- Joined
- Aug 2, 2020
Chantal most def owes the government unpaid taxes (in addition to morally owing the rest of us for all the expensive medical resources she's squandered), but as I've said before in this thread, she does at least pay sales tax. Ontario has 13% HST on tons of things that Chantal consumes in huge quantities: restaurant food, snack food, cannabis, alcohol, clothing, delivery services, etc.
Hilariously, basic groceries like fruits and veggies, bread and rice, meat and fish and milk, thats all 0% taxes. But we know she barely buys any of those. Given the sheer amount of crap food she hoovers up that has a tax on it that normal food doesn't, and clothes she soon fats out of, I wonder if she's already paid for her health care. Someone more math brained than I will have to figure out if that's possible!
ETA to avoid double posting. A quick glance at the deathfat forum proves that socialized medicine is not the reason that deathfats like Chantal happen. They can happen anywhere, and the fact that we have deathfats in the US, Canada, and the UK (including one originally from Denmark) shows that access to or expense of health care makes no real difference. And one way or another, the rest of us pay for these people, whether it's via our taxes, our insurance premiums, or just our lessening collective worth as a species.
Hilariously, basic groceries like fruits and veggies, bread and rice, meat and fish and milk, thats all 0% taxes. But we know she barely buys any of those. Given the sheer amount of crap food she hoovers up that has a tax on it that normal food doesn't, and clothes she soon fats out of, I wonder if she's already paid for her health care. Someone more math brained than I will have to figure out if that's possible!
ETA to avoid double posting. A quick glance at the deathfat forum proves that socialized medicine is not the reason that deathfats like Chantal happen. They can happen anywhere, and the fact that we have deathfats in the US, Canada, and the UK (including one originally from Denmark) shows that access to or expense of health care makes no real difference. And one way or another, the rest of us pay for these people, whether it's via our taxes, our insurance premiums, or just our lessening collective worth as a species.
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