[Spridgets] Blatant Political Post

GUY DAY grday at btinternet.com
Sun Apr 8 04:49:07 MDT 2012


It doesn't overly excite me either but there are some concerns.
I get it fresh baked from the oven then it is hot and I presume I pay tax. 
If I buy it after it has cooled down then I don't pay tax.  I suppose have 
to live with that, death and taxes etc....

If I buy it fresh baked and don't eat it until it cools where do I claim my 
tax rebate?

What does concern me is they talking about US, the Public, the taxpayer, 
paying for THEIR political advertising election campaigns and I don't want 
ANY of them.  In my book, any politician is nothing other than a pile of 
manure.

Anarchist of the future....  (the future is closer every day)

Guy R Day


----- Original Message ----- 
From: <>
To: <>; <spridgets at autox.team.net>
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2012 9:43 AM
Subject: Re: [Spridgets] Blatant Political Post


>I haven't got too excited about this tax.  Surelyt the Cornish miners
> would always have eaten their pasties cold, down the mine.
>
> Weslake-Monza 1330
>
> In a message dated 08/04/2012 03:09:53 GMT Daylight Time,
> writes:
>
> To the  folks on the other side of the pond in the (LBC) homeland. We
> feel your  pain, we're mad, and not going to take it any longer.
>
> I speak of the  Pasty tax.
>
> This from The Daily Mining Gazette newspaper today.
> <http://www.mininggazette.com/page/content.detail/id/524950/Petitioners-prot
> est-pasty-tax.html?nav=5006>http://www.mininggazette.com/page/content.detail
> /id/524950/Petitioners-protest-pasty-tax.html?nav=5006
>
> or
> http://preview.tinyurl.com/86sjs2v
>
> The story reads in  part. . .
>
> CALUMET - As they did in the 18th century, Americans are  rising up to
> protest what they view as oppressive and unfair British  taxation.
>
> The difference is, now it's in solidarity with the  British.
>
> The Keweenaw Kernewek, a local group for people of Cornish  descent,
> is gathering signatures in opposition to a recently enacted 20
> percent tax on takeout snacks. That includes the pasty, the meat pie
> brought over to the Upper Peninsula by Cornish miners and since
> designated as Michigan's state food.
>
>
> Read the story to learn  what happens next.
>
>
> Tim  Collins
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/12702006@N07/sets/
> ------------------------
> ------------------------
>
> spridgets at autox.team.net


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