer "Rich people don't create jobs"
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKCvf8E7V1g

  136. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In theory. Oh god only in theory.

  137. Libertarian here.. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    I'm a mix of Bin B and C. I go downright socialist in the sense that because I believe in Keynesian economic theory, I think that the government should shift between deficit spending and a surplus in counterpoint to the private economy. Ideally this should be set up to be as automatic as possible.

    Combined with our not being willing to let people starve in the streets, not wanting people in prison to have better lifestyles than those out of prison, etc... I think that we should have a sort of universal employment option instead of most forms of welfare. Call it the 'Federal Jobs Program'. It'd be a typical government job: Low on pay; high on benefits. I'd try to keep it paying slightly less overall than private jobs in the same category. Meanwhile it provides medical*, training(technical, OJT, and college), perhaps even food and housing. I'm picturing how we used to treat junior enlisted in the military - eat at a dining facility(where junior enlisted to most of the work), live in the dorms/barracks, family housing for the married. Anyways, haven't even addressed what I'd have them do - which is mostly 'build infrastructure', which to me is anything that should still be in operation and providing benefits 20 years later. Roads, bridges, schools, parks, government buildings, etc... Heck, maybe even put them to work putting solar panels on people's houses in areas where it makes sense. Running fiber. Helping to set up a community cooperative internet provider. To try to keep private businesses from using it to get their projects done cheaper, I'd require all infrastructure to pass in to the hands of a cooperate(IE customer owned)/not for profit, not a for profit business. The details would fill a book, of course.

    The trick is that when deciding whether a project would be profitable, you deduct the welfare we'd be paying the worker otherwise if they weren't working. So with laber discounted something like 50%, you can now, on paper at least, have a lot of projects be profitable/worth it if it wasn't for the otherwise high cost of labor.

    *Until we get some sort of universal system set up; as a libertarian I find the idea of your job providing your healthcare abhorrent. You should be getting your own healthcare insurance INDEPENDENT of your job, outside of military/professional sports and such.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Libertarian here.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're making the assumption that people on welfare just can't or won't find jobs, and that those on welfare would be able to perform manual labor without issue.

    2. Re:Libertarian here.. by fche · · Score: 1

      "I think that the government should shift between deficit spending and a surplus in counterpoint to the private economy"

      For how many years during the last century, did such a "counterpoint" policy actually result in a surplus? What government spending cuts would you agitate for over the next 10-20 years, to get a surplus budget, in non-recession times? Do you believe we are currently in a recession? (Are you a Keynesian only during recessions?)

    3. Re:Libertarian here.. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      For how many years during the last century, did such a "counterpoint" policy actually result in a surplus?

      Politicians suck at implementing the surplus part. That, I'll fully admit. Which is why I said it should be 'mostly automatic'.

      What government spending cuts would you agitate for over the next 10-20 years, to get a surplus budget, in non-recession times?

      Why does it need to solely be spending cuts? We should have never done the Bush tax cuts, for example, though at this point I'd have been working to suck money out of the housing boom - I saw that one coming a mile away. I was a bit young for the dotcom boom, but even there I saw that investors were throwing a lot of money at companies with no real business plan(sign of a boom). So you raise taxes a bit(preferably targeting the overheating* market), and build up some reserves for when the crash/downturn comes.

      Anyways, if you read into the post a bit you'd see that the 'spending cuts' I'd make during a boom time is that federal type construction and maintenance of infrastructure would slow down. I'd also slow down military R&D and acquisitions.

      *Though it's a fine line between a market that's simply 'hot' and 'overheating'. Hot is good. Overheating = greatly increased waste with no real extra production, and even higher expenses when it finally breaks.

      Do you believe we are currently in a recession? (Are you a Keynesian only during recessions?)

      No, I'm not a Keynesian only during recessions. See the Bush tax cuts. I believe that we're currently in a small one, though there are signs we're leaving it.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    4. Re:Libertarian here.. by fche · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your answers.

      "the 'spending cuts' I'd make during a boom time is that federal type ... infrastructure would slow down. I'd also slow down military ..."

      Would only that, plus tolerable tax increases, conceivably be sufficient to put the feds into a budget surplus -- without choking a presumed economic boom into a recession? Are you aware of any CBO or whatnot war-gaming of this?

    5. Re:Libertarian here.. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Are you aware of any CBO or whatnot war-gaming of this?

      Haven't seen any simulation work.

      Would only that, plus tolerable tax increases, conceivably be sufficient to put the feds into a budget surplus

      Well, the general idea is that you keep the tax rates the same no matter what; tax increases over current are going to be necessary, but tolerable - look at Europe! After that you try to keep them very stable(inflation adjusted).

      The basic idea is that you set pay scales for the 'federal job program'(FJP) at sufficiently below market that they want private work. You'll always have a few(I'd kill the welfare programs in the process of setting up the FJP) working there, but the idea is that when the economy is shedding jobs in a recession the FJP payroll explodes and they start doing all the projects they can manage. When a boom hits and the hiring boom happens, people leave the FJP to work in the private sector and construction slows.

      What chokes an economic boom isn't generally 'lack of money'. It's lack of resources - Once you've hired 95% of workers, wages start shooting up like crazy because you have to hire people away from other businesses to get them, and pay them more to keep them from being poached in turn. Great for the worker except when businesses overheat/go crazy and turn said pay increase into an unsustainable situation.

      Another example would be the home building glut - so many homes being built that they overstressed the home building supply manufacturing industry and as a result the cost started shooting up. Basically when you start looking at price/supply/demand graphs, there are cliffs in there, and you hit them during booms.

      Thus the idea of 'sucking money' out of booms - slow them down, keep them from overheating; that way you can actually increase the duration of the boom, and lessen the bust afterwards.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    6. Re:Libertarian here.. by fche · · Score: 1

      "Well, the general idea is that you keep the tax rates the same..."

      You might want to toy with the numbers available to see if anything like this scheme could accomplish the Keynesian (?) goal of budgetary surplus during non-recession times (to pay down/back the debts accured during past recessions), to see what kind of actual tax rates this would require. I would not be shocked if it resulted in mathematically impossible, let alone economically intolerable ones.

      "The basic idea is that you set pay scales for the 'federal job program'(FJP) at sufficiently below market that they want private work"

      That sounds like work-for-welfare.

    7. Re:Libertarian here.. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      to see what kind of actual tax rates this would require. I would not be shocked if it resulted in mathematically impossible, let alone economically intolerable ones.

      We need about 30% more revenue to balance the budget now, if I remember right. That's painful, but doable. During a boom wages tend to shoot up, and thus revenues. Meanwhile the FJP would be shedding workers and thus expenses.

      That sounds like work-for-welfare.

      Anything wrong with that?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    8. Re:Libertarian here.. by fche · · Score: 1

      "We need about 30% more revenue to balance the budget right now"

      I think it's closer to 50%, and that's just for the current year's deficit, with no repayment of the accumulated debt principal. At least that's not mathematically impossible for now; twenty years of entitlement growths later though, who knows.

      "Anything wrong with [work-for-welfare]?"

      Dunno; the left generally hates it, which is a good sign :-). It'd have to pay below-minimum-wage to meet your criteria of not competing with the private sector.

    9. Re:Libertarian here.. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I think it's closer to 50%, and that's just for the current year's deficit, with no repayment of the accumulated debt principal.

      We're in a recession at the moment; some deficit spending is to be expected.

      It'd have to pay below-minimum-wage to meet your criteria of not competing with the private sector.

      That's more what jobs it does than how much it pays, and it'd only pay 'below minimum' for *very* unskilled work. IE if you're a electrician you'd get lousy pay for an electrician, but still above minimum wage. It can be a bit of a moot point - I'd be getting rid of the minimum wage; the trick being that if you don't pay more than the FJP, you're not going to get a lot of workers unless you're concentrating solely on the high school student crowd.

      The ultimate idea is to keep employment up - the more people working, the fewer that need welfare support. Even if it costs more initially, if you can do that it's better for everyone.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    10. Re:Libertarian here.. by fche · · Score: 1

      "We're in a recession at the moment"

      Actually, we're not. Technically, the US recession ended in 2009, when the GDP started growing again.

      "The ultimate idea is to keep employment up - the more people working, the fewer that need welfare support."

      Except for those who are working are doing so by virtue of work-for-welfare.

  138. Re:Tax avoidance by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

    I don't see any arguing, I see a statement of facts. The U.S. government does not have the constitutional powers to legislate local law enforcement policy nor legislate any other matter having local jurisdiction. Ironically, U.S. citizens traditionally look to the federal government to ensure liberties, equality, and welfare even though local governments, not federal, have the jurisdiction to do anything about it.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  139. Support the troops! by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    There's a difference between supporting the troops and supporting the military complex. You have to be careful about the lines drawn.

    Getting our troops out of Iraq, Afghanistan can be supporting the troops while not supporting military industry/spending. Lowering overall military numbers gradually while increasing pay can be supporting, etc...

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  140. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    You know, I only mentioned that the US's dependence on military superiority for economic stability, but it's hardly the US that does it.

    Everyone does.

    Why the hell do you think the Danes and Canadians send ships and planes to the arctic to argue about what island is Danish and what is Canadian?

    "Global bullying" is done by everyone.

    --
    BMO

  141. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You going to blame the whites around for slavery too?
     
    It's not that you're wrong, but if that's the best example you can put out there you may as well be wrong.

  142. Re:Tax avoidance by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

    no more retirees getting 300k/y off the rest of us

    Citation required.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  143. Re:Tax avoidance by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

    And a small government will be any better at collecting taxes from big corporations?
    Sure they'll need to collect less money, but don't expect them to lower taxes for individuals. Less funding for the IRS will just lead to even more corporations implementing similar tax avoidance schemes, since the chance of being audited will be near zero.
    And since there will be more money left over, our corporate overlords will be able to bribe even more politicians (well bribe each of them more).

  144. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by nedlohs · · Score: 2

    Big government means and has always meant big in terms of budget. It has nothing to do with number of government employees.

    Outsourcing a government employee does not reduce the size of the government.

  145. Re:Tax avoidance by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As an individualist I'm certain you will feel quite at home away from us collectivist apes were you to transfer your residence to Somalia.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  146. Is it legal? by grasshoppa · · Score: 2

    They why is this a problem? If they are paying what they are legally obligated to pay, then why should they be forced to pay more? Who's the authority on how much more they should be paying? Why should they pay more? Ethics? Does that mean there is an ethics tax now?

    If we don't like how companies use the laws that are set up, I guess we know what we need to do, don't we? Make laws that force companies to pay what we feel is justified. Just don't be surprised by the outcome.

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
  147. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Does this mean that the people who pay no income tax should be held to the same standards? If so, I'd vote for it. No more "ObamaPhone", no more public education or police protection for deadbeats, no more food stamps for people who do nothing more than produce more mouths to feed... I'd be happier to see those fucks go too.
     
    But I'm sure you'll have some bullshit excuse for those fucking leeches. At least a company hires people, that's jobs. The welfare fucks are like a cancer.

  148. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1, Insightful

    insure yourself so you won't have to sell your property for peanuts when it's already on fire - problem solved.

    it's in the interest of insurance companies to lower the impact of fires and some even fund their own firefighters.
    http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Private-firefighters-role-growing-in-state-3275585.php

  149. Re:Tax avoidance by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you are really at a 50% tax bracket, you need to do one of two things (perhaps both). First, get a tax adviser and second, consider moving out of New York City or wherever it is that you're getting shafted for on local / state taxes. That's about 20% higher than it should be unless you have some really odd financial issues.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  150. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US federal budget. QED.

  151. Ireland taxes Europe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article says how much Facebook paid Ireland for operations around the world. How much did it pay Ireland for profits generated in Ireland?

  152. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, because he doesn't want to be taxed, but probably wants all the benefits taxes pay for, like your obvious public school education.

  153. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    well the USA is the land of the free and a capitalist beacon, so it would be awfully hypocritical to allow a market economy to prosper and then impose all sorts of rules limiting such a free market just because those who help make it happen figure out ways to get more out of it

  154. Re:Tax avoidance by rroman · · Score: 1

    It is not in vacuum it is the reality. When I create a company, the company starts to exist. Its money are not my money. When I want to use that money, I have to pay income tax. I'm the one who benefits from the things that society provides. The company does not, the company doesn't care.

    I will not repeat this again. If you are going to react to my post, please try to be more specific than "your argument stinks" argument.

  155. Re:Tax avoidance by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Because "-1: insane delusional wishful thinking" isn't an option.

  156. Re:Tax avoidance by mwvdlee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And some folks believe they should get a lot while giving very little.

    This is called tax avoidance and is legal, immoral and unjust.

    If Facebook thinks 0.3% tax is reasonable than their fire protection should be limited to a tall glass of water, their access roads should be reduced to trampled grassland and they should dispose of their sewage waste using government-provided paper bags.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  157. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    As an example 15-years ago there were far more government employees than there are know and the national debt was about 3-trillion dollars, yet now in 2012 after all the out-sourcing, and privatizations the national debt is approaching 16-trillion.

    The thing that started this began more than 15 years ago. It was the creation of an unofficial 4th branch of government, called private contractors. Not all private contractors belong to this branch, but the ones that do.. oh boy..

    They arent called federal employees, but these 4th branch payrolls mainly consists of federal money. When you count these 4th branch employees, federal employment has gone way way up over the past few decades. It isnt just the growth of defense contractors either, as a lot of technical and social services are now contracted out and they are growing rapidly too.

    Its actually plainly obvious that this is the case when you consider that spending must ultimately end up somewhere. If spending grows rapidly then the number of people dependent upon federal money for their wage also grows rapidly. Plainly obvious stuff. You've got to get pretty convoluted with your argument before you can hide this truth.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  158. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whenever I hear someone say "We live in a complex society", I understand that to be a code phrase whose intent is as follows: "You are too stupid because you do NOT have plaques on the wall. That is why you drive a service van with combination plates doing dirty work for a living for less than three times the minimum wage in your state."

    ==//==

  159. Easy by koan · · Score: 1

    Stop using Facebook.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  160. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most of them wouldn't move all of their assets away. Almost all of the interesting developments in tech happen in SV for a reason and no other place on the planet is even remotely close to duplicating that environment.

  161. You know what's cooler than a million dollars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sean Parker: You know what's cooler than a million dollars?

    Eduardo Saverin: You?

    Sean Parker: A billion dollars.

    http://www.moviemistakes.com/film8538/quotes

  162. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    TFA was about Facebook not paying very much to Ireland. I have no idea what taxes they pay (or don't pay) to the U.S.

  163. Randian BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporations are not a "someone". Those corporations profit from the infrastructure and R&D of the countries they operate in. This concept that the government is somehow "stealing" from companies and people is one of Rand's most insidious and disgusting fallacies. It's Orwellian and retarded on so many levels. She couldn't even reconcile it herself. She believed in democratic election but not in government or any taxes. She claimed her type of economics had never been tried, when in fact, it's the main theme throughout history with the exception being the beginnings of government in the modern era.

    Ayn Rand was a jilted, orphaned byproduct of Soviet totalitarianism. She went 300% in the opposite direction. She somehow believed that "taking" from the productive members of society would somehow cause those members to go on "strike". This is so simplistic and reductionist it's mind boggling that idiots like you swallow it by the gallon. She fails to even consider that government is symbiotic. "By, for, and of the people". Never does she think that there is possibility that one can profit and pay taxes. Nor is there talk of how the concentration of power and money is dangerous. Nor talk about the marginal utility of income.

    Also how fucking stupid is it to think that "productive" people would go on "strike" because of a few % of taxes? If there is opportunity to make money, people WILL go out and make it.

    You want to see how insane she really was just watch her interview with Mike Wallace: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ooKsv_SX4Y

    Seriously, educate yourself. Stop telling people they should re-examine their own ethics until you even understand the ethics being supplied to you by your crazy hero.

    1. Re:Randian BS by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      You might try introducing yourself before speaking to a complete stranger. I'm not going to read anything more than two sentences without being introduced. I'm just not interested.

    2. Re:Randian BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your name is holophrastic? Nice to meet your psuedonym. Your cut and paste response is hilariously like a temper tantrum.

    3. Re:Randian BS by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      it's a not a psuedonym, I've paid for this name. it's a not a psuedonym, I've used this name for decades, and never any other name.

      It's not a tantrum, I simply don't debate legitimate issues with strangers.

    4. Re:Randian BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just me or is there something seriously wrong with this guy?

    5. Re:Randian BS by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      judging by the scores, it's just you.

    6. Re:Randian BS by docmordin · · Score: 1

      Oh it's not just you: although, I can agree with some of what holophrastic is imparting, his behavior makes him out to be an incredibly picayune individual.

  164. Its very simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If company A owns or has shares in company B then company A can not buy, sell, lease or rent assets from company B, they can transfer assets directly but if company A is outside the country company B is registered in then Company A pays export duty on it. One of the biggest tax evasion methods is for one company to own another company and have the second company rent or lease the rights to use the parent company's assets particularly IP assets. Check out Hollywood accounting. They remove this little loophole and the you will be surprised how much tax revenue will suddenly be brought in.

  165. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Wizzu · · Score: 5, Informative

    paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion

    The problem here is that Ireland offers ridiculously low tax rates to attract investment and employment.

    This isn't due to a ridiculously low corporate tax rate in Ireland (it's 10% or more according to wikipedia, depending). The country with ridiculously low corporate tax is Cayman Islands (no corporate tax). Ireland's subsidiary pays licensing fees to the subsidiary in Cayman Islands, so that on paper the Ireland profit becomes miniscule, and thus the tax sums are low too.

  166. Re:Tax avoidance by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes. The solution is helping people to be gainful members of society. We all know that.

    The problem is that the current right wing philosophy is cut cut cut, with no money to spend "Teaching a man to fish". He just wants to take the fish away and say "Go get a job" when there are few jobs to be had, even for those that are motivated and educated.

    I'm not arguing Welfare is good, but it's a far sight better than simply throwing people to the wolves.

  167. Re:Tax avoidance by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

    Yes, but part of the reform included spending money on programs to train and educate people. That part is missing from todays calls for "reform".

  168. Re:good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you read a lot but not enough. just the right balance to know a little and push hard with that, without actually knowing anything of value. 15 or recent college grad with first job?

    I have my parents I need to help, my brothers' college tuition to pay, my mortgage payments. car. this cannot be in a tax shelter. this is a lot of money you need to recognize as income so you can spend it. you distribute some to them on 1099, not too much because it's fake services they're getting paid for. a lot left over, top tax bracket.

  169. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 2

    facebook is not real - it doesn't drive on roads and it doesn't shit. Employees and shareholders who do these things paid for them with their own taxes.

  170. Re:Luckily ...raising taxes..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blinded by greed! Now if we look back at the last decade in which traitor bush enacted lower taxes. You'll see companies like Exxon-Mobile having a streak of record breaking quarterly profits exceeding several billions of dollars for several years, AT&T record breaking quarters, Banks record breaking quarters, real estate industry record breaking quarters, financial industry record breaking quarters, medical industry record breaking quarters, and the media record breaking quarters. So all this money which is being taken out of the economy is taxed at the Bush lower rate which allows the Neocons to keep more and give less the the American idiot. So over time the NeoCons wealth starts to grow exponentially which allow them to buy up everything-technical term "Consolidation". Now in 2013 the American people are straddled with a debt which could only be paid off in a reasonable time by tripling the population, or have each American pay a one time sum of $42,500 to end the debt now, or have the local governments privatised as much as possible, or have the federal government continue to receive taxes yet give back less to each citizen. So ultimately what the NeoCons will say is the only solutions is to allow them to control whatever service the idiot Americans need because your government can no longer afford too.

