this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2024
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Improve The News

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Improve The News is a free news aggregator and news analysis site developed by a group of researchers at MIT and elsewhere to improve your access to trustworthy news. Many website algorithms push you (for ad revenue) into a filter bubble by reinforcing the narratives you impulse-click on. By understanding other people’s arguments, you understand why they do what they do – and have a better chance of persuading them. **What's establishment bias?** The establishment view is what all big parties and powers agree on, which varies between countries and over time. For example, the old establishment view that women shouldn’t be allowed to vote was successfully challenged. ITN makes it easy for you to compare the perspectives of the pro-establishment mainstream media with those of smaller establishment-critical news outlets that you won’t find in most other news aggregators. This Magazine/Community is not affiliated with Improve The News and is an unofficial repository of the information posted there.


**LR (left/right): 1 = left leaning, 3 = neutral, 5 = right leaning** **CP (critical/pro-establishment): 1 = critical, 3 = neutral, 5 = pro**

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  • Truong My Lan, the Chairwoman of Vietnamese real estate development company Van Thinh Phat, has been sentenced to death by a Ho Chi Minh City jury on charges of stealing $44B from the Saigon Commercial Bank for over a decade. barrons.com
  • Truong, 67, is accused of fraudulently taking out loans from the bank over 11 years. Prosecutors said she had her driver withdraw more than $4B in cash over three years and store it in her basement, an amount that could weigh two tons. BBC News (LR: 3 CP: 5)
  • She's also accused of committing bribery and violating banking rules, with the total amount embezzled estimated at $12.5B. However, prosecutors have calculated damages as an estimated $27B. Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)
  • The crime that Truong was sentenced to death was embezzlement between 2018 and 2022, though she was sentenced to 20 years for each of her other two crimes — bribery and banking violations. New York Times (LR: 2 CP: 5)
  • Her bank shares were found to be criminal as Vietnamese law only allows individuals to own up to 5%, and she owned over 90%. According to prosecutors, she used hundreds of shell companies and people as her proxies to circumvent the rule. BBC News (LR: 3 CP: 5)
  • This is the latest verdict among thousands of corruption cases since 2021, led by Communist Party leader Nguyen Phu Trong. Former Pres. Vo Von Thuong was convicted last month of "violations and flaws" that "negatively affected public perception." Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)

Narrative A:

  • Vietnam is known for conducting show trials, but the amount of detailed effort prosecutors put into this case shows it may be different this time around. Truong, whose ancestry dates back to Saigon before the Communist government's economic crackdown, has been growing her portfolio for decades, from selling cosmetics to purchasing real estate. She may very well have been trying to bypass the government's strict rules on wealth.
    THE SUN

Narrative B:

  • While Vietnam may prosecute some real criminals here and there, its overall anti-corruption agenda appears to be aimed at ousting political rivals and stifling normal business practices. Government officials, for instance, are, out of pure fear of being charged with corruption, refusing to approve investments and thus leaving public programs in limbo. By inhibiting business deals, the ruling party is kneecapping its own state-run economic goals.
    INVESTMENT MONITOR

Nerd narrative:

  • There's a 5% chance that Vietnam will experience a coup d'etat before 2040, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
    METACULUS (LR: 3 CP: 3)
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