| ❤️ webinar starting NOW Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:49 AM PDT |
| Axios Alert: Richard Branson successfully takes flight with Virgin Galactic Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:41 AM PDT |
| MedlinePlus Twitter Update Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:40 AM PDT |  U.S. National Library of Medicine · 8600 Rockville Pike · Bethesda, MD 20894 · 888-346-3656 |   |
| I can get you 11% per Month, hands-off & automated! Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:33 AM PDT If I Can Make You 10K A Month Hands-free, On Autopilot With Absolutely No Trading - Would You Be Interested? I am going to share with you today the reason I put over 30K Euros of my own money in an asset that will make me over 3K Euros a month and grow to over 30K Euros per Month by this time next year. Here's the best part. - - I don't need to trade anything
- I don't need to do anything - I don't need to watch a screen - My profits are automatic Learn how I do it here. Here's a screenshot of my account: I invest in a lot of things like shares, Bonds, Gold, Forex, and Bitcoin, but nothing has been easier and more profitable than what I'm about to tell you. I researched this for over a year before I put money in. Here are three things that you need to know. How Much You Can Earn Over the last 15 months, people who have put money into this asset have averaged 11% per Month. That's over 2.5% per week or 132% per year.  I share my secret here. How It Works You don't have to do anything. You put your money in, then just collect every Month, unless you want to put your profits back in to get the compounding effect. You have probably heard of Bitcoin. That is what is called a cryptocurrency. Well, there are lots of types of cryptocurrencies. People use these currencies just like any kind of money to buy things. When they buy things, one way to help the transaction is to pass the information through a Masternode. Every time the Masternode is given a transaction, it creates a little block of information. The people who funded the Masternode get paid a tiny amount every time a new block is created. Think of it as getting a share of every wire transfer fee. That's how we make money. The Masternode is the asset we put our money into. As the volume of transactions increases, more servers are needed in the Masternode. The Masternode uses the users own money along with money from people like you and me to help fund the growth. That's why you don't need to trade. For the first time, you get to be the bank. Every time there is a transaction, you get paid. Look at the table below. If you invest €10,000 this Month, then in 23 months, you could be earning €10,000 per Month without doing anything. I say Euros because they operate in Euros. The minimum investment is 500 Euros. This is not one of my products or Tradeology products. This is just an asset I have been researching and really like. That's why I put my money into it.  Click here if you want passive income. How To Invest I am happy to share my secret to passive income and how I earn an average of 11% per month. Just go here. Adrian Jones P.S. I spent almost 12 months going back and forth with one of the owners (Steve) before I put money in. Their support is good, and you can ask them any questions you might have. Here's where you can find out more. ================================= Information, charts or examples contained in this email is for illustration and educational purposes only. It should not be considered as advice or an endorsement to purchase or sell any security or financial instrument. We do not and cannot give any kind of financial advice. No employee or persons associated with us is registered or authorized to give financial advice. We do not trade on anyone's behalf, and we do not recommend or receive any payments from any broker. On certain occasions, we have a material link to the product or service mentioned in the email. This may be in the form of compensation or remuneration. In order to comply with European Union GDPR regulations we have updated our Privacy Policy to clarify and provide explanations of how personally identifiable data is collected and managed by our company. To view more about this you can go here. ================================= | | | This email was sent by: MyMarketDigest.com 831 Fincham Road, San Diego, CA, 92103 © Copyright 2021. All Rights Reserved.  |
| The smart money is pouring in already (door is closing fast) Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:30 AM PDT |
The world's biggest companies and institutions, like Apple, Samsung, NASA, Ford, GM, LG, Nikon, DARPA, Daimler, Amazon, Softbank, Intel, Airbus, Microsoft, Caterpillar, Volvo, Nio, Toyota and more… are all racing to adopt this technology first.
