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High school football coach Joe Kennedy is back to coaching and praying on the field after a years-long fight. Kennedy was put on leave in 2015 over a fight with his school regarding praying on the football field. Joe Kennedy strode alone to midfield, knelt, and prayed for about 10 seconds after his Bremerton High School football team beat visiting Mount Douglas Secondary School 27-12 Friday night. The Freedom From Religion Foundation, which works to keep government and religion separate, placed a billboard message near the school that read: "Wishing Bremerton High School a safe, secular & successful school year." In 2015, a dozen members of the Satanic Temple of Seattle went to a varsity football game at Bremerton High School, many dressed in hooded black robes or masks.
Persons: Joe Kennedy, Kennedy, Joe Kennedy strode, everybody's, Neil Gorsuch, Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Trump, jeered, what's Organizations: Service, U.S, Supreme, Bremerton High School, Mount Douglas Secondary, . Police, NFL, Florida Gov, Bremerton School, Religion Foundation, School, Seattle, Associated Press Locations: Wall, Silicon, Washington, Iowa, Florida, Bremerton —, Bremerton
The Supreme Court ruled in Kennedy's favor in June 2022 after he sued the school district. Kennedy is now coaching again at Bremerton High School for the first time in eight years. The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Joe Kennedy's favor in June 2022. Kennedy is now back to coaching at Bremerton High School this season as an assistant, according to ABC 13. Bremerton High School did not immediately return Insider's request for comment on Sunday.
Persons: Joe Kennedy, Kennedy, Joe Kennedy's, Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor Organizations: Bremerton High School, Service, ABC, Bremerton School District Locations: Kennedy's, Wall, Silicon, Bremerton
Kennedy, 69, previously revealed he was diagnosed in his early 40s with a rare neurological condition called spasmodic dysphonia. What is spasmodic dysphonia? Spasmodic dysphonia is a neurological disorder that causes involuntary spasms in the muscles of the voice box, also known as the larynx, according to John Hopkins Medicine. Spasmodic dysphonia may also be inherited, but a specific gene for the disorder has not yet been identified. Other notable people with spasmodic dysphonia include "Hellboy" actress Selma Blair, CBS News correspondent Jeff Pegues, and journalist Diane Rehm.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, spasmodic, John F, Kennedy, favorability, Oprah Winfrey, John Hopkins, Spasmodic, Winfrey, NewsNation, Selma Blair, Jeff Pegues, Diane Rehm Organizations: spasmodic dysphonia, Service, Democratic, John Hopkins Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, Michigan Medicine, University of Michigan, National, University of Pennsylvania Health, Penn Medicine, Neuroscience, CBS Locations: Wall, Silicon
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his wife, actress Cheryl Hines, are worth roughly $15 million, per Forbes. Forbes noted that one of the major reasons Kennedy does not have more money is "the Kennedy family tree has a lot of branches." RFK Jr. Forbes estimated in 2015 that the entire Kennedy family fortune was worth $1.2 billion. According to Forbes, Hines also has two retirement accounts, which hold between $600,000 and $1.7 million, mainly in stock and bond index funds. Some of Kennedy's family members have been outspoken in their support of President Joe Biden, and he's struggled to make in-roads with Democrats.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Cheryl Hines, Kennedy, Forbes, Robert Kennedy, Ethel Kennedy, John F, Australia Caroline Kennedy, Madonna, Kevin J, Kennedy's, Hines, Joe Biden, he's Organizations: Forbes, Service, RFK Jr, Madonna LLP, Children's Health Defense, Democratic Locations: Wall, Silicon, Australia, Los Angeles, Hyannis Port , Massachusetts
The lawsuit says Kennedy's screenplay and "Stranger Things" have several similarities in their characters, plot, dialogue and themes. Kennedy accused an artist who developed concept art for both his project and "Stranger Things" of sharing his work with the Duffer Brothers. Netflix and the makers of "Stranger Things" denied the allegations in court filings and said the stories are "objectively different" by "virtually every imaginable measure." "Most glaringly, Stranger Things features a core group of children who fight off evil monsters while navigating teenage social issues," the defendants said. The case is Irish Rover Entertainment LLC v. Sims, U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, No.
