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Bison
npub1whe2...xev5
I no longer feel lost
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Bison 4 months ago
We have checks on money creation and online censorship This is *actually* what the founding fathers would have wanted
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Bison 4 months ago
Hate that I do my best work late at night
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Bison 4 months ago
Not a bit chatter in the house image
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Bison 4 months ago
Zap maximalist Likes mean nothing
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Bison 4 months ago
Prefect day at the ballpark this past weekend
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Bison 4 months ago
I haven’t gone anywhere, I just have nothing to say
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Bison 4 months ago
Have we always done moments of silences? I feel like we didn’t do that growing up
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Bison 4 months ago
Cash isn’t the enemy
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Bison 4 months ago
It’s just turtles and trade offs all the way down
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Bison 5 months ago
Succession theme song went so hard
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Bison 5 months ago
Operation Chokepoint 69.0
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Bison 5 months ago
Spicy dill pickle is the new pumpkin spice
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Bison 5 months ago
Going to Madrid and Barcelona later this month, any suggestions on what you’ve seen or done there? I have a good game plan, just don’t want to miss out on a good suggestion!
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Bison 5 months ago
Pay the fee, get in a block Tick Tock
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Bison 5 months ago
As a way of “fixing” social security (aka kicking the can down the road a couple decades), I see people advocating for raising or eliminating the taxation cap on income. Typically, they’re unaware that raising the cap disproportionately to fed reported inflation has been going on almost since its inception. So there’s really no way of digging out of this hole, and nothing stops this train: “Since its inception, Social Security has featured a taxable maximum (or "tax max"). In 1937, payroll taxes applied to the first $3,000 in earnings. In 2011, payroll taxes apply to the first $106,800 in earnings. This policy brief summarizes the changes that have occurred to the tax max and to earnings patterns over this period. From 1937 to 1975, Congress increased the tax max on an ad-hoc basis. Increases were justified by the desire to improve system financing and maintain meaningful benefits for middle and higher earners. Since 1975, the tax max has generally increased at the same rate as average wages each year.” https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/policybriefs/pb2011-02.html $3,000 in 1937 would be the equivalent of a cap of $68,733.62 today (2025) The cap in 2025 is $176,100, or 2.56 times higher than it was in 1937 when accounting for inflation.