Since there's no cash contribution backing it up it don't expect it to get you very far. Remember, always ask "what's in this individual's best interests"? Then make your decision from there.
It pays to invest money and time volunteering for the re-election campaigns of officials who will have a direct impact on your business and private affairs.
Expecting a divorce with a major custody fight? Prepare now by volunteering for CASA. Network with judges and lawyers while creating the impression of what kind of outstanding and caring individual you are.
Expecting major surgery in the coming year? Start ratcheting up on donations to your local non-profit hospital where the surgery will take place. Not just so physicians will work harder to provide quality care, but you'll be less likely to have any BS from the billing department. Out of network services suddenly billed at in-network rates with the swish of a pen.
When regulators come around your business, always mention that you're hiring and ask if they know anyone with such-and-such skills or experience. If they refer you a close friend or relative, hire that person on the spot.
And the number one rule of business: always take decision-makers out to lunch and pay for their meal.
It might help if judges or sheriffs were appointed by elected officials and not elected directly. The wealthiest family in a small town can hold a lot of sway when they are the financiers of all the local politicians. Same can be said of the wealthiest corporations running our country.
Except that cops check those as well and make the final call on what is a violation and what is not. A few years back officers in Dallas were caught withholding tickets from friends and family.
Yes. As long as you don't offer cash or gifts directly to the officer he has the discretion to let you go with a warning. You can still offer bribes; they're just illegal and could get you into more trouble if the officer follows a code of ethics or too many run-ins with internal affairs. Supporting these charities seems to have almost just as good of an effect without the liability.
As a middle-class American I don't see either the Democrats or the Republicans doing anything for average American families. Or should I only care about the welfare of the "little people" until I become one myself?
Agreed. Jobs are driven by demand, not by desire. There is huge demand for coal mining in West Virginia. There are very few other jobs. So it is mine coal or starve. Or move to another state, which is easy for some and hard for others. Family bonds and a claim to one's "home" can be very strong for many people. Some parts of WV still don't have indoor plumbing; I imagine those same locales don't have high-speed broadband either. If they retrain to be programmers, are they going to find a work-from-home job without any prior experience and a whole lot of coal mining activity on their resume? A resume showing years in an unrelated field is already a road block for many career changers. Trying to do work where there is no demand for it doesn't seem possible without a "big government" jobs program. Maybe they can relocate the Obamacare IT offices to WV and see how that works out.
No, Rob Kaper (5960) was just telling eyepeepackets (33477) that he couldn't teach coal miners to code. I'm not sure if "can't" here refers to permission or ability.
One day we may have cures for just about all disease, maybe even "old age" itself. And think about how horrible that will be! Knowing that you are still going to die, but it won't be peacefully in your home with your family at your bedside. You could end up like Draco, smothered to death by gifts of cloaks and hats showered upon him by appreciative citizens at a theatre [620 BC]. Or you might end up like martyr Saint Lawrence, patron saint of cooks, who was roasted alive on a giant grill during the persecution of Valerian [258AD]. Prudentius tells that he joked with his tormentors, "Turn me over — I'm done on this side".
As we grow older we could end up dying in ways we could not have ever imagined, like Hans Steininger, the burgomaster of Braunau, Austria, who died when he broke his neck by tripping over his own beard [1567 AD].
If age alone is one day no longer terminal, then we will probably have to keep working indefinitely. This only increases the odds of dying while pursuing our occasionally dangerous professions, such as Clement Vallandigham, a lawyer and Ohio politician defending a man on a charge of murder, who accidentally shot himself demonstrating how the victim might have shot himself while in the process of drawing a weapon when standing from a kneeling position.
So maybe you plan on spending eternity very carefully, not even to venture outside to avoid such horrendous impending deaths waiting to happen. Well, that didn't work for Joao Maria de Souza, who was killed while asleep, by a cow that fell through the roof of his house onto his bed in 2013.
