![]() You do not have to worry about targeting any mobs either, as it is a mouseover macro. This macro allows you to sap and pickpocket with a single button. use Leaching Poison Crippling Poison Wound Poison Deadly Poison Hold shift for Leeching, control for Crippling, alt for Wound, or just click for Deadly. This will apply Deadly Poison to your weapon with a left mouse click, and Crippling Poison with a right click. Note: CoS won't remove phyisical DoTs such as Rend or Gouge, so it's not foolproof or as useful when up against Warriors or other Rogues, but in my experience it can be a life saver in desperate times. Casting CoS first will remove many of the DoTs that would immediately cancel your Stealth if you had only used Vanish. This is a macro that will cast Cloak of Shadows then immediately casts Vanish. Gives the best possible chance to escape, useful for dungeons where enemies have abilities that hit regardless of stealth cast Stealth Vanish Macros Ultimate Vanish Use: This yells, "Hooray, I made a macro!".note the version of WoW in which you tested it.follow the example format posted below (to get the frame around your macro, add a space before you start it).When re-creating a macro in Useful macros please In an effort to keep Wowpedia posts relevant, please re-validate and re-post macros that work in the current version. For California residents interested in helping, go to : With the release of 6.0.2, many spells have been renamed, and much of the scripted command functionality has been modified. A successful referendum in California on this issue will forcibly deliver the message to the rest who don’t. A growing number of governors and state legislators are getting the message. Instead of desperately trying to pick peoples’ pockets even more, state pols should be focusing on reforming and repairing their damaged fiscal houses. But the state’s Attorney General, following the law, has ruled that the anti-taxers can go ahead and collect signatures to get their referendum on the ballot for judgment this November. It’s no surprise that Golden State politicos are howling and trying to use every legal stratagem possible to prevent the question from going before the voters. Rather than passively accepting this economic disruption while the case goes to the courts, e-retailers are putting a referendum on the California ballot to repeal this unconstitutional tax. ![]() Talk about being penny-wise and pound-foolish. This new tax law will hurt other online retailers and their affiliates, which will damage the state economy by considerably more than that $200 million. More fundamentally, it will force Amazon to sever its relationships with thousands of its affiliates. This new tax might collect $200 million from Amazon and others. California faces a budget shortfall of $10 billion. It demonstrates the madness of its political class. That California, where modern high-tech industry was born, should wage war against Internet-based entities is bizarre. Politicians well know that the Supreme Court will ultimately throw these levies out, but they figure the litigation will last for years, and in the meantime Amazon and other Internet commercial entities might either tire of the battle or be politically browbeaten enough to go along with becoming tax collectors. The attitude of most politicos: See a whale, harpoon it. (Amazon does have a traditional physical presence in four states and collects sales taxes from customers in those states.)Ī couple of years ago New York State pulled off a similar stunt, and other states are following suit. These individuals hardly constitute the definition of what lawyers call a “nexus” or a physical presence à la a store or warehouse. In California there are some 25,000 individuals and small businesses that are profiting from their partnership with Amazon and others. These “associates” get a monthly fee for sales generated by those links. Since 1996 Amazon has had a marketing program, whereby Web sites can offer their visitors a link to Amazon-offered products and services. The legal fig leaf is Amazon’s “affiliates” program. How in the world does Amazon, which has no physical presence in the state, get hit up for sales tax? This is as flagrant a violation of a Supreme Court decision as one will ever find. The Golden State legislature recently adopted the so-called Amazon tax, which dictates that the Seattle-based retailer and other e-retailers must collect a sales levy on everything it/they sell to California residents and turn the proceeds over to the state treasury. Tax-hungry pols these days are eyeing not catalog but Internet retailers, particularly the biggest one of them all: Amazon ( AMZN).
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