Square Wants To Be a Bank But Doesn't Want To Be Taxed Like One (wsj.com) 111
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Wall Street Journal: Square has lent $5 billion to small businesses and consumers and applied for a banking license. It operates a nationwide mobile money-transfer business that serves 15 million Americans. But Square says it isn't a financial company. The San Francisco-based payments processor filed a lawsuit last week against its home city to recover $1.3 million in taxes, plus interest and attorneys' fees. Square argued that San Francisco was wrong to classify it as a financial company for tax purposes because it is a technology company that should be subject to a lower tax rate. The refund Square is seeking from San Francisco relates to excess taxes it believes it paid for 2014 and 2015, years when Square was a much smaller company. Square disclosed in its most recent securities filing that it may have to pay San Francisco additional taxes for subsequent years if it was unable to convince the city it was a tech company.
The company said in its complaint that its San Francisco operations more closely resemble a technology company than a financial-services firm. The company has roughly 2,200 employees in San Francisco. Square also said in its lawsuit that San Francisco overstates Square's gross receipts because it includes money that the company doesn't get to keep. Square takes a 2.75% cut of most credit-card payments to its small-business customers. More than half of what Square derives from those transactions must be paid out to banks and credit-card networks, the company said. San Francisco's treasurer and tax collector, Jose Cisneros, said that his office's audit of Square was "thorough and fair" and that he stands by its findings. Mr. Cisneros is also a defendant in the case.
The company said in its complaint that its San Francisco operations more closely resemble a technology company than a financial-services firm. The company has roughly 2,200 employees in San Francisco. Square also said in its lawsuit that San Francisco overstates Square's gross receipts because it includes money that the company doesn't get to keep. Square takes a 2.75% cut of most credit-card payments to its small-business customers. More than half of what Square derives from those transactions must be paid out to banks and credit-card networks, the company said. San Francisco's treasurer and tax collector, Jose Cisneros, said that his office's audit of Square was "thorough and fair" and that he stands by its findings. Mr. Cisneros is also a defendant in the case.
easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
tax technology companies at the same rate
Re:easy solution (Score:5, Interesting)
tax technology companies at the same rate
Well the joke is right there in the summary:
Square has lent $5 billion to small businesses and consumers and applied for a banking license . . . But Square says it isn't a financial company.
Well, I guess if they are not a financial company, the wouldn't need a banking license, no . . . ?
Re:easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:easy solution (Score:5, Informative)
How about if they were a smart company, they'd move the fuck out of San Francisco in a big hurry and to a more tax friendly town....or even state.
From the article
Last year, Square Chief Executive Jack Dorsey opposed a local ballot measure, Proposition C, that would have increased taxes on Square and other businesses to raise money to fight homelessness in San Francisco. Salesforce.com Inc. CEO Marc Benioff rebuked Mr. Dorsey for his position and questioned how much Mr. Dorsey had given back to the city.
Square “would be taxed at a significantly larger total contribution than much larger companies like Salesforce,” Mr. Dorsey wrote on Twitter last October, saying the measure was unfair to Square and fintech startups.
San Francisco voters approved Proposition C last November. A month later, Square announced plans to open a large new office across the Bay Bridge in Oakland.
Good luck doing business in SF/CA then! (Score:1)
No business in CA ever again. (Not allowed to use government services, like infrastructure.) Or pay up, no matter where you reside.
Your choice, ya fuckin leech!
I'm kidding. Leeches can't not leech. You'll try to buy the government. Hell, murder a few people, like good old Rockefeller! Gotta break eggs to steal^Wmake profit, right?
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I"m guessing a decent number would move. I'm guessing a decent number of them could work remotely.
And there are plenty of qualified people all over the US that would love to take a well paying job, at a new and growing company like this, no matter where they relocate.
I'm guessing more than a couple of SF workers shouldn't mind moving from the unreasonably
Re: uh huh (Score:2)
No one outside of SF and NYC is willing to pay enough for a remote SF worker to live off of.
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I know you didn't pick the example, but Austin would be a bad example. One advantage that California has over Texas is that the real estate taxes are much lower. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_California_Proposition_13 [wikipedia.org]
Section 1. (a) The maximum amount of any ad valorem tax on real property shall not exceed one percent (1%) of the full cash value of such property. The one percent (1%) tax to be collected by the counties and apportioned according to law to the districts within the counties.
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Then we convince them to build a wall/moat to keep the scurge out (or in depending upon your view).
