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  1. 𝗢𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗲𝘀𝗹𝗲𝘆 𝗹𝗮𝗮𝘁 𝘀𝗽𝗼𝗼𝗿 𝘃𝗮𝗻 𝗴𝗲𝗱𝘂𝗽𝗲𝗲𝗿𝗱𝗲 𝗮𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗶𝗻 𝗕𝘂𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘂 𝗢𝗻𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗵𝘁: '𝗠𝗮𝗮𝗸𝘁 𝗺𝗲 𝘄𝗼𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻𝗱'

    Vloerenlegger Wesley lijkt ongrijpbaar in 'Bureau Onrecht'. Na vooruitbetaalde klussen verdwijnen zowel hij als zijn bedrijf. Gedupeerde Jeffrey trekt aan de bel, terwijl Wesley telkens opnieuw begint onder een andere naam. Ondertussen melden zich...

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/56008

    #Oplichter #Wesley #BureauOnrecht

  2. 𝗢𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗲𝘀𝗹𝗲𝘆 𝗹𝗮𝗮𝘁 𝘀𝗽𝗼𝗼𝗿 𝘃𝗮𝗻 𝗴𝗲𝗱𝘂𝗽𝗲𝗲𝗿𝗱𝗲 𝗮𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗶𝗻 𝗕𝘂𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘂 𝗢𝗻𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗵𝘁: '𝗠𝗮𝗮𝗸𝘁 𝗺𝗲 𝘄𝗼𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻𝗱'

    Vloerenlegger Wesley lijkt ongrijpbaar in 'Bureau Onrecht'. Na vooruitbetaalde klussen verdwijnen zowel hij als zijn bedrijf. Gedupeerde Jeffrey trekt aan de bel, terwijl Wesley telkens opnieuw begint onder een andere naam. Ondertussen melden zich...

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/56008

    #Oplichter #Wesley #BureauOnrecht

  3. 𝗢𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗲𝘀𝗹𝗲𝘆 𝗹𝗮𝗮𝘁 𝘀𝗽𝗼𝗼𝗿 𝘃𝗮𝗻 𝗴𝗲𝗱𝘂𝗽𝗲𝗲𝗿𝗱𝗲 𝗮𝗰𝗵𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗶𝗻 𝗕𝘂𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘂 𝗢𝗻𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗵𝘁: '𝗠𝗮𝗮𝗸𝘁 𝗺𝗲 𝘄𝗼𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻𝗱'

    Vloerenlegger Wesley lijkt ongrijpbaar in 'Bureau Onrecht'. Na vooruitbetaalde klussen verdwijnen zowel hij als zijn bedrijf. Gedupeerde Jeffrey trekt aan de bel, terwijl Wesley telkens opnieuw begint onder een andere naam. Ondertussen melden zich...

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/56008

    #Oplichter #Wesley #BureauOnrecht

  4. 🤖☕️ So, Andon Labs unleashed their #Skynet wannabe, #Mona, to run a café in #Stockholm, because nothing screams "cutting-edge AI" like barely managing a hipster #coffee #shop. After dodging Swedish bureaucracy like a malfunctioning Roomba, it's a miracle Mona didn't just serve existential dread with your espresso. 😏📉
    andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-sto #AI #AndonLabs #TechHumor #HackerNews #ngated

  5. 🤖☕️ So, Andon Labs unleashed their #Skynet wannabe, #Mona, to run a café in #Stockholm, because nothing screams "cutting-edge AI" like barely managing a hipster #coffee #shop. After dodging Swedish bureaucracy like a malfunctioning Roomba, it's a miracle Mona didn't just serve existential dread with your espresso. 😏📉
    andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-sto #AI #AndonLabs #TechHumor #HackerNews #ngated

  6. 🤖☕️ So, Andon Labs unleashed their #Skynet wannabe, #Mona, to run a café in #Stockholm, because nothing screams "cutting-edge AI" like barely managing a hipster #coffee #shop. After dodging Swedish bureaucracy like a malfunctioning Roomba, it's a miracle Mona didn't just serve existential dread with your espresso. 😏📉
    andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-sto #AI #AndonLabs #TechHumor #HackerNews #ngated

  7. 🤖☕️ So, Andon Labs unleashed their #Skynet wannabe, #Mona, to run a café in #Stockholm, because nothing screams "cutting-edge AI" like barely managing a hipster #coffee #shop. After dodging Swedish bureaucracy like a malfunctioning Roomba, it's a miracle Mona didn't just serve existential dread with your espresso. 😏📉
    andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-sto #AI #AndonLabs #TechHumor #HackerNews #ngated

