post Mallorca flush

main
iOS 1 month ago
parent c145565e2c
commit f7476aed61

@ -19,7 +19,7 @@
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"time": "2024-10-21",
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"time": "2024-10-29",
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{
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{
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{
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"rowNumber": 119
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{
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"title": ":chart: Check [[Nimbus]] earnings %%done_del%%",
"time": "2024-10-14",
"rowNumber": 95
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{
"title": ":ballot_box_with_ballot: [[Crypto Tasks]]: Vote for [[EOS]] block producers %%done_del%%",
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{
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"05.02 Networks/Configuring UFW.md": [
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"time": "2024-10-19",
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"time": "2024-11-15",
"rowNumber": 230
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"time": "2025-08-25",
"rowNumber": 226
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{
"title": ":sunny: :racehorse: [[@Switzerland|Gstaad]], [[@Lifestyle|Lifestyle]]: Check out the [Gold Cup Gstaad](https://www.polo-gstaad.ch/) %%done_del%%",
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"rowNumber": 227
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{
"title": ":snowflake: :racehorse: [[@Switzerland|St. Moritz]], [[@Lifestyle|Lifestyle]]: Check out the [St Moritz Snow Polo](https://www.snowpolo-stmoritz.com/) %%done_del%%",
"time": "2024-10-15",
"rowNumber": 228
"title": ":sunny: :racehorse: [[@@Paris|Paris]], [[@Lifestyle|Lifestyle]]: Check out the [Open de France](https://www.poloclubchantilly.com/) %%done_del%%",
"time": "2025-08-25",
"rowNumber": 226
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{
"title": ":snowflake: :racehorse: 🇦🇷 [[@Lifestyle|Lifestyle]]: Check out the Abierto de Polo %%done_del%%",
"time": "2024-11-15",
"rowNumber": 229
"title": ":snowflake: :racehorse: [[@Switzerland|St. Moritz]], [[@Lifestyle|Lifestyle]]: Check out the [St Moritz Snow Polo](https://www.snowpolo-stmoritz.com/) %%done_del%%",
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@ -695,7 +695,7 @@
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"title": ":racehorse: [[@Sally|Sally]]: Pay for horseshoes (150 CHF) %%done_del%%",
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"time": "2024-11-10",
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@ -738,7 +738,7 @@
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"time": "2024-11-10",
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@ -799,110 +799,110 @@
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"title": ":snowflake:🎭 [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Check out floating theatre ([Herzlich willkommen!](http://herzbaracke.ch/)) %%done_del%%",
"time": "2024-10-15",
"rowNumber": 92
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{
"title": ":maple_leaf: :wine_glass: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Check out [Discover the Excitement of EXPOVINA Wine Events | Join Us at Weinschiffe, Primavera, and Wine Trophy | EXPOVINA](https://expovina.ch/en-ch/) %%done_del%%",
"time": "2024-10-15",
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"title": ":snowflake: :person_in_steamy_room: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Check out [Sauna Cubes at Strandbad Küsnacht — Strandbadsauna](https://www.strandbadsauna.ch/home-eng) %%done_del%%",
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"rowNumber": 102
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"title": "🎭:frame_with_picture: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Check out exhibitions at the [Rietberg](https://rietberg.ch/en/) %%done_del%%",
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"title": ":snowflake: :partying_face: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: ZüriCarneval weekend %%done_del%%",
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"title": ":hibiscus: :fork_and_knife: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Book a restaurant with terrace for the season: [[Albishaus]], [[Restaurant Boldern]], [[Zur Buech]], [[Jardin Zürichberg]], [[Bistro Rigiblick]], [[Portofino am See]], [[La Réserve|La Muña]] %%done_del%%",
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"title": ":hibiscus: :canned_food: [[@@Zürich|:test_zurich_coat_of_arms:]]: Check out [FOOD ZURICH - MEHR ALS EIN FESTIVAL](https://www.foodzurich.com/de/) %%done_del%%",
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@ -172,7 +172,7 @@
"state": {
"type": "backlink",
"state": {
"file": "00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-04.md",
"file": "00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-16.md",
"collapseAll": false,
"extraContext": false,
"sortOrder": "alphabetical",
@ -189,7 +189,7 @@
"state": {
"type": "outgoing-link",
"state": {
"file": "00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-04.md",
"file": "00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-16.md",
"linksCollapsed": false,
"unlinkedCollapsed": false
}
@ -212,7 +212,7 @@
}
},
{
"id": "55a0323df65dec0a",
"id": "90ea4b62744d13d8",
"type": "leaf",
"state": {
"type": "DICE_ROLLER_VIEW",
@ -255,32 +255,32 @@
},
"active": "0ede032e9e14d217",
"lastOpenFiles": [
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"03.01 Reading list/Diplomacy.md",
"01.02 Home/@Main Dashboard.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-15.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-16.md",
"02.03 Zürich/@@Zürich.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/Big Shells With Spicy Lamb Sausage and Pistachios.md",
"00.07 Wiki/Romain Gary.md",
"02.03 Zürich/Schifflände.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-14.md",
"00.03 News/Anatomy of a Murder.md",
"00.03 News/The Ballad of Byron York Meet Conservative Medias Saddest Stenographer.md",
"00.03 News/For Laura Loomer, a Trump comeback is everything.md",
"00.03 News/Inside the Dangerous, Secretive World of Extreme Fishing.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-03.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-02.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-01.md",
"01.03 Family/Dorothée Moulin.md",
"01.03 Family/Elise Bédier.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/Chilli con Carne.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/Turkish Eggs.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/@Main dishes.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/@@Recipes.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/Shakshuka.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/Events/2024-10-01 ⚽️ Arsenal - PSG.md",
"02.02 Paris/Paris SG.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/Events/2024-09-27 ⚽️ PSG - Rennes (3-1).md",
"03.02 Travels/These Are the Best Texas-Style Barbecue Joints in America Texas Monthly.md",
"03.02 Travels/@United States.md",
"03.03 Food & Wine/Beef Noodles with Beans.md",
"01.02 Home/@Shopping list.md",
"00.03 News/Where MAGA Granddads and Resistance Moms Go to Learn Americas Most Painful History Lessons.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-09-30.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-10.md",
"00.03 News/Who died and left the US $7 billion.md",
"00.03 News/For Dikembe Mutombo, basketball was but a vehicle for what really matters.md",
"00.02 Inbox/The House of Doors.md",
"03.01 Reading list/Carolyn et John.md",
"00.03 News/Silicon Valley, the New Lobbying Monster.md",
"00.02 Inbox/Soldier Sailor.md",
"00.03 News/The Patriot Wing Inside The Jail Block Run By Jan 6 Rioters.md",
"00.03 News/We only learnt of our sons secret online life after he died at 25.md",
"00.03 News/Opinion A lost Trump interview comes back to life.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-13.md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-12.md",
"03.02 Travels/Mallorca.md",
"00.03 News/He was Officer 'Champagne' at Rikers. 24 women accuse him of sexual assault in jail..md",
"00.01 Admin/Calendars/2024-10-11.md",
"01.07 Animals/@Sally.md",
"01.07 Animals/2024-09-30 Arrival in Son Ginard.md",
"00.01 Admin/Pictures/Sally/ima3958121943638555313.jpeg",
"00.01 Admin/Pictures/Sally/IMG_5006.jpg",
"00.01 Admin/Pictures/Sally/IMG_5009.jpg",

@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ hide task count
This section does serve for quick memos.
 
- [ ] 19:26 :chair: [[Household]]: Reprendre la recherche de table a manger demi-lune 📅2024-10-15
- [x] 19:26 :chair: [[Household]]: Reprendre la recherche de table a manger demi-lune 📅 2024-10-15 ✅ 2024-10-15
- [ ] 19:26 :horse: [[Household]]: Reprendre la recherche de statue de cheval 📅2024-10-30
- [ ] 19:27 :diya_lamp: [[Household]]: Reprendre la recherche de lampe bouillotte 📅2024-10-20
- [ ] 19:28 :test_rl: [[Household]]: Reprendre la recherche de deco liée au polo 📅2024-10-25

@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ This section does serve for quick memos.
🍽️: [[Beef Noodles with Beans]]
📺: [[2024-10-01 ⚽️ Arsenal - PSG]]
📺: [[2024-10-01 ⚽️ Arsenal - PSG (2-0)]]
 

@ -116,6 +116,8 @@ This section does serve for quick memos.
📖: [[Diplomacy]]
🚆: [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] to [[Geneva]]
 
---

@ -16,9 +16,9 @@ Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 20
BackHeadBar: 30
Water: 2
Coffee: 2
Steps:
Water: 3
Coffee: 3
Steps: 5894
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
@ -114,7 +114,9 @@ This section does serve for quick memos.
 
📖: [[Diplomacy]]
📖: [[Diplomacy]], [[Nouvelles sous ecstasy]]
🚆: [[Geneva]] to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]]
 

@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-05
Date: 2024-10-05
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 20
BackHeadBar: 30
Water: 3
Coffee: 3
Steps: 14852
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-04|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-06|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-05Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-05NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-05
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-05
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-05
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-05]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-06
Date: 2024-10-06
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 8
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.5
Coffee: 2
Steps: 12934
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-05|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-07|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-06Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-06NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-06
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-06
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-06
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[By the Sea]]
🎬: [[Aiming High - a race against the limits (2024)]]
📺: [[2024-10-06 ⚽️ OGC Nice - PSG (1-1)]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-06]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-07
Date: 2024-10-07
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 20
BackHeadBar: 30
Water: 2.5
Coffee: 2
Steps: 10326
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-06|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-08|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-07Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-07NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-07
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-07
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-07
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[By the Sea]]
🍽️: [[Big Shells With Spicy Lamb Sausage and Pistachios]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-07]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-08
Date: 2024-10-08
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.5
Coffee: 5
Steps: 11430
Weight: 90.8
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-07|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-09|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-08Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-08NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-08
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-08
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-08
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[By the Sea]]
🍽️: [[Spicy Coconut Butter Chicken]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-08]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-09
Date: 2024-10-09
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3.7
Coffee: 3
Steps: 7947
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding: 2
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-08|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-10|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-09Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-09NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-09
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-09
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-09
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
🛫: [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] to [[Mallorca]]
📖: [[99 francs]]
🐎: `=this.Riding` chukkers with [[@Sally|Sally]] at [[Son Ginard Polo Club]] > 2 goles
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-09]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-10
Date: 2024-10-10
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3.16
Coffee: 3
Steps: 7106
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding: 1
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-09|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-11|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-10Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-10NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-10
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-10
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-10
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[99 francs]]
🐎: S&B with [[@Sally|Sally]] and Chancho at [[Son Ginard Polo Club]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-10]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-11
Date: 2024-10-11
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.83
Coffee: 2
Steps: 3990
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding: 1
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-10|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-12|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-11Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-11NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-11
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-11
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-11
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[Carolyn et John]]
🐎: S&B at Vernisseta Polo Club to try a new horse (Emmanuel de la Cuesta)
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-11]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-12
Date: 2024-10-12
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2.33
Coffee: 4
Steps: 6274
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding: 6
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-11|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-13|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-12Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-12NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-12
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-12
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-12
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
🐎: `=this.Riding` Chukkers incl. 2 in Vernisseta to try a horse & 4 at [[Son Ginard Polo Club]] with [[@Sally|Sally]] for 2
📖: [[Carolyn et John]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-12]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-13
Date: 2024-10-13
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 8
Happiness: 85
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3.83
Coffee: 2
Steps: 7249
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding: 4
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-12|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-14|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-13Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-13NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-13
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-13
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-13
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
📖: [[Carolyn et John]]
🐎: `=this.Riding` chukkers at [[Son Ginard Polo Club]] with [[@Sally|Sally]] > 1 goal
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-13]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-14
Date: 2024-10-14
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 8
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 2
Coffee: 1
Steps: 8741
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-13|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-15|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-14Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-14NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-14
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-14
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-14
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
🛬: [[Mallorca]] to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]]
📖: [[Carolyn et John]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-14]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-15
Date: 2024-10-15
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water: 3
Coffee: 5
Steps: 12735
Weight: 91.1
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-14|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-16|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-15Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-15NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-15
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-15
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-15
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
🍽️: [[Big Shells With Spicy Lamb Sausage and Pistachios]]
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-15]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
---
title: "🗒 Daily Note"
allDay: true
date: 2024-10-16
Date: 2024-10-16
DocType: Note
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp:
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
Sleep: 7.5
Happiness: 80
Gratefulness: 90
Stress: 25
FrontHeadBar: 5
EarHeadBar: 30
BackHeadBar: 20
Water:
Coffee: 2
Steps:
Weight:
Ski:
IceSkating:
Riding:
Racket:
Football:
Swim:
---
%% Parent:: [[@Life Admin]] %%
---
[[2024-10-15|<< 🗓 Previous ]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[@Main Dashboard|Back]] &emsp; &emsp; &emsp; [[2024-10-17|🗓 Next >>]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Record today's health
type command
action MetaEdit: Run MetaEdit
id EditMetaData
```
^button-2024-10-16Edit
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-2024-10-16NSave
&emsp;
# 2024-10-16
&emsp;
> [!summary]+
> Daily note for 2024-10-16
&emsp;
```toc
style: number
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### ✅ Tasks of the day
&emsp;
```tasks
not done
due on 2024-10-16
path does not include Templates
hide backlinks
hide task count
```
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 📝 Memos
&emsp;
This section does serve for quick memos.
&emsp;
%% --- %%
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### 🗒 Notes
&emsp;
Loret ipsum
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### :link: Linked activity
&emsp;
```dataview
Table from [[2024-10-16]]
```
&emsp;
&emsp;

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
---
title: "💍 Fiancailles Eloi & Zélie"
allDay: false
startTime: 15:00
endTime: 16:30
date: 2022-03-26
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
# Fiancailles d'Eloi
- [l] Le [[2022-03-26]], Fiancailles d'[[Eloi de Villeneuve|Eloi]] avec [[Zélie]] à [[@@Paris|Paris]].
- [f] Cérémonie à 15h à Saint-Do, suivi d'une réception chez [[Laurence Bédier|Maman]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Diner Vivi"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:30
endTime: 23:59
date: 2022-04-07
---
[[2022-04-07|Ce jour]], diner chez [[Virginie Parent|Vivi]] avec [[@@MRCK|Boubinou]], la Goutte d'Or, [[@@Paris|Paris]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meggi-mo arrival"
allDay: false
startTime: 16:35
endTime: 16:40
date: 2022-04-07
---
Arrival of [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] in [[@@Paris|Paris]], [[2022-04-07|this day]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "👨‍👩‍👧 Dej Ag"
allDay: false
startTime: 13:00
endTime: 13:45
date: 2022-04-08
---
[[2022-04-08|Ce jour]], dej avec [[Aglaé de Villeneuve|Ag]] et [[@@MRCK|Meg]] a [[Thierry Marx Bakery]], [[@@Paris|Paris]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "👨‍👩‍👧 Garde-meuble Granny"
allDay: false
startTime: 09:00
endTime: 11:00
date: 2022-04-09
---
[[2022-04-09|Ce jour]], départ de [[@@Paris|Paris]] pour la garde-meuble à Gonesse avec [[Amaury de Villeneuve|Papa]], [[Eloi de Villeneuve|Eloi]] et [[@@MRCK|Meg]].

@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meggi-mo arrives in Lisbon"
allDay: true
date: 2022-04-29
---
My [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] is arriving to [[Lisbon]] on [[2022-04-28|that day]].

@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meggi-mo's departure to Belfast"
allDay: true
date: 2022-05-01
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] is departing [[Lisbon]] to [[Belfast]] on [[2022-05-01|that day]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meggi-mo is arriving in ZH"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 20:15
date: 2022-05-13
---
[[@@MRCK|Boubinou]] is arriving to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] on [[2022-05-13|this day]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🎡 Departure to London"
allDay: false
startTime: 08:25
endTime: 09:30
date: 2022-06-02
---
Depart à [[@@London|London]] avec [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]], [[2022-06-02|ce jour]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Retour a Zurich"
allDay: false
startTime: 18:20
endTime: 19:00
date: 2022-06-05
---
Retour à [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] avec [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]], [[2022-06-05|ce jour]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🎸 Gorillaz - arenes de Nimes"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 22:30
date: 2022-06-17
---
Concert de Gorillaz à [[Nimes]] avec [[@@MRCK|Boubinou]] [[2022-06-17|le 17 juin]].

@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Megan - Belfast"
allDay: true
date: 2022-07-29
endDate: 2022-07-30
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] is leaving to [[Belfast]] [[2022-07-29|this evening late (21:45pm)]].

@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Megan & mum back"
allDay: true
date: 2022-08-05
endDate: 2022-08-06
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] and her Mum are back to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] [[2022-08-05|this late evening (10:30pm)]].

@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meg's mum back to Belfast"
allDay: true
date: 2022-08-10
endDate: 2022-08-11
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]]'s mum is back to [[Belfast]] [[2022-08-10|in the morning]].

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⏱ Reparation Oignon LIP"
allDay: false
startTime: 10:00
endTime: 10:30
date: 2022-08-11
---
address:: Schäracherstrasse 6, CH-8053 Zürich
---
Rendez-vous de réparation de l'oignon LIP [[@Family|Chapal]] à [[2022-08-11|10h]].

@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Paris SG - Monaco (1-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-08-28
---
[[2022-08-28|ce jour]], [[Paris SG]] - AS Monaco: 1-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Neymar (PSG)<br>⚽ Volland (ASM)

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ FC Toulouse - Paris SG (0-3)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-08-31
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-08-31|Ce jour]], FC Toulouse - [[Paris SG]]: 0-3
Buteurs:: ⚽ Neymar<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Bernat

@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ FC Nantes - Paris SG (0-3)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-09-03
---
[[2022-09-03|ce jour]], FC Nantes - [[Paris SG]]: 0-3
Buteurs:: ⚽ ⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Nuno Mendes

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ PSG - Juventus (2-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-09-06
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-09-06|Ce jour]], [[Paris SG|PSG]] - Juventus: 2-1
Buteurs:: ⚽⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ McKennie (Juve)

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🏃🏼‍♂️ Diamond League Final"
allDay: false
startTime: 18:00
endTime: 22:30
date: 2022-09-08
---
Finals of the Diamond League at [[@@Zürich|Letzigrund, Zürich]] with [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] [[2022-09-08|that day]].

