Anonymous ID: 348708 Aug. 25, 2018, 10:19 a.m. No.2733015   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3020 >>3021 >>3036

>>2732833

 

this might be a stretch but i'm wondering what the 675,000 could relate to:

 

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/melania-trump-flights-cost-675-000-months-year-article-1.3785897

 

or?

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-675000-license-plate/

 

Fusco says his grandfather paid nearly $200,000 for that tag back in 1994. They now own 17 plates valued at over $3 million.

 

At a special auction for the number "6," the Fuscos are contenders, along with investment groups and Tim Ayres, a wealthy publisher. Ayres already owns number "11" and is betting on the bankability of number "6."

 

"I think it would be a good investment, I really do," says Ayres.

 

In the end, plate number "11" goes to the Fuscos for a staggering $675,000.

 

Only in Delaware - where the right plate not only gives you license to drive - but to print money as well.

 

hmmm

Anonymous ID: 348708 Aug. 25, 2018, 10:20 a.m. No.2733021   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>2733015

 

https://rew-online.com/2018/01/03/ey-expands-lease-one-manhattan-west-675000-s-f/

 

EY expands lease at One Manhattan West to 675,000 s/f

BY REW • JANUARY 3, 2018

 

ONE MANHATTAN WEST

Accounting giant EY has expanded is lease at One Manhattan West by another 70,000 s/f, according to the New York Post.

 

The deal brings the company’s total commitment in the rising 67-story tower to 675,000 s/f.

 

And it follows more good news for the developer of the eight-acre, six-building mixed-use development, stretching from Ninth Avenue to Tenth Avenue and 31st Street to 33rd Street.

Anonymous ID: 348708 Aug. 25, 2018, 10:22 a.m. No.2733036   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3047 >>3073

>>2733015

 

i got it!

 

https://nypost.com/2016/02/05/inside-hillarys-675k-worth-of-goldman-speaking-fees/

 

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton — who now claims she took what Goldman Sachs was willing to offer to give three speeches — had a price list for just about everyone else.

 

She charged the University of California $300,000 in March 2014. When the school asked for a discount, her team at the Harry Walker Agency balked, saying that was the “special university rate.”

 

The University of Nevada had to shell out $225,000 to get Clinton in June 2014, causing a ruckus at the school in the face of rising tuition.

 

The State University of New York at Buffalo lined up Clinton in October 2013 for $275,000 and had to agree to a long list of demands that included approval of a moderator, stage set and limits on the number of photos.

 

But during a New Hampshire town hall Wednesday night, Clinton claimed she took whatever Goldman Sachs was willing to pay.

 

“That’s what they offered,” she said of the $675,000 she received for three speeches.

 

One source with knowledge of Clinton’s speaking fees said it’s disingenuous for the Democratic front-runner to assert she took whatever clients wanted to pay, since hiring her was a big deal involving big bucks.

 

Rival Bernie Sanders has been hitting Clinton hard for financial ties to Goldman and Wall Street as evidence she’s beholden to them.

 

“Anybody who knows me, who thinks that they can influence me, name anything they’ve influenced me on,” Clinton challenged at the town hall forum. “Just name one thing.”

 

Clinton said she hit the speaking circuit because it’s common practice for former secretaries of state and “I wasn’t committed to running [for president]. I didn’t know whether I would or not.”

 

Just about everyone else, though, considered her a prime presidential contender after she left the State Department.

 

Clinton’s Goldman Sachs speeches were contracted and negotiated by the Harry Walker Agency, and her Goldman payments ($225,000 a speech) were on par with her typical speaking fees.

 

A spokesman for the financial giant said Clinton spoke to the firm’s clients at conferences on topics that ranged from women in finance to entrepreneurship.

 

“We host hundreds of conferences around the world for our clients as do so many other companies,” spokesman Andrew Williams said in a statement.

 

“Businesses want speakers that will interest the attendees of their conferences.”

 

In New Hampshire Thursday night, Sanders suggested Goldman used the speech fees to win influential friends.

 

“Goldman Sachs makes huge amounts of campaign contributions and provides speakers fees to help people, you know, work with them,” Sanders said.