Delivery Rider Killed in Road Rage Incident Involving Indian Driver on Sukhumvit Road
-
Recently Browsing 0 members
- No registered users viewing this page.
-
Topics
-
Popular Contributors
-
Latest posts...
-
-
11
Reckless Motorcyclist Stuns with Dangerous Stunts on Busy Road
Wearing a helmet while cycling or sledding is important for safety1. Here are some facts about helmet safety: Wearing a bike helmet reduces the risk of serious head and brain injury by 85%1. Many states have laws that require helmet use1. Children younger than 12 years should also wear helmets when sledding1. Using bicycle helmets reduces serious head injuries by 60%, traumatic brain injury by 53%, and the number of cyclists killed or seriously injured by 34%2. 100%.... Now we should do an experiment... Get 100x 'Harsh Jones' ... get them to run into a wall as fast as they can... (which would probably be about 10kmh)... see how many of them return to to post on this forum... Then consider that most kids ride a bike faster than 10 kmh... every motorcycle journey taken will reach speeds far exceeding 10km - most likely 50 kmh on average... Kids sledding will reach decent speeds of up to 30 kmh... Not wearing a helmet - utter twit... and there are then those who will say its his own choice and it will only impact him... Well it wont... it will impact his family when hes a vegetable... It will impact the innocent person in a car who he hits who will then have to live with the gilt that they were involved in an accident where another party was killed or brain damaged... ... Responses from those such as 'Harsh Jones' are a perfect example of why helmet wear has to be legal and enforced... for surely such enforcement would have protected him from such head injury and he'd be better placed to formulate more intelligent comments. -
1,521
Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
My Thai brokerage wants a new FATCA-related IRS Form W-9 every January. -
42
WISE transfers taking a minimum of 2 days now?!
Just a FYI £5,000 from RBS to SCB January 20, 2025 21:04:00 ICT Time taken less than 60 seconds from authorising at RBS. -
1,521
Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
Well, he can list his non-assessable remittances on his Kenyan tax return, in accordance with bizarro world CRS rules. In Thailand and Singapore, we don't declare non-assessable remittances. But that is all speculation. The poster of which you speak has only ASSESSABLE income to declare. He can declare it on the tax form in the prescribed location under section 1(1), on the form, income derived from employment, he can take his 60K deduction, on the form, he can take his 100K pension allowance, on the form. He can pay his tax by bank transfer from within the system while filing. Fortunately, the poster did not pay tax on that pension in his home country, else he'd have a tax credit with no place on the form to claim it. Dodged a bullet there! He can't file in CRS land without a Kenyan tax ID number, and those are difficult to attain without being a certified Nigerian prince. -
151
Did We Really Land on the Moon?
There is substantial evidence of objects left on the Moon by astronauts during the Apollo missions and robotic landers. Here are key examples: Apollo Equipment: The Apollo missions (1969–1972) left behind a range of equipment, including: Lunar Module Descent Stages: These served as landing platforms for the ascent modules. Scientific Instruments: Seismometers, retroreflectors, and other experiments (e.g., the Lunar Laser Ranging Retroreflectors) that still reflect lasers sent from Earth. Astronaut Tools and Personal Items: Cameras, tools, and even a family photo left by astronaut Charles Duke. Lunar Rover Tracks: The Lunar Roving Vehicles (used in Apollo 15, 16, and 17) left tire tracks across the Moon’s surface, visible in high-resolution satellite imagery. Robotic Landers: Various countries' space programmes (e.g., the Soviet Luna missions, China's Chang'e landers) have left rovers and instruments on the Moon. Images from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO): NASA's LRO has captured high-resolution images of Apollo landing sites, showing leftover hardware like the descent stages, rover tracks, and astronaut footprints. (The quality doesn't really matter because you'll refute it anyway)... SO... on to the real point of my response: Are there any photos of your intelligence - as given this discussion, the greatest doubt that exists in this thread is the ability for your brain to function in any meaningful manner beyond basic life support and questionable communication....
-
-
Popular in The Pub
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now