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Salt Lake City pig cleared by DA after killing a black man who was running away...

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http://www.sltrib.com/news/2017/10/04/da-clears-salt-lake-city-police-officer-in-deadly-shooting/
Bodycam footage shows SLC officer fatally shooting fleeing Utah man; D.A. says the killing was justified

Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill has cleared a Salt Lake City police officer who fatally shot a man on Aug. 13, after the man allegedly pulled a knife and threatened to injure officers trying to arrest him.

Patrick Harmon, 50, whose most recent address, according to court records from November 2016, was the Road Home shelter, was shot about 10:20 p.m. at 1002 S. State St.

A patrol officer had approached Harmon after watching the man ride across all six lanes and a median of State Street, and without a rear red tail light, according to the district attorney’s report, which was released Wednesday afternoon.

When asked for identification, according to the report, Harmon gave the officer a name that did not have a match in a police database. Body camera footage released Wednesday shows the officer searching for a name in the police database unsuccessfully.
In the video, the officer again asks Harmon for the spelling of his last name. The district attorney’s report said Harmon gave “a couple of different names.” Body camera footage shows Harmon quietly spelling his name and the officer asking for clarification multiple times.

Before the officer returned to his squad car, Harmon told the officer he may find a warrant related to a felony charge.
The officer called for backup on his radio, and two more officers soon arrived.

The officer did another check in the police database and found that Harmon had arrest warrants, including one for a felony. That warrant was for an aggravated assault, according to the report. Court records show that a $10,000 felony warrant had been issued in April, after Harmon did not show up for the sentencing. In that case, Harmon had pleaded guilty to aggravated assault, a second-degree felony.
Harmon pleaded with the officers to not take him to jail, an officer told investigators, and as police put the man’s hands behind his back to handcuff him, Harmon “bolted and ran.” As the three officers pursued him, the man “turned quickly” back toward them.
The officer who originally contacted Harmon drew his stun gun, and another, Officer Clinton Fox, drew his gun. All three officers reported hearing Harmon threaten to cut them. They saw him reach toward his right pants pocket and that he had something in his hand, the report said.

Fox later told investigators he saw a knife in Harmon’s hand with the blade exposed. He believed another officer was dangerously close to Harmon, he said.

In the footage, Fox shouts, “I‘ll f- shoot you!” before firing three rounds at Harmon. Simultaneously, the other officer fires his stun gun.

Fox felt “terrified by how close Mr. Harmon was to the officers,” he told investigators. “Fox said that in ten years of law enforcement and two military deployments, it was the scariest situation he had ever been in,” according to the report.
Critically injured, Harmon was handcuffed and given first aid at the scene by police, and then was transported to the hospital by ambulance, where he was pronounced dead a short time later.

Body camera footage shows officers administering medical attention and saying, “Patrick, stay with us.“
At the scene, investigators found a knife on the ground, the report says.

The three officers wore body cameras that recorded the confrontation, the report says. The report includes several still frames from that footage, showing Harmon turning toward officers, Fox firing at Harmon and Harmon lying near a knife. There’s also a photo of the knife, taken by investigators.

The district attorney’s ruling comes days after Harmon’s family came to retrieve his body and local groups demanded the release of the police body camera footage at a protest.

Friends and family members did not believe Harmon deserved to die, they said, adding that he was a good man at his core, despite struggles with drugs.

His sister Antoinette Harmon told The Salt Lake Tribune on Wednesday that she had not heard about the report or seen the footage. She declined to comment further.

Fox had been placed on “modified duty,” said Salt Lake City Detective Robert Ungricht, pending the department‘s investigation, which was ongoing Wednesday.

Police Chief Mike Brown issued a statement saying he and the department “trust the process and support the decision” from Gill‘s office. “I believe our officers have the training, judgment and ability to make split-second decisions in dynamic situations,” Brown said.

IC Stop Making Excuses and Let's Get Healthy Thread

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Well the last thread was deleted along with the rest of my content but the show must go on.

