‘One big thieving cabal’: Democrats warned to brace for a bigger threat than Trump

New Republic Deputy Editor Jason Linkins says Democrats must brace themselves for a much bigger enemy than Jeffrey Epstein if they want to truly show the public they are taking on U. S. corruption. “The time to pummel these crooks is nigh, and they needn’t be precious about it,” Linkins said. “Think of it like this: Trumpism is the culmination of a crooked scheme that began nearly a half-century ago, in which the rich and powerful looted our wealth and tore up the civic fabric of this nation. Yes, like the Epstein affair suggests, it really is one big thieving cabal of plutocratic reprobates that has done us dirty. There is an opportunity now for Democrats with guts to crush these scumbags, and take back what they stole.” Linkins said a massive partywide attack on the root of corruption must also include deep scrutiny inside the Democratic Party itself if the public is to be convinced that Democrats are serious about this. “Conservatives have darkly warned their liberal counterparts: ‘Be careful what you wish for; what if this implicates a bunch of crusty old Democrats?’ To which I say, ‘Don’t threaten me with a good time,’” Linkins said. “As I’ve watched the Epstein story unravel across the media through the shouting of lawmakers and the flood of tawdry emails dumped in the press I’ve not been able to ignore how it’s all one big pile of rot at the center of polite society.” Linkins said he is “less worried about whether some Democratic Party luminary catches an Epstein stray and more concerned about whether Democrats bungle the opportunity to attack these corrupt arrangements and the presidential administration that has made them its North Star.” The iron for this, said Linkins, is “particularly hot” right now with the American public. “A fresh Reuters/Ipsos poll released Wednesday found that Trump’s approval ratings had hit startling new lows, with respondents particularly “unhappy about his handling of the high cost of living and the investigation into the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.” Epstein and the economy are the “twin albatrosses around Trump’s neck,” said Linkins, but the question remains whether Democrats “will have the stomach and the sense to exploit both avenues to Trump’s ruin.” “It may not seem like a problem, but Democrats seem pathologically averse to multitasking, which explains why they’re making the salience of grocery prices their priority to the exclusion of all other matters,” Linkins said. “So monomaniacal is this approach that at various times over the past year, Democratic lawmakers have called other concerns “distractions”-up to and including Trump’s rampaging paramilitary forces.” Abandoning the moment would be a travesty considering mounting public disgust and anger. According to the most recent NPR/PBS News Marist poll, Democrats have attained a 14-point lead over the GOP on the generic congressional ballot.
https://www.alternet.org/trump-corruption-epstein-scandal/

