202-225-4000 v-mail still says Mccarthy. Anyways left blunt message. QUIT SENDING OUR FUCKING TAX MONEY OVERSEAS AND CHANGE THE VOICE MAIL RETARDS .
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Haha. Change the voice mail, retards. Made me chuckle. 110% on the taxes.
Just tired of the BS man
agreed. the utter incompetence is horrendous. This is who we have representing us?
I don't know how it is in other states right now, but in New York, if taxpayer money is involved, it is either spent incompetently, or corruptly, and probably both.
People are tired of their taxes going to foreign countries, but no one wants to assemble for a tax strike. smh
This all ends when we stop funding our own destruction
The one thing people do freely without representation
Hear hear! I've been with you from the first
Does there need to be an assembly? Just stop paying.
They are technologically savvy in using the technology, but not in running it. They have reached a point where they can't function without the technology. It will be pretty funny when they have to deal with massive power outages and they live in "smart" houses.
I think those of us in our 60's are in the "sweet spot" when it comes to technology, because we were in school/college when the digital age blossomed. We were using the earliest home computers, and many of us learned to do basic programming in either Basic or Fortran (and maybe COBAL for business majors :) ). I remember a classmate in junior high, in the early 70's, who was big into electronics; I've wondered what happened to him all these decades later; someone in that field back then would have had such potential and possibilities!)
Yes! You had to feed a stack of the punch cards, you had typed, into the machine to read them. If you had a SINGLE typo, it would kill it, and of course, if you accidently dropped them and they got out of order, you were pretty screwed. A lot, perhaps most, people would use a felt tip marker to make an "X" on the edge of the stack, so if you did drop them, you could fairly easily get them back in order. Of course, that wouldn't help if you typed a "0" for an "O", or some other typo :) Later, you had the luxury of a cassette tape to store a program on :) My first computer was a Commodor 64, with the 64 meaning 64 kilobytes of memory! When my wife and I bought our first home computer in the late '80s, it had a whopping 1 MB of memory :) We later bought an additional MB for it for about $100.
I don't know, but perhaps I'll find out when my 50th high school reunion comes up in a couple of years. :)