Persons: Ross, Matt Duffer, Mario Anzuoni, Jeffrey Kennedy's, Ross Duffer, Kennedy, Patrick Arenz, Robins Kaplan, Jeremy Osher, Boren Osher, David Grossman, Loeb, Kelly Klaus, Munger Tolles, Blake Brittain Organizations: REUTERS, Netflix, Rover Entertainment, Irish Rover, Irish Rover Entertainment, U.S, Central, Central District of, Luftman, Olson, Thomson Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S, Los Angeles, Indiana, South Bend , Indiana, Central District, Central District of California, Washington
Goldman Sachs is having an identity crisis
  + stars: | 2023-08-09 | by ( Linette Lopez | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +11 min
I never thought I'd write this but … I miss the old Goldman Sachs. That was the voice of Goldman Sachs 2009 — the adamantine firm that managed to make its way through the crisis relatively unscathed. This sort of dry humor worked back then, but for today's Goldman Sachs, the joke just doesn't hit the same way. Van Praag — who was once dubbed "Goldman Sachs' Rococo PR prince" by The Observer — left the firm in 2012. It would be nice to see the old Goldman Sachs ferocity is still out there somewhere, even if it's not on Wall Street.
Persons: I'd, , Goldman Sachs, Lucas van Praag, Goldman, van Praag, John F, David Solomon —, Solomon, boardrooms, today's Goldman Sachs, Lucas van Praag's Goldman, , FactSet, JP Morgan, chuffs, DJ Sol, Van Praag —, Observer —, Jake Siewert, Lloyd Blankfein —, David Solomon's, Michael Kovac, Marcus —, DJ'ing, Goldman's, Lloyd Blankfein, Insider's Dakin Campbell, Kim Kardashian, Morgan Stanley, It's, Trump, Gary Cohn, mathlete who's, it's, Linette Lopez Organizations: Sunday Times of, Bloomberg, Refinitiv, Wealth Management, Observer, Treasury, Blankfein, Bank of America, Ivy League Locations: Wall, Sunday Times of London, New York City, Bahamas, Silicon
Trump's lawyer suggested telling people it was normal for his electors to send in votes in losing states, according to a newly released memo. The idea was part of a larger plan to overturn the results of the 2020 election, the NYT reported. The New York Times was the first to report on and obtain the previously secret memo. The previously unknown campaign memo from December 2020 — penned by then-Trump lawyer Kenneth Chesebro — outlined a plan to overturn the 2020 election results. Chesebro wrote in the memo that their electors' votes, which would be cast in December, as well as news of the plan, would leak before the presidential certification on January 6.
Persons: Donald Trump's, , Kenneth Chesebro —, Chesebro, Trump, Pence, Kennedy, Nixon, Kennedy's, Hawaii's Organizations: The New York Times, Service, Trump, Pence, Hawaii, Politico, New York Times, The Times Locations: Wall, Silicon, Hawaii
The defense attorney, John Lauro, pointed to the conservative lawyer John Eastman, who played a central role in the push to get then-Vice President Mike Pence to falsely declare Trump the winner of the election. Eastman is one of six people described as Trump's co-conspirators in the indictment filed Tuesday in Washington, D.C., federal court. "You're entitled to believe and trust advice of counsel," Lauro said. "You had one of the leading constitutional scholars in the U.S., John Eastman, say to President Trump, 'This is a protocol that you can follow, it's legal.'" "The Eastman legal team is confident of its legal position in this matter."
