It won't last. It just takes awhile for consumers to figure out that your product is now shit.
Most people aren't visiting every day to notice the price increases or the quality decreases. And the first or second time it's often written off as just an outlier.
Of course there's variance per customer, but it takes a couple years before you really earn the shitty reputation of something like Dominos circa 2014. In the meantime, line looks like this before it drops. And by that time you're CEO of a different company.
If it's the company jet do they get to write of its usage?
If so, this isn't a commute. You drive your own car at your own expense for a commute. I'm sure people wouldn't mind as much if they had a company car and a driver for their commute.
No, he faced backlash over wasting fuel, which is running out, and creating more carbon emissions, which are killing all of us, including this fucking dumb ass.
Well, there's no income tax in Washington, but I think technically you're supposed to pay based on where you physically work. So, if he's only working 3/5 days in Washington, that's only 60% of his salary that falls under Washington's rules.
That's not how it works. What matters is the state of your residency and the state that your paychecks come from. If you get paid in a state you don't reside in, you have to file in both, unless there's a reciprosity agreement. Many states will allow deductions for income tax paid in another state. So for example if the state your employer is in has a 4% rate, and the state you reside in has a 6% rate, then you'd end up paying 4% to state A and 2% to state B. It is possible to get double taxed depending on which states are involved.
So the CEO will at the very least have to file in California.