• [OT] Behind Every Great Fortune, There Is a Great Crime

    From John Savard@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 14 08:31:36 2024
    Actually, Honore de Balzac said:
    The secret of grand fortunes without an apparent cause is a forgotten
    crime, because it was managed respectably.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p6jkSf32kU

    It's often mentioned that part of the secret of the fortune Trump's
    fahter built up was how he evaded Fair Housing laws while trading in
    real estate in New York.

    But his father wouldn't have been able to dabble in real estate were
    it not for being somewhat well-off to begin with, thanks to his
    father. And that nest egg even had a Canadian connection... it turns
    out that Fred Trump Sr. saw a better opportunity from the Klondike
    Gold Rush than becoming one of the many seeking gold.

    John Savard

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  • From The Horny Goat@21:1/5 to quadibloc@servername.invalid on Thu Jun 20 23:26:19 2024
    On Fri, 14 Jun 2024 08:31:36 -0600, John Savard
    <quadibloc@servername.invalid> wrote:

    But his father wouldn't have been able to dabble in real estate were
    it not for being somewhat well-off to begin with, thanks to his
    father. And that nest egg even had a Canadian connection... it turns
    out that Fred Trump Sr. saw a better opportunity from the Klondike
    Gold Rush than becoming one of the many seeking gold.

    There were lots of American prospectors in both the 1858 Barkerville
    gold rush (British Columbia) and the 1897-98 Klondike gold rush
    (Yukon). So while I had not heard that previously the notion that one
    of Trump's forebears had been there doesn't surprise me. (Note that
    one of the most famous Canadian poems - 'the Cremation of Sam McGee'
    has an American protagonist. Here's a 6 minute recitation) https://ca.video.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?fr=yhs-iba-1&ei=UTF-8&hsimp=yhs-1&hspart=iba&param1=RypDRDjp20T5Vc76fVk9yA%3D%3D&param2=9dUI1n2R0BLDxNuWfiP4aSFOTltNdSPoIx38%2BUf%2FiXrvPdoGmStdlfwLFZYDvqkAJrWWk4yNReCLnBD%2FqPsDZd7olTZcV8HMx1G%
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    2BfsEUzJckoMgBm17vFkQjhRf4Is9c6BouXoSqHwiJo8bif05Zrv6LkbD4xx1jMgcL1CD1JFmmZ0f%2FZbgMEbSpCVEYSYoXxS15oAodXiWOtlXWTk5BfZPnHDFUUh0d6d%2BwzNU1WahzJJAlIjD5q7eDeRVt0sXXDL8Ra7UgJHPd%
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    2Fc9lI2cPasMv0WG9x2o2%2BqRCTK1bHr5JMRavHj7bS4Zdw%2B6C57898ywkcF8WEyhVmxxDwyON7O9lmpkb%2F%2FYVL%2Fg%3D%3D&param4=0Lo
    ZlRAST6wANVVI2qMh7Q94a%2FO0uRg%2FO9iQF9P2lh0%3D&p=the+cremation+of+sam+mcgee&type=vnpr_5056_CHW_CA_bt0#id=2&vid=4315af0d06af502368abbcf5ddf41fb3&action=click
    )

    One of the primary reasons for the organization of the British colony
    of British Columbia was the fear that despite being indisputably
    British territory, it wasn't formally established as a colony and thus
    felt to be vulnerable to an American filibuster. (Which is essentially
    how California came to join the union)

    Which is why I have long considered Judge Matthew Bebgie (1st Chief
    Justice of British Columbia and very much a judge who did his
    "circuit" on horseback) one of the chief founders of British Columbia.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Baillie_Begbie

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