I'm proud of what the last thread became and how many posters got involved, you guys helped not only keep me motivated but keep other posters motivated as well so pat yourselves on the back for that.

Let's keep it up in 2015, what are some of your goals?

Kissing Cousins..Couple Finds out they are blood cousins after birth of child

What would YOU do in this situation? NEIGHBOR EDITION.

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So last night layin in bed, we wake up to some voices and then a loud crash indownstairs apt... we ain't hear shit for a minute so we doze back off..
we're awoken again, this time the kids are cryin (5,6,9,11) mom and dad arguin downstairs, a lot of yelling right...we layin there, the yelling gets louder, and now a couple screams are thrown in there...what do you do?

I'll you what happened next in a bit...

Caddo sheriff blasts new laws allowing for release of inmates

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CADDO PARISH, LA (KSLA) -

Caddo Sheriff Steve Prator is not a fan of criminal justice reform laws about to go into effect next month.

Prator expressed his concerns about the Justice Reinvestment Act, which he says provides the early release of thousands of inmates statewide, noting that 192 felons will be released early in Caddo Parish under the new law in November, and that's just the first wave.

"There's ways and things that need to be reformed on the criminal justice system, but certainly we don't need to do what we're about to do," said Prator.

The Justice Reinvestment Act is made up of 10 bills passed by the Louisiana Legislature and signed by Governor John Bel Edwards in June, intended to change Louisiana's reputation as the most imprisoned state in the country. It goes into effect November 1.

“The Legislature and the Governor have made a huge mistake,” Prator said. “Many of those scheduled to be released have not been properly vetted and are a danger to our safety and property. Seasoned multiple offenders are getting a break at our expense.”

Gov. John Bel Edwards signed the legislation into law in June in hopes of changing Louisiana’s reputation as the most imprisoned state in the country.

Justice Reinvestment reform was designed by the state to reduce the prison population by 10 percent and save an estimated $262 million over the next 10 years.

Prator noted in a statement released after the news conference that "only one law enforcement officer served on the Justice Reinvestment Task Force."

Prator, a law officer for more than 44 years, said some reform may be in order but releasing thousands of offenders back into our communities isn’t the answer.

Simply put, the State of Louisiana is risking our safety for bragging rights and to save money,” he said.

As an example, Prator said, the new laws provide for offenders to serve only 25 percent of their sentence and reduce penalties in many serious felonies and misdemeanors. They also make those convicted of drug offenses eligible for government assistance such as SNAP and provide for the removal of restitution for some offenders with “financial hardships.”

“I assure you we will continue our relentless pursuit of justice by arresting those who seek to harm or steal from the productive citizens of Caddo Parish,” Prator said.

Father leaves 2 year old son to die after he tried to steal a sound bar from Wallmart

Thread that might divide the IC for good

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I made a thread...n posters started sayn they dont take shit sitting down so this is it

Dumbest Sh*t Ever Said In The Ill Community

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This should be good. Let's not make this all about Dro

Cam Newton: "Being An Afro-American quarterback, I scare lot of people"

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Cam Newton: No one changed me, I'm true to my roots

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Comments: Agree/ Disagree, I Wanna Hear Them

Hurricane Season...

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I've seen the day after tomorrow GnS, let's not ignore this one and buy some damn bottles water at least.

F**k Ni**a Chronicles

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This is for anybody to post screenshots or quotes of posters who have done something fuck nigga worthy.

For example. .....


"Free @babybuggati she shouldn't be jailed" - @ajackson17

I'm mad as fuck right now.....thread by @iamtheville crying cause the girl he shared dip on him and got married.

Anything by @omega_conflict will fit in this thread


Add on

A Multimillionaire's 7 Rules for Combining Many Passions into One Successful Career

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https://www.entrepreneur.com/video/301083

DeVon Franklin -- best known for producing the films Miracles from Heaven and Heaven Is for Real, and co-authoring the New York Times bestselling book The Wait -- is a bit of a unicorn. He's not only a top Hollywood producer, he's a renowned preacher. He's a recognized authority on faith and the entertainment business, not necessarily two subjects that you'd expect to see together. He discusses the blending of the two in his first book, Produced By Faith and his recently released title, The Hollywood Commandments.

