Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Conventional progressivism focuses on policies that redistribute wealth or subsidize access to basic goods, such as universal healthcare and housing vouchers.By contrast, supply-side progressivism aims to create more of these goods and services and make them more widely available. [2]
However, this statement contradicts the technical manuals and encyclopedias written by Rick Sternbach and Michael Okuda, where a speed of 3053 times the speed of light was established for a warp factor of 9.9 and a speed of 7912 times the speed of light for a warp factor of 9.99. Both numerical values are well below the value given by Tom Paris ...
The five days since Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign launched at warp speed have remade the 2024 race – and given Democrats new hope of preventing a second Donald Trump presidency.
The Star Trek television series and films use the term "warp drive" to describe their method of faster-than-light travel. Neither the Alcubierre theory, nor anything similar, existed when the series was conceived—the term "warp drive" and general concept originated with John W. Campbell's 1931 science fiction novel Islands of Space. [47]
Warp Speed or variation, may refer to: Warp speed, a speed of warp drives, especially fictional ones from Star Trek; Warp Speed, film made in 1981 with Adam West; WarpSpeed, a 1992 videogame; Operation Warp Speed, a 2020 U.S. federal government program, public-private partnership, to quickly develop COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 vaccines
For societies with a resource distribution which entropywise is similar to the resource distribution of a reference society with a 73:27 split (73% of the resources belong to 27% of the population and vice versa), [Note 3] the point where the Hoover index and the Theil index are equal, is at a value of around 46% (0.46) for the Hoover index and ...
More than $100 trillion in household wealth is expected to be passed down as part of the Great Wealth Transfer, the largest in U.S. history, according to a new report.
The wealth elasticity of the poor is much higher than the rich: If a pauper wins the lottery he'll tend to spend a large portion of the "Windfall" within a year. If a millionaire wins the lottery his consumption patterns change little. The size of the wealth effect is based on perceptions of the permanence of the change in wealth.