Cheese touch gaming

Engine has

4 years ago | [YT] | 3,526



@Balling-Nyamo

War in italy has never been more intense

4 years ago | 83

@javafr

“I hate taxes, sample text” Me too kid

4 years ago | 65

@Hakeem-uz1ng

Taxes are Haram I'm serious, I just found out that taxes in its current form under welfare state is simply considered theft in Sharia law.

4 years ago | 83

@HolyFaceDevotee

This is what I subbed for. Your policies for reforming the Nigerian country for the better has become one of the best pieces of art you've created.

4 years ago | 21

@saycap

factually correct

4 years ago | 18

@soccashaun364

By using the resources and your own knowledge, analyse the effectiveness of this strategy

4 years ago (edited) | 20

@puupaa8198

Jus for your concern Fluconazole is a diflurophenyl bis triazole tertiary alcohol which has a broad spectrum antifungal activity than ketoconazole. Flucoral is water soluble; very well absorbed from the GIT even in the presence of food, antacids or H2 receptor antagonist pretreatment. After oral administration plasma levels are nearly as high as intravenous administration. Flucoral is widely distributed in tissues & body fluids. Concentrations in C.S.F., saliva, sputum, vaginal fluid approximate those attained in the plasma. Oral bioavailability exceeds 90% in contrast to other azoles antifungal which are highly protein bound. Flucoral is only 11% protein bound. The drug is excreted mainly in the urine. Elimination half-life is approximately 30 hours. Indications: Oropharyngeal, esophageal & vaginal Candidiasis. Fungal infections of the skin & nail due to Candida or dermatophytes. Serious systemic candidal infections including, urinary tract infections, peritonitis, pneumonia Cryptococcal meningitis. For the prophylaxis of fungal infections in immuno-compromised patients. 😂😅

4 years ago | 4

@Jequetepeq

Now this is a certified Libertarian moment™️

4 years ago | 3

@eriknestaas2270

Karl Heinrich Marx (German: [maʁks]; 5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883[13]) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, sociologist, political theorist, journalist and socialist revolutionary. Born in Trier, Germany, Marx studied law and philosophy at university. He married Jenny von Westphalen in 1843. Due to his political publications, Marx became stateless and lived in exile with his wife and children in London for decades, where he continued to develop his thought in collaboration with German thinker Friedrich Engels and publish his writings, researching in the reading room of the British Museum. His best-known titles are the 1848 pamphlet The Communist Manifesto and the three-volume Das Kapital (1867–1883). Marx's political and philosophical thought had enormous influence on subsequent intellectual, economic and political history. His name has been used as an adjective, a noun, and a school of social theory.

4 years ago | 4

@zovphi

Yeah same it's also me when : bottom text

4 years ago | 2

@cigolio4k60fps8

Tax evasion

4 years ago | 3

@rylanmetors473

You should do a meme where is had premiere pro's sample text, it's kinda long lol

4 years ago | 0

@cigankiller

Today i trolled a ى جىنسىي يول ياللۇغىنى كەلتۈرۈپ 7چىقىرىدۇ ھەمدە بۇ خىل ئەھۋال كۆرۈلسە دىققەت قىلىش كىرەك ئىدى بۇ ئىدارىنىڭ كاتىپى he looked kinda sad though. Back to the point, he looked like sus impoloster 🥵🥵🥵. دىققەت قىلىش كېرەك دەپ قارايدۇ . I don't know how, why but he did it. ن ۋە باشقا بىر قىسىم تور بەت بالىسى دەپ ئاڭلىغانمۇ بۇ خىل ئەھۋالدا بالىنىڭ ئۆسۈپ يېتىل ☹☹☹☹ھازىرقى تورى

