Anonymous ID: 777095 April 25, 2023, 8:55 p.m. No.18754170   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>18754102

>What if no deal is reached on debt ceiling

 

Then they use C.R.s per usual. Anon worked under C.R.s a LOT. They PRETEND there's a crisis but there never is, it's all about power, money and control It's ridiculous. Anon got brand new office equipment from desktop to cubicle partitions for FIVE years in a row. Previously anon had the same ancient desk etc they'd had since circ 1950s military surplus, painted freaking lime green. The agencies were and ARE vastly overfunded. They don't hire people who pass the Civil Service test, they hire some idiots who don't last and buy lots of new toys. Anon will never run out of:

Pens

Mechanical Pencils

Sticky Notes

Printer paper

Steno pads

Staples

Tape

and so much else I'd have to go look, that's just from memory, I was around those drawers today.

 

Anon's desk looked brand new the day it was replaced- I was only there 4 hours every 2 weeks, unless I could avoid it, sometimes it couldn't be avoided.

 

C.R.= Continuing Resolution

 

 

The day-to-day operations of most federal agencies are funded on an annual basis by appropriations. When those appropriation bills are not enacted by the start of the fiscal year on October 1, Congress uses a continuing resolution, or โ€œCR,โ€ as a temporary measure to fund government activities for a limited amount of time. Continuing resolutions are temporary โ€œstopgaps,โ€ often employed to avoid a partial government shutdown and to give lawmakers more time to enact appropriations for the full year. However, programs deemed as essential services, such as those related to public safety, often continue to operate even in the absence of a CR.

 

WHAT IS THE CURRENT FUNDING SITUATION FOR FISCAL YEAR 2023?

Fiscal year 2023 began on October 1 and none of the 12 appropriation bills for the year were enacted yet. As a result, a continuing resolution was enacted on September 30 to avoid a government shutdown and provide temporary funding for government operations (plus some supplemental funding for other purposes) through December 16. Because legislators still had not reached an agreement, a second CR was used to extend temporary funding through December 23. While Congress had agreed on funding levels by that deadline, a third CR was enacted on December 23 to allow more time for full enactment of such funding. Funding for fiscal year 2023 was fully enacted on December 29.

 

WHY ARE CONTINUING RESOLUTIONS AN IMPORTANT PART OF THE BUDGET PROCESS?

While temporary funding measures often avoid shutdowns, they also reflect the failure of lawmakers to reach agreement on some or all appropriation bills for a full fiscal year. Funding the government for a full year is preferable to using a CR because it allows government agencies to plan appropriately and match their resources with their responsibilities. Predictability benefits the economy by providing certainty about government activities.

 

The majority of federal spending is governed by permanent law and generally not constrained by the appropriation process. However, over the past 10 years, appropriations have accounted for about one-third of total spending, on average, and support programs that touch nearly every aspect of our daily lives as well as various facets of the economy โ€” including national defense, operating national parks, law and immigration enforcement, healthcare research, and a host of other activities. All of those activities are funded through the 12 regular appropriation bills that are supposed to be enacted into law each year by the Congress and President. Under regular budget order, lawmakers would enact all of those full-year appropriation bills before October 1.

 

HOW OFTEN ARE CONTINUING RESOLUTIONS USED?

Missing the October 1 deadline to enact all 12 appropriation bills is not unusual; in fact, that deadline has not been fully met since fiscal year 1997. Instead, lawmakers have come to rely heavily on CRs โ€” temporary, imperfect solutions that avoid the difficult but necessary work of allocating funding. Lawmakers often enact multiple CRs in a single fiscal year before deciding on full-year funding levels. For fiscal years 1998 through 2023, 131 CRs have been enacted.

 

https://www.pgpf.org/blog/2023/1/what-is-a-continuing-resolution

Anonymous ID: 777095 April 25, 2023, 9:33 p.m. No.18754425   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4440 >>4630

>>18754117

MomAnon bought the lp for anon's birthday or Christmas (1 day variation) and the vinyl was abandoned 20 years later because anon was too lazy to go back and get the orange crate completely full of excellent albums.

 

Anon listened to several audiobooks in the past couple of weeks and learned something suspected but never really known for sure.

What anon DID know

  1. All current vinyl lps- $4.00 with tax

  2. The record store was owned by a mob guy

  3. Mob guy ended up shot in the trunk of his caddy

 

The price was always way too low but we bought as we could afford to buy.

 

How the records got there?

They press an outlandish amount of records and ship them, inflating numbers and making the work look like a major success regardless if it sold or not. The extras get inventoried as shipped and received and once the numbers are reported those albums go out the back door and straight to the mob(CIA assets, work associates) who already made money on the artists. They would know A LOT about the 27 club, ala Sam Cooke who was also managed by Jack Keen, the manager of Richie Valens (La Bamba)

the notes taken (in the dark) were

DeFi , Larry NunesJohn Siamis>Keen Records

 

Keen screwed Sam Cooke by not honoring an oral contract for You Send Me, Cooke's debut single and a MASSIVE HIT.

 

Valens gets killed in a plane crash with loads of plausible deniability- Keen gets his catalog

 

Cooke is murdered- Keen gets his catalog

 

During the time Keen had the catalog MGM Records was pressing bootleg copies by the tens of thousands, this is proven

 

Oh, they also killed Bobby Fuller, Roulette Records, see Nunes above.

 

The GODFATHER was Morris Levy

 

 

https://allthingsthriller.com/2019/06/30/playing-roulette-with-the-mob-part-iii-the-bobby-fuller-four/