It’s amazing what a well-executed vision for a community golf course can become.
The Park strived to be a gathering place for golfers and families. Here it is at 6:15 on a Wednesday night.
This is an example of what public golf can be for a community.
Pep Guardiola hits back at critics telling him to 'focus on football' and not global issues:
"OK, you focus on being a journalist as well. You cannot talk about economics, because you are not a journalist specifically about economics, right? You focus on football, [so] don't talk about that. That's why.
"They want [me] to remain silent, that is what the world wants, right? Be silent, and don't say anything. I think it's completely the opposite."
Jake Paul accidentally explained the entire wealth inequality debate in 30 seconds.
Most people think billionaires have billions sitting in bank accounts. They look at Musk’s net worth hitting $700B and imagine Scrooge McDuck swimming in cash.
The reality: Musk himself says he’s “cash poor.” When he needed $44B for Twitter, he had to sell Tesla shares in chunks. Each sell-off dropped the stock 5-10%. His “net worth” literally decreased as he tried to access it.
This is why wealth taxes are so complicated to implement. You’re taxing an imaginary number that can’t be converted to cash at face value. A founder selling 5% of their company to pay taxes floods the market with supply, crashing the price of the remaining 95%.
The distinction matters because it shapes how the entire economy behaves. Musk’s $700B “net worth” is really just the market’s guess at what Tesla and SpaceX might be worth if you tried to sell them all, which you can’t.
Liquid wealth and paper wealth follow completely different rules. Most policy debates pretend they’re the same thing.
INCITEMENT: Today’s college freshman were eight when the Democrats and their willing accomplices in the drive-by media began feeding them a steady diet of Trump is Hitler, Republicans are fascists, and both are the greatest threat to democracy in our lifetimes. Just ten years of violent rhetoric and we’re seeing the results.
The reality is, if a prominent political leader from the left had been killed, cities would be under lockdown, buildings boarded up, and protests erupting everywhere. With this tragedy, though, we’ll sadly just head to work tomorrow morning as if nothing has happened.
The Left is the most violent group of people the world has.
They are what they are. Violent. Dangerous. Unhinged.
You don't see anyone on the other side killing.
Our education system fosters victimhood, entitlement, & self-doubt instead of achievement, virtue, & fortitude. Math, reading, writing, science, PE, and civics should be the focus. This is true educational reform, instead of a silly accounting debate over “more vs. less” funding.
Today, we honor the heroes of D-Day—June 6, 1944.
With unmatched courage, American soldiers landed in Normandy, led the charge against tyranny, and changed the course of history.
These patriots’ sacrifice secured freedom for millions. America is forever grateful. 🇺🇸
Student loans should be like mortgages. You cannot get a loan for $1.5 million to buy a house that is only worth $400k. A college degree is an asset, which should be able to be valued.
There should be an "appraisal" of the specific university and academic major before loan approval, and perhaps with annual reviews for continuation of additional loan amounts. Schools should have to show auditable "comps", citing the average salaries of recent graduates of that specific college's program and specific major, to justify the price tag of the program of study. This would have the side benefit of incentivizing colleges to make sure that their grads find good employment.
And I would insist that the salary comps be for grads who are actually working in that field, not for philosophy majors who then go to work for their dad's hedge fund. Consideration should be given also to how many grads can find a job in the field associated with their major. A gender studies major who cannot find a job and is working as a barista should count as big minus points in this algorithm.
If graduates of a specific major at a certain college don't make very much working in that field after graduation, then the college would be compelled by market forces to reduce the price tag, in order for students to qualify for loans to pursue that "asset". If this means that fruitless areas of study get closed off from the student loan market, then that would be a good outcome. Those who want to be art history majors and hieroglyphics linguists can find other ways to fund themselves.
The @OhioState University Buckeyes “showed the world that the road to greatness is paved by hard work, sweat, and often a great deal of adversity. It's a proud day for all of us, but it's a proud day for the Scarlet and Gray.” –President Trump 🇺🇸 @OhioStateFB@OhioStAthletics
I don’t know how to get this across to people. The US tripled its money supply in the past 18 years. It held interest rates at zero for nine of those years. Everyone thinks mortgage rates should be 3.5% and the stock market only goes up. Stocks were overvalued and interest rates were artificially low. How come no one thinks there is a price to be paid for that? All we are doing is returning to normal after a bender.
1) 1996 Nancy Pelosi encourages all of Congress to back reciprocal tariffs
2) 2008 Bernie Sanders wants tariffs, says jobs are going overseas
3) 2018 Barack Obama calls for reciprocal tariffs
4) 1988 Donald Trump says foreign countries must pay tariffs
Only 1 hasn’t sold out