Just thinking about all of the horrible ways to die can drive a person to madness, but in the end maybe there is one next-best-thing to knowing how you are going to die in six months while counting down the last days on your death bed, with enough time to tell your loved ones goodbye or changing your will to cut out your less-than-loved ones. And maybe that's taking matters into your own hands, like David Phyall, the last resident in a block of flats due to be demolished near Southampton, England, who decapitated himself with a chainsaw to highlight the injustice of being forced to move out. Ya. That'll show 'em!
They're not any worse than the "proud" unemployed parents who are desperately trying to find a job, but until then refuse to accept unemployment benefits, food stamps, medicaid, food pantries, charity, or handouts from friends or family. They send their kids to bed hungry but think they're so awesome because they never took any help from anyone.
Are you suggesting that if Steve Jobs paid his fortune to doctors and hospitals and spent hours engaged in painful "treatments" he would have lived one day longer than the path he chose? He had pancreatic cancer. It's not like a melanoma. It is inoperable and incurable. My body is not a pin-cushion for an entire team of doctors and administrators to fund their lifestyle at the expense of my family's lifetime of frugally saving up enough cash to cover a modest education for kids and possibly a retirement if one of us lives to be 80.
I feel for your predicament. I have two autistic kids, a wife with Lupus, and an ex-wife that has cost me thousands in legal fees just to keep my kids safe from her sex-offender boyfriend. My salary is high, but my savings have been wiped out twice. I earn what should be considered "good money", but I have a high deductible insurance plan, and I am out of pocket almost $10k every year. Throw in that I'm the sole breadwinner for my household, the government doesn't think my wife (who is bed or couch ridden for weeks at a time) is disabled enough for disability benefits, and my kids will likely never be capable of supporting themselves, my outlook isn't too bright.
But you have to make best with the resources you've got. I bit the bullet living frugally in college while studying twice as hard as most of my non-engineering peers in college (I only know this because my friends who dropped engineering for business or liberal arts told me how much easier it was). It's a little harder knowing that I've worked hard to be where I am, my employer expects me to take work home at night and finish projects over the weekend, and yet I need to live just as frugally, and I have to watch my family miss out on the lifestyle that I wanted for them.
Yet during times when I've had money I was able to invest it and made decent returns, which came in handy from one crisis to another. This year I have bought some acreage with a mobile home. I'm taking a gamble that the land will appreciate as the area seems to be in the path of development. I have part of the land fenced in, I have started a small mixed flock of goats and sheep, the land is ag-exempt, which keeps property taxes ridiculously low, and I have slowly been buying tools and goods that allow me to produce more of what I need rather than paying way too much on pre-prepared food and merchandise. I actually have half my acreage leased out to another farmer, but at $10 an acre per month I don't think I'm ripping anyone off. I'm looking for business opportunities that will put what little money or resources to use while I am out at work earning my salary. I've given some thought to building a small self-storage business on my land to earn a little more and help me to be less dependent on my day job, but that will have to wait until I can save up enough to get rolling on such a plan.
I don't blame landlords for the predicament of the poor who are stuck in a cycle of renting. Owning a home can work out to be even more of a financial tragedy for many. I do blame government policies, usually set on the city level, that restrict what types of properties can be built. Many areas would benefit from affordable housing but cities want to promote developments that will bring in the kind of taxpayers they want. Unfortunately in the US we neither have the benefit of a just socialist government nor the freedom of a libertarian free market. I don't understand a city that on the one hand makes vagrancy illegal, forbids camping or sleeping on streets, alleys, parks, under bridges, in their own car, etc. but at the same time does not make any shelter available to those falling on hard times.
You highlight some real problems and shortfalls with civil law and common insurance practices. Solution could be:
1. Stronger protections for consumers, since you usually don't get to negotiate term-by-term of your insurance contract. Insurance is already regulated, therefore there is no "free market", so consumer protections would be warranted. [BWT, I support the old-school libertarian approach to most business situations. If I have the cash and want to insure random people against all sorts of losses then I should be able to negotiate terms of the contract with my potential clients without outside interference. If we had a TRUE free market then we would need neither industry protectionism nor consumer protections].
