Message from @ola
Discord ID: 760039906403024896
So tedious
These algebra "exercises" are so boring :( @kaizen
@nian.i.nazrul extremely
They’re not even hard just confusing because there are so many numbers
I love mathematics, btw.
Try solving some "problems" rather than "exercises". I think you'll love it.
Could you give me an example?
Of a “problem”
@kaizen DMed you
@everyone my public Instagram is here. Let's follow eachother @thepangburn
@ThePangburn just dropped a follow, looking very clean 👀
Thanks bud 👍
Ofc
The only math you need is stats
Didnt take stats
my instagram is @5minutebobby
Hi people 👋
Hi @amburger , welcome to the server! Feel free to share ideas. No safe spaces here!
@amburger welcome! Hope you’re intellectually challenged at every turn 🙂 have fun!!
@everyone please rt and engage https://twitter.com/ThePangburn/status/1310476546533015552?s=20
Well Trump did pay taxes first off.
Nominal.
Have you ran through different reasons as to why Trump may have tweeted that?
I spend no time trying to justify anything Trump tweets, because life is too short for his crap?
And if Trump paid his fair share according to the law, then it is not Trumps fault it is a problem with the law.
Sure.
Thats no good reason to say "Sam's right"...
You're essentially admitting your cynicism.
He is right about questioning the sort of person Trump is.
That's a red herring. I'm addressing the specific tweet.
The tweet? The one that says "imagine being the sort of person who...."
There are major defects in US tax law, but that's not the major issue with Trump.
Trump tweets a daily mail article, tweet says low number pay taxes DESPITE CRIPPLING DEBT....what's his point?!
Based on investigative work reported on several years ago and earlier, it's pretty clear Trump set up pro forma operators of fake business plan Trump branded businesses, and perpetrated some large securities frauds in debt for equity swaps using fraudulent valuations. The consequences of that include ripping off investors, and masking major business losses that if honestly reported, would have resulted in large tax liabilities, and more Trump company and likely an actual personal bankruptcy, as he didn't have the cash to pay those obligations he used frauds to hide.
The fake valuation debt-equity swaps are complex, and difficult to prosecute without cooperation across agencies regulating different facets of those civil frauds and crimes, and private parties with standing in various Trump operations.
Trump now seems to be using official immunity (that has limits he's our first President ever to test as he's done) and legal delaying tactics, hoping to age out Statute of Limitations issues on key parts of that. He's also paid many civil damage settlements, and even has a team of "fixer" lawyers, from Melania Knavss's porn model work as an illegal alien, to cam girls and strippers he's fucked, to more mundane business frauds.
Of note, one major accounting firm used by Trump declined to make the usual accuracy certifications found on such documents, but rather added a disclaimer that it was unable to certify some of its work as accurate.
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More than likely Trump's lawyers and accountants delivered tax returns that accurately claim some twisted but no more illegal than what the IRS itself often pulls, interpretation of relevant 26 USC & CFR provisions, but based on assumptions that far larger underlying massive frauds and crimes are buried in complex financial scams that obviously were perpetrated in his case, but are hard to convict.
Is a parking ticket or a series of felony charges more serious, if the felony charges either can't be proven, or are too complex for legal process to enforce to match the actual facts?
Consider that maybe everything Trump tweets is a red herring. He's trolling us.
Misdirection. A very important skill in some fields!
A Twitter war by a nutcase is a reminder to watch what was done, not what is said. However, people who look to Twitter for their news on that kind of issues that are multi-thousand person projects (post-Doc forensic accounting, securities and tax law, and many support roles), may be trying to evade what's involved in actually doing serious analysis.