Neil Malhotra
nmalhotra.bsky.social
Neil Malhotra
@nmalhotra.bsky.social

Edith M. Cornell Professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Opinions my own.

Neil Malhotra is an American political economist. He is the Edith M. Cornell Professor of Political Economy in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University, where he is also the Louise and Claude N. Rosenbrg, Jr. Director of the Center for Social Innovation. He studies the politics of the United States, survey methodology, and voter behavior in elections, including work on retrospective voting and disaster preparedness and relief politics. .. more

Political science 48%
Sociology 19%

Reposted by Neil Malhotra

Reposted by Clayton Nall

Reposted by Neil Malhotra

Dear NFT investors: so sorry you lost everything. But fear not, there’s a road to recovery. Using equitable jurisprudence-based ex parte preferred claims, we can help you recover with the legal blockchain. Wire or cash only. $999 per share in the recovery fund. Results are prima facie vel non!
There are 14 BILLIONAIRES that are part of the second Trump administration

Reposted by Neil Malhotra

I’ve been getting a lot of calls over the past few days, and the interesting thing is none of them are about Donald Trump. They’re all about Elon Musk. My constituents, and a majority of this country, put Trump in the White House, not this unelected, weirdo billionaire.

Reposted by Neil Malhotra

Tab soda, NARS lip pencils and more.

There’s a thriving online market for discontinued products that fans are willing to pay dearly for. Here's a look into what customers are hitting up eBay and other resale sites to find.
When They Stop Selling Your Favorite Thing
Shoppers are going online to pay dearly for discontinued items, from the perfect lip pencil to Tab.
www.nytimes.com

Reposted by Neil Malhotra

“What if the UAW are right about what is good for them?” would be a lot more convincing if they were not cheering on the destruction of the industry they work in. We’re capable of recognizing CEOs as economically irrational, unions can be too.

Reposted by Neil Malhotra