Thursday, November 21, 2019

Human Parts





The PayPal Mafia: How a group of 'misfits' became the kings of tech


Malta businessman held on yacht in journalist murder probe - Panama Papers


Son of former German president stabbed to death in Berlin

 

'Extremely painful': British consulate worker details torture by Chinese secret police

What makes something horrifying? — David Livingstone Smith (New England) on horror


What does John Stuart Mill’s life tell us about what a meaningful life is? — Elijah Millgram (Utah) in conversation with Robert Talisse


Natasha Sarin (Penn) & Lawrence H. Summers (Harvard), Shrinking the Tax Gap: Approaches and Revenue Potential:
Between 2020 and 2029, the IRS will fail to collect nearly $7.5 trillion of taxes it is due. It is not possible to calculate with precision how much of this “tax gap” could be collected. This paper offers a naïve approach. The analysis suggests that with feasible changes in policy, the IRS could aspire to shrink the tax gap by around 15 percent in the next decade—generating over $1 trillion in additional revenue by performing more audits (especially of high-income earners), increasing information reporting requirements, and investing in information technology. These investments will increase efficiency and are likely to be very progressive.




Discover new places with help from top Local Guides - Google Blog: “…One of the things we shared at Connect Live this week was that we’ll soon be piloting a new feature in Google Maps that will help people discover new places with help from top Local Guides. People in Bangkok, Delhi, London, Mexico City, New York, Osaka, San Francisco, São Paulo and Tokyo will soon see top Local Guides featured in the For You tab of the Google Maps app. When you follow one of these Local Guides, their recommendations will be surfaced to you in Google Maps, so you can get inspired with ideas of things to do and places to go. If you live in one of the nine test cities, keep an eye on the For You tab of Google Maps, you just might discover something new with help from a local…”


Something exactly like this was a minor plot device 45 years ago in Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle’s The Mote in God’s Eye.

PRAY FOR HONG KONG. REGARDLESS OF WHAT OUR INTELLECTUALS AND THEIR DICTATOR-FELLATING ENTHUSIASMS TELL YOU, HONG KONG IS FIGHTING FOR LIBERTY IN A PROBABLY ULTIMATELY HOPELESS — BUT NOT MEANINGLESS — FIGHT. THEIR FIGHT IS ALL OF OURS. KEEP THEM IN YOUR PRAYERS:  Background and what is going on .



The Human Part (Finnish original title Ihmisen osa) is a marvelous and fascinating tale by prize-winning Finnish author Kari Hotakainen. It starts, interestingly, with a scolding of authors. Authors are people who make a living by producing lies, says Salme Malmikunnas, the main protagonist in this wonderful novel.

But even so, Salme has a story to tell, and when she meets a living, breathing author at a book fair, she decides – after some persuasion – to sell her story for a few thousand Euro. She likes that he promises to tell her story exactly as she tells it, word by word.

CLUSIVE
PRESS FREEDOM

Laws restricting investigative journalism are 'worse than ever before'


  • By Michael Bachelard