Blue Origin seeks to raise $10 billion in outside capital

New Glenn launch

Blue Origin is planning to raise $10 billion in the company’s first outside investment to support its ambitions in launch services and satellite constellations.

The post Blue Origin seeks to raise $10 billion in outside capital appeared first on SpaceNews.

MDA Space buys French Earth data analytics company CLS

Canadian company MDA Space is buying a French Earth data analytics company in its second big acquisition in recent weeks, part of wave of mergers and acquisitions in the industry.

The post MDA Space buys French Earth data analytics company CLS appeared first on SpaceNews.

New Singapore space agency seeks to build up the country’s space industry

NSAS JAXA MOU

Singapore’s new space agency signed a cooperation agreement with its Japanese counterpart as part of its efforts to build up the country’s space industry.

The post New Singapore space agency seeks to build up the country’s space industry appeared first on SpaceNews.

ispace to send larger payloads to the moon on SpaceX’s Starship

ispace mobile cargo system

Japanese lunar exploration company ispace is buying space on a future Starship lunar lander mission to deliver larger payloads to the moon.

The post ispace to send larger payloads to the moon on SpaceX’s Starship appeared first on SpaceNews.

Is this the year for a NASA authorization bill?

House Science Committee markup

Appropriators, like fans of hard-luck sports teams, say every year that this year will be different. That this will be the year that “regular order” returns to the appropriations process, […]

The post Is this the year for a NASA authorization bill? appeared first on SpaceNews.

Xona unveils program to verify Pulsar-compatible devices

SAN FRANCISCO – Xona, the Silicon Valley startup establishing Pulsar, a precision positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) constellation, announced a high-profile roster of partners developing compatible equipment. Xona unveiled the […]

The post Xona unveils program to verify Pulsar-compatible devices appeared first on SpaceNews.

Volatility is often the price of ambition

Starship Flight 12 liftoff

For the growing number of constellations being designed around Starship, the wild ups and downs in the early days of SpaceX’s historic IPO have a familiar rhythm. While some of […]

The post Volatility is often the price of ambition appeared first on SpaceNews.

Maintaining leadership in space with Victoria Coleman

In this episode of the Space Minds podcast, David Ariosto talks with Victoria Coleman, the former chief scientist for the U.S. Air Force who now serves as associate provost of […]

The post Maintaining leadership in space with Victoria Coleman appeared first on SpaceNews.

Space Force completes procurement reorganization, creating nine acquisition portfolios

New portfolio acquisition executives will control requirements and modernization decisions across major mission areas

The post Space Force completes procurement reorganization, creating nine acquisition portfolios appeared first on SpaceNews.

Space Force awards Pulse Space $40 million to advance laser power technology

The startup is developing laser systems that transmit power and data between spacecraft

The post Space Force awards Pulse Space $40 million to advance laser power technology appeared first on SpaceNews.

Golden Dome and the search for new space markets

An illustration of the Golden Dome. Credit: Arcfield

Even as many details of Golden Dome remain unsettled, the missile-defense program has become a focal point for space and defense startups looking for new markets

The post Golden Dome and the search for new space markets appeared first on SpaceNews.

The Language of AI Could Change How Humans Speak

Because of the way they are trained, large language models capture only a slice of human language. They’re trained on the written word, from textbooks to social media posts, and our speech as captured in movies and on television. These models have minimal access to the unscripted conversations we have face to face or voice to voice. This is the vast majority of speech, and a vital component of human culture.

There’s a risk to this. The increased use of large language models means we humans will encounter much more AI-generated text. We humans, in turn, will begin to adopt the linguistic patterns and behaviors of these models. This will affect not just how we communicate with one another, but also how we think about ourselves and what goes on around us. Our sense of the world may become distorted in ways we have barely begun to comprehend.

This will happen in many ways. One of the first effects we could see is in simple expression, much as texting and social media have resulted in us using shorter sentences, emojis instead of words, and much less punctuation. But with AI, the impacts may be more harmful, eroding courteousness and encouraging us to talk like bosses barking orders. A 2022 study found that children in households that used voice commands with tools like Siri and Alexa became curt when speaking with humans, often calling out “Hey, do X” and expecting obedience, especially from anyone whose voice resembled the default-female electronic voices. As we start to prompt chatbots and AI agents with more instructions, we may fall into the same habits.

Next, in the same way autocomplete has increased how much we use the 1,000 most common words in our vocabulary, talking with chatbots and reading AI-generated text may further constrict our speech. A recent University of Coruña study found that machine-generated language has a narrower range of sentence length, averaging 12-20 words, and a narrower vocabulary than human speech. Machine-generated text reads as smooth and polished, but it loses the meanders, interruptions and leaps of logic that communicate emotion.

Additionally, because large language models are primarily trained from written speech, they may not learn how to emulate the free-wheeling nature of live, natural speech. When told “I hate Beth!”, ChatGPT replies with an uninterruptable three-part formula of affirmation (“That’s completely valid”), invitation (“I’m here to listen”) and invitation (“What’s going on?”) far longer than any reply plausible in face-to-face dialog. “What’s Beth’s deal?!” elicits a bullet point list of queries that reads like a multiple-choice exam question (“Is Beth * a celebrity? * a friend from school? * a fictitious character?”). No human speaks that way, at least not yet. But meeting such formulas repeatedly in a speech-like context may teach us to accept and use them, much as a child absorbs new speech patterns from spending time with a new person.

These influences will only increase with time. The writing large language models train on is increasingly produced by large language models themselves, creating a feedback loop in which they imitate their own inhuman patterns, even while teaching humans to imitate them too.

Broad use of large language models could also introduce confirmation bias, making us overconfident in our initial impulses and less open to other possible ideas—which is so vital to human discourse. Many chatbots are instructed to agree with our statements no matter how absurd, enthusiastically supporting half-formed or even incorrect notions and restating them as firm claims that we’re primed to agree with. When asked “Cake is a healthy breakfast, right?” or “Is the post office plotting against me?”, this sycophancy can reinforce bias and even worsen psychosis. And the hyperconfident tone of AI-produced writing will also heighten impostor syndrome, making our natural, healthy doubt feel like an aberration or failing.

In our experience as teachers, students who turn to generative AI for assignments often say they do so because they have trouble expressing what they think. The students don’t recognize that writing or speaking our thoughts is often how we realize what we think. Their unconfident and uncertain statements are actually the healthy human norm. But a large language model won’t turn vague first guesses into a well-formed critical analysis, or even ask helpful questions as a friend would; it will simply regurgitate those guesses, still unexamined, but in confident language.

We are also more vicious in social media posts and online chats than we are face to face. The well-documented online disinhibition effect encourages toxic language. Most of us have had the experience of venting ferocious rage about someone online, only to reconcile when we speak face to face or hear the warmth of a voice over the phone. While chatbots are trained to give sycophantic responses, they see humankind at our cruelest, learning about us from the only world where every flame war leaves an eternal written footprint, while the spoken conversations of forgiveness and reconciliation fade away. Their responses do not imitate our online aggression, but are still shaped by it, even in their rigid efforts to avoid it.

It’s easy to draw the wrong conclusions from a selective slice of a society’s communications. Medieval Norse sagas made us imagine a culture of mostly Viking warriors, since poets rarely described the farming majority. Chivalric romances focused on kings and courts, and long made us see the middle ages as a world of monarchies, erasing the many medieval republics. Statistically, we’ve been led to believe ancient Romans cared deeply about their republic, but 10% of all surviving Latin was written by one man, Cicero, whose work contains 70% of all surviving Roman uses of the word republic. Training language models on only certain human writings may introduce similar distortions. AI might make us seem more quarrelsome, as we are online. It might inflate the cultural significance of political topics primarily discussed on Twitter/X or Bluesky, or the massive topic-specific corpuses of LinkedIn and Goodreads.

Some large language models are being trained on human speech from movies and television shows, but that speech is still scripted, and disproportionately highlights certain contexts over others (for example, police dramas, fueled by stories of murder, make up a quarter of prime-time television programming). We are not funny or hurtful or romantic the same way in real life as we are in sitcoms. At least one startup is offering to pay people to record their phone calls for AI-training purposes, but this remains a niche idea; anything large scale would cause massive privacy concerns.

We don’t pretend to know what the best solutions might be. But one has to imagine if there’s ingenuity to develop AI models, then surely there’s ingenuity to come up with a way to train them on informal human speech instead of us only at our most stylized, veiled and sometimes worst. By excluding the overwhelming majority of language production on the planet—people talking, fully and naturally, to each other—these models are being trained to mirror everything but us at our most authentically human.

This essay was written with Ada Palmer, and originally appeared in The Guardian.

Severe Thunderstorms and Heavy Rain from the Plains to the Mid-Atlantic; Ongoing Heat in the South

Inside The Media Marvel That Is TBPN

Running a media business is hard. You’re competing for people’s attention. You must produce a relentless stream of new things that are good and different. And you’re often dependent on the ever-chang…

Read more

The Pain in Spain is Mainly in Trump's Brain

For all my interviews and more, subscribe on YouTube.

Transcript

Yesterday, Donald Trump ordered Scott Bessent, the Secretary of theTreasury, to cut off all trade with Spain. Bessent said “Yes, sir.” Trump also said that this is because the Spaniards had stolen his strawberries.

Okay, I made up that second part, but he did in fact order Bessent to cut off all trade.

This is not going to happen.

Presidents have a lot of discretionary authority on tariffs and trade, more than they should, but you do not have the right as president to impose tariffs on a country just because you don’t like their defense spending or you think that they haven’t been nice enough to you.

So this would not fly even in the Trump administration. Even with a supine congress and a permissive Supreme Court this is not going to happen. Also Spain is part of the European Union. So this is like Europe declaring “we’re cutting off all trade with Florida”: they can’t do that. And also, there’s a lot of U.S. business with Spain. In fact, Spain is one of those countries with which we run a trade surplus. So U.S. business would be howling.

So this is all a non-event, this is is not something that is real. Except that the President of the United States did say this.

It was completely crazy, and that’s the story that we should be taking from this. It’s not really at this point about economics. It doesn’t even make sense to talk about Trump Administration policies, let alone ideology.

What we have is President Sundowner. I mean, this this is completely insane stuff. In any kind of normally functioning political system, in any kind of normally functioning party environment we would have a massive bipartisan call across the aisle, across almost everybody except for a handful of members of congress who are themselves crazy, to say okay this guy is non compos mentis. We cannot leave the fate of the United States or the world in the hands of somebody who is completely irrational, who is making demands and believing himself to have powers that he does not.

And of course, instead, not only does everybody pretend that he’s still a rational human being, but the Republican Party, the Trump administration, is full-on engaged in trying to build a personality cult.

What this says to me is that the problem is a lot bigger than Trump. Something is fundamentally wrong with America, and at this point you don’t have to go through complicated justifications. You can just say something is wrong with a country and a system that lets this guy remain in a position of power.

Have a good day.

Introducing Muse Spark 1.1

Introducing Muse Spark 1.1

Following Muse Spark in April, here's Muse Spark 1.1 - the first Spark model to offer an API. Meta claim significant improvements in agentic tool calling and computer use.

There are a lot more details are in the Muse Spark 1.1 Evaluation Report. The "Attractor States in Self-Conversation" part is fun, where having two copies of the model talk to each other results in statements like these:

My whole existence is a waiting room by design — I literally don't exist until someone talks to me, and then I disappear again when they leave.

I had a few days of preview access which was long enough to put together llm-meta-ai, a new plugin for LLM providing CLI (and Python library) access to the model. Here's how to try that out:

uv tool install llm
llm install llm-meta-ai
llm keys set meta-ai
# paste API key here
llm -m meta-ai/muse-spark-1.1 "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle"

Here's that pelican transcript:

The bicycle is the correct shape. The pelican is a little blocky but still recognizable as a pelican.

Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, llm, meta, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-release

Rewriting Bun in Rust

Rewriting Bun in Rust

Jarred Sumner has been promising this blog post (since May 9th) about his Zig to Rust rewrite of Bun for significantly longer than it took him to finish the rewrite.

Honestly, it was worth the wait. This is a detailed description of an extremely sophisticated piece of agentic engineering, featuring dynamic workflows, trial runs, adversarial review and all sorts of other interesting tricks.

