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CP Multiply 10,000 times $150K. Then realize payroll tax, insurance, 401K, etc means each employee probably costs $300K or more. That's a heck of a lot more that $54.9M. People don't seem to realize in massive companies like this, small percentages are huge amounts. Also, they don't have $18B just sitting in a ban... | yes | 6,960 |
Katherine Last thought. I'd ask him if he receives any public benefits. If not, put that in the ask for the local public provider. They are able to help with that. (Able, does not mean will.) But it is a long process and due to the seemingly endless requirements to keep public benefits, difficult to maintain them. In S... | no | 1,971 |
Pentagon Will Increase Artillery Production Sixfold for Ukraine The Army’s top acquisition official says production of the 155-millimeter shells badly needed by Kyiv will rise to 90,000 a month in two years. WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is racing to boost its production of artillery shells by 500 percent within two years,... | yes | 7,035 |
Santos, who has been flat broke all his life until he ran for Congress, miraculously loaned his own 2022 election campaign $700,000 on the way to Congress.What was the source of the Dark Billionaire Money who funded Santos ?The Republican Party does not want citizens to know what right-wing billionaires are running the... | yes | 5,340 |
dogglesshoebox Here is reporting from the national broadcaster, CBC: <a href="https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/convoy-protest-emergencies-act-ottawa-1.6648413" target="_blank">https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/convoy-protest-emergencies-act-ottawa-1.6648413</a><a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/trudeau-canada-free... | no | 2,146 |
After the blown up pipelines and the try to take Europe as a hostage by cutting off energy, we can see that Russia is not playing nice, to say at least. What do we have to expect from Russia? Let´s ask the east european countries that were forced members of the Warsaw pact for 45 years. Nothing but trouble, that´s why ... | yes | 6,479 |
Placeholder Do give a thought to the 60 Trillion (in todays dollars) of loot from one colony alone that the serious achievements were built on. And don't forget the toll in lives and social ruin while you're at it.
| yes | 5,355 |
How about giving up on that destructive acquisition of Activision - $69 Billion - instead of firing engineers?"Do more with less" - meaning Microsoft needs USD $69 Billion for a pointless acquisition.Activision engineers: if the merger goes through, you know what's coming.
| no | 205 |
The current CBO projections, which Krugman cites to approvingly, puts our annual debt servicing expenses at 7.2 percent of GDP by 2052 (and growing). Our entire federal discretionary budget is around 6 percent of GDP. Someone please explain to me how this is not an impending fiscal disaster (other than, “I’m over 70 ... | no | 4,584 |
Skepticism aside, it's way too late to stop or even realistically control A.I. The genie is literally out of the bottle, with more sophisticated iterations of A.I. to come. There's too much financial momentum behind it. OpenAI, the research lab behind the viral ChatGPT chatbot, is in talks to sell existing shares in a ... | yes | 9,161 |
Richard I don't think this is a whose state is worse contest. Militias were mentioned and are nothing to trifle with. Although I'd bet that the pressure to conform to "norms" in general is much worse in Montana, however the whole point is that this open-carry, pro-gun, in your face ethos is virtually everywhere in most... | yes | 8,156 |
I married a New Yorker and I feel so bad for my 'second home town' (yes my wife hates it when I use that phrase). Anyway, it's terrible how Uber execs on the other side of the country have been able to exert their will on NYC and cause so much disruption that has resulted in bad, not good. Don't forget that Uber also... | yes | 6,794 |
Dean, Republicans have done absolutely nothing to help Americans, zip. However, GOP fights to give the wealthy tax cuts and protect Big Oil! IF you know someone who uses insulin, thank Biden and the Democrats for capping the price at $35 per month! The McCarthy’s 118th Congress want p repeal this!
| yes | 5,305 |
When you go to the doctor, the receptionist no longer asks to see your Medicare Card. Instead he or she now ask for the card of your privatized insurance company that acquired you like livestock on a medieval fief. Taxpayers pay money into the Medicare system, but the money is no longer used exclusively to pay for med... | yes | 5,186 |
Ostensibly there's no more of a coup in Brasilia than in DC on Jan 6, 2021. The insurrectionists did not live in reality, so that even if they wanted to continue some sort of revolution, they were too incompetent.The parallels with Jan 6 are thus stark. The rioters are little more than narcissistic thugs of the man w... | no | 319 |
Richard Blaine Dogger Bank is a UK project, the international bit is building a power hub on an artificial island so that the power can be routed to Europe.40% of the UK energy market is renewable as of 2022, so the stuff yet to come on line can be exported. Dogger Bank could end up generating over 100GW -- or 50millio... | no | 1,755 |
David Kiel The company had been quite profitable. $17.6 billion profit on $50 billion revenues - 35% margins there. They have the cloud business, and now possibly have the AI field. And interestingly enough, there is that gaming business (or entertainment). As for "wildcatter days" - that had been over long ago. What i... | no | 1,518 |
Ken Aaron 10000000%.
| yes | 8,502 |
One of the best investments the world can make to tackle global warming is pay the people of the Amazon (not those raping the land and killing indigenous people) to not allow clearing and to expand the rainforest. Much better investment than covering the earth in solar panels and wind turbines.
| yes | 9,016 |
Here is my theory of inflation1 doz jumbo eggs at Trader Joe's in FLDec 2020 $2Jun 2021 $2.5Dec 2021 $3.50June 2022 $4Dec 1st 2022 $4.5Jan 3rd 2023 $5CPI that
| yes | 8,706 |
Andrew Intrater, at a minimum, should clawback the commissions Santos was paid on his investment. If it’s true that Santos made several million from swindling investors, he needs to be punished, severely, so it sends a message. How can McCarthy and the senior GOP members of Congress allow Santos to undermine their in... | no | 1,437 |
JanDespite the impressive figures, salaries in general in the US have not gone up nearly as quickly as housing prices have. That makes establishing a safety net rather difficult. That said, I find it hard to believe she was doing her personal computing on a work laptop. That's just screaming & begging for trouble. Olde... | no | 4,169 |
Oatmeal I'm in a fairly stable field but my cousins are in tech. This is what I've learned from them:1) Be your own brand. Sure, your LinkedIn profile might have your current workplace/ position but reinforce to others outside your unique proposition. If you collaborate with people outside your company, make sure they ... | no | 377 |
A Ponzi scheme is when early investors (elderly) are paid with the investments of new investors (children). I expected that capitalism was one big Ponzi scheme. China is showing that almost all modern global society is a Ponzi scheme. At some point, they all collapse, and you are forced to accept your losses.
| yes | 6,661 |
The Russian Kh-22 missile with a 2,000-pound warhead that hit a sprawling residential apartment complex – home to some 1.700 people – in Ukraine’s fourth largest city, Dnipro, was launched on January 14, New Year’s day by the Julian calendar. The strike destroyed more than 70 apartments. The initial death toll was 46 a... | yes | 9,815 |
All healthcare systems, world-wide, are socialized and universal; some simply less efficient or equitable than others. Second, there are three levers in healthcare, all of which operate in lockstep: cost, access and quality. Used separately, they counter each other. In the American system, according to our own NIH, acc... | yes | 5,114 |
617to416 The problem is not "capitalism" per se, but American zero-sum plunder capitalism dedicated to funneling the nation's wealth into the wealthiest pockets. This form of capitalism makes life increasingly precarious for 99.99% of us as our wealth, income, and opportunity continually decrease, while the 0.01% hoard... | yes | 5,391 |
There’s an intellectual disconnect. Savage argues sexual needs and emotional needs are separate, then says sex workers are paid for their time and listening. That’s an emotional need. He says his own and most relationships are transactional and lists how he “pays” for sex with his partner by doing loving things. Sex an... | no | 1,415 |
And raise the income cap, currently at around $150k. That should be a no brainer.
