We need people like this here.

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
This is the kind of entrepreneurial spirit we need in this country! There are many adults here that could learn a lesson or two from this 8 year old girl! Maybe instead of whining how impossible it is to earn a living or how no one is providing jobs people should do as this girl is doing and finding her OWN way! Too bad the tax code over there, much like our's is becoming, will, sooner or later, kill her drive. She will soon find out that hard work and success is punished. She has the right answer. Freedom is found only in self reliance. These kind of people should be encouraged not discouraged.





[h=1]8-year-old girl will solve your everyday problems for a small price[/h]

Eve Hobsbawm will solve your problems for you in between doing her grade school homework


Eve Hobsbawm from London is a life coach like no other — she's only eight years old. While most kidsher age make money by selling cookies or doing chores, she solves everyday problems mostly for adults who need to see through the untainted eyes of a child. She even has a website —where she adorably calls herself Miss Evie Mouse — that advertises her consulting services.


The precocious young entrepreneur says her daddy, who runs a tech start-up, has inspired her to start her business. On her website, Eve warns potential clients that she can neither help them with their homework (especially math!) nor answer their existential conundrums. But she's definitely your girl when it comes to daily problems, and all for below $1.50 per question.


Back in December, when Eve was just seven years old, her first client asked her for advice about a really annoying husband. "It all cancels out," said Eve, who's obviously wise beyond her years. "You might do stuff to him that's also really annoying." The client was understandably very impressed. And since that may not be enough to convince you of Eve's exceptional problem-solving skills, a writer from The Guardian put Eve to the test by asking for her help to find his missing keys and for advice on what to serve for dinner with friends. The smart Miss Evie Mouse told him he'd find his keys in the hall (and he did), and to serve his friends spaghetti, which he realized later really was the easiest and most logical choice.


http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technol...-everyday-problems-small-price-182136358.html
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
I got eight of 'em for ya.


8 kid entrepreneurs to watch

link: http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2011/smallbusiness/1105/gallery.kid_entrepreneurs/index.html

Leanna Archer

Company: Leanna's Inc.
Age: 15
Website: leannashair.com


Running a successful small business is hard. But these eight kid entrepreneurs are showing that it's just child's play.


Leanna Archer decided she wanted to become a hair care mogul at the ripe old age of 11.

''The idea came to me when I received tons of compliments about my hair and I knew it was thanks to my homemade products,'' said Archer. ''I had nothing to lose, because I figured that if it didn't work out I still had my whole life ahead of me.''

Archer's company, Leanna's Inc., makes eight organic, hair products, which include hair dressings, hair butters and shampoos. Her secret formulas have been passed down through her family for generations and are free of sodium lauryl sulfate and parabens, chemicals which are considered health risks. `'Our products contains no oil filters, no synthetic ingredients, no chemically-engineered ingredients,'' she said.

Last year, the company had revenues of more than $100,000. The Long Island entrepreneur expects that number to increase to more than $300,000 by year-end. She is in the process of building an army of sales representatives across the United States.

Her advice to small business owners: ''All new entrepreneurs should know that mistakes are a big part of success.''


Robert Nay

Company: Nay Games
Age: 14
Website: naygames.com

At age 14, Robert Nay's first game, Bubble Ball, was downloaded more than two million times within two weeks of its launch.

Not bad considering that the average mobile game receives a few hundred downloads.In January, the game knocked the monster hit ''Angry Birds'' out of the number 1 most downloaded free game spot in the Apple app store.

''My friends suggested I try making an iPhone app, and I thought it would be really cool and decided to give it a try,'' said Nay. Without any previous coding experience, Nay went to the public library to research how he could go about building his game.

''I came up with the idea for the game by myself, but it was influenced by other games I liked and suggestions from people.''

One month later, after reading a few books and producing over 4,000 individual lines of code, Bubble Ball was complete. The total cost to produce the app: $1,200 -- a sum given to Nay by his parents to purchase a new Macbook and the proper software licenses.

Available on Apple and Android devices, the puzzle game has been downloaded more than seven million times to date.

The eighth grader's new mobile game development company, Utah-based Nay Games, is now working on ''some awesome new stuff for Bubble Ball,'' as well as other gaming projects.

His advice to young people: ''You can do amazing things if you just try.''



Mark Bao

Company: Supportbreeze
Age: 18
Website: supportbreeze.com

At 18 years old, New Yorker Mark Bao is a successful serial technology entrepreneur and philanthropist. The teen prodigy has sold three web companies, two of which Bao states were ''highly profitable.''

One garnered a quarter of a million subscribed users within three weeks of its launch. Bao has also started two nonprofit foundations.

His past ventures, all self-funded, included the viral hit, threewords.me, a social media site where visitors describe their friends' personalities in three words, Atomplan, a small business management tool, and Facebook Idol, an ''American Idol''-like competition app.

