Wow! Your completely made-up set of 'facts' completely turned my opinion around.
Why can't a college-educated person secure employment that pays enough to meet his needs? He likely qualifies for state and federal aid to help meet living expenses.
However conditions for younger adults are much harder today then the past generations in terms of home ownership.
Have you heard about the Great Depression? Home ownership was a bit harder then than today.
Single wage-earners in their twenties aren't typically homeowners, they are renters.
The man-child in this case is actually fighting another court case trying to get visitation to his own child - everything his parents are asking him to do should be the same things the family court judge hearing his visitation case would expect him to do - secure housing, get a job, provide a stable role model for his child.
The Tesla owners said they paid an extra $5,000 to have their cars equipped with the Autopilot software with additional safety features such as automated emergency braking and side collision warning. The features were "completely inoperable," according to the complaint. Under the proposed agreement, class members, who paid to get the Autopilot upgrade between 2016 and 2017, will receive between $20 and $280 in compensation. Tesla has agreed to place more than $5 million into a settlement fund, which will also cover attorney fees.
$20-280 for a "completely inoperable" $5,000 set of upgrades?
On the other hand not having physical stores all over the country where customers can actually see the goods before buyig saves them vast amounts of money.
And that's why Amazon is frequently the lower-cost option for consumers. Condoning policies like unlimited returns would eat into their profits, forcing Amazon to raise prices, potentially shrinking their cost advantage over competitors.
No, it isn't - what is the Libya Model? The Lybia model isn't surround yourself with female body guards, torture your citizens, and let your kids kill your country's citizens without restraint. Libya was hell on earth, the locals brought down the government and the US helped.
But that isn't what Bolton was referring to - Libya Model is to demand absolute, verified shutdown of nuclear development, no exceptions.
THAT is the Libyan Model any sane person would understand Bolton was talking about.
Bolton was referring to the need to build trust and verify any denuclearization efforts when he brought up Libya in a CBS interview last month. He didn’t imply, publicly at least, that the “Libya model” would include regime change in North Korea.
What else exactly does Trump think he's going to get? The North Koreans already offered unilateral nuclear disarmament and negotiations on reunification with South Korea. That's basically everything that matters.
So all Trump needed to do was show up and it would have all been done?
This meeting was something the last several administrations tried to do (and failed), Trump got closer than anyone, and you blame him because you think like every previous administration, Trump should have gone to N Korea, accepted their empty promises, showered them with humanitarian aid, and then looked the other way when they srated working on nuclear weapons again?
As a note, Bill Maher, in a fit of reasonableness, actually, in his way, apologized to Mitt Romney, said he wasn't actually a bad guy, he just had different opinions/positions than Maher and Bill apologized for the way he treated candidate Romney - who Maher agreed was actually a pretty decent guy.
Was the KJU summit going to strip the US of it's ability to strike domestic targets?
As a reminder, it was the previous administration, who got his Nobel Peace Prize in advance of doing anything of any substance, because the members of the committee "just knew he'd do good things once in office, so why wait?", that used drone strikes to target and kill American citizens without benefit of trial.
If your criteria for "technology news" is it possibly impacts someone that uses technology, then every store on every page of the local newspaper is a candidate for Slashdot... For instance, the 30 year-old "man-child" that refuses to move out of his parent's house while he fights to regain custody of HIS son.
Or, if you ever read even a summary of Trump's book The Art of the Deal, you'd know this is negotiations 101 - you have to be willing to walk away if the deal isn't right, in order to get the best outcome.
It wasn't Trump, it was Pence and Pompeo who threatened North Korea with a Libyan outcome.
Threatened? No, predicted.
Speaking in May 21 interview on Fox News, Pence said the reclusive regime could end up like the North African country "if Kim Jong Un doesn't make a deal."
Your Corolla would cost you $22k extra in gasoline prices over, say, six years of moderately intensive driving in my country.
You do realize that on average about $0.66/gallon is collected to fund road and infrastructure projects at the state and federal level - right? When you stop buying gasoline, how will you pay "your fair share" for the upkeep of roadways?
Some are already close. The electric Hyundai IONIQ is less than $30,000 and if the range improves by 60 miles or so
Ioniq's EPA range is 124 miles. You're asking them to nearly double
the Ioniq's range for pocket change.
Math?
Adding 60 to 124 is not "nearly doubling", it is an aprox. 50% increase. I'm not sure what common core math priciples you were applying here, but a 50% increase is about half of a 100% increase, which is the definition of "doubling" something.
A majority of voters in the last Presidential election decided that it was perfectly acceptable for the the Secretary of State, HRC, to send, receive and store classified emails and attachments (of all classification categories) on an insecure personal server from consumer devices (which were later wiped and crushed, apparently to secure their insecure devices as they were decommissioned)... so why is this a problem with President Trump sing an insecure flip phone to post his thoughts to twitter?
You skipped the part where it was John F. Kennedy that cut the tax rates, how reduced taxes encouraged compliance with the tax code and tax revenues increased...