Miss Universe leadership and ex-judge in public dispute over rigging allegations

Miss Universe Organization president Raúl Rocha Cantú (left) and former judge Omar Harfouch (right) appear in separate photos. Rocha Cantú has denied Harfouch’s allegations of irregularities in the 2025 pageant, while Harfouch maintains his claims after resigning days before the finals. (Photo Sources: Miss Universe Organization and Omarharfouch. com) Miss Universe leaders and former judge Omar Harfouch issue conflicting explanations over alleged irregularities in the 2025 pageant, which MUO firmly denies BANGKOK The Miss Universe Organization (MUO) and former judge Omar Harfouch have issued conflicting accounts of events behind the Miss Universe 2025 competition, after Harfouch resigned days before the finals and publicly alleged that the selection process leading to Fátima Bosch’s victory lacked transparency. MUO has strongly denied the allegations and has not announced any independent review. Harfouch, a Lebanese-French businessman, pianist, and political activist known for his anti-corruption advocacy, served briefly on the judging panel before stepping down. Harfouch’s allegations In public posts released shortly before the coronation, Harfouch said he resigned after questioning how semifinalists were chosen. He alleges that the Top 30 candidates were “pre-selected” by what he calls an “impromptu jury,” a group he claims operated outside the official panel. He also alleges that some of those involved had personal relationships or affiliations with certain contestants. Harfouch says he raised his concerns directly with MUO leadership, including organization president Raúl Rocha Cantú, and described their exchange as unsatisfactory. He then withdrew from all pageant-related duties, including a planned musical performance. He later described the pageant results as “rigged” and referred to Bosch as a “fake winner.” These remarks reflect Harfouch’s own characterization; he has not released evidence to support the claims, and no outside body has confirmed them. MUO denies allegations and defends its process MUO, led by Rocha Cantú, has categorically rejected Harfouch’s statements. In an official response, the organization said his claims “incorrectly suggested” that an unauthorized committee had chosen semifinalists. MUO stated that all scoring followed established Miss Universe protocols and confirmed that no external group was permitted to select finalists. The organization said Harfouch may have misunderstood “Beyond the Crown,” a social-impact initiative that plays no role in competition scoring. MUO also said Harfouch is no longer authorized to use Miss Universe trademarks following his public allegations. Rocha Cantú has not made additional statements beyond MUO’s official release. The organization maintains that Bosch’s win is legitimate. Other judges raise concerns, though not about rigging Former footballer Claude Makélélé, originally part of the judging roster, withdrew shortly before the finals for personal reasons and has not echoed Harfouch’s claims. Former Miss Universe Natalie Glebova, who served on the final judging panel, wrote online that Thailand’s Praveenar Singh, the first runner-up, was her personal choice. She noted that earlier editions included an onstage independent auditor and expressed interest in restoring that practice. She did not endorse allegations of misconduct. A competition already under scrutiny The 2025 Miss Universe season had drawn major attention even before the dispute. A livestreamed encounter in which Thai pageant figure Nawat Itsaragrisil reprimanded Bosch during a pre-pageant activity led to criticism and a brief walkout by several contestants before Nawat apologized. Separately, Miss Jamaica Gabrielle Henry was hospitalized after falling from the stage during preliminaries, prompting safety questions. Other contestants faced online harassment or political scrutiny, adding to the heightened tension surrounding this year’s competition. Ownership and leadership shifts Miss Universe is co-owned by JKN Global Group of Thailand and Legacy Holding Group USA, each with a 50 percent stake. JKN Global acquired MUO in 2022 and later sold half of its stake to Legacy Holding, whose principal Raúl Rocha Cantú serves as MUO president. In October 2025, MUO announced Mario Búcaro as its new Chief Executive Officer, succeeding Anne Jakapong Jakrajutatip, who stepped down earlier in the year.
https://asianjournal.com/entertainment/miss-universe-leadership-and-ex-judge-in-public-dispute-over-rigging-allegations/

WWE News & Rumor Roundup: Hall of Famer ready for one final run, 4-time World Champion injured, Triple H confirms WarGames match

Welcome to a brand new edition of Sportskeeda Wrestling’s WWE News and Rumor Roundup for 22nd November, 2025.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/wwe/wwe-news-rumor-roundup-hall-famer-ready-one-final-run-4-time-world-champion-injured-triple-h-confirms-wargames-match

The Real Problem With Higher Education And the real engine behind socialism’s resurgence. by Bruce Thornton