2. Overhaul our POS legal system so that most straight-forward civil matters can be resolved without any need for lawyers and unaffordable legal expenses (see "consumer protections" above). The US suffers from an assortment of litigation abuses that just aren't seen in most other countries, especially in Europe.
3. Require a bond or other security from your tenants to offset such potential losses. Diversifying your portfolio would also be a good idea. If all your life savings are wrapped up in your home maybe if would be safer to sell it and use the proceeds to invest in a diversified portfolio of more manageable assets. This is the only option available to you without having to totally change our society and culture.
I like your suggestion of negotiating with your landlord to split revenue from subletting. The city and state can ask you to pay a tax on this arrangement, but otherwise they should butt out from private affairs of individuals.
This is exactly the problem with our present system of government. From the local council to the US Senate we have laws for this and that, exclusions, grandfathering, retro-active, exceptions, rebates, subsidies, credits, fines, penalties, and loopholes, loopholes, loopholes. There is no consistent guiding principal for how our laws are written. We neither have a socialist nor a free-market government. Some areas of life are virtually unregulated to the detriment of average citizens while others are incredibly over-regulated to the detriment of average citizens. But for almost any law or regulation it is possible to work around the intent of the law by some maneuver such as you describe. The only barriers are cost, risk, and complexity. The end result is that those with modest means and modest ambitions (ie typical American family) suffer under the law, whereas those who are hiring lawyers to plot their way through the loopholes and game the system benefit substantially. In a just and fair society there would be no need for the Estate Law industry. Google "Medicaid Planning" and "Asset Protection" to learn more about taking advantage of loopholes that the wealthy use to avoid the burden levied by the government onto middle-class families or families with an sick, elderly, or disabled member.
I could live happily with a democratic socialist government. I could take my chances in a free-market based libertarian society. I'd rather not have anything in between. 200+ years of singing songs about being free, and yet we have to keep working towards actually being free, breaking one chain at a time, all while another link is being forged on the other limb.
Or rent from an apartment owner that forbids subletting and enforces their own contracts. This is why we have civil law instead of totalitarian "do what you're told" law. This whole deal reeks of industry protectionism. Give me a TRUE free market, or give me TRUE socialism. Everything else is just a shade of fascism that favors people with "special" status over the rights of the common man.
When did these apartment sub-letters ever refuse to pay taxes? Why would they need permits for a single unit or single room short term sublease? Permission from the owner I would understand, but that would be a civil matter between landlord and tenant. It's these kinds of intrusions of government into private matters that fuels small government extemists, putting social progress at risk, like programs such as Obamacare and Medicaid.
Then why not ask for the taxes to paid rather than criminalizing short-term subletting? It's this kind of BS that Tea Baggers point to when they advocate for free market reforms and then go about defunding government programs like Obamacare and Medicaid.
Punishing the businesses now will just make it harder for these companies to pay proper wages going forward, and it will cause greater economic harm to the rest of the country. The best thing workers can do now is to just put this whole mess behind them, show up to work, and do their jobs. Our nation depends on the success of these businesses to create jobs that would not exist otherwise. We should be thankful that Apple and Google made the difficult decisions that were necessary to keep good paying jobs and technical innovation here in America instead of India or Korea.
But Americans want to be paid too much. We need more H1B Visa professionals who are willing to work for reasonable wages. The future of innovation is at stake, and we cannot let it be shackled to spoiled code monkeys who aren't willing to accept the same prevailing wages that are offered in China and India. If they want more money than that then they should climb further up the corporate ladder where compensation is more closely matched to the manager's contribution to the company.
Given the Zombies' affinity for brains, this may work more to your disadvantage.
Since there's no cash contribution backing it up it don't expect it to get you very far. Remember, always ask "what's in this individual's best interests"? Then make your decision from there.
It pays to invest money and time volunteering for the re-election campaigns of officials who will have a direct impact on your business and private affairs.
