Tag Archives: Ghosts

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US companies treat UK citizens like ghosts to rip them off

At the center of the controversy is a loophole in the tax code that disregards a consumer’s physical presence and allows the company to treat them as if they were physically located in another country when they buy something. In other words, you might think you are standing on a high street in London buying a cup of coffee, but according to how the tax system is gamed, you are actually standing in a different country when you make that purchase. UK citizens, in other words, are outsourcing their spiritual self to other countries where these companies treat them as having a corporal presence enabling a tax arbitrage that deprives the citizens of Britain with the taxable income necessary to maintain the roads, networks, internet, political stability and access to media outlets they have built up over the decades used by the offending companies to grow sales. But it’s OK to treat a ghost-like representation of these same citizens who are theoretically present in these foreign territories to boost the stock prices in these same companies. Treating UK citizens like ghosts means they get hit twice. Not only do they lose the tax refunds owed to them by these companies (in the form of a higher overall tax take by the government) but with the decrease in taxes comes fresh government the austerity measures needed to maintain the infrastructure these companies need to continue their parasitical leeching of untaxed revenues from the citizens.If only British citizens ate and lived like ghosts, all would be fine. But since they are not, real money needs to be spent for real goods and services despite Google, Amazon’s and Starbuck’s tax treatment of them as immaterial.So you have a situation where Google, Amazon and Starbucks want to use the assets paid for and built by the UK citizens (over generations) but they don’t want to pay for access. They only want your ‘spiritual’ representation to book sales for them in favorable tax territories for virtually nothing in return, except maybe some low wage serf work dispensing lattes to bankers and accountants busy scamming you.The government must, if it is to be considered legitimate, introduce a tax credit to all UK households equal to the taxes lost when big US companies game the system and treat them like ghosts. A rough calculation suggests that each British family is due a £10,000 pound annual ‘ghost’ tax credit to compensate them adequately for the abuse of the assets and infrastructure that is being used by foreigners without adequate compensation.If a British family’s tax liability falls beneath the £10,000 threshold then an outright gift of the difference should be awarded. Any shortfall from the treasury’s ability to pay compensation to British citizens from foreign tax abuse should be financed by the BoE at the same rates they charge these same companies for capital: ½% (or less if you consider Forex arbitrages schemes used by these companies dropping their cost of capital to negative numbers). The coalition government talks about the need to rebalance the UK economy. This would be a good start. Rebalance the tax code in ways that treat UK citizens as living, breathing contributors to society, not accounting ghosts living in a dreary world of austerity cuts to pay for accounting tricks by foreigners. Read More

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Call of Duty: Ghosts is official, heading to next generation Xbox

As predicted earlier this week, Activision and Infinity Ward made the next game in the Call of Duty franchise official earlier today. Call of Duty: Ghosts was jointly announced via Twitter alongside the launch of a Facebook fan page and a teaser trailer posted on YouTube. Read More

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Call of Duty: Ghosts announcement expected this week

The latest release in the Call of Duty franchise could be announced as early as this week. Promotional material for the unannounced title known as Call of Duty: Ghosts highlight a May 1 reveal although it’s unclear if Activision plans to showcase anything on that date or if it’s simply… Read More

Haunted Mirror Sells For $155 On EBay

An antique mirror managed to scare up $155 U.S. in a recent eBay auction despite — or perhaps because of — claims that it might be haunted.

The two sellers — Joseph Birch, 20, and Sotiris Charalambous, 43 — claim they acquired the allegedly haunted mirror when their landlord put it in a dumpster outside their London home about five months ago.

Since then, the duo claim they’ve suffered a streak of bad luck, including financial problems and illness according to the Daily Mail.

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Whispering sweet post-structuralist nothings

My favorite love song of the past few years is “Video Games,” by Lana Del Ray because of the third line of the chorus. It’s the song’s most burlesque moment, a come-on that should feel scuzzy and hackneyed, that should ruin everything: “I heard that you like the bad girls, honey.” But it catapults the song over all the barricades I’ve erected in my soul against love songs and against songs in which the singer self-identifies as “bad.” The reason is that the melody in which this particular line is sung cuts against its meaning. Because the words are about sex, you’d expect the song’s heretofore sultry melody to remain sultry or wax sultrier. Instead, on the words “bad girls, honey,” the vocal goes high, chaste, folky. If you only heard this snippet of melody, without words or context, you’d guess it belonged in an Indigo Girls song about ghosts or injustice, or in a lament about Scotland. That’s why the “bad girls, honey” kills me: The words are able to register as hot because the notes are cold. The operative principle here — you can get away with saying something very warm if you deliver it in a cold medium — also explains why Lana Del Ray gave this warmest of torch songs the coldest of names.

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Eric Cantor is not impressed

While many thousands of people were moved by Richard Blanco’s inauguration poem , “One Today,” a message of equality and shared experience and struggle in contemporary America, the camera fell unfortunately (brilliantly) on Eric Cantor’s grimace during the delivery.The Twittersphere was quick to wonder whether Cantor was hoping for rhyming couplets, or hated poetry in general, has a grumpy resting face or perhaps was just cold:[embedtweet id="293408114886205441"][embedtweet id="293408412530782209"][embedtweet id="293408070615326723"]Even some ghosts of the White House past weighed in:[embedtweet id="293421109284569088"] Continue Reading… Read More