7 thoughts on “In today’s economy, the rich get richer”
I found a twenty in the gutter at a reasonably crowded bus stop at Telegraph and Durant in Berkeley around 1989, and back then and certainly to the students and riffraff who take the bus in Berkeley, $20 was real money.
I have to assume everyone else assumed it couldn't possibly be real money if it was just lying there on some dried leaves for anyone to pick up.
I put it there.
EMH, my ass!
Two statisticians are walking down the street when they see a $5 bill. One stoops down to pick it up, and the other one says "That was lucky!"
The punchline needs more work.
If your title thesis is true, and had you been a millionaire, it would have been a twenty.
Would you call it a red bill or a blue bill, and was it found in a usually red or blue precinct?
Gregory Mankiw dropped it, but since the marginal value to him was only 50 cents, it wasn't worth picking up.
I found a twenty in the gutter at a reasonably crowded bus stop at Telegraph and Durant in Berkeley around 1989, and back then and certainly to the students and riffraff who take the bus in Berkeley, $20 was real money.
I have to assume everyone else assumed it couldn't possibly be real money if it was just lying there on some dried leaves for anyone to pick up.
I put it there.
EMH, my ass!
Two statisticians are walking down the street when they see a $5 bill. One stoops down to pick it up, and the other one says "That was lucky!"
The punchline needs more work.
If your title thesis is true, and had you been a millionaire, it would have been a twenty.
Would you call it a red bill or a blue bill, and was it found in a usually red or blue precinct?
Gregory Mankiw dropped it, but since the marginal value to him was only 50 cents, it wasn't worth picking up.