A list of puns related to "Capital Of Maryland"
Indianapolis, Indiana poll is in: the Annapolis Indian apple is sin - DNA police
Active duty military stationed in Maryland, so I know I don't owe any taxes on regular income. But it's my first year investing and first time dealing with Capital Gains, Dividends, Royalties, etc.
TurboTax automatically pulled the Interest and Dividend Income numbers from the Federal Return and said that they were "Non-Maryland" by default, but it did not do the same for Capital Gains or Royalties.
What's the determining factor behind these, if anyone can explain?
Royalties are from two Trusts that are based outside the state.
Capital Gains were just from trading stocks on major markets.
Thanks in advance for any insight; I had assumed the investment paperwork would be as easy as the other forms but it has not turned out to be that way >_>.
> Abstract > > Online communities provide important functions in their participantsβ lives, from providing spaces to discuss topics of interest to supporting the development of close, personal relationships. Volunteer moderators play key roles in maintaining these spaces, such as creating and enforcing rules and modeling normative behavior. While these users play important governance roles in online spaces, less is known about how the work they do is impacted by platform design and culture. r/AskHistorians, a Reddit-based question and answer forum dedicated to providing users with academic-level answers to questions about history provides an interesting case study on the impact of design and culture because of its unique rules and their strict enforcement by moderators. In this article I use interviews with r/AskHistorians moderators and community members, observation, and the full comment log of a highly upvoted thread to describe the impact of Redditβs design and culture on moderation work. Results show that visible moderation work that is often interpreted as censorship, and the default masculine whiteness of Reddit, create challenges for moderators who use the subreddit as a public history site. Nonetheless, r/AskHistorians moderators have carved a space on Reddit where, through their public scholarship work, the community serves as a model for combating misinformation by building trust in academic processes.
For reference this ACM paper is based on Sarah Gilbert's (/u/SarahAGilbert) PhD dissertation work on /r/AskHistorians from 2017-18. You can find her brilliants posts on /r/AskHistorians which also summarises her methods, cultural and technical impacts of AHS using Reddit as platform, and the visible and invisible work of AHS's mods (and why they do it).
Idk about you, but I'm not feeling very essential at all. And I feel like I'm putting my family at risk unnecessarily. Don't get me wrong, I know I'm BLESSED to have a job. And I totally agree there are things that need to remain active. But common sense tells me that my job is NOT essential and there's no reason my colleagues and I should be out potentially spreading the virus to our families and the public. So... what are my fellow Marylanders up to?!
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