Recent Posts

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Is the 5 year R&D depreciation tax still present???

All R&D costs, payroll for example, have to be depreciated over 5 years since 2022. Deadly for any company that does significant R&D (includes companies that pay programmers to create new programs). Very expensive for R&D heavy businesses.
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Wonder what the stipulations are on the Social Security taxation. I begin drawing mine in August, but I’m still working for another couple of years. I can’t imagine mine not being taxed being I have a primary income.

@NavyCanDo   Here...read this I hope it helps

What to know about the $6,000 ‘senior deduction’ in GOP megabill
https://thehill.com/business/personal-finance/5381335-senate-social-security-tax-deduction/
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Wonder what the stipulations are on the Social Security taxation. I begin drawing mine in August, but I’m still working for another couple of years. I can’t imagine mine not being taxed being I have a primary income. 
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Tucker On Twitter / Re: Tucker says Iran is no threat to U.S.
« Last post by rustynail on Today at 08:01:45 pm »
Tucker proves middle aged crazy is a thing.
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Tucker On Twitter / Re: Tucker says Iran is no threat to U.S.
« Last post by Cyber Liberty on Today at 07:45:20 pm »
First time I have responded to a Tucker thread in quite a while... He is still an idiot it seems.

He's gotten so edgy he has fallen off the flat Earth.
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Trump administration torpedoes SCOTUS with emergency requests and sees surprising success

The dizzying pace of applications comes as the administration looks to advance some of Trump’s sweeping policy actions

 By Breanne Deppisch Fox News
Published July 3, 2025 6:26pm EDT | Updated July 3, 2025 6:37pm EDT

The Supreme Court ended its term last week, but the justices aren’t done yet, partly due to a legal blitz President Donald Trump has strategically deployed in his second term, one that’s proven surprisingly effective in advancing his sweeping agenda.

Lawyers for the Trump administration filed their 20th emergency application to the Supreme Court Thursday in just a 23-week period.

The dizzying pace of applications comes as the administration looks to advance some of Trump’s sweeping policy actions. And, in many cases, the court’s 6-3 majority has given the administration the green light to proceed.

The high court has ruled in Trump’s favor in the majority of emergency applications, allowing the administration to proceed with its ban on transgender service members in the military, its termination of millions of dollars in Education Department grants and its firing of probationary employees across the federal government, among many other actions.

Like most emergency orders, the rulings are often unsigned, giving little indication what the justices might be thinking.

Emergency applications — and the Supreme Court’s responses — aren’t meant to offer lasting relief. But Trump has found success using a "move fast and break things" strategy to push key requests through the court’s so-called "shadow" docket.

For context, Trump has filed more emergency applications in five months than his predecessors did in years. Former President Joe Biden submitted just 19 over his entire term, while presidents Obama and George W. Bush filed only eight combined during their time in office.

more
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-administration-torpedoes-scotus-emergency-requests-sees-surprising-success
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Tucker On Twitter / Re: Tucker says Iran is no threat to U.S.
« Last post by Sighlass on Today at 07:33:38 pm »
First time I have responded to a Tucker thread in quite a while... He is still an idiot it seems.
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Justice Alito's warning about nationwide injunction 'loophole' looms over Trump cases
AG Bondi criticized 'rogue' judge for attempting to undermine Supreme Court's decision on nationwide blocks
By Ashley Oliver Fox News
Published July 3, 2025 2:54pm EDT

Justice Samuel Alito raised concerns about a "potentially significant loophole" in the Supreme Court's decision to curb universal injunctions, and now his warning is hanging over lawsuits involving President Donald Trump.

Alito said in his concurring opinion in Trump v. CASA that class action lawsuits and lawsuits brought by states leave room for judges to hand down injunctions that, in practice, would function the same way a universal injunction does.

"Federal courts should thus be vigilant against such potential abuses of these tools," Alito said.

Alito's warning comes as judges continue to hand down sweeping rulings and as plaintiffs begin filing lawsuits tailored to avoid running into the new roadblock established by the high court.

In one major ruling, Judge Randolph Moss, an Obama appointee based in Washington, D.C., found this week that Trump's proclamation declaring an "invasion" at the border was unlawful.

Trump's proclamation restricted migrants from claiming asylum when crossing into the United States, a practice the Trump administration says has been abused by border crossers.

more
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/justice-alitos-warning-about-nationwide-injunction-loophole-looms-over-trump-cases
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