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From Miriam Sweeney
From Miriam Sweeney

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From Chuck Sellman
From Chuck Sellman

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Juice vs Sauce
Juice vs Sauce

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Recommended by Alan Crystal
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From Alan Crystal
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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly
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Shrey Purohit recommends
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Eric Meier’s latest project
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Adam Koszek knows owner
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Lance Descourouez knows
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Steve Bazant spoke with 
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Lily‘s son RAINE works here.
Lily‘s son RAINE works here.

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Williams College Visual Resources Center
Williams College Visual Resources Center

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Williams College Visual Resource Center uses this per Michelle Apotsos
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Turningart.com - used by JP Morgan in Mountain View offices 
Turningart.com - used by JP Morgan in Mountain View offices 

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JP Morgan Chase - art in office - 8/14/25
JP Morgan Chase - art in office - 8/14/25

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Friend of Mark Governor and Lily Yu
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Maryanne Grace worked at van Eck for the summer of 2025
Maryanne Grace worked at van Eck for the summer of 2025

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Map of extent of control in North America 
Map of extent of control in North America 

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VisitWicklow.ie
VisitWicklow.ie

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Wicklow Way
Wicklow Way

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 Katie Hansen - Payton Stiewe says she would be interested in SF maps
 Katie Hansen - Payton Stiewe says she would be interested in SF maps

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Bob Bransten artist / friend
Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend
Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend
Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Chris Hughes uses this to edit voice notes
Chris Hughes uses this to edit voice notes

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[ 2025-12-05 18:19:30 ]

 

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 18:52]
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So I just got done with my first waymo, and darn it, I have to record this here because I'm afraid I'm gonna lose it on Pixium. Um, but I'll try to think through the 8 minutes of talk that I just gave. Um, uh, what are my impressions? Uh, the first ones relate to getting in and having to figure out how to unlock the darn thing and get in. Um, And then, uh, it giving me a few instructions about the ride, what to touch, what not to touch. Um, and Not having a person with you in the vehicle, so. You realize more about how we rely on other people to do things for us and that space and maybe this is first, the space, right, even when you're with another human being in a car, it's really not by yourself and as much as I I'm on my phone when I'm in uh a lift with a driver, uh, or, or just looking out the window, you know, you're with another human being. And so that was starkly different to be in a space without another person there and realizing as much as you try to tune out the other person, uh, they're there. Uh, or in this case, they're not there. Um, Then there's the work aspect of this, and, and so in my work, I rely on other people. I work with other people. I do things, other people do, do, do, uh, work for me. I work for other people, I work with other people. People and, and, and that's, well, it is what it is and I've sought over my life to try to spend more time with people whom I enjoy working. I have a motto that I adopted 3 or 4 years ago, uh, called, it's carpe diem con amigos. I used to be carpe diem, but now it's seize the day with other people because when you do things with other people. It's more enjoyable. And frankly, you get more done, but it's also more satisfying to be on a journey with another human being. And, and, and so I, I, I feel a little bit like, like this Waymo is a spreadsheet, like it does a lot of work for us instead of doing math in your head. Um, you've got a tool, you've got a robot doing the work for you now. Um, or maybe it's like having a conversation with another human being, um, versus, you know, talking to yourself, and, uh, but you're not relying on that person to do that function for you of getting you from A to B. And Yes, in some ways, that's good. I sought out over time to not work with people who aren't good at getting things done or getting you from A to B. But, um, But also when you, when it does work and you are working with somebody. Uh, and they do get you from A to B. It's a really enjoyable process. And that's all going to be lost, that good and that bad of having someone do something for you. Probably, you know, the better overall that the job's going to get done and you don't have to. Worry about it. Uh, you don't have a good interaction with somebody, but you're not gonna learn about any of your, uh, Uber or Lyft drivers anymore. They're not gonna be there. So, I guess one more thing has been moved to be done by a robot instead of by uh another human being. Uh, and the Larry David side of me is happy to not have as many interactions with other human beings. Um, now, the, the, and also channeling Larry David is the second major point. The first is about work and the second is about just Relationships being life sustaining and, and that's all gone. When I go to a hotel. I often will want to go to the lobby to at least know that there are people who are living in. Doing things and the world's going about, uh, waking up, and that makes you feel a little bit less alone. Will Smith in that movie was the last guy alive on Earth, who would want that? Who would want to live their whole life, you know, entirely by their own, by themselves. Here we are. Um, one more thing that we do on our own, one more bowling alone. And, and Is that good? I don't know. Probably not. Then again, we can seek out the people that we want to seek out to be, uh, for our social interaction, but you gotta, you definitely got to seek it out. And some people don't seek it out and they don't even know that they're missing social interactions. And, um, there, there, those social interactions are life sustaining. In COVID, we all figured out that we needed to interact with other people to be healthy. And Again, one more place where that life sustaining social interaction is, uh, is gone. Um, but hey, from a business perspective, uh, Waimo has done its job of thinking about the customer experience and it was all done very well, um. So thank you Waymo. Uh, maybe I missed something, but, uh, I can't think of it. It's the work and it's the, and it's the, the, the, the. The, the, I guess, again, thinking about how we, in our work lives, rely on other people and seek out other people who are of a high quality to do things with. And um Yeah, I mean, I will double down on that, um, of doing more things with people, and those being the most meaningful things. In my life, to work with other people. Um, well, I, yeah, I, I, I that that's the time I have left. That's what I want to do, work with other, do interesting things with other people that are meeting the objectives of each thing, whether it's whether it's um making money and serving our customers at Lewis Bolt or Webster Pacific. Or, uh, uh, developing uh Pixium and hopefully making some money on that. Um, I've got lots of wonderful people in my life. Um, and, uh, if Waymo has its way, you know, we won't, we, none of those people, and hey, none of the people that I'm working on anything with, uh, those things I mentioned are, you know, Waymo or Lyft or Uber drivers, but, um. Yeah, maybe, maybe in the, in the, you know, in the working realm, um, we're headed for more robots. Hey, AI uh could easily, not easily, but could become uh analysts. Uh, to do things for us that other humans do and what will that be like to actually, you know, carpe diem con amigos, carpe diem con robatos, um. Uh, what will that be like? Maybe that's where we're headed, and will it be as less emotionally satisfying to achieve things, uh, with a robot at your side? Uh, I don't know. Um, but I do know that it's satisfying to accomplish and most satisfying to accomplish with, with others. I'm guessing, you know, I didn't. You know, give a pat on the bat to Waimo after finishing the ride, and I didn't have to tip them, and that was a nice thing. Um, so it will be different as we get more robotics, uh, assisting our lives. Hopefully, it makes us appreciate the people that we do have in our lives more. OK, that's it. Thank you.

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Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 14:50]
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This is a test of a voice note transcription on our production site, testing 1234.

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From Miriam Sweeney

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From Miriam Sweeney

2025-12-03 14:57:39i41202
2025-12-03 14:57:47i41203

This is a World War I era propaganda map that appeared on the cover of Life magazine on February 10, 1916. It depicts a hypothetical scenario of the United States under the control of the Central Powers (primarily Germany and Austria-Hungary). 

  • The map was created to counter American isolationist sentiment and encourage the U.S. to join the war effort.
  • The U.S. is renamed "New Prussia," and cities and regions are given German or German-sounding names, such as "New Berlin" (Washington D.C.), "Kulturplatz" (Boston), and "Schlauterhaus" (Chicago).
  • Other areas are renamed based on Central Powers allies, such as "Japonica" (California) and "Turconia" (Florida).
  • The surrounding ocean is labeled the "Von Tirpitz Ocean". 
    Source: Google AI

    [ 2025-12-03 05:49:22 ]

Seldom has a Prussian invasion been treated with so much whimsy. In 1916, amidst a national debate over American entry into World War I, LifeMagazine weighed in with a warning about the potential price of staying out. The tone was light-hearted, but the argument was serious: If Germany triumphed on the continent, America was at risk.

