🏦 Morgan Stanley, the first big U.S. bank to offer its wealthy clients access to bitcoin funds
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Morgan Stanley becomes the first big U.S. bank to offer its wealthy clients access to bitcoin funds. Morgan Stanley is the first big U.S. bank to offer its wealth management clients access to bitcoin funds, CNBC has learned exclusively. (Hugh Son via CNBC)
Why This Wave of Anti-Asian Racism Feels Different. “The indignity of being Asian in this country has been underreported,” the poet and essayist Cathy Park Hong writes in Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning. (Morgan Ome via The Atlantic)
The Horse-Meat Vigilante Fighting Criminal Butchers in a Florida Backwater. You don’t find the Dark Knight of Florida’s animal-slaughter underworld. You put out a signal, and he finds you. Last March, I flew to West Palm Beach, drove a rental car inland, and settled into a room at a chain hotel that Richard Couto had chosen for me. (David Herbert via Bloomberg)
How the WHO's Hunt for Covid's Origins Stumbled in China. More than a dozen foreign scientists led by the World Health Organization gathered with Chinese counterparts last month to vote on the question: How did the Covid-19 pandemic start? (Jeremy Page via Wall Street Journal)
Big Short' investor Michael Burry says he'll stop tweeting after SEC regulators paid him a visit. Michael Burry's incendiary tweets have piqued the interest of federal regulators, the investor revealed this week. "Tweeting and getting in the news lately apparently has caused the SEC to pay us a visit," the Scion Asset Management boss said in a now-deleted tweet. (Theron Mohamed via Business Insider)
Here's how homeless Americans can get their $1,400 stimulus check - pass it on. Millions of Americans won’t have to do anything to receive their third stimulus check. It will either automatically be mailed to them or deposited directly into their bank accounts. (Elisabeth Buchwald via MarketWatch)
BBC Accused Of Airing Incendiary Claim That Women Put In Danger By Low Traffic Neighborhoods. The Science and Environment Unit of BBC News has been accused of spreading falsehoods in a TV report on Low Traffic Neighborhoods (LTNs) broadcast on March 17. (Carlton Reid via Forbes)
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