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When I think about regions bank, I listen this attractive songs.
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Follow4Follow
Follow me and I follow you guys. My eyes on you though, If you unfollow, I am going to unfollow too.
I can also calculate cards for you anytime. follow!
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Which Credit Card is Good
There are many complaints on credit cards as I have seen on #twitter.
I believe those people hasn’t met with Regions credit cards yet. They are awesome. Low interests, good fees, reasonable rewards!
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Visa Responds to Hurricane Florence and Typhoon Mangkhut
Visa and the Visa Foundation today announced a commitment to help the people impacted by Hurricane Florence in the United States and Typhoon Mangkhut in the Philippines. In response to these events, Visa is taking several actions to support relief efforts, including:
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Same Great Visa Content, New Location
We have moved. Get the latest Visa and payments news, announcements, trends and more at the Visa Blog.
Be sure to add a bookmark to stay informed on all things Visa. The Visa Corporate Tumblr will remain live for an interim period, although no new content will be published.
Thank you and see you on the Visa Blog.
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paw [$12] / preview
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Today we wish a happy #VeteransDay2018 to all who have bravely defended our nation and continue to do so. Learn how veterans at the State Department are continuing their service to our country through the #VIPFellowship program. https://www.instagram.com/p/BqDW9U6l9ts/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=oktyvvf3tdzd
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Visa Teams Up With CFSI to Explore the Intersection of Savings and Credit
Access to liquid savings and affordable credit are serious challenges for many Americans. Over 30% of U.S. households lack the savings to cover basic expenses for more than 3 months if faced with an unexpected drop in income, such as losing a job or having benefits cut. And nearly 45 million Americans don’t have sufficient credit history to generate a credit score and gain access to mainstream credit products like a credit card. As a result, when unexpected financial shocks occur, many consumers rely on high-cost small dollar credit products or must juggle bill payments, endangering their credit profile and harming their overall financial health.
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Isn’t Visa A Credit Card Company? Not Exactly And Here’s Why
Visa is everywhere. We process more than 150 million transactions a day. There are 3 billion Visa branded cards that are accepted at nearly 42 million locations in more than 200 countries. In fact, you probably have a Visa card in your wallet right now.
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ALL CREDIT CARDS ARE VALID
if you’re a credit card past its expiry date YOU ARE VALID
if you’re a credit card which has gone over its allowance YOU ARE VALID
if you’re a credit card that works perfectly YOU ARE VALID
fuck you target for rejecting my card and saying it isn’t valid, ALL CREDIT CARDS ARE VALID. last time i shop at your store
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-16.60 CHECKCARD 0710 PAULETTE'S ORIGINAL TORONTO ON
On 7/10, North texted me this photo: Which clearly was a boxed array of breaded miscellaneous organs, a cup of whipped macaroni, and a little thing of zesty guacamole, right? Think again. This is an order of fried chicken from Paulette’s Original Donuts and Chicken, Leslieville’s new house of indulgence. Judging from that Toronto Life article, Leslieville locals have gone completely berserk for this new chicken shack. [Owner Devin] Connell is truly blown away by the response. “We’ve been selling out—doing almost 300 covers a day—from the moment we opened.” I’m not sure what a cover is, but I do know 300 is a huge number, as long as you don’t compare it to some other bigger numbers. I wonder if Owner Devin Connell considered the consequences of her reckless entrepreneurial endeavor? Did she really think it through when she decided to drop this atom bomb of battered, savory chicken, for which she “based her recipe more on Korean fried chicken than on the dirty bird of the American South” on this sleepy hamlet known as Leslieville, Toronto, Ontario, Canada? The locals are going apeshit for this chicken. Ms. Connell. Your townspeople’s jimmies have not merely been rustled by your new establishment. Their jimmies have been ROCKED. So naturally Ryan wanted to see what the fuss was about, sauntered down to Leslieville to wedge himself right in the craw of a 300 cover-per-day clusterfuck, and flashed my plastic to the tune of $16.60. Judging from the menu, he grabbed a Combo Chicken: 2 pieces white, 2 pieces dark, dipping sauce or rub & one small side. (He opted for the sauce over the rub, and a small mac and cheese.) But was it any good?? Hard to say. Let’s see how the readers of Toronto Life rate the dining experience.
Too bad it’s not awesome :( The yelp reviews say it all. BOO. - by Sally
Sally kicks off the comment section by being a massive Debbie Downer. Way to shit on everyone’s good time, Sally.