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Diner Lorena"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 23:30
date: 2022-09-13
---
Diner à [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] avec Lorena [[2022-09-13|ce jour]].

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Maccabi Haifa - Paris SG (1-3)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-09-14
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-09-14|Ce jour]], Maccabi Haifa - [[Paris SG]]: 1-3
Buteurs:: ⚽ Chery (MHA)<br>⚽ Messi<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Neymar

@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Lyon - Paris SG (0-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:45
endTime: 22:45
date: 2022-09-18
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-09-18|this day]], Lyon - [[Paris SG]]: 0-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Messi

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Paris SG - 0GC Nice (2-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-10-01
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-01|Aujourdhui]], [[Paris SG]] - OGC Nice: 2-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Messi<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Laborde (OGCN)

@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🛩 Meggi in Belfast"
allDay: true
date: 2022-10-03
endDate: 2022-10-11
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] in [[Belfast]].
&emsp;
Departure: [[2022-10-03]] from [[@@Zürich|Zürich]]
Return: [[2022-10-10]] to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]]

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Benfica - PSG (1-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-10-05
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-05|aujdhui]], Benfica - [[Paris SG]]: 1-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Danilo (OG)<br>⚽ Messi

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
---
title: "📣 Conference on FinTech"
allDay: true
date: 2022-10-05
endDate: 2022-10-07
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-05|Wednesday]] & [[2022-10-06|Thursday]], conference in [[Milan]].

@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🛩 Weekend in Belfast"
allDay: true
date: 2022-10-07
endDate: 2022-10-11
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
🛩 Flight from [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] to [[Belfast]]
&emsp;
Departure: [[2022-10-07]]
Return: [[2022-10-10]]
![[ima2787069855116213160.jpeg]]

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ PSG - Benfica (1-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-10-11
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-11|Ce jour]], [[Paris SG]] - SL Benfica: 1-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ João Mario (Benfica)

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🍽 Lunch w Marguerite & Arnold"
allDay: false
startTime: 12:00
endTime: 14:00
date: 2022-10-15
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-15|Ce jour]], dej à [[Geneva]] avec [[Marguerite de Villeneuve]], [[Arnold Moulin]] & [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]].
[ACCUEIL](https://www.restaurant-les-clochettes.com/accueil)

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Paris SG - Marseille (1-0)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-10-16
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-16|Ce jour]], [[Paris SG]] - Olympique Marseille: 1-0
Buteurs:: ⚽ Neymar

@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧁 Tea Time, fraterie"
allDay: false
startTime: 15:00
endTime: 16:30
date: 2022-10-22
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-22|Ce jour]], tea time à [[@@Paris|Paris]] avec [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] et:
- [[Noémie de Villeneuve]]
- [[Marguerite de Villeneuve]] & [[Arnold Moulin]]
- [[Eloi de Villeneuve]]
- [[Philomène de Villeneuve]]
- [[Aglaé de Villeneuve]]
- [[Séraphine Priso Le Bastart]]

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🍽 Lunch w Mutti"
allDay: false
startTime: 12:00
endTime: 13:30
date: 2022-10-23
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-23|Ce jour]], dej à [[@@Paris|Paris]] avec [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] & [[Laurence Bédier]].

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ PSG - Troyes (4-3)"
allDay: false
startTime: 17:00
endTime: 19:00
date: 2022-10-29
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-10-29|ce jour]], [[Paris SG]] - ESTAC: 4-3
Buteurs:: ⚽ Soler<br>⚽ Messi<br>⚽ Neymar<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽⚽ Baldé (ESTAC)<br>⚽ Palaversa (ESTAC)

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Juventus - PSG (1-2)"
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00
date: 2022-11-02
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-02|That day]], Juventus - [[Paris SG|PSG]] : 1-2
Buteurs:: ⚽ Bonucci (Juve)<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Nuno Mendes

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ PSG - AJ Auxerre (5-0)"
allDay: false
startTime: 13:00
endTime: 15:00
date: 2022-11-13
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-13|Today]], [[Paris SG]] - AJ Auxerre: 5-0
Buteurs:: ⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Soler<br>⚽ Hakimi<br>⚽ Sanchez<br>⚽ Ekitike

@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🏇 Mallorca"
allDay: true
date: 2022-11-20
endDate: 2022-11-28
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Week in [[Mallorca]], [[@Spain|Spain]], to see [[Francisco Podesta]] with [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]].

@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ France - Australie (4-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 22:00
date: 2022-11-22
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-22|This day]] from [[Mallorca]], [[@France|France]] - Australie: 4-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Rabiot<br>⚽⚽ Giroud<br>⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Goodwin (AUS)

@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ France - Denmark (2-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 17:00
endTime: 19:00
date: 2022-11-26
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-26|This day]], [[@France|France]] - Denmark: 2-1
Buteurs:: ⚽⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Christensen (DEN)
&emsp;
In Cassai Beach Club, [[Mallorca]].

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Tunisia - France (1-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 16:00
endTime: 18:00
date: 2022-11-30
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-30|This day]], Tunisia - [[@France|France]]: 1-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Khazri (TUN)<br>⚽ Griezmann

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🏒 ZSC - HC Ajoie"
allDay: false
startTime: 19:45
endTime: 21:00
date: 2022-11-30
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-11-30|This day]], [[@@Zürich|ZSC]] vs HC Ajoie with [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]].

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ France - Pologne (3-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 16:00
endTime: 18:00
date: 2022-12-04
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-12-04|This day]], 1/8 Finals of the World Cup: France - Poland: 3-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Giroud<br>⚽⚽ MBappé<br>⚽ Lewandowski (POL)

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ France - Angleterre (2-1)"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 22:00
date: 2022-12-10
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-12-10|Ce jour]], 1/4 de finale France - Angleterre: 2-1
Buteurs:: ⚽ Tchouaméni<br>⚽ Giroud<br>⚽ Kane (ENG)

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⛷️ Arosa"
allDay: true
date: 2022-12-10
endDate: 2022-12-12
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Weekend du [[2022-12-10|10 déc]] et [[2022-12-11|11 déc]] avec [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] à [[Arosa]].

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ Maroc - France (0-2)"
allDay: false
startTime: 20:00
endTime: 22:00
date: 2022-12-14
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-12-14|Ce jour]], Maroc - France: 0-2
Buteurs:: ⚽ T. Hernandez<br>⚽ Kolo Muani

@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
---
title: "🧚🏼 Meg in LDN/Ireland"
allDay: true
date: 2022-12-16
endDate: 2022-12-30
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]] in [[@@London|London]] and then [[Belfast]]
Return to [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] on [[2022-12-29|29th]] at 10pm

@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
---
title: "⚽ France - Argentine (3-3)"
allDay: false
startTime: 16:00
endTime: 18:00
date: 2022-12-18
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2022-12-18|Ce jour]], Finale de la Coupe du Monde: Argentine - France: 3-3
Buteurs:: ⚽⚽ Messi (ARG)<br>⚽ Di Maria (ARG)<br>⚽⚽⚽ MBappé
&emsp;
---
### Tirs aux buts
&emsp;
| &emsp; | **Argentine** | **France** |
|:------:| :-------------: | :----------: |
| 1 | ⚽ Messi | ⚽ MBappé |
| 2 | ⚽ Dybala | Coman |
| 3 | ⚽ Paredes | Tchouaméni |
| 4 | ⚽ Montiel | ⚽ Kolo Muani |
| 5 | | |

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
---
title: Médecin
allDay: false
startTime: 11:15
endTime: 12:15
date: 2023-01-23
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2023-01-23|Ce jour]], 1er RDV avec [[Dr Cleopatra Morales]].

@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
---
title: Genève
allDay: true
date: 2023-02-06
endDate: 2023-02-08
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Depart à [[Geneva|Genève]] [[2023-02-06|ce jour]] et retour le [[223-02-07|lendemain]].

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
---
title: ⚕ Médecin
allDay: false
startTime: 12:15
endTime: 13:15
date: 2023-02-09
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2023-02-09|Ce jour]], RDV de suivi avec [[Dr Cleopatra Morales]]

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---
title: "👰‍♀ Mariage Eloi & Zélie"
allDay: true
date: 2023-02-10
endDate: 2023-02-12
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Mariage d[[Eloi de Villeneuve|Éloi]] avec [[Zélie]] en [[@France|Bretagne]] (Rennes) [[2023-02-11|ce jour]].
&emsp;
🚆: 23h11, arrivée à Rennes
&emsp;
🏨: **Hotel Saint Antoine**<br>27 avenue Janvier<br>Rennes
&emsp;
### Vendredi 10 Février
&emsp;
#### 17h: Mariage civil
Mairie de Montfort-sur-Meu (35)
&emsp;
#### 20h30: Veillée de Prière
Chapelle du château de la Châsse
Iffendic (35)
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Samedi 11 Février
&emsp;
#### 14h: Messe de Mariage
Saint-Louis-Marie
Montfort-sur-Meu (35)
&emsp;
#### 16h30: Cocktail
Château de la Châsse
Iffendic (35)
&emsp;
#### 19h30: Dîner
Château de la Châsse
Iffendic (35)
&emsp;
---
&emsp;
### Dimanche 12 Février
&emsp;
#### 11h: Messe
Chapelle du château de la Châsse
Iffendic (35)
&emsp;
#### 12h: Déjeuner breton
Château de la Châsse
Iffendic (35)
&emsp;
🚆: 13h35, départ de Rennes

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---
title: 🎬 Tár @ Riff Raff
allDay: false
startTime: 20:30
endTime: 22:30
date: 2023-02-19
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2023-02-19|Ce jour]], [[Tár (2022)]] @ [[Riff Raff Kino Bar]].

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---
title: 🩺 Médecin
allDay: false
startTime: 15:00
endTime: 15:30
date: 2023-03-06
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2023-03-06|Ce jour]], rdv avec [[Dr Awad Abuawad]]

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---
title: 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Marg & Arnold à Zürich
allDay: true
date: 2023-03-11
endDate: 2023-03-13
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Arrivée le [[2023-03-11|11 mars]] de [[Marguerite de Villeneuve|Marg]] et [[Arnold Moulin|Arnold]].
Départ le [[2023-03-12|lendemain]].

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---
title: 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Molly & boyfriend in Zürich
allDay: true
date: 2023-03-18
endDate: 2023-03-20
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Weekend in [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] for [[@@MRCK|Meggi-mo]]s cousin Molly and boyfriend.
Arrival on [[2023-03-18|18th March]] and departure on Monday [[2023-03-20|20th March]].

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---
title: 🩺 Médecin
allDay: false
startTime: 11:45
endTime: 12:15
date: 2023-04-14
completed: null
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
[[2023-04-14|Ce jour]], rdv avec [[Dr Cleopatra Morales]]

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---
title: 🏠 Arrivée Papa
allDay: false
startTime: 20:26
endTime: 21:26
date: 2023-12-21
completed: null
---
[[2023-12-21|Ce jour]], arrivée de [[Amaury de Villeneuve|Papa]] à [[@@Zürich|Zürich]]

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
---
title: 🗼 Départ Papa
allDay: false
startTime: 13:30
endTime: 14:30
date: 2023-12-27
completed: null
---
[[2023-12-27|Ce jour]], départ de [[Amaury de Villeneuve|Papa]] de [[@@Zürich|Zürich]] pour [[@@Paris|Paris]]

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---
title: ⚽️ Arsenal - PSG
title: ⚽️ Arsenal - PSG (2-0)
allDay: false
startTime: 21:00
endTime: 23:00

@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
---
title: ⚽️ OGC Nice - PSG (1-1)
allDay: false
startTime: 20:45
endTime: 22:45
date: 2024-10-06
completed: null
---
[[2024-10-06|Ce jour]], OGC Nice - [[Paris SG|PSG]]: 1-1
Buteurs:: ⚽️ Nuno Mendes (csc)<br>⚽️ Nuno Mendes
&emsp;
```lineup
formation: 433
players: Donnarumma,Nuno Mendes,Pacho,Marquinhos,Hakimi,Ruiz,João Neves,Zaïre-Emery (Vitinha),Barcola,Kolo Muani (Lee),Dembélé
```

@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Parent:: [[@Reading master|Reading list]]
ReadingState:: 🟥
ReadingState:: 🟧
---

@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: 🟥
Read:: [[2024-10-14]]
---

@ -0,0 +1,91 @@
---
Tag: ["🥉", "🇺🇸", "🇨🇩", "🏀", "🪦"]
Date: 2024-10-06
DocType: "WebClipping"
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp: 2024-10-06
Link: https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5807033/2024/10/01/dikembe-mutombo-legacy-david-aldridge/
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: [[2024-10-14]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-basketballwasbutavehicleforwhatreallymattersNSave
&emsp;
# For Dikembe Mutombo, basketball was but a vehicle for what really matters
Big John seemed to speak Dikembe Mutombo into existence.
This was 1988. I was covering John Thompson — not the Georgetown Hoyas, the team he coached. As with almost everyone else who wrote about college hoops at the time, if you were writing about or covering the Hoyas, as I was at the time for the Washington Post, you were really covering Thompson, more than the players — who were essentially off-limits to you, anyway. He and Bobby Knight were the show in college basketball at the time. In an era full of legendary coaches, from Dean Smith, Denny Crum and Lou Carnesecca to John Chaney, Dale Brown and Larry Brown, Thompson and Knight stood atop the coaching firmament, from far different viewpoints and for far different reasons.
People thought Big John hated the media. That wasnt true. Like Knight, he loved to *argue* with the media, and, also like Knight, sometimes did so profanely. But he didnt hate writers, at all. He actually had a soft spot for many of them. So when he started talking about this “big African” that was coming to play for him the following season, he did so with a twinkle in his eye.
“Yall are gonna love him,” Thompson said. “Kid speaks four languages.”
It was more than that. At the time, Dikembe Mutombo Mpolondo Mukamba Jean-Jacques Wamutombo was just starting to master English, joining his fluency in French, Spanish, Portuguese and *five* African tribal dialects. He was going to be a pre-med major at Georgetown, where he was already taking classes after coming over from the Boboto Institute in what was then known as Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo. His cousin, whose career he hoped to emulate, was a cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon at the nearby Washington Hospital Center. This was not your typical incoming player, and that was aside from the fact that he stood 7-foot-2.
My God. He was 22 years old then.
And thus, it is deflating, an emptying of ones capacities, to write about Dikembe Mutombo dying from brain cancer, at 58, a professional athlete of significance and a towering human being of far greater substance.
![](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5806126/2024/09/30/dikembe-mutumbo-cancer-died-nba-news/)
Mutombos vision met his height somewhere above most of us. His resonant, gravelly voice made hiding impossible. Not that he was shy. During his 18 seasons with the [Nuggets](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/nba/team/nuggets/), [Hawks](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/nba/team/hawks/), [76ers](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/nba/team/sixers/), [Nets](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/nba/team/nets/), Knicks and Rockets, 10 of which produced All-Star appearances, Mutombo never ducked. [Even as the Lakers Shaquille ONeal bludgeoned Mutombo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5BgYiegnm8) during a five-game pounding of the 76ers in the 2001 NBA Finals, Mutombo didnt back down.
But no one in the game was bigger, or better, at getting people to think about others beyond themselves.
Mutombos was among the most persistent in getting the league to begin what is now the Basketball Africa League. He became a regular on the [NBA](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/nba/)s Basketball Without Borders Africa tours and clinics, showing his NBA brethren around in country after country, pointing out not just what needed fixing, but what was being done right by local citizens. He hated the stereotyping so many people would default to when discussing the continents problems, but was no less fierce in decrying the lack of urgency by local and national politicians in addressing those problems.
Even his Mutombo Coffee business had a give-back, a [“Women in Coffee” initiative](https://www.mutombocoffee.com/pages/farmers?srsltid=AfmBOooHMoRbX_Wmn0jhK0jrqc3nCC_fzyo7rwYXipOGWf2u5okafXNK) in which proceeds from the sale of his coffees went back to female farmers from Africa and Latin America.
“He was a humanitarian at his core,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement released Monday. “He loved what the game of basketball could do to make a positive impact on communities, especially in his native Democratic Republic of the Congo and across the continent of Africa. I had the privilege of traveling the world with Dikembe and seeing first-hand how his generosity and compassion uplifted people.”
He was known, of course, for the finger wag, which he broke out early in his NBA career as a playful admonition to anyone who had the temerity to try to shoot over him. It served multiple purposes; it was a non-verbal reminder of his incredible anticipation and length, as well as a way to make the blocked shot something sexy, something that might make a highlight or two. [Or a commercial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4WWvMMblaY).
Mutombo was not perfect. He had foibles. And fierce pride. But he transcended them, so very often, to do things that re-centered us, from individual achievement to what was best for the most people. So his obituary should not lead with his Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame induction, in 2015, or his four NBA Defensive Player of the Year awards, or his 3,289 career blocked shots, second only to Hakeem Olajuwon. [The iconic, incredible moment in 1994](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEQgHW_3vOQ), when Mutombo helped lead his eighth-seeded Denver Nuggets to a first-round upset of the top-seeded Seattle SuperSonics? Historic, but secondary.
Dikembe Mutombo, more than anything, carried himself with a seriousness, a sobriety, that belied his years, just as the other big men Thompson recruited to the Hilltop during that era carried themselves.
Patrick Ewing had come from Jamaica as a child to settle with his family in Cambridge, Mass., and had to listen to racist taunts in high school and college when he had the audacity to pick the Hoyas. Alonzo Mourning stared down his circumstances in Chesapeake, Va., playing defense with a fierceness that bordered on rage. Craig (Big Sky) Shelton was from D.C.; Othella Harrington starred in Jackson, Miss. In the summers, most would return to Georgetowns campus to engage in fierce competition with one another, a Finishing School for Big Men, with Thompson often watching.
Mutombo wanted, desperately, to be like Bill Russell, Thompsons teammate in Boston during his two-year stint in the NBA as a player, whose greatness as a player, similarly, finished second to his standing as a man. Russell, too, destroyed opponents game plans from the inside out.
“If I want the 11 rings for the 10 fingers like Mr. Russell, I have to play defense,” Mutombo said.
He didnt get a ring from either of his NBA Finals appearances. But he broke Mournings Georgetown record for blocked shots in a game six weeks after Mourning set it in 1989.
And Mutombo always understood that basketball was but a vehicle for more important ideas, even ones that seemed impossible.
In 1997, his mother, Marie, suffered a stroke. His father tried to take her to the one hospital near the familys home, but there was a curfew in place, and he couldnt leave their house with her. She died there. So Mutombo simply decided that this shouldnt happen to anyone else, and decided to build a hospital in Kinshasa. Pro athletes donate to hospitals; they dont build them. Nonetheless, he began what he thought would be a quick round of fundraising among his NBA brethren. The rough estimate to build the hospital was $29 million. So he started asking around.
His Georgetown brothers, Ewing and Mourning, gave money. Gary Payton, whod been vanquished in that Denver upset of the Sonics, gave money. Thompson gave money. And that was … about all. Very few of Mutombos NBA brethren came out of pocket to help. It was a wound that Mutombo didnt talk about much afterward, but never forgot; in the end, he donated $15 million himself to ensure the construction of the 300-bed [Biamba Marie Mutombo Hospital and Research Center, which opened in 2007.](https://x.com/officialmutombo/status/1548764979083546624)
“What Im doing, is just setting an example, for Africa,” he said amid his fundraising efforts.
His example, though, was not just for his homeland. And his size was fitting for the oversized impact he had while he was here.
*(Photo of Dikembe Mutombo: Nathaniel S. Butler / NBAE via Getty Images)*
**[David Aldridge](https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/author/david-aldridge/)** is a senior columnist for The Athletic. He has worked for nearly 30 years covering the NBA and other sports for Turner, ESPN, and the Washington Post. In 2016, he received the Curt Gowdy Media Award from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Legacy Award from the National Association of Black Journalists. He lives in Washington, D.C. Follow David on Twitter **[@davidaldridgedc](https://twitter.com/davidaldridgedc)**
&emsp;
&emsp;
---
`$= dv.el('center', 'Source: ' + dv.current().Link + ', ' + dv.current().Date.toLocaleString("fr-FR"))`

