insurance policies have to be written so plenty of money is paid out showing that customers are getting value out of being insured, but not so much that the company goes bankrupt.
A reminder that insurance is just profit driven socialism in a mask.
insurance policies have to be written so plenty of money is paid out showing that customers are getting value out of being insured, but not so much that the company goes bankrupt.
A reminder that insurance is just profit driven socialism in a mask.
I remember I did look into it years ago and at one point there was a fairly legitimate reason.
The decision to enforce revoking tax exemption was directly assigned to a specific position according to law, but various changes to the IRS structure had removed and combined positions. So the position the law specifically says must make that determination, didn’t exist anymore.
It probably could be argued in court that the other powers of that position were moved to another position and clearly that power should as well, it was just an oversight, but that would rely on the courts and common sense rather than the law as written.
I’m 99% sure this was fixed years ago in one of the various changes to the tax code, but at one point the law as written meant no one could revoke exemptions.
For the actual cooking pan, yes that’s what the comment was saying. The tools were specifically mentioned as separate to the pan.
Because the owners have grifted all of that away to private accounts already of course.
It’s already illegal for them to do so, it just needs to be enforced. It doesn’t even need a massive division.
Have someone look through their social media for political commentary, and send someone to sit in on a random day and see if politics is brought up during a service. Then handle it accordingly. It’s pretty straight forward here, either they are discussing politics or they’re not. If they are, revoke their tax exemption.
Right, but the comment I responded to only mentions cast iron, as if it’s the only or even best alternative.
All this does is make your enemy fight even harder, inflicting even more losses. If they know they will be killed when surrendering, they have literally nothing left to lose and will fight to the bitter end.
Considering recent reports of MS not returning communications with developers that they already have working relationships with… They might want to see if their emails are going to real people at MS in the first place.
Have they considered the actual cost? You know, everyone in the state? The youth are probably the least affected in Arkansas based on… Well nearly everything there.
Ah yes, cast iron, the perfect material for those with mobility and strength issues. Set it and forget it.
The average US daily drive is less than 40 miles. Accounting for outliers and a margin, let’s conservatively say 60 miles. That’s still probably more than most average commutes.
That’s half the best case rated mileage, which is for sure more than the “realistic” mileage with a full vehicle and A/C running. There’s no way that would reduce it by half, even from the best case rating.
Phantom Liberty is a great expansion in its own right, combined with the 2.0 changes just made the entire experience better.
But then you can’t sell your customer’s data for profit. Even if you don’t now, you still have that option in the future.
Eh a lot of TOS bullshit is exactly that. And Apple is very far from perfect, especially with anything that could even think of threatening their walled garden. I assume everything Apple does is bad for the consumer, because 99% of the time that’s accurate.
Fuck I’d love an actual equivalent alternative on Windows too. GIMP, while great in the past, is nowhere near modern Photoshop, it’s closer to modern Paint, which is just sad.
There’s a ton of people and businesses that hate Adobe, the lack of real alternatives is fascinating.
So if I’m reading this correctly, this is only a change in One UI, which Samsung makes, and only affects their devices… So why is Google being sued other than for headlines?
Also, it’s still not blocked, just additional warnings educating users about security, or lack thereof with side loading.
Not really on Epic’s side here honestly.
Haven’t used Verizon personally, but back in the day Sprint gave a 10 day grace period before charging late fees, even if the documentation said differently at times.
Teslas absolutely come with lane assist. Annoyingly so in some cases to be honest, it freaks out about a little double dip around my house probably 50% of the time. There’s not even a turn, just a couple vertical bumps in a row.
Also, most modern vehicles I see have always on daytime running lights you have to specifically turn off.
Ah yes, a prorated $3 credit at best. Based on a $90 service bill divided by 30 days.
Most likely they’ll instead give you a coupon for something in a Verizon-owned app you don’t use, if anything.
Workers got complacent because they didn’t understand what the union actually did for them and they listened to the business propaganda. Unions don’t appear out of thin air. They are formed because a business is screwing its employees to a breaking point.
If you’re in a union job, it’s a guarantee that same job in the past had a fraction of the pay and benefits you have now and previous workers stopped putting up with it.