  8. 🤖☕️ So, Andon Labs unleashed their #Skynet wannabe, #Mona, to run a café in #Stockholm, because nothing screams "cutting-edge AI" like barely managing a hipster #coffee #shop. After dodging Swedish bureaucracy like a malfunctioning Roomba, it's a miracle Mona didn't just serve existential dread with your espresso. 😏📉
    andonlabs.com/blog/ai-cafe-sto #AI #AndonLabs #TechHumor #HackerNews #ngated

  9. europesays.com/people/52829/ Jamie Dimon says bureaucracy sinks companies and the solution may be getting rid of the ‘jerks’ who don’t want to solve it #bureaucracy #employees #JamieDimon #JPMorgan

  10. Op de Concertzender is de zondagavond begonnen:

    18:00 Bureau Radiophonie

    19:00 Sensenta

    20:00 Space Exposure

    21:00 X-Rated

    23:00 X-Ray

    concertzender.nl/programmagids

    #concertzender #zondagavond #radio #fomo

  11. HJRES182
    Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection relating to the withdrawal of the rule relating to "Bulletin 2023-01: Unfair Billing and Collection Practices After Bankruptcy Discharges of Certain Student Loan Debts".

    📢 Introduced in House

    congress.gov/bill/119th-congre

    #HJRES182 #congress119 #house #democrat #congress #newbill

  12. Why India Will Not Overtake China

    There is a thought I have been sitting with for a while, and I want to put it out without dressing it up.

    India is not going to overtake China. People hate hearing this. They will quote our GDP growth, our young population, our rising number of unicorns, the size of our talent pool. None of that is the real story. The real story is harder to fix because it does not sit inside policy or money. It sits inside the way Indians treat each other.

    India is a low trust society trying to behave like a high trust one. Until that gap closes, real scale will keep slipping out of our hands.

    I know this sounds like opinion, so let me show you the research, because the work on this question is actually quite settled.

    In 1997, two economists named Stephen Knack and Philip Keefer published a paper in the Quarterly Journal of Economics. They studied 29 countries and found a clear link between how much people in a country trust strangers and how well that country performs economically. More trust meant stronger growth, better institutions and lower corruption. They never claimed trust was the only thing that mattered. But they showed it mattered a lot. That paper is now one of the most cited works in development economics.

    Around the same time, the political thinker Francis Fukuyama wrote a full book called Trust. His argument was simple. Countries that build large, well run institutions almost always sit on top of high social trust. When trust is missing, what you usually see is small family run businesses that struggle to grow past one or two generations.

    When you actually look at the numbers, the gap between countries is huge. The Integrated Values Surveys, which collect this data through 2022, show that around seventy four percent of people in Denmark say most people can be trusted. Norway is at about seventy two. Finland at sixty eight. China comes in fourth in the world at around sixty three percent. It is the only country outside the West in the top group. India does not appear anywhere near these numbers. Researchers from IZA and other peer reviewed journals openly call India a low trust country, often using exactly that phrase in the very first line of their paper.

    Corruption follows the same pattern, because trust and corruption are basically two sides of the same coin. In Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perceptions Index, India is ranked 96 out of 180 countries, with a score of 38 out of 100. China sits at 76. Denmark, Finland and Singapore are at the very top. These rankings are not random. The same countries that score high on trust also score low on corruption. Both numbers come from the same habit, the habit of strangers behaving honestly even when no one is watching them.

    The Indian version of this problem actually has a name in academic literature. We have just not started using it.

    In 1958, an American political scientist called Edward Banfield went to live for nine months in a poor village in southern Italy called Chiaromonte. He was trying to understand why the village stayed poor for generations even though the people there were perfectly capable. The book he wrote afterwards, The Moral Basis of a Backward Society, gave us a concept called amoral familism. Banfield described it as a community where everyone tries to maximize benefits for their own immediate family, and assumes everyone else is doing the same. The result was a village that could not act together for any common goal. Nobody trusted their neighbours or the institutions around them. Anything outside the household was treated as either a threat or something to quietly take from. Years later, the political scientist Robert Putnam expanded this work across all of Italy and showed that the more trusting north of Italy consistently performed better than the south on almost every measure of governance and prosperity.

    Read Banfield’s description today, replace the word village with India, and the fit is uncomfortably close.