Life Magazine, February 10, 1916.

The first thing that stands out on this map is that some of the invaders’ naming decisions are more creative than others. New Potsdam, New Berlin and New Hamborg appear alongside Ach Looey, Schlauterhaus, and Denverburg. The Great Lakes have been renamed after beers, which naturally raises the question of where Culmbacher went.

Bismarck, of course, is still Bismarck.

After presumably tense negotiations, Germany’s Ottoman allies have been left with Florida. Alongside Baghdad Corners and Constantinople Junction, Key West has become West Turkey. Japan, despite siding with Britain and the Allies, has nonetheless taken the opportunity to seize the West Coast, leading to the particularly inspired Nagaseattle. Sadly, no one seems to have bothered with Canada, which remains the land of Barbarians.

Inevitably, America’s geographic position meant that works like this one would remain more fun and fantastical than the equivalent invasion literature that emerged on the other side of the Atlantic. Yet the anxieties at play were similar to those that helped drive European powers to war in 1914. Particularly striking in this regard is the inclusion of an “American Reservation” spanning Arizona and New Mexico. At the outset of the 20th century, Europeans seem to have increasingly imagined military defeat at the hands of another great power in terms of their own treatment of conquered non-European peoples. Rather than simply the loss of wealth, territory, or prestige, they feared something closer to colonization and national destruction. For Americans, this presumably meant being relegated to the status of the Navajo.

The Fatherland, February 23, 1916.

Yet just as these fears could be marshaled in favor of war, they could also serve as arguments for isolationism. Following the appearance of Life’s 1916 cover, a pro-German newspaper called The Fatherland posted a rebuttal titled “New Map of the D.S.E.” or “Dependent States of England.” In this version, Great Britain is the power that exploits America’s ill-fated entry into the war. Chicago becomes Dryrottingham, Bismarck becomes Kitchener, and Washington becomes London on the Potomac. New York, in a desperate effort to find something that sounds even more like what the British would rename a city they just conquered in North America, becomes Duke of Yorktown.

If this particular map failed to keep America out of war in 1916, a similar effort failed three decades later. The possibilities of the genre came full circle with a 1939 front page from the Chicago Herald and Examiner titled “If We Enter a World War—and LOSE!” This entry offers a more familiar what-if-the-Nazis-won style dystopia. Even if the map tactfully avoids naming any of the countries involved, the lightning bolts on the wings of the planes bombing New York give a clear indication.

Fortunately, and I don’t think I’m giving too much away, America entered the war and WON! Germany ended up occupied and divided, while Americans moved on to imagining other apocalyptic scenarios. Perhaps this will change now with the much-discussed return of great-power competition. But so far we have yet to see any updated invasion maps featuring New Beijing, Xicago, or Shanghaiowa.

***

Thank you for reading Mid-Afternoon Map. Readers can send comments, criticism or more maps to nick.danforth@warontherocks.com.

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Recommended by Nick Toole

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Recommended by Nick Toole

[ 2025-11-24 17:12:32 ]

 

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 10:50]
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Testing 1, testing, testing, 123.

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From Chuck Sellman

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From Chuck Sellman

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 10:37]
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Testing 13123 testing.

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Juice vs Sauce

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Juice vs Sauce



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Recommended by Alan Crystal

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Recommended by Alan Crystal

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From Alan Crystal

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From Alan Crystal

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https://lnkd.in/e7t7eGhc 

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

 Gabrielle said that he’s written a book that I should try to track down. His art is about the invisible people in museums who actually make museums go.

[ 2025-11-04 00:43:06 ]

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

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Recommended by Bob Bransten

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Recommended by Bob Bransten

[ 2025-10-23 22:00:36 ]

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-10-23 22:11]
----------------------
OK, so I just finished this book called All the Beauty in the World, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and me, Patrick Brinley. And it was great. What a lovely read about. Uh, uh, about. Patrick's, uh, journey through life, um, after his brother died. I'm guessing Patrick was in his early twenties and his brother was mid-twenties, a little older than him. And he passed away, I think, from cancer, and it was very sad. And, um, Patrick was gonna be a writer, but then, but then, um. Uh, stopped with that path and. Remember exactly what the story was about how he got a job at the museum, but he became a security guard and did it for like 10 years and. Um, and so it's a great reflection on, certainly there's lots of pieces about grief, there's, but then there's pieces about life in this job and. And, um, it was the perfect job for him, I think, given where he, what had just happened to him, um, reflections on, on life and all sorts of pieces of art and what art is and means to someone, um. Um, What, what they were. I mean, he was a guard, he gets pushed through, he gets not, he gets placed all over um his friendships with people who are so different from him, double his age and from another continent, people from Guyana and all over the world who are guards and have been guards for years, um. Uh, what art is? Um Appreciating a beauty. Um, Uh The work of artists, um. And the timelessness of art. Um, the, the, the book ends with him sort of coming to the end of this chapter of his life. He'd been married all the time, or much of the time that he was working at the Met, and he gets married during that time. He has a kid and then another kid, and Um, and his life, um, and what he chooses to build with his life, um. Ah, changes fundamentally at that point. Um There were some great, great. Um, discussions about art and Uh, I'll read a couple of things here. I think that sometimes we need permission to stop in a door, and a work of art grants us that. I think for Brinley, art is about beauty. Um, Um Um, He talks about, let's see, 3 distinct types of lovers, art lovers, lovers of the Met and lovebirds. Um, What else? There were some wonderful little snippets in this book, and I need to find them quickly here. Kind of going backwards. Um are OK. So great works of art. They help us believe that some things aren't transitory at all, but rather remain beautiful, true, majestic, sad, or joyful over many lifetimes. And here is the proof painted in oils, carved in marble, stitched into quilts. He was taken by the, the, um. Quilt exhibit The, uh, women quilters, the benders, bend bend, um, and also by the Michelangelo exhibit. Um, the greatest art is produced by people hemmed in by circumstances, making patchwork efforts to create something beautiful, useful, true. In short, I've come to understand that my life will consist of chapters, which raises the possibility of bringing my current current chapter to a close, and that's sort of when he, when he, uh, leaves. Um, he's been the, the, the quilts. Um, Let's see here. The whole tortured Michelangelo thing. Um, an exhibit called Unfinished about works of art that were only partially finished. Um, Mary Cassatt, this was her style, this was her subject, she made, um, uh, intelligence that can't be replicated. Um, Oh, the, the gun, the arms and armor section, and Colt revolvers, um, Colt pursued the novel goal of producing perfectly interchangeable machine-made parts, a leap forward in the development of assembly line manufacturing that became known as the American system, kind of like Southwest Airlines, I said. Um The musical instrument. Section and, uh, this idea that maybe they should have been played instead of just stuck up in a, in an exhibit. Um. Uh, the, the, the Rogers, Jacob S. Rogers, locomotive manufacturer who gave all sorts of stuff to the Met and really launched the collection. Um, Let's see what else. There was a whole section on, um. On a Understanding world's beauty and also our logical brains. Um, he spent time in the Islamic wing. Oh, the final product would contain no visible trace of the circle, but stood as a demonstration of the unity that underlies multiplicity, a tentative Muslim faith, faith, unity and multiplicity. And Islamic Islamic art. Too many visitors think of the Met as a museum of art history where the objective is to learn about art rather than from it. I believe we take art seriously when we try to discern what at close quarters, close quarters it reveals. And also at the end of the book, he had a nice. Um, encouragement to people about. Go into the world, you are qualified to weigh in on the biggest questions artwork raises. So, under the cover of no one hearing your thoughts, think brave thoughts, searching thoughts, painful thoughts, and maybe foolish thoughts, not to arrive at right answers, but to better understand the human mind and heart as you put both to use. Find out what you love in the Met, what you learn from, and what you can use as fuel, and venture back into the world, carrying something with you, something that doesn't fit quite easily into your mind, that weighs on you as you go forward and changes you a bit. Um, I like this going backwards to grief is among other things, a loss of rhythm. You lose someone, it puts a hole in your life, and for a time you huddle down in that hole. He just had lots of time on his hand, and so he spent. Admiring, he spent it admiring art. Um, OK, there's a frame around her putting space between her sacred beauty and older meaning of the word sacred is set apart and the profane mundane world. I think that sometimes we need permission to stop in a door, and a work of art grants us that. He saw a mother in the American wing fountain hands her child two coins, one wish for yourself and another, another just as big for someone else. Oh, I like that, good parenting. A work of art tends to speak of things that are at once too large and too intimate to be summed up, and they speak of them by not speaking at all. I think for me one of the things that that I think about, especially in relation to Pixium, is that. Is that, um, knowing the backstory for a piece of art is really important and. Uh, of course, the modern. Uh, the typical museum system gives you a wall tag and not a lot more, and everything becomes more meaningful when you understand the backstory. And I don't buy this idea that the thing should just be and exist by itself. I think that we, we know it, we love it more when we understand the backstory. Those quilts by the B Benders, G benders, um, uh, are much more meaningful because we understand. The suffering of those people, and yet they made this art in spite of or during that time that they were suffering. Much of the greatest art I find seeks to remind us of the obvious. This is real. It all is all it says. Take the time to stop and imagine more fully the things you already know. We have to return.

