Professor Benedict Gross was the first one, a class on Abstract Algebra. Dr. Gross has since moved to UCSD.Nope. Fauxahontas would be my guess. She's out there making that money.
Professor Benedict Gross was the first one, a class on Abstract Algebra. Dr. Gross has since moved to UCSD.Nope. Fauxahontas would be my guess. She's out there making that money.
Lecture 1 is simple enough for comprehension by most participants in this group. I haven't seen any solid evidence that anyone has taken a college course at this level (it appears to be aimed at college sophomores, or the equivalent).Professor Benedict Gross was the first one, a class on Abstract Algebra. Dr. Gross has since moved to UCSD.
Benedict Gross - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Shocking, I know, but you never answered my question. Do you only support the Capitol Police maybe... I don't know... every January 6th?I know. I have already taken some.
Gosh... thanks. I'm currently tied up chewing my own arm off but, if my jaw ever gets tired, I'll absolutely click on your 49 minute algebra lecture. Can't really do both with all the screaming and blood loss, you know?Lecture 1 is simple enough for comprehension by most participants in this group. I haven't seen any solid evidence that anyone has taken a college course at this level (it appears to be aimed at college sophomores, or the equivalent).
The first 4:30 is mostly about how the course is to be run, the textbook, etc. If you start at 4;30 you can skip all that. The rest of Lecture 1 is stuff I learned in my 1963 NSF Math Camp in Worcester, MA, for 6 weeks in the summer between my high school Sophomore and Junior years. We studied set theory, number theory, probability, and a weekly special half-day seminar on a different topic. We also had a Wednesday afternoon bowling league and a Saturday afternoon field trip to a beach or amusement park.Gosh... thanks. I'm currently tied up chewing my own arm off but, if my jaw ever gets tired, I'll absolutely click on your 49 minute algebra lecture. Can't really do both with all the screaming and blood loss, you know?
With all "due" respect, I'm far more interested in your bowling league stories.The first 4:30 is mostly about how the course is to be run, the textbook, etc. If you start at 4;30 you can skip all that. The rest of Lecture 1 is stuff I learned in my 1963 NSF Math Camp in Worcester, MA, for 6 weeks in the summer between my high school Sophomore and Junior years. We studied set theory, number theory, probability, and a weekly special half-day seminar on a different topic. We also had a Wednesday afternoon bowling league and a Saturday afternoon field trip to a beach or amusement park.
Maybe they're concerned more "good citizens" will murder executives just trying to provide for their families. I can see where investors might have a problem with it.Sued for doing the right thing?
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BlackRock is Suing UnitedHealth for Giving “Too Much Care” to Patients After the CEO was Murdered
You think you’ve seen peak corporate insanity? Hold my beer.medium.com
Asked and answered (many times).Oh... and your answer about support police on a bipolar level.
No, you've never answered. It's okay... you don't answer most things that call out your bullshit.Asked and answered (many times).
The conclusion sums up the problem with Healthcare in the US and why we pay multiples more than everyone else on the planet for demonstrably poorer results.Sued for doing the right thing?
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BlackRock is Suing UnitedHealth for Giving “Too Much Care” to Patients After the CEO was Murdered
You think you’ve seen peak corporate insanity? Hold my beer.medium.com
See below ==No, you've never answered. It's okay... you don't answer most things that call out your bullshit.
The first time I heard about a corporation buying up a non-profit hospital, I wondered, "Who are they buying it from?"The conclusion sums up the problem with Healthcare in the US and why we pay multiples more than everyone else on the planet for demonstrably poorer results.
BlackRock will probably win this lawsuit. Or settle for millions. Either way, they’ll extract value from a system designed to extract life from patients.
They’re not just suing UnitedHealth — they’re suing the very idea that health insurance should provide health insurance. They’re fighting for their constitutional right to profit when people die and lose money when people live.
Welcome to American healthcare, where caring too much is a lawsuit waiting to happen.
Gosh... thanks. I'm currently tied up chewing my own arm off but, if my jaw ever gets tired, I'll absolutely click on your 49 minute algebra lecture. Can't really do both with all the screaming and blood loss, you know?
I'm not letting Lil' e waste 49mins of my life..let alone even 4+mins.The first 4:30 is mostly about how the course is to be run, the textbook, etc. If you start at 4;30 you can skip all that. The rest of Lecture 1 is stuff I learned in my 1963 NSF Math Camp in Worcester, MA, for 6 weeks in the summer between my high school Sophomore and Junior years. We studied set theory, number theory, probability, and a weekly special half-day seminar on a different topic. We also had a Wednesday afternoon bowling league and a Saturday afternoon field trip to a beach or amusement park.