The End of Tax Havens?

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas

The image above is of a World War II German Panzer tank. So, what does that have to do with tax havens? I’ll get to that soon.

But first, let’s look at the Isle of Jersey, one of the islands in the English Channel. Most people think of it as a British tax haven, but it’s not, strictly speaking, a part of the UK and not a member of the EU. It’s a self-governing parliamentary democracy under a constitutional monarchy and has its own legal, judicial, and, most importantly, financial systems. For decades, it’s been a choice location for those who seek to avoid taxation.

Income tax was first created in England to pay for the Napoleonic Wars (maximum: 10%) and was raised in World War II to a maximum of 99.25%, again to pay for warfare. It was reduced after the war, but climbed again (on investment income over £20,000) to a maximum of 98% in 1974.

Jersey emerged as a tax haven as a result. Since Jersey was not obligated to pay tax to the UK, Britons increasingly deposited their wealth there.

It’s important to mention at this juncture that most of the world’s tax havens first sprouted as a result of similar situations – supply created in response to a clear need. Most people will abide low to moderate taxation but, whenever governments have become truly rapacious in taxing their people, those people have sought to escape enslavement from their own governments. Sometimes, this has meant physically leaving the country (as so many Britons did in the 70’s) and, sometimes, this has meant moving one’s money to a jurisdiction that has either low, or no, direct taxation.

Tax havens have a long history and, since the 70’s, as taxation in much of the world has been on the rise, havens have unsurprisingly flourished.

Not surprising, then, that the blowback from the most rapacious governments has grown. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (a euphemism if ever there was one), or OECD, has led the charge, funded primarily by the US but based in Paris and utilised heavily by the EU as well as the US.

The OECD claims to have as a primary goal the elimination of money laundering in the world. It has successfully convinced most of the world that money laundering (the practice of keeping parasitical governments from stealing your wealth) is a criminal activity and must be stopped.

However, the true objectives of the OECD are the following:

  1. To eliminate the individual right of privacy with regards to wealth.
  1. To force minimum tax levels on all sovereign nations, so that they cannot offer freedom from excessive taxation to anyone.

But, lest we’re tempted to sympathise with the OECD, it’s important to mention that it also fully accepts the fact that its member-countries have their own tax havens which don’t comply with OECD minimum standards. Seen in this light, the OECD is exposed as more of a shakedown organisation than a “force for good.”

Still, the OECD is powerful and it’s taken its toll on tax havens. Every two or three years, it puts the squeeze on a selection of the world’s tax havens, demanding new or revised minimum standards. It places them on a blacklist or graylist until they cave in to the new standards. Then, two or three years later, it goes after another selection of havens, thereby steadily ratcheting down economic freedom in the world.

One of their foremost successes has been the Isle of Jersey. By forcing tax equalisation on Jersey, Jersey has had to decide whether to increase taxation for offshore depositors, or decrease taxes for locals. It chose the latter and, as a result, has experienced a shortfall in the government kitty, resulting in layoffs for public service workers, cuts in funding for road repair, sewage services, education, etc. Jersey appears to be on the ropes as a result.

So the big question is, “will the OECD reach its goals?” In five or ten years’ time, will the only tax havens be in places like Delaware, where the government-sanctioned tax haven follows the “bad practices” that the OECD has called “criminal”?

At present, no one has the answer to that question, but what we can say is that we’re witnessing The Great Race. The economies of all the OECD member-nations are in trouble. Having destroyed their own economies through massive debt, they’re grasping for every tax dollar they can get their hands on to keep the house of cards from collapsing. The inevitable collapse is getting ever closer, so the hope is to scoop up as much wealth by whatever means possible before the fall. This is critical as, after the fall, the credit will evaporate. The governments will no longer be able to fund the costly agencies necessary to track down and confiscate the wealth of their citizens.

This is therefore a race against time, which brings us back to the Panzer in the photo.

