2022 NFL Gameday Thread: C’mon Damar (Part 1)

Can confirm snow games are awesome. Just dress warmly and you’re good.

So easy. This is like Peyton in a dome shit from 2008.

Bills will eventually get theirs though.

Whelp

Damn… was open and great throw

The only Patriots game I’ve been to was the deflategate AFC Championship, where it was freezing cold rain all day. Tailgating was fun but the game was miserable, even with the Pats winning by a billion.

Fuck off turbo tax you rent seeking corrupt assholes

Cliffs on turbo tax?

If it weren’t for tax companies lobbying, we’d have free, easy, online filing directly through the IRS.

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Hooof, that’s going to take a while.

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What a disaster

That’s true

“gene, stick to the ref talk and don’t comment on Josh Allen’s football abilities, thanks.” - Jimmy N.

Josh is gonna need to run.

Wait till you hear about landlords

Congrats to the Bengals for making it to back-to-back Super Bowls! not an easy feat.

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Hallelujah a stop

It’s gross. This is the worst part to me.

The centerpiece of Intuit’s anti-encroachment strategy has been the Free File program, hatched 17 years ago in a moment of crisis for the company. Under the terms of an agreement with the federal government, Intuit and other commercial tax prep companies promised to provide free online filing to tens of millions of lower-income taxpayers. In exchange, the IRS pledged not to create a government-run system.

Since Free File’s launch, Intuit has done everything it could to limit the program’s reach while making sure the government stuck to its end of the deal. As ProPublica has reported, Intuit added code to the Free File landing page of TurboTax that hid it from search engines like Google, making it harder for would-be users to find.

Twelve years ago, Intuit launched its own “free” product: the similarly named “Free Edition” of TurboTax. But unlike the government program, this one comes with traps that can push customers lured with the promise of “free” into paying, some more than $200. Free Edition was a smash hit for Intuit and its pitch for “free” prep remains core to the company’s growth. Recently, it launched a “free, free free free” ad campaign for the Free Edition, including a crossword puzzle in The New York Times in which the answer to every clue was “f-r-e-e.”

Intuit knows it’s deceiving its customers, internal company documents obtained by ProPublica show. “The website lists Free, Free, Free and the customers are assuming their return will be free,” said a company PowerPoint presentation that reported the results of an analysis of customer calls this year. “Customers are getting upset.”

More importantly, refs are gonna need to ref.

The rugby stuff seems likely to cause injuries?

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