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#21
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... NOYB wrote: wrote in message oups.com... The whole place underscores the importance of sustaining a viable middle class and illustrates what can happen when any group is allowed to prosper at the complete expense and without regard to its fellow citizens. Tax deductible? I do hope to write the entire thing off as journalistic research. So by stiffing the government out of taxes, are you prospering at the expense and without regard to your fellow citizens? That bulge in the side of my face isn't an absessed tooth, Doc. It's my tongue in my cheek. Lighten up, already. :-) ;-) |
#22
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posted to rec.boats
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NOYB,
You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... wrote in message oups.com... The whole place underscores the importance of sustaining a viable middle class and illustrates what can happen when any group is allowed to prosper at the complete expense and without regard to its fellow citizens. Tax deductible? I do hope to write the entire thing off as journalistic research. So by stiffing the government out of taxes, are you prospering at the expense and without regard to your fellow citizens? |
#23
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. |
#24
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 28 Nov 2005 12:39:36 -0500, Harry Krause wrote:
-- Don't pray in my public schools, and I won't think in your church. ...or anywhere else, for that matter. -- John H "It's not a *baby* kicking, beautiful bride, it's just a fetus!" [A Self-obsessed Hypocrite] |
#26
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. But there are always those educational seminars held in luxury vacations spots. The medical doctors seem to really be hooked on those. |
#27
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posted to rec.boats
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That is common with most businesses.
"P Fritz" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. But there are always those educational seminars held in luxury vacations spots. The medical doctors seem to really be hooked on those. |
#28
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "P Fritz" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. But there are always those educational seminars held in luxury vacations spots. The medical doctors seem to really be hooked on those. The only one I take advantage of is the annual Florida Dental Association meeting in Orlando. But I must get an advertisement for a new one in some exotic locale almost every day in the mail. I *will* be attending the ADA meeting in Hawaii in 2009 though. ;-) |
#29
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... NOYB wrote: "P Fritz" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. But there are always those educational seminars held in luxury vacations spots. The medical doctors seem to really be hooked on those. The only one I take advantage of is the annual Florida Dental Association meeting in Orlando. But I must get an advertisement for a new one in some exotic locale almost every day in the mail. I *will* be attending the ADA meeting in Hawaii in 2009 though. ;-) I get clients to pay for many of my trips. They usually want some sort of presentation from me at their meetings. Since I am on a retainer fee, they don't have to pay more for me to be there, so they're glad to pick up my airfare, hotel, meals, et cetera. I was invited to a meeting next month in Seattle, but I talked the client into putting me off until Spring. I do hope the sun shines a little in Seattle in the Spring. Do you claim the trip as income? |
#30
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "NOYB" wrote in message ink.net... "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... NOYB wrote: "P Fritz" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message nk.net... "Sir Rodney Smithers" Ask me about my knighthood. wrote in message ... NOYB, You are just upset because you would have to fill some cavities to write off your trip, but it still might be a good deal. There are all sorts of "grey area" methods to save taxes. Writing off non-business related trips as a business expense is not my way to save taxes. As a corporation, I could make my wife an officer, and then write-off *any* trip that I take by simply keeping a journal of daily "business meetings". But I consider that unethical...and would never do it. But there are always those educational seminars held in luxury vacations spots. The medical doctors seem to really be hooked on those. The only one I take advantage of is the annual Florida Dental Association meeting in Orlando. But I must get an advertisement for a new one in some exotic locale almost every day in the mail. I *will* be attending the ADA meeting in Hawaii in 2009 though. ;-) I get clients to pay for many of my trips. They usually want some sort of presentation from me at their meetings. Since I am on a retainer fee, they don't have to pay more for me to be there, so they're glad to pick up my airfare, hotel, meals, et cetera. I was invited to a meeting next month in Seattle, but I talked the client into putting me off until Spring. I do hope the sun shines a little in Seattle in the Spring. Do you claim the trip as income? "Narcissists are grandiose. They live in an artificial self invented from fantasies of absolute or perfect power, genius, beauty, etc. Normal people's fantasies of themselves, their wishful thinking, take the form of stories -- these stories often come from movies or TV, or from things they've read or that were read to them as children. They involve a plot, heroic activity or great accomplishments or adventu normal people see themselves in action, however preposterous or even impossible that action may be -- they see themselves doing things that earn them honor, glory, love, riches, fame, and they see these fantasy selves as personal potentials, however tenuous" "Narcissists' fantasies are tableaux or scenes, stage sets; narcissists are hung up on a particular picture that they think reflects their true selves (as opposed to the real self -- warts and all). Narcissists don't see themselves doing anything except being adored, and they don't see anyone else doing anything except adoring them. Moreover, they don't see these images as potentials that they may some day be able to live out, if they get lucky or everything goes right: they see these pictures as the real way they want to be seen right now (which is not the same as saying they think these pictures are the way they really are right now, but that is another story to be discussed elsewhere). Sometimes narcissistic fantasies are spectacularly grandiose -- imagining themselves as Jesus or a saint or hero or deity depicted in art -- but just as often the fantasies of narcissists are mediocre and vulgar, concocted from illustrations in popular magazines, sensational novels, comic books even. These artificial self fantasies are also static in time, going back unchanged to early adolescence or even to childhood; the narcissists' self-images don't change with time, so that you will find, for instance, female narcissists clinging to retro styles, still living the picture of the perfect woman of 1945 or 1965 as depicted in The Ladies' Home Journal or Seventeen or Vogue of that era, and male narcissists still hung up on images of comic-book or ripping adventure heroes from their youth. Though narcissists like pictures rather than stories, they like still pictures, not moving ones, so they don't base their fantasies on movies or TV." "Narcissists have strange work habits. Normal people work for a goal or a product, even if the goal is only a paycheck. Normal people measure things by how much they have to spend (in time, work, energy) to get the desired results. Normal people desire idleness from time to time, usually wanting as much free time as they can get to pursue their own thoughts and pleasures and interests. Narcissists work for a goal, too, but it's a different goal: they want power, authority, adulation. Lacking empathy, and lacking also context and affect, narcissists don't understand how people achieve glory and high standing; they think it's all arbitrary, it's all appearances, it's all who you know. So they try to attach themselves to people who already have what they want, meanwhile making a great show of working hard." |
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