Fiftyyearsandcounting
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 25 Oct 2009
- Messages
- 2,361
I do carry DR and CR cards but prefer cash for regular shopping. Every week I draw out a set amount in cash for food and housekeeping. That's the budget.
Also; "I am not a number.... I am a free man!"As someone once said,
I will not make any deals with you…I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
YesDo you pay tax?
We’re doing it wrong:)
I agree with the last sentence about wealthy tax havens, but despite this I'm quite happy to pay my share of the taxation burden.We are taught to like tax. Bad people don't pay and its why we haven't enough hospitals......Bollocks.
The more you pay the more they waste.
Little people pay tax, rich people don't. The ones in control are the ones who don't pay tax.
I didnt say I pay all the tax I should :-)We’re doing it wrong:)
I’m doing it wrong:)I didnt say I pay all the tax I should :-)
Good man.I agree with the last sentence about wealthy tax havens, but despite this I'm quite happy to pay my share of the taxation burden.
When I got my jaw smashed about 8 years ago, it was the collective tax take that paid the consultant surgeon to put it right so that I could eat again after a few weeks. It was the collective tax take that paid the nurses and cleaners in the hospital, and the collective tax take that paid for the roads for me to be driven home again.
Even thought I don't have children, I am happy for my taxes to pay for teacher's, because hopefully I will live to an old age, and some of those children being taught to read, write and count could be the nurses dishing out my medication in the old folks home, and I would quite like them to be able to read the instructions of the medication and count out the correct dosages.
My life would be marginally improved as I wouldn't have to wait at the bar etc while dopey Derek in front of me fumbles about trying to figure out how many shillings half a pint of bitter costs.I’ve only been to a cash point twice this decade and both of those were not even for cash for my own use, they were for putting cash in a birthday card.
If we went cashless tomorrow my life would be no different.
If you've ever watched "Hunted" on TV you'll already know how easy it is to trace people through phone calls, and phone GPS, numberplate recognition, CCTV and cash withdrawals from ATMs
I have nothing to hide, so not at all concerned about any of this, but it does seem difficult to go "off grid" in modern society.
Feel exactly the same, the stuff you mentioned is the kind of of stuff we should all be proud to spend our taxes on. Sensational post. Have a virtual fist bump from me.I agree with the last sentence about wealthy tax havens, but despite this I'm quite happy to pay my share of the taxation burden.
When I got my jaw smashed about 8 years ago, it was the collective tax take that paid the consultant surgeon to put it right so that I could eat again after a few weeks. It was the collective tax take that paid the nurses and cleaners in the hospital, and the collective tax take that paid for the roads for me to be driven home again.
Even thought I don't have children, I am happy for my taxes to pay for teacher's, because hopefully I will live to an old age, and some of those children being taught to read, write and count could be the nurses dishing out my medication in the old folks home, and I would quite like them to be able to read the instructions of the medication and count out the correct dosages.
When they wrongly took £800 pound off me in 1998 they made an enemy.I’m doing it wrong:)
Fair play mateWhen they wrongly took £800 pound off me in 1998 they made an enemy.
When no one would help, employer or union I decided I had to get it back myself.
In 2006 I became self employed. I'm now ahead.
The only reason I'm ahead though, is just in case it happens again :-)
That is the perfect example of how people are conned. You believe your taxes are for nurses and hospitals. You are told that continually and when they need more money from you to help the NHS you will gladly pay more.I agree with the last sentence about wealthy tax havens, but despite this I'm quite happy to pay my share of the taxation burden.
When I got my jaw smashed about 8 years ago, it was the collective tax take that paid the consultant surgeon to put it right so that I could eat again after a few weeks. It was the collective tax take that paid the nurses and cleaners in the hospital, and the collective tax take that paid for the roads for me to be driven home again.
Even thought I don't have children, I am happy for my taxes to pay for teacher's, because hopefully I will live to an old age, and some of those children being taught to read, write and count could be the nurses dishing out my medication in the old folks home, and I would quite like them to be able to read the instructions of the medication and count out the correct dosages.