Source: The Economist
Like most sins, tax breaks are easier to condemn than to resist. Politicians regularly decry the inefficiency and complexity that tax breaks introduce to the overall tax system, while merrily adding to the pile.
Source: The Economist
Like most sins, tax breaks are easier to condemn than to resist. Politicians regularly decry the inefficiency and complexity that tax breaks introduce to the overall tax system, while merrily adding to the pile.
Zika Fake Science Back in the News; Con Artists at Work
Jon Rappoport | 16 April 2016
No longer possible to believe…
Watch Robert De Niro Speak Candidly About Anti-Vaccine Documentary, His Son, Aut…
“Tomorrow is the most important thing in life. Comes into us at midnight very clean. It’s perfect when it arrives and it puts itself in our hands. It hopes we’ve learned something from yesterday.”
– …
Transcript of Internet Freedom: Your Rights in a Digital World with Rainey Reitman is now available to Subscribers!
Subscribers: Click to download/view the Transcript.
Also find it in the blog p…
By Catherine Austin Fitts
After my speech at the Appraisal Institute on Tuesday am, we had a grand lunch with Solari Report subscribers at Kuleto’s in San Francisco. Subscribers came from Santa Cruz…
A broker reported to me today that their clearing agent is requiring them to mark purchases of AAA sovereign bonds denominated in foreign currencies as “speculative” investments.
Pressure to do this …
By Lee Habeeb and Mike Leven
He is America’s most iconic banker. Okay. He isn’t a real banker, but we all know and love him; he’s George Bailey from the quintessential Christmas movie It’s …