- Sun Jun 09, 2024 4:31 pm
#69617
You know what ? I really don’t give a flying fuck about restricting, limiting, or reducing immigration. In fact, I think it is an unequivocally positive thing for the UK in multiple ways, and I’d actually welcome more of it. I do want to bring an end to human beings risking and sometimes losing their lives attempting to cross the channel in dangerous small boats, but I want it done by making sure there is a safer alternative for these people and by investing funds in processing asylum claims properly and promptly.
I’m not in the slightest concerned about any reasonable increase in income tax, VAT, or national insurance. Any such increases are invariably marginal for most taxpayers, and in the case of the majority of people paying their taxes via PAYE, are barely even noticeable. Like most people, I was never going to buy a fucking yacht anyway. I’m more than happy to pay any non-punitive increase in taxation if it enables my government properly to fund and re-build decent public services and help tackle inequality, and if it starts to restore the health service to where it should be, then bring it on, I say.
I absolutely hate the way that modern general elections have reached a point whereby any mention of the need to raise revenue via necessary increases in taxation has had to be considered anathema for any party aspiring to government.
What’s wrong with me?
I’m not in the slightest concerned about any reasonable increase in income tax, VAT, or national insurance. Any such increases are invariably marginal for most taxpayers, and in the case of the majority of people paying their taxes via PAYE, are barely even noticeable. Like most people, I was never going to buy a fucking yacht anyway. I’m more than happy to pay any non-punitive increase in taxation if it enables my government properly to fund and re-build decent public services and help tackle inequality, and if it starts to restore the health service to where it should be, then bring it on, I say.
I absolutely hate the way that modern general elections have reached a point whereby any mention of the need to raise revenue via necessary increases in taxation has had to be considered anathema for any party aspiring to government.
What’s wrong with me?
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.