Exact(6)
1st century bc) it had become the fashion to assume that prophets spoke not to their times only but of things to come, and in times of stress men studied prophetic texts intent on learning when redemption was to come.
By the end, when redemption (of sorts) comes only at the price of two further deaths, the reader has been treated to parents who war with children, teachers with pupils, wives with husbands, and old-timers with incomers.
It feels more and more like some sort of apologist/capitalist construct: "See, all is well, and it always was! Us scrappy humans can redeem any dang situation!" What I don't like about this is that it implies that, when redemption doesn't happen, it's the unredeemed person's fault.
When redemption is genuine, it becomes easier to mourn.
And that is the moment when redemption for all will come, and when the city will turn once again to Batman, realize what he's done for them all along, they will forgive him whatever past failures and sins are weighing on him, and they will offer him redemption as well.
As fascinating as end-of-days prophecies and the coming of the Messiah may be, the Torah's only apparent reference to a time when redemption will come states: "And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon you, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you shall bethink yourself among all the nations, where the Lord your God has driven you" (Deuteronomy 30:1).
Similar(51)
Information dating back to 1943 collected by the Investment Company Institute, a trade group, shows that periods when redemptions of fund shares exceeded purchases have been short-lived.
The Stanford scheme began coming apart when redemptions increased in 2008 and early 2009, in part because of the financial crisis, to the point where incoming funds were no longer sufficient to meet investor withdrawals.
The same was true in October, when redemptions as a percentage of assets remained virtually unchanged despite an 11percentt loss in technology funds and a 3percentt drop in equity fund prices over all, Mr. Nachmany added.
Problems arise when redemptions keep coming in and the cupboard of easily sold positions runs dry as Alpert said he suspects is happening at some funds.
When the redemption took place, JPMorgan paid out the equivalent of $25.6541 per Strat share, including some accrued interest.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com