[–] ianai 3y ago ↗ Seems a very troubling title for this article. Is the author jockeying for SBFs death? I sure hope not.Time to dial back the rhetoric. [–] kick_in_the_dor 3y ago ↗ The title is a pun, playing on the title of the book "Death of a Salesman".Obviously a joke.If you read the article you would understand what this means. [–] cloutchaser 3y ago ↗ I find it extra funny since SBF shared the stage with Bill Clinton and Tony Blair. Ofc I imagine he paid them a lot to be there, but still... He really wanted to be a statesman. [–] fmajid 3y ago ↗ Like Jeffrey Epstein wanted to be thought a patron of the sciences. [–] [deleted] 3y ago ↗ (comment deleted)
[–] kick_in_the_dor 3y ago ↗ The title is a pun, playing on the title of the book "Death of a Salesman".Obviously a joke.If you read the article you would understand what this means. [–] cloutchaser 3y ago ↗ I find it extra funny since SBF shared the stage with Bill Clinton and Tony Blair. Ofc I imagine he paid them a lot to be there, but still... He really wanted to be a statesman. [–] fmajid 3y ago ↗ Like Jeffrey Epstein wanted to be thought a patron of the sciences.
[–] cloutchaser 3y ago ↗ I find it extra funny since SBF shared the stage with Bill Clinton and Tony Blair. Ofc I imagine he paid them a lot to be there, but still... He really wanted to be a statesman. [–] fmajid 3y ago ↗ Like Jeffrey Epstein wanted to be thought a patron of the sciences.
7 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 23.8 ms ] threadTime to dial back the rhetoric.
Obviously a joke.
If you read the article you would understand what this means.