š¬ Quotes
āAs a punishment for being the worst owner in sports–terrible teams, allegations of sexual harassment, and financial improprieties, Dan Snyder will sell the Commanders for more than any other sports team has ever been sold. Let that be a lesson to you.
š¬ Dave Pell (I think)
The most compelling question regarding Jack Teixeira, a 21-year-old National Guard airman who just got arrested for leaking classified documents to his gamer bros on a Discord server is how the hell a guy like this had access to the material and was able to share it so easily.
š¬ Dave Pell
It was the first thing that I asked myself.
The second most compelling question is, well, wait, so knowingly taking classified documents to your home or resort and sharing them with anyone you want is a crime? Interesting.
š¬ Dave Pell
Interesting indeed. šæ
Contempt for the other tribe, rather than affection for one’s own, is now many Americans' animating passion.
š¬ George Will
… so much to say … not going to bother.
š Having your cake and eating it.
I donāt want to live forever ⦠I just donāt want to die.
āThe line between a fire tweet and the incoherent ramblings of a madmen is thinner than ever.ā
š¬ Ryan Broderick
š Itās Monday - I guess thereās not much going on ā¦.
š Where does the Tennessee House Speaker actually live? - people who live in glass houses shouldnāt throw stones.
š I showed Bruce Springsteen my Bruce Springsteen tattoo. He said he didnāt like it. - I look forward to this new series.
I am a cult author, asked in the street maybe five times a year: “Are you Emma Forrest?” And I am Emma Forrest. But it’s a surname invented by my grandfather to combat anti-semitism, so there are other more legitimate Emma Forrests, some with their own internet fame, like the Scottish judo star or the woman, also Scottish, who consumes 3,000 calories of fizzy drinks a day.
š¬ Emma Forrest
āVery happy to clarify that I am one of the journalists who would have pushed back on Hitler. Status-obsessed virtue-signalling twat that I am.ā
š¬ Helen Lewis
New Zealand | Leaving - On A Jet Plane
šNew Zealand loses appeal to rich foreigners as investor visa numbers plunge..
Maybe they have been reading Rushkoff’s book - and donāt want to be put in the same bag as Peter Thiel?
It was bizarre. I do get called out a lot to do these talks for businesspeople about the digital future. So, it was one of those where they paid me a bunch of money to convince me to spend some jet fuel and leave my home and pontificate, but then instead of taking me out onto the stage, they brought these five guys into the green room and sat around this table and started asking me all these very binary questions about where they should place their bets for the digital future: Bitcoin or Ethereum; VR or AR; and finally, New Zealand or Alaskaāwhere should they invest in land to put their bunker for āthe eventā?
š¬ Douglas Rushkoff
(my bold)But still ….
Itās not just rich foreigners not arriving - itās ordinary people leaving ⦠again.
All kinds of reasons - but just from my own peculiarly tight Kiwi circle
-
me - of course - though I havenāt abandoned the country completely!
-
a kiwi friend and his wife moved to Portugal in January.
-
a highly networked and successful tech entrepreneur who has built his businesses in New Zealand for the last 30 years, very well connected, recognized by many for his contribution to the country has hit a wall and is looking at the US and The Far East as new opportunities. His words;
āIn New Zealand there is zero appetite in thinking beyond the shores of the country.
- an internationally successful VC who had spent the last two years in New Zealand seeking to kick start an incubator and accelerator wrote to me last week;
My overall experience in NZ shows that it is a country that is too small and internally focused to get meaningful traction as an innovator, not impossible, just a smaller pond and appetite ā¦. I plan to build connections in Australia and further regionally in Asian markets this year.
- a good American friend who has lived in Aotearoa for the last 8 years. Again, accomplished and connected and still canāt get local traction, yet without trying is fielding calls from Singapore, Vietnam and Malaysia.
But thereās more. COVID saw a lot of Kiwis returning āhomeā. COVID has āmoved onā (well - we all know it hasnāt - but it is clearly now manageable), net result, the Kiwis are back out on the road again.
Example - just like the UK, there is a severe shortage of healthcare professionals just one of many articles .. a shortage of 4,000 people (this in a country of 5 million people). If a similar ratio were applied to the US, there would be a shortage of over 1/4 million healthcare workers!
Hereās the rub ⦠in my three years in New Zealand I lost count of trained healthcare professionals (and accountants and engineers for that matter) who were driving for taxi companies and Ola. (I am sure that the same applied to Uber - but canāt speak to that, because - well - Uber ). Why? Because New Zealand requires them to go through all their training again. (Not just pass exams - but actually retrain.)
Meanwhile - a Kiwi trained Healthcare professional can fly out of Auckland, land in Sydney, get paid more and have a lower cost of living.
There’s a lot more around the challenges that New Zealand face - which I’ll save for another day - just to leave you with a couple of quotes from Bernard Hickey - a Kiwi journalist and political commentator based in Wellington. (again - my bold.)
Wayne Brown is actually simply expressing a view held by most asset owners and investors in Aotearoa-NZās economy, or as I call it, a housing market with bits tacked on. That deeply held and and so-far-extremely-profitable investment strategy is that owning shares or investing in businesses in Aotearoa is vastly inferior to owning land, especially leveraged residential land, and even better if it is residential-zoned land that remains banked and undeveloped. The
Wayne Brown (ed - the new major of Auckland) is being exactly what he is: a property developer who has actually made most of his personal money from land price appreciation on land made valuable through rezoning and paying for water connections at a lower-than-full cost.

The Atlantic seems pithy today ā¦
āThe auto rickshaw is more or less a motorcycle in the front and a party in the back.ā
š¬ Emma Marais - The Atlantic
“He kept calling this Trump-catalyzed mass subversion ātremendously exciting,ā but to me, it sounded exciting only in the sense that breaking the seventh seal from the Book of Revelation would be a wild ride.ā
š¬ Graeme Wood - The Atlantic
āThe only way you get higher is if you step out of line, thatās the only way. Seriously. Unless youāre untalented ⦠and then you should stay in line.ā
š¬ Kara Swisher
āIn Germany, the comparable retirement age is 65. In Italy, itās 67. And in the U.S., the retirement age is NO,ā
š¬ John Oliver
āVirgin Orbit is laying off 85% of its staff, or roughly 675 people. The company will cease operations “for the foreseeable future,” Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart told employees.ā
š¬ CNBC
Sculpture
āI think the relationship of a warm-blooded creature versus an object that is still and silentāwhich is essentially what I think sculpture isāfor me is the sort of fundamentals. Sculpture is in our everyday lives the whole time. Crossing the road with a lorry coming towards you is, in my opinion, a sculptural experience, where you as a flesh-and-blood object [are] up against the thing that isnāt. And oneās emotional and psychological assessment of that all happens in a flash.
To me, there is a big, sculptural presence there because of the way that large lorry is constantly displacing space as it comes towards youāso the track that is left behind, which is now empty, was once filled. And thatās what I think we do when weāre interacting with sculpture: the space is filled. As we walk around it, we are constantly losing an image of it and finding a new image. So quite a large part of what sculpture is, [is] not necessarily visual. And I think thatās quite shocking. [Itās] a state of affairs that weāre assessing.ā
š¬ Phyllida Barlow

