An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
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An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Another one of the smartest marketing minds in hip hop besides Diddy, Snoop Dogg was in the house on the Jimmy Fallon Show to discuss his partnership with 7 Eleven Store Chain and Norton Soft Ware Security check it out.
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I wonder what he think about at night in that cell, to shoot yourself then get two years in prison has to be kinda difficult to swallow.
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Damn T.I. has been arrested again and this run in with the law might be a violation of his parole:
According to sources L.A. County Sheriff’s deputies pulled over the multi-platinum selling rapper and his wife in a Maybach on Sunset Boulevard around 10:30PM. Deputies say they smelled marijuana, and after searching the vehicle they arrested T.I. and Tameka. Both T.I. and “Tiny” were booked on felony possession of a controlled substance.
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Ed Lover takes no prisoners in “C’mon Son” 17. He goes at Parris Nilton, Big Baby, Soulja Boy, Brian Pumper, Kat Stacks, Brandon Jennings and more, check it out.
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From a fan stand point it seems pretty ridicules to watch millionaires argue with billionaires about contract disputes, when most fans are barely making $40-50 grand a year. But when you view a situation like the New York Jets and Darrell Revis hold out from a business positions, one can understand a player of his caliber taking a stance and demanding more money. In the defense of the professional athlete (especially NFL players who’s contracts are not guaranteed), they have to get all the can while they can because the average career is short lived. Inaddition, these team owners are making tons of money off of these players so they deserve a fair compensation in relationship to the revenues they are capable of generating.
In the video above LeCharles Bentley doesn’t blame the Jets’ Darrelle Revis one bit for holding out and he explains why, check it out.
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Usher thanks Justin Bieber for being the best retirement plan ever… lol
Snoop came through to show some love
The rest of the pics when you…
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Here is a bit of balling on a whole other level, 21-year-old Dhiaa Al-Essa who is an engineering talked with the Metro.co.uk about his car collection which consists of 30 luxury vehicals purchased by his Saudi billionaire father.
Hs collection includes four “red” Maranello, five Porsches, three Lamborghinis, two Rolls Royce and a Mercedes SLR McLaren. The latest addition to collections is the Ferrari 458 Italy, and for his 22nd b-day his father to set to buy him the Bugatti Veyron and another Koenigsegg Agere.
Just for kicks Dhiaa spent the summer flying his cars to London, Montreal, Las Vegas and New York to go on driving tours with friends.
‘I love speed but the limit in Saudi Arabia is 75mph so I’m pretty limited. When the Bugatti arrives I hope to take it to Germany where you can drive as fast as you can,’ said the engineering student from Riyadh.
‘The Mercedes McLaren SLR is my favourite. I love the way it looks and drives and it’s also been reliable for a car out in 50ºC temperatures.’
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John Faraci, International Paper chairman/CEO, gives insight on why he and many other employers are not hiring.
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This is a real good read from the Harvard Business Review discussing the new age entrepreneur, check it out:
The story of entrepreneurship in the twentieth century was about individuals who got access to sophisticated capital in a few advanced markets and created massive economies of scale. That’s how AT&T, Home Depot, and Microsoft swiftly made their way onto the Fortune 500. But in the twenty-first century, a very different story is unfolding.
Today entrepreneurs anywhere can create value with relatively little capital. Barriers to entry in almost every industry have come crashing down, opening vast opportunities for small companies. These developments are especially apparent in emerging markets, where we’re seeing signs that an entrepreneurial economy is ready to bloom. We’ve spent the past two years studying entrepreneurship in the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia, and we’ve found hundreds of world-class ventures poised for significant growth there. Most people’s assumptions about entrepreneurship in the developing world—that entrepreneurs either don’t exist there or are microentrepreneurs—are wrong. High potential ventures are surfacing where no one is looking for them—in Beirut instead of Boston, in Cape Town instead of Silicon Valley—among people who have historically been outside the economic power structure.
What’s surprising is that so many of these companies aren’t in the fast-growing markets the world is already watching, such as India or Brazil. They’re cropping up in places like Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Africa—whose economies have been driven by top-down government policy, large business groups, multinational corporations, and even social elites, such as local royalty. Until relatively recently, such places were thought to have a critical shortage of businesspeople who could build companies. Click Here To Read More
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