Tony Bee / Getty Images You may have reason to worry that your car will be ripped off even if it isn’t on the recent “Hot Wheels” report, listing the most stolen vehicles in the U.S.
Every year, the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), a nonprofit supported by the insurance industry, publishes a report about stolen cars, based on data collected by law enforcement agencies. The report notes trends—in 2011, for instance, there was a rise in thefts of newer cars, even though they’re more likely to have sophisticated anti-theft technology—but the biggest takeaway is the top ten list of most stolen cars.
Even when it’s a private/individual prayer, we tend to shut them by default. However, have you ever asked yourself or anyone why that’s the case? Do we simply do so because of the that’s-how-it’s-always-been- done factor? First, we should understand that every spiritual activity believers engage in must be biblically substantiated. As believers, we don’t do band-wagon or simply go with trends. Instead, we pattern our conducts and practices based on what is prescribed in the Written Word.
Only about 20% of U.S. adults say they have a best friend at work. Should the other 80% start looking for one?
Yes and no. There’s no doubt that social support in the workplace is important for health and well-being, says Catherine Heaney, an associate professor of psychology at Stanford who researches the relationship between work and health. That support can come from a co-worker who has become a close friend, but it doesn’t have to; interactions with supervisors and friendly acquaintances can also boost your well-being, Heaney says.
Mike says he was struggling with COVID-19 when he felt his breathing getting worse. He did not want to go to the Veterans Affairs hospital near his home, where he believed doctors might put him on a ventilator. And he knew they would not prescribe the treatment he really wanted: a drug called ivermectin.
So in late July, Mike, who says he is a 48-year-old teacher and disabled veteran from New York state, contacted America’s Frontline Doctors (AFLD), a group he had been following on social media.
A showmance began between the two houseguests in 2009, when they met on the set of the CBS TV show. Now, after nearly a decade together, the longtime couple has two kids. July 2009: Jordan and Jeff met on season 11 of "Big Brother" ADVERTISEMENT
October 2009: Lloyd admitted that she had started dating Schroeder "Right after the show, we'd only go about four days before seeing each other,"