  171. Double taxation? What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dividends? Cap gains? Operating costs? Wages? Did you fail kindergarten math?

  172. this is good for the economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporate taxes are counterproductive. We should support savings and investments because they create progress and jobs. Tax consumption for less harm to the economy.

  173. Re:Tax avoidance by Rockoon · · Score: 2

    However, the world we currently live in has few if any countries where the overwhelming majority agree that the bulk of government spending is on important things for the government to spend money on.

    Indeed. In America, between federal, state and local governments more than $21,000 per person is spent per year (FY 2012).

    Now think how much easier it is for someone that only pays $4,000 a year in taxes to go around not thinking that their tax dollar isnt being greatly wasted.... after all, even if "only" 80% of the money is being wasted, they still get (on average) $4,200 worth of value for their $4,000.... a net win for them.

    Its when they turn around and say that the rich arent paying their "fair share" that it goes into the absurd.. The guy paying $20,000 a year in taxes is also only getting (on average) $4,200 worth of value with that same 80% waste.. its simply not possible to explain to this person that their $20,000 isnt a "fair share" because the claim is absurd.

    A case in point. We spend more per student than any other country on earth, and what do we have to show for it? Very large amounts of systemic waste, obviously.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  174. Re:good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets see, if we have an automated work force your skills become worthless, the people who become valuable will be the artists people who can entertain us, stop us from becoming bored.

    In different societies the ability to hunt is highly prized, can you run, throw a spear ?

    Would your survive in the arctic, or would you be reliant on others with greater skills than you, should they then abandon you as dead weight or does your life still have value ?

    You currently live in a society where your skills have value, the people you write off have different skills that would see you reliant on them under different circumstances. Your skills are there by genetics and environmental factors, ie how you were raised.

    For example, can you play the piano to concert level, is this a lack of skill or laziness ?

  175. One article for every company? by Kwyj1b0 · · Score: 1

    Are we going to have one article for every multinational corporation that uses tax shelters/accounting tricks to avoid paying taxes?

    Personally, I don't think what they are doing is "morally" right - but then again, I'm one of those morons who don't think that corporations are people. Frankly, I'm not sure why companies pay taxes (specifically taxes on profits) - I think the rate should be 0 percent. The employees pay taxes (from the CEO to the night custodian). Employees pay taxes to drive to work, use facilities, etc.

    If they are using land, they should pay tax on that (i.e. physical presence) - just like any homeowner. If they are using electricity, the pay the utility company (and they shouldn't get a subsidized power bill, unless they have an agreement with a private utility company). A company can't do much with money in isolation. It needs to spend it or invest it and pay capital gains tax.

    The biggest flaw that I see is that the company starts "gifting" executives cars and accommodation. The employee might not pay tax on it - it isn't bought from their income. The executive is happy - they get "lower" tax rate effectively (since they don't pay for the car/house). But you can't stop companies from having their own vehicles - Fedex can and should own aircrafts. I don't see a clean way to distinguish these cases.

    Maybe someone can enlighten me on why companies are taxed, and other flaws with eliminating corporate tax?

    1. Re:One article for every company? by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Because Corporations aren't people, but corporations are everywhere, so it is easy optics to say we should just take their money and then we could all have ponies and sugar coated IPads.

  176. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    so you say no property taxes, which supposedly fund the fire protection, were paid on the HQ building?

  177. Violence or starvation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been studying economic policies within the context of power in varying types of governmental systems. Capitalist democracies like the United States, Rome or ancient Greece almost exclusively use military might to get their way abroad and defend their national interests. The quintessential example is an attitude of 'We probably wont have a reason to invade you if you sell us sufficient amounts of oil'. Socialist democracies such as nearly every nation-state of the EU use economic reliance or dominance to do the same thing. That attitude is more akin to 'Now that we have helped you industrialize your agrarian workforce, you owe it to us to sell low cost manufactured goods or our food aid programme might have some funding difficulties.'

    The current question in 'colonialism 2.0' as Vaphell insightfully called it is which attitude is better for civilization as a whole - coercion through threat of violence or coercion through the threat of starvation?

  178. Re:Tax avoidance by Mr.CRC · · Score: 1
    If we didn't have these services provided by government with all the associated graft that makes them more expensive than they need to be, then that is exactly what Facebook would have done before a fire started. So you have made no argument. Yes, society can function with private services, and a lot better. We wouldn't be paying our taxes to support $480000 pensions for policemen who retired at 50, while the current budgets for the actual services dwindle! This is the fraud you get with government and it's unions.

    http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=215290

  179. Econ 101 laws apply to Corporate taxes by sdguero · · Score: 2

    I.e. diminishing returns.

    The higher you raise corporate taxes, the more inventive ways large profitable companies are going to find to avoid them. So we end up taxing the crap out of small players that can't afford to globablize (and are a small percentage of oerall tax revenue), while the big boys just offshore their financials. If the USA were to lower corporate taxes 80-90% it probably wouldn't be worth the effort for a lot of companies to maintain foreign entities to get the tax benefits. This might make for an interesting economics investigation...

    1. Re:Econ 101 laws apply to Corporate taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell that to the Irish. They already have a low corporate tax rate, but even that was mostly avoided by shipping profits to the Cayman Islands.

  180. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Maritime law dictates that anybody who is aware of piracy has to intervene to stop it if they have the means, no matter what flag the victim flies.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  181. Re:Tax avoidance by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

    Tax avoidance is not the correct solution. It benefits those with better knowledge of tax law and how to avoid paying. It would be better to simplify the tax laws to prevent the ability to avoid taxes. Then, if the simplified tax laws are bringing in too much money, lower the rates.

  182. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    >I will not repeat this again.

    Stuff a sock in it.

    --
    BMO

  183. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    Canada and Denmark have their teritorial waters there, but i don't see them blowing brown people up half the world away or threatening independent states. There is nothing global about their tiny little posturing.
    I see maybe 3 candidates that are the real deal (the US, China, Russia) and really the US is in a league of their own. What is it, defense budget equal to the next 20 countries combined?

  184. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    >Canada and Denmark have their teritorial waters there, but i don't see them blowing brown people up half the world away or threatening independent states.

    If they were bigger, they would be.

    This is what you don't understand.

    --
    BMO

  185. Re:Tax avoidance by obarel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It also can't have profits and can't pay taxes - it's a company, not a human being.

    So I suggest we get rid of the notion of "companies". It's harmful to society. Instead, let's have the employees and the shareholders responsible for taking the profits and for paying taxes. That'll be a lot simpler, and would require them to actually relocate to the Cayman Islands before they can enjoy the tax benefits.

    And if specific employees and/or shareholders find ways not to pay taxes, then the government can find ways to withhold services such as education, health, roads and sewage. Agreed?

  186. FLat tax by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

    And this is what I point at when I suggest flat taxation, and everyone says it would hurt the poor. The poor are already being hurt by the super rich paying almost nothing. I include businesses in this definition of super rich.

  187. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    wrong.
    The government is accountable to the people, when all is said and done,. Money doesn't vote, people do.
    We have seen time and time again where the government has fought and one against a multitude of corporation and their abuses.
    With strong government regulations, you can limit damage corporations do. With out it it means corporation can do whatever they want. We have seen that. we have seen the results from that, it's not pretty.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  188. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The solution, of course, is to pay taxes on revenue, not on profit.

    Except that it would then be impossible to run any business with a physical product, unless you own the entire supply chain.

  189. Re:Tax avoidance by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Actually, a lack of money doesn't cause crime. Just look at India if you don't believe me, they're quite literally the happiest people on earth.

    Indeed, does welfare reduce crime? No, in fact, it actually increases it.

    http://www.neoperspectives.com/welfare.htm

    Im not so sure about the marriage issue, but I do know quite well that single parent kids are far worse off, and our current welfare and child support laws encourage. Black people are especially bad here, not due to their race, but due to the cultural values (or lack thereof) of most urban black males. It's not society's fault, it's their own fault, but politicians and the media are so afraid of being labeled racist that nobody will speak up about it.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  190. Re:Tax avoidance by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    ...we're going extinct.

    We are?!

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  191. Re:Tax avoidance by Mr.CRC · · Score: 1

    Not if there is no capital. Capital comes from people who are able to defer consumption today in order to accumulate savings to invest tomorrow. And no, government funny money fiat fraud currency systems are no substitute for capital, as their collapse is what we are currently living through. Credit != capital.

  192. Re:Tax avoidance by Bengie · · Score: 1

    XanC was being sarcastic as he quoted Schmidt.

  193. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 2

    So?
    They question is not about taxes. Just saying Lower taxes otr raise taxes is meaningless.
    It's don't to create an emotional argument and fear mongers.
    What do you get for those services? Do you kniow what it takes to keep a city running? the 1000's of miles of infrastructure?
    Safety, etc...

    For the record I make nearly 100K, and pay 21% in taxes, all said and done. Minus fuel taxes, I don't want to figure that out. No time, but it's not much. I get about 8 gallons of fuel a week, most weeks.

    If my taxes jump to 40%, but in exchange health care an all education was free I would be fine with that becasue it has value to myself, and more importantly, society as a whole.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  194. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 0

    Example: Halliburton rebuilding the Middle East

    PEOPLE in charge of Haliburton profit from it

    a healthy population has a DIRECT correlation to higher productivity from your workforce, ergo higher profits

    PEOPLE are using the healthcare services ad PEOPLE realize the profits

    Roads and other public infrastructures allow your employees to come to work and customers to purchase your product/service.

    true, both employees and customers pay for their right to use the infrastructure with their taxes plus property taxes dependent on value dependent on quality of infrastructure are paid on company's real estate

    Police and Fire departments help to protect corporate assets from theft and destruction.

    property taxes cover that

  195. Re:Tax avoidance by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

    Nonsense. Facebook drives on roads and shits. When their employees and shareholders are driving on behalf of the company or taking a shit on company time, Facebook's responsible. When they do those things on their own time, in their own cars, on their own toilets, they're reponsible.

  196. Re:Tax avoidance by Bengie · · Score: 1

    If they don't like the benefits afforded by society as a whole, they are allowed to leave. If they're that worried about losing a small amount of money to taxes, then they are free to go find some unclaimed land and protect it themselves.

  197. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 2

    The US defense budget is over $700 billion [2], which as a component of the overall US federal budget is only exceeded by Medicare/Medicaid and social security [3], and is also equal to the sum of the military budgets of the next 14 highest military spending countries [2], which for a country of only 4.5% of the world's population (compared to China's 19% and India's 17%) [4] is rediculous by any stretch of the imagination.

    The US spends more than $450 billion [1] just to service the interest on its debt, which is more than 3% of total GDP [1, 5], and that's with an average debt interest rate of just 2.5% [7] on a debt of over $16 trillion [6]. "As the debt ratio increases, the exchange value of the dollar may fall. Paying back debt with cheaper currency could cause investors (including other governments) to demand higher interest rates if they anticipate further dollar depreciation. Paying higher interest rates could slow domestic U.S. growth." [8].

    The debt to GDP ratio for the United States now exceeds 100% [9], which is a position shared by countries also with financial problems like Ireland and Greece. The US may have its own financial printing press, but inflationary pressure will either limit its use or risk total collapse of the US dollar as a global reserve currency in favor of the Euro or IMF SDRs [10].

    Anyone who denies that the USA is in deep financial doodoo is living in laa laa land with their head in the sand.

    [1] http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.htm
    [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures
    [3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:U.S._Federal_Spending_-_FY_2011.png
    [4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_population
    [5] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_%28nominal%29
    [6] https://www.fms.treas.gov/fmsweb/viewDTSFiles?dir=w&fname=12122700.txt
    [7] http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/rates/pd/avg/2012/2012_11.htm
    [8] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_public_debt
    [9] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_public_debt
    [10] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bancor

  198. Re:Tax avoidance by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

    OK, so let's all stop paying taxes. Let's see how many days it will take until it looks like Zombie Apocalipse. Really, go ahead.

  199. Which Crooks Get the Money? by drrilll · · Score: 1

    And does it matter? I think the entire debate falls into the "what is less evil" category, rather than "what is good". I think I have better things to think about.

  200. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You (and the OP) seem to ignore the fact that the United States itself is one of the biggest tax havens for foreign companies.

  201. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 2

    Corporation also cost society money. SO they shoudl also pay. 20% on the net no deduction except RnD, 30% on any money leaving the US.

    I would also tax 100% on all net over a billion dollars.
    Put that money into RnD, or hire more people, or get it taxed.

    What people discussion economics seem to for get, is that the only way money has value to society is if it is moving.

    When you pay a dollar to buy and orange, the dollar is only worth something at the moment of the transaction. In fact, it's worth exactly 1 orange. The orange gets consumed, but the dollar will be a dollar again at it's next transaction.

    Yes, yes, I know it's radical idea. Lets all horde are money and watch society crumble. The we can use it to heat out homes as we go back to living in mud huts and afraid of the lightning god.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  202. Re:Tax avoidance by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

    Yes, society can function with private services, and a lot better.

    Citation needed.

  203. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is a means test for Social Security that is based on life decisions:

    0. Abolish the right to expatriate and/or raise the expatriation tax to discourage expatriation--in for pence, in for pound. Tune the substantial presence criteria to broaden the tax base.
    1. Eliminate the cap on SS & Medicare tax on wages.
    2. Apply the SS & Medicare taxes on capital gains (one of the few good measures of the PPACA).
    2. Owned real property in your lifetime? You don't collect. Learn to live on a reverse mortgage.
    3. Owned a business within thirty years of retirement age? You don't collect. The time gap is to protect those who realized that they are not cut out for business ownership and chosen to resume earning a humble living, but not too close to retirement age so as to wrongly qualify; other sections will see to it that it does not happen.
    4. Hold a college degree? ABSO FUCKING LUTELY NO GODDAMN MOTHERFUCKING WAY DO YOU COLLECT! The earning differential should be used to pay for one's retirement.
    5. Net worth greater than 200K? You don't collect. This will force those not otherwise disqualified to conduct their affairs prudently.
    6. Have children at retirement age? You don't collect. Since the Pleistocene, children have been retirement plans. This will compel family responsibilities. If they commit suicide or die after you reach the eligibility age, you are SCREWED!
    6. Born after 1965? You don't collect. More likely than not, those born after 1965 will have one or more of the above.
    7. Pass a federal statute overriding state law coupled with the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act making a federal offense to murder any such SS OAB recipient with either death or mandatory life-without-parole in a supermax facility to deter such conduct.

    Once the last 1965 born people die around the mid 2050's, Social Security can be dismantled and the tax discontinued.

    SS OAB should be reserved for those who are single, childless, effectually denied any effective post-secondary education, home ownership, business opportunities and investing. There are millions each having the faculty of ambition impaired by sub-clinical disabilities. These were neither sufficient to disqualify from a driver's license nor sufficient to quality for SSI Disability. Nonetheless, these have not fared well in the economy since the Nixon Shock and the firing of the PATCO workers. For those not qualifying, let their ambitions lay and grow their nest egg. Not running oneself into the ground to chase that dollar should not be construed as voluntary poverty.

    Don't make the assumption that I described my situation in the above.

  204. Re:Tax avoidance by Vaphell · · Score: 1
  205. Re:Tax avoidance by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    You are correct that the tax laws should be simplified, but I am not sure how that would correct the problem of the government spending money on things it should not be spending money on. Our problem in this country is NOT insufficient government revenue. Our problem is excessive government spending.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  206. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 1

    that is,at best, a simplistic use of work force development, and at worst(and probably) you are ignorant and just spread lies to fit your agenda.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workforce_development

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  207. No worries; taxes are collected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Facebook pays VAT for all ad revenues. In Finland, that's 23 cents for every euro collected.

    Additionally, Finnish Facebook shareholders pay 29% on all dividends as well as capital gains (if any).

  208. Re:Tax avoidance by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

    So, you are against progressive taxation? The rich guy also gets back a lot more from the society he lives in than the other fellows, so why should he complain that he pays more taxes?

    I'd LOVE to pay a million euro of income tax every year!

  209. you can't fix this by terec · · Score: 2

    The people primarily hit by higher taxes are regular wage earners. "The one percent" and corporations have many ways of getting around paying taxes, and there is no law that can fix this (short of turning a country into a totalitarian state). That's why it is so fascinating that the "educated middle class" so often votes for tax increases and the politicians that favor them.

  210. Except...Offshoring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It further encourages companies to move all operations to places with low wage labor. Taxing profit, wages, and cap gains all have purpose. If a company is extracting money from a country, they should pay for what makes that country worth selling to.

    1. Re:Except...Offshoring by swillden · · Score: 1

      It further encourages companies to move all operations to places with low wage labor. Taxing profit, wages, and cap gains all have purpose. If a company is extracting money from a country, they should pay for what makes that country worth selling to.

      Offshoring doesn't change the argument at all. They can offshore whether they pay corporate taxes or not.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  211. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I guess thats we birth rates are down.

    You might want to get a reality check on that opinion.

    The Great Society worked. The money for it has been stripped by the pubs.
    I used to be poor. very poor. No one I knew was having more kids for money. Even the most poor not that doesn't make sense. However low education, emotional stability and boredom can lead to more sex.

    The problem we have no has NOTHING to do with Lyndon Johnson. A bunch of banker and financial 'experts' from around the world at the largest institutions lied, cheated, and stole. THAT is why we are in this mess.
    Had Greece(and the world) been given correct data, they would not be in this mess. Note that countries with strongly regulated financial system weren't hit that badly at all. Countries with good education and health care system. The impact they did feel was do to the country with not so well regulated financial systems being hit.

    It's the same thing. Every financial scandal that impacted the economy at large cause the pubs to scream 'it's the social program fault' and never at the actually liars who created the mess.

    no no, all these problems are becasue poor people have kids.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  212. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 1

    And they should not be able to use any backbone paid with tax dollars.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  213. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 0

    as long as all the share holders are personally fined whenever the company breaks the law, I would be fine with that.

    Corporation exist to avoid person responsibility.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  214. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *Sigh*
    With strong government regulation powers. Corporations control that regulation and shit get all fucked up.
    We have seen that.
    You are right though.
    It is not pretty.

  215. they pay taxes, just not federal taxes by terec · · Score: 1

    Corporations pay lots of taxes, but they are mostly local taxes (e.g., on property) and state taxes (e.g., on sales). Those are incidentally also taxes that go to services corporations actually need and want from their community. They pay even more taxes indirectly through personal income tax, because they need to adjust their salaries accordingly.

    What corporations are avoiding is federal taxation. They can do that because there is really very little they get for high federal taxes.

    And there is little governments can do about it. We've entered an age where corporations (and increasingly individuals) look at nations like shoppers look at products: cost, service, and performance. Politicians better get used to it, because there is not a whole lot they can do about it.

  216. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 0

    "Please check the budget of governments"
    they are available, and I used to review government budget. City, county state and federal. There isn't really that much waste. Corporations would KILL to have that little waste.

