Guess What Occupation Is Most Frequently Cited In The Panama Papers?
With all the anti-one-percenter rhetoric and tax-evading-evil-doer narratives spewing forth from the mainstream media mouthpieces of the establishment since The Panama Papers were exposed for all to see, it may come as a surprise to some to find out which cohort of the elites are the most populous among the tax-haven-creating documents...
The Politicians!
Which makes us wonder if this leak was indeed a plot to blackmail/expose the West's ruling class?
Nevertheless, one thing is very clear, as Luis Guillermo Valez explains via PanamPost, officials are hypocritically denouncing the strategies they practice themselves...
Why can’t tax evasion be a legitimate form of self defense? In some countries and circumstances, it is.
Despite what politicians want us to believe, tax havens exist because some countries have been turned into tax hellholes by officials bent on “social justice” and “income redistribution.” Sometimes, those same politicians top the list of “offshore” account holders trying to evade taxes.
“The Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith had something to say about this kind of government revenue, namely that taxes are a lesser evil overall than other forms of paying for public services.
But to prevent taxes from harmful excess, Smith left to posterity the four principles of good taxation, which have been almost completely forgotten by politicians concerned with legislating taxation. Here is Smith’s wise warning:
Excessive taxation is a powerful stimulus to evasion, so penalties to offenders grow proportionally to the temptation that causes it. Contrary to the principles of justice, the law first raises the temptation to infringe it and then punishes the violators.
And if corruption and overspending is added to excessive taxation, the motives for tax evasion are complete. Once again Smith:
In all countries where there is a corrupt government, and where there is suspicion that it incurs in great expense and government revenue is improperly used, very often these laws that protect contributions are little respected
In the 1970s, I met a Canadian man called Bryan O’Connor. He used to deliver pizzas in Toronto and always carried a little notebook in which he religiously wrote down all the tips he received in his work, preventing the risk of missing a penny in his tax return.
I’ve never met anyone else like Bryan. I think he and Immanuel Kant are probably the only people in human history who voluntarily paid all their taxes. I’m sure Bryan has.
Nor do I believe that Jesus Christ was completely honest when answering the Pharisees about paying taxes. He said “give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s.” After all, the man had left behind the honorable carpentry work and did not seem to generate any taxable income. That’s probably why he was defeated in the famous vote competing with Barabbas, who– weapons in hand – had rebelled against the ominous tribute of Imperial Rome.
Since ancient times people have rebelled against taxes. The Roman provinces were often faced uprisings against fiscal depredations and their leaders’ abuses. The peasant wars in Germany, of which Frederick Engels, Marx’s buddy, has left a vivid account were tax rebellions.
The French Revolution began as the uprising of the Estates General against taxes, demanding a cheap government. Interestingly, the twentieth century, which saw a rapid growth in the size of governments and taxes, was free of riots and tax rebellions. And not because all taxpayers behaved like Bryan O’Connor.
Panama Papers: What about Modern Governments?
Though no less rapacious than prior ones, modern governments are more tempered and have given up on the most ominous tax collection practices: murder and torture.
However, it is not shocking to the majority’s opinion that there are a few who punish tax evasion with imprisonment. This is the case of Mexico, Chile, and Peru, Colombia’s partners in the Pacific Alliance, and whose shameful example the Colombian government proposed to imitate in the last tax reform.
Everyone, from the Leviathan-worshipping economists, politicians, and political scientists who serve them, to journalists, tax attorneys, and the public opinion sees the evader as a criminal and the government that punishes him as the defender of society, no matter how corrupt and abusive it may be.
In illo tempore, the evader was seen as a hero who faced a thief state. The inverted values of current times have a background of hypocrisy that nobody can deny.
In almost all countries, legislatures who enact taxes are composed mostly of professional politicians who, by granting special benefits, want to keep lobbyists and wealthy campaign donors happy.
Interest groups and political operators are willing to grant each other benefits with the hope that the general coffers will bear the costs.
Everything is a bargaining of crossed interests leading to casuistical and tangled tax regimes, completely away from the predicaments of solidarity, equity, and efficiency which ultimately are no more than a cover more for private interests.
The economists, lawyers, tax experts, and other technicians who advise governments in the design of structural tax reforms – which are periodically announced but never arrive – are generally also company advisers and wealthy individuals looking to reduce their effective taxation rate.
The middle class defends itself by under-invoicing or non-billing and making up liabilities and expenses on their tax returns. The poorest, who usually only are reached by indirect taxation, join the noisy protests of civil servants who live from taxes and always receive the support of politicians competing for their votes.
That is the common background of what is called the state, from which everyone wants to get a lot and contribute little. But yes, everyone denounces tax evasion.
Governments around the world – in their relentless fight against the tax evasion problem created by themselves with their fiscal voracity and performance – have unseemly decided to form an international coalition against so-called tax havens, while those same officials seek shelter for their good or ill-gotten fortune.
