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Thursday, January 16, 2020

Bezos of BC fame: Winners take all

“ENDURANCE

I don't know you,
But I love you,
Just as God loves me and you.
The sun and the moon
Are opposing forces,
But they still greet each other,
Peacefully,
As one awakens in the morning,
Just as the other goes to sleep.
Life has pounded me down
And thrashed me around,
Time and time again,
But I always get right back up,
Because I still love life -
Just as the earth still loves
The rain.” 

Suzy Kassem, Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem 

Top-Secret UFO Files Could ‘Gravely Damage’ US National Security if Released, Navy Says Live Science

Three Coyotes Fail to Impress Unfazed Cat Named Max in This Showdown Time 

How the Ginkgo biloba achieves near-immortality Science Magazine
 

The world’s 500 wealthiest people tracked by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index added $1.2 trillion, boosting their collective net worth 25% to $5.9 trillion.



Only eating 'one steamed bun per day', a Chinese student dies after suffering severe malnutrition

The sudden death of 24-year-old student Wu Huayan, who was trying to save money to help her sick brother, sparks nationwide outrage over whether more could have been done to save her.

'They've been completely gutted': Is the end of political cartoons nigh?

Through satire and irony, political cartoonists wield great power. But facing greater censorship and struggling to make money in an online world, many say the future is looking "absolutely dire".



 A PROMISING START TO A CAREER: 17-year-old high school student discovers rare new planet 3 days into NASA internship

Inspired by a trip to Venice, the world’s most prominent example of what life could be like in many of our coastal cities in the years to come, Hayden Williams made a series of 3D rendered images showing what our world might look like underwater 

How the oil industry has spent billions to control the climate change conversation Guardian

Australia, where lies and conspiracy theories spread like bushfire Guardian








The Wild Wild West of Data Hoarding in the Federal Government

Active Navigation: “There is a strong belief, both in the public and private sector, that the worst thing you can do with a piece of data is to delete it. The government stores all sorts of data, from traffic logs to home ownership statistics. Data is obviously incredibly important to the Federal Government – but storing large amounts of it poses significant compliance and security risks – especially with the rise of Nation State hackers. As the risk of being breached continues to rise, why is the government not tackling their data storage problem head on?..”



We've built the battery of the future out of a common element. Click to open in new tab.
As society moves away from fossil fuels, we will need more radical new technologies for storing energy to support renewable electricity generation, electric vehicle


ANOTHER EXAMPLE THAT IT CAN BE DONE ... I am sure it will not be as easy and cheap as the story outlines ... but today Tesla just surged past $500 mark ... so the public is looking at better as usual environment

Researchers have created emissions-free cement
Carbon emissions from cement production are a major global source of greenhouse gases. 


Winners Take All is Anand Giridharadas’ 2018 book about how “the global elite’s efforts to ‘change the world’ preserve the status quo and obscure their role in causing the problems they later seek to solve”. For instance, Giridharadas would argue that Jeff Bezos donating a billion dollars to charter schools while Amazon pays no federal income tax is a problem.
Why, for example, should our gravest problems be solved by the unelected upper crust instead of the public institutions it erodes by lobbying and dodging taxes? His groundbreaking investigation has already forced a great, sorely needed reckoning among the world’s wealthiest and those they hover above, and it points toward an answer: Rather than rely on scraps from the winners, we must take on the grueling democratic work of building more robust, egalitarian institutions and truly changing the world — a call to action for elites and everyday citizens alike.
The RSA made an animated video of a talk by Giridharadas that distills his central message into about five minutes — it’s a good watch/listen. The full talk is available here. (via aeon)

The Ancient Greeks named four virtues: temperance, wisdom, courage and justice. Aristotle added more, but cheerfulness wasn’t one of them. The Greek philosophers didn’t seem to care about how we felt compared with how we acted. Aristotle said that we would ideally feel good while acting good, but he didn’t consider pleasure necessary for beautiful action. Acting virtuously meant steering clear of excess and deficiency. But in order to reach his ‘mean’, we need to jettison every action that misses the mark. Most of the time, the mean is incredibly tough to find, but if it came down to a choice between feeling good while acting badly or feeling badly while acting good, Aristotle said to choose good behaviour. He understood that feelings are hard to control, sometimes impossible, but he also knew that positive feelings like to hang around virtuous actions. While we’re waiting for the good feelings to show up, he asked us to get to work on temperance, wisdom, courage and justice. But he never said anything about smiling through it.
Against cheerfulness




What You Need to Be Warm: Neil Gaiman Reads His Humanistic Poem for Refugees, Composed from a Thousand Definitions of Warmth from Around the World


“Sometimes it only takes a stranger, in a dark place, to hold out a badly-knitted scarf, to offer a kind word, to say we have the right to be here, to make us warm in the coldest season.”





The tink tink tink of iron radiators waking in an old house.
To surface from dreams in a bed, burrowed beneath blankets and comforters,
the change of state from cold to warm is all that matters, and you think
just one more minute snuggled here before you face the chill. Just one.

Places we slept as children: they warm us in the memory.
We travel to an inside from the outside. To the orange flames of the fireplace
or the wood burning in the stove. Breath-ice on the inside of windows,
to be scratched off with a fingernail, melted with a whole hand
.




Science: “Academic journals in Russia are retracting more than 800 papers following a probe into unethical publication practices by a commission appointed by the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). The moves come in the wake of several other queries suggesting the vast Russian scientific literature is riddled with plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and so-called gift authorship, in which academics become a co-author without having contributed any work.  The RAS commission’s preliminary report documenting the problems and journals’ responses to them is “a bombshell,” says Gerson Sher, a former staffer at the U.S. National Science Foundation and the author of a recent book on U.S.-Russia science cooperation. The report, released yesterday, “will reinforce the suspicions and fears of many—that their country is not going down the right path in science and that it’s damaging its own reputation,” says Sher, who applauds RAS for commissioning the investigation…”


What to think of "near death experiences"? — John Martin Fischer (UCR) in a lively video interview 

 
Yehonatan Givati (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Theories of Tax Deductions: Income Measurement versus Efficiency, 5 NYU J.L. Fin. & Accounting ___ (2020):

What is the purpose of tax deductions? A common view among tax law scholars is that tax deductions are required to properly measure income. I present an alternative theory of tax deductions, relying on standard economic efficiency grounds. I develop a model which highlights the fact that economic activities have costs and benefits, but an income tax system taxes only some of those benefits. The efficient deduction rule allows the deduction of a share of the cost equal to the share of the benefit that is taxed. I also show that the deadweight loss due to a departure from the efficient deduction rule increases quadratically with the departure, making larger departures from the rule much more costly than smaller ones.


MALTA’S PM


The tiny island nation of Malta has a new prime minister. Robert Abela, a first-term lawmaker, was sworn in on Monday. He took office following the resignation of his predecessor, Joseph Muscat, whose top adviser was linked to the car bomb murder of investigative reporter Daphne Caruana Galizia. He’s vowed to strengthen the rule of law in the country, but avoided questions about the ongoing murder probe.

THE IMPOSSIBLE


Scientists taking photographs of the impossible – the black hole – was just one collaborative highlight from 2019. Collaboration is in our blood here at ICIJ, so we asked our team what non-journalism collaborations they loved last year. We have everything from dancing pro footballers, Dolly Parton songs, free-range eggs and baseball to share!

NEW INSIDERS

Last year we set the challenge of adding 300 new readers to our ICIJ Insiders community. The response was amazing. Not only did we raise nearly $300,000 from donations, we added more than 500 new readers to our community. Welcome, to all of you! This ongoing support helps us stay independent, and also gives us stability to keep exposing injustices around the world.