Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Vale Jon Kudelka / The Epstein Files as a Weapon in the Conflict Over Currency and the “Central Domain”


My sincere condolences to Jon Kudelka's family, friends, and all who knew and loved this most wonderful human. What an extraordinary contribution he made to Australian society; we are all the better for it.


Vale Jon

Professor Euan Ritchie


... Kudelka is a Czech surname


Jon Kudelka, Walkley-winning Tasmanian cartoonist, dies from brain cancer


I have no doubt that Epstein, MAGA, Brexit, AFD, FN, Reform, are all Russian intelligence projects.

~ Timothy Ash

 

Epstein Emails Expose How America’s Elites Really See the Rest of Us Egberto Off The Record

 

Who entered Epstein’s jail tier the night of his death? Newly released video logs appear to contradict official accounts. CBS News. “An orange-colored shape.”

 

From Putin’s Kiss to Jeffrey Epstein The After-Action Report. Another alleged blackmail ring, this one operating in Silicon Valley.


You’re Paying Taxes to Billionaire Pedophiles Who Bomb and Maybe Eat Children Charles McBryde


Epstein’s “wild” party with Zuckerberg, Musk, and Thiel Oligarch Watch


The Epstein Files Are Hazing You Into The Pedo Gang indi.ca (resilc)


The Plutocrats Who Rule Our World Aren’t Even Enjoying Themselves Caitlin Johnstone 

Monday, February 09, 2026

Delhi police bust government impersonation call center, arrest 55

  China executes 11 organized crime members linked to Myanmar scam compounds

 
China executes four more from scam compounds
 
India: Nigerian Yahoo boy, member of Black Axe, arrested for murdering his accomplice with a shovel and cutting off his head in dispute over $1000 in fraud proceeds

Texas: Law enforcement raids Indian-owned jewelry shop used to launder gold received from fraud victims who had been told they needed to keep money “safe” in call from LE impersonators; $55 million involved
 
Identity Theft Resource Center releases annual report; data breaches up 79% over the last five years; number of ID theft victims fell sharply from 1.36 billion in 2024 to 278.8 million in 2025; ransomware was also down
 
83 year old man in Ohio who shot and killed an Uber driver who came to pick up money from grandparent scam gets 21 years prison
 
DOJ announces creation of new civil division and affirmative litigation branch; consolidates consumer issues
 
New scams in old bottles:  Years ago it was common for scammers to sell rare coins as great investments. Coins are graded on an MS scale, and for those most valuable it is very difficult for most of us to determine the difference in grade ourselves. Thus the scammers bought cheaper coins, claimed that they were a higher grade, and urged consumers to simply lock them away and wait for them to appreciate – which of course they never did.  The key was lying about the grading of the coins.
 
Of course no scam really goes away.  Now scammers are misgrading trading cards.  A jury in New York recently convicted  Anthony Curcio of meticulously faking grades to boost the value of big-dollar trading cards, including Pokémon trading cards and an iconic Michael Jordan rookie card, to rip off buyers seeking collectibles in prime condition.  His co-defendant, Iosif “Joe” Bondarchuk, had previously pleaded guilty for his role in the $2 million scam.
 
Curcio, youth sports coach, motivational speaker working with youth in the field of drug abuse and crime prevention, is a five time best-selling author of children books, and convicted bank robber for a Brinks armored car heist.

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraud, romance fraud; BEC fraud, sweepstakes/lottery fraud tech support fraud, romance fraud money mules, crooked movers, government imposters, online vehicle sale scams, rental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the worldHumor
  • Actual dumb question by a lawyer:   ATTORNEY: Doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse? WITNESS: No. ATTORNEY: Did you check for blood pressure? WITNESS: No. ATTORNEY: Did you check for breathing? WITNESS: No.. ATTORNEY: So, then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy? WITNESS: No. ATTORNEY: How can you be so sure, Doctor? WITNESS: Because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar. ATTORNEY: I see, but could the patient have still been alive, nevertheless? WITNESS: Yes, it is possible that he could have been alive and practicing law.
FTC and CFPBBenefit Theft Business Email compromise fraud Bitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesJamaica and Lottery FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion 

‘I don’t think I am a hero’: Boy, 13, describes ‘superhuman’ swim to save family

We photograph things in order to drive them out of our minds. My stories are a way of shutting my eyes.
- Franz Kafka


 ‘I don’t think I am a hero’: Boy, 13, describes ‘superhuman’ swim to save family BBC


What One Australian Teen Did to Save His Family Is Superhuman.“A 13-year-old boy from Australia has gone viral after a superhuman display of heroics rescued his family after they drifted out to sea. And this is one of a million reasons why you won’t catch this writer out on the ocean or any other large body of water. That, and an irrational fear of giant squid. I don’t care what anyone says, the kraken is real.”