I dunno, Sally, while the chicken would be a very once-in-a-while treat for me, I think their cake doughnuts are delicious. I can see myself grabbing one of them and a coffee on the regular. I hope she’s successful anyway, good luck to her. - by Dizzy
Dizzy counters with a measured, reasonable perspective on the fledgling donut and chicken outfit. Too bad it turned out Diz was just feeding a troll.
love this place. lol i trust TL over yelp sally…;) been twice for donuts but yet to try chicken. great flavors. nothing like it in the city. love how people annonymously hate on these comment sections lol - by james t
James “Sick Burn” T illuminates Sally’s blunder of outsourcing her critical thinking to the snarky, embittered hive mind known as Yelp.com. Notice his sly use of an ellipsis, a winking emote, and no less than two lols in his playful rebuke. Also, it seems James is becoming acquainted with the phenomenon of “anon hate” which is rampant on so many social media venues, including it seems, the comments section for bland reviews of local restaurants. James, you don’t even know the half of it. You and Sally are only a few contentious exchanges away from turning TL.com’s “THE DISH” section into a churning vortex of human dog shit. Others will leap into the fray to fight the good fight against Ms. Connell and her crimes against chicken. I hope you like hate speech, misogynistic slurs, rape “jokes”, and sentences constructed at a 5th grade level, strung together by a dude old enough to have a kid in 5th grade. Is this the battle you are prepared to wage, James? These are the fires you stoke with your mocking retort. You are opening Pandora’s Latrine.
I was going to check them out but too many “meh” reviews on Chowhound. And their prices are way too high for what you’re getting. - by cathie
Another jaded review-site urchin weighs in. What is Chowhound by the way? An even snootier alternative to Yelp? For the truly discriminating restaurant goer with nothing but time and crabby words to burn on the internet, but thinks Yelp is too pedestrian of an outlet. Yelp is too commercial these days, it’s not about the COMPLAINING anymore. Maybe Cathie checked a review-site that reviews review-sites, and Yelp got too many “whatever” reviews. Chowhound edged it out with a tepid chorus of “it’s alright I guess” reviews. Cathie’s acquiescence to the latter brand was absolute, and the rest was history.
Best doughnuts in town - by Al
Al is not messing around here, although I do suspect he may be engaging in mild hyperbole.
yeah. i get it. you (one person, obviously .. with 2 minutes between each comment!!!) love this place. gee, i wonder who wrote them. HAHAHAHAHHAAA!!! - by Sally
Sally, you are a fucking troll. Just GTFO.
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-25.51 CHECKCARD 0711 HARVEY'S TORONTO ON
17 days ago, Ryan spent about a quarter of one of my Benjamin Franklins at Harvey’s | Canada’s Best Tasting Burger. Or a quarter of the Canadian equivalent of Ben Franklin, whoever that was. I did not learn about him in school, because in America, they don’t teach us about guys like that. Just go ahead and click that link to begin your journey into understanding this burger chain’s self-proclaimed DOMINATION in the arena of Canadian burger yumminess. Just be careful not to click on the French side of the site’s gateway, unless you enjoy reading INSCRUTABLE HORSE SHIT. Hey, what gives? Google Translate says the English and French slogans are different. E: “It’s a Beautiful Thing” vs. F: “Each Has His Burger”. The latter seems like a pretty strange slogan to me, even after accounting for awkward translator parsing. The sentiment of the slogan is, “Everyone gets to have a burger. Yes, you there. The burgerless man. You shall have one too.” Uh… fair enough? Maybe there is a cultural divide between English speakers and French speakers when it comes to the linguistics of marketing? Maybe that slogan makes their dang mouths water in Quebec. Come to think of it, maybe the slogan “It’s a Beautiful Thing”, which to English speakers seems like such a generically corporate, quasi-inspirational junk phrase, actually sounds like a bizarre slogan to non English speakers? Maybe they’re wondering what the hell Harvey is babbling about. “Beautiful? EXCUSE ME??? Beautiful was the day my child was born, hamburger man. Spare me the poetry, I am HUNGRY.” Maybe that’s what they would say, is what I’m saying. Do our slogans sound like shitty spiritual aphorisms to a Frenchman? Does he wonder why our products are associated with beauty and freedom and redefining luxury, and all that sort of lofty nonsense, when more practical questions like “can each man physically obtain this product?” go infuriatingly unanswered? What sort of non sequitur do our slogans become when they hit French ears? Like Coke’s “Open Happiness.” They don’t want to hear that shit. I think the French would be more comfortable with something like, Coke: “Brown Liquid In His Mouth. It Can Happen.” Well, now I’ve pretty much committed myself to clicking on the French section and telling you what I find there. Hang on. Ok, I don’t really understand anything here, except like “CHEDDAR”, and also I guess… most of the words? Like “CONFIDENTIALITÉ” and “FRIDELLES” which is right next to a photo of fries. I think I was overreacting when I called French inscrutable horseshit. It turns out that maybe foreign languages are not a very big deal? Most of the words are just silly versions of English words. Anyway, there’s nothing very interesting there, except for a link I zeroed in on right away: Aimez-nous sur Facebook. I clicked on that, getting pretty excited to hear what French-Canadians were saying about this joint, and if indeed “Each [Does In Fact] Has His Burger”. But I was disappointed not to find even a lick of French on their FB page. Nothing I could g-translate to perhaps take a closer peek into the curiously admirable utilitarian mindset they bring to the table when evaluating products and slogans. I notice right away that people are much more mannerly on this page than they are in the comments section of Toronto Life. There are hardly any brutal flame wars here at all. But I couldn’t see the full comments unless I was logged into FB, so of course I dusted off my stupid old sock puppet account from like five years ago, which I made for this very reason, to be able to log in without actually “using Facebook,” due to the fact that Facebook is approximately the most horrible thing ever conceived. The FB account under my real name isn’t really me. It’s one of my weirdo fans squatting in that account, doing a really half assed job of pretending to be me. Good for him I guess? Someone was going to anyway, so he might as well be the intrepid dude to hold down that fort. So I logged into FB under the old account I named after a painting of a horse, had to assure the system that the login attempts from Bulgaria which had accumulated over the years were not actually me, so that I could FINALLY read a few banal comments about a Canadian hamburger restaurant. Right up top, Harvey’s got a huge black eye from the vicious left hook of a disgruntled customer named Julie. Naturally I was very curious about her ordeal, so I inquired. I don’t know if she’ll get back to me about it though. Or for that matter, if I’ll even log into the Steed McPainting account again in the next five years. As I scrolled through the comments, mostly populated by the remarks of happy, satisfied customers, I kind of got in the spirit of the media. Wait then things kinda started getting ugly again? Then things got cheery again. Ok I guess I’m done doing that. Oh but HOLD UP. I spent so much time messing around with people who chat about burgers on facebook for some reason, I completely forgot to mention Ryan’s ACTUAL TRIP to the establishment. I notice on the map there’s one just down the street from PAULETTE’S ORIGINAL TORONTO ON, so I’m guessing that’s where he went. He sent me this photo on that day. It seems he had the courage to approach this insane vagrant, buy him a meal, and bring him back to what I am assuming is Ryan’s home? Ryan sure is a nice guy. Actually I was just joking, that is his pal, Joey Comeau. To my knowledge, Joey and Ryan have not traded credit cards yet. Which is a shame, because I have a feeling Joey would be willing to take this game to a WHOLE DIFFERENT LEVEL. Ryan, for your next CC broswap, consider sliding your plastic over to Comeau while making piercing eye contact and grimly declaring…
“Let’s kick it up a notch.” I am pleased that some of my money was applied toward addressing the hunger of these two solid bros. Looks like they went to town on the ketchup packets there. What did they even get that comes in those elliptical plastic hulls? That doesn’t look like a thing you’d put a burger into. What is even going on here? I hope I didn’t just type all that stupid shit about the wrong restaurant…
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Why a secured credit card is an opportunity to serve 45 million Americans
A credit history can open doors to greater financial health and wealth-building opportunities. Many organizations require credit checks on job applications, impacting the ability of someone with a low-to-no credit score to find employment. A strong credit score provides access to affordable credit that can be used to manage liquidity, meet unexpected expenses, purchase a home or start a small business. Unfortunately, 45 million people in America are credit invisibles, they lack of a score due to insufficient credit history.
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It’s that time of the year! The Campbell Foundation has given out its annual “Holiday Hugs,” which are end-of-the-year grants awarded to HIV/AIDS service organizations to use as they see fit. This year, nine Florida-based nonprofits each received a $3,000 grant and a 10th group, Basic NWFL, was awarded $5,000.
The nonprofits that received Holiday Hugs are:
AH Monroe in Key West
Basic NWFL in Panama City
Broward House in Fort Lauderdale
Children’s Diagnostic & Treatment Center in Fort Lauderdale
Latinos Salud in Wilton Manors
Legal Aid Services (Ryan White Program) in Fort Lauderdale
McGregor Clinic in Fort Myers
Oasis in Pensacola
Poverello Center in Wilton Manors
SunServe in Wilton Manors
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Secured Credit Card of Regions Bank
There are many people who would like to know if there is a secured card of regions bank. There is one for consumers. These are rates of the card.
Interest Rate (APR): 24.74%
Rewards ($1) : There is no rewards, bonuses and miles for this card.
Annual Fee: $28
Foreign Transaction Fee: There is no foreign transaction fee.
Cash Advance Fee: 4%
Cash Advance APR: 26.99
Balance Transfer Fee: 4%
Balance Transfer APR: 24.74%
I don’t think this is a bad card and I think it can be good for those who wants to build credit. This is a secured card and you shouldn’t expect much for rewards. I also like that there is no foreign transaction fee.
Stats are taken from: https://creditcards.center/regions-bank-secured-credit-card/
If you have any questions about finance and advertising please let me know.
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