THAT's tellin' 'im
Feb. 26th, 2009 02:21 pmThe gist of the story is that U2 have joined a long line of super-rich who are using Irish tax loopholes and offshoring their income to avoid paying. All the while exhorting their countrymen to fund more charitable work in the third world, which makes for a special kind of savory hypocrisy.
The best response to one of those breathless Bono appeals for uplift came at a Glasgow gig when he hushed the audience to reverent silence before starting slowly to clap. "Every time I clap my hands," he whispered into the microphone, "a child in Africa dies..."
A voice responded in broad Glasgow accent: "Well, fucking stop doin' it then."
ETA: Dr Memory, via Snopes - it's apocryphal. Which is to say, not true.
Re: You're joking, right?
Date: 2009-02-26 09:17 pm (UTC)possibly be thinking, at multiple levels:
1) Is it hypocritical to contribute to AIDS research without contributing
to cancer research? Is it hypocritical to contribute to NPR without
contributing to the local art society? Is it hypocritical to contribute
to CARE without contributing to the Palestinian Relief organization?
If not, how can it be hypocritical to contribute to third world charities
without contributing to the US government?
2) Apparently you have some idiosyncratic ethical theory that makes the
latter case different from all the others. Fine. But do you really want
to conclude that anyone who fails to buy into every idiosyncratic theory
you come up with must be a hypocrite? Maybe he just doesn't buy your
theory.
3) I should think that the more you care about funneling money to the
Third World, the greater your ethical obligation to avoid paying taxes.
Presumably you don't buy that, though it's obvious to me. Should I
conclude, because you don't live by my values, that you are a hypocrite?
Re: You're joking, right?
Date: 2009-02-26 09:36 pm (UTC)I'm not critiquing them for contributing to charity rather than their country's treasury. (Though I could critique that, it'd be a separate issue.) Nor am I critiquing their choice of charities (though again, I believe that charity begins at home and could write up a critique along those lines).
I'm critiquing them for using their wealth to avoid debt obligations their less-wealthy countrymen cannot avoid while at the same time exhorting those less-wealthy individuals to give away still more of their income.
If they said "here, let us share our tax shelter with you so that you may have more money to give to these worthy causes" that'd be interesting. But that's not at issue here any more than my specific concerns about where people do funnel their charitable contributions.
Re: You're joking, right?
Date: 2009-02-26 10:22 pm (UTC)