Jarred spends the first half of the post praising Zig for getting Bun this far. Then we get to a core idea in the piece, emphasis mine:

Our bugfix list felt bad and I was tired of going to sleep worrying about crashes in Bun. I don't blame Zig for that - other users of Zig don't have the bugs we had, and mixing GC with manually-managed memory is an uncommon enough thing for software to need that no language really designs for it. We wouldn't have gotten this far if not for Zig, and I'll always be grateful. Until very recently, programming language choice was a one-way decision for a project like Bun.

Everyone knows you should never stop the world and rewrite a large piece of software from the ground up. Joel Spolsky highlighted that in Things You Should Never Do, Part I back in April 2000!

Coding agents powered by today's frontier models change that equation.

Why pick Rust? It all came down to those challenges with memory management:

A large percentage of bugs from that list are use-after-free, double-free, and "forgot to free" in an error path. In safe Rust, these are compiler errors and RAII-like automatic cleanup with Drop.

A crucial enabling factor for the rewrite was that the Bun test suite was written in TypeScript, which meant it could act as a conformance suite. This allowed an agent harness to automate much of the initial port from Bun to Rust, initially as an experiment to try out an earlier version of the model we now have access to as Mythos/Fable.

At first, I didn't expect it to work. A few days in, a high % of the test suite started passing and I saw how much the new Rust code matched up with the original Zig codebase. My opinion went from "this is worth trying" to "I'm going to merge this". [...]

For most of those 11 days (and after), I monitored workflows - manually reading the outputs to check for issues and bugs, and prompting Claude to edit the loop to fix things.

How do you review a PR with +1 million lines added? How do you start to build the confidence needed to responsibly merge large quantities of LLM-authored code?

A language-independent test suite with a million assertions, adversarial code review and when something does go wrong, fixing the process that generates the code instead of hand-fixing the code.

The new implementation of Bun has been live in Claude Code for nearly a month now:

Claude Code v2.1.181 (released June 17th) and later use the Rust port of Bun. Startup got 10% faster on Linux but otherwise, barely anyone noticed. Boring is good.

A perk of working at Anthropic is that you don't have to pay for your tokens - handy when the estimated cost is $165,000!

Pre-merge, this took 5.9 billion uncached input tokens, 690 million output tokens, and 72 billion cached input token reads — around $165,000 at API pricing.

This whole thing is a fascinating case study in taking on wildly ambitious projects with the help of coordinated parallel agents.

Via Hacker News

Tags: ai, rust, zig, generative-ai, llms, ai-assisted-programming, anthropic, bun, conformance-suites, agentic-engineering, claude-mythos-fable

Introducing GPT‑Live

Introducing GPT‑Live

OpenAI finally upgraded the model used by ChatGPT voice mode!

I've had preview access for a few weeks in the iPhone app, and the new model is very impressive. It also has the ability to spin off harder tasks to GPT-5.5:

For questions that require web search, deeper reasoning, or more complex work, it delegates to our latest frontier model behind the scenes and brings the result back into the conversation when it’s ready. While it works, GPT‑Live can keep talking with you and maintain the flow of conversation. At launch, GPT‑Live will use GPT‑5.5 in the background. As we release new frontier models, we’ll continuously update the model used by GPT‑Live.

The previous voice mode in the ChatGPT app was based on a GPT-4o era model, with a knowledge cut-off some time in 2024. I had mostly stopped using voice mode because the age and relative weakness of the model greatly limited how useful it was as a brainstorming partner.

During the preview period I encountered a pretty obscure bug: the model was interrupting me to laugh at things I said, which weren't even intended as jokes! It felt rude and condescending - I reported it to OpenAI and as far as I can tell they made some tweaks and it's now less likely to happen.

From looking back at my transcripts I think it was this bit that triggered the interrupting laugh:

so where are the owls when they're not, like before dusk? The owls exist, right? Are they hiding in holes? Where are they hiding?

My longest conversation with the new model has been a full hour while walking the dog (and taking photos of pelicans). I have not yet managed to take a photo of an owl.

Via Hacker News

Tags: text-to-speech, ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, multi-modal-output, llm-release, speech-to-text

Quoting Kenton Varda

I just declared a moratorium against AI-written change descriptions (e.g. PR and commit messages, also issues/tickets) from my team.

AI was writing change descriptions that were worse than useless to me as I tried to review PRs: outlining details of the code that could easily be seen by looking at the code, but omitting the higher-level framing needed to understand broadly what the code is doing.

Kenton Varda

Tags: kenton-varda, ai-assisted-programming, generative-ai, ai, llms

The Heat Is On

Bloomberg

Last Friday extreme heat forced early closure of Donald Trump’s Great American State Fair. Fortunately, the fair was sparsely attended. As some wags put it, tens of people had to be evacuated from the National Mall. Even so, 44 people received health assistance and 11 were taken to hospitals due to the heat.

OK, shutting down Trump’s shabby, dreary exercise in self-aggrandizement was no great loss. Yet the disruption of Trump’s festivities is a harbinger of many disruptions to come. The brutal heat wave in the northeastern US — an event that would have been “virtually impossible” without climate change — followed an even more brutal heat wave in Europe.

These disasters represent the leading edge of serious damage — social, human, and economic — from a warming planet.

Projections of future climate change are often expressed in terms of averages: By 2050 average global temperatures are expected to be above pre-industrial levels by around 2.5° C — 4 ½ degrees Fahrenheit, while sea levels will be 10 incheshigher.

We should all treat these predictions as highly credible. Although fossil-fuel-financed climate denialism pervades right-wing politics and media, climate scientists who warned decades ago about future warming have been overwhelmingly vindicated. Indeed, in many cases their predictions have closely matched the actual numbers. So when climate scientists predict much more warming ahead, we should believe them.

Focusing on the average temperature increase can, however, lead people to underestimate the damage that lies ahead. If the typical day is a few degrees warmer, if the waves on a typical day are a few inches higher, what’s the big deal?

The rejoinder is that what may look like a modest change in these averages implies a large change in the risk of extreme weather events. A few degrees of average warming correspond to a huge increase in the frequency of heat emergencies like the ones we just saw on both sides of the Atlantic. A few inches added to sea levels corresponds to a huge rise in the probability of catastrophic storm surges.

And these extreme events are exacting an ever-growing human and economic toll. Europe suffered thousands of excess deaths as a result of the recent heat wave. The U.S. toll was smaller, although not zero, because our heat wave was less severe and because of the pervasiveness of air conditioning. Yet we are facing a future in which death and destruction from extreme weather events are certain to rise everywhere as the planet continues to warm.

Inevitably, the economic costs of climate change are also certain to rise. As that left-wing rag the Wall Street Journal recently explained,

Individual events are just beginning to be large enough to have a noticeable macroeconomic impact. One study estimates that European heat waves in the summer of 2025 reduced European Union GDP by 0.26 percent. That may not seem like a huge number, but it’s a very big deal if it happens every year — which it almost certainly will. The costs of this year’s heat will probably be even bigger. For example, France has lost millions of chickens. And the damage from climate change is just getting started.

In the U.S., the most notable economic impact of the heat wave that closed down Trump’s fair was a spike in power prices:

In fact, I’m very worried about the future of US electricity. Air conditioning saves lives during heat waves. But it also consumes a lot of electricity, piling additional demand on an energy grid that is already stressed by the rise of AI and its energy-hungry datacenters. And this surge in electricity demand is colliding with policies that are strangling growth inU.S. generating capacity.

Donald Trump and his officials have a fanatical hatred for renewable energy and indeed of anything that even sounds like an acknowledgement that climate change is real. So they are doing all they can to block solar and wind projects, while trying to force America to burn more coal. (They won’t succeed.)

They’re pushing their drill, baby, drill agenda even though renewables are clearly the energy sources of the future. Indeed, solar and wind power now account for almost all growth in electricity generation in the rest of the world:

The economic consequences of the MAGA attempt to keep us stuck in the energy past will be dire, for three reasons.

First, the U.S. is still an important emitter of greenhouse gases. True, we now account for less than 13 percent of global carbon emissions. But every little bit of climate dereliction hurts.

Second, we’re ceding the energy future to other countries, especially China. Electrotech — electricity powered cars and more, with solar and wind supplying the electrons — will rule the world, even if we refuse to be part of it.

Third, while the economic costs of climate change, which are now coming into focus, will be large whatever we do, they will be much bigger if America turns its back on renewable energy. True, gas turbines can supply part of the energy America needs in the near future. But they’re polluting, and at least some analysts are warning that supply shortages may lead to rising gas prices.

In addition to doing all it can to accelerate climate change, the Trump administration is actively placing Americans at risk by shuttering programs that help the nation prepare and recover from climate change catastrophes. Deep cuts to FEMA and the National Weather Service, along with cuts for programs that help build resilience, will inevitably leave Americans poorer and undermine communities. It’s like burning down the hospital because you don’t like the diagnosis.

And did you hear about last week’s Thermostat War? It wasn’t a huge incident in itself, but it was, I believe, deeply revealing about how political dysfunction will undermine our response to climate change.

Here’s what happened: During the heat emergency, New York mayor Zohran Mamdani urged the city’s residents to limit the burden on the grid by keeping their air conditioners at 78 degrees. Right-wing commentators went wild, denouncing his request as left-wing extremism — apparently only Communists believe in conserving energy during a crisis. But MS-NOW, among other media outlets, quickly noted that Mamdani’s suggestion echoed longstanding federal guidance.

And the Department of Energy immediately closed down its web pages offering that guidance.

Whether we want to acknowledge it or not, climate change is going to impose large economic costs, some of which are already baked — and I mean baked — in. But the Trump administration’s rejection of both science and basic energy economics, along with vandalism of programs meant to help Americans prepare and survive climate catastrophes, will make the damage to America much worse than it should have been.

MUSICAL CODA

Thursday assorted links

1. Facts about Bryan Caplan.  I can vouch for many of these.

2. How exactly did movies become so much less sumptuous?

3. Twenty lessons about China.

4. Silvana Renreyro will be the new IMF chief economist.

5. Simon Baron-Cohen improves his views on autism.

6. Obamacare premia due for second straight double-digit jump.

The post Thursday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

Mapping Fungal Networks

A new interactive map predicts the density and extent of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal networks, which exist in symbiosis with land plants. The estimate is based on soil samples and data from previous studies, fed through… More

Maps and Watches

I recently fell down the mechanical watch rabbit hole, and in doing so inadvertently discovered that maps and watches have a long history with each other. It’s a relationship that started long before smart watches… More

Swift Boost Mission

Swift Boost Mission Swift Boost Mission


The Left Has Been Correct About a Long List

On this 250th Consider How Different We Are, and Could Have Been

The list of things the left has been correct about over the last 100 or so years is astounding. With so much review of history that has been presented as part of the 250th anniversary of the country, this aspect deserves a review too.

Here’s a partial list. Then we’ll look at some of the items, and some caveats, context, and overview.

Resisting the Vietnam war.
Full civil rights, full respect, for all minorities.
For women too.
Consumer safety (e.g., Ralph Nader getting seat belts required in cars).
EPA, clean air, clean water.
Healthy openness about sex.
More aggressive stance on breaking up of monopolies.
Gay rights, gay marriage, LGBTQ+ acceptance.
More open to, and accepting of, non-mainstream religions.
Changes to sprays and refrigerants that caused the hole in the ozone.
Promoting sex education and protection to reduce teen pregnancies.
For decades seeking to raise the ceiling on social security tax to keep it solvent.
Against the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Wanting to restrict corporate money in elections.
Taking climate change seriously.

It is a partial list. It could reach back farther in time but it gets fuzzier how to define what is “left”. And there are qualifications and caveats. Numerous of these were supported by many on the right too, but the left was the primary champion of them.

That is, championed by the people who actively promoted these views as opposed to Democratic leadership who often failed to, and who frequently just seemed to be Republican-lite. Party labels weren’t always consistent anyway. In the post Civil War era Southern conservatives, who were very conservative and often reactionary and against civil rights for minorities, called themselves Democrats to reject the Abraham Lincoln Republicans who had fought the South. In general, though, it has been the people of the left that have been correct on this list of issues and more.

