Published in the Foreign Policy Research Institute's quarterly journal "Orbis" in Summer 2002.
Fonte, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, argues that the forces of post-Western and post-democratic transnational progressivism are competing against the traditional nation-centered Western-style liberal democracy.
I put the paper in the thread below because it is a bit brow raising given the elements he was talking about in 2002 and where we are in 2024.
Nearly a year before the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, wire service stories gave us a preview of the transnational politics of the future. It was reported on October 24, 2000, that in preparation for the UN Conference Against Racism, about fifty American nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) sent a formal letter to UN Human Rights Commissioner Mary Robinson calling on the UN “to hold the United States accountable for the intractable and persistent problem of discrimination” that “men and women of color face at the hands of the U.S. criminal justice system.”
The NGOs included the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, Amnesty International U.S.A. (AI-U.S.A.), Human Rights Watch (HRW), the Arab-American Institute, National Council of Churches, American Friends Service Committee, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the International Human Rights Law Group, the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law, and others. Their spokesman, Wade Henderson, of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, stated that the NGOs’ demands “had been repeatedly raised with federal and state officials [in the United States] but to little effect. . . . In frustration we now turn to the United Nations.” In other words, the NGOs, unable to enact the policies they favored through the normal processes of American constitutional democracy-the Congress, state governments, state courts, the federal executive branch, or even the federal courts-felt it necessary to appeal to authority outside of American democracy and beyond its Constitution.
In the two weeks before September 11, from August 31 to September 7, 2001, the UN World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Related Intolerance was held in Durban, South Africa. The American NGOs listed above attended the conference with financial support from the Ford, Rockefeller, MacArthur, and Charles Stewart Mott Foundations. At the conference the NGOs worked with delegates from African states that supported “reparations” from Western nations as compensation for the transatlantic slave trade of the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries. American NGOs provided research assistance and helped develop reparations resolutions that condemned only the West, without mentioning the larger traffic in African slaves that were sent to the Islamic lands of the Middle East. In addition, the NGOs endorsed a series of demands, including:
• U.S. acknowledgment of “the breadth and pervasiveness of institutional racism” that “permeates every institution at every level.”
• A declaration that “racial bias corrupts every stage of the [U.S.] criminal justice process, from suspicion to investigation, arrest, prosecution, trial, and sentencing.”
• Support and expansion of federal and state hate crimes legislation.
• Condemnation of opposition to affirmative action measures.
• U.S. recognition of an adequate standard of living as a “right, not privilege.”
• A statement deploring “denial of economic rights” in the United States.
• Promotion of multilingualism instead of “discriminatory” English-language acquisition emphasis in U.S. schools.
• Denunciation of free market capitalism as a fundamentally flawed system.”
Most importantly, the NGOs insisted that the United States ratify all major UN human rights treaties and drop legal reservations to treaties already ratified. For example, in 1994 the United States ratified the UN Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), but attached reservations declaring that it did not accept treaty requirements “incompatible with the Constitution.” The official State Department reservations memorandum specifically notes that the CERD’s restrictions on free speech and freedom of assembly are incompatible with the First Amendment. Yet leading NGOs including the HRW and AI-U.S.A. demand that the United States drop all reservations and “comply” with the CERD treaty.4
On August 6, 2001, Reuters reported that the United States had presented its first explanation of how it was implementing the CERD treaty to a UN committee. An NGO representative from the Center for Constitutional Rights reportedly said that “Almost every member of the UN committee raised the question of why there are vast racial disparities . . . in every aspect of American life-education, housing, health, welfare, criminal justice.” A representative from HRW declared that the United States offered “no remedies” for these disparities, but “simply restated” its position by supporting equality of opportunity and indicating “no willingness to comply” with CERD.5 (This would presumably mean the enactment of policies resulting in statistical equality of condition for racial and ethnic minorities in education, housing, health, welfare, criminal justice and the like.)
Indeed, to comply with the NGO interpretation of the CERD treaty, the United States would have to turn its political and economic system, together with their underlying principles, upside down-abandoning the free speech guarantees of the Constitution, bypassing federalism, and ignoring the very concept of majority rule-since practically nothing in the NGO agenda is supported by the American electorate.