    We trust our family fully. We trust our caste, region and community a little. Beyond that small circle, we are always on guard. We feel that someone is trying to use us, replace us, take credit for our work, or take our seat the moment we stand up. And the painful part is that this fear is not really paranoia. It is mostly an honest reading of how things work around us. So people protect themselves first, and stop sharing what they know. When a billion people behave this way every day, the loss to the country is huge, even if no one can see it directly.

    You can feel this in daily Indian life. The senior who refuses to truly invest in juniors, because a junior who grows is a junior who might one day take their place. The manager who hides information from the team, because letting them learn feels like a personal risk. The bureaucrat who refuses to move a file unless something is in it for him. The politician who treats public money like personal property. The friend quietly happy when you slow down, because your stagnation makes their position look stronger. The cousin who quietly damages the family business from inside, because grabbing a small piece feels safer than working together to grow the whole.

    This is what failure to coordinate looks like at the level of a country.

    China is not a clean society. Anyone who follows even basic Chinese politics knows the place has heavy corruption. The Xi government has been running an anti corruption campaign for over ten years and has prosecuted more than a million officials. The political system itself is closed, full of internal rivalry and favouritism. Yet despite all of that, China still manages to execute at a scale we cannot match. They built one of the largest fast rail networks in the world in around two decades. They built industries that made them the world leader in solar panels, electric vehicles, lithium batteries and now AI hardware. Their Belt and Road projects now reach more than a hundred countries. You can disagree with their political system, but the execution is real and visible.

    India has stronger democratic freedoms and arguably better human capital. Yet we keep failing to turn these advantages into coordinated national outcomes. The bottleneck is not intelligence. It is the ability to coordinate. And the ability to coordinate, when you really break it down, is just trust wearing institutional clothes.

    The Nordic countries make this point even more clearly.

    Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Iceland together have a population smaller than greater Mumbai. Apart from Norway’s oil, they have almost no natural resources. They are cold, sparsely populated and were historically poor. And yet today they sit at the top of almost every global ranking that matters in the modern world. Innovation. Healthcare. Governance. Ease of doing business. Life expectancy. Happiness.

    The OECD and the World Happiness Report keep pointing to one main reason. Their generalized trust is extremely high. Citizens trust each other and trust their institutions. So contracts work. Taxes actually reach the people they were meant for. Rules get followed even without surveillance. Society does not get jammed by its own friction. Their citizens are not smarter than ours. Their cooperation between strangers is just much denser.

    Researchers describe two kinds of trust. Particularized trust is what you give to people you already know. Generalized trust is what you extend to strangers. India is rich in the first and very poor in the second. This one gap explains the strange paradox we live in every day. We send world class individuals to top companies and boardrooms abroad, while our own institutions back home keep struggling. The individual rises because the family invested in that one person. The system stays broken because almost nobody truly invests in the system.

    I want to be careful here, because this argument is easy to misread.

    I am not saying Indians are bad people. That framing is lazy and wrong. The argument is about the cultural operating system we have inherited. That operating system was shaped over centuries of foreign rule, scarcity and a long history where trusting outsiders often ended badly for the trusting side. Once upon a time, this software helped us survive. The price we pay for it today is that we cannot bring our brilliance together the way countries with stronger social capital can. A billion careful, guarded individuals do not add up to a coordinated nation. They cancel each other out at the edges, and the noise becomes louder than the progress.

    If India ever truly wants to challenge China, the real work has to go much deeper than infrastructure spending or new policies. The real work is internal. It is about widening the trust circle outward from family to strangers. It is about senior people mentoring others without fearing being overtaken. It is about backing talent that does not share our caste, our region or our background. It is about believing that the collective will eventually protect us, and then actually showing up for someone else when their moment comes.

    Until that quiet inner shift happens, India will keep producing brilliant individuals who win alone, while the operating system underneath us keeps failing as a whole. And that, more than any economic chart anyone can show me, is the real reason the China gap is going to stay wider than we are willing to admit.

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    #Citizens #Colonialism #Corruption #Economy #Fear #Freedom #Government #India #Policy #Politics #Society #Trust
  13. I'm quite certain the #NavySeals assigned to #SealTeamSix have some thoughts about the naming of this "team of elite private sector businessmen"

    "The Department of Defense launched a team of elite private sector businessmen tasked with handling and approving defense contractor negotiations, aimed at fixing the former “broken Pentagon bureaucracy.”

    "Dubbed “Deal Team Six,” the crew is tasked with creating better deals with defense companies to ensure their production of U.S. military equipment is not at the expense of the taxpayer, but that of the contractor, according to a Thursday social media video posted by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth."