@ -0,0 +1,256 @@
---
Tag: ["🚔", "🇺🇸", "⛓️", "🔞"]
Date: 2024-10-06
DocType: "WebClipping"
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp: 2024-10-06
Link: https://gothamist.com/news/he-was-officer-champagne-at-rikers-24-women-accuse-him-of-sexual-assault-in-jail
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: [[2024-10-12]]
---
&emsp;
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-24womenaccusehimofsexualassaultinjailNSave
&emsp;
# He was Officer 'Champagne' at Rikers. 24 women accuse him of sexual assault in jail.
Lisa wasnt pregnant when she entered Rikers Island.
It was February 1991. She was 22 years old, addicted to crack cocaine and had just been sentenced to six months for selling drugs — the first in a long string of stays at the Rose M. Singer Center, the womens jail more commonly known as “Rosies.” As part of the intake process, she submitted to a medical exam that included a pregnancy test.
“Going to prison was very, very, very scary at a young age,” Lisa said. She longed for the comfort of her mothers four-bedroom apartment in the South Bronx where she grew up. If she followed the rules at Rosies, she recalled being told at sentencing, she could leave jail two months early.
“Those 60 days meant everything to me. I wanted to go home,” Lisa said.
But shortly after arriving, she said, a guard threatened to take away that early release if she didnt comply with his demands. He repeatedly raped her, forcing her to submit to intercourse and perform oral sex in a part of the jail used to store recreation equipment, she said.
Lisa learned the guard had impregnated her, she said, when she sat on one of the jails cold, stainless steel toilets and felt a gush of blood leave her body.
“I had a miscarriage in the bathroom,” Lisa said. “You could feel that was a baby, or beginning of the baby.”
Jail staffers transported her to Elmhurst Hospital, where excess tissue from the pregnancy was removed from her uterus, she said. Afterward, she was sent back to Rikers. No one ever asked how she came to be pregnant inside a womens-only jail, said Lisa, who asked to only be identified by her nickname due to fears of retaliation from correction officers or law enforcement.
Lisa hardly said a word about her experience over the next three decades. That changed in 2023, when [she and 700 other women](https://gothamist.com/news/late-night-sex-assaults-invasive-searches-the-700-women-alleging-abuse-at-rikers) who were held at Rosies sued New York City. [New Yorks Adult Survivors Act](https://gothamist.com/news/adult-survivors-act-deadline-has-passed-but-an-nyc-law-provides-new-window-to-file-certain-suits) opened a one-year window that permitted civil lawsuits to be filed over allegations of sexual abuse that would have otherwise been too old to bring to court. The accusations in the lawsuits span more than five decades.
A new Gothamist investigation has found at least 20 jail staffers names repeated across multiple lawsuits, suggesting that Rikers Island had several serial sex abusers on its payroll. In almost every case, it appears officials have done little, if anything, to investigate the womens stories and hold the alleged attackers accountable.
That includes Lisas accused rapist. The man she says raped and impregnated her is identified in 24 lawsuits. She knew him by the name “Champagne.”
Lisa, who asked to use a nickname because she fears retaliation, said she was raped and impregnated by a correction officer she knew as "Champagne" while she served a sentence at the Rikers women's jail.
Jessy Edwards
From at least the late 1980s to the early 2000s, Champagne raped, groped and forcibly kissed dozens of women in their cells or in secluded areas of the jail, according to the lawsuits. Many of the women who claim to have endured abuse at Rikers didnt know the name of their attacker or only knew a surname.
In city records, Champagne is a ghost. The Office of Payroll Administration has no record of anyone with that name who worked at Rikers during the period of the allegations.
But hidden in a handful of the lawsuits was a clue as to his real identity.
Some of the 24 women said they believed Champagne was a nickname a moniker he sometimes wore on a silver name tag while walking Rosies long cinder-block halls.
His real surname, they said, was Fant.
Using a combination of social media posts, payroll and personnel records, and other public documents, Gothamist determined that only one guard with the last name Fant worked at Rosies during the time of the allegations: Correction Officer Keith Fant.
Reached by phone, Fant confirmed he was known in the jail as Champagne, a name given to him by some female detainees, he said, because of his “bubbly” personality.
His employment at Rosies aligns with the times each of his accusers say they were jailed. The citys Department of Investigation, which handles the most serious misconduct complaints against correction officers, said it had investigated Fant in the past but would not provide details because the matter hadnt been substantiated.
Gothamist shared photos of Keith Fant that he posted on his Facebook page with 14 of the women who named Champagne in their lawsuits and could be reached for this story. Four of them, including Lisa, told Gothamist that he was their attacker; another eight confirmed it was him, but did not want to be interviewed by a reporter. Two of the women couldnt be sure.
Fant, who retired in 2005 and earns a pension of over $45,000 a year, said all of the women are lying.
“I know that's a lot of people and I know it raises eyebrows, but I never, I have not touched anybody inside Rosie's,” Fant said. “The only thing I can think of is maybe they're trying to get some money.”
It is true there is considerable money to be paid. In all, the 700 lawsuits involving Rikers amount to a potential $14.7 billion liability for city taxpayers. The women who identified Champagne alone seek more than $500 million. But several said a payday isnt their motivation.
“There's not enough money in the world that will ever take away the scars that I have, the pain,” Lisa said. “The truth needs to be told. The real ugly things that happened, everything that's been swept under the rug.”
Perhaps most astonishing is that when Gothamist contacted several accused guards who were identified in lawsuits, the men said it was the first time they had heard of the allegations against them.
City officials have shown a reluctance to proactively investigate the flood of allegations. Mayor Eric Adams promised a “thorough investigation” in March in response to Gothamists initial reporting on the lawsuits against the city, but no investigation was launched. The Department of Correction has repeatedly refused to answer detailed questions about the accusations against Fant and others.
Only after repeated questions from Gothamist about why the lawsuits have not been examined has the Bronx district attorneys office, which has jurisdiction over Rikers, said it would begin reviewing the lawsuits to determine whether to open criminal investigations into current and former staffers.
#### **Where the hell did all of these pretty women come from?**
Most of the allegations that name Champagne occurred in the 1990s, a decade when the number of women held in city jails profoundly increased. Then-Mayor Rudy Giulianis [“broken windows”](https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1982/03/broken-windows/304465/) approach to policing included NYPD officers conducting dramatic, carefully planned drug sweeps of neighborhoods in northern Manhattan, the South Bronx and southeast Queens.
Tasha Carter Beasley grew up in the canyon of brick apartment buildings on West 147th Street in Harlem. Her father was addicted to heroin, her mother crack cocaine, “along with mostly everybody else that I could think about,” she said. Carter Beasley was using heroin by the time she was 25 years old.
She entered Rikers on a robbery charge in 1996, when more than 13,700 women passed through New York City jails — the highest number of women ever detained pretrial in the citys history. Rosies became so crowded an adjacent mens jail was used to house the deluge of women. That same year, the state Legislature passed a law [formally declaring](https://www.nytimes.com/1996/04/23/nyregion/bill-seeks-to-protect-inmates-from-guards-who-seek-sex.html) that incarcerated people are [legally unable to consent](https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/PEN/130.05) to sexual contact with jail or prison staff.
“It was almost like a beauty pageant,” Carter Beasley said of the women passing through Rosies. “You would wonder, Where the hell did all of these pretty women come from? And it was like they had just swept us up off the streets.”
The parade of new detainees created ripe conditions for the serial abusers of Rikers Island, she said. “It was a regular story that the officers were f---ing inmates.”
Tasha Carter Beasley was held at Rikers in 1996 and said she was raped by a correction officer she knew as "Champagne."
Stephanie Keith
Carter Beasley said she was a shy and impressionable young woman when she met Fant, who she identified through photos as the officer she knew as Champagne. She said she worked shifts cleaning areas of the jail under Fants supervision. He was 40 years old at the time, according to his personnel records, and had been working at Rosies since Mayor Ed Koch cut the opening ribbon in front of the 800-bed facilitys pale pink facade in 1988.
Fants nickname was so ubiquitous within the jail that even his superiors captains and wardens called him Champagne, he said.
Gothamist spoke with Fant via phone for more than 90 minutes for this story. While working at Rosies, Fant said he interacted professionally with detainees, and had a good rapport with the women he oversaw.
“I never was mean to them. I talked to them. They talked about their lives, their story. To be honest with you, they all liked me,” he said.
But Carter Beasley said Fant used his charm — and his power as an officer who oversaw detainees on maintenance duty — to get women alone in a facility packed with people. She said Fants role gave him the authority to choose which women would work those shifts, pluck them out of crowded housing units and take them to isolated parts of the jail.
“That's how he would come and pick me up,” she said. “This is how he went and apprehended a lot of his girls.”
At least three other women who named Champagne in their lawsuits described being sexually assaulted during these types of work shifts. One woman claimed in court filings that on a weekly basis he would force her to perform oral sex by the garbage area, and he threatened to throw her in solitary confinement if she didnt comply. Other women allege they were raped in cleaning closets, kitchen freezers, empty hallways and in other remote areas of the jail that Champagne could access when he worked as a recreation officer or brought them to the jails medical clinic.
Fants personnel records confirm that he worked as a recreation officer and as a medical escort over the course of his 20-year career, although the documents do not specify when he started working those shifts.
Carter Beasley said Fant first touched her in a secluded closet with a slop sink in a part of the jail known as the annex. Fant sidled up behind her as she filled a mop bucket with fresh water, she recalled, complimented her waist-length hair, pressed his body against hers and kissed her. Days later, she said, he brought her an iced tea from the officers kitchen on a hot summer evening and took her to the maintenance closet.
“I think he did a double \[shift\], because I remember this night he was around,” she said.
He sat on a chair, she claimed, unzipped his pants and directed her to perform oral sex. Fant denies the allegation.
“At the time you're not thinking this shouldn't be happening, that I should not have his penis in my mouth and he should not have it in my mouth,” she said. “At the time, your mind cannot reason that this is rape.”
#### **“No one cared”**
Karen Klines thought Rikers Island would be the place that finally helped her get off of crack cocaine. She grew up in an abusive Washington Heights household and was on the streets by the time she was 13 years old. Klines started using and selling drugs, and she was picked up in one of the Giuliani administrations many drug sweeps.
“All of my pickups was anywhere between 158th Street to 161st Street between Amsterdam and Broadway,” she said. “Anytime there was a sweep, it's like I was standing out like a sore thumb because I had a crack addiction.”
Instead of finding refuge at Rosies, Klines said she met Champagne. While serving a six-month jail sentence for drug possession in 1999, she took a job serving meals to him and other guards in the officers kitchen to earn money for her commissary account.
“Doesnt pay much, but I was able to get the things I need, like deodorant,” she said. “And maybe a little cookie or a bag of chips.”
Karen Klines thought Rikers Island would be a refuge from her addiction to crack cocaine. Instead, she said she was further traumatized from being raped by a correction officer inside the jail.
Stephanie Keith
While working there, she said she overheard other guards calling Champagne by the last name Fant a name her attorneys added to the details of her lawsuit, which alleges a string of sexual assaults that most often took place inside a mop closet.
The first time, Klines said, Fant forced her to crouch on the ground with her back pressed against a white-painted concrete slop sink and perform oral sex in exchange for cigarettes. As it became more routine, she said, Fant would come to the kitchen just before her shift was over, lift a pocket on the leg of his dark-blue uniform and reveal a pack of Newport 100s to indicate that he wanted to meet.
She remembered being bent over the sink as he raped her from behind, watching the water drip from the faucet into a rusty drain.
“I had to look at something to keep my mind off of what was taking place,” Klines said. “When he finished, he would always go out first. And then he tapped the door, then it was your cue to come out. But he always made sure the hallways was clear.”
Klines incarceration record shows she was jailed multiple times while Fant was working at Rosies. She said he continued to rape her when she would return.
“He said, I know you back, you miss me? And he would say it in like a joking way. Like, I know you came back to see me,’” she said. “I was afraid. I felt guilty. I felt embarrassed. I felt not worthy to continue to live. It was like the feeling of him leaving something nasty on my skin, and it was like I could never scrub my skin enough to feel better.”
Klines reported the alleged rape to jail officials in 1999, she said. But instead of investigating her allegations, she claimed they placed her in a mental observation unit and gave her the antidepressant Prozac and Seroquel, an antipsychotic.
“I was under the influence of so much medication, I just suppressed \[the abuse\] because I felt that was my reason for ending up out of general population now because I done opened my mouth,” Klines said. “No one cared.”
The Department of Correction did not answer questions about whether any measures were ever taken to investigate Klines abuse allegations. Fant denies having sexual contact with anyone at Rikers.
#### **“Those things just did not happen.”**
Fants 878-page personnel file is a trove of work schedules, occasional reprimands and scrawled hand-written notes — a window into one mans career as a New York City correction officer. The documents were obtained by Gothamist through a public records request.
Records show he was reprimanded in 1991 for failing to wear his proper nameplate. The four women who spoke with Gothamist and who were detained at Rosies over a span of 14 years said Fant regularly wore a name tag that said Champagne.
Fant confirmed to Gothamist that a colleague had made him a Champagne tag but said he rarely used it. “I didn't wear it all the time, because I wasn't even allowed to wear it like that,” he said.
He also denied womens claims that he brought cigarettes and other items into the jail for them. Bringing contraband into a jail for the purpose of providing it to detainees is against department policy and, in some cases, illegal.
The Department of Investigation looks into cases of alleged fraud, corruption and other illegal activities by city employees. Fants record shows that the department's chief investigator ordered Fant to appear for an inquiry in February 2000.
Records show Fant was ordered in 2000 to appear before the Department of Investigation's inspector general overseeing the city's correction department.
The documents do not detail the nature of the investigation, and the Department of Correction fully redacted more than 70 pages of Fant's employment records. Gothamist is challenging the redactions.
Unlike police officers, unsubstantiated complaints against jail guards are not made public. Diane Struzzi, an investigation department spokesperson, said she would not give details about the inquiry because doing so would be a violation of Fant's privacy.
Fant said he remembered the inquiry, but didnt know what it was about. He said as part of the investigation he received a call from a woman who had been detained at Rikers on his personal phone, which he viewed as an attempt by investigators to entrap him.
Fant said he was shocked that 24 women had filed lawsuits alleging hed sexually assaulted them at Rikers, and that he only learned about them through Gothamists questions.
When provided with detailed descriptions of the womens claims, he said he didnt remember any of the women who identified him and that their accusations were “all conjured up hyperbole.”
Lisa, who said Fant impregnated her, and three other women claim they were assaulted in the recreation area in the 1990s. But Fant said he didnt begin working as a recreation officer until 2000, making their allegations "impossible," he said. His personnel file does not make clear when he took on that role.
“What did I do to deserve this?” he asked. “It's just not true. I mean, I can't say it any plainer than that. Those things just did not happen.”
Of the 24 lawsuits, 17 provide an approximate time of day when the abuse took place. In seven of those cases, the times do not exactly align with the shift times recorded in Fants personnel files, which the retired officer said disproved their allegations.
Jubi Williams, a victim advocate at Levy Konigsberg, a law firm representing some of the women, said its difficult for most people, let alone survivors of sexual assault, to recall exact shift times from 20 or 30 years ago.
“Sometimes people don't remember the exact dates or the time frame properly,” Williams said. “But when I talk to victims and survivors, what they do remember is what cologne he used, the way his breath smelled, his gait as he approached their cell, and the patterns of behavior: how he would take them out and pretend they had a job to do and then abuse them.”
#### **A “culture of lawlessness”**
Earlier this year, Klines stared at a photo on her phone that Fant posted to social media. It was a recent selfie one taken nearly two decades after Klines had last seen him.
She recognized him immediately.
In the photo, Fant poses in a car with a fedora on his head. He has a gray beard and is biting his lower lip.
“I never thought I would ever see his face again, it was a memory I wanted to forget,” Klines said. “He still holds his lip the exact same way.”
Overwhelmed, she handed the phone to Carter Beasley. The two met in 2018 while working for the city in homeless shelters, years after they left Rikers for the last time. They became friends, and then a couple. When they met, they had no idea the other knew Champagne. They said they were together for years before they shared their stories of alleged rape inside Rikers with each other.
Carter Beasley examined the photo on her girlfriends phone. She also immediately recognized Fant as Champagne.
“It looked like he didn't have a damn thing wrong with him,” she said. “Meanwhile, I couldn't even be in a relationship with a man because I didn't know how to get past that.”
All of the women who spoke to Gothamist said they want Fant to be held responsible for the abuse they said they endured, and their lawsuits accuse the correction department of failing to protect them.
“I believe the Department of Correction had his back like it was a jacket,” Klines said.
The Rose M. Singer Center (middle foreground) serves as the women's jail at Rikers Island.
DougSchneiderPhoto
Sarena Townsend, a former sex crimes prosecutor and former deputy commissioner at the correction department, oversaw investigations into alleged sexual misconduct by officers from 2018 to 2022. She said a "culture of lawlessness" has long pervaded Rikers and would have allowed correction officers to act as sexual predators for decades without being stopped.
Based on her review of the 24 lawsuits that identified “Champagne” or Fant, she said at least nine of the womens allegations could be prosecuted under first-degree rape or aggravated sexual assault charges, which are not subject to New Yorks statute of limitations. However, collecting evidence on decades-old cases would be difficult.
Criminal prosecutions of correction officers for sexual assault at Rikers are rare, and the agencies responsible for investigating the allegations have been slow to act.
#### **Slow to investigate**
Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark has jurisdiction over Rikers, but her relationship with the jail system is complicated. The correction officers union has been [one of her biggest financial donors](https://www.thecity.nyc/2019/11/04/correction-officers-are-top-donors-to-unopposed-bronx-da-darcel-clark/), contributing a total of $27,000 to her campaigns in 2015, 2018 and 2019. The union declined to comment for this story, and it did not contribute to her campaign last year.
