Today's Tids Issue 4,806
It's over. Not:
The new year chances everything, right?
Isn’t it interesting how people react to dates?
Because I have this Blog for the Tids, Google is always sending me helpful hints for my benefit and privacy. I always think, which piece of my privacy are they going to take now. That is, if there is anything left that they don’t know about me already. With paranoia like that, I could run for President.
Did you know that Salvador Dali found deep meaning in cauliflower? Tuck that one away for the time when you are considering a move away for the deliciousness of a good steak to the greenery from gardens -- eating food you like versus center of universe.
Are humans destined towards Alfred E. Nemanism as continued mask wearing relentlessly pulls ears forward in future generations?
The Question:
Who were the five richest US Presidents (Adjusted for Inflation)?
The Headlines:
--Trump Finally Signs Stimulus Bill; Sighing Changes Potential Market Disaster To Upbeat Outlook.
--Murdock’s New York Post Urges Trump To Accept Defeat.
--Human Remains At Nashville Bomb Site That Of Suspect Anthony Quinn Warner; Nashville Truck Driver Charged With Bomb Scare Outside Of Convenience Store..
--Covid Hospitalizations High And Steady.
---Alibaba Division Ant Agrees To Control Monopoly Ambitions
I think my life is pretty darn good right now considering my biggest dilemma is trying to listen to a TV program through the crunch of my potato chips.
When I was a working man, I always liked the week between Christmas and New Year’s. I always went into work because nobody was there and I could get more done, at my pace. Then I went on vacation when all of those who took the week off came back.
In case you missed it, a new report on consumer spending in November shows it fell for the first time since April. That’s not a good sign. there are a lot of bad signs seeping up through the veneer hiding a sluggish economy.
Two really petty passages of music are the Sanctus from Gabriel Faure’s Requiem (Op48) and the Kyrie from Maurice Durufle’s Requiem (Op 9). Forget that they are requiems, because the music is alive.
Redundancy: Interviews with NFL Players.
This is the week when all media have their Year in Review special editions. I give it you two words: Corona Virus.
Kicking yourself, Department:
If you had Bought $10,000 worth of Zoom stock at the beginning of 2020, you would have $55,000 today.
The Answer:
Number one is Donald Trump, despite media trying to minimize his wealth. Next is Gorge Washington followed by Thomas Jefferson, John f. Kennedy, Teddy Roosevelt, Andrew Jackson and James Madison. If unsuccessful candidates Michael Bloomberg or Ross Perot had made it, Trump would have been third. Some other wealthiest candidates who failed are Nelson Rockefeller ($1 Bil), Steve Forbes, John Kerry, Mitt Romney, Ted Kennedy, John Hancock, Al Gore and Hillary.
Well, the last week of the year is here. And it will look like the last several months, and that will continue into the beginning of next year, except with perhaps a little more hope.
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