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Governor Of California PANICS As PepsiCo Closes Last Plant!

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Beverage maker Pepsi is [music] shutting

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down its manufacturing facility on

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>> a lot of a big group of people just

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thrown out your service. Nothing.

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>> So about 150 workers will be out of a

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job come the new year after PepsiCo

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announced [music]

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production operations will end.

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>> I've never seen something like this.

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[music] A big company acting this way is

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deplorable. California's governor is

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scrambling as PepsiCo shuts down its

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final plant in the state. When a company

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that's been operating for generations

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pulls the plug overnight, wiping out

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hundreds of union jobs without warning,

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it exposes how fragile the state's

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economic control really is. PepsiCo has

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confirmed multiple plant closures as

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part of a nationwide restructuring

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driven by falling snack demand, rising

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costs, and aggressive corporate

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consolidation.

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>> The Pepsi plant has been here gosh,

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since I was a child. Um, and I I know

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that they have been big sponsors in the

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community over the years. They have

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sponsored those [music] little league

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teams. Thursday, employees arrived to

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work to find out that history will be

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ending soon.

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>> PepsiCo closed long operating plants

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with immediate effect, catching workers

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off guard as they arrived for normal

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shifts and were told within minutes that

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operations were permanently ending.

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These facilities had been running for

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decades and were deeply tied to local

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economies, making the sudden closures

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especially disruptive. The second shift

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of workers got the news.

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>> I have a daughter in school. I have a

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house. You know, come on. Uh, y'all

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can't do people like that. Y'all a big

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company. At least give us a heads up.

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>> Employees who were working at the end of

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the week found themselves unemployed by

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the next with no advanced notice and no

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opportunity to prepare. The speed of the

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shutdowns matters because it shows how

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quickly a major corporation can erase

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stable, long-term jobs through a single

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internal decision. Today, workers were

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notified when they arrived to work they

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would be off the job as of today, but

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get pay and benefits for 60 days.

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>> When closures happen this fast, the

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impact goes beyond workers. Cities lose

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employers overnight, and state

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leadership is left reacting after the

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damage is already done, exposing how

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little control governments have once

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corporate decisions are finalized.

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>> Everybody doesn't know how they're going

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to take care of their kids. They don't

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know how they're going to put the kids

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through school and stuff like that. So,

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it's a shock to everybody right now. I'm

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still in shock.

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>> What makes these shutdowns alarming is

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that they are not isolated to one city

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or one bad facility. PepsiCo has

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confirmed multiple plant closures and

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production shutdowns across California,

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Florida, New York, and Illinois,

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signaling a coordinated pullback rather

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than a local failure. Several of these

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sites were long-standing operations,

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some running for more than half a

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century. And in multiple cases,

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manufacturing was eliminated entirely

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while limited warehouse or distribution

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functions remained. That pattern matters

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because it shows PepsiCo shrinking its

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US manufacturing footprint by design,

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not reacting to a single problem. Today,

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a Pepsi bottling plant that [music] has

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been in Chicago for decades closed

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unexpectedly. Shocked employees at that

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southside plant are suddenly unemployed.

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Once closures appear across multiple

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states at the same time, the message

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changes. This stops being a regional

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labor issue and becomes a national

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restructuring move. One that puts

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pressure on state leaders who now have

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to explain why legacy employers are

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disappearing on their watch.

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>> There is a lot of uncertainty for about

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a 100 workers at the Muny PepsiCo

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distribution center. The company just

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announced plans to close that location.

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[music] PepsiCo's own performance shows

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why these closures are happening now.

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The company has reported weaker snack

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demand in North America with consumers

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buying fewer traditional chips and

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packaged snacks as prices rise and

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habits change. At the same time,

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operating costs have climbed. Energy,

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transportation, labor, and compliance

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costs have made older, less efficient

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plants harder to justify, especially

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when corporate leadership is under

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pressure to protect margins. PepsiCo has

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responded by consolidating production

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into fewer facilities and trimming what

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it makes. PepsiCo will offer more budget

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friendly snacks, launch cleaner and high

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protein options, [music] and cut costs

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next year. To do so, it plans to close

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some plants and trim about 20% of its

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products.

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>> This is not a short-term pause. PepsiCo

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has signaled a broader reset by planning

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to cut nearly 20% of its US product

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lineup by 2026, showing that these

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shutdowns are tied to a long-term

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restructuring strategy, not a temporary

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slowdown. These closures didn't happen

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in a vacuum. PepsiCo has been under

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sustained pressure from large investors,

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including activist funds, to cut costs,

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streamline operations, and improve

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returns as growth slows.

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>> The company has been coming under

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pressure from investor Elliott

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Management just rolled out a new plan to

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boost [music] profits.

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>> That pressure changes how decisions are

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made. Instead of gradual adjustments,

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companies move fast, shut

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underperforming assets, and prioritize

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financial efficiency over workforce

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stability. Speed becomes a feature, not

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a mistake. When investor demands set the

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timeline, communities and workers are no

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longer part of the equation. The result

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is abrupt shutdowns that satisfy

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shareholders while leaving cities and

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state leaders scrambling to manage the

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fallout.

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>> Yeah, they were ready to go to work out.

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They found out at about 5:45 this

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morning that this decades old Pepsi

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plant was going to be closed for good.

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The workers affected by these closures

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are not easily replaceable. These plants

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employed unionized, long tenured

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workers, many with 20 to 30 years of

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service, earning stable wages that

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supported families and entire

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neighborhoods. These are manufacturing

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and logistics jobs that do not transfer

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cleanly into today's job market. Most

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workers are mid-career or late career,

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meaning retraining is harder, relocation

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is costly, and comparable pay is rare.

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Losing these positions creates long-term

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damage, not short-term disruption. Pepsi

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says the building is pretty old, has its

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physical limitations, and these

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employees are trying to figure out what

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they're going to do next. When jobs like

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these disappear, the impact spreads

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quickly. Local spending drops, small

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businesses feel it, and communities

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built around steady industrial work lose

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their economic anchor almost overnight.

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A significant portion of the displaced

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workforce was near retirement. Workers

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in their late 50s lost positions they

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expected to hold for the remainder of

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their careers, forcing an unexpected

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return to the job market with limited

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options at similar pay levels.

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>> Says he worked as a forklift operator at

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this back of the yards Pepsi plant. But

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Gonzalez and several other employees

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were told this morning that the plant

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was shutting down. This timing sharply

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increases the damage of the closures.

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Retirement plans built over decades are

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interrupted. Income stability is lost

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and financial obligations such as

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healthcare and education remain fixed

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while earnings disappear. And guys, make

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sure to subscribe, like, and comment why

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you like this video for a chance to win

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a new Apple MacBook.

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