British Columbia debt near $60 billion.

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
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Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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Buses are good, you don't want to encourage people to move closer to the city core- ever check the price of real estate downtown?

Then what about encouraging business to move to the suburbs?

As the population ages there are fewer people able to do long distance walking or cycling.

If they don't have to bus as far, that will also reduce the cost of public transit, no?
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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You're right JLM, walking isn't considered exercise.




A drink a day linked to healthy aging - CNN.com

Well at least find some way to make taxes more user-pay.

The only exceptions to that might be universal compulsory education (since all children ought to have a right to an education, we could all contribute via some flat income tax) and other basic essentialy services such as the administration of the government itself, and the justice system.

But all non-essentials ought to be as user-pay as possible somehow.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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The fast cat ferries actually provided some serious benefit to the Province of BC.
Remember we had a considerable number of welders who were able to obtain
first quality skills with aluminum welding that has proved invaluable. The taxes
these people paid on earnings and the company contracts for additional work
after the cats has brought a lot of money and expertise to BC and the latest round
of contracts demonstrates that.
The Cats were sold cheap mostly for political reason actually and some of those
boats were used by private interests from America in BC waters for a time then
sold overseas by others for profit.
The present government has made the most mess of the deficit and debt though.
In addition people here do pay more taxes and they receive benefits for those taxes
I do not regret that I pay more as we have a lot going for us in BC. The problem is
we have a dishonest government in power or should I say making believe they are
in power. They have lost the confidence of citizens and are putting in time until
they are replaced.
The latest version of the NDP is much different and I think I will likely support them in
the next election. Politics is a living thing, in the sense that what happened before is
not necessarily what will happen again. Take Saskatchewan for example. When the
Grant Divine Tories were in power the order of the day was mismanagement and even
corruption. Today Brad Wall has his fault like anyone else but the present version
of conservative rule is much different that the one back then.
I think we need a change and the present Liberal/Federal Conservative coalition is done,
the social Conservative movement is not the answer either and the Greens are out in
the wilderness looking for organic berries. The NDP is the only alternative to the present
unethical crowd.

Pure Bull$hit. Building the fat cats was a political stunt with no business plan. Did you know that out of work journeyman welders were not hired because they dippers wanted to make a training program out of this. Or that they ran a welding training program for women only?

Currently we have the best government we have had since WAC Bennett. Unfortunately in 10 years they still have not managed to undo all the damage the dippers did. And you want to replace them with dishonest Dix, one of the architects of the dark decade of dipper mismanagement? Those of us that still have to work for a living cannot afford another hit like that to the economy.
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
I could agree with taxing cholesterol-laden basic ingredients.

Cigs and alcohol however are never necessary, whereas some prepackaged food, depending on the ingredients, might not be so bad now and then when you're busy, athletic equipment can make you fit if used properly, vehicles can be essential for some businesses (though I can support a gas tax and maybe tax on resources like metals), TV can sometimes be educational, dirt bikes use gas (refer to gas tax), BBQ can cook healthy food in some cases, computers are sometimes necessary for work (though I can agree to taxing non-renewable energy resources that might power my computer), and during vacations you'll probably still pay lots of gas tax for the flight there.

As for cigs and alcohol, they are never healthy, or in the rare cases where alcohol may be used for some medicinal purpose, we could exempt hospitals from paying taxes on alcohol. But otherwise when are they ever necessary. Big difference.

You're making excuses Machjo.

Excusing pre-packaged foods due to a 'convenience' issue or minimizing the healthcare costs resulting from high impact/high risk sports is disingenuous.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Pure Bull$hit. Building the fat cats was a political stunt with no business plan. Did you know that out of work journeyman welders were not hired because they dippers wanted to make a training program out of this. Or that they ran a welding training program for women only?

Currently we have the best government we have had since WAC Bennett. Unfortunately in 10 years they still have not managed to undo all the damage the dippers did. And you want to replace them with dishonest Dix, one of the architects of the dark decade of dipper mismanagement? Those of us that still have to work for a living cannot afford another hit like that to the economy.
You figure the latest abortion is a good govt?
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Actually loggers did not out log themselves, the government is selling raw logs to foreign countries
and that should stop. Dave Barrett was in fact a good Premier, the problem for him was he believed
you could do everything at once and you can't. What happened was a first time government who did
try to change the landscape instead of concentrating on the real problems at hand and it did not
work out at all.
Bill Bennett practiced a government of mean spirit. he sold the boxcar plant and a number of other
companies that could have diversified the economy of BC much earlier than it happened.
Bill Vander Zalm was a figure who created a crisis of confidence, that brought the Province to its own
level of disintegration and his successor was probably the meanest person they could have found
and that backfired.
Harcourt was likely the most honorable man this Province ever had as a leader, I personally didn't
care for him but he was a Statesman even when he was in office. Bingo Gate which happened a
couple of decades earlier came back to haunt the party not Mike Harcourt. He was a victim of
circumstance.
Glen Clark wasn't a bad guy really and when all the shouting was done he proved to be right he didn't
do anything wrong. He hired a guy who lived on his block who wasn't working. He wrote a second
check because the cost of materials was higher than estimated by the time the projects started. At
that time lumber prices skyrocketed. he did not want is said he got special treatment or something for
nothing. The lumbermen's club different story. There were politicians who patronized that place over
nearly twenty years and they were from different parties as well.
The same can be said for Piggies Palace many will remember, it was located on the other end of the
Pickton Property and had no licence to operate but politicians and some say other officials patronized
it from time to time at least it was alleged so.
After Clark was the sellout artist Ujjal who was nothing more than a gutter snipe a liberal hiding in the
NDP Premiers office. Much of his leadership campaign was paid for by federal liberals I understand.
Gordon Campbell was the most divisive man the province had for a Premier. Policy decisions were
written on the backs of envelops on the way to announcement and sometimes cabinet ministers had
no idea of what was going to be announced.
Christi Crunch is an air head who's time will never come she will lose
Dix who knows he seems like a decent guy and has a well thought out program but will he have the
patients of leadership to stick to his own priorities only time will tell.
Meanwhile someone has to tackle the mountain of debt they have all created.