Care to address the 47% of tax filers (which is a subset of "all Americans") that either pay no net federal income taxes or actually receive so-called "tax refunds" far in excess of the taxes withheld from their wages.
I replace them with another one. Baby boomers are baffled by this, because they've never lived in a world where they are inherently replaceable.
There is a whole generation of displaced IT workers that have trained, only to have been replaced by, H-1B workers - it's your contention that they have no idea what it means to be "inherently replaceable."
That 43% of a random collection of millennials around the globe don't plan to stay with their current jobs past two years is far from surprising. We're talking about the world, not about just the 50 united states, or just the EU - it likely includes so-called third-world countries where things are tougher.
I can easily imagine that 43% of the respondents were working dead-end jobs in third-world countries, that would easily account for the majority of the 43%, add in a few over-educated/frustrated starbucks barristas or barnes and noble booksellers and 43% is easy to imagine.
A guy that runs a company with billions in the bank from selling music, cellphone apps, tablets and cellphones wouldn't be my go-to source for opinions on immigration and tarrifs.
Tim Cook got his job when Steve Jobs passed - Tim is an executive (a suit, in/. parlance), yet some how he is held up as some sort of 'Gandalf-like' character, his every utterance worthy of being carved in stone.
I don't care about Tim Cook's opinions on immigration, has Cook ever found himself competing against an illegal immigrant for a job? When your monthly paycheck has two commas in it, you have almost certainly lost touch with the hourly worker whose paychecks don't even have one comma.
"...So it's 2 percent of the capacity in South Australia achieving 55 percent of the revenues in South Australia."
It's providing 55% of FCAS, not electricity - the 100MW battery represents 2% of the energy in AU.
What does this mean? Where is the FCAS charged on my residential electric bill? Will customers see a savings on their electric bill? How much does FCAS represent for each KW consumed?
This is like saying the new printer in the office is printing 55% of the pages for an office and is printing those pages at a 90% savings over the old printer - big deal, something no one outside the electric company ever thought about is now cheaper.
Wow! Your completely made-up set of 'facts' completely turned my opinion around.
Why can't a college-educated person secure employment that pays enough to meet his needs? He likely qualifies for state and federal aid to help meet living expenses.
However conditions for younger adults are much harder today then the past generations in terms of home ownership.
Have you heard about the Great Depression? Home ownership was a bit harder then than today.
Single wage-earners in their twenties aren't typically homeowners, they are renters.
The man-child in this case is actually fighting another court case trying to get visitation to his own child - everything his parents are asking him to do should be the same things the family court judge hearing his visitation case would expect him to do - secure housing, get a job, provide a stable role model for his child.
The Tesla owners said they paid an extra $5,000 to have their cars equipped with the Autopilot software with additional safety features such as automated emergency braking and side collision warning. The features were "completely inoperable," according to the complaint. Under the proposed agreement, class members, who paid to get the Autopilot upgrade between 2016 and 2017, will receive between $20 and $280 in compensation. Tesla has agreed to place more than $5 million into a settlement fund, which will also cover attorney fees.
$20-280 for a "completely inoperable" $5,000 set of upgrades?
On the other hand not having physical stores all over the country where customers can actually see the goods before buyig saves them vast amounts of money.
And that's why Amazon is frequently the lower-cost option for consumers. Condoning policies like unlimited returns would eat into their profits, forcing Amazon to raise prices, potentially shrinking their cost advantage over competitors.
No, it isn't - what is the Libya Model? The Lybia model isn't surround yourself with female body guards, torture your citizens, and let your kids kill your country's citizens without restraint. Libya was hell on earth, the locals brought down the government and the US helped.
But that isn't what Bolton was referring to - Libya Model is to demand absolute, verified shutdown of nuclear development, no exceptions.
THAT is the Libyan Model any sane person would understand Bolton was talking about.
Bolton was referring to the need to build trust and verify any denuclearization efforts when he brought up Libya in a CBS interview last month. He didn’t imply, publicly at least, that the “Libya model” would include regime change in North Korea.
Source
What else exactly does Trump think he's going to get? The North Koreans already offered unilateral nuclear disarmament and negotiations on reunification with South Korea. That's basically everything that matters.
So all Trump needed to do was show up and it would have all been done?
This meeting was something the last several administrations tried to do (and failed), Trump got closer than anyone, and you blame him because you think like every previous administration, Trump should have gone to N Korea, accepted their empty promises, showered them with humanitarian aid, and then looked the other way when they srated working on nuclear weapons again?
As a note, Bill Maher, in a fit of reasonableness, actually, in his way, apologized to Mitt Romney, said he wasn't actually a bad guy, he just had different opinions/positions than Maher and Bill apologized for the way he treated candidate Romney - who Maher agreed was actually a pretty decent guy.
Pence was guilty of "saber rattling", the North Korean was guilty of "being insulting" - apples and oranges.
