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Nati Harnik / AP

Warren Buffett, 86, gave a master class during Q&A yesterday at Berkshire Hathaway's annual meeting ("Woodstock for Capitalists"), which drew 30,000 devotees to CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska:

  • On declining U.S. manufacturing: "Nobody should be roadkill ... Greater productivity will benefit the world in a general way, but to be roadkill, to be the textile worker in New Bedford [is painful] ... It would be no fun to go through life and say: I'm doing this for the greater good, and so that shoes or underwear was all for 5 percent less."
  • On cyber attacks: "the number one problem [for] mankind."
  • On not investing in Google: "I blew it."
  • On Amazon's Jeff Bezos, and his success in both e-tailing and cloud computing: "the most remarkable business person of our age ... I've never seen a guy succeed in two businesses almost simultaneously that are really quite divergent in terms of customers and all the operations."
  • On the House health-care plan, which would repeal added taxes on payroll and investment income for high earners: "It is a huge tax cut for guys like me."
  • On managing employees: "We count very heavily on principles of behavior rather than loads of rules."

P.S. Lead story of The (London) Sunday Times, "Brexit brings bonanza for billionaires" (paywall): "[W]ealthy individuals have benefited from the weaker pound since Britain voted for Brexit, boosting the sterling value of their overseas investments."

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Go deeper

Dave Lawler, author of World
2 hours ago - World

U.S. and Europe head in opposite coronavirus directions

Expand chart
Data: Our World in Data; Chart: Naema Ahmed/Axios

While the U.S. continues to set records for new coronavirus cases, European countries have managed to turn their own terrifying spikes around.

The big picture: As some states in the U.S. crack down to head off the worst, the debate in countries like the U.K. and France has shifted to whether and how to lighten their own restrictions before the holidays.

11 hours ago - World

Microwave energy likely behind illnesses of American diplomats in Cuba and China

Personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Cuba in Havana in 2017, after the State Department announced plans to halve the embassy's staff following mysterious health problems affecting over 20 people associated with the U.S. embassy. Photo: Sven Creutzmann/Mambo photo/Getty Images

A radiofrequency energy of radiation that includes microwaves likely caused American diplomats in China and Cuba to fall ill with neurological symptoms over the past four years, a report published Saturday finds.

Why it matters: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine's report doesn't attribute blame for the suspected attacks, but it notes there "was significant research in Russia/USSR into the effects of pulsed, rather than continuous wave [radiofrequency] exposures."

14 hours ago - Politics & Policy

Georgia governor declines Trump's request to help overturn election result

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp pushed back on Saturday after President Trump pressed him to help overturn the state's election results.

Driving the news: Trump asked the Republican governor over the phone Saturday to call a special legislative session aimed at overturning the presidential election results in Georgia, per the Washington Post. Kemp refused.