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Cake day: April 9th, 2025

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  • I don’t know how we’ve been getting record corporate taxes year after year (to say nothing of our income taxes on the higher salaries tech companies pay thousands of Irish employees), and yet:

    • Infrastructure remains shit and underdeveloped
    • Inequality of development, amenities, and pay between Dublin and everywhere else gets worse every year.
    • We’ve failed to build a solid bedrock of homegrown companies to replace the fragile reliance on MNC employment and corporate taxes.
    • Pension age bomb is still ticking

    I maintain that low corporate taxes are, unfortunately, crucial for underdeveloped nations to have any hope of investment coming to their shores. It sucks, but it massively contributed to Ireland crawling out of desperate poverty. And we never did anything sustainable with that good fortune, to say nothing of being too scared of them leaving to not reset the tax rate to something fairer now that we have other benefits for MNCs beyond low taxes (eg: we’re one of the most well educated countries in the world now). If US giants leave Ireland, there’s gonna be a shitton of unemployed people and we don’t have anywhere internally for them to take their expertise.

    Edit: None of this, BTW, says the EU shouldn’t smack them hard as a counter. Out government has fucked us with decades of “ah sure it’ll be grand”. No reason the whole EU should be held back just for us.

    The EU will be held back in this because those same corps have immense political weight more than anything tbh.








  • I think it’s a self-selecting issue. Entrepreneurs who are content to start a business that pays for a comfortable life dont reach out to endless investors. They’ll take loans, not stake in their company. They won’t constantly reach for attention to justify higher valuations, and therefore higher investments. They’re more likely to stay private and not go public for the same reason, which lessens awareness of them outside of direct customers.

    Nobody would be talking about Tesla as much if it wasn’t an investment device (and its CEO would likely be a less loudly evil person too). It’d just be a car manufacturer, and the only relevant thing about it would be the quality of its cars and the happiness of its customers. No investors to wonder about “growth potential”.