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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2016 8:44 pm
by Terran
Globemaster_III wrote:QUOTE (Globemaster_III @ Sep 13 2016, 03:39 PM) I am not a Trump fan but i will vote for trump, He will make Hillary look Bad again and she gonna pay for it. :)
is that some kinda achievement? making someone look bad? and why would she pay for him making her look bad? :unsure:

Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2016 11:11 pm
by SumVeritas
i guess it's like the wall :P

Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2016 8:25 pm
by peet
O well, at least we know Trump has real hair on his head :D

Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2016 3:04 pm
by MagisterXF94
The orange moron, will lose

also can we talk about the clowns that gary Johnson and jill stein are?

How to lose a campaign with one sentence
QUOTE Gary Johnson
"What is Aleppo"[/quote]

Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2016 4:28 pm
by Terran
didn't he also have trouble naming a single world leader yesterday? called it his "aleppo moment"... and when jill stein later tried to troll him, she too failed to name a leader.





good times.

Posted: Fri Sep 30, 2016 5:25 pm
by Wasp
Aleppo, Oh yeah, now I remember...

Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2016 8:52 am
by MagisterXF94
Hilary apparently used the same trick, to avoiding paying taxes, that trump used.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-10-02/c...ce-scheme-trump

$#@! em both, that is all i can say.

Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2016 9:14 pm
by lexaal
Turd sandwich?

Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2016 10:35 pm
by cashto
Senor NoirSol wrote:QUOTE (Senor NoirSol @ Oct 3 2016, 01:52 AM) Hilary apparently used the same trick, to avoiding paying taxes, that trump used.
Not really.

Not sure how much you know about our (very complicated) tax system, but there are essentially two types of income that we report: ordinary income (wages, rents, business income, some other types), which is taxed at a progressive scale which tops out at around 40%, and capital gains (investment income), which is taxed at varying rates depending on type, but always lower than ordinary income, and normally 15% for investments held longer than one year (long term capital gains).

Trump's loss was taken as a loss on ordinary income (business revenue), so he can carry those losses forward for any kind of income. Clinton's loss was a long-term capital gains loss, which can offset any future long-term capital gains, but only $3,000 per year can be applied to ordinary income. As a result, Clinton has been paying an effective rate of 25-35% every year, whereas Trump has probably paid an effect rate of 0% for up to 18 years or however long it took to recoup those losses.

As the NYT article discusses, there is nothing inherently shady about applying past losses to future income. It's been a cornerstone of our tax system for a very long time actually: if you lose $100k in the first 6 months and then gain $100k for the next 6 months, then your income for the year is $0 and you pay no tax -- so why should it be any different if you lose $100k for one year and make $100k the next? The IRS understands that for businesses, they can have cycles longer than a year.

It's the scale of the writeoff -- four orders of magnitude larger than Clinton's, and 2% of all business losses for all taxpayers in that year -- which makes this such a big story (esp. in light of Trump's supposed business acumen).

Posted: Wed Oct 05, 2016 1:28 am
by zombywoof
Aside from the erudite analysis by Mr. Cashto...

That quote in his sig still makes me giggle.