Este artigo da BBC diz abertamente que o povo britânico está a ser vampirizado pelas companhias de energia. Eles utilizam o termo cash cow.
Nós no Carteisiano vamos mais longe e dizemos que os britânicos são a vaquinha leiteira mais mansinha do mundo. Se você for milionário pode investir à vontade no Reino Unido.
Pode carregar à vontade nos preços e depois terá bónus muito generosos ao fim ano. Obviamente que o valor dos mesmos dependerá de quanto você conseguiu roubar ao povo britânico.
Quanto aos impostos, não se preocupe com isso. Arrange um paraíso fiscal ou outras manobras. Nãp somos nós que lhe vamos dar lições sobre ess matérias onde vocês todos estão especializados.
Até podem pedir aconselhamento em Westminster na sede do governo britânico. Qualquer ministro o poderá aconslhar honestamente sobre o assunto, inclusiamente o primeiro ministro.
Nós não aconselhamos a pedirem-lhes este tipo de aconselhamento eunquanto eles estiverem no governo, porque podem-lhes causar problemas. Contactem-nos depois de saírem do governo em 2015 quando perderem as eleições. Nessa altura eles trabalharão como superconsultores universais e estarão dispostos a prover os melhores serviços a bem da nação em fuga fiscal.
Ao dizer nação, não nos refirimos à nação inglesa, refirimos-nos à nação dos milionários do Bilderberg group. O grande capital move-se à escala planetária e cósmica quando lhes abrirem esses horizontes.
Energy customers are not cash cows, says Ed Davey

Gas and electricity customers are "not just cash cows" to be "squeezed" to create bigger profits for shareholders, Energy Secretary Ed Davey will say.
In a speech later, the Liberal Democrat minister will call on the industry to "open up your books" to show how it is trying to minimise tariffs.
Millions of customers face price rises for gas and electricity this winter.
But industry body Energy UK complained that a "tit-for-tat Punch and Judy show of insults" was developing.
Four of the UK's six main energy companies have recently announced price rises, with an average increase of 9.1%, and the other two are expected to follow suit soon.
'Greed'
The firms say the rises are largely due to increasing wholesale prices, but critics say they are unfair and will lead households into difficulties with bills.
In September, Labour leader Ed Miliband announced plans for a 20-month energy price freeze from May 2015, should his party win the next election.
He has accused the coalition of doing too little to help keep tariffs down.
But the government has launched a competition review and will review green and social charges, responsible for some of the cost of bills.
In his speech to the annual conference of Energy UK, which represents the industry, in London on Tuesday, Mr Davey will argue that companies need to make enough money to invest in greener technologies.
He will add: "But those profits cannot come at the expense of the elderly, the vulnerable, and the poorest in our society. Customers are not just cash cows to be squeezed in the pursuit of a higher return for shareholders.
"Trust between those who supply energy and those who use it is breaking down.
"It is so difficult for people to work out what exactly they are paying for that they fear the big energy companies are taking them for a ride when bills go up."
'Unproductive'
Mr Davey will say: "Fair or not, they look at the big suppliers and they see a reflection of the greed that consumed the banks."
He will tell companies: "You deliver an essential public service, so your industry must serve the public - and the public must have trust in what you do."
Mr Davey will say the government is looking at how to reduce the impact of its policies on bills, adding: "But our commitment must be matched by a commitment in industry to open up your books and set out exactly how you are bearing down on your own costs to make bills as low as possible."
He will also tell industry leaders they face a "Fred the Shred" moment, in reference to the former Royal Bank of Scotland boss Fred Goodwin, who was stripped of his knighthood after leading the bank to near-collapse in 2008.
But Labour's shadow energy secretary, Caroline Flint, said: "David Cameron's out-of-touch government is offering nothing to the millions of families faced with rising energy bills and a cost-of-living crisis."
"Ed Davey and the Lib Dems had a chance to support Labour's energy bill freeze but have chosen instead to side with the Tories and the energy companies.
"It just goes to show you can't trust a word they say."
Energy UK, meanwhile, said the industry was "already working hard to ensure everyone can keep the lights on and stay warm this winter".
"The best way to do this is for everyone to work together, which is why this tit-for-tat Punch and Judy show of insults is so unproductive," a spokesman said.
"The energy industry is vital to the UK. It is a major employer, a serious investor and a significant taxpayer.
"As analysis from UBS shows, about 95% of rising energy costs are out of the hands of the energy companies and can be attributed to government policies and other network, social and environmental costs."
Meanwhile, a former adviser to Tony Blair has criticised Mr Miliband's decision to focus on the cost of living, describing it as "the stupidest campaign any opposition can start, ever".
John McTernan, who served as Mr Blair's political secretary at Downing Street, told a discussion organised by centre-left think tank the Policy Network that most bills squeezing household budgets are "irresolvable grievances" beyond the control of politicians.
"If you raise cost of living, be prepared to deal with housing costs," he said. "If not, just shut up."
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