I don’t know about the kraken, but I sometimes miss living by the ocean.


The Tour Down Under’s winner won despite being blasted off his bike by kangaroos. “Two of them blasted through the peloton when we were doing probably 50 kph and…went left, right, left right, left right and I ended up hitting its backside.”


Ultra-processed foods should be treated more like cigarettes than food – study Guardian. “‘UPFs are made to encourage addiction and consumption and should be regulated like tobacco, say researchers.'”


Nipah Virus Has Asia on High Alert Amid New Cases in India NBC. No cases in Thailand but monitoring has been tightened further. Nipha has a fatality rate of >


 The early-retirement trap: How to avoid loneliness, boredom and ‘wet leaf syndrome’ 

The early-retirement trap: How to avoid loneliness, boredom and ‘wet leaf syndrome’ Quitting work earlier in life is the ultimate goal for many. But the reality can be a brutal letdown. 

Sue Williams


 Litany of FAA Faults Found in Potomac Crash
The New York Times
 NYC creating a “secret” underground utilties map
Gothamist
 Vulnerabilities Surge, Messy Reporting Blurs Picture
Robert Lemos
 Trump's acting cyber-chief uploaded sensitive files into a public version of ChatGPT
Politico
 Russian Hackers Believed Behind December Cyberattacks on Polish Energy Targets
A.J. Vicens
 Microsoft Gave FBI Keys to Unlock Encrypted Data
Thomas Brewster
 Why AI Can't Make Thoughtful Decisions
Blair Effron
 China Trains AI-Controlled Weapons with Learning from Animals
Josh Chin
 Misleading Text in the Physical World Can Hijack AI-Enabled Robots
Emily Cerf
 Risks of AI in Schools Outweigh Benefits
Cory Turner
 AI hallucination reveals in part how bad WMP botched their risk assessment
Peter Campbell
 AI error sent some ICE recruits into field offices without proper training
NBC News
 Waymo Probed by NTSB over Illegal School Bus Behavior
Sean O'Kane
 Congress Passes Bill to Fund U.S. Science Agencies
Evan Bush
 Daily Beast and other outlets are reporting the supposed leak of thousands of personal details for ICE and other immigration related agents
Boris Patro—Raw Story
 Never-before-seen Linux malware is “far more advanced than typical”
ArsTechnica
 I think I found what caused yesterday's Verizon outage.
Reddit
 Many Bluetooth devices with Google Fast Pair vulnerable to WhisperPair hack eavesdrop
Ars Technica
 Starlink tries to stay online in Iran as regime jams signals during protests
Ars Technica
 Microsoft Copilot misinformation is the source of a career-limiting international incident
The Guardian
 Script of my national radio report yesterday on the damage being done to communities by AI data centers, and the effect of AI strangling the supply of DRAM
Lauren Weinstein
 How to slow down the AI Horror
Lauren Weinstein
 Verizon outage: With service restored, here's everything that's happened so far
Tech Radar
 Google's fear of anything like an Ombudsman
Lauren Weinstein
 Exclusive: Volvo tells us why having Gemini in your next car is a good thing
Ars Technica
 A single click mounted a covert, multistage attack against Copilot
Ars Technica
 Tech giants face landmark trial over social media addiction claims
BBC
 He let ChatGPT analyze a decade of his Apple Watch data. Then he called his doctor.
WashPost
 The AI Shopping Wars Are Here
NY Mag via Steve Bacher
 AI-Powered Disinformation Swarms Are Coming for Democracy
WiReD
 Google appeals landmark antitrust verdict over search monopoly
BBC
 Re: How AI Undermines Education
Martin Ward
 Re: Thieves are stealing keyless cars in minutes. Here's how to protect your vehicle
John Levine
 Info on RISKS (comp.risks)



Jeffrey Epstein helped Russian spies collect blackmail 'kompromat'

 The CIA has deleted the CIA World Factbook(a popular almanac about the countries of the world) from the web. Fuck this. All these assholes do is pillage & destroy.


Epstein Emails Expose How America’s Elites Really See the Rest of Us Egberto Off The Record

 

Who entered Epstein’s jail tier the night of his death? Newly released video logs appear to contradict official accounts. CBS News. “An orange-colored shape.”

 

From Putin’s Kiss to Jeffrey Epstein The After-Action Report. Another alleged blackmail ring, this one operating in Silicon Valley.


Epstein received ‘not a girl not yet a woman’ photos from friend in Sydney

Epstein received ‘not a girl not yet a woman’ photos from friend in Sydney Michael Koziol

February 6, 2026 — 

Washington: Paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein received photos from a friend who was living in Sydney and described the pictures as “the most sensual and ‘im not a girl not yet a woman’ style photos” she had ever taken. Emails released by the US Department of Justice as part of the Epstein files reveal the convicted sex offender was contacted by a female friend – whose name was redacted – in March 2012, seemingly while she was studying in Sydney.


Jeffrey Epstein helped Russian spies collect blackmail 'kompromat' on western elites for DECADES says former MI6 agent Steele


The Mandelson-Epstein scandal is also the Mandelson-Palantir scandal. MP @alexburghart asks why Keir Starmer’s visit to Palantir’s office in Washington - arranged by Mandelson while his firm repped Palantir - was kept off books.

The Mandelson affair: inside the scandal of a century The New Statesman


Revealed: Palantir deals with UK state total at least £670m – including £15m contract with nuclear weapons agency


Epstein Geopolitics And the Age of Primitive Accumulation Un-Diplomatic


Putin envoy dismisses Polish PM’s claim Epstein scandal was Russian operation Polskie Radio


Newly released Epstein files reveal further ties to Israel Mondoweiss



Effective tax rates for billionaires


A blueprint for a coordinated minimum effective taxation standard for ultra-high-net-worth individuals


The Library of Congress at a Crossroads: Executive Overreach and the Future of Public Knowledge

Street, Leslie and Runyon, Amanda, The Library of Congress at a Crossroads: Executive Overreach and the Future of Public Knowledge (January 25, 2026). U of Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 26-07, Seattle University Law Review Online & Seattle Journal of Technology, Environment, & Innovation Law, forthcoming, 2026, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6155010 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.6155010 

In May 2025, President Trump’s removal of the Librarian of Congress and attempted removal of the Register of Copyrights precipitated a constitutional crisis that exposed fundamental structural vulnerabilities in the nation’s knowledge infrastructure. This Article argues that the Library of Congress faces a dual threat: a constitutional breach of separation of powers and a cultural threat to the preservation of America’s intellectual heritage. The Library’s structural ambiguity — its simultaneous identity as a legislative library, national library, and copyright agency — has left it vulnerable to executive overreach that threatens both constitutional integrity and its role as custodian of national memory. 

Drawing on separation-of-powers doctrine, mandatory deposit jurisprudence, and the emerging Supreme Court framework on presidential removal authority, this Article demonstrates that the Copyright Office’s exercise of executive functions within a legislative institution creates irreconcilable constitutional tensions. The D.C. Circuit’s decision in Valancourt Books further undermines the mandatory deposit system that has sustained the Library’s comprehensive collections for over 150 years. To resolve these crises, this Article proposes a comprehensive three-part legislative solution: 

(1) modernizing mandatory deposit to authorize electronic submissions and create constitutional protections through voluntary compliance mechanisms; (2) codifying the Library’s status as a wholly legislative branch entity with congressional appointment of the Librarian; and (3) severing the Copyright Office from the Library and relocating it to the Executive Branch. Without decisive congressional action, the erosion of the Library’s statutory independence threatens the constitutional balance of powers, the preservation of American cultural heritage, and the future of public knowledge in a democratic society.


Yet another tax slug’: Howard, Costello pan capital gains proposal Luke Kinsella and John Kehoe

 

Yet another tax slug’: Howard, Costello pan capital gains proposal 
Luke Kinsella and John Kehoe
Feb 6, 2026

Former Reserve Bank of Australia governor Bernie Fraser supports paring back the capital gains tax discount for investment properties, while former Liberal prime minister John Howard and treasurer Peter Costello say it would hurt the aspirational middle class and be used as cover to pay for Labor’s uncontrolled spending.

The Albanese government is considering replacing the 50 per cent discount for capital gains with a less generous concession to address concerns about intergenerational inequity and housing affordability, The Australian Financial Review revealed this week.
Peter Costello was the federal treasurer when the government introduced the capital gains tax discount. Eamon Gallagher
Howard said this would not be tax reform. “It would be yet another tax slug by the Albanese government which lazily leans on the [Australian Taxation Office] to provide extra revenue,” he told AFR Weekend. “It would hurt the aspirational middle class.”
The Howard-Costello Coalition government introduced the CGT discount in 1999 during its second term in office.

