The Pussy Grabber in Chief is going to lower corporate tax from 35% to 15% so America can become tax-friendly like Ireland.
Except the admitted Sexual Predator in Chief already says he doesn't pay any taxes and he knows full well corporations don't pay taxes, either.
We've been hearing a lot about Ireland lately, like how Microsoft's cloud service business is booming ever since Microsoft told American 3-letters to fuck off on grabbing people's data from Ireland.
Recall Trump's visit(s) to Ireland re: golf course?
That's where that tax-dodging coke head keeps his money, too.
I agree and, I would point out that I am 71 years old, which gives me some experience regarding views.
I remember staying outside as long as I could see. I remember how the sky looked before light pollution set in. I remember the concept of "public lands," where a guy could pull off the side of near any road and shoot a gun at some bottles and cans.
The landscape, compared to now, was photogenic.
Now, it's almost impossible to capture old theaters, tall hotels, barns, pasture, without trespassing on private property and it's damned near impossible to find a spot where there aren't any modern fucking poles that support telephones, internet connections, cable, electricity and fucking transformers.
Still, I manage to get great photos because the Artist is a fine painter.
Regarding "view pollution," I deal with it in one of two (2) ways:
Nearly 139 million Americans voted this year, according to the United States Elections Project. This sets a new overall record, surpassing the all-time high of 132 million Americans who voted in the 2008 contest between Barack Obama and John McCain.
You left out the CEOs. With that and the shareholders, you identified the destructive source of greed.
The Pussy Grabber in Chief is going to lower corporate tax from 35% to 15% so America can become tax-friendly like Ireland.
Except the admitted Sexual Predator in Chief already says he doesn't pay any taxes and he knows full well corporations don't pay taxes, either.
We've been hearing a lot about Ireland lately, like how Microsoft's cloud service business is booming ever since Microsoft told American 3-letters to fuck off on grabbing people's data from Ireland.
Recall Trump's visit(s) to Ireland re: golf course?
That's where that tax-dodging coke head keeps his money, too.
... Sheldon Cooper.
... fought so hard to put data on Irish soil:
Microsoft knew that its client base would bolt if the US could have unfettered access.
I ran a large shop when UAC first hit, and I immediately disabled it.
As you know, all it does is ask the nagging question, "Are you sure?"
My people were lawyers, paralegals, secretaries and staff.
They were never sure because the goddam thing gave them NOTHING to consider.
They would stop all work and get my permission to proceed, which was a smart move on their part. If things went sideways, ...
I agree and, I would point out that I am 71 years old, which gives me some experience regarding views.
I remember staying outside as long as I could see. I remember how the sky looked before light pollution set in. I remember the concept of "public lands," where a guy could pull off the side of near any road and shoot a gun at some bottles and cans.
The landscape, compared to now, was photogenic.
Now, it's almost impossible to capture old theaters, tall hotels, barns, pasture, without trespassing on private property and it's damned near impossible to find a spot where there aren't any modern fucking poles that support telephones, internet connections, cable, electricity and fucking transformers.
Still, I manage to get great photos because the Artist is a fine painter.
Regarding "view pollution," I deal with it in one of two (2) ways:
1.) I get over it
2.) I get used to it.
I'm a photographer and actually notice things around me.
I don't like all those fucking power poles and lines but did you ever think of that?
No.
You only think about yourself.
Our "rights" are documented.
For example, my original post and my posting that the motherfucking pussy grabber is not my president are protected in writing.
I support Snowden, but nothing he did is protected in writing.
He made his situation and he needs to deal with it by staying right where he is.
That time is ending sooner than you think.
My freedom of speech ends where my right to bear arms begins, so no worries.
... this guy has tapes of Putin peeing on Trump.
Yeah. What the simple fuck was that all about?
Is there any case law that shows where a baker who refused to providing a goddam wedding cake to LGBTQ was also a goddam ISP?
Full disclosure: I hope the Pussy Grabber falls down a flight of stairs, but I like most of what TFS advocates.
... [sic]
We're a republic; not a democracy.
The vote has ALWAYS been about self-interest. That's the was it was DESIGNED to work.
The counterbalance to that is legislation, which is immune to the voting system.
For instance, voting on a measure that would nullify a Constitutional right is forbidden.
The concept of "soon" is not a consideration in the renewable vs fossil fuel paradigm shift.
"Soon," is more closely associated with, "jobs."
... were right there in my ears all along.
That's why the subject is
Re:Whoosh... (Score:3)
Imagine if tanks were WWII technology and China had nuclear weapons and didn't give a shit what the pretty weather girl said.
It's a shame (for him) science didn't support him and a shame for the hungry who don't bother with science.
You are better off spending your energy on trying to influence others votes.
Then other people will be eligible for this:
Bothering to vote is not really a rational choice.
So we should all stay home?
I do like the 100% off site backup idea.
During my career of 34 years, I had two (2) things that scared the shit out of me:
1.) No backup
2.) Malware or security breach
I had a Novell 3.1 server crash on me at 5:30 pm and Novell worked with me till 6:30 the next morning rebuilding it.
It was broken at the core and we didn't lose any data.
Didn't need the backup tapes then (no such thing as EHD), but I had them.
I had my share of infected computers, but it was all single-box shit.
Viruses ruled the day back then.
Later, it really didn't matter much if I had anti-virus on desktops because viruses were so, like, yesterday and crap.
It was Trojans with popup ads or false virus warnings and it drove me crazy.
Mostly, Combofix, TDSSKiller, Malwarebytes, HijackThis, etc. took care of that.
I retired two years ago.
Two years before THAT, ransomware was just coming up over the horizon.
I had my shit together and management paid out the ass for best practices.
I lectured, pleaded, shamed, ratted out everybody who was stupid. The staff (my coworkers) were most excellent and never got hit.
The owner's son, one entitled immature bitch, would click on any goddam thing because he had me to mop up the blood.
It wasn't two months after I left that the Firm got covered with ransomware because that privileged asshole clicked on a link in an email.
They didn't pay the ransom, of course, but the vendor who replaced me spent a high-dollar week putting shit back together.
The EHD stayed attached to the servers (7) 24/7 with no offsite, so they were useless.
In total, they lost two weeks of work.
For a law firm, that's damned near catastrophic.
If that had happened on my watch, I'd have been back up in a couple of days at most, but I sure as hell would have peed down both legs.
No.
100% of the people who voted made their decision based on their own interest.
The people who didn't vote decided that a Trump administration would be in their best interest.
So, let's run those numbers again, shall we?
Good point.
A good backup strategy includes off site copies as I did, taking the EHD home each day.
I've been retired 2 years now and I'm not up to speed on the state of the art.
Can cloud backups be encrypted by local server infection of ransomeware?
I searched, but didn't find a definitive answer.
Apparently, they did:
Nearly 139 million Americans voted this year, according to the United States Elections Project. This sets a new overall record, surpassing the all-time high of 132 million Americans who voted in the 2008 contest between Barack Obama and John McCain.
But that total suggests that only 60% of the country's 232 million eligible voters actually voted this year.
... how many have noticed that there are few "polls" anymore?
And that "good" shows up precisely where?
It's way too early for your comment.