As someone that has one of those job you are talking about. I can’t speak for everyone I def know people that barely contributes anything but Yes I really don’t work that much maybe 4-6 hours a week but it’s also bc I have almost 10 years of experience doing what I do so it becomes easy. I have people under me that does a lot of the groundwork and heavy lifting but I still have to set up the framework and guide and make final decisions. My last job after l quit they had to hire 2 guys to replace me and they couldn’t even do my job. I think at least in what I do it’s not about how much time you put in but business intuition, deep understanding of the full cycle logistics. I think the company culture also matters, if it’s full of corporate bs it’s gonna be hell. You need leaders that has no ego and knows what they are doing and take ownerships and trust their employees also takes ownership’s.
@Tim0nline@zachklein In what way? You get 4 parking space per corner, extra long sidewalks every block trying to go anywhere, noise echoing everywhere if you face the interior, space that could be more houses inside but ended up being someone’s half dead garden or cloth drying racks?
@KalshiPolitics This is honestly insane, the corruption snd incompetence of her administration is just wild for me that there’s even a remote chance that she will win a second term. As a Democrat maybe even socialist I can’t even believe that I might have to vote for Spencer Pratt this time
@cxgonzalez I have my own company and makes USD, was living in Barcelona last year for about 6 months. Let’s just say my rent in Barcelona was more expensive than my rent in LA for a similar apartment. Long term rental will be a bit cheaper but not by significantly much
In some very real sense, Ozempic was invented in 1990. Pfizer ran the human trials and just never published them.
They showed it lowered blood glucose in diabetics, slowed gastric emptying, and killed hunger; the same 3 things that make Ozempic work today.
The joint venture agreement said internal data stayed internal, and that was that. Pfizer killed the program in 1991. The reasoning, as far as I can tell, was that nobody would ever want an injectable diabetes drug besides insulin.
So, the license went back to the hospital in Boston that held the patents.
Novo picked it up in 1992 and spent the next two decades building liraglutide, then semaglutide.
It's insane that data sat in a filing cabinet for 30+ years.
I only know this because Jeffrey Flier, one of the Harvard scientists in the room, finally wrote it up. He's in his late 70s and didn't want the history to die with him.
This makes you wonder what else is in those filing cabinets.
Ozempic could've existed 27 years ago.
@ClownWorld Had this guy rear ended me and totalled my Porsche, he got off the car and started yelling at me for 30 mins, once the police showed up he changed his attitude 180 and pretended he was injured and got on an ambulance and now he is sueing me for body injury. Welcome to America 🇺🇸