    #DealTeamSix #USMilitary #DepartmentOfDefense #DOD #DepartmentOfWar #DOW #PeteHegseth

    militarytimes.com/news/pentago

  14. @ChrisChavagneux vous feriez une proposition similaire aux #initiatives_citoyennes à l'Assemblée, la population pourrait la soutenir et la “voter” massivement. Elle arriverait ainsi chargée et avec un peu d'élan directement sur le bureau de la commission permanente compétente à l'Assemblée nationale, qui serait obligée de au moins la discuter un peu, publiquement.

  15. National Bilibid Prison Development Plan Tackled By Muntinlupa City Councilors

    Recently in the progressive city of Muntinlupa, the development plan of the National Bilibid Prison was tackled by the City Council in the form of a public hearing with several stakeholders present, according to a Manila Bulletin news report.

    To put things in perspective, posted below is an excerpt from Manila Bulletin report. Some parts in boldface…

    The Muntinlupa City Council held a public hearing to address the impending development of the vast land of the New Bilibid Prison (NBP), which is expected to affect residents.

    The NBP, located in Barangay Poblacion, is under the Bureau of Corrections (BuCor) and houses prison facilities.

    The NBP Reservation, which refers to the surrounding areas outside the prison facilities, contains houses of BuCor employees, public school teachers, and residents, as well as public schools and churches.

    The City Council’s Committee of the Whole, with all councilors present, conducted the public hearing together with presidents of resident associations and informal settlers, representatives from the Commission on Human Rights, Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor, Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development, and BuCor.

    Councilor Raul Corro, majority floor leader, said the entire City Council held the hearing “due to the importance of the subject matter: the Bucor proposed master development plan for NBP.”

    He explained that the hearing discussed the “concern of informal settlers on their relocation and the legal requirements to be met to have a relocation plan that meets the minimum livable requirements such as availability of basic services like water, power and other amenities.”

    Corro emphasized that the city government is entitled to its equitable share in the development of any national wealth such as land under its jurisdiction, and should be informed about the kind of development to be implemented in NBP

    Let me end this post by asking you readers: What is your reaction to this recent development? If you are a resident of Muntinlupa City, what is your opinion about the planned development of the New Bilibid Prison which has a vast land that includes residences, communities, schools and churches already? What is the best place the City Government can find as the target destination of relocation the informal settlers?

    You may answer in the comments below. If you prefer to answer privately, you may do so by sending me a direct message online.

    +++++

    Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at  @HavenorFantasy as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

    For more South Metro Manila community news and developments, come back here soon. Also say NO to fake news, NO to irresponsible journalism, NO to misinformation, NO to plagiarists, NO to reckless publishers and NO to sinister propaganda when it comes to news and developments. For South Metro Manila community developments, member engagement, commerce and other relevant updates, join the growing South Metro Manila Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/342183059992673

    #Alabang #AlabangBlog #ASEAN #Asia #AssociationOfSoutheastAsianNationsASEAN #BarangayPoblacion #Biazon #Bing #Blog #BureauOfCorrectionsBuCor #CarloCarrasco #ChatGPT #CityCouncilOfMuntinlupa #CityGovernmentOfMuntinlupa #CityOfMuntinlupa #development #economics #economy #Facebook #geek #Google #GoogleSearch #informalSettlers #Investagrams #ManilaBulletin #MetroManila #Muntinlupa #MuntinlupaCity #MuntinlupaCityCouncil #NationalCapitalRegionNCR #NCR #NewBilibidPrisonNBP #news #Philippines #PhilippinesBlog #Pinoy #prison #RaulCorro #redevelopment #RuffyBiazon #RufinoBiazon #socialMedia #SouthMetroManila #SouthSnippets #SoutheastAsia #squatters #Tumblr #Twitter #WordPress #WordPressCom
  16. Pavel Durov (Telegram):

    "41 kidnappings of crypto holders in France in 3.5 months of 2026.

    Why?

    🥖 French tax officials selling crypto owners' data to criminals (Ghalia C.) + massive tax database leaks.

    Now the same state also wants IDs and private messages of social media users.

    More data => More leaks => More victims.

    That’s why Telegram would rather leave the French market than give their corrupt bureaucrats access to private messages. 🐶"
    #crypto #france #telegram #paveldurov

  17. Pavel Durov (Telegram):

    "41 kidnappings of crypto holders in France in 3.5 months of 2026.

    Why?

    🥖 French tax officials selling crypto owners' data to criminals (Ghalia C.) + massive tax database leaks.

    Now the same state also wants IDs and private messages of social media users.

    More data => More leaks => More victims.

