இறைவன் என்றும் உள்ளவன்
ஆதலின்,வாழ்த்துவார்வாழ்த்தும்
வாழ்த்தினானாதல், வைவார் வையும்
வைவினானாதல்
அவனுக்கு வருவது ஒன்று
இல்லையாயினும்,வெகுளியுற்றார்க்கு
அவ்வெகுளி காரணமாக அவனை வைதல்
இயல்பாதல் போல,
அன்புற்றார்க்கும் அவ்வன்பு காரணமாக
அவனைவாழ்த்தலும்
இயல்பாதலின், (1/2)
@Coffeehudigi That is a beautiful photo. R was a great friend of mine more than a coworker. We often shared our personal stories during our otherwise boring office calls. He was very proud of your work as a physician. Wishing V and you the best.
@itskJayaprakash Starting with index funds is a good idea, until you learn more about the market. For 95% people, index funds with low expense ratios are good enough.
@thekaipullai Data centers need lots of power, connectivity, low-latency access to users, etc. etc. Coastal locations have water, but think about hurricanes, flooding and inadequate infrastructure. You don’t want a Highly environmental, friendly data center that is highly ineffective 😁
@drloguortho1 They do what they like, traveling, volunteering, etc. it’s a new mindset doctor. They are refusing to get a mortgage or a loan and be bound by bank loans for next 15-30 years.
@apeki@reidhoffman It’s in the gray area. If someone has a H1B visa with Greencroft processing and has not completed six years, that may be OK. Due to long green card processing times, some are in adjustment of status and continue to extend beyond six years. Not sure if that’s legal anymore.
This makes no sense.
If someone on an H1B extension with a pending AOS is forced to return to their home country, they can’t legally work. How are they supposed to continue the green card process?
The policy defeats the entire purpose. Hope this gets revised by next week 🤞🏼
An alien who is in the U.S. temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply.
This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivizing loopholes.
The era of abusing our nation’s immigration system is over.
@bethanyjbabcock@MiniRetireMatt It was #fake data. Few teachers in high-paying states/districts (e.g., California, New York, long experience + advanced degrees) might reach $100k+. Teachers typically work a 10-month school year with ~2 months summer break. They also do training during summer.