23/4-SF3 SF chronicle
Brought some food from the neighbourhood grocery, plus a SF Chronicle. This Sunday version got so much advertisement booklets, it's volume is even more huge than my notebook computer. Finished it already while warming the food for lunch. Only the weekly activities calendar is useful, also found no art criticism column in it.
[There is however a special report bklet, which asked the question: Is the American Dream still possible? The report says that 81% of the American believe business decision is based on what is best for shareholders, not employees. Center to this is again the mindset of only money makes money, while labourers are just replacable hired manpower. At the end of the article, is a box asking What Can You Do?, and it suggested one should hence exercise the power to vote, Be an active citizen as it says.]
[The headline of the Chornicle is Big-Screen Revival, it comes together with a this week question Is it worth taxpayer dollars to restore classic old theaters? and readers are asked to do the polling by choosing either:
Yes. They can become social and aesthetic centerpieces to revital neighbourhoods. OR No, they're money-losing propositions promoted by sentimental people living in the past. If they asked me in between these two limited opinion, to be honest, I don't think the former is any match to the latter argument, but I still prefer a third option: "Yes, despite they're money-losing propositions promoted by sentimental people living in the past.".]
[There is however a special report bklet, which asked the question: Is the American Dream still possible? The report says that 81% of the American believe business decision is based on what is best for shareholders, not employees. Center to this is again the mindset of only money makes money, while labourers are just replacable hired manpower. At the end of the article, is a box asking What Can You Do?, and it suggested one should hence exercise the power to vote, Be an active citizen as it says.]
[The headline of the Chornicle is Big-Screen Revival, it comes together with a this week question Is it worth taxpayer dollars to restore classic old theaters? and readers are asked to do the polling by choosing either:
Yes. They can become social and aesthetic centerpieces to revital neighbourhoods. OR No, they're money-losing propositions promoted by sentimental people living in the past. If they asked me in between these two limited opinion, to be honest, I don't think the former is any match to the latter argument, but I still prefer a third option: "Yes, despite they're money-losing propositions promoted by sentimental people living in the past.".]
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