Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Its founders wondered if it was possible to invent a new kind of justice system that would cure the ailments that a crime revealed instead of just locking up criminals.
Priya Parker • The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters

entrap him by arranging a business meeting that instead was a rendezvous with a prostitute.
Clyde W. Ford • Think Black: A Memoir
Bill Tafoya, the special agent who served as our “futurist” at Quantico, advocated a minimum of a ten-year commitment of money and resources on the magnitude of what we sent into the Persian Gulf. He calls for a wide-scale reinstatement of Project Head Start, one of the most effective long-term, anticrime programs in history. He doesn’t think more
... See moreJohn E. Douglas, Mark Olshaker • Mindhunter
never let the facts get in the way of a fair outcome.
Laurence Endersen • Pebbles of Perception: How a Few Good Choices Make All The Difference
Florida drew the transient and rootless on the eternal promise of a second chance, with more than its share of scammers and con men. So who was to say the guy living next door wasn’t one of them? A subdivision like Carriage Pointe was Jane Jacobs’s vision of hell.
George Packer • The Unwinding
Frank Donovan, a lifetime close friend and a lawyer from Detroit. He was known among his friends and clients as a brilliant legal analyst with a nonaggressive temperament. No litigator. When we were both twenty, I remember him saying: "When there's a fight, I pick up my hat and go home." He had a large head, somewhat out of proportion to
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