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Comment wrong tool for the job (Score 1) 338

while you can mark up your HTML with CSS for print media, why bother? when i send documents around i almost always send PDF's since they'll look the same in just about every reader. if it's something somebody else needs to edit, then i usually go with an MS Word document, which is a very portable format these days.

Comment Re:LOL (Score 1) 464

think about it like being on a vacation. you can't fill every minute of every day with something unique and fun. the problem with being on a space station is that you're on a space station. there isn't much to do up there to begin with.

Comment Re:Tax breaks for the rich? (Score 1) 260

Have you heard of Ford? What about GM? They compete! Believe it or not, they make similar products targeted at particular markets. They use marketing and pricing in an attempt to gain a greater share of these markets from eachother and other companies in these same markets.

Comment Re:Tax breaks for the rich? (Score 1) 260

Those rich people contribute a great amount to government coffers, but consume relatively little. As revenue declines, services suffer. If the top earners continue to leave a state, the revenue will continue to go down and poverty will get worse as the government has fewer funds available to pay for social services.

Comment Re:Tax breaks for the rich? (Score 1) 260

A) I'd like to eliminate both! Businesses contribute a very small portion of tax revenues already. The potential for job creation and general economic growth that would result has the potential to bring in that lost revenue and then some through personal income taxes.

B) Have you heard about this thing called competition? It's when businesses compete for greater shares of a market by lowering prices or increasing the quality of their product.

Comment Re:Tax breaks for the rich? (Score 0) 260

You're right, you'll spend the money either way. Eliminating business taxes has numerous benefits, however. It will eliminate the need for offshore tax havens, bringing mountains of capital back to the states. It will eliminate the need for businesses to jump through hoops for tax planning purposes, vastly reduce compliance and accounting costs, etc. Businesses spend great deals of time and energy dealing with the tax system, distracting them from the actual work the business does. I'd say it would be a huge benefit. And what better way to attact more investment and domestic economic growth than to dump business taxes?

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