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#1
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#2
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Degen 1103 (eBay) about $70 delivered - (Most sensitive small portable and
has SSB) Grundig S-350 $99.95 at Radio Shack, often cheaper in certain catalog outlets or as Tecsun BCL2000 on eBay (Analog, some images, mostly out of band, great sensitivity and sound, no ssb) Sangean SG-622 $40 approx (smallish analog no SSB) Kaito WRX-911 $30 (tiny pocket sized analog with decent performance for price and size) Grundig FR-200 $40 (Wind up with light/mediocre as radio) Jay "andrew cool" wrote in message ... any help would be great. www.moveon.org stop the republicans! |
#3
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All these seem like good choices. I'd only add the Grundig Mini World
100 PE to the list. ($30 @ Radio Shack, analog, pocket size, decent for the price and size). About the Degen 1103. . . Not sure. . . Isn't that the one Bro. Stair "gives away" - for an $80 offering. If you're in need of a tax deduction you might consider that. You'd have no sales tax on it. You CAN'T say you want to BUY or ORDER the radio. You have to tell him you are sending an OFFERING and then REQUEST the radio if he still has them available. This way he avoids paying state sales tax on it as well. I don't know what other benefits he has except to possibly be exempt from some kind of sales tax audit. He is very adamant about the wording of the request, but you can get a tax break from it - if needed. Al ========== Jay wrote: Degen 1103 (eBay) about $70 delivered - (Most sensitive small portable and has SSB) Grundig S-350 $99.95 at Radio Shack, often cheaper in certain catalog outlets or as Tecsun BCL2000 on eBay (Analog, some images, mostly out of band, great sensitivity and sound, no ssb) Sangean SG-622 $40 approx (smallish analog no SSB) Kaito WRX-911 $30 (tiny pocket sized analog with decent performance for price and size) Grundig FR-200 $40 (Wind up with light/mediocre as radio) Jay "andrew cool" wrote in message ... any help would be great. www.moveon.org stop the republicans! |
#4
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![]() "Al Patrick" wrote in message ... All these seem like good choices. I'd only add the Grundig Mini World 100 PE to the list. ($30 @ Radio Shack, analog, pocket size, decent for the price and size). About the Degen 1103. . . Not sure. . . Isn't that the one Bro. Stair "gives away" - for an $80 offering. If you're in need of a tax deduction you might consider that. You'd have no sales tax on it. You CAN'T say you want to BUY or ORDER the radio. You have to tell him you are sending an OFFERING and then REQUEST the radio if he still has them available. This way he avoids paying state sales tax on it as well. I don't know what other benefits he has except to possibly be exempt from some kind of sales tax audit. He is very adamant about the wording of the request, but you can get a tax break from it - if needed. Al That DX-440 is a good cheap set too used. -- 73 and good DXing. Brian ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A lot of radios and 100' of rusty wire! Zumbrota, Southern MN Brian's Radio Universe http://webpages.charter.net/brianhill/ |
#5
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![]() "Al Patrick" wrote About the Degen 1103. . . Not sure. . . Isn't that the one Bro. Stair "gives away" - for an $80 offering. If you're in need of a tax deduction you might consider that. You'd have no sales tax on it. You CAN'T say you want to BUY or ORDER the radio. You have to tell him you are sending an OFFERING and then REQUEST the radio if he still has them available. This way he avoids paying state sales tax on it as well. I don't know what other benefits he has except to possibly be exempt from some kind of sales tax audit. He is very adamant about the wording of the request, but you can get a tax break from it - if needed. *If* this brother-stair is a registered 501(c)3 charitable organization (tax-exempt, not just a non-profit organization), then you could deduct from federal and state income an amount equal to your contribution (minus) the fair value of the radio given in exchange. You would be required by any state of domicile that has a sales tax, to declare the same difference and pay "Use Tax" on it. Does he explain this in his claim of tax breaks? Jack |
#6
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He doesn't mention the tax angle at all. He emphasizes that it is an
OFFERING you are sending. Then, if you request it, he will send you a radio so you can better hear his broadcasts or so you can provide a means for a friend to hear his broadcasts. Jack Painter wrote: "Al Patrick" wrote About the Degen 1103. . . Not sure. . . Isn't that the one Bro. Stair "gives away" - for an $80 offering. If you're in need of a tax deduction you might consider that. You'd have no sales tax on it. You CAN'T say you want to BUY or ORDER the radio. You have to tell him you are sending an OFFERING and then REQUEST the radio if he still has them available. This way he avoids paying state sales tax on it as well. I don't know what other benefits he has except to possibly be exempt from some kind of sales tax audit. He is very adamant about the wording of the request, but you can get a tax break from it - if needed. *If* this brother-stair is a registered 501(c)3 charitable organization (tax-exempt, not just a non-profit organization), then you could deduct from federal and state income an amount equal to your contribution (minus) the fair value of the radio given in exchange. You would be required by any state of domicile that has a sales tax, to declare the same difference and pay "Use Tax" on it. Does he explain this in his claim of tax breaks? Jack |