Franklin seems to be winning everywhere: He's the successful CEO of Franklin Entertainment, a production company in conjunction with 20th Century Fox, a bestselling author, a TV personality, a producer and a sought-after speaker. Beliefnet called him one of the "Most Influential Christians Under 40," Variety magazine named him one of the "Top 10 Producers to Watch," and Ebony magazine has named him one of the "Top 100 Influential African-Americans in America."

Since so many beginner entrepreneurs, authors and speakers I work with struggle to combine multiple passions and messages into one brand, I could not wait to ask him how he does it all. Here are my top seven commandments on how the rest of us can follow his lead and weave together multiple passions into one successful business.

Thou shalt pay your dues.


Some may be tempted to say that Franklin is successful thanks to his proximity to Will Smith, because he started his career within the company that manages Smith. However, Franklin started there as an intern, waiting on the firm's assistants. In other words, he was at the very bottom of the bottom. It took years before he actually had a relationship with Smith himself.

When I asked Franklin about his start, I love how he explained the phrase we've heard before about "taking the stairs" to success: "I pray that people don't have overnight success, because if you get it overnight, you'll lose it overnight. Taking the elevator to the 20th floor takes no energy, takes no effort. However, if you need to manage life on the 20th floor and you haven't taken the steps, you might get here; but you're not going to know how to manage it."

He went on to explain that the process it takes to work your way up builds not only your character, but your actual capacity for managing life on that top level. Plus, getting there is not the goal, is it? It's staying there.

"Your ability to maintain what you obtain is critically dependent on the process you went through to get it," Franklin said. "I would never be able to do and manage what I have now if I had tried to shortcut the process."

Thou shalt learn to be patient -- very patient.

"It took over 150,000 hours, over 6,500 days from the day I set foot in Hollywood to finally getting my production company. That is 150,000 hours of showing up, serving," Franklin shared.

He understands the frustration of feeling stuck, and he offers a great solution for those moments. Realize that the frustration is wasted energy and wasted time. Shift your attention immediately onto what you can do right then and there to be productive and create results.

"If you really want to maximize your time, fix your focus. Think about this. Every time I'm frustrated, 'Okay, what can I focus on that can actually be productive?' If I can focus on something productive, what's going to happen? I'm going to feel better. Because what I focus on creates how I feel."

Thou shalt learn to let go.


In the last few years, within the entrepreneurship and personal development space, there has been a growing focus on letting go: "Let go and let God," "the universe has your back," etc. I don't' know about you, but this can be a frustrating idea because I love to hustle. I love to solve problems and produce results -- when do we push and when do we release?

"Your prayers alone aren't enough. I talk about the concept of praying and preparing," Franklin said, explaining his mindset. "I don't work to make things happen. I work because I believe things are already happening."

He explained if you start to think, If I don't land this sale, if I don't make this deal, everything will fall apart, you have a lack of belief, and belief is necessary for success. He reminded that desperation is like bad cologne. The moment you walk in the room everyone smells it and no one wants to go near it.

"[Think], What can I actually do today and am I maximizing where I am? Once I actually look at where I am and I say, 'Yeah, I'm maximizing where I am,' great. Then I've got to relax, to pray, to have faith and to trust. Am I doing the work? Yes, but am I doing the work to the point of losing my mind? No, because when I actually sit back and I rest in the confidence of who I am and what I'm doing, more opportunities come."

Thou shalt be your authentic self.


Franklin doesn't deny any part of himself in order to succeed and he says you shouldn't either because "your difference is your destiny."
"Too often we try to become a version of what other people want us to be. As a result, we diminish the destiny we were created to achieve. For me, [it's] owning my authenticity, owning the fact that I am a Christian. I'm a person of faith. Owning the fact that I love Hollywood."

