Media Dragon
Daily Dose of Dust
Jozef Imrich, name worthy of Kafka, has his finger on the pulse of any irony of interest and shares his findings to keep you in-the-know with the savviest trend setters and infomaniacs.
''I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center.''
-Kurt Vonnegut
Powered by His Story: Cold River
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Hot-button’: Report to Waverley Council proposes $300 driveway tax in new parking plan
Polymarket hosts a future hellscape
Decades of data suggest people who stick to a couple of brews fare better in terms of gray matter
I'm not eloquent enough to write well about complex tax landscapes, but we live on one planet and the price of civilisation is taxation …
Norway's Wealth Tax Unchains a Capital Exodus
Pope questioning Elon Musk's massive wealth, saying, "If that is the only thing that has value anymore, then we're in big trouble."
10 Hacks Every Bluesky User Should Know
Lifehacker: “If you’re tired of X and Threads, it might be time to move to greener, or perhaps bluer, pastures. Lifehacker’s own Joel Cunningham moved to Bluesky way back in 2024, and since then, a lot of our writers and editors have followed suit and are living it up over on the butterfly site.
It turns out that, with the right platform, it’s possible to like social media again. Bluesky is quite unlike most other social media networks. You have a lot of control over who sees your posts and how they reply to them, plus you can block and mute users en masse and tweak moderation settings just so. If you’re new to Bluesky, or if you’ve just been using the default settings, it’s time to dig deeper into all the ways you can customize your experience
Polymarket hosts a future hellscape
Protos – “Polymarket, a prediction market platform owned by New York-based company Blockratize, currently has open assassination markets on its website. They’re easy to find because they’re some of the most heavily traded markets on the platform. Among these markets are:
- Iran leader by end of 2026? (the current Ayatollah is on the list)
- Will the Iranian regime fall by (numerous dates available to bet on)?
- Will the Iranian regime survive US military strikes?
So-called “assassination markets” are some of the most heavily traded markets on Polymarket. Despite the death of Ayatollah Khamenei being among the most popular prediction markets, Kalshi, as per its terms and conditions, didn’t pay out when he died. Polymarket, however, did, and half a billion dollars changed hands in the process..
Donald Trump and US politicians noticeably absent. Polymarket seems to purposely avoid including US politicians or the current US president in any possible assassination markets, but the same cannot be said for nearly every other major leader in the world…it’s almost certainly down to the fact that Polymarket is based in the US, that its founder, Shayne Coplan, is a US citizen, and that Donald Trump Jr. is an advisor to and investor in the company…the Biden administration had effectively stopped Polymarket from advertising to or onboarding US citizens. These hinderances to the platform’s growth came to end in 2025 thanks to the Trump administration dropping multiple probes into its practices, which could have led to lawsuits and possible criminal prosecutions. Instead, Polymarket now finds itself at the forefront of a world where leaders of countries have public hits put on them via vague market questions that leave murder open as an interpretation and solution.
Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases
Speaking truth to common sense
The web of offshore companies that allowed Chelsea to cheat the system
As FA chairman at time of rule breaches says club got off lightly with sanctions, we take closer look at £47m secret payments that helped secure star players such as Eden Hazard
Gullible, Cynical America. “They’ll insist that you can’t trust scientists, because they’re part of the conspiracy. The podcaster selling you his special creatine gummies, though? He seems trustworthy.”
Warriors’ Casino: The People Making A Killing Gambling On War Racket News
Wyden Sounds Alarm as DAG Blanche Intervenes to Conceal Details of Mystery Epstein InvestigationUnited States Senate Committee on Finance
The Morally-Challenged In Charge. Aurelien
Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases
Bloomberg, Bloomberg: UK Yields Record £3.4 Billion from Transfer Pricing Cases:
The UK’s transfer pricing revenue almost doubled to £3.4 billion ($4.6 billion) in 2024-25 from a year earlier, reaching the highest annual level ever, official data showed Wednesday.
Tax revenue raised from settling transfer pricing cases rose from £1.8 billion in 2023-24, as the number of settled inquiries rose to 143 from 128, according to His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs’ annual data. The jump is mainly attributable to a small number of very high-value cases completed last year.
The average age of settled transfer pricing inquiries during the latest period increased to 41 months in 2024-25 from 33.1 months in the previous year.
