Phonebook
Banned
Posts: 1,322
Joined: Aug 2013
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RE: The 'wishlist' should be stopped? Yes or No.....
(20-04-2014 13:52 )Sm© Wrote: Well I bought Georgie Darby her famous golden bucket. She never asked for it, but she certainly appreciated it. It's been on tv multiple times and features in lots of her pics, vids and webcam shows.
In return I got a lifelong membership to her website, and I also help her boyfriend run his website.
Not bad for £3.99
£3.99 for a bucket is not bad when you consider what you've in return but I think this is an exception. Your bucket 'pales' into insignificance when you consider the way some mugs have allowed themselves to be ripped off.
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20-04-2014 13:55 |
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Lotuseater
Banned
Posts: 622
Joined: Nov 2010
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RE: The 'wishlist' should be stopped? Yes or No.....
(20-04-2014 12:18 )Ro1982 Wrote: If anyone is stupid enough to buy things for people they don't even know they deserve to be rinsed. Idiots
Laughing out loud and agreeing. I bet the girls just chuck most of the junk and trinkets straight in the bin.
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21-04-2014 10:00 |
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Lotuseater
Banned
Posts: 622
Joined: Nov 2010
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RE: The 'wishlist' should be stopped? Yes or No.....
(20-04-2014 15:39 )tony confederate Wrote: (20-04-2014 13:49 )Lotuseater Wrote: I wonder what the Inland Revenue would have to say about these "Wishlists"?
They would have nothing to say. A gift does not count as taxable earnings if it's given as a mark of general appreciation. Why do you think footballer's or cricketer's testimonials are tax free?* It would be different if the Inland Revenue could argue that the gifts were received from clients/customers as part of a business relationship. In that case any gift that was worth more than £250 ought to be declared for tax (prostitutes being given high value jewellery has been held to be taxable).
* Unless the right to a testimonial match or testimonial season is written into the player's contract, in which case the proceeds would be taxable as earnings from the player's employment.
I think the Revenue would not give up quite so easily...for a start these girls are in effect the same as prostitutes as they are selling a sexual service (just no physical touching, but the result is the same), and to have a 'wishlist' in existence means that this is no spontaneous, casual expression of appreciation, but a solicited payment according to 'pricelist' of specified "gifts" with the underlying implication (no matter how unlikely) that the giver might get enhanced call quality or priority (I am sure some saddos even think they might get a date if they send enough gifts.)
(This post was last modified: 21-04-2014 10:08 by Lotuseater.)
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21-04-2014 10:06 |
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