He went on to quote a phrase he'd once heard from another preacher. "'When you are rare, you are rewarded.' It's important to hone that rarity, hone that difference -- it will lead you to your destiny."

But, thou shalt focus on one passion first.


Herein lies the rub, multi-passionate reader. Be authentic, yes, but build a foundation first. What do you want to be known for first that will set you up to explore all of your other passions? That is your tree trunk.

"We all have different gifts ... we're really broad and unfocused," Franklin explained. "If you're unfocused, you're not going to be able to hone your energy, your time, and then zone in on what are the opportunities that are going to help you build who you are and become who you need to be. It's like the tree. If the tree does not have a trunk, there can be no branches."

Franklin's trunk was entertainment. He knew at an early age that he wanted to be in the entertainment industry -- even though he also felt called to preach, write, etc. -- so he moved to Hollywood, started his film degree and got an internship in the industry. Later, an established influence in the industry, he began writing about his faith and making faith in entertainment part of his platform.

MY ex-gf Hacked into my facebook

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I don't know how she did it. I Don't know what because I didn't leave my facebook open and on top of that she change my password so I'm hella lost. Who has any idea how she did it?

7 Lifestyle Changes You Must Adopt to Build Your Business on the Side

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@Fosheezy

https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/292346

Building a business on the side isn't for everyone. You'll need to sacrifice much even while you learn new things. Creating your own startup is challenging even when you dedicate full-time effort. When you're working to develop your idea on the side, it's likely your budget is every bit as limited as your time.

So how can you nail it? You need to change your life. Adopt an action plan to help you apply these principles and stay disciplined until you reach your goal.

1. Sacrifice time with friends.

I know this is hard for a many people, but it's the reality. You need to reduce the time you spend with others. It's easier said than done. But it does produce results: When I started limiting the time I spent with my friends, I was able to grow my business faster.

Create a schedule that works for you and treat it as if your life depends on it. Unless you're completely burned out, don't change it just to have some fun.

2. Seize opportunity with every minute away from your full-time job.

Lack of money isn't your only obstacle. Time is the real resource you can't create. To build your company, you need to be a fast learner and apply what you pick up along the way. The best time to learn? The few minutes here and there, between everyday tasks.

If you have 10 minutes open on your schedule, you have time to take a business call or listen to a podcast.


3. Learn how to effectively manage your time.


Since every minute is precious, you need to make your downtime work for you. Books offer a wealth of knowledge to help you learn about time management. A book waits for you at the precise spot you left off, and you don't need large chunks of time to see a benefit. Start by reading 10 minutes before bed, while you're traveling or during those in-between task times mentioned earlier.

4. Increase the intensity of your work.


If you increase your intensity, you'll be able to achieve more in an hour than others can in three hours. In "Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World," author Cal Newport outlines a simple formula: Work Accomplished = Time Spent x Intensity.

If you spend 10 hours chugging along at Intensity Level 2, you'll get the same amount done as if you'd worked for two hours at Intensity Level 10.

The Pomodoro technique is one proven way to ramp up your focus. In fact, it's how I built my business on the side while studying dentistry.

5. Understand accountability is your best friend.

This is the one change I wish I'd adopted earlier. If you really want to succeed, find an accountability partner or join a mastermind group.

An even better option (if you have the money): Invest in a mentor. If you find a good one, this likely will be the best money you ever spend.

6. Don't spend money you make in the beginning.


I know you're eagerly waiting for your business to free your from your other job, but that's precisely the reason you need to hang on to your first profits -- or reinvest them in your enterprise. Just don't spend it to buy things you want for your personal enjoyment. In this way, you train yourself to stop working for money and make money work for you.

For example, you could invest the money in a mentor, a book or a course to learn something that will help you continually improve. If you want to eat caviar for the rest of your life, you need to hold off spending what you earn in the lean times.

7. Up your circle.


This might seem to contradict my earlier advice to cut down on the time you spend with others. But when you elevate the circle of people around you, you gain more from the limited time you can afford away from your business.

