>>518731758
Around 65% of my paycheck goes to taxes, so no, it's not "free" money, I just get a tiny little bit of what was stolen from me back
Kind reminder that earning 100k a year in France means you pay:
- 38k in income tax at source
- 35k in various deductions, including:
· 14k to feed the Ponzi scheme that is retirement, without a single guarantee that you'll have one when your time comes
· 18k to feed boomers who benefit from tax breaks such that they pay less tax than a family of five (and who have a better standard of living than the average AND median French person who bleeds himself dry for a tax-exiled boss)
· 1k to repay the "social debt" (i.e., repair the damage caused by 45 years of left-wing politics) without your consent
· 0.5k for Karim and Maurice's Pôle Emploi training so they retain their right to do nothing at the expense of the 38k mentioned above
- 26k in income tax at the end of the tax year
And your boss pays:
- 76k in charges including:
· 4k so that Boualem, who sprained his ankle at work, and Céline, a civil servant who has her period, can stay home and do nothing for months
· 8k to feed boomers
· 1k to contribute to social dialogue (???)
· 13k to feed the Ponzi scheme that is retirement, without a single guarantee that you'll have one when your time comes
· 16k to fill the hole created by the horrible management of social security that you finance at your own expense and burdened even more every day by hypochondriac boomers who cling to life as long as possible by seeing three doctors a week, thus allowing you to have waits of 6 months to a year to see a specialist and to die in front of the closed door of your local emergency room if something ever happens to you
· 1k so Moulim can learn a job that will allow him to replace your children in 10 years
· 3k to feed some Arab at the CAF (social assistance)
· 1k for computer training for Muriel, 63, who is retiring at your expense in 16 months