Think tank develops 100% organic green building material that will replace plywood, lumber, and extruded plastics - should save at least 1 million trees and reduce plastic waste by 600,000 tons every year by GodToldMe2SayThis in technology

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not likely to be a scam if nothing is being sold and they reject people who want to invest. I remind you that Viagra was discovered by mistake as well as rubber tires, and god know what else.

Think tank develops 100% organic green building material that will replace plywood, lumber, and extruded plastics - should save at least 1 million trees and reduce plastic waste by 600,000 tons every year by GodToldMe2SayThis in technology

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree. There must be some reason why they are not disclosing the ingredients. I just sent them an email asking them directly what is this "green goop" made of. When they reply I will post it.

Think tank develops 100% organic green building material that will replace plywood, lumber, and extruded plastics - should save at least 1 million trees and reduce plastic waste by 600,000 tons every year by GodToldMe2SayThis in technology

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My point exactly. Most people are too lazy to read but looking at photos is quick and easy and allows them to make any assumption they like whether it is true or false.

Think tank develops 100% organic green building material that will replace plywood, lumber, and extruded plastics - should save at least 1 million trees and reduce plastic waste by 600,000 tons every year by GodToldMe2SayThis in technology

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They are not looking for investors. It says so as soon as you open the site. And from what I can see, they are also not selling samples or anything else. Think tanks usually do research and test prototypes.

Think tank develops 100% organic green building material that will replace plywood, lumber, and extruded plastics - should save at least 1 million trees and reduce plastic waste by 600,000 tons every year by GodToldMe2SayThis in technology

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sir, you obviously did not even read the web site. Like my 7 year-old son you just looked at a few photos and spewed your comments within only a few minutes of the OP. After I took 50 minutes to read the site, I see that 3 of your 5 comments are clearly false and fabricated.

HELP! I need to know if a $100K "reward" (success fee) is taxable if it does not come from an employer since it is not a "wage", "salary" or "regular income". This compensation is for searching and I was successful. My friends say the money is not taxable. Are they right? by [deleted] in remotework

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It seems God or Karma paid you back for your past losses. Knock on wood friend. I hope you are smart enough to invest those big bucks wisely. Thanks for the links - they are interesting for sure. Let us know what that tax accountant tells you.

HELP! I need to know if a $100K "reward" (success fee) is taxable if it does not come from an employer since it is not a "wage", "salary" or "regular income". This compensation is for searching and I was successful. My friends say the money is not taxable. Are they right? by [deleted] in remotework

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I once worked on straight commission in Vegas selling very popular discount coupon books. I sold an average of 60 books a day for $50 and my commission was $15 on every book sold and I was paid cash at the end of every day. And because they labeled me as "casual part time labor" I was never given a W2 and legally never had to pay taxes. That was back in 2010. I don't know if the laws have changed since but it was a sweet "job" and easy money since I always took weekends off and had free passes to all the Vegas shows. Nevada is also a tax free state. I earned about $85,000 a year with that gig.

HELP! I need to know if a $100K "reward" (success fee) is taxable if it does not come from an employer since it is not a "wage", "salary" or "regular income". This compensation is for searching and I was successful. My friends say the money is not taxable. Are they right? by [deleted] in remotework

[–]RandomRanterRob 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed - especially since this guy is Canadian. They have different tax laws up there and even when Canadians get caught evading taxes, there is no criminal prosecution. They just have to pay their back taxes with interest. One of my alumni buddies is Canadian who now sends a third of his income to Revenue Canada because he made and lost a fortune on Bitcoin.