Not exact matches
never waste
CAPITAL LETTERS on an article about Chambers at this juncture... I still can't believe that no one from management has ever explained why such a frugal club spent so
much money on him in the first place... we haggle for months and years with clubs for players who could have a monumental impact on the very future of our club but somehow we
found $ 16 million for someone who couldn't regularly crack a Southampton lineup (very fishy)... don't get me wrong, I like what he showed at times last season in Middlesbourogh but from the handful of games I watched him play I still have some serious questions about his consistency as a back - line player in the EPL; as such he should prove himself on loan for another season, making sure that he goes to a team that wants him in the starting 11... bottom line, let's not get bogged down with the semantics of peripheral players and focus on the real task at hand = figure out who the hell is going to be our starting 11 for the foreseeable future, which means getting contracts signed, getting rid of a lot of deadwood and bringing in talented players into the positions which truly
need upgrading... the rest is just unnecessary noise
There is
much common ground, too, with the ideas for «community - wealth building» being developed very concretely by the Democracy Collaborative in the US, though there is a stronger emphasis in their work on the
need to root
capital in specific places than one usually
finds in the alternative liberal tradition.
We must prioritize
finding more stable transit funding sources other than from the commuters» pockets to balance the budget, stave off future hikes and restore funding for
much -
needed capital projects.»
The authority officially concurred with a number of the audit's
findings, and blamed its infamously attenuated resources for the failure to swiftly turn over units, noting that it had to devote
much of its
capital funds to the daily
needs of residents and employees.
Wes Moss, managing partner at
Capital Investment Advisors in Atlanta, Georgia, surveyed 1,350 retirees and
found that the average amount a person
needs for a «happy» retirement is
much less — about $ 500,000.