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    Original 'Suicide Squad' director David Ayer responds to James Gunn’s casting announcement

    Gregory Wakeman
    Contributor
    Yahoo Movies UKSeptember 14, 2019
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    Some of the Suicide Squad will return for James Gunn.
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    Some of the Suicide Squad will return for James Gunn.

    Suicide Squad writer and director David Ayer has announced his full support of James Gunn’s upcoming sequel/complete reimagining, The Suicide Squad.

    On Friday afternoon Gunn took to Twitter to reveal the first confirmation of The Suicide Squad’s complete cast. Later that day, Robert Garcia, who is the mayor of Long Beach, California, decided to take to the social media site to thank David Ayer for the original film.

    Read More: John Cena Eyed for ‘Suicide Squad’ Sequel (EXCLUSIVE)

    “Just want to thanks [David Ayer] and the cast and crew of the Suicide Squad movie for creating a rich and amazing universe of characters,” wrote Garcia. “Loved the film, and excited to see the next chapter with many of the same characters. So glad this story will continue.”

    This provoked Ayer to respond with, “On the real I cannot wait to see this movie #TheSuicideSquad.”

    On the real I cannot wait to see this movie #TheSuicideSquad https://t.co/Vz7mg42AYE

    — David Ayer (@DavidAyerMovies) September 14, 2019

    Ayer, who has been hard at work on his upcoming crime thriller The Tax Collector starring Shia LaBeouf, has previously been very open about the various shortcomings of Suicide Squad, admitting that wish he had done numerous things differently with the story, including giving more screen time to Jared Leto’s Joker.

    NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 01: Director David Ayer attends the "Suicide Squad" world premiere at The Beacon Theatre on August 1, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Jim Spellman/WireImage)
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    NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 01: Director David Ayer attends the "Suicide Squad" world premiere at The Beacon Theatre on August 1, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Jim Spellman/WireImage)

    Gunn still has much to thank Ayer for, though. Not only does The Suicide Squad see the return of Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang, Viola Davis as Amanda Waller, Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flag and Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn from the original, but, lest we forget, while the original was savaged by critics it still went on to gross over £596 million ($746.8 million) worldwide.

    Read More: Margot Robbie's 'Birds of Prey' footage shows a 'scrappier Gotham'

    Here’s the full list of James Gunn’s cast for The Suicide Squad.

    Don’t get too attached. #TheSuicideSquad pic.twitter.com/uITPhrDzz2

    — James Gunn (@JamesGunn) September 13, 2019

    We’ll finally get to see what Gunn does with The Suicide Squad when it is released on August 6, 2021.

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    A 5,000-Year-Old Plan to Erase Debts Is Now a Hot Topic in America

    Gisdrunos: Paying off student debt will only reward the overpriced colleges and universities by shifting the demand curve, along with prices, up (with costs to consumers reduced by such pay offs, more will be able "to afford" college - and remembering that demand is not want or need, but want or need accompanied by the ability to pay). The explosion of college costs are result of government aid programs, and giving more aid will only push those costs higher without higher education having to reorder its house and become more efficient and funttional. Richard Vedder, professor of economics emeritus at Ohio University did an interesting interview with Business Insider in which he observed... "More student borrowers might partly explain why government financial-aid programs have grown enormously — but that's also causing tuition increases, according to Vedder. In 1970, financial-aid programs "were almost nonexistent," he said. "Generally, middle-income people didn't get money from the federal government; the large majority of students did not." In 1978, Congress passed a bill known as the Middle Income Student Assistance Act. This made all undergraduates regardless of income class eligible for subsidized loans and middle-income students eligible for Pell Grants, according to NASPA, Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education. More and more students started applying for financial aid, Vedder said. "Knowing that students will get this financial-aid money, the university raises fees and takes advantage to capture that themselves," Vedder explained, referring to an idea known as the Bennett hypothesis. Named for a former education secretary who believed that more government aid for students led directly to college cost increases, the hypothesis is an ongoing topic of political debate. But it has some vertical support in Vedder's eyes. Citing a statistic from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Vedder said that for every new dollar of federal student aid, tuition is raised by 65 cents. Though tuition rose in 1978, so did people's incomes, making the burden of college less than it was in the 1940s, Vedder explained. But between 1978 and 2015, the burden of college began to rise again as tuition fees doubled and economic growth slowed."

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