amadeus
Bishop of Bio-Dome
I believe so! I would just go based on my U.S. driver’s license, which I get renewed every few years.Out of curiosity, what state would your vote be counted in? Last state of domestic residence?
I believe so! I would just go based on my U.S. driver’s license, which I get renewed every few years.Out of curiosity, what state would your vote be counted in? Last state of domestic residence?
How does that work? When I renew my driver's license I have to go into the DMV to get my eyes tested and a new picture taken. Does the state DMV outsource that to whatever Japan uses for a DMV?I believe so! I would just go based on my U.S. driver’s license, which I get renewed every few years.
It doesn’t!How does that work?
Canadian licenses can be converted even though I believe they’re issued by province.
Uhhhh OK... but then your response to this:Disinterest is also the opposite of a statement.
was this:That's incorrect. Disinterest, and even disdain, is a bigger statement than you give it credit for.
You can't have it both ways. So make up your mind. Desperately wanting to disagree with me isn't an argument.You have a point, since 2018 was a statement election.
200,000 fewer are even around to conclude this, with probably 140,000 of those directly attributable to his mismanagement. Those people have family members and friends.However, any informed, intelligent and fairminded person will conclude that Trump has done a good job.
They are. I can confirm that personally. Though each Province's automobilists' or motorists' association handles licenses and other related matters here. Whatever Provincial Government branch of bureaucracy is supposed to be tasked with it seems insular and atrophied - at least in Alberta.
Interesting. I can add that all decisions about transferrability of licences between Alberta and other jurisdictions are made by the Minister of Transportation. Most US states and many other country's licenses are convertible in Alberta. Licences are issued primarily by private registries and by the Alberta Motor Association, a system that was established by a previous Conservative government.
The three decades following the Second World War saw a period of economic growth that was shared across the income distribution, but inequality in taxable income has increased substantially over the last four decades. This work seeks to quantify the scale of income gap created by rising inequality compared to a counterfactual in which growth was shared more broadly. We introduce a time-period agnostic and income-level agnostic measure of inequality that relates income growth to economic growth. This new metric can be applied over long stretches of time, applied to subgroups of interest, and easily calculated. We document the cumulative effect of four decades of income growth below the growth of per capita gross national income and estimate that aggregate income for the population below the 90th percentile over this time period would have been $2.5 trillion (67 percent) higher in 2018 had income growth since 1975 remained as equitable as it was in the first two post-War decades. From 1975 to 2018, the difference between the aggregate taxable income for those below the 90th percentile and the equitable growth counterfactual totals $47 trillion. We further explore trends in inequality by applying this metric within and across business cycles from 1975 to 2018 and also by demographic group.
https://www.rand.org/pubs/working_papers/WRA516-1.html
Even if you cut these numbers in half it is insane and indicative of terrible policy. Imo it is the base cause for the slow march to great social upheaval.
And hence, the plutocracy, the elite and tiny percentage of the population, the billionaires, who are the real political power in the United States (not the voters, and not the major political party organizations of their volition, much of the time), who flagrantly bribe government to get laws passed, regulations loosened, foreign affairs dictated, and even wars fought for their agendas and profit margins alone. Both major American political parties are thoroughly in their pocket. Although the plutocracy got it's original start in the Gilded Age, definitely this tax inequity helped them skyrocket out of proportion - while lining the pockets of Administrations and Congresses passing such laws.
I'm not but it makes the court a complete joke.
The court's decision over the past 10 years have already made it into a complete joke.
He's telling everyone that's the plan now.