After [Gothamists first stories detailed](https://gothamist.com/news/late-night-sex-assaults-invasive-searches-the-700-women-alleging-abuse-at-rikers) the astounding number of lawsuits filed against the City of New York, Clarks office [established an email address](https://gothamist.com/news/bronx-da-assigns-team-of-prosecutors-to-review-rikers-sexual-assault-cases) for former Rikers detainees to contact prosecutors with their allegations. As of July, her office said no one has contacted them.
When asked in June about why Clarks office hadnt proactively investigated the allegations, spokesperson Patrice OShaughnessy said the district attorney couldnt proceed because it didnt have the cooperation of the womens attorneys. But after multiple requests for clarification, she told Gothamist in July that the office is now “reviewing the lawsuits for evidence and leads.”
Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark has jurisdiction over Rikers Island as a prosecutor.
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
The citys Department of Investigation has the power to open investigations based on allegations in civil lawsuits, but Struzzi, the spokesperson, wouldnt say whether it has looked into allegations against Fant or other jail staffers identified in the lawsuits.
It appears the mayor has little interest in digging into the sexual assault allegations. When Adams [promised an investigation at his press conference in March](https://www.nyc.gov/office-of-the-mayor/news/227-24/transcript-mayor-adams-holds-in-person-media-availability), he gave the impression that action would be taken.
“Abuse in jails, period, is not something that's new, but when you see it, you must address it and face it. And that is what we're going to do,” he said at the time.
But when his office was asked three months later about the status of that investigation, a spokesperson would only say the citys Law Department was looking into the allegations. The trouble with that is that its the very agency charged with defending the city against the lawsuits.
“He promised the f---ing investigation,” Carter Beasley said of the mayor. “So what happened?”
*Reporter Samantha Max contributed to this article. If you have a tip about sexual abuse at Rikers, you can email her at [\[email protected\]](https://gothamist.com/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection), by phone at (646) 799-7558 or on Signal at samanthamaxwnyc.93.*
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Date: 2024-10-06
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# NYC Mayoral Race 2021: The Company Eric Adams Keeps
## Hes the candidate of old political-machine guys like Democratic fixer Frank Carone. What would that mean in City Hall?
[![Portrait of David Freedlander](https://pyxis.nymag.com/v1/imgs/32e/f2a/23e275392cb285f5d89e1306709d83e1fa-David-Freedlander.2x.rsquare.w168.jpg)](https://nymag.com/author/david-freedlander/)
By
Photo: Bruce Gilden for New York Magazine
![](https://pyxis.nymag.com/v1/imgs/a78/9d9/a0072b645fd492ded61cb174c8dd850487-L1009777.rvertical.w570.jpg)
Photo: Bruce Gilden for New York Magazine
![](https://pyxis.nymag.com/v1/imgs/a78/9d9/a0072b645fd492ded61cb174c8dd850487-L1009777.rvertical.w570.jpg)
Photo: Bruce Gilden for New York Magazine
Heading into Memorial Day weekend, a poll had just shown Brooklyn Borough President [Eric Adams](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/eric-adams-nyc-mayor-race.html) with his largest lead of the contest, and the mayoral candidates were spread out across the city, trying to catch up. [Scott Stringer](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/scott-stringer-nyc-mayor-race.html) was down at One Police Plaza for a press conference on cutting bureaucratic bloat in the NYPD; [Kathryn Garcia](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/kathryn-garcias-nyc-mayor-race.html) was in front of Moynihan Train Hall, rolling out a detailed plan for infrastructure projects in every borough. [Maya Wiley](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/maya-wiley-nyc-mayor-race.html) was in Morningside Heights, pushing for the State Legislature to give victims of sexual abuse more time to sue, and [Andrew Yang](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/andrew-yang-nyc-mayor-race.html) was in Tribeca, unveiling a proposal to help low-income seniors stay in their homes.
And Adams was in a park in Inwood, talking about dirt bikes.
By his side was Adriano Espaillat, the uptown U.S. representative and someone whose endorsement is one of the few in New York City politics that can actually move votes. Espaillat had been with Stringer before two-decade-old allegations of sexual harassment upended the city comptrollers mayoral campaign. Before issuing his endorsement, Espaillat spoke with Adams about how dirt bikes and ATVs were overrunning the streets, and here was the payoff: The congressman, surrounded by a half-dozen current and former uptown elected officials, singing the praises of a future Adams administration while Adams addressed a concern of his district.
The 2021 race for mayor is, as all political campaigns are, an experiment, an answer to the question of what kind of city New York is. Is it one that has taken a sharp left turn, highlighted by the rise of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and last summers racial-justice protests? (Based on recent polling, it seems decidedly not.) Is it one where municipal ties are so weak that someone who has never evinced much knowledge or even interest in city government can win based on cultivating a certain kind of internet fame? (Andrew Yang is hoping the answer is “yes.”)
Or is New York City still a town ruled by the same kind of party machines that controlled its governance for most of the 20th century: one of backroom deals, Brooklyn clubhouse politics, big real-estate money, and mutual back-scratching.
This is Eric Adamss bet.
“This whole race has been about people trying to create different frames for it. Is it an ideological-left frame? A pragmatic-manager frame? A businessman-outsider frame?” said David Schleicher, a professor at Yale Law School and an expert in New York City politics. “But instead it is Eric Adams, building a coalition inside the shell of the Democratic Party of labor unions, Black homeowners, real-estate interests, and other Democratic Party politicians. If he pulls it off, he will be one of the most powerful mayors New York has had in a generation. It is the return of the permanent government, and Eric Adams is going to be at the center of it.”
Among the more than 30 former colleagues and staffers and current lobbyists, lawyers, and local elected officials who talked about Adams for this story — almost all of them anonymously, citing the fear that he would soon be mayor and look to exact revenge — most pointed to a moment from his first year in office as especially illustrative of how he would govern.
In 2007, Governor Eliot Spitzer demanded that state lawmakers receive raises only if they agreed to a series of reforms designed to clean up Albanys cloudy way of doing business.
Adams, a Brooklyn native who had recently become a state senator after two decades in the NYPD, wasnt having it.
“I dont know how some of you are living to tell you the truth. With $79,000, you qualify for public assistance. This is a joke,” he said in a speech on the floor of the State Senate.
“We are not being paid enough,” he continued. “Dont be insulted for yourselves. You should be insulted for your children, that you are not allowed to give your children an affordable, decent form of living.”
Politicians are not supposed to admit that they are interested in money for anything other than funding their campaigns. They are there to serve, after all. And they are especially not supposed to admit they are interested in money when they are making more than the median salary in the state for six months of work and their job comes with all sorts of perks, including per diems when they work in Albany. But Adams was willing to go there.
“Ill be darned if Im ashamed to say it,” he added, his voice echoing off the chamber walls. “I deserve to be paid more. And Im only a freshman and Im already complaining. We better vote on a raise and make sure we get paid more.”
The little speech became a headache for Democrats, who had been locked out of power for 40 years in the State Senate and were trying to retake the majority. Republicans jumped on the opportunity to cast a Black Democrat as gruff and greedy — especially the last part, when Adams turned to his colleagues and said, “Show me the money! Show me the money! Thats what this is all about! We deserve more money.”
Adams was a well-known figure in the citys political scene before then, if an idiosyncratic one. To this day, those who know Adams describe him as deeply committed to racial justice. In 1995, he had started a group called 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care from his perch in the NYPD, pushing for Black and Latino officers to have more of a role in the departments operations. He was described in *New York* Magazine in 1994 as a ”radical” and “contentious” transit cop, “\[b\]etter known for his strident, unaccommodating comments than for his leadership,” and someone who “seems always on the brink of inciting controversy,” such as when he [criticized mayoral candidate Herman Badillo](https://www.nytimes.com/1993/10/06/nyregion/the-ad-campaign-mr-badillo-invokes-race.html) for marrying a Jewish woman instead of a Latina. He ran for Congress in 1994 against Representative Major Owens, a revered figure in central Brooklyn, on the grounds that Owens should never have denounced Louis Farrakhan. Adams lost.
Adams with members of 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care in 2000. Photo: Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times/Redux
He was investigated by the NYPD four times, once for traveling with other cops to Indiana to escort Mike Tyson from prison, violating the NYPDs policy forbidding officers from associating with known felons. Despite being a self-described “conservative Republican,” he clashed with Mayor Rudy Giuliani in the 1990s over the mayors defense of the police in misconduct investigations. Four years after Giuliani left office, Adams would again find himself sparring with allies: This time, the police commissioner. While running for State Senate, the now-retired captain Adams appeared on television and cited his rank while voicing criticisms of the department. By repeatedly mentioning his rank, the commissioner at the time found, Adams had “imbued his claims and comments with the credibility derived from his official position and, in so doing could have confused, misled, and panicked viewers into believing that he was speaking on behalf of a department he had criticized and contradicted.” (“Those investigations were an attempt to disgrace him that failed—and they did not lead to any discipline aside from a wrist-slap for appearing on television without permission,’” said Evan Thies, a spokesperson for Adams. “Eric was despised by the leadership of the NYPD for speaking out against police abuse and racism, and they targeted him and slandered him every chance they got.”)
Once in Albany, Adams developed a reputation as one of the most camera-ready, charismatic members of the State Senate. He helped lead the charge against the practice of [stop and frisk](https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/bloomberg-cops-outraged-as-gov-prepares-to-delete-frisk-list/1876055/) in the Bloomberg era and worked on anti-gang and anti-gun initiatives. But he also made his colleagues cringe with embarrassment, like the time he started a campaign to get teenage boys to pull their pants up or released a PSA teaching parents how to search their childrens baby dolls for guns or drugs.
Adams had an eye for where the power centers were and knew what powerful politicians needed, but he also made some problematic associations. He developed a close friendship with Hiram Monserrate, another ex-cop with a devoted following in his district in Queens. Monserrate threw the state government into chaos in June 2009, when, along with fellow Democrat Pedro Espada, he bolted the conference and joined the Republicans in an attempt to shift control of the Senate.
Former colleagues of theirs said that Adams and Monserrate bonded over the fact that they were both former cops. After Monserrate was arrested in December 2008 for slashing his girlfriend in the face with a piece of glass, Adams claimed that police were railroading Monserrate because he, like Adams, had been a reformer inside the department. As State Senate Democrats debated what to do about Monserrate and launched a four-month investigation into the incident, behind closed doors Adams became one of his most vociferous defenders. “He was just so dismissive of the fact that any of us thought this was a serious issue,” one lawmaker said. “It made my skin crawl.”
When Democrats voted to expel Monserrate following his assault conviction in 2010, Adams walked out of their meeting. “Fuck all yall,” he said, according to two lawmakers present. (Through his spokesperson, Adams strongly denied saying this and put me in touch with Diane Savino, another Democratic senator who said it never happened.) He later claimed that his opposition was on procedural grounds, writing in a letter to constituents that “I decry all domestic violence behavior; to condone violence against women would violate all standards of decency, run counter to my commitment to end domestic violence, and violate my core values!”; Adams later attended Monserrates wedding and a campaign birthday party in 2018, when Monserrate was mounting a political comeback after serving 21 months in prison on federal corruption charges. (Adams [publicly broke](https://nypost.com/2021/02/20/eric-adams-publicly-breaks-with-longtime-pal-hiram-monserrate/) with Monserrate in February of this year.)
Adams had a way of becoming the power behind the throne, getting close first to State Senate Democratic leader Malcolm Smith, then becoming a top lieutenant to the man who replaced Smith, John Sampson. “Its odd to see him running for mayor because he was always the guy behind the guy,” said one State Senate Democrat.
Former colleagues remember Adams as constantly trying to play different angles. In 2013, the Republicans, who were responsible for making committee assignments and who had not a single Black member in their body, offered Adams and another Black Democrat, James Sanders, chairmanships of committees. Sanders declined, but Adams accepted, becoming chair of the Committee on the Aging. The role came with a salary boost, a bigger office, and access to donors. His fellow Democrats saw it as a sign that he would be with the GOP on tough votes, and when they approached him about the need for Democrats to maintain a united front, Adams was dismissive. “He just wasnt a team player,” recalled one senior Senate aide. “In a way thats true for everybody in politics, but you always got the sense that the thing Eric Adams cared most about was what was in it for Eric Adams.”
“There is a certain kind of New York politician for whom *The Godfather* is their favorite movie,” recalled one former colleague. “Eric Adams is one of those politicians.”
Although he never joined the group of breakaway Democrats who caucused with the Republicans known as the Independent Democratic Conference, he was seen as quietly supportive of them, and after he left the Senate, Adams was replaced by a former staffer who did promptly join the group. “We called him Captain Chaos,’” one lawmaker said. Adams would also disappear for weeks at a time for foreign travel. He and Sampson traveled to South Korea with a high-powered Albany lobbyist and with staffers from their offices. (Later, as Brooklyn Borough President, hed accept thousands of dollars in travel [to China, Turkey, and Azerbaijan](https://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/new-york-elections-government/ny-nyc-mayoral-race-eric-adams-china-turkey-azerbaijan-20210206-uelz6zyvzzad5p4nuhvx6woqcu-story.html) paid for by the host countries.)
The schemes could occasionally shade into something more serious than a lack of judgment. In 2010, Adams and Sampson were in charge of [recommending which company should win](https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/22/nyregion/22casino.html) a contract to open up a new casino at the Aqueduct racetrack in Queens. Sampson [later admitted](https://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/18/senate-leader-tipped-aqueduct-bidder/) leaking an internal State Senate document assessing the bids to the company that later won the contract, AEG, while company representatives attended a Grand Havana Room fundraiser for Adams and donated to his campaign. Adams joined a company representative and Sampson and then-Governor David Paterson at a dinner but later denied that he was there, saying he just happened to be at the same restaurant and saw them there, something that a state inspector general wrote [“strains credulity.”](https://www.thecity.nyc/2021/6/6/22521915/eric-adams-aqueduct-casino-bid-transcript-shaky-memory) After recommending the contract to AEG, Adams later attended a victory celebration at the home of the companys lobbyist, which the inspector general said “reflects, at a minimum, exceedingly poor judgment.” Adams continues to deny that his conduct was improper; his spokesperson called the inspector generals report “a political hit piece.”
The saga led to Sampsons getting booted from his position as Democratic leader in favor of Andrea Stewart-Cousins. Adams stayed by his side. Sampson at the time was under investigation for stealing $400,000 on the sale of foreclosed homes and asking a friendly prosecutor he knew to turn over the names of those who were testifying against him so he could “take them out.” But he still fought to hang on to his leadership post, and Adams was in charge of rallying Democratic lawmakers to support Sampson. Sampson refused to step aside, certain that Adams had procured him a majority. In the end, Democratic senators overthrew Sampson in a landslide, leading Adams to once again storm out of their conference meeting. “He doesnt know how to operationalize anything,” one lawmaker present said.
Adams was treated with such suspicion by his fellow Democratic lawmakers that one senator, Shirley Huntley of Queens, started taping her conversations with him while she was under investigation for corruption, hoping that she could use them to stave off any jail time. Huntley was sentenced to a year in jail; she recently reappeared at the opening of Adamss Queens campaign headquarters.
“He became the shadow leader of the conference when he was here,” said one lawmaker who served alongside Adams. “But I tried to stay away from him, and I think others did too. We always assumed he was wearing a wire.”
Adams remained in Albany until 2013, when he ran for Brooklyn borough president without any serious opposition. The post of borough president is a largely ceremonial job with some powers over land use but offers a straight line to City Hall for mayoral hopefuls. Adams wasnt shy about his ambitions**:** He raised eyebrows when, soon after his inauguration day, he said he was going to run for mayor in eight years and set up a [nonprofit](https://www.guidestar.org/profile/46-5189061), called the One Brooklyn Fund, where he could solicit donations outside the citys strict campaign-finance system. While the organization has put on community events, it has also drawn concern from good government groups, who [charge](https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/30/eric-adams-charity-485070) that its spending on galas and marketing materials have boosted Adamss own political profile. Adams always had a penchant for making shocking statements — he once told a reporter that the only reason you used to see a white guy walking down Franklin Avenue in Crown Heights is if “he is into S&M and wants to get robbed.” As borough president, that streak continued. He [told a group of LGBT seniors](https://www.brooklynpaper.com/borough-presidents-adams-goes-on-strange-rant-at-opening-of-affordable-housing-for-lgbtq-seniors/) at an affordable-housing ribbon cutting that their place in the neighborhood was unwelcome and that it may provoke confrontations, and he told white gentrifiers that they should [“go back to Iowa.”](https://nypost.com/2020/01/20/brooklyn-borough-president-eric-adams-tells-new-new-yorkers-go-back-to-iowa/)
Adamss ascension in Brooklyn coincided with a low period for the Brooklyn Democratic Party. Home to more Democrats than any other place on earth, the party over the last decade has watched as party-backed candidates lost to ones supported by the left-leaning Working Families Party and Democratic Socialists of America. Adams has tended to buck parts of the political Establishment in the city, but he has [remained loyal to the Kings County Democrats](https://www.cityandstateny.com/articles/politics/campaign-confidential/why-are-democratic-parties-staying-out-mayoral-race.html), and he grew close to Frank Carone, the partys lawyer and someone who, over the past eight years, has become a top ally of Mayor de Blasio and quietly become one of the most influential power brokers in the city.
Adams and de Blasio in 2018. Photo: Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images
Carone has worked as the Democratic Partys lawyer for years, and in 2012 he joined the law firm Abrams Fensterman, whose lawyers including Carone have given thousands of dollars in campaign contributions to Adams over the years. When Adams ran unopposed for Brooklyn borough president in 2013, it was in part because Carone, as his lawyer, [helped kick his opponent off the ballot](https://issuu.com/cityandstate/docs/cs_081913_all). Howard Fensterman, the founding partner of Abrams Fensterman, is a major fundraiser for both Andrew Cuomo and Chuck Schumer; the firm has spawned a series of ancillary businesses including nursing homes and consulting firms, and Fensterman once described the law practice as “the golden goose” and “[a platform to launch us into other businesses.”](https://libn.com/2007/07/20/side-businesses-new-partners-part-of-law-firms-charge/)
Both Carone and Adams grew to become close allies of de Blasio. When de Blasio was mired in his own state and federal investigations for illicit fundraising, Adams was one of his few defenders. When de Blasio ran for president, Carone enthusiastically raised money for him. “Bill de Blasio doesnt really have friends,” said one former de Blasio staffer. “But to the extent he does, Frank Carone is one of them.” Carone regularly socializes with de Blasio, and former City Hall staffers said they knew to always take both Carones and Adamss calls.
Their needs were different. Adams, who believes that veganism cured his diabetes and prevented him from going blind, would request meetings with top officials in the Health Department to talk about the importance of a plant-based diet and would complain that his longtime romantic partner, Tracey Collins, was being mistreated by her bosses at the Department of Education.
Carone, whom the *Daily News* described as having “[unfettered access](https://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/ny-metro-carone-deblasio-podolsky-20190407-7yzb3gi7dzacbhxrwtpngt5s5e-story.html)” to de Blasio, sent names and résumés to a de Blasio aide and messaged staffers directly to deal with issues his clients faced, according to emails obtained by the newspaper through a public-records request. Carone never registered as a lobbyist, but he quickly became the go-to lawyer for a number of controversial real-estate developers. Carone has represented the Allure Group, which bought the Rivington House, a former medical facility for HIV patients, and sold it to luxury real-estate developers, a deal that [plagued de Blasio](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2016/06/guide-to-mayor-de-blasios-investigations.html) throughout his first term and led to an attorney generals investigation. He has represented the developers behind the plan to close Long Island College Hospital and replace it with seven luxury towers. Readers may recall that de Blasio was arrested as a candidate to prevent this plan from going through; Adams hosted several meetings on the plan, and it was the most engaged many elected officials recall seeing him. “I couldnt believe it,” said one local official. “He wouldnt return any of our calls about anything, but *this* was the thing he cared about?” Observers couldnt help but note that, in the end, de Blasio ended up on the same side as Carone.
Carone and his firm have also represented a Brooklyn developer who had to pay out a $3.4 million settlement for evicting seniors from a nursing home and the [Podolsky brothers](https://nymag.com/news/features/podolsky-homeless-shelters-2013-12/), who despite pleading guilty to dozens of felonies for their treatment of tenants, recently sold $173 million worth of real estate to the city, a figure that is [by some estimation](https://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/ny-metro-cluster-173-031419-story.html) three to four times what the properties were worth.
According to another exposé in the *Daily News* by Michael Gartland, who has tracked Carones rise closely, Carones wife has benefited as well, getting paid $100,000 to host party fundraisers even as the partys finances have been devastated, its [cash reserves dwindling](https://www.amny.com/politics/seddio-stepping-down-as-chair-of-kings-county-democrats-report/) from $500,000 the year Frank Seddio took control of the party to just $32,800 in 2019.
Throughout the campaign, Adams has done Zoom forums at Carones office and works out of his firms office. The prospect of an Adams mayoralty has worried many people who know both of Adams and Carone well. “Carone is using his position within the party to essentially advance Adams,” said Theodore Hamm, a professor at St. Josephs College who has followed the Brooklyn Democratic Party closely for the left-leaning *Indypendent*. “If Adams wins, given his track record, Carone will have a lot of influence as the point man for doing business with the Adams administration. He personally stands to gain immensely.” Adams has a history of bending to the demands of his backers: In 2018, for example, he [abruptly reversed course](https://nypost.com/2018/06/18/brooklyn-president-turns-on-school-testing-plan-after-donor-backlash/) on ending the specialized exam for the citys elite schools after facing backlash from his Chinese American donors. (“Erics position on specialized schools has nothing to do with contributors to his campaign,” said spokesperson Thies.)
Carone has been quietly making calls on Adamss behalf, especially among real-estate interests and ultra-Orthodox Jews. Carone was bundling for Scott Stringer back in 2018, when it seemed as if Stringer was a frontrunner to be the next mayor; Adamss rivals say he may now be fundraising for Adams instead. (“He makes calls to his friends and family to encourage them to vote for Eric and will continue to do so,” said a spokesperson for Carone, but “he does not bundle.”) He can be charming, people who know him say, a kind of Mill Basin version of Manhattan PR maven Howard Rubenstein with a threatening streak like Joe Percoco, the Cuomo former aide who developed a reputation as the governors enforcer and who is now serving time in federal prison. Multiple lawmakers told me that if they endorsed another candidate besides Adams, they received cryptic text messages from Carone soon after, featuring, say, a simple question mark, or a screenshot of the announcement with nothing more added.
Adamss rise is boosting Carone, too. “He has used politics to build his law practice, then used his law practice to build a political organization. Its the oldest story of machine politics there is,” said one city councilmember. “He bet big on Bill de Blasio, and he bet big on Eric Adams, and both of those bets look like they are going to pay off spectacularly.”
That same morning Eric Adams appeared in the park in Inwood, he didnt know that he had another person with him, an opposition researcher for the Andrew Yang campaign. Adamss rivals had grown frustrated that Adams seemed to be constantly unveiling new parts of his biography and had for weeks been devoting considerable resources to trying to catch Adams in a lie. At a campaign stop on June 1, for example, Adams said that he had spent time at the notorious Spofford Juvenile Detention Center in the Bronx, something he had not mentioned previously, although he did say in his campaign launch video that his mother picked him up from the precinct house when he was arrested at the age of 15. He said he worked for a time as a squeegee man. He said in the first mayoral debate in May that as an off-duty police officer, he stopped an anti-Asian hate crime in process and also that he shot a knife-wielding assailant. He said that when he returned home from the hospital after his son was born, enemies of his in the NYPD drove by and shot out the windows of his car. Theres no evidence that these things are not true, but his opponents are suspicious, whispering that the narrative pieces have fallen in place too conveniently.
Recently, focus fell squarely on a simple question: Where does Adams live? Sally Goldenberg, a reporter for [Politico](https://www.politico.com/states/new-york/albany/story/2021/06/08/burning-the-midnight-oil-eric-adams-mysterious-whereabouts-off-the-campaign-trail-1385412), started dropping by Borough Hall late at night, noticing that the lights were on and that Adamss car was there. The Yang camp has had as many as four operatives on duty staking out Adamss various homes and his office. So far they have found that he stays at the office into the wee hours of the morning and have seen no evidence that he returns home to any of the Brooklyn domiciles. There have been a couple of tense moments when Adams seemingly recognized the Yang tails. On one occasion, he rolled down his car window and smiled and waved theatrically.
When I first began covering this race, I would talk to the various operatives about their plans and strategies, but at some point it all seemed kind of silly: Even seven months out, Eric Adams was the odds-on favorite to be the next mayor of the City of New York. The candidate favored by a plurality of Black New Yorkers has a tremendous advantage in a Democratic primary, where voters of color make up a majority. This was de Blasios path in 2013, when he campaigned relentlessly in central Brooklyn with his Black son, and it was Bill Thompsons path before that, and Fernando Ferrers before that. Adams has added to that support by getting the bulk of the citys major labor unions behind him, often with de Blasios blessing.
It is a bit of a good-cop-bad-cop routine. People who worked and served with Adams, and who told me that they would seriously consider leaving the city if he won, still say that he is an immensely talented politician — charming, personable, charismatic — and that he tends to not hold grudges or obsess over slights. His campaign has been a bare-bones operation, and he has scarcely spent any money as we head into the races final days, leading his rivals to wonder what he actually intends to do with what will remain of the more than $10 million he has raised, more than any of his rivals who are participating in the taxpayer-backed city campaign-finance system.
It is hard to predict what the story of the Adams campaign, and potential administration, will be. His path to victory resembles a race-flipped version of Ed Kochs in the 1970s and 80s, putting together a working-class outer-borough coalition buoyed by middle-class homeowners. It is the pre-gentrified, pre-Bloombergian way of winning. And if he pulls it off, Adams would be the mayor of labor and communities of color. With this coalition, Adams could get more out of Albany than any mayor before him. He would be free to ignore his detractors among the mostly white left-wing activists in the city, who made it clear they were never with him in the first place. An Adams administration is likely to view the citys issues through a racial justice lens, arguing that equity cant be achieved if streets arent clean, or government operations run efficiently, or schools arent better. Although he has been criticized for some of his comments and causes, from his remarks at the LGBT center to his “Stop the Sag” efforts, his campaign believes that such messages are heard differently in working class communities, where voters feel like Adams is the only one who understands them and has the courage to say what they are thinking**.** He has accused his opponents and the press of playing into racist stereotypes, most [recently comparing](https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2021/06/12/nyc-elections-2021-whos-running-eric-adams-where-does-eric-adams-live-controversy-response) investigations into where he lives to Birther attacks on President Obama.
“If you think New York politics is not enough about ideas, or is too transactional as it is, or no one cares for the broader city interest, you are really going to not be happy with an Adams administration,” said David Schleicher, the Yale Law professor. “In a multivalent, decentralized city, someone who is backed by labor and the *Post* and the police and by middle-class homeowners is going to be able to achieve pretty much what they want, and everyone else is going to be terrified of him.”
He quoted George Plunkitt, the leader of the Tammany Hall at the turn of the century, who once said of the reformers who challenged Tammanys rule that “they were mornin glories — looked lovely in the mornin and withered up in a short time, while the regular machines went on flourishin forever, like fine old oaks.”
- [The Key People Caught Up in the Eric Adams Investigations](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/guide-new-york-city-officials-eric-adams-investigations.html)
- [New Poll Paints Extremely Bleak Picture for Eric Adams](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/new-poll-paints-extremely-bleak-picture-for-eric-adams.html)
- [The Flamboyant Lawyer Trying to Keep Eric Adams From Prison](https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/inside-alex-spiros-all-out-defense-of-eric-adams.html)
[See All](https://nymag.com/tags/the-city-politic)
The Company Eric Adams Keeps
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# Opinion | A lost Trump interview comes back to life
One evening in February 1989, my Watergate reporting partner Carl Bernstein bumped into Donald Trump at a dinner party in New York.
“Why dont you come on up?” Carl urged me on the phone from the party, hosted by Ahmet Ertegun, the Turkish American socialite and record executive, in his Upper East Side townhouse. “Everybodys having a good time,” he said. “Trump is here. Its really interesting. Ive been talking to him.”
Carl was fascinated with Trumps book, “The Art of the Deal.” Somewhat reluctantly, I agreed to join him, in large part, as Carl often reminds me, because I needed the key to his apartment, where I was staying at the time.
“Ill be there soon,” I told him.
![Book cover of The Trump Tape](https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/interactive/2024/bob-woodward-trump-interview-1989/img/bw_book.jpeg)
Excerpted from [“War” by Bob Woodward](https://www.amazon.com/War-Bob-Woodward/dp/166805227X). Copyright © 2024 by Bob Woodward. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster Inc. All Rights Reserved.
It had been 17 years since Carl and I first collaborated on stories about the Watergate burglary on June 17, 1972.
Trump took a look at us standing together, and he came over. “Wouldnt it be amazing if Woodward and Bernstein interviewed Donald Trump?” he said.
Carl and I looked at each other.
“Sure,” Carl said. “How about tomorrow?”
“Yeah,” Trump said. “Come to my office at Trump Tower.”
“This guy is interesting,” Carl assured me after Trump was gone.
“But not in politics,” I said.
I was intrigued by Trump, a hustler entrepreneur, and his unique, carefully nurtured persona, designed even then to manipulate others with precision and a touch of ruthlessness.
The Trump interview, taped on a microcassette, transcribed and printed, was deposited into a manila envelope with a copy of Trumps book and eventually lost in piles and piles of records, interview notes and news clippings. I am a pack rat. For over 30 years, Carl and I looked for it.
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/H24B6AQTWQVBJCQOBCBZVLMUBQ.JPG&high_res=true&w=2048)
The envelope in which all the “lost” materials were found. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)
I joked with President Trump about “the lost interview” when I interviewed him in the Oval Office in December 2019 for the second of my three books on his presidency, “Rage.”
“We sat at a table and we talked,” Trump recalled. “I remember it well.” He said I should try to find it because he believed it was a great interview.
Last year, I went to a facility where my records are stored and sifted through hundreds of boxes of old files. In a box of miscellaneous news clippings from the 1980s, I noticed a plain, slightly battered envelope — the interview.
Its a portrait of Trump at age 42, focused on his real estate deals, making money and his celebrity status. But he was hazy about his future.
“Im really looking to make the greatest hotel,” Trump told us in 1989. “Thats why Im doing suites on top. Im building great suites.
“You ask me where Im going, and I dont think I could tell you at all,” Trump said. “If everything stayed the way it is right now, I could probably tell you pretty well where Im going to be.” But, he emphasized, “the world changes.” He believed that was the only certainty.
Your browser does not support the audio element.
He also spoke about how he behaved differently depending on whom he was with. “If Im with fellas — meaning contractors and this and that — I react one way,” Trump said. Then he gestured to us. “If I know I have the two pros of all time sitting there with me, with tape recorders on, you naturally act differently."
“Much more interestingly would be the real act as opposed to the facade,” Trump said about himself. I wondered about “the real act.”
“Its an act that hasnt been caught,” Trump added.
He was constantly performing, and, that day, we were the recipients of his full-on charm offensive.
“Its never the same when theres somebody sitting with you and literally taking notes. You know, youre on your good behavior, and frankly, its not nearly as interesting as the real screaming shouting.”
Trump also appeared preoccupied with looking tough, strong.
“The worst part about the television stuff when we do it is they put the makeup all over you,” Trump said. “This morning I did something and they put the makeup all over your face and so do you go up and take a shower and clean it off or do you leave it? And in the construction business, you dont wear makeup. You got problems if you wear makeup.”
Your browser does not support the audio element.
We asked Trump to take us through the steps of one of his real estate deals. How are they done?
“Instinctively, I know exactly,” he said immediately. “I cannot tell you what it is, you understand. Because instinct is far more important than any other ingredient if you have the right instincts. And the worst deals Ive made have been deals where I didnt follow my instinct. The best deals Ive made have been deals where I followed my instinct and wouldnt listen to all of the people that said, Theres no way it works.
“Very few people have proper instincts,” he said. “But Ive seen people with proper instincts do things that other people just cant do.”
Is there a master plan?
“I dont think I could define what the great master plan is,” he said, referring to his life. “You understand that. But it somehow fits together in an instinctual way.”
Your browser does not support the audio element.
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/GMTTYEI4BQ33GMPYCHYG6B6KME.JPG&high_res=true&w=2048)
The cassette from the 1989 interview. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)
I asked about his social conscience. Could it “lead you into politics or some public role?”
“To me, its all very interesting,” he said. “The other week, I was watching a boxing match in Atlantic City, and these are rough guys, you know, physically rough guys. And mentally tough in a sense, okay. I mean, theyre not going to write books but mentally tough in a certain sense.
“And the champion lost and he was defeated by somebody who was a very good fighter but who wasnt expected to win. And they interviewed the boxer after the match, and they said, Howd you do this? Howd you win?
“And he said, I just went with the punches, man. I just went with the punches. I thought it was a great expression,” Trump said, “because its about life just as much as it is about boxing or anything else. You go with the punches.”
To look back over Trumps life now — his real estate deals, presidency, impeachments, investigations, civil and criminal trials, conviction, attempted assassination, campaign for reelection — that is exactly what he has done. Go with the punches.
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/HISCF7DHAY6OBAFOIPX3ZTNNPI.jpg&high_res=true&w=2048)
Donald Trump with welterweight rivals Marlon Starling, left, and Mark Breland, right, at a New York news conference on March 15, 1989, to announce they will fight a month later at the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City. (Marty Lederhandler/AP)
“People ask me and they might ask you guys, you know, where are you going to be in 10 years? I think anybody that says where theyre going to be is a schmuck,” Trump added. “The world changes. Youll have depressions. Youll have recessions. Youll have upswings. Youll have downswings. Youll have wars. Things that are beyond your control or in most cases beyond peoples control. So you really do have to go with the punches and its bad to predict too far out in advance, you know, where youre going to be.”
At the time, he was almost obsessed with critical news headlines about him losing deals.
“You make more money as a seller than you do as a buyer,” Trump explained. “I found that to be a seller today is to be a loser. Psychologically. And thats wrong.
“Ill tell you what. I beat the s--- out of a guy named Merv Griffin,” Trump said. Griffin was a television talk show host and media mogul. “Just beat him. And, you know, he came in — you talk about makeup. He came in with makeup and he was on television, you know, he comes into my office. He made a deal to buy everything I didnt want in Resorts International,” Trump said. “I kept telling him no, no, no, no, and he kept raising the price, raising the price, raising the price. All of a sudden, it turns out to be an incredible deal for me. An unbelievable deal.
“Plus,” Trump added, “I got the Taj Mahal, which is the absolute crown jewel of the world.” He was referring to the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, not the sacred mausoleum in India.
“The point is that people thought I lost,” he said. “So whats happened is theres a mood in the world for the last five years that if youre a seller, youre a loser, even if youre a seller at a huge profit.”
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/VEF4RZ47L5UIA3OJWTKASS4OL4.jpg&high_res=true&w=2048)
Donald Trump stands next to a genie lamp at the grand opening of the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City on April 5, 1990. (Mike Derer/AP)
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/M5BGCEH36SEHGPEJYBD2A2NZMM.jpg&high_res=true&w=2048)
