Anonymous ID: c14835 Nov. 17, 2025, 7:52 p.m. No.23867901   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8084 >>8229 >>8494

Larry Summers Goes Into Hiding; Messages Sought Epstein's Advice On Cheating With Daughter Of CCP Official

 

In the latest blow to Democrats from the recent 'Epstein files' released by House Republicans, former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers announced that he's stepping back from public commitments after new documents reveal he was asking for Jeffrey Epstein's advice on how to bang a female mentee behind his wife's back.

 

Summers - who was Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary and later president of Harvard University, repeatedly messaged Epstein about a woman codenamed "peril" in 2018 and 2019.

 

In one January 2019 text exchange, Summers told Epstein that the woman was unlikely to leave him due to his position of power and the professional connections that might come with it - to which Epstein replied, "She is doomed to be with you."

 

Think for now I’m going nowhere with her except economics mentor," Summers wrote in November 2018. "I think I’m right now in the seen very warmly in rear view mirror category."

 

"She must be very confused or maybe wants to cut me off but wants professional connection a lot and so holds to it," Summers then wrote to Epstein in March 2019 - explaining why he believed she continued to engage with him despite tensions, the Harvard Crimson reports.

 

In at least some of his exchanges with Epstein on the relationship, Summers appears to refer to macroeconomist Keyu Jin ’04, a tenured professor at the London School of Economics at the time, who is mentioned in a series of late 2018 messages between the two men.

 

In one, Summers forwarded Epstein an email from Jin asking for feedback on a paper. Summers mused to Epstein that it was “probably appropriate” to hold off on responding.

 

“She’s already begining to sound needy :) nice,” Epstein replied. -Crimson

 

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https://www.zerohedge.com/political/larry-summers-goes-hiding-messages-sought-epsteins-advice-cheating-daughter-ccp-official

Anonymous ID: c14835 Nov. 18, 2025, 12:10 a.m. No.23868315   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Google’s CEO says nobody is safe if this doomsday AI theory comes to light

 

The man at the helm of one of the world’s most powerful tech empires believes no one on the planet will walk away untouched if a doomsday prediction comes true.

 

Speaking to BBC News at Google’s headquarters in California, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai gave his tech peers a reality check amid the frenzy, which has seen several competitors announce new multi-billion dollar data centres over the past six months. The speculation and excitement over exactly what AI could turn into (and how much money it could generate) has driven an investment surge of biblical proportions.

 

While Pichai describes the boom as an “extraordinary moment,” he warns it is also one laden with irrationality.

 

Silicon Valley has seen this movie before. Sky-high valuations, vast spending, and a gold-rush mentality have triggered growing chatter that the sector may be inflating faster than reality can support.

 

Analysts are now questioning whether the industry is drifting into dangerous territory. If one pillar collapses, the perceived value of the others might crumble with it immediately.

 

Pichai was asked whether Google could emerge unscathed if the AI bubble burst, and his answer was bleak, contrary to what most bullish CEOs might have said.

 

“I think no company is going to be immune, including us,” he admitted.

 

Meanwhile, Alphabet’s push into custom AI superchips pits it directly against Nvidia, which recently became the first company to hit a US$5 trillion (AU$7.72 trillion) valuation. That figure means it is technically “worth” more than 37 developed nations around the world.

 

Lying behind those gargantuan numbers is a tangle of almost US$2 trillion in deals connected to OpenAI. That figure has attracted scepticism because it dwarfs the company’s expected annual revenue. The actual number is forecast to be less than a thousandth of that amount, making even the most seasoned of market speculators uneasy.

 

Pichai suggested investors may have forgotten the lessons of the dotcom bust and could be racing ahead of reality, claiming tech investment cycles often “overshoot” when something new and useful materialises out of nowhere.

 

“We can look back at the internet right now. There was clearly a lot of excess investment, but none of us would question whether the internet was profound,” he said.

 

https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/world-economy/googles-ceo-says-nobody-is-safe-if-this-doomsday-ai-theory-comes-to-light/news-story/faf1990c181e95d111b52220f8ae5804