    10s of thousands of projects are done by government entities in the US every year without a problem and using a systematic process which keeps the price low.

    The fact is, most people don't really know what level of skill, expertise, and work to do most things the government does.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  217. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This puzzles me. Does this mean that if I call my local police to report somebody (unlawfully) breaking into my home, the police are not obligated to respond to my call and defend me from criminal attack? (Not thinking of uninteresting circumstances where they don't have enough officers, etc.) Don't they have employment contracts that specify their duty to respond? Or are you only saying they have no legal duty under *Federal* law to respond? But again, if they're sworn peace officers, on active employment, aren't they required to enforce Federal law (see state vs. Federal drug legalization conflicts for examples) as well as state and local ordinances?

    Or to put the question another way, why do the cops bother to come when I call 911, if they have no duty to do so? It's been my experience that they do respond.

  218. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are hinting at a false dichotomy.
    You are proposing that if governments have less power, corporations will have less power due to influence over governments.
    But corporations don't have power just through their sway over government - they have power because of their size and influence over a large number of people. Government is supposed to be large enough to stop them exert that influence in ways that are unpalatable.

  219. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "Its when they turn around and say that the rich aren't paying their "fair share" that it goes into the absurd."
    no, it isn't. You just don't know what fair share means.

    Hint: the more lopsided that holding of money is, the more the the people with the most wealth have to pay to be fair.
    SO when 10% if the people hold the most wealth, their percentage will go up to maintain the same level of services.
    It's not a direct numbers game.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  220. Re:Tax avoidance by tomtomtom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, when a fire erupts at the Facebook HQ, simply don't send the firemen when Facebook calls and tell them to contract a private firefighting company. They will have the fire put down by that company and will simply pay an invoice for the services rendered. :-)

    Actually, this is exactly what used to happen before (roughly, and depending on where you live) the early to mid 19th century. The earliest firefighters in modern times were either volunteers or employed on a private contractual basis (ie they would literally turn up at the scene of a fire and try to negotiate payment before putting it out). As insurance developed in the 17th century, naturally insurers started to provide their own firefighters to reduce the losses sustained to fire. The insurers in London, for example, set up a system after the Great Fire of 1666 whereby each had their own group of firemen and they placed "fire insurance marks" on each house so that they could identify whether their unit was supposed to fight a particular fire or not. Eventually the usual pressures of commerce meant that these units usually merged into a single unit covering the whole of London across multiple insurers in the early to mid 19th century, however, still under a model of privately funded provision.

    What happened next could be viewed as an example of "corporate welfare"... the insurers lost large sums in a few particularly bad fires and they decided as a result of this that they would lobby the government to provide a beefed-up firefighting service at taxpayers' expense. At the same time, there was a growing movement to "profesionalise" the remaining voluntary provision in other parts of the world which led to them becoming paid rather than voluntary. Following the model set in the insurer-led markets, these areas paid their firefighters out of the public purse.

    I would suggest that it seems the right thing to do to fund fire defence by extracting the costs directly from insurers on an incident basis rather than simply relying on general taxation - i.e. if my house catches fire, my insurer would then have to pay the government back the cost involved in calling the fire brigade out (you can argue about the corner case of how to deal with people who are uninsured and whether you fund their costs from general taxation, a levy on those who are insured, or by trying to pursue them individually). One benefit is that the insurers then have even more incentive (beyond just the threat of loss) to ensure that fire prevention measures are adequate. You could also compare this to the idea that the court system should be self-funding through filing fees etc. Just because it's a legitimate use of a government monopoly, doesn't mean it has to be funded through general taxation.

  221. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "If we didn't have these services provided by government with all the associated graft that makes them more expensive than they need to be
    HAHAHAHAHahaha. wow.. simple stupid.

    The Graft is US government is tiny, tiny, tiny amount, and the risk for doing so is huge.

    Graft in private corporation? it's huge. The penalty for doing so is nearly non existent.

    I hope those Facebook fire dept travel on Facebook roads, over Facebook gas lines, and Facebook water lines, and Facebook sewer lines and got contact from the Facebook phone. and be prepared to pay for anyone time the inhibit and that the chemicals and smoke never leave Facebooks property.

    " then that is exactly what Facebook would have done before a fire started. "
    maybe, maybe not. I have seen a lot of companies skimp on needed servidces to save a buck today.
    Server backups? naw too expensive right now(i.e. will impact bonus). Redundant power maintenance? naw it will be fine for now.

    And many more.
    No one is an island.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  222. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the main reason why they're able to get away with having to pay so little is to do with the US law of treating two separate entities (one of which owns the other) as a complete unit, of which law Ireland recognises. If it weren't for this bloody stupid idea then we'd be taxing them a hell of a lot more, as would you.
    If you want to start somewhere, try your coru^H^H^H^H business friendly politicians. They're worse than ours.

    - An Irishman who spent time looking into these loopholes.

  223. Re:Tax avoidance by rroman · · Score: 1

    This is also for people. Of course the companies that own the ships traveling in that area are profiting from such protection, BUT - once again, the companies are just people, the shareholders, management, employees - those people benefit from the protection from pirates. The company as a juridical person doesn't care.

    Another example would be: If I have company and the company and this company generates some profit. As long as I don't withdraw the money from my company, I can not use the money. The company can reinvest the money (before the end of fiscal year) and pay no taxes, or save the money (during the end of fiscal year) and pay the taxes. Even if the state for example by protecting its ships increases its profits, nothing changes, the money is still stuck in my company. If I want to collect my profits, the money will be taxed by income tax, otherwise my company will reinvest the money in some point in the future (inflation is the force causing this and is strong enough).

    When I state it as simple as possible, income taxes are just forcing companies to reinvest their profits the same year and don't save anything for future.

  224. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We can argue about the fat, but we can't argue about the consumption that causes it? Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over?

  225. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like it.

    And your company doesn't pay its fair share of US taxes, and you are in management? Guess what, you only get a similar percentage of US benefits, and get to wait on longer lines to go through immigrations and customs while traveling back to the US.

    And companies that don't pay their fair share of taxes should NOT be considered an individual for election purposes. (Not that it ever made sense.)

  226. Re:Tax avoidance by geekoid · · Score: 0

    Adam Smith is irrelevant. In an era where the butcher, brewer, and baker wer elcal, got all their stuff local and klived among the towns fold, he was right.
    Once peopel started running businesw, his central idea of the invissible hand having a positive impact on society becasue ti's in their best interests no longer matter.

    "It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest."

    When doing things 'right' costs more then not doing them then they will stop. The farther away someone is the less they wil care.

    In 1750, if the butcher cheated every one there would be a direct impact against the person making the decision to cheat. If the dumped slop in the street, there was a direct impact. When they person is in new york making decision about a company in Virginia that will get them more money in the next 3 months. They won't bother considering any long term personal harm when looking at the quarterly profit and bonuses.

    oh, and he wasn't a capitalist. Find better news sources.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  227. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course contractors aren't cheap, we actually produce results.

  228. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by dnaumov · · Score: 2

    How about we just close the loopholes? If you have a US based company that is clearly operating a subsidiary, that subsidiary (even foreign) will be subject to US taxation. Far simpler strategy.

    You miss the whole point of the story. This story isn't JUST about US tax being avoided.

    paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion

    The problem here is that Ireland offers ridiculously low tax rates to attract investment and employment.

    Somehow when employees are forced to compete for jobs, its okay, when companies are forced to compete for marketshare, thats okay too, but when goverments/countries are forced to compete to attract international business, politicians scream bloody murder.

  229. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The purpose of our military is not supposed to be to protect our economic interests...but, unfortunately, has become abused for that purpose. And most of us take that for granted.

  230. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    How about we just close the loopholes? If you have a US based company that is clearly operating a subsidiary, that subsidiary (even foreign) will be subject to US taxation. Far simpler strategy.

    You miss the whole point of the story. This story isn't JUST about US tax being avoided.

    paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion

    The problem here is that Ireland offers ridiculously low tax rates to attract investment and employment.

    You hopefully do realize that this amounts to a taxation rate of 0.3%, which is way below the lowest corporate tax in Ireland - 12.5%.

    This is not simply an issue of placing HQ in a tax haven (within the EU) - it also requires an ample dose of transfer pricing. Whether this is a "moral" action or not I'll leave for others to decide (I personally believe that the practice should be outlawed), but it is not a case of simply following national law.

  231. Re:Tax avoidance by roman_mir · · Score: 0

    Tax avoidance in fact allows the job creators to keep the money that they would otherwise re-invest (since they only consume a tiny portion of what they earn, their consumption levels do not changed due to higher or lower taxes, only their re-investment levels change).

    It is investment that creates the products and services, investment is savings and savings come from under-consumption and over-production, not from taxes, not from the printing presses, not from borrowing (though you can borrow somebody else's savings, that's true).

    Consumption is the end consequence of production, production and distribution always come first. Consumption is the most insignificant, destructive, trivial consequence of production. It is production and savings that drive the economy, nothing else.

    Leaching class being the politicians and at this point a large bio-mass of voters, who were sold the bill of good, which hit the right buttons, making them believe that their consumption with taxes, borrowed, printed money is some form of an economic key. It's not.

    The Chinese are productive, they can afford their own goods. Americans can't afford the Chinese goods, thus 40-50 Billion USD/month trade deficit, the ever growing debt and inflation.

    In reality the Chinese goods are not cheap, the Chinese government subsidises the US consumers by destroying their own currency and allowing USA to export most of its inflation to the productive part of society (and this is the real extortion and siphoning off the labour of others).

  232. Re:Tax avoidance by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if it would help reduce spending by simplifying the tax code. It would make it harder for politicians to pull misleading values out of the tax code (like the effective rate some corporations pay) and push the focus on to the actual spending of the government.

  233. Re:Tax avoidance by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    Job creators won't have any capital if they're not being paid enough to accumulate anything let alone spend. By this, I mean the low wage workers. Believe it or not there is a huge swath of this country that lives borderline poor and works full time. With little or no opportunity for advancement regardless of what they do. These people pay taxes too.

    --
    C|N>K
  234. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    >The purpose of our military is not supposed to be to protect our economic interests...

    But that's the point of most militaries.

    --
    BMO

  235. Re:Tax avoidance by obarel · · Score: 1

    You are absolutely right, that's exactly the purpose of a corporation. It's allowed to exist because this lack of responsibility (or the ability to take on risks that are too great for individuals and groups) is seen as a positive. But this shouldn't give corporation the right to do whatever they want, which is what currently happens in some cases.

  236. Re:Tax avoidance by swillden · · Score: 1

    This puzzles me. Does this mean that if I call my local police to report somebody (unlawfully) breaking into my home, the police are not obligated to respond to my call and defend me from criminal attack?

    Correct. They have no legal obligation.

    Or to put the question another way, why do the cops bother to come when I call 911, if they have no duty to do so? It's been my experience that they do respond.

    Well, it is their job, and if they do it badly enough the voters might get upset and replace the police commissioner/chief/sheriff. But if they choose not to come help you or, if as is more likely, they come and decide to wait outside until they're sure the situation is safe, you (or your remaining family) can't sue them.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  237. Re:Tax avoidance by rgbrenner · · Score: 1

    You're thinking of this supreme court case: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/politics/28scotus.html?_r=0

    Even with a restraining order, the police had no legal obligation to respond.

  238. Re:Tax avoidance by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

    No, but yes and yes.

    Jobs are created by consuption (AKA demand). Investiment opportunities are also created by consuption, investiment requires both capital and demand to happen. Jobs only require demand. That's why people have work to do at the poorest places of Africa, and can be without a job at the richest places of Europe.

    The problem that you probably are thinking about is that capital enables productivity gains. Jobs that don't apply much capital normaly don't create much wealth. But that doesn't mean the job doesn't exist, only that the people that depend on it (all of them, suppliers and consumers) are poor.

  239. Time for major tax reform? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

    I think this issue points out the obvious problem: US income tax law--let alone the income tax law of many countries--needs to be MASSIVELY overhauled.

    Think about it--why are we having problems like:

    1. Businesses incorporating--and often operating--in low-tax countries for tax avoidance reasons? Indeed, look at how many businesses are incorporated in Nevada or Delaware so they could enjoy much lower state tax rates.

    2. The existence of "offshore financial center" banks, where both individuals and businesses are placing their money so they can't be touched by the IRS in the USA, HM Revenue & Customs in the UK, and so on. Why do you think there are so many "banks" in various Caribbean island nations, Switzerland and Monaco? Indeed, a recent economic estimate of money sitting in OFC's could be around US$33 TRILLION dollars. (!!)

    This is why radical tax reform is needed. For example, the no-loophole flat tax proposed by Steve Forbes in 1996 eliminates taxation on bank account interest, capital gains and stock dividends, which would drastically slow the "offshoring" of businesses and liquid assets for tax avoidance reasons. I'd take it further and replace the income tax with something like FairTax (there is a bill in the US Congress to do this--H.R. 25), which would essentially end all taxation on the process of EARNING money. Such major reforms would put an end to most companies engaging in these practices, helping the local economy tremendously in the long run.

  240. So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So? Surely this hurts you, average tax payer in America, but so what? Why should Mark Zuckerberg care about you? He is a jew (which stands for the chosen of the God), a billionaire, a man who controls your privacy. Now, what type of idiots are you if you are going to continue use facebook now?

  241. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its TOO funny because on one hand they (corps) do everything they can to reduce their taxes. On the other hand, they often demand more govt services then most who do pay taxes (policing, court time, etc).

  242. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by squiggleslash · · Score: 3

    I think he's pointing out that taxes on corporations are just a form of double taxation where the taxation is "hidden" - you see more expensive goods and services, but have no idea what the cause is.

    I'm in agreement, and I'm someone who would happily see higher taxes in exchange for better public services, and am as anti-corporate as the next guy. Corporate income tax just doesn't make any sense. Tax sales, tax employees incomes, tax dividends, etc, but the process of moving money around (which is, after all, what a corporation is) shouldn't, by itself, be taxable.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  243. Re:Tax avoidance by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    It's also true that it matters less to the corporations; with government out of the way they can just do it themselves. As a bonus, they don't need to worry about accountability or similar socialist nonsense.

    P.S. Congratulations, your post is the worst technically correct sentence I've ever read.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  244. Re:People will say their duty is to shareholders.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I fail to see how this is for ``the shareholders'' in the long run. Unless corp is paying dividends (or you have hope that corp will someday pay dividends), the secondary market is just a ponzi scheme (your ONLY way to make money is to find yet-another-fool to pay you more---without dividends, as a shareholder, you don't benefit from the corporation in any way).

    Now, for the corp to pay US shareholders dividends, wouldn't it need to have large profits in the US?

  245. Re:Tax avoidance by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    The money for it has been stripped by the pubs.

    Which ones? The Red Lion? The Rose & Crown? Fergus O'Fuckery's?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  246. Corporations are People by Guppy · · Score: 1

    Making corporations paying taxes on profits is double taxation and should not be done. Rather the profits should pass through to the owners (investors) and then the investors should pay taxes as if that was their earned income.

    No, it's single taxation. Corporations are people, remember? And people pay taxes.

    Corporations even have basic human rights like free speech (demonstrated through their ability to make unlimited political campaign contributions), so if they enjoy rights as if they were citizens, we should expect them to perform the other basic duties as if they were citizens as well.

  247. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think a lot of that has to do with how some countries compete at the expense of everyone involved.

    Ireland is a perfect example of that. They are attempting to lure corporations there with these lower rates but are screwing over every other nation, including their own. The rates are so low not even they can sustain their nation and are currently flat fucking broke.

    I would honestly endorse a global tax code where they are taxed based on their total income globally and that income is paid out proportionally to which area generated the most of that base revenue before it got shipped around to each country through its own shell companies.

    Or possibly divided according to how their workers are divided up. If they want to have 45% of their workers in one country, than that country gets 45% of the taxes they paid and so forth. Then they can't avoid the taxes and the area they want to put all their labor at also gets all their money, even if it isn't were they are.

  248. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    Well look down the road a ways. If the problem keeps growing at the current rate eventually the system will break. I don't know when it will happen but sooner or later the money wont be enough. What then? Will blood flow like a river?

  249. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 0

    Working people don't have kids anymore. That's why the birthrate is down. Almost no one I work with has more than two kids. A lot of them only one and many have none and want none. They don't really have the time and they don't get extra money for having them. Meanwhile the poor keep having children because...they're paid to. I don't discriminate, I have a white trash niece that spits one out every couple of years so she doesn't have to work. My sister raises them for her or they would have to raise themselves. At least she's kicked the Meth habit though. At least she seems like she has.

    I don't dispute that the bankers and others have exploited and stolen. Still and all we can't afford a growing class of dependents that feel like some one owes them a living. It's going to stop though, I give it about another 10 years and then the money will dry up totally. China will finally wise up and quit loaning us enough to keep the welfare state going. We will strip the defense department to the bone to feed the growing poor segment which will increase as industry continues to fail until finally there is nothing left. They'd better collect all the guns before that happens or it'll be a bloody mess.

  250. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    "And some folks believe they should get a lot while giving very little."

    Righto. So what it sounds like you're proposing is a cost-benefit balance for taxpayers-vs-government, so basically people get back in some sort of essential service just as much as they paid in.

    Am I receiving your implication clearly?

  251. Re:Tax avoidance by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    Like I say, I can afford it but it pisses me off. I understand infrastructure but I also understand waste and corruption. Still, if they'd just fucking stop where it is I could live with it. No! The greedy fuckers want more and more and more. It's like a meth addict, they can't get enough money. The more they take the more they want.

  252. 'CruTcHy' & his "greatest hits" (15 FAILS) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1.) 'CruTcHy' doesn't know that PYTHON requires left indentation -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3335057&cid=42378113 (yet said I needed to do that? Please... talk about "pot calling a kettle black", lol!). He doesn't even CODE Python, and claimed to have "debugged it" himself? He used an online debugger (on code that /. formatting messed up on a paste that ran perfectly, see #2 next).

    2.) IF my program has a "bug", how come it ran PERFECTLY here, 5x in a row vs. trolls like yourself + 100's of times BEFORE that too, vs. your "trollspeak/trollanguage", 'CruTcHy'... Hmmm?? -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3301707&cid=42259605

    3.) 'CruTcHy' conceded memory usage with loaded data (where first you criticized me for it & withdrew it) -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41126057 (yet he says he "codes Delphi"... on THAT note? See #12 below also, lol!) and *tried* to say he'd edit a large custom hosts file vs. duplicates by hand with a text editor (good luck to that with MILLIONS of entries, lol).

    4.) 'CruTcHy' missed the fact that the hosts file DOES need protecting (UAC ACL & write protect help do so) -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41126421

    5.) 'CruTcHy' ADMITS hosts files are useful (which I will find very useful in the future, thank you!) -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41126661

    6.) 2 significant folks in the security field who create custom hosts file data host my GUI program in malwarebytes' hpHosts & securemecca -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41126285 for custom hosts file creation & mgt.... and 'CruTcHy' said nobody gives a hoot about my program (seems you do, & fail vs. it, and there's these security folks also).

