Laughing@Data.Com: Hilarious Heresy Against the Hype Machine – Book Review


Lila de Alba

In the digital colosseum where data evangelists duel with dashboards and AI prophets peddle predictive panaceas, Martyn Jones arrives not with a sword, but a seltzer bottle. His latest tome, Laughing@Data.Com (self-published, 2025), is a riotous romp through the absurdities of the IT industry, a book that skewers the sacred cows of big data, machine learning, and that perennial favorite, “digital transformation,” with the precision of a Welsh coal miner’s pickaxe. Jones, a grizzled data architect who’s consulted for everyone from Adidas to the UN (and survived to tell the tale), channels the spirit of Swiftian satire into a manifesto that’s equal parts Wired’s gadget glee, CIO’s boardroom battle cry, and FT Weekend’s urbane eyebrow-raise. If Dave Trott’s advertising yarns met Stewart Lee’s stand-up scorn in a Zurich banker’s lounge, this would be the offspring: witty, worldly, and wonderfully wicked.

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Revealing Wealth: A Blueprint for Financial Transparency – Book Review

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By Samantha Sterling Parker, Spanish FT Weekend

Madrid, Monday 9th March 2026

To say that Martyn Jones’s Revealing Wealth is merely a book about tax evasion is like saying the Large Hadron Collider is just a fancy pipe. This is a manifesto for a digital revolution, a technical blueprint for global equity, and a provocative call to arms that arrives just as the old financial order begins to crack.

Below is a look at this seminal work through three distinct editorial lenses.

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IT’S POLITICS: Uncovering Tax Evasion: Insights from ‘Revealing Wealth’ – Book Review

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By Samantha Sterling Parker, Long FT Weekend

Madrid, Monday 9th March 2026

Book Review: Revealing Wealth: Combatting Tax Evasion with Data, Political Will and Technology by Martyn Jones

In an age defined by algorithms, trillion-dollar tech companies, and data flowing across borders at the speed of light, one of the oldest problems in civilisation persists: how the wealthy avoid paying their share of tax. In Revealing Wealth, Martyn Jones argues that the real scandal is not simply that tax evasion exists, but that in a data-rich world we still allow it to thrive.

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Revealing Wealth: A Data-Driven Crusade Against Tax Evasion – Book Review


By Melanie Rodham Jenkins

Reviewed by Afilonius Rex, for FT Weekend

Madrid, Monday 9th March 2026

In an era when wealth inequality feels like an intractable virus, Martyn Jones’s Revealing Wealth: Combatting Tax Evasion with Data, Political Will and Technology arrives as a potent antidote – or at least a blueprint for one. Published in 2025, this ambitious tome blends technical savvy with moral urgency, proposing a global “World Asset Register” (WAR) to unmask hidden fortunes. Jones, a data architecture veteran once hailed as one of the world’s top information experts, teams up with his alter ego, Afilonius Rex – a pseudonym for a collective of contrarian thinkers – to argue that technology can pierce the veil of offshore secrecy. But as Gillian Tett might observe, drawing from her anthropological lens on finance, this isn’t just about algorithms and databases; it’s about the cultural rituals of power, where the ultra-rich perform elaborate dances to evade civic duty, leaving the rest of us footing the bill.

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IT’S POLITICS: Echoes from the Past: Historical Voices on Trump, MAGA, and the Shadow Over the West


History has a peculiar habit of clearing its throat at inconvenient moments. Unfortunately, the present tends to respond by turning up the volume on cable news.

In an age where political discourse is conducted through rallies, retweets, and the occasional midnight proclamation on social media, one cannot help but wonder what the great minds of earlier centuries might make of it all. The phenomenon surrounding Donald Trump and the rallying cry of Make America Great Again (MAGA) has spilt far beyond the borders of the United States, casting a long and argumentative shadow across Europe and the broader international order. Nationalism, isolationism, suspicion of alliances, and the rhetorical targeting of those deemed “other” are hardly new ideas, but like vintage fashions and bad moustaches, they have returned with startling enthusiasm.

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IT’S POLITICS: Trump’s Digital Assault on Europe


Trump’s Digital Assault: How the Far-Right Weaponises Social Media to Wage War on Europe and Democracy

By Elena Vasquez

The Guardian Angle, 9 March 2026

In the shadow of Trump’s second term, a toxic alliance between far-right extremism and social media algorithms is accelerating the erosion of democracy, not just in America, but across Europe. As recent analyses reveal, this isn’t mere happenstance; it’s a calculated siege on rational discourse, institutional trust, and transatlantic solidarity. Drawing from three incisive critiques on social media’s suppression of intellectual rigour, the extreme right’s manipulative tactics online, and Trump’s undeclared economic and military aggression against Europe, we can forge a clear antithesis to the far-right’s “free speech” facade and synthesise a roadmap for resistance. The stakes? Nothing less than reclaiming democracy from digital vermin.

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IT’S POLITICS: Trump’s Undeclared War on Europe – Radio Debate


Radio Debate: Trump’s Undeclared War on Europe

Martyn Jones (Moderator): Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining this special extended edition of Global Echoes on March 8, 2026. Tonight, we’re taking a thorough, step-by-step look at what has come to be known as “Trump’s Undeclared War on Europe.” This isn’t hyperbole; it’s a phrase that’s gaining traction as we see the real-world fallout from recent U.S. actions. Just over a month ago, on January 3, U.S. forces launched Operation Absolute Resolve in Venezuela, capturing President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores in a dramatic raid on Caracas. They were flown to the U.S. to face charges related to narco-terrorism and drug trafficking. President Trump announced that the United States would essentially “run” Venezuela during a transition period, with Vice President Delcy Rodríguez stepping in as acting leader. Celebrations erupted in some places, protests in others, but the core issue seems tied to Venezuela’s vast oil reserves and giving American companies like Exxon and Chevron greater control.

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IT’S POLITICS: The Digital Assault on Europe

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Kensington, Sunday 8th March 2026

The internet was supposed to be a glorious democratising force, connecting people, spreading ideas, and letting truth shine through. Instead, it has become a glittering weapon in the hands of the extreme right, twisting platforms into tools that erode rational thought, fair elections, and basic decency. This is no accident. It is a deliberate, sophisticated playbook designed to undermine democracy while hiding behind memes, outrage, and “free speech” rhetoric.

Here are ten key ways the far right manipulates social media to push anti-democratic behaviour, each one more insidious than the last.

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