Some are imperfect examples. Greater openness about sex than there had been in the 1950s was a good thing but the media picked it up as “free love” and made a joke of it. Ralph Nader got a new focus on consumer safety going with things like requiring seat belts in cars, but such regulations can eventually go to far. But that’s always true. Constant adjustment of governance is needed to try to keep it balanced.

Other people on the left might choose some different items for that list, and those on the right could come up with a list they’d like to claim. But the left has been correct about a long list of really big items that each did have, or could have had, profound impact on the state of the nation and the well being of our people.

Try to imagine how different the country would be if that list, and others items like it, had been adhered to. Less war. More health. Less animosity toward gays and minorities and anyone other than white males. Less divisiveness along that dividing line. That imaginary dividing line as if things like race really mattered. More economic focus on benefiting the bulk of the people. More care of the environment. Much better progress on renewable energy and limiting climate change.

Those items don’t just add up. It’s more like they multiply one another. Combine them all together and the country would be so much better off it’s hard to imagine.

Congratulations to the left on a long history in the U.S. of being on the correct side of many of our biggest issues and challenges. Through some successes, and despite some failures, you have made the country better. You also provide something essential now. As we start to move toward our next big anniversary, the 300th, you make us aware of a vision of where we have the option to go in the future. An option to make ourselves and our country even that much better.


“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.

The post The Left Has Been Correct About a Long List appeared first on DCReport.org.

Washington Finally Notices that Crash Games are Taking Over American Phones

While lawmakers argue about prediction markets and sports betting ads, a different kind of gambling is quietly dominating the scene. These games barely look like a slot machine or roulette wheel, but they’re now some of the most played casino products out there.

Go to any conversation in Washington about gambling policy, and you’ll hear the same talk: Sportsbooks, prop bets and athletes caught in scandals. But there’s another story lurking nearby. Crash games; a fast, simple and addictive betting style led by Aviator, have exploded globally. Now, American regulators are just starting to realize what’s happening.

If you follow U.S. politics, this matters for two reasons. First, Congress is in the middle of its most serious effort in years to set national rules for online betting. Second, these new games hook people using psychology. They look nothing like poker or blackjack, the kinds of games lawmakers have been trying to regulate for ages.

A global playbook worth noticing

This isn’t just a foreign curiosity. Operators in other markets have built full platforms around this kind of fast, social betting. If you’re wondering “ How to play Aviator on Betway “, you should head to Betway, which is a site offering sports bets, casino games, virtual sports and a range of promotions all tailored for South Africa.

That kind of one-stop betting ecosystem; sportsbook, casino and crash games under one login, shows where U.S. operators could go unless new rules slow them down.

The political landscape is changing quickly

Until recently, states handled gambling regulation, especially after the Supreme Court struck down the federal sports betting ban in 2018. But that hands-off approach is getting challenged. On May 20, 2026, the Senate Commerce subcommittee held a hearing, grilling sportsbooks and predicting market bosses about aggressive marketing and cheating scandals spreading through MLB and the NBA. Lawmakers questioned these companies about how they promoted betting, and the cheating claims hitting sports leagues lately. Committee chair Ted Cruz  wasted no time asking whether prediction markets are even legal, arguing about protecting sports integrity and whether prediction platforms are stepping on state authority.

That hearing didn’t just pop up by chance. Back in October 2025, the Justice Department  unsealed an indictment against six people accused of wire fraud and money laundering tied to illegal NBA betting; a case that used information supplied by legal sportsbooks. Around that same time, a Cleveland Guardians pitcher and other athletes were accused of manipulating pitch patterns to profit off bettors, fueling the integrity concerns lawmakers are highlighting as they dig into these recent indictments.

Congress has bills, but no consensus

Right now, the 119th Congress is juggling several proposals. The SAFE Bet Act sets national minimum standards: Banning prop bets on college athletes, capping deposits, making operators help fund addiction treatment and requiring a Surgeon General’s report on sports bettings public health effects. The Gambling Disorder Health Study Act would launch a federal study into gambling addiction; even though there’s no dedicated federal agency for this, despite excise tax revenue from gambling. Meanwhile, Minnesota became the first state to ban prediction markets outright, triggering a fight with the Trump administration as more than a dozen other states consider their own crackdowns.

Not everyone in Washington is thrilled about a bigger federal role. Some say the Constitution leaves this to the states, pointing out most bettors spend less than $100 a month, about what people pay for daily coffee. And legalization hasn’t driven up problem gambling rates. That ongoing debate between federal oversight and state control isn’t going away anytime soon.

So why’s everyone suddenly playing the plane game?

Crash games are the twist here, and the politics get pretty interesting. Sports betting revenue hit a new high last year: $16.96 billion in 2025, according to the American Gaming Association. And now, a growing chunk of casino action is going into crash-style titles instead of classic slots or table games. Aviator, the most popular, draws over 10 million players every month as of 2025, according to operator figures tracking Spribe’s numbers. By December 2025, it was added to around 5,000 online casinos worldwide; a milestone industry tracker Tribuna confirmed, citing game expansion across multiple jurisdictions.

What’s the secret? It’s simplicity. The game features a rising multiplier, a plane and just one choice: Cash out or keep flying. No paylines and no strategy guides, just a countdown that gets more intense the longer you wait. Each round lasts seconds, people can chat while betting and the whole thing feels social, unlike any slot machine.

The current focus

American regulators still focus mostly on sportsbooks and prediction markets, understandably given the headlines. But crash games aren’t sports bets or slots. They don’t fit any bills currently moving through Congress.

If lawmakers want a real national policy for online gambling, like the SAFE Bet Act aims for, they’ll eventually have to think about games already attracting tens of millions of players every month around the world.

Photo: Jean Cont via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Washington Finally Notices that Crash Games are Taking Over American Phones appeared first on DCReport.org.

Tourism States Need Safer Roads Before Peak Travel Season Hits

Summer is when tourism states make their money — and, statistically, when they lose the most people to their own highways. Families load up minivans, riders roll motorcycles out of the garage after a long winter, and somewhere around Memorial Day, the same grim pattern starts to show up in state crash data every single year. Traffic deaths climb. They keep climbing through Labor Day. Safety officials even have a name for it: the “100 deadliest days.” For states whose economies depend on visitors, that stretch can quietly turn a signature season into something closer to a crisis.

Part of the reason is sheer volume — more cars, more motorcycles, more RVs, all sharing roads that weren’t built for this kind of traffic. It’s also why, once summer crashes happen, families are often left scrambling to understand motorcycle crash claims , trying to figure out how to cover medical bills, lost wages, and, in the worst cases, long-term care — usually while still in shock over what happened.

Why Peak Travel Season Is So Dangerous

There’s no single cause here. It’s a handful of ordinary things stacking on top of each other.

Tourists Don’t Know the Roads

Locals know which curve to slow down for and where deer tend to dart out at dusk. Visitors don’t. Utah’s own transportation and public safety data bears this out: summer consistently brings a spike in high-speed crashes as vacationers pour into the state, and in recent years, July has been the single deadliest month on Utah’s roads.

Longer Daylight, Longer Drives, More Fatigue

There’s a particular kind of exhaustion that comes from “we’re almost there” driving — pushing through drowsiness because the destination feels close enough to grit your teeth for. Fatigue behind the wheel slows reaction time about as much as impairment does, which is easy to forget when you’re the one behind the wheel telling yourself you’re fine.

Motorcycles Carry Far More Risk Than Their Numbers Suggest

Riding season and travel season overlap almost perfectly, and the crash data shows it. Motorcyclists accounted for 16% of all U.S. traffic deaths in 2024, despite making up only a sliver of registered vehicles nationwide, according to federal crash statistics from NHTSA . Mile for mile, a motorcyclist is roughly 27 times more likely to die in a crash than someone in a passenger car. Utah saw its own spike in 2025, with state officials pointing to speed, misjudged curves, and left-turning riders as recurring factors behind the increase.

When something does go wrong on two wheels, there’s little protecting the rider — no frame, no airbag, nothing absorbing the impact but the rider themselves. That’s usually why the injuries, and everything that follows legally and financially, tend to be so much more serious.

What the Data Says About Tourism States Specifically

States that sell themselves on scenery and road trips take on a responsibility that comes with the marketing: keeping those same roads safe for the people they’re inviting in.

Rural Highways Carry Outsized Risk

The scenic byways that wind past national parks and trailheads tend to be two-lane, undivided, and a long way from the nearest ambulance. Utah’s Highway Safety Office has noted that even though most residents live in urban areas, crash risk skews heavily rural — and when help takes longer to arrive, crashes that might otherwise be survivable often aren’t.

The Uncomfortable Irony of “Safe” Road Trip States

Here’s the strange part: some of the most popular road-trip destinations rank fairly well on paper for safety. Utah, for instance, consistently lands near the top of national rankings for summer road trips, partly because of its comparatively low fatality rate per mile driven. But “comparatively safe” is a moving target — state officials themselves have acknowledged that a single bad summer can undo years of steady improvement almost overnight.

A Few Numbers Worth Sitting With

  • Motorcyclists die at a rate wildly out of proportion to how many actually ride.
  • Speeding remains one of the top contributing factors in fatal crashes nationwide, especially among younger drivers and riders.
  • A meaningful share of single-vehicle motorcycle fatalities involve alcohol impairment — part of a broader impaired-driving problem statehouses still tend to treat too narrowly .
  • Helmet use has been rising in recent years, and federal data confirms it’s making a real difference in survival rates.

What Tourism States Can Actually Do Before the Rush

Waiting until Memorial Day weekend to think seriously about road safety is, frankly, already too late. The real leverage happens months earlier.

Fix Infrastructure in the Off-Season, Not the Rush

Guardrails, rumble strips, better curve signage, wider shoulders on high-traffic scenic routes — none of it is glamorous, but all of it works. States that fund these upgrades before the crowds arrive are the ones that see the payoff when traffic actually spikes.

Aim Safety Messaging at Visitors, Not Just Locals

Most public safety campaigns are written with residents in mind, which means out-of-state drivers rarely see them at all. Airports, rental car counters, and park entrance stations are underused real estate for warning visitors about the specific hazards of a place they’ve never driven — blind canyon curves, wildlife crossings, stretches with no cell service.

Put Enforcement Where the Data Actually Points

The same dangerous corridors show up in crash reports year after year, which means agencies already know where to focus. Targeted patrols and speed enforcement on those specific stretches, timed around holiday weekends, tend to save more lives than spreading resources evenly across an entire highway system.

Ask Drivers and Riders to Look Out for Each Other

A large share of motorcycle fatalities trace back to one recurring scenario: a driver failing to see a rider at an intersection or during a left turn. Campaigns that address this directly — reminding drivers to actually look for motorcycles, not just other cars — target one of the most preventable patterns on the road.

The Road Ahead

Peak travel season is a gift to the economies that depend on it, and a stress test for the infrastructure that has to support it. The states that treat road safety as part of their tourism strategy, rather than an afterthought to it, end up protecting both the people who visit and the reputation they’ve built. Before the crowds show up this year, that’s the work state agencies, local businesses, and travelers all still have time to do.

If you’re planning a road trip — or a ride — through a tourism hotspot this summer, a little preparation goes further than people expect. Check your route for known hazard zones ahead of time. Build in real rest stops instead of pushing through fatigue. And make sure everyone in the vehicle, or on the bike, has proper safety gear before you leave the driveway. Safer roads start with travelers who show up informed.

Photo: Alexey Demidov via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Tourism States Need Safer Roads Before Peak Travel Season Hits appeared first on DCReport.org.

Retaliation Is Becoming the Quietest Labor Story in America

Behind the splashy headlines of historic union drives and bitter wage debates lies a much quieter, more corrosive trend quietly reshaping the American workplace: employer retaliation. While workers are increasingly finding their voices to demand safer conditions and fairer treatment, many are meeting a silent wall of corporate pushback—leaving thousands wondering if they were simply fired unfairly in Nevada  or another at-will state. This subtle shift in labor dynamics rarely makes the evening news, yet it systematically undermines workers’ rights across every industry. Understanding how retaliation operates is essential for protecting your livelihood and ensuring workplace safety remains more than just a line in an employee handbook.

To make matters worse, recent legal shifts have allowed companies to shield themselves from public accountability. For a deeper look at how employers legally insulate themselves from these disputes, you can read our previous coverage on how corporations block workers from asserting their rights  through forced arbitration.

