Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) signaled that he is open to the possibility of a “meat tax” to help combat climate change, according to a video of a Q&A session at his town hall event in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Thursday.
He's coming for our gains.
As silly as it sounds, I bet a lot of the weak liberal males would find all sorts of reasons to make it more difficult to maintain muscles. In a way, that's all this shit is: a mating strategy for physically weak males. Socialism is for betas.
The alternative is rule by the Army, but okay. LOL, John Galt. Carry on with your bad self. On the Internet invented by the federal government. Maybe drive to the local BBQ to celebrate your independence from collectivism. Traffic should not be terrible..
Speaker to Animals wrote: Fri Aug 30, 2019 6:38 pm
However you do it, people on a board should have a significant stake in the company. And an existing corporation is not just going to give a huge amount of stock to employers so they can have a guy. Unions might be able to buy stakes, though..
There's no requirement to own stock to be a corporate board member. Most are just wealthy cronies of the CEO who get a ridiculous stipend for attending a couple of meetings a year and rubber stamping the CEO's requests. Significant stockholders can demand a seat, but that's a different story.
We are only accustomed to dealing with like twenty online personas at a time so when we only have about ten people some people have to be strawmanned in order to advance our same relative go nowhere nonsense positions. -TheReal_ND
Speaker to Animals wrote: Fri Aug 30, 2019 6:38 pm
However you do it, people on a board should have a significant stake in the company. And an existing corporation is not just going to give a huge amount of stock to employers so they can have a guy. Unions might be able to buy stakes, though..
There's no requirement to own stock to be a corporate board member. Most are just wealthy cronies of the CEO who get a ridiculous stipend for attending a couple of meetings a year and rubber stamping the CEO's requests. Significant stockholders can demand a seat, but that's a different story.
And anybody on that board should have skin in the game. Nobody should sit on a board of directors who does not have a significant stake in the company.
Nobody should be making decisions with other people's money.