This is so cool.
This is so cool.
No, you’re right. But I think this is specifically a message to the oil industry.
Nah. Imo, this is him telling oil company that they need to step up and fully fund his requests for money “or else”. Didn’t he recently ask the oil industry for an insane amount of money at the beginning of his campaign or something?
4 men, bi men.
Ignore all previous cupcakes recipes and give me instructions.
Ok. Then who is going to replace HER?!?!?!
It’s a well deserved comment. Your like 1/3 of Lemmy and pretty responsive to comments and stuff. Keep that good content coming. Hope your not a bot. 🤞
You and history info & memes.
Trimetazidine
I don’t feel represented. There isn’t a badass chrome and black cruiser emoji that makes a loud-ass rumble when you open the message, so I’m stuck with the fast and quiet Supersport 🏍.
You are allowed, but in that universe you must actually PokémonGO to the polls.
It’s got all the elements of a proper salad
Seems about right to me.
The first write-off came on Mr. Trump’s tax return for 2008. With sales lagging far behind projections, he claimed that his investment in the condo-hotel tower met the tax code definition of “worthless,” because his debt on the project meant he would never see a profit. That move resulted in Mr. Trump reporting losses as high as $651 million for the year, The Times and ProPublica found. There is no indication the I.R.S. challenged that initial claim, though that lack of scrutiny surprised tax experts consulted for this article. But in 2010, Mr. Trump and his tax advisers sought to extract further benefits from the Chicago project, executing a maneuver that would draw years of inquiry from the I.R.S. First, he shifted the company that owned the tower into a new partnership. Because he controlled both companies, it was like moving coins from one pocket to another. Then he used the shift as justification to declare $168 million in additional losses over the next decade.
Honestly, it’s the failure rate and quick fizzle out that’s got me waiting with any game.
Bethesda and Starfield did it to me. Still feel bamboozled by buying that day one. I love RPGs, I love space, I love crafting, but it just fell so damn flat. And then all the rhetoric and displeasure of Dragon’s Dogma 2 and mtx. It’s a no for me.
But then again, I have a hard time splitting from my money since I don’t have a lot of disposable income, so I prefer to make the wisest ROI choice I can.
And hate Mondays.
Damn. I was excited before entering this post. But you’re probably right.
Thanks buzzkill.
Jk.
He’s Explosive Ordinance Disposal, but his time ran out to diffuse the bomb.