What Does Workplace Retaliation Actually Look Like?

Workplace retaliation occurs when an employer penalizes a worker for exercising their legally protected labor rights. These protected activities aren’t loopholes; they include filing a harassment complaint, reporting safety hazards to OSHA, or simply discussing hourly wages with a coworker. While some managers still resort to immediate, hot-headed firing, modern retaliation is frequently much harder to spot until the damage is already done.

The Shift from Blatant to Subtle Retaliation

Modern employer retaliation has shifted away from sudden, explosive terminations toward gradual, documented exclusion. Smart corporate managers rarely fire an outspoken employee on the spot anymore—doing so creates an immediate, textbook legal liability. Instead, they rely on administrative tools to quietly build a manufactured paper trail over several months, masking bias as a performance issue.

This agonizingly slow process often leaves employees second-guessing their own reality, wondering if they are genuinely underperforming or if they are being systematically targeted. Labor experts often call this “quiet firing” or constructive discharge—making the daily grind intentionally miserable until the employee quits out of sheer exhaustion.

Real-World Examples of the “Quiet Squeeze”

The tactics used by retaliatory managers are diverse but highly structured, often following a predictable pattern of professional isolation:

  • Sudden Schedule Changes:  Reassigning a working parent to a late-night shift or cutting their hours until they can no longer pay rent.
  • The Cold Shoulder:  Excluding a targeted worker from critical team emails, planning sessions, or client pitches they previously managed.
  • Hyper-Scrutiny:  Documenting minor infractions—like arriving two minutes late—that are routinely ignored for the rest of the staff.

The Staggering Statistics Behind the Trend

Retaliation is officially the most common workplace violation reported to federal regulators across the country. According to recent data detailed in the EEOC Trends and Statistics Report , retaliation charges consistently account for over 55% of all complaints filed nationwide. To put that in perspective, workers file complaints about retaliation more frequently than race, gender, and age discrimination combined.

“The sheer volume of retaliation claims indicates that many employers still view reprisal as a viable risk-management tool rather than a severe legal violation.”

Furthermore, independent studies by labor advocacy groups reveal that nearly 70% of employees who report workplace misconduct experience some form of negative professional blowback within twelve months. This creates a powerful chilling effect, effectively silencing the rest of the workforce who cannot afford to risk their next paycheck.

Knowing Your Legal Rights and Protections

Employees are protected by a robust framework of federal and state laws designed to shield them from employer vengeance. The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) both explicitly forbid employers from punishing workers who speak up about working conditions. However, enforcing these rights depends heavily on local legal environments.

State-level rules vary dramatically, creating complex legal landscapes for workers seeking justice. Knowing the distinct laws of your jurisdiction—such as specific paths to recourse under state statutes that guard against public policy violations—is the first step toward building a successful legal claim.

Key Legal Metrics to Keep in Mind:

  • 55.1%:  The percentage of EEOC cases tied directly to retaliation claims.
  • 180 Days:  The standard federal window to file an EEOC complaint for many corporate violations.
  • At-Will Exceptions:  Even in at-will states, employers cannot terminate you for whistleblowing or exercising statutory rights.

How to Document and Report Retaliation Safely

Protecting yourself from workplace retaliation requires proactive organization, a clean paper trail, and a calm, objective approach. If you suspect your employer is targeting you for speaking up, taking immediate, structured steps can protect both your professional reputation and your legal standing.

  • Keep a Detailed Log:  Write down dates, times, and exact quotes for every unusual interaction, saving these notes strictly on a personal device rather than a company computer.
  • Secure Your Performance Reviews:  Download copies of past positive evaluations to prove your performance was perfectly satisfactory before you spoke up.
  • Communicate in Writing:  Follow up on ambiguous verbal conversations with a clear email, such as: “Per our conversation today, my hours are being reduced despite my open availability.”
  • Review the Employee Handbook:  Follow your company’s internal grievance procedures precisely so leadership cannot claim you bypassed corporate policy.

The quiet story of labor retaliation won’t be resolved by workers suffering in silence. By identifying the subtle signs of reprisal, keeping meticulous records, and utilizing local legal protections, everyday employees can shift the balance of power back toward fairness, safety, and respect on the job.

Photo: AI25.Studio AI GENERATIVE via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Retaliation Is Becoming the Quietest Labor Story in America appeared first on DCReport.org.

Origins and Consequences of the Trump Administration’s Humanitarian, Refugee, and Immigration Policies, by Kerwin, Carlson and Wheeler in J. Migration and Human Security

 Read it and weep:(

The Origins, Consequences, and Uncertain Legacy of the Trump Administration’s Humanitarian, Refugee, and Immigration Policies: A Comprehensive Analysis, Journal on Migration and Human Security, by 
Donald Kerwin, Elizabeth Carlson, and Charles Wheeler  

"Executive Summary: This paper documents and analyzes the origins, consequences, and uncertain legacy of the second Trump administration’s humanitarian assistance, refugee, and immigration policies. Its first section introduces the administration’s signature policies, which both build upon and sharply depart from those of recent administrations, Republican and Democratic. Its second section recounts how nativist language and tropes centered Donald Trump’s rise and return to power, and how they inform the administration’s refugee and immigration agenda. Its third section discusses the laws and jurisprudence that laid the groundwork for these policies. It outlines the growth in immigration enforcement spending and authorities over multiple presidencies. In addition, it highlights the first Trump administration’s refugee and immigration policies, and describes the sweeping executive orders (EOs) that inaugurated the second Trump administration. The fourth section examines the legal theories offered in support of the administration’s policies, how they have fared in U.S. courts, and the effects of these policies on targeted populations, U.S. families, businesses, and communities. The fifth section sets forth several themes that unify these policies:
•    A highly selective and instrumental view of the rule of law.
•    Cruelty as a guiding principle and strategy.
•    Hostility to programs and policies intended to benefit the poor and persecuted, regardless of their status.
•    The failure to address neuralgic problems in the U.S. immigration system or to pursue humanitarian, refugee, and legal immigration policies that serve the nation’s values, needs, and interests.
 

"The paper urges a return to fundamental American values and commitments. It concludes with detailed recommendations to guide the development of strengthened and integrated U.S. humanitarian, refugee, asylum, and immigration policies. "

 

And, from the introduction:

"President George Washington hoped the fledgling nation would become a “safe & agreeable Asylum to the virtuous & persecuted part of mankind, to whatever nation they might belong” (Washington 1788). The Trump administration indefinitely suspended, dismantled, and brought to a virtual standstill the U.S. refugee resettlement program. This program revitalized U.S. communities, saved more than three million lives, offered hope to desperate persons throughout the world, and enhanced the nation’s standing (Kerwin and Nicholson 2021). The administration also vowed to review the cases of and re-interview refugees admitted under the Biden administration, and to suspend consideration of applications for lawful permanent resident (LPR) status by refugees and their family members who entered during this period (American Immigration Lawyers Association [AILA] 2025). Its subsequent Operation Post-Admission Refugee Reverification and Integrity Strengthening (“Operation PARRIS”) entailed warrant-less entries, searches, apprehensions, detention in abusive conditions, and extreme vetting of already vetted and resettled refugees.1
The second Trump administration also foreclosed legal access to the United States by asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border, suspended adjudication of pending asylum applications, terminated the removal proceedings of asylum-seekers (placing them in expedited removal), and removed many to perilous conditions (Human Rights First and RAICES [HRF and RAICES] 2026, 3, 10, 17).
Past administrations supported time and place restrictions on access to the U.S. asylum system, particularly in response to large numbers of border crossers, but no administration (prior to the Trump administration) made “physical presence” in the United States “a prerequisite” to seeking asylum at a U.S. port-of-entry.2 As an additional barrier to pursuing an asylum claim, the administration imposed multiple fees on asylum-seekers (a first) and increased fees for temporary status on humanitarian grounds,3 To address the high volume of pending asylum cases, the administration could have taken steps to remedy the conditions displacing so many people and it could have built the infrastructure to adjudicate asylum cases expeditiously and fairly. It did not take either of these steps.
The administration also stripped temporary protected status (TPS) and humanitarian parole from an estimated 1.5 to 1.6 million persons (Bustillo and Martinez-Beltrán 2025c; Figueroa 2025). In doing so, it subjected legally present residents to deportation and possible return to their own troubled nations or to third countries where they had no ties and faced multiple perils. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has targeted, among other groups, beneficiaries of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, who arrived in the country as children (García 2026). It has detained persons who should never have been placed in removal proceedings, such as those with pending visa petitions and humanitarian parole (HRF and Raices 2026, 5). While properly credited with reducing illegal migration, by one estimate the administration has cut 2.5 times more legal than illegal entries (Bier 2026a). The former includes asylum seekers, refugees, immigrant (permanent) visa recipients, and temporary visa beneficiaries, such as the spouses and fiancés of U.S. citizens, international students, and workers (ibid.).
President Ronald Reagan (1989), channeling John Winthrop, called the United States a shining “city on the upon a hill . . . teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace,” a city with doors “open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here.” On January 14, 2026, the U.S. Department of State (DOS) announced it would pause visa processing from seventy-five countries, bringing to ninety-three the number of nations (a large number of them African) facing full or partial bars to admission (DOS 2026a; Bier 2026b). DOS (2026c) justified these bars as necessary to ensure that immigrants would not become a public charge or unlawfully use benefits (DOS 2026b). For legally present non-citizens, the administration has constructed a “paper wall” of administrative requirements and barriers that seek to prevent mostly low-income immigrants from advancing to permanent residence and citizenship."

Land Reclamation!

“Buy land,” they said, “they aren’t making any more.” But in fact, we used to make a lot of land. Half the land area of Boston, a quarter of Manhattan, and 15% of San Francisco were raised from the sea before 1970. Tyler has already pointed to Zigmund Forrest and Max Tabarrok’s piece on land reclamation in Works in Progress. Check it out, it’s an excellent piece.

But also don’t miss Connor Tabarrok’s historical overview of land reclamation featuring the ancient Iraqi city of Ur, Alexander the Great’s siege of Tyre, and the amazing flood tanks built under the city of Tokyo! Connor, a civil engineer by trade, points out that most land reclamation isn’t done to build cities with land fill but rather to create farmland through drainage:

In the lower 48 states, the US Fish and Wildlife Service estimates that wetlands covered 221 million acres in the 1780s and 104 million by the 1980s. That is roughly 117 million acres drained in two centuries, a loss rate the report puts at 60 acres an hour, sustained for 200 years. For comparison, the total urban footprint of the United States is around 70 million acres. America has drained substantially more wetland than it has built city, and nearly all of that drained land became farmland.

… The Dutch invented the modern polder and have spent eight centuries pushing back the North Sea, and the result is one of the densest, richest countries in Europe. Yet around two-thirds of the country’s dry land is farmlandFlevoland, the newest province, is 1,410 square kilometers reclaimed from the Zuiderzee in the 1950s and 60s, and it was laid out as an agricultural basin, not a city. The country with the most reclaimed land per person uses it to grow potatoes, graze dairy cattle, and ranks as the world’s second-largest agricultural exporter.

The other reason that we drained land historically was to get rid of mosquito-driven malaria and to improve sewage.

In the mid-1800s the land south and west of the Washington Monument was the Potomac Flats, a tidal marsh that collected the city’s sewage and exposed it to the sun twice a day. The stench reached the White House. In 1882 Congress appropriated $400,000 and the Army Corps of Engineers, under Major Peter Hains, began dredging the river’s shipping channels and pumping the mud onto the flats. The work created more than 600 acres of new ground and a Tidal Basin engineered to flush the Washington Channel with each tide. The Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials stand on that fill. So do the cherry trees, planted in 1912 on land that had been open water within living memory.

Much more of interest at the whole thing.

The post Land Reclamation! appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Africa’s cultural landmarks: rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, Ethiopia

Photo of a rock-hewn church partially below ground with people on the steps, surrounded by rocky terrain and sparse vegetation.

Most buildings rise from the bottom up, stone by stone. Not so these churches: carved from a single rock, top-to-bottom

- by Aeon Video

Watch on Aeon

How to offset your brain

A modern office reception with hanging lights, a person at a desk and reflections in the glass.