''I've always been interested in technology and how it can make a difference,'' said Bao. ''Entrepreneurial action creates change.''

His newest self-funded startup, Supportbreeze, is a customer service platform that helps businesses manage their support inquiries. The service dramatically cuts down on response time and manpower, said Bao.

''I needed a really good customer service application for my other startups, which led to the creation of Supportbreeze,'' he said.

These days, Bao can be found splitting his time between building up Supportbreeze, attending college classes, and assisting his pals at the New York City startup, Onswipe, a tablet publishing platform that enables content publishers to beautifully display their media and advertising on touch devices without any programming knowledge.

''When you're young, don't fear failing,'' he said. ''Whether you succeed or fail, the things you learn will be incredibly valuable for your future endeavors.''


Lizzie Marie Likness

Company: Lizzie Marie Cuisine
Age: 11
Website: lizziemariecuisine.com

An aspiring chef since age 2, Lizzie Marie Likness is well on her way to becoming the next generation's Rachael Ray.

At age 6, Lizzie Marie Likness yearned to take horseback riding lessons. She wanted them so badly that she offered to help foot part of the bill.

When her parents asked where she would get the money, she replied,''I'll sell healthy homemade baked goods at the local farmer's market.'' From that moment on, Lizzie became the founder of Lizzie Marie Cuisine.

''Lizzie Marie Cuisine is unique because I teach kids how to have fun cooking healthy meals and how to live healthy,'' said Likness. "My company teaches people that it's not all about eating healthy, it's also about living healthy.''

A few short years later, word about her original recipes and ability to empower young people had spread beyond her local community. She soon began receiving invitations to demonstrate her cooking prowess alongside celebrity chefs at major live events, such as Taste of Atlanta.

She also was asked to become a spokesperson for the American Heart Association's ''Go Red For Women,'' campaign, and the Atlanta Falcons's ''First Down For Fitness Program.'' She also has appeared as a guest on the ''Rachael Ray Show.''

Today, Likness is the star of the WebMD Fit Channel's series, ''Healthy Cooking with Lizzie.'' She also just signed a branded entertainment and TV development deal with N.Y.-based production company, DBG, and global digital marketing agency, Digitas.

The mini-preneur, who hails from Georgia, expects to launch a series of healthy cooking cookbooks, packaged food products, and new digital media shows in the near future.

Her best advice: ''The greatest reward is doing what you love for the good of others.''



Farrhad Acidwalla

Company: Rockstah Media
Age: 17
Website: rockstahmedia.com

With $10 from his parents, Farrhad Acidwalla joined the entrepreneurial ranks at age 13, when he decided to build an online community devoted to aviation and aero-modeling. Several months later, he sold the community to a fan for $1,200.

Four years later, he put $400, from the sale of his online community, into Rockstah Media, now an international, award-winning agency focusing on branding, marketing and web development in Maharashtra, India.

''In the future, we plan to diversify and scale up our business by producing Hindi language entertainment programs,'' said Acidwalla.

Acidwalla said he keeps his 42 employees happy by offering them profit-sharing opportunities.

''Taking initiative is the most important step, so long as it is backed by hard work and dedication,'' he said.



Asya Gonzalez

Company: Stinky Feet Gurlz
Age: 14
Website: stinkyfeetgurlz.com

The daughter of two entrepreneurs, Asya Gonzalez wanted to follow in her family's footsteps.

''I remember asking my Dad why my uncle couldn't come with us on spontaneous trips, and he said because he works at an office,'' Gonzalez recalled. ''I knew right then that I wanted to have freedom, make my own money and make my own rules. You can't do that climbing the corporate ladder ... as my Dad says.''

At 13, Gonzalez launched Stinky Feet Gurlz, a company that designs, markets and sells 1940s-inspired t-shirts and apparel.

Her company also donates a portion of every shirt sold to She's Worth It!, a nonprofit organization she founded, dedicated to ending human trafficking and child sex slavery.

'' 'Buy a shirt, save a child.' That's our motto,'' she said.

The company expects to make $20,000 a month beginning next year. ''Most adults like to help and give advice so be open to it,'' she said. "And above all, have fun!''



Brian Wong

Company: Kiip
Age: 20
Website: kiip.me

Two years ago, while traveling on long flights, Brian Wong noticed that many of his fellow airline passengers were casual mobile gamers, tapping away on their smartphones for hours at a time.

Shortly after, the former Digg employee began researching the market and devised a plan for a new gamer rewards platform.

Within a year of his 'aha' moment, he was able to raise over $4 million in venture capital for his company, Kiip.

''I've always had the entrepreneurial itch, but what got me the most excited was the opportunity to truly reinvent a space,'' said Wong.