    7.) Text Editors like notepad.exe &/or gedit will NOT handle properly processing hosts file data fully, which 'CruTcHy' had to be "schooled in" also -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41121573

    8.) 'CruTcHy' is a troll that's constantly off topic - He had to be reminded of what the topic is here (hosts) since you were trolling calling me homo, retard, & such, plus starting up your trolling b.s. -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3058625&cid=41104817 &

    9.) 'CruTcHy' doesn't even know that PROCESSORS FETCH INSTRUCTIONS FROM MEMORY (not send them directly to the CPU) -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3335057&cid=42374745

    10.) 'CruTcHy' says code should be easy to debug & yet doesn't use error-handlers -> http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3258205&cid=42016197 (we ought to call you "Mr. Crash & Burn", lol... change your nick to that, might as well, after that)... lmao!

    11.) 'CruTcHy' says he codes Delphi - ok: Show us a program you've done that did as well as stuff I've done, all written in Delphi no less, over time then since 1997-2004 (In response to this, I will put up a list of things that did well in respected publications, commercial trade shows in computer sciences, books, magazines, newspapers, & more that I did while you were STILL

  253. It's our fault, not butt-book's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our politicians make the tax rules, so all companies that just follow the rules, are not doing anything but taking maximum advantage of the graft they and others paid for.

  254. Re:People will say their duty is to shareholders.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that you Timothy Geithner? Obama in 2016! Woot! Vote for the little guy! Like Facebook or Google. Fuck the 1%ers!

  255. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Got my Obama phone! Aren't your phones free too?

  256. Cut the crap. Corporations are people too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know we didn't elect him but a recent candidate (that we were pretty smitten with) offered a famous quote that "Corporations are people too"... he left out the part about morality, taxes and even death as a guarantee! There is no excuse for allowing this to happen. Money transacted here should be paid in Ireland?? Cmon.

    Should Things I buy from another place inthe US on line incur taxes to ireland too?? It plain does not scale. Unless you are one of the Pedipalp Wringers that we just love so much... you know the ones with the princely ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H kingly wages and smirk of superiority....

  257. Re:Tax avoidance by mkiwi · · Score: 1

    We can easily reach a compromise between Democrats and Republicans on this matter. The answer? Make guns illegal and get rid of welfare and other entitlements. Then the poor people can't rise up and destroy you, because they can't get guns, while the government is still heavily armed with non-lethal weaponry. (That's me being facetious, for those who cannot detect it).

  258. Re:People will say their duty is to shareholders.. by superwiz · · Score: 1

    but they're still actual human beings

    Who take money from other human being and promise to pay them dividends at some future time (that's what a stock is -- a right to vote in an entity which promises but does not guarantee future dividends). And that money which they take from those human beings has been taxed at least once (and in many case multiple times).

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  259. nahah. by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Not gonna convince me that FB are the good guys. Not going to open a FB page anyway. Although kudos to them for getting *one* thing right. They sell information. Creation of that information does not take roads, public telecommunications (the info goes over private networks), etc. Why should they pay for services of which they consume none?

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  260. Iea be Ghood Tu Be Dha Khingh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahient dhat urite Zucky Zucky !

    Zucky: "Iz Thanke Thanke Uhz Ahal."

  261. Their effective rate isn't even the real scandal by markhahn · · Score: 1

    Why do corps get to pay tax only on profits? How would you like it if individuals paid tax only on their leftover "profit"?

  262. My ideas to fix this by SydShamino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1. Lower the corporate tax rate, and raise the unearned income rates in response. This fixes the problem with richer people paying an effective tax rate lower than poorer people and makes it less likely that companies would want to set up such complicated shell corps. It has the negative effect of hurting the retirement of anyone that has all of their money in non-Roth investments suddenly subject to the new higher rates.

    That's a pretty common solution. I think this one also works and is more novel:

    2. Require companies to pay taxes based on the nationality and/or country of residence of the majority of their executive officers and board of directors. The tax rate is based on the income earned by all subsidiaries. This means that Facebook wouldn't have to just set up shell corporations in other countries, they would have to find a board made up of non-US people, and likely move the top executives out of the country, too. And at that point, well, they aren't really a US company any more at all, and it doesn't matter if they pay US taxes on their non-US income. But really I don't think most companies would go to that effort, as that is far beyond their fiduciary duty to their American shareholders. While business is offshore-able, most people still want to live in the same country as their friends and family. I think this can be used to "fairness'" advantage in tax law.

    --
    It doesn't hurt to be nice.
  263. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The you get the situation where companies with stores in multiple locations will decide they will look at their risk exposure, for example if they have 100 buildings at $1million each they may decide the worst possible situation would see 5 buildings destroyed so they will insure all the buildings for a maximum insured liability of 5 million.

    This way they get coverage for 100% of their assets for only 5% of the cost.

    Try doing that with your home

  264. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A rather simple solution. If the company is owned primarily (over 50%) by Americans, then whatever that percent is should be taxable. In other words, if Facebook's stock is owned by 75% Americans, then that 75% of that $1.34 billion should be taxable as if it were derived in America.

  265. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by icebike · · Score: 1

    Great idea.
    You've done the hard part.
    Now run out and have every country pass the same law. Post back when you are done.

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  266. Re:Tax avoidance by Maudib · · Score: 1

    By your own logic cax avoidance is the right thing to do if you want to force government to do less.

  267. TFS has a sensationalist spin by Kergan · · Score: 1

    You miss the whole point of the story. This story isn't JUST about US tax being avoided.

    paid Irish taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire non-U.S. profits of $1.344 billion

    The problem here is that Ireland offers ridiculously low tax rates to attract investment and employment.

    Ireland's corporate tax rate is not "ridiculously low" and, contrary to what TFS suggests, Dublin is no tax haven. The Irish corporate tax rate is low by EU standards, but let's get real here: it's a far cry from being at Cayman level.

    Let me to requote TFS with a bit more emphasis:

    paid ***Irish*** taxes of about $4.64 million on its entire ***non-U.S.*** profits of $1.344 billion

    What's the going corporate tax rate in Ireland again? 10%? 15%? Whichever it is, this means that they booked well under $100 million in profits over there. $1.344 billion is the profit booked in the Cayman.

    Also, if Facebook is indeed siphoning profits out of Irland the way TFS says it does, I'd be very surprised that the Irish taxman won't eventually knock at the door. EU governments have little sense of humor when they need money, and $1.2 billion for having the rights to Facebook's IP is a bad joke that is virtually guaranteed to be investigated.

  268. dogma vs reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tax avoidance in fact allows the job creators to keep the money that they would otherwise re-invest (since they only consume a tiny portion of what they earn, their consumption levels do not changed due to higher or lower taxes, only their re-investment levels change).

    So says your church dogma, sure. You have convinced yourself that the wealthy will "reinvest" in things that are good for the working class, because you have been chanting it repeatedly at your church rallies.

    However a quick glance at the American economy will tell you that is not how reality works. For decades now we have kept lowering income taxes for the wealthiest Americans, shifting the tax burden increasingly to those who make less. Your religion claims that doing so will create more jobs, more opportunity, and more economic mobility. Have any of those happened as a result? The answer is, without a doubt, no. Hell around 10 years ago unemployment resulting from these epically bad decisions became so bad that we had to change how we count unemployed people just to make the numbers palatable. Once we made the mathematical adjustments, we of course kept going on with the same economic decisions.

    In other words, what you are preaching doesn't work. It doesn't work in America, doesn't work in Somalia, doesn't work in China, and won't work anywhere else, either. Just because you were born about 2 centuries too late to be the slave owner you aspire to be doesn't mean you have a chance of convincing a government to bring back slavery (thankfully).

  269. wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There is no obligation to "pay back" for anything to anybody. Every payment is done at the time of consumption.

    Take slavery, add cannibalism, and you get roman_mir! The remaining question than is at what point do you consume your slaves? Or is just taking them in considered consumption?

  270. Screw it, just eliminate corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's time the people of the United States wake up and recognize the *fact* that there is no systemic fix for this sort of thing. Corporations and their wealthy owners and executives are never going to allow themselves to be restrained into being responsible members of society. Present trends will continue until either everyone not part of the ruling class is explicitly enslaved, or until the corporations are burned to the ground and their servants and masters are killed or hounded into exile.

    I don't *like* this picture of the future, but it's become increasingly obvious that its where we're going. :-(

  271. Re:Tax avoidance:....root cause... by Johann+Lau · · Score: 1

    More than that..

    What has been created by this half century of massive corporate propaganda is what's called "anti-politics". So that anything that goes wrong, you blame the government. Well okay, there's plenty to blame the government about, but the government is the one institution that people can change... the one institution that you can affect without institutional change. That's exactly why all the anger and fear has been directed at the government. The government has a defect - it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect - they're pure tyrannies. So therefore you want to keep corporations invisible, and focus all anger on the government. So if you don't like something, you know, your wages are going down, you blame the government. Not blame the guys in the Fortune 500, because you don't read the Fortune 500. You just read what they tell you in the newspapers... so you don't read about the dazzling profits and the stupendous dizz, and the wages going down and so on, all you know is that the bad government is doing something, so let's get mad at the government.

    -- Noam Chomsky

    Who also said the powerful only understand one thing, violence. They surely only respect actual pressure, not words, not ideals. They don't understand those words, and they don't share those ideals. They are kinda like dogs who got used to sleeping and shitting all over our beds.... we really, really ought to start acting accordingly, instead of wagging the finger and rolling our eyes. I wish it was legal to suggest killing a bunch. But apparently it's only legal to be killed, slowly, and over generations. Well fuck.

  272. APPLE. For fuck's sake, Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple was one of the first companies to take advantage of this loophole, and you are banging on Facebook. For fuck's sake, i expect slashdot to be the first ones to bang on this, not the last.

  273. Re:Tax avoidance by czth · · Score: 1

    "Modern economics" does not make demands. And the idea that businesses are colluding to produce unemployment is silly. If a businessperson can hire someone that will add more to his bottom line than they cost, all things being equal, they'll do it. But demand for people, especially at minimum wage, is limited. There are plenty of people who cannot add even minimum wage to a company's bottom line: and companies are not charities (or if they are, they still want efficient employees). Already, a clue has been given as to one of the causes of unemployment: minimum wage. If a person is willing to work for less than minimum wage, and they provide over that amount of value, then they can be profitably employed - but that's not legal, so the company and the potential employee loses the value they could have gained (note that nowhere have I stated that a person can comfortably support a family of eight on minimum wage, nor that minimum wage is the only cause of unemployment).

    And again, it is not "when a resource becomes short its value rises" - values are individual and subjective. If you fix that to prices rise, it's about right, but the usual term used is decrease in supply (and an increase in demand tends to have the same effect). It requires no conspiracy for there to be no buyer for a particular good or service - or worker - especially at a given price, and again, when a price floor such as minimum wage is in effect, it's easier for there to be a lack of a buyer. If a particular used car commonly goes for $3000 - that is, it is valued at $3000 by knowledgeable buyers, compared to equivalents etc. - and there is a price floor in effect requiring it to be sold for at least $3500, it will not sell as well, and not because customers are conspiring not to buy it to avoid the price being driven above $3500.

    Consider Japan, which is very much in the situation of having higher demand for minimum wage (untrained) workers: did they just keep cranking up minimum wage until highschool grads can make the equivalent of $100/hour? No; they invested in robots for things like homecare for their aging population. There is no conspiracy against paying present minimum wage workers $100/hour; it's just about the value they add to the business. Even if there is reduced supply, businesses are not going to be able to pay more than the value gained for any resource, including employees, and stay in business for long. That's even more fundamental than economics: it's basic math.

  274. Why should corporations pay taxes anyway? by hyanakin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I still wonder what's good about corporations paying taxes anyway.

    Wouldn't it be more beneficial if they didn't pay taxes?

    So, if corporations didn't have to pay taxes. They would hire more people or pay them more. Those additional hires or higher salaries will then be taxed again. So the Gvt. does get it's money.

    The effect is, that corporations won't have to go offshore for the best tax deal and pay taxes there.

    So we would benefit a lot more if the corporations stayed here - tax free - but in return hire more people or pay higher salaries.

    1. Re:Why should corporations pay taxes anyway? by andrewbaldwin · · Score: 1

      So, if corporations didn't have to pay taxes. They would hire more people or pay them more.

      Nice to see the season of goodwill trumping realism.

      It's more likely (though less desirable) that the fat cats would just award themselves bigger bonuses.

    2. Re:Why should corporations pay taxes anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would get taxed here, get it yet?
      We currently collect $2.4 trillion against a non existent budget of $3.8 trillion that is heading to $5 trillion. Why anyone thinks this problem can be solved with more money is laughable.
      Please post your numbers on how all this will work out.

    3. Re:Why should corporations pay taxes anyway? by Caetel · · Score: 1

      They would hire more people or pay them more.

      Why would they do that? They're not charities, employing people for the fun of it. Unless there's a need for more employees, nobody else is going to be employed, and those that are employed aren't going to earn any more than the companies can get away with paying them based on the job market. And even then, those employees (and everyone else) are going to have to pay more in tax to make up for the loss of corporation tax.

      Are Facebook, Google, et al. who are paying miniscule amounts of tax in Europe and elsewhere demonstrating your theory? By the relative unemployment levels between there and the US, I'm guessing not.

  275. Re:Tax avoidance by besalope · · Score: 2

    Example: Halliburton rebuilding the Middle East

    PEOPLE in charge of Haliburton profit from it

    a healthy population has a DIRECT correlation to higher productivity from your workforce, ergo higher profits

    PEOPLE are using the healthcare services ad PEOPLE realize the profits

    Roads and other public infrastructures allow your employees to come to work and customers to purchase your product/service.

    true, both employees and customers pay for their right to use the infrastructure with their taxes plus property taxes dependent on value dependent on quality of infrastructure are paid on company's real estate

    Police and Fire departments help to protect corporate assets from theft and destruction.

    property taxes cover that

    Legally Corporations are defined as people, only they officially lack the capacity to vote aside from lobbying. However, if you are really going to push the people ticket, then Capital Gains tax needs to be raised to 35% across the board instead of the 15% cap as the investors have the most to gain by corporate operations. The normal workers are actually producing and already paying full income tax on their wages while investors merely front capital with no additional effort.

  276. Taxes are for the little guy by PacRim+Jim · · Score: 1

    Haven't you heard? Taxes are for the little guy. The person who can't afford to hire an expert to guide them through an endlessly complex code. The person who can't afford to hire an expert to guide them through an audit. The person who can't afford to hire a lobbyist to badger Congress for tax breaks. In other words, the middle-class American taxpayer. The sucker.

  277. Re:Tax avoidance by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

    Wow. Wow. Wow.

    That article appears to be a textbook example of the old adage "Correlation does not imply causaility". It cherry picks data, then tries to imply a correlation and causation without examining the other factors that affect such data points.

    And it's funny, but I work with a lot of people from India, all of them say they are better off her than at home and they all want to bring their families here (many have). If they're so happy, why are they in such a hurry to get out of India?

    Crime rates in india are also hard to determine, because reporting policies are different, classification policies are different, etc.. many crimes are simply not reported in public statistics and many crimes are mis-classified.

    For instance, Rape in india is almost never reported. It's widely under-reported world-wide, including in the USA, but in countries like India where it is a huge societal stigma (the woman is considered to be at fault in a rape), and where women are considered property (and thus rape is not considered possible in many situations that would otherwise be).

    Then, let's not even get into the huge levels of corruption within the police and other law enforcement organizations.

    Now, having said all that, India is still probably below the US for crime, but part of that is historical. People have always been poor, for centuries. There is also a relatively peaceful religion in place in much of the country, which helps, as well as the fact that most people grow up in large families that are self-policing, with people living in the same household.. that means that people have a place to live and a large number of people to pool resources.

    None of that is true in the US. Plus, weapons are hard to find in India, while in the US there are more guns than people.

  278. Re:Tax avoidance by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    And I'm sure the employees and shareholders that pay taxes have excellent fire protection, access roads and sewage disposal for their own homes.

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  279. Re:Tax avoidance by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

    Well stated. Thank you.

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  280. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you have it all wrong. In each of those cases, the court decided that law enforcement had no duty resulting from a preexisting special relationship to protect a particular individual citizen. Common sense should have told you that the police and the fire department have a fiduciary duty to protect citizens generally. That is their job. What they don't have a duty to do is to be a private security force on the ready to constantly protect a specific individual.

  281. Re:Tax avoidance by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    No, what I tried to make clear is that tax avoidance may be legal, but it's also immoral and unjust.
    What I'm proposing is that companies pay a tax rate that isn't based on setting up shell companies in Cayman islands.

    The whole concept of government is basically protection of it's community. Services such as fire brigade, police and wellfare work as insurances. Common services such as roads, waste disposal and even jail are usually paid based on usage in most governments.

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  282. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WRT your side note: Not without fixing an immense number of laws.
     
    Right now, the tax systems of most nations only even work "somewhat" well and fairly if taxes apply at *every* step on the way. Otherwise, intermediate goods and trickery will be used to affect valuation of taxes and pick tax rates by picking geographical locations for these taxes to be collected in even more.

    Also, the article linked has opinions I don't agree with. It is obvious to me that if corporations themselves can own property and have income and money, they should be taxed as every natural person that does (though more thought should be invested as to *where* it is being taxed, for fairness' sake).

  283. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by icebike · · Score: 1

    Its an open question as to whether corporations should be taxed at all, a question that even economic theory can't agree on.

    I can see both sides of the issue.

    There is an interesting article on this issues located here http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/CorporateTaxation.html

    The upshot seems to be that the appearance of fairness is the best rreason any one can come up with. The counter argument is that shareholders own the corporation, so why not tax them.

    In any event its s fairly good read.

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  284. Re:Tax avoidance by pitchpipe · · Score: 1
    B-b-but... that's irrational, sqrt(2).

    Your post made me smile.

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    Look where all this talking got us, baby.
  285. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Right" is usually relative. Saying it's right, in this case, is inaccurate.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-KqeU8nzn4

  286. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is that simpler? How, exactly, does the proposal that every corporate entity everywhere on the planet will have to file and pay taxes to every country it does business in on all profits earned anywhere in any country it does business in make things 'simpler'?

    And how do you pay 5,726% of your revenues in taxes? I mean, after the US gets its cut, and Canada, the UK, France, Sweden, Denmark, and each of the other 100-odd countries most of these corporations do business in get a cut... what's left, exactly?

  287. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This clearly isn't true when the company in question is raking in 90% of it's money from the USA, and giving virtually none of it back.

    In that case, they pay taxes on that 90% of its money that was earned in the USA, IN the USA. What TFA is talking about is the fact that Irish tax law allows Facebook to pay ridiculously low tax rates earned by its Irish subsidiary, as allowed by the Irish tax code.

    Let's be clear - this money was earned in other countries, and unless it gets shifted back into the US, it is not subjected to US tax law. It's that simple. Looking at money earned overseas and saying, "damn we should get a cut of that," simply invites retaliation in kind - every other government on earth will start demanding their 'fair share in taxes' of profits earned in the US, as well. This will rapidly bankrupt any company in business.

    The US government has zero tax jurisdiction over profits earned overseas by companies operating in foreign markets - the only point where the US government gets to tax that money is if the corporation actually moves those profits back to their US parent company. And given that there's a whole big world out there, it's usually simply not that hard to find other things to do with those profits - reinvest in your facilities, talent, and manufacturing overseas, for instance.