The Panzer tank was critical to German advance in World War II. In the 1940’s, if you heard one coming, you ran like hell. But they ran on gasoline. The Nazi command recognized early in the war that, unless they captured the oil fields in Russian-held Romania, the German war machine would literally “run out of gas.”

As risky as it was, it was essential to attack Russia. The attack became increasingly desperate, since the Germans fully understood that their end was on the horizon if they did not succeed (Can we see any similarity between this and a government near us?).

The Germans failed to conquer Romania. Then, in 1945, at the Battle of the Bulge, the advance by Panzer tanks came to a halt. Had they reached the front lines, they would have won the day for Germany. But, instead, they ran out of fuel in mid-advance.

As decisive as that event was, to my mind, there is a connected event that’s more significant to us today. When the tanks ran out of gasoline, the crews left the tanks and simply began to walk back to Germany. Most were later rounded up by the Allies and they went along peacefully.

The great significance of this event is that, no matter how much bluster a political or military leadership presents, and no matter how obediently the soldiers respond to such posturing, once it’s clear that the game is up, the pretence amongst the soldiers evaporates. If an army learns in advance that an end is inevitable and has had the requisite time to think over the situation in advance, it simply awaits the tipping point. When that occurs, they’re less likely to make a panicked, futile last stand. The foreknowledge informs them to be prepared in advance to simply walk away.

So, to return to The Great Race by many governments today, what we are witnessing is a last-ditch effort to squeeze as much wealth as possible from their citizens before those governments run out of gas or, in this instance, run out of credit.

At some point in the not-so-distant future, creditors will dump treasuries back into the EU and US markets. Stock and bond markets will crash. Currencies will crash. Debt defaults will take place. Banks that are seemingly too big to fail will fail and there will be no fund from which to bail them out.

What we can expect will be an increasingly desperate attempt to rob people of their personal wealth. The situation will ramp up to a draconian level. Then, quite suddenly, the crisis will be upon us. The dreaded tanks will run out of fuel – the governments will lose the economic power to continue their advance against economic freedom.

The goal for each individual who values his freedom might then be to avoid being the low-hanging fruit until that day, so that he might come out intact on the other side.

Editor’s Note: Bestselling author Doug Casey has been warning of a currency collapse. He believes a collapse of major currencies could wipe out trillions of dollars in wealth, including pensions. Here’s Doug:

It’s going to be much more severe, different, and longer-lasting than what we saw in 2008 and 2009… The U.S. created trillions of dollars to fight the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009. Most of those dollars are still sitting in the banking system and aren’t in the economy. Some have found their way into the stock markets and the bond markets, creating a stock bubble and a bond super-bubble. The higher stocks and bonds go, the harder they’re going to fall.

Unlike most people, Doug Casey has actually lived through a currency crisis. He was in Argentina when its currency collapsed in 2001 during the largest sovereign debt default ever. By making smart investments, he even managed to make a large gain on his money in the aftermath of the crisis.

We recently recorded a video presentation with Doug on this topic. In the video, Doug shares his advice on how to position your money and investments for the collapse of a major currency like the U.S. dollar. Click here to watch the video now.

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49 Comments
Ken31
Ken31
August 27, 2022 9:17 pm

I am not really concerned with tax havens, but does anyone have any recommendations or thoughts on a new dishwasher? The one that came with the house had about 3 months of life left in it and we have been here for 8.

Rick
Rick
  Ken31
August 27, 2022 9:53 pm

When we bought this house , replace the dish washer with a Westinghouse. Light service, there is only two of us, but it does a good job.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Rick
August 28, 2022 10:58 am

Yes the 90 day warranty is excellent on the Westinghouse

Robert(QSLV)
Robert(QSLV)
  Ken31
August 27, 2022 9:53 pm

How far are you from the Mexican border? Should be able to get one there.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Ken31
August 27, 2022 10:30 pm

Bosch makes a quiet and powerful product. As a plumber of many years experience…I installed one for my Mom. They are also moderately priced.

There are other good choices depending upon your situation, but I went with Bosch.

