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Everything posted by S e u o n g

  1. my vote for DH1, nice music, Rhythm| , is more chilling I like it more than DH2,
  2. Joe Biden on Tuesday released his 2019 tax returns, which show he and his wife, Jill, paid nearly $ 300,000 in federal income tax last year and had an adjusted gross income of about $ 985,000. Biden's release of his 2019 tax returns come hours before the first presidential debate and two days after The New York Times reported that President Donald Trump paid no federal income taxes whatsoever in 10 out of 15 years beginning in 2000. Trump paid just $ 750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017, the Times reported. Trump has not released his tax returns to the public, which breaks decades of precedent for major-party presidential nominees and presidents. READ: 2019 tax returns for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris California Sen. Kamala Harris also released her 2019 tax returns on Tuesday, which showed that she and her husband, Doug Emhoff, paid about $ 1.2 million in taxes and had an adjusted gross income of about $ 3 million. "This is a historic level of transparency and it will give the American people faith once again that their leaders will look out for them and not their own bottom line," Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield told reporters on Tuesday, noting that Biden has now released more than two decades of tax returns. The Bidens made $ 14,700 in charitable donations, according to the tax documents. They show the Bidens earned income from Northern Virginia Community College, where Jill Biden teaches, and the University of Pennsylvania, where Joe Biden led a center for diplomacy. They also earned income from speeches and books, which passed through corporations they had established. Biden was a six-term senator before joining Barack Obama's presidential ticket, and his financial disclosures often showed that he was among the Senate's least wealthy members. He has described himself as "Middle Class Joe" on the campaign trail. But in the two years after he left the White House, Biden made $ 15.6 million, largely through speaking fees and book profits. He and Jill made $ 11 million in 2017 and $ 4.6 million in 2018, and paid $ 3.7 million in taxes in 2017 and $ 1.5 million in 2018, financial documents released by Biden's campaign last year show. The bombshell Times report on Trump's taxes draws on more than two decades of tax information and outlines Trump's extensive financial losses and years of tax avoidance. Trump's taxes also show he claimed a $ 72.9 million refund, which has become the subject of an Internal Revenue Service audit, for taxes he had paid between 2005 and 2008. Trump denied the Times story at a White House briefing on Sunday and claimed that he pays "a lot" in federal income taxes. This story has been updated with additional information about Biden and Trump's tax returns.
  3. my vote is for DH2, For personal taste. I like Allan Walker music. (I listen to while I play LoL) I really like this rhythm
  4. Video title : Gettin 'DOCKED By the FAIL! | Funny Fails | AFV 2020 Content creator ( Youtuber ) : America's Funniest Home Videos Official YT video :
  5. Hello, You have good activity, and I would like you to return to the staff.
  6. American Airlines surpasses its olive feat: it will save millions on fuel by changing beverage carts Are you a cost control freak? Well if so, you are in luck. His company of reference when it comes to being creative in cuts has done it again. American Airlines, the airline that in 1987 achieved a place of honor in the anecdotes of all the managers of the world by saving $ 40,000 a year just by removing an olive from the salads that were served in first class has a new objective: the trolleys of drinks. Even more difficult. After American Airlines left CFOs around the world astonished after managing to save some 40,000 dollars during the 1980s just by eliminating one olive from each salad served in first class, the airline seems to be going to repeat the ' feat '... but with considerably more savings. This time the story is provided by the Bloomberg news agency - about the 'feat' of the olive there are people who believe that it is an urban legend, despite the fact that the main media still talk about the news - and although 20 years have passed , the goal of the airline again is catering. Lighter carts The company is targeting beverage carts and, specifically, their weight, and for this reason it has announced that it will replace the current ones with which it serves beverages on its flights, with another nine kilos lighter. Although it sounds anecdotal, this measure would mean a significant reduction in the total weight carried by its aircraft. Specifically, 190 kilos in the Boeing 777 and 54 in the MD-80. Fuel savings This will have repercussions, as it was not very difficult to suppose, in a saving for the company in fuel more than considerable. Although neither the airline nor the Bloomberg news agency have just estimated the same, according to some figures that both provide - such as reducing around 45 kilos of weight in the devices represents an estimated annual saving of about 2.8 million dollars - the reduction of the annual cost per plane would be important. Thus, in the case of the 777 it could be at 11.76 million dollars -about 8.4 million euros- and in the MD-80, at 1.19 million dollars -about 860,000 euros-. This is good news for American Airlines since this savings has a direct impact on one of the main costs that every airline has: fuel - the other is labor costs. And is that the need is pressing: this week the price of aviation fuel in New York reached its highest in two years, standing at 2.35 dollars a gallon.
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    Mark of the beast XDDD

  8. My vote for DH2, it has a very good rhythm than DH1
  9. Donald Trump paid no federal income taxes whatsoever in 10 out of 15 years beginning in 2000 because he reported losing significantly more than he made, according to an explosive report released Sunday by the New York Times. The President paid just $750 in federal income taxes in both the year he won the presidency and his first year in the White House, according to more than two decades of his tax information obtained by The Times. At a White House briefing Sunday, Trump denied the New York Times story and said he pays "a lot" in federal income taxes. "I pay a lot, and I pay a lot in state income taxes," he said. Trump added that he is willing to release his tax returns once he is no longer under audit by the Internal Revenue Service, which he said "treats me badly." The President is under no obligation to hold his tax returns while under audit, but has been saying that for years. The President repeatedly refused to answer how much he has paid in federal taxes in the briefing and walked out to shouted questions from CNN's Jeremy Diamond on the topic. The expansive Times report paints a picture of businessman who was struggling to keep his businesses afloat and was reporting millions in losses even as he was campaigning for President and boasting about his financial success. According to the newspaper, Trump used the $427.4 million he was paid for "The Apprentice" to fund his other businesses, mostly his golf courses, and was putting more cash into his businesses than he was taking out. The tax information obtained by the Times also reveals Trump has been fighting the IRS for years over whether losses he claimed should have resulted in a nearly $73 million refund. In response to a letter summarizing the newspaper's findings, Trump Organization lawyer Alan Garten told the Times that "most, if not all, of the facts appear to be inaccurate" and requested the documents. The New York Times said it will not make Trump's tax-return data public so as not to jeopardize its sources "who have taken enormous personal risks to help inform the public." The tax-return data obtained by the newspaper does not include his personal returns for 2018 or 2019. Trump's taxes have been largely a mystery since he first ran for office. During the 2016 campaign, the then-candidate broke with presidential election norms and refused to produce his tax returns for public review. They have remained private since he took office. Being under audit by the IRS does not preclude someone from releasing their tax returns publicly. But that hasn't stopped Trump from using it as a defense against releasing his financial information. In 2016, Trump released a letter from his tax attorneys that confirmed he was under audit. But the letter also said the IRS finished reviewing Trump's taxes from 2002 through 2008. Trump did not release his tax returns from those years, even though the audits were over. Additionally, the Times reported Sunday that Trump's tax information reveals specific examples of the potential conflicts of interests between the President's business with his position. The President has collected an additional $5 million a year at Mar-a-Lago since 2015 from new members. A roofing material manufacturer GAF spent at least $1.5 million in 2018 at Trump's Doral golf course near Miami while its industry was lobbying the government to roll back federal regulations, according to the Times. It also found that Billy Graham Evangelistic Association paid more than $397,000 to Trump's Washington, DC, hotel in 2017. The Times reported that in Trump's first two years in office, he has collected $73 million in revenue overseas, with much of that coming from his golf courses but some coming from licensing deals in countries, including the Philippines, India and Turkey. The Times said all of the information obtained was "provided by sources with legal access to it." A previous New York Times investigation published in 2018 reported that Trump had helped "his parents dodge taxes" in the 1990s, including "instances of outright fraud" that allowed him to amass a fortune from them Trump received at least $413 million in today's dollars from his father's real estate empire, starting at the age of 3.
  10. Come guys new contest !! this is ur chance to get VIP ! 

     

     

  11. Welcome mate, remember read rules and follows the model of post to avoid problems. ! ✌️
  12. As President Donald Trump continues to sow doubt and uncertainty about the election, he's set to announce his third Supreme Court nominee in the Rose Garden Saturday, the capstone of the promise he made four years ago to name a long line of conservative judges who will reshape the courts for generations. "We have tremendous unity in the party," Trump said of his Supreme Court pick during a campaign rally in Newport News, Virginia, on Friday night, adding that getting his nominee confirmed would be a "great victory" ahead of November 3. " They say the biggest thing you can do (as president) is the appointment of judges, but especially the appointment of Supreme Court justices. That's the single biggest thing a president can do, because it sets the tone of the country for 40 years, 50 years. " The President's expected choice of Amy Coney Barrett, 48, a federal appellate judge and Notre Dame professor who was a law clerk for the late Justice Antonin Scalia in the late 1990s, would further shift the balance of the court to the right, potentially ahead of a consequential case on health care that will be heard a week after Election Day. Barrett's views on Second Amendment gun rights, immigration and abortion Barrett's expected nomination - just one week after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg - would inject another polarizing and unpredictable dynamic into the presidential race at a time of great anxiety for Americans. Trump this week tried to keep the public's attention away from the coronavirus pandemic as the number of cases ticked past 7 million and Americans grappled with an unshakable sense of economic uncertainty. But in the lead up to his nomination announcement, Trump has only managed to create more anxiety. His refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power raised the specter that America will be transformed into a "banana republic" in November if Democratic nominee Joe Biden wins. The President contradicted his own FBI director by arguing that the election is rife with fraud and rigged against him, even though there is no evidence to support that conspiracy theory. Trump also continued his war on science by undercutting his own medical advisers on the timeline for a vaccine and by suggesting that officials at the Food and Drug Administration might have political motivations if they take additional time to evaluate the safety of a vaccine. (The FDA declined comment on the President's statement, but FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn has said the "FDA will not authorize or approve a vaccine that we would not feel comfortable giving to our families.") A consequential pick for the high court While he was stirring more chaos, Ginsburg's death created another welcome distraction for Trump - a chance to remind conservatives, some of whom may have soured on the President during the pandemic, the redeeming power of a Trump White House: his appointment of an unprecedented number of federal judges in his first term. At the same time, it is difficult to decipher the effect that the high court pick will have on the presidential race, because the anger about Republicans' rush to confirm a replacement for Ginsburg has also electrified Democrats and led to a flood of donations to progressive groups and candidates. Many Democrats view Trump's expected choice of Barrett, whom he appointed to the 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals, as a direct rebuke to the legacy of Ginsburg, a liberal icon and staunch defender of abortion rights.
  13. President Donald Trump's refusal to commit to a peaceful presidential transition Wednesday comes as Republicans across the country are taking concrete steps that threaten to undermine the integrity of the election, particularly in key battleground states. Trump's comments about the transition were only the latest instance where he's actively sought to sow doubt into the legitimacy of the election. But beyond Trump's rhetoric, his campaign and Republicans at the state and local level are moving to make it more difficult for voters to cast a ballot, more difficult for states to count votes and more likely that tallies will be challenged in the courts -- with a particular focus on mail-in voting, which is being dramatically scaled up this year because of the coronavirus pandemic. Those efforts, along with Trump's repeated baseless claims that the election will be rigged, threaten to eat away at the public's confidence in the outcome, regardless of whether Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden is declared the winner. They come amid a contentious fight over filling the Supreme Court seat left vacant by the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in a situation where Trump could be picking the person who decides his electoral fate. "I spent 38 years as a Republican lawyer going into precincts looking for evidence of fraud. There are, to be sure, isolated cases, but nothing like the widespread fraud that would somehow invalidate an election or cause anyone to doubt the peaceful transfer of power," Ben Ginsberg, who helped litigate the 2000 election on George W. Bush's behalf, told CNN's John King on Thursday. "So what's different about this is a president of the United States going right at one of the pillars of the democracy without the evidence that you have got to have to make that case." The President's attacks on democracy Trump has been falsely saying for months now that the influx of mail-in ballots as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic are ripe for fraud. He suggested last week that the results of the election may never be accurately determined. And he suggested that the Supreme Court would determine the outcome of the election -- after his nominee is potentially seated. The President went a step even further Wednesday when asked if he would accept a peaceful transition of power, saying, "Well, we're going to have to see what happens." Republicans on Capitol Hill dismissed the notion that a peaceful transition won't occur, but several embraced the idea that the courts would have to decide the election - an implicit suggestion that a dispute will arise questioning the results. Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham, who is facing his own reelection fight while shepherding Trump's Supreme Court nominee, said he would accept the election results from "the court's decision." "We will accept the court's decision, Republican and Democrat, I promise you as a Republican if the Supreme Court rules in favor of Joe Biden, I will accept that result," Graham said in a "Fox and Friends" interview. "No matter who challenges the results to have election, eventually the Supreme Court is likely to hear that challenge and when they rule, that is - that is the end of it." Republicans have pointed to Hillary Clinton's comments August comments that Biden should not concede under any circumstances if the election is close. But Biden has said he will accept the results once all the votes are counted. "Sure, the full results. Count every vote," he told CNN's Anderson Cooper at an outdoor town hall. Both parties are fighting lawsuits across the country related to voting access, and the Trump and Biden campaigns are furiously preparing contingency plans for a post-election legal fight. Republicans say the legal positions they are taking to stop efforts to expand mail-in voting are intended to safeguard existing election laws from being changed so close to Election Day. Democrats argue that access to voting needs to be expanded due to the pandemic, and they say they're pushing back against efforts to suppress the vote.
  14. A former Louisville police officer has been indicted by a grand jury on first-degree wanton endangerment charges for his actions on the night Breonna Taylor was killed by police - but not for her death. Two other officers at the shooting were not indicted. Live updates on the announcement The long-awaited charges against the former officer, Brett Hankison, were immediately criticized by demonstrators and activists who had demanded more serious counts and the arrests of the three officers involved in the March shooting. The charges pertain to Hankison allegedly firing blindly through a door and window in Taylor's building. The other two officers - Sgt. John Mattingly and Det. Myles Cosgrove - were not charged following months of demonstrations. Kentucky's Attorney General Daniel Cameron told reporters Wednesday that the officers were "justified in their use of force" because Taylor's boyfriend fired at officers first. "The decision before my office is not to decide if the loss of Breonna Taylor's life was a tragedy," he said. "The answer to that question is unequivocally yes." Cameron called the Taylor's death "a gut-wrenching emotional case" where "the pain is understandable." He defended the length of the investigation, saying the time reflected "how important it was to get this right." "I know that not everyone will be satisfied," he said of the grand jury decision. "Our job is to present the facts to the grand jury, and the grand jury then applies the facts ... If we simply act on outrage, there is no justice. Mob justice is not justice. Justice sought by violence is not justice. It just becomes revenge. " The American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky in a tweet called the decision to not charge the officers in her death "the latest miscarriage of justice in our nation's long history of denying that Black lives matter." "Once again, a prosecutor has refused to hold law enforcement accountable for killing a young Black woman. Breonna Taylor should still be alive today." The NAACP said in a statement that the justice system "failed" Taylor and the charges against one officer do "not go far enough." Demonstrators at a makeshift memorial to Taylor in downtown Louisville called for Cameron to step down after the charges were announced in court and the former's detective's bond was set at $ 15,000. Some demonstrators marched in the downtown area. "I understand that Miss Breanna Taylor's death has become a part of a national story in conversation," Cameron said. "We must also remember the facts and the collection of evidence in this case are different than cases elsewhere in the country. Each is unique and cannot be compared." The charges come more than six months after Taylor, a 26-year-old Black EMT and aspiring nurse, was shot to death by Louisville police officers in her home. The officers broke down the door to her apartment while executing a late-night warrant in a narcotics investigation on March 13. Louisville has prepared for the possibility of unrest from the decision. For months, protesters have criticized the length of the investigation and demanded the arrests of all officers involved. Anticipating new protests, Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer and Louisville Interim Police Chief Robert Schroeder Wednesday afternoon announced a 72-hour countywide curfew starting 9 p.m. Government buildings will be closed. The Kentucky National Guard has been activated, Schroeder said. "I urge everyone to commit once again to a peaceful, lawful response, like we've seen here for the majority of the past several months," Fisher said. The city and the police department had already declared states of emergency and set up barricades restricting vehicle access to downtown areas. Stores and restaurants have boarded up their windows, and some federal buildings closed for the week. Protesters started gathering Wednesday morning, hours before the expected announcement. Taylor's death set off outrage across the country, chants of "say her name," calls to arrest the officers, and a renewed focus on the Black women killed by police. Her story gained wider attention during nationwide demonstrations that followed the late May killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. Cameron, the first Black person to hold the post and a Republican rising star, was made a special prosecutor in the case in May, and the FBI opened an investigation as well. A day after the grand jury convened, Sgt. Mattingly sent a mass email to the department early Tuesday defending his actions and slamming the city's leadership. In June, Hankison was fired for "wantonly and blindly" firing into Taylor's apartment, Louisville's police chief said. Six officers involved in the incident are under internal investigation, LMPD said on Tuesday. The city of Louisville announced on Sept. 15 a historic $ 12 million settlement of the family's wrongful death lawsuit. The city also agreed to enact police reforms which include using social workers to provide support on certain police runs and requiring commanders to review and approve search warrants before seeking judicial approval.
  15. Go to participate guys! dont be lazy e.e🙊

     

     

  16. Video title : FLAILING Into the FAIL! | Funny Fails | AFV 2020 Content creator ( Youtuber ) : America's Funniest Home Videos Official YT video :
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