I don't think Donald Trump is volounteering to personally go through the accounts himself. I don't think he will even delegate it to one other person, it may take several people to go through the $4.3tn that disappears there each year.
Phillip.
Book claims earth is flat: https://www.amazon.com/Greatest-Lie-Earth-Proof-Moving/dp/1943056013/ref=sr_1_1
Brexit will never happen, Labour will win the General Election, and other bull : independent.co.uk
Anonymous Coward is a sociopath : according to some online test he took.
Phillip.
Trump threatened to defund NATO as they are one of the only members meeting their spending commitments. So yes you can defund the military for political reasons. In the Ukraine, the police was so corrupt they had to start again. They absolutely defunded the police force (militsiya). And there are certainly scandal rocked schools that got shut down.
The WHO, who had at one point Robert Mugabe as its "good will ambassador", has gotten everything catatrophically wrong. They can hardly claim budget constraints. They get $4.3tn per year. Even overlooking epic corruption, if they can't do the one thing they are paid to do then that money is being wasted. Personally I don't blame Trump for demanding an investigation as to where American tax payers money is going.
Phillip.
Not buying either. I've no problem dropping $1k on a phone, max $1.5k, but the lack of headphones, SD card and removable battery are becoming deal breakers for me. The first is just personal, as I much prefer normal headphones to the wireless ones. I don't even have expensive ones I don't want to give up, just the free ones that come with the phone. Second and third are because I work in real estate. Transferring a few GB by usb is painful. And running out of battery is an absolute disaster. My favourite phone was my Note2. Several days battery, custom ROM, and I could switch battery in an emergency in seconds.
Rather than buy the Note 20, I am thinking dropping down from my current phone to one that has those features. Wait until the next gen that has a great low light camera.
Phillip.
Of course the embassy it trying to find a loophole to get rid of him without him being murdered by the USA. They'd dress him up as a DHL delivery guy if they thought that would work. Hardly news.
Phillip.
If Putin wants Greenland he will just take it, he doesn't need to be offered. He is a little busy taking over Europe and the Middle East at the moment though.
I doubt there will be anything interesting there if it was abandoned in 1960.
Philip.
A lot of troll posts here, wonder if they are by the same person? Possibly as they show a basic grasp of fundamentals.
Phillip.
That's not a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme promises great immediate returns, and uses investors money to pay off other investors to fool people into thinking they are. Nobody is buying into Tesla to make a quick buck. I doubt people invested large sums because they expected every car to be electric by 2020.
They are sold at a loss because it takes continued R&D to bring the costs down. To short sighted people like yourself, R&D is a considered a waste of money. However refining the world's most advanced car manufacturing plant, developing and integrating the software and battery technologies, all takes time and money. In the mean time building up a significant patent portfolio. See the sale of the patent portfolios of Motorola or Nokia to see how much this can be worth.
Starting from scratch is expensive. We all hope they can make it. Mobile phones were sold at a loss for a long time after they came out, but I wouldn't like to be without mine now.
Phillip.
I'm happy to hear that yet another piece of "alternative", "stick-it-to-The-Man" payment infrastructure has been burgled. Really.
Then you are rather a sick individual.
You see, a large part of the appeal of bitcoin comes from its aura of "under the radar", "the authorities need never find out" financial transactions.
No it isn't. A large part of the appeal of mobile phones to terrorists is ease of communication, however most people are not terrorists. I think a lot of people are interested because you can transfer money anywhere in the world instantly with no transaction charge. No VISA, Western Union, Paypal, etc. You can access your money for free too. I pay through the nose in bank charges for access to my own money. In France, you even pay a monthly charge to own a credit card!
For the first group (criminals) I believe it serves as a useful deterrent, or at least a risk and a complication.
Er no, I don't think criminals keep their money on Bitcoin exchanges.
So to summarise, we should wait outside your house and then kick the crap out of you and take all your belongings so you get a personal reminder that there are not so nice people out there? Enjoy living in YOUR world. And no don't bother talking about the police as your "safeguard", you know there is a 99.99% chance they won't do anything.
Phillip.
If the bank gets robbed, the insurance replaces your money. You pay for this in bank fees. Nothing to stop somebody starting a Bitcoin insurance, so your money will be as safe as in a bank. That way you get the security without all the extortionate transfer fees.
Phillip.
Not just the Greeks but people lost their money in Iceland and Cyprus. People get their accounts hacked, card cloned, etc, all the time. Credit card fraud is way more than Bitcoin, and that cost just gets passed onto the bank customer (ie you).
It's amazing that people like JustAnotherOldGuy think banks are still safe. In the UK, anybody that has any sense spreads their money amongst multiple banks keeping under £75,000 (the amount guaranteed by the government) in each one.
For under $1000 I wouldn't even keep a backup more effort than a USB stick.
Phillip.
Actually when banks get robbed you can lose your money. It happens all the time. Sometimes you get a portion back, in the UK the government guarantees up to £75,000, or in the case where the Spanish banks where supposed to be holding your money for property investment you get none back. Try looking up what happened to those with their money in the Cyprus and Icelandic banks.
Phillip.
Have you been to Germany? I've driven through a number of times and have been surprised to see how similar it is to driving through England (except with nicer cars). Especially the suburbs where the houses and the shops look so familiar. They also love their pubs, with similar pub grub (but with no horse in their sausages). I was in Berlin yesterday and it's certainly not the prettiest of German cities but it's definitely not the ugliest in the west. If you drive through the large Turkish areas then you will get a bad impression. Then again if a tourist drove down Tooting Broadway they wouldn't think England the most elegant place in the world.
If you think of Rome as a beautiful place to visit then maybe you should try? It's dirty, covered in graffiti, crime-ridden, people trying to force knocked-off goods on you every street corner. The banking system in Italy is on the verge of collapse too. Paris is nice but try going to Marseilles. See how long you can live there before you get your first beating.
Merkel's immigration policy may have upset a lot of people and caused chaos across Europe, but that's not Germany as a people or a place.
Phillip.
given the level of misinformation being peddled by the anti-EU media
Are you kidding? Did you not see the level of misinformation peddled by the Remain camp? They rolled out everyone from celebrities to the IMF, and even the American President Mr Obama, to say what a disaster it would be telling some real whoppers.. Some in the Leave camp may have published ropey information but there is NO WAY you can say it wasn't both sides peddling misinformation.
The referendum was not unnecessary, it was an election pledge made by Mr Cameron and the public voted him into office with that being one of the promises he made. Mr Cameron has always been a man of integrity, and despite the great political risk he kept his promise. Ok it destroyed him. But he did what he thought was the right thing.
Phillip.
Everything that can be invented has been invented. -- Charles Duell, Director of U.S. Patent Office, 1899