5 mind-blowingly valuable things hidden in everyday life - health care appliances

by:Yovog     2020-04-12
5 mind-blowingly valuable things hidden in everyday life  -  health care appliances
In a world of rational thinkers, what is the value of goods to us.
This is not the world, however, so we ended up buying a cup of coffee for $5, somewhere, there's a guy who's still in a room full of collectible baby peas, and he's definitely going to fund his retirement fund.
But, even outside of obvious and silly examples, there are situations where money works in a way that we cannot control.
Experts say it's hard to believe. . .
Buying a house for homeless people can actually save money. Homeless people will be with us forever.
No one is willing to hire them, it is impossible for society to give them only a place to live.
It was sad when a guy slept in a box he found in the alley and ate mice cooked with a lighter, but he didn't let us pay anything ---
He collects the most change in his hat every day.
But has anyone calculated in advance the actual cost of keeping someone alive and homeless? Someone did!
It's nearby.
First of all, it's not cool to let the poor die on the street as a society.
So while we do not provide housing, we do provide emergency room care.
This is counter-intuitive, but this barely bit of help actually costs society more than the whole process. Why?
Well, it's a bit unhealthy for no one to live on the street, and it should be a surprise, that's before depression and its accompanying substance abuse works.
For example, Boston's homeless medical facility tracked 119 long-term homeless people for five years.
During that time, the 119 people suffered a staggering amount, although 33 of them died and 7 were placed in nursing homes.
In Washington, on 2002, 198 people conducted 9,000 ER visits, less than once a week.
At least $1,000 each time, this is a medical fee that these hospitals are trying to charge.
Unless they have a very good day, the money will come out of your pocket.
If they take advantage of shelters, increase the cost of $24,000 per year, plus the cost of police arresting and handling those who misbehave (plus the round-the-
Once they are in jail, they get the clock housing, feeding and Protection)
All this adds up to a neat amount for taxpayers.
Experts say it will really be cheaper.
For example, a project in San Diego "When patients are linked to housing, income benefits, health insurance and primary care homes, emergency department visits have decreased by 61% in more than two years, hospital stay decreased by 62%.
"Statistically, once a person has a roof over his head, he will not get sick or get into so much trouble.
In principle, of course, the public will never support the idea.
But principles have proved expensive.
If you automatically object to the idea of giving the homeless a free house, you will hate the next one even more. . .
In the long run, the cost of paying children good grades is rewarding. You may think that we have already produced great value for our achievements.
Many of us have worked for 12 years just to get into college and learn more.
But because of the average income of college graduates, you have to wonder if we really value our achievements enough?
Research has shown that we will all have a better life if we open our wallets and children to learn.
It's an anger!
No one pays for school!
The spoiled little ones should thank them for even having school!
But here are some interesting things about minors: they)
Don't like to listen to adults and B)
Not the best long-term planners.
When we tell 12-year-
In this way, in more than five years, they can go to a place where they have to get more good grades in order to have a better chance of finding a good job in five years, before we finished half of the sentence, they stopped listening.
Children's rewards need to be more direct.
In short, you need to bribe them.
An economist at Harvard University, when the school pays students to study. And guess what?
With improved grades, students are more likely to go to college and be hired, and music sales aimed at upsetting parents are likely to grow by 500%.
But it may not be surprising. -
What is particularly crazy in this study is that even if students get paid just because they appear, they get better grades.
In other words: Treat school like you do with work.
But why should the government pay you, the snobbish child, to keep him from wasting his potential?
Because society makes money in the long run.
Better grades are equal to better jobs, better jobs mean higher incomes, and higher incomes mean more taxes.
This also means that there are fewer and fewer opportunities for children to drop out of school, because dirty tattoo needles can bring endless bar quarrels and infections and burden society.
So, let's say, we pay the eighth grade students $20 a week until we graduate.
This is a little more than five.
She will make more money if she graduates, which means she will pay more taxes-
About $2,400.
This means that in two years, our investment is balanced.
According to this chart, continuing this principle throughout the university is a sign of the dollar: That's why the Columbia District.
Again, it seems a bit cynical.
But again. . .
What are we afraid?
We are not preparing these children for the expectations of the adult world?
Where do people do things purely for economic incentives?
The metal in your coin is worth more than money to all, but for most of us loose change is more annoying than its value.
Whenever we buy something that ends with a price of 6, we only have cash, which means that we end up with four useless pennies, and we throw them in the jar and probably never see them again.
But those pennies and five cents are not as cheap as you think.
What if we told you that your change is worth twice as much as it is on the surface?
A penny of small pieces made of metal is more than twice the value printed on the surface.
In other words, if you take a salary of $500 and let the bank give you the price of the sergeant, you will have precious metals of more than $1,000 (
If you can get someone to melt them.
This is because, oddly enough, once we stamp Lincoln's face, society will halve the value of this metal.
It is worth it because we have carved "a penny" on the surface, although the inherent value of some old penny material is more than two cents.
So are five coins. -
They are made from a mixture of copper and nickel, which is worth mentioning.
But before you light the stove and magically double the value of your piggy bank, know that the US government has a law that prohibits the melting of coins for this reason.
Doing so will allow you to work in slammer for five years, which may be more than you would be willing to risk for every extra penny.
But that doesn't mean that you should keep putting them flat on the rails as well.
Someone outside is willing to buy your coins at a price that exceeds their value as a currency.
Of particular interest are the coins cast before 1982, made of copper (
Contrary to modern pennies made of zinc)
Thanks to the steady rise in copper prices, its value is higher.
A business owner and another man in Portland, Oregon scrubbed 15 banks a week for a few pence, of which his shed was worth $2,000 (
Coincidentally, it sounds like the worst robbery movie ever set up).
But the big boba might be a hedge fund manager named Kyle Bass.
Put it in perspective ,. The reason?
Coin collectors believe the American era will soon come. S.
The Ministry of Finance does not think it is worth printing Penny and five coins anymore and promotes the five coins to the smallest fiat currency.
When this happens, it is not illegal to melt your coins and a five-cent coin, which will be the payday for the rater.
So you may not be able to take advantage of the opportunity to hoard coins, but you can take advantage of those who think they can take advantage of them.
We cannot deny that people may be stupid.
Like Tommy Lee Jones said in that movie about aliens, "one person is smart.
You know, people are stupid, scary, dangerous animals.
"But what if it all goes backwards?
What if most of the terrible financial decisions we make in life can be avoided, and if we just listen to random assholes around us and not believe in our personal talents?
This is not a new idea.
As early as 1907, a mathematician named Francis Galton asked a group of people to guess the weight of a cow.
Most people left and some left.
But they succeeded as a group of people.
The Honeycomb's mind is smarter than the individual.
If you can use the viewer lifeline on every issue, it would be much easier to consider a game ---
95% of the audience is choosing the right answer.
Of course, it has been pointed out that the accuracy of the population will decrease as the problem becomes more and more difficult.
But they also point out that only smarter people can solve the problem.
The key is that we value our intuition too much, and the wisdom of the tribe is not enough.
Especially when we think we are experts in the brands we buy.
This principle is called;
Once something is established as ours, we are more willing to value it, no matter what the idiots in the office say.
So, let's say you have a Mac (
Or a pair of Doc Marten boots, or a Buick sedan, etc).
You are more likely to think that your brand is s ** t, regardless of how it actually performs, and no matter how much others tell you how much they like competing brands.
This has financial consequences: that is, brand loyalty will cost you.
Or, "loyal Buick customers paid an average of $1,051 more than customers who switched from another brand to Buick.
What's even more striking is that Mercedes's loyal fans pay an average of $7,410 more than buyers who switch from other brands to Mercedes.
"It doesn't matter if the person trying to give us information is an expert, we are laymen.
For example, the study found that you can manipulate whether the subject believes in global warming.
Massive data is meaningless;
We insist on doing it with our intuition.
"1 your personal information is worth $81 for Facebook. Someone wants to know where all of Facebook's money comes from?
Think about it, for a moment.
They don't sell anything, and they are not very big in advertising.
But the company is worth billions of dollars. Why?
The answer is interesting information.
It turns out that the company bought you from Facebook.
Facebook sells your life for billions of dollars and you give it to them for free. We've covered .
It makes sense because even if you don't buy anything, you're a money-making machine.
This is because social networking is essentially a large-scale, very comprehensive marketing survey.
Whenever you click on "like", share a link, join a fan page, and even make friends, you are generating a set of statistics that the company will sell to get.
According to Facebook's filing before the stock goes public, it is estimated that this will bring it real dollar value.
Promoting this among Facebook's billion or so users, they spent a total of £ 9.
Facebook is actively adding messages 7 million minutes a day.
Considering that the federal minimum wage is $7.
$25 per hour, which means Facebook is earning about $1.
2 million free labor per day to create the so-called ".
While "unpaid" may not be accurate, most of us go through Facebook at work anyway.
So we think it's our employer that Facebook screwed up.
Chat Online
Chat Online
Chat Online inputting...