#7
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"Al Patrick" wrote
He doesn't mention the tax angle at all. He emphasizes that it is an OFFERING you are sending. Then, if you request it, he will send you a radio so you can better hear his broadcasts or so you can provide a means for a friend to hear his broadcasts. One of the worst (in a long line of stupid things that America's church leadership have done) was to make the churches beholden to the government. This happened when they became "tax exempt". Ever since, you could argue that there is a stonger state-and-church relationship than church-and-state. There is nothing to separate when the government can control the financial operations of the church, and that they do. The Infernal Revenue Code actually describes that the value of a MEAL must be considered income in offset to any charitable deduction that involved participants having dinner at a charity funcion held in a church. Tickets sold for that "dinner" are of course to benefit one of the church's charitable efforts, and the meals may even be DONATED by VOLUNTEERS - but the IRS says there is a value in that meal that must be deducted from the "charity" that ticket-buyers are allowed to deduct. Now, when "activist" churches (pretend "brother stair" is one, I don't know him) start preaching that government is evil, unconstitutional, should be disobeyed, etc., the government that these churches are beholden to usually acts back. IRS is pretty fast to act on inconsistencies in a church's use of it's tax exemption under 501(c)3. And it is EASY to find any American a lawbreaker with respect to taxes, on any return or business they examine. I'm just observing that this obvious play on words that Stair thinks he is pulling by mailing "free" radios to anyone whos asks (after a fixed-amount donation, of course) could get him in a lot of trouble. And state sales tax agencies could even harrass supporters of him by reaching across state lines (all 50 states have this agreement) and discovering who didn't pay Sales & Use tax on the radios. The same supporters who made improper deductions could have federal and state income tax issues. No matter how trivial that sounds, once an audit is underway, other things "turn up". This is just a speculative example of what does happen to organizations of both charitable and non-profit construction who make complaints about our goverment's behavior. And it has nothing to do with President Bush or any five of his predecessors. It is a situation that has been developing for a long, long time, and runs much deeper than any party lines. Members of Congress from *either* side of the isle who complain about these practices have strange misfortunes befall their careers. If there was one thing I would hope conservatives and liberals alike would be willing to lay all their other differences aside for (besides REAL security threats that is), I would hope it would be to unravel to the very rotten core that is our income tax. 73, Jack Painter Jack Painter wrote: "Al Patrick" wrote About the Degen 1103. . . Not sure. . . Isn't that the one Bro. Stair "gives away" - for an $80 offering. If you're in need of a tax deduction you might consider that. You'd have no sales tax on it. You CAN'T say you want to BUY or ORDER the radio. You have to tell him you are sending an OFFERING and then REQUEST the radio if he still has them available. This way he avoids paying state sales tax on it as well. I don't know what other benefits he has except to possibly be exempt from some kind of sales tax audit. He is very adamant about the wording of the request, but you can get a tax break from it - if needed. *If* this brother-stair is a registered 501(c)3 charitable organization (tax-exempt, not just a non-profit organization), then you could deduct from federal and state income an amount equal to your contribution (minus) the fair value of the radio given in exchange. You would be required by any state of domicile that has a sales tax, to declare the same difference and pay "Use Tax" on it. Does he explain this in his claim of tax breaks? Jack |
#8
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![]() "Al Patrick" wrote in message ... All these seem like good choices. I'd only add the Grundig Mini World 100 PE to the list. ($30 @ Radio Shack, analog, pocket size, decent for the price and size). FWIW, today...err...yesterday...I received a Grundig Mini 300 (which is why I'm here - to learn more about broadcast schedules, etc.). It has a digital display and a clock with alarm & sleep functions, plus wrist strap, case, and earbuds. Regular price is $39.95 but I ordered mine from levenger.com on sale for $29.95. -- ~~Bluesea~~ Spam is great in musubi but not in email. Please take out the trash before sending a direct reply. |
#9
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The FR200 by Grundig is an excellent low cost option for
anyone needing a simple radio . It is not a primary radio, but it works quite well for me. 73 and DX Arnie Coro CO2KK |
#10
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![]() "andrew cool" wrote in message ... any help would be great. Yep-- the Degen DE1103, the Degen DE1102 are great buys in that price range. Look on eBay for the seller, liypn. He's in China and gets these radios direct from the factory. His prices and service are excellent. Jackie |
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