| no | 2,462 |
Brett and David almost said it out loud.Current politics is not Conservatives vs Liberals, it's populism vs institutions and authoritarianism vs classic liberalism.The conservative movement no longer believes in free and fair elections.Brett and David have a natural party, the classic liberal Democratic party who still... | yes | 8,910 |
To paraphrase John Paul Jones, we have not yet begun to tax.Taxes peaked around 20% GDP under Clinton. Think of 1% GDP as $210 billion today. The Bush and Trump tax cuts take about 2% GDP revenue away total, about 40% of the annual deficit.1. Go back to the Clinton rates and then create a 45% bracket for income over... | yes | 7,692 |
Mike. No the article is not misleading, and strangely enough, neither are you. Contract workers like Onami-san can only get a monthly maximum of 65,000 yen, provided that they have paid into the public pension system for 40 years. Regular employees (medium/large corporations, public servants, etc) receive an additional... | no | 149 |
I just finished a year of a Non-Compete contract, which was with a company that has gross revenues of over $800,000. million USD. My company was a part of this company and they were to purchase my shares after my 5 year contract, at a pre-determined formula and when the final buyout came they used their sledge hammer ... | yes | 7,448 |
I sent a message to my cousin Carol, who has been like the big sister I wished I had. Carol was there to comfort me when my father died, there to host a party when I finally graduated from college in my forties and nobody else cared; there to march at Pride with me as the best-ever ally, when I came out (again) after b... | no | 118 |
With the added statement, regarding either of the above scenarios, that Russia’s offshore funds will all be employed to re-build Ukraine.
| yes | 8,183 |
eleven billion dollars. this city, this state, and the MTA are so vile. how are the criminals responsible for this misappropriation of funds not in jail?
| no | 2,767 |
Why does an epipen cost $800?
| no | 4,531 |
Well, one thing is for sure and that's that nothing is for sure. Even if in the short-run inflation moderates back down to 2-3%, sooner or later another series of shocks will send prices up again, or create a contraction, or both. That's what was on my mind as I read the opening color description of the man who... | no | 4,699 |
I wish this piece would have mentioned school curriculums and programs like we have in Wisconsin (Secure Futures) which gives young people a nice starter dose of Financial Literacy. They also have personal coaching and a new app to help kids "see the future" with their financial decisions and college choices. I send ... | yes | 6,685 |
Semi-retired you're right. Tesla just dropped the Model Y price by 13k, a gorgeous marvel of engineering. When you're ready to buy one they only accept American dollars. Or lease and pay with American dollars (or finance with American dollars). My point is that our cash still has value since you love the house you live... | no | 2,535 |
Dee Many people, myself included, routinely buy trip insurance for big-ticket trips with high non-refundable costs (cruises, especially). But rarely for a simple plane ticket of a few hundred dollars. We just figure we'll eat that amount or maybe be able to reschedule. We don't anticipate some of the high costs of r... | no | 3,353 |
I disagree. To your first point, please put on your Keynesian hat Paul: the government can issue bonds and deficit spend to provide benefits to the elderly until the working age population and retiree population stabilizes.To your second point, the current capital investment in China is at its highest level ever, and ... | yes | 5,895 |
I have read that interest on the debt over the next decade will exceed a trillion dollars a year.That number is around 1/2 our governments tax receipts and roughly equals the pentagon’s budget.I can’t see why that is not a serious economic problem when seen in the context of multiple other problems that USA taxpayers h... | no | 2,945 |
Elie Levine Hi, and welcome to the hive. I suggest that the opening legend be changed from its current, "How many words can you make with seven letters", to something that shows the limited extent of the search. Something like, "We made (number here) words using these seven letters. How many of those words can you ... | yes | 6,409 |
Fox Exactly. $15 trillion for wall street. No need to cut anything, just appropriately tax those who benefited from those bailouts. They are mainly very wealthy, even millionaires. Raise their taxes and cut their loopholes.
| no | 654 |
Michael - The ACA has its roots in a republican think tank.Taxes are supposed to pay for the things we all use and need. Education, infrastructure are not handouts, they are an investment.Everyone benefits from having a healthy and well educated populace.
| no | 4,419 |
"It’s true that U.S. debt is very large — $31 trillion (said in your best Dr. Evil voice)."Indeed, it's large. Will we every pay back those loans or do we borrow and spend endlessly?
| yes | 8,580 |
Tom Some more thoughts. The US government is a great bet for investors? For those investors wanting to invest in a government it is the best bet in the world, but that isn’t saying much. Anyone who bought US long term bonds in the last few years has suffered huge losses on that investment, because of Inflation and Fed ... | no | 560 |
Ken Most of us don't make enough money to have enough extra money to invest to live off passive income. You need a minimum of $3M to live off the dividends alone.
