Jemima Kelly
@jemimajoanna
Columnist @FT. Formerly/forever @FTAlphaville. Best known for snark, sarc & Sark. "Notorious fiat scammer". "Bus passenger". "Great power." 😎
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http://ft.com 05-01-2012 12:03:20
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quick #FeelingsTrumpFacts reminder on what many (also 'experts') still fail 2understand on 21st cent assessment criteria (& #MediaLiteracy too)
Jemima Kelly 'The more an asset price is disconnected from its fundamentals the more potential it has to go to the moon'
via Victor Mallet
For anyone needing a break from the doom and gloom today, a column from me on cherry blossom and slowness and being alive
Sakura season and the art of savouring via Financial Times
on.ft.com/3vTyFZj
Jemima Kelly There was a quote from the Iliad that has stayed with me
“The gods envy us. They envy us because we’re mortal, because any moment may be our last. Everything is more beautiful because we’re doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again.”
For anyone needing a break from the doom and gloom today, a column from me on cherry blossom and slowness and being alive
Sakura season and the art of savouring via Financial Times
on.ft.com/3vTyFZj
On vibes-based stock markets and the absurd valuation of Trump’s recently-listed Truth Social, currently priced at 1,400 times its (non-existent) revenues.
Great piece by Jemima Kelly
ft.com/content/1dad2f…
“There’s a lot of things to like about him,” says Liz Uihlein. “But nobody can control the bad part of him, where he just says terrible things about people.”
Some choice quotes from Trump donors here in this Big Read by Alex Rogers
ft.com/content/b1c551… via @ft
NEW Financial Times Sketchy Politics video! 🎥 robert shrimsley joins me to discuss whether Sunak/Hunt are being too bold and Labour not bold enough. Featuring a Ming vase, my battered New Labour mug, a badly drawn Hunt 👀 and a better map! youtube.com/watch?v=Ro7A8D…
“[H]aving exemplars whose characters we can aspire to emulate is a crucial component in our own moral development, and in our path towards living a life of virtue and what Aristotle called ‘eudaimonic’ contentment,” writes Jemima Kelly in Financial Times.🇬🇧🇺🇸 on.ft.com/3PHSSIr