Tim Wilson speaks at the Australian Libertarian Society and Australian Taxpayers' Alliance 2015 conference on "property rights as human rights."
‘After the election, Labor is now emboldened. And their objective is to inflict tax violence on wealth and deliver revenue for their spending agenda while crowing they’re balancing the budget from the blood they can extract from your wallet.’
Tim Wilson
There’s something amusing about watching a political party throw the toys out of the cot when they lose. Of course, all political parties have done it from time to time. Labor, for example, complain about the bias of the media when they lose but rarely ever do anything to ensure media diversity or integrity when they win.
However, I must say that there’s something strange about the idea that it’s the preferential system that’s been the reason behind Labor’s massive win because,as “The Australian Financial Review” told us, if we’d had a simple majority system then the Liberals would have won another 13 seats.
There is something wrong with this for two reasons:
While I’m sure that some would argue that this is unfair because it gives some people two votes, preferences actually help ensure that we don’t end up with some cult member who managed to get 21% of first preference, while the other 17 candidates split the votes between themselves without any of them getting a significant number.
For example, imagine these results:
You can probably surmise two things from that list. You may infer that most of the voters would have been opposed to the Processed Food Only Party, yet they win if there’s no preferences. The second is that I can’t add up as the total is less than 100%.
Of course some of you will remember that it was also outrageous in the UK when Labour won so many seats with such a low percentage of the votes – the problem was the FPTP voting that enabled MPs to win with less than fifty percent of the votes.
I’m waiting for some Coalition MP or independent media personality to argue that votes for the Liberal or National Party should be worth two because the people who vote for them are clearly more intelligent and informed and not swayed by misinformation from Labor or their partners the Greens. (Yes, yes, I know that Labor and the Greens aren’t partners, but I heard many, many times about how they were working together to turn the country communist…)
As Tim Wilson wrote, Labor will be “balancing the budget with the blood they can extract from my wallet.” This makes me very happy to know that the budget will be balanced and that it can be done with the blood that’s in my wallet. Personally I don’t know how the blood got there but I’m more than happy to see it go and I much prefer them to be using that than taking money out of my wallet…
Of course Timmy was engaging in a little bit of hyperbole. This is rather typical of the Lazarus of Goldstein. If you remember he was a strong campaigner against Bill Shorten’s plan to get rid of franking credits…
Actually, Mr Shorten never had a plan to get rid of franking credits as such. Shorten only intended to stop the double dipping where someone who was paying no tax could still claim back the tax that the company paid before sending out the dividends. In simple terms, the idea behind franking credits was that you shouldn’t be taxed twice, so if the company had already paid the tax then you shouldn’t have to pay tax on your dividends. John Howard decided that it wasn’t fair that people who paid no tax missed out on this refund, so he changed the rules so that some people weren’t taxed at all.
I wonder what the whiners would do if we changed to a first past the post system and then we organised to stand nine candidates named Tim Wilson in the seat of Goldstein and between them they got 40% of the vote but split between them in such a way as to ensure that none of them actually won.
Outrageous… surely we have to change to a preferential system where it’s clear that you don’t end up with the conservative vote being split…
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I remember when the Poo Machine farted how unfair it was when she failed to win Blair in 1998.
Wilson: "inflict tax violence on wealth", etc.
Sure wealthy people pay more tax. However, after tax they are still left with more money.
If they make more money, they are more likely to be using more of a society's resources — resources for which they should pay.
It is tax inflicting violence on the poor that we should be more concerned about.
Taxpayers' Alliance is a subsidiary of the US entity, which is in the fossil fuel social-Darwinist Atlas Koch* Network like IPA, CIS, AIP etc.
*Atlas Koch shares US donors with Tanton Network, Project 2025 and locally antipathy towards Indigenous a la The Voice No campaign with Advance & RW MSM.
Thankfully, as opposed to the UK, US and Europe, compulsory voting makes up for younger voters being demographically outnumbered by ~8 million Gen X, Boomer 'bomb' and silent gens, plus inertia of younger &/or working age not voting in UK and US; making it way too easy.....