Dave & Chuck “The Freak” talk UNCUT about Dave’s nut week, a guy who used a massage gun on his eyes, a dude just smoking weed, a dentist who does stand up and more! *NSFW*
https://t.co/pGsQMpsrjk
It’s not just the uniform design. It’s the larger shoulder pads, the cut of the jerseys with actual sleeves, dazzle fabric making the pants and jerseys of many teams — including the Oilers — shine in the light. The NFL aesthetic peaked from about 1987-1995.
Happy Father’s Day to all the dads who show up, lead by example, and teach their kids to treat others with kindness and respect. Those lessons matter more than ever. You are appreciated, needed, and loved. Enjoy your day!
Hi #BroncosCountry - so excited for some football!!!
I just wanted to take a minute and let everyone know these are two kind of scams going around. One via DMs .( don’t click) And a crypto address. ( don’t redpond) see below
Hate for anyone to lose their account.
Take care!
Somehow it seems appropriate to be the last media member in the old Broncos headquarters building, as I work in a lobby conference room before they shut this place down. I’ve got a lot of memories in this building. Some good, some bad, all part of life itself.
Mark your calendars. 📆
We're headed to Arizona and North Carolina this fall for our #BroncosCountry Takeover pregame fan rallies!
For more info & to RSVP » https://t.co/M9DKH2t9Gk
Property taxes on primary residences are a tax on unrealized gains, and the double standard around it is glaring.
You buy a house for $300k with your after-tax dollars. Years later the market rises and the assessor says it’s now worth $600k. Your tax bill goes up—even though you didn’t sell, didn’t refinance, didn’t pull out a dime of equity. You’re paying higher taxes every single year on “wealth” that exists only on paper. That is the literal definition of taxing unrealized appreciation.
Politicians and pundits scream bloody murder when anyone suggests doing the exact same thing to billionaires’ unrealized stock gains. “It’s unfair! They’ll be forced to sell assets!” Yet the same logic is applied to your family home without a second thought. If the principle is wrong for Elon Musk’s Tesla shares, it’s wrong for grandma’s paid-off house.
The common defense—“It pays for schools and roads”—doesn’t hold up as justification for this specific mechanism. Those services are valuable, but tying their funding to the fluctuating paper value of your home creates a system where success (a nicer neighborhood, inflation, or simple supply and demand) is punished with a higher bill. Once the mortgage is gone, you still don’t truly own it. You’re a tenant with extra paperwork, paying annual rent to the government based on an assessment you don’t control.
This isn’t about hating government services. It’s about honest funding. Tax actual economic activity—consumption via a broad sales tax, realized capital gains, or user fees for specific services. Shift the burden to people who are actively spending or transacting in the economy instead of penalizing ownership itself. Other countries and even some U.S. localities have shown you can fund local government without treating primary homes like perpetual leaseholds from the state.
Ownership should mean ownership. Not “you own it until the county decides your paper equity went up.” Abolish property taxes on primary residences. The current system is a wealth tax dressed up as a service fee, and it’s long past time we called it what it is.
Hypothetically........ I'm being taxed on money I never made. Let that sink in.
If I bought my property outright for $120,000 in 2001
Now the county says it’s worth $499,100.
Did I sell it? No.
Did I make a profit? No.
Did I get a check for $499,100? No.
But my taxes jumped like I did.
That's the problem.
This isn't income.
This isn't cash.
This is a number someone decided on paper - and now I'm being billed for it.
If my stock portfolio doubles, I don't pay taxes until I sell.
If my income doesn't increase, I don't magically owe more income tax.
So why does owning a home work differently?
Why am I being taxed on unrealized gains?
A house isn't just an investment, it's where people live.
And this system means you can do everything right, pay off your home, and still get squeezed harder every year because of a number you never turned into money.
You don't truly own something if you can be taxed out of it.
This isn't about "services" or "inflation."
It's about being charged for value you never received.
And people are starting to notice.
The hardest part about looking back at a job you poured everything into is realizing you worked through your breaks, picked up the slack, missed time with your family, took on unnecessary stress, put off vacation days, and burned yourself out for a company that didn’t even notice.