Mike Borland, MBA

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Mike Borland, MBA

Mike Borland, MBA

@mdborland

Banking systems, accountant, analyst, mba, developer, web design, C#, ASP, programmer, conversions, financial reporting, auditor, compliance

Katılım Ocak 2010
3.1K Takip Edilen567 Takipçiler
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
History has clearly shown there is no way off a peak but down. I think Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun Microsystems, put it best decades ago. The market is priced for perfection. But AI is a crazy, spectacular development you say...
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@jessica_erstad Golf is a difficult sport. My background is endurance sports, swimming, running, cycling, etc. I golf (badly) for a change of pace. The Jim Ager junior 9 hole course is a big challenge for me.
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jessica erstad
jessica erstad@jessica_erstad·
A lot of people ask Darin if he’s sad the boys don’t play baseball any more. Not when they’re playing on a team that is breaking their high school golf records. All four boys that score have shot rounds under par. So fun! Darin doesn’t mind being the 3rd best golfer in the house.
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
Media Bias: While I go directly to independent news sources I visit Google news too where they aggregate news sources. They are still dominated by the old line media that is 99% slanted against conservatives. Nothing has changed.
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@commbankerguy Well that has been the key thing banks have been focused on for a long time. Especially the larger ones.
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Community Banker Guy
Community Banker Guy@commbankerguy·
Operational efficiency is the moat all community banks need to be striving for most. It’s the game changer, the earnings multiplier, the real path to excellent returns. Too many banks acquiring without fixing the real problem.
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
Meta (aka Facebook) - Not financial analysis here, but has anyone else noted that your facebook feed is not composed of your friends posts but of social groups and advertisers you have not chosen? I see very few posts from friends, often even NO posts.
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Mike Borland, MBA retweetledi
Eric Adams
Eric Adams@ericadamsfornyc·
Last night, another act of political violence shook the nation. At this point, no one should be surprised. “The President is a fascist.” “Eat the rich.” “Let the streets soak in capitalists’ blood.” “Globalize the intifada.” “By any means necessary.” This isn’t fringe rhetoric anymore. It’s been normalized, echoed on campaign trails, and amplified on podcasts where politicians regularly appear. You don’t get to indulge this language, elevate those who use it, and then act shocked when it turns into violence. We need to get back to sanity before we lose our country.
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@BreitbartNews The Irish used to have a huge wealth gap relative to other groups. They closed it by educating themselves and working hard.
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Breitbart News
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews·
A presenter at Illinois' Reparations Commission (ADRC) gives away the game: "It's IMPOSSIBLE, actually, for all states & localities to meet the task of closing the racial wealth gap. Their combined budgets across the U.S. are $5 trillion... The MINIMUM that's required to eliminate the racial wealth gap is $16 trillion."
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
Granted that I am no expert here. But just imagine, what if, that the US along with participating neighbors can control the Strait of Hormuz. It would be game, set, and match. Iran would be powerless.
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Scott McNealy
Scott McNealy@scottmcnealy·
A long time ago, Sun Microsystems received a $2.4b settlement from Microsoft for illegal meddling with Java technology. Bill has a history of bad acts. But at least Windows never had any bugs or viruses. And he loves his island vacations.
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970

5 years ago Bill Gates told the world that people had “no choice” avoiding the COVID shot, claiming the unvaxxed would “endanger their grandparents” & the vaxxed were 100% protected. Every single claim was false. All of it. And he walked away without a single punishment.

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Hillbilly Catholic
Hillbilly Catholic@RosaryQuotes123·
Bishop of the Diocese of Lincoln, Bp. James D. Conley, visited Mila Nguyen and administered the Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick as she continues to recover from a serious illness—through the intercession of Fr. Flanagan. Ven. Fr. Flanagan founded an orphanage called Boys Town in Douglas County, Nebraska, and is known for his holiness. Video and info: Bp. James D. Conley
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@SamUSOH @DailyInterLake Probably a good thing. I used to live in Estes Park, CO. When I go back there now I am amazed at the overpopulation of elk. They kind of take over the town even in the summer.
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Ryan McBeth
Ryan McBeth@RyanMcbeth·
This is incredibly misleading. Only ships going to and from Iranian ports are subject to the blockade. We need to make shame great again or else people will just keep lying and spreading Iranian propaganda. centcom.mil/MEDIA/PRESS-RE…
Annmarie Hordern@annmarie

FT: At least 34 tankers with links to Iran have bypassed the US blockade since it began, according to the cargo tracking group Vortexa, including several carrying Iranian oil— despite President Trump declaring the barricade a “tremendous success”. giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/ac…

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John
John@market_sleuth·
Did anyone have a rental car company outperforming every stock in the NYSE so far this year on their bingo card? 🤣
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Jeremy Wayne Tate
Jeremy Wayne Tate@JeremyTate41·
Most people on X do not think much deeper than the latest meme, but for those who do, this is gold
Bishop Robert Barron@BishopBarron

