Kommentare
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"much of the better education is self taught".
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Owning a small business can be a good learning experience. I wish I did not have to learn the hard way so late in life. I am 54 and must let people whom are poison to my business go. I have no resources to replace the bad with the good - only faith. Life is hard, but God is good.
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Very Educational
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Wonderful insights shared! Thank you!
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You want to hate this guy for being such a rich bastard, but he seems to be a genuinely nice guy.
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...for this company...eh...country...27years later, we are on our way to demise, none of this shit matters. oracle my ass.
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On Long Island, NY teaching pays well.
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Loved This :)
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About history,,,slaves are free now and robots take over pickin cotton..
Bill Gates make u dont need work,,, and wath do we eat that we can
afford? mc,d,,? colesterol and diabetes to make more monny to
pharma...more taks to finanse war and i am stil sober..........ok now i
am drunk and i think about the world again with another idea...we can
not do without the world but the world can do great without us,,,,,, -
"You won the lottery by being born in the United States." I think most people need to remember this than spending so much energy hating others. Empower yourself with your own innate abilities. Earth is a beautiful place. Enjoy it!
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Warren Buffet is so down to earth, "You'll be eating at mcdonalds, and I'll be eating at mcdonalds. We're the push on food." Such a charismatic guy.
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how is student loan avoided? its college or high school education jobs for the rest if your life. so...
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Thanks
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how to stay out of debt: do not use tomorrow money, and save as much as you can
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When I was in College in the mid 1970's "one million dollars" was the equivalent of $5.9 Million today so basically I had to earn $220,000 in 1974 dollars to be the equal of a Millionaire in 2017.Β Set your goals at an attainable level and this Country (USA) will allow you to fulfill them if you do your part and don't let goals slide.Β You CAN do it!
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Rat tuyet
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Warren be a role model live like Hugh Hefner.
Buffett became a billionaire on paper when Berkshire Hathaway began selling class A shares on May 29, 1990, when the market closed at $7,175 a share. More on Warren Buffett: https://www.amazon.com/gp/search?ie=UTF8&tag=tra0c7-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=9113f36df9f914d370807ba1208bf50b&camp=1789&creative=9325&index=books&keywords=Warren%20Buffett In 1998, in an unusual move, he acquired General Re (Gen Re) for stock. In 2002, Buffett became involved with Maurice R. Greenberg at AIG, with General Re providing reinsurance. On March 15, 2005, AIG's board forced Greenberg to resign from his post as Chairman and CEO under the shadow of criticism from Eliot Spitzer, former attorney general of the state of New York. On February 9, 2006, AIG and the New York State Attorney General's office agreed to a settlement in which AIG would pay a fine of $1.6 billion. In 2010, the federal government settled with Berkshire Hathaway for $92 million in return for the firm avoiding prosecution in an AIG fraud scheme, and undergoing 'corporate governance concessions'. In 2002, Buffett entered in $11 billion worth of forward contracts to deliver U.S. dollars against other currencies. By April 2006, his total gain on these contracts was over $2 billion. In 2006, Buffett announced in June that he gradually would give away 85% of his Berkshire holdings to five foundations in annual gifts of stock, starting in July 2006. The largest contribution would go to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In 2007, in a letter to shareholders, Buffett announced that he was looking for a younger successor, or perhaps successors, to run his investment business. Buffett had previously selected Lou Simpson, who runs investments at Geico, to fill that role. However, Simpson is only six years younger than Buffett. Buffett ran into criticism during the subprime crisis of 2007--2008, part of the late 2000s recession, that he had allocated capital too early resulting in suboptimal deals. "Buy American. I am." he wrote for an opinion piece published in the New York Times in 2008. Buffett has called the 2007--present downturn in the financial sector "poetic justice". Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway suffered a 77% drop in earnings during Q3 2008 and several of his recent deals appear to be running into large mark-to-market losses. Berkshire Hathaway acquired 10% perpetual preferred stock of Goldman Sachs. Some of Buffett's Index put options (European exercise at expiry only) that he wrote (sold) are currently running around $6.73 billion mark-to-market losses. The scale of the potential loss prompted the SEC to demand that Berkshire produce, "a more robust disclosure" of factors used to value the contracts. Buffett also helped Dow Chemical pay for its $18.8 billion takeover of Rohm & Haas. He thus became the single largest shareholder in the enlarged group with his Berkshire Hathaway, which provided $3 billion, underlining his instrumental role during the current crisis in debt and equity markets. In 2008, Buffett became the richest man in the world, with a total net worth estimated at $62 billion by Forbes and at $58 billion by Yahoo, dethroning Bill Gates, who had been number one on the Forbes list for 13 consecutive years. In 2009, Gates regained the position of number one on the Forbes list, with Buffett second. Their values have dropped to $40 billion and $37 billion, respectively, Buffett having lost $25 billion in 12 months during 2008/2009, according to Forbes. In October 2008, the media reported that Warren Buffett had agreed to buy General Electric (GE) preferred stock. The operation included extra special incentives: he received an option to buy 3 billion GE at $22.25 in the next five years, and also received a 10% dividend (callable within three years). In February 2009, Buffett sold some of the Procter & Gamble Co, and Johnson & Johnson shares from his portfolio. In addition to suggestions of mistiming, questions have been raised as to the wisdom in keeping some of Berkshire's major holdings, including The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE:KO) which in 1998 peaked at $86. Buffett discussed the difficulties of knowing when to sell in the company's 2004 annual report: That may seem easy to do when one looks through an always-clean, rear-view mirror. Unfortunately, however, it's the windshield through which investors must peer, and that glass is invariably fogged. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Buffett