The NGOs at the Durban conference exemplify a new challenge to liberal democracy and its traditional home, the liberal democratic nation-state. These have always been self-governing representative systems comprised of individual citizens who enjoy freedom and equality under law and together form a people within a democratic nation-state. Thus, liberal democracy means individual rights, democratic representation (with some form of majority rule) and national citizenship. Yet, as the vignettes of the Durban conference (and myriad other conflicts of the past four decades) demonstrate, all of these principles, along with the very idea of the liberal democratic nation-state, are contested today in the West, suggesting that we have not reached the “end of history” in the ideological sense delineated by Francis Fukuyama in his groundbreaking 1989 essay.6
Post-September 11
Three weeks after the September 11 attacks, Fukuyama stated in an article in the Wall Street Journal that his “end of history” thesis remained valid twelve years after he first presented it, shortly before the fall of the Berlin Wall. Fukuyama’s core argument was that after the defeat of communism and National Socialism, no serious ideological competitor to Western-style liberal democracy was likely to emerge in the future. Thus, in terms of political philosophy, liberal democracy is the end of the evolutionary process. To be sure, there will be wars and terrorism, but no alternative ideology with a universal appeal will seriously challenge the ideas and values of Western liberal democracy as the “dominant organizing principles” around the world.
Fukuyama correctly points out that non-democratic rival ideologies such as radical Islam and “Asian values” have little appeal outside their own cultural areas, but these areas are themselves vulnerable to penetration by Western democratic ideas. The September 11 attacks notwithstanding, “we remain at the end of history,” Fukuyama insists, “because there is only one system that will continue to dominate world politics, that of the liberal-democratic West.” There is nothing beyond liberal democracy “towards which we could expect to evolve.” Fukuyama concludes by stating that there will be challenges from those who resist progress, “but time and resources are on the side of modernity.”7
Indeed, but is “modernity” on the side of liberal democracy? Fukuyama is probably right that the current crisis with the forces of radical Islam will be overcome, and that, at the end of the day, there will be no serious ideological challenge originating outside of Western civilization. However, the activities of the NGOs suggest that there already is an alternative ideology to liberal democracy within the West that for decades has been steadily, and almost imperceptibly, evolving.
Thus, it is entirely possible that modernitythirty or forty years hencewill witness not the final triumph of liberal democracy, but a new challenge to it in the form of a new transnational hybrid regime that is post-liberal democratic, and in the context of the American republic, post-Constitutional and post-American. I will call this alternative ideology “transnational progressivism.” This ideology constitutes a universal and modern worldview that challenges in theory and practice both the liberal democratic nation-state in general and the American regime in particular. The aftermath of September 11 provides the possibility of a resurgence by the forces of traditional nation-centered liberal democracy. But before addressing this possibility, it is necessary to examine in detail the theory and practice of “transnational progressivism.”
CITATIONS
1-Anthony Goodman, United Nations, Reuters, Oct. 24, 2000.
2 -Ibid.
3-NGO demands listed in “Report of the U.S. Leadership Meetings on the World Conference Against Racism,” convened by Gay McDougall, International Human Rights Group, 2001.
4-Reuters, AP, New York Times August 6, 2001 by Karen Iley on Yahoo! News.
5-Ibid
6 -“The End of History?” National Interest, Summer 1989.
7-Francis Fukuyama, “History Is Still Going Our Way,” Wall Street Journal, Oct. 5, 2001.
Transnational Progressivism
The key concepts of transnational progressivism could be described as follows:
(1) The ascribed group over the individual citizen.
The key political unit is not the individual citizen, who forms voluntary associations and works with fellow citizens regardless of race, sex, or national origin, but the ascriptive group (racial, ethnic, or gender) into which one is born. This emphasis on race, ethnicity, and gender leads to group consciousness and a deemphasis of the individual’s capacity for choice and for transcendence of ascriptive categories, joining with others beyond the confines of social class, tribe, and gender to create a cohesive nation.
(2) A dichotomy of groups: Oppressor vs. victim groups, with immigrant groups designated as victims.
Influenced (however indirectly) by the Hegelian Marxist thinking associated with the Italian writer Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) and the Central European theorists known as the Frankfurt School, global progressives posit that throughout human history there are essentially two types of groups: the oppressor and the oppressed, the privileged and the marginalized. In the United States, oppressor groups would variously include white males, heterosexuals, and Anglos, whereas victim groups would include blacks, gays, Latinos (including obviously many immigrants), and women. Multicultural ideologists have incorporated this essentially Hegelian Marxist “privileged vs. marginalized” dichotomy into their theoretical framework. As political philosopher James Ceaser puts it, multiculturalism is not “multi” or concerned with many groups, but “binary,” concerned with two groups, the hegemon (bad) and “the Other” (good) or the oppressor and the oppressed. Thus, in global progressive ideology, “equity” and “social justice” mean strengthening the position of the victim groups and weakening the position of oppressors-hence preferences for certain groups are justified. Accordingly, equality under law is replaced by legal preferences for traditionally victimized groups. In 1999, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission extended antidiscrimination protection under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to illegal immigrants.
(3) Group proportionalism as the goal of “fairness.”
Transnational progressivism assumes that “victim” groups should be represented in all professions roughly proportionate to their percentage of the population or, at least, of the local work force. Thus, if women make up 52 percent and Latinos make up 10 percent of the population, then 52 percent of all corporate executives, physicians, and insurance salesmen should be women and 10 percent should be Latinos. If not, there is a problem of “underrepresentation” or imbalance that must be rectified by government and civil society. Thomas Sowell recently wrote-as he has for several decades-that many Western intellectuals perpetually promote some version of “cosmic justice” or form of equality of result.8 The “group proportionalism” paradigm is pervasive in Western society: even the U.S. Park Service is concerned because 85 percent of all visitors to the nation’s parks are white, although whites make up only 74 percent of the population. Therefore, the Park Service announced in 1998 that it was working on this “problem.”9(3) Group proportionalism as the goal of “fairness.” Transnational progressivism assumes that “victim” groups should be represented in all professions roughly proportionate to their percentage of the population or, at least, of the local work force. Thus, if women make up 52 percent and Latinos make up 10 percent of the population, then 52 percent of all corporate executives, physicians, and insurance salesmen should be women and 10 percent should be Latinos. If not, there is a problem of “underrepresentation” or imbalance that must be rectified by government and civil society. Thomas Sowell recently wrote-as he has for several decades-that many Western intellectuals perpetually promote some version of “cosmic justice” or form of equality of result.8 The “group proportionalism” paradigm is pervasive in Western society: even the U.S. Park Service is concerned because 85 percent of all visitors to the nation’s parks are white, although whites make up only 74 percent of the population. Therefore, the Park Service announced in 1998 that it was working on this “problem.”9
(4) The values of all dominant institutions to be changed to reflect the perspectives of the victim groups.
Transnational progressives in the United States (and elsewhere) insist that it is not enough to have proportional representation of minorities (including immigrants, legal and illegal) at all levels in major institutions of society (corporations, places of worship, universities, armed forces) if these institutions continue to reflect a “white Anglo male culture and world view.” Ethnic and linguistic minorities have different ways of viewing the world, they say, and these minorities’ values and cultures must be respected and represented within these institutions. At a 1998 U.S. Department of Education conference promoting bilingual education, SUNY professor Joel Spring declared, “We must use multiculturalism and multilingualism to change the dominant culture of the United States.” He noted, for example, that unlike Anglo culture, Latino culture is “warm” and would not promote harsh disciplinary measures in the schools.10
(5) The Demographic Imperative.
The demographic imperative tells us that major demographic changes are occurring in the United States as millions of new immigrants from non Western cultures and their children enter American life in record numbers. At the same time, the global interdependence of the world’s peoples and the transnational connections among them will increase. All of these changes render the traditional paradigm of American nationhood obsolete. That traditional paradigm based on individual rights, majority rule, national sovereignty, citizenship, and the assimilation of immigrants into an existing American civic culture is too narrow and must be changed into a system that promotes “diversity,” defined, in the end, as group proportionalism.
(6) The redefinition of democracy and “democratic ideals.”
Since Fukayama’s treatise, transnational progressives have been altering the definition of “democracy,” from that of a system of majority rule among equal citizens to one of power sharing among ethnic groups composed of both citizens and non-citizens. For example, Mexican foreign minister Jorge Castañeda wrote in the Atlantic Monthly in July 1995 that it is “undemocratic” for California to exclude noncitizens, specifically illegal aliens, from voting. Former Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) general counsel Alexander Aleinikoff, declaring that “[we] live in a post-assimilationist age,” asserted that majority preferences simply “reflect the norms and cultures of dominant groups” (as opposed to the norms and cultures of “feminists and people of color”).11 James Banks, one of American education’s leading textbook writers, noted in 1994 that “to create an authentic democratic Unum with moral authority and perceived legitimacy the pluribus (diverse peoples) must negotiate and share power.”12 In effect, Banks said, existing American liberal democracy is not quite authentic; real democracy is yet to be created. It will come when the different “peoples” or groups that live within America “share power” as groups.
(7) Deconstruction of national narratives and national symbols.
Transnational progressives have focused on traditional narratives and national symbols of Western democratic nation-states, questioning union and nationhood itself. In October 2000, the British government sponsored Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain issued a report that denounced the concept of “Britishness” as having “systemic . . . racist connotations.” The Commission, chaired by Labour life peer Lord Parekh, declared that instead of defining itself as a nation, the UK should be considered a “community of communities.” One member of the Commission explained that the members found the concepts of “Britain” and “nation” troubling. The purpose of the Commission’s report, according to the chairman Professor Parekh, was to “shape and restructure the consciousness of our citizens.” The report declared that Britain should be formally “recognized as a multi-cultural society” whose history needed to be “revised, rethought, or jettisoned.”13
In the United States in the mid-1990s, the proposed “National History Standards,” reflecting the marked influence of multiculturalism among historians in the nation’s universities, recommended altering the traditional narrative of the United States. Instead of emphasizing the story of European settlers, American civilization would be redefined as a “convergence” of three civilizations-Amerindian, West African, and European-the bases of a hybrid American multiculture. Even though the National History Standards were ultimately rejected, this core multicultural concept that that United States is not primarily the creation of Western civilization, but the result of a “Great Convergence” of “three worlds” has become the dominant paradigm in American public schools.
In Israel, adversary intellectuals have attacked the Zionist narrative. A “post-Zionist” intelligentsia has proposed that Israel consider itself multicultural and deconstruct its identity as a Jewish state. Tom Bethell has pointed out that in the mid-1990s the official appointed to revise Israel’s history curriculum used media interviews to compare the Israeli armed forces to the SS and Orthodox Jewish youth to the Hitler Youth. A new code of ethics for the Israel Defense Forces eliminated all references to the “land of Israel,” the “Jewish state,” and the “Jewish people,” and, instead, referred only to “democracy.” Even Israeli foreign minister Simon Peres sounded the post-Zionist trumpet in his 1993 book, The New Middle East, where he wrote that “we do not need to reinforce sovereignty, but rather to strengthen the position of humankind.” He called for an “ultranational identity,” saying that “particularist nationalism is fading and the idea of a ‘citizen of the world’ is taking hold. . . . Our ultimate goal is the creation of a regional community of nations, with a common market and elected centralized bodies,” a type of Middle Eastern EU.14
(8) Promotion of the concept of postnational citizenship.
“Can advocates of postnational citizenship ultimately succeed in decoupling the concept of citizenship from the nation-state in prevailing political thought?” asks Rutgers Law Professor Linda Bosniak.15 An increasing number of international law professors throughout the West are arguing that citizenship should be denationalized. Invoking concepts such as inclusion, social justice, democratic engagement, and human rights, they argue for transnational citizenship, postnational citizenship, or sometimes global citizenship embedded in international human rights accords and “evolving” forms of transnational arrangements.
These theorists insist that national citizenship should not be “privileged” at the expense of postnational, multiple, and pluralized forms of citizenship identities. For example, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, under the leadership of its president, Jessica Tuchman Mathews, has published a series of books in the past few years “challenging traditional understandings of belonging and membership” in nation-states and “rethinking the meaning of citizenship.”16 Although couched in the ostensibly neutral language of social science, these essays from scholars from Germany, Britain, Canada, and France, as well as the United States, argue for new, transnational forms of citizenship as a normative good.
(9) The idea of transnationalism as a major conceptual tool.
The theory of transnationalism promises to be for the first decade of the twenty-first century what multiculturalism was for the last decade of the twentieth century. In a certain sense, transnationalism is the next stage of multicultural ideology-it is multiculturalism with a global face. Like multiculturalism, transnationalism is a concept that provides elites with both an empirical tool (a plausible analysis of what is) and an ideological framework (a vision of what should be). Transnational advocates argue that globalization requires some form of transnational “global governance” because they believe that the nation-state and the idea of national citizenship are ill suited to deal with the global problems of the future. Academic and public policy conferences today are filled with discussions of “transnational organizations,” “transnational actors,” “transnational migrants,” “transnational jurisprudence,” and “transnational citizenship,” just as in the 1990s they were replete with references to multiculturalism in education, citizenship, literature, and law.
