So they've launched this site without providing a singular example?
A blog post that says a lot of words without really saying anything at all. The whole post boils down to "The founders of Reform have multiple companies."
The profit is in the ink rather than the printer. There are two issues with someone coming into the market with a cheap printer/ink. 1) It's hard for any business to keep selling a product at 10% profit margin when you…
Legal requirement in the UK. No way around it.
You've clearly not experienced the reality of enterprise then. You're opinions are based on a limited understanding and knowledge of real life situations when it comes to this sort of stuff.
What. That's exactly how court works? How else do you think people and companies get away with doing a lot of bad things.
Never thought about that. According to Mr Google; believed to come from the Latin phrase “quid pro quo,” which translates into "something for something," or an equal exchange for goods or services.
"And yeah, 80 million pounds of profit last year. I'd buy that for a dollar" In business, last years profits are often irrelevant. This is a good example. It's a constant treadmill of trying to stay profitable - which…
I'm not sure you understand what's happening here or the basics of business and liquidation. "Normal companies can't go bankrupt in one day" - They didn't go bankrupt. They went into liquidation. Massively different…
They didn't acquire client assets for £1. That's not quite how it works.
You can't have a profitable bank that's insolvent. That doesn't make sense. The company has gone insolvent because it's no longer profitable.
The token £1 is just a payment requirement for ownership. The bidding process for insolvent companies is essentially who will take on the most "problems" for the best outcomes for the business. So one company may bid…
Would I want certain things on the internet to be illegal, yes. Like they already are.
The percentage of people with mobility disabilities is extremely high. With medical breakthroughs increasing the age of life too, this is only likely to increase with time
Having a man in the middle of payments adds more benefits that it does cons.
It's free in most EU countries. I've never paid for a bank transfer. The third party doing the transaction gives me some protection that I wouldn't otherwise have. Can't argue against the anonymous part of it but when…
Digitizing cash has moved civilization forward in ways we could never have dreamed of.
What you said doesn't make sense. The seller requested the buyer to pull the money out of the bank into cash and then immediately deposited that cash into their bank account. What would be the reason for doing that?…
Money laundering, like drugs, starts in larger amounts and is broken down further down the chain it goes. Those $5 and $10 bills getting laundered started from a $50K transaction getting laundered.
Unfortunately we wouldn't move forward as a society if we didn't do things that affected people that didn't want to progress with modern ways of living.
No matter how hard you try, cash is dying. If it's a good thing or not is another debate but you're not supporting anything by paying in cash. You're simply prolonging the death with no benefit of doing so other than to…
You must be very slow using your phone.
They don't trust a smartphone app provided by their banking provider but they trust a random bloke they've never met with 10k in their back pocket. Right. Makes sense.
The problem with your thinking there is that you're making an assumption that removing rights is automatically a bad thing or a loss that affects us all, which is quite simply not true. Removing rights can be a good…
He's never actually given ANY evidence to prove what he's suggesting. He's only shown clinical cases which are basically "these people followed my advice and got better" - Which isn't exactly scientific. It's akin to me…
So they've launched this site without providing a singular example?
A blog post that says a lot of words without really saying anything at all. The whole post boils down to "The founders of Reform have multiple companies."
The profit is in the ink rather than the printer. There are two issues with someone coming into the market with a cheap printer/ink. 1) It's hard for any business to keep selling a product at 10% profit margin when you…
Legal requirement in the UK. No way around it.
You've clearly not experienced the reality of enterprise then. You're opinions are based on a limited understanding and knowledge of real life situations when it comes to this sort of stuff.
What. That's exactly how court works? How else do you think people and companies get away with doing a lot of bad things.
Never thought about that. According to Mr Google; believed to come from the Latin phrase “quid pro quo,” which translates into "something for something," or an equal exchange for goods or services.
"And yeah, 80 million pounds of profit last year. I'd buy that for a dollar" In business, last years profits are often irrelevant. This is a good example. It's a constant treadmill of trying to stay profitable - which…
I'm not sure you understand what's happening here or the basics of business and liquidation. "Normal companies can't go bankrupt in one day" - They didn't go bankrupt. They went into liquidation. Massively different…
They didn't acquire client assets for £1. That's not quite how it works.
You can't have a profitable bank that's insolvent. That doesn't make sense. The company has gone insolvent because it's no longer profitable.
The token £1 is just a payment requirement for ownership. The bidding process for insolvent companies is essentially who will take on the most "problems" for the best outcomes for the business. So one company may bid…
Would I want certain things on the internet to be illegal, yes. Like they already are.
The percentage of people with mobility disabilities is extremely high. With medical breakthroughs increasing the age of life too, this is only likely to increase with time
Having a man in the middle of payments adds more benefits that it does cons.
It's free in most EU countries. I've never paid for a bank transfer. The third party doing the transaction gives me some protection that I wouldn't otherwise have. Can't argue against the anonymous part of it but when…
Digitizing cash has moved civilization forward in ways we could never have dreamed of.
What you said doesn't make sense. The seller requested the buyer to pull the money out of the bank into cash and then immediately deposited that cash into their bank account. What would be the reason for doing that?…
Money laundering, like drugs, starts in larger amounts and is broken down further down the chain it goes. Those $5 and $10 bills getting laundered started from a $50K transaction getting laundered.
Unfortunately we wouldn't move forward as a society if we didn't do things that affected people that didn't want to progress with modern ways of living.
No matter how hard you try, cash is dying. If it's a good thing or not is another debate but you're not supporting anything by paying in cash. You're simply prolonging the death with no benefit of doing so other than to…
You must be very slow using your phone.
They don't trust a smartphone app provided by their banking provider but they trust a random bloke they've never met with 10k in their back pocket. Right. Makes sense.
The problem with your thinking there is that you're making an assumption that removing rights is automatically a bad thing or a loss that affects us all, which is quite simply not true. Removing rights can be a good…
He's never actually given ANY evidence to prove what he's suggesting. He's only shown clinical cases which are basically "these people followed my advice and got better" - Which isn't exactly scientific. It's akin to me…