You'll also see proof… the smart money is pouring in already and you'll understand why this won't stay secret for long…
| | | Matt Warder Fortune Research | | | A Fortune Research Publication | | | Disclaimer & Disclosures The information in this email is intended for informational purposes only and does not guarantee specific results as there is a high degree of risk involved with trading. Also, our traders are real traders and may have financial interests in the companies discussed. Please see our Terms and Conditions for more information. | | | | | | This email was sent to edwardlorilla1986.paxforex@blogger.com by WealthPress LLC | |
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| Sunday best: Maureen and Bernie meet at a diner Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:26 AM PDT Presented by PhRMA: The unofficial guide to official Washington. | | | | | | | | By Tara Palmeri | | | |  | DRIVING THE DAY | | Billionaires — they're just like us: Even RICHARD BRANSON has to deal with flight delays. Today, his Virgin Galactic flight to space was delayed by more than 90 minutes. In what is likely the most entertaining article you'll read this morning, NYT's Maureen Dowd went to a Burlington diner with Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.), where he showed a remarkable amount of restraint when lured into breezy topics like pop culture: "At 79, Bernie Sanders is a man on a mission, laser-focused on a [handwritten list of topics] that represents trillions of dollars in government spending that he deems essential. When I stray into other subjects, the senator jabs his finger at his piece of paper or waves it in my face, like Van Helsing warding off Dracula with a cross," Dowd writes. "'You don't want to discuss "Free Britney"?' I ask. 'No.'" Dowd writes that Sanders, now chair of the Senate Budget committee, admits that it feels strange to be a member of the establishment, as his progressive allies push him to remain a hell-raiser rather than a bridge builder: "'You know politics,' he answers with a shrug. 'You can't please all of the people all of the time.' He adds that he sees this moment as a chance to 'address concerns progressives have had for decades.'" TOP FIVE READS FOR SUNDAY … — Top read on the 2022 campaign: NYT's Trip Gabriel on the messaging war for suburban swing voters. The story of the 2020 election, in many ways, is about how the suburbs shifted: In 2016, DONALD TRUMP carried the suburban vote, 47%-45%; in 2020, JOE BIDEN carried the same group, 54%-43%, according to a new Pew study. Now, both parties are aiming their messages squarely at the 'burbs, with an eye at the swing seats that'll determine who wins control of the House in 2022 (two-thirds of the DCCC's front-line incumbents are based in suburban areas, Gabriel notes). Related: Check out this week's Playbook Deep Dive podcast on how the 'burbs turned blue. — Top read on the economy: Victoria Guida and Katy Murphy explain why the housing market boom could bust Biden's economic recovery. The housing market is in a vicious cycle: The pandemic "unleashed enormous pent-up demand" for roomier homes. The Fed's response to the economic crisis "drove mortgage rates to rock-bottom lows." And low housing stock is pricing out would-be homebuyers (home prices are up about 15% from last year), leading to "an even more dramatic increase in rents" and a "growing concern that housing costs could soon begin to nudge inflation higher." Yikes. Another good inflation read: "How Dollar Tree Sells Nearly Everything for $1, Even When Inflation Lurks," by WSJ's Sarah Nassauer. — Top read on the pandemic: Pfizer and U.S. officials debate the need for a Covid-19 vaccine booster shot, by WaPo's Yasmeen Abutaleb, Tyler Pager, Laurie McGinley and Lena Sun. If you've already been vaccinated, do you need a booster shot? That's the topic of a heated debate pitting top U.S. health experts against vaccine manufacturers like BioNTech and Pfizer (which claims to have data showing that immunity against the coronavirus declines in vaccinated people over time, particularly in the elderly). On Monday, Pfizer is scheduled to brief senior federal officials, including ANTHONY FAUCI, NIH Director FRANCIS COLLINS and CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY. Further reading: "POLITICO-Harvard poll: Americans sharply divided over vaccine mandates," by Dan Goldberg. — Top read on Afghanistan: WaPo's Miriam Berger on Iran's complicated reaction to the U.S. pullout. Iran doesn't exactly want U.S. forces in Afghanistan. But as Western troops withdraw, the Islamic Republic is "watching with alarm" as the Taliban — a radical Sunni movement "at fundamental odds" with Iran's Shiite clerics — is quickly regaining power. "Tehran fears both Taliban rule and Afghanistan returning to civil war, a destabilizing prospect likely to … send more waves of Afghan