This new and sinister Statist International will be a major threat to capital mobility and individual freedom. However, because supposedly the offshore world only affects the rich, everyone applauds in a universal expression of envy and hypocrisy.
The problem of national and international evasion is not resolved with the creation of a universal tax police. Small, moderate, simple, and austere governments and fiscal systems adjusted to the four rules of Smith are the best antidote against tax evasion.
But in the current state of public opinion where people accept and demand – as Walter Lippmann would say– a large government that administers their affairs for them instead of a government that administers justice among men who conduct their own affairs, it is at best an anachronism to invoke the wise old Smith.
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Well, duh
Prostitution Politician, the oldest profession prostitute in the world.
And what Nationality Is Most Frequently Cited In The Panama Papers? American Jews???
what cult is Most Frequently Cited In barbaric activity https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2016/05/22/the-disturbing-riddles-o...
Politician = Lawyer mostly
Crooked Politicians
what kind of occupation starts with "murd"?
It also fits with the theory that the Panama Papers was a CIA job with unknown ulterior motives against global political targets.
Remember they have only released a small fraction of terabytes of data that were supposedly leaked
what are we looking at,
a holes?
Nor do I believe that Jesus Christ was completely honest when answering the Pharisees about paying taxes. He said “give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s.”
All Roman coins bore Caesar's countenance not just the coins used to pay taxes. Jesus is subtly urging the Judeans to stop adopting Roman ways and dealing in the Roman reserve currency. It's an economic plan of attack and it's brilliant.
Bullshit. That little tidbit was inserted by the custodians of the Bible under the artistic license of the day. Jerusalem probably schooled Rome in the art of fucking the plebes.
well Farqued Up, call it bullshit if you like. After living in such darkness, light has rendered you blind. You can't handle the Truth in your world of universal deceit!
Evading taxes will require a new skill set when cash is eliminated, when we must buy and sell by the number of our name, when the beast demands not only our taxes but our universal allegiance to the global cashless system of digits in the sky.
Small, inexpensive Government is a pipe dream. Not much different then the sought utopia of the communists. Theoretically possible, yet no sign in sight. The opposite actually is plain for all to see. We live in an era where government now has more tools of enslavement then ever before. So big, they think they're God, handing out natural rights, and you aint seen nothing yet!
Your options are being enslaved by global government, or fleeing to the mountains and living off grid, just as the scriptures warned would happen before the great and terrible day of the Lord.
It is not God that died, but Liberty and Truth, at our hands! We are to blame, we've aligned ourselves against God and Truth, we are reaping what we've sown!
We will continue down this road enslaving the world until that terrible day when our evil lords are confronted by THE LORD!
Close, but not exactly right. There was no Roman "reserve" currency because there were no banks required to "reserve" any currency. However, the Tiberian Denarius was the particular coin that was required to pay the Roman tax-- it was the only acceptable "legal tender" for resolving your debt to the Emperor Tiberius. By first asking the Pharisees to produce a specimen of the particular coin that was required for tribute (a coin that was relatively scarce and not typically used in general commerce) and then asking them to acknowledge the Emperor's claim to divinity and his function as High Priest (as these claims were inscribed right on the coin), Jesus used their own words and actions to expose their hypocrisy by demonstrating that their possession and use of the coin implied they worshipped two different Gods, in violation of the first Commandment. "Render unto Caesar" is not a recommendation to pay taxes to Caesar; rather it is an oblique warning to not worship false Gods, couched in language that rebuked the Pharisees and could not, on its surface, be objected to by Roman authorities.
Further analysis here:
https://www.lewrockwell.com/2010/03/jeffrey-f-barr/render-unto-caesar-am...
The problem with taxation in the US is that it gets spent on the military rather than on hospitals, infrastructure and welfare. If the American citizens actually saw their tax dollars doing good things, they way it happens in northern European "socialist" countries, then people would not complain as much about taxes.
"The problem with taxation in the US is that it gets spent on the military rather than on hospitals"
Go back and check your numbers. Roughly 20% of the budget is military spending. Roughly 66% of the budget is wealth transfers to people who vote the correct way. Then even more as state budgets do massive wealth transfers as well with virtually zero spent on military. Last time I took math, 66% was WAY more than 20%. Take from the HUGE portion. Better yet, cut BOTH in half.
Setting that aside, the government should not be involved with hospital "building" in the first place. When government gets involved the systems go to hell. See Europe's and Canada's terrible, expensive, inefficient, health care systems for proof.
the problem is the source of the taxes
the duals switched it from import tariffs and taxes on capital gains to taxes on wages
reverse that = BOOM
"See Europe's and Canada's terrible, expensive, inefficient, health care systems for proof."
The USA spends 17% + of GDP on health care. Canada and Europe, with varying degrees of semi-socialized medical care spend about 11-12% of GDP, and this from a lower GDP per capita than the US.
Perhaps you should look up the definition of "expensive" and "inefficient".