Larsen & Oats: Crossing Borders, Sharing Burdens
Lotta Björklund Larsen & Lynne Oats, Crossing Borders, Sharing Burdens: Rethinking Taxation and Migration as Fiscal Belonging (2026) (open access pdf/ePub):
Tax matters. It structures our societies, influences our choices, and reflects our values. Yet the meaning and impact of taxation are constantly changing in step with a world marked by climate transitions, demographic shifts, digitalisation, globalisation, and migration.
Did Trump Official Go Too Far?
First Amendment Watch reports how the Office of Disciplinary Counsel of the D.C. Bar has accused Ed Martin, the former interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, of potential misconduct based on a letter he sent to Georgetown Law Dean William Treanor threatening not to hire any Georgetown students unless Georgetown ceased all DEI initiatives. Mr. Martin is now the DOJ pardon attorney.
Bessent’s Term as Acting IRS Commissioner Expires
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s 210-day stint as Acting IRS Commissioner expired in early March 2026. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act precludes Bessent from continuing in that specific temporary role.
Monday, March 23, 2026
How the APS is navigating the rise in WFH surveillance
How the APS is navigating the rise in WFH surveillance

Electronic Surveillance Under Scrutiny as Trump Targets Left Wing Groups as “Domestic Terrorists”
“For the first time, journalists and researchers have a searchable directory of over 1,500 of the world’s knowledge repositories. The new publication is from Newsjunkie.net, the data-journalism resource known for its “Who’s Behind the News” reporting
- The Guide to Public Archives II is available free of charge at https://www.newsjunkie.net/article/introducing-guide-to-public-archives
- The interactive Global Archive Map is at https://www.newsjunkie.net/archive-map
- Additional information about Newsjunkie’s research and journalism resources can be found at https://www.newsjunkie.net/.
“Pay enough, and you can jump to the front of the queue for almost anything.” Concierge Nation: Welcome to White-Glove America. “Exclusivity — even if it comes at the cost of social cohesion — is the business model.”
Electronic Surveillance Under Scrutiny as Trump Targets Left Wing Groups as “Domestic Terrorists”
SpyTalk: “FEW NATIONAL SECURITY DEBATES HAVE RILED UP AMERICANS more than the permission Congress has given the government to eavesdrop on their private emails and phone calls. The legislation that gave these intrusive powers to the likes of the NSA and the FBI is up for renewal later this spring, and signs are that it will face a bumpy road to passage by Congress. The issue has taken on additional freight because President Trump has ordered the departments of Justice, Homeland Security, Treasury and the IRS to explicitly target left wing groups for investigation, labelling them “domestic terrorists.” An authority that had its beginnings in retooling legislation for the war on terror, Section 702 of the Foreign Surveillance Intelligence Act (FISA) was one of the many policies that traded liberty for security. Now, in its fourth major vote on renewal, uncertainty surrounds its future—as many argue it should.
A little history is in order here. In 1978, following revelations that the National Security Agency had illegally eavesdropped on civil rights and antiwar activists, Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which required the government to get warrants from a new, secret federal court to electronically monitor people in the U.S. who were suspected of being agents of foreign powers. Fast forward to the shocking al Qaeda attacks on New York and Washington on Sept. 11, 2001. In a panic, the George W. Bush administration summarily tossed aside FISA guardrails in the name of national security.
In a secret program code-named Stellar Wind and authorized by President Bush, the NSA conducted warrantless surveillance of the electronic communications of Americans. Once the existence of Stellar Wind was revealed, top law enforcement officials, including Deputy Attorney General James Comey and FBI Director Robert Mueller, concerned that it was illegal, threatened to resign unless the program was replaced with a lawful substitute…”
War and Peace and Fraud - Red and Blue States Are Growing Further Apart on Income Tax
Measure what is important: instead of giving importance to what is measured
The awards highlight storytelling with data, focusing on projects with measurable public benefit, such as AI-driven fraud detection, marine-debris initiatives, and geospatial grant allocation tools.
Last week’s APS Data Awards proved data isn't just spreadsheets, it's storytelling. From disease graphs to cinema stats, the best communicators make numbers stick. Thanks Australian Bureau of Statistics and congrats to the finalists.