Less than two months old, Kiip is a mobile rewards network that offers gamers real rewards for virtual achievements, such as winning a coupon for a can of soda after getting a new high score or completing a difficult level.

With access to more than 15 million active mobile gamers and clients, such as Dr. Pepper and Sephora, behind him, the San Fransisco entrepreneur hopes to become the leader in ''moment-based advertising.''

His words of wisdom to other young business minds: ''You are the most powerful force in your own life, don't let others set the rules for you.''


Adam Horwitz

Company: Yep Text
Age: 19
Website: yeptext.com

Since the age of 15, Adam Horwitz has had one entrepreneurial goal: create a million-dollar company by the time he was 21.

Three years and 30-or-so unsuccessful, self-funded web ventures later, he launched his first successful product, Mobile Monopoly. The online course teaches people how to earn money generating mobile marketing leads and earned Horwitz a six-figure profit.

Horwitz added several other online courses, each earning him six figures or more, and broke the million-dollar-revenue mark before his 18th birthday. His company Local Mobile Monopoly is a multimedia training platform that helps business owners.

''I just love being able to build a business and watch it grow into something huge,'' said Horwitz. ''The journey is the most exciting part.''

His latest venture is YepText, a text messaging service that enables businesses to attract customer foot traffic to their locations by text messaging ads and promotions to their smartphones. ''The only other text messaging services out there were extremely complicated and targeted towards the Fortune 500 list,'' said Horwitz. ''So we decided to go a different route and target the small business niche.''

Currently, Horwitz spends his days growing YepText, while working on several other ventures.

His message to other aspiring, young entrepreneurs: ''Anything is possible now, just make sure that you take action and never, ever give up.''
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
This sort of thing should be encouraged, not discouraged. I wonder, instead of the 'progressive' income tax, which penalizes hard work and success, why not a 'LAZY' tax? Sort of the 'sin taxes' on cigarettes and booze. They CLAIM they put high taxes on these things to discourage their use. It is therefor logical to assume that if you tax success at a higher rate you must be trying to discourage it! SO, if you tax 'LAZY' at a higher rate it would 'encourage' success and 'discourage lazy'.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
This sort of thing should be encouraged, not discouraged.

Dude seriously, where do you come up with these things? How do you come to the conclusion that these things are not encouraged?

I wonder, instead of the 'progressive' income tax, which penalizes hard work and success, why not a 'LAZY' tax?

Let me suggest an author for you, Ayn Rand. I think you would thouroughly enjoy her writings and philosophy. If you have had the priviledge of reading her stuff then I apologize for assuming that you haven't.

Sort of the 'sin taxes' on cigarettes and booze. They CLAIM they put high taxes on these things to discourage their use. It is therefor logical to assume that if you tax success at a higher rate you must be trying to discourage it!

Yeah.....that's what we must assume.

SO, if you tax 'LAZY' at a higher rate it would 'encourage' success and 'discourage lazy'.

Who determines if you are lazy? What qualifies you as being lazy? What's your definition of lazy? Enquiring minds want to know.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
A 'progressive' income tax taxes higher incomes, other wise known as success, at a higher rate. Therefor, discouraging success.

An example:

When I first arrived in England, in 1976, the highest tax rate was 98%. My English friend, a self-employed jewelry designer and silversmith, would shut down his business when ever his weekly income reached the 'tipping' point. WHY? He would only make 2% of every thing that he earned after.

Not too long after that Maggie Thatcher LOWERED that rate to I THINK 75%. SO, as a result of that my friend would work until the NEW tipping point. etc.

We see the same thing here, as rates go higher, production will go down. Why should it not? Why would any hard working, intelligent person, choose to work for less per hour, day, job, after a certain point? I won't. I doubt that many would.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
A 'progressive' income tax taxes higher incomes, other wise known as success, at a higher rate. Therefor, discouraging success.

Very simplistic view of the tax system we have. Look, it would be simple if we didn't have S.S., Medicare, Medicaid, lets just get that on the table. But we do, so unless someone is going to do away with those programs, what you are trying to explain will just not work.

Bill O'reilly said exactly what you are talking about on his show not to long ago and threatened to quit his O'reilly Factor if the his taxes were raised, yeah.......right.

An example:

When I first arrived in England, in 1976, the highest tax rate was 98%. My English friend, a self-employed jewelry designer and silversmith, would shut down his business when ever his weekly income reached the 'tipping' point. WHY? He would only make 2% of every thing that he earned after.

So......if he reached this "tipping point" in the second quarter of his business year, he would just shut down for the remainder of the year?


We see the same thing here, as rates go higher, production will go down. Why should it not? Why would any hard working, intelligent person, choose to work for less per hour, day, job, after a certain point? I won't. I doubt that many would.

