Originally posted by Asher
Since when was food not taxed? If bills don't have tax how come they have the "tax" section on there and take away money?
I never said 65% of our income goes to taxes. If we lived in BC, it probably would.
By the time you factor in health care premiums, provincial income tax, federal income tax, sales tax, and gasoline taxes, you'd be very surprised how much money goes to the government when the salaries are quite large.
Moreso than the middle-class socialists will have you believe, in fact.
Since when was food not taxed? If bills don't have tax how come they have the "tax" section on there and take away money?
I never said 65% of our income goes to taxes. If we lived in BC, it probably would.
By the time you factor in health care premiums, provincial income tax, federal income tax, sales tax, and gasoline taxes, you'd be very surprised how much money goes to the government when the salaries are quite large.
Moreso than the middle-class socialists will have you believe, in fact.
2) Don't know. Doesn't happen here, except on phone bill.
3) BC has lower taxes than QC
4) Health care premiums only exist in Alta and 1 other province, IIRC. Other provs have a health-care contribution that's graduated just like the regular tax
5) I wouldn't be surprised at all. I've seen what my parents pay in taxes, and it's not even close to 50%. It's under 40% without sales taxes, and with them it might approach 45%, not higher. If your father makes over 200k and isn't rich enough to pay a team of accountants to cheat the government then he might well be paying 50-55% with all contributions taken into account. Too bad. I'm sure he can make do with what's left.
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