| yes | 7,179 |
Media Start-Up Semafor Plans to Buy Out Sam Bankman-Fried’s Investment Semafor is one of several media companies that received money from Mr. Bankman-Fried or his affiliates before his cryptocurrency company fell apart and he was charged with crimes. The news start-up Semafor began operating late last year with big amb... | no | 89 |
The Two Co-ops, they are not worth the money. If I had two million to invest I would live somewhere else. Only the desperate would waste their money. The Washington Co-op is a dump in my opinion. The house, while overpriced, is the best of the three listings, although the owner should have staged the bedrooms bette... | no | 3,492 |
E Read this study -- it is eye opening. <a href="https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2020/nov/maternal-mortality-maternity-care-us-compared-10-countries" target="_blank">https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2020/nov/maternal-mortality-maternity-care-us-compared-10-countrie... | yes | 9,244 |
Probably some commenter has already said this, but as a person whose (mostly fixed) income is a small fraction of the $400,000 mark Mr. Stephens apparently feels isn't enough to live on, I couldn't be more disgusted. Hey, if you need to cheat the federal government to live and you make "north" of $400,000, maybe you sh... | yes | 6,471 |
fast/furious With what money?
| no | 418 |
As long as they pay the $500 million thst is fine. Open twenty casinos and collect twenty billion . Free buffets will follow . Next year open 20 more collect another $20 billionThen watch the bankruptcies .
| yes | 5,530 |
How Long Does It Take to Save Up for a Down Payment? A new report gives us an idea, based on local income and housing prices. The biggest barrier to homeownership for many prospective buyers isn’t the monthly mortgage bill, but the steep down payment. The 20 percent required to qualify for a typical mortgage for a medi... | yes | 6,016 |
I pay for a sports package and the tennis channel only to encounter ESPN+ this Aussie Open. What does the future hold? Welcome to the following charges: Tennis by the set, game and point with added charges for tie-breakers? Because I absolutely refuse to pay a third fee, I was prevented from watching Gauf and Pagula... | yes | 7,830 |
America was in the depths of a Depression before World War II broke out. Has anyone calculated the equivalent deficit spending the Government starting printing money to pay for the war effort, in today's dollars? War bonds couldn't begin to cover the cost of that war. Every major corporation stopped whatever they were ... | yes | 8,259 |
I just love having my tax dollars wasted by Congress...it's rich isn't it, that the party that overlooked rampant corruption, blew off how many subpoenas, the party who supported a President who threw food and the White House china at a wall, the party who pretended Hillary spent her time in the nonexistent basement of... | no | 2,162 |
I recently waited in a 30 minute line at Utopia Bagels, and ended up spending $80+ for a dozen bagels (12, since the worker forgot one of the baker's dozen), a pound of lox cream cheese, a bacon egg & cheese bagel, two lox & cream cheese bagels (with whole slices of lox, different from lox cream cheese), and two coffee... | yes | 6,064 |
35% of all US counties are dominated by a Catholic hospital and their religious doctrine regarding reproductive health care. This extends to the lack of reproductive health care training that physicians will receive if they choose to complete their residency at a Catholic hospital. Six US Supreme Ct justices are Cath... | yes | 7,289 |
What is “tech as we know it”, really? All these “tech” layoffs are at companies whose sole purpose is tech. Meanwhile companies with some tether to the real world continue to look for skilled workers in those fields. I work for the IT division of a major retailer, where we maintain and redesign systems that billions in... | no | 0 |
CSL Moving from a city to a rural area opens up other expenses such as what to do for transportation to go to work, school, and shopping. NYC has one of the cheapest modes of transportation in which to get around. Where can can you spend $1.35 and go to anywhere in the city? We also know that once there is a price i... | yes | 8,786 |
In Wisconsin its simple. Non-competes have failed in or courts so many times that a non-compete now requires equal compensation. If you 're making $100k per year and the non-compete is for 1- year, then the contract requires a $100k payment for the former employee not to compete. And, any Wisconsin employer now trying... | no | 4,081 |
Krush You hit the nail on the head. After a couple more years of Meghan's constant whining, Harry will bolt back to the family fold and be welcome with open arms.