1

Recommended by Cheryl McIntosh

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Recommended by Cheryl McIntosh

[ 2025-10-15 23:18:49 ]

0

[ 2025-10-14 01:48:26 ]

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[ 2025-10-14 01:48:26 ]

 

2025-10-14 01:50:34i39780

Contrary to popular belief, Lorem Ipsum is not simply random text. It has roots in a piece of classical Latin literature from 45 BC, making it over 2000 years old. Richard McClintock, a Latin professor at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, looked up one of the more obscure Latin words, consectetur, from a Lorem Ipsum passage, and going through the cites of the word in classical literature, discovered the undoubtable source. Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 of "de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum" (The Extremes of Good and Evil) by Cicero, written in 45 BC. This book is a treatise on the theory of ethics, very popular during the Renaissance. The first line of Lorem Ipsum, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet..", comes from a line in section 1.10.32.

[ 2025-10-14 01:48:26 ]

 

 

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[ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ]

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0

From Root Division

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From Root Division

https://smarthistory.org/ | enrique chagoya

2025-10-13 17:07:00i39765
2025-10-13 17:07:17i39766
2025-10-13 17:07:42i39767

[ 2025-10-13 17:06:15 ]

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Shrey Purohit recommends

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Shrey Purohit recommends

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.


[ 2025-10-13 02:53:21 ]

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[ 2025-10-12 15:50:20 ]

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[ 2025-10-12 15:50:20 ]

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-10-12 16:37]
----------------------
The The, um, glimpses talks were great. Let's see, my impressions from them. Randy Joss journeys with Joan. Uh, savoring the moment, being present, Tom Paper, mapman, maps are cool. Uh, Suzanne Taylor, a month in Provence. So The whole Little Prince and what's Uh, essential is invisible. Uh, Kate Curry, who's your daddy. Uh Just heartfelt, um. Raising of children and. Being comfortable. Being comfortable, um. With their, um, with their, uh, reality of 22 moms, uh, Charles Xu, music is a universal language, that was a lot of fun. Um, there's a lot of amazing artists out there who, uh, I never hear about, never delve into it. Denise Rabius, art and meditation are good for the soul. Uh Yeah, well, she's an artist and, and she meditates and it was fun to see her passion for that. Jody Johnson flying with a Purpose, um, following a thread, uh, she didn't know where she was going and, and we got to follow her journey into, um, greater levels of. Being a pilot and also flying people, uh, who, um. Uh, for medical reasons. Eric Meyer, I had no idea he got into the Mississippi because of a book he read. Um, that I've, I've written down somewhere, uh, Beta Gallego and ventures with the unruly law. Oh, crazy in the Philippines, how the government has, uh, overreached. There were these amazing parallels to, to, um, To what's happening in the United States. And then Sandy Dean letting go of the outcome, incredibly courageous. Uh, what he's done and, uh, Eugene Tan searching for a home. I want to find the name of a Chinese person. He's in, uh, he grew up not in China, but he's Chinese and goes to Hong Kong, but he doesn't speak Mandarin. So he's sort of an outsider. There's a name for what he is, a person who's not entirely at home, um, because of their language or geography or uh racial background. And then Steve Ellis lessons from playing the field leading is carrying the whole with you thing about his, with you in rugby is what you say to somebody that you're with and his rugby teammates being with him. In his challenges first when his mom passed away when he was 21 and in college, and then now with his, with his um wife having stage 3 breast cancer. Uh, the talks were amazing. I want to get the list of the talks from 5 and 10 years ago.

1

[ 2025-10-12 15:47:59 ]

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[ 2025-10-12 15:47:59 ]

Polarization and democracy 10/11/25

  • I was one of the people who almost left
  • Red and blue people in my life
  • Hate the democrats just a little bit less than I hate the republicans
  • Politics is war - you’re naive to think that the other side will not use all tools and weapons available
  • What’s essential is invisible - Four stoic virtues: Wisdom, Courage, Justice, and Temperance. What about manners and love?
  • Democrats and republicans are playing too much to the fringes
  • Income inequality is growing - you get the revolution you deserve
  • Prop 50 - getting in the mud
  • We need a third party - or people in the middle, democrat or republican, need to voice themselves and combat the fringes

 

2025-10-12 15:48:37i39757



 

[ 2025-10-12 15:47:59 ]

 

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Eric Meier’s latest project

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Eric Meier’s latest project

Eric read this book and this sparked his move to Mississippi.  

2025-10-12 14:28:12i39755
2025-10-12 14:27:44i39754

[ 2025-10-12 14:26:08 ]

0

Adam Koszek knows owner

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Adam Koszek knows owner

[ 2025-10-09 15:22:30 ]

0

Lance Descourouez knows

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Lance Descourouez knows

[ 2025-10-09 12:50:52 ]

0

Steve Bazant spoke with 

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Steve Bazant spoke with 

[ 2025-10-09 12:50:34 ]

0

[ 2025-10-05 12:58:05 ]

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[ 2025-10-05 12:58:05 ]

"The Jewish Phenomenon" is a book written by Steven Silbiger, first published in 2000 by Longstreet Press with a revised edition released in 2009. The book seeks to explain the disproportionate success of Jewish people in business and professional fields by identifying seven core cultural principles that have contributed to their enduring economic achievement.

Author and Publication

  • Author: Steven Silbiger
  • First Publication: 2000 by Longstreet Press
  • Revised Edition: 2009 by Lyons (M. Evans & Company)

Summary and Core Principles

Silbiger, based on extensive reading and research, presents seven keys or principles that form the foundation of Jewish financial and professional success. These are not merely academic observations but practical cultural practices and values rooted in Jewish history and experience.

