zer0signal
zerosignal
zer0signal

Tom is correct. You can only write off unreimbursed expenses, and only if they are more than 2% of your AGI.

I believe you can write off the portion used for business purposes, as long as you can justify the amount. Since the mileage is negligible, you could probably use hours instead.

I just taught myself that,and I'm also hooked. My new favorite formulas

On the flip side, don't shut down a city council meeting like black lives matter did in Minneapolis, saying that you want to have a conversation, then silence any white people that try to talk. That's not a conversation, that's a lecture.

If your refund is that big, you should invest in tax planning instead

If your refund is that big, you should invest in tax planning instead

:(

Honestly, I’m not sure I would recommend keeping up with my habits :D

I used sharkbites when i installed my water softener a year and a half ago. Haven’t had any problems so far.

That wouldn’t be a lot of fun here in MN, where the riding season can be rather short due to cold and snow.

I work for a state revenue department, and we are starting to crack down on this, big time.

Maybe this just comes from having GM cars for most of my driving life, but I don’t want a retractable screen, because that is one more moving part that is going to break at some point.

Don’t: complain that the new boss doesn’t do things exactly like the old boss.

Bulletproof cars? I thought guns were only a problem in America.

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and Greater Orange County?

I drive my 2002 Sunfire at those kind of speeds on a daily basis, and haven’t had an issue. Maintain your car and you won’t have any problems.

I’ve seen those before too, usually one is spring loaded that way when the box is opened, it will automatically pop up.

I generally drive them about the same as my personal vehicle. I treat it like a test drive. I want to know how fast it can accelerate or stop, how it handles, etc. I avoid doing anything dangerous, because I don’t want to have to pay for damages either.

I was on a work trip a few years ago, and my coworker would randomly shift our Chevy Trailblazer into reverse while we were doing about 45 mph. There is also the time when I was on a jobsite, and we got a piece of equipment stuck. We ran to Walmart for a tow strap, and tied it to whatever we could find underneath our

Both of our cars were former rental cars. We bought them through a dealer rather than a rental company. Neither car has had any major problems. Both were bought around 40,000 miles, and both are over 100,000. The only thing that made me hesitant about buying a rental car is knowing that some people abuse rental cars.

Now if they could get my location-based recipes to work.