I think they should impound that unfinished Chinese tower with the graffiti and hire homeless people to make it into homeless housing.
SubDRSive
And sticky...
Citadel CEO Kenneth Griffin in recent photo wearing a generic fast food worker uniform standing at order counter of fast food restaurant...
Marge called someone this morning. And their story wasn't convincing this time.
So far today the CEO of HSBC has suddenly resigned... https://archive.ph/SgxD2
archive.today webpage capture Saved from https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czkvnd4g44ro no other snapshots from this url 30 Apr 2024 13:31:34 UTC
HSBC chief executive unexpectedly steps down 7 hours ago João da Silva, Business reporter
Noel Quinn has led the banking giant for nearly five years HSBC's group chief executive Noel Quinn is unexpectedly retiring after nearly five years in the role. Europe's largest bank says it is in the process of finding a successor for 62-year-old Mr Quinn, who will stay in the role until a new chief executive is named. HSBC is considering candidates from both inside and outside the firm. It comes as the UK-based lender reported a 1.8% drop in profit for the first three months of 2024, compared to the same time last year. The company said that its pre-tax profit for the period came in at $12.7bn (£10bn), which was a little better than expected by market analysts. "After an intense five years, it is now the right time for me to get a better balance between my personal and business life,” Mr Quinn said. Mr Quinn, who has worked at HSBC for 37 years, was first appointed as its chief executive on an interim basis in 2019, after his predecessor John Flint was ousted from the role. In March 2020, he took the reins of HSBC on a permanent basis. "[Mr Quinn] has driven both our transformation strategy and created a simpler, more focused business that delivers higher returns," HSBC's chairman Mark Tucker said. Along with its quarterly results, the bank announced an interim payout to investors of $0.10 per share and said it would buy back up to $3bn of its shares. HSBC recently completed the sale of its operations in Canada and announced plans to do the same with its business in Argentina. The sales are part of efforts by the London-based bank to focus more on faster-growing markets in Asia. Shanti Kelemen, chief investment office at M&G Wealth, told the BBC's Today programme that it "has probably been a very intense five years" and that Mr Quinn "has had a very long career". She said that Mr Quinn had changed the shape of the bank during his time at the top, by such actions as selling HSBC's Argentina business, leaving Canada, and stepping up Asia operations. "What he's done will probably reverberate and determine the path of their success for certainly several years to come," she added. UK banking International Business HSBC
It made the NY Post, but that rag needs me to turn off adblockers and send a nude photo to be able to read the article.
The target is any industry that cuts costs. The terrorists are MBAs.
There should have been more crew. There should have been tugboats escorting the ship so an engine failure wouldn't endanger a public bridge.
They are externalising any possible cost and then spreading bs conspiracies.
The train that blew up in Ohio was less than an hour from Pittsburgh. If it it had happened there, how much damage and death would have resulted? Every us railroad is cutting costs, tearing up track the MBAs don't understand the immediate use for.
Anything happens, that's what the taxpayer is for.
Remember this shittiness when they're in prison. Faulty lights, expensive internet that's slow, fires, foul drinking water, etc. We need to constantly rub their noses in all possible cost cutting, while posting signs about how the prison is having a record year.
I think some of the comments in this thread are interesting reading and underline the point in the OP.
https://old.reddit.com/r/Superstonk/comments/1bqqj4h/apes_whats_this_found_this_document_while/
I'm out of the loop on these drawings...are they a take on game maps or floor plans?