The Seven Principles

  1. Understand that real wealth is portable; it’s knowledge and education
    • Emphasizes self-esteem, delaying gratification, pursuit of quality education, keeping skills updated, and setting high expectations for children.
  2. Take care of your own and they will take care of you
    • Focus on supporting one's community through business and charity that promotes self-sufficiency.
  3. Successful people are professionals and entrepreneurs
    • Encourages pursuing a career while maintaining entrepreneurial ventures and tapping into new opportunities.
  4. Develop your verbal confidence
    • Cultivate communication skills as critical assets.
  5. Be selectively extravagant but prudently frugal
    • Balance spending wisely with occasional indulgence.
  6. Take pride in individuality: encourage creativity
    • Promote uniqueness and creative problem-solving.
  7. Be psychologically driven to prove something
    • Use the outsider status as motivation, believe in self-determination, take risks, and make long-range plans.

Examples Cited in the Book

The book uses a variety of anecdotes and statistics to illustrate these principles in practice, including stories of Jewish entrepreneurs and professionals who succeeded by applying these values. Specific historical and cultural references are used to show how these traits have been honed through Jewish religious teachings, historical persecution, and community cohesion.

Book's Tone and Approach

The work combines data, anecdotal evidence, and Jewish humor. It is positioned as accessible and practical, aiming to offer lessons applicable to both Jews and non-Jews who seek success. Silbiger respects cultural identity and historical experience while providing commonsense wisdom.

In sum, "The Jewish Phenomenon" by Steven Silbiger is a researched exploration of how seven cultural principles rooted in Jewish history and identity have led to remarkable success, illustrated through numerous real-life examples and supported by statistical evidence.linkedin+4

  1. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/jewish-phenomenon-7-keys-enduring-wealth-people-beryl-subia
  2. https://careerlanenigeria.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/steven-silbiger-the-jewish-phenomenon_-seven-keys-to-the-enduring-wealth-of-a-people-m-evans-company-2009.pdf
  3. https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7177
  4. https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-jewish-phenomenon-steven-silbiger/1100066559
  5. https://archive.org/details/jewishphenomenon0000silb
  6. https://sobrief.com/books/the-jewish-phenomenon
  7. https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1h1ZbMTedPfcILMT0hPoohqopvOn2_XMY
  8. https://www.reddit.com/r/economy/comments/1d6nfnn/succeeding_in_a_profoundly_psychopathic_system/
  9. https://openlibrary.org/books/OL8644304M/The_Jewish_Phenomenon
  10. https://www.scribd.com/document/891930341/Jewish-Phenomenon-Review
  11. https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/the-jewish-phenomenon--seven-keys-to-the-enduring-wealth-of-a-people_steven-silbiger/309832/
  12. https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Jewish-Phenomenon/Steven-Silbiger/9781590771549
  13. https://www.studocu.com/row/document/university-of-nairobi/communication-skills/book-review-1-the-jewish-phenomena/82356967
  14. https://www.abebooks.com/Jewish-Phenomenon-Seven-Keys-Enduring-Wealth/30893009892/bd
  15. https://www.goodwillbooks.com/the-jewish-phenomenon-seven-keys-to-the-829-9781563525667.html
  16. https://aish.com/the-debate-over-jewish-achievement/
  17. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpPqyn-eL1I
  18. https://www.abebooks.com/9781563525667/Jewish-Phenomenon-Seven-Keys-Enduring-1563525666/plp
  19. https://prestigebookshop.com/product/jewish-phenomenon-the/
  20. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41206203

    [ 2025-10-05 12:58:05 ]
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[ 2025-10-03 01:42:00 ]

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[ 2025-10-03 01:42:00 ]

0

[ 2025-09-23 14:51:03 ]

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[ 2025-09-23 14:51:03 ]

[ 2025-09-23 14:51:03 ]

1

Referenced in Smoke with Taron Egerton

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Referenced in Smoke with Taron Egerton

[ 2025-09-14 01:25:19 ]

0

Steve Hanon recommends

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Steve Hanon recommends

[ 2025-09-14 00:48:00 ]

0

[ 2025-09-07 23:13:06 ]

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[ 2025-09-07 23:13:06 ]

[ 2025-09-07 23:13:06 ]

0

[ 2025-09-05 16:50:03 ]

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[ 2025-09-05 16:50:03 ]
0

[ 2025-09-05 14:15:11 ]

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[ 2025-09-05 14:15:11 ]

[ 2025-09-05 14:15:11 ]

0

[ 2025-08-31 18:17:54 ]

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[ 2025-08-31 18:17:54 ]

[ 2025-08-31 18:17:54 ]

0

[ 2025-08-27 02:11:10 ]

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[ 2025-08-27 02:11:10 ]

[ 2025-08-27 02:11:10 ]

0

[ 2025-08-26 14:31:53 ]

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[ 2025-08-26 14:31:53 ]

 

2025-08-26 14:34:09i38685
2025-08-26 14:34:09#38685
0

Lily‘s son RAINE works here.

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Lily‘s son RAINE works here.

[ 2025-08-25 01:23:03 ]

0

[ 2025-08-24 00:58:28 ]

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[ 2025-08-24 00:58:28 ]

[ 2025-08-24 00:58:28 ]

0

[ 2025-08-22 14:51:16 ]

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[ 2025-08-22 14:51:16 ]

2025-08-22 14:53:06i38209

[ 2025-08-22 14:51:16 ]

0

[ 2025-08-20 03:46:51 ]

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[ 2025-08-20 03:46:51 ]

equalearth
[ 2025-08-20 03:46:51 ]

0

[ 2025-08-18 16:59:47 ]

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[ 2025-08-18 16:59:47 ]
2025-08-19 14:12:30i38141
2025-08-19 14:12:30#38141

 

[ 2025-08-18 16:59:47 ]

0

[ 2025-08-18 16:01:33 ]

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[ 2025-08-18 16:01:33 ]

[ 2025-08-18 16:01:33 ]

0

Williams College Visual Resources Center

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Williams College Visual Resources Center
0

Williams College Visual Resource Center uses this per Michelle Apotsos

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Williams College Visual Resource Center uses this per Michelle Apotsos

[ 2025-08-15 15:01:04 ]

0

Turningart.com - used by JP Morgan in Mountain View offices 

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Turningart.com - used by JP Morgan in Mountain View offices 

[ 2025-08-15 11:49:12 ]

0

JP Morgan Chase - art in office - 8/14/25

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JP Morgan Chase - art in office - 8/14/25

 

Turningart.com (summary by Perplexity)

TurningArt is a national, full-service artwork company based in Boston that connects contemporary artists with businesses, healthcare providers, real estate, and individuals across the U.S. The platform offers a curated catalog featuring works from more than 3,000 artists, with options to rent, purchase, or commission original pieces and prints. TurningArt handles every step from consultation and curation to installation and rotation, providing turnkey art solutions for commercial and residential spaces. Artists benefit from flexible, non-exclusive partnerships and exposure to diverse clients, while customers receive personalized art programs and expert advisory services to enhance their environments.linkedin+2

  1. https://www.linkedin.com/company/turningart
  2. https://alexnyeart.com/blog/
  3. https://sidehusl.com/turningart/
  4. https://www.trustpilot.com/review/turnedart.com
  5. https://www.zoominfo.com/c/turningart/346462118
  6. https://phoenixchildrensfoundation.org/moments/hope-makers/turning-art-into-impact/
  7. https://www.turningart.com/artists
  8. https://mccmeetingspublic.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/hutchinstx-meet-3458c03dfa1e43878a85635df0b23a39/ITEM-Attachment-001-8b5801eccecb41d7917ca336a76da62d.pdf
  9. https://www.turningart.com/why-turningart
  10. https://www.turningart.com
  11. https://www.trustpilot.com/review/turningart.com


