"Insulin was invented at the University of Toronto, Canada, from 1921" Please support ! Please Donate!Invest! help me! Hello World! ! I want to eradicate diabetes type 1 from the world I want to help eliminate pain from people around the world with diabetes please donate your money develop the Cure for Diabetes. The complete cure of diabetes is a dream for humanity of 100 years! please invest and Donate for diabetes cure New Technology And Talk about diabetes with family (^o^)ノシ(^o^)ノシ(^o^)ノシ\(^o^)/(^w^)ノシ
@@francismclean5564 two things. The first, is the joke went right over your head. The second, which sort of matches the intelligence I expect from someone who doesn't get sarcasm, is your racist comment. I've never eaten a bat in my life. Nor do I have any interest in doing so. Thinking all Chinese eat whatever one region of that continent sized country eats, is about as stupid, as saying all white people eat maggot cheese because one region in Italy does that, or rotten shark because some Danes do that. But, I wouldn't put that level of stupidity past you.
As a student at WSU, I can confirm that local businesses have already begun to shutter. The local bookstore, a popular coffee shop, and an iconic bar in Pullman have closed already.
College town economies have been so inflated over so long that it is difficult for them to adjust to a downturn. The rent in most sub-metropolitan centers is so high that even a marginal subtraction of renter population looks like a catastrophe. Food prices are out of control on-campus and off-campus establishments are not behind in the loot, barring the usual fast food poison. Living in college park, MD, you could usually expect to get half a plate of something for $15. For a 2X2 apartment you could expect to pay somewhere between $1000 to $1500 per room if you are on/near campus and $700+ if you are off-campus but that is offset by the vehicle you need to commute. Living on a graduate assistant salary, it is easy to not break-even if you are not ultra careful. As a result, you get credit-card defaults. Undergrads by default are in a debt-trap to begin with if the parents are not rich with fixed assets lying around. If students don't rent places with stupid pool lounges and swimming pools, their parents can use that money for something better. There is no reason for the amount of real-estate predatory behavior that goes on in college towns. This is a good opportunity to reach a financial equilibrium. Don't rent a stupid place that no one needs. Pay your debt off.
@@Matt-fl8uy That is right(connected as in the metro/MARC station is on the east side of town whereas the campus is mainly west with shuttles running), but College park is a town that is a few sketchy zip codes away from the last livable place that one could consider DC. There are some parts of DC too you wouldn't venture after dark with confidence. It is cheaper to live in NW DC than it is to live in CP if one rents an apartment. The commute is a question mark. If you get stuck on the 495, then you will miss the class that you would have made if you lived on-campus. Right now, they are constructing a metro line but I cannot remember a time in the last five years that didn't have some sort of traffic obstruction due to construction). Now the main point. College park is surrounded by high-crime poor neighborhoods and in itself is just OK. The high rent situation of Georgetown, Arlington, Vienna etc. doesn't apply here. Those are nice looking affluent neighborhoods that offer safety and proximity to work for people with families as well as for single folks. The number of options for all ranges of rent are there. It is just a different place. CP(and most of MD, with the exception of Bethesda/Chevy Chase) is in no way even close e.g. no UMD faculty/staff lives in CP. Therefore, there is a manipulated supply curve designed to be marginally below the demand curve so that exorbitant pricing remains a ritual. The pandemic reversed that. Since this is already at rant level. Here is some more. If you live in an apartment complex and suddenly your floor is vacant due to the holidays, then your power bill goes up. In fact it goes up to a level that you could practically calculate yourself adjusting the floor average. It is very similar in houses. A house of five could end up paying 70$/head a month in the summer. Fun fact: Almost no one renting in CP has ever seen their power bill. You get a bill with the name of the real-estate firm which owns the complex but never pepco or (insert name)gas/water. It is that blatant. It gets better. Party people/Instagram models think what they get is a bill. No, the $15 we spend on the rice and edamame bowl lunch had a bill that you get in the form of reciept. Someone writing a number on a peice of paper is not a bill. It is exponential douchebaggery.
