While you're here, how about this:
Warren introduces bill to redirect wall money to coronavirus | TheHill
The bill, according to Warren's office, would result in approximately $10 billion being shifted from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
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"It's our job to ensure that funding is not a limiting factor as public health leaders and front-line medical professionals continue getting ready," he said.
Mets fans angrily send GM money after Phillies destroyed their offseason | NBC Sports Philadelphia
The internet lets sports fans tease and taunt nearly everyone directly, from opposing players to their own mascots: just @ them. But the front office is a notable, and large, exception - the people pulling the strings (and purse strings) are normally absent from social media.
Which means, when the Phillies swooped in this past offseason to hire Joe Girardi and sign Zack Wheeler away from hopeful Mets fans, their fans needed to get creative with their venting.
As coronavirus spreads, what to watch out for when it comes to money
It's no secret that coronavirus fears have infected the market and prompted concerns about a potential global economic downturn.
Yet even amid scary headlines and big market drops, most financial experts have two words of advice for individual investors: Don't panic.
"The No. 1 regret among Americans is the failure to save for emergencies and the failure to save for retirement," said Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at personal finance site Bankrate.com. "An episode like this is a solid reminder that we still need to do both of those things."
Check out this next:
Financial Advice From a Money Management Pioneer
For Ethel Davis, financial advising is part business and part heart. Here's how she answered some of our everyday financial questions.
Ethel Davis, owner of VZD Capital Management , has a morning ritual. The first thing she does before beginning work is turn on the digital photo frame perched on her office desk. Each photo is of a client.
"I ask them to send me a picture doing something they love to do," Davis explains. "After 30 years of being in the financial arena, I have been around so many financial advisors who just took other people's money. I said I was not going to do that, and I took bruises for it. ... Maybe I haven't made as much money as others, but as I look at those pictures of my clients each morning, I know I h ave purpose."
5 things Boeing's tax break money could buy instead | Crosscut
To prevent a tariff war, Washington lawmakers may take back some of the company's record-setting tax break — and free up $100 million per year in the state budget.
A Boeing 737 MAX 9 sits along the tarmac at Renton Municipal Airport, near the Boeing plant in Renton, Wash., March 13, 2019. (Photo by Matt M. McKnight/Crosscut)
Seven years ago, Washington lawmakers approved an $8.7-billion tax break package to benefit Boeing and other aerospace companies, with the goal of ensuring Boeing would build its new 777X airplane in the state.
How Can I Get My Husband Off My Back About Money?
Welcome to the club, my friend. Whether they do it consciously or not, it's normal for people to try to balance themselves out by partnering with their financial opposite. (And that's not just anecdotal — academic research backs it up , too.)
"I see this with a lot of couples: Once they decide who's the spender and who's the saver, they tend to delegate those roles to each other, and polarize even further," says Megan McCoy, a marriage and family therapist and professor at Kansas State University, where she studies personal financial planning. "It becomes a good cop, bad cop situation. But in reality, their viewpoints might be more similar than they think, and it's not that one person is right and the other is wrong."
Bullied Australian boy won't go to Disneyland, money will go to charity instead
BRISBANE, Australia (Gray News) – The family of a bullied Australian boy will turn down the money raised to send him to Disneyland.
The heartbreaking video of 9-year-old Quaden Bayles telling his mother he wanted to die sparked an outpouring of support from the around the world, including from Aussie actor Hugh Jackman, who told the boy in a video that "you've got a friend in me."
A GoFundMe page set up by American comedian Brad Williams raised more than $470,000 to send the boy and his mom to "The Happiest Place On Earth."
Happening on Twitter
This April, Uber will introduce what it calls a "new omni-present advertising network that cuts through clutter wit… https://t.co/JT1M82KEP4 WIRED (from San Francisco/New York) Wed Feb 26 20:25:04 +0000 2020
Uber is introducing what it calls a "new omnipresent advertising network that cuts through clutter with street-leve… https://t.co/52WzrPj7SN WIRED (from San Francisco/New York) Thu Feb 27 14:22:04 +0000 2020
1. Clear the clutter 👏 https://t.co/xbi6srX3HD realtordotcom (from worldwide) Mon Feb 24 23:00:04 +0000 2020
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