General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI think I'll sit out this episode of 2 Minutes of Hate; RE: Apple, Inc.
Apple broke no law. We can't prosecute people for being "wrong" we can only prosecute for acting in ways defined by law as being illegal; otherwise we are not governed by law but caprice and envy. Frankly, I'm impressed that Apple waded into the literally tens of thousands of pages of tax law and were able to so expertly craft the shelter. They aren't to be condemned, they're to be congratulated for being one of the few entities actually able to navigate the labyrinth of contradiction, shift and incompetent construction. It's truly a marvel to behold. That the number of companies exploiting this loophole is so few is an indictment of the byzantine nightmare that is the US tax code.
What if we one day had a tax code that even the "little people" could obey too? Golly!
Congress has no business complaining because they wrote the law. They can change it but I don't believe they will. Perhaps I'm too cynical at the ripe old age of 24 but I think they fear the campaign backlash/loss of tax revenue were they to act in accordance with their professed outrage.
This is just a show for the public. Beat up a few high-profile corporate execs and then do nothing of substance. It gives the people their 2 minutes of cathartic hate and then its back to the usual tedium. I can't share the outrage over this issue because the staged farce is meant to make us outraged so that we still love our masters as they lie to our faces. They're pillorying Apple so you don't notice what incompetent stumble-bums they are as they pretend to look out for our best interests.
CincyDem
(6,355 posts)Bake
(21,977 posts)Haters in the other thread want to throw somebody in jail for OBEYING THE DAMN LAW!! And then get pissy when I suggest we need to CHANGE THE DAMN LAW.
Bake
randome
(34,845 posts)[hr]
[font color="blue"][center]Stop looking for heroes. BE one.[/center][/font]
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Nimajneb Nilknarf
(319 posts)randome
(34,845 posts)Kidding! Thanks!
[hr]
[font color="blue"][center]Stop looking for heroes. BE one.[/center][/font]
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liberal N proud
(60,334 posts)RANT ON
We all know how this happened; the corporations paid lobbyist who paid congress (don't tell me they don't) to write a law that allowed them to send profits off-shore where there are no taxes thus cheating the US citizens out of billions of dollars that could have helped with the DEBT and DEFICIT that the right wingers are all enraged about.
But never mind that scam because over there across the street, there is a family who is getting federal aid (welfare), we must stop them moochers.
RANT OFF
kelliekat44
(7,759 posts)Otherwise it just keeps reminding people of how much the system is stacked in favor of the wealthy on every turn.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)If Corp X paid lobbyists then those lobbyists lobbied congress. Which means congress still wrote the law. Are we then to trust congress to investigate what congress did on behalf of the non-lobbying proles?
It's not Apple. It's congress demanding corporations pay tribute lest the laws be written against them.
KurtNYC
(14,549 posts)"How many dependents did you claim last year?"
A: 3
"And why did you claim 3 ?"
A: Because I followed the tax code that you, Congress, wrote. Followed it to the letter.
"But do you realize that by claiming 3 dependents you are paying less taxes than you would if you had declared only one?!"
RevStPatrick
(2,208 posts)...is the greatest TV commercial ever made:
(sent from my Macbook, probably the 10th Apple computer I've owned over the years)
MadrasT
(7,237 posts)pa28
(6,145 posts)Are you sure you want to applaud Apple because they can afford an army of clever accountants to legally shield their billions from taxation? They are now lobbying for changes in the law that would allow repatriation at a very low rate or even a total amnesty.
Like Romney, Apple probably did not break the law but it seems to me they are both part of the problem. I'll sit out the "two minutes hate" but I think I'll sit out the free congratulatory back rub as well.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)Please note that I also opined that it would be nice if the tax code were a thing the "little people" could obey as well. In other words, it should be a thing where people do not require, "an army of clever accountants to legally shield" their earnings.
If it takes an army to fix it is because the people with the power have waged war. That's not Apple, that's our government. That Apple can afford the army is not an indictment of Apple, it is a cause for alarm that all the other businesses out there are being subjected to laws they cannot fully and fairly comprehend and may inadvertently violate even if they had the best of intentions.
Savannahmann
(3,891 posts)I have never understood why people here and in the rest of our party get so outraged when someone plays by the rules to win. We don't demand tax reform from Washington, we don't demand accountability of our elected reps. We scream that the corporations are crooked.
Initech
(100,068 posts)Tom Rinaldo
(22,912 posts)However if they carefully took all steps needed to comply with the letter of the law there should not be a witch hunt looking for an excuse to prosecute them. I get that.
However there is a difference between unethical and illegal and just because something is legal doesn't mean I can't be upset over it being unethical. And Congress is not one monolithic entity either. Just like with the Supreme Court there are principled dissenting opinions that someday may evolve into the prevailing majority view point. So sure no doubt there are hypocritical show boating members of Congress as you describe, but there are also some voices in Congress who have long argued for tax fairness and greater economic justice. Just because those voices did not prevail when the tax loopholes that Apple used became law is no reason why those voices should be silent about this now. If anything they should be louder now that the intended result of those loopholes are clearly revealed.