@@sidsharma8100 Dang, that's nuts! Yeah, I'd be ticked too. Hopefully things improve for the long term because of all of this. Thank you for the thoughtful response!
And that's the problem. They're relying on Debt, to put money into those places. It just doesn't work. And it takes 10-20 years away from those young people. Before they can even get their life started.
@@scottfree6479 about 40 of the biggest 50 cities in the country are Democrat run. If the "liberal" cities fail, all of America will feel that negative impact. Beyond that, blue counties from 2016 account for about 70% of the total US economy.
Translation: "College towns disappointed that they can't suck the blood of already debt-trodden poverty-ridden students for a few months. Students saving a few bucks staying with their parents is a disaster."
Wow, you must own a business in Pullman with that kind of knowledge. What a dumb thing to say. You have no idea how much this hurts the local economy, local businesses and family’s.
And they rely heavily on Student Debt for their revenue. To me, that's not right. Those kids shouldn't be forced into that Rock and a Hard Place scenario.
I agree. "I don't owe you anything," is not a good Business Model to use. It just destroys more of our own country's Human Capital. The Poverty/Homeless problem isn't a coincidence either.
@ Absolutely disagree. 90% of American colleges DO NOT have huge endowments. Matter of fact, they can barely pay their yearly bills. It applies to most of the colleges in Middle of States or in cornfields (as we say in midwest). Some of the city colleges too suffer from lack of endowments.
I live in Amherst MA, a town where a majority of the population are college students. Small businesses that have been open for decades are closing, and the ones that haven’t closed are facing significant financial troubles. Another issue that wasn’t covered is that our 2020 census count is likely to be down because many students were living at home, which could be a problem for the already underfunded public schools. I’m not suggesting to bring students back, merely arguing that the loss of half the population had created a large problem in the local economy.
Don’t feel bad for college towns. Most help keep scandals quiet for big sports teams stars, cover up for admin scandals, support underage binge drinking and bilk poor students for millions.
Neglected to mention why thousands of us have returned to Pullman when it would be cheaper to stay home. We all signed housing leases early this year when this was supposed to have blown over by now and now we're paying for it...
In all it makes the Phoenix University business model all that more interesting. Also, these small colleges ought to adapt. You don’t see the cutting on tuition costs, or taking installment plans, or even giving up their campus additions. Also coaches and administrative personnel take home pay is short of obscene. I knew of a Dean if a Public University who did nothing more than politicking all day long on the phone.
It's all about which college towns. If you're talking about where I came from which is Tucson for the UofA, they are going to get rocked by this virus. But you're talking about Austin, they have all sort of major tech companies coming there, agencies, and businesses in general that even if you weren't going to college, there's jobs and money. I have hardly seen any real slow down in Texas which is why I will forever make this state my place and if I have kids, they will have a much better standard of living than back where I was from. That place got devastated by the 08 recession and I only escaped it because of the military.
I’d like to see how universities with large international student bodies handle. Boston University has some of the highest internal enrollment that pay full tuition, this will cripple small shops along its campus.
4 ปีที่แล้ว +1
Small businesses in Allston, Brighton and Brookline might feel the hurt.
Everything's not the same after this pandemic. Zoom meetings, work from home, no travel, online shopping , no public transport etc have all become the norm
ASWATHI P Write for yourself a screen play in which this virus is a bio weapon. It will be a thriller about population control, and the destruction of our culture/civilization which sustains us all. Consider, after one of our labs at Fort Detrick Md, the US launched a joint research program with China in Wuhan before the escape/deployment of this virus.
It’s dumb going back to school right now because you pay on-campus rates for online classes. Some people still have to pay room and board to take one class on campus, while the rest of them are online.
On the 1 hand, I'm glad I graduated from college a couple years ago so don't have to worry about this possibility of catching Coronavirus. On the other hand, I do worry fir my sister and cousins still in college across the state, as well as my mom who works at an elementary school, who all could still get Coronavirus.
