A Dangerous Game Over Taiwan (11-16-22)

This low streaming quality video was shot on my Oppo A15.

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I Turned Against Cyber Currencies In May of 2021

It wasn’t until May of 2021 that I finally read some in-depth examinations of cyber currencies and they all concluded they are worthless. Prior to my investigation, I didn’t have an opinion about things like Bitcoin. At one point in early 2021, I bought $500 worth of Bitcoin and then sold it when it went to $570. It gave me the excitement of gambling and it seemed like it wasn’t good for me.

00:00 Column: Coinbase had a great public stock offering. That doesn’t make bitcoin legit

1:24:00 WHAT IF BITCOINS CRASH… THE UPCOMING CRYPTO CRASH

The best way to hedge against inflation is to connect to others. The best way to invest is with your family, friends and community. The best way to survive an earthquake is to connect with the people around you.

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Crypto Meltdown & Its Links To Stanford Law School

From Crypto News:

Was SEC Chair Gary Gensler Helping Sam Bankman-Fried Find Legal Loopholes for FTX? Here’s What You Need to Know

Speculation is mounting in the community that Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chairman Gary Gensler could have worked with FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried to find legal loopholes the exchange could take advantage of.

The speculation has emerged as ties between Sam Bankman-Fried, his parents Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, and prominent figures at the top level of government and regulatory agencies in the US, have been uncovered in recent days. And to top things off, Bankman-Fried himself is also a major political donor, first and foremost to the Democratic Party.

The rumor mill has in recent days become so intense that Republican Rep. Tom Emmer, known as one of the most crypto-friendly members of the House of Representatives, tweeted that he has received reports that Gary Gensler was helping Bankman-Fried “work on legal loopholes to obtain a regulatory monopoly.”

“We’re looking into this,” the crypto-friendly politician added.

Notably, the tweet from Emmer came a day after an article in Fortune revealed that Bankman-Fried’s mother, Barbara Fried, is the leader of a group known as Mind the Gap that raises money from the tech industry for Democrats.

In a 2020 article in The Stanford Daily, Mind the Gap was described as a “secretive Stanford-connected Democratic fundraising group” that funneled more than $20m to Democratic candidates in the 2018 House of Representatives election.

Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried’s father, Stanford law professor Joseph Bankman, also has close ties to leading politicians. He has in the past drafted tax legislation for Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat well-known for her opposition to crypto and crypto mining in particular.

SEC chair Gary Gensler also has ties to the Democratic Party, and previously served as the finance chair for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

“It’s not a stretch to imagine [Sam Bankman-Fried] sought to exploit these political ties to his benefit,” the Fortune article said, while also adding that now is “a good time for skeptics to ask why [Gensler] failed to stop FTX in the first place—and if anyone else in high places had a role in enabling this debacle.”

Lastly, and perhaps not surprisingly, speculation on the ties between Bankman-Fried and prominent government figures is also running rampant in the community.

Among those who have voiced their opinion is the popular crypto Twitter user Tara Bull, who asked if FTX was “used to launder money for the democratic party?”

“A question worth asking,” responded the new Twitter owner and well-known Dogecoin fan Elon Musk.

From Fortune magazine.

From MarketWatch:

SBF was born and raised in the Golden State, according to a 2021 Yahoo! News profile. He grew up in an academic setting, with parents who were law professors at Stanford University. And that background seemed to affect his thinking. His mother, Barbara Fried, told Yahoo! that when her son started reading the philosopher Derek Parfit at age 14, he took Parfit to task. “Sam was mad at Parfit for being wrong, but madder at Parfit for the cheapness of his argument,” she said.

From Gizmodo: “Both of the crypto founder’s parents are blue on Wikipedia: Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman are professors at Stanford Law School. Bankman worked with his son’s companies. SBF’s aunt, Linda P. Fried, is also dean at Columbia University’s school of public health.”

From a thread on Reddit:

* That Stanford Law Professor might have some awkward questions coming his way. Lawyers have actual ethical rules they’re required to follow—if he’s actually currently licensed to practice (which I assume a law professor would still be, even if they weren’t actively practicing), it is going to be really fun for him to explain to the bar exactly how his son managed to perpetuate the exact kinds of securities fraud he himself would be incredibly aware of (Google seems to indicate that the father teaches financial law?).