Was the KJU summit going to strip the US of it's ability to strike domestic targets?
As a reminder, it was the previous administration, who got his Nobel Peace Prize in advance of doing anything of any substance, because the members of the committee "just knew he'd do good things once in office, so why wait?", that used drone strikes to target and kill American citizens without benefit of trial.
If your criteria for "technology news" is it possibly impacts someone that uses technology, then every store on every page of the local newspaper is a candidate for Slashdot... For instance, the 30 year-old "man-child" that refuses to move out of his parent's house while he fights to regain custody of HIS son.
Or, if you ever read even a summary of Trump's book The Art of the Deal, you'd know this is negotiations 101 - you have to be willing to walk away if the deal isn't right, in order to get the best outcome.
After Trump backed out of President Obama's personal Iran deal...
FTFY
Yes, they way you get the best deal is to be willing to walk away from the deal if it isn't right.
Unfortunately, too many "experts" view geo-political negotiations like the famous South Park Underpants Gnomes:
3. Sign Agreement
It wasn't Trump, it was Pence and Pompeo who threatened North Korea with a Libyan outcome.
Threatened? No, predicted.
Speaking in May 21 interview on Fox News, Pence said the reclusive regime could end up like the North African country "if Kim Jong Un doesn't make a deal."
Source
Your Corolla would cost you $22k extra in gasoline prices over, say, six years of moderately intensive driving in my country.
You do realize that on average about $0.66/gallon is collected to fund road and infrastructure projects at the state and federal level - right? When you stop buying gasoline, how will you pay "your fair share" for the upkeep of roadways?
Some are already close. The electric Hyundai IONIQ is less than $30,000 and if the range improves by 60 miles or so
Ioniq's EPA range is 124 miles. You're asking them to nearly double
the Ioniq's range for pocket change.
Math?
Adding 60 to 124 is not "nearly doubling", it is an aprox. 50% increase. I'm not sure what common core math priciples you were applying here, but a 50% increase is about half of a 100% increase, which is the definition of "doubling" something.
A majority of voters in the last Presidential election decided that it was perfectly acceptable for the the Secretary of State, HRC, to send, receive and store classified emails and attachments (of all classification categories) on an insecure personal server from consumer devices (which were later wiped and crushed, apparently to secure their insecure devices as they were decommissioned)... so why is this a problem with President Trump sing an insecure flip phone to post his thoughts to twitter?
So 'Free Returns' means 'Infinite number if Free Returns'?
Non-defective returns cost retailers money, retailers are not in the business of loaning out their products.
This just in, Trump popukarity has risen since the election.
But of course, that is 'in the tank for Trump' CNN...
Obviously this is a self selecting set of high income high education worker and will not represent the entire market by any means.
As a reminder, this survey polled millennials across 36 countries.
Face it, right wing economics don't work.
You skipped the part where it was John F. Kennedy that cut the tax rates, how reduced taxes encouraged compliance with the tax code and tax revenues increased...
Care to address the 47% of tax filers (which is a subset of "all Americans") that either pay no net federal income taxes or actually receive so-called "tax refunds" far in excess of the taxes withheld from their wages.
I replace them with another one. Baby boomers are baffled by this, because they've never lived in a world where they are inherently replaceable.
There is a whole generation of displaced IT workers that have trained, only to have been replaced by, H-1B workers - it's your contention that they have no idea what it means to be "inherently replaceable."
That 43% of a random collection of millennials around the globe don't plan to stay with their current jobs past two years is far from surprising. We're talking about the world, not about just the 50 united states, or just the EU - it likely includes so-called third-world countries where things are tougher.
I can easily imagine that 43% of the respondents were working dead-end jobs in third-world countries, that would easily account for the majority of the 43%, add in a few over-educated/frustrated starbucks barristas or barnes and noble booksellers and 43% is easy to imagine.
A guy that runs a company with billions in the bank from selling music, cellphone apps, tablets and cellphones wouldn't be my go-to source for opinions on immigration and tarrifs.
Tim Cook got his job when Steve Jobs passed - Tim is an executive (a suit, in /. parlance), yet some how he is held up as some sort of 'Gandalf-like' character, his every utterance worthy of being carved in stone.
I don't care about Tim Cook's opinions on immigration, has Cook ever found himself competing against an illegal immigrant for a job? When your monthly paycheck has two commas in it, you have almost certainly lost touch with the hourly worker whose paychecks don't even have one comma.
"...So it's 2 percent of the capacity in South Australia achieving 55 percent of the revenues in South Australia."
It's providing 55% of FCAS, not electricity - the 100MW battery represents 2% of the energy in AU.
What does this mean? Where is the FCAS charged on my residential electric bill? Will customers see a savings on their electric bill? How much does FCAS represent for each KW consumed?
This is like saying the new printer in the office is printing 55% of the pages for an office and is printing those pages at a 90% savings over the old printer - big deal, something no one outside the electric company ever thought about is now cheaper.
Wow.