docjeed
Michael Reed
docjeed

I’d normally say “Don’t tell Scalzi,” but I’m guessing he already knows.

I’d watch it.

As noted by others below, it’s less about the taxes because of the principal business location, but because of extensive laws and that long history of legal precedence for business law. “Lawyers are EXPENSIVE, yo.”

In my headcanon, the Evil Dead universe is now a part of the Marvel Cinematic Multiverse because of this (and especially the post-credit scene, with Bruce Campbell battling his own hand). C’mon now, IT FITS.

I gotta wonder how much of the TSLA shine is wearing off, because P/E multiples are responsible for a lot of the recent market drop. TSLA had pretty high multiples, and with an inflationary economic environment, people don’t want to pay those multiples any more.

Seriously. All you have to say is “open season on dinosaurs, no kill limit” and knowing mankind it’d be all over.

Joe Manchin didn’t need to be swayed, his family IS part of the coal business.

So?

That sounds like a challenge.

Came here for this, not leaving disappointed.

Ah, but if it tanks the valuation of the company, that can have results too.  Especially if anything is leveraged against stock, and its price.

That’s the point, isn’t it? Any other nation on the planet would look at this and say, “yes, this is a major problem.”  For us, it’s a day that ends in the letter Y.

Sorry, we’re already at major bloodshed.

That’s absolutely true, all of it.

Man, now I’m getting very macabre ideas.  Please don’t feed my necromantic imagination.

Interesting. Is any of that $7500 eligible for a tax carryforward into future years?

Not ignoring the economics of it AT ALL. The problem is that the demand side has *significantly* increased—I’d be surprised if it wasn’t double what it was five years ago, based upon what I’m seeing as a semiconductor equipment supplierand companies haven’t planned to accommodate it. That “every twelve months”

Just the opposite. Predictability when it comes to wafer starts is very important for planning fabrication runs. Not like we weren’t seeing 9-month lead times FOUR YEARS AGO, but still. Companies have been VERY loathe to invest capital for new fabs over the past ten years, and lead times have gradually increased as a

It still amazes me that politicians are gutless enough to give Amazon tax breaks.