An honest question for people: how do you think small towns economically will stay afloat during these times? What are some solutions for small towns like Pullman that aren’t bringing in the revenue that they’re used to from football games and students?
At least in New England, many of these small towns are seeing an influx of people leaving major cities to avoid COVID, especially now that their jobs are remote. Some will likely stick around even after COVID passes. Not a fix by any means, but it is a silver lining.
The more students stay at home, the cheaper their education gets, the lower their student loan needed is. For them it's perfect to ensure they can start in professional life without a lot of debt.
@@falcons655 Two things: 1) I always find it interesting how we seem to be strapped for cash when we're talking about helping consumers (the lifeblood of the economy), but then somehow we have $6 Trillion+ lying around and ask zero questions when bailing out large failing conglomerates that pay next to nothing in taxes. If these corporations are failing again in two weeks, then do we have another $2 Trillion for them (despite being in debt) - even if, for some reason, we don't have the same amount for normal people? Why is citizen solvency not a responsible long-term investment for the government? Interest rates are low right now, and if we don't invest in people, then the economy is going to collapse. 2) Mid to Longer-term: We implement a mild 10% VAT that exempts household consumer necessities and is tailored progressively to luxury items and business transactions. Let's say for simplicity that the UBI is 1,000/month. You'd therefore need to be spending 120,000/yr in order to spend more into the VAT than you're getting from UBI; therefore, it acts as a progressive tax. It's nearly impossible for firms like Amazon and Google to game a VAT, so we can use it to achieve the revenue required to alleviate the individual economic burden of COVID at a universal level. Universality is important here many reasons. I'll cover three of them: 1) People's tax brackets two years ago aren't a strong representation of their financial situations during COVID. 2) Universal models reduce cultural prejudices. Every one gets it, from street cleaners to investment bankers. 3) The additional cost required to implement the program universally is only a modest increase from implementing it at a need-based level; therefore, points 1 & 2 are worthwhile investments to strengthen the biggest economy in the world and make sure no one needlessly falls through the cracks, while also allowing people the autonomy to know what's best for their own situations. For more information, I recommend watching this video and reading Andrew Yang's book, The War On Normal People: th-cam.com/video/yrZkOXCZQ5Q/w-d-xo.html What do you think? I personally think it'll be obvious in retrospect that this is what we should have done, especially when the idea was on the table and offered repeatedly. Regardless, UBI is our future. I'm Interested in hearing your thoughts!
If the US would just get it together for TWO WEEKS and do a nationwide lockdown, the economy could be so much stronger afterwards. I live in europe. We closed everthing in April. Now, everything is back to normal and safe. Schools are open and children are not at risk because cases are so low. We wear masks, to keep elderly people safe and make sure that another lockdown does not have to happen. But still, every company and every shop is running normally.
I disagree on that when you are worried about today and you don't consider tomorrow then the effort of today is in vain as the problem is bound to show it ugly head again
There is no "either economy OR health". You have to have both. Keep the virus from spreading = the economy will be saved. Have a look around the world if you dont believe me.
if this pandemic has taught us one thing, it’s that local economies are extremely fragile.
"Insulin was invented at the University of Toronto, Canada, from 1921"
Please support ! Please Donate!Invest!
help me!
Hello World! !
I want to eradicate diabetes type 1 from the world
I want to help eliminate pain from people around the world with diabetes
please donate your money develop the Cure for Diabetes.
The complete cure of diabetes is a dream for humanity of 100 years!
please invest and Donate for diabetes cure New Technology
And Talk about diabetes with family
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They always have been, that's why It's called 'local'.
Yeah it shows how fragile economies are when something as small as a global pandemic throws it into chaos
Towns relying on one university is like people relying on one income.
Same idea with institutions relying on federal dollars and profits from the athletics department
Or a city relying on one industry- take it from a Flint, MI native
Wall Street be like: how do we short a town?
ez, you buy puts on the town.
@@HanZhang1994 towns dont have puts. bat eater
Sell variable rate mortgages to all the strippers in town and don't ask for proof of income
@@francismclean5564 two things. The first, is the joke went right over your head. The second, which sort of matches the intelligence I expect from someone who doesn't get sarcasm, is your racist comment. I've never eaten a bat in my life. Nor do I have any interest in doing so.
