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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Follies who wrote (125836)12/9/2016 4:03:48 AM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217740
 
No, that isn't what it means. Every person I know loves medicare and social security.

So I guess you don't plan on using either medicare or social security. You must be either rich or stupid. Those would be the only two logical things you can be.

And you want to turn that over to the plutocrats/Wall street? Are you nuts? Have you seen how many bilions of dollars in fines Wall street and big banks have paid for fraud.

2008 was all fraud i.e. our selling fraudulent junk CDO's around the world as AAA paper!

Diabetes for both and additionally also high blood pressure for the other. The were so grateful when Obamacare came along.

Obamacare repeal would lead to 24 million more people without health insurancehttp://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/13/obamacare-repeal-would-lead-to-24-million-more-people-without-health-insurance.html

cnbc.com

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Does privatizing SS mean the government can't spend my retirement savings? I would be for that wouldn't you?



To: Follies who wrote (125836)12/9/2016 4:33:21 AM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217740
 
Michael Babich, the former chief executive of Insys Therapeutics and a protege of its founder, the billionaire John Kapoor, was arrested and charged today with conspiring to bribe doctors to prescribe Insys' mouth-spray version of fentanyl unnecessarily, potentially harming patients and defrauding insurers. Insys had no comment. - forbes.com

Babich, 40, was one of six former Insys employees arrested and charged, according to an indictment filed by the U.S. Attorney's Office of the District of Massachusetts. The others are all also former Insys executives: Alec Burlakoff, 42,the former Vice President of Sales; Richard M. Simon, 46, the former National Director of Sales; former Regional Sales Directors Sunrise Lee, 36 and Joseph A. Rowan, 43, of Panama City, Fla.; and former Vice President of Managed Markets, Michael J. Gurry, 53.

As described in a Forbes profile earlier this year, Kapoor originally recruited Babich from Northern Trust, a bank, to work at the billionaire's family office, helping to manage his investments. Babich later became chief executive of Insys, which was developing a mouth spray version of fentanyl, one of the most potent opioid drugs, for use in cancer patients. Kapoor was chairman of Insys, leaving day-to-day operations to Babich.