In 2014, those whose incomes exceeded $100,000 represented more than 8 per cent of all tax filers, garnered slightly more than 33 per cent of all income and paid nearly 52 per cent of all federal income tax.
Read MoreOnce governments “invest” through loans or equity stakes, or otherwise become enmeshed with a company via other corporate welfare schemes, politicians are in an inherent conflict of interest. They feel the need to defend their—or more precisely taxpayers’—“investment” from competition, domestic or foreign.
Read MoreTaxpayers, through local taxes, the value of land and a tax surcharge on event tickets will pay $520 million, or 74 per cent of the new arena and related “blacktop” costs.
Read MoreReality check: Blue collar workers in mines and others with specialties related to minerals will not easily find employment elsewhere, not when Alberta already has 202,000 unemployed workers.
Read MoreSupply management is a relic of 1930s Soviet central planning influenced by Karl Marx. It never should have been introduced into Canada. So let’s call supply management what it is: Marxist economics applied to dairy cows.
Read MoreI prefer that the soft Alberta economy, competition,and insurance industry pressure spur dental bill declines, not government politicking accompanied by veiled threats.
Read MoreThe author does a fine job flipping between the biographies of Churchill and Orwell, guiding the reader through their almost uncannily similar experiences as soldiers, civil servants, travellers, husbands, and ultimately as gifted writers....
Read MoreOpportunities for four lanes and tunnelling the TransCanada have been repeatedly sacrificed to government spending best described as “impulse buying” — popular in political minds now, but of little lasting value.
Read MorePolitical messiah-worship can be disastrous because it is difficult to dislodge an autocrat once in power.
Read More“Taxes are the price we pay for civilization.” But one cannot extrapolate from that to an assumption that ever-higher taxes equal ever-more civilization.
Read MoreSwitzerland is a good example of how referendums organically promote a more engaged public. The Swiss have voted on matters ranging from EU membership to minimum wages to abolishing the army.
Read More100 years ago, the politicians of the day were actually reluctant to impose new taxes except in the most extreme circumstances: war.
Read MoreTo promise a certain pension amount decades out assumes the actuarial wisdom of a deity.
Read MoreScience and medicine are not “alternative,” “conventional” or “Western,” any more than gravity can be described as European or Chinese.
Read MoreConsider Britain’s greatest accomplishment in the field of freedom: Abolishing slavery at home, then in its empire (as of 1833) and battling slavery elsewhere
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