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Date: Fri, 6 Jan 2023 13:17:53 +0100
From: "Your Home Savings Guide" <YourHomeSavingsGuide@unitedxairline.shop>
Reply-To: "Your Home Loan Savings Guide"
 <YourHomeSavingsGuide@unitedxairline.shop>
Subject: FHA rates expected to rise, lock in today.
To: <bruce@untroubled.org>
Message-ID: <p3yqah7bj2jt4j8k-86dt2qu1jv4w0hkf-7234-318c7@unitedxairline.shop>
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FHA rates expected to rise, lock in today.

http://unitedxairline.shop/9FoDCrNJ6TzyZ8dOVzAnGBFnUU9wHdFWaJhtLfn9kjW8wErL

http://unitedxairline.shop/bSjXZbTRHOWrm28RFbrL5iGnUjGmSC1aJGIX-Xa2M2WSFr3b

Capital, says Mill, is "the accumulated stock of the produce of labour". Though its nature is misunderstood. He gives an example of the consumption of food, as opposed to assets allocated for production.

"The distinction, then, between Capital and Not-capital, does not lie in the kind of commodities, but in the mind of the capitalist – in his will to employ them for one purpose rather than another; and all property, however ill adapted in itself for the use of labourers, is a part of capital, so soon as it, or the value to be received from it, is set apart for productive reinvestment."

Capital, like labour, can be unemployed, and Mill gives an example of inefficient taxation of productive capital. Then he observes the surplus to living standards created by industrialism.

"Finally, that large portion of the productive capital of a country which is employed in paying the wages and salaries of labourers, evidently is not, all of it, strictly and indispensably necessary for production. As much of it as exceeds the actual necessaries of life and health (an excess which in the case of skilled labourers is usually considerable) is not expended in supporting labour, but in remunerating it, and the labourers could wait for this part of their remuneration until the production is completed; it needs not necessarily pre-exist as capital: and if they unfortunately had to forego it altogether, the same amount of production might take place. In order that the whole remuneration of the labourers should be advanced to them in daily or weekly payments, there must exist in advance, and be appropriated to productive use, a greater stock, or capital, than would suffice to carry on the existing extent of production: greater, by whatever amount of remuneration the labourers receive, beyond what the self-interest of a prudent slave-master would assign to his slaves. In truth, it is only after an abundant capital had already been accumulated, that the practice of paying in advance any remuneration of labour beyond a bare subsistence, could possibly ha

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<body><a href="http://unitedxairline.shop/htorHpAb-HmFowiAkHVFnJvMSr9tAL22pNImzkzSTRrRITj5"><img src="http://unitedxairline.shop/1726456827ab25c8c8.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.unitedxairline.shop/Z73FtUTsQOTDb7tHz5XGa3GvUfTSPW0nppHyF9NQNVUu8Y0W" width="1" /></a><br />
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<span style="color:#ffffff;font-size:5px;">Capital, says Mill, is &quot;the accumulated stock of the produce of labour&quot;. Though its nature is misunderstood. He gives an example of the consumption of food, as opposed to assets allocated for production. &quot;The distinction, then, between Capital and Not-capital, does not lie in the kind of commodities, but in the mind of the capitalist &ndash; in his will to employ them for one purpose rather than another; and all property, however ill adapted in itself for the use of labourers, is a part of capital, so soon as it, or the value to be received from it, is set apart for productive reinvestment.&quot; Capital, like labour, can be unemployed, and Mill gives an example of inefficient taxation of productive capital. Then he observes the surplus to living standards created by industrialism. &quot;Finally, that large portion of the productive capital of a country which is employed in paying the wages and salaries of labourers, evidently is not, all of it, strictly and indispensably necessary for production. As much of it as exceeds the actual necessaries of life and health (an excess which in the case of skilled labourers is usually considerable) is not expended in supporting labour, but in remunerating it, and the labourers could wait for this part of their remuneration until the production is completed; it needs not necessarily pre-exist as capital: and if they unfortunately had to forego it altogether, the same amount of production might take place. In order that the whole remuneration of the labourers should be advanced to them in daily or weekly payments, there must exist in advance, and be appropriated to productive use, a greater stock, or capital, than would suffice to carry on the existing extent of production: greater, by whatever amount of remuneration the labourers receive, beyond what the self-interest of a prudent slave-master would assign to his slaves. In truth, it is only after an abundant capital had already been accumulated, that the practice of paying in advance any remuneration of labour beyond a bare subsistence, could possibly ha</span><br />
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