“Carte figurative des pertes successives en hommes de l’Armée française dans la campagne de Russie en 1812-1813”, is a graphical depiction of the losses of French Army during Napoleon’s ruinous invasion of Russia of 1812-13, (cf. War and Peace by L.Tolstoy) drawn in 1869 by Charles Joseph Minard, a former French alien civil engineer
Combatting fraud through private and public sector data sharing with Australian Financial Crimes Exchange (AFCX) – Australian Taxation Office - TJF - Winner
Over the past 50 years, nearly every dystopic movie and literature like 1984 portrayed a 100%-surveilled society where the people at the top control everything using AI and such. And here we are, actively making that future an inevitable reality now. Great job society.
“The US is hurtling towards autocracy at a faster rate than Hungary and Turkey”. The Varieties of Democracy Institute: “Our data on the USA goes back to 1789. What we’re seeing now is the most severe magnitude of democratic backsliding ever…”
Exposed: How Debt Became the Tool the Wealthy Use to Drain Workers’ Income Egberto
4,000 Meatpackers Strike in Colorado at Brazilian-Owned JBS Mike Elk
Americans Should Have a Right to Full-Time Work New York Times Note the re-write of the headline.
WSJ: Red and Blue States Are Growing Further Apart on Income Tax
Richard Rubin & Jeanne Whalen (WSJ): Red and Blue States Are Growing Further Apart on Income Tax
GOP-led states are looking to entice new residents with lower taxes, while Democratic-led states seek higher taxes on top earners to shore up budgets and social services
Washington State Legislature Approves Millionaire’s Tax
Tax Notes: Washington Legislature Approves Millionaire’s Tax
Washington lawmakers have approved a new income tax on millionaires, securing a key legislative victory for progressive tax reformers
Tax Notes: Washington Legislature Approves Millionaire’s Tax
Washington lawmakers have approved a new income tax on millionaires, securing a key legislative victory for progressive tax reformers
DOJ clears way for government to hire technologists still connected to private sector employers
NextGov/FCW – “The Justice Department issued an opinion last week authorizing the Trump administration’s plan to allow employees from tech companies to work for the federal government while remaining employed by their companies and keeping their not-yet-vested company stocks.
NextGov/FCW – “The Justice Department issued an opinion last week authorizing the Trump administration’s plan to allow employees from tech companies to work for the federal government while remaining employed by their companies and keeping their not-yet-vested company stocks.
The Removed DOGE Deposition Videos Have Already Been Backed Up Across the Internet
Follow-up to $21.7 Billion Blunder: New PSI Report Reveals Billions in Taxpayer Dollars Squandered by DOGE –
See Also 404 Media[no paywall] – “The DOGE deposition videos a judge ordered removed from YouTube on Friday after they had gone massively viral have since been backed up across the internet, including as a torrent and to the Internet Archive. The videos included DOGE members unable or unwilling to define DEI; discussing how they used ChatGPT and terms such as “black” and “homosexual” to flag grants for termination but not “white” or “caucasian,” and acknowledgements that despite their aggressive cuts they failed to achieve the stated goal of lowering the government deficit…The news shows the difficulty in trying to remove material from the internet, especially that which has a high public interest and has already been viewed likely millions of times. It’s also an example of the “Streisand Effect,” a phenomenon where trying to suppress information often results in the information spreading further.
DOGE deposition videos in Depositions for MLA-ACLS-AHA Lawsuit About the NEH,” the title of the pageon the Internet Archive reads. The page says the files were uploaded on Saturday. On the Data Hoarder subreddit, multiple users said they had downloaded a torrent of the videos. Once a torrent of files has been shared, it becomes much harder to fully delete off of the internet because its distribution has been decentralized. 404 Media verified that the torrent did contain the DOGE deposition videos…”
Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, March 14, 2026 – Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, finance, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weisshighlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly complex and wide ranging ways technology is used to compromise and diminish our privacy and online security, often without our situational awareness. Five highlights from this week: Scammers Stole Their Retirement Savings. Then the Tax Bill Arrived; Meta’s AI Deepfake Detection System Fails the Test; Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response releases cybersecurity module; Tech giants break silence on Anthropic; and Pentagon Reportedly Used Microsoft Workaround to Test OpenAI Models, Despite Ban.



