Trojan, I've read a bunch of posts by you tonight and understood every one. The tender constructive criticism you've been receiving here has really improved your writing dramatically.
Trojan, I've read a bunch of posts by you tonight and understood every one. The tender constructive criticism you've been receiving here has really improved your writing dramatically.


Im really sure it was more or less the missing periods. But I actually felt smart writing that line above.But since ive been here I now like to think of myself as a lil goblin creature who lives in his cave with only his opinions that hes the only one who seems to understand hehe.

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I believe that. Most of the Clubs that I visit are family owned, etc etc.
There is some wheel greasing in any small business, but I still think you should go for it. You never know till you try?
I figure 5 strippers can pool their money, and get a small business loan to start a business they have experiance working. I'm sure they would improve employee relations, and not need to worry about the horror stories from the inside. You can get government grants/loans for female owned/operated businesses.
I know that I would probably enjoy going to a place where the women running things . . .





One has to understand that the financial risk in owning a club is not as great as one may think.
A smart clubowner of course is incorporated, owns a variety of businesses, and each business is a subsidiary or division of his/her parent corporation. The assets of each division are held in a Nevada corporation which does not require disclosure of it's owners.
Losses and credit interest are tax deductible, and most smart owners use corporately held lines of credit/credit cards to fund their operations, so that none of their own money is invested.
If the strip club division no longer is profitable or must be closed, it is bankrupted, and all of it's assets are repossessed by the Nevada equity corp and then a new corporation can be formed instantly from scratch. The parent corp and the other division are not affected by the bankruptcy, and since the owner has no personal assets invested in the business, life goes on.
Of course different clubs require different cash outlays, but the myth that owning a strip club is risky is just that, a myth. If it is structured and financed properly, the risk is not much greater than operating any other type of business.
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