Load 16 tons and what do you get? (Score:2)
Company towns sound like a great idea! I can't believe we haven't done that before.... I can't for the life of me see a way that it could end badly.
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Yes, the property taxes may be higher, but California makes up for that by having a state income tax of up to 12.3% (which Texas doesn't have at all).
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Well, I"m of the thought that at least for a few of the employees....given 2 choices of move to new job, or you're out of a job, will consider moving.
And for those that do not...well, there's plenty of folks out there that would love to take those jobs if they moved and had openings.
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tax technology companies at the same rate
Well the joke is right there in the summary:
Square has lent $5 billion to small businesses and consumers and applied for a banking license . . . But Square says it isn't a financial company.
Well, I guess if they are not a financial company, the wouldn't need a banking license, no . . . ?
If your main product is money, you are a financial company. I would have thought that was obvious (unless you want to weasel out of taxes I guess). In the same way banks use and develop a ton of tech but that doesn't make them tech companies.
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Simple solution is to tax all the same.
But fighting the tax authorities is a futile effort, they have stamina and resources to bring to court that anyone else could dream of, so fighting them is going to be a nightmare.
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In the same way banks use and develop a ton of tech
If banks really developed and kept up on tech like they should, Square would have never existed. But that doesn't make Square a technology company.
Re: easy solution (Score:2)
Banks develop technology all the time. But it's not consumer ready. They fundamentally have the wrong culture to develop SUCCESSFUL consumer tech.
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Uh, my bank owns its own tech subsidiary that makes the CC machines, and the one that does the processing. Saves me money, and gets me better service.
Square is for people who have shitty credit because they over-leveraged their business so bad that they can't get a real merchant account. And people who are just so bad at shopping around that they can't find a better processor.
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Square is also for people who do such low volume by CC, that it actually costs more in monthly fees to have a merchant account (me included).
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That's odd, I don't even have to pay monthly fees.
Are you really sure it isn't because you suck at shopping for business services?
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If by that, you mean I won't deal with companies that funnel you through sales people and don't offer transparent pricing on their web site, then yes.
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No, and if you think those are the choices, it underlines what I was saying about shopping for the service.
Maybe you wave your hands and just believe, "they're all the same, except the appers!" But you're paying extra. A lot extra.
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You've really presented no evidence to the contrary. I know what's out there. I'm not seeing anything significantly less.
See also, Uber, AirBnB, Lyft (Score:2)
AirbnB isn't a hotelier, it's a technology platform. It should be exempt from taxes and regulations.
Lyft and Uber don't have to treat their taxi drivers like employees, they're technology companies.
Fuck it, even WeWork is claiming to be a technology company, not a coworking space.
They're all bullshit claims for the purposes of avoiding taxes, ignoring regulation and fleecing investors. If you get paid primarily for X, you're an X company. Apple and Microsoft are tech companies.
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IMO there isn't even such a legit thing as a "technology company." Just count them as they really are, part of whatever industry their product would otherwise be in.
If you make accounting software, you're a financial company. If you make airplane control software, you're an aerospace company.
Easy, simple, clear.
Apple would be a consumer electronics company, and Microsoft would be that too, but primarily a business services/consulting company.
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I mean, someone making accounting software isn't a financial company any more than ledger printers in the past were. Some companies produce new inventions. Think Bell Labs. But when most people say "technology" they think "software". esp. when they are talking about scalability of tech companies. And a lot of companies do sell software.
The question is, what better explains their business model? Uber doesn't sell software, they sell taxis. Game companies sell games. But Oracle sells software that peo
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A ledger company is clearly a business supply company using the system I suggested.
And why do you think people think of "technology" as "software?" That's just a totally random grab at the air with no apparent foundation.
And very few companies sell software, especially among these so-called "technology companies." Ones that do sell software don't normally describe themselves is broad terms like being a "technology company." They're actually more likely to be a professional services company, like IBM, who se
And a few lines down... (Score:3)
Well the joke is right there in the summary:
Well keep reading further down, then:
And keep in mind that square filed their request for a banking license in 2018, after having abandoned their 2017 attempt [reuters.com].
Well, I guess if they are not a financial company, the wouldn't need a banking license, no . . . ?
The weren't a financial company back in 2014 and 2015 so they seek to get reimbursement for some taxes back then, but are one now-ish so they think they need a banking license no in 2017-2018.
Two d
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It's incumbent on Square to keep its taxes low. Its attorneys will fight the classification. They should've done this before, but it's still possible to receive a refund should a judge decide in their favor.
Conversely, if Square meets the SF test of being a financial company, then they should pay SF government's litigation expenses.