refugees across the border," writes Berger. And that, in turn, is sparking a fierce debate in Iran over how exactly to deal with the Taliban. — Top read on infrastructure: WSJ's Andrew Duehren with a curtain-raiser on the pivotal week ahead. "Democrats are racing to finalize a bipartisan infrastructure deal and set the contours of a broad child-care and education plan, aiming to maintain a delicate agreement with Republicans while simultaneously plowing forward with their own priorities," Duehren writes. "After a two-week recess, senators return to Washington this week to determine the fate of much of President Biden's roughly $4 trillion agenda." Further reading on the Dems' challenges: "Opinion: Why America's Most Popular Party Isn't Getting More Done," by Jeff Greenfield for POLITICO Magazine. Good Sunday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri. | | | | A message from PhRMA: Out-of-pocket costs shouldn't be out-of-this-world confusing. If we fix insurance, we can fix out-of-pocket medicine costs. See how. | | | SUNDAY BEST … — Fauci on ABC's "This Week," on when the FDA will grant full authorization of the vaccines: "Although it's quite understandable that some people might say, 'Well, we want to wait for the full approval [to get vaccinated],' that's really only a technical issue. It's the FDA dotting the i's and crossing the t's. But there's no doubt in my mind that these vaccines are going to get full approval because of the extraordinary amount of positive data." — Rep. ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.) on CNN's "State of the Union," on Afghanistan: "As it unfortunately appears is going to happen, if the government collapses, Kabul falls, we see the horrible pictures, we see the rise of the Taliban again, and we see safe haven for terrorists to train, we might realize that Afghanistan, though not fun for us, and that was a big sacrifice, was certainly worth not having that be a safe haven. I hope I'm wrong, but we might see that." — Senate Armed Services Chair JACK REED (D-R.I.) on NBC's "Meet the Press": "I think Kabul will hold. The question is, can it hold long enough to create a political solution between the sides?" — Pentagon press secretary JOHN KIRBY on "Fox News Sunday," on the U.S. message to Afghan partners: "While we aren't going to be on the ground with them going forward, we are not walking away from this relationship. We're going to continue to support them from a financial perspective, logistical perspective and certainly aircraft maintenance." — ERIC ADAMS on "State of the Union," on guns: "It is extremely important that, just as we became energetic after we saw mass shootings with assault rifles in the suburban parts of our country — which we should have — we should have also focused on the handgun. The numbers of those who are killed by handguns are astronomical. And if we don't start having real federal legislation, matched with states and cities, we're never going to get this crisis under control." — Adams on whether his political approach was similar to the Biden coalition: "I duplicated it. I was encouraged when I saw what the president did. And I knew what I was hearing on the ground, that everyday New Yorkers, just like everyday Americans, they wanted not a government of just an ideological approach, but a pragmatic approach. We want to be safe. We want to be employed. We want to be able to educate our children. When I saw the president speak a blue-collar, plain talk, understood the need of everyday Americans, I was encouraged. I stood my ground. And that was the pathway that I knew." — More on "This Week" … GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: "Is it fair to call you an 'anti-woke' Democrat?" Adams: "No, I — some of us never went to sleep. That's the problem. You know, a 35-year record of fighting for reform, for public safety, a person who was arrested by police, assaulted by police, but also lost a child of a friend to gang violence. And so I never went to sleep. And people who have finally realized that there are issues out here believe that they can carve the entire Democratic agenda." | | | | A message from PhRMA: The way insurance covers your medicine is too complicated. See how we can make the system work for patients. Not the other way around. | | | BIDEN'S SUNDAY — The president will leave Wilmington, Del., at 6 p.m., arriving back at the White House at 6:55 p.m. KAMALA HARRIS' SUNDAY — The VP has nothing on her public schedule. | | | | STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president's ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today. | | | | | |  | PLAYBOOK READS | | | 