Ken31
Ken31
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 27, 2022 11:33 pm

Thanks, I think a plumber is a good endorsement. Bosch has been getting good reviews.

BL
BL
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 12:44 am

Ken- We have Fisher-Paykel dish drawers at the doomstead. Never failed in 15 years. (They were German made.)

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 11:02 am

Good luck finding a RepairMan for a Bosch, you need one with a hard food disposal built in. Bosch doesn’t offer that. Maytag or Kitchenaid are the best.

bucknp
bucknp
  Ken31
August 27, 2022 11:22 pm

Hands in suds work well. Kidding.

Ken31
Ken31
  bucknp
August 27, 2022 11:39 pm

I shared an apartment with some guys while I was in the Army and I had lived there almost 2 months before I realized it had a dishwasher because the other 2 guys had been doing them by hand the whole time. We were hardly ever there, though. The week after I learned that we got orders to Germany.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 6:43 am

On that note, you don’t have a wife, Ken? Problem solved. And free.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Svarga Loka
August 28, 2022 7:01 am

free? what, buy someone a house so she can wash my dishes? you have an odd understanding of the meaning of ‘free’.. i can wash dishes just fine!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 2:42 am

“The one that came with the house had about 3 months of life left”

New house with a younger Dish Washer? English speaking probably Extra.

Plan B?

TonyBaloney
TonyBaloney
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 6:01 am

We took ours out and replaced with drawers. There’s just the 2 of us and kitchen is small. My mom has a kitchen aid, is quiet and seems to work well.

The Central scrutinizer
The Central scrutinizer
  TonyBaloney
August 28, 2022 6:15 am

They are a good product. I think they’re priced a little high compared to other quality brands though. It’s really all about what you’re comfortable with.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 7:00 am

while clothes washing machines are one of the most brilliant inventions ever, dishwashers are one of the most useless. theyre a disgusting nexus of uncleanliness right in the middle of the place in the house where one really wants cleanliness.. wash the dishes by hand and youll have cleaner dishes.

brian
brian
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 11:14 am

We have this one installed…

https://i.postimg.cc/rmzQKx2B/dishes.webp

Came with an operator too…
https://i.postimg.cc/28N7fP3R/washer.webp

brian
brian
  brian
August 28, 2022 9:34 pm

Oh and btw way, it low energy requirement and ‘green’ works even when the power is out… Super economical and a joy to use… Its amazing…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ken31
August 28, 2022 9:24 pm

The key things in a d/w are price, noise, and spray arms. Do not over pay, because you’ll just be repairing or replacing soon, anyway. I would not pay over $500 for a d/w and I’d try to get one for $300.

D/w’s all have decibel ratings. So you need to know if noise is gonna be a factor (is your kitchen near to where you watch movies?)

You will need a lower spray arm, a middle spray arm, and an upper spray arm. This will make sure water can spray on all dishes from all sides. If you have less than these, you will have issues with cleaning.

All a d/w does is continuously spray hot water at your dishes. Nothing else. So do not fall for any gimmicks. Stay away from touch screens, choose something with buttons that “click.”

Also, installing a d/w is pretty easy. They are all basically the same size because they have to fit your cabinetry. There is only an electrical cord, a water line (use braided stainless) and a drain line, plus two tabs to screw to the underside of the counter to secure it. So you probably do not need to pay $100-$200 to get it installed.

Finally, consider your d/w to be a “dish sterilizer.” Rinse everything well before putting it in. Also, the dishwasher cleaners do work, and can help avoid service calls.

Two if by sea.
Two if by sea.
August 27, 2022 10:03 pm
The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Two if by sea.
August 27, 2022 11:50 pm

You’ll need a fully equipped shop just to deal with routine maintenance. Still…one of the sweetest things to come out of WWII…aside from the P-51 Mustang. Sign me up for one of those!

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
August 27, 2022 10:27 pm

I really have only ONE question.

This forum is rife with Libertarian wisdom, so there should be some great answers forthcoming.