My third party observation says: it's going to be a tough battle for them, but sometimes legal departments are persuasive and it looks good to the investors to attempt to cut new
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Reminds of an old saw about legal arguments over a broken borrowed kettle. "Your honor, my client could not have possibly broken the kettle because, one, he never received the kettle, and two, the kettle was already broken when he got it."
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If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck...
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Or stop allowing "technology company" to be a designation. Nearly every large company is a "technology company." It is a meaningless term.
If you provide software for other financial companies to use, you are a software services firm. If you develop software to provide financial services yourself, you are a financial services firm. And providing financial services to advisors or other financial services firms is still providing financial services, so you cannot claim you're a software services firm just beca
hilarious. (Score:2)
Following the government's lead (Score:2)
They say they are a financial company, for licensing, and want to not be a financial company, for taxes. That's cute. But they're just following government's lead.
In the original ACA (Obamacare) case, the government was asked what part of the Constitution gives the federal government* the right to force people to purchase healthcare plans.
Feds: It's a tax of $695 per person - and a tax credit if you buy an approved healthcare plan. We have the power to pass a tax.
States: Okay, taxes have to be initiated b
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Because it's forced awful healthcare on the majority at a higher price than the decent healthcare they had before..
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Because it's forced awful healthcare on the majority at a higher price than the decent healthcare they had before..
It's the exact same doctors, nurses, hospitals and machines. It's just how it's paid for. The question is do you want one payer getting a good price and you putting a little bit in or do you wants lots of payers getting reamed and you pay most of it? Hmmmm, tough choice. Really what it is, is America is very 'fuck you, I got mine' and you just can't stand the idea that you might be supporting someone else and ignore that they are also supporting you and it works better for everyone.
UK spends approx 4000 p
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It's the exact same doctors, nurses, hospitals and machines. It's just how it's paid for. The question is do you want one payer getting a good price and you putting a little bit in or do you wants lots of payers getting reamed and you pay most of it?
There are exactly four ways to spend money. Ordered by efficiency they are:
1) I spend my money on me. I will try to balance quality against cost to maximize my benefit. (Ex. Buying a new tool for myself off of Amazon.)
2) I spend my money on someone else. Cost will be much more important to me than quality, so I will let quality slide to save money. (Ex. Buying a retirement gift for a coworker.)
3) I spend someone else's money on myself. Quality is paramount, and I will struggle to get as much as I can.
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You show as much understanding of Americans as you do economics. By every statistic available, Americans are the most generous people in the world. Really, what it is, is America is very realistic. They realize that handing healthcare decisions over to faceless bureaucrats fixes nothing other than the empire expansion dreams of bureaucrats. We prefer to make decisions for ourselves. If you want a nanny state to mother you to the grave, then move to one. The world is full of them.
there are already bureaucrats making medical decisions, it's just they work for the medical coverage companies instead of the government.
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You had a kid? How much did that cost you? How ever had a serious disease or illness? Whats the cost of that? How many people go bankrupt or are left to die because they don't have the right policy or can't afford the copay? What happens if you get something not covered by your policy?
Trying to
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You don't understand, because you think the ACA or health insurance is about healthcare. It's not. It is about who will pay for healthcare.
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It is about who will pay for healthcare.
Nah mate, it's about how much they can charge for healthcare.
WTF? (Score:2)
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Which raises the question: how can a supposedly conservative organization push an agenda to increase the size of government and make it more intrusive in people's lives? Not to mention forcing people to give up their money.
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Which raises the question: how can a supposedly conservative organization push an agenda to increase the size of government and make it more intrusive in people's lives? Not to mention forcing people to give up their money.
When you realize that both sides play the cronyism game... It's all about the money.
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Red herring comment. The post is clearly an example of a situation where the government also holds a double standard to get things done in a technically "illegal" way.
Just because he lingered on and spoke at a length greater than necessary to get the point across is irrelevant.
So to help you out since you cannot figure it out for yourself apparently, is that because the government likes to have its cake and eat it too, then Square believes they should be able to have its cake and eat it too as well.
Sure tw
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ACA and Square's classification are both taxation disputes for a court to decide.
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One is a for-profit corporation. The other is a government program. Those are two very different things.
hint: To the Fascists those are the same thing.
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Looks rather like they say "we're not a financial company, but we want to be one. But since we're not one, we shouldn't have to have paid taxes like one till they approve the license that lets us be one"....