Costello, the nation’s longest-serving treasurer, said Labor was not interested in serious tax reform.
After 25 years, what is driving the higher capital gains tax agenda is not a wish to improve the tax system but an attempt to cover for out of control spending,” he said.
“Increasing capital gains tax rates combined with high marginal tax rates will make Australia quite uncompetitive in the region and will just be another nail in the dismal productivity performance of the Australian economy.”
While in opposition in 2019, Labor under then-leader Bill Shorten proposed reducing the discount to 25 per cent, as well as curtailing negative gearing, franking credits and increasing taxes on trusts. But since Labor lost that year’s election the party had not seriously revisited the policy until now, as it prepares the May budget.
Bernie Fraser, the only Australian to have served as both Treasury secretary and RBA governor, said he had always opposed the 50 per cent discount on capital gains.
“From day one, I’ve argued against the bloody thing,” said Fraser, who led the RBA during the Hawke-Keating era.
“I was always disappointed when Labor tried to do something about it [in 2019], there was a big reaction in the polls. Unfortunately, rather than argue the case, they threw the towel in altogether. One has to be more persistent and determined in making the case. But they gave up straight away.”
Fraser proposed removing any capital gains tax discount for investment properties, but was more open to a discount for other assets such as shares.
“Housing should primarily be for living in and to raise a family, rather than for wealthy investors,” he said. “It’s a pity that all this money has gone into capital gains concessions to people who don’t really need it.”
Bernie Fraser has proposed removing any capital gains tax discount for investment properties. Alex Ellinghausen
Costello said the current 50 per cent discount still left investors facing a relatively high tax rate compared to overseas.
“New Zealand’s capital gains tax is zero, Singapore’s is zero and the top rate of American capital gains tax is 20 per cent,” Costello said. The maximum capital gains tax rate in Australia is effectively 23.5 per cent for assets held longer than 12 months and sold by high earners.
In an appeal to Labor’s support base, Costello also warned eradicating concessions could hurt superannuation funds, which are currently eligible for a one-third discount under the reforms he introduced – meaning funds currently pay a capital gains tax rate of 10 per cent, instead of 15 per cent.
“There is no way you could quarantine superannuation funds from tax increases that everyone else gets,” Costello said.
But the Grattan Institute’s Brendan Coates said superannuation funds were already taxed separately to individual income earners.
“It’s already a separate income tax system for super funds. Earnings are taxed at the fund level, rather than the hands of the individual,” he said, adding that the government could keep the discount for superannuation funds at 33 per cent while reducing it for individual investors.
“There’s a good case of having a lower tax rate on [capital gains] than what there is on ordinary income. Some discount is justified. It’s just that the 50 per cent has been too generous.”
Outlook Economics director Peter Downes, who worked at Treasury when the discount was introduced in 1999, said the government needed to consider the impact on renters of any change to the CGT regime.
“If you increase a tax on property investors, they withdraw investment from the property market, which means there are fewer properties to rent and rents go up,” Downes said.
“With rents higher, there are more owner occupiers looking to buy because servicing a mortgage looks more attractive than paying a rent.”
The Financial Review reported on Friday that one option under consideration by Labor was returning to the Keating era by replacing the 50 per cent capital gains discount for investors with a less generous deduction based on the cumulative increase in inflation over the life of an asset.
Costello said the pre-1999 system of indexing the cost base of assets to inflation each year was very complex and the 50 per cent discount was far simpler for taxpayers to calculate.
Government sources said nothing had been settled yet, let alone taken to cabinet.
Other options include a flat rate deduction lower than 50 per cent, potentially only applying the less generous arrangements to investment properties given younger voters’ concerns about housing affordability and missing out at auctions to landlords.
Labor luminary Bill Kelty was reported in the Financial Review last month as saying most wealthy people earned capital gains and paid far lower tax rates than did wage and salary earners.
“Most people who are rich, they take money in capital gains and don’t pay 50 per cent. The maximum rate someone pays is 23 per cent when they transfer the money into capital,” he said. “How fair is that?”
Kelty did not call for a tax increase in capital gains, but said big income tax cuts for working-age people should be provided but not extended to wealthier people with assets such as investment properties, shares and trusts.
A Senate committee is examining the capital gains tax discount and is due to finalise its report by March 17.
The Parliamentary Budget Office estimated, in analysis finalised last month but released on Thursday, that the discount was worth about $247 billion in lost revenue to the budget over 10 years, or about $20 billion every year.
Economists recommend reducing the discount to 25 or 33 per cent, or to index asset prices to inflation for the purpose of calculating one’s tax liability.
The PBO’s estimate does not consider when investors target other assets in response to a lower discount.
If assets like property which promise large capital gains were taxed more, investors could shift funds to other assets such as bonds or term deposits. The government would lose capital gains tax revenue, but that would be partially offset by more tax on other forms on income, such as interest.
The Grattan Institute estimated that dropping the discount to 25 per cent, without any grandfathering for investors who had already purchased assets such as property or shares, would cost around $6.5 billion each year (which includes the effect of switching assets).
Teal independent MP Allegra Spender welcomed the government’s consideration of reform to the discount, but said it should be a part of a broader package of tax reform that is not a mere revenue raising drive.
“Any tax measures the Government takes should be revenue neutral and put money back in the pockets of people trying to get ahead,” she said.

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