Expecting a divorce with a major custody fight? Prepare now by volunteering for CASA. Network with judges and lawyers while creating the impression of what kind of outstanding and caring individual you are.
Expecting major surgery in the coming year? Start ratcheting up on donations to your local non-profit hospital where the surgery will take place. Not just so physicians will work harder to provide quality care, but you'll be less likely to have any BS from the billing department. Out of network services suddenly billed at in-network rates with the swish of a pen.
When regulators come around your business, always mention that you're hiring and ask if they know anyone with such-and-such skills or experience. If they refer you a close friend or relative, hire that person on the spot.
And the number one rule of business: always take decision-makers out to lunch and pay for their meal.
It might help if judges or sheriffs were appointed by elected officials and not elected directly. The wealthiest family in a small town can hold a lot of sway when they are the financiers of all the local politicians. Same can be said of the wealthiest corporations running our country.
Except that cops check those as well and make the final call on what is a violation and what is not. A few years back officers in Dallas were caught withholding tickets from friends and family.
Yes. As long as you don't offer cash or gifts directly to the officer he has the discretion to let you go with a warning. You can still offer bribes; they're just illegal and could get you into more trouble if the officer follows a code of ethics or too many run-ins with internal affairs. Supporting these charities seems to have almost just as good of an effect without the liability.
As a middle-class American I don't see either the Democrats or the Republicans doing anything for average American families. Or should I only care about the welfare of the "little people" until I become one myself?
The defendant, Thomas McGehan, was acquitted and released from custody (to be shot to death four years later in his saloon).
Agreed. Jobs are driven by demand, not by desire. There is huge demand for coal mining in West Virginia. There are very few other jobs. So it is mine coal or starve. Or move to another state, which is easy for some and hard for others. Family bonds and a claim to one's "home" can be very strong for many people. Some parts of WV still don't have indoor plumbing; I imagine those same locales don't have high-speed broadband either. If they retrain to be programmers, are they going to find a work-from-home job without any prior experience and a whole lot of coal mining activity on their resume? A resume showing years in an unrelated field is already a road block for many career changers. Trying to do work where there is no demand for it doesn't seem possible without a "big government" jobs program. Maybe they can relocate the Obamacare IT offices to WV and see how that works out.
No, Rob Kaper (5960) was just telling eyepeepackets (33477) that he couldn't teach coal miners to code. I'm not sure if "can't" here refers to permission or ability.
One day we may have cures for just about all disease, maybe even "old age" itself. And think about how horrible that will be! Knowing that you are still going to die, but it won't be peacefully in your home with your family at your bedside. You could end up like Draco, smothered to death by gifts of cloaks and hats showered upon him by appreciative citizens at a theatre [620 BC]. Or you might end up like martyr Saint Lawrence, patron saint of cooks, who was roasted alive on a giant grill during the persecution of Valerian [258AD]. Prudentius tells that he joked with his tormentors, "Turn me over — I'm done on this side".
As we grow older we could end up dying in ways we could not have ever imagined, like Hans Steininger, the burgomaster of Braunau, Austria, who died when he broke his neck by tripping over his own beard [1567 AD].
If age alone is one day no longer terminal, then we will probably have to keep working indefinitely. This only increases the odds of dying while pursuing our occasionally dangerous professions, such as Clement Vallandigham, a lawyer and Ohio politician defending a man on a charge of murder, who accidentally shot himself demonstrating how the victim might have shot himself while in the process of drawing a weapon when standing from a kneeling position.
So maybe you plan on spending eternity very carefully, not even to venture outside to avoid such horrendous impending deaths waiting to happen. Well, that didn't work for Joao Maria de Souza, who was killed while asleep, by a cow that fell through the roof of his house onto his bed in 2013.
Just thinking about all of the horrible ways to die can drive a person to madness, but in the end maybe there is one next-best-thing to knowing how you are going to die in six months while counting down the last days on your death bed, with enough time to tell your loved ones goodbye or changing your will to cut out your less-than-loved ones. And maybe that's taking matters into your own hands, like David Phyall, the last resident in a block of flats due to be demolished near Southampton, England, who decapitated himself with a chainsaw to highlight the injustice of being forced to move out. Ya. That'll show 'em!
