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In terms of fortunes now being made and the industry’s impact on our economy, Big Pharma (or a little pharma that develops a miracle drug) is fast becoming today’s go-go industry. Profit margins often exceed those of industries, such as software, that we think of as modern gold mines. Only now the products have to do with life or death.
Only a handful of fat people have ever showed up; most of the time, thin folks sit around brainstorming about how to be better allies. I ask Harrop why she thinks the group has been such a bust. It’s simple, she says: “Fat people grow up in the same fat-hating culture that non-fat people do.”
Here we have a collection of wholesome good news stories and random acts of kindness that show the good side of the human race. Compiled from the Giving Everyday project's Instagram account, they ...
It was still here when I got back, and I was going to steal it because basically it’s the only good book we have, the rest is romance novels and Stephen King and the Bible, though we have The Shining, which is good, of course, but since you came now I think I should leave it. It’s yours if you want it.
Why America Needs Ebonics Now When white people want to do something experimental in education, it’s called charter schools or experiential learning. When black people do it, it’s called identity politics.
The Huffington Post has partnered with YouGov to conduct daily public opinion polls on the issues of the day, and provide a polling widget allowing readers of the online news site to compare their views to those of the nation as a whole.
Instead, we have now reverted to this much vaguer term collusion which, as everyone knows, doesn’t really have a legal meaning. And it now includes things like a willingness to possibly receive information that the Russians obtained about Hillary Clinton and was harmful to her, in order to confer advantage on the Trump campaign.
Most of the 1.2 billion people the global economy added to the middle class in the last 15 years earn between $2 and $13 per day. “The nature of demand will be for cheap, undifferentiated goods,” says a World Bank report—exactly the kinds of products that are most likely to be made in supply chains with low or nonexistent labor standards.