Current Developments In Tax Malpractice: Basics And Beyond
Does the FT think there’s a Musk-insprired conspiracy against Labour?
I noted yesterday my suggestion that the supposed crisis surrounding gilt prices might have been created by those in the City of London who wished to fulfil Elon Musk's demand that Keir Starmer's Labour government in the UK be brought down.
Last night, this was the FT homepage headline:
Downer and Howard’s East Timor lies. History missing in action.
The Government commissioned an official history of our operations in Timor and then censored the historian, removing an entire chapter. The partially redacted chapter obtained by MWM confirms lies told by the Howard Government.
The Government commissioned an official history of our operations in Timor and then censored the historian, removing an entire chapter. The partially redacted chapter obtained by MWM confirms lies told by the Howard Government.
What but Musk can explain this week’s financial crisis?
The comments I made here yesterday and on Radio 2 about the possibility of there being a degree of coordination in what is happening right now in bond markets have attracted a lot of attention.
So, let's be clear. I offered speculation. The reason is simple. Something very weird is happening in financial markets, and no events, bar one, explain why it might be happening now. That one event is that Musk said at the weekend that the UK's Labour government needs to be pulled down. He then ran a poll on Twitter on this issue. He also spread scurrilous rumours. And as the FT has noted, the attempt at a coup that is following from those comments appears to be very real and front page news. I hardly had to make this up: it is out there.
China releases world’s most powerful electronic warfare weapon design software – for free South China Morning Post
How a major bank cheated its customers out of $2 billion, according to a new federal lawsuit Popular Information
Founder of muckraking financial information firm Hindenburg Research calls it quits AP
The Governments That Survived Inflation Foreign Affairs
The Bitter End Doomberg
Xiaohongshu (RedNote)
‘TikTok refugees’ unexpectedly turn to Chinese alternative as ban looms LA Times
America’s youth longs for Chinese e-commerceGarbage Day. Worth a read on social media.