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DHolzer | 10 months ago

a tax evading soft spot that is.

discuss

order

lenerdenator|10 months ago

That, and cultural.

Irish-Americans are less ambivalent about their roots than many other people of European descent - being excited about being part-German in Missouri is tantamount to being excited about watching paint dry, for example - and the fact that a man of Irish descent was President of the United States within two centuries of the "famine" and after centuries of oppression by the English boosts the credibility of America as a "land of opportunity", even if only in retrospect.

FirmwareBurner|10 months ago

The EU could change that if it wanted to. I imagine more money is lost due to tax avoidance than from US tariffs.

disgruntledphd2|10 months ago

> The EU could change that if it wanted to.

They definitely can't, given that tax decisions require unanimity. Like, if they didn't get this sorted when they had Ireland over a barrel in 2011, it's probably not going to happen. Full disclosure: I am an Irish citizen.