seabear01
Sea Bear
seabear01

Shit! And here I thought I was being a Rebel!

Unless you were writing poetry, you just managed to add stress and effort to a project that could be streamlined by giving it a title.

A Yep...

While Open Carry is generally Legal, enforcing that right is generally not worth the hassle. A friend's son recently was complaining that Open Carry was legal, and it only took him about $2000 to get the charges dropped.

The scary part is often badges have been replaced by ID cards. These ID's are next to impossible to fake, IF you have the right equipment. The imbedded chips are a dead giveaway that what your are dealing with is a genuine officer of the law.

Lock Picks.

Iowa is the same.

In my experience, if you are in someone's computer and don't have everything back perfectly, people will shrug it off.

Kinda, you'd be surprised how often people forget their own password.

The complete collection of what i brought to work today other than my phone.

In my case, I can actually do math. I may have gone to a public school, but it was in the 80's, so I left without the standardized lobotomy.

No, you were right the first time.

I've had business accounts at all but NCIX. I'm not lazy, I tend to buy from Amazon just because they have better prices and I know when things will show up. The last part is often more important than a couple dollars would be.

Can I write off the new gadget as a business expense?

It's a bit of a Catch 22. If you don't start saving now, then you will find it harder to do so when it comes time to buy the property. If you do start saving now, then you run into the problem of paying off high interest loans.

Actually, it's idiotic to not invest in a home. If you rent, you are paying double the cost to buy, and you are gathering no equity. As a result, the lack of equity means that your best form of long term savings is something that You personally are avoiding.

Does it remove the google bar?

Not so much. Unless you already have a home you are paying a mortgage on or have paid off, you should always start a fund to put down on a down payment. A house, no matter how you look at it, is the most practical long term savings plan you can have.

Honestly, if it tries to kill us, not trying to kill it right back would be the act of a happy meal.

I've been reading back through the articles this guy posts. I'm beginning to think I have more miles on my current set of tires than he has on a bike.