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Selling Hope: The Ethics of Lottery Tickets
13 hours ago ago from Million Dollar Journey
I n early November Kirby and Marie Fontaine, each without the other’s knowledge, bought a Lotto Max ticket. Both in their 30s, two kids at home, living in a mobile home they were down to their last few dollars. She worked in a care home. He had to give up his position in security because of a stroke months before. Money was tight and there wasn’t enough for him to get the rehabilitation he so desperately needed. Marie beat the odds that ...
Related contentGenerosity experiment
13 hours ago ago from Sasha Dichter\'s Blog
On the subway today, a man was asking for donations so he could buy food, sandwiches, deodorant, even hand sanitizer to give for free to homeless people. He had lived on the street two decades ago, he said, and now does this part time to give back, in addition to a part time job he holds. I have absolutely no idea if this is true, but I was skeptical. I, along with everyone else in my car, got off the train without giving him any ...
Related contentThe Bass Ackwards Economics of Bailout II
10 hours ago ago from WordFeeder
Wednesday, December 9, 2009 Ours is a consumer-driven economy. Everyone knows this, including our government, which is why it keeps extending unemployment benefits. Do everything you can to keep people spending, even while they're unemployed and looking for work. It is the most, and possibly the only really effective thing the Obama Administration and Congress have done to prevent an already horrendous recession from being even worse. ...
Related contentUrban Survival; Living without Money
17 hours ago ago from HAZARDOUS PIONEERS
I came across this today, from Ran Prieur's site - an article about a lady in Germany who has lived without money for 13 years. Interestingly her approach to living without money stemmed from observing/trying to help the homeless, something that I take an interest in. Have a read and see what you think, as I myself am looking into taking up various forms of bartering experiments early on in the new year with the hope of posting up my ...
Related contentMegan McArdle: Scrap Expansion of Medicare Because is isn't Profitable
4 hours ago ago from TheDailyBanter.com
The Atlantic s resident idiot libertarian explains that allowing 55 year olds into Medicare is a bad idea because it wouldn t be profitable : What is a Medicare buy-in going to do if the check gets lost in themail, or someone forgets? Insurance companies cut you off.Medicareis going to have a hard time telling some nice sixty year old womanthat oops, they re not going to treat her cancer after all because shedidn t make the payment ...
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