Many of the same scholars who touted multiculturalism now herald the coming transnational age. Thus, at its August 1999 annual conference, “Transitions in World Societies,” the same American Sociological Association (ASA) that promoted multiculturalism from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s featured transnationalism. Indeed, the ASA’s then-president, Professor Alejandro Portes of Princeton University, argued that transnationalism is the wave of the future. He insisted that transnationalism, combined with large-scale immigration, would redefine the meaning of American citizenship. University of Chicago anthropologist Arjun Appadurai has suggested that the United States is in transition from being a “land of immigrants” to “one node in a postnational network of diasporas.”17
It is clear that arguments over globalization will dominate much of early twenty-first century public debate. The promotion of transnationalism as both an empirical and normative concept is an attempt to shape this crucial intellectual struggle over globalization. The adherents of transnationalism create a dichotomy. They imply that one is either in step with globalization, and thus with transnationalism and forward-looking thinking, or one is a backward antiglobalist. Liberal democrats (who are internationalists and support free trade and market economics) must reply that this is a false dichotomy-that the critical argument is not between globalists and antiglobalists, but instead over the form Western global engagement should take in the coming decades: will it be transnationalist or internationalist?
CITATIONS
8-Thomas Sowell, The Quest for Cosmic Justice (Free Press, 1999).
9-John Leo, “Long on Diversity Division,” Washington Times, May 21, 1998.
10-In Jorge Amselle, “Reverse Imperialism,” National Review, Oct. 12, 1998.
11- Alexander Alienikoff, “Citizens, Aliens, Membership and the Constitution,” Constitutional Commentary 7, 1990, p. 30.
12-James Banks, “Transforming the Mainstream Curriculum,” Educational Leadership, May 1994, p. 4.
14-Quotes from Tom Bethell, “The Cultural Wars in Israel,” paper prepared for Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies conference on “Israel: The Advanced Case of Western Afflictions,” Washington, D.C., Dec. 15, 1997; David Remnick, “The Dreamer,”
New Yorker Jan. 7, 2002; and Yoram Hazony, “The End of Zionism?” Azure Summer 1996. On post-Zionism in general see Yoram Hazony, The Jewish State: The Struggle for Israel’s Soul (Washington, D.C. and New York: New Republic/Basic Books, 2000)
15-Linda Bosniak, “Citizenship Denationalized,” Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, Spring 2000, p. 508.
16-See T. Alexander Aleinikoff and Douglass Klusmeyer, ed, From Migrants to Citizens: Membership in a Changing, World (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 200); and T. Alexander Aleinikoff and Douglas Klusmeyer, ed., Citizenship Today: Global Perspectives and Practices (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2001).
17-In Linda K. Kerber, “The Meaning of Citizenship,” Dissent, Fall 1997, p.36.
“El jugador de fútbol es lo más importante y vamos a defender sus reivindicaciones hasta la muerte”.
En 1995, Diego ideó, fundó y presidió un sindicato de jugadores con el objetivo de enfrentarse de manera colectiva a la poderosa FIFA.
Durante su carrera, Pelusa entendió que la FIFA había transformado al fútbol de un deporte a un negocio, en el cuál la mercadería eran los jugadores. Y aún en sus últimos años como futbolista profesional se puso el equipo de los jugadores al hombro para reivindicar sus derechos.
“Tenemos que luchar por un gremio fuerte, porque la gente no va a la cancha por los dirigentes”, sentenció.
“Que jueguen y se callen la boca”, replicó João Havelange, presidente de la FIFA.
I have been following the Kenya power sector developments for some decades especially after I somehow got involved in the Rabai power plant construction & subsequent talks with TZ about gas. I have also made many trips to Germany on energy tours.
To be clear, I am not a paid blogger or a government stan. I just hate people spreading misinformation especially when it is historical and verifiable facts!
Claude is quietly doing what $2,000/hour Goldman Sachs analysts do—
finding 100-bagger stocks before they explode.
And it’s free.
Here are 12 prompts that uncover hidden small-caps, decode catalysts, and get you in early:
(Save this before it’s gone)
1. The Goldman Sachs "Small-Cap Hidden Gem" Scanner
"You are a senior small-cap equity research analyst at Goldman Sachs who covers companies BEFORE they reach $10 billion in market cap — because by the time Wall Street's big analysts start covering a stock, the easy money has already been made.
I need to find small-cap stocks with 10-100x potential before mainstream analysts discover them.
