Thursday, 17 September 2020

Ten Things I'm Pretty Certain About

1.  If some idiot did eventually get access to Donald Trump's tax records for the previous three decades....they'd eventually to say that the guy now only averages $40-million a year on profits (over the whole past decade).  His BIG years?  All from the 1990s era.

The ultra-rich angle?  It won't be there.  This story of the 2.5-billion 'value'?  It's basically assessing hotels and casinos at a certain rate, which might not be totally true.  

Does this bother anyone that Trump might only 'marginally' be a billionaire by a dollar or two?  No.  

2.  The NBA will only survive as an organization if the TV contract business continues on 'as is'.  Once the current contract ends, and the talk starts on the new deal....it won't match the current numbers, and the players will stand there in shock with profits set at 50-percent of the current numbers.

A doomed path?  The super-players with ultra-contracts are finished and need to start talking retirement..

3.  Fox News will lose about 25-percent of their viewing audience over the next year to lesser-known right-of-center news organizations.

4.  At least one state will not be able to complete the vote count and sign their process as 'wrapped-up' by the time that the Electoral College occurs.

5.  NY City officials by the end of January 2021, will agree that around one million NY residents are 'gone' and likely NOT to come back.  

6.  Nashville will begin by summer of 2021, discussing a crisis with around 150k new residents within 25 miles of the city.  Traffic, congestion, drug sales, and stress will be hyped up.

7.  Covid-19 will be detailed out as a 'virus' that escaped a Chinese lab, because of a cleaning worker's mistake.  

8.  A poll will be taken in early 2021, to reveal that 19-percent of Americans have no idea who Hillary Clinton's husband is. 

9.  The November election will not be decided until the House meets in January, and votes state by state to finalize the pick.  

10.  Around 30-percent of California residents will admit by next summer that they'd really like to leave the state, but don't have the money to reach that goal.

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