I wrote the book to make the case for unconditional cash, but i wanted to grounde ground it in personal experience. I grew up in Hickory North carolina and my mom was a Public School teacher and my dad was a paper salesman. We had a very stable middleclass existence. In my own life i got Financial Aid to countries fancy boarding school and then we started facebook and 2004 and the rocketship rise of facebook is a pretty wellknown story. I ended up making quite a bit of money at my young age and it forced me to think about what is the most powerful way we can think about the economy so the. 1 but keeps getting so lucky is actually not getting lucky at the expense of everybody else. That took me on a journey of what is the most powerful way to help people get ahead and it turns out the evidence is pretty clear on this point. If you provide people with cash, no strings attached, then they invested in themselves, their families and their communities, their kids do better in school, Health
The fact that an illegal immigrant failed to show up to court for allegedly trying to scam a Westport couple out of $6,000 should come “as no surprise” to anyone, according to Bristol County District Attorney Thomas Quinn III.
A 28-year-old man who appears to be illegally in the country and is alleged to have attempted to scam a Westport couple out of $6,000 earlier this week was released back into the community on low bai.
Bristol County District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III is ticked off at a Fall River judge who set a bail he says is “clearly too low” for a 28-year-old illegal immigrant who allegedly tried to scam a Westport couple out of $6,000.