They're not any worse than the "proud" unemployed parents who are desperately trying to find a job, but until then refuse to accept unemployment benefits, food stamps, medicaid, food pantries, charity, or handouts from friends or family. They send their kids to bed hungry but think they're so awesome because they never took any help from anyone.
Are you suggesting that if Steve Jobs paid his fortune to doctors and hospitals and spent hours engaged in painful "treatments" he would have lived one day longer than the path he chose? He had pancreatic cancer. It's not like a melanoma. It is inoperable and incurable. My body is not a pin-cushion for an entire team of doctors and administrators to fund their lifestyle at the expense of my family's lifetime of frugally saving up enough cash to cover a modest education for kids and possibly a retirement if one of us lives to be 80.
I . . S . a . i . D . . . never mind.
I feel for your predicament. I have two autistic kids, a wife with Lupus, and an ex-wife that has cost me thousands in legal fees just to keep my kids safe from her sex-offender boyfriend. My salary is high, but my savings have been wiped out twice. I earn what should be considered "good money", but I have a high deductible insurance plan, and I am out of pocket almost $10k every year. Throw in that I'm the sole breadwinner for my household, the government doesn't think my wife (who is bed or couch ridden for weeks at a time) is disabled enough for disability benefits, and my kids will likely never be capable of supporting themselves, my outlook isn't too bright.
But you have to make best with the resources you've got. I bit the bullet living frugally in college while studying twice as hard as most of my non-engineering peers in college (I only know this because my friends who dropped engineering for business or liberal arts told me how much easier it was). It's a little harder knowing that I've worked hard to be where I am, my employer expects me to take work home at night and finish projects over the weekend, and yet I need to live just as frugally, and I have to watch my family miss out on the lifestyle that I wanted for them.
Yet during times when I've had money I was able to invest it and made decent returns, which came in handy from one crisis to another. This year I have bought some acreage with a mobile home. I'm taking a gamble that the land will appreciate as the area seems to be in the path of development. I have part of the land fenced in, I have started a small mixed flock of goats and sheep, the land is ag-exempt, which keeps property taxes ridiculously low, and I have slowly been buying tools and goods that allow me to produce more of what I need rather than paying way too much on pre-prepared food and merchandise. I actually have half my acreage leased out to another farmer, but at $10 an acre per month I don't think I'm ripping anyone off. I'm looking for business opportunities that will put what little money or resources to use while I am out at work earning my salary. I've given some thought to building a small self-storage business on my land to earn a little more and help me to be less dependent on my day job, but that will have to wait until I can save up enough to get rolling on such a plan.
I don't blame landlords for the predicament of the poor who are stuck in a cycle of renting. Owning a home can work out to be even more of a financial tragedy for many. I do blame government policies, usually set on the city level, that restrict what types of properties can be built. Many areas would benefit from affordable housing but cities want to promote developments that will bring in the kind of taxpayers they want. Unfortunately in the US we neither have the benefit of a just socialist government nor the freedom of a libertarian free market. I don't understand a city that on the one hand makes vagrancy illegal, forbids camping or sleeping on streets, alleys, parks, under bridges, in their own car, etc. but at the same time does not make any shelter available to those falling on hard times.
You highlight some real problems and shortfalls with civil law and common insurance practices. Solution could be:
1. Stronger protections for consumers, since you usually don't get to negotiate term-by-term of your insurance contract. Insurance is already regulated, therefore there is no "free market", so consumer protections would be warranted. [BWT, I support the old-school libertarian approach to most business situations. If I have the cash and want to insure random people against all sorts of losses then I should be able to negotiate terms of the contract with my potential clients without outside interference. If we had a TRUE free market then we would need neither industry protectionism nor consumer protections].
2. Overhaul our POS legal system so that most straight-forward civil matters can be resolved without any need for lawyers and unaffordable legal expenses (see "consumer protections" above). The US suffers from an assortment of litigation abuses that just aren't seen in most other countries, especially in Europe.
3. Require a bond or other security from your tenants to offset such potential losses. Diversifying your portfolio would also be a good idea. If all your life savings are wrapped up in your home maybe if would be safer to sell it and use the proceeds to invest in a diversified portfolio of more manageable assets. This is the only option available to you without having to totally change our society and culture.
I like your suggestion of negotiating with your landlord to split revenue from subletting. The city and state can ask you to pay a tax on this arrangement, but otherwise they should butt out from private affairs of individuals.
I wish I was being sarcastic. Coming from Texas I've never seen a requirement for spouses to register with the state to watch their step-children.
This is exactly the problem with our present system of government. From the local council to the US Senate we have laws for this and that, exclusions, grandfathering, retro-active, exceptions, rebates, subsidies, credits, fines, penalties, and loopholes, loopholes, loopholes. There is no consistent guiding principal for how our laws are written. We neither have a socialist nor a free-market government. Some areas of life are virtually unregulated to the detriment of average citizens while others are incredibly over-regulated to the detriment of average citizens. But for almost any law or regulation it is possible to work around the intent of the law by some maneuver such as you describe. The only barriers are cost, risk, and complexity. The end result is that those with modest means and modest ambitions (ie typical American family) suffer under the law, whereas those who are hiring lawyers to plot their way through the loopholes and game the system benefit substantially. In a just and fair society there would be no need for the Estate Law industry. Google "Medicaid Planning" and "Asset Protection" to learn more about taking advantage of loopholes that the wealthy use to avoid the burden levied by the government onto middle-class families or families with an sick, elderly, or disabled member.
I could live happily with a democratic socialist government. I could take my chances in a free-market based libertarian society. I'd rather not have anything in between. 200+ years of singing songs about being free, and yet we have to keep working towards actually being free, breaking one chain at a time, all while another link is being forged on the other limb.
Or rent from an apartment owner that forbids subletting and enforces their own contracts. This is why we have civil law instead of totalitarian "do what you're told" law. This whole deal reeks of industry protectionism. Give me a TRUE free market, or give me TRUE socialism. Everything else is just a shade of fascism that favors people with "special" status over the rights of the common man.
When did these apartment sub-letters ever refuse to pay taxes? Why would they need permits for a single unit or single room short term sublease? Permission from the owner I would understand, but that would be a civil matter between landlord and tenant. It's these kinds of intrusions of government into private matters that fuels small government extemists, putting social progress at risk, like programs such as Obamacare and Medicaid.
My baby sitter doesn't have a licensed daycare facility. She watches my two kids in her private home. Should she be hauled off to the gulag as well?
Then why not ask for the taxes to paid rather than criminalizing short-term subletting? It's this kind of BS that Tea Baggers point to when they advocate for free market reforms and then go about defunding government programs like Obamacare and Medicaid.
Sorry, forget to end with a smiley :-). I was just parroting something I heard at a TEA Party rally.
Punishing the businesses now will just make it harder for these companies to pay proper wages going forward, and it will cause greater economic harm to the rest of the country. The best thing workers can do now is to just put this whole mess behind them, show up to work, and do their jobs. Our nation depends on the success of these businesses to create jobs that would not exist otherwise. We should be thankful that Apple and Google made the difficult decisions that were necessary to keep good paying jobs and technical innovation here in America instead of India or Korea.
Welcome to Corporatocracy. Which doesn't exist. Because conspiracy theories are always false. And this wage-fixing business is a conspiracy, right?
But Americans want to be paid too much. We need more H1B Visa professionals who are willing to work for reasonable wages. The future of innovation is at stake, and we cannot let it be shackled to spoiled code monkeys who aren't willing to accept the same prevailing wages that are offered in China and India. If they want more money than that then they should climb further up the corporate ladder where compensation is more closely matched to the manager's contribution to the company.