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Josephat42 karma
You can get away with it for one or two years, but can you for seven? Because when they find that one, they're going to go back a long way, and the penalties and interest are going to kill you.
Literally - I knew someone who killed themself when it was the only way out of that debt.
Josephat11 karma
Carter was and is weirdly perceived as a liberal leader. A 'liberal' who deregulated the oil industry/fixed prices (badly impacting the economy, but a windfall for the industry) and began the process to deregulate other industries. He was also seen as 'weak on defense' when he supported every major military program save the B-1 (Trident, MX, Pershings, cruise missiles, B-2, etc).
Regardless of Carter's true heart, do you think he was miss-packaged as a president and candidate in 1980?
Josephat6 karma
I've worked in public and private. IRS trains very well, and they're very efficient with the craptastic, old computer hardware they have to deal with (largely due to Congressional funding restrictions and some bad management).
Josephat56 karma
*When the Sons of Anarchy script called for Jax Teller to let out every last bit of hate he had for Clay Morrow (Ron Perlman) this season, Charlie Hunnam didn’t just act it — he lived it. Off screen, Hunnam decided to avoid Perlman at all costs. If they were in the same vicinity, he’d flat out ignore him.
The trouble is, he didn’t let Perlman in on his plan.
“I decided as difficult as it was going to be, I wasn’t going to talk with him, not even say good morning to him and not tell him why I was doing it,” Hunnam told EW exclusively. “I just hoped he would understand, to know that it was just about work and that it wasn’t anything personal.”
He didn’t talk about his motivation for giving his co-star the cold shoulder until he did press for Frankie Go Boom, an indie film he starred in with Perlman this year. Only then did Perlman learn what his younger co-star had been doing.*
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