He's a fluid and clear stylist, but I got the sense that he was a little too enamored of his own voice. "Money" has far too many parenthetical asides, including "it's good to be the Khan," which appears in his account of how Kublai Khan forced his realm to adopt paper money, and again with "It's good to be the king," in a passage about how Charles II of England stiffed his creditors to finance war with the Dutch.
And sometimes both Goldstein's writing and thinking get a little muddied.
In case you are keeping track:
St. Paul will use CARES Act money for guaranteed income experiment - StarTribune.com
St. Paul will move forward with a program to provide cash assistance to some of the city’s poorest families, now that the City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to allocate more than $290,000 in federal CARES Act money.
The 18-month People’s Prosperity Guaranteed Income Pilot, which Mayor Melvin Carter established with a Sept. 3 executive order , will provide $500 a month for up to 150 families with young children. The program will be open to qualifying participants in College Bound St. Paul, the city’s college savings account program, and will not be limited to just four ZIP codes, as originally planned.
Based.Money: DeFi's 'Game of Chicken' - Decrypt
Experimental decentralized finance project Based.Money knows its audience well. Take a look at its homepage, which is plastered with absurdist animations: A Tesla Cybertruck shuttles to and fro while the dismembered head of Vitalik Buterin tumbles upward. It even has its own vaporwave, soundtrack ripped from a " LoFi beats to code to" playlist .
The aim is "to keep blockchain weird and to continue in the spirit of the original cypherpunk movement," one of its creators, a full-time Silicon Valley tech worker who operates beneath the moniker "Based Money God," told Decryp t.
Programmable money: How crypto tokens could change our entire experience of value transfer
Not to change the topic here:
North Carolina senator says allowing college athletes to earn money is 'huge mistake'
WASHINGTON (AP) - The fourth congressional hearing this year on how to allow college athletes to earn money from their names, images and likenesses came Tuesday with a stern warning from one senator.
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The U.S. Senate Committee of Health, Education, Labor & Pensions held a hearing on compensating college athletes as the NCAA changes its rules to allow athletes to profit from their fame.
University of Wisconsin Chancellor Rebecca Blank and Utah State athletic director John Hartwell were among those who testified along with Ramogi Huma, a former UCLA football player and advocate for college athlete rights, and Ohio State director of track and field Karen Dennis.
Anonymous “Bitcoin Man” is Giving out Free Money | KGET 17
You may have heard of the online currency Bitcoin, and an unnamed Bakersfield man claims to be giving it out for free. Residents report finding stickers around town with codes you can scan on your phone. Some Bakersfield residents have won money from this unlikely scavenger hunt.
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The “Bitcoin Man” operates from an anonymous Instagram account. His account claims that he’s giving away $1,000 worth of Bitcoin Cash, a form of the online currency Bitcoin. Tech experts uncovered a motive for this bizarre giveaway.
BREAKING: B1G wants to make money in 2020 - Rock M Nation
Dad talked a big game and turned the car around but then remembered he doesn't get the deposit back so... ya know what kids, we ARE going to Disney World!
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Following an announcement on August 11th that the B1G would postpone its fall sports season Commissioner Kevin Warren formed a "return to competition task force" which presented their findings this past weekend , apparently in favor of returning due to the development of rapid COVID testing.
Modern Mobility: More Money, More Crashes, More Injuries | ARLnow.com
Modern Mobility is a biweekly opinion column. The views expressed are solely the author’s.
On Saturday, the Arlington County Board voted 4-1 to endorse the County’s application for $25 million in grant money for VDOT’s Arlington Blvd Safety Improvements Project , covering the area from Glebe Road to Fillmore Street.
VDOT’s preferred alternative consists of a wide median from Glebe Road to Fillmore Street, the creation of dedicated left turn lanes at Irving Street, the extension of the westbound left-turn lane at Fillmore Street and the addition of dedicated left-turn phasing (green arrows) at Irving Street to service those new dedicated turn lanes.
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