Riddle me this:

IF the Federal Reserve (a cabal of private bankers) can, in conjunction with The United States Treasury Department (with the dubious consent of Congress), print TRILLIONS of US Dollars out of thin air… AT WILL! …then what is, in point of fact, the purpose of paying income tax at all?

It obviously isn’t a “financial necessity”, is it?

If anyone can come up with an answer other than “CONTROL”, I’d really love to hear it!

mark
mark
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 27, 2022 10:32 pm

Demonic Debt Slavery…more accurate than just ‘Control’.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  mark
August 27, 2022 10:56 pm

Swing and a miss.

mark
mark
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 10:01 am

An oldie but goody:

INCOME TAX IS SLAVERY

(INCOME TAX IS DEMONIC NAME STEALER BANKSTER DEBT SLAVERY)

February 12th, 2013

Income Taxation is Slavery

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It’s been known for at least thousands of years that unfair taxes eventually lead to the destruction of a civilization. “The power to tax is the power to destroy” people often say, and not without good reasons. In the book “The Income Tax: Root of all Evil” by Frank Chodorov, he writes: “The income tax is not only a tax; it is an instrument that has the potentiality of destroying a society of humans.”

The history of taxation is also the history of the rise and fall of civilization. It is the history of economic rape.

When the human is similarly deprived of what he has produced – which is the essence of income taxation – he is indeed degraded to the status of an ox.

The government says to the citizen: “Your earnings are not exclusively your own; we have a claim on them, and our claim precedes yours; we will allow you to keep some of it, because we recognize your need, not your right; but whatever we grant you for yourself is for us to decide.”

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The income tax, by attacking the dignity of the individual at the very base, has led to the practice of perjury, fraud, deception, and bribery.

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The banks in Britain eventually applied a similar system to the USA through the introduction of an income tax and the “Federal Reserve Act” in 1913. In the USA a large part of the population thinks that they are independent, while in fact the world banks operating from Britain have taken over again since 1913 through an economic coup d’etat. For more on this, I refer you to the work by Jordan Maxwell. 41 42 43 44 45 Also read what Colonel Edward Mandell House told President Woodrow Wilson about this. 46

INCOME TAX IS DEMONIC DEBT SLAVERY
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World War Zeke
World War Zeke
  mark
August 28, 2022 12:30 pm

If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there’d be a shortage of sand. — M.Friedman

Instead, the Feds took charge of our prosperity/productivity and “five” years is up. All they know is crisis expansion and deflection.

If only we truly were on our own.

ursel doran
ursel doran
  mark
August 28, 2022 12:54 am

New IRS agents, 87,000 they say, NOT to go after the rich, but the easy picking from the Sheeples!!!!
“In Canada, Trudeau is arming climate change police to do the same thing. Let’s face the facts.
We the people are now the enemy – not Putin! This is the consequence of Marxism.
We are nothing more than economic slaves.”

The Real IRS Hunt

a9racer
a9racer
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 27, 2022 10:39 pm

We can hasten this whole charade along if more people start asking that very astute question. And acting accordingly.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  a9racer
August 27, 2022 10:55 pm

It’s why I’m putting it out there now. Sooner or later even the most moronic among us will wake up to this obvious fact. It’s simply undeniable. It’s unavoidable. The realization is inevitable…and the scammers know it. THAT is WHY they are trying to kill as many of us as they can before that critical mass awakening occurs.

It’s a big club, and we ain’t in it.

I’ve never felt more close to George Carlin than I do today. Same with Frank Zappa. Pop culture throwin’ truth bombs for 20+ years.

Awesome.

bucknp
bucknp
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 27, 2022 11:33 pm

Movin’ to Montana soon
Gonna be a dental floss tycoon, yes I am

https://genius.com/Frank-zappa-montana-lyrics

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  bucknp
August 27, 2022 11:41 pm

riding my pigmy pony with my zircon encrusted tweezers. I’ll be the envy of every other dental floss tycoon!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 10:29 am

It’s only to provide the appearance of legitimacy.
You get your wealth taken either way, so why does it matter?

