Stop terraforming taxation, says Cupertino, and let us get on with it Apple has filed its defence against the European Commission's claim it owes €13bn in back taxes in Ireland.
Apple on Monday filed a defence in which it dismissed the very idea of the US$13.75/£11bn bill, calling for the total or partial annulment of the European Commission decision that set the case in motion and suggesting the Commission pay Apple's costs into the bargain.
Cupertino's argument offers 14 pleas in law that collectively assert that the EU just doesn't understand how Apple operates and thoroughly misunderstands the way it gets stuff done in Ireland.
We therefore get familiar arguments suggesting Apple need not pay tax in Ireland because the real profit-generating work happens elsewhere. Apple Ireland "carried out only routine functions and were not involved in the development and commercialisation of Apple IP which drove profits," says Plea 4.
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 2) by tisI on Thursday February 23 2017, @03:16AM
"EU just doesn't understand how Apple operates and thoroughly misunderstands the way it gets stuff done in Ireland."
"and suggesting the Commission pay Apple's costs into the bargain."
Funny but this sounds like the same logic stream I get from my 4 year old grandson.
"Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself."