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Devoting your life to making money can leave you lonely and aimless, Matthew McConaughey says. The actor warned against chasing cash at the cost of relationships and other valuable parts of life.
The phrase Follow the money was mentioned by Henry E. Peterson at the 1974 Senate Judiciary Committee hearings as Earl J. Silbert was nominated to U.S. Attorney. [3] A 1975 book by Clive Borrell and Brian Cashinella, Crime in Britain Today, also uses the phrase.
If you didn’t touch that money for a whole year, by 2024, you’d have $1,010. You might think, Oh, that’s great, I made money by doing nothing. But in reality, that $1,010 is worth only $981. ...
In his 2011 book, Rudy: My Story, Ruettiger writes of his dealings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and settlement for alleged securities fraud, stating, "I fell into the same obvious trap the rest of the country had fallen into in all of those boom years" and "I shouldn't have been chasing the money."
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Although Franklin is not the progenitor of the phrase, his usage is the most famous, especially in the United States. [2] Earlier versions from the 18th century include a line in Daniel Defoe's The Political History of the Devil (1726), [3] and a quotation from The Cobbler of Preston by Christopher Bullock (1716), which is the earliest known iteration.
The Way to Wealth or Father Abraham's Sermon is an essay written by Benjamin Franklin in 1758. It is a collection of adages and advice presented in Poor Richard's Almanack during its first 25 years of publication, organized into a speech given by "Father Abraham" to a group of people.
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