  288. Bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole lot of them - Google, Amazon, Starbucks, Facebook (et al.) - and also the governments that aren't closing these loopholes.

    Seems to me the only ones that "win" are the corporations and governments - while the rest of us are not only expected to pay our taxes, but also to bail out the aforementioned out when they act irresponsibly.

    Perhaps it's time for a "War on Greed".

  289. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    Well, actually, if we made huge megacorporations with subsidiaries all around the world unfeasible because of double taxation, it would solve a lot of our problems. It would essentially force those corporations to break up into smaller companies that operate independently on national level. They would still do business with each other but they would have to work in their own interest (and consequently in the interest of national economy), not in the interest of HQ that is on the other side of the world.

  290. This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm Irish and Ireland has a lot of problems but this isn't one of them. It's businesses that provide jobs that are the fruit of what makes the world tick. It's not bureaucrats or politicians. It's industrialists.

    What happens if other countries follow suit and offer a low corp. tax rate. That country attracts new businesses in their own locality, not just foreign ones. Remember, Irish corporations also benefit from these tax breaks. The reason many other countries are not offering corp tax breaks is because they lean more to the right and want more money for themselves. They are not concerned with jobs for the 'underlings'. If every country in Europe had low corp tax rates, the EU and Eurozone would be thriving and using stimulus to get its way out of debt. But our overmasters don't like people to be thriving. Tax breaks for businesses are effectively a stimulus.
    There's too much communism in the world. Too many greedy politicians trying to take someone else's pie so that nobody can have any pie.

    On Ireland's problems:
    The agricultural sector is now at ~5% of output. This is too low imo. Ireland should be an agibusiness country too. We have vast swathes of vacant land.
    European law - common agricultural policy and deregulation of fiscal policy cause a lot of the problems.
    Trade unions are a little too demanding.
    General global corruption problems.
    Idiotic politicians.
    Neutrality.

    1. Re:This by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      If you won't associate your words with your name, then I'm not interested in reading them.

  291. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The carbon tax initiative seems to just be a slight of hand to bring in a global tax and global government by my reading of things. There's no underlining balanced principle to pay a tax into when China doesn't want to pay green taxes to fat white men.

    A global corporate tax can only work without these fat cats trying to take power. It would need to be a compromised policy forcing business to do the following to please everyone:

    a) crush wasteful misuse of resources
    b) low carbon emmisions
    c) low birth rate
    d) satisfy basic human rights

    For (d) to work, the tax would have to part of a larger formulation of other taxes that cannot slide too far above a certain level where people cannot live. Kind of a recursive equation. "As long as x% of human beings can do x, y, and z, (have at least 1 child and at most 3, be able to start their own business, purchase property, build on that property etc. ) there's no problem" otherwise, lower it (them).

    i.e. a form of socialism. Works fine in Scandinavia and can be scaled up relatively easily despite naysayers extol. We need a socialist dictator who is not human - a computer that represents the people, would be ideal. Humans aren't good at being dictators. It's better to have computers imo.
    Computers serviced by buddhist monks that are trained in the art...

    The problem is the level of paranoia and mistrust and idolising of power in the world, and the evil fat cats at the top that derive entertainment from human suffering. So they prefer communism, which is really a bastardised word for .. 'deriving entertainment from human suffering' ..

  292. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    This is not the solution at all.

    The solution is to completely repeal absolutely every income tax on the books, and then the 16th Amendment that allows what is simple theft by the government to exist. We stopped the draft because it was wrong. We should stop the income taxes because they are wrong, again being simple theft, which is wrong.

    The thing to do is to replace the income taxes with the Fair Tax, which taxes new goods and services sold at retail. In that scheme, no businesses are taxed. That is as it should be, since these taxes harm businesses, but we can only tax such businesses if they do business in the USA. That is a great incentive to business to NOT do business in the USA, which they take to its logical conclusion and work to set up their manufacturing operations in foreign countries, resulting in a job scarcity in our country. In short, the income taxes are tearing this country apart, and have been ever since the rest of the world recovered from WW2 and began being able to compete with us. First textiles went to Italy and other places in the 60's, followed by consumer electronics in the late 60's and 70's, followed by great harm being done to steel and auto industries in the 80s, and then great impact to the intellectual industries like software in the late 90's to present as software development went to places like India and Russia. Income taxes in the USA are at the bottom of all of this. Their repeal would get a lot of these jobs to come back to the USA.

  293. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

    Its an open question as to whether corporations should be taxed at all, a question that even economic theory can't agree on.

    You keep saying that. You sound like Fox news reporting "the controversy" by stating there are two sides, even if the controversy isn't nearly so contentious. Corporations are people. While they gain the rights and privileges thereof, they should be taxed like it. It isn't an issue of economics, except as a distraction to the massive rights boost corporations get over people. all (or most of) the rights, and none of the responsibilities.

  294. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    I've seen papers indicating that taxing the moving of money would remove all future crashes. The crashes happen from bubbles that pop. The bubbles in recent time have usually been based on some manner of money juggling that encouraged more juggling. Like Enron, it wasn't about profitability or sustainability, but about revenue. You can't sell at a loss and make it up on volume, but there have been companies who did that long enough that the revenue numbers were high enough to get bought out, then crash (AOL managed to buy Time Warner with worthless stock). If you restricted stock purchases to every 30 minutes on trades locked in 10 minutes before the trading moment (randomly matching buyers and sellers of appropriate prices at an instantaneous point), then the nanosecond arbitrage would be gone. With the arbitrage speculators out, stocks would even out in price and fluctuate less. No more booms, no more busts (well, the bubbles would be dampened, people will still have runs on tulips). Another way of doing it would be small charges on moving the money. With the flow of money being more restricted, the arbitrage opportunities would be reduced. Investments would go back to being investments, and not opportunities with traders with direct links to steal from investors.

  295. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Altrag · · Score: 1

    The counter argument is that shareholders own the corporation, so why not tax them.

    They do.. the problem is their "income" isn't usually all that great. I doubt the check Zuckerberg cashes at the end of the month is more than a couple times more than mine. (Heck, maybe less.. depending on his day-to-day spending habits and how much he can avoid charging directly to his personal accounts.)

    Of course on paper he probably makes more in a couple minutes than I do in a year, but as long as its all just tied up in share value, he doesn't really have any "money" as far as taxation is concerned. He'd be hit like a truck with taxes if he randomly decided to completely cash out one day.. not that he has any reason to do something like that.

    I can think of an obvious solution to that problem -- consider share increases as taxable income.. but I think we're a century or two too late for that to go over very well.

  296. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    when goverments/countries are forced to compete to attract international business,

    You are so naive it's almost funny.

    You think that all those countries are "competing" for business, so all the $1.3bn of business goes to Ireland?

    It doesn't work like that. The company gets that business from all over the world and does business in many countries. Ireland isn't winning business. And a company wouldn't give up on something the size of France or Germany basically ever.

    --
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  297. Encourage local employment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would love to see progressive tax policy where 'payroll tax' is abolished and companies receive financial incentives to employ locals - to the extent that a company could decrease their taxation rate significantly by employing more staff. The equivalent otherwise lost beingcollected from the poor suckers making minimum wage and paying the majority of the taxation requirements of the government of the day. Let companies wither down their taxation to almost nothing by employing more staff..

  298. Re:Tax avoidance by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    no, it isn't. You just don't know what fair share means.

    You say that, but you never justify it...

    Hint: the more lopsided that holding of money is, the more the the people with the most wealth have to pay to be fair.

    Yes, but they already pay significantly more. Until you explain why the amount that they are paying isnt a fair share, all you are doing is claiming without justification that it isnt a fair share.

    Lets go to the numbers (2009 figures from the Congressional Budget Office), broken up by quintile:

    Lowest quintile pays 0.3% of the federal tax burden.
    Second quintile pays 3.8% of the federal tax burden.
    Middle quintile pays 9.4% of the federal tax burden.
    Fourth quintile pays 18.3% of the federal tax burden.
    Highest quintile pays 67.9% of the federal tax burden.

    Now you might start trying to claim that they make sooo much more than these numbers indicate, that the ratio between their income and their liability doesn't also increase in this same progressive manner... but lets look at the numbers from the same source, the congressional budget office:

    Lowest quintile averages $23.5K in income.
    Second quintile averages $43.4K in income.
    Middle quintile averages $64.3K in income.
    Fourth quintile averages $93.8K in income.
    Highest quintile averages $223.5K in income.

    Now lets divide the current share of the tax burden in each quintile by the average income:

    Lowest quintile 0.3 / 23.5 = 0.01276596
    Second quintile 3.8 / 43.4 = 0.0875576
    Middle quintile 9.4 / 64.3 = 0.14618974
    Fourth quintile 18.3 / 93.8 = 0.19509595
    Highest quintile 67.9 / 223.5 = 0.30380313

    To be clear here, thats is their share of the tax burden divided by their share of the income. If the income grew faster than the share of the tax burden, then the numbers on the right hand side would be decreasing.. but thats not the case.. they are increasing.

    Now, are you able to justify the argument that the rich do not pay their fair share? As income grows, the share of the tax burden grows even faster, so you are going to have to try a different argument.. one that doesnt simply appeal to the emotions of the ignorant.

    --
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  299. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    There's this risk in bringing in terms like "immoral and unjust" into any discussion of taxation. It is way too easy for someone else to argue the opposite position upon the same basis.

    If you bring in value-for-money arguments like insurance, OK, but then you also ignite the ire of those who point out to what extent governments perform wealth-transfer, where the value of government to some class of entities is net highly negative -- quite possibly immoral and unjust.

  300. Re:Tax avoidance by xelah · · Score: 1

    All taxes ultimately fall on people. Only people consume economic output, so it's only people control over it can be taken away from to provide government services. Don't fall in to the trap of thinking that taxes on corporations are not taxes on you. Instead of looking at corporations, look at the outcome in terms of what different individuals pay in total, and look at the effect of the tax on behaviour.

    The little old lady with her 200 BT shares left over from privatisation pays the same corporation tax on the profits that become her income as a wealthy investor. No tax allowances, no graduation of rates. And the wealthy investor can use corporate shells - offshore and otherwise (trivial companies can be moved more easily than people) - to manage his tax burden in a way often not available to most people. He can, in the UK, earn up to 300k in profits via a company he owns without paying any corporation tax at all, and if he can get his income that way he can avoid the national insurance (payroll tax) that most people have to pay. And, of course, in the US there's the ludicrous situation with capital gains tax rates.

    Looking at behaviour, taxes on corporate profits encourage companies to over-borrow and so increase the risk of bankruptcy and the imposition of default costs on others. The returns on loan financing attract much less tax - in the UK just income tax, and so it's much more lightly taxed than earned income or dividends. It also causes economic effort to be wasted in operating tax avoidance schemes - less useful production, more lawyering and accounting. Finally, the ability to avoid taxes like these favours large corporations over smaller ones and new entrants, reducing competition.

    Identifying objectively what profits are made where in a corporations with costs, assets and revenues all over the world is a next to impossible task. It's just not a number which exits. Total profit is slippery enough, allocating it to particular jurisdictions can easily turn in to a nonsense. That's one reason why we have the spectacle of Starbucks and Amazon essentially deciding for themselves how much UK tax to pay. What they pay may be obviously ludicrously low, but how, exactly, do you calculate the right number?

    Given that corporation tax is pretty much the national insurance of profits instead of labour income, I think it'd be much better to move towards abolishing corporation tax and NI, and raising all that revenue through a single set of income tax rates for all kinds of income. It would save collection costs for governments and accounting costs for companies, as well as addressing the above. Countries should introduce transitional arrangements for pensioners (who paid corporation taxes as they built up their pensions and currently pay only income tax on the income they're getting from it), and should charge an income tax on dividends going to foreigners based on the corporate tax rate domestic countries pay in the foreign jurisdiction. But, in the end, I think it has to go....it's just not tenable as a way to raise tax.

  301. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by llZENll · · Score: 1

    This would be a huge mess to deal with, policing every company and deciding if they are worthy, there will be so many shades of grey on the issue it will be too much trouble to figure out. There are much simpler solutions:

    1) Remove all corporate taxes! simplifies the government, simplifies the tax code, reduces company waste of dealing with the tax code. Just image the influx of companies, jobs, and boom to the economy this would be, it is unimaginable. All profit all companies earn is already double taxed, once when the company earns it, and secondly when it is paid out as a dividends.

    2) To cover this loophole simply tax the royalties Facebook USA is paying to Facebook Dublin. Is this already the case and the story is sensationalized garbage?

  302. There are a few pass-through companies. by whovian · · Score: 1

    Certain companies, notably those dealing as real estate trusts or energy companies, already do not pay taxes on taxable income if they distribute almost all of it to shareholders within a designated 12-month period. In the case of mREITs, at least 90% has to be paid out, which is done so in the form of monthly or quarterly dividends.
     

    --
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  303. Re:Simple solution, reform your government by rmdingler · · Score: 1

    The very way campaign contributions work in America, and undoubtedly elsewhere, allows corporations to get these petitions for favorable tax treatment written into law. Unlimited donations via the Super Pac loophole has essentially taken the teeth out of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974.

    --
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    Ernest Hemingway

  304. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Suggesting no corporate taxation is not the same as suggesting no taxation."

    True. But suggesting corporations do not benefit from the services supplied by government, and therefore have no obligation to help pay for them, is ridiculous. That's the implication of advocating no corporate taxation.

  305. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Except that it would not work that way. It would just result in more shell corporations and a more complicated corporate structure.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  306. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then, logically, the employee and shareholder tax rates should go up, because the corporation won't be paying anything to help. The employees can then negotiate with their employer for a raise to cover the increased tax rate.

    There's still no free ride. Those services have to be paid for somehow.

  307. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Tom · · Score: 1

    With the current tax system - yes. This requires more than just changing one tax, you would have to re-think the entire system.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  308. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    I am not sure that I want to allow Facebook to arm its own militia.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  309. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Create a society of have's and have not's and eventually the have's are all destroyed by the have not's.. It's happened throughout history, and apparently people don't learn from it.

    I would say the majority agree with your assessment (as I do). The gap between extremely rich and poor has been growing rapidly, and the middle class is all but being pushed to the lower class.

    The problem is that most extremely wealthy people doesn't care about anyone but themselves and a few close people around them. Their failure is that they expect the "other" handful of extremely rich people to "take care of it".

    I have a feeling the same path has been worn before. Different players, same game.

  310. Re:Tax avoidance by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

    Except individual offices all pay their share of employment taxes, property taxes, and sales taxes for their location... That's what pays for those things, and why local over menus in the US shouldn't give them up.

    Income tax is easy to move around. That's why Michigan went to a VAT-based business tax for so any years... Effectively taxing the increase in property value of the parts that went in versus what went out at each factory.. It kept companies from claiming manufacturing "below costs" in one state while the mother ship in Nevada claimed the retail price but didn't pay taxes. Facebook doesn't have a physical place you can pin physical value at, so it's difficult to tax that way.

    You could claim Facebook uses Internet that was created by the government as a type of "roads" the government provides. But even then, that backfires because all "last mile" connections are privately owned by companies... They were subsidized but those subsidies work AGAINST the common people. If you tried to tax access it would just provide more corporate control over the little people at the ends.

  311. Fiduciary responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A publicly traded company is said to have a fiduciary responsibility to its shareholders to maximize the amount of money it makes. If they know about a weakness in the tax collection schemes of the world, moral or not, they are obligated to pursue it. That's why most U.S. corporations are based in Delaware.

    The fault is a bad taxation policy based on net income. If they were taxed at one rate on gross income, they wouldn't have any reason to go through the expense of setting up these shell companies.

    1. Re:Fiduciary responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So exxon(texas) walmart(arkansas),apple(calif),chevron(Calif),etc.are all breaching these so-called duties by being located outside of Delaware? Funny,Ijust looked briefly at about 60 of the usa's largest corps and saw zero in Delaware. Lotsa prosecutions around the corner I guess. Or maybe not .

  312. Re:Tax avoidance by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

    The government has to turn this around... It's an awfully nice corporate property you got there Steve... I'd be ashame if the angry mobs visited...

    A disproportionate amount of people are in prison for "property" crimes. Because crimes that affect PROFITS are punished more harshly than crimes that affect people. That's why murdering, raping and such go free in less time than drugs ... Drugs add liability to the system, and that reduces profits and increases costs. Don't forget all the crazy laws affecting robbing Banks. (Unless you own said bank) Raping and murdering doesn't really affect corporations, so they don't lobby for much more punishment.

  313. HAhaha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Big rich folks complain about people mooching the system, and then they mooch the system a million times worse than everyone else.

    Classic.

  314. Re:Tax avoidance by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

    What you miss is that the quintile is not at 20, 40, 60%... They are at more like 25%, 75%, 90%, 95%. The quintile used divides by slice of pie... So taxes from 100's millions at the bottom equal the amount the 1% pays. That's why the 1% is taxed at 15% for capital gains.. (The vast majority of the top 5% doesnt even get "wages", they are living off interest) While the middle is taxed at 28% on wages.

  315. Screw Pelosi, Reid, Obanana by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally, a company is allowed to keep most of the money it has earned. Screw the Witch From the Anus of America, the doodlehead from Reno and the communist from...well, Kenya. Mark it up as a victory for capitalism and all those idiots who bought Facebook at its Initial Public Offering (IPO).

  316. I think the real news here by BuypolarBear · · Score: 1

    Is that Facebook is finally making a profit.

  317. Please Read The Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This tax rate was on their FOREIGN profits.

    Their U.S. profits were charged at a much higher rate.

  318. More profit laundering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like drugs dealers

  319. Re:Tax avoidance by xelah · · Score: 1

    Corporation also cost society money.

    I'm not sure of the intended meaning here, but certainly corporations costs resources (because it takes people's time, physical space, etc., to do all the paperwork, accounting, shareholder meetings, filing and so on). Those costs fall on the individuals involved, some mix of customers, investors, employees and so on.

    SO they shoudl also pay.

    Which is the same as making individuals pay. Corporate vehicles are proxies for people. An equivalent tax on those people, if it could be calculated and devised, would be no more or less fair than the tax on the corporation. But, of course, incentives have to be considered, too, because taxes always change incentives and behaviour.

    I would also tax 100% on all net over a billion dollars. Put that money into RnD, or hire more people, or get it taxed.

    Why do any of those things if you're not allowed to keep any of the benefits? It destroys the incentive structure (whilst creating an incentive to split companies in to little pieces).

    What people discussion economics seem to for get, is that the only way money has value to society is if it is moving.

    Money has value only as a control mechanism - because it allows coordination not otherwise possible. It's output (and leisure, and the environment, etc.) that has value. Not all movements of money have value - if we gave each other $10 all day long, moving it back and forth, no value is created. The same with taxation, welfare payments and payments for second hand goods, like most houses. And, of course, not all creation of valuable output is reflected in the movement of money.

    When you pay a dollar to buy and orange, the dollar is only worth something at the moment of the transaction. In fact, it's worth exactly 1 orange. The orange gets consumed, but the dollar will be a dollar again at it's next transaction.

