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9 February 2017 | 9 replies
If you end up transferring funds across borders/currencies I can recommend you to a transfer service that can typically save clients 3-10% in the transfer process, sometimes more depending on the currencies involved.
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16 January 2020 | 16 replies
@Vincent Gizzi,I say ride it out, and if they break-- go on CL and get a new pair for a few hundred bucks.
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4 June 2011 | 6 replies
A Mexican facility feels so concerned that they won't take OUR currency.
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8 January 2013 | 24 replies
"I do not want the same kind of focus on safety and soundness [in the regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac] that we have in the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision.
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26 August 2023 | 21 replies
All of it used off Craigslist, FB Marketplace and OfferUP.For example we have a pair of Basset sofa/love seat.
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17 September 2015 | 12 replies
I was looking at a pair of duplexes about 30 min south of Rockford for $148k and the taxes were $7500 a year!
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22 September 2014 | 5 replies
Yes, always count your profit in percentage rather then currency.
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30 June 2011 | 7 replies
Treat it like a pair of shoes; Try it on, test it out for a while, and if it makes you happy, go get another.
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20 March 2013 | 4 replies
All,
I have two loans on one property which I have been going in circles trying to figure out how to make it "better". "Better" for me is almost always focused on cash-flow. Here is the information on the loans:
1st...
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27 September 2019 | 19 replies
Since, only 38% of government expenses are funded by income taxes and since, US citizens bear only 37% of the loss in value from newly printed dollars used to cover US revenue shortfall, only 14% of revenue shortfall is borne by US income taxpayers. (38% of US expenditures paid from income taxes x 37% of loss in the value of the dollar borne by US taxpayers = 14% of US revenue shortfall from failure to pay income tax is borne by US citizens.)The great advantage of the dollar being the world's reserve currency, is that it is mostly foreigners, not us, who bear the cost of constantly devaluing the US dollar. https://comparegoldandsilverprices.com/news/economics-101/dollar-devaluation-since-1913/Moreover, many authors have noted that the US does not need the income tax to fund the government at all. https://www.forbes.com/sites/briandomitrovic/2013/04/02/to-fund-the-federal-government-we-dont-need-federal-taxation/#573211bd51f3Indeed, for well over a hundred years the U.S. government ran just fine without an income tax.