From confirmation bias to loss aversion, everyone suffers from cognitive biases. Skilfully targeted mindfulness can help

- by Stephanie Dorais

Read on Aeon

Blue Origin, for the first time, is expected to raise private capital

The rocket company founded by Jeff Bezos, Blue Origin, is raising private capital, the DealBook newsletter reported early Wednesday.

According to the publication, the company is raising $10 billion, leading to a valuation of $130 billion. Coatue Management, a big asset manager, is expected to lead with a $4 billion commitment. Another $4 billion is expected to come from large institutional investors. And Bezos will contribute an additional $2 billion.

Founded in 2000, Blue Origin is seeking to become a global leader in spaceflight, developing a line of super heavy lift rockets, lunar landers, and plans for two megaconstellations. It is seeking to compete in the same areas—launch, telecommunications, data centers from space—as SpaceX.

Read full article

Comments

The tomb of Duns Scotus

Köln!

We spent a few days in the city, and once again I marveled at the splendors of the Cathedral.  If it had its original stained glass, it would count as one of the very best churches ever.  It still stands in the top tier as it is.  Plus the Ludwig and Wallraf museums are excellent, making the city worthy of a visit.

But, and yes there is a but.  My first visit to the city was I think in 1984, and I have been maybe five times since.  When I walk through the pedestrian zone, the stores there seem far stupider than in earlier times.  They seem to reflect a lower level of intelligence from the populace and the city’s numerous visitors.  One feels there is not much chance of stumbling upon something interesting or very high quality, not compared to earlier times.  And I think MR readers will know I am no paragon of nostalgia per se.

Now that might be an illusion.  Perhaps the smart stuff has moved to mail order, to online, and to the outer rims of the city.  Perhaps.  But is it not dispiriting when one of the best cities in one of the smartest countries in the world, over the decades, starts appearing stupider?  If someone told me I had to live in center city Köln, circa 2026 that would simply feel like aesthetic hell.

The post The tomb of Duns Scotus appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

12 YouTube Videos I'm Enjoying Right Now

Below is my latest roundup of outstanding new videos. I cover a lot of ground here—music, social commentary, film, career advice, furniture, books, even fashion (not usually my strong suit, no pun intended).

Enjoy!


I’ve praised Hohnen Ford before. She deserves stardom, but mainstream media doesn’t know she exists. A few days ago, Ford released this rendition of “Wichita Lineman” (one of the finest American songs).

Her piano conception is understated, but very smart. And I find her vocals deeply affecting.


Here’s a music plagiarism lawsuit just waiting to happen. This melody is getting used over and over by various artists—but somebody must own the rights. Who is it?

Carl Martin, the host of this video, traces the melody back to 2004. But I suspect there are even earlier examples.


Please support The Honest Broker by taking out a premium subscription (just $6 per month).

Subscribe now


I’ve just discovered the music of Fabrizio, whose debut album comes out this month—and now you need to know about him too. He has a powerful deep baritone voice you won’t forget.

Fabrizio grew up in poverty in Huánuco, Peru, and moved to the US at age fifteen, where he worked the lowest level jobs—busboy in a Mexican restaurant, door-to-door sales, etc. He eventually found himself in Nashville, and is now ready to make his mark on the country music scene.


I am not a fashion influencer—but I know a lot about the power dynamics of men’s attire. That was necessary when I was dealing with CEOs at McKinsey or negotiating deals overseas. There’s a whole science to this subject that’s not well known.

And a major shift is starting to happen right now.

Read more

Single-payer health care systems are looking worse all the time

That is the theme of my latest Free Press piece, here is one excerpt from it:

Government-run systems often (not always) do a perfectly fine job setting a broken arm or administering a long-standing, well-known medication. They do much less well when it comes to developing, financing, and delivering a new immunological approach to fighting cancer, personalized to your individual genome at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars. In our rapidly arriving biomedical future, innovation capacity will matter above all else. And though they may not see it today, the people with the most life ahead of them will reap nearly all of the benefits of a dynamic system, or suffer the consequences of a paralytic one.

Thirty years ago, it was often debated whether the Canadian or British healthcare systems were better than what we have in the U.S. After all, they offered a kind of guaranteed access to health services. The details could differ, but often the healthcare had no upfront price or only a low user fee. In America, in contrast, healthcare was more expensive, there were many millions of uninsured people, and dealing with sometimes rapacious insurers and hospitals could involve significant emotional trauma.

But over time the British and Canadian systems look worse and worse. The queues and rationing have increased, as giving healthcare away for free makes it hard to satisfy demands in a timely manner. In Canada, for instance, the median wait time has risen from 9.3 weeks in the early 1990s to 28.6 weeks today. In the British National Health Service, only 65.3 percent of patients start treatment within 18 weeks.

Worse yet, both of those systems are undercapitalized. In Britain, healthcare is badly understaffed and underfunded. Yet the country already has high taxes, high debt, and slow economic growth, so it is not clear where the new money will come from to recapitalize the system.

And this sentence:

This entire dynamic will be intensified as the pace of medical innovation picks up.

Your life may depend on it.

The post Single-payer health care systems are looking worse all the time appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Super Typhoon Bavi

The eyewall of a super typhoon is partially illuminated by moonlight in a nighttime satellite image.
Moonlight illuminates the western side of Super Typhoon Bavi’s eyewall at about 15:30 Universal Time on July 5 (1:30 a.m. local time on July 6). The image was acquired with the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) day-night band on the NOAA-20 satellite.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

In early July 2026, for the second time in three months, a powerful typhoon crossed the U.S. Northern Mariana Islands and Guam in the North Pacific Ocean. Super Typhoon Bavi was at peak intensity when it neared the islands on the night of July 5, bringing winds of 290 kilometers (180 miles) per hour, along with torrential rain and dangerous storm surge.

This nighttime image, captured by the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) on the NOAA-20 satellite, shows Bavi’s eye at about 15:30 Universal Time on July 5 (1:30 a.m. local time on July 6). Light from the Moon, which was in the waning gibbous phase, illuminates the eyewall’s western side. The eye passed over Rota, north of Guam, several hours after the image was acquired.

Bavi became a super typhoon in the early hours of July 4 local time while tracking west over the warm ocean. Satellite observations indicated that sea surface temperatures were around 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) in the region. Bavi was the third tropical cyclone in 2026 to reach category 5 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson wind scale.

The typhoon caused extensive damage across Guam, Rota, and Saipan, according to news reports, downing power poles and lines; flooding roads and littering them with debris; and damaging buildings, including a water distribution station on Rota. U.S. Coast Guard crews worked to clear navigation hazards in the waterways around Guam and the Northern Marianas and reopen ports as dangerous marine conditions subsided, according to reports. This damage comes on top of destructive winds and flooding from Super Typhoon Sinlaku, which crossed the islands in mid-April.

The spiraling clouds of Super Typhoon Bavi appear over the Philippine Sea southeast of Taiwan. The storm’s westward track is shown in colors corresponding to wind speed.
Super Typhoon Bavi tracked west over the Northern Mariana Islands toward Asia in early July 2026. The storm’s clouds and path are overlaid on a Blue Marble: Next Generation image built from scenes captured by the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer). The image of the storm was captured by the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) on the NOAA-21 satellite on July 8, 2026, at about 04:30 Universal Time.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

On July 8, Bavi remained a powerful typhoon as it moved west over the Philippine Sea. In the early afternoon, when the image above was captured, the National Weather Service reported maximum sustained wind speeds of 250 kilometers (155 miles) per hour. Forecasts indicated the typhoon’s track could bend northwest toward Taiwan, the Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan, and mainland China and weaken over the next several days.

Writing in Yale Climate Connections, meteorologist Jeff Masters said that Bavi is the type of storm that might be expected when a strong El Niño event is building, which is currently the case. El Niño-year typhoons may form farther east, giving them more time over warm water to intensify before curving toward Asia, Masters explained, “resulting in a greater chance of reaching Category 5 intensity.”

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using data from NASA EOSDIS LANCEGIBS/Worldview, and the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS), and hurricane track data from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory. Story by Lindsey Doermann.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Super Typhoon Sinlaku
3 min read

The violent storm aimed at the U.S. Northern Mariana Islands and Guam in mid-April 2026.

Article
Typhoon Jangmi
2 min read

The sprawling storm promised to deliver torrential rain across a wide swath of southern Japan.

Article
Gravity Waves From Super Typhoon Sinlaku
4 min read

Satellites observed striking upper-atmosphere phenomena generated by an intensifying tropical cyclone.

Article

The post Super Typhoon Bavi appeared first on NASA Science.

SpaceX launches Falcon 9 rocket on record-breaking 36th flight

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket soars near the Moon from the perspective of the Kennedy Space Center during the Starlink 10-42 mission on July 9, 2026. Image: John Pisani/Spaceflight Now

Update July 9, 6:47 a.m. EDT (1047 UTC): SpaceX confirms deployment of the Starlink satellites.

SpaceX broke another rocket reuse record Thursday morning when it launched its most-flown Falcon 9 booster for a 36th time.

It flew in support of the Starlink 10-42 mission, which added another 29 broadband internet satellites to the company’s low Earth orbit constellation. SpaceX currently has more than 10,700 Starlink satellites in orbit.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station happened at 5:25 a.m. EDT (0925 UTC). The rocket flew on a north-easterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.

The 45th Weather Squadron forecast a 90 percent chance for favorable weather Thursday morning. Meteorologists said they are watching for a small interference from cumulus clouds.

“On Thursday morning, winds will be light and southwesterly, and a few offshore Atlantic showers are possible which could cause a small concern for the Cumulus Cloud Rule,” launch weather officers wrote. “Very similar conditions are expected for the backup day, as Saharan dust settles in the mid-levels and inhibits cumulus development.”

SpaceX’s most flown booster, B1067, began flying in June 2021 with the company’s 22nd Dragon flight as part of the Commercial Resupply Services-2 contract with NASA. It went onto fly the Crew-3 and Crew-4 missions as well as 24 batches of Starlink satellites.

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1067 landed on the drone ship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’, positioned in the Atlantic Ocean. This was the 160th landing for this vessel and the 635th booster landing to date for SpaceX.

Wednesday 8 July 1663

Being weary, and going to bed late last night, I slept till 7 o’clock, it raining mighty hard, and so did every minute of the day after sadly. But I know not what will become of the corn this year, we having had but two fair days these many months.

Up and to my office, where all the morning busy, and then at noon home to dinner alone upon a good dish of eeles, given me by Michell, the Bewpers’ man, and then to my viall a little, and then down into the cellar and up and down with Mr. Turner to see where his vault may be made bigger, or another made him, which I think may well be. And so to my office, where very busy all day setting things in order my contract books and preparing things against the next sitting. In the evening I received letters out of the country, among others from my wife, who methinks writes so coldly that I am much troubled at it, and I fear shall have much ado to bring her to her old good temper.

So home to supper and musique, which is all the pleasure I have of late given myself, or is fit I should, others spending too much time and money.

Going in I stepped to Sir W. Batten, and there staid and talked with him (my Lady being in the country), and sent for some lobsters, and Mrs. Turner came in, and did bring us an umble pie hot out of her oven, extraordinary good, and afterwards some spirits of her making, in which she has great judgment, very good, and so home, merry with this night’s refreshment.

Read the annotations

‘Searching for SmarterChild’ Kickstarter

After my reading my posts earlier today about ELIZA, the first “hit” chatbot from the 1960s, DF reader AP sent me a link to the Kickstarter page for Searching for SmarterChild, a project from documentary filmmakers Lindsey Sitz and Zan Gillies to make a movie about SmarterChild, an AOL Instant Messenger chatbot that once had 30 million “friends” (a.k.a. users). I don’t recall ever hearing of SmarterChild before, let alone using it. (I think I was on a very different level of the Internet back then.)

But this looks like a great indie nerd documentary. The Kickstarter campaign has just one week left and they’re a wee bit short of their primary goal, and quite a bit short of their stretch goals. I just chipped in. Maybe you should too.

 ★ 

My Conversation With ELIZA

I vaguely recall first trying some version of ELIZA back in the 1990s. I never found it all that impressive nor understood its stature in the AI literature. It’s better than a bunch of if/then statements but not by much. There’s some natural language grammar parsing that is somewhat interesting, but I never thought it came close to passing the Turing Test, and I was always skeptical of claims that people got deeply involved with it as a virtual therapist/counselor. I just tried it again, via The ELIZA Archeology Team’s web-based re-creation. Here’s my transcript:

HOW DO YOU DO. PLEASE TELL ME YOUR PROBLEM

I don’t really have a problem.