    Yes, the value to an individual (rather than a whole society) of money is defined by what you can buy with it. As such, all prices, including salaries, are relative. And the $1 in your example forms a part of economic output measures. Money (and the markets and structures governing its movement) has to do a lot of things at once, though - coordinate production, distribute information, determine distribution and set incentives, mediate exchanges that happen over periods of time, and so on. That's one reason designing taxes (and any economic policy) is hard....you can't control distribution (fairness) separately from decision making (incentives).

  320. it's the law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it is US law that corporate managers of publicly traded corporations should tax avoid as much as they legally can. it is called fiduciary responsibility. if they did not, they can be sued by their shareholders (or even the government [SEC] in all irony) for breach of duty.

    want to change it? first, you must change US law before you appeal to ethics.

  321. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure why you always choose to be so ignorant.
    UN Resolution 1441
    The UN security council voted unanimously, Congress voted nearly unanimously. Who else would you like to have voted for it? Saddam himself?

    Take you ignorance and lies elsewhere, the rest of us have memories more than a week long and know the truth and not the NYT talking points.

  322. Re:Tax avoidance by swillden · · Score: 1

    "Suggesting no corporate taxation is not the same as suggesting no taxation."

    True. But suggesting corporations do not benefit from the services supplied by government, and therefore have no obligation to help pay for them, is ridiculous. That's the implication of advocating no corporate taxation.

    You apparently failed to read beyond the first line of my post.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  323. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    If done right, more shell corporations and more complicated corporate structure should also mean more tax burden, not less. That's the direction we need to go.

  324. Re:Tax avoidance by swillden · · Score: 1

    You're thinking of this supreme court case: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/politics/28scotus.html?_r=0

    Among others, yes.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  325. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Federal employee unions collect roughly 14 Billion a year in dues, about 20% of that goes to support the union emploiyees. The rest of that, lets say $10 Billion a year goes to supporting the DNC in elections. Thats $10 Billion a year that taxpayers pay to get DNC officials elected. But as you say there is no graft in the US government, and its peanuts. So you are denying a provable fact and saying the $10 Billion a year is nothing. So by your reasoning there are no rich people because no one make a paultry sum of $10 Billion a year.

    I could also go step by step showing more and more corruption, like the $800 Billion "stimilus" that didn't produce shovel ready jobs and was just corruption. Or the $50 Billion from the EPA for green energy that largely went to companies supporting Obama and largely went bankrupt just after getting their federal money, but I would be lying because you said that doesn't happen.

    Grow up. I'm not forced to do business with corrupt coroporations. I'm forced at gunpoint to fund the US government corruption and I'm called names when I dare point that out.

  326. Re: Tax avoidance by VTBlue · · Score: 1

    Best comment on libertarians EVER!

  327. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    You are welcome to contribute to government treasuries any amount you like. Don't expect your neighbours to be quite so cheerful.

  328. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    According to that gang, the "fair share" from a rich person is always "more, more, more".

  329. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    They do talk a good game. The "patriotic millionaires" were so patriotic about wanting to pay extra taxes, that all of their voluntary contributions, plus that of every other US taxpayer with similar inclination, is coming to apprx. $3 million for the whole year. Pretend-crediting that amount solely to the ~200 self-identified "members", that's $15000 of generosity per patriotic millionaire. Gee, thanks a lot, guys.

  330. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    Resolution 1441 was based on absolute lies by the Bush administration, and Colin Powell was *used* as a *stooge* to *lie* to the UN. He has since recanted the WMD stuff and has said things like this:

    Colin Powell discusses the WMD 'blot' on his record
    Share on printShare on email
    By Eric Black | 05/04/12

    In a forthcoming memoir, Colin Powell will describe the speech he gave at the U.N. justifying the U.S. invasion of Iraq on the basis of bogus evidence that Iraq possessed chemical and biological weapons as "a blot, a failure will always be attached to me."

    As far as I can tell by the preview of the book published by Bloomberg, Powell does not suggest that he knew that was he was saying was false.

    âoeI am mad mostly at myself for not having smelled the problem," Powell writes about his role. "My instincts failed me."

    http://www.minnpost.com/eric-black-ink/2012/05/colin-powell-discusses-wmd-blot-his-record

    You're an AC because you are repeating the same lies of the Bush idiots.

    You're disgusting.

    --
    BMO

  331. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My goodness, did the market just find a real solution to a hypothetical anti-libertarian talking point? Who would have guests..

  332. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong. The corporations can't exist without permission from the government. Ask Bell.

  333. Re:Tax avoidance by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    What you miss is that the quintile is not at 20, 40, 60%... They are at more like 25%, 75%, 90%, 95%. The quintile used divides by slice of pie...

    What you seem to miss is that the data I am using, from the congressional budget office, actually states how many households are in each quintile. You miss this so trivial of a thing because you never bothered to care about the facts.

    Lowest quintile - 22.7 million households
    Second quintile - 23.6 million households
    Middle quintile - 23.7 million households
    Fourth quintile - 23.3 million households
    Highest quintile - 23.6 million households

    What I see here is that the defense of the original theory, that "the rich dont pay their fair share" gets more and more convoluted as I repeatedly wreck a succession of justifications for the theory with actual data.

    you have two choices..

    1) think of something even more convoluted to try to justify a theory that cant be backed up with data, or
    2) look at the actual data, from the source, and realize that you are wrong

    Clearly you need to be told where the data is, because you never once cared about the actual data. Hopefully now you WILL start giving a shit about having theories that you cannot back up... you really should be embarrassed. Really.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  334. Einstein by NewYork · · Score: 1

    "The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them." --Einstein

  335. Re:Tax avoidance by Patch86 · · Score: 1

    As you are no doubt well aware, the Constitution and Federal law are not the only sources of law in the country. Just because the police don't have a Constitutional obligation to protect the public, it doesn't mean they don't have a legal or moral duty to do so full-stop. Most police forces are not Federal agencies, they are State level, and local State laws are the ones that can (or not) define their duties.

  336. No plunder - give them a choice by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Perhaps contract is the wrong word then may be "social understanding" is a better term. Certainly the terms are always open to negotiation. My point is simply that we can view company taxes as pay back for the legal restrictions that allows them to make money. The level of those taxes and the level of those restrictions is always open to negotiation. This requires some give and take. As it stands at the moment companies seem to have avoided paying almost any tax and are arguing for more restrictions so they can make even more money. So I would give companies a choice - either pay tax rate and have all the nice legal protections they enjoy or don't pay any tax but also don't have any legal protections and let them decide which is the most profitable route.

    1. Re:No plunder - give them a choice by czth · · Score: 1

      Choice is good - many would not even be willing to offer that sort of choice... but why limit it to just two? There are a lot more potential arbitration/protection systems than "the state's" and "none at all"; it borders on a false dilemma.

  337. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    So, you think the way to go is to drive up costs? That will work out well for everyone. /s

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  338. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly, there are probably not that many FaceBook employees in Ireland (correct name Eire).
    Secondly, they are collecting all non-US profits there, which mean that Eire has an inflated GDP
    for no real gains in employment , taxes, consumption etc..
    Krugman had a post on this a while back in the NYT.

  339. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by icebike · · Score: 1
    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  340. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Libertarians can fsck off to Somalia. The have minimal government, low taxes and no restrictions on what goes on. Disputes resolved by the power of the gun. Perfect.

  341. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    The way to go is to penalize corporate ownership complexity and reward simplicity. As a bonus, you can do both by removing a lot of crap from tax laws.

  342. Re:Tax avoidance by torsmo · · Score: 1

    I think he means their tribe, "the Individualists"...

  343. Re:Tax avoidance by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

    That's not social security.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  344. Re:Tax avoidance by Liberty.45ACP · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but "where the police are obliged to protect your personal property and your life" is an absolute load of crap. About all they are obliged to do is take a report after the fact. The courts back that up. They can be standing on an adjacent street corner and have no obligation whatsoever to protect you from a crime. Cops are historians.

  345. Re:Tax avoidance by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    I don't mind paying taxes but I make less than 100,000 dollars a year and pay more than 50,000 a year in taxes by the time the Feds, State and local governments get through bleeding me.

    Please show your working.

  346. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suggesting no corporate taxation is not the same as suggesting no taxation.

    Actually, in practice, it might as well be.
    To focus on taxing the money at the point it gets transferred to individuals will allow for enormous loopholes, as money:
    1. Actually do not have to be legally transferred to the individuals to be of value to them.
    2. does not have to be transferred inside the country.
    3. The government could be kept totally in the dark on what the companies are doing, creating a parallell economy where people own whatever they want.

    And so on, and on and on.

    The point is that lowering taxes like that is just a race to the bottom.
    Most countries have tax systems like this to be able to extract taxes close to the places where resources are created.
    This actually *simplifies* the tax code, rather than make it more complex.

    On a more general note, corporations as entities are not necessary in a free market. The free market worked in thousands of years without them.
    They are legal constructions where:
    1. some forms to some extent limits the risks people have to take to engage in private enterprise which is pretty important.
    2. their operations and their assets can be sold. That will enable a person to exit a business at some point, that was very difficult before.

    As part of the free market, they rather usually *limit* how well the market operates, not the other way around.

    For these reasons and many more, they are taxed.

  347. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Corporations can't just pass all costs directly to their customers. The market will only pay a certain price for given goods or services, and if you charge more it just won't pay. So up to a point you can just pass tax increases on, but if you want to stay competitive some or all of that burden falls on your profits.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  348. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    It's pretty simple really. There are millions of people in the UK on Facebook. Facebook makes profit selling their private data off. Clearly much of that business takes place in the UK, involving UK citizens and UK companies all operating under UK law and regulations. Facebook even employs people in the UK, people who are a product of UK society, the UK education system and whose needs are catered for by UK government services.

    Yet Facebook, and seemingly many other international companies, don't want to pay any tax here. What we are saying is that if you want to do business in the UK market you damn well pay our taxes and stop trying to subvert the spirit of the law.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  349. Re:Tax avoidance by freezin+fat+guy · · Score: 1

    For if we don't pay taxes you better be prepared to pay Vinny down the street a bit of money to make sure that you don't get mugged, robbed, or killed.

    Hey, at least Vinny is a true patriot.

    Let's be honest, the majority of Republican voters cheer for billionaires who skip taxes, from their trailers, in red states that accept money from blue states.

    You have to love the success story of a party that convinces people to fight for the right to push their own families to the back of the bus in order to patriotically benefit the rich.

  350. Re:Tax avoidance by bmo · · Score: 1

    It's amazing how the Fark Independents come out and discuss a minor point largely irrelevant to the point at hand.

    And by the way, I like to shoot, but I take offense at your name. Obviously not one of us who take shooting seriously, and you wear it on your sleeve as an "Internet Tough Guy."

    At the range, I'd be the guy taking the booth on the opposite end from you as I'd be afraid you might not handle your weapon correctly.

    In the future, if you don't want to be taken as a complete idiot, you might want to use a different name.

    Bye.

    --
    BMO

  351. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    You know the easiest way to reduce corporate ownership complexity is to reduce tax law complexity. Forget everything else. Make tax law simple and straightforward and lots of problems go away. Once you have done that, you can look at the remaining problems and start to come up with solutions. However, the problem with both offshoring profits and complex corporate ownership can for the most part be solved by simplifying the tax code.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  352. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They had no cake either...

  353. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    I believe I just said that.

    However, even if you simplify tax laws as much as possible, it'll still be possible to offshore profits by buying expensive nothing from shell companies incorporated in tax havens. This trivial accounting trick will bring your taxable profits close to zero. Apart from simplifying tax laws, you also need to make an official list of tax havens and make a new law which states that money paid to companies incorporated in those tax havens is never recognized as tax-deductible expenses.

  354. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's interesting, considering that the US government is by far the richest, most powerful, most far-reaching organization in human history.

  355. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually tax avoidance is legal, moral and just. I think you meant tax evasion.

  356. Re:No, the solution is admit they are tax collecto by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    You are not a legal entity in Ireland. You are not a legal entity in the Cayman Islands. You, in fact, are probably not allowed to be a legal entity in both of those plus the United States. (If you started out as a legal entity in the Cayman Islands, you sure as hell aren't going to be one in the US in less than a decade of effort.) Therefore this trick of simply moving money across jurisdictions isn't available to you. And that, in a nutshell, is why the trick of moving money across jurisdictions is a cheat. Because you and I can't do it. Not can't because we can't pay the fees (though that's true too). Can't because it's literally not legal. Corporations are NOT people. Corporations can pay a $50 fee and exist as a legal entity anywhere in the world, and multiply their existences into multiple countries for that same trivial fee. If you tried to do that, you'd end up on a Homeland Security watchlist.

    Double taxation it may be, but you have the solution precisely backwards. It's the moving money around that is the source of these tax loopholes in the first place. Money is moved from the United States to Ireland and from Ireland to the Cayman Islands, while doing no work whatsoever along the way, and suddenly it is magically no longer taxable at any of those stops along the way? Bullshit. Tax each and every transfer like that, and watch all these tricks go away.

    Meanwhile, eliminate taxes on individuals.

    We're at a severe disadvantage as natural persons. We're either not allowed to hold multiple citizenships, or acquiring them is extremely expensive (relatively speaking) and extremely time-consuming (absolutely speaking). We're mortal. Corporations are not. We only have one income. Corporations have hundreds of millions. We only have one brain. Corporations have tens of thousands. The asymmetry is monstrous, unfair, and insurmountable. I would argue to abolish the legal concept completely, except that we humans seem unable to effectively organize collectively any other way. Certainly our attempts to collectively organize governments are universally pathetic. So we're stuck with the legal creature, at least for now. But stop pretending they're individual people, and stop pretending that we owe them ANYTHING. It's the other way around. They owe us EVERYTHING, and not just salaries.

    Taxes are a necessary evil as long as a military is a necessary evil, and as long as we have the idea that we need to pay for necessary evils. So let's tax the legal entity that feels it the least, and leave the rest of us alone.

  357. Re:Tax avoidance by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

    Why do you think the rich stepped up during the great depression? Why did the rockafellers and Getty's donate tons of money to the poor, and help out?

    Because it was in their self interest to do so. Helping the poor meant improving a society that had all but collapsed. You can't make more money if nobody has any to give you.

  358. Re:Tax avoidance by megahurts.gr · · Score: 1

    Wow, let me guess: you have got to be Greek!

    --
    This guide is definitive. Reality is frequently inacurate. (from THHGTTG)
  359. Re:People will say their duty is to shareholders.. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    Worse are the corrupt politician who allow it to happen for a kick back of cents, not to the dollar but cents to the thousands of dollars and microscopic percentage which those corrupt cheats take to allow the richest to pay a negligible percentage versus the average wage earner. Now add to this the bullshit were those same lying cheating and stealing arseholes cheat of federal taxes also cheat on state taxes. Time to bust them up and lock them up, the corrupt politicians and those that pay them off.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  360. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    We can see if there is any reason to do that after we simplify the tax code. Just because something is possible does not mean that it will be worth actually doing it. You talk about simplifying the tax code, but want to put a complication in there right off the bat. That is why it never gets simplified, everyone has one or two complications they want to add. Simplify the tax code, if, once that has been done, there is still a problem with companies offshoring profits (not just that some companies are doing it, but that enough are doing it that it creates a problem) then is the time to introduce your suggested solution. I suspect that if the tax code was simplified very few companies would find the overhead of offshoring profits worth it.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  361. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by next_ghost · · Score: 1

    Simplify the tax code, if, once that has been done, there is still a problem with companies offshoring profits (not just that some companies are doing it, but that enough are doing it that it creates a problem) then is the time to introduce your suggested solution.

    We're talking under an article that gives you all the proof you need that the additional solution is necessary:

    The Caymans-operated subsidiary owns the rights to use Facebook's intellectual property outside the U.S., for which Facebook Ireland pays hefty royalties to use. This lets Facebook Ireland transfer the profits from low-tax Ireland to no-tax Cayman Islands.

  362. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the giant server farm using a lot of coal power in Oregon isn't 'real'? Facebook's main office building in California isn't 'real'?

  363. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Really, what part of the article tells us what they would do under a simplified tax code? The article tells us what they do under current tax law. It does not tell us what they would do under a changed tax law.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  364. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed. In America, between federal, state and local governments more than $21,000 per person is spent per year (FY 2012)

    Your entire argument is predicated on this $21K being evenly distributed. It isn't. The guy living on the street does not get anywhere near as much value out of the money spent on federal highways as the guy whose company runs 100 shipping trucks cross-country every month. Even things like food stamps benefit the rich - the person spending the food stamp gets food, but the company redeeming the food stamp gets the profit of the sale.

  365. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but they already pay significantly more. Until you explain why the amount that they are paying isnt a fair share, all you are doing is claiming without justification that it isnt a fair share.

    Since "fair" is a completely subjective measurement, how about you define what actual criteria is important? Otherwise you are just being intellectually lazy by resting on the status quo.

  366. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by ohnocitizen · · Score: 1
    You missed the point of my comment. If the US taxed foreign income for US-based corporations, then Ireland could set its taxes as low as they want, the US would still get that tax income. In fact, it might keep countries like Ireland from attracting US companies in the first place.

    The US can fix their tax laws too. They could easily make it more profitable to keep the investment mostly at home. Irish tax and legislation isn't exactly secret sauce. Washington State gives Boeing and Microsoft and Amazon astounding tax breaks just to keep its citizens employed. So do a lot of other states.

    That was *exactly* my point.

  367. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The loopholes are there by design, 1%'s run both government and the corporations that suck off the hind tit of government.

  368. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Corporation also cost society money. SO they shoudl also pay. 20% on the net no deduction except RnD, 30% on any money leaving the US.

    1. PEOPLE cost society money(resources). The concept of a corporation also enables more efficient generation of resources. Just like people, some are better at it than others. Just like people, we pass laws and regulations to seek to limit the damage the 'bad eggs' cause.
    2. You do realize that 20% of net basically equals a 20% sales tax, right? Though it would end up being a pretty hefty subsidy for sole proprietorships.
    3. You specified a deduction for R&D, but not for hiring people, then mentioned 'hire more people' as a tax break, which is it?
    4. Not all money moving has value, besides corporations are moving money all the time. Remember, when you own shares of a company, you own a portion of it's assets, not a particular number of dollars. Corps generally try to make the most use out of their assets as they can.
    5. How do you define 'money leaving the US'? Is it leaving the USA when a company buys Italian champagne to stock in it's stores? When it imports aluminum bars(production in the USA being practically nil due to low amounts of Bauxite deposits) to fabricate stuff? When a dividend goes to a foreign stock owner?

    Most rich/corporations don't actually hoard money. They hoard assets, which they rent out or allow others to use productively in exchange for a portion of the profits. Often expressed as 'interest'.

    Sure, I think the idea that a corporation is a person needs to be killed, along with some other adjustments, but the idea of a corporation itself isn't a bad one.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  369. Re:Tax avoidance by Caetel · · Score: 1

    My idea is to split personal income taxes into two categories - earned and unearned. Earned is salaries, piece work, etc... IE you 'did' something to earn that money. Unearned is capital gains, interest, dividends, and such, money earned from the simple fact that you 'owned' something. Your first ~$10k of income in either category is taxed at 0%, after that it's tiered in parallel like the current system. Assuming an average return rate of 5%, that's $200k in investments before you start having to pay taxes on the return, which is a good amount for emergencies, college, early retirement, and what not.