They identify as a bank (Score:5, Insightful)
Square presented themselves to me as a bank and made no bones about it. They offered me online payment processing and banking services. There is absolutely no logical or legal grounds for them to claim that they are anything other than a financial institution.
I thought square was the less crappy alternative to PayPal, but now i see they are equivalent. Both are full of shit.
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It's not costing them much to sue and may gain them some results, so why not. It likely won't work.
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It could be very nasty for them if they win.
If they're not a financial institution then they're in breach of a myriad of federal laws.
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Also, what do they think employees of financial services companies do? Most of it's technology. If they win this, all the proprietary trading, brokerage and investment companies will be able to argue that they're technology companies.
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Exactly. All banks are technology companies, their entire business is data protection, transmission and management.
It just happens to be highly valuable data.
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drinkypoo summarized:
I thought square was the less crappy alternative to PayPal, but now i see they are equivalent. Both are full of shit.
Did you catch the fact that Square's CEO (and principle shareholder) is Jack Dorsey - you know, the guy who also founded and remains in charge of Twitter?
That Square would be just as full of shit as Twitter is was always a foregone conclusion ...
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A politician was asked about simplifying the tax code. His response: "Why would we give up that much power?"
The US tax code is 6,000 pages for a reason.
They just proved to be a bank (Score:2, Insightful)
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Fixed that for you.
Like everybody who hates his country. (Score:1)
I actually want my roads to be fine, my family saved when my house burns, and my parcs to be cared for, thank you very much.
Without feeding a criminal (aka profit), in case you wanted to say that.
The only thing I have a problem with, is both having no choice if I want to support murderers (for-profit / offensive warfare) and thieves (bank bailouts, tax exemptions etc).
But that is what you get, when you let those very criminals run for office and spread lies; ruining your govenment and democracy.
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So, tell me, do you not take your deductions? Do you kick in some additional money when pay (you can do that, you know)? Or do you pay as little as possible, same as everybody else?
We UsE cOmPuTeRs We ArE a TeCh CoMpaNy (Score:2)
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As if normal banks didn't use computers. Square is funny.
They are missing a trick. They should ask people to give them money then they can claim to be a charity. Better yet, a church.
Nah, just be a bank. (Score:1)
All churches get to make up literally out of thin air, is deities. Useless.
Banks get to make up *money*. Which is like a deity, but with real power.
Like the power to buy yourself a government with media ads, err, news, and a few lobbyist puppets, err, polticians.
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All churches get to make up literally out of thin air, is deities. Useless. Banks get to make up *money*. Which is like a deity, but with real power. Like the power to buy yourself a government with media ads, err, news, and a few lobbyist puppets, err, polticians.
Get yourself a megachurch and you can make more money than you could ever know what to do with, apart from pay tax on it of course, you don't have to put in to the systems that benefit you if you have the right sky buddy.
They aren't a bank... (Score:2)
Banks have better customer service, and you can actually talk to someone...
And that' not saying much ... (Score:1)
Two days for a money transfer? Which is just a single TLS-encrypted packet in any sane world.
Charging me money... for charging money! (E.g. processing fees, for sending me a letter I specifically said I do not want, about charging me processing fees.)
Not even able to withdraw anything not divisible by 10 EUR, unless I travel halfway around the city?
Congratulations! You're dealing with a bank!
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This makes perfect sense . . . (Score:2)
. . . in whatever delusional world these companies operate in. Sort of like how We Co. insists it's a technology company instead of an office leasing company (something that capital markets apparently have finally realized as We Co.'s IPO valuation drops through the floor).
Disruption (Score:3)
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Good luck with that! (Score:1)
Goldman Sachs is writing a lawsuit to declare it a tech company as we speak.
As is any other of those greedy thieves.
"I'm a tech company! I take your $8, make up $92 out of thin air, lend $100 to a sucker, and demand $8 a year, or even month, for that 'hard work', and give you 0.5% ... of your $8... per year! That requires a lot of sneaky tech...niques! Ain't I an inventive thief?!"
Reverse argument? (Score:2)
Can we try the reverse argument of this? I'm not a corporation but I want to be taxed like one. Yay, no more taxes!
gross receipts (Score:1)
Gross receipts ARE what you received before you deduct any expenses.
Do their lawyers really think this bullshit will fool any judge? Or is it just pandering to the fuckwit libertarian audience of Brogrammer Valley?
But everyone is a tech company (Score:1)
Every new on-line based start-up competing in or with traditional industries wants the customers, benefits and profits, without any of those nasty bothersome legal obligations and regulations.