The seemingly growing popularity of socialism, and the election of socialist Zohran Mamdani as New York City’s new mayor, have led billionaire Peter Thiel to reprise a 2020 email that explained with “a simple theory” why millennials are attracted to socialism, and down on capitalism. It seems that loads of student loan debt, and exorbitant prices for houses have kept them from achieving the American dream of earlier generations. “If you proletarianize the young people, you shouldn’t be surprised if they eventually become communist,” Thiel told the Free Press. This analysis is superficial and oddly simplistic about what has happened to higher education, which has nothing to do with capitalism “proletarianizing” students–it’s pure bathos, by the way, to describe some of the most privileged young people in history as “proletarians.” For instance, take the complaint about student loans. They were federalized and politicized by Barack Obama, leading to programs and regulations that ignore fiscal responsibility and common sense–the very dysfunctions that created our federal entitlements’ drunken-sailor largess that has led to more and more money spent on entitlements. Indeed, currently we spend more on entitlements than on our military, and on servicing the growing interest on this mountain of debt that will have to be paid for by our grandchildren and their grandchildren. Not even the rapacious demagogues of ancient Athens thought to redistribute the wealth of the unborn. So, how did those students amass so much debt? Aren’t they adults responsible for their bad decisions, including the choice of trendy, useless majors with little value on the job market? Do we think it’s rapacious capitalism’s fault when a spendthrift can’t repay his loan for an expensive car? Or is it justice to strong-arm the dealer to post facto to lower the price, or coerce the bank that loaned the money to reduce the interest rate? But aren’t those adult borrowers the victims of inflated tuition? That’s not capitalism’s fault, given that under Obana student loans create an opportunity for universities with gigantic, tax-free endowments to raise tuition costs and milk the corrupt student loan racket. Making the universities contribute to paying off students’ bloated loans would make more sense and be more just than blaming some cartoon caricature of our free-market economy. The bigger problem with Thiel’s “theory” is that it misses the dysfunctional changes over the last fifty years that have damaged our universities’ legitimate purpose. The cultural Marxist “long march” through the institutions has gradually politicized universities with Marxist ideology, which in turn opened the way for the “higher nonsense”: Postmodernism and poststructuralist ideologies–the idiot bastards of Marx’s malign ideas like “false consciousness” — that have also infected the university with other sophistic ideas such as simplistic, radical materialist determinism and juvenile relativism. All these preposterous ideological sophistries have polluted the universities’ core mission of liberal education–to equip students with free minds and truths necessary for political freedom. They’ve been replaced with the noxious notion that everything we believe is real, good, and true are mere illusory “constructs” serving the plutocratic’ selfish powers of capitalism. The result ensures that the citizenry taught by families, churches, schools, tradition, virtues, and morality, are now trained to believe themselves to be victims of “false consciousness.” And so, rather than free, they believe they are mere dupes conditioned by “the man” to accept the “lie” that capitalism and free markets, merit and hard work, create and distribute wealth more widely and justly than collectivism, redistribution of others’ money, dirigiste economic policies, and the unjust equality of outcome. Postmodern ideology, moreover, adds radical epistemic relativism to this toxic Marxist brew– the lie that meaning, facts, knowledge, truth, rights, morality, even personal identity itself, are mere “constructs,” minions serving the power of those who own and shape the means of production. Their aim is to justify and mystify the oppressive social, political, and economic power and privilege of the capitalist hegemony. And, of course, our universities have demonized Western Civilization with the chimeras of false consciousness now distorting the foundations of Western Civilization–rationalism, our Judeo-Christian inheritance, freedom, equality, and democracy. Our universities have redefined and replaced these foundations with “toxic masculinity,” metastasizing “phobias,” and “white supremacy” –all the seeds of racism, and predatory, genocidal “settler colonialism” and imperialism. We saw the fruits of these big lies on October 7, 2023, in the despicable protests from students in some of our most prestigious universities in support of terrorist murderers of Israelis and Jews. Not just supporting the butchers, but also chanting vile antisemitic, genocidal slogans like “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada,” –a favorite of New York City’s new communist mayor and champion of jihadists. Most damning for our universities is the failure to teach their charges that the Marxism and postmodernism preached in their courses have little or no empirical evidence to support their claims, and few, if any, sound arguments to recommend these ideologies that are internally incoherent. If “truth,” for example, is merely a fable of malign power and its “discourses” that no one can escape, then why should we believe the magical economics of Karl Marx, or the juvenile, epistemic nihilism of Jacques Derrida or Michel Foucault? Aren’t these poststructuralist malignant fads just more “constructs,” an invention of pampered, privileged academic savants sawing off the civilizational branch they’re sitting on? George Orwell knew where such fantasies lead. Speaking of the West and its cultural degeneration into utopian political fantasies, and the failure of civilizational nerve in 1940 after the appeasement of Hitler ignited World War II, Orwell wrote that “for two centuries we had sawed and sawed and sawed at the branch we were sitting on.” But when the branch finally broke, it didn’t land us “in a bed of roses,” but a “cesspit full of barbed wire” –a fitting description of utopian communism and its cesspit of mass slaughter, show trials, and dehumanizing gulags. Finally, the popularity of communism and its knock-down socialism have been influencing our culture and politics for over a century, and left residues in our institutions, culture high and low, and and government that reached its apogee in the presidency of Barak Obama and his ambition to “fundamentally transform the United States.” That sentiment has the ring of Progressive movement that began over a century ago. It was filled with ideas and political ambitions that started with communism and socialism. This movement begat our political Progressivism. Especially influential has been its displeasure with the Constitution and its balanced and divided powers, and unalienable rights codified in the Bill of Rights. President Woodrow Wilson, the academic godfather of the Progressive movement, was vocal about his dislike of the Constitution and its empowerment of ordinary people, instead preferring technocracy and rule not by We the People, but by a “public bureau.” As Wilson wrote, our government needed “a public bureau skilled in economical administration,” one comprising the “hundreds who are wise” given the power to guide and control the thousands who are “selfish, timid, stubborn, or foolish” — a contrast that still defines and separates our two political parties and their policies, administered by bloated, politicized Federal agencies that even with Donald Trump’s pruning are still creating expensive and tyrannical mischief. But we don’t have to go back to the Progressives to see the influence of communism and its baleful effects. In 1976, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in his speech “If One Doesn’t Want to Be Blind,” compared our political culture and ideology to those of Soviet-era Russians who were living through communism’s bloody tyranny: “What we see [in the West] . is still the same [as the Soviet Union]: the universal reverence of adult society for the opinion of children; the feverish infatuation, on the part of many young people, with vanishingly worthless ideas; the timorousness of professors to find themselves outside the latest trends; the failures of journalists to take responsibility for the words they fling so readily; the universal sympathy for revolutionary extremists; the muteness of people with serious objections; the passive defeatism of the majority; the feebleness of governments and the paralysis of society’s defense mechanisms; the spiritual dismay leading to political cataclysm.” Finally, the bacillus of leftism has spread and colonized our institutions for at least a century, making “school loans” and “expensive” houses superfluous, if not irrelevant, for explaining the fad of socialism among our young. If we want to slow down that fad, we should support President Trump’s efforts to reform the corrupt institutions of our universities. Comments are closed.
http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2025/11/22/the-real-problem-with-higher-education-and-the-real-engine-behind-socialisms-resurgence-by-bruce-thornton/

Paul Skenes’ girlfriend Olivia Dunne poses in blue bikini as Jared Jones and fiancée Rylie Fox share steamy ocean kiss

Paul Skenes and Jared Jones are two talented pitchers in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization. On Friday, Dunne posted a snap of herself enjoying the beautiful seaside scenery with warm blue waters and tall hills alongside the Napoli Coast in Kauai, Hawaii. The LSU gymnast, who wore a bright blue bikini, was seated on the edge of a boat/yacht, with her face towards the sun, soaking in its warmth. 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) Unlock Free tips from our Experts Get Picks Now Later in the day, she also shared a heartwarming snap of the “bride & groom” kissing while afloat on the ocean, ahead of the D-Day on Saturday. Jones and Fox have been together since their high school days at La Mirada High School near Los Angeles. The Pirates pitcher declined to go to college, while his future wife chose to study at California State University. The couple had announced their engagement on December 30. Their celebrity couple friends, Dunne and Paul Skenes, were spotted earlier on Friday, relaxing by the poolside in a resort in Kauai. The wedding is also a chance at a vacation for Skenes, who is coming off a National League Cy Young-winning campaign. Upon reaching the US island-state, Dunne had also posted a few snaps from her and Rylie’s time in Kapaa. This is not the first time Dunne has hyped her fellow Pirates WAG. Back in October, the social media influencer had a sweet two-word caption for Jones and Fox’s romantic getaway to Siesta Key, Florida. “I think she’s definitely helped him on the public side of things . whether it’s the social media side of getting visibility and using that platform more,” he said. “Because he’s not really active on it even right now, but he’s more so now than he was even a few years ago.” Dunne and Skenes’ simultaneous rise to success since they started dating at Louisiana State University has made them one of the more recognizable couples in the North American sports bubble.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/baseball/news-paul-skenes-girlfriend-olivia-dunne-poses-blue-bikini-jared-jones-fiancee-rylie-fox-share-steamy-ocean-kiss

