济南简单治阳痿-【济南附一医院】,济南附一医院,济南男科哪家好,济南市男科病治疗,济南早泄一般都有什么原因,济南一分钟射,济南男人小腹下面有个疙瘩,济南射精很快治疗有哪些方法
济南简单治阳痿济南前列腺医学检查,济南龟头过于敏感早射怎么办,济南看男科哪里好,济南无法射精怎么治疗,济南男科勃起障碍,济南男人性功能不行怎么办,济南市治前列腺的医院哪个好
So interesting to see “Progressive” Democrat Congresswomen, who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe, the worst, most corrupt and inept anywhere in the world (if they even have a functioning government at all), now loudly......— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 14, 2019 338
Retirement is just a numbers game to Carl Jensen, who quit his job when he was miserable and decided his family of four could live off less.“We save a lot of money,” Jensen said. “We (do) the electricity ourselves, too.”He’s at home with his family full time and is making it work by slashing the family’s expenses."I had a really bad day at work, and I remember thinking I had this incredible stress. I can't do this for the next 15 to 20 years of my life,” he said. "I don't need a new car, so I don't have a new car. I don't care about my clothes ... so I don't buy brand new clothes. And I have an old phone because honestly I don't want to learn a new phone."The family lives on just more than ,000 a year, an amount his retirement funds generate, along with his wife’s job at a startup."I realized early, retirement is just a number game, and if you're a saver and can be a little bit frugal when you're younger and let the stock market work for you, you can actually stop working early.""People that haven't saved very much for retirement still have great choices available to them if they're flexible."Kim Curtis, Wealth Legacy Institute CEO, understands Jensen’s choice isn’t for everyone and says approaches can vary."The key around your 40s is making sure that you don't give up the savings your started in your 20s,” Curtis says.People in their 20s should focus on a savings routine such as a 401K, Roth IRA and keeping credit card balances low. Those in their 30s need to focus on asking for a raise and building their salaries.Curtis says they need to be bold.People in their 40s have a tougher time if they have growing children. It’s harder to save."The key around your 40s is making sure that you don't give up the savings your started in your 20s,” she said.Keep building the money in your 50s and consider not fully retiring until your 70s. It’s not as bad as it sounds."The idea of not working and stepping off and not having any new income from the time you retire through life expectancy is really a fallacy now because a lot of people have side hustles and a side hustle in retirement could be an Uber driver. It could be a wag walk or dog sitting,” Curtis says.People who can keep working will benefit most, though.For the average person, ,000 a month at age 62 is all social security provides. And it’s ,425 at age 66.If you don’t draw until you are 70 years old, it jumps to ,800 per month, Curtis says."That's significant."Jensen decided working is not for him, but he picks up contract jobs in between repairing and adding on to his house, which he does himself. 2611
ST. LOUIS, Mo. — A St. Louis Man made a gruesome discovery while cleaning out his mother's apartment after she died. Adam Smith says he found a dead baby in her freezer, and it's apparently been there for several years. Smith said he has been living in the apartment and taking care of his mother, who passed away from cancer just a few days ago. He said his mother had kept the box, wrapped up tight, in their freezer for decades and always told him to stay away from it. After she passed away, he decided to open it. "There was a pink blanket, baby blanket, and when I reached down and touched it I could feel a foot," Smith told CNN. I could see the baby's head with hair, hair that was still attached to it, smooth."Police were called to the building early Sunday morning. They call the infant's death "suspicious."Smith told police that he never looked inside the box his mother kept wrapped in the freezer. He always thought it was a frozen wedding cake. Smith says his mother once told him that she lost a child at birth and that family members have told him that his mother had twins at one point, but lost one of the babies at birth. The second twin was allegedly given up for adoption. "Who absolutely keeps their own child in a box for this long and never talks about it and never, I just have so many thoughts and it's just insane," Smith said. Smith said he's distraught thinking about the possibility that the child may have been his sister and what his mother may have done to her. "I have to wait for the autopsy to see if that baby ever took a breath and I cannot help it, to think she might have done something to it. I just can't help it," Smith said. And now that his mother is gone, Smith said he wonders if he'll ever know the truth. "I wanted some kind of closure and I feel like I may never get any closure because my mom's gone," Smith said. The child's death remains under investigation. 1927
