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The Manhattan Institute’s Mark Mills and InOrbis CEO Rosario Fortugno debate the resolution, “Between now and 2035, electric vehicles in the consumer market will disappoint environmentalists by remaining a product bought mainly by the well-heeled minority.”

Taking the affirmative is Mills, a Manhattan Institute senior fellow, a faculty fellow at Northwestern University’s engineering school, and a partner in Montrose Lane, an energy-tech venture fund. He is author of the book The Cloud Revolution: How the Convergence of New Technologies Will Unleash the Next Economic Boom and a Roaring 2020s.

Taking the negative is Fortugno, the CEO of InOrbis, a company that works to develop technologies for electric vehicle fleet management, autonomous vehicles, and machine learning. He blogs at ApplyingAI.comon the topics of free markets, electric vehicle adoption, and the benefits of artificial intelligence.

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Crypto funds see $223M outflow, ending 15-week streak as Fed dampens sentiment

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Crypto funds see 3M outflow, ending 15-week streak as Fed dampens sentiment

Crypto funds see 3M outflow, ending 15-week streak as Fed dampens sentiment

Profit-taking broke a 15-week winning streak of global cryptocurrency ETPs last week after hawkish remarks that followed last week’s US Fed rate decision.

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ECB: Cash is ‘here to stay’ even as digital euro advances

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ECB: Cash is ‘here to stay’ even as digital euro advances

ECB: Cash is ‘here to stay’ even as digital euro advances

ECB Executive Board member Piero Cipollone said that a digital euro will not replace physical money but complement it to preserve payment autonomy.

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White House crypto rules bring SEC-CFTC clarity for US crypto firms: Lawyer

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White House crypto rules bring SEC-CFTC clarity for US crypto firms: Lawyer

White House crypto rules bring SEC-CFTC clarity for US crypto firms: Lawyer

Carving out clear jurisdictions for the SEC and CFTC may ease investor concerns over ambiguous securities laws.

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