And now you know. And knowing is half the battle!Starbucks has exactly two things going for it. They invested very heavily in having all the most convenient locations and I mean all the most convenient locations, and the quality of the coffee is fine. I haven't tried any of their 'coffee themed milkshake' options but the coffee is fine.
If you're on the road and your breakfast coffee has worn off, just go with Dunkin. I'm sure they're just as bad at the corporate level but at least they don't pretend to be something they're not. They're not your friends. They're not saving the planet. The food is not healthy. They're a drive-through fast food joint that sells nothing but junk food and surprisingly high quality coffee.
I wasn’t prepared for how highly caffeinated the coffee was. Made me twitchy and unable to sleep, exacerbating the jet lag from the flight over. Never again.
I haven't.You heard about the Panera Bread lemonade fiasco, right?
I heard there was something up with panera bread lemonade: but was never drunk enough to be willing to look it up.You heard about the Panera Bread lemonade fiasco, right?
Same reason we outlawed weed. It interfered with business interests who had purchased enough politicians.So... why did the US make amphetamines illegal?
A new drug described as “the closest we have ever been to an HIV vaccine” could cost $40 (£31) a year for every patient, a thousand times less than its current price, new research suggests.
Lenacapavir , sold as Sunlenca by US pharmaceutical giant Gilead, currently costs $42,250 for the first year. The company is being urged to make it available at a thousand times less than that price worldwide.
In a study presented at the 25th international Aids conference in Munich on Tuesday, experts calculated that the minimum price for mass production of a generic version, based on the costs of lenacapavir’s ingredients and manufacturing, and allowing for 30% profit, was $40 a year , assuming 10 million people used it annually.