Arcayer
Arcayer
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 12:49 am

I’m a little confused. You seem to imply libertarians should have a “proper” justification for income taxes? The correct libertarian answer is indeed that the official justifications are indeed pretexts and the underlying need for an income tax isn’t the revenue. I’m not sure why you would expect that libertarians should give an answer that doesn’t boil down to “CONTROL”.

None the less, the somewhat long version of my answer is:

An income tax has many important advantages to governments. First off, just printing infinite dollars isn’t actually safe. More particularly, your economy will crash if you circulate them too heavily. Further, if you pump too much into too narrow a pipe, that pipe will burst. That is, you can print dollars, but you can’t print steel. If you point too many dollars at your steel industry, that industry will… not exactly crash, not in the traditional sense. It’ll become dysfunctional. Steel prices will explode upward, productivity will fall, you won’t get the steel you thought you would, rather, you’ll get less steel than if you just hadn’t meddled at all. And not just you. Anyone operating under your currency is going to have less steel than they thought they had, which is going to come back to haunt you from a million directions.

In the end, whether you print dollars, demand tribute, or just regularly send out raiders to collect stuff that you want, you can’t take that which doesn’t exist, and if you try, even that which was previously available to take will not be produced. Governments don’t need you to report your income just so their accounting adds up correctly. They need some idea of what’s actually going on, so they know how far they can press their luck before physical limits cut in, and bad things happen to them.

There are, of course, many more advantages, more than I can list. Getting people used to obeying governments, getting them used to reporting everything they do. The fact that transactions are two sided, means it’s likely the other side reported their side, and the most threatening government in the area is likely to know you’re attempting to defy it if you don’t report the transaction on your side, which leads into a nasty equilibrium where everyone enforces the law against everyone, because they’re afraid the other side will enforce the law against them if they don’t enforce the law against the other side… this is a standard Molochian equilibrium, wherein a system can survive even if none of the constituent members endorse it.

All in all, income tax is just good for government, and any government that supports it will be more successful, survive longer and grow larger than the competition. Knowledge is a valuable asset, and one of the largest weaknesses of government, of [super macroscopic shadow life structured of networked animals] in general, is that humans are microscopic from their perspective. They can’t see us directly. Anything that gives feedback on the state of the body has massive survival advantages.

So why bother with income tax being a tax? Why not just, mandate the reporting of all transactions?

First off, pretexts are in fact valuable. Humans don’t like being victims.

(Some members of the alt right might be surprised at this statement. The problem here is, people who play the victim card don’t think of themselves as victims in the same sense that actual victims think of themselves as victims. There’s a world of difference between being raped and then having your wallet taken, and not being given giant amounts of money/fame/power, that you somehow deserve, because you’re actually better than the schmoes who just won’t recognize your wonderful yada yada. Whenever someone calls themselves a victim, have a check somewhere in your model that asks if their victim narrative raises or lowers their opinion of themselves. Note: real victims don’t like being victims, and want to not be like themselves in so far as that’s why they were a victim. Real victims hate that they wandered into that dark alley as much OR MORE, than they hate the perpetrator. Often they don’t hate the perpetrator At All. The perpetrator feels natural to the victim, especially if the perpetrator [actually profited by hurting them]. Being a victim feels like losing. It is losing. Victims are losers.)

(Further note: all things equal, winners are better than losers, but don’t be confused. Evolution set up strong instincts favouring winners, because that’s what evolution likes, but the easiest way to be a winner is to avoid doing anything difficult in your life. In reality, most losers are better people than most winners, evolution be damned.)

Income tax establishes a narrative whereby people can look away from their own victimhood, and play at being winners. Even if this narrative collapses easily under scrutiny, most people just won’t scrutinize it. It’s not like they’ll actually remake their lives so as to avoid taxes, so looking in that direction is just painful with no gain. Maybe if everyone looked in that direction at the same time, we could all stop paying taxes together, but of course, [coordination is hard] and [that won’t happen] so [why bother trying]. Unfortunately, just because a prophecy is self fulfilling, doesn’t make it wrong.