4 years ago | 5

@legitbusinessownergus7620

The industry has begun 1899 Argentina

4 years ago | 1

@legobattledroid3128

A tax is a compulsory financial charge or some other type of levy imposed on a taxpayer (an individual or legal entity) by a governmental organization in order to fund government spending and various public expenditures.[2] A failure to pay, along with evasion of or resistance to taxation, is punishable by law. Taxes consist of direct or indirect taxes and may be paid in money or as its labour equivalent. The first known taxation took place in Ancient Egypt around 3000–2800 BC. Most countries have a tax system in place to pay for public, common, or agreed national needs and government functions. Some levy a flat percentage rate of taxation on personal annual income, but most scale taxes based on annual income amounts. Most countries charge a tax on an individual's income as well as on corporate income. Countries or subunits often also impose wealth taxes, inheritance taxes, estate taxes, gift taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, use taxes, payroll taxes and/or tariffs. In economic terms, taxation transfers wealth from households or businesses to the government. This has effects that can both increase and reduce economic growth and economic welfare. Consequently, taxation is a highly debated topic. Contents 1 Overview 2 Purposes and effects 3 Types 3.1 Income 3.2 Social-security contributions 3.3 Payroll or workforce 3.4 Wealth 3.5 Property 3.6 Goods and services 3.7 Tariff 3.8 Other 3.9 Descriptive labels 3.10 Fees and effective 4 History 4.1 Trends 4.2 Forms 5 Economic effects 5.1 Incidence 5.2 Increased economic welfare 5.3 Reduced economic welfare 6 In developing countries 6.1 Key facts 6.2 Summary 7 Views 7.1 Support 7.2 Opposition 7.3 Socialism 7.4 Choice 7.5 Geoism 8 Theories 8.1 Laffer curve 8.2 Optimal 8.3 Rates 9 See also 9.1 By country or region 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External links Overview Pieter Brueghel the Younger, The tax collector's office, 1640 The legal definition and the economic definition of taxes differ in some ways such that economists do not regard many transfers to governments as taxes. For example, some transfers to the public sector are comparable to prices. Examples include tuition at public universities and fees for utilities provided by local governments. Governments also obtain resources by "creating" money and coins (for example, by printing bills and by minting coins), through voluntary gifts (for example, contributions to public universities and museums), by imposing penalties (such as traffic fines), by borrowing, and also by confiscating wealth. From the view of economists, a tax is a non-penal, yet compulsory transfer of resources from the private to the public sector, levied on a basis of predetermined criteria and without reference to specific benefit received. In modern taxation systems, governments levy taxes in money; but in-kind and corvée taxation are characteristic of traditional or pre-capitalist states and their functional equivalents. The method of taxation and the government expenditure of taxes raised is often highly debated in politics and economics. Tax collection is performed by a government agency such as the Ghana Revenue Authority, Canada Revenue Agency, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in the United Kingdom or Federal Tax Service in Russia. When taxes are not fully paid, the state may impose civil penalties (such as fines or forfeiture) or criminal penalties (such as incarceration) on the non-paying entity or individual.[3] Purposes and effects The levying of taxes aims to raise revenue to fund governing or to alter prices in order to affect demand. States and their functional equivalents throughout history have used the money provided by taxation to carry out many functions. Some of these include expenditures on economic infrastructure (roads, public transportation, sanitation, legal systems, public safety, education, health-care systems), military, scientific research, culture and the arts, public works, distribution, data collection and dissemination, public insurance, and the operation of government itself. A government's ability to raise taxes is called its fiscal capacity. When expenditures exceed tax revenue, a government accumulates debt. A portion of taxes may be used to service past debts. Governments also use taxes to fund welfare and public services. These services can include education systems, pensions for the elderly, unemployment benefits, and public transportation. Energy, water and waste management systems are also common public utilities. According to the proponents of the chartalist theory of money creation, taxes are not needed for government revenue, as long as the government in question is able to issue fiat money. According to this view, the purpose of taxation is to maintain the stability of the currency, express public policy regarding the distribution of wealth, subsidizing certain industries or population groups or isolating the costs of certain benefits, such as highways or social security.[4] Effects of taxes can be divided into two fundamental categories: Taxes cause an income effect because they reduce purchasing power to taxpayers. Taxes cause a substitution effect when taxation causes a substitution between taxed goods and untaxed goods. Substitution effect and income effect with a taxation on y good. If we consider, for instance, two normal goods, x and y, whose prices are respectively px and py and an individual budget constraint given by the equation xpx + ypy = Y, where Y is the income, the slope of the budget constraint, in a graph where is represented good x on the vertical axis and good y on the horizontal axes, is equal to -py/px . The initial equilibrium is in the point (C), in which budget constraint and indifference curve are tangent, introducing an ad valorem tax on the y good (budget constraint: pxx + py(1 + τ)y = Y), the budget constraint's slope becomes equal to -py(1 + τ)/px. The new equilibrium is now in the tangent point (A) with a lower indifferent curve. As can be noticed the tax's introduction causes two consequences: It changes the consumers' real income (less purchasing power) It raises the relative price of y good. The income effect shows the variation of y good quantity given by the change of real income. The substitution effect shows the variation of y good determined by relative prices' variation. This kind of taxation (that causes the substitution effect) can be considered distortionary. Budget's constraint shift after an introduction of a lump sum tax or a general tax on consumption or a proportional income tax. Another example can be the introduction of an income lump-sum tax (xpx + ypy = Y - T), with a parallel shift downward of the budget constraint, can be produced a higher revenue with the same loss of consumers' utility compared with the property tax case, from another point of view, the same revenue can be produced with a lower utility sacrifice. The lower utility (with the same revenue) or the lower revenue (with the same utility) given by a distortionary tax are called excess pressure. The same result, reached with an income lump-sum tax, can be obtained with these following types of taxes (all of them cause only a budget constraint's shift without causing a substitution effect), the budget constraint's slope remains the same (-px/py): A general tax on consumption: (Budget constraint: px(1 + τ)x + py(1 + τ)y = Y) A proportional income tax: (Budget constraint: xpx + ypy = Y(1 - t)) When the t and τ rates are chosen respecting this equation (where t is the rate of income tax and tau is the consumption tax's rate): 1 1 + τ = 1 − t ⇒ t = τ 1 + τ {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{1+\tau }}=1-t\Rightarrow t={\frac {\tau }{1+\tau }}} {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{1+\tau }}=1-t\Rightarrow t={\frac {\tau }{1+\tau }}} the effects of the two taxes are the same.

4 years ago | 4

@laskelodan

🔥

4 years ago | 0

@malikgibbs5052

this is the definition of fighting

4 years ago | 0

@gus2116

Me too also hate tax not good MY MONEY not STINKY GOVERNMENT. Bad government in 1900s did the stinky and introduced income tax 👎👎

4 years ago | 0

@jwaj

This is the last thing king George saw before dying due to the sheer force felt by the singing of the Declaration of Independence in America

4 years ago | 0

@ricktraversi8719

73😂 👉🇨🇴 POLINE

4 years ago | 1