Persons: John Eastman, Donald Trump's, Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump, John Lauro, Mike Pence, Trump, Eastman, Pence, Lauro, Joe Biden, Jack Smith's, Biden, John F, Kennedy's, Smith Organizations: Trump, U.S, Congress, Washington , D.C, White, Department of Justice, NBC News, Presidential, CNBC, Eastman Locations: U.S, Washington , U.S, Washington ,
A major super PAC backing RFK Jr's campaign is mostly funded by Timothy Mellon. Mellon has given millions to GOP campaigns, including Trump, and bankrolled a border wall effort in Texas. Mellon cited Kennedy's "bipartisan support" in a statement to CNBC on his contribution to the super PAC. That includes:$20 million in contributions to America First Action, a super PAC that supported former President Donald Trump's 2020 re-election campaign. $30 million to Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC associated with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Persons: Timothy Mellon, Mellon, He's, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, , Kennedy, Kennedy's, Donald Trump's, Kevin McCarthy, Mitch McConnell, Greg Abbott, Andrew Mellon, Gavin De Becker, De Becker, Biden, he's Organizations: PAC, RFK, GOP, Trump, Service, Democratic, Federal, CNBC, Republican, America, Congressional Leadership Fund, Leadership Fund, Republican Gov Locations: bankrolled, Texas, Wall, Silicon, Mexico
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. lashed out at the Biden administration for not granting him Secret Service protection. "Since the assassination of my father in 1968, candidates for president are provided Secret Service protection. Not all campaigns welcome Secret Service protection either. One is that Secret Service protection is covered by taxpayers. Secondly, the presence of Secret Service agents gives any hopeful the aura of being the leader of the free world.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Biden, Kennedy, Long, Robert Kennedy Jr, New York Sen, Alejandro Mayorkas, Kevin McCarthy, Mitch McConnell, It's, Ben Carson, Donald Trump, BuzzFeed, Sen, John McCain's Organizations: Service, Twitter, NPR, Homeland, DHS, Super Bowl, Agents, United Nations General Assembly, Secret Service Locations: Wall, Silicon, New York
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told Fox News that the media is treating him more harshly than it did Donald Trump. During an appearance on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures" with Maria Bartiromo, the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy was asked if he was being heard by potential voters. He added: "Even more than President Trump was slammed by the mainstream, corporate media." "Listen, if I believe the stuff that's written about me in the papers and reported about me on the mainstream news sites, I would not have anything," Kennedy told Fox News. His niece, Kerry Meltzer, told Insider in April that she could not support his presidential bid as a practicing physician because his "vaccine skepticism is unfounded and potentially dangerous."
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Donald Trump, Maria Bartiromo, John F, Kennedy, baselessly, I've, Trump, Harris, Kerry Kennedy, Kerry Meltzer Organizations: Fox News, Service, Democratic, Harvard, Trump, Politico Locations: Wall, Silicon, Hitler's Germany
Silicon Valley and Wall Street stars are indulging Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s presidential campaign. RFK Jr. has said that vaccines cause autism – and the White House recently blasted him for sharing anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. Get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in business, from Wall Street to Silicon Valley — delivered daily. This isn't the first time parts of Wall Street and Silicon Valley have backed an anti-establishment firebrand. In both 2016 and 2020, big names like venture capitalist Peter Thiel and Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman backed Republican candidate Donald Trump.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Jack Dorsey, SPAC, Chamath Palihapitiya, Bill Ackman, Kennedy, Jr, Twitter's, who's, Bill Ackman – who's, Jamie Dimon, , Ken Fisher, Mark Gorton, Chamath, David Sacks, Palihapitiya, Ackman, he'd, Peter Thiel, Stephen Schwarzman, Donald Trump Organizations: Twitter, RFK, White House, Service, CIA, Democratic, Pershing Square Capital Management, Fisher Investments, Research, CNBC, vax, Children's Health Defense, PayPal, Blackstone, Republican Locations: Silicon, Wall, Silicon Valley
Jack Kennedy Schlossberg, 30, is the grandson of John F. Kennedy and the son of Caroline Kennedy. Schlossberg is on track to follow the family tradition of becoming a lawyer. Get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in business, from Wall Street to Silicon Valley — delivered daily. Jack Kennedy Schlossberg is the 30-year-old grandson of President John F. Kennedy and the son of Caroline Kennedy. Here's what you need to know about Jack Schlossberg.
Persons: Jack Kennedy Schlossberg, John F, Kennedy, Caroline Kennedy, Schlossberg, He's, he's, Jack Schlossberg Organizations: Service Locations: Wall, Silicon
US 2024 Presidential hopeful Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks to press at the State House in Concord, New Hampshire, on June 1, 2023. WASHINGTON — The White House on Monday condemned Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for making "vile" and "false" claims that Covid-19 was bioengineered to spare Jews and Chinese people. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Kennedy's comments "put our fellow Americans in danger." He then claims that the United States and China are "developing ethnic bioweapons .... so we can target people by race." "Every aspect of these comments reflect some of the most abhorrent antisemitic conspiracy theories throughout history and contributes to today's dangerous rise of antisemitism," she said.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, WASHINGTON —, Karine Jean, Pierre, Kennedy's, Jean, Kennedy, Joe Biden Organizations: State House, WASHINGTON, Democratic, Republicans, New York, Twitter Locations: Concord , New Hampshire, White, United States, China
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. baselessly claimed COVID-19 may have been "ethnically targeted" to spare certain groups. He said Caucasians and black people were most susceptible, and Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese people were most immune. "COVID-19, there is an argument that it is ethnically targeted. "COVID-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and black people. The Anti-Defamation League responded to Kennedy's claims about COVID-19 being ethnically targeted in a statement to The Post.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, baselessly, Kennedy Organizations: RFK Jr, Service, Democratic, New York, Defamation League Locations: Wall, Silicon, New York City, China, Wuhan, COVID
When asked at the time, he didn't say whether he had donated to Kennedy's campaign. Ackman is one of several prominent business leaders who donated to Kennedy's campaign in the second quarter. The Purple Good Government PAC, a committee that's been largely funded by investor and Elon Musk ally David Sacks, donated $6,600 to the campaign. Ken Fisher, the founder and executive chairman of Fisher Investments, donated $6,600 to the campaign, according to the filing. Veteran Wall Street executive Omeed Malik also donated $6,600 to the Kennedy campaign, the filing says.
Persons: Bill Ackman, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, that's, Elon Musk, David Sacks, Ken Fisher, Omeed Malik, Kennedy, Malik, Brett Messing, Anthony Scaramucci's, Eric Clapton, Sacks, Fisher, Clapton, Chamath Palihapitiya, Joe Biden, Kennedy's, Biden, Kevin Breuninger Organizations: Pershing, Capital, CNBC, RFK, Good Government PAC, Fisher Investments, Wall, Hamptons, Quinnipiac, Democratic Locations: England
British musician Eric Clapton apparently tried to give $5,000 to Robert F. Kennedy Jr's presidential campaign. Like Kennedy, Clapton has been critical of vaccines and COVID-related health mandates. According to federal campaign finance law, individuals can contribute no more than $3,300, and campaigns are barred from accepting donations from foreign nationals. Kennedy's campaign refunded the donation, according to documents filed with the Federal Election Commission on Friday. Federal Election CommissionAltogether, Kennedy reported raising $6.3 million since launching his long-shot campaign for the Democratic nomination in April.
Persons: Eric Clapton, Robert F, Kennedy Jr's, , Kennedy, Clapton, Kennedy Jr, Joe Biden, it's, he'd, Kennedy didn't Organizations: Service, Federal, Democratic, Democratic National Committee, Astra, Clapton Locations: Wall, Silicon, British, England, United Kingdom
RFK Jr. might be running for President as a Democrat, but he has some fans among GOP lawmakers. Sen. Ron Johnson told Insider he hopes Kennedy "gains traction and wins the nomination." House Republicans have invited Kennedy to testify next week, and some Democrats say it's a political ploy. "He's displayed extraordinary political courage," said Johnson, recounting Kennedy's own narrative about how he took up anti-vaccine advocacy. Johnson's liking for Kennedy goes beyond just COVID and vaccines — he's on a similar wavelength with other aspects of Kennedy's conspiratorial worldview as well.
Persons: Sen, Ron Johnson, Kennedy, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Johnson, It's, he's, Bobby, He's, John F, York Sen, Trump, Joe Biden's, Jack Dorsey, David Sacks, Biden, it's, That's, Jim Banks, Ted Cruz, Thomas Massie of, I'd, Massie, Jim Jordan, Tom Williams, Jordan, Donald Trump's, Dennis Kucinich, who's, Kucinich, Dan Goldman, Goldman Organizations: RFK Jr, GOP, Republicans, Service, Democratic, Tea Party, Republican, JFK, CIA, Biden, Ukraine, Twitter, Capitol, Kennedy Democrats, Democrat Party, Jim Banks of Indiana, Federal Government, FBI, Big Tech, Inc, Getty, Center, Children's Health Defense, Democrat Locations: Wall, Silicon, Kennedy's, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, York, Ted Cruz of Texas, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Ohio, New York
But as president, he sided with the CIA and FBI in continuing to shield some records from the public. "When I return to the White House, I will declassify and unseal all JFK assassination related documents," Trump wrote on his social media platform, Truth. In 2017, Trump oversaw the release of over 19,000 documents but eventually broke a promise to fully release the remaining material. Siding with the CIA and FBI, Trump eventually kicked the can on the remaining records to 2021. The constant drip of records flies into the face of the spirit of the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992.
Persons: Trump, Biden, , Donald Trump, John F, Kennedy, It's, Joe Biden, Kennedy's, Karine Jean, Pierre, what's, Gerald Posner, Lee Harvey Oswald, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, JFK's, Trump's, Warren Organizations: CIA, FBI, Service, White, JFK, National Archives, Biden White, Democratic, NBC News, Kennedy, Parkland Hospital
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., son of former US Senator Robert F. Kennedy, speaks during the Bitcoin 2023 conference in Miami Beach, Florida, US, on Friday, May 19, 2023. Since the conference, Kennedy has continued to tout bitcoin. Kennedy said at the Miami bitcoin conference that if he were to become president he would "make sure that your right to hold and use bitcoin is inviolable." Kennedy, 69, is the son of former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy, both of whom were assassinated in the 1960s. In May, days before he took the stage the Miami bitcoin conference, Kennedy tweeted: "Cryptocurrencies, led by bitcoin, along with other crypto technologies are a major innovation engine.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Virginia Canter, Cheryl Hines, Canter, Hines, I'm, Gamble, Mr, Joe Biden's, Gary Gensler, headwinds, Biden, John F, Kennedy's, Jack Dorsey, David Sacks, Chamath, Omeed Malik, bitcoin Organizations: Democratic, CNBC, Procter, Miami bitcoin, Securities, Exchange, SEC, Biden, Quinnipiac, Children's Health Defense, CHD, U.S Locations: Miami Beach , Florida, Miami, bitcoin, Washington, cryptocurrencies, U.S
Bill Ackman said in 2021 that delaying Covid vaccinations for older Americans "seems like genocide." In fact, he said Kennedy is asking "important questions" about vaccines, raising issues he is interested in learning more about. Several of Ackman's recent tweets about Covid vaccines have stunned and confounded many of his colleagues on Wall Street, according to several people who have known and been allied with him for years. "I listened to RFK on several podcasts and a town hall and thought he raised important issues about vaccines and other issues that were worth learning more about," said Ackman, the CEO of Pershing Square Capital. Ackman has pushed his newfound skepticism to his approximately 740,000 followers while saying he is not opposed to vaccines.
Persons: Bill Ackman, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Ackman, Kennedy, it's, Omeed Malik, David Sacks, Chamath Palihapitiya, Ackman's, Tucker Carlson, Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: Democratic, CNBC, RFK, Pershing, Capital, CDC, FDA, Wall Street, Hamptons . Venture, Trump White House, Fox News Locations: U.S
In 1928, Joseph Kennedy bought a white-shingled cottage in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, for $25,000. The main home in the Kennedy family compound in Hyannis Port, Mass. AP/Stew MilneHyannis Port became a homeBefore the Kennedys rolled into Hyannis Port, they had trouble establishing a summer home in coastal Massachusetts. Eunice Kennedy, Jacqueline Bouvier, Edward Kennedy, John F. Kennedy and Jean Kennedy play footballl while on vacation at the Kennedy compound in June 1953 in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. (His father stayed in his Hyannis Port bedroom for five days listening to classical music when he heard the news.)
