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" ... Amazingly, NCAA Division I schools that sponsor the richest and most competitive athletic programs, those that most depend on the generosity of wealthy alumni, are more likely than Division II and III institutions to arrogantly tread into the maelstrom. Division II and III schools are somewhat smarter because they realize that athletics recruiting is key to meeting student enrollment goals and their athletes are paying a significant portion of their tuitions and required fees. Few Division II athletes are on full scholarship and Division III prohibits athletic scholarships — so they or their families are picking up most or all of the cost of their educations. Or, more accurately described, most Division II and III athletes, like their student peers, are leaving college with astronomical student debt. Division II and III colleges and universities recognize that their coaches are productive admissions recruiters. ... "
" ... These are the real values of Deutsche Bank. The bank’s history shows that it’s perfectly normal for wealthy investment bankers to get their expensive suits tailored on the very same day that their colleagues are losing their jobs. Spanning decades, the bank has arrogantly engaged in one heinous activity after another with impunity. Deep pockets enabled them to pay the fines and continue doing business. When this happens, it's easy for bankers to feel invincible. When you believe that you are untouchable, you will do unspeakable things to others. It's a sad commentary of the bank’s business practices and values. ... "
" ... These companies are being rewarded for their poor management decisions—including self-enrichment due to stock buybacks and arrogantly not putting money away for a crisis—that came to light in the wake of the coronavirus. ... "
" ... These two passages are illustrative. The latter is an example of a writer intimately familiar with the subject he's covering; the former is just a pretense of that, arrogantly dismissive while at the same time transparently uninformed. ... "
" ... Today the Treasury Department is negotiating with more than 50 countries in an effort to implement FATCA. It's entirely understandable that FFIs are encouraging their home governments to shoulder the burden of negotiating with Treasury. After all, the law in many cases arrogantly requires them to violate domestic human rights laws regarding privacy, placing FFIs between a legal rock and a fiscal hard place. But governments are doing themselves and their financial industries a disservice by contemplating entering into FATCA agreements with the U.S. Backlash against the law is growing, and Treasury is in a race against time to lock it into place before a repeal effort can gain steam. ... "