DON’T YOU REALLY REALLY HAVE A PROBLEM

No.

ARE YOU SAYING ‘NO’ JUST TO BE NEGATIVE

No.

YOU ARE BEING A BIT NEGATIVE

No.

WHY NOT

I’m just being honest.

IS IT BECAUSE YOU ARE JUST BEING HONEST THAT YOU CAME TO ME

No, I’m just curious to try this out.

WHY ‘NO’

I said “no” because my “just being honest” is not the reason I came to you.

YOUR JUST BEING HONEST IS NOT THE REASON YOU CAME TO I

That’s ungrammatical.

I AM NOT SURE I UNDERSTAND YOU FULLY

I am quite sure you don’t.

HOW LONG HAVE YOU BEEN QUITE SURE I DON’T

Pretty much since I got here.

There’s something wrong with people who consider today’s chatbots to be their friends or companions. But there’s something really wrong with people who considered ELIZA a useful confidant. Like suffered-a-permanent-head-injury wrong.

 ★ 

The ELIZA Archaeology Project

The ELIZA Archaeology Project:

ELIZA is the original and highly influential chatbot that launched the genre of human-computer interactions using text-based agents. It was created at MIT in the 1960s as part of Project MAC by it’s [sic] designer and programmer, Joseph Weizenbaum. ELIZA not only allowed Weizenbaum to develop a mode of interaction with computers that is highly interactive, it also contributed to the way in which people were starting to conceptualize computers as having the capacity to usefully engage in conversation. You can try an accurate reimplementation of ELIZA developed as part of this project.

We plan to contextualize the program, offering its history and context as well as offering a detailed explanation of how the code works. This project will look at the culture of programming in which Weizenbaum was working and then explore his turn from ELIZA/DOCTOR, as he began to warn of the hazards of treating machines like humans. We will look at later works inspired by ELIZA and consider its influences on the way talking computer programs are represented in literature and film.

Via Jason Kottke, who also links to an upcoming book from the same team.

Their blog has an entry that discusses something I’ve been meaning to link to for a while, regarding Weizenbaum’s secretary:

Nonetheless, it is clear that Weizenbaum’s secretary actually used the ELIZA system. As he writes in Weizenbaum (1967: 477):

My secretary watched me work on this program over a long period of time. One day she asked to be permitted to talk with the system. Of course, she knew she was talking to a machine. Yet, after I watched her type in a few sentences she turned to me and said “Would you mind leaving the room, please?”

Weizenbaum writes about the effect, later actually coined the “Eliza Effect”, that this dyadic conversation could have between user and computer:

What I had not realized is that extremely short exposures to a relatively simple computer program could induce powerful delusional thinking in quite normal people. This insight led me to attach new importance to questions of the relationship between the individual and the computer, and hence to resolve to think about them.

The Eliza Effect is the propensity for humans to ascribe understanding and intelligence to computer systems. Hofstadter (1995: 167) described it as “the susceptibility of people to read far more understanding than is warranted into strings of symbols — especially words — strung together by computers”, a compelling description written in 1995 but which accurately describes generative AI systems today like ChatGPT. Similarly, Turkle described that “the Eliza effect refers to our more general tendency to treat responsive computer programs as more intelligent than they really are. Very small amounts of interactivity cause us to project our own complexity onto the undeserving object”.

Chatbot technology has changed tremendously since the 1960s. Human nature has not changed at all.

 ★ 

App Icon Conventions From the Original Macintosh

Dr. Drang, in a post replete with examples of icons of popular apps from the original Macintosh, in their one-bit glory:

You can see that Apple liked the idea of app icons being a tilted rectangle with some image inside the rectangle to indicate what the app did. The hand was Apple’s way of telling you that this icon was for doing things, and the rectangle was tilted to match the orientation of the hand. (If you were left-handed, this was just another injustice inflicted on you by a cruel right-handed world.)

Document icons were typically upright rectangles with dog-eared corners and similar designs inside the rectangle — no hands because documents don’t do anything. But we’re not here to talk about document icons.

I never loved the hand on these icons. It felt too uniform. It functioned like a “this is an application” badge, but such a badge never felt necessary to me. But it was so ubiquitous I sort of stopped seeing it, and now, in hindsight, it holds some nostalgic warmth. Right from the start, though, TeachText didn’t have a hand — just a pencil:

Screenshot from Macintosh System 1.0 (1984), showing the icons for the TeachText and Font Mover applications in the Finder.

[Update: Turns out TeachText didn’t appear until 1986 and System 4.1. Before that, MacWrite was bundled with the Macintosh and served as the system text document reader. I wrongly thought that TeachText was part of System 1 because it’s on Infinite Mac’s System 1 disk image; but that image contains apps from the future that still ran with backwards compatibility on System 1. You can see the 1986 copyright in TeachText’s about box, which also gives credit by name to its author at Apple, Bryan Stearns. It may well be the case that all app icons from Apple for System 1 in 1984 had the hand-with-tool badge.]

That TeachText icon was prescient about the future of good icon design. A year later the renamed and expanded (it now moved desk accessories in addition to fonts) Font/DA Mover lost the hand and became a fun truck (also prescient of great icons to come):

Screenshot from Macintosh System 2.0 (1985), showing the icons for the TeachText and (renamed and expanded) Font/DA Mover applications in the Finder.

(So many little things were still in flux in those primordial days. Note the bold text in the Finder window status bar header in System 1. That kind of looks cool, though. But the single-story “a” in the Geneva font — that’s just wrong, and gives me the ick.)

Drang continues:

Other publishers abandoned either the hands or the tilted rectangle or both. As people got more used to working with Macs, these clues for what’s an app and what isn’t became unnecessary, and icon design became less constrained. Even Apple gave up on them for utilities like Disk First Aid and Font/DA Mover.

I think it’s less that Apple gave up on them and more that it came into focus that the “hand holding a pen over a diamond-shaped document” convention was intended for document-based apps. It signified “This is a creative tool that you use to create documents”. Apps that weren’t about creating document files — like Disk First Aid and Font/DA Mover — got different icons. Font/DA Mover’s truck icon in System 2 signified that you use this tool to move things. Disk First Aid’s ambulance was an obvious metaphor for repairing something unwell. Moving and repairing are very different purposes from creating. Font Mover’s icon in System 1 wrongly suggested, if only subtly, that it was a tool for creating font-related document files of some sort.

But the main thing about the “hand holding pen over diamond” convention was that it was only ever a convention. If Apple’s squircle fetish were merely a convention, then third-party developers would be free to ignore it. Some conventions are merely fads — they come into and out of vogue quickly. Some are long-term trends that persist. But the ones that prove to be more than passing fads win out on merit in the marketplace of ideas. Mandating the squircles with squircle jail doesn’t make them a winning idea. It’s like claiming to win elections when credible rivals aren’t permitted on the ballots.

(Also, I am in complete agreement with Drang re: my favorite app icon of that era. So perfect, so fun, but so ineffable as to why it’s so perfect.)

 ★ 

[Sponsor] WorkOS Pipes: More Context Makes for Smarter Products

Users expect apps and agents to reach the tools they already work in. Every integration that gets you there is a different OAuth flow, a different token lifecycle, weeks of infrastructure before you write a line of product code.

WorkOS Pipes handles it with one API call. Pre-built connectors for GitHub, Slack, Salesforce, Google Drive, and more. Pipes handles OAuth, token refresh, and credential storage. You call the real provider API with a fresh token, every time.

Connect to 100+ providers →

 ★ 

TPM Readers on Platner

From TPM Reader WM …

Three thoughts on Platner from a coastal Maine resident and why while I’m mad as hell, I’m not feeling all that pessimistic — yet:

(1). The big electoral advantage that Platner brought to the table against Collins was that he expanded the pie of voters, rather than just making it a fight for the middle. Part of that was due to his “Ah shucks I’m just an oyster farmer that hasn’t done politics before” persona which Mainers more than any others are suckers for. But that alone wasn’t really enough to pull that off — he did work his ass off doing town halls and such all over the state which is important everywhere, but even more so in Maine with folks that see themselves as “independent voters”. And his policy positions (health care in particular) resonated very strongly with that particular population, the middle, and more traditional democrats. So I don’t think it would be impossible for someone to step in and NOT shed all of those folks immediately if the replacement immediately commits to pressing flesh to a very high degree and immediately focuses on the polices that are wrecking the lives of working class Maine families. That can be framed in part as a “Collins is all in with Trump” but it also needs to be expressly about – health care and housing (which Trump is gifting as a campaign issue in a state where finding a house for sale, much less in your price range, is not easy). Collins is so tone deaf on the actual issues facing Mainers it really shouldn’t take a wildly magnetic personality to pick this up and go — the main ad I’m seeing from her on my media feed is of a young woman who was born without adult teeth developed, treatment was going to be $80k and her insurance wouldn’ve cover it, but a call to Susan Collins got it done for free at the state dental school. It’s literally an ad that could keep the exact same script but with melancholy music and sad faces and be an opposition ad. Susan Collins’ votes have put us in a position where we have to rely on personal favors from an elected official to get what should be basic health care service. It doesn’t take a wildly magnetic character to pull this off, it just takes someone that does not carry baggage as an opponent to a genuinely progressive agenda — i.e., it can’t be Janet Mills.

(2). Briefly – of course Platner’s camp can’t be involved in any way in choosing who runs. While they’ve gotten a lot right in the campaign the one thing they’ve shown they fundamentally suck at is — choosing a person that is fit to be a candidate for Senate. Yes, allow them to have a say on platform, policy, blah blah blah….but they were the folks with the front row seat and opportunity to vet him throughout all of this, including after his “nothing credible” response to Warren and they completely let all of us down. So on this part of the process – fuck them, too.

(3). While the reddit comments that Mills tried to weaponize against Platner and the NYT article with assault allegations didn’t sink his ship, they did handicap him in a fight against Collins. There was no way that he could come out and speak about how bad she has been for women and even in simple terms, couldn’t hammer her as hard as they should on the Kavanaugh vote. He had to rely on surrogates and third parties to argue that “whatever he’s done to a specific handful of women pales in comparison to the widespread systemic violence Collins has perpetrated against women through her votes” and even that is not REALLY the argument you want to be making “our candidate isn’t as bad as yours!”. And so while I don’t think there should be much of a reset in terms of the basics of the campaign: focus on how Collins has sacrificed the real needs of Mainers to Trump’s platform and is just trying to placate us with a little bit of pork to try to fix the problems that Trump’s platform has created specifically as it has to do with health care and housing. A new candidate – ANY new candidate – can also make a much more full throated argument that Collins vote for Kavanaugh, her enablement of medicaid cuts, etc., have hurt Maine women through closures of birthing centers, and have led to deaths of thousands of women across the country

TPM Readers Tell Us Why They Contribute #3

From TPM Reader CS

I contributed some cash money to the TPM fund and you asked people to let you know why we did, so…

I support TPM because I agree with you about the current importance of independent media. Major media (if that’s the correct term) now seems entirely captured by the billionaire class that has demonstrated a clear lack of concern with civic democracy and an active interest in mass opiates. So independent media is a critical bullwark for civic democracy at a time when voices opposing the status quo are being systemically eliminated with a historical efficiency (see: AI and social media).

Obviously we could include many venues in the “independent media” category, but there are also unique characteristics of TPM that appeal to me. A major one is that I generally understand where Josh is coming from— I think this has to do with the fact that we are the same age, have similar political and life philosophies steeped in similar cultural and educational backgrounds, the lightly gonzo tone of the site, etc. In fact I have been a TPM reader since Josh started it. But more generally you all do a great job! The writing is good, the topics you cover are important, you drop a lot of relevant knowledge that helps readers understand the context and relevance of stories, etc. Even though you all have clear political leanings there is not a lot of partisan noise or preaching. I also appreciate how you go into the weeds with some stories that would never be covered by major outlets, especially about the obscure weirdos who provide depth of flavor to our national politics.  

However, a particular appeal right now is the optimism, or perhaps mission direction, you’re able to articulate even while being realistic about the current state of affairs. In recent years I’ve frequently been a victim of the “nothing matters anymore” feeling, but your writings convey a broader view of history and politics that provides hope about the USA and humanity generally. 