As motivational speaker Jim Rohn said, you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with. So up your circle. Seek people with growth-oriented mindsets who are building their companies and can help you do the same.

And in the meantime, before you find a mentor or an aspirational peer group? Make "friends" with your idols in the business world. If you want to be like Elon Musk, read his biography, watch every interview you can get your hands on, and listen carefully to his advice. Podcast hosts also can be a source of inspiration and a literal voice in your ear, encouraging you to push forward.

White Man Attempts to Steal Steaks From Walmart and watch what happens at the End


If he was black......

What city breeds the ugliest women??

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Women born and raised in the city only..
No immigrants

The General Business Thread

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Alright yall this is a spinoff from the Tax Implications thread that was started by @JonnyRoccIT‌ . I made this thread to help out anybody who has general questions about getting started or going forward, legal matters in business, financing/banks/credit, how to find information, building websites, structure, taxation, business plans/proposals, investing, motivation - anything that has to do with running a business please ask the question here and me or @pralims will answer you promptly.

Anything that has to do with even supplying apps or anything for that matter that can help someone, anybody, somewhere do something easier or better will be greatly appreciated.

To kick things off I have put the topics in spoilers to make the O/P organized and easier to browse for mobile users.


Business Entity/Legal Structures

Sole Proprietorship

The simplest structure is the sole proprietorship, which usually involves just one individual who owns and operates the enterprise. If you intend to work alone, this structure may be the way to go. The tax aspects of a sole proprietorship are appealing because the expenses and your income from the business are included on your personal income tax return, Form 1040. Your profits and losses are recorded on a form called Schedule C, which is filed with your 1040. The "bottom-line amount" from Schedule C is then transferred to your personal tax return. This is especially attractive because business losses you suffer may offset the income you have earned from your other sources.

As a sole proprietor, you must also file a Schedule SE with Form 1040. You use Schedule SE to calculate how much self-employment tax you owe. In addition to paying annual self-employment taxes, you must make estimated tax payments if you expect to owe at least $1,000 in federal taxes for the year after deducting your withholding and credits, and your withholding will be less than the smaller of:

1) 90 percent of the tax to be shown on your current year tax return or

2) 100 percent of your previous year's tax liability.

The federal government permits you to pay estimated taxes in four equal amounts throughout the year on the 15th of April, June, September and January. With a sole proprietorship, your business earnings are taxed only once, unlike other business structures. Another big plus is that you will have complete control over your business--you make all the decisions. There are a few disadvantages to consider, however. Selecting the sole proprietorship business structure means you are personally responsible for your company's liabilities. As a result, you are placing your assets at risk, and they could be seized to satisfy a business debt or a legal claim filed against you.Raising money for a sole proprietorship can also be difficult. Banks and other financing sources may be reluctant to make business loans to sole proprietorships. In most cases, you will have to depend on your financing sources, such as savings,
home equity or family loans.


Partnership

If your business will be owned and operated by several individuals, you'll want to take a look at structuring your business as a partnership. Partnerships come in two varieties: general partnerships and limited partnerships. In a general partnership, the partners manage the company and assume responsibility for the partnership's debts and other obligations. A limited partnership has both general and limited partners. The general partners own and operate the business and assume liability for the partnership, while the limited partners serve as investors only; they have no control over the company and are not subject to the same liabilities as the general partners.

Unless you expect to have many passive investors, limited partnerships are generally not the best choice for a new business because of all the required filings and administrative complexities. If you have two or more partners who want to be actively involved, a general partnership would be much easier to form.

One of the major advantages of a partnership is the tax treatment it enjoys. A partnership does not pay tax on its income but "passes through" any profits or losses to the individual partners. At tax time, the partnership must file a tax return (Form 1065) that reports its income and loss to the IRS. In addition, each partner reports his or her share of income and loss on Schedule K-1 of Form 1065.