Scan:
- Market cap filter: focus on companies between $100M and $2B — big enough to be legitimate, small enough to still multiply
- Revenue growth screen: minimum 25% year-over-year revenue growth for 3+ consecutive quarters (the hallmark of explosive companies)
- Analyst coverage check: companies with 0-5 analysts covering them (20+ analysts = already discovered)
- Insider ownership: founders and executives owning 15%+ of shares (skin in the game = alignment with shareholders)
- Industry tailwinds: is this company in a sector that's structurally growing for the next decade (AI, cybersecurity, energy transition, aging demographics, automation)
- Unit economics quality: improving gross margins and positive operating leverage (revenue growing faster than costs)
- Balance sheet health: enough cash to survive 18+ months without profitability if growth requires investment
- Competitive position: what makes this company defensible — network effects, patents, switching costs, or unique data
- Near-term catalysts: specific events in the next 6-12 months that could re-rate the stock (earnings, product launches, regulatory decisions)
- Red flags check: dilutive share issuance, related-party transactions, high debt, or inventory buildup
Format as a Goldman Sachs-style small-cap opportunity report with 5 specific stock ideas, each meeting multiple criteria above.
My preferences: [DESCRIBE YOUR RISK TOLERANCE, PREFERRED INDUSTRIES, INVESTMENT HORIZON, AND HOW MUCH RESEARCH TIME YOU CAN DEDICATE PER STOCK]"
2. The Peter Lynch "Buy What You Know" Opportunity Finder
"You are Peter Lynch — the legendary Fidelity manager who generated 29% annual returns and coined 'invest in what you know' — helping me identify investment opportunities hiding in plain sight in my daily life.
I need to find investment opportunities based on products, services, and trends I encounter every day.
Find:
- Daily life inventory: what products, apps, services, or stores am I using more this year than last year
- Emerging behavior patterns: what are my friends, family, and colleagues doing differently than 2 years ago (new apps, new habits, new purchases)
- Workplace intelligence: what tools, software, or services is my company buying or switching to
- Kids' trends: what products, brands, or apps are teenagers and young adults obsessed with that parents haven't noticed yet
- Retail observation: which stores have lines, which brands are sold out, which products are the ones everyone is talking about
- Industry insider knowledge: what's my own industry buying, using, or integrating that's not yet in the headlines
- Public company identification: for each observation, identify which PUBLIC company benefits (not every trend has a public pure-play)
- Lynch category classification: classify each opportunity as Fast Grower (20%+ growth), Stalwart (steady large company), Cyclical (economy-sensitive), Turnaround, or Asset Play
- The "so what" test: just because a company makes a popular product doesn't mean the STOCK is a good buy — check valuation and fundamentals
- Research priority: rank my top 5 observations by the combination of conviction and upside potential
Format as a Peter Lynch-style opportunity memo with everyday observations translated into specific investment ideas with next steps for deeper research.
My daily life: [DESCRIBE YOUR JOB, INDUSTRY, HOBBIES, PRODUCTS YOU'VE STARTED USING RECENTLY, AND TRENDS YOU'VE NOTICED IN YOUR ENVIRONMENT]"
Dating App x kaju Mommyyy
Part-1
Character-
Kaju- 42y, oka big shoopping mall owner..mogudu poyi 10 years avutondhi..single amma ga chala responsible, but ee age lone kadha chaala korikalu...gula vastayi..puku lo vedi teerchevadikosam partner kosam vethukutundhi, so thana friend bumble app lo try cheymandi.
Ajay- 21y, kaju koduku, fair ga manchi fitness maintain chestunadu, modda avg 6inch size..not a virgin..already vesadu, valla madam anu ni and exgf vaishu ni
This story is a work of fiction, not meant to hurt anyone, if you got offended then ping me for content removal.
1/n //Story//
Summer, mrng 7am
Ajay lechi...clg dumma kotti room lo light veskokunda kallu chaapi phone lo sadhana ani oka influencer reels and pics and exclusive content chusthu modda ooputunadu
Ade time lo kaju mrng lechi machi tight saree katti baitaki veldam ani ready ayyindi
Kaju: ajjjuuu...legu...entha sepu padukuntav Ajay earphones valla em vinipinchatledu Kaju door tesindi... Modda shine avuthu undhi...ajay battalu vippesi unnadu Ajay: huh? Amma? Enduku vachav
ani amma ni ah saree lo chusthu undi...motham karchesadu...threads la motham spray avutundi..vadi body mida chest mida face mida K: chi em panul ra avi...
Ani door musesi vellipoyindi
Kaju baitaki vachaka
Veedi modda enti intha undhi...uff...na koduku pedhodu ayyadu...naku sukam kavali...main ga modda kavali..cha cha vaadu na koduku ani anukuntu vellipoyindi
Kaju manchiga ready ayyi mall ki vellindi...akkada male workers antha kaju vaipe chustunaru....kaju ah chupulani feel avuthu guddha oopukuntu veltundi...