Thinking all Chinese eat whatever one region of that continent sized country eats, is about as stupid, as saying all white people eat maggot cheese because one region in Italy does that, or rotten shark because some Danes do that. But, I wouldn't put that level of stupidity past you.
It's the media Mafia making all the money as usual-afterall, nothing sells like bad news!
As a student at WSU, I can confirm that local businesses have already begun to shutter. The local bookstore, a popular coffee shop, and an iconic bar in Pullman have closed already.
College town economies have been so inflated over so long that it is difficult for them to adjust to a downturn. The rent in most sub-metropolitan centers is so high that even a marginal subtraction of renter population looks like a catastrophe. Food prices are out of control on-campus and off-campus establishments are not behind in the loot, barring the usual fast food poison. Living in college park, MD, you could usually expect to get half a plate of something for $15. For a 2X2 apartment you could expect to pay somewhere between $1000 to $1500 per room if you are on/near campus and $700+ if you are off-campus but that is offset by the vehicle you need to commute. Living on a graduate assistant salary, it is easy to not break-even if you are not ultra careful. As a result, you get credit-card defaults. Undergrads by default are in a debt-trap to begin with if the parents are not rich with fixed assets lying around.
If students don't rent places with stupid pool lounges and swimming pools, their parents can use that money for something better. There is no reason for the amount of real-estate predatory behavior that goes on in college towns. This is a good opportunity to reach a financial equilibrium. Don't rent a stupid place that no one needs. Pay your debt off.
Isn't College Park, MD connected to the Metro Line with DC & NOVA? If so, that's a brutally expensive place to live all around.
@@Matt-fl8uy That is right(connected as in the metro/MARC station is on the east side of town whereas the campus is mainly west with shuttles running), but College park is a town that is a few sketchy zip codes away from the last livable place that one could consider DC. There are some parts of DC too you wouldn't venture after dark with confidence. It is cheaper to live in NW DC than it is to live in CP if one rents an apartment. The commute is a question mark. If you get stuck on the 495, then you will miss the class that you would have made if you lived on-campus. Right now, they are constructing a metro line but I cannot remember a time in the last five years that didn't have some sort of traffic obstruction due to construction).
Now the main point. College park is surrounded by high-crime poor neighborhoods and in itself is just OK. The high rent situation of Georgetown, Arlington, Vienna etc. doesn't apply here. Those are nice looking affluent neighborhoods that offer safety and proximity to work for people with families as well as for single folks. The number of options for all ranges of rent are there. It is just a different place. CP(and most of MD, with the exception of Bethesda/Chevy Chase) is in no way even close e.g. no UMD faculty/staff lives in CP. Therefore, there is a manipulated supply curve designed to be marginally below the demand curve so that exorbitant pricing remains a ritual. The pandemic reversed that.
Since this is already at rant level. Here is some more. If you live in an apartment complex and suddenly your floor is vacant due to the holidays, then your power bill goes up. In fact it goes up to a level that you could practically calculate yourself adjusting the floor average. It is very similar in houses. A house of five could end up paying 70$/head a month in the summer. Fun fact: Almost no one renting in CP has ever seen their power bill. You get a bill with the name of the real-estate firm which owns the complex but never pepco or (insert name)gas/water. It is that blatant. It gets better. Party people/Instagram models think what they get is a bill. No, the $15 we spend on the rice and edamame bowl lunch had a bill that you get in the form of reciept. Someone writing a number on a peice of paper is not a bill. It is exponential douchebaggery.
@@sidsharma8100 Dang, that's nuts! Yeah, I'd be ticked too. Hopefully things improve for the long term because of all of this.
Thank you for the thoughtful response!
And that's the problem. They're relying on Debt, to put money into those places.
It just doesn't work.
And it takes 10-20 years away from those young people.
Before they can even get their life started.
@@emuriddle9364 Agreed!
