The specifics of the current program are as follows: (1) a terrorist act must cause $5 million in insured losses to be certified for TRIA coverage, (2) the aggregate insured losses from certified acts of terrorism must be $200 million in a year for the government coverage to begin, and (3) an individual insurer must meet a deductible of 20% of its annual premiums for the government coverage to begin. Once these thresholds are met, the government covers 80% of insured losses due to terrorism
couch1potato
This got me 😂
Canadians should install a new door on their side 😂
I've used Wise (formerly TransferWise) for years. They have competitive exchange rates and acceptably low fees. They offer a debit card (electronic; you can see all the info/numbers in the app) that works for me for some online vendors in México (I'm US), but doesn't work for others. Your mileage may vary depending which country you're trying to use it in.
I also use my capital one venture credit card as a daily driver. They have no foreign transaction fees and exchange rates are pretty close to daily spot price (and it gets 2% back on purchases everywhere).
Another option could be Charles schwab checking account debit card (i forget the name of the actual product). It offers no foreign transaction fees on purchases and atm withdrawals and they reimburse atm fees worldwide.
I mean, this take makes as much sense as France asking for the statue back
I tried posteo and eclipso before settling on mailbox.org.
Coming from gmail.
If you search around there are several libraries you can join from afar without proving local residency. I had like 5 libraries from around the US on libby while the free downloading was still viable.
Working in Rota was absolutely frustrating trying to get anything done
Seems like a depth of 0 inches means you can just lay it on the floor?
Is that pronounced like 'fury' or 'furry' 🤔