Officials act offensively when they seize endless amounts of people’s pay checks, by increasing income taxes without bounds.
They act more offensively when they confiscate further income, from any earnings made by investing what remains after these tax seizures.
Politicians promise that people will be compensated for agreeing to surrender increasing amounts of their incomes, in the way of improved old age benefits and other public services.
It appears they are breaking these promises like they do others, as these old age benefits do not include compensation for this further income that is confiscated; on top of the amounts seized from their pay checks.
It is wrong to grant a person less than $290.00 a month in Canada Pension, after they agreeably surrendered hundreds of thousands of dollars in income through their lifetime.
It is more wrong to try and justify this negligent compensation, with the excuse that this income was seized mostly from investment earnings and not their pay checks.
Politicians can employ countless public agents to follow their orders, for as long as they can get away with endlessly increasing taxes to keep them employed.
Representatives can be dismissed for undemocratic leadership if they threaten to increase taxes any further, while they will not set legal limits on how high they can raise them.
It is easier to get this done if it shows that enough folks agree with firing those that continue to make these threats, if they will not set these legal limits; so the form following this post can be submitted to help show this consensus. It also means to help:
- Stop these further seizures of investment earnings, until these promises to compensate people that agreeably surrender them are kept;
- Revoke the Parliamentary retirements of those that will not honor these promises, as they grant themselves multiple times this amount of public pension; through the use of this compensation that is withheld from these people.
The statement, “as they grant themselves multiple times this amount of public pension …”; is based on the following findings:
“The current average CPP retirement pension is $8,303 per year. May 23, 2018”;
“Federal employees also receive a FERS benefit equal to 1.1 percent of final salary multiplied by their years of service. The average federal employee who has worked at least 35 years has an annual salary of $99,000. So let’s call this a $38,000 pension. Mar 7, 2017”.
The following forms are also provided to help stop similar offensive treatment: