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#davidrubenstein — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #davidrubenstein, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Jamie Dimon warns that the $38 trillion national debt is ‘not sustainable’ and it’s one of two ‘tectonic plates’ that may crash in the near future

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon issued a stark warning regarding the future of the American economy, identifying the…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #borrowingmoney #Business #DavidRubenstein #FiscalPolicy #JamieDimon #JPMorganChase #nationaldebt #TectonicPlates
    newsbeep.com/us/427110/

  2. Jamie Dimon warns that the $38 trillion national debt is ‘not sustainable’ and it’s one of two ‘tectonic plates’ that may crash in the near future

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon issued a stark warning regarding the future of the American economy, identifying the…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #borrowingmoney #Business #DavidRubenstein #FiscalPolicy #JamieDimon #JPMorganChase #nationaldebt #TectonicPlates
    newsbeep.com/us/427110/

  3. When only violent seditionists, grifters (including family and the occasional jailed politician in the US and elsewhere) are friends of the Administration -

    #trump #sedition #grifters #philanthropy #DavidRubenstein
    #kennedycentre

    When Donald Trump Fired David Rubenstein

    flip.it/SNvWmu

  4. When only violent seditionists, grifters (including family and the occasional jailed politician in the US and elsewhere) are friends of the Administration -


    When Donald Trump Fired David Rubenstein

    flip.it/SNvWmu

  5. Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett was in conversation with David Rubenstein at the National Book Festival this past weekend. From post…

    Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings

    September 9, 2025, Posted by: Neely Tucker

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett took the stage early Saturday morning at the National Book Festival to talk about her new book, “Listening to the Law: Reflection on the Court and Constitution,” to a crowd that filled a ballroom.

    She was the first justice to speak at the book festival since Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the justice she replaced on the nation’s top court.

    Interviewed onstage by festival co-Chairman David M. Rubenstein, Barrett said she wrote the book so that Americans could see how the court works and to “feel pride” as the nation approached its 250th birthday.

    Featured image, generated by WP AI…

    “The drafting of the Constitution has been called the ‘Miracle at Philadelphia,’” she said, referring to the city in which the document was debated and signed in 1787. “And I think it really was a miracle … it has lasted because each generation has taken it and made it its own.”

    Barrett, 53, was a Notre Dame law professor and serving on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Indiana when she was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Trump in 2020, just weeks before the presidential election. (She had been a finalist in 2018, after the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy.)

    Trump, when introducing her as his nominee, described her as “one of our nation’s most brilliant and gifted legal minds.”

    Born in New Orleans, she was the oldest of seven children and now has seven children with her husband, Jesse Barrett. She obtained her law degree at Notre Dame (meeting her husband in the process) and, she told the crowd, the family was happy there before her nomination.

    “My husband and I have plots at Notre Dame in the cemetery there,” she said, “so I really thought that’s where we were going to stay.”

    Her conversation Saturday morning touched on how she comes to her decisions, indicating it’s not a cut and dried process.

    “I try to keep an open mind,” she said. “One thing I try to communicate in this book is that every step of the decision-making process is really important and it matters. So, I go into (judicial) conference knowing what I think, but I do listen to my colleagues, and I will adjust what I think about how we should approach the opinion based on what my colleagues say.”

    Justice Barrett also provided the audience with details about the daily business of the court.

    See also: https://drwebdomain.blog/2025/09/06/amy-coney-barrett-a-deep-dive-into-the-supreme-courts-conservative-pivot-a-special-scotus-series/ For more background on Justice Barrett.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    #2025 #America #Blogs #Books #DavidRubenstein #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #JusticeBarrett #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #NationalBookFestival #Opinion #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Timeless #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

  6. Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett was in conversation with David Rubenstein at the National Book Festival this past weekend. From post…

    Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings

    September 9, 2025, Posted by: Neely Tucker

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett took the stage early Saturday morning at the National Book Festival to talk about her new book, “Listening to the Law: Reflection on the Court and Constitution,” to a crowd that filled a ballroom.

    She was the first justice to speak at the book festival since Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the justice she replaced on the nation’s top court.

    Interviewed onstage by festival co-Chairman David M. Rubenstein, Barrett said she wrote the book so that Americans could see how the court works and to “feel pride” as the nation approached its 250th birthday.

    Featured image, generated by WP AI…

    “The drafting of the Constitution has been called the ‘Miracle at Philadelphia,’” she said, referring to the city in which the document was debated and signed in 1787. “And I think it really was a miracle … it has lasted because each generation has taken it and made it its own.”

    Barrett, 53, was a Notre Dame law professor and serving on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Indiana when she was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Trump in 2020, just weeks before the presidential election. (She had been a finalist in 2018, after the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy.)

    Trump, when introducing her as his nominee, described her as “one of our nation’s most brilliant and gifted legal minds.”

    Born in New Orleans, she was the oldest of seven children and now has seven children with her husband, Jesse Barrett. She obtained her law degree at Notre Dame (meeting her husband in the process) and, she told the crowd, the family was happy there before her nomination.

    “My husband and I have plots at Notre Dame in the cemetery there,” she said, “so I really thought that’s where we were going to stay.”

    Her conversation Saturday morning touched on how she comes to her decisions, indicating it’s not a cut and dried process.

    “I try to keep an open mind,” she said. “One thing I try to communicate in this book is that every step of the decision-making process is really important and it matters. So, I go into (judicial) conference knowing what I think, but I do listen to my colleagues, and I will adjust what I think about how we should approach the opinion based on what my colleagues say.”

    Justice Barrett also provided the audience with details about the daily business of the court.

    See also: https://drwebdomain.blog/2025/09/06/amy-coney-barrett-a-deep-dive-into-the-supreme-courts-conservative-pivot-a-special-scotus-series/ For more background on Justice Barrett.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    #2025 #America #Blogs #Books #DavidRubenstein #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #JusticeBarrett #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #NationalBookFestival #Opinion #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Timeless #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

  7. Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett was in conversation with David Rubenstein at the National Book Festival this past weekend. From post…

    Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings

    September 9, 2025, Posted by: Neely Tucker

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett took the stage early Saturday morning at the National Book Festival to talk about her new book, “Listening to the Law: Reflection on the Court and Constitution,” to a crowd that filled a ballroom.

    She was the first justice to speak at the book festival since Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the justice she replaced on the nation’s top court.

    Interviewed onstage by festival co-Chairman David M. Rubenstein, Barrett said she wrote the book so that Americans could see how the court works and to “feel pride” as the nation approached its 250th birthday.

    Featured image, generated by WP AI…

    “The drafting of the Constitution has been called the ‘Miracle at Philadelphia,’” she said, referring to the city in which the document was debated and signed in 1787. “And I think it really was a miracle … it has lasted because each generation has taken it and made it its own.”

    Barrett, 53, was a Notre Dame law professor and serving on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Indiana when she was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Trump in 2020, just weeks before the presidential election. (She had been a finalist in 2018, after the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy.)

    Trump, when introducing her as his nominee, described her as “one of our nation’s most brilliant and gifted legal minds.”

    Born in New Orleans, she was the oldest of seven children and now has seven children with her husband, Jesse Barrett. She obtained her law degree at Notre Dame (meeting her husband in the process) and, she told the crowd, the family was happy there before her nomination.

    “My husband and I have plots at Notre Dame in the cemetery there,” she said, “so I really thought that’s where we were going to stay.”

    Her conversation Saturday morning touched on how she comes to her decisions, indicating it’s not a cut and dried process.

    “I try to keep an open mind,” she said. “One thing I try to communicate in this book is that every step of the decision-making process is really important and it matters. So, I go into (judicial) conference knowing what I think, but I do listen to my colleagues, and I will adjust what I think about how we should approach the opinion based on what my colleagues say.”

    Justice Barrett also provided the audience with details about the daily business of the court.

    See also: https://drwebdomain.blog/2025/09/06/amy-coney-barrett-a-deep-dive-into-the-supreme-courts-conservative-pivot-a-special-scotus-series/ For more background on Justice Barrett.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    #2025 #America #Blogs #Books #DavidRubenstein #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #JusticeBarrett #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #NationalBookFestival #Opinion #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Timeless #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

  8. Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett was in conversation with David Rubenstein at the National Book Festival this past weekend. From post…

    Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings

    September 9, 2025, Posted by: Neely Tucker

    Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett took the stage early Saturday morning at the National Book Festival to talk about her new book, “Listening to the Law: Reflection on the Court and Constitution,” to a crowd that filled a ballroom.

    She was the first justice to speak at the book festival since Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the justice she replaced on the nation’s top court.

    Interviewed onstage by festival co-Chairman David M. Rubenstein, Barrett said she wrote the book so that Americans could see how the court works and to “feel pride” as the nation approached its 250th birthday.

    Featured image, generated by WP AI…

    “The drafting of the Constitution has been called the ‘Miracle at Philadelphia,’” she said, referring to the city in which the document was debated and signed in 1787. “And I think it really was a miracle … it has lasted because each generation has taken it and made it its own.”

    Barrett, 53, was a Notre Dame law professor and serving on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Indiana when she was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Trump in 2020, just weeks before the presidential election. (She had been a finalist in 2018, after the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy.)

    Trump, when introducing her as his nominee, described her as “one of our nation’s most brilliant and gifted legal minds.”

    Born in New Orleans, she was the oldest of seven children and now has seven children with her husband, Jesse Barrett. She obtained her law degree at Notre Dame (meeting her husband in the process) and, she told the crowd, the family was happy there before her nomination.

    “My husband and I have plots at Notre Dame in the cemetery there,” she said, “so I really thought that’s where we were going to stay.”

    Her conversation Saturday morning touched on how she comes to her decisions, indicating it’s not a cut and dried process.

    “I try to keep an open mind,” she said. “One thing I try to communicate in this book is that every step of the decision-making process is really important and it matters. So, I go into (judicial) conference knowing what I think, but I do listen to my colleagues, and I will adjust what I think about how we should approach the opinion based on what my colleagues say.”

    Justice Barrett also provided the audience with details about the daily business of the court.

    See also: https://drwebdomain.blog/2025/09/06/amy-coney-barrett-a-deep-dive-into-the-supreme-courts-conservative-pivot-a-special-scotus-series/ For more background on Justice Barrett.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Justice Barrett Offers Insight Into Court’s Inner Workings | Timeless

    #2025 #America #Blogs #Books #DavidRubenstein #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #JusticeBarrett #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #NationalBookFestival #Opinion #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Timeless #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates