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Should I Have Offered This Trade

I was offered a trade. Any thought? He wants Seahawks Defense & Victor Cruz. I will get Maurice Jones-Drew & Percy Harvin.?

Sounds pretty fair to me, but I think you're getting a slightly better deal. If you have another solid defense like the Patriots, you can afford to trade the Seahawks defense.

You will need MJD for depth. McFadden will not play many snaps. You need a 3rd RB for bye weeks and injury and stuff. Cruz and Harvin are essentially equal. They are both WR2s with potential upside.

What would have happened if Germany had offered to trade Slovakia for Danzig and the Corridor to Poland?

Such an offer would have been hastily declined.One reason is found in Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points, which Poland generally supported:XIII. An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations, which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea, and whose political and economic independence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant.The “indisputably Polish populations” part became a huge problem leading up to World War II, as I describe here, but the “access to the sea” part was unambiguous.Recognizing this, Joachim von Ribbentrop made a similar offer. In early 1939, when Germany and Poland were still at peace, the Germans came to the table:Besides the Ukraine Ribbentrop promised Slovakia (a sign of things to come) and access to the Black Sea.If Jozef Beck turned down Ukraine, Slovakia, and access to the Black Sea (which Ribbentrop points out in the linked book, is still a sea), why on Earth would Beck have accepted only Slovakia?Ribbentrop would have been laughed out of the embassy.

Would you trade Carlos Hyde for Alshon Jeffery?

PPR League. My starters:

WR: Antonio Brown
WR: Tyreek Hill
RB: Melvin Gordon
RB: Ezekiel Elliot
Flex: Carlos Hyde

Bench:
Alvin Kamara
Jerrick McKinnon
Duke Johnson Jr
Adrian Peterson
Marvin Jones, Jr.
John Brown

Should I fix my car before I trade it in?

Satanic Mechanic is right on the money.

Don't bother fixing. I would only add this to his comments:

Don't let the guy doing your trade in rake you over the coals for the things that need fixing. You have to be a good negotiator or you will get eaten alive. They love it when you've got a cracked windshield or something really obvious, and really expensive for someone like you to fix. They will pay 50% of what you would pay (maybe less) to have the same things fixed.

So, if you feel like they are taking advantage of you by low balling your trade, ask them what it would be worth if it was perfect.

Lets say they offer you $3,500 (don't be insulted - that's probably close to the number you will get offered at first blush).
Ask them what it would be worth if it was perfect? They may say $4500. Whatever they say, add $500 to it. Then meet them 1/2 way between their first offer and the "ideal" value. In this example it would be 1/2 way between $3500 and $5000. Tell them you want $4250. When they balk, tell them you know it's got a bad windshield etc... and you know it will cost them less than half of what it will cost you to have those fixed, so stop wasting each other's time and just settle on $4250.

And I would definitely trade it in, because selling that car privately will require you to spend $1000 or so, just to unload it. Very few private buyers will be interested in a car that needs that kind of work, and the ones that are will only be interested if the price is super low. So save yourself the trouble, don't bother fixing it up, just trade it in, as is.

Good luck.

Which company is offering a trade premium fund to an NGO/trust?

Most firms have something like a CSR fund.These shall be part of expenses only.Companies do not devote profits for charity.Companies allocate fund for charity which is a subset of their expenses.Ashok Devanampriya Indian Investment Management Firm

What do you think of Japan's offer to lend trade negotiators to UK to help negotiate with EU?

There is some rather crazy logic to this suggestion.The Japanese probably have more experience of negotiating trade deals than anyone except the Americans. They are expert at opening up export markets while keeping sectors of their own economy closed. In their longstanding negotiations with the USA, they have always be negotiating from a position of weakness. Their negotiators are single minded and communicate among themselves in as subtle, nuanced way that is difficult for outsiders to read. The Japan Inc. system gives them the closest possible connection to big companies, banks etc. so negotiators are very well informed on all the issues.An island nation stuck off the northeast edge of Eurasia, Japan can and does identify with Britain on the other side, stuck off the northwestern edge.Brexiteers aspire to an economy similar to Japan’s, harmonious, mono-cultural, with near zero immigration — a place where the economy is stagnant, the population is ageing, agriculture is protected, and above all native culture is protected from outside challenge. Like the British, the Japanese excel in ‘golden age’ period TV dramas etc etc.If the Japanese have seen the published BBC celebrity pay scales, they may ask for a lot of money. They already know London is a rich city.Of course, this isn’t a serious proposal, though I do think the Japanese could only be better than David Davis and his ill-briefed team.

Can I have trading and demat accounts with different brokers?

Yes of course you can. In fact, many people already do. It's like having different bank accounts. It's as simple as that. But does it make sense? It depends on what the broker provides. For example, if you want to open an account with us: Join Us | Trading Strategies | Lowest Brokerage Charges you're doing it to avail our technology based services. On the contrary if you're opening an account with Motilal Oswal, its to let them do all the work for you. It depends on what you're seeking.Brokerage charges is a major reason for traders to jump ship from one to another broker. We are among the lowest brokerage charges in the industry:Equity: 0.1% or maximum Rs 100 per orderFutures: 0.01% or maximum Rs 100 per orderOptions: Rs 10 per lot or maximum Rs 100 per orderWe provide solid platforms for FREE and are very transparent in terms of pricing. Hope this helps.www.fyers.in

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