Persons: Joseph Kennedy, Kennedy, It's, , Royce, Kate Storey, Joseph, John, Robert, John F, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Robert's, John Kennedy, Carolyn Bessette, Saoirse Kennedy, Storey —, Stone —, it's, Stew Milne, Rose, Honey Fitz, Fitzgerald, Boston, Storey, Gloria Swanson, Franklin D, Roosevelt, Eunice Kennedy, Jacqueline Bouvier, Edward Kennedy, Jean Kennedy, footballl, Hy Peskin, Eunice, John's, Ethel, Jacqueline, Rosemary Kennedy, Joseph Jr, Kathleen, Robert Jr, Bobby Shriver, Joseph P, Ted Kennedy's, John Jr, Caroline, Jackie, Maria Shriver, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Caroline Kennedy's, Edwin A, Pat, Ted, what's Organizations: Service, Hyannis Port, Kennedy Hyannis Museum, Stone, Stew Milne Hyannis Port, Catholic, Hollywood, Big, Senate, Democrat, Kennedys, Big House, Kennedy Library Foundation, Democratic, Getty, Camelot Locations: Hyannis Port , Massachusetts, Boston, Hyannis, Cod, Hyannis Port, Hyannis Port ,, Stew Milne Hyannis, Massachusetts, Palm Beach , Florida
"We've seen a dramatic expansion of rights for conservative religious communities that has had a detrimental impact on equality rights, certainly for LGBTQ people," said Elizabeth Platt, director of the Law, Rights and Religion Project at Columbia Law School. Smith, who said she opposes gay marriage based on her Christian beliefs, was represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative religious rights group. Still, the ruling illustrated a disparity in how the court views protections for LGBT people in contrast to the competing conservative Christian interests, Platt said. He stood out among conservatives in his espousal of sympathy both for conservative Christian causes and for what is sometimes called the "dignity interests" of marginalized groups including LGBT people. Barrett's addition gave it a 6-3 conservative margin and recalibrated how it weighed conservative Christian causes against the dignity interests of people protected by civil rights laws.
Persons: Read, Lorie Smith, Smith, Elizabeth Platt, Kristen Waggoner, Waggoner, Jack Phillips, Phillips, Platt, Anthony Kennedy, Brett Kavanaugh, Trump's, Neil Gorsuch, Friday's, Amy Coney Barrett, Kennedy, Kennedy's, Hodges, Obergefell, Barrett, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Barrett's, Rachel Laser, John Kruzel, Will Dunham Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Law, Columbia Law School . Colorado, Alliance Defending, Defending, Colorado Civil Rights Commission, FOSTER CARE, Catholic Church, Philadelphia, Republican, Trump, Americans United, and State, Thomson Locations: WASHINGTON, Denver, Colorado, U.S, Fulton, City of Philadelphia, Obergefell
The Supreme Court ruled to overturn race-based affirmative action on Thursday. After the ruling, many focused on John F. Kennedy's underwhelming 1935 Harvard admission essay. The essay, which was first published by The Washington Post in 2013, reappeared on social media on Thursday after the Supreme Court ruled that affirmative action in college admissions was unconstitutional. Although Kennedy's example was extreme and unlikely to cut muster today, US colleges do explicitly favor applicants whose parents went there, via the legacy system. Commentators — including President Joe Biden — on Thursday noted that the legacy system remained untouched by the court ruling.
Persons: John F, Kennedy's, Kennedy, , — Rebecca Brenner Graham, SATs, Robert Kennedy, Joe Biden —, Ivy, Sonia Sotomayor Organizations: Harvard, Service, The Washington Post, Ivy League, Arts, Harvard Crimson, Harvard University Locations: America
For some Gen Zers, the "American dream" is inspired by European work culture. In fact, other American Gen Zers seem obsessed with it. Whether it's entrepreneurial ventures that allow for a flexible schedule or office jobs that promote work-life balance, some American Gen Zers are adopting European sensibilities when making decisions about their career and work life. Insider spoke with several Gen Zers about the Europeanization of their dreams. Young Americans see Europe as the ideal templateTo some American Gen Zers, Torres-Kennedy's life might seem like a dream.
Persons: Zers, , Sofi Torres, Kennedy, Torres, I'd, she's, it's, Gen Z, Young, I've, Kennedy Davina Ramkissoon, she'd, Lily Rakow, Rakow, we're Organizations: Service Locations: Europe, Bordeaux, France, Chicago, America, Paris, Ireland, North America, Annapolis , Maryland, European
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