This is an instant classic. I’ve heard that even the porn industry is out for a bailout. When are the powers that be going to wake up and realize how stupid they’ve been?
Here’s a link to the originating site . In the interim, enjoy the video:
This is an instant classic. I’ve heard that even the porn industry is out for a bailout. When are the powers that be going to wake up and realize how stupid they’ve been?
Here’s a link to the originating site . In the interim, enjoy the video:
I read this Times Online article a couple of times, hoping to find that they were being silly. I thought I came close, but kept stopping when I read this:
Assuming interest rates are reduced to about 1 per cent today, it will make little difference to savers if they fall all the way to zero. To all intents and purposes, income from bank accounts will be reduced to nil.
The next logical step, although it may be politically controversial, would be to do the opposite of what the Tories suggest. Instead of reducing taxes on interest payments, the Government could tax all bank deposits and other risk-free savings . This would create a negative risk-free interest rate, encouraging savers either to invest in property, shares and other productive assets – or simply to save less and consume more. In either case, the result would be more consumption and physical investment, less unemployment and faster recovery from the slump .
In the absence of a savings tax – and even Mr Obama would probably balk at anything so controversial – there are plenty of other measures to boost consumption and investment. Most obvious are direct government spending on infrastructure; public guarantees and subsidies for business loans or home mortgages; or tax cuts and handouts, especially for those on low incomes who tend to spend all their money. The beauty of such policies in a world of zero or near-zero interest rates is that they are effectively cost free. In the present environment, extra public borrowing does not displace private employment or “crowd out” business investment.
There are plenty of objections to ever-increasing public borrowing, not just fairness and efficiency but also the moral hazard of creating a culture of state-dependence. But in a slump, when the alternative is business bankruptcies and longer dole queues, these objections make little sense.
If you’re from the Time Online or you’re
If not, allow this rant: Why is it that you people JUST DON’T GET IT? This is not all about consuming our way over the hill, like we’re a bunch of ants trapped by a mudslide of honey.
This – this financial ‘situation’ that the world’s ‘brightest’ and ‘best’ have unleashed upon us – is all about defiance. Defiance when told I have to spend my hard-earned savings on crap that is made in some Gulag somewhere all to the benefit of some crap company that’s based in Georgia or Arkansas. Defiance against being told that the solution is to relinquish the only method of control: financial power and influence. Defiance against caving in to CEOs that make as much in a few minutes as most people do in a year, especially when being told that you have to make concessions in order to continue to be employed to keep making more piece of crap cars that no one wants.
Ugh. "Saving" is the cornerstone of an efficient capital generating system. Without savings, you have no mass capital. Without mass capital, you have no investments. Without investments, you have no jobs. Without jobs, you have no income. Without income, you have no way to generate savings.
Do you get that it’s a cycle, or should I repeat myself?
Numbnuts.
Fantastic link ! I’ve repasted some below, just in case the link disappears. I haven’t pasted the rules, but maybe we should all start using them in order to get some visibility with the Canadian public?
Definitions:
Caught in the Crossfire: When Palestinian civilians are killed.
Retaliation: When Israeli army or settlers kill Palestinians.
Escalation: (synonym/can be used interchangeably with Provocation): Any act of violence or resistance by the Palestinians.
Murdered: When Israeli Civilians are killed.
Brutal/cowardly/ghastly: adjectives describing attacks on Israelis.
Self defense: Any act of violence by Israelis .
Terrorism: Any act of violence by the Palestinians.
Civilians: Armed settlers are civilians when killed. Try to avoid using this term for Palestinians.
Neighborhoods: Areas inhabited by Israeli settlers especially if targeted by shooting (light guns)
Positions: Any Palestinian towns and villages especially when bombed by helicopter gunships or raked with large caliber machine guns .
Tragedy: Any Israeli death .
Deserved: Any Palestinian death.
Squatters: Palestinian natives .
Democratic ally: Synonym for Israel.
Disputed Areas: Any Palestinian or Arab land occupied by Israel in defiance of International law.
Anti-Semite: Person condemns Israeli violations of Palestinian civil and human rights.
Victims: Any Jewish Israeli .
Attacker: Any Palestinian engaging in any form of resistance (violent or not). Also see terrorist.
Targets: Palestinian buildings, homes, offices – What the Israeli military designates as military targets.
Attack/bombing/murder: Acts the Palestinians commit when directed at Israelis .
Clashes: This is a difficult term to understand but is generally used when Palestinians die .
Measures (e.g. Economic measures, security measures) : Any acts the Israelis commit (blockades, collective punishment, shelling neighborhoods, starving a population etc) .
Security: Anything the Israeli government chooses to do. This can include land confiscation, extra-judicial killings, home demolitions, destruction of groves, uprooting trees, blockades etc. The term security is reserved for use only with the word Israel or Israeli and must never
be applied to Palestinians. Lashing out: A term reserved for Palestinians and acts they commit against Israelis
Under siege: Again a term for use by the Israelis as in Palestinians have put Israelis under siege. Exact meaning depends on the circumstances. Never use for Palestinian towns or villages.
Finally … a journalist who isn’t content to listen to the BS:
Mark Thompson: "In the name of humanity, what is Israel doing?"
Here I am, a typical middle-class dude with lots to lose and I’m begging the so-called leaders of my federal government to avoid the Harpie-like calls for tax relief for businesses and on the personal level.
Why? Because our social infrastructure will come to a drastic and complete failure if we do.
Mel Hurtig doees comparisons of tax rates for corporations and for personal income across the globe as research for his book, The Truth About Canada .
Last week, I received a newsletter update related to one of his chapters on tax rates.
Here’s an update from the OECD. For the most recent year for which reliable statistics are available (2007), of the 30 OECD countries, Canada is 20th when you compare the total tax revenue as a percentage of GDP.
Of the 10 countries that have lower total taxes, most have miserably poor social programs e.g. Mexico, Turkey, U.S.A., Korea.
Bear in mind that since 2007 total Canadian taxes as a percentage of GDP have come down substantially.
Here is a list of countries with higher taxes than Canada, with Denmark being the highest, followed by Sweden, Belgium, France, Norway, Italy, Finland, Austria, Iceland, Hungary, Netherlands, Spain, Luxembourg, Portugal, U.K., Czech Republic, Germany, New Zealand, Poland.
Overall, the OECD average is about 35.9% while the figure for Canada today is estimated to be about 33%.
The reality, as Mr. Hurtig points out, is that we are no longer in need of more tax cuts just to ‘be competitive’ with other nations. In fact, I’d argue that in order to attract quality employees and talented professionals, we need a stable and reliable social safety net that takes care of everyone in our society.
As we head into the final days without government (when we’ve needed it more than any time in our history), question the clarion call for tax cuts and understand that cutting taxes in an age when people aren’t making money is foolish and only benefits an elite few.
Supoprt new initiatives that will re-build Canada’s manufacturing base and goals that are geared towards a green economy. Only then will our investments pay off.