These college-towns are going to become ghost towns
@@scottfree6479 about 40 of the biggest 50 cities in the country are Democrat run. If the "liberal" cities fail, all of America will feel that negative impact. Beyond that, blue counties from 2016 account for about 70% of the total US economy.
King Kong .......
“50,000 people used to live here, now it’s a ghost town.” - Captain McMillan 1995
If they weren’t already
@John Doe And Republican cities are already
Translation: "College towns disappointed that they can't suck the blood of already debt-trodden poverty-ridden students for a few months. Students saving a few bucks staying with their parents is a disaster."
Well said 😷
After pandemic ends and life goes back to normal.
Society at large: Woohoo, I didn’t learn a thing!
That's why the Great Depression happened. 9 years after the Spanish Flu.
"You're traumatized and destitute? Haha! I don't owe you anything!"
"Virginia Tech is not allowing off-campus students to buy meal plans"
Why would they ever want to?
Funny enough Virginia Tech is known for some top tier dining food
So they can pay off the cost of their meals over the next 20 years with interest.
Oh please. Save me the pity. Everything around campuses are intentionally price inflated. So glad they suffer this lack of business.
You'd do the same
I concur.
Wow, you must own a business in Pullman with that kind of knowledge. What a dumb thing to say. You have no idea how much this hurts the local economy, local businesses and family’s.
People not affected by the pandemic are incredibly selfish. “It’s not that lethal. What’s the big deal.”
And they rely heavily on Student Debt for their revenue.
To me, that's not right.
Those kids shouldn't be forced into that Rock and a Hard Place scenario.
This economy is such a joke!
I agree.
"I don't owe you anything," is not a good Business Model to use.
It just destroys more of our own country's Human Capital.
The Poverty/Homeless problem isn't a coincidence either.
With billions and billions of dollars of endowment, they will be fine. Maybe try making it more affordable by lowering tuition costs
Rafael Mendoza the vast majority of schools have tiny endowments if any
You obviously didn't watch the video.
@@BrieoRobino my comment was towards the universities not the town's, as I know they will suffer
@ Absolutely disagree. 90% of American colleges DO NOT have huge endowments. Matter of fact, they can barely pay their yearly bills. It applies to most of the colleges in Middle of States or in cornfields (as we say in midwest). Some of the city colleges too suffer from lack of endowments.
But that's not how racketeering works. 😉👍
We need to rethink what we know about economics now more then ever, answer some of the unanswered questions that exists.
I live in Amherst MA, a town where a majority of the population are college students. Small businesses that have been open for decades are closing, and the ones that haven’t closed are facing significant financial troubles. Another issue that wasn’t covered is that our 2020 census count is likely to be down because many students were living at home, which could be a problem for the already underfunded public schools. I’m not suggesting to bring students back, merely arguing that the loss of half the population had created a large problem in the local economy.
Don’t feel bad for college towns. Most help keep scandals quiet for big sports teams stars, cover up for admin scandals, support underage binge drinking and bilk poor students for millions.
so the community should suffer for the decisions of about 10 people? great thinking
Neglected to mention why thousands of us have returned to Pullman when it would be cheaper to stay home. We all signed housing leases early this year when this was supposed to have blown over by now and now we're paying for it...
@Lesbian Amazon Sister Off campus apartments :/
This proves how college is a profit -making business. This system is good until it isn't. Maybe try a different model yeh?
Big fat F for the fresh MBA grads who thought education was the only key they needed to “success in the real world”.
To bad they shut down sports. I wonder how U of M going to pay the note due on their big house?
In all it makes the Phoenix University business model all that more interesting.
Also, these small colleges ought to adapt. You don’t see the cutting on tuition costs, or taking installment plans, or even giving up their campus additions.
Also coaches and administrative personnel take home pay is short of obscene. I knew of a Dean if a Public University who did nothing more than politicking all day long on the phone.
Meanwhile, professors scrape by on food stamps and ramen.
United Corporations of America.
