Working at Disney World, the Volkswagen Beetle, and Spider Murderers

After the long weekend Tuesday morning news drop

  • Eleven Un-Magical Secrets I Learned While Working at Disney World From parents leaving their kids with “Mary Poppins” to ladies lusting after Captain Jack Sparrow, the most magical place on Earth is also one of the most colorful places to work. (Bloomberg)

  • The Unstoppable Appeal of Highway Expansion: U.S. transportation authorities have spent billions widening urban freeways to fight traffic delays. What makes the “iron law of congestion” so hard to defeat? (Citylab)

  • The fiscal policy elephant in the room: The global macro debate is focussed on monetary policy. Fiscal policy will play a bigger role in the coming 12-18 months. (Value Added)

  • Climate Change Is the New Dot-Com Bubble: The free market has plenty of grandiose ideas about how to fix our broken planet. There’s just one problem: We can’t afford another bust. (Wired)

  • Fund Managers Start Axing ESG Buzzword as Greenwash Rules Bite Some of Europe’s biggest asset managers are starting to drop a once-ubiquitous ESG label from their company filings amid concern that regulators will no longer tolerate vague descriptions of environmental, social and governance investing. (Bloomberg Green)

  • Self-driving cars: The 21st-century trolley problem Autonomous tech could lead to deaths at the hands of robots. But is continuing to let humans drive even worse? (Vox)

  • Collectors Who Caught the Bug Volkswagen’s original Beetle, cute and petite, still thrills aficionados. (New York Times)

  • The Cheap and Easy Climate Fix That Can Cool the Planet Fast CO2 is only part of the patchwork of warming. Methane locks in far more heat in the short term and has been leaking just as relentlessly. (Bloomberg)

  • Anti-vaccine chiropractors rising force of misinformation At a time when the surgeon general says misinformation has become an urgent threat to public health, an investigation found a vocal and influential group of chiropractors has been capitalizing on the pandemic by sowing fear and mistrust of vaccines. (AP)

  • Why so many of us are casual spider-murderers: It’s officially arachnicide season in the Northern Hemisphere. Millions of spiders have appeared in our homes – and they’d better be on their guard. Why do we kill them so casually? (BBC)

Videos of the Week, AT&T Far-Right News Media, and the US Bond Market

Friday morning news drop

  • How AT&T helped build far-right One America News As it lauded former President Donald Trump and spread his unfounded claims of election fraud, One America News Network saw its viewership jump. Reuters has uncovered how America’s telecom giant nurtured the news channel now at the center of a bitter national divide over politics and truth. (Reuters)

  • US government bond market specialists warn of fragility in Fed pullout Concerns remain over gaps in liquidity after weak supports during pandemic-induced instability (Financial Times)

  • Secret trove illuminates the lives of billionaires The world’s wealthiest are among the most avid users of offshore companies, a new cache of documents known as the Pandora Papers shows, and they turn to tax and secrecy havens for a variety of reasons. (Washington Post)

  • Are U.S. Housing Prices Becoming Unaffordable? Housing prices are rising for a number of reasons: Household formation from the millennial generation, Increased demand to move due to the pandemic, Investors looking for yield and inflation protection, Extremely low mortgage rates. The one variable that could throw a wrench into this equation would be higher mortgage rates. (A Wealth of Common Sense)

  • A Whiff of Civil War in the Air Malice and misinformation are driving national division. A recent poll that should shock exactly no one who closely follows American politics and culture. A majority of Trump voters (52 percent) and a strong minority of Biden voters (41 percent) strongly or somewhat agree that it’s “time to split the country.” (The Dispatch)

  • The World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2021: The Full List of Winners This is the first World’s 50 Best Restaurants list since the onset of the pandemic. Votes for the 2021 list take into account the votes cast for the 2020 list as well as a March 2021 “refresh” vote, in which voters could issue new votes, but only for restaurants in their own region. (Eater)

  • Clint and Ron Howard Remember When They Were Just ‘The Boys’ In a new memoir, the showbiz siblings recall their experiences growing up on “The Andy Griffith Show,” “Star Trek” and other Hollywood classics. But they weren’t all happy days. (New York Times)

Videos of the week

Micky Clarke - "DOOM" - Chapter 11 TV

BMX BIGGEST GAP BARSPIN | LEGENDARY LYON 25 STAIRS | COURAGE ADAMS What a way to debut your first edition shoe! The @CourageAdams Slip-On BMX. Featuring premium black leather uppers embossed with elephant skin texture and Courage’s signature Elephant Scale logo showing through transparent rubber outsoles.

Vans Presents COURAGE - Featuring Courage Adams | BMX | VANS

Top 3 Slopestyle Runs from SilverStar | Crankworx British Columbia 2021 Red Bull Joyride might have gotten away this year, but the there was no way British Columbia could let the summer go by without a world-class MTB Slopestyle event. As luck would have it, Brett Rheeder and Matt MacDuff have been keeping themselves very busy in SilverStar Bike Park lately. Over the last two years, they have built an absolute fire 🔥 of a Slopestyle course with tons of potential to drive evolution of the sport above and beyond.

Dickies' "Loose Ends" Video Ronnie gets to work on the pool beat straight out the gate, followed by timeless stylings from Knox, Foy, Allysha and the esteemed Dickies team. Wallin shuts it down with one of his finest displays to date.

Braydon Szafranski's "SZA" Part The legend of Las Vegas never ceases to surprise. Absurd manuals, sketchy ditch rides and heavy stair moves for the OG fans, Braydon brings it all.

NOTHING NEW Nothing has changed. Level 1, in partnership with 686 and Rossignol, presents NOTHING NEW - another snow riding experience.

China's Energy Crisis, Tether's Missing Money, and Squid Game

Thursday morning news drop

  • China’s Energy Crisis: A simple breakdown of the crisis and its impact on the world China’s energy crisis is best understood through the simple, Econ 101 lens of supply and demand, with a particular focus on the coal market. Net-net, we have demand up and supply down, leading to widespread shortages, rising costs, and a ripple effect that extends across the globe—the stage is set for what could be a long, cold winter. (Curiosity Chronicle)

  • The Great Inflation Debate: Watching the inflation-watchers Whether we are living through the beginning of a new inflation is uncertain. What is clear is that we are living through a great inflation debate. I cannot think of a period in recent memory, in which there was so little agreement on likely future trends. The uncertainty causes real anxiety for policy-makers and the public. Does it amount to a crisis of the authority of economics? (Chartbook)

  • Anyone Seen Tether’s Billions? A wild search for the U.S. dollars supposedly backing the stablecoin at the center of the global cryptocurrency trade—and in the crosshairs of U.S. regulators and prosecutors. (Businessweek)

  • Adapting to a brave new world The past year has been challenging for asset and wealth managers as they confronted COVID-19 and the almost overnight shift to digitization and working from home, as well as growing cyber threats and heightened investor focus on sustainability. This has compounded already significant pre-pandemic pressures, ranging from increased client expectations and stiff competition, to new regulation. (RBC)

  • Are We Craving Risk or Losing Reward? 1980-2000 will go down as the most favorable 20-year period in U.S. investment history. However, we haven’t changed our collective narrative to reflect this yet. We are still acting like this period was “normal” though, in retrospect, it clearly wasn’t. Because, if you look over the last six centuries, interest rates across the globe have been on a slow downward trajectory: (Of Dollars And Data)

  • The pandemic is testing the limits of face recognition Government use of face ID systems exploded during the pandemic—but tying it to critical services has left some people locked out at the moment they needed help the most. (MIT Technology Review)

  • How Fear and Family Values Led to the Biggest Hit in Netflix’s History More South Koreans are dying alone and in poverty, so why not risk it all in a fight to the death? (Slate)

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Paid Sick Leave, Tropical Hurricanes, and TikTok

Wednesday morning news drop

  • Doing Paid Sick Leave Right It’s not just about the number of days. BC should set the highest standard for workers’ rights. (Tyee)

  • How tropical storms and hurricanes have hit U.S. shores with unparalleled frequency A record 18 storms and hurricanes have made landfall in the past two years; climate change could increase these stormy stretches in coming decades (Washington Post)

  • Will TikTok Make You Buy It? In three short years, TikTok has grown in the public imagination from an app for dancing teens into an all-purpose cultural powerhouse, driving trends in music, food, news and politics, and changing the way people communicate online. In the process, it’s also become something else: a place where people buy things. Lots of them. Give any social media platform long enough, and it turns into a mall. (New York Times)

  • Private Equity is Notoriously Opaque. Researchers and Investors Say This is No Longer OK. Without true transparency, it’s hard to prove definitively that private equity works and to make the economic case for it. (Institutional Investor)

  • I Collect Cashflows I collect shares of businesses. Been doing it since my late teens. Not always successfully. I use a certain type of non fungible token called a stock certificate for this. I never lay hands on the certificate, it’s in digital form, living somewhere in the multiverse. A company called DTC makes sure the shares I’ve bought are the shares I get. And then I hold them. Sometimes I will trade them for digital dollars that I also don’t ever see or touch, but then soon after I am trading those dollars for another pile of virtual stock certificates. People will say “You’re crazy, why would you want to buy a fraction of a company you will never touch and hold in your hands?” And I’m like “You just don’t understand.” (Reformed Broker)

  • The fractionalization of everything: Sophisticated Wall Street investors have been using fractionalization for years to mix and match intricate securities from commercial real estate to agriculture futures. Now, fractionalization is making its way to the general public in just about every way imaginable. One interesting caveat to most fractional investments aimed at retail investors is that buyers don’t actually own the things they buy. They’re simply buying a stake in the asset, betting that it will rise in value and they’ll be able to sell their portion at a higher price than what they paid. (Vox)

  • We have no theory of inflation Inflation is the biggest debate in macro. The models don’t work. Forecasting is hard. Forecasting inflation is especially tricky. And economists are, in the main, bad at it. This is, as one might expect, an especially unhappy problem for the economists working in central banks who are guiding policy which is itself targeting a given rate of inflation. (Value Added)

  • After OnlyFans: Sex Workers Search for a Safe Online Platform How the site’s ban on adult work, followed by a backlash-induced reversal, highlights the precarious, stigmatized nature of sex work. (Tyee)

  • ‘A magic world’: An oral history of the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ ‘Blood Sugar Sex Magik’ “Blood Sugar Sex Magik,” featuring “Under the Bridge,” “Breaking the Girl” and “Give It Away,” was released on Sept. 24, 1991, the same day as Nirvana’s “Nevermind.” It would become the Chili Peppers’ critical and commercial breakthrough, eventually selling more than 7 million copies. “Before ‘Blood Sugar,’” says Kiedis, “we were relatively unknown.” After, he continues, “I remember walking down my street in the Hills and cars driving by and hearing our songs coming out of the radio.” (Los Angeles Times)

US Constitutional Crisis, Facebook Scandal, and the Biggest Album Release Dates in Modern History

Tuesday morning news drop

  • The US constitutional crisis is already here Neoconservative Robert Kagan tells us to be afraid, very afraid. That the train has already left the station, that democracy is on its way to extinction as we fiddle while the wildfires burn. (Washington Post)

  • Why this Facebook scandal is different Internal evidence shared by former Facebook product manager Frances Haugen shows Facebook has known — but ignored — the harm it causes. (Recode)

  • Direct Indexing: Let The Games Begin Institutional money has been building custom indexes for a long time, but retail investors are just starting to gain access to it. This was made possible by improvements in technology and especially the advent of free trading. The 30% annual growth in assets is impressive, but at just ~$350 billion, the game has just begun. (Irrelevant Investor)

  • Can We Suck Up Enough CO2 to Cool the Planet? As we speak, giant machines are removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in an urgent attempt to slam the brakes on climate change. (Reasons To Be Cheerful)

  • Desalination can make saltwater drinkable — but it won’t solve the U.S. water crisis The water in the ocean is a tempting resource. Removing salt comes with environmental and economic costs, though. (Washington Post)

  • The Geography of Vaccines Analysis of vaccination rates across U.S. metro areas shows how the shots have become the latest flashpoint in a divided America. (Citylab)

  • Kill the Travel Bug: The Case for Staying Put Why we prioritize globe-trotting over all else, even a plague (Walrus)

  • The Biggest Album Release Dates in Modern Music History, Ranked September 24, 1991, is often called the biggest release day in history. We came up with a formula to see whether that was the case. (The Ringer)