Next, income tax has an important role in shaping behavior. Note that income tax is not generally applied equally on all profits, some profits are taxed more heavily, some less. There’s all sorts of tax exemptions and brackets and etc. Often, these sorts of incentives have greater impact than the actual funds collected. As a more blatant example, look at employer provided healthcare.

Another important detail, if all you ever do is print dollars, people will stop using dollars. Even if you mandate that all prices must be in dollars, they’ll behave as most companies that accept bitcoin do now, that is, they’ll only ever own dollars for split seconds, instantly converting into and out of your currency as needed for a particular transaction. While in theory, as long as a dollar price exists, you can print that much and buy it, in practice, dealing with insane prices is difficult. If you don’t want dollar denominated prices to enter lala land, you need demand for dollars. Payment of taxes is a good way to artificially create a use case that only dollars can meet. Income tax makes dollars desirable to the general public. Taxes in general provide an incentive for peasants to care that you can print money, and not just ignore you and go on about their lives using gold or another government’s currency, or whatever.

ursel doran
ursel doran
  Arcayer
August 28, 2022 12:58 am

Last I recall, subject to correction, the tax code is “about”, 7,500 pages long, and much of it is the well-lawyered manipulations for the special interest exemptions.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  ursel doran
August 28, 2022 2:46 am

“special interest exemptions”

Down to ‘unique individual’ level.

m
m
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 5:52 am

You covered the supply side…
now you need to create demand for those freshly printed fiatsos, as otherwise their “value” quickly goes to zero.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 6:44 am

Control.

credit
credit
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 10:24 am

it’s sort of like potty training – get them used to it on their first job and they are properly trained for life

Anonymous
Anonymous
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 10:27 am

To give the illusion that the government runs on taxes and needs taxes to run.
To give the illusion of taxation WITH representation (as opposed to the tax of inflation which no one can vote for or against).

They do get money from taxes, obviously. Last year, they got $3.8Trillion from “official” taxes and $2.8 Trillion from money printing (defecit spending).

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
August 28, 2022 10:50 am

Also, taxes can be targeted to specific people or actions/behaviors. Inflation, not so much.

Saxons Wrath
Saxons Wrath
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 10:54 am

Why do you think (((they))) are hiring 87,000 IRS thugs? To wash dishes?? No, it’s to steal your wealth….good luck in keeping it

Jdog
Jdog
  The Central Scrutinizer
August 28, 2022 1:29 pm

The purpose of the Income tax is not to finance government, at least not the Federal Government. In 1946 the then Chairman of the Federal Bank of NY Beardsley Ruml explained that taxes for revenue were obsolete because the government was no longer under the gold standard where it was obliged to exchange the currency for gold.
He went on to state that the real purpose of the income tax from that point forward was to redistribute wealth, and to control the value of the dollar.
While the government causes inflation by borrowing and spending money, it can through the income tax and other taxes remove money from circulation which is deflationary.
That is why government will raise taxes when inflation becomes a problem. That is the reason they are hiring so many new IRS agents. Look for income tax increases to follow the hiring of the new agents.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
August 28, 2022 6:35 am

Did you fall out of bed, Archie? 3:51 am on a Sunday? Good grief! (Oh, I get it, you ARE in Oslo?)

When I worked at Disney World with all the Internationals who used to staff the different country pavilions at EPCOT, you could get a glimpse of Norway right here in the US. One girl prettier than the next.

The Canadians partied the hardest. Fun people.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 28, 2022 6:59 am

well, to be a bit more accurate, the germans did take romania (and held it for a while) but they failed to take the much bigger oil fields in the caucasus, without which they were up shit creek fuel-wise. the romanian fields simply didnt yield enough oil to cover the german fuel requirements. the oil fields that made norway rich in the north sea had not yet been developed (largely not even discovered yet at that time) and would have been in any case far too close to britain to operate without being bombed daily were they to have been developed then. The germans subsequently went all-in on coal-to-liquids which is horrifically expensive… consider that they managed to fight two more years using synthetic fuel manufactured from coal… they had comparatively little and managed to do a lot with it… since then we the ‘winning’ side (the bankers really won that war, not the west nor the germans nor the ussr etc etc) managed to go on a fifty year long bender pissing away a prodigiously enormous fortune in cheap high quality energy and instead of doing anything intelligent with it we built this monstrosity that’s now trying to exterminate us to keep their party going a little while longer.
coulda been that the same would have happened if the ‘other’ side won the second war, but they had at least shown some cojones in dealing with bankers and maybe things might not have been so bad.. hard to avoid pondering the possibility sometimes..

Saxons Wrath
Saxons Wrath
  Anonymous
August 28, 2022 11:14 am

All Wars are Bankster Wars…
Always have been, always will be….

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 28, 2022 7:04 am

you havent been to norway in the past, say, 20 years, have you?
full to the brim with the same third world imported garbage as the rest of europe.
that the oil fields still yield them enough money to keep things clean and maintained despite the new demographics does not mean anything other than ‘they havent run out of money just yet’.

Matthew Clark
Matthew Clark
August 28, 2022 7:20 am

I understand and agree with much of the theme of this article, however the author has falsified history. That is not good. Romania was not occupied by Russia before the war. That happened towards the end of the war. During most of the war Romania was an ally of Germany. Germany had access to Romanian oil and Romanian troops fought alongside German troops against the Russians (as at the Battle of Stalingrad). To win the political battle against authoritarians we must rely on our integrity, and honesty. Giving renditions of false history only plays into the hands of the Progressive authoritarian oligarchy.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Matthew Clark
August 28, 2022 12:52 pm

somewhere i think the author confused the caucasus oil fields with the ploesti oil fields. the brits did sabotage the romanian oil infrastructure mid-war and the germans effectively lost control of the area and access to the oil by iirc early 44.. but in any case the oil available from romania simply easnt enough for the german economy and military to operate.

Jdog
Jdog
August 28, 2022 12:57 pm

I see the trolls are out derailing posts this morning.

Taxation is a basic concept that not 1 in 1000 people really understand. It can be broken down into 2 categories, moral taxation, and immoral taxation. Some people will argue that all taxation is immoral but that is asinine.
Some public services can only be provided through public financing and therefore some taxes are necessary.
So the question is what determines if a tax is moral or immoral?

To simplify the answer, it is choice. A moral tax is one in which you have a choice to pay or not to pay. Sales taxes, excise taxes, and tariffs, are all examples of moral taxes that work to provide the services people need, and still give people the choice to either purchase the product being taxed or not.

Road taxes on gasoline are a perfect example. Roads being needed, are financed by the tax on fuels used to power the vehicles that use the roads. People who choose not to own a vehicle are not buying fuel and not paying the fuel tax.
Excise taxes and tariffs in part go to pay for ports and other facilities that make international trade possible and therefore are being paid by the people benefiting.

Examples of immoral taxes are the income tax and property taxes. These are taxes that claim government ownership of both citizens and of citizens property. They are forced taxes and therefore immoral.

The USA was formed on the idea of individual sovereignty, meaning every Citizen owned themselves and their life as opposed to the feudal societies where a King or Emperor owned the peasants who lived under them.

When the USA began, there were no income or property taxes because both are contrary to individual sovereignty.
If a person truly owns themself, and their life, then what legal claim does a government that is supposed to be the public’s servant have, upon the fruit of their labor? The only legal claims of ownership of the fruits of another mans labor are under the laws of slavery.

Similarly, If a man is truly sovereign, then he has a right to property ownership. What right has government to claim ownership over a free man’s property? In order to impose tax upon something the government must establish some legal interest in that item. Property tax in effect is the forceful claim of ownership of a sovereign persons property by government.

In conclusion, the legal effect of these taxes is to deny Citizens their self ownership. The Income Tax enslaves Citizens, and the Property tax steals ownership of their real property.