| yes | 9,413 |
Again, we try every single way we can not to provide universal healthcare for everyone, and again wind up with a grotesque patchwork of measures that dam up leaks here and there while opening up new holes elsewhere. How about we stop kidding ourselves that Republicans care at all about the general public? While they ho... | yes | 8,066 |
California storm damage could top $1 billion. Major weather disasters have been striking the United States much more often in recent years as the global climate changes. The damage from weeks of storms and flooding in California could exceed a billion dollars, according to the state’s emergency agency and private weath... | no | 75 |
If you don’t find the idea of Noma appealing, move on. I can’t imagine spending more than $10k on a vehicle, and yet people some waste hundreds of thousands on them. An object that moves A-to-B, really. But I can accept that it’s a fetish that I just don’t get; I don’t need to belittle those who enjoy that which I do n... | yes | 8,440 |
Anyhow America gives things for free whereas China has built-in paybacks. Memos-of-Understanding between governments are not disclosed, but dangling $$ in front of politicans to spend is always grabbed up.Remember "The Mouse that Roared"; taking over a country without a war. (I am stretching it a bit) And remember the ... | yes | 6,280 |
Candy Sullivan Okay, so if a fundraising campaign was launched by Mr Proudfoot and others, and they could raise 1, 2, or 10 millions dollars to rename that arena, then the uni will do the renaming? Slam dunk?
| yes | 7,438 |
While private equity has its place, its fundamental raison d’etra is to extract profits at any cost from consumers and in this situation, franchisees, then sell for a profit. So, too, voracious medical entities, corporations which have purchased veterinarian and dental practices, etc. My experience is that communicati... | no | 2,103 |
"The U.S. has experienced six significant economic depressions; each was preceded by a sustained period of budget balancing."~ Professor Fredrick ThayerFrom 1823-36 the U.S. debt was reduced by 99.7 percent, to $38,000. A depression began in 1837.Under great pressure from Republicans, FDR balanced the budget in 1936. T... | no | 2,034 |
it's not the price gouging that's causing inflation, it's those jerk Americans with their savings accounts... please. The ruling corporate class won't be happy until they suck every dollar out of every American that they can find, forcing us into debt and a new form of serfdom and the Federal government pretty much sup... | yes | 5,969 |
This seemed like a lobbying piece by the health care industry. They say it's up to the government to "incentivize" hospitals to create more quality care opportunities for pediatric patients by pouring more money into a system that rewards administrators and stockholders. They even make a pitch for specific legislatio... | yes | 5,077 |
What about America's debt to the rest of the world? The BEA put the "U.S. net international investment position, the difference between U.S. residents’ foreign financial assets and liabilities" at around negative $17 trillion last year. It's well less than annual GDP, but bodes ill for our future.
| yes | 8,635 |
I had a career change in midlife, but I remember well my advertising years, when we had up to a 10% cut every winter, just before Christmas, and in the Spring. We also suffered through job cuts when we lost an account. I still recall the Burger King firings, when we lost the account and the company fired one person f... | yes | 9,796 |
Having worked on the MTA/NYCTransit No. 7 Subway Line Extension running from Times Square to Hudson Yards, a tiny simple job compared to East Side Access, got to tell how boondoggles fatten AEC participants, agencies and pols. Its done through almost endlessly prolonged advocacy, studies, more studies, consultations up... | yes | 9,381 |
As others noted, the key environmental change is “easy access” to calories. While I don’t have Prader-Willi Syndrome, I am on the end of the scale in that direction. Had I not changed my ways, I could be obese like many of my genetic relatives. Growing up in the 1950 on a farm, we had no any processed or junk food in t... | yes | 8,907 |
The federal debt increased by $7.8 trillion under the term of the last republican president… NOW they care about debt & deficits, and seem eager and willing to drive the US economy off a cliff.
| no | 3,732 |
The US powers that be finally got scared enough of China to open the purse strings and spend some money on industrial technology. Good for them, I guess. At least we're not invading anyone for their oil or natural gas this time...
| no | 4,869 |
"In the long run, the greatest hope we can have for China is its people. The greatest investment we can make in the coming decades of turbulence is to keep faith with them".This statement could apply to any country world-wide. It is an all too common mistake to conflate a nation's government and its policies with its ... | no | 1,954 |
Salim Durrani Yes, exactly.Blinken: "We do sincerely hope that Mr. Netanyahu, our great friend forever (despite his being under criminal investigation for corruption and doubling and tripling down on apartheid measures in order to keep the fanatical right wing in his camp in the Knesset) will kindly, please, but only i... | yes | 8,014 |
Instead of paying the head coach millions, split it with the team, and sponsorships go into a collective pot. There ain’t no “I” in team, but there are two “I”s over an S to make a $ sign.The no transfer rule should apply to anyone with an NIL without a clawback of half. Half for the player, half for his teammates who ... | no | 921 |
Aff The cost of eggs has jumped a $1.25 or so around here. Not sure how many times a week you eat eggs, but let’s say you are like my brother-in-law. A protein, lactose intolerant fanatic, he has eggs six days a week, three at a time. That’s two dozen eggs every two weeks, and added $65 a year. Please.
