Bryce Lillico

1.4K posts

Bryce Lillico

Bryce Lillico

@b_lillico

Toronto, Ontario Katılım Mart 2011
62 Takip Edilen28 Takipçiler
Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
direct.mit.edu/rest/article-a… Pretty incredible how much impact paying the lowest earning healthcare providers can have - even improving overall mortality which is really hard to shift.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@ryanlpainter So let’s make the medial average income $162,000. That’s why unions are awesome.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@TheDalesReport @6ixbuzztv Here’s a guarantee. The people with meaningful accumulation of stealable possessions will NEVER have the humanity to house refugees. It will be those struggling themselves that recognize the need and show compassion. Rich people don’t care.
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TDR
TDR@TheDalesReport·
@6ixbuzztv So, is the city liable if there is theft or some other crime by the perpetrator on the land owner? Who insures this? Slow creep of getting diluting YOUR property rights... Government creates the problem then asks (first) then forces YOU to become the solution.
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6ixBuzzTV
6ixBuzzTV@6ixbuzztv·
Olivia Chow asks Toronto residents to open homes to refugees
6ixBuzzTV tweet media
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@CP24 Good for her. 👏 the last thing cops need is more politicians pumping their tires.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@TPAca @oliviachow Listen, you guys killed that dog. Don't act all sad after making the decision to send an animal to attack an active shooter. If police want to blindly charge an active shooter instead of controlling the scene, do it yourself. Stupid and dangerous to public.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@willfalk @nytimes Although I’m not sure the administrative function exists at that level, not to mention certain states resistance to participating in care delivery at all. Definitely a problematic situation.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@willfalk @nytimes Shifting to the fed level would be a huge shock. If the drug co’s lose access to preferred 1L nationwide in a single negotiation, that hurts. I’d like to see state level negotiations, allowing for a lower cost of “missing” during a procurement process.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@CP24 This is not “up”. This is “flat”. How can you throw a headline out saying UP with this data?
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@JordanMRoberts For every 1 PPP project that shows even a hint of success, I'll show you 10 that have led to unmitigated disasters. PPP is great for private interests, but def one of the biggest policy failures of the last 50 years.
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@mkobach There is a good chance Vegas and Phoenix will be uninhabitable within this timeline.
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Matthew Kobach
Matthew Kobach@mkobach·
The future of homeownership in the US: In 10 years: Buying in a top 25 city will be unattainable for most young families. In 20 years: Buying in a top 50 city will be unattainable for most young families. There will be a dramatic shift of people moving to “satellite cities” further and further from the main city. Especially near cities where it’s easier to expand out (think Vegas and Phoenix). Renting in a top 50 city will be as normal as renting in NYC, LA, or SF because owning a house simply won’t be a realistic option for most. Too many people think that because housing is currently unaffordable, that it’s destined to fall or burst. That’s not how it works unfortunately. There are plenty of counties/economies that prove housing can get even more unaffordable in the US. The only solution is building. Building more. And then building more after that. And that requires de/re-zoning and deregulation. We’re currently 10+ years behind the number of new houses needed to match population growth. And it will take 10+ years to catch up. And that’s not even necessarily new houses in desirable cities/areas. Housing is broken, and there is no easy or quick solution.
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Bryce Lillico retweetledi
Hampton Institute
Hampton Institute@HamptonThink·
Capitalism is such an inefficient and wasteful system. So much so that roughly a third of the world's food is ultimately discarded before consumed. This amounts to about 1.3 billion tons a year. Meanwhile, billions of people struggle with food insecurity.
Read Raising Expectations (and Raising Hell)@JPHilllllll

A tiktoker shared video of the amount of food being thrown out at a Walmart. Just an unfathomable volume of needless waste.

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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
Which corporate group has done/will do more damage to society?
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@CP24 They better all be CEOs of the major corporations that funnelled their COVID relief into dividends and buy backs. #whitecollarcrime
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
@anandc This is criminal behaviour. If he wasn’t dead he should be arrested. Not sure if there is a statute of limitations but Chizen should be arrested.
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Anand C
Anand C@anandc·
Masterclass in CEO communication -
Anand C tweet media
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Bryce Lillico
Bryce Lillico@b_lillico·
PSA --- Laundry scent boosters are toxic and make you smell like a walking febreze plug-in🤮. They also give everyone around you a headache. Thats all.
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Bryce Lillico retweetledi
𝐑𝐨𝐛𝐞𝐫𝐭 𝐌𝐨𝐨𝐫
The fact that Instant Pot is already being framed as a corporate cautionary tale—the company that went bankrupt bc they made a product so durable & versatile that its customers had little need to buy another one—instead of as a critique of capitalism is deeply, deeply depressing.
𝐑𝐨𝐛𝐞𝐫𝐭 𝐌𝐨𝐨𝐫 tweet media
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Alexis Gay
Alexis Gay@yayalexisgay·
companies trying to get people back in the office
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