More Bull$hit. The government is not selling logs anywhere. In fact it is not that easy to export logs from crown land. The vast majority of log exports come from private lands and Indian reserves. The biggest reason there are few mills left in B.C. is because a combination of union greed, over regulation and multiple levels of government over taxation killed the goose that laid the golden egg.
The rest of your trash must have come directly from the Tyee news. Lots of lefty spin but no facts or reality.

You figure the latest abortion is a good govt?

Better than the alternative.
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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You're making excuses Machjo.

Excusing pre-packaged foods due to a 'convenience' issue or minimizing the healthcare costs resulting from high impact/high risk sports is disingenuous.

Well, if there was a tax on cholesterol-laden ingredients, then pre-packaged foods using such ingredients would be paying the tax indirectly.

As for high-risk sports, maybe require participants to buy medical insurance for it for instance. Either that or tax the equipment. This should not apply to low-impact/risk sports equipment beyond the tax on the metal itself.

It's already law that kids HAVE TO attend school until 16.

I know. I'm waying though that I have no issues with the funding for that to come from income tax. But for most other things, the tax ought to be more targetted to reflect user-pay principles.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Better than the alternative.
If you have to choose between abortions then the problem isn't the govt is it?

Well, if there was a tax on cholesterol-laden ingredients, then pre-packaged foods using such ingredients would be paying the tax indirectly.

As for high-risk sports, maybe require participants to buy medical insurance for it for instance. Either that or tax the equipment. This should not apply to low-impact/risk sports equipment beyond the tax on the metal itself.



I know. I'm waying though that I have no issues with the funding for that to come from income tax. But for most other things, the tax ought to be more targetted to reflect user-pay principles.
Education comes out of property taxes not income taxes.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Currently we have the best government we have had since WAC Bennett. Unfortunately in 10 years they still have not managed to undo all the damage the dippers did. And you want to replace them with dishonest Dix, one of the architects of the dark decade of dipper mismanagement? Those of us that still have to work for a living cannot afford another hit like that to the economy.

You could be right- I guess the biggest blemish was getting rid of B.C. Rail and how it was done, but the fast cat fiasco overshadows that by a country mile. Gordo's impaired charge didn't help, but really is that a government matter, definitely didn't set a good example. He did reduce provincial income tax by 25% right off the bat. He was unpopular over closing small unefficient hospitals, but with hospital equipment so costly they were just unaffordable. I don't think Dixie Cup is going far, N.D.P. would be better off with Farnsworth.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Personally, I would like to see BC declared an international heritage park, stop all logging, mining and oil pipelines.

When I lived in the Cariboo I was a member of the Cariboo Tourist association. At the annual meeting some clown got up and said "we will soon run out of trees that are economical to cut, so tourism will become the number one industry. We should start building motels and hotels right now to accommodate all the people who will flock here." So I said, "If we wait until we cut down all the trees, pray tell, who the hell will want to come here?"

Some guy on Vancouver Island thought he would start a business offering guided tours of clearcuts on the island - epic fail! Loggers like to piss and whine about ecotards screwing up the industry, but the fact is that the loggers over logged themselves out of a job. Now we ship what few jobs that would be left out of country for pennies. Whose fault is it really? We once had a pristine wilderness that people used to love to visit. Now we practically have to beg them to come to view the devastation.

What we should do us eliminate expensive pensions to free loaders.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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MUch like the options federally. Right now we have the best of a bad lot.
Don't forget that the BC NDP make Jack Layton look like a conservative.
There is no such thing as good **** and bad ****. It's all **** no matter how you slice it.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
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Nakusp, BC


This is what the interior of BC looks like. All those lovely light coloured patches are clear cuts. If you look closely you will notice that the majority of green patches are on really steep slopes. This province was raped and it is the timber industry that is at fault. Campbell cut most of the regulations, gutted the Forest Ministry and put the industry in charge of regulating itself (fox in charge of the hen house syndrome). So pointing fingers at unions and government regs doesn't wash. That is just passing the buck.
 

Machjo

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 19, 2004
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It's already law that kids HAVE TO attend school until 16.

I know. I'm Saying though that I have no issues with the funding for that to come from income tax. But for most other things, the tax ought to be more targetted to reflect user-pay principles.