Quote Adeybull="Adeybull"In 2005 you went into liquidation, taking the taxpayer for £1/2m in unpaid taxes. Bulls are trying to avoid doing precisely that. London, Crusaders and Wakey all took the taxpayer for large sums of unpaid tax. If this comes off, Bulls will not.
Our CEO in 2005 was Gareth Davies. You clearly mean our then-chairman, Caisley. Most people will be aware of my views on his stewardship over the latter part of his tenure. But the reason he wanted London kicking out was because of the unpaid taxes. His stated view was why should other clubs have to pay the taxes they have collected from employees, customers and spectators, when London could get away with it and thereby secure an advantage by rising immediately like a phoenix?
You will see in my post above that I say that anything is preferable in my mind to administration. Want to know one more big reason why? Because I would be totally embarrassed to support a club that had just ripped off the taxpayer. Write that down someplace, so that IF the Bulls should fall over, and IF perchance I am wrong and something DOES rise from the wreck, you cans see if I practise what I preach.
I also wonder just how the likes of you can know for certain that the Bulls' present situation is due to "ineptitude and bad management"? You are presuming that by responding to the symptoms. You can have no idea as to the causes. Bloody good job you are not a doctor.'"
Sorry Adey, I thought I had posted for the final time on this subject but this posts once again takes the biscuit. This moral high ground nonsense over HMRC & tax is just that, nonsense, and you are using this as an excuse to justify the whole direction the current BOD have taken to emotionally blackmail money out of Bulls and other clubs fans.
You then go one step further and effectively castigate and vilify three other clubs and, even worse, their fans for 'their' going into administration and what you then calling 'ripping off the tax payer'.
You really need to climb down off your high horse as clearly the lack of 02 is clearly effecting you ability to think straight!
The only people that are to potentially to blame for HMRC being out of pocket are the people who have the legal obligation within company law to ensure that the business pays it's taxes on time and fully are the director of that company. Simple as that! No, ifs, buts, or maybes.... in message board parlance that is a FACT!
The Bulls fans, the London fans, the Crusaders fans and the Wakey fans don't owe the tax man any money or should not feel in anyway obligated to bail out their club for it's directors and managements failure to pass on the money they paid the club in taxable income terms & VAT already which they to pass on, for whatever reason, to HMRC.
Administration and insolvency law, as you should know supposedly being an accountant, is structured in the way it is for good reason and an acceptance that companies can't always survive and as such companies will become insolvent, possibly owing and unable to pay HMRC & the tax payer money it owed and also other companies with which it traded. This is real life and this is real business! What you fail to acknowledge is that that business has most probably paid out millions of pounds during many previous years of successful trading to HMRC, as is required to keep trading, and that if a business does unfortunately become insolvent any amount left owing is relatively small in percentage terms to the tax generated for the exchequer and paid by that business up to that point. Equally, and Wakefield is a case in point, may continue to generate tax revenue for the exchequer going forward if the burden of previous debt and mismanagement is removed from a new potential owner if rescued from administration... that is why the administration process exists to ultimately SAVE future tax revenue, jobs and income that generate other taxes to be paid to the exchequer. So, in Wakefield's case the new company will already have paid more money to the exchequer than they lost and will now continue to do so for many years and many more times over going forward as an on-going viable concern.
So, if I was to take the moral high ground like you and, given the fact that I think even with this £1m they are going to be unable to continue to run a sustainable business in the longer term saddled with this debt and continued mismanagement, then in actual fact I could accuse you and any fans that support this measure as the ones that are likely to be doing HMRC & the tax payer out of much needed income going forward! Indeed by letting the current business go under and either be brought out of admin or start again as a new business, then this is very likely to be the best way to continue to generate money for the exchequer and in fact you are probably ultimately the ones going to be 'ripping off the tax payer'?
Stop using this as an excuse and furthermore apologise to the fans of the clubs that you have backhandedly accused of having low morals because they didn't follow a hair brained scheme similar to the one the Bulls BOD are now running!