donalg1 wrote: » Oh please do ghandee would love to see a post from me saying I support the CPA. Can't imagine you finding one though just ghandee making stuff up again true to form though.
donalg1 wrote: » In work and on boards all day tis well for some.
spikethedog wrote: » Yea, I changed that to "supporting" the tax. Some laws are made to be broken, not all laws are correct, some things need to be challenged.
dxhound2005 wrote: » Some people break some tax laws and some of them get caught and appear on the Revenue lists. Some others probably get away with it, some dodgy offshore accounts should be easier to hide than a house.http://www.revenue.ie/en/press/defaulters/index.html Some people have got away with breaking the new tax laws but they will not be able to hide their houses forever.http://www.oireachtas.ie/viewdoc.asp?fn=/documents/bills28/acts/2012/a5212.pdf123.—Any local property tax, interest referred to in section 149 or other monetary penalty amount which is due and unpaid by a liable person shall be and remain a charge on the relevant residential property to which it relates. 124.—Notwithstanding section 36 of the Statute of Limitations 1957, the charge referred to in section 123 shall continue to apply without a time limit until such time as it is paid in full. So some laws are made to be broken are they? That gives carte blanche to every criminal to use this argument to bring the country to anarchy. Which is the last thing the property owing classes should want to see happening. There is no inviolable right to own a piece of the earth and build a house on it, that only comes with a system of law and order. All the legitimate challenges have failed, wait until the next election and vote a Sinn Fein government to get rid of the tax.
spikethedog wrote: » Are you another one who has never broken a law? We truly are the land of saints and scholars. There's a lot more than Sinn Fein against this tax, half of fine gael and labour are too, only they're too cowardly to stand up and be counted. Fianna fail are against the tax, the independents are against the tax and somewhere around 600-700,000 people in the country haven't registered and are against the tax.
donalg1 wrote: » I'm not moaning about it I'm just pointing out the fact people having been making these silly claims for a year now. If it bothered me I wouldn't read it but it does make me laugh so ill keep reading and laughing.
Ghandee wrote: » You're alright, I'll let readers judge for themselves, it's all there, black and white, as clear as crystal. (I especially like the post you got red carded for lol:pac:) Mmm, well now, seeing as I'm employed in the private sector and work my own hours, I hardly think that it's any concern of yours how often, or when I post. You might do me a favour though, look at my total post count, then look at when I joined boards. Compare that then with your own history.
Bullseye1 wrote: » Where was your protest?
Bullseye1 wrote: » Those who have protested have been accused of being freeloaders and tax cheats even though they have paid plenty of taxes, vat, duty, stamp duty and probably have never claimed any social welfare. Go figure. Then you have others who do **** all but blindly accept what their government make up. And ask nothing in return. Go figure.
donalg1 wrote: » Well I have never accused anyone of being a freeloader for pretexting. I have laughed at those that have claimed to be protesting while never going to a protest. I have a lot of respect for those that take time to actually attend protests.
Bullseye1 wrote: » This goes to the very heart of the waste in government spending. And instead of looking for proper change with genuine reform and removal of waste we have the pro side shouting at the top of their voices pay up and shut up. You have no right to know how your money is spend...cough...wasted.http://www.independent.ie/national-news/litany-of-waste-across-hse-laid-bare-as-721m-is-slashed-from-budget-3353780.html
bgrizzley wrote: » i wonder is the legislation still there from the last time Fianna Fail scrapped the property tax. did they legally have to undo it or is it possible to just ignore it?
dxhound2005 wrote: » http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/1978/en/act/pub/0035/index.html LOCAL GOVERNMENT (FINANCIAL PROVISIONS) ACT, 1978 AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR CERTAIN RELIEFS IN RELATION TO THE PAYMENT OF RATES, TO MAKE OTHER PROVISIONS WITH RESPECT OR IN RELATION TO RATES, TO MAKE PROVISIONS REGARDING LOCAL GOVERNMENT, AND TO MAKE OTHER PROVISIONS CONNECTED WITH THE FOREGOING. [20th December, 1978] One of the most disastrous bits of gombeen politics. I don't think there is another country in the world that abolished it's local property tax. This aberration could never continue.
tayto lover wrote: » People are being persecuted for working hard for their families and buying a decent home. That cannot be right in any civilized country. The people who commit crime, refuse to work, get council houses with small rents, don't pay for anything and who are offered the free grants get all the rewards while all the time being carried by the workers through their taxes. The highest paid people in the country, the politicians, are also carried by the same people they are again trying to squeeze. The Bankers, developers and speculators who cost the country billions are also being subsidised by the same people, the working taxpayer ???? Meanwhile the same politicians close hospitals, garda stations and post offices all over the country. Services needed by the taxpayers. Madness, complete bloody madness.
HabeasCorpus wrote: » Good man Vincent, reminding Asshole he is earning over 100k plus perks. Asshole can only come up with having to pay property tax and extra 500 quid a year affecting him!!!! In a society where people have nothing, and are trying to scrape a fare to emigrate. How is Asshole, thick and stumbling able to get a high wage, he cannot debate, he has nothing to offer. I am so enraged when I see these unintelligent incompetent creeps, unable to do anything except grab. Irish people are too easy allowing this.
dxhound2005 wrote: » People with persecution complexes think they are being persecuted.