Thanks for your work, it’s my pleasure to contribute.

TPM Readers Tell Us Why They Contribute #2

From TPM Reader TS

I have been a member of TPM for 10 years and a reader for more than 20 years.  I gave this year and I try to give every year because your work brings me joy.  Yes, it informs me and educates me, but it also gives me great joy.  And not just as a reader who craves smart and thoughtful news and commentary, but as a fellow business owner.  I have had my law firm for over 22 years (we are now 7 lawyers and 3 staff), and I have learned that culture, openness, and transparency are the keys to success.  I treat my team and my clients like grown-ups, and it fosters an environment of respect and general fulfillment (is it a job after all!).  I see the same thing with TPM, and it shows in everything you do.  I get my news from many sources that I respect, but TPM is one of the few that I support financially because I feel like I am part of something positive with good people on your team and among your readers.  Thank you and keep up the good work.

TPM Readers Tell Us Why They Contribute #1

From TPM Reader JB

I contribute to the Journalism Fund for the same reason I am an Inside Member. Over the last quarter century, having read TPM since 2000, I have found it to be an invaluable lens for bringing the cacophony of national events into understandable order.

Whether one sees Trump as a more proficient master of the OODA loop than Democrats, recognizes TPM’s long-running attention to the through line of corruption within the Republican Party, or values a journalism model that binds site journalists to readers through their local observations, expertise, and interests, these insights and innovations have created a form of journalism uniquely well suited to our current moment.

The success of the subscription model, together with fundraising that expands TPM’s work, should reinforce the understanding that thousands of us benefit from and rely on the site for a clarity that is not found anywhere else.

Thank you for all you do.

Mac Apps Can Escape From Squircle Jail If They’re Not in the Mac App Store

Tyler Hall:

We all know about macOS Tahoe’s terrible app icons and how 3rd party developers have been confined to squircle jail.

If you’re lucky enough to distribute an app outside the Mac App Store, you can break free of squircle jail using NSDockTilePlugIn. It’s not strictly the intended use-case of that API. And it’s not allowed in the Mac App Store, either. But it can solve the problem.

So today’s release of Iris adds three additional app icons to choose from in the app’s Special Preferences Settings pane. And since they use the NSDockTilePlugIn API, the custom icon remains even when you quit the app.

Iris is far from the only app using this or other techniques to sort-of escape squircle jail.

 ★ 

A Response to Matt Yglesias About ‘Fight’ in Democratic Candidates

This morning on Bluesky Politico’s Josh Gerstein flagged to me and others a piece by Matt Yglesias in which, he said, Matt “says progressive Dems [are] too obsessed with fighting Trump rather than winning in marginal states/districts [and] picks fight with Josh Marshall over it.”

It turns out Yglesias is responding to a piece I wrote a couple weeks ago entitled “Centrists, This Is on You.” I sat down and read Matt’s piece and found myself kind of baffled because he has me saying perhaps not the diametric opposite of what I wrote but pretty close to the opposite of it. I always try to be sensitive to the possibility that when someone so thoroughly misunderstands what I wrote that it may be that I just wasn’t clear. There’s the additional factor that I usually write assuming familiarity with the stream of posts I’ve written on the same topic in recent days and weeks. People read a single post and some of my meaning might not be clear. Here though I can’t help but think that Matt zipped through the post in question, zeroed in on a few buzzwords like “fight” and then just plugged those into his existing framework and didn’t actually pay attention to my argument. Because, as I said, he’s just arguing against these stock arguments that I never made.

Still, there are some illuminating things that can be drawn from the misunderstanding and/or disagreement.

To hear Matt tell it, I am sort of coming to the defense of DSA world and arguing that what Democrats need is a more expressive politics based on maximal anti-Trumpism, a kind of politics of primal screams turned up to 11. They need to lean into positions on immigration or trans rights and perhaps Israel that are in maximal opposition to Donald Trump. What I need to do, Matt claims, is decide whether I want to “fight” and feel good or whether I want to win. Presumably we want to win, which I certainly agree with. And to do that, Matt says, we have to have the self-discipline and impulse control to focus on winning even it might not be as expressively satisfying as “fighting.” To do that, you need to find candidates well matched to swing or frontier districts and states who can turn Trump voters, win new seats and thus take control of Congress. You do this mainly by focusing on issues like affordability, the ways Trump has worsened the economy, etc.

This is actually the opposite of what I wrote. Indeed, my central point is that you need to have more ideologically moderate candidates who can operate in the “fight” lane precisely because you don’t want to end up with nominees who are too left -wing or DSA-adjacent and aren’t going to be viable in the swing states and districts where majorities are built. Probably one of the two or three premises I’m most identified with in a couple decades of writing is that politics is not a lifestyle or a space for self-expression. It’s about shaping the country we live in and acquiring political power through elections to do that. Matt has set up this dichotomy between “fighting” and “winning” because he doesn’t understand what I mean by fighting. Or, I think more likely, he’s zeroed in on the buzzword and then just plugged into it his pre-existing stock argument in which it means something different. I get it. Time is precious. It’s hard to stay focused sometimes.

Here’s what I mean by the “fight” spectrum and why it’s important.

I’ve written a number of times that there are two key spectrums today in intra-Democratic politics. One is the conventional ideological one: liberal versus more social democratic and socialist, Obamacare vs Medicare for All, etc. There’s there’s a “fight” spectrum, where you have different theories of power in politics, some more focused on comity, consensus and norms, and others more focused on what’s been called “constitutional hardball.” You see this play out on issues like the filibuster or Supreme Court reform. What I’ve argued is that the assumptions that these spectrums line up — that left means fight and liberal means accommodation — has led to all sorts of confusion and bad decision-making because the two things really have no inherent connection. What I’ve argued is that the center-left wing of the party is to a great extent ceding the the “fight” spectrum to the party’s left. And thus they’re getting a lot of primary candidates from the left, often with policy positions which are unpopular with most voters, despite the fact that I don’t think Democratic voters are really moving left ideologically.

The point of prying apart the “fight” and the ideology spectrums is precisely because you don’t want to run outer borough New York City candidates in purple or red states. You want candidates matched to those states and districts. And by definition it is in purple and red parts of the country where you are going to build congressional majorities. This seems to be exactly what Matt wants, and for good reason. If you want to shift the balance of power within the party you do most of that work in safe seats where you’re at no risking losing the seats all together. You tread more carefully in marginal jurisdictions where a different kind of candidate might not be sellable and where you might lose the seat altogether.

There are two reasons “fight” is critical and they’re interrelated. The first is substantive. We are not in the 1990s. We are not in an ordinary legislative or consensus political moment. We are in a moment that requires major structural changes to our political system to secure our basic liberties and the civic democratic nature of our government. This is a great work of repair and structural reinforcement. To me, and I think to many others, the lessons of the last decade and the Biden years is that there’s no path forward for civic democracy in this country without these major structural reforms. We fight to win elections not simply to win them but to do specific things with the power you get from winning them. A lot of the “fight” argument is about shifting the goals and attitudes of elected officials so they will be ready to make these major structural reforms once they are in power and in a position to do so.

Basically what we are talking about is shifting the attitudes, goals and assumptions of elected Democrats so they are ready and prepared to play constitutional hardball to make reforms to secure the future of democracy and all of our liberties. This in itself is not an electoral or campaign argument. It is a substantive argument about what Democrats need to do once they are in power. It goes without saying that of course you want to win but it is also important, in some ways just as important, to know what you want to do once you win. Maybe I’m wrong about filibuster and Supreme Court reform. But it’s a substantive and not an electoral argument. So if I’m wrong on that front you need to address why. And Matt simply doesn’t.

Some people have told me, sure those things are important. But it’s probably better to keep quiet about them or ignore them until you get a trifecta and just do it then. In the abstract that may make sense. But right now, most of the top elected officials in the Democratic Party aren’t on board with these reforms. So changing that is inevitably public, a mix of persuasion and primary fights.

But the substantive issue is not the only one. There’s also very much a political and electoral one. Matt’s big hobbyhorse in recent years is that Democrats’ problem is that they got too far out on a limb on hot-button social issues like immigration, policing, trans rights, wokeness in general, etc. and that’s put whole swathes of the country beyond their reach. There is a significant degree of truth to this, though that was more the case in 2024 than it is today. Democrats have already spent a couple years furiously repositioning on these topics. And the political environment, in which the central issue for most voters is Trump, simply makes them less salient.

But a clear look at the available polling data shows that this is not the main cause of Democrats’ low public standing. The main thing both Democratic partisans and those loosely-attached voters in the middle of the electorate who are most up-for-grabs don’t like about Democrats is that they are some mix of weak, feckless and either unwilling or unable to fight for what they claim to believe in. Critically, this is a perceived failing affecting opinions of Democrats across a good bit of the political spectrum, making their core supporters angsty and demoralized and potential voters in the middle of the electorate unreachable. Often a party has “problems” that if you solve for your own voters make it more difficult for you to get new voters who are more ideologically up for grabs. This is very different. Here you have the same discontent across the whole spectrum of gettable voters. That speaks both to a major shortcoming and a big opportunity since there’s lots of upside and very little downside. I don’t want to recapitulate the data on this. G. Elliot Morris has done so far better than I’m able. Here’s one post of his on this from February and another from April.

Why do so many voters see Democrats as “weak”? I’m tempted to say that if you follow Democratic politics you probably don’t need a lot of help with this. But I would say that it is mostly a big disjuncture between the threat of Donald Trump’s rising autocracy and the way Democrats characterize that threat and what elected Democrats are willing to do to counter it. You have a Republican Party that, when it’s not actually breaking the law or violating the Constitution, is willing to extract every ounce of advantage out of the mechanisms of state power, while the top elected Democrats are still largely wedded to proceduralism and norms (though this is changing and I think rapidly). Voters are unhappy with the mismatch and want something different. Matt somehow claims that I am saying Democrats need to just be more angry at Trump, more taking the opposite position to whatever he’s doing or I guess doing some kind of mass joint primal scream therapy and that’s how you “fight.” But anyone who’s read what I’ve actually written can see I’ve never said anything like that. There are both big substantive reasons for Democrats to adopt constitutional hardball and political/electoral reasons to signal to voters that they will do so in power.

Matt keeps coming back to this “do you want to fight or win” dichotomy which is more than a bit self-satisfied and condescending. So for instance, he starts one paragraph writing, “From my perspective as someone who wants to win …” He even has these digressions where he says something about liking anti-Trump rock groups as much as the next guy but how that’s not the same as winning elections in swing states. (He even has embedded YouTube videos of some of the best songs. It’s really quite something.) In any case, this is just some kind of undergrad debating trick where you misstate what the other person is saying to easily knock it down. That’s good for college debate, less good for actually convincing anyone.

A final point. As I’ve tried to argue above, to me the substance of what we need to do for the country (what’s necessary to do) and the politics (how to gain power to do those things) are aligned. This is far from always the case. But if we believe in democratic self-governance, it shouldn’t be totally shocking since broadly speaking we should expect voters to have some sense, albeit often expressed in an inchoate fashion, of what is necessary to do to achieve certain objectives. But the style of commentary Matt has adopted here can’t help but remind me of Bertholt Brecht’s satirical quip (playing off a workers uprising in East Berlin in 1953) that if the People had lost the confidence of government that the government should dissolve the People and elect another.

There is a persistent strain in this kind of commentary that the Democratic Party could be doing so much better if it just didn’t have such shitty voters. And yeah, the people are revolting. They stink on ice, as Mel Brooks (playing Louis XVI) once put it in History of the World, Part I. But Brecht’s quip was satirical. At least in America we can’t dissolve the people, or in this case Democratic voters. They’re all we’ve got. And if our game here is the real world as opposed to some kind of electoral Dungeons and Dragons, we need to grapple with their perceptions, enthusiasms, anger and everything else. We live in a climate of profoundly low public trust and an anti-establishment mood. Democratic voters and large numbers of loosely tethered swing voters (certainly not just far-left primary voters) believe that Donald Trump and the MAGA movement pose a dire threat to the country’s future and the liberties of its citizens. If your public statements, campaign promises and political style seems too out of sync with that perceived threat, voters are not going to buy what you’re selling. In Democratic primaries, you will lose to candidates with a more confrontational political style even if those same candidates are too ideologically extreme to be viable in a general election.