  • September: No sign of any relief in the market Unfortunately the situation did not improve for buyers in September, with new listings continuing to come more slowly than normal for this time of year, while there was plenty of demand to vacuum up anything priced even remotely close to reality. (House Hunt Victoria)

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The Pandora Papers, Facebook Whistleblower, Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett's Last Concert

Monday morning news drop

  • Huge 'Pandora Papers' leak exposes secret offshore accounts of politicians, celebrities and billionaires Canadians named in confidential files include former auto-racing and figure-skating champions (CBC)

  • Whistleblower: Facebook is misleading the public on progress against hate speech, violence, misinformation Frances Haugen says in her time with Facebook she saw, "conflicts of interest between what was good for the public and what was good for Facebook." Scott Pelley reports. (60 Minutes)

  • Facebook Struggles to Quell Uproar Over Instagram’s Effect on Teens The social network has been all hands on deck as it grapples with revelations that it knew the harmful effects its Instagram photo-sharing app was having on teenagers. (New York Times)

  • Facebook is Weak and Facebook is in Trouble Not financial trouble, or legal trouble, or even senators-yelling-at-Mark-Zuckerberg trouble. What I’m talking about is a kind of slow, steady decline that anyone who has ever seen a dying company up close can recognize. It’s a cloud of existential dread that hangs over an organization whose best days are behind it, influencing every managerial priority and product decision and leading to increasingly desperate attempts to find a way out. Insiders see a hundred small, disquieting signs of it every day — user-hostile growth hacks, frenetic pivots, executive paranoia, the gradual attrition of talented colleagues. (New York Times)

  • ‘Major’ Oil Spill Off California Coast Threatens Wetlands and Wildlife Southern California beaches, marshland under threat after massive oil spill. A pipeline failure sent at least 126,000 gallons of oil into the Pacific off the coast of Orange County, creating a 13-square-mile slick. Dead fish and birds washed ashore in some areas. (CBC)

  • Alberta acted like the pandemic was over. Now it's a cautionary tale for Canada Saskatchewan faces similar surge in hospitals, while Manitoba is at risk from low vaccination rates. (CBC)

  • The Charter of Rights and Freedoms vs. vaccine mandates — and government inaction on COVID A look at how some sections of the charter might hold up in court (CBC)

  • America’s pandemic is now an outlier in the rich world The one big exception to this story is America at 2,000 covid-19 deaths a day. That is only 40% below the country’s January peak. But the true death toll is even worse. The Economist’s excess-deaths model, which estimates the difference between the actual and the expected number of deaths recorded in a given period, suggests that America is suffering 2,800 pandemic deaths per day, with a plausible range of 900 to 3,300, compared with 1,000 (150 to 3,000) in all other high-income countries, as defined by the World Bank. Adjusting for population, the death rate is now about eight times higher in America than in the rest of the rich world. (Economist)

  • What an end to blind bidding for real estate could look like Majority supported elimination of blind bidding for property in a recent poll commissioned by CBC News (CBC)

  • Canadians are unknowingly buying homes in climate change danger zones, report finds Climate change could boost damage costs by billions; more risk disclosure needed for adaptation (CBC)

  • How Miami Seduced Silicon Valley: Wall Street may not be quaking over Miami’s ascendancy, but in the zero-sum game among cities, San Francisco is indisputably feeling some pain. In July, according to Redfin, Miami was the top migration destination for home buyers in the U.S., while San Francisco had the largest homeowner exodus. Suarez told me about a playful text he recently received from the mayor there, London Breed: “Stop stealing my techies.” He says he replied, “Sorry, London, I love you, but no.” Awash in coders, crypto, and capital, the city is loving — and beginning to shape — its newest industry. (New York Magazine)

  • The real stakes of Apple’s battle over remote work Inside the unexpected fight that’s dividing the most valuable company in the world. “There’s this idea that people skateboarding around tech campuses are bumping into each other and coming up with great new inventions,” said Cher Scarlett, an engineer at Apple who joined the company during the pandemic and has become a leader in, among other issues, organizing her colleagues on pushing for more remote work. “That’s just not true,” she said. (Vox)

  • How Tesla’s ‘Self-Driving’ Beta Testers Protect the Company From Critics Every so often, a clip of a Tesla running experimental beta driver assistance software goes viral. But who are the people behind the wheel? And why does it matter? (Vice)

  • Does New Cash Make Stocks Go Up? Financial theory said more investors coming into the market doesn’t matter. Then meme stocks hit. Flows of cash really do move prices—is catching on among the data-minded investors known as quants. That’s partly thanks to an influential 2020 paper by academics Xavier Gabaix of Harvard and Ralph Koijen of the University of Chicago. It’s also a matter of timing: The stock price surges unleashed by Reddit chat boards have shown what can happen when new investors pour into a stock. “It’s really important that this event on the Reddit stocks happened suddenly,” says Bouchaud, chairman of Capital Fund Management. It threw light on the idea that “prices move because people do things independently of fundamental value.” (Businessweek)

  • A Lot of Money Sloshing Around in Everything The Great Depression created an entire generation of frugal spenders and savers. The pandemic may have created an entire generation of degenerate gamblers and speculators. Most people assumed speculative activity in the markets would cool off once sports came back, the casinos opened up again and people were able to move about more freely with their normal activities. Judging by the action in options trading, that’s not the case. If anything, there is even more speculation going on in 2021 than 2020. (A Wealth of Common Sense)

  • This Is How Much Crypto to Hold in Your Portfolio Nothing about crypto is that simple, of course, including its value as an alternative asset. Yes, some brokerages argue that adding a dollop may boost returns in a well-diversified portfolio. But the market is evolving so fast that data sets from even a year ago may now be stale. More governments including China are cracking down on digital tokens than embracing them. Investors also need to separate the tokens from the technology: Blockchain networks have the potential to revolutionize financial markets. If you’re going to bet on crypto, those companies may be safer than speculating on the coins. (Barron’s)

  • Ladies and Gentlemen, Daniel Craig At long last, the star of the James Bond franchise bids farewell to 007 with “No Time to Die” (and learns for the first time about his life as an internet meme). (New York Times)

  • The Surveillance Apparatus That Surrounded Britney Spears An account by a former employee of the security team hired by Ms. Spears’s father created the most detailed portrait yet of the singer’s life under 13 years of conservatorship. (New York Times)

  • Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga prepare for Bennett's last big concert The 95-year-old singer is gearing up for two more shows at Radio City Music Hall, though he's grappling with Alzheimer's. Anderson Cooper was there as he prepared. (60 Minutes)

Top 10 S&P Companies 1980 - 2020

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Videos of the Week and Pork Prices are at an All-Time High

Friday morning news drop and videos of the week

  • Bacon prices reach all-time high in Canada As grocery prices continue to rise, the price of bacon in Canada reached an all-time high last month, according to data from Statistics Canada.​ (CTV News)

  • Are Rising Interest Rates Bad For Tech Stocks? Interest rates fell from 6.5% in the early-2000s to just over 3% a few short years later. In that time tech stocks got crushed, crashing 80%. From the summer of 2016 through the winter of 2018, interest rates more than doubled from 1.4% to 3.2%. Tech stocks rose around 60% over this time frame. Sometimes they move together. Sometimes they move in opposite directions. Sometimes they simply march to their own drummer. (A Wealth of Common Sense)

  • Meet Ramzi Musallam, Wall Street’s Top-Secret Billionaire Investor Musallam produced his track record by focusing on technology companies that operate in sectors dominated by the United States’ federal government, particularly defense, health care and education. America’s $6.8 trillion worth of annual spending and sweeping regulatory power give it unparalleled sway in these markets. While many buyout firms try to avoid investing in areas affected by government interference, Musallam’s strategy hinges on understanding what the most influential player in the global economy will do next. (Forbes)

  • Climate Change Is the New Dot-Com Bubble: There are good VCs being venturesome with their capital. There are funds that are investing in green things. There isn’t one carbon market; there isn’t one set of standards to follow; there are dozens of options, which means there isn’t really anything at all. The free market has plenty of grandiose ideas about how to fix our broken planet. There’s just one problem: We can’t afford another bust. (Wired)