[ 2025-08-15 11:05:03 ]

1

Friend of Mark Governor and Lily Yu

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Friend of Mark Governor and Lily Yu

in his 30s - sees innovative art-related things - very well-connected


[ 2025-08-14 18:25:41 ]

0

Maryanne Grace worked at van Eck for the summer of 2025

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Maryanne Grace worked at van Eck for the summer of 2025

[ 2025-08-09 01:35:39 ]

0

Map of extent of control in North America 

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Map of extent of control in North America 

 

2025-08-08 11:49:24i37697

 

 

2025-08-08 11:49:39i37698

2025-08-08 12:09:23i37718

[ 2025-08-08 11:48:39 ]

0

VisitWicklow.ie

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VisitWicklow.ie

VisitWicklow.ie


[ 2025-08-03 16:32:37 ]

0

Wicklow Way

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Wicklow Way

wicklowway.com

[ 2025-08-03 16:28:23 ]

0

 Katie Hansen - Payton Stiewe says she would be interested in SF maps

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 Katie Hansen - Payton Stiewe says she would be interested in SF maps

[ 2025-08-03 16:04:43 ]

0

Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

[ 2025-08-02 16:54:00 ]

0

Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

[ 2025-08-02 16:51:32 ]

0

Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

[ 2025-08-02 16:51:19 ]

0

Chris Hughes uses this to edit voice notes

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Chris Hughes uses this to edit voice notes

[ 2025-07-24 23:24:02 ]

0

[ 2025-12-05 18:19:30 ]

 

2025-12-05 18:26:18i41260
2025-12-05 18:26:29i41261



[ 2025-12-05 18:19:30 ]

 

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 18:52]
----------------------
So I just got done with my first waymo, and darn it, I have to record this here because I'm afraid I'm gonna lose it on Pixium. Um, but I'll try to think through the 8 minutes of talk that I just gave. Um, uh, what are my impressions? Uh, the first ones relate to getting in and having to figure out how to unlock the darn thing and get in. Um, And then, uh, it giving me a few instructions about the ride, what to touch, what not to touch. Um, and Not having a person with you in the vehicle, so. You realize more about how we rely on other people to do things for us and that space and maybe this is first, the space, right, even when you're with another human being in a car, it's really not by yourself and as much as I I'm on my phone when I'm in uh a lift with a driver, uh, or, or just looking out the window, you know, you're with another human being. And so that was starkly different to be in a space without another person there and realizing as much as you try to tune out the other person, uh, they're there. Uh, or in this case, they're not there. Um, Then there's the work aspect of this, and, and so in my work, I rely on other people. I work with other people. I do things, other people do, do, do, uh, work for me. I work for other people, I work with other people. People and, and, and that's, well, it is what it is and I've sought over my life to try to spend more time with people whom I enjoy working. I have a motto that I adopted 3 or 4 years ago, uh, called, it's carpe diem con amigos. I used to be carpe diem, but now it's seize the day with other people because when you do things with other people. It's more enjoyable. And frankly, you get more done, but it's also more satisfying to be on a journey with another human being. And, and, and so I, I, I feel a little bit like, like this Waymo is a spreadsheet, like it does a lot of work for us instead of doing math in your head. Um, you've got a tool, you've got a robot doing the work for you now. Um, or maybe it's like having a conversation with another human being, um, versus, you know, talking to yourself, and, uh, but you're not relying on that person to do that function for you of getting you from A to B. And Yes, in some ways, that's good. I sought out over time to not work with people who aren't good at getting things done or getting you from A to B. But, um, But also when you, when it does work and you are working with somebody. Uh, and they do get you from A to B. It's a really enjoyable process. And that's all going to be lost, that good and that bad of having someone do something for you. Probably, you know, the better overall that the job's going to get done and you don't have to. Worry about it. Uh, you don't have a good interaction with somebody, but you're not gonna learn about any of your, uh, Uber or Lyft drivers anymore. They're not gonna be there. So, I guess one more thing has been moved to be done by a robot instead of by uh another human being. Uh, and the Larry David side of me is happy to not have as many interactions with other human beings. Um, now, the, the, and also channeling Larry David is the second major point. The first is about work and the second is about just Relationships being life sustaining and, and that's all gone. When I go to a hotel. I often will want to go to the lobby to at least know that there are people who are living in. Doing things and the world's going about, uh, waking up, and that makes you feel a little bit less alone. Will Smith in that movie was the last guy alive on Earth, who would want that? Who would want to live their whole life, you know, entirely by their own, by themselves. Here we are. Um, one more thing that we do on our own, one more bowling alone. And, and Is that good? I don't know. Probably not. Then again, we can seek out the people that we want to seek out to be, uh, for our social interaction, but you gotta, you definitely got to seek it out. And some people don't seek it out and they don't even know that they're missing social interactions. And, um, there, there, those social interactions are life sustaining. In COVID, we all figured out that we needed to interact with other people to be healthy. And Again, one more place where that life sustaining social interaction is, uh, is gone. Um, but hey, from a business perspective, uh, Waimo has done its job of thinking about the customer experience and it was all done very well, um. So thank you Waymo. Uh, maybe I missed something, but, uh, I can't think of it. It's the work and it's the, and it's the, the, the, the. The, the, I guess, again, thinking about how we, in our work lives, rely on other people and seek out other people who are of a high quality to do things with. And um Yeah, I mean, I will double down on that, um, of doing more things with people, and those being the most meaningful things. In my life, to work with other people. Um, well, I, yeah, I, I, I that that's the time I have left. That's what I want to do, work with other, do interesting things with other people that are meeting the objectives of each thing, whether it's whether it's um making money and serving our customers at Lewis Bolt or Webster Pacific. Or, uh, uh, developing uh Pixium and hopefully making some money on that. Um, I've got lots of wonderful people in my life. Um, and, uh, if Waymo has its way, you know, we won't, we, none of those people, and hey, none of the people that I'm working on anything with, uh, those things I mentioned are, you know, Waymo or Lyft or Uber drivers, but, um. Yeah, maybe, maybe in the, in the, you know, in the working realm, um, we're headed for more robots. Hey, AI uh could easily, not easily, but could become uh analysts. Uh, to do things for us that other humans do and what will that be like to actually, you know, carpe diem con amigos, carpe diem con robatos, um. Uh, what will that be like? Maybe that's where we're headed, and will it be as less emotionally satisfying to achieve things, uh, with a robot at your side? Uh, I don't know. Um, but I do know that it's satisfying to accomplish and most satisfying to accomplish with, with others. I'm guessing, you know, I didn't. You know, give a pat on the bat to Waimo after finishing the ride, and I didn't have to tip them, and that was a nice thing. Um, so it will be different as we get more robotics, uh, assisting our lives. Hopefully, it makes us appreciate the people that we do have in our lives more. OK, that's it. Thank you.

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[ 2025-12-03 14:44:47 ]

 

2025-12-03 14:47:21i41197
2025-12-03 14:47:30i41198
2025-12-03 14:47:38i41199
2025-12-03 14:47:47i41200



[ 2025-12-03 14:44:47 ]

 

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 14:50]
----------------------
This is a test of a voice note transcription on our production site, testing 1234.

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From Miriam Sweeney

2025-12-03 14:57:39i41202
2025-12-03 14:57:47i41203

This is a World War I era propaganda map that appeared on the cover of Life magazine on February 10, 1916. It depicts a hypothetical scenario of the United States under the control of the Central Powers (primarily Germany and Austria-Hungary). 

