View Single Post
  #10   Report Post  
Old December 22nd 11, 04:48 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Dawlish Dawlish is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Mar 2008
Posts: 10,601
Default Shop until you drop.

On Dec 22, 4:26*pm, MartinR wrote:
On Dec 22, 12:13*pm, Dawlish wrote:





On Dec 22, 12:09*pm, Dave Cornwell wrote:


Dawlish wrote:
If there could be more perfect conditions for dragging people away
from Internet shopping and into the high street shops pre-Christmas,
I'd like to experience them.


So mild in Exeter this morning, that a single fleece was easily warm
enough. The high street retailers won't be able to use last year's
excuse of snow and bad weather to explain their pretty inexoarble
declime. What will this year's excuse be? Too mild for winter clothes?
*))


Presently very dry and 11.5C. Very pleasant December weather and so
much better than last year, at this time!


------------------------
No matter the weather I can't think of anything I would less like to do
than go to a High Street shopping, especially this week. I often wonder
if the Government fully takes in to account the amount of shopping on
line, including Ebay and Amazon when they do their health of the economy
blurb. They always seem to think that "High Street sales are down" mean
everyone is on the bread line.
Dave


I don't dislike shopping; especially when the wether is fine and
parking is easy - as it was at 8.30 in Exeter. Anyone lazy enough to
be setting off now deserves all they get!


I'd like them to tax goods sold on ebay. That would create a more
level playing field with high street shops. People run businesses on
ebay and pay no tax whatsoever on the profits. Now that annoys me. My
accountant helps a great deal, but I still pay the tax I'm due on the
income I earn. They don't and I don't see why they shouldn't. It's
time ebay made accounts available to the taxman.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


I'm assuming that if you sell goods on Ebay, as I do, that I have
previously purchased, I will already have paid tax in the form of VAT
at 17.5% or 20%. *Not only that, but I would have been taxed up to 40%
on what I used to pay for it . If you run a business on Ebay that's
different. *Most Ebay sellers are probably people like me who would
rather see some return on the junk they have accumulated plus giving a
fair load of it away to local charity shops.

MartinR

I- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Businesses, Martin. People run businesses as a livelihood on ebay and
pay no tax, as ebay refuses to make their accounts available to the
Inland Revenue. I sell too, but it's junk, like you say!