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Monday, June 08, 2020

Peter's Palantir: Ponzi scheme mastermind Bernie Madoff denied compassionate release

I am not your typical art historian. I am not your typical activist. I am still learning what art and protest mean to me. And so, this book is more about my journey through art toward activism. This book is about discovery, confusion, and progress.


The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph."

-Thomas Paine, American Founding Father




Michael Gibson still remembers his first day working for Peter  Thiel. Like many of Thiel’s hires, he’d met the contrarian investor through several of the PayPal founder’s variously eccentric political ventures. A onetime self-described “unemployed writer in L.A.,” who’d left a doctoral program in philosophy at Oxford, Gibson had met Thiel through his work at the Seasteading Institute, a Thiel-funded attempt to create a libertarian “floating city” in international waters. Then Thiel asked him to help teach a class at Stanford Law School on philosophy, technology, and politics

IRS faces obstacles with remaining stimulus checks The Hill. “Tax experts said the IRS faces a tough road ahead in getting payments to everyone who hasn’t received theirs yet, especially for low-income individuals who don’t make enough money to have to file tax returns and also don’t receive certain federal benefits.”



Mirit Eyal-Cohen (Alabama), Unintended Legislative Inertia, 55 Ga. L. Rev. ___ (2020):

Institutional and political forces create strong inertial pressures that make the updating of legislation a difficult task. As a result, laws and regulations often stagnate, leading to the continued existence of obsolete rules and policies that serve long-forgotten purposes. Recognizing the inertial power of past policies, legislatures over the last few decades have increasingly relied on a perceived solution — temporary legislation. In theory, this measure avoids inertia because it requires legislators to make a deliberate choice to extend it.


The pandemic has cost jobs around the world. Comparing people who lost the same position in the two countries reveals that the U.S. government is spending more on unemployment — but its citizens are getting less
How Germany Saved Its Workforce From Unemployment While Spending Less Per Person Than the U.S.ProPublica






Former Sirtex boss released after insider trading conviction EU
Man Behind Sweden’s Controversial Virus Strategy Admits MistakesBloomberg. So much for herd immunity.


Op-Ed: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Don’t understand the protests? What you’re seeing is people pushed to the edge Los Angeles Times












Zoom Transforms Hype Into Huge Jump in Sales, Customers Bloomberg. “Free users for sure we don’t want to give that because we also want to work together with FBI, with local law enforcement in case some people use Zoom for a bad purpose,” [CEO Eric Yuan] said on the call.”