PHOTO OF THE DAY: Workers remove a statue of Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville, Va., on Saturday as the city takes down Confederate statues, including this original trigger for the deadly 2017 "Unite the Right" rally. | Win McNamee/Getty Images | THE WHITE HOUSE EMPTY CHAIRS — "Vacancies remain in key Biden administration positions," by WaPo's Tyler Pager, Ann Marimow and Laurie McGinley: "The Biden administration is working to move past the pandemic without a permanent leader for the agency that authorizes drugs and vaccines. Democrats are decrying Republican-led efforts to restrict the right to vote, but President Biden has yet to nominate a solicitor general to represent the government on voting rights and other issues that could come before the Supreme Court. "And the OMB has only an acting director, even as the president seeks a sweeping budget resolution in Congress that would enable his 'human infrastructure' plan to pass, one of his top goals.Biden and his aides consistently tout their 'whole of government' approach to solving pressing problems, but several key agencies across the government still have no permanent leaders." POLICY CORNER COST OF CLIMATE CHANGE — "Yellen: U.S. regulators to assess risk posed by climate change," by AP's Martin Crutsinger: "Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN says she will lead an effort by top U.S. regulators to assess the potential risk that climate change poses to America's financial system, part of a wide-ranging initiative launched by the Biden administration. Yellen says the regulatory review, which will be done by the Financial Stability Oversight Council, [which she chairs,] will examine whether banks and other lending institutions are properly assessing the risks to financial stability." CONGRESS LOOKING TO SCOTUS — "Democrats craft voting bill with eye on Supreme Court fight," by Brian Slodvsko: "As congressional Democrats gear up for another bruising legislative push to expand voting rights, much of their attention has quietly focused on a small yet crucial voting bloc with the power to scuttle their plans: the nine Supreme Court justices. "Democrats face dim prospects for passing voting legislation through a narrowly divided Congress, where an issue that once drew compromise has become an increasingly partisan flashpoint. But as they look to reinstate key parts of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a landmark civil rights-era law diminished over the past decade by Supreme Court rulings, they have accepted the reality that any bill they pass probably will wind up in litigation — and ultimately back before the high court.The task of building a more durable Voting Rights Act got harder when the high court's conservative majority on July 1 issued its second major ruling in eight years narrowing the law's once robust power." AMERICA AND THE WORLD HAITI LATEST — "Suspects in assassination told police the plan was to arrest, not kill, Haiti's president," by the Miami Herald's Jaqueline Charles and Kevin Hall: "The operation that led to Haitian President JOVENEL MOÏSE'S middle-of-the-night assassination was in the planning for at least a month, and came together during meals around Port-au-Prince and at a home where most of the men accused of the slaying were staying, several people who interviewed some of the suspects told the Miami Herald. … "JAMES A. SOLAGES, 35, and JOSEPH G. VINCENT, 56, both from South Florida, did not tell [Investigative Judge CLÉMENT] NOËL why they chose the date that they did — July 7 — to launch the armed attack on Moïse's private residence, but insisted that the plan was not to assassinate him. Their mission, Noël and another person who debriefed the men said they were told, was to 'arrest the president [at his home] and go to the presidential palace with him.'" — "Colombians held in Haitian president's assassination claim ties to Miami-area security firm," by the Miami Herald's Jaqueline Charles, Kevin Hall, Antonio Maria Delgado and Bianca Padró Ocasio: "Seventeen Colombians and two Haitian Americans from South Florida are in custody in Haiti. A person who interviewed the detained Colombians in Haiti told the Miami Herald that the men claimed to have been recruited to do work in Haiti by an under-the-radar firm in Doral called CTU Security." Quite a comparison: "Miami and the Doral enclave have become sort of a Star Wars bar for would-be liberators and for-hire warriors." — "U.S. Won't Send Troops to Haiti After President's Killing, Officials Say," by WSJ's Nancy Youssef and Juan Forero AND WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING … "No casualties among U.S. troops near 'indirect fire' attack in Syria," by CNN's Barbara Starr | | | | A message from PhRMA: Let's make out-of-pocket costs transparent, predictable and affordable. See how. | | | 2022 WATCH ALASKA GOP LEADERS BACK MURKOWSKI CHALLENGER — "Alaska Republican Party leaders endorse Tshibaka in U.S. Senate race," by the Anchorage Daily News' Samantha Davenport: "The Alaska Republican State Central Committee on Saturday endorsed KELLY