It's all about which college towns. If you're talking about where I came from which is Tucson for the UofA, they are going to get rocked by this virus. But you're talking about Austin, they have all sort of major tech companies coming there, agencies, and businesses in general that even if you weren't going to college, there's jobs and money. I have hardly seen any real slow down in Texas which is why I will forever make this state my place and if I have kids, they will have a much better standard of living than back where I was from. That place got devastated by the 08 recession and I only escaped it because of the military.
I’d like to see how universities with large international student bodies handle. Boston University has some of the highest internal enrollment that pay full tuition, this will cripple small shops along its campus.
Small businesses in Allston, Brighton and Brookline might feel the hurt.
Everything's not the same after this pandemic. Zoom meetings, work from home, no travel, online shopping , no public transport etc have all become the norm
ASWATHI P Write for yourself a screen play in which this virus is a bio weapon. It will be a thriller about population control, and the destruction of our culture/civilization which sustains us all. Consider, after one of our labs at Fort Detrick Md, the US launched a joint research program with China in Wuhan before the escape/deployment of this virus.
Hopefully, in the long term, it will lead to a much greater decline in the 9-5 and 40+ hours a week lifestyle.
I really like this one!💕💕💓
It’s dumb going back to school right now because you pay on-campus rates for online classes. Some people still have to pay room and board to take one class on campus, while the rest of them are online.
Terrible news. Absolutely terrible. Imagine, lower student debts.
Students can learn anything from TH-cam. Just need to spend the time.
Yup but you can’t get a deferred
Lol not every source is created equal
On the 1 hand, I'm glad I graduated from college a couple years ago so don't have to worry about this possibility of catching Coronavirus. On the other hand, I do worry fir my sister and cousins still in college across the state, as well as my mom who works at an elementary school, who all could still get Coronavirus.
Jesse Torres hopefully they will stay healthy!
what.... help me. so not being enrolled reduces the likelihood of catching coronavirus? I dont understand the logic here
@Alex lol ahhh brevity. cheers
I thought this was a Vox video, it’s still good though.
Didn't align with your political ideology?
An honest question for people: how do you think small towns economically will stay afloat during these times? What are some solutions for small towns like Pullman that aren’t bringing in the revenue that they’re used to from football games and students?
At least in New England, many of these small towns are seeing an influx of people leaving major cities to avoid COVID, especially now that their jobs are remote. Some will likely stick around even after COVID passes. Not a fix by any means, but it is a silver lining.
just wanna say how beautiful these small college towns are
I'm attending wazzu rn, it is pretty
@@JW-mr5mh cougars go rawr
The more students stay at home, the cheaper their education gets, the lower their student loan needed is. For them it's perfect to ensure they can start in professional life without a lot of debt.
yea so that's flawed logic.
Not if you signed a housing lease
We could alleviate the economic burden of COVID on small college towns if everyone there was receiving a universal basic income. 🧢
As great as an idea as that is, how would we be able to afford that? Our country is already trillions of dollars in debt
@@falcons655 Two things:
1) I always find it interesting how we seem to be strapped for cash when we're talking about helping consumers (the lifeblood of the economy), but then somehow we have $6 Trillion+ lying around and ask zero questions when bailing out large failing conglomerates that pay next to nothing in taxes. If these corporations are failing again in two weeks, then do we have another $2 Trillion for them (despite being in debt) - even if, for some reason, we don't have the same amount for normal people? Why is citizen solvency not a responsible long-term investment for the government? Interest rates are low right now, and if we don't invest in people, then the economy is going to collapse.
2) Mid to Longer-term: We implement a mild 10% VAT that exempts household consumer necessities and is tailored progressively to luxury items and business transactions. Let's say for simplicity that the UBI is 1,000/month. You'd therefore need to be spending 120,000/yr in order to spend more into the VAT than you're getting from UBI; therefore, it acts as a progressive tax. It's nearly impossible for firms like Amazon and Google to game a VAT, so we can use it to achieve the revenue required to alleviate the individual economic burden of COVID at a universal level.