    That's pretty much what the UK has already. A certain amount of your annual income is tax free (about £8000 this year) after which income above that is taxed at 20% up to the next tier, above which income is taxed at 40%.

    Capital gains are taxed at 18% or 28% depending on your total income, with the first £10000 in a financial year tax free. Dividend income is taxed at at the income tax rate, with a deduction to account for corporation tax (so you'd only pay income tax on the dividend if you're taxed at 40%). Bank interest is also taxed at your income tax rate (20% automatically witheld, if you're a higher rate taxpayer you declare the remaining tax on your tax return). Stock held within a tax-free account (pension, ISA) attracts no capital gains tax and no additional tax on dividends.

    Obviously, if the corporation tax is abolished somebody is going to have to make up that tax revenue, which ends up being the tax-paying citizens, so the tax rate for us is only going to go up. And bear in mind that similarly to large corporations, many high net worth individuals take advantage of loopholes in the tax code to minimize their tax bill. It's not a sense of injustice that makes people go into the 'shady' areas of the law to avoid tax, it's greed.

  370. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Here's a question: Why does even the UK still give people making their money via investment preferential treatment over those that 'earn a living'? An extra £2k isn't an insubstantial amount. A top rate of 28% for capital gains is still a heck of a lot lower than 40%. Etc...

    Obviously, if the corporation tax is abolished somebody is going to have to make up that tax revenue, which ends up being the tax-paying citizens, so the tax rate for us is only going to go up.

    I think the critical difference in thought is that I see it as you're already paying that tax. It's just hidden, out of obvious sight. Like gas taxes - you see the final price on the pump, but in many/most areas over half that price is actually taxes.

    And bear in mind that similarly to large corporations, many high net worth individuals take advantage of loopholes in the tax code to minimize their tax bill. It's not a sense of injustice that makes people go into the 'shady' areas of the law to avoid tax, it's greed.

    I know that; it's just that the options for high-income individuals to avoid taxes is still more difficult than it is for a huge multinational corporation. I'd try to avoid raising the rate too much.

    Most of the actual loopholes Romney exploited have been closed, and closed for a while. The biggest one remaining is our entirely too low capital gains tax rate. I'd argue raising it to the 35% over $400k we currently have for ordinary income, but put some rules in place to allow you to average your capital gains over a number off years, so selling off a property doesn't hit you too hard for a one time affair.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  371. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, "free trade" agreements, which allow a company to "trade" with itself and move the money offshore in the first place.

  372. Robert Kiyosaki by NewYork · · Score: 1

    "Business owners and investors use systems, rather than their time, to generate income." --Robert Kiyosaki

  373. Why (Fair Trade Goods != Fair Trade Currency)? by FathomIT · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't tax rates be part of the mix in global cooperation? Those that undermine the rest should be punished by the rest.

  374. Re:Tax avoidance by fche · · Score: 1

    "If my taxes jump to 40%, but in exchange health care an all education was free I would be fine with that becasue it has value to myself, and more importantly, society as a whole."

    How do you figure such math could possibly work? An extra 20% of your income that you can't spend on your own education/health care, but the government would spend on you *and society as a whole*? How can you come out materially ahead?

  375. Facebook is getting services, should pay up by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    If FB doesn't pay taxes, that doesn't mean that the government is getting less money. It means ordinary people are paying more taxes.

    How can that be fair ? Everyone in Ireland is giving tax breaks to FB for what, exactly ?

  376. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a difference between someone who has power over you because you like or need their product and someone who can come into your house with guns and take you away.

  377. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    Re: "10s of thousands of projects are done by government entities in the US every year without a problem and using a systematic process which keeps the price low"

    ignorant people like you (which there are many in the US) are why the US is so fucked

    google peter shieff and ron paul... and educate yourself moron

    the US people are dependent on the government and the government is basically the entire economy... which ironically is also the case in China and other socialist countries

    "land of the free" is a fucking memory in the US... you can't even fart in the US without being scrutinized by the fucking government, and China has more capitalism (as in a real free market) than the US, where "companies" merely compete for government contracts, grants and payouts

  378. Re:Tax avoidance by strikethree · · Score: 1

    But I also have the thought of 'why bother taxing corporations'? We suck at it, and ultimately companies are owned by individuals, everybody from fat cat industrialists to the retired grandmother who bought $100 of IBM stock 50 years ago.

    Well,that is obvious. The corporations will buy huge mansions, expensive luxury cars, etc and the CEO will take home $50k a year... but have the use of all of those nice things like "private" jets and yachts used to transport them to 3 month long conferences on islands of paradise with hundreds of young females attending to their every need. And no tax revenue will be generated.

    --
    "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  379. Re:Tax avoidance by strikethree · · Score: 1

    Setting corporate taxes to zero would drive all of the money that exists towards corporate coffers. Are you sure that is a sane state of affairs?

    --
    "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  380. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about just taxing gross revenue based on product or service delivery location? It's not possible to dodge that without abandoning the markets that create the revenue.

  381. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't understand since you're not here. We can't do anything about it. It's big money at the helm, not the politicians in office. They're only puppets and front-men who change the rules as they are told to do. They don't even write the bills they attempt or actually do, pass into law. Have you seen the film THE AVIATOR? It will give you an idea how things work, and have worked for ages in the USA and all over the world, not just here. All you say is only preaching to the choir whether you know it, or not.

  382. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok then, ploease give us 100% of your income for taxes. Oh, that's not acceptable either? Then why don't we debate the level, rather than smiling about it, you fool.

  383. Re:Tax avoidance by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Under current tax code they can already do that, as the jets, yachts, and such are 'business expenses' and therefore deductible. Though more recent rules require them to account for 'payments in kind', IE if you get a company car for private driving, you have to put in the value of the car* as earned income for the employee.

    *At least the portions used for private use. Which includes driving to/from work in most cases. It gets complicated.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  384. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    why did obama get into office then? seems like the choir is full of dipshits to me

  385. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    actually i should qualify that a bit more... obama is just another lying scumbag

    ron paul has been consistent in his constitutional policies for 30 years and has served in congress for many of those (so he is definitely "electable" despite what moron journos may suggest), and if he had have won the presidential office he would have been your best hope at disbanding the fed and reigning in government, since he could have vetoed any measure to increase the scope of government

    mitt romney is also a dipshit so thanks to the republican primary voters you lost that chance, but i still think voting obama in for a second term won't get you anywhere... it will be business as usual in washington

    if you continue to think it's impossible, there's a good bet you'll never get where you want to be (and ironically you thinking you have no power is what you have been brainwashed into thinking)

    americans really are a product of their environment, so i don't really blame them for the years of consumption and unscupulous spending, and i feel sorry for the position you find yourselves in now, but as much as the solution seems so hard, consider the result of doing nothing

    have you attended any of the rallies or protests?

  386. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    Re: "It's big money at the helm, not the politicians in office"

    no actually its the other way around... you are only looking at the obvious consequence of increased government power. lobbyists get rich because the government has power to sell. if you take the power away from government, there would nothing to bribe the politicians for and the lobbyists would eventually go away

    big businesses get rich off the government because of lobbying the government and funding election campaigns, which is essentially corruption... yes it may be hard to imagine that the very government who oppresses other corrupt countries into becoming more "democratic" is actually corrupt itself

    the proof is in the pudding... if politicians were'nt benefiting from under the table deals (and over the table deals such as election campaign contributions) there would be no corruption in washington and no bailouts or anything like that. unfortunately politicians are merely human and every human has a price (possibly even ron paul - its just that his price probably far and away exceeds the price of most politicians and is beyond the affordability of even the biggest corporations)

    don't be a fool and confuse the issues... it is true that you can't change how corporations operate and that's why you think you have no power, but corporations aren't the bad guy here. they are merely behaving like any pack of dogs (or humans) would in the same situation... if the government throws a bone to a pack of dogs, the biggest dogs are always going to get it... if you think its the dogs fault for taking the bone then you're wrong. the government shouldn't be throwing the bones to the dogs in the first place.

    there are 2 solutions: either elect officials that are uncorruptable (good luck with that) or take away bone throwing power from officials, so there is really only one solution, and that's the solution that people like ron paul, peter sheiff, etc have been advocating for years (and being ignored because obviously government doesn't want to give up its power), but the people have some power through who they vote for, and if you vote for people like ron paul (and even though he has now retired you can be sure that there will be more "tea party" reps in future) you can vote in people who may have the balls to start slashing away at the edges of government, reducing department budgets (which will mean less government jobs) etc. yes there will be jobs lost, but the people who lose government jobs will go out and find more productive jobs in companies that actually make useful contributions to the economy

    i could go on forever, but if you just type "peter scheiff" in youtube, you will see a man who has his head screwed on right talking to a lot of idiots in media and government who have absolutely no idea how the world works

  387. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    oops i mean peter schiff (not scheiff) of course... dunno how i got that spelling in my head

  388. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The Chinese pirating your IP out the back door? Sorry, the State Department won't be lobbying China on your behalf."

    Didn't help very much. No amount of US government lobbying has helped since the US is so in debt to China. "Look Obama, shut up, all we'll stop buying your bonds", said Jiantao only yesterday, "bankrupt countries have no rights".

    Why pay a government that cannot help you. Perhaps you cute little geeks worrying about about bits, bytes, gay marriage and social networking have not seen this

    * U.S. Tax revenue: $2,170,000,000,000
    * Fed budget: $3,820,000,000,000
    * New debt: $ 1,650,000,000,000
    * National debt: $14,271,000,000,000
    * Recent budget cuts: $ 38,500,000,000

    Let's now remove 8 zeros and pretend it's a household budget:

    * Annual family income: $21,700
    * Money the family spent: $38,200
    * New debt on the credit card: $16,500
    * Outstanding balance on the credit card: $142,710
    * Total budget cuts so far: $38.50

    Got It ????? Shouldn't be difficult even for a semi-numerate geek.

  389. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're on same page. Cheney and the "revolving door" = example. Perhaps the prime example in that he went In and out of politics and corporate america for decades. It explains it all as to what I meant. I thought you'd catch on but you haven't apparently. In effect and reality, He went in and out of political offices to structure things just as he or his corporate amerika buddies need it to be. The other politicos are put there by corporate donations to their campaigns and if you look at the contributions of the largest corporations to either major political party you see they back both sides hedging their bets like a win, place, show in a horserace. They lose some only to win no matter what to win big in the end by their puppets put into place in positions of political influence attempting to pass yet more laws they themselves didn't even write, but corporate execs did. I see your into aviation from your other posts. Once more, see the film THE AVIATOR. It shows this in the conflict between Howard Hughes and Juan Trippe of Pan Am airlines and how it illustrates the reality of politicians (senator Owen Brewster) owned by Trippe to create the CAB bill (civil aeronautics board bill) to give Pan Am a monopoly on flights to Europe over Hughes TWA airlines. I would've thought you knew thins since you seem to be aviation oriented based on your posts. We're on the same page but you refuse to see it and you're attempting to turn it into an argument. I know you've been in many lately. This isn't another one, get that out of your head here. Remember also that I know you're not in this nation either to live through it and the ruin it's creating, but it is good to see others from abroad realize it also. That's the one bright spot here crutchy. Realize I am not arguing with you so your name calling is unnecessary. We see it how it really is, both of us. Except that I see it from the inside. You see it from the outside. There is a difference, but it comes out to the same view and it ought to. It's reality. I wish you would realize this. See that film. It illustrates reality of bribery and political control of politicians by the wealthy and corporate bodies they control also.

  390. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    i do see it (i've been listening to guys like ron paul and peter schiff... they have consistently been right, and everyone else has been consistently wrong), and you are right in describing signs and consequences of the problem (corporate campaign donations and corrupt politicans), but you are confused about the actual underlying problem itself.

    if you keep thinking that the corporate sector is to blame then you will be stuck... the corporate sector isn't to blame

    i repeat... capitalism is a good thing if left to work as intended

    corporations should be allowed to make a profit, lobbyists should be abllowed to lobby, corrupt businesspeople should be free to run for president... these are all good things that real freedom and protection of liberty gives you... nobody should be able to judge the corruptability of a presidential candidate except voters

    government intervention is a bad thing, because government isn't spending money that it has earnt, and it spends it without consideration of risk

    corporations spend their money much more wisely because they have to earn it by selling things... EXCEPT when they receive government bailouts, in which case there is no risk and they can go as crazy as the government

    it is impossible to stop corrupt businesspeople from running for office... barack obama seemed like a saint when he first ran for office... he said he was going to change everything, but he's not a saint and he's repeating all the same mistakes as bush, except much worse

    corporations aren't your enemy.... the government is your enemy... the government is stealing your money, not the corporations
    when you hear reports of huge corporate profits, in most cases (where the government isn't involved in bailing them out) it is because the corporations are selling things... look at apple for instance... it is doing well because they are selling a lot of ithings... don't hate them because they are selling stuff
    apple's customers aren't forced to buy apple products... they do so by choice
    on the other hand, the government is FORCING TAXPAYERS to buy all sorts of shit that they can't afford, and by printing money, the fed is stealing money off you buy devaluing your currency
    don't bother looking at the stockmarket or housing prices to see if the economy is doing well... look at how much it costs for a loaf of bread... when was the last time the cost of a loaf of bread went down? your dollar is buying you less with each passing day. if you look at the value of the US dollar against gold (the original base used up to 1971, the value has dropped significantly (the table at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_dollar#Value shows it pretty starkly, and funny enough according to that table the dollar value really started dropping after the introduction of the federal reserve in 1913, but it only started dropping perpetually after 1971)

    you are right that there are corrupt politicians... there have always been corrupt politicians though so you aren't making any breakthroughs there. corrupt politicans aren't the problem either. the problem is you have allowed government to become so powerful, that your corrupt politicians have lots of power to sell. take away the power of government, and there is less reason to want to bribe officials regardless of how corrupt they are.

    THE SIZE OF YOUR GOVERNMENT IS YOUR PROBLEM

    humans will always be human. you can't blame them for that. corporations can be corrupt, but they have always been and they are in Australia too... the difference betwee nthe US and Australia is that in Australia the politicans have less power so sell, so there is less incentives for corporations to bribe. a smaller government is a better government

    i may not be living in the US, but that's good in a way because i can see the overall picture with more objectivity and clarity (i'm not affected by the consequence of bad policy as much as you)

    don't believe what you see in movies, don't believe what you see on CNBC or Fox News..

  391. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, but you overlook what the corporate machine really is - it is a machine to maximize profit at ANY cost. That's the problem in and of itself, the publicly held and trade corporation (with many bosses, mostly the majority stockholders/board of directors with preferred stock (screw common stock, in a bankruptcy it's not secured and worth shit compared to the preferred stuff), first of all. It creates GREED man. A 13,30k points DOW JONES? WTF! There aren't enough resources to back it. They also oversell what they have and can't back it either (I saw this in the gold market recently). I can't blame fools who put their money up on that craptable that gets cheated with inside information all the time getting pissed when they lose bucks. I know 'someone' who lost 80k on it in fact, talk about pissed off you know. It happens, all of that (more than people suspect, ala corporate lawyers and patents for example as well as other means). Moving on. I respect Ron Paul, and you said the USA is full of fools or something along those lines. I tend to think for myself and make judgements based on observations. Here is where we differ. I do agree that small federal government is good. That is a strong point of yours I won't argue with, and it is Ron Paul's point. Problem being the "2 party system" is a crock of crap. Want to hear it from an honest man who was on the inside of it? Governor Jesse Ventura http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgkrBs_RjFw who tells you how it works. Just like the WWF he was involved it. It is all an act between the democrats and republicans. Sociopaths (so called leaders, yea, right. They have the money to get into the positions and are wealthy themselves. Why not elect a working stiff instead? Well that would upset the applecart is why!). Top that off with that film the AVIATOR as I told you. It is based on fact. Especially since you are into Aviation. It's based on facts as I told you. It is how big business runs and owns politicians man. I think it is a good mix of what you say, and what I say. It's easy to over simplify is why and complex (and big, a big sham and scheme). The banks/imf are up to their eyeballs in it also. We can never escape debt based on interest loans from the Fed (not federal at all, but a consortium of private banks. It's why Andrew Jackson wrote on his gravestone "I killed the bank" and when he did? The depression nobody talks about, since it happened generations ago, stopped and we excelled again. They got "in" again with Woodrow Wilson and he wrote "I made a pact with the devil" (not a direct quote but close)). Mortgage backed security used to be "the thing" but government pushed that via Clinton, but the loan officers started extending it to anyone to make a quick buck since the regulations and standards for it dropped so much. It was easy money, fuck consequences, keep extending loans to FHB's and others who can't afford it. I saw 1 where a busdriver got herself into a mansion/300,000 dollar home. No way could she swing it. She defaulted. They want you to, since they can take what you paid already, turn around, and sell it again. Especially to 'sharks' (who wait for this to pickup homes pennies on the dollar. I know this because i am into realestate and rental properties too, and paying my taxes in full is my defense. It is my #1 priority in fact to hold onto them vs. scum like that who lurk waiting). Yes, We see this the same also. We should. It is reality. I also note you note what I have as I have been all over this planet in my time, not all of it, but enough in Europe, North America and more. It's all the same, everywhere. We agree here as well. You mention gold. Ron Paul asked for an audit of the Ft. Knox supply. They DENIED it. 5 times. It's already gone. It's been given to the Chinese I suspect to offset the debt to them (based on their elderly's savings largely). I'm out there seeing it. I live it. Groceries shot up miles as you note too. Everything has. Our AAA credit rating? Gone too. Let me tell you about gettin

  392. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    i think we are on the same page, though i must admit i haven't figured out who i'm talking to... i don't really take much notice of what i do on slashdot... most of the time i just use it as a platform to rant (gotta love that freedom thing)

    "Only way to do it? Get money"

    don't bother. it won't be long till your money won't buy anything anyway. many of those rich scumbags you hate will be broke too. only those with real assets (commodities, property, etc) will be "worth" anything

    your attitude seems like one of desperation and despair, but there are lots of people who are on their feet trying to make a difference, and when it comes to the crunch they have the best chance of success (obviously doing nothing won't get you anywhere)

    there is a really good youtube video of peter schiff talking to protesters at the occupy wall street gathering... they share similar views but many still think the corporations are to blame so their rage is misdirected

    who appear to have your head screwed on... to make sure its on tight, i hope you realise that corporations are what made your country great... allowing your government to increase in size and scope will destroy you (and it seems like you do understand)

    you probably still have a job so protesting is difficult, but you have access to the internet... you have access to a phone most likely...

    spread the word... help your fellow countrymen to wake up and see the writing on the wall... contact your local, state and federal representatives and let them know how you feel

    it seems so hopeless but the consequences of doing nothing are so much worse than doing something... anything

    even this conversation may help people reading understand, which can only be a good thing

    there will likely be a bond market collapse in the near future (google "stockton bankruptsy" for starters), and when the debt ceiling is raised again soon holders of t-bonds will (hopefully) wake up and realise the government is never going to make good on them

    the longer your economy prolongs the inevitable, the worse it will be in the end

    cheers mate, and good luck in the coming months... you are gunna need it

  393. Re:Tax avoidance by crutchy · · Score: 1

    zero income taxes, 10% goods and services taxes, and 7% interest rate

    if you really want to punish the wealthy, punish their spending habits

    that way the more you spend the income the government makes, and in a consumption economy like the US, the government is going to make A FUCKLOAD of income from GST alone

    ...the middle class (who spends less than the rich) starts to save more because they don't pay income tax

    oh, and someone needs to "suicide" ben bernanke... check out this youtube clip
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzhrphUG68s
    fucking douchebag

  394. Well, here goes nothing... lol! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the "custom subject-line above" let the cat outta the bag? I use THAT analogy, cuz we've been "going @ one another" like a 'crazy as a BAG OF CATS' (lol)... read closely, get to know THE REAL ME, a bit better then (& a truce too, ok? Read):

    "i think we are on the same page, though i must admit i haven't figured out who i'm talking to..." - by crutchy (1949900) on Tuesday January 01, @07:58PM (#42446469)

    We ARE on "the same page" but seeing it from diff. angles (for lack of a better analogy here)... we see diff. parts, but I am GLAD we spoke thus (yes, I posted differently to you than usual, so you wouldn't "pop off" & just say "ah fuck you, it's APK, let's startup shit" instead of having a NICE productive & INFORMATIVE conversation)!