TSHIBAKA in the 2022 race for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Republican LISA MURKOWSKI. The committee approved Tshibaka's endorsement in a 58-17 vote during a meeting in Fairbanks." KEMP'S TIGHTROPE ACT — "In Georgia, Kemp sets out to mend fractured GOP," by AP's Bill Barrow and Jeff Amy: "A swath of Republicans' right flank joins Donald Trump in blaming [Gov. BRIAN] KEMP for not doing more to reverse the former president's loss last year. Some moderate Republicans, meanwhile, have cooled to a party under Trump's control. … Kemp has since been censured by multiple local GOP committees and booed by a minority of state Republican convention delegates who roared for long-shot primary challenger VERNON JONES … [E]ven if Georgia Republicans run the gamut from archconservative Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE to metro Atlanta residents who voted for Biden, Kemp disputed the idea the GOP is too factionalized for him to win a second term." N.Y. DEMS PLAY THE WAITING GAME — "'We all wait with bated breath': Secretive Cuomo inquiry leaves New York politics in limbo," by Anna Gronewold: "Few governors in recent New York history have dominated the news cycle — and the levers of government — like ANDREW CUOMO, the state's three-term governor. But in the summer of 2021, with an embattled Cuomo eyeing reelection next year, the future of state politics rests with another statewide official: Attorney General TISH JAMES. "James, who has been investigating a portfolio of allegations against the governor since March, … has made clear there is no clock in her office counting down the months, weeks or days remaining in her inquiry. … The uncertainty has paralyzed much of New York's Democratic political apparatus. State lawmakers have put their parallel impeachment investigation on a very slow burn. Cuomo has not revisited his pre-scandal pledge to run for a fourth term in 2022. And potential Democratic primary challengers are waiting to see if they'd face a wounded Cuomo, a vindicated Cuomo, or perhaps no Cuomo at all." BEYOND THE BELTWAY APOCALYPSE WATCH — "California wildfire generates its own lightning as it more than doubles in size," by L.A. Times' Alex Wigglesworth WAITED 7 HOURS TO VOTE, FACES 40 YEARS IN PRISON — "Texas Man Who Waited Hours to Vote Is Arrested on Charges of Illegal Voting," by NYT's Isabella Grullón Paz LEE RETREATS FOR THE LAST TIME — "'An incredible day' as Lee statue removed in Charlottesville," by AP's Sarah Rankin: "Cheers erupted Saturday as a Confederate statue that towered for nearly a century over downtown Charlottesville was carted away by truck from the Virginia city where it had become a flashpoint for racist protests and deadly violence. "It was a day of palpable joy and immense relief for scores of residents and visitors who lined neighboring streets to watch the larger-than-life figure of Gen. ROBERT E. LEE hoisted from its pedestal and taken — at least for now — to storage. The statue's removal came more than five years after racial justice activists had renewed a push to take down the monument, an initiative that drew the attention of white supremacists and other racist groups, culminating in the violent 'Unite the Right' rally in 2017." DESSERT EVERLASTING LOVE — "Jimmy Carter, wife Rosalynn celebrate 75 years of marriage," AP: "Former President JIMMY CARTER on Saturday turned to his wife ROSALYNN and thanked her for 75 years of marriage, telling her that she's always been right for him. … About 300 friends and family members attended the event at Plains High School, part of which was livestreamed. …Those who attended Saturday's celebration included former U.S. President BILL CLINTON and former Secretary of State HILLARY CLINTON, along with U.S. House Speaker NANCY PELOSI. Country music stars TRISHA YEARWOOD and GARTH BROOKS; and media businessman TED TURNER also attended, the Carter Center said in a statement." | | | | THE ROAD TO TOKYO 2020 – A TUESDAY CONVERSATION WITH FIRST VICE PRESIDENT OF THE IOC ANITA DEFRANTZ: The Tokyo Olympics kick off July 23, 15 months after being postponed. One problem … Japan's capital city is in a Covid state of emergency and has prohibited fans from attending. With financial pressure to push forward and potential punishment for any athletes involved in protests or demonstrations during the sporting event, these Olympics Games will be unlike any other. Join Global Translations author Ryan Heath for a POLITICO Live conversation with Anita DeFrantz, First Vice President, International Olympic Committee, on what's at stake in the Tokyo Olympics, as a global health crisis, sports and politics all come to a head. REGISTER HERE. | | | | | |  | PLAYBOOKERS | | SPOTTED: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg at the Apple store in Pentagon City on Saturday afternoon. … Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) in