Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:22 p.m. No.9844947   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4950 >>4995 >>5011 >>5036

Cernovich

@Cernovich

Not a surprise. Raw male IQ peaks at 27. Most great music and math are done by young men.

https://twitter.com/Cernovich/status/1279184320322662400

 

A 28-Year-Old With No Degree Becomes a Must-Read on the Economy

Subscribers to Nathan Tankus’s newsletter, Notes on the Crises, aren’t bothered by his lack of diplomas.

 

Nathan Tankus, 28, hasn’t finished his bachelor’s degree at New York City’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He has, however, mastered enough knowledge of economics and finance to become a widely followed commentator on the Federal Reserve. A newsletter he launched this year has followers at the Fed, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Department of the Treasury. He’s also followed on Twitter by journalists, economic think-tankers, and Wall Street economists.

 

Tankus built an online following slowly since around 2015, but it’s only in the past year that he’s broadened his audience with deep dives into monetary mechanics. In September he diagnosed the dislocations in the secured lending market that forced the Fed to resume buying Treasury bonds on a massive scale. This year he wrote a series of detailed posts called Notes on the Crises, which explained the Fed’s emergency actions to combat the Covid-19 recession. He made extensive use of T-accounts, a tool of accountants that places assets on the left and liabilities on the right.

 

“He has really good knowledge of the plumbing of the monetary system,” says David Beckworth, a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center of George Mason University.

Tankus’s diploma-free rise is interesting in part for what it says about the economic and finance debates taking place on the internet. Establishment credentials matter there less than ever. Tankus has taken full advantage of the lack of gatekeepers on the web, where a sharp and quickly delivered argument on the topic du jour—whatever that may be—can have more impact than a peer-reviewed article in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, say, or the American Economic Review.

 

Nobody is more surprised by his newfound fame than Tankus himself, who can finally afford to move out of the family apartment in Manhattan where he grew up. “It’s been a completely amazing, strange experience,” Tankus says. The newsletter, with 450 subscribers, is netting him $45,000 a year, and he thinks he can earn an additional $20,000 from other speaking and writing engagements. “This has turned into a comfortably full-paying career,” he says. “And there’s a lot of room to grow.”

 

Tankus was attending the Urban Academy Laboratory High School in Manhattan in 2008 and 2009 when his teachers made the financial crisis into a teachable moment. During his summer vacation in 2009 he tackled A Monetary History of the United States, a magisterial work by the conservative economists Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz. Soon after, he picked up The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money by the liberal John Maynard Keynes. “I kept reading it again and again until I had a handle on it,” he says. He was still in high school when he was exposed to the financial instability hypothesis of Hyman Minsky and to Modern Monetary Theory, which was just getting going as a movement.

Earning a college degree didn’t come as easily. He spent his freshman year at Wells College in upstate New York, then transferred to the University of Ottawa to study with a pair of post-Keynesian economists, Marc Lavoie and Marco Seccareccia. He says he had “financial aid issues that prevented me from being successful there,” so he returned to New York and studied at John Jay, part of the City University of New York, with the leftist economist J.W. Mason.

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:23 p.m. No.9844950   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4995 >>5011

>>9844947

 

But he hasn’t yet gotten his diploma—which he needs before he can do what he wants to do next, namely study for a Ph.D. in law at the University of Manchester in the United Kingdom. Why law? “I got to a certain point where I realized these debates about the origins of money and so on couldn’t be settled within economics. There are legal and historical questions.”

 

Tankus understands his niche in the ecosystem of economics. Akin to journalism, it’s about writing the first draft of history. “I’m writing a lot when other people aren’t necessarily putting things out there,” he says. “You can be a great academic, but if you’re not writing all the time you’re not necessarily in people’s minds as someone they would want to ask a question to. I write so much that there’s always something for people to pick up.”

 

After the Fed began announcing a series of extraordinary measures to rescue the U.S. economy, Tankus wrote 21 long pieces in 31 days. “Sometimes that meant staying up until 5 or 6 a.m.,” he says. “It was unbelievable breakneck speed.”

 

His posts earned the attention not only of people who share his liberal views, but of ones who just wanted to understand the nuts and bolts of what the Fed was doing. His Twitter followers include reporters from Bloomberg News, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times; Peter Orszag, a former Obama administration official who’s the chief executive officer of financial advisory at the investment bank Lazard; and Alan Cole, a senior economist to Republicans on Congress’s Joint Economic Committee.

 

“We speak a common language, maybe come to different conclusions,” says Beckworth, the George Mason economist, who describes his own politics as right of center. “He will always give you a smart, informed answer.”

 

At a time when a lot of social media has become an echo chamber where people go to hear from people they already agree with, it’s encouraging that there are still places where disagreements can be thrashed out—and credentialism is pushed aside. Says Tankus: “We’ve kind of stretched the space for gatekeepers in economics.”

 

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-07-02/nathan-tankus-s-newsletter-subscribers-don-t-care-about-diplomas

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:37 p.m. No.9845129   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5158 >>5161 >>5191 >>5215 >>5232 >>5244 >>5249 >>5321 >>5368 >>5382 >>5455 >>5475

Shocking 'masks required' sign at Arizona shop aims to shame customers

Helen Wieffering, Arizona Republic 3 hrs ago

 

Monument protection is top priority for Trump admin this July 4th weekend

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USA TODAY logoShocking 'masks required' sign at Arizona shop aims to shame customers

Snarky signs aren't anything new for Phoenix vintage shop Antique Sugar, but a recent notice asking customers to wear a mask hit a nerve online.