Square is in the financial business, AirBnB is in the hotel business, Uber is in the taxi business, etc. etc. etc. All need and depend on being able to access at least a few of the services government provides, and all are (in theory) for-profit businesses. There is no reason not to apply the same regulations and obl
Focus on games (Score:2)
I saw this same story ... (Score:2)
... but the characters were different.
It was Uber. "We are not a taxi company, we're a tech company."
Guns (Score:2)
Do they get to keep banning guns and gun accessories from their platform if they're a bank?
How about donations to Wikileaks?
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Pity I can't just form rsilvergun INC (Score:2)
How can you trust electronic funds transfers? (Score:2)
"Technology Company" is NOT a business type (Score:2)
All companies use technology. Google and Facebook are advertising companies. Microsoft is a software company. Intel and AMD are manufacturing companies. Apple is a hardware, software and services company. Amazon is a retailer and cloud services firm.
Clearly, if you want a functional description of Square, it is a financial services company. The root of this obfuscation is the stock market which created "Tech Sector" as a category which is frankly as stupid, in 2019 as referring to "digital xxxx" products
"Applied for a banking license." (Score:2)
If the applied for a banking license then they currently are not a bank in the legal sense of the word...which really is the only sense that matters.
There are actual regulations as to what a bank is. Although I would like to believe that the taxing authorities used the correct classification process, I suspect that the taxing authorities may have been a little overzealous when it comes to revenue collection.
Who you gonna believe, me or your lyin eyes? (Score:2)
They take in money. They hold money. They lend money. They offer financial services. But they aren't a bank. A company has transmogrified right before our eyes. It's a Festivus miracle!
This can all be solved in one fell swoop:
City of San Fran: "Not a problem sir. Just sign here surrendering your financial licenses and we'll cut a check."
*Crickets*
Break your business up. (Score:1)
Granted you will still be taxed as a bank on part of your overall business.
And that's the norm . . . (Score:2)
Some University of Pennsylvania academic shyster professor classified their move "as brilliant" --- no dou
Hmmm... They take in and process payments (Score:3)
That sounds exactly like what Paypal does and it has a name. It's an ACH (automated clearing house).
A number of years back a Paypal supervisor who was jerking me around over a refund, made the mistake of telling me that they were an ACH in the process of telling me they were exempt from banking regulations. Bad mistake. WIthin an hour I knew exactly what regulations they WEREN'T exempt from and which they were in violation of. Refund processed in less that 12 hours from there.
Story aside, I think I see a pattern here... We do it with computers so wer'e not a ( transport/financial/medical ) company, we're a tech company.
I seem to recall, there was a supreme court ruling around patents (my recall is a wee touch foggy about how long ago) that said "do it with a computer" doesn't make it unique. Obviously, I'm not a lawyer, but I'd think that principal would hold across the board. Some corporate lawyer is gonna get body parts handed to them.
And with THAT said, in the healthcare industry, there has long been the commentary that pay for procedure is bad vs paid for outcome, because they just pump the procedures to get paid. Sounds a little like lawyers running up dubious legal theories doesn't it. They get paid either way.
Re: Mind your own business (Score:3, Insightful)
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Theft from them eventually gets paid for by customers.
With politicians you rarely get what was promised.
Forget if you voted for a loser, then force will be used to make you comply with what you voted against.
Bureaucrats make all kinds of regulations you have even less control over.
Although you can buy some influence there, usually in order to block competitors.
In comparison companies are much easier/better regulated by the people: don't buy their product/se
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Yes, preview mode is useless to me.
Well, it would be the Christian thing to do. (Score:1)
I'm a healthy person, but the Christans and Muslims got one thing right: You are forbidden to take interest. And generally, if you take money, you should have worked for *that* money. (Helloo media industry! Yes, I'm looking at you. And at the banks and stock traders behind you.)
Sadly, only the fundamentalists seem to take that seriously nowadays. (And a few muslim banks. Which take a fixed amount of money for a fixed amount of money they lend you, agreed in advance. And simply do what everybody else does w
They are only cash-strapped *because* ... (Score:1)
Banks leech off of them, and assholes inject lobbyist puppet politicians and don't pay their taxes.
Ditto for state government debts.
Remember the bank bailout? What was it? $1.4 trillion?
No. The Federal Reserve actually "lend" them $14 (!) trillion. At 0.1% interest. Which they promply lend to the very same government. For 3.5% interest!
You couldn't get a better definition of free money if you tried. Well, except now there was more money... but still the the amount of work force. So inflation. So you now hav