If big business and the top 1% don't pay their taxes because there's no enforcement, then guess who pays more?
I'm still riveted by his ossempic face, Kevin McCarthy. His friend Elon must have given it to him. Elon's talked publicly about taking Bogovian, ossempic and fasting and stuff, but Kevin McCarthy is clearly borrowing some of his or something. I keep staring at it. I'm like, OK, sure, sir. I'm sure he's counting his calories. No idea what you're talking about. He's skinny. He's lost enormous amounts of weight. I find that looks this.
If we said that about a woman, you'd be triggered.
No, I'm going to comment on it. I think it's very strange, a sudden weight loss. But nonetheless, it looks great. It's performativeness. It's performativeness on behalf of the Republican Party. It's the same thing, which is my fail, which is Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders endorsing legislation limiting drag performances. Really, Sarah, is that a huge problem in.
Arkansas? Let's enrage. Let's demonize the other side rather than focusing on real estate. It's ridiculous. Why don't you focus on things that matter to actual people? It's like, I know she's going to say this matters. This is not legislation. This is not legislation. Legislation helps people.
The Fed eases up on the brakes, Elon Musk looks for new ways to monetize Twitter, and Snap has another rough quarter. Also: Meta may have prevailed in a fight with the FTC. Today’s Friend of Pivot is Jonathan Kanter, Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division at the DOJ. He stops by to discuss Google, antitrust, and his agency's fight against monopolies.
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