Nonsense on stilts: Difference between revisions
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In these pages we refer to the creative contortions of [[U.S. Attorney]]s to achieve elliptically things the common law is perfectly able to achieve directly, in terms first used by Jeremy Bentham. Stiltish things preferred by our American friends: | In these pages we refer to the creative contortions of [[U.S. Attorney]]s to achieve elliptically things the common law is perfectly able to achieve directly, in terms first used by Jeremy Bentham. Stiltish things preferred by our American friends: | ||
*[[Rehypothecation]] | *[[Rehypothecation]] | ||
*[[Bright line | *[[Bright line test]] | ||
*[[Smart beta]] | *[[Smart beta]] | ||
*[[Merger of debt]] | *[[Merger of debt]] |
Latest revision as of 13:21, 16 June 2023
Office anthropology™
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Nonsense on stilts
/ˈnɒnsəns ɒn stɪlts/ (n.)
“A bright line test is simple nonsense: rehypothecation of pledged securities, rhetorical nonsense — nonsense upon stilts.” — Jeremy Bentham
In these pages we refer to the creative contortions of U.S. Attorneys to achieve elliptically things the common law is perfectly able to achieve directly, in terms first used by Jeremy Bentham. Stiltish things preferred by our American friends: