Gob wrote:Mine is "Let's pretend I give a shit and leave it at that."
Tax exemption stripped.
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Well, this explains it all, in his own words;
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
And here we go again... 

Why is it that when Miley Cyrus gets naked and licks a hammer it's 'art' and 'edgy' but when I do it I'm 'drunk' and 'banned from the hardware store'?
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
loCAtek wrote:Well, this explains it all, in his own words;....
- Econoline
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Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Let me add one more

People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
— God @The Tweet of God
— God @The Tweet of God
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
And then I am amazed you have not read Heinrich Boll? None?Sean wrote:Good God man!
And then you whinge about people giving you grief...
Ignorant Morons. All of you.
Really One cannot expect you to understand the connection then.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Then can you explain what that story has to do with the strip tax.
Cheers Rube
Cheers Rube
Bah!


Re: Tax exemption stripped.
No, his writing never interested me. I did however visit his house on Achill Island when I went there as a boy. Does that count?rubato wrote: And then I am amazed you have not read Heinrich Boll? None?
Ignorant Morons. All of you.
Really One cannot expect you to understand the connection then.
yrs,
rubato

Why is it that when Miley Cyrus gets naked and licks a hammer it's 'art' and 'edgy' but when I do it I'm 'drunk' and 'banned from the hardware store'?
- MajGenl.Meade
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- Contact:
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
To be fair, I think perhaps rubato's point is best explained in these terms


For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Possibly.
However I still don't get the relevance to the article in the OP.
However I still don't get the relevance to the article in the OP.
Bah!


Re: Tax exemption stripped.
And so far the score is:
Rubato has read Heinrich Boll and his book "End of a Mission".
No one else has.
Well its a good book and bears directly on this subject in more than one way.
But you do have to read it to get it.
yrs,
rubato
Rubato has read Heinrich Boll and his book "End of a Mission".
No one else has.
Well its a good book and bears directly on this subject in more than one way.
But you do have to read it to get it.
yrs,
rubato
Last edited by rubato on Tue Sep 11, 2012 12:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
You may have read the story Rube, but can you answer what the connection with the OP is?
I can find nothing to connect it.
I have read books too mate. However, I won't link to any of my randomly read books in this thread as they have nothing to do with it.
Just like your Boil book,

I can find nothing to connect it.
I have read books too mate. However, I won't link to any of my randomly read books in this thread as they have nothing to do with it.
Just like your Boil book,

Bah!


Re: Tax exemption stripped.
A New York state strip club says it should not have to pay tax, claiming an exemption for the performing arts.
Image
But the New York state tax department and an appeal court say $124,000 (80,000) owed by Nite Moves does not fall under an exemption for "live dramatic or musical arts performances".
The dispute is due before the state's highest court on Wednesday.
Tax officials say the club paid taxes on non-alcoholic drinks but must also pay for admission and "couch sales".
The exemption claimed by Nite Moves is usually applied to theatre performances or ballets.
The club is expected to ask a cultural anthropologist who has studied exotic dance - and visited the club - to testify on its behalf at the New York Court of Appeals.
An administrative law judge had previously ruled that "the fact that the dancers remove all or part of their costume... simply does not render such dance routines as something less than choreographed performances."
But the Tax Appeals Tribunal said the club had not adequately proved that it qualified for the exemption.
The tribunal said there was not enough proof that the dances were choreographed. An appeal court which upheld the tribunal's ruling added that club dancers did not need to have formal training.
It is expected that the high court will take about a month before issuing a decision
There you go, plain as the nose on your face really...The spectre of dullness must be every author's nightmare, but who would have imagined so clever a novelist as Heinrich Boll succumbing to it? His latest work is divided into four sections and the most interesting thing about them is deciding which is the dullest. Every so often one catches glimpses of Boll's intention, but the chloroform of his prose works so well that only the drowsiest of conclusions can be offered. A father and son in some German town stand trial for perpetrating an obscure ""Happening,"" including the burning of a jeep, one obviously modeled on Jean Tinguely's self-destroying sculptures. There is scattered talk of pop art and the new consciousness, and no doubt Boll, the upholder of humanistic and Catholic values, wished to comment on the absurdity of current fashion and the demise of culture. Unfortunately, he succeeds only in parodying himself. The novel is dreadfully old-fashioned, a collection of slowly evolving portraits of various townspeople, each representative of aspects of middle class character and professions, each reacting in highly detailed and inescapably boring style to the peculiar crime. Law, religion, sex, money, art, philosophy, politics, journalism--all these abstractions are embodied in cardboard figures quite as if they were members of a morality play. Of course Boll is a serious writer and he knows enough about his craft to give the semblance of a life-like texture or delicacy to his creation. Still, the whole thing reads like third-rate Thomas Mann, teutonic brio-a-brac, as removed as a museum from the world of today.
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-revi ... on/#review
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Boll, not boil. Heinrich Boll. Quite a lovely read. Nobel prize and everything. For people who read books.
yrs,
rubato
yrs,
rubato
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
LOL!! There's that world famous sense of humour (fail) againrubato wrote:Boll, not boil. Heinrich Boll. Quite a lovely read. Nobel prize and everything. For people who read books.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Your own literary sense fails, again!
Try reading the books will you?
No?
Well try having some one read them to you then.
yrs,
rubato
Try reading the books will you?
No?
Well try having some one read them to you then.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Can you point out what "literary sense" is indicated by recognising your failure to see humour when your nose is rubbed in it?
I love the way you dig yourself into these holes. then try to bluster your way out on an empty hand...
I love the way you dig yourself into these holes. then try to bluster your way out on an empty hand...
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Strip clubs? Taxes?End of a Mission, written in 1968, finds Heinrich Boll trying to come to terms with his country's monstrous past in an investigation of an inexplicable crime and an even more absurd trial. Told to rack up mileage on a jeep to prepare it for inspection, a soldier drives it home--and burns it in the company of his complaisant father. Boll's account of the testimony and background of the witnesses, and their nonplussed response to the composure and satisfaction of the accused, illuminates the life of an insignificant town caught up in sudden, unreasonable importance.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
Here's a good read (speaking of strip clubs and taxes)............


Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Tax exemption stripped.
I am sorry for my spelling mistake Rube.
Now please answer my question.
I note you have avoided it ever since posting your link (which has NOTHING to do with the OP).
I accept that your lack of response is you hiding from the question.
I understand that might be easier for you than admitting your link had nothing to do with the topic of this post. However, please stop being rude because you don't have an answer.
Thanks.
Now please answer my question.
I note you have avoided it ever since posting your link (which has NOTHING to do with the OP).
I accept that your lack of response is you hiding from the question.
I understand that might be easier for you than admitting your link had nothing to do with the topic of this post. However, please stop being rude because you don't have an answer.
Thanks.
Bah!


Re: Tax exemption stripped.
What question? I don't see any question. You haven't posted any question. You haven't posted one single example of a question. Can't find a question, can you?
Try reading a book, why don't you? I am a scientist.
yrs,
rubeoddo
Try reading a book, why don't you? I am a scientist.
yrs,
rubeoddo


