Can’t do that, under the NLRA, if you fire people for union activity, the US Dept. of Labor will sue you and you will lose.
Can’t do that, under the NLRA, if you fire people for union activity, the US Dept. of Labor will sue you and you will lose.
Is this really something that needs to be said? It is axiomatic that if you want more expensive things, it will take you longer to get there or you will incur more debt if you’re unwilling to wait.
You might want to look at this as to why people might not want to move to St. Louis.
St. Louis is in a flyover state and it’s a city most people don’t want to live in. One of my clients, a neurologist, just got a job there because they paid more than anyone else. Why? No one wants to go there.
As the comment below said, “middle of nowhere” sounds pretty dreadful too. Also, depending on your politics, it may very well be dreadful.
The thing about hospitalists is, if you want anywhere near that salary you’ll have to move to the middle of nowhere. If you’re willing to do that, so much the better.
Your cable bill is only like $45 per month? Because the services you just named are that much. Also, dump HBO, it’s like $15 per month for like 3 half-way decent shows (GoT jumped the shark in my opinion).
Not according to math. If you have .09% APR, you are paying .0075% per month on $30,000. At the end of 36 months, you’d pay a total of about $35,000.
It really depends on what you’re going to do with the money. If the money’s just going to sit in your checking account, then it’d save you like $5,000 in interests costs assuming a 3 year loan at 0.9% with no down payment if you just paid the cash up front.
In that case, it won’t even be an issue because they’re not moving in and there’s likely no mortgage, as those types typically pay cash because commercial mortgages are more expensive than personal mortgages.
Actually, you wouldn’t have to go through an eviction because they’re trespassing. You didn’t sign a lease, you didn’t start a month to month tenancy, nothing. They are no different than a stranger on your property. That’s the legality of the situation in every state (it’d be different if you were renting to them or…
Oh yeah, you can totally do that too, depending on your specific situation.
It’s all about common courtesy, ya know? I feel like many issues would be solved in this world if people just showed courtesy to others.
You understand that when you “close” the property becomes legally yours? So, you had better have your movers set to go that day if you’re also selling your house or need to get out of an apartment or, literally any situation in which you’re not staying at your current property.
You understand that there are many sitting VR experiences, right? In fact that’s almost 100% true for PSVR.
Unless you have absolutely terrible credit or are VERY sensitive to price fluctuation, you’ll pay through the nose with fixed rate.
As a lifelong liberal Democrat, what you said is exactly why Trump won and Hillary lost.
No, because taxes have to balance. If the recipient doesn’t pay tax because it’s a “loan” then the creditor must pay tax on the interest (even if you didn’t charge it).
Uh... no. In fact, in many cases, as explained above, it’s legally mandated.
It’s actually a very simple concept. If it wasn’t taxed, everyone would just “make loans” and never pay income tax.