The natives are finally growing restless. Well, some of them are, at any rate and, for just for a change, this is grass-roots agitation of the righteous sort.
Yes, the people behind the Taxpayers Alliance are as mad as hell and they are not going to take it anymore. The strapline says it all:
Campaigning for lower taxes because it’s our money
Right on, brothers and sisters and Amen and, might I just add, about bloody time too. Ever since the mid-90’s, when the producing classes were finally bullied and browbeaten into dolefully accepting that higher taxes would result in better government services, they have stoically maintained their stiffer upper lips while the fiscal thumbscrews have been steadily tightened.
But the government services they thought they cherished have remained as crap as they ever were and now, finally, a few of them have realised that they’ve been took, they’ve been had.
But (and you all knew that there just had to be a ‘but’) as pleased as I am to finally see these few worms turning, they still have some way to go before they address the ‘root causes’ of their problems:
We have already found £50 BILLION of unnecessary government spending to cut (without closing hospitals or schools, or cutting pensions). That is more than enough to abolish Council Tax or take a big slice out of Income Tax.
The objects of their attack are what they see as the ‘waste and inefficiency’ of the government as if those things can somehow be magically eradicated while leaving the public sector largely intact. However, ‘waste and inefficiency’ are not bugs requiring elimination in order for the welfare state to function properly, they are systemic features of the welfare state itself.
For as long as these campaigners continue to accept the fabian argument that services like healthcare and education must be provided by the government, then their otherwise noble campaign will remain fatally flawed. It leaves them wide open to the counter-argument that state and schools and hospitals must have the necessary ‘resources’ and sooner, rather than later I think, they will find themselves running smack into that brick wall.
But, that said, they are still doing the right thing. Or, at least, starting to do the right thing. I hope it is the thin end of a very thick wedge.
[My thanks to reader Gawain Towler who provided the above link via Terence Coyle.]
” ‘Two economists walked past a Porsche showroom. One of them pointed at a shiny car in the window and said, ‘I want that.’
‘Obviously not,’ the other replied.”
(David Friedman — “Hidden Order: The Economics of Everyday Life”, “Economics Joke #1”, p. 17)
If they really believed that it was their money, they would not hand it over to the government the way they do.
If you have ever visited a pig farm you will see that when feeding time comes the pigs will rush to get as much as they can. If you have never visited a pig farm, you need not too. You can witness this same feeding frenzy everyday in the house of commons or parliament. It is commonly refered to as PIGS AT THE TROUGH a suitable description of our politicians