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Saturday, January 07, 2017

Jervis Bay: Map of World Imrich Type Billionaires by Country

 “Perhaps your fear in passing judgment on me is greater than mine in receiving it.”


“’Poor beggar.’
Not because he was dead but because he had lived!”

How to survive a iceberg polar bear plunge (and why you shouldn’t do one). “But is it good for you? Herrera says swimming has numerous cardiovascular benefits, but the only potential ‘benefit’ you get from doing it in cold water is that extra layer of fat

Dirty Money Scientific American

Eddie Obeid mugshot revealed ahead of former MPs move to Cooma jail


A building linked to disgraced former Labor minister Eddie Obeid's family has been damaged in a suspicious fire, the second blaze at the same Sydney property in just over a week.
Police and firefighters received multiple calls from witnesses just after 6pm on Tuesday to say flames were coming from the unoccupied Bellevue Reception Centre, on Restwell Street in Bankstown Suspicious fire damages building linked to Eddie Obeids family

Airbnb faces $400m lost bookings in London crackdown Financial Times. Couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch




WSj via FastCompany – “There’s no need to panic—the rich are doing fine. According to new data from the Internal Revenue Service, income reported on tax returns for the 400 wealthiest individuals rose 20% in 2014, the Wall Street Journal reports. The significant income boost reveals what many of us already suspected: The rich are getting richer. Worth noting is that the country as a whole has been grappling with broad-based wage stagnation for decades.”


$2,000,000,000,000 in Proceeds of Corruption Removed from China and Taken to US, Australia, Canada and Netherlands Duhaime’s Anti-Money Laundering Law in Canada. From 1995-2013. Sydney real estate to continue to rise and rise ...




Map of World Billionaires by Country and Origin Barry Ritholtz  A cat may look at a monarch, and so I suppose a blogger can make suggestions to nouveau riche ... Stop buying Superyachts -  “Superyachts magnify billionaires’ worst traits”  

Millennial princes snatch at power in Gulf Reuters


Finland introduces basic income for unemployed Aljazeera (margarita). Note this is a workaround to address disincentives in the Finnish social safety system.


Colombia – Inviting NATO to Fight “Organized Crime” – A Menace for Latin America Vineyard of the Saker (Chuck L). Talk about mission creep, on multiple fronts




How Art Auctioneers Get Buyers Riled Up Enough To Pay Tens Of Millions For One Painting 


“With such astonishing sums of money being tossed around, one might assume that art buyers are making 
cool, levelheaded decisions, especially when they’re in a room full of people they know and are trying to impress. This is often not the case. To the contrary, scientists see mounting evidence of ‘auction psychology’.” Here’s how it works.

The Best Time to Retune Your Career? It’s Probably Right Now, By Kevin Granville. December 31, 2016. “Thinking about asking for a raise, or changing jobs, or just want to be more happy at work? Here’s advice on how to get started.”

 DeBlasio’s New York: The selling of the mayoralty

Sometimes the point of a sentence is to jar, sting, or offend - to jar, sting, or offend. In that case, nothing performs quite like profanity. So why use a euphemism?... Calling Spade and Shovel 


`I Must Live With These Mysteries'



“No; I merely want to make a philosophical point, namely that the world is, and ever will be, full of insoluble or unsolved mysteries, whatever our pretensions to absolute understanding.”



 China is on a massive bitcoin buying spree Boing Boing 





How to Tweet if You’re in Government and Not Donald Trump: Write, Review, Edit, Seek Approval, Wait, Edit, (Maybe) Send (sub. re’d) –by Aruna Viswanatha and Natalie Andrews: “In 2010, a top Justice Department official told the agency’s divisions they could set up Twitter accounts and he convened a ‘working group’ to provide guidance on what, when and how the agency could Tweet ...


Writing without a Face: On “Frantumaglia”




Emmet Gowin: Mariposas Nocturnas Index #44, Bolivia, 2011; from ‘Hidden Likeness: Photographer Emmet Gowin at the Morgan,’ a recent exhibition at the Morgan Library and Museum. Gowin’s new book, Mariposas Nocturnas: A Study of Diversity and Beauty, collects fifty-one of his moth grids and will be published by Princeton University Press in September 2017.



“Public libraries have had another bad year. They are like churches and local railways. People like having them around, and are angry if they close. But as for using them, well, there is so little time these days. The latest Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy figures on library closures are dire. In the past five years 343 have gone. Librarian numbers are down by a quarter, with 8,000 jobs lost. Public usage has fallen by 16% and spending by 14%. Book borrowing is plummeting, in some places by a half. The admirable children’s laureate (and cartoonist) Chris Riddell said during the latest campaign for libraries in November that, “if nurtured by government, they have the ability to transform lives. We must all raise our voices to defend them.”…Ever since the days of Alexandria, the library has been the palace of the mind, the University of All. The internet has removed its monopoly on knowledge, but cannot replicate its sense of place, its joy of human congregation. The Victorian tycoon Andrew Carnegie, first great patron of public libraries in Britain and America, dreamed of one in every town and village. His vision awaits renaissance.”























Emmet and Edith Gowin/Pace-MacGill Gallery
Emmet Gowin: Mariposas Nocturnas Index #44, Bolivia, 2011; from ‘Hidden Likeness: Photographer Emmet Gowin at the Morgan,’ a recent exhibition at the Morgan Library and Museum. Gowin’s new book, Mariposas Nocturnas: A Study of Diversity and Beauty, collects fifty-one of his moth grids and will be published by Princeton University Press in September 2017.
Whenever Ferrante is forced to communicate about her work, her communication is laced with an intense self-surveillance. The book is restrained and self-protective, and I find myself protective of her as well