Donald Trump explains the laser show and fireworks to Merv Griffin before the grand opening of the Trump Taj Mahal on April 5, 1990. (Charles Rex Arbogast/AP)
I asked Trump, when you get up in the morning, what do you read? Whom do you talk to? What information sources do you trust?
“Much of it is very basic,” Trump said. “I read the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. I read the Post and the News, not so much for business, just to sort of I live in the city and you know, its reporting on the city.” The New York Post covered Trump almost obsessively.
“I rely less on people than I do just this general flow of information,” he said. “I also speak to cabdrivers. I go to cities and say, what do you think of this? Thats how I bought Mar-a-Lago. Talking to a cabdriver and asking him, Whats hot in Florida? Whats the greatest house in Palm Beach?’”
“Oh, the greatest house is Mar-a-Lago,” the cabdriver said.
“I said where is it? Take me over.” Trump then added, “I was in Palm Beach, I was in the Breakers, and I was bored stiff.”
Trump eventually bought Mar-a-Lago for $7 million.
“I talk to anybody,” he said. “I always call it my poll. People jokingly tell me you know that Trump will speak with anybody. And I do, I speak to the construction workers and the cabdrivers, and those are the people I get along with best anyway in many respects. I speak to everybody.”
Your browser does not support the audio element.
Trump claimed he bought 9.9 percent of a casino company, Bally Manufacturing, and in a short period of time made $32 million. He then said he spent “close to 100 million dollars on buying stock” in Bally, which led to a lawsuit against him. The lawyers for the other side wanted Trumps records.
“They were trying to prove that I did this tremendous research on the company, that I spent weeks and months analyzing the company,” Trump said. “And they figured Id have a file that would be up to the ceiling. So they subpoenaed everything, and I end up giving them virtually no papers. There was virtually no file. So Im being grilled, you know, so-called grilled by one of their high-priced lawyers.”
Trump impersonated the lawyer: “How long did you know about this, Mr. Trump? And when?”
“In other words, theyre trying to say like this is this great plot,” Trump said. “I said, I dont know, I just started thinking about it like the day I bought it.”
The lawyer was incredulous. “Well, how many reports did you do?”
“Well, I really didnt, I just sort of had a feeling.”
“They didnt believe that somebody would take 100 million bucks and put it into a company with virtually no real research,” Trump said. “Now I had research in my head, but beyond, you know, they just had not thought that happens. And the corporate mind and the corporate mentality doesnt think that happens. Those are my best deals.”
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/3GKN76XVQ7PPGE5XWY4QMBITUU.JPG&high_res=true&w=2048)
The cassette player used to play the 1989 interview. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)
Carl asked Trump whether he ever sees himself in a public service role.
“I dont think so, but Im not sure,” Trump said. “Im young. In theory, statistically, I have a long time left. Ive seen people give so much away that they dont have anything when bad times come.”
He said he was setting up a Donald J. Trump Foundation. “When I kick the bucket — as the expression goes — I want to leave a tremendous amount of money to that foundation. Some to my family and some to the foundation. You have an obligation to your family."
Trump spoke about “bad times” as if they were inevitable. “I always like to sort of prepare for the worst. And it doesnt sound like a very particularly nice statement,” he said. “I know times will get bad. Its just a question when.”
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/SPQVP2Q7DPDPH5KV2JTA2KRN6A.jpg&high_res=true&w=2048)
Donald Trump and his wife, Ivana, wave to reporters as they board their yacht Trump Princess on July 4, 1988, in New York. (Marty Lederhandler/AP)
He brought up his 281-foot yacht, which was originally owned by Saudi businessman and arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi. Trump had renamed it Trump Princess. “To build new today would cost 150 to 200 million dollars. If you guys want, well go on it or something. ... Its phenomenal. If you read Time magazine, I do nothing but float around on this boat all day long. Its not the way it is.”
Your browser does not support the audio element.
Who is your best friend? I asked.
He listed some names of businessmen and investors, people who worked for him, that neither Carl nor I recognized, and his brother Robert. “In, I guess all cases, business-related,” he said. “Only because thats the people I deal with."
“But friendship is a strange thing. You know, Im always concerned with friendship because Ive seen — sometimes youd like to test people. Right now everybody wants to be my friend for whatever reason. Okay, for the obvious reasons.
“Sometimes youd like to test them and say one day, just for a period of a week, that Trump blew it. And then go back and call em up and invite em to dinner and see whether or not they show up. Ive often wanted to do that. Take a period of a month and let the world think that I blew it just to test whether or not in fact the friends were friends."
“Im a great loyalist. I believe in loyalty to people. I believe in having great friends and great enemies. And Ive seen people who were on top who didnt stay on top and all of a sudden the same people that were kissing their a-- are gone. I mean like gone.
“One example was a banker. He was really a great banker, for one of the big banks — Citibank. And he was in charge of huge loans to very substantial people.
“He made a lot of people rich loaning money and he called me like two years after the fact. He said, you know, its incredible, the same people that were my best friends, that were calling me up all the time and kissing my a-- in every way, I cant even get through to em on the telephone anymore. ... When he left the bank, they wouldnt take his calls anymore.
“I would.”
Trump described his strategy of refusing to pay fines for the violations he received from property inspectors.
“From day one, I said f--- them,” Trump said of the inspectors.
“When I was in Brooklyn, inspectors would come around and theyd give me a violation on buildings that were absolutely perfect,” Trump recalled. “Id say, F--- you. And theyd give me more violations. And more. And for one month it was miserable. I had more violations — and they were unfounded violations. But they give it because what they wanted was if you ever paid em off, theyd always come back. So what happened to me, in one month they just said, F--- this guy, hes a piece of s---. And theyd go to somebody else.”
“The point is if you fold, it causes you much more trouble than its worth,” Trump said.
“You can say the same thing with the mob. If you agree to do business with them, theyll always come back. If you tell em to go f--- themselves — in that case, perhaps in a nicer way. But if you tell them, Forget it, man, forget it, nothings worth it, they might try and put pressure on you at the beginning but in the end theyre going to find an easier mark because its too tough for them. Inspectors. Mobs. Unions. Okay?”
This was Trumps basic philosophy.
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/52ICMITEBWPXCC5VM6VVK4UZVQ.JPG&high_res=true&w=2048)
Transcriptions from the 1989 interview. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)
Carl asked, who are your greatest enemies?
“Well, I hate to say because then youre just going to go and interview em. I hate playing the role of a critic.”
Trump in fact loved it. “The obvious one is Ed Koch,” he said. “Ed Koch was the worst mayor in the history of New York City.”
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/WWYAB5B7D2JHFJWG5ZUDM7ZVJQ.jpg&high_res=true&w=2048)
New York Mayor Ed Koch, foreground, shakes hands with Manhattan Borough President David Dinkins as Donald Trump and Central Park Administrator Elizabeth Barlow Rogers look on during ceremonies marking the completed renovations of Central Park's Lasker Rink on Dec, 1, 1988. (Frankie Ziths/AP)
Thirty-five years later, Trump still criticizes opponents with the same exaggerated effect. “Joe Biden is the worst president in the history of the United States,” he said after President Biden announced in July that he would not be seeking reelection.
Even in 1989, Trumps character was focused on winning, fighting and surviving. “And the only way you do that,” he said, “is instinct.”
“If people know youre a folder,” he said, “if people know that youre going to be weak, theyre going to go after you.”
Trump said it was “a whole presentation.”
Your browser does not support the audio element.
“Youve got to know your audience, and by the way, for some people, be a killer, for some people, be all candy. For some people, different. For some people, both.”
Killer, candy or both. Thats Donald Trump.
What a remarkable time capsule, a full psychological study of a man, then a 42-year-old Manhattan real estate king.
I never expected Trump to become president or a defining political figure of our time. The same instincts I reported on during his presidency were just as much a trademark of his character back in 1989. Here, in this interview 35 years ago, we see the origin of Trumpism in the words of Trump himself.
![](https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.com/public/EX4KRBCSVXYGYGRMLRG23NDWHM.JPG&high_res=true&w=2048)
Found materials from the 1989 interview. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)
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# Silicon Valley, the New Lobbying Monster
One morning in February, Katie Porter was sitting in bed, futzing around on her computer, when she learned that she was the target of a vast techno-political conspiracy. For the past five years, Porter had served in the House of Representatives on behalf of Orange County, California. Shed become famous—at least, C-*span* and MSNBC famous—for her eviscerations of business tycoons, often aided by a whiteboard that she used to make camera-friendly presentations about corporate greed. Now she was in a highly competitive race to replace the California senator Dianne Feinstein, who had died a few months earlier. The primary was in three weeks.
A text from a campaign staffer popped up on Porters screen. The staffer had just learned that a group named Fairshake was buying airtime in order to mount a last-minute blitz to oppose her candidacy. Indeed, the group was planning to spend roughly ten million dollars.
Porter was bewildered. She had raised thirty million dollars to bankroll her entire campaign, and that had taken years. The idea that some unknown group would swoop in and spend a fortune attacking her, she told me, seemed ludicrous: “I was, like, What the heck is *Fairshake*?’ ”
Porter did some frantic Googling and discovered that Fairshake was a super *PAC* funded primarily by three tech firms involved in the cryptocurrency industry. In the House, Porter had been loosely affiliated with [Senator Elizabeth Warren](https://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/how-elizabeth-warren-came-up-with-a-plan-to-break-up-big-tech), an outspoken advocate of financial regulation, and with the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. But Porter hadnt been particularly vocal about cryptocurrency; she hadnt taken much of a position on the industry one way or the other. As she continued investigating Fairshake, she found that her neutrality didnt matter. A Web site politically aligned with Fairshake had deemed her “very anti-crypto”—though the evidence offered for this verdict was factually incorrect. The site claimed that she had opposed a pro-crypto bill in a House committee vote: in fact, she wasnt on the committee and hadnt voted at all.
Soon afterward, Fairshake began airing attack ads on television. They didnt mention cryptocurrencies or anything tech-related. Rather, they called Porter a “bully” and a “liar,” and falsely implied that shed recently accepted campaign contributions from major pharmaceutical and oil companies. Nothing in the ads disclosed Fairshakes affiliation with Silicon Valley, its support of cryptocurrency, or its larger political aims. The negative campaign had a palpable effect: Porter, who had initially polled well, lost decisively in the primary, coming in third, with just fifteen per cent of the vote. But, according to a person familiar with Fairshake, the super *PAC*s intent wasnt simply to damage her. The groups backers didnt care all that much about Porter. Rather, the person familiar with Fairshake said, the goal of the attack campaign was to terrify other politicians—“to warn anyone running for office that, if you are anti-crypto, the industry will come after you.”
The super *PAC* and two affiliates soon revealed in federal filings that they had collected more than a hundred and seventy million dollars, which they could spend on political races across the nation in 2024, with more donations likely to come. That was more than nearly any other super *PAC*, including Preserve America, which supports Donald Trump, and WinSenate, which aims to help Democrats reclaim that chamber. Pro-crypto donors are responsible for almost half of all corporate donations to *PAC*s in the 2024 election cycle, and the tech industry has become one of the largest corporate donors in the nation. The point of all that money, like of the attack on Porter, has been to draw attention to Silicon Valleys financial might—and to prove that its leaders are capable of political savagery in order to protect their interests. “Its a simple message,” the person familiar with Fairshake said. “If you are pro-crypto, we will help you, and if you are anti we will tear you apart.”
After Porters defeat, it became obvious that the super *PAC*s message had been received by politicians elsewhere. Candidates in New York, Arizona, Maryland, and Michigan began releasing crypto-friendly public statements and voting for pro-crypto bills. When Porter tried to explain to her three children why she had lost, part of the lesson focussed on the Realpolitik of wealth and elections. “When you have members who are afraid of ten million dollars being spent overnight against them, the will in Washington to do whats right disappears pretty quickly,” she recalls saying. “This was naked political power designed to influence votes in Washington. And it worked.”
[](https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a60545)
“And Im saying *you* need to come look at *this*.”
Cartoon by Roland High
Porters defeat, in fact, was the culmination of a strategy that had begun more than a decade earlier to turn Silicon Valley into the most powerful political operation in the nation. As the tech industry has become the planets dominant economic force, a coterie of specialists—led, in part, by the political operative who introduced the idea of “a vast right-wing conspiracy” decades ago—have taught Silicon Valley how to play the game of politics. Their aim is to help tech leaders become as powerful in Washington, D.C., and in state legislatures as they are on Wall Street. It is likely that in the coming decades these efforts will affect everything from Presidential races to which party controls Congress and how antitrust and artificial intelligence are regulated. Now that the tech industry has quietly become one of the most powerful lobbying forces in American politics, it is wielding that power as previous corporate special interests have: to bully, cajole, and remake the nation as it sees fit.
Chris Lehane was just shy of thirty years old when he came up with the notion of “a vast right-wing conspiracy,” to explain Republican efforts to undermine Bill and Hillary Clinton. It was such an inspired bit of showmanship that Hillary Clinton adopted it as one of her signature lines. At the time, Lehane was a lawyer in the Clinton White House tasked with defending the Administration from charges of scandal, but he specialized in seizing control of the political conversation, finding colorful ways to put Republicans on defense. Tactics such as declaring that the President of the United States was the victim of a shadowy conservative cabal were so effective that the *Times* later declared Lehane to be the modern-day “master of the political dark arts.”
After serving in the White House, Lehane joined Al Gores Presidential campaign, as press secretary, and after Gores defeat he set up shop in San Francisco. Despite the size and the electoral significance of California, many campaign operatives viewed the state as a political backwater, because it was so far away from Washington. But Lehane, who had worked on the Telecommunications Act of 1996, was convinced that Silicon Valley was the future, and he quickly built a business providing his dark arts to wealthy Californians. When trial lawyers wanted to increase the states caps on medical-malpractice jury awards, they brought in Lehane, who helped send voters flyers that looked like cadaver toe tags, and produced ads implying that doctors might be performing surgery while drunk. A few years later, when a prominent environmentalist hired Lehane to campaign against the Keystone XL Pipeline, he sent activists into press conferences carrying vials of sludge from an oil spill; the sludge was so noxious that reporters fled the room. Then he hired one of the Navy *SEAL*s who had helped kill Osama bin Laden to talk to journalists and explain that if the pipeline were approved a terrorist attack could flood Nebraska with one of the largest oil spills in American history. Lehane explained to a reporter his theory of civil discourse: “Everyone has a game plan until you punch them in the mouth. So lets punch them in the mouth.”
But Lehanes efforts generally failed to impress the tech industry. For decades, Silicon Valley firms had considered themselves mostly detached from electoral politics. As one senior tech executive explained to me, until about the mid-twenty-tens, “if you were a V.C. or C.E.O. you might hire lobbyists to talk to politicians, or gossip with you, but, beyond that, most of the Valley thought politics was stupid.” Within a decade of Lehanes move West, however, a new kind of tech company was emerging: so-called [sharing-economy](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/05/15/is-the-gig-economy-working) firms such as Uber, Airbnb, and [TaskRabbit](https://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/taskrabbit-redux). These companies were “disrupting” long-established sectors, including transportation, hospitality, and contract labor. Politicians had long considered it their prerogative to regulate these sectors, and, as some of the startups valuations grew into the billions, politicians began making demands on them as well. They felt affronted by companies like Uber that were refusing to abide by even modest regulations. Other companies tried a more conciliatory approach, but quickly found themselves mired in local political infighting and municipal bureaucracies. In any case, “not understanding politics became an existential risk,” another senior tech executive said. “There was a general realization that we *had* to get involved in politics, whether we wanted to or not.”
In 2015, San Francisco itself became the site of a major regulation battle, in the form of Proposition F, a ballot initiative to limit short-term housing rentals, which both sides acknowledged was an attack on Airbnb. The proposal had emerged from built-up frustrations: some San Franciscans complained that many buildings had essentially become unlicensed hotels, hosting hard-partying tourists who never turned off the music, didnt clean up their trash, and—most worrying for city leaders—hadnt paid the taxes that the city would have collected had they stayed at a Marriott. Other residents argued that Airbnbs presence was making it harder to find affordable housing, because it was more profitable to rent to short-term visitors than to long-term tenants. Proposition F would essentially make it impossible for Airbnb to work with many homeowners for more than a few weeks a year. Early polling indicated that the initiative was popular. Numerous other cities had been considering similar legislation, and were eagerly watching to see if lawmakers in San Francisco—where Airbnb was headquartered—could teach them how to rein in the Internet giant, then worth some twenty-five billion dollars.
Airbnbs executives, panicked, called Lehane and asked him to come to their headquarters; he showed up within minutes of their call, in the sweatpants and baseball jersey that hed been wearing at his sons Little League game. Lehane has the lean build of someone accustomed to athletic self-torture—he runs daily, often fifteen miles at a stretch, typically while sending oddly punctuated e-mails and leaving stream-of-consciousness voice mails—and he has a boyish crooked front tooth that offsets the effect of his receding hairline. To Airbnbs leaders, he didnt look like much of a political guru. But, once Lehane caught his breath, he launched into a commanding speech. Youre looking at this situation all wrong, he said. Proposition F wasnt a crisis—it was an opportunity to change San Franciscos political landscape, to upend a narrative. The key, he told executives, was to build a campaign against Proposition F as sophisticated as Barack Obamas recent Presidential run, and to deploy insane amounts of money as a warning to politicians that an “Airbnb voter” existed—and ought not be crossed. He proposed a three-pronged strategy, and explained to executives that what politicians care about most is reëlection. If the company could show that being anti-Airbnb would make it harder for them to stay in office, they would fall in line. Lehane was soon named Airbnbs head of global policy and public affairs.
