Soldato
- Joined
- 7 Jul 2009
- Posts
- 16,234
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- Newcastle/Aberdeen
Or like being disappointed in a school prefect for stealing sweets from the sweet stall.
[TW]Fox;29370847 said:This is genuinely ridiculous - he had some shares which he sold before he became PM and paid UK tax on the proceeds.
People are acting as if he's some sort of deliberately shady big time tax crook, it's almost as if they WANT to believe that because it suits whatever opinion they already held so have taken this and run with it, perhaps through lack of understanding, perhaps through not being that bothered about the facts anyway.
I can't believe people are even calling for resignation!? For what?
He bought shares in a company which is run by his father.
This isn't like you/me buying Barclays/BP shares on the FTSE.
He knew what he was buying into. It's likely that only certain people have access to these shares. He is in insider of an offshore company.
He was given them by his father if I'm not mistaken, he didn't buy them.
from the bbc:
Downing Street said Mr and Mrs Cameron bought their holding in April 1997 for £12,497 and sold it in January 2010 for £31,500. That year the personal allowance before capital gains tax was paid was £10,100 per person.
from the bbc:
Downing Street said Mr and Mrs Cameron bought their holding in April 1997 for £12,497 and sold it in January 2010 for £31,500. That year the personal allowance before capital gains tax was paid was £10,100 per person.

Ok I was mistaken![]()
They shouldn't have to. If you have to explain to people that 'this type of trust is morally okay, but this type of trust is morally wrong even though they're incredibly similar' you've already lost. Cameron's credibility is shot, I don't see him lasting much past the EU ref.
DLA? He had a disabled son and was entitled to the benefit.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I think people are more concerned that it took 5 pre-prepared statements to say "yeah I had shares and sold them", and what he finally owned up to isn't even a big deal.
It's got people wondering why someone would try and stop that relatively benign piece of information getting out, and together with the original claim of "it's private go away" from the leader of a government with an almost insatiable desire to spy on their own citizens it does sort of leave a bad taste. It also does nothing to counter the 'one rule for the ruling class, one rule for the plebs' argument.
I find it hilarious that people still don't realise the difference between evasion and avoidance. All of the facts are pointing to the latter, so why are people acting as if it's the former?
One is illegal, the other is very much legal.