MBAN(Business Analytics/Data Science), software engineer, father of 2 awesome sons, huge golf and college football fan, comedian, Atlanta native now in SC.
I remember during the 100 year drought (2008?) we were asked to conserve. We did. And the water rates went up. Less showers, no outdoor watering for us meanwhile our friends across the Chattahoochee in Alabama had no such restrictions. I was convinced we were going to figure out a way to tap into the Tennessee River but we chickened out, ha ha!
@TheBigGuyWJCL@GSAthletics_FB Gosh. Hate to hear this news. RIP big man. Such a warrior on the field. One of many who put Statesboro on the map and paved the way for tiny GSC to become the institution it is today.
@TheBigGuyWJCL@GSAthletics_FB This really hits hard. I hope EagleNation will rally around this family at this time to ensure his children know how much their father was respected, admired and truly loved by those of us privileged to watch him compete.
Eagle Nation has lost a legend
Saddened to learn of @GSAthletics_FB great Joe Ross's passing.
Thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.
https://t.co/11VDfAOp99
Notable Billionaire/Ultra-Wealthy Losses (Recent)
Details/Examples
1- California: At least 6+ billionaires in late 2025/early 2026; broader ultra-wealth exodus.
Peter Thiel (to FL), others unnamed; tied to proposed wealth tax; some reports claim $700B+ in billionaire wealth impacted (mix of moves and market effects)
2- New York: Significant HNWI outflows; some billionaires relocating.
Frequent mentions in millionaire migration data; losses to FL/TX; no exact recent billionaire count but high overall rich exodus
3- Illinois: High millionaire/HNWI net loss
Part of broader high-tax state trends; fewer specific billionaire cases noted.
4- New Jersey: Outflows of affluent residents
Similar to NY/CA patterns; occasional billionaire mentions in tax-avoidance moves
5- Massachusetts: Notable rich departures
High-tax Northeast state; part of millionaire flight lists
State
Net Outflow (2020-2024)
California - 1,234,030
New York - 966,209
Illinois - 418,056
New Jersey - 192,209
Massachusetts - 162,751
Louisiana - 129,488
Maryland - 120,435
Michigan - 67,785
Pennsylvania - 49,031
Minnesota- 47,930
@buckbelue8@MiamiHurricanes@680TheFan Didn’t he declare for the draft after his injury? And then later decide to play another year? If so, why would there be any animosity with UGA? He made a great decision, got paid a bunch of money and balled out. Why the national narrative that UGA mistreated him?