I'd like to say hello to everyone. The summer is full of activity. The latest Covid variant is the same as the previous one. The lifeguards are sick at home so I would dive into the pool to escape it.

There is a plain view.

How did you get into financial trouble? Bill wanted to know.

Mike said it would be two ways. Then suddenly.

The Sun Also Rises was written by Ernest Hemingway. About halfway into the book, it comes. While waiting for a bullfight, Mike Campbell says that he is going to be rich as hell one day. That doesn't get more Hemingway than that. This off-the-cuff quip could have startled Papa.

That's what happened. It's possible that a decades-old literary phrase is embedded in the collective mind. The circumstances of a posthumous zeitgeist make their clauses compelling. They are invoked in many pieces of writing. William Butler Yeats used to be the king of this hill, with a phrase from his poem, "The Second Coming" You couldn't get through a week without tripping across someone who invoked the famous line from Yeats.

It is clear that the center is not holding. We're focused on the rate at which things are collapsing. The four-word description of Campbell's financial decline by Hemingway has become a cult classic. Collapse we all feel is happening around us after the center fails to hold. It is happening in two different ways.

Everywhere it is. If you type "Hemingway bankrupt" into the search box, you'll get more than 2000 links in your browser. As Hemingway said, we age very slowly and then all at once. A reviewer for the New York Times talked about a split between two characters in a novel. People are apologizing for the quote when it comes to the stock market andcryptocurrencies. One commentator wrote last October that we must have already used that Hemingway-inspired phrase at least a dozen times. Three commentators invoked that quote as Boris Johnson resigned as UK prime minister.