Anonymous ID: d91788 Dec. 29, 2018, 11:53 p.m. No.4518424   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Where do we send our CV for the space force?

 

I'm a professional dog groomer, we need rovers in space and I am here to do my duty.

 

Jewish dogs welcome.

 

Where we groom one, we groom all!

Anonymous ID: d91788 Dec. 29, 2018, 11:58 p.m. No.4518465   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8514 >>8593 >>8778 >>8870

The Damage Done By Jeff Sessions' Last Act As AG | All In | MSNBC

 

Anon (Oh! Now Jeff is the Debil)

 

On his last day as attorney general, Jeff Sessions signed an order limiting the use of a tool for criminal justice reform called consent decrees. All In Correspondent Trymaine Lee went to Ferguson, MO - currently under a consent decree - to find out what's at stake for its residents now.

 

https://www.msnbc.com/all-in/watch/the-damage-done-by-jeff-sessions-last-act-as-ag-1412616771933

Anonymous ID: d91788 Dec. 30, 2018, 12:01 a.m. No.4518494   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8593 >>8778 >>8870

It Sure Looks Like This Obamacare Program Has Led to More People Dying

 

Under the health law, Medicare started penalizing hospitals for too many readmissions. Now mortality rates are up.

 

To determine whether a government program is successful, it's often necessary to look not only at how well it does what it's supposed to do, but what it's doing that it isn't supposed to. For example, killing people.

 

Take the hospital readmissions program built into Obamacare. The program derived from a simple observation that hospitals were treating lots of people who would then return for more treatment within the month. Unnecessary readmissions cost Medicare an estimated $17.5 billion a year. If hospitals were treating people effectively, the thinking went, those people shouldn't need to return so soon.

 

https://reason.com/blog/2018/12/27/it-sure-looks-like-this-obamacare-progra

Anonymous ID: d91788 Dec. 30, 2018, 12:25 a.m. No.4518676   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Only This Many (48% surveyed) Americans Can Cover A $1,000 Emergency

 

The majority of Americans say they do not have enough money saved to cover an emergency expense.

Only 48 percent of respondents told LendingTree in a recent survey that they could cover a $1,000 emergency using either cash or bank account savings, despite the fact that these types of expenses occur quite frequently. In fact, 60 percent of people said they had to cover an emergency costing at least $1,000 within the past year.

 

The result? Debt. One-third of people incurred debt from an emergency they couldn’t afford – and 18 percent of this subset of people have emergency debt balances of at least $10,000.

 

Older Americans belonging to the baby boomer generation were more likely to be able to afford a $1,000 emergency, compared with Generation X or millennials.

 

While tapping savings was the overwhelmingly preferred method for handling such an expense, the next most popular option for those without the liquidity was borrowing from family or friends, followed by selling something or using a credit card. Seven percent of respondents said they would add more hours to their work schedules and 6 percent would get a loan or ask for a paycheck in advance.

 

In order to prepare for an emergency scenario, LendingTree recommends automatically saving a part of your weekly paycheck, paying closer attention to budgeting, reviewing recurring expenses and working some additional hours to start stashing cash away.

 

When encountered with the emergency expense, an individual should compare borrowing options and pay down any incurred debt as soon as possible.

 

https://start.att.net/news/read/article/fox_news-only_this_many_americans_can_cover_a_1000_emergenc-rfoxnews/category/finance

 

Save some spare $cash$ Anons, never know when you will need to help yourself or your friends/family.