I refuse to support a company that has $300B in revenue and pays $0 in taxes.
A. Revenue is not profit.
B. You might want to research the changes in the tax code that made that possible, and who was responsible.
You must be one of them one percenters!Don't care about all that. I paid more Fed taxes (don't care about the state and payroll stuff) than them. That's all that matters to me.
Interesting. What's your reasoning, Biku? With Miroku, anyway, it can't be quality of the product...I'll never buy a Miroku Winchester nor a Baikal Remington.
You must be one of them one percenters!
"... That's because Amazon actually owed money to the federal government in 2019. After two straight years of paying $0 in U.S. federal income tax, Amazon was on the hook for a $162 million bill in 2019, the company said in an SEC filing on Thursday...."
Amazon had to pay federal income taxes for the first time since 2016
While both left and right like to criticize Amazon for not paying enough in taxes, all they are doing is taking advantage of every tax deduction they legally can. If you don't like how they pay, or don't pay, federal taxes, your beef is with the tax code, not Amazon. Write your congressional representatives.
Interesting. What's your reasoning, Biku? With Miroku, anyway, it can't be quality of the product...
...........
While both left and right like to criticize Amazon for not paying enough in taxes, all they are doing is taking advantage of every tax deduction they legally can. If you don't like how they pay, or don't pay, federal taxes, your beef is with the tax code, not Amazon. Write your congressional representatives.
This may open your eyes a bit:
These Are the Roughly 200 Businesses Whose Leaders Are Backing Gun Control Initiatives by Beth Baumann
These Are the Roughly 200 Businesses Whose Leaders Are Backing Gun Control Initiatives
Beth Baumann
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Source: AP Photo/Philip Kamrass, File
The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms launched an initiative last year aimed at providing information to Second Amendment-loving Americans. The goal was to provide a comprehensive list of companies and/or CEOs who back gun control initiatives and legislation or have anti-firearm corporate policies in place.
"When we started this project last year, we were actually surprised, and in some cases disappointed, at some of the businesses we added to the list," CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb said in a statement. "We discovered several brand name businesses and corporate leaders who evidently have a nefarious agenda to limit gun rights. Their current and potential patrons should have the knowledge of what their hard earned dollars are actually funding."
The CCRKBA recently added Gucci to the list after it was revealed the high-end brand donated $500,000 to the March for Our Lives organization, which launched after the Parkland shooting in Florida. March for Our Lives quickly used the funds to advance anti-Second Amendment legislation, Gottlieb said.
According to Gottlieb, putting together the list was about giving pro-gun Americans knowledge about their purchasing habits. It's not about boycotting companies and businesses but rather about giving Americans the ability to make informed decisions about where their hard-earned dollars go.
"We encourage people to buy products from companies they can count on to not support efforts aimed at curtailing constitutional rights," he explained. "By providing this information, we hope gun owning consumers are making reasonable decisions about which businesses to patronize. This might convince some businesses to re-think their core values."
"We're not calling for a boycott of these companies," Gottlieb said. "Businesses and the people who own them can support whatever kind of philosophy they want, and gun owning consumers can likewise not spend any money with those firms. Let the marketplace decide. Over 100 million American gun owners represent a sizeable [sic] consumer bloc, and they will decide where they spend their money."
Below are the roughly 200 businesses that made the list:
Comcast
I hear what you said and my findings are the same. I blame a good part of the problem on Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerburger. They were in it just for the money (and maybe fame) but they are the ones that TURNED everybody into an idiot.Well as a former employee of AutoZone for a very long time
Why do u not like Autozone?
I really liked working there
I am pro small business and have loved dealing with small business most of my life as growing up in a small town
I see so many businesses now with very poor employees who do the bare minimum and support staff like managers not doing their part to train and manage them
I have worked most of my life in upper retail management and I have never seen such low standards across the board and never seen employees demanding so much for high pay and little effort on their part
I know here we have problems with people showing up for work
Which seems crazy to me
When i was just out of school and before and during college I worked as many hours as I could
I agree most of these big companies have sold out to what ever they feel is necessary to make a buck
And sadly this seems to be the trend
I have said this since I got very ill
All of my friends and family think I am a grumpy old man even though I am not old ..
i say we are in the age of the idiot
We are getting away from what made our great nation thrive
God help us if we do not change soon
I can see real pain for us if these people do the changes they want to do
Please stay safe and warm out there
God Bless you all my friends
John
Sent from my SM-S727VL using Tapatalk
And another thing - what's wrong with WalMart?
My son is an up and coming Management executive. One of his early jobs was at WM. He started out as a clerk and worked up to Co-Manger. The store manager was a woman with a HS diploma, and she started out as a cashier.
...Target (anti-military) ...
My wife once walked into a Victoria's Secret store and asked if she could be fitted for an Erin Go Bragh. She said they scurried around for quite a while to see if they had any.
She doesn't go there any more.
John
I've done commercial refrigeration for many years. I've learned that most of the high end restaurants I've serviced have some of the dirtiest kitchen/food prep areas I have ever seen. Not all, but most. Many of the family-owned stores are filthy...not all. I've seen too much filth in the food areas. I try not to think about it when I go out to eat. Also, if I have a choice of going to (fictional name)'s restaurant in the city or their other joint 5 miles out of the city, I will drive out of the city, where the employees might have a give-a-care attitude. Even McFood chains are cleaner in the rural areas compared to the city's. I want clean food. A good friend & classmate of mine died, among a few others, from hepatitis that he got from a restaurant chain in the area about 17 years ago. That chain lost everything and all their restaurants shut down. Anyone from this area probably remembers the story. 'nuff said.![]()
I felt like Firestone did me wrong on my first new car/truck, a 1975 Ranchero. The tires started unraveling after a few thousand miles with steel belts coming through the treads. Had a major recall on these tires and was a disappointed with the proration I got for the tires at Firestone to replaced. Did a One man Firestone boycott for 30 years <snip>.