
and do what the man is telling you...even though he's not doing the same?
how does following hypocritical advice benefit us?
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 12:00, Reply)

I appreciate I'm being foolishly optimistic, but I'd feel like a twat getting angry at companies fiddling their books if I was fiddling mine.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 12:10, Reply)

we say "everyone pays tax" thats when its a moral issue... right now its a class issue... if your rich enough or powerful you dont have to pay tax... therefore its a punishment for not being ambitious/cuntish enough...
so only the stupid and weak pay their fair amount of tax...
so when ikea is registered as a charity and the politicians tell you that your handyman neighbour is "morally wrong"
thats when its being a good little boy....
when the rich and powerful AREN'T doing it, yet saying everyone who isn't is morally wrong.
fuck that.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 13:02, Reply)

It's not being a "good little boy"
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 12:12, Reply)

so i' argue that while the deficit could be filled by the corporate big boys paying their share...instead we are being asked to "shop our neighbour"
thats exactly being a good little boy.
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 13:24, Reply)

( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 13:55, Reply)

you dont make the corporations play ball by forcing the average man...
you go the other way round....
you make sure the big boys are paying up and THEN you go for the little guy...
if a boat had 4 holes one hole with a surface area twice the size of the other 4 holes... you wouldn't say the best solution would be to plug the smallest hole would you?
(fluid dynamics will tear this metaphor apart... but you get it)
( , Tue 24 Jul 2012, 14:08, Reply)