Am I missing something here? Has our rates gone up or down since the President has taken office?
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Yes, he would have shut down for the remainder of the year. He would have made more on the 'dole' than if he worked. Much like here.

Rates here are about the same, but Obama wants to raise them, on the 'rich', just as they did in England. Just as they did in California, and it's driving business out of the State and bankrupting the State.

SS, medicare etc, should be scraped. NOT government functions. Also NOT allowed for under the Constitution AND also not paid for by the income tax.

I don't care what O'Riely does, or says. I only care how badly I get creamed for taxes. I want to keep what I earn. I expect every one to cover their own lives.

I would eliminate that income tax. It is unfair and contrary to production.

Any tax I would use would be as LOW as possible, and be set for a minimum of 25 years so businesses and the people would know what to count on and be able to start long term planning.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Well I guess you should just pack it up and leave the country then.

or........

you can put your logic to the test and stop being lazy, become uber rich and you will pay less in taxes then you are now. Simple, now get busy.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Well I guess you should just pack it up and leave the country then.

or........

you can put your logic to the test and stop being lazy, become uber rich and you will pay less in taxes then you are now. Simple, now get busy.

Very silly of you. I will work, as I always have and do my BEST to pay as little as I can. I will do my BEST to gut the socialist State.

ME LAZY? What do you base that on? Just being a smart butt? I work pretty darn hard for a 'lazy' person.

ME leave this Country? Nope, I will fight to insure our Constitution is protected, just as my oath stated.

I have a better idea, have EVERYONE pay taxes. Have everyone take that attitude that these kids are showing, get off their butts, and succeed. AND, and it is a really BIG AND, get the government out of the way and out of our pockets so we CAN succeed.

The BIGGEST threat to personal success and our freedom, is our government.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
The incentive is there to make more money, because if you do, you too can take advantage of loopholes and the tax structure as it is today.


 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
The incentive is there to make more money, because if you do, you too can take advantage of loopholes and the tax structure as it is today.



Loopholes? What makes you, or anyone, think that the government is entitled to our money? What makes other people think that they are 'entitled' to others wages. A right is NOT a right if it places a burden on another person.

What I earn is mine to do with as I please.

Jefferson was right, read my signature.



As I once told my congressman when I lived in SC. "Get your hands out of my pockets and let me live".
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Loopholes? What makes you, or anyone, think that the government is entitled to our money? What makes other people think that they are 'entitled' to others wages. A right is NOT a right if it places a burden on another person.

What I earn is mine to do with as I please.

Call it the price you pay to live in a civilized society.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
"This sort of thing should be encouraged, not discouraged."

I'm still stuck on how such a simple statement draws any conclusions whatsoever. It simply states two ideas, one, that this sort of thing should be encouraged, and two, that this sort of thing should not be discouraged. It doesn't draw a conclusion that this sort of thing is discouraged, any more than it draws a conclusion that it is encouraged.

So, I feel compelled to ask you, Dood, seriously, where do you come up with these things? Are you that hard to up start a confrontation? LOL
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Reagan said it best:

I love the crowds reaction when asked if the millionaire should pay more or less in taxes than a bus driver. Good thing ole Ronnie isn't running for President today, he'd be called a Socialist and accused of engaging in class warfare. :rolleyes:

 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Call it the price you pay to live in a civilized society.

Civilized? Not be any standard I go by.

I call it the price I pay for living in a country with a corrupt government hell bent on enslaving the People. A corrupt government hell bent on destroying our Constitution. The price for living in a country where large segments of the population believe that they are entitled to others wages, demand that they be cared for and often refuse to provide for themselves.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
WE HAVE PEOPLE like this here, look around when you are sitting in a truck stop

I DO, and I see a LOT over greatly over taxed and over regulated people struggling to make ends meet to pay for those "who would not".

I am GREATLY impressed will a "young girl" who can find a way to earn money when there are MILLIONS in this country, and her's, who can't. We NEED more like her! Until the VAST majority of the population is like her, there are NOT enough. The 'entitlement' mentality must go away, for good.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
A 'progressive' income tax taxes higher incomes, other wise known as success, at a higher rate. Therefor, discouraging success.

You know the funny thing is when we had real tax rates (from the 30's into the 80's) we were more successful and more individually productive than we have been since Reagan. The amazing thing is, the biggest individually productive time was in the early 40's when people would work 80 hours plus and pay taxes with 20 hours worth of labor. you think about what has replaced tangible assets that the country had (like manufacturing) and then look at how we have companies that have small assets being overvalued that provide no tangibles at all and think what if we taxed them, those with the limited employment and the $500 per share stock?

Maybe we do need to see the tax rate go up, more incentive to work harder. I can say that I won't be helped by the lower of cap gains taxes for at least 5 years so I can see the need to raise them a bit ... but overall we need to fix what we have, cut spending across the board and stop fighting losing wars.
 
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