Quote:
Originally Posted by Johny Joe Hold
Yes, Sister Mitza, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) should not second guess use of private jets. If one owns a private jet, that person is important. The pleasure of using the jet for personal business helps the wealthy who, in turn, help us by building a capitalistic economy.
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Thank you. And of course somebody owns a train. Does that mean its passengers are due tax? Reverting to my personal experience, there's a train (I like rail travel) departing London -› Paris? -› ??? -› Peking (or Shanghai, I'm not entirely certain) -› Hong Kong, anyway last time I looked it was 6 weeks of clickety clack with abundant scenery and whatever goes on in trains, night after night, you can't get off (unless you fancy being destitute in Ulaanbaatar) although onboard cocktail lounges are beyond adequate if other continents' rail services are anything to go by. From what I've heard. At least if there's an unexpected [not] plague outbreak you can jump off wherever you are and fly home or get somewhere but at least you're alive.
Does that mean you'd be slugged for services you never received? Because you weren't there? LA, in my experience, has yummy muffins, pretty good road networks if you travel at night e.g. 2 or 3 a.m. (4 o'clock getting a bit risky due to foreign types manning the produce markets) certain beaches better avoided so you wouldn't go there but otherwise I'd be happy to chip in for services, I appreciated. Then whether avoiding commercial flight deficiencies or not zip off, landing fees presumably having been paid, to one's next tropical paradise?
I paid for the muffins: pretty good: butter all over, huckleberries splurged throughout + tax; all of a sudden I choose to go to Paris(vomit central) were not all the taxes paid already? Dissing major contributors to any Christian economy opens the doorway. Satan will pounce even worse than Ulaanbaatar. Don't take my word for it. Go there.