    Delphi use too - it ROCKS -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3350243&cid=42441269 with PROOF as per my usual, you know... lol, must document on /., the "show me state" of the net!

    "i don't really take much notice of what i do on slashdotby crutchy (1949900) on Tuesday January 01, @07:58PM (#42446469)

    Man, you ought to... but, then again? You use a "handle/nickname" & NOT YOUR REAL NAME or initials as I do... I expose myself, and it's my professional rep on the line. I have to, especially vs. trolls around here (yes, I had them threaten my life, post my personal information, libel & stalk me & more, MANY times... not a first. It's the price you pay using your REAL name... then again - if you don't? You can't really get anywhere or develop a GOOD rep, or name & show your accomplishments vs. naysayers either).

    It's a 'trade off' & I? Quoting Robert Frost "took the road less traveled" is all... it's been working out well though, mostly, but it "adds pressure" for me... I welcome it though - good mental exercise & exercise in vigilance.

    "Surprised"? Don't be... just a guy, but one that got pretty upset @ this stuff from you directed MY way (since you did the same thing you bitched @ me about, no indents (and yes, my code does work, stupid /. formatting with code sometimes "f's it up" on pastes, as it did YOUR pasting in my code as I showed) -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3335057&cid=42403999 (and, lol, of course a "few more items" over time, yourself vs. myself too).

    Ah, anyhow/anyways: Back to our discussion (you are not all bad by the by, I hope you think the same of me & we can 'call a truce' on the b.s. above... deal? Consider it!).

    "Only way to do it? Get money" don't bother. it won't be long till your money won't buy anything anyway. many of those rich scumbags you hate will be broke too. only those with real assets (commodities, property, etc) will be "worth" anything" - by crutchy (1949900) on Tuesday January 01, @07:58PM (#42446469)

    WELL, that's what I meant about diversifying from coding ONLY... it's become harder to get FULL TIME long term jobs in it and you know this... especially if/when you WORK FOR OTHERS (selling the MOST precious thing there is - YOUR LIFE & TIME, a finite quantity + most precious asset we all have, for awhile... remember - we're all just 'visiting; here after all, lol, for a little while only!).

    In today's "litigious society"? You NEED "the holy dollar" or you get NO LAW... I've been there when CA (busted by the SEC for accounting fraud shortly after, "the lord works in mysterious ways") *tried* to say an app I wrote was a malware (wasn't, passed all 21 of their removal questions, but they did not PULL it, but reduced it to zero threat levels... heck, wasn't even scriptable for attack!).

    It was a SIMPLE (and you're a coder, you'll understand this, @ least allegedly you are from what you said before but wouldn't bac

    1. Re:Well, here goes nothing... lol! by crutchy · · Score: 1

      well i must admit i'm surprised... apk

      re: "not SO bad now, but I expect as you do, especially for us coders with NO UNIONS BACKING US. it will be worse shortly"

      i agree that software development will be hard hit. i'm not in America but if Australia hits hard times I'm a bit more fortunate to be a professional engineer with representation by engineers australia (which is probably more of a lobby organisation, but they have a lot of clout having influence over australia standards, worksafe, minimum salaries, and inflence in the legislative process, etc... they really have too much power and are a pain to deal with actually because they are forcing the whole chartered status thing). i do programming in my job (i do get paid for programming), but its mainly development of specialist software (LAMP and some delphi) to support the engineering side of things.

      re: "In today's "litigious society"? You NEED "the holy dollar" or you get NO LAW"

      definitely true... but in tomorrow's mahem when the dollar collapses, it may well be 'every man for himself' and 'survival of the fittest'. you probably needn't bother with preparations unless you build a fortress, because if you prepare more than the unprepared masses, you will become a target of the unprepared masses. its probably hard to take seriously, but have you seen the "mad max" movies? or the movie "water world"? martial law will of course be declared at some point in the midst of the collapse, but that will only work as long as the government can support the soldiers (paying with commodities or land because dollars will of course be worthless). you'll probably find that little empires start to build, and the US becomes a feudal state. the idiot "new world" secret societies that think they are in control will be as surprised as the politicians at how uncivilized a country of consumers can get when there is no more left to consume. the UN might risk sending in some foreign peacekeeping troops but that won't save you. sorry this is getting really pessimistic, but as an outside observer, this kind of future for america wouldn't surprise me... that is unless obama goes crazy with his nuclear football and triggers world war 3.

      re: "paying 3x what you actually have in that asset, imo is STUPID... but, some folks have no other recourse is all"

      i'm one of those folks that has no other choice but to mortgage, but fortunately i didn't overextend (my mortgage payments are more than double the minimum, with a redraw facility that i use for some bills)

      re: "NO man... GREAT MEN DID... selfless TRUE 'leaders'"

      i agree, and there have been great political leaders, but also great corporate leaders that have spurred the US economy... henry ford, steve jobs, etc. government jobs don't build an economy... they simply take money from the taxpayer and spend it (inefficiently)... the government sector is an economic overhead in that they don't produce anything. not to say that government can't have a stake in private companies (as a shareholder)... but if the government has operational control it always fucks things up. government would have difficulty organising a fuck in a brothel. the corporate sector is efficient because it must be or it will die (except of course if tainted by government bailouts). even in the face of increased government regulation and continuous scrutiny and meddling, the corporate sector comes up with ways to stay competitive (by shifting production offshore or by evading tax with offshore shell companies). if the american labour market was as competitive as china's labor market, americans would have jobs. that seems unfair that americans should work for less pay, but your standard of living is based on debt anyway. in a balanced economy your standard of living would be lower anyway, and when the shit hits the fan your standard of living is going to plummet. most employers want to be able to pay decent salaries because people work harder when they are happy (henry ford is an example, along with google more recently).

    2. Re:Well, here goes nothing... lol! by crutchy · · Score: 1

      as an aside i wanted to find out who australia's reserve bank was accountable, since i've been hearing the america's federal reserve is apparently accountable to nobody. from their website, the RBA is bound by the Reserve Bank Act 1959, and while the bank has certain freedoms to direct monitary policy, it must report to the treasurer and in matters of disagreement the governor general intervenes and can force the reserve to implement changes to its policy, so at least the Australian people have a some semblence of control over its currency, and the government would be unpopular to allow the RBA to go on a printing rampage and i think the governor general might be used in that case. given that our governor general is an australian and a woman (i think a little less corruptable than a man, personal opinion only), i think she would do the right thing by the people and force the RBA to pull its head in

      http://www.rba.gov.au/about-rba/accountability.html#consultation_with_government

      from the fed website i couldn't find much in the way of disagreement resolution between congress and the fed other than reporting, but i did come across this gem in the fed act itself, which may prove useful to congress if push comes to shove

      http://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/section31.htm

      The congress can amend the act to restrict the functions of the fed if it chooses to. I don't know why they haven't already... i guess the fed having a printing press makes it easy for them to buy members of congress

    3. Re:Well, here goes nothing... lol! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Programming will be hit hard, as it's NOT a necessity (as in food, shelter, & utilities), hence, my 'insulation" from being into other things (real estate properties & rentals - they ARE necessities). As is, it's not going so great for many coders (TONS are outta work, really good ones too). When times are good though, R&D and software development takes an upward swing too.

      On coding - well, I believe you, because you asked a valid question of me (did I remove debug symbols & such) in my app, which I told you I did in the 2 ways possible (via compiler IDE directives as well as "inlining" them myself by hand). I've known quite a few engineers that coded their own stuff (even had them in my FORTRAN classes "way back when", good pal of mine in fact in highschool too)!

      Yea- the man was 4.0/Straight A's outta Community College level, & also @ Syracuse U, in engineering (mechanical)... which is NO EASY TASK...

      Well, 14++ yrs. on the job working for ClubCar - in Augusta Ga. home of the "masters" in golf, & they make golf carts (his family came to Georgia when I told them how it was "booming" circa 1995-2000 with other pals of mine looking for STEADY work too)... they let him go after that many years.

      I couldn't *BELIEVE* it, & the man is SHARP AS A TACK too, & saved them lawsuits in that I am certain would've stretched into the multi-millions of dollars ranges (especially considering MOST golfers? Have ca$h, & that means LEGAL POWER as we discussed already)... the defects he caught on the assembly line, shutting it down even, would have KILLED people (had a lockwasher on WRONG, lol, talk about DUMB!).

      So, in the states, yea... Even engineers aren't 'safe'/'depression proof' in the USA. Not as bad as it is for software folks, but not perfect either.

      Heh - 2 great flicks about "dystopian futures", in "Road Warrior" & "WaterWorld" (last of the V-8 interceptors, love that line in the former)... I hope it doesn't get THAT bad, since I live in an area not FAR @ ALL from a friggin' "warzone" of scum & villainy... only 2-3 blocks off in fact, gunshots every other day almost, murders & such galore (goons have tried to rob me 3x in the past 3 yrs. for example, always left them "leaking", put it that way).

      On "fortress"? I *sort of* have built that around my home (have to, lol, been robbed 3x in the past 30 yrs., which isn't 'bad' compared to others I know, like my neighbors)... neighbor's dogs alert me, I fenced the place off, & of course, am armed to the teeth... experience makes it a necessity (I wish it didn't HAVE to be this way, but there it is). Had to take some shots @ a thief once in fact inside my home, YEARS ago in the darkness around 3-4 a.m., the 'witching hour' for that type. He never came back (of course).

      The wealthy "dump dollars" though, on the dollar deflating away... they exchange for higher valued more stable currencies OR assets like gold (but, like bandwidth from our ISP's? The brokers 'oversubscribe' as I noted earlier, & sell what they do NOT actually HAVE... it's sick, dangerous, & DUMB - still, they do it).

      On Obama & Nukes - well, I truly do NOT *think* he's that dumb... heck, nukes are like a fart: One gets put out on 1 side of the room (planet), the stink (radiation) spreads... everyone gets hit to an extent really. It's a lunatics weapon... & I honestly do NOT believe Einstein was the 1st to know how to do it (or those around he in the manhattan project). Others did, but thought ahead imo, & said to themselves "No way! It will be INSTANTLY militarized & weaponized, and definitely used... too dangerous, I will keep it to MYSELF!"

      I believe you are correct on military & police organizations crumbling if pay stops... but, I do believe they will STILL be the most organized forces there is, and will probably BE the root of those "tiny empires".

      You should see "The Book of Eli" on that note - it is largely ALL about that... great flick, since you seem to be into dysto

    4. Re:Well, here goes nothing... lol! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LMAO - our US "FED"? Isn't even REALLY legal... no majority elected it, since they waited until Christmas vacation & only their "best money can TRULY BUY politicians" only stayed around for the 'majority vote' to make the bill law beneath Woodrow Wilson... they are about as "FEDERAL" as Federal Express delivery is!

      * Now, I know WHY 'oldsters' kept telling me "never trust banks"... lol!

      APK

      P.S.=> Gotta "jet", have to do finishing part of an eviction today in court, paying MORE MONEY out to the City Marshall office (between that & court? I lose $150) so... see ya!

      ... apk

  395. Re:Tax avoidance by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    yea I was thinking pensions too, but those come out of state tax I believe. My example doesn't matter too much I don't think, there's definitely a bubble in SS regardless of max payouts... and as somebody mentioned Medicare is a part of social security and we're known for our health industry charging massive amounts of money off of medicare.

  396. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anarchy is not the answer. Variety increases in the world as entropy advances. Variety builds on platforms that have "settled out". That's civilization: a settled out platform. Read Kevin Kelley's "What Technology Wants."

  397. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, then, is law? It is the collective organization of the individual right to lawful defense.

    Each of us has a natural right to defend his person, his liberty, and his property. These are the three basic requirements of life, and the preservation of any one of them is completely dependent upon the preservation of the other two. For what are our faculties but the extension of our individuality? And what is property but an extension of our faculties? If every person has the right to defend even by force — his person, his liberty, and his property, then it follows that a group of men have the right to organize and support a common force to protect these rights constantly. Thus the principle of collective right — its reason for existing, its lawfulness — is based on individual right. And the common force that protects this collective right cannot logically have any other purpose or any other mission than that for which it acts as a substitute. Thus, since an individual cannot lawfully use force against the person, liberty, or property of another individual, then the common force — for the same reason — cannot lawfully be used to destroy the person, liberty, or property of individuals or groups.

    Such a perversion of force would be, in both cases, contrary to our premise. Force has been given to us to defend our own individual rights. Who will dare to say that force has been given to us to destroy the equal rights of our brothers? Since no individual acting separately can lawfully use force to destroy the rights of others, does it not logically follow that the same principle also applies to the common force that is nothing more than the organized combination of the individual forces?

    If this is true, then nothing can be more evident than this: The law is the organization of the natural right of lawful defense. It is the substitution of a common force for individual forces. And this common force is to do only what the individual forces have a natural and lawful right to do: to protect persons, liberties, and properties; to maintain the right of each, and to cause justice to reign over us all.

  398. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But on the other hand, imagine that this fatal principle has been introduced: Under the pretense of organization, regulation, protection, or encouragement, the law takes property from one person and gives it to another; the law takes the wealth of all and gives it to a few — whether farmers, manufacturers, ship owners, artists, or comedians. Under these circumstances, then certainly every class will aspire to grasp the law, and logically so.

    The excluded classes will furiously demand their right to vote — and will overthrow society rather than not to obtain it. Even beggars and vagabonds will then prove to you that they also have an incontestable title to vote. They will say to you:

    "We cannot buy wine, tobacco, or salt without paying the tax. And a part of the tax that we pay is given by law — in privileges and subsidies — to men who are richer than we are. Others use the law to raise the prices of bread, meat, iron, or cloth. Thus, since everyone else uses the law for his own profit, we also would like to use the law for our own profit. We demand from the law the right to relief, which is the poor man's plunder. To obtain this right, we also should be voters and legislators in order that we may organize Beggary on a grand scale for our own class, as you have organized Protection on a grand scale for your class. Now don't tell us beggars that you will act for us, and then toss us, as Mr. Mimerel proposes, 600,000 francs to keep us quiet, like throwing us a bone to gnaw. We have other claims. And anyway, we wish to bargain for ourselves as other classes have bargained for themselves!"

    And what can you say to answer that argument!

    As long as it is admitted that the law may be diverted from its true purpose — that it may violate property instead of protecting it — then everyone will want to participate in making the law, either to protect himself against plunder or to use it for plunder. Political questions will always be prejudicial, dominant, and all-absorbing. There will be fighting at the door of the Legislative Palace, and the struggle within will be no less furious.

  399. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Privatizing some fire response in no way supports a so-called libertarian philosophy -- someone's still gotta collectively pay for fire fighting. Whether it's property and home owners paying via their insurance or tax payers paying via, um, taxes, communities still need fire protection and the massive effort of personnel and equipment that goes with it. From 40 years of wildland firefighting, I'll say that it's likely cheaper and more efficient when done by the government (city, county, state of federal). In addition, just like disaster response, you need a centralized command and control to order resources, dispatch and keep track of everyone. I also suspect there's some slight of hand when contracting resources. The costs come off different books, so agencies can say "hey, we're lowering our costs" when, in fact, it just comes out of a different budget and often at a higher cost.

    Government -- state, local, federal -- does a lot of good and does so efficiently and effectively. The right wing, libertarian drumbeat that we don't need government and the taxes that support it are just nutso. Why don't they all just go to Somalia... .

  400. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I have an obligation to pay back into society that which it asks me to pay and I have agreed to"

    Wrong. Dead wrong. Taxes are not optional; you have an obligation pay the taxes Congress decides you should pay. That's how laws work. You can't opt out of them by "not agreeing" .

    That's how this (and every other nation outside of perhaps Somlia are run. if you don't like that, then leave, but pay your taxes first.

    We GET that some bed wetting infantile narcissists think that THEY stand above everyone else and NO ONE has ANY right to impose upon them ANYTHING they don't personally agree to. Do you have some other fucking point you were trying to make or did you just feel your " NOT ME!!!" bladder get full again and you decided to let go another warm spray of feel-good all over everyone around you?

    The world must look like an infinite frustrating place everywhere outside of Grover Norquist's asshole. People who experience as much chronic frustration as you do often end up as violent suicide cases. Do everyone a favor and when you finally decide to exit this world, just do yourself and live up to your "leave me alone" bullshit and don't be one of these shooters who decides that dying is a collectivist activity.

    Thanks.

  401. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed. The individual trying to survive in a forest has almost zero freedom to do anything else..including sleep, until they join with someone and form some kind of government (the social contract) and share risks, rewards, and responsibilities.
    The problem with civilizations is that they work too well. Civilization is the process of isolating ourselves from the risks of the natural world. Some number of generations into any civilization eliminates the need to know how to create and maintain one, so it eventually falls to random change or collapse, due both to the isolation from real needs (Malthus) and from the need to know what creates a civilization in the first place. Modern technology (homo petroleumus) has made the isolation almost complete: to where only 1% of the people actually grow any food, and even fewer grow food that is edible without high energy processing and transport.
    Add this to the focus on consumerism as a mode of living, and our future looks pretty bleak, with or without a solvent bureaucracy to manage it. Throw in a bureaucracy that is totally controlled by consumption economics, and the jig is up until the fat public falls on its ass and can't get up. Too bad they've already covered most of the natural world with the shadow of their CO2 spare tire.
    A government with weak power is a tool of the banks, because government power comes from money (taxes). Allowing government to borrow from banks does the same thing that borrowing does to other people: it turns them into slaves.
    Taxation rate is not really the problem to solve. Appropriate power is. Tax the money, not the people. Sales taxes provide a feedback loop for both the government and the consumer, while remaining anonymous. Income taxes run open-loop while implementing identity controls on production.

  402. Re:Tax avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're a dope.

  403. Re:Tax avoidance by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    That's nice, for you. Where I live, taxes buy a whole lot of horrible, uncivilized things.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  404. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by haruchai · · Score: 1

    To which the US should reply, "we are $16 Trillion in debt, we don't have the means, so very, very sorry"

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  405. Re:The solution to offshoring profits to tax haven by haruchai · · Score: 1

    That's may or may not be true but what would happen with a "Fair Tax" if it's really such a thing, would be a huge growth in the underground economy.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body