dejongj
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As is my manhoodJohn Hancock is Americanese for a signature.
As is my manhoodJohn Hancock is Americanese for a signature.
Lol semaphore would mean the hands up in the airMaybe they were semaphore workers? Or military personnel marching?
Subtleit contains and spreads my signature.
John Hancock is Americanese for a signature.
Agreed so I'm not quite following @Nod 's point that ( why) I should write my full name in the artificial snow.YepHe was one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independance, and his signature was the largest and "flounciest".
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On a positive note, be glad it wasn't a duff batterySitting at my desk wondering why my laptop was not charging
Best turn the power on then![]()
I wasn't aware artificial snow was edible.So nobody eats it! It would serve them right for putting showy decorations outside way too early. If your signature is anything like mine, it's pretty much illegible so you wouldn't be giving anything away.
Au contraire, I think it's an excellent move. It's exactly the same approach that is taken with regard to doping in athletics, and the effect there is that athletes are very very very careful to ensure that they don't accidentally ingest, or allow someone to give them, anything which is banned. Err on the aside of caution. I assume the Government wants individuals and corporations to be similarly careful with regard to their tax matters.WAMT - Osbourne announcing he wants to remove mens rea for tax evasion and make it a strict liability offense.
Quite worrying, as this sets a precedent for more offences to be tried on a strict liability basis - and this bodes very ill for our judicial system.
First rule of building projects: If it starts by the time you had originally expected it to finish, you're doing well. Sounds like you're doing well.Kitchen re-fit due to start today. Emptied cupboards especially. Total chaos everywhere. Now things aren't starting until tomorrow.![]()
Au contraire, I think it's an excellent move. It's exactly the same approach that is taken with regard to doping in athletics, and the effect there is that athletes are very very very careful to ensure that they don't accidentally ingest, or allow someone to give them, anything which is banned. Err on the aside of caution. I assume the Government wants individuals and corporations to be similarly careful with regard to their tax matters.
If the rule book is easy to understand, and unambiguous then I would agree. Unfortunately that is just not the case, not even close.Au contraire, I think it's an excellent move. It's exactly the same approach that is taken with regard to doping in athletics, and the effect there is that athletes are very very very careful to ensure that they don't accidentally ingest, or allow someone to give them, anything which is banned. Err on the aside of caution. I assume the Government wants individuals and corporations to be similarly careful with regard to their tax matters.
Inappropriate analogy. Professional sport is an opt-in system, and the sanction for breaching the rules is exclusion from the system. You don't get to opt in or out of criminal law and the penalty is incarceration.Au contraire, I think it's an excellent move. It's exactly the same approach that is taken with regard to doping in athletics, and the effect there is that athletes are very very very careful to ensure that they don't accidentally ingest, or allow someone to give them, anything which is banned. Err on the aside of caution. I assume the Government wants individuals and corporations to be similarly careful with regard to their tax matters.
Much more succinct than my rantIf the rule book is easy to understand, and unambiguous then I would agree. Unfortunately that is just not the case, not even close.
We've yet to see the detail, but it seems it will apply to income tax and corporation tax so I would be surprised if they didn't add VAT.will this have an impact on grey importing ? Presumably under strict liability it won't be a defence to a charge of evading VAT to say " I didnt know the supplier was goig to ship it marked as toy parts" or " I didn't realise it wasnt a UK supplier " etc or does the removal of mens rea only apply specifically to avading income tax ?
Purely because I don't have your detailed knowledge on that subjectMuch more succinct than my rant![]()
Don't forget to check the pressure in the system, sometimes after bleeding radiators the pressure can get too low for it to fire up. At least ours does that.Bloody combi boiler going on the blink, dug the manual out and managed to get it going again though
Hoping it is nothing major and was just a blip
Don't forget to check the pressure in the system, sometimes after bleeding radiators the pressure can get too low for it to fire up. At least ours does that.
Fair point.Inappropriate analogy. Professional sport is an opt-in system, and the sanction for breaching the rules is exclusion from the system. You don't get to opt in or out of criminal law and the penalty is incarceration.