  • The map was created to counter American isolationist sentiment and encourage the U.S. to join the war effort.
  • The U.S. is renamed "New Prussia," and cities and regions are given German or German-sounding names, such as "New Berlin" (Washington D.C.), "Kulturplatz" (Boston), and "Schlauterhaus" (Chicago).
  • Other areas are renamed based on Central Powers allies, such as "Japonica" (California) and "Turconia" (Florida).
  • The surrounding ocean is labeled the "Von Tirpitz Ocean". 
    Source: Google AI

    [ 2025-12-03 05:49:22 ]

Seldom has a Prussian invasion been treated with so much whimsy. In 1916, amidst a national debate over American entry into World War I, LifeMagazine weighed in with a warning about the potential price of staying out. The tone was light-hearted, but the argument was serious: If Germany triumphed on the continent, America was at risk.

Life Magazine, February 10, 1916.

The first thing that stands out on this map is that some of the invaders’ naming decisions are more creative than others. New Potsdam, New Berlin and New Hamborg appear alongside Ach Looey, Schlauterhaus, and Denverburg. The Great Lakes have been renamed after beers, which naturally raises the question of where Culmbacher went.

Bismarck, of course, is still Bismarck.

After presumably tense negotiations, Germany’s Ottoman allies have been left with Florida. Alongside Baghdad Corners and Constantinople Junction, Key West has become West Turkey. Japan, despite siding with Britain and the Allies, has nonetheless taken the opportunity to seize the West Coast, leading to the particularly inspired Nagaseattle. Sadly, no one seems to have bothered with Canada, which remains the land of Barbarians.

Inevitably, America’s geographic position meant that works like this one would remain more fun and fantastical than the equivalent invasion literature that emerged on the other side of the Atlantic. Yet the anxieties at play were similar to those that helped drive European powers to war in 1914. Particularly striking in this regard is the inclusion of an “American Reservation” spanning Arizona and New Mexico. At the outset of the 20th century, Europeans seem to have increasingly imagined military defeat at the hands of another great power in terms of their own treatment of conquered non-European peoples. Rather than simply the loss of wealth, territory, or prestige, they feared something closer to colonization and national destruction. For Americans, this presumably meant being relegated to the status of the Navajo.

The Fatherland, February 23, 1916.

Yet just as these fears could be marshaled in favor of war, they could also serve as arguments for isolationism. Following the appearance of Life’s 1916 cover, a pro-German newspaper called The Fatherland posted a rebuttal titled “New Map of the D.S.E.” or “Dependent States of England.” In this version, Great Britain is the power that exploits America’s ill-fated entry into the war. Chicago becomes Dryrottingham, Bismarck becomes Kitchener, and Washington becomes London on the Potomac. New York, in a desperate effort to find something that sounds even more like what the British would rename a city they just conquered in North America, becomes Duke of Yorktown.

If this particular map failed to keep America out of war in 1916, a similar effort failed three decades later. The possibilities of the genre came full circle with a 1939 front page from the Chicago Herald and Examiner titled “If We Enter a World War—and LOSE!” This entry offers a more familiar what-if-the-Nazis-won style dystopia. Even if the map tactfully avoids naming any of the countries involved, the lightning bolts on the wings of the planes bombing New York give a clear indication.

Fortunately, and I don’t think I’m giving too much away, America entered the war and WON! Germany ended up occupied and divided, while Americans moved on to imagining other apocalyptic scenarios. Perhaps this will change now with the much-discussed return of great-power competition. But so far we have yet to see any updated invasion maps featuring New Beijing, Xicago, or Shanghaiowa.

***

Thank you for reading Mid-Afternoon Map. Readers can send comments, criticism or more maps to nick.danforth@warontherocks.com.

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[ 2025-11-25 16:00:21 ]

[ 2025-11-25 16:00:21 ]

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[ 2025-11-25 14:11:22 ]

 

2025-11-25 14:11:44i40887

 

 

2025-11-25 14:12:00i40888

 

[ 2025-11-25 14:11:22 ]

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Recommended by Nick Toole

[ 2025-11-24 17:12:32 ]

 

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 10:50]
----------------------
Testing 1, testing, testing, 123.

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From Chuck Sellman

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-12-05 10:37]
----------------------
Testing 13123 testing.

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Juice vs Sauce



[ 2025-11-22 14:16:41 ]

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[ 2025-11-19 15:08:21 ]

[ 2025-11-19 15:08:21 ]

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[ 2025-11-15 17:03:06 ]

2025-11-15 17:03:46i40424

2025-11-15 17:03:32i40423

[ 2025-11-15 17:03:06 ]

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Recommended by Alan Crystal

[ 2025-12-04 22:37:34 ]

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From Alan Crystal

2025-11-15 17:00:28i40421

2025-11-15 17:00:18i40420

2025-11-15 17:00:06i40419
[ 2025-11-15 16:59:09 ]

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[ 2025-11-12 17:23:03 ]

https://lnkd.in/e7t7eGhc 

[ 2025-11-12 17:23:03 ]

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[ 2025-11-11 19:07:59 ]

[ 2025-11-11 19:07:59 ]

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[ 2025-11-09 01:31:46 ]

 

2025-11-09 01:32:11i40330

2025-11-09 01:33:41i40331
2025-11-09 01:33:54i40332
2025-11-09 01:34:03i40333


[ 2025-11-09 01:31:46 ]

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[ 2025-11-08 04:45:32 ]

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[ 2025-11-08 04:45:17 ]

[ 2025-11-08 04:45:17 ]

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[ 2025-11-07 20:39:22 ]

2025-11-24 17:21:55#40886
2025-11-24 17:21:46#40885
 

 

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[ 2025-11-05 22:42:06 ]

[ 2025-11-05 22:42:06 ]

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[ 2025-11-05 22:41:34 ]

[ 2025-11-05 22:41:34 ]

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[ 2025-11-05 22:33:06 ]

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

 Gabrielle said that he’s written a book that I should try to track down. His art is about the invisible people in museums who actually make museums go.

[ 2025-11-04 00:43:06 ]

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Recommended by Gabrielle Ly

[ 2025-11-04 00:42:49 ]

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[ 2025-10-30 17:02:49 ]

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Recommended by Bob Bransten

[ 2025-10-23 22:00:36 ]

