The latest Bitcoin news is that you can donate Bitcoins to charity. The idea sounds good although almost no one wants to get rid of Bitcoins at the moment much less give them away so it may be an uncharitable option.
The actual reality of the use of the imaginary currency becomes more complex when taxation donations are considered. Since the value, if there really is any, of bitcoins is very volatile, especially over the last few weeks, what are you donating and what can you claim? If you give $50,000 to a charity at the start of the financial year and it drops in value, then you are not being so generous you would have been if you used dollars. If the value rises significantly can you claim the greater value on your taxes? Hint – don’t try it!
Cripple Creek tourism is on the rebound
Guests can gamble at full capacity, without masks once again
Guests can gamble at full capacity, without masks once again
and last updated 2021-05-22 20:02:27-04
CRIPPLE CREEK â With mask mandates being lifted giving many vaccinated folks the chance to show their smiling faces in public, and itâs making one community hit especially hard by the pandemic finally feel normal again. So normal, the community is expanding.
In Cripple Creek, itâs about the entire experience.
âItâs not just about the gambling,â Cripple Creek visitor Andrea Fitzgerald said. âItâs the history.â
A local newspaper had two articles yesterday that challenge the nature of art, a Lego Sculpture and a Computer portrait.
The first one, a Lego construction that sells for $1500, seems childish in its use of a child’s toy and is potentially dangerous as anyone who has stepped on a Lego block knows.
The second, a computer drawn portrait of Edmond de Belamy, seems derivative and rather blurry but sold for an astonishing $432,500. This might be a defining example of the computer acronym GIGO – garbage in, garbage out.
A third overall concern is the cost of some art with Wikipedia listing almost 40 pieces sold for over $100 million. Surely a better use of that money might be to build a few hospitals.
Art redefined
10 hours ago Illustrative image. A newspaper had two articles that challenge the nature of art, a Lego Sculpture and a Computer portrait.
The first one, a Lego construction that sells for $1500, seems childish in its use of a child’s toy and is potentially dangerous as anyone who has stepped on a Lego block knows.
The second, a computer drawn portrait of Edmond de Belamy, seems derivative and rather blurry but sold for an astonishing $432,500. This might be a defining example of the computer acronym GIGO - garbage in, garbage out.
A third overall concern is the cost of some art with Wikipedia listing almost 40 pieces sold for over $100 million. Surely a better use of that money might be to build a few hospitals.
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