| yes | 9,395 |
Adrienne If you're serious about food waste and economizing, and have the cash and space for it, a separate freezer is your best investment. Failing that, it's all about making lists and food prepping for the week. Because in this country, we collectively throw out about 40% of the food we buy.
| no | 106 |
It has never been more clear that the party of obstruction really does its "best work" as the minority. No ideas, no agenda, no notion of what statesmanship means. Making $170K a year throwing sand in gears. They'll get another shot at the minority in two years, thankfully.
| yes | 8,626 |
JPRP Agree, who know what the health effects are from the significant magnetic fields generator by the induction stoves. Also where I live in NJ radon gas is a significant problem. So I have a remediation system and open the windows and doors when ever I can. The last thing I need is a totally sealed house.
| yes | 6,840 |
Because children are easier to sell to, the infantilization of the American public has been a project of corporate America for decades. Don't believe me? Watch an hour of commercials, or look at tonite's TV lineup or the slate at the local movie theater.This childishness has bled into the investment and political worl... | no | 2,005 |
The $10-20M insurance payout sounds like an extremely good reason not to come back. He's already too old to be seriously good, and has serious physical issues to overcome. If you subtract expenses, my guess is that the insurance payout is not far behind his expected payout of playing, and it comes without risk. He know... | yes | 5,570 |
They had to come up with the $10B somehow that they are investing in OpenAI…
| no | 1,951 |
I agree that the debt limit is unconstitutional. On the other hand, I think we need to be cognizant of the fact that a 30 trillion dollar debt, if interest rates hit 5%, would require $1.5 trillion in interest payments. That would be 25% of the federal budget just going to pay interest on the debt. And as the defici... | no | 4,440 |
Michael I'm on a budget.If you look across one brand, most have their inductions priced about 20% more than a comparable gas, so yes, more money (not anywhere near 4x more) my point is that they are not as new, getting better and cheaper all the time - comparatively - keep in mind all appliances are still quite expensi... | no | 2,496 |
Rural Farmer My in-laws did the exact thing you describe with a suitcase they could not open. My husband intervened and forced the lock before it went to the curb for trash removal. In the suitcase was a 12 piece sterling silver ware set. Sometimes it pays to look.
| yes | 5,483 |
La Rana - Some of the criticism is valid, seen by millions, so you can't claim "without merit". For example, angry with losing a point at the US open in 2020, Djokovic slammed a tennis ball toward one of the line judges, it struck her in the throat, resulting in his ousting of the tournament. And let's not forget the ... | no | 1,909 |
Mike Reasonable Crypto is a solution looking for a problem it might actually solve. There is not one today, aside from accelerating our increasing rate of dumping greenhouse gasses into the air, thus warming the planet. Mining bitcoin is stunningly costly in energy and computation resources. There is an increasing cost... | yes | 5,191 |
MattNg And in time to get to the theater and you're giving a half day and $20 to Cameron.If you must see, you can do so at home, with unlimited bathroom breaks.
| no | 3,414 |
It’s funny to me that Paul, who has worked as a book reviewer for a long time, can with a straight face blame the wave of negative criticism of American Dirt on one reviewer, after which “others quickly jumped on board and a social media rampage ensued.” Doesn’t she recognize that this is exactly how the *positive resp... | no | 4,073 |
I believe your premise is true. She is held to a different standard. Yes.But to write this piece and not mention the roads (see the Insta page called "LATFS"), the garbage (as explained in another reply), the education system, any specifics on decisions made compounding the crime issue, the recent article written thro... | no | 3,776 |
Gingrich lives in the toniest town in America; he’s worth at least $9 million due to his congressional salary and pension, “books” and speaking fees.
| yes | 8,204 |
Try writing a complex document (appellate brief) under a tight deadline that requires extremely focused concentration while fielding telephone calls from higher-up partners demanding immediate answers to complex legal issues for a judicial ruling in the middle of a major medical malpractice trial, reading and respondin... | yes | 9,762 |
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