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-10-23 22:11]
----------------------
OK, so I just finished this book called All the Beauty in the World, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and me, Patrick Brinley. And it was great. What a lovely read about. Uh, uh, about. Patrick's, uh, journey through life, um, after his brother died. I'm guessing Patrick was in his early twenties and his brother was mid-twenties, a little older than him. And he passed away, I think, from cancer, and it was very sad. And, um, Patrick was gonna be a writer, but then, but then, um. Uh, stopped with that path and. Remember exactly what the story was about how he got a job at the museum, but he became a security guard and did it for like 10 years and. Um, and so it's a great reflection on, certainly there's lots of pieces about grief, there's, but then there's pieces about life in this job and. And, um, it was the perfect job for him, I think, given where he, what had just happened to him, um, reflections on, on life and all sorts of pieces of art and what art is and means to someone, um. Um, What, what they were. I mean, he was a guard, he gets pushed through, he gets not, he gets placed all over um his friendships with people who are so different from him, double his age and from another continent, people from Guyana and all over the world who are guards and have been guards for years, um. Uh, what art is? Um Appreciating a beauty. Um, Uh The work of artists, um. And the timelessness of art. Um, the, the, the book ends with him sort of coming to the end of this chapter of his life. He'd been married all the time, or much of the time that he was working at the Met, and he gets married during that time. He has a kid and then another kid, and Um, and his life, um, and what he chooses to build with his life, um. Ah, changes fundamentally at that point. Um There were some great, great. Um, discussions about art and Uh, I'll read a couple of things here. I think that sometimes we need permission to stop in a door, and a work of art grants us that. I think for Brinley, art is about beauty. Um, Um Um, He talks about, let's see, 3 distinct types of lovers, art lovers, lovers of the Met and lovebirds. Um, What else? There were some wonderful little snippets in this book, and I need to find them quickly here. Kind of going backwards. Um are OK. So great works of art. They help us believe that some things aren't transitory at all, but rather remain beautiful, true, majestic, sad, or joyful over many lifetimes. And here is the proof painted in oils, carved in marble, stitched into quilts. He was taken by the, the, um. Quilt exhibit The, uh, women quilters, the benders, bend bend, um, and also by the Michelangelo exhibit. Um, the greatest art is produced by people hemmed in by circumstances, making patchwork efforts to create something beautiful, useful, true. In short, I've come to understand that my life will consist of chapters, which raises the possibility of bringing my current current chapter to a close, and that's sort of when he, when he, uh, leaves. Um, he's been the, the, the quilts. Um, Let's see here. The whole tortured Michelangelo thing. Um, an exhibit called Unfinished about works of art that were only partially finished. Um, Mary Cassatt, this was her style, this was her subject, she made, um, uh, intelligence that can't be replicated. Um, Oh, the, the gun, the arms and armor section, and Colt revolvers, um, Colt pursued the novel goal of producing perfectly interchangeable machine-made parts, a leap forward in the development of assembly line manufacturing that became known as the American system, kind of like Southwest Airlines, I said. Um The musical instrument. Section and, uh, this idea that maybe they should have been played instead of just stuck up in a, in an exhibit. Um. Uh, the, the, the Rogers, Jacob S. Rogers, locomotive manufacturer who gave all sorts of stuff to the Met and really launched the collection. Um, Let's see what else. There was a whole section on, um. On a Understanding world's beauty and also our logical brains. Um, he spent time in the Islamic wing. Oh, the final product would contain no visible trace of the circle, but stood as a demonstration of the unity that underlies multiplicity, a tentative Muslim faith, faith, unity and multiplicity. And Islamic Islamic art. Too many visitors think of the Met as a museum of art history where the objective is to learn about art rather than from it. I believe we take art seriously when we try to discern what at close quarters, close quarters it reveals. And also at the end of the book, he had a nice. Um, encouragement to people about. Go into the world, you are qualified to weigh in on the biggest questions artwork raises. So, under the cover of no one hearing your thoughts, think brave thoughts, searching thoughts, painful thoughts, and maybe foolish thoughts, not to arrive at right answers, but to better understand the human mind and heart as you put both to use. Find out what you love in the Met, what you learn from, and what you can use as fuel, and venture back into the world, carrying something with you, something that doesn't fit quite easily into your mind, that weighs on you as you go forward and changes you a bit. Um, I like this going backwards to grief is among other things, a loss of rhythm. You lose someone, it puts a hole in your life, and for a time you huddle down in that hole. He just had lots of time on his hand, and so he spent. Admiring, he spent it admiring art. Um, OK, there's a frame around her putting space between her sacred beauty and older meaning of the word sacred is set apart and the profane mundane world. I think that sometimes we need permission to stop in a door, and a work of art grants us that. He saw a mother in the American wing fountain hands her child two coins, one wish for yourself and another, another just as big for someone else. Oh, I like that, good parenting. A work of art tends to speak of things that are at once too large and too intimate to be summed up, and they speak of them by not speaking at all. I think for me one of the things that that I think about, especially in relation to Pixium, is that. Is that, um, knowing the backstory for a piece of art is really important and. Uh, of course, the modern. Uh, the typical museum system gives you a wall tag and not a lot more, and everything becomes more meaningful when you understand the backstory. And I don't buy this idea that the thing should just be and exist by itself. I think that we, we know it, we love it more when we understand the backstory. Those quilts by the B Benders, G benders, um, uh, are much more meaningful because we understand. The suffering of those people, and yet they made this art in spite of or during that time that they were suffering. Much of the greatest art I find seeks to remind us of the obvious. This is real. It all is all it says. Take the time to stop and imagine more fully the things you already know. We have to return.

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Recommended by Cheryl McIntosh

[ 2025-10-15 23:18:49 ]

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[ 2025-10-14 01:48:26 ]

 

2025-10-14 01:50:34i39780

Contrary to popular belief, Lorem Ipsum is not simply random text. It has roots in a piece of classical Latin literature from 45 BC, making it over 2000 years old. Richard McClintock, a Latin professor at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, looked up one of the more obscure Latin words, consectetur, from a Lorem Ipsum passage, and going through the cites of the word in classical literature, discovered the undoubtable source. Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 of "de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum" (The Extremes of Good and Evil) by Cicero, written in 45 BC. This book is a treatise on the theory of ethics, very popular during the Renaissance. The first line of Lorem Ipsum, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet..", comes from a line in section 1.10.32.

[ 2025-10-14 01:48:26 ]

 

 

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[ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ]

lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] lorem ipsum [ 2025-10-14 01:46:22 ] 

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From Root Division

https://smarthistory.org/ | enrique chagoya

2025-10-13 17:07:00i39765
2025-10-13 17:07:17i39766
2025-10-13 17:07:42i39767

[ 2025-10-13 17:06:15 ]

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Shrey Purohit recommends

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.


[ 2025-10-13 02:53:21 ]

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[ 2025-10-12 15:50:20 ]



[ 2025-10-12 15:50:20 ]

Transcription | Voice Note [2025-10-12 16:37]
----------------------
The The, um, glimpses talks were great. Let's see, my impressions from them. Randy Joss journeys with Joan. Uh, savoring the moment, being present, Tom Paper, mapman, maps are cool. Uh, Suzanne Taylor, a month in Provence. So The whole Little Prince and what's Uh, essential is invisible. Uh, Kate Curry, who's your daddy. Uh Just heartfelt, um. Raising of children and. Being comfortable. Being comfortable, um. With their, um, with their, uh, reality of 22 moms, uh, Charles Xu, music is a universal language, that was a lot of fun. Um, there's a lot of amazing artists out there who, uh, I never hear about, never delve into it. Denise Rabius, art and meditation are good for the soul. Uh Yeah, well, she's an artist and, and she meditates and it was fun to see her passion for that. Jody Johnson flying with a Purpose, um, following a thread, uh, she didn't know where she was going and, and we got to follow her journey into, um, greater levels of. Being a pilot and also flying people, uh, who, um. Uh, for medical reasons. Eric Meyer, I had no idea he got into the Mississippi because of a book he read. Um, that I've, I've written down somewhere, uh, Beta Gallego and ventures with the unruly law. Oh, crazy in the Philippines, how the government has, uh, overreached. There were these amazing parallels to, to, um, To what's happening in the United States. And then Sandy Dean letting go of the outcome, incredibly courageous. Uh, what he's done and, uh, Eugene Tan searching for a home. I want to find the name of a Chinese person. He's in, uh, he grew up not in China, but he's Chinese and goes to Hong Kong, but he doesn't speak Mandarin. So he's sort of an outsider. There's a name for what he is, a person who's not entirely at home, um, because of their language or geography or uh racial background. And then Steve Ellis lessons from playing the field leading is carrying the whole with you thing about his, with you in rugby is what you say to somebody that you're with and his rugby teammates being with him. In his challenges first when his mom passed away when he was 21 and in college, and then now with his, with his um wife having stage 3 breast cancer. Uh, the talks were amazing. I want to get the list of the talks from 5 and 10 years ago.

