I differentiate between intolerance in spirit vs. intolerance in action. Intolerance in spirit refers to a conflict of opinion where the opinion may be voiced. Having religious intolerance in action would be to the point of committing violence. In the US, we have freedom of expression, so anyone...
I'm talking about in the present day United States, but, yes, there is a lot of religious intolerance even in this day and age in other countries, though not as bad as say during the Crusades, or during Nazi Germany, if you need a contrast.
It's good that modern, civilized society has evolved to be tolerant of different religions and opinions. I don't care if someone wants to be a Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, or worship the Greek and Roman Gods of Mythology. Worship whatever the heck floats your boat as long as you don't impose...
We don't know, no one knows. Time could be infinite into the past and infinite in the future with who knows how many big bangs, universe expandings, then galaxies, solar systems, and life forms developing back to universe contracting, engulfing everything into a dense singularity in an endless...
The right trading strategy plus experience plus leverage in an environment very conducive to his trading strategy. He's a classic price action breakout trader.
http://archive.fortune.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2000/12/18/293117/index.htm
December 18, 2000
(FORTUNE Magazine) – Every...
That's possible, though I know stress can cause coronary artery disease, especially when mixed with a high saturated fat diet and lack of exercise (post high school baseball).
This happened 6 months ago. I just read about it. Too much stress?
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-12-03/madhu-satyanarayana-j-goldman-co-money-manager-dies-at-33
What do you call a former wife that gets a 50% divorce settlement, alimony (despite shacking up with another guy), and alimony disguised as child support?
Answer: a long-term prostitute
Because his account went boom and bust multiple times over different market environments. Each time he went from 5 figures to deep six figures, then back to 5 figures until late 1998 to early 2000 he caught the massive dotcom bubble. I believe he was up to $40 mil in early 2000, then dropped to...
You're probably right. It's ridiculous to think anyone's month of birth has anything to do with his investment returns.
The sample having 6 times the number of accounts held by men vs. women should mimic a normal population since the stock market attracts a lot more men than women.