DislikedObviously you have never had their Orange mocha frappicino latte lite
Wassup yall?
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Humble Lifetime Member
Walk the Talk from a fun loving discretionary trader 46 replies
You talk the talk I walk the talk 8 replies
DislikedObviously you have never had their Orange mocha frappicino latte lite
Wassup yall?
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DislikedFortunately for me, I stopped going to Star Bucks a few years back when I was living in LA. Damn Expensive back then, imagine what it is now.Ignored
DislikedStarbucks has come out and blamed the economy for their low profit forecast in 2008. Ahh, excuses, excuses.Ignored
DislikedParty in the USA
Dollar Hits 1-Month High Against Major Currencies
The dollar rose and was more than four cents away from record lows against the euro set earlier in the week, boosted by improved sentiment on the U.S. economy.
-CNBC
C'mon, since when "1-month high" is any good for the dollar?
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DislikedParty in the USA
Dollar Hits 1-Month High Against Major Currencies
The dollar rose and was more than four cents away from record lows against the euro set earlier in the week, boosted by improved sentiment on the U.S. economy.
-CNBC
C'mon, since when "1-month high" is any good for the dollar?
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DislikedParty in the USA
Dollar Hits 1-Month High Against Major Currencies
The dollar rose and was more than four cents away from record lows against the euro set earlier in the week, boosted by improved sentiment on the U.S. economy.
-CNBC
C'mon, since when "1-month high" is any good for the dollar?
Ignored
DislikedGlobalization’s Aftershocks
What's the collapse of the Eastern bloc got to do with America's credit crisis? Author Loretta Napoleoni explains.
Temma Ehrenfeld
Newsweek Web Exclusive
Updated: 1:23 PM ET Apr 23, 2008
What does the collapse of communism have to do with the credit crunch?
According to Italian economist Loretta Napoleoni, author of the best-selling book "Terror Inc: Tracing the Money Behind Global Terrorism," the fall of the Berlin wall set off a global economic transformation that led directly to the turmoil on Wall Street and will ultimately require a new era of regulation.
Napoleoni, a senior partner at G Risk, a London-based risk agency, argues that the crisis won't end until the excesses of globalization—which include growing criminal markets in sex slaves and counterfeit drugs—are brought under control. :surprised Napoleoni spoke to NEWSWEEK's Temma Ehrenfeld about the credit crisis, its aftermath and the author's new book, "Rogue Economics: Capitalism's New Reality" (Seven Stories. $24.95). Excerpts:
NEWSWEEK: What exactly is "rogue economics"?Ignored
DislikedFirst shots
Nice lil private island right next to the hotel I'm in. Said the owner use to come on Fridays with the helo. Yeah, poverty SUCKS.Ignored