| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983-01-01 | N/A | Televised debate between David Brooks and Milton Friedman. | Unknown | View |
This document contains a segment of a court opinion regarding the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, specifically addressing legal claims under the Antiterrorism Act, RICO, and the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act. It outlines headnotes on legal standards for motions for reconsideration and sovereign immunity, and lists numerous attorneys and law firms representing the plaintiffs and defendants.
This document is a biographical profile of political commentator David Brooks, likely from a dossier or 'Edge' profile series found in House Oversight documents. It details his educational background, career trajectory through major publications (WSJ, NYT, Weekly Standard), and outlines his evolving political stances on the Iraq War, the Republican party, Barack Obama, and social issues like gay marriage. The document includes specific dates of his writings and interactions with figures like Milton Friedman and Barack Obama.
This document is page 275 of a bibliography or reference list found within the House Oversight Committee's investigation files (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013775). It lists scientific citations alphabetically from 'McManus' to 'Milton'. The subject matter of the citations focuses heavily on chaos theory, non-linear dynamics, mathematics, and biophysics (e.g., fractal models, complex dynamics, attractors, EEG analysis). This reflects Jeffrey Epstein's known interest in and funding of theoretical physics and mathematics.
This document appears to be page 197 of a scientific paper or book regarding neurobiology and nonlinear dynamical systems (chaos theory). It cites various studies from the 1990s regarding biological oscillations in animals and humans. The document bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013697', suggesting it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation, likely related to Jeffrey Epstein's connections to the scientific community or funding of scientific research.
This document appears to be page 19 of an academic essay or book included in House Oversight Committee evidence (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021265). The text discusses the philosophical and scientific shift toward the 'autonomous individual' and 'self-interest' in the 20th century, citing Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, and economist Milton Friedman. It uses the biological behavior of sardines (swimming to the middle of a school to avoid predators) to explain 'emergent' collective behavior arising from individual self-preservation instincts.
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