Crypto is not actually regulated like securities, so those laws likely weren’t broken (more general laws like fraud… who knows). But you don’t need to actually commit a crime to get disbarred in most states (or to get forced out of your cushy university gig). You just need to make the legal profession as a whole look bad.

The very specific knowledge his parents have makes me seriously wonder how involved in this scam they were. A couple of experts on the legal nuances of the financial system just happen to have their son follow the exact playbook of old-school financial crimes?

* I looked up his dad couple days ago, and it looks like he teaches regulatory frameworks related to start ups. So he might have been instrumental in setting up the company in the Bahamas and in Hong Kong in the past. Still, that makes him highly liable. I am not a lawyer but it does look very shady especially if he is a law professor at Stanford of all places.

* SBF and the rest of his Effective Altruism polycule blew through $billions of other people’s money & can’t pay them back?

Doesn’t sound very cash money altruism to me, but what do I know?

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My Journey To No-Fap Maximalism

Before I became the No-Fap Maximalist, I was a not a pretty sight. From April 25, 2010:

This was streamed live from my iPhone with the Shure mic extension.

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AP: The downfall of FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried sends shockwaves through the crypto world

For six months, I’ve been talking about the life and thought of philosopher Rony Guldman, who published in 2022 a memoir, The Star Chamber of Stanford: On the Secret Trial of a Stanford Law Fellow. The two antagonists in this book are the Stanford Law professors Barbara Fried and Joe Bankman, who are the parents of FTX con artist and Democratic party funder Sam Bankman-Fried.

Joe Bankman worked for his son at FTX.

This low streaming quality video above was shot on my Oppo A15.

Rony’s magnum opus is Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression: The Nature and Origins of Conservaphobia.

From the AP:

NEW YORK — Sam Bankman-Fried received numerous plaudits as he rapidly achieved superstar status as the head of cryptocurrency exchange FTX: the savior of crypto, the newest force in Democratic politics and potentially the world’s first trillionaire.

Now the comments about the 30-year-old Bankman-Fried range from bemused to hostile after FTX filed for bankruptcy protection Friday, leaving his investors and customers feeling duped and many others in the crypto world fearing the repercussions. Bankman-Fried himself could face civil or criminal charges.

“I’ve known him for a number of years and what just happened is just shocking,” said Jeremy Allaire, the co-founder and CEO of cryptocurrency company Circle.

Under Bankman-Fried, FTX quickly grew to be the third-largest exchange by volume. The stunning collapse of this nascent empire has sent tsunami-like waves through the cryptocurrency industry, which has seen a fair share of volatility and turmoil this year, including a sharp decline in price for bitcoin and other digital assets. For some, the events are reminiscent of the domino-like failures of Wall Street firms during the 2008 financial crisis, particularly now that supposedly healthy firms like FTX are failing.

One venture capital fund wrote down investments in FTX worth over $200 million. The cryptocurrency lender BlockFi paused client withdrawals Friday after FTX sought bankruptcy protection. The Singapore-based exchange Crypto.com saw withdrawals increase this weekend for internal reasons but some of the action could be attributed to raw nerves from FTX.

Bankman-Fried and his company are under investigation by the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The investigations likely center on the possibility that the firm may have used customers’ deposits to fund bets at Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund, Alameda Research, a violation of U.S. securities law.

“This is the direct result of a rogue actor breaking every single basic rule of fiscal responsibility,” said Patrick Hillman, chief strategy officer at Binance, FTX’s biggest competitor. Early last week Binance appeared ready to step in to bail out FTX, but backed away after a review of FTX’s books.

The ultimate impact of FTX’s bankruptcy is uncertain, but its failure will likely result in the destruction of billions of dollars of wealth and even more skepticism for cryptocurrencies at a time when the industry could use a vote of confidence.

“I care because it’s retail investors who suffer the most, and because too many people still wrongly associate bitcoin with the scammy ‘crypto’ space,” said Cory Klippsten, CEO of Swan Bitcoin, who for months raised concerns about FTX’s business model. Klippsten is publicly enthusiastic about bitcoin but has long had deep skepticism about other parts of the crypto universe.

Bankman-Fried founded FTX in 2019, and it grew rapidly — it was recently valued at $32 billion. The son of Stanford University professors, who was known to play the video game “League of Legends” during meetings, Bankman-Fried attracted investments from the highest echelons of Silicon Valley.

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