Your message has been rejected and is being returned because it appears to be a reply to an alias that is designed for one-way communication only. You should reply only to the sender of a message sent to one-way aliases. If you wish to complain about abuse of a one-way alias, you should send E-mail to the postmaster of your domain. For example, postmaster@Eng. If your E-mail was addressed to more than one alias protected by this filter then you will get a copy of this message for each protected alias. Thank you for your cooperation and consideration, -- Postmaster P.S. This is an automatically generated message. -----------------Begin Returned Message------------------- Your message has been rejected and is being returned because it appears to be a reply to an alias that is designed for one-way communication only. You should reply only to the sender of a message sent to one-way aliases. If you wish to complain about abuse of a one-way alias, you should send E-mail to the postmaster of your domain. For example, postmaster@Eng. If your E-mail was addressed to more than one alias protected by this filter then you will get a copy of this message for each protected alias. Thank you for your cooperation and consideration, -- Postmaster P.S. This is an automatically generated message. -----------------Begin Returned Message------------------- Tim May wrote:
"Here's something to think about - while queuing up for petrol this afternoon (yes - I confess to being a panic buyer) I worked out that OPEC is charging $30 a barrel and our government is taxing us at slightly over $150 a barrel - ouch!"
this is true, and similiar pretty much all over europe.
This is from the U.K., where tax policy is ahead of that of the U.S. Whilst we are (almost) ready to mcveigh the tax collectors and wipe out millions of burrowcrats, the Brits are quite sheeplike in accepting taxes which are several times the price of the underlying commodity. Germany, France, Sweden, Italy, and essentially all other European nations are similarly sheep-like in their acceptance of such taxes.
sorry, but you have no idea what you're talking about. this is an economic puzzle, not a political one. food, clothes, tobacco, gas/petrol and a couple other things have a very unique price structure, in that the demand is pretty much independent of price - you just need so much food or tobacco or gas, no matter what it costs, and you don't have any need for more, no matter how cheap it is. it's therefore been a long-known fact that you can change prices for this stuff at will without any change in demand. the only thing stopping you is the competition. now a tax is valid for everyone, so the last stop gap is out. therefore, gas and tobacco are the two highest-taxed items here in germany, and I'm fairly sure in most of europe. why don't we complain? oh, we do (a little). :) in the end, it doesn't matter much. I don't think europeans pay much more in taxes than US citizen do, it's just distributed differently.