Scientists discover what really powers Venus’s wild, planet-encircling winds

Imagine storms fiercer than the strongest hurricanes on Earth, blowing nonstop all the way around an entire planet. This is exactly what happens on Venus, where winds at the cloud tops race around the planet at speeds of more than 100 metres per second. Even more astonishing is that Venus itself rotates very slowly so slowly that one full day on Venus lasts about 243 Earth days. Yet its atmosphere completes a full trip around the planet in just four Earth days. This extreme mismatch is called “superrotation,” and for years scientists have struggled to fully explain it. Now, new research has revealed an important clue: a daily rhythm in Venus’s atmosphere, driven by the heat of the Sun, may be a major force behind these extraordinary winds. The study, led by Lai and colleagues and published in AGU Advances, provides fresh insight into the hidden mechanics of Venus’s atmosphere. Unlike Earth, where the atmosphere generally moves at roughly the same speed as the planet’s surface, Venus’s atmosphere behaves more like a separate, fast-moving system. Researchers suspected that different types of atmospheric waves and circulation patterns were helping drive the superrotation, but it was unclear which ones were most important. To investigate, the research team examined data collected over 16 years by two spacecraft: the European Space Agency’s Venus Express and Japan’s Akatsuki satellite. These spacecraft studied Venus’s atmosphere by measuring how radio waves bent as they passed through its thick clouds, revealing details about temperature, pressure, and motion. In addition, the scientists used a computer model to simulate how Venus’s atmosphere behaves under these extreme conditions. The team focused on something called “thermal tides.” These are large-scale movements of air caused by uneven solar heating. When sunlight warms the dayside of Venus, the heated air rises and sets off waves that travel around the planet. There are two main types of thermal tides on Venus. Diurnal tides follow a once-per-day cycle, while semidiurnal tides repeat twice per day. Past studies suggested the semidiurnal, or twice-daily, tides were mainly responsible for helping push the atmosphere into superrotation. However, this new research paints a different picture. By including data from the planet’s southern hemisphere for the first time, the scientists found that the diurnal, or once-per-day, tides play a much bigger role than previously believed. These diurnal tides help move energy and momentum upward, toward the tops of Venus’s thick cloud layers. This transfer of momentum acts like a global engine, constantly pushing the atmosphere forward and keeping the winds racing around the planet at extreme speeds. Although more research is still needed to fully understand every detail, this discovery significantly changes scientists’ understanding of Venus. It also offers valuable lessons for studying other planets that rotate slowly or orbit close to their stars. Understanding Venus’s atmosphere could even help astronomers interpret weather patterns on distant, Earth-like worlds in other solar systems. Venus may be our closest planetary neighbor, but with its scorching temperatures and furious winds, it remains one of the most mysterious worlds we know. This new finding brings us one important step closer to understanding its alien climate.
https://knowridge.com/2025/11/scientists-discover-what-really-powers-venuss-wild-planet-encircling-winds/

SCHD: Stop Calling It A Value Fund; It’s A Quality Momentum Strategy

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4846856-schd-stop-calling-it-a-value-fund-its-a-quality-momentum-strategy?source=feed_all_articles

USC vs. Oregon projected starting lineup and depth chart for Week 13 | 2025 college football season

The No. 15 USC Trojans will square off against the No. 7 Oregon Ducks in Week 13 of the 2025 college football season on Saturday. The game will kick off at 3: 30 p. m. ET from Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Oregon. Ahead of the USC vs. Oregon game, here’s a look at the projected lineups for both teams. Thanks for the submission! USC vs. Oregon projected starting lineup for Week 13 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) 70% Win (110-25-1) Unlock Free tips from our Experts Get Picks Now USC projected starting lineup Here’s a look at USC’s projected starters on offense vs. Oregon: Here’s a look at USC’s projected starters on defense vs. Oregon: Here’s a look at USC’s projected starters on special teams vs. Oregon: Oregon projected starting lineup Here’s a look at Oregon’s projected starters on offense vs. USC: Here’s a look at Oregon’s projected starters on defense vs. USC: Here’s a look at Oregon’s projected starters on special teams vs. USC: USC vs. Oregon depth chart for Week 13 USC depth chart Here’s a look at USC’s depth chart for its offense: Here’s a look at USC’s depth chart for its defense: Here’s a look at USC’s depth chart for its special teams: Oregon depth chart Here’s a look at Oregon’s depth chart for its offense: Here’s a look at Oregon’s depth chart for its defense: Here’s a look at Oregon’s depth chart for its special teams: How to watch the USC vs. Oregon game? TV channel and live stream details for Week 13 clash The USC vs Oregon clash will be broadcast live on CBS, with Brad Nessler (play-by-play), Gary Danielson (analyst) and Jenny Dell (sideline reporter) on the call. Fans can also live stream the game on Paramount+ or Fubo. Also Read: Tony Pauline’s NFL Mock Draft 1. 0: Arch Manning to NFC North contenders, Garrett Nussmeier swooped by AFC North team, Drew Allar heads to NFC West.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/college-football/usc-vs-oregon-projected-starting-lineup-depth-chart-week-13-2025-college-football-season