A photo of the sign ricocheted around the internet, racking up thousands of shares in just one day after Antique Sugar owner Sarah Bingham posted it to her personal Facebook account Monday morning.

 

She'd typed out the requirement in bold typeface on four sheets of printer paper, respectfully asking patrons to wear a mask or postpone their visit.

Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning.

"We'll be happy to debate the efficacy of masks with you when this is all over and you come in to sell your dead grandmother's clothes," it said.

"TL;DR: Masks required," the sign finished.

Bingham had grown frustrated when, 10 days into the city order, some people still weren't covering their faces when they came into the shop. A few people became angry with her when she asked them to wear a mask.

 

June 19: Maricopa County sends mandate to every resident in the county: Wear a mask no matter what city, town or area you live in

Opinion: Face masks work. They need to be mandatory.

"It's such a minimal, easy thing to do, and I'm asking so nicely. Well, not anymore, but I did," Bingham said.She taped the new sign over one with more docile language: "Help us stay healthy so we can stay open," she recalled.

 

Running Antique Sugar was tough during the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic, but slowly, the owners were adapting. Bingham and her best friend, Annamarie Sanchez, started selling more clothes on Instagram and offering more exchanges to customers who didn't feel safe using the dressing rooms to try on clothing in the store.

"It's such a fun and happy atmosphere here," Bingham said of the community that's supported Antique Sugar this spring and summer. She said the majority of her clientele was happy to abide by the store's guidelines well before masks were mandatory in Phoenix.

For that reason, Bingham said, the response on the new sign has been all positive so far. Some customers have laughed as they've walked in, and many have said nothing at all.

She was running Antique Sugar alone on Tuesday morning and had a busy morning ahead of her, between news outlets calling and hundreds of Instagram messages to review.

No one had walked in without a mask since the sign went up.

"I wonder if it's actually being the deterrent I wanted it to be," Bingham said.

 

Follow Helen Wieffering on Twitter: @helenwieffering

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/shocking-masks-required-sign-at-arizona-shop-aims-to-shame-customers-it-seems-to-be-working-the-owner-says/ar-BB16gxCD?li=BBnbcA1

 

This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Shocking 'masks required' sign at Arizona shop aims to shame customers

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:39 p.m. No.9845161   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9845129

Chris Illuminati

@chrisilluminati

 

Much like the pandemic, this vintage store warning sign escalated quickly

 

7:11 PM · Jun 29, 2020

https://twitter.com/chrisilluminati/status/1277786909666955265

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:43 p.m. No.9845215   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5244

>>9845129

 

GUISE

 

ONE tweet 23 hours ago, July 2, 2020

 

BUT NONE since Sept, 14, 2016

 

AZ is really trying to get the mask shit going

 

https://twitter.com/AntiqueSugar/status/1278836448154669062

 

 

linda white

@safianwhite

·

21h

Replying to

@AntiqueSugar

People have to learn mask it or casket. I am in Brooklyn but my daughter is in Phoenix. I'd love to visit your shop when I visit her.

 

 

this is the store:

 

https://twitter.com/AntiqueSugar

 

Antique Sugar

@AntiqueSugar

Sweet vintage threads for all Rainbow

Phoenix, AZ instagram.com/antiquesugar?i…Joined October 2010

132 Following

672 Followers

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 4:54 p.m. No.9845368   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5475

>>9845129

>>9845244

 

'Wasn't there a problem with businesses with ROOSTERS way back, Sarah Sanders Rooster Restaurant and ROOSTERS associated with pedos?

 

what are the odds?:

 

SO

not only the

 

rainbow

 

and the

 

heart inside a heart

 

but a rabbit

 

and a rooster

 

and now the MSM picking her up about Corona Masks with a really creepy sign.

 

HMMM?

 

Antique Sugar

@AntiqueSugar

This rooster and this bunny are very excited for you to pick an egg for deals tomorrow.

5:24 PM · Apr 6, 2012·Camera on iOS

https://twitter.com/AntiqueSugar/status/188421902853865474/photo/1

 

https://twitter.com/AntiqueSugar/status/188421902853865474/photo/1

 

Pics from Twitter page

 

https://www.yelp.com/biz_photos/antique-sugar-phoenix-2?adjust_creative=duckduckgo&utm_campaign=yelp_feed&utm_medium=feed_v2&utm_source=duckduckgo

Anonymous ID: 57679e July 3, 2020, 5:01 p.m. No.9845475   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9845368

>>9845129

 

and a site called

 

BORED PANDA

 

ran a full story

aren't Pandas a thing with Pedos?

And the heavy push to mask up AZ and stay closed for Corona?

 

 

Bored Panda

Search domain www.boredpanda.comhttps://www.boredpanda.com

Bored Panda is a leading art and pop culture magazine which is viewed nearly 100 million times every month. Our mission is to spread good news and highlight top artists from around the world.

 

https://www.boredpanda.com/face-mask-sign-antique-sugar/?utm_source=duckduckgo&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=organic>>9845129

 

https://www.boredpanda.com/?utm_source=duckduckgo&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=organic

 

Google Play Apps

 

TEEN? Bored Panda Entertainment

 

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.boredpanda.android

 

https://www.boredpanda.com/?utm_source=duckduckgo&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=organic