His first step in this role was to mobilize Airbnbs natural advocates: the homeowners who were profiting by renting out their properties, and the visitors who had avoided pricey hotel rooms by using the service. By the end of 2015, more than a hundred and thirty thousand people had rented or hosted rooms in San Francisco. Lehane recruited several former Obama-campaign staffers to lead teams who made tens of thousands of phone calls to Airbnb hosts and renters, warning them about Proposition F. The team members also urged hosts to attend town-hall meetings, talk to neighbors, and call local officials. During this period, the company—accidentally, it says—sent an e-mail to everyone who had ever stayed in a California Airbnb, urging them to contact the California legislature. The legislature was inundated with messages from around the world. The Senate president pro tem called Lehane to let him know that the message had been received, and to beg him to stop the onslaught. “I kind of wish we *had* done it on purpose,” someone close to that campaign told me.
The second part of Lehanes strategy was to use large amounts of money to pressure San Francisco politicians. The company brought on hundreds of canvassers to knock on the doors of two hundred and eighty-five thousand people—roughly a third of the citys population—and urge them to contact their local elected officials and say that opposing Airbnb was the equivalent of attacking innovation, economic independence, and Americas ideals. The relentless campaign posed a clear threat to the citys Board of Supervisors: if an official supported Proposition F, Airbnb might encourage someone to run against him or her. “We said the quiet part out loud,” a campaign staffer said. “The goal was intimidation, to let everyone know that if they fuck with us theyll regret it.” In all, Airbnb spent eight million dollars on the campaign, roughly ten times as much as all of Proposition Fs supporters combined. “It was the most ridiculous campaign Ive ever worked on,” the staffer told me. “It was so over the top, so extreme. You shouldnt be able to spend that much on a municipal election.” That said, the staffer loved her time at Airbnb: “It was the most money Id ever earned working in politics.”
The third aspect of Lehanes strategy was upending the debate over Proposition F by proposing alternative solutions. Otherwise, Lehane and Airbnbs chief executive, Brian Chesky, believed, the company would face similar proposals in other cities. “You cant just be against everything,” Lehane told the Airbnb board. “You have to be *for* something.” As a compromise gesture, Airbnb had voluntarily begun paying taxes on short-term stays within the city. It also offered to share some internal company data—such as the number of guests visiting the city each month—that would help local officials monitor the services impact on the community. Whats more, Airbnb eventually offered to build a Web interface that San Francisco officials could use to register hosts and track rental patterns. The solution was self-serving, in that it made the city dependent on Airbnb for monitoring Airbnbs activities. But the proposals addressed many of the complaints that had prompted Proposition F. More important, they guaranteed San Francisco tens of millions of tax dollars annually. When Proposition F finally came to a vote, it was resoundingly defeated.
Airbnbs approach to political conflict was in stark contrast with that of [Uber](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/04/09/at-uber-a-new-ceo-shifts-gears), which had just become the most valuable startup in the world—and which, owing to its resistance to various taxi regulations, was soon under fire from multiple cities and nations. Airbnbs tactics were designed to appeal to politicians higher ideals. After the Proposition F campaign, Lehane began working on a partnership with the S.E.I.U., one of the nations largest labor unions, to unionize the workers who cleaned Airbnb rentals. The plan never came together, but labor-friendly politicians in San Francisco and New York began viewing Airbnb as a potential ally.
To other political operatives, Lehanes tactics hardly seemed groundbreaking. But within Silicon Valley his approach was a revelation. “It was a huge bang for a relatively small outlay,” a tech executive told me. “It turns out the R.O.I.”—return on investment—“on politics is way better than anyone suspected.”
After the defeat of Proposition F, San Franciscos Board of Supervisors eventually agreed to many of Airbnbs suggestions. By then, Lehane had moved on to other locations. He began similar Airbnb campaigns in dozens of other cities, including Barcelona, Berlin, New York, and Mexico City. When the U.S. Conference of Mayors convened in Washington, D.C., in 2016, Lehane was invited to speak after Michelle Obama. “Read my lips,” he told the gathering. “We *want* to pay taxes.” Airbnb soon had agreements with more than a hundred cities, and when local politicians proved intransigent—leaders in Austin, for instance, seemed immune to Airbnbs overtures—the company simply went over their heads. In Texas, it persuaded the state legislature to make it hard for any municipality to ban short-term rentals. Today, Airbnb has agreements with thousands of cities.
A few years after Lehane joined Airbnb, a venture capitalist pulled him aside at a party and said, “It used to be, hiring the right C.F.O. was the most important thing to make sure a company goes public. But youve proved a political person is just as important.” Lehane, however, had had an even bigger insight. These campaigns had revealed that tech companies—particularly firms, like Airbnb, with platforms that connect people who might otherwise have trouble finding one another—were now potentially the most powerful cohort in politics. “At one point, organizations like labor or political parties had the ability to organize and really turn out large numbers of voters,” Lehane told me. Today, Internet platforms have the bigger reach; a tech company can communicate with hundreds of millions of people by pushing a button. “If Airbnb can engage fifteen thousand hosts in a city, that can have an impact on who wins a city-council race or the mayoralty,” Lehane told me. “In a congressional or Senate race, fifty thousand votes can make all the difference.” Of course, simply having a huge user base doesnt guarantee that Airbnb can get everything it wants. Voters respond only to enticements that they find persuasive. But companies like Airbnb, Lehane understood, could make arguments faster, and more efficiently, than nearly any political party or other special-interest group, and this was a source of considerable power. “The platforms are really the only ones who can speak to everyone now,” Lehane said.
For the tech industry, the Trump years were a bewildering mess. The President attacked tech platforms for being biased against conservatives, and liberals railed against Silicon Valleys social-media companies for propelling Trump into the White House. Tech executives declared their support for the industrys many immigrants in the face of Trumps Muslim ban and border separations; they also contended with walkouts and protests from employees over racial injustice, sexual harassment, and all-gender bathrooms—subjects that neither an engineering degree nor business school had prepared them for. When Joe Biden won the Presidency, in 2020, the Valleys leaders were relieved. The Biden Administration seemed like a return to the Pax Obama, an era when tech was considered cool and politicians boasted of knowing Mark Zuckerberg. Bidens victory also meant that Lehane, with his deep roots in the Democratic Party, was unquestionably Silicon Valleys top political guru. Companies sought him out; employees loved that he was generous with credit and made politics fun. (Many former colleagues talk proudly about the nicknames that he bestowed upon them.) Most of all, he made the people he worked with feel like they were on a righteous quest. Peter Ragone, a prominent adviser to numerous Democratic politicians, told me that, among the handful of political consultants transforming Silicon Valley, “Chris is the tip of the spear. His capacity for processing information at speed is breathtaking.”
The Valleys enthusiasm for Biden, however, was short-lived. The President quickly appointed three prominent tech skeptics—Gary Gensler, [Lina Khan](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/12/06/lina-khans-battle-to-rein-in-big-tech), and Jonathan Kanter—to oversee the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Trade Commission, and the antitrust division of the Department of Justice, respectively. Soon the government was suing or investigating Google, Apple, Amazon, Meta, Tesla, and dozens of other companies. Some of those suits and inquiries had been initiated under Trump, but Bidens S.E.C. found a particular target in the cryptocurrency industry. Gensler, an ally of Elizabeth Warren, filed more than eighty legal actions arguing that crypto firms or promoters had violated the law, most often by selling unregistered securities. Some of the executives being sued by the S.E.C. had contributed lavishly to the Democrats. Brad Garlinghouse, the C.E.O. of the crypto firm Ripple, who had been a fund-raising bundler for Obama, was among those under legal fire, and he clearly felt victimized. He told Bloomberg that the federal government was acting like “a bully,” and tweeted, “Dems continue to enable Genslers unlawful war on crypto—sabotaging the ability for American innovation to thrive. Its no wonder the GOP has announced a pro-crypto stance . . . . Voters are paying attention.” (Last year, a federal judge upheld some portions of the S.E.C.s case against Ripple and dismissed others.)
To certain people, the governments approach felt oddly aggressive. One crypto executive told me she discovered that her bank accounts had been frozen—with no explanation—only when she tried to make a withdrawal to repair a catastrophic home-septic-system failure. Around this time, various regulatory agencies were warning banks about the risks posed by the crypto industry. When the executives accounts were later unfrozen—again, without a clear explanation—she was left wondering if the governments goal was to intimidate the industry. (The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks, said that it does not direct banks to freeze individual accounts.)
[](https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a26370)
Cartoon by Michael Maslin
The Biden Administrations oppositional stance, however, seemed warranted when, in 2022, FTX—the enormous crypto exchange and hedge fund led by [Sam Bankman-Fried](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/10/02/inside-sam-bankman-frieds-family-bubble)—imploded amid revelations that more than eight billion dollars had been misallocated or lost. Bankman-Fried had been a prolific political donor, and violating campaign-finance law was among the crimes for which he was arrested. Another crypto executive told me that, after the FTX scandal, many figures in the industry “just wanted to put our heads down and disappear,” adding, “The less people noticed us, the better.”
But among Silicon Valleys most moneyed class retreat wasnt an option. The powerful venture-capital firm Andreessen Horowitz had already raised more than seven billion dollars for crypto and blockchain investments. The “super angel” investor Ron Conway had poured millions of dollars into crypto firms through his venture fund. Lehane urged some of the largest crypto investors and companies, many of whom were bickering on Twitter, to instead form a coalition devoted to changing the public narrative. He began hosting private biweekly gatherings, known as the Ad-Hoc Group, where various collaborations were discussed. Eventually, a former partner at Andreessen Horowitz, Katie Haun, recommended that the large crypto firm Coinbase, where she was a board member, bring on Lehane as an adviser.
Lehane met with Coinbases co-founder Brian Armstrong and told him that, just as with Airbnb, what seemed like a crisis was actually an opportunity. “This is not the time to go quiet,” Lehane told him. “This is your chance to define your company and the industry, and prove youre different from FTX.” In 2023, Lehane joined Coinbases Global Advisory Council. Twenty-five days later, the S.E.C. sued the firm.
Lehane established a war room with the primary goal of convincing politicians that the political consequences of being anti-crypto would be intensely painful. The person familiar with Fairshake, who was then an employee at Coinbase, told me, “It wasnt really about explaining how crypto works, or anything like that. Its about hitting politicians where they are most sensitive—reëlection.” Armstrong clarified this aim at a crypto conference in 2023. The goal, he said, was to ask candidates, “Are you with us? Are you against us? Are we going to be running ads for you or against you?”
Although Lehanes basic strategy resembled the one hed used at Airbnb, that campaign had been focussed on municipal issues and local political races. The crypto effort was national in scale, targeting Senate and House races—and potentially even the Presidential contest—and would require significantly more money. Lehane suggested to Armstrong that crypto firms set aside fifty million dollars for outreach. Lets earmark a hundred million, Armstrong replied. Coinbase, Ripple, and Andreessen Horowitz donated more than a hundred and forty million dollars to Fairshake, the crypto super *pac*. Executives at other firms contributed millions more.
Lehane, collaborating closely with Fairshake, began crafting a pro-crypto message and helping to build a “grassroots” army. “We need to demonstrate theres a crypto voter,” he told the Coinbase team. “Theres millions and millions of Americans who own this stuff. We need to prove theyll vote to protect it.”
The Federal Reserve has said that in 2023 fewer than twenty million Americans owned cryptocurrencies. Polling indicates that the issue is not an electoral priority for many voters. One Coinbase staff member pointed out this discrepancy to Lehane, saying, “I dont know if there *is* a crypto voter.”
“Then were going to make one,” Lehane replied.
Coinbase began loudly promoting the results of surveys reporting to show that fifty-two million Americans owned cryptocurrencies, and that many of them intended to vote to protect their digital pocketbooks. Those polls indicated that sixty per cent of crypto owners were millennials or Gen Z-ers, and forty-one per cent were people of color—demographics that each party was trying to woo. Lehane also quietly helped launch an advocacy organization, Stand with Crypto, which is advertised to Coinbases millions of U.S. customers every time they log in, and which urges cryptocurrency owners to contact their lawmakers and sign petitions. The group says that it currently has more than a million members. The Coinbase employee told me that Stand with Crypto would identify a city with a significant population of crypto enthusiasts, like Columbus, Ohio, and then inundate them with push notifications aimed at organizing town halls and rallies. The employee explained, “If you can get fifty or sixty people to show up, with good photo angles you can make it look like hundreds. In small states or close elections, thats enough to convince a candidate they should be paranoid.”
This supposed army of [crypto voters](https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-the-south/the-people-casting-their-ballots-for-crypto) fed directly into the next stage of the assault: scaring politicians. Stand with Crypto built an online dashboard that assigned grades to U.S. senators and representatives—and to many of their challengers—which reflected their support for crypto. The scores seemed to inevitably be either “A (Strongly supports crypto)” or “F (Strongly against crypto),” though the data undergirding the grades were sometimes specious. “Most of them hadnt really taken a side,” another Coinbase staffer told me. “So wed, you know, look at speeches theyd given, or who they were friends with, and kind of make a guess. If you were friends with Elizabeth Warren, you were more likely to get an F.”
Nevertheless, Lehane insisted that Fairshake maintain a nonpartisan tone. The super *PAC* was careful to support an equal number of Democratic and Republican candidates, and, following Lehanes advice, it planned to stay out of the 2024 Presidential race altogether. A venture capitalist who has advised the crypto industry told me that the groups nonpartisan stance was essential, because, “if we want to get the right regulations in place, we have to get a bill through Congress, which means we need votes from both parties.” Moreover, Fairshakes goal was to “create a nonpartisan cost for being negative on crypto and tech,” the venture capitalist added. “People need to know there are consequences.”
To make this point, Lehane and Fairshake wanted to find a contest in which the groups spending was certain to attract national attention. Fairshake compiled a list of high-profile races, and near the top was the fight to replace Dianne Feinstein in California. The obvious target was Porter, whose strongest opponent in the Democratic primary was [Representative Adam Schiff](https://www.newyorker.com/tag/adam-schiff). California was reliably blue, and so, if Fairshake helped defeat Porter, the group wouldnt get blamed for handing a seat to the Republicans. Whats more, Californias primary occurred on March 5th—early in the campaign season—which meant that Porters race would get lots of attention and Fairshake would have time to broadcast its involvement and petrify candidates in other states. Because Porter was friendly with Elizabeth Warren, she could be painted—fairly or not—as anti-crypto. Best of all, many polls indicated that Porter was unlikely to win the primary anyway, so if the super *PAC* “went in with a big spend, and made a big splash and she lost, Fairshake could take the victory lap regardless of whether it tipped the scales,” the Coinbase employee said. The calculation was prescient: Fairshakes spending helped doom Porter in the primary, and the general election appears to be a lock for Schiff (who got an A from Stand with Crypto). As another political operative put it, “Porter was a perfect choice because she let crypto declare, If you are even *slightly* critical of us, we wont just kill you—well kill your fucking family, well end your career. From a political perspective, it was a masterpiece.” Porter will be out of government at the end of this year.
After Porters defeat, many politicians who had once treated crypto with disdain or hostility suddenly became fans. In May, two months after Porters defenestration, a pro-crypto bill came up for a vote in the House. In previous years, similar bills had languished amid tepid Republican support and strong Democratic opposition. The new bill—known as the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act—was openly opposed by President Biden. But it sailed through the House, with nearly unanimous Republican backing and seventy-one votes from Democrats. The Senate Majority Leader, Chuck Schumer, recently joined a Crypto4Harris virtual town hall and promised that passing the legislation this year is “absolutely possible,” adding, “Crypto is here to stay.” The Democratic senator Sherrod Brown—a longtime crypto critic—is running for reëlection in Ohio, where Fairshake has directed forty million dollars to ads in support of his opponent; Brown has lately been tempering his public criticisms of the industry. Earlier this year, crypto donors indicated that they might get involved in Montanas Senate race, where the incumbent Democrat, Jon Tester, once a crypto skeptic, is facing a difficult fight. Soon afterward, Tester voted to weaken S.E.C. oversight of cryptocurrencies, earning him the unusual grade of “C (Neutral on crypto).” It looks like Fairshake will stay out of Montana as long as Tester keeps voting the right way. A similar dynamic occurred in Maryland: after the super *PAC* threatened to take sides in the Democratic Senate primary there, both major candidates proclaimed their pro-crypto bona fides.
In total, Fairshake and affiliated super *PAC*s have already spent more than a hundred million dollars on political races in 2024, including forty-three million on Senate races in Ohio and West Virginia, and seven million on four congressional races, in North Carolina, Colorado, Alaska, and Iowa. Three and half million dollars was used to help vanquish two left-wing representatives who were members of the so-called Squad: Jamaal Bowman, of New York, and Cori Bush, of Missouri. Of the forty-two primaries that Fairshake has been involved in this year, its preferred candidate has won eighty-five per cent of the time. The super *PAC*s latest filings indicated that it had more than seventy million dollars to spend in the remainder of the election cycle. Its donations to political candidates are on par with those of the oil-and-gas industry, the pharmaceutical industry, and labor unions.
Just as Airbnb sought to change the conversation around Proposition F by proposing various concessions—paying taxes and sharing data—the crypto industry has become a vocal proponent of a seemingly solutions-oriented fix: new regulations for cryptocurrencies and the blockchain. Critics, however, say that these proposals are self-serving. A central dispute between the crypto industry and regulators concerns whether cryptocurrencies are securities—akin to, say, a share of Apple, the sale of which is governed by strict investor-protection laws—or commodities, like a bushel of corn, which can be sold with very little government involvement. Most fiat currencies—that is, those issued by governments—are used primarily to buy such things as food and clothing, rather than to gamble on the rise and fall of exchange rates. Cryptocurrencies, in contrast, are often difficult—or, in some cases, impossible—to use for purchasing physical goods, and they are frequently held by speculators solely as a wager that their value will rise. There are several thousand cryptocurrencies in existence. A few—most notably, Bitcoin and Ether—are considered commodities. The statuses of most of the rest are up for debate.