Personal liability is a major concern if you use a general partnership to structure your business. Like sole proprietors, general partners are personally liable for the partnership's obligations and debts. Each general partner can act on behalf of the partnership, take out loans and make decisions that will affect and be binding on all the partners (if the partnership agreement permits). Keep in mind that partnerships are also more expensive to establish than sole proprietorships because they require more legal and accounting services.


The other portion is in the next post


As for what state is best to incorporate in, it really depends on what type of business you're trying to build. Please PM me and I may be able to assist you.




Motivation

For motivation give these books a read:



Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki

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Think & Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill

Think-and-Grow-Rich.jpg




@pralims‌
@traestar‌
@black caesar
@MarcusGarvey‌
@kontakz‌
@BigBallsNoWorries‌
@YunnSanco‌
@KingSimba‌


Feel free to post if yall can contribute, anything is plenty.

Chiraq Gang Blogger "ChicagoWorldNews" Reportedly Shot 2x / Deleted All Accounts & Vids

Big Baller Brand Didn’t Sell Nearly As Many Lonzo Ball Shoes As Initially Reported

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https://www.google.com/amp/uproxx.com/dimemag/lonzo-ball-shoe-sales-numbers/amp/



Don’t get caught up in the hype that LaVar Ball and Big Baller Brand have racked up millions of dollars in sales of Lonzo Ball’s signature shoe. Even at $495 each.

The sneakerheads at Nice Kicks did some legwork to refute the rumors that Ball’s ZO2 Prime had sold 5,000 pairs in as little as four hours after its initial release. Like most internet rumors, that turned out to be bunk. Matt Halfhill over at Nice Kicks explained in a post how they figured out the number is much, much lower.


Basically, Halfhill ordered a pair a few hours before Chad Johnson ordered a pair and posted his confirmation email on social media. By Halfhill’s count, just 34 total transactions on the entire Big Baller Brand site had occured between those two orders, and that could have been for shirts, hats, and anything else there that isn’t a pair of very expensive shoes.

When another Nice Kicks staffer ordered a pair of shorts the next day, the transaction number simply didn’t account for thousands of shoe orders—there were just 328 individual purchases.

Out of the 328 transactions that happened on BigBallerBrand.com in the first 24 hours that the shoes were offered for sale, we tracked that a total of just 263 pairs of sneakers had sold in both signed and unsigned versions of the ZO2 Prime.

While we have no access to sales receipts, transactions or traffic data, we have been monitoring the inventory levels of the footwear listed on BigBallerBrand.com. After noting the initial product levels at the start and deducting the current units sold, we can confidently say that 210 pairs of unsigned ZO2 Primes had sold (103 pairs in size 8.5 alone), along with 53 autographed ZO2 Primes.
While it’s tough to confirm anything here from a secondary source and incredibly unlikely the Balls are going to talk down rumors of big sales, the logic used by Nice Kicks here makes sense. And then there’s the big sales numbers that don’t match the actual sales thus far.

Not accounting for shipping or sales tax (that doesn’t appear to be properly applied to transactions anyways), the total revenue for footwear in the first 24 hours was $157,685, based on the numbers sold for signed, unsigned, and the larger sizes that are priced at an extra $200.

While $157,685 is an incredible amount of sales in one day, it is far from the $2.5 million that numerous outlets have reported today online.
It’s an interesting look at the reality of the shoe business, an industry the Balls are now going it alone in. Though opting not to sign with a major shoe company is clearly not a decision to take lightly, the Balls seemed forced to do so. Talks with Nike blew up and the pursuit of growing Big Baller Brand as a whole was sidetracked by talk of top tier price points. LaVar Ball wanted to package his three sons into a single billion-dollar shoe contract, and the companies that dominate the industry wanted nothing to do with it.

While the initial release on Thursday created a huge amount of Internet buzz—both good and bad—it didn’t immediately translate into massive sales. Like Stephon Marbury warned, it’s very difficult to grow a brand on your own. It’s easy to LaVar Ball to get people talking about him, his sons and their very expensive shoes, but actually convincing people to buy them takes a lot more than calling them “premium” and walking away.
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