the audience Saturday night at Jacob's Pillow dance festival in Becket, Mass., where she watched a show by the Contra-Tiempo dance group. SPOTTED Saturday night at Franklin Hall to celebrate Eli Yokley's birthday: Matt Dornic, Josh Dawsey, Joanna Piacenza, Cameron Easley, Richard Hudock, Olivia Petersen, Mark McDevitt, Sam Sabin, Matt Bracken, Emily Atkin, Jon Reid, Jack Fitzpatrick, Chris Bien and Bryan Lowry. MEDIA MOVE — Jane Lytvynenko is joining Joan Donovan's team at Harvard's Shorenstein Center. She previously covered misinformation, cybersecurity and online investigations at BuzzFeed. STAFFING UP — Elizabeth Dent is joining the Pentagon to work on defeating ISIS issues. She previously was a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute's Countering Terrorism and Extremism program and a consultant with NTT Data. WEEKEND WEDDING — Josh Siegel, energy and environment reporter at the Washington Examiner, and Florianne Escalambre, an ICU nurse at Inova Fairfax, got married Saturday at the Barn at Willow Brook in Leesburg, Va. The couple met on Bumble before bonding over tennis. Pic … Another pic HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) … Education Secretary Miguel Cardona … Garrett Graff (4-0) … Chris Maloney of Black Rock Group … Page Gardner … Josh Wachs of Wachs Strategies (5-0), celebrating with family and friends by eating as much lobster as possible in multiple locations along the East Coast … Gracie Boatright … Emily Benavides of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs GOP … Urmila Venugopalan of the MPA … Nora Connors … KayAnn Schoeneman … Stacy Merrick Montejo … Paige Rusher of Sen. Richard Burr's (R-N.C.) office … ONDCP's Anne Sokolov … Joe Wall of Goldman Sachs … Andrew Kirell … Ali Schmitz of "Meet the Press" … Michael Wong … Stephen Hostelley … Scott Graves … AMA's Sandy Marks … Stephen Goodin … Kurt Owermohle … POLITICO's Sophie Read … Jamie Stiehm … Chris Vaeth … Matt Lahr … Fox News' "The Five" (1-0) Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross. | | | | A message from PhRMA: Getting to what you pay for medicines shouldn't be a maze. Let's make out-of-pocket costs transparent, predictable and affordable. And let's do it without sacrificing access to medicines and innovation. See how we can make the system work for patients. Not the other way around. | | | | | | | Follow us on Twitter | | | | Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family Playbook | Playbook PM | California Playbook | Florida Playbook | Illinois Playbook | Massachusetts Playbook | New Jersey Playbook | New York Playbook | Brussels Playbook | London Playbook View all our political and policy newsletters | | Follow us | | | | |  |
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| What to Cook This Week Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:03 AM PDT Consider gado-gado, ground lamb pulao or sheet-pan baked feta. Michael Kraus for The New York Times | Sunday, July 11, 2021 Sam Sifton | | Good morning. It’d be nice to steer into the worlds of tiny houses, #vanlife and trail cooking. But I’d want a lot of cooking equipment, too, which complicates matters: a smoker and a 60-inch grill, say, along with a propane hob cooker; a discada; a 110-quart cooler filled with pellet ice. I’d want shovels for clambakes, a rotisserie, a Schwenker and absolutely a wood-burning pizza oven on a trailer to haul behind the van or the house, depending. So this remains a pipe dream. | | I’ll think on the possibilities, though, as I make my way through these smoke-roasted chicken thighs with paprika (above) this afternoon, to serve with lemon-tahini slaw and a peach poundcake for dessert. I’ll imagine myself cooking on the edge of the desert, or on a lot overlooking an Oregon beach, or down deep in a West Virginia holler, working the magical huge grill that is somehow part of my vintage Volkswagen Westfalia. Those are good summer reveries. | | Back to reality on Monday, news blaring out of the radio in the kitchen and everything serious once more. I’m thinking gado-gado for dinner, a dish beloved across Indonesia and made many different ways. (This recipe is based on the style made in Bali.) | | For dinner on Tuesday, how about this excellent ground lamb pulao? Judging from the notes beneath the recipe, you could make it with just about any protein and achieve success. But listen: Lamb’s fantastic here. Do give that a try. | | Sheet-pan baked feta with broccolini, tomatoes and lemon for Wednesday, a one-pan meal that’s like a delicious hot salad, easily made. (If it’s too warm where you stay and you have a grill, you could swap that rig in for your kitchen oven and cook the meal outdoors.) | | To bring a zip to Thursday’s repast, how about this summer shrimp scampi with tomatoes and corn? | | And then on Friday you can end where I started, with another fine chicken recipe: huli-huli style, to eat with this spicy kimchi potato salad and cold watermelon for dessert. | | There are thousands more recipes to cook this week awaiting you on New York Times Cooking. (Stunning summer fruit desserts! No-cook recipes for a heat wave!) It is true that you need a subscription to access all of them, and to access all the features on our site and app. Subscriptions support our work and allow it to continue. I hope, if you haven’t already, that you will think about subscribing today. | | We are here if you need us, if you’re troubled by a recipe or if something goes wrong with our code. Just write cookingcare@nytimes.com and someone will get back to you, I promise. (You can also write to me: foodeditor@nytimes.com. I cannot reply to everyone. But I read every letter sent.) | | Now, it’s a long-distance drive from chervil and stone-ground grits, but I raved about S.A. Cosby’s “Razorblade Tears” a while back, and maybe you didn’t believe me. So let Adam Sternbergh make the case for reading it right now, in The Times. | | You should also check out E. Alex Jung’s profile of the actress Jennifer Coolidge, in New York. | | And while there’s a Scottie Pippen interview in GQ this month that delivers some excellent tea, the real draw is Margaret Pattillo’s portrait photograph of Pippen standing at rest, with a glass of bourbon. He looks content, even happy. | | Finally, old music to play us off, Dyke & the Blazers, “Funky Broadway.” Listen to that real loud, and I’ll be back on Monday. | | Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. | 45 minutes, 6 to 8 servings | | Bryan Gardner for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne. | 25 minutes, 4 servings | | Michael Kraus for The New York Times | About 45 minutes, 4 servings | | David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. | 15 minutes, 4 servings | | |  |
| $500 Right Now Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:00 AM PDT |
| 10 Cent Trades Posted: 11 Jul 2021 08:00 AM PDT Dirt cheap trades with the potential to explode in value Have you read about my "10 Cent Moonshot Trades" yet? It's all about finding dirt cheap trades in what I call the secondary market that can explode in value in a short period of time. Just recently, I had a 10 cent moonshot explode for 100% ROI in about 6 hours… Then, the very next trading session, I took an 11 cent contract that jumped to 82% ROI in less than 5 hours! Imagine putting $2k into a trade and 6 hours later cashing out for $4k… then putting $4k in the very next trading day and having $7,280 by the time you're done with lunch! Now, of course, I am not saying every moonshot trade immediately soars like this. But that's the unique power of these tiny moonshot trades. And, for the first time, I am signaling students to join me as I trade them! All the Details Here In over 40 years, these are the most consistently explosive trades I have ever seen. And because they typically trade between 10 and 20 cents, they're easily tradable with just about any account size. Plus you're in and out in a matter of days (or even hours) so you don't have long term exposure and you can recycle your profits quickly. All you need is a computer, an internet connection and a brokerage account and you can target moonshot signals! So, think about it… - They're the most explosive trades I've seen
- They're simple to trade
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- Cheap to get into for anyone
- Don't require special software or unique account
Do you see why I call this "a loophole for the little guy"? All you have to do is start trading them with me! Tap Here to Learn How See ya on the flip side, Tom | | RISK DISCLAIMER There is a very high degree of risk involved in trading.. DTI Trader and all individuals affiliated with this site assume no responsibility for your trading results. The indicators, strategies, columns, and all other features are for educational purposes only and should not be construed as advice. Information for futures trading observations are obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but we do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, or warrant any results from the use of the information. Your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness and usefulness of the information. You must assess the risk of any trade with your broker and make your own independent decisions regarding any securities mentioned herein. | | Unsubscribe DTI Trader 1555 University Blvd S Mobile, Alabama 36609 United States (251) 652-1555 | |  |
| There's still time - Don't miss another week of winning picks Posted: 11 Jul 2021 07:45 AM PDT You are receiving this email because you signed up for the Tradespoon Newsletter on Wed, Apr 7, 2021. If you no longer wish to receive any emails from Tradespoon, please use the "Unsubscribe" link towards the bottom of this email.