I quit JPMorgan and took a 70% pay cut. It was a scary decision, but I finally feel meaningfully busy, not calendar busy.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Meet Semlani, a 33-year-old startup cofounder based in India. It’s been edited for length and clarity. I was two years into my time at JPMorgan when I realized how disillusioned I’d become with my life. It felt robotic. I was following the motto “30 VP,” a phrase I’d heard at the company. It means the goal is to reach vice president status by the age of 30. I’d seen my seniors have these glamorous investment banking careers, so that’s what I thought I was supposed to do. At 26, every day felt the same. I’d be in the office by 9 a. m., go to the same meetings, do the same actions, and leave at 7p. m. During that time, I lost friends and relationships. On a whim, I signed up for a 10-day silent meditation retreat with the intention of taking a digital detox, and came back with the clarity that it was time to quit. My time at JPMorgan shaped my career, but quitting helped me redefine success and eventually raise over $6 million for my startup. I was chasing a goal that wasn’t mine at JP Morgan I started working at JPMorgan in 2015 as an intern on a US visa. Later, I moved back to India and became an associate within the asset management department. I was focused on climbing the corporate ladder. At the same time, I felt like every conversation with coworkers was about having kids, buying a house, paying loans, and planning for the future. But I didn’t see a future for myself at JPMorgan. I had just grown accustomed to the status, validation, and money it provided. I wanted to make a real impact and keep learning, but I was afraid to quit. I had associated my identity with working at JP Morgan If I went to an event and said I worked at JPMorgan, it meant something. People seemed more curious about me when they learned where I worked. I liked the validation and didn’t want to give it up. The idea of leaving a good salary was also a hesitation. I got used to buying the best gadgets and going to nice restaurants. I definitely experienced some lifestyle creep, and I wasn’t sure how I’d maintain my habits without that salary. I knew I needed a break from work I had no idea what to expect going into the meditation retreat. There were no screens, no talking, just breathing. The first few days felt depressing, but when I really settled into the meditation, it gave me space to question everything. I asked myself, “Do I really want to live like this? Is this how I want to be known?” The answer was no. I questioned what’s the worst that could happen if I left JPMorgan, and kept coming back to the idea that, no matter what happens, at least I’m not dead. When I returned home, I felt a sense of calm and a knowingness that I was ready to let go of my job. I didn’t know what was next for me, but I knew it was time to forge a new identity. The day I returned to work, I told my manager I was thinking about quitting. I ultimately stayed a few more months, until February 2018, to hand over my work as smoothly as possible and ensure the team wouldn’t be negatively impacted. I took a 70% pay cut to work for a startup that fulfilled me I was living with my parents rent-free at the time, but I still had some expenses. That’s when I began looking into startups. I applied to some jobs and ultimately got hired as a customer service associate at a startup. I really resonated with its mission of helping international students go abroad through scholarships, loans, or grants, because of my shared experience as an international student, which motivated me to take a 70% pay cut from JPMorgan. I had to scale down on a lot of things I was doing before, like eating out at nice restaurants and traveling, which was tough. There were even moments where I considered going back to JPMorgan because of it, but I’m so glad I stayed. The learning and access I had in a startup environment were unbeatable Being able to grab coffee with the CEO, share ideas, and see decisions happen in real time changed me. It was a real startup hustle, and I was actually building things, not just attending meetings. I felt meaningfully busy, not just calendar busy. That’s when it clicked for me that success isn’t only about money or titles. If I focused on becoming truly competent and useful, the success and money would eventually find their way. In late 2019, the startup was having fundraising issues, and I was asked to leave. It came as a bit of a shock, and I felt like I hit a professional roadblock. I thought about going back to a secure role at a place like JPMorgan, but I realized I wouldn’t fit into a structured setup again. The pandemic hit shortly after, and oddly, it gave me time to explore ideas. I decided to go all in on my startup idea as a cofounder. Leaving JP Morgan helped me redefine success The early days of fundraising and building were hard. There was a point in time about six months in where I went to bed crying every day, thinking, “When will this end?” But I’d wake up the next morning and remember that this is what I signed up for. This is what I wanted to do. Since then, our startup has raised over $6 million from global investors and we’ve built Tartan into a leading data-infrastructure platform. I still feel like JPMorgan was an integral part of my career. It shaped me into becoming disciplined and structured. Sometimes I think about what my life would be like if I stayed there. I’d probably be a managing director with a corner office, but that’s not what success looks like to me anymore. These days, success isn’t about title, big paychecks, or nice things. It’s not even about chasing a goal 10 years down the line. It’s about what keeps me going every day. If I’m waking up in the morning smiling and going to sleep smiling, I think I’m good. Do you have a story to share about taking a risky or unconventional career pivot? If so, please reach out to this reporter at tmartinelli@businessinsider. com.
https://www.businessinsider.com/quitting-jpmorgan-risky-move-helped-launch-startup-redefine-success-2025-11

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