Fair point, up to a point. But it's already possible to go to jail for along time on the basis of an honest mistake - "I thought she was 16" doesn't cut any ice in court. Sure, that's a very different application, where the law is simpler, but the principle already exits that you can go to jail for making an honest mistake.I'm not comfortable with people making honest mistakes facing prison - the tax system is complicated and full of grey areas - mistakes or differences of opinion are inevitable and this response is disproportionate to the 'mischief'
I'm happy to defer to your experience here. My impression is that companies will do whatever they can to exploit the tax system legally, and currently if some of their actions are slightly the wrong side of the line then they don't face much of a sanction. Perhaps making the sanctions bigger would encourage some of them not to skate on such thin ice.You post infers corporations are not currently careful about their tax affairs - from my experience that is simply not true. Most companies are compliant with the law even though HMRC have nowhere near enough resources to ever hope to investigate a fraction thoroughly.
Maybe. I don't have a problem with people being strong-armed into simplifying their tax affairs. As I said above, that's necessary if we want to simplify the system.This isn't about encouraging more care (there are already financial penalties to deal with that on a sliding scale of severity of carelessness/negligence - a proportionate response to the mischief) but to strong-arm taxpayers with complicated affairs to overpay their tax to avoid the risk of Justice WantsAPeerage taking an alternate view and tossing the SAO in the slammer.
Maybe, but that's not a helpful attitude. There has been an arms race over decades (if not longer) whereby individuals and corporations have been trying to outwit the intent of Parliament, and Parliament has responded by trying to close the loopholes. It would have been better to clamp down hard on evasion and avoidance long ago, but that wasn't done. Unfortunately it's led to the position whereby a 'clear, fair and consistent' tax system would just be abused.Parliament needs to stop abrogating its responsibility for tax law by blaming everyone else for their failure to write a tax code that is clear, fair and consistent.
Yes I do assume that. My glass is generally half full..You also appear to assume that this will be limited to tax affairs. I think that's extremely unlikely once the precedent is set. Future ministers faced with public outrage over some event or scandal and prompted to react with knee-jerk legislation will see this as a way of being 'zero tolerance'.
Fair point. But it's not the first attack. Environmental offences, age-related offences and traffic offences don't require mens rea, and there's no big fuss about that. I personally don't see why tax offences can't be treated similarly, though I can respect the position of those who disagree.It's an attack on one of the fundamental standards of our criminal legal system; acteus reus & mens rea.
The fact that these terms are in Latin should give some indication of their historical importance to judicial systems, and why all legal systems of a good standard feature them.
I'm currently familiar with boiler issues.Bloody combi boiler going on the blink, dug the manual out and managed to get it going again though
Hoping it is nothing major and was just a blip
Sidelights are ok if they are large enough to be seen. It's those pesky silly little side lights that are barely noticeable that cars had years ago but some Japanese makes seem to still insist on fitting.
And the increasing habit of lorries lighting themselves up as Christmas trees!ind you, I'd rather that than the current Euro trend of blinding LED strips .
I'm never sure if I'm gonna get hit or abducted![]()
Yeah I've heard about you ....Someone else can do the abducting, but I'm willing to volunteer to do the hitting![]()
And the increasing habit of lorries lighting themselves up as Christmas trees!
I drive a lot in the dark mornings, in country type and or at least un-lit roads.
You see one of those coming around a bend at you at 5am ..... Its close encounters of the 3rd kind, re-enacted.
I'm never sure if I'm gonna get hit or abducted![]()
It's not the abduction that hurts...
...it's the probing!![]()

Well the gospel according to "Paul"...it's the probing!![]()
Errrr.....voice of experience?
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LOVE Paul!!Well the gospel according to "Paul"
Graeme Willy: You are an alien!
Paul: To you I am, yes.
Graeme Willy: Are you gonna probe us?
Paul: *Why* does everyone always assume that? What am I doing? Am I harvesting farts? How much can I learn from an ass?
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