Universality is important here many reasons. I'll cover three of them: 1) People's tax brackets two years ago aren't a strong representation of their financial situations during COVID. 2) Universal models reduce cultural prejudices. Every one gets it, from street cleaners to investment bankers. 3) The additional cost required to implement the program universally is only a modest increase from implementing it at a need-based level; therefore, points 1 & 2 are worthwhile investments to strengthen the biggest economy in the world and make sure no one needlessly falls through the cracks, while also allowing people the autonomy to know what's best for their own situations.
For more information, I recommend watching this video and reading Andrew Yang's book, The War On Normal People: th-cam.com/video/yrZkOXCZQ5Q/w-d-xo.html
What do you think? I personally think it'll be obvious in retrospect that this is what we should have done, especially when the idea was on the table and offered repeatedly. Regardless, UBI is our future. I'm Interested in hearing your thoughts!
I was not a supporter of UBI before the pandemic, but now it definitely makes sense.
GO COUGS BABY
TY,☺️
College and college towns prey on students heavily loaded on student loans. There need to be more reckoning for those predators.
you dont know why you wrote that.
@@jusletursoulglobaby That's a broad sweeping statement without saying anything
Great video! Also, amazing voice! You should make more videos @Carlos Waters!
GO COUGS!!!!
I don't care anymore.
It’s like what happened to coal mining towns
no its really not
Y’all said Moscow Idaho incorrectly - coming from a local
It's mos co, dont'cha know? :P it's like boi-ze
These college towns deserve to become ghost towns because they price gouged students for so many years.
so with that mindset, every metro area deserves the same outcome.
@@jusletursoulglobaby pretty much
@@jusletursoulglobaby hopefully people take advantage of home-cooked meals and stop being fat, overweight, or obese.
@@ninjanerdstudent6937 wow you're just overall bitter
50% gone... Just because of the Thanos snap 👌
“5600 people is a small town”. I live in a town with
Then that's a smaller town.
You live in a village
reduce cutoff marks and anyone take admission
How did the town named Moscow survive the cold war?!!!!!
you'll be amazed but there's more than one Moscow in the US
There’s also St. Petersburg in Florida
Yo this video gave me nostalgia. I tore that place up from 06-10. Go Cougs!
It's way better to have a stimulus than unemployment. We need to take care of today before we even think about tomorrow.
🤝
If the US would just get it together for TWO WEEKS and do a nationwide lockdown, the economy could be so much stronger afterwards. I live in europe. We closed everthing in April. Now, everything is back to normal and safe. Schools are open and children are not at risk because cases are so low. We wear masks, to keep elderly people safe and make sure that another lockdown does not have to happen. But still, every company and every shop is running normally.
I disagree on that when you are worried about today and you don't consider tomorrow then the effort of today is in vain as the problem is bound to show it ugly head again
There is no "either economy OR health". You have to have both. Keep the virus from spreading = the economy will be saved. Have a look around the world if you dont believe me.
@@jasmina.8473 thats nice, what country?
but the president says it is under control ...
this president also said he would date his daughter ... so...
John Doe and that’s is relevant because
most colleges' expense are new buildings that are undergoing construction indefinitely. Colleges do not know how to save but spend spend spend.
Go Cougs!!!!!!
Most Americans are actually very happy that they got their town back.
Why keep saying ‘may’. It will!
Good, let them fail, maybe it will teach them to be fiscally responsible the following year.
Go Cougs!
Hola cómo estás saludos llequeeee buenos días
Omg! GO COUGS!!!
Most college towns are in red states so couldn’t give two f*cks
No reason for these schools to shut down. Self inflicted wounds
im tired of covid idc anymore
CHINA!!!!
나라빚945조
WSJW
Thanks Trump!
Old people want to protect their college babies.
NCAA Football 🏈 got exposed. 😂😂😂
Online schools that lead to a direct job or technical career upon graduation is the future.
If colleges make so much money? Why do they need govt funding?
Ruind business and humans life, they don't care about anyone just promoting the Ai
................
My PHD grad ex-boyfriend can confirm that College is a scam.