The Brutalist Report - fortune
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- DOJ uses White House correspondents’ dinner shooting to pressure preservations to drop lawsuit over Trump’s $400 million ballroom [40d]
- The ‘obscene economics’ of modern warfare show how the race to military supremacy is transforming, while U.S. rearmament relies on China [40d]
- John Ternus, Apple’s new CEO, inherits a rebounding China business—and some messy headaches [40d]
- Chevron CEO says Venezuela must do more for oil industry revival [40d]
- Another attack at ‘Hinckley Hilton’ raises new security concerns [40d]
- Sergey Brin confronted Gavin Newsom at a treehouse party — then launched a political war [40d]
- After the gunshots, JD Vance was first to be pulled off stage, then Trump and the first lady. Someone started a ‘U.S.A.’ chant but was shushed [40d]
- The White House correspondents’ dinner shooting suspect apparently traveled by train with guns. ‘This isn’t about, in my mind, changing the law’ [40d]
- The suspect in the White House correspondents’ dinner shooting referred to himself as a ‘Friendly Federal Assassin’ and railed against Trump policies [40d]
- Elon Musk says saving for retirement is irrelevant because AI is going to create a world of abundance: ‘It won’t matter’ [40d]
- Baby boomers have now ‘gobbled up’ nearly one-third of America’s wealth share, and they’re leaving Gen Z and millennials behind [40d]
- The presidential line of succession was at the shooting that targeted the Trump administration. Amid security doubts, ‘the system worked,’ AG says [40d]
- Suspect in DC dinner attack spent several years acquiring guns [40d]
- Iran’s foreign minister returns to Pakistan as Islamabad races to save U.S. ceasefire talks while Tehran seeks Hormuz toll with Oman [40d]
- Sen. Thom Tillis says he’s ready to move ahead with confirming Warsh as Fed chair after DOJ drops probe on Powell [40d]
- Here’s how the ‘multi-layered protection’ at the White House correspondents’ dinner worked and how the hotel added security after Reagan was shot [40d]
- Accused gunman at correspondents’ dinner was likely targeting Trump and top officials after traveling by train to D.C., Blanche says [40d]
- Why the key to American drone dominance lies with blockchain [40d]
- AI is frying our brains — here’s what leaders need to do about It [41d]
- More than 90,000 tech workers have been laid off this year. But here’s why companies like Microsoft are offering voluntary buyouts instead [41d]
- Kalshi and Polymarket are racing to ban insider trading. The economist who built the theory behind prediction markets says it’s the whole point [41d]
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