| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
M. Hoffman
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Academic citation |
5
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1 |
This document is page 36 of a text authored by Peter Singer, identifiable by the bio at the bottom. It is a philosophical essay or review discussing Derek Parfit's book 'On What Matters,' analyzing moral theories including Kantianism, social-contract theory, and utilitarianism. The text concludes with a bio of Peter Singer and bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031911', indicating it is part of a document production for the House Oversight Committee.
This document appears to be page 42 of a memoir or autobiography included in House Oversight evidence files (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027890). The text is a first-person narrative describing the author's youth on an Israeli kibbutz in the 1950s, detailing a conflict with his father over refusing university to become a truck driver, and admitting to 'freelance forays into lockpicking and petty larceny' with friends named Ido and Moshe. The narrative also covers the author's return to the kibbutz school and the influence of an inspiring history teacher.
This document appears to be page 19 of a text (article or book excerpt) produced during a House Oversight investigation (ID: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023535). The text discusses the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, specifically debates around a two-state solution versus a binational state. The narrator recounts interactions with a Palestinian activist named Fadi Quran and reflects on the hypocrisy of US Congress members (specifically Jewish Democrats) who publicly applaud Netanyahu while privately opposing his policies on settlement expansion.
This document appears to be page 294 of an academic paper authored by M. Hoffman et al., included as evidence in a House Oversight investigation (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015506). The text discusses behavioral economics and game theory, specifically the 'Hawk-Dove model' as it relates to property rights, the endowment effect, the IKEA effect, and the sunk cost fallacy. It cites various researchers including Kahneman, Thaler, and Locke, but does not contain direct communications or transactional data related to the Epstein investigation on this specific page.
This document appears to be page 30 of a book or essay included in a House Oversight evidence file (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032200). The text provides a political analysis of Singapore under the leadership of 'Lee' (presumably Lee Kuan Yew), contrasting his 'hybrid regime' and 'quasi-authoritarian' success with Western democratic ideals and the failures of other Asian democracies to curb corruption. It references the Arab Spring, suggesting the text was written after 2011. There is no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or specific crimes on this specific page.
This document is a bibliography page (numbered 386) from a manuscript titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?', likely produced as evidence in a House Oversight investigation (document number 016076). It lists references for Chapter 2 and Chapter 3, citing works from 1986 to 2011 on topics including psychology, artificial intelligence, communication theory, and body language. While the document stamp suggests it is part of an investigation file (potentially related to Epstein given the user context), the text itself is strictly an academic or literary reference list with no direct mention of Epstein or his associates on this specific page.
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