In 1911, a hall of 3,000 men stood and applauded a single woman — Marie Curie — a rare and powerful moment of recognition in an era when women were almost never celebrated in science.
I’m LONG everything.
- America will fix its problems
- no war with China
- wars in Europe and the Middle East end
- we will solve housing
- we will solve addiction
- we will fix social security and the debt problem
- California will wake up and get out of its own way
- we will legalize building again
- billionaires will build great public projects
No doomerism.
The world will get richer, safer, and more peaceful.
More people will get medicine and money and buy cool shit.
I’m long everything.
Peter Lynch ran Fidelity's Magellan Fund from 1977 to 1990.
Averaged 29.2% annually.
Beat the S&P 500 eleven out of thirteen years.
Turned $1,000 into $28,000.
Best track record of any mutual fund manager.
Maybe ever.
He retired at 46.
Because his daughters were growing up and he was missing it.
He later said he didn't know a single person on their deathbed who wished they'd spent more time at the office.
Could have managed money for another 30 years.
Chose family instead.
Knowing when to stop is underrated.
The Dow closed below 6,600 in March of 2009
Today it's over 50,000
There were certain ppl trying to keep you out of the market the entire way up
Don't listen to these ppl
.@ParisHilton advocating passage of the DEFIANCE Act that would combat nonconsensual deepfake pornography: "Too many women are afraid to exist online, or sometimes, to exist at all... This isn't just about technology, it's about power"
Is corporate America too scared to criticise Donald Trump? The Economist’s editor-in-chief, @zannymb, puts that question to the boss of one of the world's biggest banks. When asked whether there is a climate of fear in America, Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, says “I think that’s clear". Watch the latest episodes of The Economist Insider: https://t.co/XeZfB569Ek