[](https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a60629)
“Now, to demonstrate that he has come of age, Jeffrey will open a childproof bottle of acetaminophen in front of all his friends and family.”
Cartoon by Patrick McKelvie
Many within the industry want Congress to pass regulations that would treat mainstream cryptocurrencies as commodities, which are overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a relatively sleepy agency that most people have never heard of—and that tends to be less belligerent than the S.E.C. If the C.F.T.C. becomes the primary regulatory body for crypto, its likely that the stream of lawsuits and fines against large crypto companies will slow or cease. More important, selling Dogecoin (the cryptocurrency associated with a Shiba Inu dog), Dentacoin (“the only cryptocurrency by dentists, for dentists”), or CumRocket (cryptocurrency for the pornography aficionado) would become significantly less risky, and more profitable.
People in the government think that this would be disastrous. “A lot of these tokens, frankly, have no real utility, no actual use, and theyre just for gambling or scamming people,” an official familiar with the S.E.C.s thinking told me. “We already have regulations in place that have protected investors in these kinds of situations for decades. Crypto just doesnt want to abide by them. If your entire business plan is asking Can we get Kim Kardashian to tweet about us? and then taking peoples money, the government needs to be involved.”
In fact, convincing average Americans that the crypto industry is a wholesome, customer-friendly place has been a tough sell: polls indicate that most people do not consider the crypto sector to be safe. Lehanes colleagues within the industry have therefore shifted their tactics slightly. Getting Congress to pass friendly legislation is still a priority, but this push is now being presented as being in service of much loftier aims: protecting innovation, entrepreneurialism, and Americas future.
In July, Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, of the [Andreessen Horowitz venture fund](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/05/18/tomorrows-advance-man), made a ninety-one-minute video accusing President Biden of weakening America. Andreessen said to Horowitz, “Theres been a brutal assault on a nascent industry that Ive just—Ive never experienced before. Im in total shock that it has happened.” Horowitz replied, “Theyve basically subverted the rule of law to attack the crypto industry.” These and other government actions, they said, threatened to doom Americas economy, technological superiority, and military might. And Biden, by refusing to embrace various tech-industry proposals, was allowing China to leap ahead. “The future of technology, and the future of America, is at stake,” Horowitz declared. The two men were so concerned, they said, that they had no choice but to endorse Donald Trump in 2024. (They also noted that, under Biden, billionaires like themselves might have to pay more in taxes. But that issue received less airtime.)
To people inside the crypto industry, the video—which received a huge amount of attention, prompting online co-signs from Elon Musk and various other titans—was a masterstroke. As the Coinbase employee put it, “Now youve got Andreessen and Musk and all these other rich, powerful guys saying that crypto is part of a bigger debate. Its about an attack on American innovation and progress and the future of the country! It changed the conversation from Is cryptocurrency a scam? to Does Biden even care about middle-class entrepreneurs?’ ”
Even though Lehane opposes Trumps candidacy, and had nothing to do with the video, Andreessen and Horowitzs move was right out of the Lehane playbook. Lehane had done such a good job teaching the Valley how to play politics that others could now mimic his gambits. In July, Lehane joined Coinbases board of directors. “Chris is a genius,” the Coinbase employee said. “I dont know how he comes up with this stuff, but he can change reality. He makes magic happen.”
The annual conference for Bitcoin enthusiasts isnt an event at which politicians usually appear. The affair often draws more than twenty-five thousand people, many of them distrustful of government. Wandering around the sea of booths, you can get a free vodka shot at 10 *a.m*. or discuss “tax-avoidance strategies” that fall somewhere between fraud and fantasy. People sell Edward Snowden T-shirts and crypto-themed board games. Its a safe haven for enthusiasts of Panties for Bitcoin. But when the event took place in Nashville, in July—at a venue just a few blocks from the Redneck Riviera bar, where women were offering to lift their shirts in exchange for some of “that bit stuff”—it was teeming with political luminaries. There were eight senators, nearly a dozen representatives, and countless candidates for national and state office, some of whom launched into impromptu speeches whenever the techno music paused. The star attraction, however, was Donald Trump.
The events appearance on the Presidential campaign circuit—and Trumps willingness to spend one of his campaign days in a state hes guaranteed to win—confirmed that the crypto campaign initiated by Lehane was having an effect. When Trump gave a speech before a standing-room-only crowd in orange wigs and “Make Bitcoin Great Again” hats, he pledged, “On Day One, I will fire Gary Gensler”—the S.E.C. head. This prompted a standing ovation and choruses of pro-Trump chants. A man standing near me FaceTimed his wife and insisted that she watch the speech, even though she was in the delivery room where their grandchild was being born.
[Trumps embrace of crypto](https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/07/us/politics/donald-trump-crypto-2024-campaign.html) was a hundred-and-eighty-degree turn. As President, he had tweeted that he was “not a fan” of cryptocurrencies, which “are not money” and “can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity.” He continued, “We have only one real currency in the USA. It is called the United States Dollar!” Later, he said that Bitcoin “just seems like a scam.” But after leaving office Trump began seeking out new revenue sources, such as selling non-fungible tokens—a type of digital content hosted on the blockchain. This earned him a reported $7.2 million in 2023. Trump was convinced. His current Presidential campaign was among the first to accept cryptocurrency donations. He recently announced that—presumably in exchange for compensation—hed become the “chief crypto advocate” for World Liberty Financial, a company led, in part, by an entrepreneur whod reportedly sold marijuana and weight-loss products. Before Trump took the stage in Nashville, he hosted a “roundtable” fund-raiser with crypto investors, many of whom paid more than eight hundred thousand dollars to attend. Conference organizers have said that Trump raised twenty-five million dollars there.
When Trump spoke at the conference, it was clear that he had been, in the parlance of Bitcoin fans, “orange-pilled.” He promised that, if elected, he would direct the federal government to hold billions of dollars worth of cryptocurrency reserves. The U.S., he proclaimed, would become the “crypto capital of the planet and the Bitcoin superpower of the world!” Trump began echoing the crypto campaigns talking points. “If we dont do it, China is going to be doing it!” he said.
You might think Trumps newfound veneration of Bitcoin would have delighted Lehane. It didnt. Rather, it suggested that his campaign might be working a bit *too* well. As with Airbnb, Lehane doesnt want the crypto industry to become firmly associated with either Democrats or Republicans, because then it will be impossible to pass legislation around it. And virtually any policy championed by Trump becomes a partisan matter by default.
President Bidens announcement, in July, that he was dropping out of the race seemed to offer the crypto industry an opportunity for a reset with the Democrats. The ascension of Vice-President Kamala Harris, a Californian with a tech-friendly record, raised the possibility of balancing the partisan scales. In a September speech about her economic plans as President, Harris pledged that the U.S. would “remain dominant in A.I. and quantum computing, blockchain, and other emerging technologies.” The détente seems to be working: on October 4th, Ben Horowitz, the venture capitalist who had appeared in the video attacking Biden, [told his employees](https://www.axios.com/2024/10/04/ben-horowitz-endorse-kamala-harris) that he and his wife would be making a personal donation to “entities who support the Harris Walz campaign”—in no small part because some private conservations hed had with Harris and her team made him “very hopeful” that, as President, shed abandon Bidens “exceptionally destructive” crypto policies. Lehane, for his part, has donated thirty-five thousand dollars to Harriss campaign (and nothing to Trumps).
In the meantime, however, the crypto coalition that Lehane helped to build has begun fraying—a victim of the same partisan divides that plague the rest of the nation. In August, Ron Conway, the California power broker who had given half a million dollars to Fairshake, e-mailed the super *PAC*s other funders, including Andreessen and Armstrong, to complain that the campaign was alienating Democratic lawmakers. “How short sighted and stupid can you possibly be,” he wrote. Fairshakes donations to unseat Senator Brown in Ohio were, Conway said, a “slap in the face” to Schumer. “NOT ONE PERSON BOTHERED TO GIVE ME A HEADS UP THAT YOU WERE DOINIG THIS,” he continued, proving that billionaires also ignore spell-check. “We have two factions: a moderate faction and a Donald Trump faction (Brian and Marc). . . . I have been working too long with people who \[do\] not share common values and that is unacceptable.” He went on, “Because of your selfish hidden agendas it is time for us to separate. . . . I will I no longer compromise myself by associating or helping.”
Republican leaders began making parallel complaints. When Andreessen and crypto executives joined a Republican congressional retreat in Jackson Hole this past summer, attendees expressed fury over the fact that Fairshake had spent money on ads supporting the Democratic candidates in the Arizona and Michigan Senate races—contests that might well decide which party takes control of the chamber.
Whether or not Lehanes coalition holds together, one thing is clear: Silicon Valley has become part of a tradition that stretches back to Boss Tweed. Tech has learned how to politick. To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, the industry is mastering the worlds second-oldest profession by studying the techniques of the first. Techs money and emerging political savvy mean that its interests—crypto, the sharing economy, ungoverned social media—are here to stay. For the S.E.C., Silicon Valleys turn has sparked something close to terror. “If crypto wins, youre going to see financial firms suddenly saying their products are on the blockchain, and theyll drive billions through that loophole,” the official familiar with the S.E.C.s thinking told me. “We saw this happen with savings and loans, and with mortgage derivatives, and with regional banks, and it always ends badly. Somethings going to blow up, and a lot of people are going to get hurt.” Even the people who have worked on Lehanes campaign arent certain that theyre doing the right thing. “Yeah, the Valley is more sophisticated now, but that doesnt mean its good for the public,” the Coinbase staffer told me. “The public gives zero shits if crypto is a security or a commodity. Whats really important to them—How do I protect myself? How do I know which coin is safe?—thats not part of the conversation. This isnt enlightened debate and discussion. This is about using money to be a bully, so everyone knows youre the scariest ones on the playground.”
There are two ways of looking at Silicon Valleys new political sophistication. The first is that it is a manifestation of how a modern democracy is supposed to work. As Peter Ragone, the prominent Democrat consultant, put it, “Id rather have people getting involved and getting their hands dirty—being willing to talk about regulation and saying their opinions in public—than a situation like the past, where all the rich guys cut deals in back rooms.” Many of Americas proudest political battles—the fights for marriage equality, universal suffrage, environmental protections—succeeded only because they were backed by supporters with deep pockets and fierce tenacity, advantages that the tech industry also has. And no amount of money can decide an election unless the voters agree with the agenda. “You dont get to take office unless you have a majority, or close to a majority, of people agreeing with you, no matter how rich you are,” Ragone said. In this view, tech-industry proponents, like many Americans, have simply learned to advocate for a cause, build a coalition, and make sure that their voices are heard.
The other way of viewing the Valleys political exertions is as a symptom of systemic rot—as proof that American governance and legislation have become so perverted by money that it is nearly impossible for people other than billionaires to further their agendas. This dynamic can be seen as particularly dangerous given that the U.S. economy has dumped lavish riches on a tiny group of disaffected, defiantly unaccountable technologists. As many critics of Silicon Valley see it, todays startup founders and venture capitalists are, like the nouveaux riches of previous eras, using their wealth for selfish aims. In doing so, they have revealed themselves to be as ruthless as the robber barons and industrial tyrants of a century ago—not coincidentally, the last time that income inequality was as extreme as it is today.
[](https://www.newyorker.com/cartoon/a28467)
Cartoon by Seth Fleishman
Lehane, for his part, acknowledges that our political system is flawed, but he believes hes making it better. Hes been successful, he told me, only because hes worked with so many talented colleagues devoted to building a better, fairer world. “For me, its always been about Can you give the little guy a much bigger knife to cut a much bigger piece of the economic pie?’ ” he said. As he sees it, Airbnb fought large hotel chains so that teachers and nurses could earn extra money by renting out their empty bedrooms. Coinbase has given people a way to sidestep the big banks and their onerous fees. Many entrenched industries have used politics to benefit themselves at the publics cost. Its only fair, Lehane argues, to let Internet upstarts fight for their agenda; he says his advocacy is rooted in a passionate belief that tech, if regulated wisely, can help the powerless get their share.
Of course, this mission has also made Lehane very wealthy. (He declined to disclose precisely *how* wealthy.) “But, at the risk of being incredibly hubristic, theres a lot of places I could have gone to make money,” he said. What motivates him, he added, is a righteous battle. His X profile features a photograph of him in boxing gloves, grimacing mid-punch.
In August, OpenAI, the artificial-intelligence giant, announced that it had hired Lehane as its vice-president of global affairs. Unlike the battles that hes fought at Airbnb and Coinbase, where the ideological lines of combat have been easy to define, the political fights over artificial intelligence are murkier and more nascent. There are numerous stakeholders with competing interests within the tech industry itself. Marc Andreessen, for one, has called for little to no additional regulation of underlying A.I. technologies, because, he wrote in a jeremiad last year, hampering the development of technology that might benefit humanity “is a form of murder.” In other words, “any deceleration of AI will cost lives.” He left it unsaid that creating regulations would also likely make it more difficult for him and other venture capitalists to find fast-growing companies to invest in, thereby denying them profits.
On the opposing side is a contingent of A.I. engineers who believe that their creations may soon become powerful enough to exterminate most of humanity. Regulation, therefore, is urgently needed to insure that only the most enlightened technologists can practice this mysterious alchemy. The technologists pushing these arguments, inevitably, place themselves among those enlightened few, and their “more responsible” visions of A.I. development often align with the business plans of their own startups.
Somewhere in the middle is Lehane and [OpenAI](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/12/11/the-inside-story-of-microsofts-partnership-with-openai). The company made an opening salvo in July, when its chief executive, Sam Altman, published, with Lehanes support, an op-ed in the Washington *Post* which portrayed the fight around A.I. regulations as one pitting democracies against authoritarian regimes. “The bottom line is that democratic AI has a lead over authoritarian AI because our political system has empowered U.S. companies, entrepreneurs, and academics,” Altman wrote. But that lead is not guaranteed, he continued, and it can be protected only if Congress passes regulations that encourage important software advances—like OpenAIs ChatGPT chatbot—and also prioritize “rules of the road” and “norms in developing and deploying AI.” OpenAI, Altman indicated, is prepared to accept substantial constraints on data security and transparency, and it supports the creation of a government agency to regulate A.I. development and use.
This rhetoric may sound high-minded, but—not surprisingly—Altmans position is also somewhat self-interested. The companys smaller rivals would probably find such rules and norms expensive and cumbersome, and therefore have a harder time complying with them than OpenAI would. The op-ed was also an example of Lehanian reframing: instead of talking about big A.I. companies competing with small startups, or about the inevitable tensions between rapid technological leaps and slower but safer progress, Altman recast the A.I. battle as one between good and evil. And Silicon Valley, in this story line, is the home of virtuous superheroes.
Some observers of the A.I. industry find this perspective cynical. Suresh Venkatasubramanian, a professor of computer science at Brown, is a co-author of the White Houses “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights,” which urges regulations on data privacy and transparency, and protections against algorithmic discrimination. He told me, “You notice OpenAI doesnt want to talk about its alleged theft of copyrighted materials, which is definitely anti-democratic and, if true, definitely anti-American.” (ChatGPT was developed by inhaling texts from the Internet without paying—or, for the most part, crediting—their authors; OpenAI claims that this is fair use.) Whats more, Altmans reframing elides important issues that democratic nations might disagree on, such as what kinds of privacy regulations ought to govern A.I., and who should pay for the environmental costs of A.I. data centers.
But Lehanes strategy of putting Altman forward as a strong political voice guarantees that OpenAI, and the A.I. industry as a whole, will continue to influence the American political conversation for years to come. Venkatasubramanian told me, “The goal is to get a seat at the table, because then you have influence over how things turn out.” The A.I. industrys influence is already being felt in state capitals. Workday, a giant human-resources software company, has been lobbying in several states to add what could be a subtle loophole to legislation about “automated decision tools” in the workplace. Companies that, like Workday, sell A.I.-enhanced software for hiring employees would essentially be immune from lawsuits over racial discrimination, or other biases, unless a litigant could prove that A.I. was the “controlling” factor behind the rejection of a candidate. “It all comes down to just one word in the legislation,” Venkatasubramanian said. “One word makes all the difference, and if you are at the table, and involved in the conversation, you can nudge that word into the legislation, or out of it.”
Even Lehane admits that the A.I. campaign is in its early stages. The exact pressure points arent quite clear yet. Alliances and enmities are constantly shifting. What is certain, though, is that Silicon Valley will continue to bully and woo politicians by deploying money—and its giant user base—as a lure and a weapon.
Things could change: the robber barons of the Gilded Age were eventually brought down; twentieth-century industrial tyrants were, over time, shamed into retreat. The most well-known tech companies—Google, Apple, Meta, and Amazon—have become bêtes noires to people on both the right and the left. (So far, though, this seemingly hasnt done much to harm profits, or to cow executives.) Democracy, in all its mess and glory, may prevail. The only fixed truth about technology is that change is inevitable. Most of the tech industry “has run independent of politics for our entire careers,” Andreessen wrote when he announced that his political neutrality was over. Going forward, he would be working against candidates who defied tech. As Andreessen saw it, he didnt have a choice: “As the old Soviet joke goes, You may not be interested in politics, but politics is interested in you.’ ” ♦
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