Sunday, April 17, 2016
Hedy's Folly by Richard Rhodes
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Interesting Stuff Jan. 13, 2011
Dam problems in Massachusetts
-100 major dams need repair, state auditor says
-Audit warns of deteriorating municipal dams
Dr. Who marries Dr. Who or his clone or his daughter or—oh, the paradoxes!
The [Amazingly Comprehensive] History of the Batmobile
Interesting Stuff Dec. 30, 2010
Ft. Leonard Wood recovers from tornado
Life imitates art
-The Phoenix Jones Interview
-'Real Life Superhero' Breaks Up Carjacking In Washington State
-Real Life Super-Hero Phoenix Jones Rescues Man from Carjacking in Seattle
-Real-Life Superhero Walks Streets, Fighting Crime
Lost Earmarks
The President and the E-word
Stan Lee gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
Subterranean history: Beautiful abandoned NYC subway station
Water getting more expensive
-Orange (CA) water rates could go up 59% over 4 years
-Phoenix officials propose another water-rate hike
Wednesday, June 3, 2020
Billion Dollar Whale by Tom Wright and Bradley Hope
I’m feel stuck in trying
to describe Billion Dollar Whale, by Wall Street Journal reporters Tom Wright
and Bradley
Hope. Part of what boggled my mind is the sheer size of the crime
they describe, the theft of an estimated $5 billion dollars. That’s right, billion. The other is the number of
corrupt people needed to pull it off. Some were neck deep in the scheme, but a
lot of people had to look the other way or squelch concerns in order for this
to occur and for it to go on for so long.
Low like to party. This is where the story gets really crazy. His partying led him to contact—and in some cases even friendship—with American celebrities. Low pulled money out of the Malaysian fund to finance the making of the film The Wolf of Wall Street, which is about the huge fraud committed by Jordan Belfort, who was played by Leonardo Dicaprio in the film. (Dicaprio was far from the only celebrity in Low’s circle, and part of the fascination of the book is seeing how he used his access to access these people.) Low’s theft and excesses almost makes Belfort seem like an amateur.