I agree that it makes little sense to have selective outrage at Apple only just because it seems they may be a little bit more talented at playing a rigged game than some others. The anger should be over the rigged game, but it is appropriate to call public attention to an outrageous example of how that game is being played. That is how people grasp the concept - examples are always needed and is this is a damn good one. Not every corporation devotes as much energy to legally scamming the system as Apple has. If they get no flak for this the future trend line for corporate (legal) tax evasion) is obvious, and it will be even worse than what we subject to now.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)We may well have our outrage but what will congress do? I submit: not a damned thing and they know it.
badtoworse
(5,957 posts)Dreamer Tatum
(10,926 posts)Mitt Romney violated no law by having offshore tax havens.
Gee, I wonder what the prevailing attitude was about THAT?
Wounded Bear
(58,648 posts)Although it's not "proven" that Romney violated no laws. It is assumed that he was breaking the law and took advantage of the amnesty granted to certain large overseas accounts during the bailout era.
The big thing there was the whole, "We don't have to show you people our tax returns" when every other politician does. The outrage was about something the same here. They might have not broken the law, but they did exploit it to the fullest.
It really is about the law itself, and how tax laws get written to the advantage of the "haves" at the expense of others.
Dreamer Tatum
(10,926 posts)This is all framed in terms of the "liberal" company, Apple. Had this come out about
Exxon, GE, or other tax avoiders, no one would lament the law; they'd scream for
nationalization.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)We may well find Mr. Romney's -- or Apple's -- or anyone else's -- off-shore accounts unfair or unethical but if it is legal then it is legal.
I doubt leaving the law undefined except by the emotions of the crowd is a substitute. I'm not saying you advocate such things but as soon as the legislature commits pen to paper it creates a system that can be manipulated. The more complex the system the more gross the distortions we will find, as the Apple incident illustrates.
I believe nothing will be done. This is all just a show. However, I fear if anything does happen it will only make the system even more complex meaning the "little people" who cannot afford armies of accountants will be further pushed out of the competitive market while those with the money will continue to create a system only they can obey. Then, when the next big They-Didn't-Pay 2 Minutes of Hate comes along we'll chant and pant-hoot on cue until A) nothing happens or B) it becomes even more convoluted and corrupt.
Egalitarian Thug
(12,448 posts)side can say Apple broke the law. You don't know that, they don't know that, and the fact is that neither Apple nor the IRS can say that either, and that's the root of all of this.
Within the 73,600+ pages of the 2012 U.S. Tax Code exist hundreds or even thousands of contradictory provisions. How do you think these giant paper people get away with paying no taxes on what are literally inconceivable profits?
And to use Orwell to rationalize your bias it is beyond ironic.
Nuclear Unicorn
(19,497 posts)"Within the 73,600+ pages of the 2012 U.S. Tax Code exist hundreds or even thousands of contradictory provisions"
This was central to my OP.
Egalitarian Thug
(12,448 posts)"incompetent stumble-bums", rather they created this to achieve exactly what they have, a law so convoluted that the result is no law at all that gives anybody with sufficient means the ability to opt-out of paying taxes.
Your first sentence indicated to me that you were defending Apple.
Rise Rebel Resist
(88 posts)Nye Bevan
(25,406 posts)We are a pretty reasonable bunch here, on the whole.
Blue_Tires
(55,445 posts)I think it's the combination of those two things more than anything else...
MADem
(135,425 posts)A pox on both their houses.
rightsideout
(978 posts)Typed using my Mac Pro Quad Core tower computer.
unblock
(52,205 posts)i've heard this attitude in many places, congress wrote the tax code so they shouldn't investigate apple, etc.
this is ridiculous. the entire point of congressional inquiries is to find out what is actually happening (whether legal or not) and determine is we as a country consider it odious and to then, if appropriate, to do something, most notably CRAFT LEGISLATION, to address the problem.
if someone is BREAKING the law, then investigations into such matters are best left to police, prosecutors, justice departments, etc. yes, something congress gets in on the act for show but usually they just screw it up (just ask poindexter and north).
in this case it is perfectly appropriate for congress to examine what companies like apple are doing, and say, "damn, this is legal!? we need to change that!"
Fuddnik
(8,846 posts)I refuse to buy ANYTHING made by these parasites and their i-slave labor.
pitchforx
(49 posts)and Apple helped create it-Apple lobbies for 0 corporate taxes, pays their workers minimum wage and even less overseas at Foxconn sweatshops where it makes it's' products. i don't see great charity work or social consciousness coming from this quasi-cult.
Samsung is building a chip factory in the US- what's apple done for US lately?
ZRT2209
(1,357 posts)xfundy
(5,105 posts)and their outrageous tax avoidance scheme. So, cons, change the laws, get rid of the loophole, make taxes more fair? OK?
Oh, hell no they won't. GE and many other HUUUUUUUGE repug-supporting, job-offshoring corps pay NO taxes, and they can't risk angering them.