  • Half of unvaccinated workers say they’d rather quit than get a shot – but real-world data suggest few are following through But while it is easy and cost-free to tell a pollster you’ll quit your job, actually doing so when it means losing a paycheck you and your family may depend upon is another matter. And based on a sample of companies that already have vaccine mandates in place, the actual number who do resign rather than get the vaccine is much smaller than the survey data suggest. (The Conversation)

  • When the Doctor Has to Make the Toughest Decision It hasn’t felt like all these people arrive and you choose between them. It’s this horrific situation where a lot of patients are not getting regular care. You’re being denied the type of care that would be most recommended. That’s what we call a “standard of care,” what would typically be given to you. And there can be more risk with missing out on that care, more chance that you won’t survive. We’ve seen that during surges, even survival from COVID has been lower in stressed hospitals. (Slate)

  • The problem with corporate “values” Despite the language of essentialism around them, though, corporate values don’t always track with company behavior. Some of this is due to a lack of specificity and accountability in their rollout — you can’t expect people to change their behavior if they don’t know why or how — but the primary reason is that, despite lip-service to the contrary, the long-term vision that values require is not rewarded. US corporate governance norms are based on the shareholder value model, which enshrines maximizing shareholder profits as a company’s raison d’être. When values are at odds with a company’s bottom line, all too often they won’t win out. (Vox)

  • Why Britain and France Hate Each Other: The two countries are more similar than is often acknowledged. Not only in terms of population, wealth, imperial past, global reach, and democratic tradition, but the deeper stuff too: the sense of exceptionalism, fear of decline, instinct for national independence, desire for respect, and angst over the growing power of others, whether that be the United States, Germany, or China. London and Paris may have chosen different strategies—and there is nothing to say that both are equally meritorious—but the parallels between these two nations are obvious. (The Atlantic)

  • Cold War, Hot Mess After decades of mismanaging its nuclear waste, the US Department of Energy wrestles with its toxic legacy. (VQR)

  • Why Is Every Young Person in America Watching ‘The Sopranos’? The show’s depiction of contemporary America as relentlessly banal and hollow is plainly at the core of the current interest in the show, which coincides with an era of crisis across just about every major institution in American life. “The Sopranos” has a persistent focus on the spiritual and moral vacuum at the center of this country, and is oddly prescient about its coming troubles: the opioid epidemic, the crisis of meritocracy, teenage depression and suicide, fights over the meaning of American history. The show’s new audience is also seeing something different in it: a parable about a country in terminal decline. (New York Times)

Videos of the Week


20 Years Pushing the Limits of Freeride MTB | Red Bull Rampage History 20 years, 14 events, 9 winners. Who would have thought 20 years ago, that Red Bull Rampage could have brought freeride MTB this far!? The inaugural Red Bull Rampage was held in 2001. Twenty years and nine different winners later, we celebrate the event’s 20th anniversary by looking back at some of the biggest moments.

Brandon Semenuk Crowned Champion! | Full Winning Run | Red Bull Rampage 2019

Queens Of Gnar: They came, they saw, they slayed. Audi Nines 2021 was proud to welcome a new group of riders into the family and to witness these women pushing mountain biking to new heights. From teenagers to veterans, the moment they rolled into the course, it was clear that Audi Nines is exactly where they belong. Riders: Veronique Sandler, Joey Gough, Kathi Kuypers, Caroline Buchanan, Casey Brown, Robin Goomes, Patricia Druwen, Alma Wiggberg, and Gemma Corbera.

Love The Process - Max Langille Love The Process, a tale of trusting yourself and what you’ll become. This film by Dylan Siggers gives a cinematic mix that’s meant to draw you into Max Langille’s process of completing a video part and dialling in tricks for competition.

Locked In Barcelona: We've got some jaw dropping riding for you in this one via Max and Igor Bespaliy, Sergei Nogaev, and Kirill Shatalov. After flying out to Barcelona for what was originally meant to be a two week trip, the guys ended up being trapped there because of the COVID situation. You could get stuck in a lot of worse places I guess! Either way, the guys got some incredible footage out there and sure did make the most of their trip.

Mami Tezuka's "Sorceress" Bloodwizard Part: Classic vert moves with a style all her own, Blood Wizard's sorceress flies through pools, parks, and remote pipes. Those tweaked-out Smiths would make Mike proud.

Tyson Bowerbank's "Passing Time" Almost Part Bowerbank bangs out impossibles and spine-bending rewinds, putting together a part full of surprises. That last line is HEAVY.

VANS EU "Incompiuto" Video Sicily’s mob left behind massive concrete complexes, so Pfanner, Doobie and the Vans Euro crew took a trip out to feast on the remains.

The Spirit Of The Thing: Style titans Phil Casabon and Sammy Carlson stomp foot on Mt. Hood’s volcanic ground to capture, with the hand of Hotlaps and his wizard staff, 'The Spirit of the Thing.'

National Day for Truth and Reconciliation and the 94 Calls to Action

  • Indigenous leaders call on Canadians to 'own your own truth' on National Day for Truth and Reconciliation A ceremony marking the day is being held on Parliament Hill (CBC)

  • Why Canada is marking the 1st National Day for Truth and Reconciliation this year Sept. 30 honours the children, survivors, families and communities affected by residential schools (CBC)

  • 'Sheer frightened panic': Why the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation falls in September 'Fall still triggers a lot of really sad memories for me. For 10 months, you were just a number' (National Post)

  • On the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, settler Canadians need to remember Canada’s history is built on moments of violence against Indigenous Peoples that can all too easily become muted in a vague sense of the past. This story is a practice of remembering (Narwhal)

  • The Truth and Reconciliation 94 'calls to action' Commission urges all levels of government to work together and advance reconciliation (CBC)


Thursday morning news drop

  • ‘Most Americans Today Believe the Stock Market Is Rigged, and They’re Right’ New research shows insider trading is everywhere + so far, no one seems to care. It’s not just those at the top of the rankings who constantly beat the market; purchases made by U.S. executives outperformed the S&P 500 over the ensuing 12 months by an average of 5% points between 2015 and 2020. The gap might seem scandalous to those with only a passing acquaintance with U.S. insider trading rules, which make it illegal for insiders to trade using material—or financially significant—nonpublic information. And yet on Wall Street it’s long been an open secret that insiders trade on what they know. (Businessweek)

  • ‘We’re all fighting the giant’: Gig workers around the world are finally organizing Faced with fragility and uncertainty, gig workers are connecting across borders to challenge platforms’ power and policies. (Rest of World)

  • Dimension Studio: How fashion is being brought to the metaverse Everyone in this world appears to be reporting exceptional demand. Cathy Hackl, a futurist and metaverse expert who consults for brands, notes a surge in work for her consultancy business. “I think that the opportunity could be life-changing for startups that really present a value proposition; that are really doing things that have never been done before” (Vogue Business)

  • The Diversity Premium: More Women, Higher Returns. “The higher the female representation across the companies we cover the better share price returns we have observed since 2010,” said Eugène Klerk, Credit Suisse’s head of global ESG research. (Institutional Investor)

  • Robinhood Hits Campus, Where Credit Card Companies Fear to Tread The company plans to hit up college coffee shops to spread the word about its services. When credit card companies did it a generation ago, Congress got involved. (New York Times)

  • Jon Stewart Has a New Talk Show, but He Plans to do More Listening “The Problem With Jon Stewart” will examine social issues through the personal stories of those most affected. “It feels more cathartic than just yelling at the screen,” he said. (New York Times)

Housing Market Risks, the Chinese Economy, Supply Chain Issues, and School Bus Drivers

Wednesday morning news drop

  • Here's how some Canadian companies are marking the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation Businesses not required to close for new statutory holiday are supporting reconciliation in their own ways (CBC)

  • Housing market at high risk of sharp correction, CMHC says Raises market risk assessment from moderate, says strength is far beyond what is warranted (Financial Post)

  • Labour shortage hampering post-pandemic recovery for businesses in Canada, study finds 55% of entrepreneurs can't find enough workers, leading to delays, limiting growth (CBC)

  • Five Lessons Evergrande Taught Us About The Chinese Economy How forcefully will China act to contain the damage done by Evergrande? Will China be able to shift its economic model successfully away from real estate and endless development? How will this shift affect the broader global economy? We’ll be paying attention in future weeks. (NPR)

  • Why coffee could cost more at groceries, cafes After hovering for years near $1 per pound, coffee futures — the price large-volume buyers agree to pay for coffee upon delivery months down the road — doubled in late July, reaching heights not seen since 2014. Though prices have eased a bit, they remain elevated at about $1.90 per pound. (AP)

  • Why America has a school bus driver shortage Across the country, school districts are struggling to fill transportation jobs. The shortage helps explain systemic problems in the labor market. (The Hustle)

  • The Supply-Chain Mystery: Why, more than a year and a half into the pandemic, do strange shortages keep popping up in so many corners of American life? (New Yorker)

  • The Broken Clock Most people don’t care about the objective truth, they just want an answer. Any answer will do. And the more confidently you can provide that answer, the better. It reminds me of the famous reply given to the Nobel laureate Ken Arrow after he discovered that his long term weather forecasts were no better than chance: “The Commanding General is well aware that the forecasts are no good. However, he needs them for planning purposes.” (Of Dollars And Data)

  • Zillow’s Home-Flipping Bonds Draw Wall Street Deeper Into Housing Zillow has essentially dived into the house-flipping business, offering to quickly take properties off sellers’ hands. And in the process it’s helping pull Wall Street even deeper into the $2 trillion U.S. housing market. (Businessweek)

  • America’s car crash epidemic Driving kills as many Americans each year as guns do. Experts say that’s preventable. (Vox)

  • Trump’s Plans for a Coup Are Now Public Some of the plots to overturn the election happened in secret. But don’t forget the ones that unfolded in the open. (The Atlantic)

House Hunt Victoria, Economic Risks, Used Cars, and James Bond

Tuesday morning news drop

  • The Economy Looks Solid. But These Are the Big Risks Ahead. One concern is that political leaders will mismanage things in the world’s largest and second-largest economies. (Upshot)

  • Wall Street Scans the Lots as Used Cars Prod Inflation The Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index, an obscure tracker of wholesale used-car prices, has become closely watched by the finance world’s high rollers. (New York Times)

  • The Cost of Insuring Expensive Waterfront Homes Is About to Skyrocket New federal flood insurance rates that better reflect the real risks of climate change are coming. For some, premiums will rise sharply. (New York Times)

  • Cities Are Flouting Flood Rules. The Cost: $1 Billion. If you want publicly subsidized flood insurance, you can’t build a home that’s likely to flood. But local governments around the country, which are responsible for enforcing the rule, have flouted the requirements, accounting for as many as a quarter-million insurance policies in violation (New York Times)

  • Why China Finally Decided to Ban Bitcoin The move to rein-in cryptocurrency has to do with its desire to exert more control over economic activity in the country. Bitcoin and its brethren were designed as a tool for facilitating transactions without institutional authorities like banks or governments, so allowing them to flourish in any country takes some power away from state actors. (Slate)

  • An Electrifying Future for Hypercars? After more than 50 years of V8- and V12-powered super- and hypercars that evolved incrementally, change is in the air. Increasingly, the best-performing European, Japanese, and American vehicles are battery powered (Penta)

  • The Rise of the Pandemic Dashboard Governments around the world have created online tools for the public to view the latest data on Covid-19, but some platforms are better than others. (CityLab)

  • The NBA’s Anti-Vaxxers Are Trying to Push Around the League — And It’s Working Conspiracy theories in the locker room. Mask police in the arena. Superstars trying to avoid the shot. After bringing back the culture from Covid, basketball confronts its own civil war. (Rolling Stone)

  • It’s No Time to Die: but is it time to revoke James Bond’s licence to kill? In the 1960s, 007 was a glamorous antidote to postwar austerity, but now he’s more laughable than heroic. Can the Bond brand survive, post-Brexit? (The Guardian)

  • Justin Tucker’s Record-Breaking Field Goal Was a Thing of Destiny The Ravens kicker booted a 66-yard, walk-off field goal to further cement himself as the greatest kicker in NFL history (The Ringer)

  • How many empty homes are there in Victoria The 2016 census states that there were 8330 empty homes in Greater Victoria, representing 4.8% of the total in the region. Given we only had 845 active residential listings at the end of August, at first glance it would be reasonable to conclude that we don’t have a supply problem, we have an empty homes problem. (House Hunt Victoria)

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