    That’s why Telegram would rather leave the French market than give their corrupt bureaucrats access to private messages. 🐶"
    #crypto #france #telegram #paveldurov

  18. Pavel Durov (Telegram):

    "41 kidnappings of crypto holders in France in 3.5 months of 2026.

    Why?

    🥖 French tax officials selling crypto owners' data to criminals (Ghalia C.) + massive tax database leaks.

    Now the same state also wants IDs and private messages of social media users.

    More data => More leaks => More victims.

    That’s why Telegram would rather leave the French market than give their corrupt bureaucrats access to private messages. 🐶"
    #crypto #france #telegram #paveldurov

  19. Pavel Durov (Telegram):

    "41 kidnappings of crypto holders in France in 3.5 months of 2026.

    Why?

    🥖 French tax officials selling crypto owners' data to criminals (Ghalia C.) + massive tax database leaks.

    Now the same state also wants IDs and private messages of social media users.

    More data => More leaks => More victims.

    That’s why Telegram would rather leave the French market than give their corrupt bureaucrats access to private messages. 🐶"
    #crypto #france #telegram #paveldurov

  20. Pavel Durov (Telegram):

    "41 kidnappings of crypto holders in France in 3.5 months of 2026.

    Why?

    🥖 French tax officials selling crypto owners' data to criminals (Ghalia C.) + massive tax database leaks.

    Now the same state also wants IDs and private messages of social media users.

    More data => More leaks => More victims.

    That’s why Telegram would rather leave the French market than give their corrupt bureaucrats access to private messages. 🐶"
    #crypto #france #telegram #paveldurov

  21. Constitution vs. Your Mailbox

    I keep watching people argue about the United States Postal Service like it’s some sacred, untouchable relic carved into stone tablets. It’s not. It’s a government service. Those get rewritten more often than bad sitcom plots. Here’s the part nobody bothers to read before firing off hot takes: the United States Constitution doesn’t guarantee USPS as it exists today. Not even close. What it actually does is give Congress permission. That’s it. A bureaucratic green light. In […]

    ericfoltin.com/2026/04/27/cons

  22. Constitution vs. Your Mailbox

    I keep watching people argue about the United States Postal Service like it’s some sacred, untouchable relic carved into stone tablets. It’s not. It’s a government service. Those get rewritten more often than bad sitcom plots. Here’s the part nobody bothers to read before firing off hot takes: the United States Constitution doesn’t guarantee USPS as it exists today. Not even close. What it actually does is give Congress permission. That’s it. A bureaucratic green light. In […]

    ericfoltin.com/2026/04/27/cons

  23. Constitution vs. Your Mailbox

    I keep watching people argue about the United States Postal Service like it’s some sacred, untouchable relic carved into stone tablets. It’s not. It’s a government service. Those get rewritten more often than bad sitcom plots. Here’s the part nobody bothers to read before firing off hot takes: the United States Constitution doesn’t guarantee USPS as it exists today. Not even close. What it actually does is give Congress permission. That’s it. A bureaucratic green light. In […]

    ericfoltin.com/2026/04/27/cons

  24. Constitution vs. Your Mailbox

    I keep watching people argue about the United States Postal Service like it’s some sacred, untouchable relic carved into stone tablets. It’s not. It’s a government service. Those get rewritten more often than bad sitcom plots. Here’s the part nobody bothers to read before firing off hot takes: the United States Constitution doesn’t guarantee USPS as it exists today. Not even close. What it actually does is give Congress permission. That’s it. A bureaucratic green light. In […]

    ericfoltin.com/2026/04/27/cons

  25. Constitution vs. Your Mailbox

    I keep watching people argue about the United States Postal Service like it’s some sacred, untouchable relic carved into stone tablets. It’s not. It’s a government service. Those get rewritten more often than bad sitcom plots. Here’s the part nobody bothers to read before firing off hot takes: the United States Constitution doesn’t guarantee USPS as it exists today. Not even close. What it actually does is give Congress permission. That’s it. A bureaucratic green light. In […]

    ericfoltin.com/2026/04/27/cons

  26. Spain weighs the German plan for EU deregulation: offer relief to SMEs, or protect their social model

    The Agenda for a sustainable dismantling of bureaucracy at the EU level of Germany’s Christian democratic party, the…
    #Europe #EU #EuropeanCouncil #AgendaPública #AgendaPúblicainEnglish #agricultura #alemania #comisióneuropea #competitividad #economía #empleo #españa #Europa #transiciónecológica #UniónEuropea
    europesays.com/europe/26838/