Carr: "Looks like alien." |
Some of us may go on about
civic duty and funding public services.
But from the dawn of time, when dues were paid with root vegetables, given a choice most
people would prefer to keep some tax back for themselves. Why part with more than you need to – after
all, the government will only spend it on things you don’t want, or won’t use.
And Jimmy Carr had that
choice. Because he’s rich he can
afford expensive advice on how best to deal with his tax matters. From the numbers being touted, Jimmy’s spent
wisely, but he’s committed no offence, broken no law. In a sense he hasn’t been caught
out at all, so why the fuss?
For me the episode’s more
about pretence and personality. Much of
Carr’s humour is cruel, aimed at disadvantaged people; I don’t like him, so I’m
glad he’s being criticised. But Jimmy’s real
deception arises from the difference between his background and the professional
image he portrays.
Carr’s from a
comfortably-off middle-class Thatcherite family, and before he entered show
business was a blue-chip executive for Shell. Contrasting with that lifestyle though, his comedy act relies on an entirely-feigned political stance, pitched at pop-up raving lefties with opinions most of us discard as we mature.
One of Jimmy’s recent routines was a lampoon
on a Barclays tax-avoidance scheme; how he must have chuckled to himself.
Now though, it’s hard to see
his collectivist fanbase taking him seriously.
With luck Carr's public repentance won’t help and after all, it’s not as
if he’s offered to pay any of the tax he’s avoided. No: instead, Jimmy’s laughing all the way to the
offshore bank.
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