There is a way past the absurd and deeply divisive “war” between the President and the Pope, which has been enthusiastically ginned up by the press. And it is indicated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 2309 to be precise. After laying out the various criteria for determining a just war—proportionality, last resort, declaration by a competent authority, reasonable hope of success, etc.—the Catechism points out that “the evaluation of these conditions for moral legitimacy belongs to the prudential judgment of those who have responsibility for the common good.” The assumption is that the just war principles function, to use the technical term, as heuristic devices, designed to guide the practical decision-making of those civil authorities who have to adjudicate matters of war and peace. The role of the Church, therefore, is to call for peace and to urge that any conflict be strictly circumscribed by the moral constraints of the just war criteria. But it is not the role of the Church to evaluate whether a particular war is just or unjust. That appraisal belongs to the civil authorities, who, one presumes, have requisite knowledge of conditions on the ground. So, is the war in question truly the last resort? Is there really a balance between the good to be attained and the destruction caused by the war? Are combatants and non-combatants being properly distinguished in the waging of the conflict? Do the belligerents have right intention? Is there a reasonable hope of success? The posing of those questions—indeed the insistence upon their moral relevance—belongs rightly to the Church, but the answering of them belongs to the civil authorities. The Pope has said, on numerous occasions, that he is not a politician and that his role is not the determination of any nation's foreign policy. But he has just as clearly said that he will continue to speak for peace and for moral constraint. In making both of these claims, he is operating perfectly within the framework of paragraph 2309 of the Catechism. If we understand that the Pope and the President have qualitatively different roles to play in the determination of moral action in regard to war, we can, I hope, extricate ourselves from the completely unhelpful narrative of “Pope vs. President.”

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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@TeamPillen Well we have to be careful. Luckily we just got our CRP grass burned without any problems...
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Governor Jim Pillen
Governor Jim Pillen@TeamPillen·
Our state still faces a significant wildfire threat. Today, I issued a proclamation to ensure that Nebraska National Guard resources are ready and available to respond to wildfires, should they be needed. High winds, low humidity, and dry conditions continue to be a concern and could produce dangerous conditions. Protecting the citizens of Nebraska is my number one priority. We are ensuring that resources are ready to combat fires and safeguard lives and property. I have full confidence in Adjutant General Strong to lead our state’s disaster response with efficiency and effectiveness.
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Michael Green
Michael Green@profplum99·
Another nice note… let the TDS outrage commence!
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy

Food for thought. Iran Is Not Winning. It Is Unraveling. The prevailing narrative on Iran has it almost perfectly reversed. We are told that Tehran is winning a war of wills in the Gulf and that Donald Trump is gambling recklessly with the world’s most sensitive chokepoint. In reality, Iran is not consolidating strength; it is managing decline. And Trump’s play on the Strait of Hormuz has quietly forced energy markets to reprice security—tilting the balance decisively toward the Americas, and away from Europe, Asia and China. The Islamic Republic no longer resembles a confident revolutionary project. With the old clerical core leadership shattered, power has splintered between a camp that recognises a deal with the outside world as the only path to survival and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a class of military dictators with guns, patronage networks and a rational fear that any genuine settlement will ultimately throw them overboard. This is not a unified strategy at work; it’s infighting, paranoia, a fragmented system in late-stage decay, crumbling under pressure. Into this fragmentation, the White House has introduced a form of calibrated coercion too often caricatured as impulsive. Around the Strait of Hormuz, Washington has threatened disruption without fully triggering it, forcing shipowners, insurers and policymakers to absorb a hard truth: dependence on vulnerable, seaborne Middle Eastern barrels is not a passing inconvenience but a structural risk. Iran can harass tankers and jolt day-to-day sentiment; it cannot rebuild a broken economy on sporadic shocks to global shipping. And the world must deal with the end of Pax Americana! The underlying playbook is anything but novel. Sun Tzu’s insistence that “all warfare is based on deception”, Machiavelli’s counsel that a ruler must manipulate appearances and exploit factionalism, and Alfred Thayer Mahan’s argument that sea power and control of chokepoints shape the fate of nations are not museum pieces. They are, in this case, the operating code. Trump’s opaque signalling, deliberate use of disinformation and visible but limited naval posture in and around Hormuz amount to a modern, Mahanian use of sea power as economic statecraft. Energy markets are already adjusting. Tankers are head to the Gulf of America. In a world where a single strait can a risk to economies is Europe and Asia, without ever being fully closed, assets tied to secure basins and diversified export routes deserve a premium. The Americas sit in an enviable position: vast, politically stable hydrocarbon resources, multiple pipelines and ports, and no dependence on a distant maritime chokepoint controlled by adversaries. By contrast, Europe, much of Asia and China find themselves downstream of vulnerabilities they do not control and regimes they cannot stabilise, exposed to shipping routes that can be threatened faster than alternative supply can be mobilised. All of this plays out against a domestic backdrop in Iran that looks less like revolutionary vigour and more like fear. A state that cannot safely keep its internet on, that must rely on public brutality to deter dissent, is not projecting confidence. It is signalling weakness, to its own citizens as much as to its rivals. Winston Churchill once remarked that “in war, resolution; in defeat, defiance; in victory, magnanimity; in peace, goodwill.” Iran’s leadership offers only defiance, without realistic prospects of victory or peace. The uncomfortable conclusion for those still insisting that Tehran is “winning” is that what they are observing is not the rise of a regional hegemon, but the protracted, strategically exploited unwinding of a brittle regime at the centre of an overexposed energy system.

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Matthew Marsden
Matthew Marsden@matthewdmarsden·
Of course, I am not leaving the Catholic Church.
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Mike Borland, MBA
Mike Borland, MBA@mdborland·
@wesbury I say they blew it even earlier, that is ZIRP that begun in 2011. Before this I was a Fed supporter.
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Brian Wesbury
Brian Wesbury@wesbury·
It’s true…Central Bank Independence is important. However, the Fed blew its Independence when it funded the GFC and COVID-spending with QE, at super low rates. Blame the Fed, not Trump. “A Botched Fed Transition Is a Stain on Independence” - Bloomberg bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
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