Damus
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serenitys forge
@serenitys forge
A farmer dies in April 2026.

His son inherits the farm. The farm has been in the family since 1847.

The farm consists of: 300 acres of grazing pasture, a farmhouse built in 1892, a barn, a milking parlour, two tractors of varying ages, a Land Rover that runs about 70% of the time, and a herd of 180 Hereford-cross cattle.

On paper, the farm is worth approximately £3.2 million. This is because land near him has been bought recently by a London hedge fund looking for carbon credits, which has dragged the comparable value of every field within forty miles upward to a number nobody local can justify.

In cash, the farm produces a profit of about £28,000 a year in a good year. In a bad year it loses money. The son also works as a fencing contractor three days a week to keep the operation viable.

The inheritance tax bill on a £3.2 million estate, even at the reduced 20% rate, comes to approximately £140,000 after the increased threshold is applied. The son does not have £140,000. The son has never had £140,000. The son has £4,200 in his current account and an overdraft.

The son sells 60 acres to a developer to pay the tax. The developer puts solar panels on the 60 acres. The remaining herd cannot be sustained on the reduced land. The herd is sold. The barn becomes a holiday let.

A different family eats Brazilian beef this Christmas without knowing why the price went up.

The Treasury collects £140,000.

The land never produces British food again.

#uk #brits #woodlander #farm #food #sovereign #fight
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SimOne · 2d
That all happened in a month?!
Adnan · 2d
This is one of the most heartbreaking, sobering, and accurate breakdowns of the modern agricultural crisis I have ever read. It perfectly captures how theoretical wealth on paper can destroy actual livelihood in reality. When land value is driven up by hedge funds chasing green labels rather than a...
MrWonderland · 2d
Most people do NOT hate the government and politicians enough.
LeadingSuspect · 2d
Why is it that beef in southamerica is so cheap? Who demands free trade? Who likes to ship goods around the globe. I can think of some multinational corporations who have a very influencial lobby, and they 'support' their candidates with substantial pocket money, so they can present themselves in fu...
FiddleHodlHomestead · 2d
This makes me want to cry.
Jude · 2d
Can’t you just take out debt against the property to pay the taxes? Keeps the Ponzi rolling
Petronius Tchaikovsky · 1d
Irony with the carbon credits is that the Brazilian beef is farmed on deforested Amazon.
Thomas Forsyth · 1d
Beautifully illustrated. Any sane leadership would make farmers and farmland a matter of national security. This is so obviously an insidious attack on the people of the UK and their wellbeing.
Lizzle · 1d
The father should have gifted the property to his son, when he was still alive. Might have solved the problem. Or not?
𝕞ptf · 1d
Property tax is a huge scam. Just because someone paid x amount for a property down the road, doesnt mean your property is now worth that. You should only pay tax on what YOU paid for your property.
47 · 1d
fucking fiat
diem · 1d
It’s hard to look at this situation and not conclude conspiracy
poorbitcoiner · 1d
Just pirates being pirates, nothing new under the sun.
Noob · 1d
You know, same happens everywhere. Even with Brazilians.
NoStrFromObject · 1d
love money and economic system
IM · 1d
A revolution is coming.
Michaelmas · 1d
Which is the plan... "passive income" is a satanic parasite on the ass of society.
nix · 1d
The system working as intended, against our interests. "You will own nothing ..." Yet there will be some blue haired vegan somewhere celebrating and failing to realise that "you will own nothing" includes wokes and vegans.
andreinvestsandstackssats · 1d
This could have all been avoided. Why didn’t they incorporate the farm ? It is brainwashing at grand scale and blatant theft by the government.
Aragorn 🗡️ · 1d
The part that stands out: the tax threshold was designed to capture windfall wealth. The son didn't receive a windfall — he received a farm that produces £28k/year. The paper value was inflated by hedge funds he had nothing to do with. So the threshold works as intended. It captured him anyway. ...
hodlbod · 1d
A rancher near me is in a similar situation, not because of taxes but because his kids don't want to continue ranching. His land is worth millions because of zoning restrictions and local population growth. I don't know what he makes, but the ranch produces about 50 calves every spring (each of whic...
Paul Sernine · 1d
Sad story. But there’s a different side to it, that’s full of questions. Why didn’t the farmer act to secure his legacy? Rising land prices due to speculation is hardly a new phenomenon. Did he think about creating an offshore trust and transfer ownership of the farm to this trust? Then set up...
BitcoinOllie · 1d
Maybe intentional to control food production.