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RNG

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Posts posted by RNG

  1. The gov't doesn't have a say in pricing or how a business conducts the rounding off. They only suggested guidelines. It is more likely that the dollar store listened to the cheapskate old ladies' complaints and changed policy.

    The BC government definitely implied that all stores had to follow the guidelines in a story published in the Vancouver Sun. Mind you, they have lied to me before. Googling it now, I see you are right.

    Edit: Or the Sun is continuing their anti-Liberal crusade with a little misdirection.

  2. Free advertising, what is your business, currious.

    Well there is a difference between working for yourself and working for someone else at that level of income.

    Atleast with yourself you can add capitalization to your assets as a business expense, as well as perform many other tax write offs.

    People who arn't working for themselves are probably paying higher taxes on those 400 dollars. even at only $20,000 a year before taxes.

    Also what are you doing to earn that $400 paper pushing or performing actual labor like those poor JOBers are on 40 hours a week plus 10 to 20 hours of extra time in transit without their work vehicle, without their travel expenses, and without their free phone account, and without their other free write offs for luxuries and other benefits. Plus them needing to pay into extra services you don't have to like EI and CPP.

    Not quite right. Not only do you still have to pay CPP, you have to pay double, your contribution and your company's. And you can chose to not pay EI, but then you aren't eligible to receive it.

  3. One could save a little money by using the Debt card over cash, now that the Feds are getting rid of the penny.

    Perhaps showing how I go out of my way to find things to do since I retired, I have been keeping track since the penny disappeared. I have stayed in the range between being three cents down and two cents up since it happened, and I always use cash for anything less than $20. There is one dollar store in our neighborhood that was rounding everything up but the little old ladies in our area (we have 3 assisted living facilities in walking distance) complained to some government agency and he got a nasty-gram and has been playing by the rules since.

  4. Without really studying it in detail, I am amazed at the breadth of opinions I am picking up about the economic situation in Cypress and the potential fall-out. The general amalgam of news and op-eds I have read on the news websites of BBC, CBC, CTV and CNN, as well as a few blogs sent to me by a friend appears to be as follows.

    The Cypriot banks are about to fail, and the government will totally run out of money in a month. Germany led the EU in offering a bailout as long as the Cypriot government took 10% of people's savings deposited in banks. Apparently Germany wanted this because of all the Russian oligarchy's money deposited there. The less kind sites referred to it as Russian Mafia money.

    The common folk, somewhat understandably expressed outrage. The government pulled the proposed legislation, but the smart money says it had little to do with respect for the masses but mostly fear of the Russians.

    Germany is ready to let the country sink.

    Thoughts and opinions on the next step(s) and potential fallout?

  5. I just want to point out that ALL MONEY is money that technically doesn't exist, and there will NEVER be enough money in the world to pay the debt that our current ponzi scheme has created.

    Not true. As wealth is created money can safely be added to the system. When oil is produced, iron mined, cars built, and so on, money can be "created". But there needs to be a balance or eventually the money will become worthless. Take Germany after WWII or Zimbabwe not so long ago. Money supply and interest rates are the governments tools to keep the economy in balance and it is often a difficult job.

  6. A CNN breaking news e-mail says

    There is a "high probability" that Syria used chemical weapons against
    opposition forces, though verification is needed, U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers,
    chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said Tuesday.


    The claims come amid pressure in the West to arm the rebels, long overmatched
    by the Syrian military and its allies.


    The embattled government of President Bashar al-Assad on Tuesday accused
    rebels of a deadly chemical weapon missile attack on the town of Khan al-Asal in
    Aleppo province. The opposition has accused al-Assad's forces of using such
    weapons.


    The civil war -- which began two years ago after a government crackdown on
    Syrian protesters -- has left around 70,000 people dead, the United Nations
    says, and uprooted more than 1 million people.


    Get complete coverage of breaking news on CNN.com, CNN TV and CNN Mobile.

  7. The big fear is that the US is artificially holding down it's interest rates with the massive quantitative easing. (Love those euphimizms, like undocumented workers when you mean illegal aliens.) At some point they are going to have to quit printing money and when that happens there will be high rates and rampant inflation. One of the many things Flaherty and the BoC are trying to juggle is keeping our interest rates realistic and moderating the high personal debt levels being seen in Canada. A tough balancing act. And due to our regulations our banks did way better than those in the US and most of Europe.

    Remember the shock when Martin disallowed the merger of two of the Canadian big banks? There was lots of shock, but in the end it was probably a good thing.

  8. I went with a Shaw bundle. I tried very hard to compare the apples to oranges that Shaw and Telus are offering here in BC. It appeared that for the my usage, the combined phone, cable and internet with Shaw was slightly better, and the bundle is better in all my cases than any possible mix and match. The downside is that once the decision is made, it is a pain to change providers.

  9. But the scary thing is that just like at the federal level for how many years with the Conservatives and Reform splitting the vote and letting the Liberals waltz in, can the same thing happen in Alberta now. The official conservatives haven't been conservative since Klein left. I think Wildrose is, but just like Reform in it's early days it has a few too many wingnuts. And the Conservative have become a tired force. Could be trouble.

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