2/n Ajay fresh ayyi
Amma enti intha hawt ga undhi...but amma kadha nen alantivi cheyyakudadu ani laptop open chesadu...
Ajay ki mylfs ante pichi...so evarithonaina relation ki veldama ani alochisthu bumble app instal chesadu
Age priority 18-45 pettadu
Swipe chestunadu...ala oka 20 mins tarwatha oka account kanipinchindi
Miss k ani undhi(face covered), age 42
Ajay: abba backless blouse lo emundi...uff open to anything anta..abababa
Ani pic ni screenshot tisi zoom chestu chustunadu...location hyd kabbati swipe chesadu
Sulla oopatam start chesadu
- Heatwave in India
- West Bengal elections
- US Iran war
- Rahul Gandhi's current visit of Nicobar
- A 16 year old incident
In this thread
They look different but how all these events are interconnected to each other
1-15
On 1st April
PIB issue a waring of IMD about upcoming heatwave in India but that time nobody spoke about it because everyone knows that April - June are hot months in India and every year temp remains between 40 - 50 degree in this season
23rd April
Polling happens in first phase of elections for West Bengal
Record breaking 92% poling happens
And many observer say that this polling went in favour of BJP
Huge poling is also expected in second phase which is scheduled on 29th April
¿Sabías que una humilde campesina polaca logró engañar a la realeza europea durante 60 años haciéndose pasar por la heredera del mayor imperio del mundo? Sobrevivió a un manicomio y desató una brutal guerra por la fortuna secreta del zar ruso. Tira del hilo 🧵👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽
Julio de 1918. En un sótano de Ekaterimburgo, los bolcheviques masacraron a tiros y con bayonetas al zar Nicolás II y a toda su familia. Los cuerpos fueron ocultados en el bosque para borrar su rastro en un absoluto secretismo que alimentó la leyenda de que alguien sobrevivió
La esperanza recayó en Anastasia, la hija menor del zar. Los rumores decían que las joyas cosidas en su corsé actuaron como un chaleco antibalas, salvándole la vida, así que, durante años, docenas de impostores reclamaron el trono. Pero nadie lo hizo con la maestría de una mujer.
1/ Merz will die EU schwächen - ausgerechnet jetzt 📣
Brillantes Timing, Herr Merz.
Den Politic-Artikel findet ihr im zweiten Post - aber man muss sich das auf der Zunge zergehen lassen:
Während Russland seit über zwei Jahren einen Vernichtungskrieg auf europäischem Boden führt, während Trump die NATO faktisch verlassen und sich an Putins Seite gestellt hat, während deutsche Infrastruktur unter hybridem Dauerbeschuss steht - hält der @Bundekanzler in Berlin ein
Treffen mit der konservativsten CDU-Unionsführung ever ab, um dabei der Präsidentin der Europäischen Kommission eine Liste mit 27 Forderungen zu überreichen. Darunter: ein nationales Vetorecht über EU-Gesetzgebung.
Bürokratieabbau nennt er das. Geopolitischer Selbstmord wäre die ehrlichere Bezeichnung.
Der vorgeschlagene sogenannte "Oversight-Body" soll ein "fundamentales Vetorecht" über jede neue EU-Gesetzgebung erhalten - entweder als neue Institution oder durch Erweiterung des bestehenden Regulatory Scrutiny Board.
Was das bedeutet, ist schlicht: nationale Blockademacht über den einzigen Rahmen, der Europa in dieser Lage noch handlungsfähig hält.
Und wie bei Merz fast schon zu erwarten und nur nebenbei: das Vorhaben wäre vertragswidrig und nach geltendem EU-Recht nicht umsetzbar, ohne die europäischen Verträge selbst aufzureißen.
Ein Detail, das Merz offenbar für nachrangig hält oder es ihn wieder mal schlicht nicht interessiert.
Wer täglich zu Recht Orban für seinen Veto-Missbrauch in der Außenpolitik geißelte, der sollte sich zweimal überlegen, ob er denselben Lähmungsmechanismus nun in die ordentliche Gesetzgebung einbauen will.
Das ist kein Widerspruch mehr - das ist schlicht Heuchelei, verkleidet als Reformwille.