Yes, you make a good point. Canada and Europe simply let people die before getting to see a doctor and/or specaiist. That is very efficient. Good thing that the U.S. medical system is available for Canadians and Europeans to run to when they truly need medical care.
I also agree that the U.S. is getting much worse with regard to health care. And, the government keeps getting more and more involved. Oh, look, more government and... wait for it... WORSE health care!!! Same for Europe. Same for Canada.
Repeat for college tuition. Repeat for military. Repeat for any government interference in free markets.
Sorry, but an all-powerful, totalitarian, government is NOT the answer.
Delusional... there are no "free markets" least of all in the US Health Care business.
In Canada, government is not all-powerful or totalitarian. More like incompetent and corrupt, but still less corrupt than the USA.
My father just passed away at 92. 8 years after heart surgery, His replacement valve was failing and he would not survive another open heart. So they offered to do a scoped tune up of the valve tissue and he declined, figuring that he was ready to go with dignity. He loved the quality of the health care that he received here.
If he had lived in the US, and had private health care insurance, the doctors would have "sold" him (and us) on more drugs, more tests, more surgery to milk every last penny out of the end of his life. I saw it happen to my in-laws when they lived in FL.
Delusional...Who said that there were "free markets?"
People with reading comprehension skills will understand that I said that governments have interfered (and continue to interfere) with free markets, not that there is a free market anywhere. But, some are not very bright. Either that or they twist words to have a fake argument with the wall.
See my initial post concerning the meaning of the words "expensive, inefficient".
In the USA, government has responded to market forces. That force being the medical/health insurance lobby's eforts to buy the politicians so that they get an even bigger share of the US GDP pie.
Even my elderly father recognized that, after Obama-care passed he said: "they have managed to combine the worst of both systems".
The point is that Canada and Europe are inexpensive and efficient when compared to the USA, even before the US government got involved.
The Federal Government spends something like $600 billion on Medicare and Medicaid. That gigantic expenditure means that the US has socialized government medicine just like Canada and Europe; we just run it differently. Arguing which among the US, Canadian, or European systems is "more efficient" is like saying whether it's more "efficient" to set your money on fire, or put it into a shredding machine. A distinction without a difference.
USA burns/shreds 50% more of your money on health care than the rest of the developed world. That is the distinction with a difference.
50% of people in the US don't pay taxes, so all they care about is looting.
at pinch----taxes are only spent to buy votes-every one knows this--infrastructure and gov't finance is done with bonds and welfare is done with printing---jeez
The problem with taxation in the US is the US local, state and federal governments.
Couldn't have said it better
"it may come as a surprise to some......"
C'mon Tyler. I mean really.
Got rope?
Got rope!
I'm waiting for the NYT to do a twelve page expose'.
/sarc
Do as I say not as I do
Since only "The Little People" pay taxes, it rather clearly demonstrates the "We, the Rulers, are above The Law" mindset.
(Not that any of us needed a reminder of the status quo).
I would have never guessed it. LOOK WHO THE BIGGEST CROOKS, LIARS AND CHEATS ARE?
I guessed that it was lawyers. They were number two. Go figure!
@ HRH Remember that most pols are lawyers as well. :)
How is it that I am ruled by CROOKS? I dont like it anymore. DAM IT! These are the ones telling us what to do and making our laws? THE BIGGEST HYPOCRITES OF THEM ALL???? ITS MIND BOGGLING? Holy shit?
Diplomats not far behind.
BTW, where's Bremer?
So, Mr Bremer, where did all the money go? At the end of the Iraq war, vast sums of money were made available to the US-led provisional authorities, headed by Paul Bremer, to spend on rebuilding the country. By the time Bremer left the post eight months later, $8.8bn of that money had disappeared.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/jul/07/iraq.features11
Probably into the pockets of the "better-connected". Once again, "rules" do not apply to this elite group.
iron dome bitchez
+10 for the drug dealer for being honest????
The drug dealers honest money was "Confiscated" by the "legit" crowd as we can see. They like to suck all the air out of the room.
Why aren't the crooked Clinton's on that list?
Ahhh because they're honest law abiding tax paying citizens?!
BWAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Note that "jurist" is only a bit smaller than "economist" in the bubble chart of Panama-users. The category "murd" just cries out for, well, exposition...
When nine hundred years old you become, look this good you will not.
Tax evasion is always and everywhere a legitimate form of self defence.
I guess none of the Politicos ever read the story of Ancient Rome's Cincinnatus.
Like smuggling cigarettes into the NYC area.
Carrying a gun in a no gun zone. It's comedic. Our United States of America President is a stand up Douchebag.
The progressive rag media are clinching pillows, winding up crocodile tears, and posting to Mark Zuckerberg in receiving a new trending algorithm.
Las Vegas and Arizona have new bodies to bury. We can just blame it on Mexican Cartels.
Wait for the upcoming White House to blame another country. This idiot is a riot.
David Cameron ' I've learned from my mistakes and will cover them up better in future '
Bearer shares for example.