GitLab, Gitea and Codeberg
GitLab, Gitea and Codeberg
Well you still have the lawn mower, which you can sell. But you’ll get less than you paid for it (you might get $400) – and I think that difference ($600) is the only part that should be exempt from taxes
Surely businesses’ investments can’t be written off? If they could, that would be a massive flaw in the system
Here’s my opinion, as someone who has zero education in economics. Feel free to voice your disagreement if you know better
If your personal expenses match your income but those expenses can’t be written off, the resulting taxes result in a net loss for that month. This would be the same with a business if expenses could not be written off
And in my opinion, buying a house should not be written off as a personal expense, and neither should a business buying a warehouse be able to write it off either. If something can be sold, only the permanent loss should be considered an expense – the remainder should be an asset
But bills and rent are generally permanent expenses. You don’t get anything back after paying them, except the continuation of your services. I think these should be deductible. Similarly, if a business has to pay for a SaaS solution, I’m okay with that being a deductible
Is my thinking flawed?
GitHub’s reporting functions are limited. For example, it’s not possible to report the issue or the reply from GitHub Actions. And the form for reporting the whole repository is somewhat broken and annoying to use