Nichts aus den letzten Jahren gelernt - wir haben einfach keine Zeit für diesen Fehler. Nicht jetzt, verdammt noch mal ❗
2/ Und dann war da noch von der Leyen. Dieselbe von der Leyen, die auch ohne formelles Amt im CDU-Bundesvorstand ein zentrales Aushängeschild der Partei ist, die Merz führt, die in Brüssel sitzt und eigentlich die Unabhängigkeit der Kommission verkörpern sollte. politico.eu/article/german…
3/ Ihre Reaktion auf die Hardball-Taktik ihrer Berliner Parteifreunde?
Sie spielt die herunter, betont gemeinsame Ziele, sagt, das Papier der CDU spiegele "viele unserer Überlegungen" wider - und präsentierte sich Seite an Seite mit Jens Spahn als geeintes konservatives Lager. politico.eu/article/von-de…
Farmers are stuck in a bad loop: use more chemicals, get diminishing results, pay more, take on more risk. And they can't just stop, because if pests win, crops die.
AI that can identify individual weeds in real time, robotics that can treat one plant instead of blanketing a field, and new biological solutions mean this problem finally looks solvable.
AI-Native Service Companies
@gustaf
The total spend on services is many times larger than the spend on software, and a lot of those services are already outsourced, which makes them easier to replace with an AI-native product.
We're excited about companies that don't sell a tool to help you do the work: they just do the work.
Uh, ma pensa!
Il compagno della Minetti è Giuseppe Cipriani jr, erede dei Cipriani dell'Harry's Bar di Venezia nonché fondatore della scuderia Barone Rampante che nei primi anni '90 correva in F3000.
In quegli anni Flavio Briatore aveva frequentazioni un po' particolari. 1/n
2/n Il “Tribüla” finisce in un'inchiesta antimafia condotta dai magistrati di Catania, accanto ai nomi di mafiosi dalla caratura internazionale. Niente di penalmente rilevante, lui non è indagato ma la sua voce resta registrata in conversazioni con boss come Felice Cultrera.
3/n Cultrera è un uomo d’affari catanese che fa riferimento al boss di Cosa Nostra Nitto Santapaola, che è il centro dell’inchiesta antimafia. Uno degli interlocutori dell’attivissimo Cultrera è appunto Flavio Briatore.
Ukraine Has a Destruction Plan. They’re Exceeding It. Four Months Running. Madyar Just Told BBC How.
@BBC just published a rare interview with the commander of Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces @usf_army — “Madyar” — Robert Brovdi.
Art collector. Grain trader. Former Christie’s regular. Now running the most technologically advanced drone warfare operation in history from a secret underground command centre.
This is what he said. 🧵👇
1/
“The territory 1,500–2,000 km inside Russia is no longer a peaceful rear. The freedom-loving Ukrainian ‘bird’ flies there whenever and wherever it wants.”
2/ “Putin extracts natural resources and converts them into bloody dollars, which he then directs against us in the form of Shaheds and ballistic missiles.
If oil refineries are a tool for earning money used to wage war — they are a legitimate military target and subject to destruction.”
South 24 Parganas, located in the southern part of West Bengal, lies in the Sundarbans region near Kolkata and shares a border with Bangladesh.
It is considered one of the strongest bastions of the Trinamool Congress (TMC) in the state.
Mamata Banerjee’s nephew, Abhishek Banerjee, is the Member of Parliament from this region and remains its most influential figure. His close aide, Jahangir Khan, also wields significant power here. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is frequently active in the area, and in the past, large quantities of bombs and explosive materials have been recovered from here.
The region is notorious for election rigging and “chapa voting” (booth capturing). TMC’s dominance has created an atmosphere of fear and intimidation.
Conducting free and fair elections in South 24 Parganas remains one of the Election Commission’s biggest challenges.
Enter India’s most fearless police officer- Singham, IPS Ajay Pal Sharma.
Ajay Pal Sharma is the officer who successfully dismantled powerful crime syndicates in Rampur and Sambhal in Uttar Pradesh. The Election Commission has now deputed him as a Special Observer in South 24 Parganas with the sole mandate of ensuring free and fair elections.
Ajay Pal Sharma vs Abhishek Banerjee & Jahangir Khan
The climax is yet to unfold, but his arrival has already sent shockwaves through the entire TMC ecosystem in the region.
1/2
Ajay Pal Sharma at work at 24 South Paragana
Open challenge to Jahangir Khan
2/3
NIA's entry in South Paragana
NIA recovered 79 bombs, arrested Ahidul Islam Molla, identified as a key co-conspirator and prime accused