Don't miss another week of winning picks!
We will be posting next week's WeeklyTrader and MonthlyTrader picks, as well as tomorrow's ActiveTrader picks later this afternoon! If you have not heard yet, Tradespoon released one of its newest services called Picks Membership! Click here to learn more This paradigm-changing system is so astonishingly accurate, uncanny in its ability to predict, and so ahead of the industry's software curve. The best part about this service is that you don't need to be glued to your computer screen. The WeeklyTrader and MonthlyTrader picks are issued every Sunday for the week ahead with exact entry, exit, and stop loss points for both Stocks and Options so you simply place your orders in a set-it and forget-it fashion! In addition, the ActiveTrader picks are are also issued this Sunday but they are also issued each evening for the next trading day! And similarly they come with exact entry, exit, and stop loss points for both Stocks and Options so you can also simply place your orders in the same set-it and forget-it fashion!
Click on the link below to read a description of my new Picks Membership and how you can start profiting from it immediately. Take a look. See what you think. Click here to learn more
To great returns, Vlad Karpel Tradespoon Founder
Tradespoon LLC | 318 Half Day Rd. | Suite 215 | Buffalo Grove | IL | 60089 Unsubscribe From Tradespoon Emails Disclaimer
Content in this email is provided for informational and educational purposes only.
Vlad and his team may have a financial interest in its picks as they trade many of the same equities and options they pick.
Vlad Karpel and Tradespoon (Company) is not an investment advisory service, nor a registered investment advisor or broker-dealer and does not purport to tell or suggest which securities or currencies customers should buy or sell for themselves.
It should not be assumed that the methods, techniques, or indicators developed at Tradespoon will be profitable or that they will not result in losses. nor should it be assumed that future picks will be profitable or will equal past performance.
RISK DISCLOSURE: Options involve substantial risk and are not suitable for all investors. Please read "Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options " prior to investing in options. Evaluate any strategy prior to use to understand risk and suitability.   |
| MedlinePlus Twitter Update Posted: 11 Jul 2021 07:41 AM PDT |  U.S. National Library of Medicine · 8600 Rockville Pike · Bethesda, MD 20894 · 888-346-3656 |   |
| 11 July 2021 | My exclusive Top 5 Watchlist for the week ahead Posted: 11 Jul 2021 07:32 AM PDT It's never too late to start saving "It's never too late to retire early" Dividend investing has existed in the finance world for as long as one can remember. Perhaps the reason this practice has been able to stick around while remaining so popular can be attributed to the promise of financial growth and higher returns that come with it. According to the S&P 500's index performance, dividend stocks do have the edge over others like growth stocks and the stock market in general since they bring in higher returns for shareholders. Even though a large amount of risk exists in dividend investing, the practice remains popular for investors preferring the establishment of a passive income stream for themselves. It has become challenging to find valuable dividend stocks amid the financial volatility, which is also shaking the hedge fund industry. The entire hedge fund industry is feeling the repercussions of the changing economic landscape. Its reputation has been tarnished in the last decade, during which its hedged returns couldn't keep up with the unhedged returns of the market indices. This week, we will find out why these stocks need to be a part of your portfolio. Here's my list for this week: - First Horizon Corporation (FHN)
- Investors Bancorp, Inc. (ISBC)
- Huntington Bancshares Incorporated (HBAN)
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Star Group, L.P. (SGU) -
Hennessy Advisors, Inc. (HNNA) (continued below) Recommended Link: | What You Do Between Now and September 7 Is Absolutely Critical In a new video, veteran pattern trader Tom Gentile has released his top 10 picks that could go up between now and September 7. He has not only given the names of these stocks but also the exact dates during which they may increase in price and how much potential profit he expects each of them could make within weeks from now. Full details here. | | | | | | |
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