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[ 2025-10-12 15:47:59 ]

Polarization and democracy 10/11/25

  • I was one of the people who almost left
  • Red and blue people in my life
  • Hate the democrats just a little bit less than I hate the republicans
  • Politics is war - you’re naive to think that the other side will not use all tools and weapons available
  • What’s essential is invisible - Four stoic virtues: Wisdom, Courage, Justice, and Temperance. What about manners and love?
  • Democrats and republicans are playing too much to the fringes
  • Income inequality is growing - you get the revolution you deserve
  • Prop 50 - getting in the mud
  • We need a third party - or people in the middle, democrat or republican, need to voice themselves and combat the fringes

 

2025-10-12 15:48:37i39757



 

[ 2025-10-12 15:47:59 ]

 

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Eric Meier’s latest project

Eric read this book and this sparked his move to Mississippi.  

2025-10-12 14:28:12i39755
2025-10-12 14:27:44i39754

[ 2025-10-12 14:26:08 ]

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Adam Koszek knows owner

[ 2025-10-09 15:22:30 ]

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Lance Descourouez knows

[ 2025-10-09 12:50:52 ]

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Steve Bazant spoke with 

[ 2025-10-09 12:50:34 ]

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[ 2025-10-05 12:58:05 ]

"The Jewish Phenomenon" is a book written by Steven Silbiger, first published in 2000 by Longstreet Press with a revised edition released in 2009. The book seeks to explain the disproportionate success of Jewish people in business and professional fields by identifying seven core cultural principles that have contributed to their enduring economic achievement.

Author and Publication

  • Author: Steven Silbiger
  • First Publication: 2000 by Longstreet Press
  • Revised Edition: 2009 by Lyons (M. Evans & Company)

Summary and Core Principles

Silbiger, based on extensive reading and research, presents seven keys or principles that form the foundation of Jewish financial and professional success. These are not merely academic observations but practical cultural practices and values rooted in Jewish history and experience.

The Seven Principles

  1. Understand that real wealth is portable; it’s knowledge and education
    • Emphasizes self-esteem, delaying gratification, pursuit of quality education, keeping skills updated, and setting high expectations for children.
  2. Take care of your own and they will take care of you
    • Focus on supporting one's community through business and charity that promotes self-sufficiency.
  3. Successful people are professionals and entrepreneurs
    • Encourages pursuing a career while maintaining entrepreneurial ventures and tapping into new opportunities.
  4. Develop your verbal confidence
    • Cultivate communication skills as critical assets.
  5. Be selectively extravagant but prudently frugal
    • Balance spending wisely with occasional indulgence.
  6. Take pride in individuality: encourage creativity
    • Promote uniqueness and creative problem-solving.
  7. Be psychologically driven to prove something
    • Use the outsider status as motivation, believe in self-determination, take risks, and make long-range plans.

Examples Cited in the Book

The book uses a variety of anecdotes and statistics to illustrate these principles in practice, including stories of Jewish entrepreneurs and professionals who succeeded by applying these values. Specific historical and cultural references are used to show how these traits have been honed through Jewish religious teachings, historical persecution, and community cohesion.

Book's Tone and Approach

The work combines data, anecdotal evidence, and Jewish humor. It is positioned as accessible and practical, aiming to offer lessons applicable to both Jews and non-Jews who seek success. Silbiger respects cultural identity and historical experience while providing commonsense wisdom.

In sum, "The Jewish Phenomenon" by Steven Silbiger is a researched exploration of how seven cultural principles rooted in Jewish history and identity have led to remarkable success, illustrated through numerous real-life examples and supported by statistical evidence.linkedin+4

  1. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/jewish-phenomenon-7-keys-enduring-wealth-people-beryl-subia
  2. https://careerlanenigeria.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/steven-silbiger-the-jewish-phenomenon_-seven-keys-to-the-enduring-wealth-of-a-people-m-evans-company-2009.pdf
  3. https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7177
  4. https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-jewish-phenomenon-steven-silbiger/1100066559
  5. https://archive.org/details/jewishphenomenon0000silb
  6. https://sobrief.com/books/the-jewish-phenomenon
  7. https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1h1ZbMTedPfcILMT0hPoohqopvOn2_XMY
  8. https://www.reddit.com/r/economy/comments/1d6nfnn/succeeding_in_a_profoundly_psychopathic_system/
  9. https://openlibrary.org/books/OL8644304M/The_Jewish_Phenomenon
  10. https://www.scribd.com/document/891930341/Jewish-Phenomenon-Review
  11. https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/the-jewish-phenomenon--seven-keys-to-the-enduring-wealth-of-a-people_steven-silbiger/309832/
  12. https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Jewish-Phenomenon/Steven-Silbiger/9781590771549
  13. https://www.studocu.com/row/document/university-of-nairobi/communication-skills/book-review-1-the-jewish-phenomena/82356967
  14. https://www.abebooks.com/Jewish-Phenomenon-Seven-Keys-Enduring-Wealth/30893009892/bd
  15. https://www.goodwillbooks.com/the-jewish-phenomenon-seven-keys-to-the-829-9781563525667.html
  16. https://aish.com/the-debate-over-jewish-achievement/
  17. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpPqyn-eL1I
  18. https://www.abebooks.com/9781563525667/Jewish-Phenomenon-Seven-Keys-Enduring-1563525666/plp
  19. https://prestigebookshop.com/product/jewish-phenomenon-the/
  20. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41206203

    [ 2025-10-05 12:58:05 ]
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Referenced in Smoke with Taron Egerton

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Steve Hanon recommends

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Lily‘s son RAINE works here.

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equalearth
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Williams College Visual Resources Center

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Williams College Visual Resource Center uses this per Michelle Apotsos

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Turningart.com - used by JP Morgan in Mountain View offices 

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JP Morgan Chase - art in office - 8/14/25

 

Turningart.com (summary by Perplexity)

TurningArt is a national, full-service artwork company based in Boston that connects contemporary artists with businesses, healthcare providers, real estate, and individuals across the U.S. The platform offers a curated catalog featuring works from more than 3,000 artists, with options to rent, purchase, or commission original pieces and prints. TurningArt handles every step from consultation and curation to installation and rotation, providing turnkey art solutions for commercial and residential spaces. Artists benefit from flexible, non-exclusive partnerships and exposure to diverse clients, while customers receive personalized art programs and expert advisory services to enhance their environments.linkedin+2

  1. https://www.linkedin.com/company/turningart
  2. https://alexnyeart.com/blog/
  3. https://sidehusl.com/turningart/
  4. https://www.trustpilot.com/review/turnedart.com
  5. https://www.zoominfo.com/c/turningart/346462118
  6. https://phoenixchildrensfoundation.org/moments/hope-makers/turning-art-into-impact/
  7. https://www.turningart.com/artists
  8. https://mccmeetingspublic.blob.core.usgovcloudapi.net/hutchinstx-meet-3458c03dfa1e43878a85635df0b23a39/ITEM-Attachment-001-8b5801eccecb41d7917ca336a76da62d.pdf
  9. https://www.turningart.com/why-turningart
  10. https://www.turningart.com
  11. https://www.trustpilot.com/review/turningart.com


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Friend of Mark Governor and Lily Yu

in his 30s - sees innovative art-related things - very well-connected


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Maryanne Grace worked at van Eck for the summer of 2025

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Map of extent of control in North America 

 

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VisitWicklow.ie

VisitWicklow.ie


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Wicklow Way

wicklowway.com

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 Katie Hansen - Payton Stiewe says she would be interested in SF maps

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Bob Bransten artist / friend

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Chris Hughes uses this to edit voice notes

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