Rapid City, S.D. — South Dakota has a meth problem, and it wants you to know about it.The state came out with a new slogan last week, and it's got people buzzing. “It’s everywhere, it’s in Rapid City, it’s in small-town South Dakota. It’s in Belle Fourche, it’s in Buffalo," said Bryan Hentkowski, who is recovering from his meth addiction. “It touches everybody, in one way or the other,” said Tim Kelly, who lives in Rapid City, South Dakota. “Your neighbors are doing it, people’s parents are doing it, it’s everywhere,” Hentkowski said.Hentkowski lives in Rapid City, South Dakota. He is in rehab recovering from his meth addiction — and he’s far from the only one. Meth arrests in South Dakota have tripled since 2013. But the state's not ignoring the problem. In fact, they’re on it. The state's new slogan show's people saying, "I'm on meth," and, "I'm on meth too." There’s no doubt the state's new campaign is effective. people are buzzing about it from coast to coast. “It did in 24 hours what we’ve been trying to do for several years and that is, raise awareness of the methamphetamine crisis in South Dakota,” said Kevin Thom, the sheriff in Pennington County. He likes the campaign. "You know some of it is kind of mean spirited, the comments, frankly there’s some pretty hilarious and creative memes that are out there on the internet. I think it’s clearly a net positive,” Thom said. “It’s free, it’s free when people are talking about you on social media and advertising cost a lot of money,” said Vicki Lane, a professor of marketing at University of Colorado Denver. She says the state is using a controversial slogan to get people talking about the problem. “Controversy in particular has a risk that it will backfire. Because it is controversial that people will have a negative perception or negative reaction or negative attitude and maybe even a negative emotion,” Lane said. And there's definitely some of that to be found in Rapid City. “Do you want my honest opinion? I think it's stupid," Hentkowski said. “The PR man ... he was probably on meth when he did it,” said Joe Utter, who lives in Rapid City. “Could be a stroke of genius to get people talking about it, but on the other hand, it’s gonna make us look a little stupid," Kelly said. “Initially, I thought it was pretty ridiculous, it does stop and make you think. There is a meth problem in South Dakota,” said Kristin Kirsch, from Spearfish, South Dakota. Broadhead, the company that created the campaign for the state, said in a statement, “We are proud of this work, and as far as we’re concerned, the campaign is doing its job. It’s generating conversation, it’s soliciting all kinds of reactions and, yes, it’s making people uncomfortable.” While the conversation might be getting started for people at home, it’s been the reality for a while for Pennington County Deputy Dustin Meyer. “We’re going to go serve some warrants on some subjects that are felony drug charges, specifically possession of methamphetamine,” Meyer said. The Pennington County sheriff's department averaged 23 meth arrests a week last year, a third of the total arrests in the state. Thom appreciates the hard work of his deputies, but he knows it’s not the answer. “A stronger focus on the prevention, a stronger focus on the treatment," Thom said. "I mean, you have to have vigorous enforcement, and we’ve done a good job because we’re arresting people in record numbers, but it hasn’t put a dent in the problem.” 3505
Residents were urged to shelter in place for several hours after an explosion and fire broke out Wednesday at a massive ExxonMobil plant in Texas, injuring 66 people, officials said.The injuries were non-life threatening, plant manager Jason Duncan told reporters. Most involved minor, first-degree-type burns, with the victims treated at a local clinic, he said. Most were ExxonMobil employees or contractors.City officials said via Twitter Wednesday afternoon that the shelter-in-place advisory had been lifted after monitoring failed to detect "any levels of concern" in the air. The fire had been contained by the evening."We realize the people who live here in Baytown and our surrounding communities are worried," Baytown spokeswoman Natasha Barrett told reporters. "We understand that and we've been working hour after hour to check on things, to monitor air quality."The fire occurred at the company's Baytown Olefins Plant, ExxonMobil spokeswoman Sarah Nordin said. The company website describes the complex as one of the largest refining and petrochemical complexes in the world. It's located about 25 miles east of Houston.Barrett said the fire began about 11:07 a.m. local time and the precautionary shelter-in-place was issued about 10 minutes later.The blaze is in a unit that contains polypropylene material and Exxon asked that the shelter-in-place order be issued west of the plant and south of the Texas Spur 330 freeway "out of an abundance of caution," the city of Baytown said via Twitter.Duncan said the fire broke out at a polypropylene recovery unit, where the plastic is purified for production. He said crews were working to shut down the units to isolate the fire source.Duncan said the company is conducting air quality monitoring at the site and fence line, and cooperating with regulatory agencies. He said no adverse environmental effects had been detected.Barrett said city and county officials were also monitoring the air.The cause of the explosion is unknown, he said. 2015