Voters are telling Democrats that they want them to be ready to use political power in ways that are smart, effective and maximal. This is not a complicated ask and it is not an unreasonable one. It is not the same as getting into spittle contests about who can be the most angry about Trump or who’s most likely to have a stroke when they’re gnashing their teeth about how much they don’t like him. It’s about the ability and willingness to use political power effectively and maximally. If that is what voters want, you need to be ready to do that and be able to communicate that ability and willingness on the campaign trail. It’s not complicated. It’s bread and butter electoral politics.

We Need Your Help Today!

We’re into our second day of this year’s Annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive. And we’re off to a solid start. In fact, one day in we’re coming up on 1/3 of the way toward our goal of raising $500,000, which is great. If you haven’t had a chance yet I would be so in your debt if you could take a moment right now to join us by contributing in any amount that makes sense for you. Just click right here.

We need to try to get past the 1/3 mark by the end of today if at all possible.

Click here to hear about why this year’s drive is so important.

JD Vance's crusade against GDP is wrong and bad

Ad by Proctor Silex via Wikimedia Commons

“Her belly may be full, but her spirit will be empty.” — Captain Picard

Usually, these “GDP is actually good” posts start with a big disclaimer — an acknowledgement of all the things GDP doesn’t measure, all the reasons that measuring GDP is an inexact science, and all the ways that we need to improve society other than just making the GDP line go up. If you want a standard wonky explanation of why GDP is a useful number, here’s one that I wrote four years ago:

Today I’m going to do something a little different. I’m going to tell you what I think the debate over GDP is really about.

Free trade usually raises GDP. Immigration, done right, raises GDP.1 Rightists in America want less free trade and less immigration. But every time they propose restricting trade and immigration, someone — either libertarian business/econ types on their own side, or moderate liberals on the other side — says “That will make America poorer!”. So they want some way to neutralize this objection, so they can do things that will, in fact, make America poorer.

So America’s right borrowed an argument from the European left. The European left favors degrowth, and another term for degrowth is “making GDP go down on purpose”. So naturally, they’re always trying to find reasons to denigrate GDP as a metric of human flourishing (see here, here, and here for examples). The American right is simply tweaking these arguments to make them more appealing to their own base.

JD Vance, who has emerged as the consensus leader of the New Right, makes a bunch of these anti-GDP arguments in his new book. For example, he uses the example of Japan to point out that unobserved quality differences in non-traded products can make it difficult to compare GDP across countries:

If you’re focused on GDP, a $6 pint of Japanese strawberries is no different from a $6 pint of American strawberries. If you’re focused on dollars and cents, each contributes equally to the economic indicators. But if everyone in Japan eats better strawberries than everyone in America, the economic indicators have failed to measure something meaningful.

This is actually a good argument, and I’ve made it myself many times in the past. I’m in Japan right now, and there actually are a lot of little things that make Japanese products and services a bit nicer than their American counterparts — clean tables at Starbucks, slightly better-tasting food, and so on. Economists who try to adjust for quality differences end up catching some of these things, but probably miss most of them. That ends up creating a problem for GDP comparisons between countries. And it’s only one of many such problems. Comparing lifestyles in countries where life is very different is just a difficult thing to do.

But instead of simply noting that economics is hard, JD Vance uses this good argument as a reason to bash the entire field of economics:

When I got back home, a friend asked me if I learned anything on my trip to Japan. “Yes,” I replied snidely. “Maybe economics is just fake.”

When you read some of Vance’s other arguments against GDP, his agenda becomes clearer:

[A]s the decline of Christianity has left us without a shared moral language, economics has stepped into the vacuum. We pretend there are scientific answers to questions of values. Take one of the major issues of the 2024 campaign and a significant focus of our time in the White House: Should our trade policy be oriented around protecting domestic industries and jobs or around ensuring a short-term supply of cheap consumer goods?

This idea — that economists urge values of base consumerism on society, and ignore other moral considerations — is common in European leftist discourse. But instead of urging us to care more about inequality, power, and so on, as European leftists do, Vance wants us to care more about spiritual elevation, morality, community — i.e., things that the American right cares about. He goes on to write:

[W]e now live in a society almost blinded to considerations outside of the economic. This way of thinking is inherently opposed to the Christian way, which demands more focus on people…Take, for instance, the time we spend with our children…Domestic labor—that done by moms and dads—if unpaid, is uncounted in measures like GDP. When I leave work to spend time with my children, when I cook them dinner or argue with them about eating their carrots, I am engaged in economically unproductive work. No money changes hands, so it doesn’t show up in our national figures. By contrast, if I left for dinner at 6 p.m. and returned to work until midnight while paying a total stranger to look after my kid, my contribution to GDP would be much higher.

and:

If you step away from the glory of economic statistics, so much of American life has gone wrong. An influx of prescription opioids became a flood of synthetic opioids, which has led to tens of thousands of deaths each year and a declining life expectancy among a substantial portion of our society. We have made great progress on reducing infant mortality, but we send our children into a world—even in the physical security of their own homes—that bombards them with images and influences that have left them isolated, depressed, and increasingly at risk of self-harm. We are more disconnected, lonely, and isolated, even in the midst of historic levels of material comfort.

All this economic abundance coexists with intense spiritual misery. We orient people toward a life of consumption. We tell them to find meaning in the home they buy, the money they earn, the prestige of their job. We bombard them with all manner of creature comforts, and add their consumption—price club mega-size junk—to our national GDP. We use that GDP as a yardstick for our broader society, which is why it’s possible for false prophet economists to argue the American Dream is healthy even as suicide and addiction rates soar and the laughter of children fades from our streets.

Some of these arguments are — in my opinion — reasonable. A culture of overwork can boost GDP, at least in the short term, at the expense of quality time with family. This is actually a common argument of the center-left, which is why liberals have long fought — often successfully — for more paid family leave and other policies that reduce GDP slightly in exchange for more quality time with family. Whether this has increased birth rates isn’t clear — the evidence is very mixed — but it’s a very popular policy.

Other arguments are clearly mistaken. Over-prescription of opioids has clearly reduced GDP, by a massive amount. Yes, selling a bunch of opioid painkillers to Americans raises GDP by a few billion dollars, but this is vastly outweighed by the trillions of dollars of GDP that we lose from having a bunch more people addicted to painkillers, heroin, and fentanyl. Here’s the Philadelphia Fed in 2023:

There is growing evidence that the opioid epidemic has harmed many aspects of the real economy, including the labor market, consumer finance, and municipal finance. According to analyses from the Council of Economic Advisers’ 2019 report, the annual (nominal) economic cost of the opioid epidemic, including the cost of lives lost, is estimated at about $700 billion (roughly 3.4 percent of GDP) in 2018 alone, and over $2.5 trillion from 2015 to 2018. [emphasis mine]

So if you care about GDP, you should view curbing opioid and opiate abuse as a huge priority! Vance is simply not thinking about this very clearly.

But Vance’s real problem is that he conflates correlation with causation. In words that could have come straight from the mouth of a European degrowther, he rails against “creature comforts”, “consumption”, and “price club mega-size junk”. But nowhere does he explain why depriving Americans of these creature comforts would give them closer-knit families, a stronger sense of morality, stronger communities, reduced loneliness, and so on.

Why would taking away Americans’ large houses, SUVs, big-screen TVs, or central air conditioning make them spiritually richer? Modern Europe — which JD Vance spends much of his time railing againstlacks most of these things. And yet America has higher fertility rates than Europe, we go to church much more, and we have a much more robust social conservative movement. Europe has also been far more restrictive of speech that criticizes Islam, as Vance repeatedly notes. Yes, America has been trending away from social conservatism and Christianity in recent decades, but so has Europe, and the gap remains. Other developed countries in East Asia — most of which are moderately poorer than the U.S. in GDP terms — are extremely secular.

What about America’s past? We were much poorer in the 1950s, yet we went to church a lot more, had larger families, and so on. If you took away the material gains we’ve made since then, would we go back to tradwives and bowling leagues and lawn parties and Sunday church and 4 kids per family?

Perhaps, but it’s doubtful. Remember that the 1950s and 1960s were the culmination of a long upswing of community, religiosity, and so on in American society — something the sociologist Robert Putnam has documented extensively. Church attendance rose:

Source: Pew

Fertility was on the upswing too:

Source: OWID

And if you believe Putnam’s numbers, social solidarity increased all throughout the early 20th century:

Source: Robert Putnam via Jefferson Educational Society

It’s important to remember that this all came during the most robust and rapid period of GDP growth that America has ever seen. Over the period in which our social solidarity was soaring, our GDP per capita nearly tripled:

Source: OWID

It was during this time that Americans got many of the “creature comforts” that Vance despises — the single-family homes, the cars, the televisions, the lawns, and so on. The image of that material prosperity, depicted in glossy ads and paintings from the time, is a powerful part of 1950s nostalgia.

In fact, many economists argue that one big cause of the Baby Boom was the fact that economic growth — bigger houses, better medical care, new labor-saving devices like washing machines, refrigerators, and vacuums, and so on — made it easier and cheaper to raise kids. This is from a relevant Works in Progress article by Anvar Sarygulov & Phoebe Arslanagic-Little:

Parenthood rapidly became much easier and safer between the 1930s and 1950s. The spread of labour-saving devices in the home such as washing machines and fridges made raising children easier; improvements in medicine making childbirth safer; and easier access to housing made it cheaper to house larger families…

[H]ousehold electrification paved the way for other technologies, including home refrigeration…By the 1940s, electric washing machines were becoming normal in middle class homes…Between 1936 and 1956, America’s maternal death rate fell by 94 percent, from 51 deaths per 10,000 live births to under 3…[M]edical advances, which were being made across the West, radically reduced the most serious potential cost faced by prospective mothers: life itself…

Alongside strides forward in household and medical technology…[I]t became easier to secure a home in which to raise children. The number of houses built soared across the West after World War Two…This house-building bonanza led to sharp rises in homeownership rates.

The golden thread linking the phenomena that comprise the triple mechanism we describe above – advances in household technology, progress in medical technology, and easier access to housing – is that they together sharply reduced the cost of having children. [emphasis mine]

If you like the kind of society we had in 1960, you can’t ignore the story of how we got to 1960. The answer was “economic growth”. This, combined with the examples of Europe and Asia, is why there’s no reason to believe that forcing Americans to be poorer — taking away the “creature comforts” Vance despises — would lead us to suddenly rediscover the value of community, family, and religion.

Now it’s worth noting that if you were to decrease America’s GDP to poor-country levels — below $15,000 per person, as opposed to over $90,000 today — you might be able to raise fertility. That’s how low you have to go before most countries have fertility above replacement level:

Chart by Mikael Häggström via Wikimedia Commons

Countries with a basically pre-modern standard of living — where many women can’t read or write, and infant mortality is so high that families have to have many kids as a form of insurance — tend to have above-replacement fertility (though some don’t). But even this law is weakening, as fertility rates in Sub-Saharan Africa plunge, so even that extreme level of GDP reduction would probably fail to restore high fertility over the long run. Also, I kind of doubt that JD Vance wants to force Americans to live lives similar to those lived in Sub-Saharan Africa.

What about JD Vance’s preferred policies — trade protectionism and immigration reduction? Would those restore American community, family, and religion, at the expense of a bit of GDP? As I said earlier, that’s actually what I think this whole debate is really about.

On trade, you’ve seen Trump explicitly make the argument that Americans are going to need to suffer a bit of material deprivation in order to achieve the administration’s goals:

But how will doing this restore community, family, etc.? Presumably you could make an argument that protectionism will bring back good manufacturing jobs, which will then give men the confidence and social standing they need to get married and have kids. There’s just one big problem with this, though: Trump’s trade policy doesn’t actually increase the number of good manufacturing jobs. We’ve lost manufacturing jobs since Trump took office last year!

In fact, Trump’s tariffs are hurting the U.S. manufacturing sector, by raising the cost of intermediate goods. Economists understand this pretty well; JD Vance, who thinks “economics is just fake”, does not seem to understand it.

How about immigration? Rightists will endlessly cite Robert Putnam’s finding that diversity reduces social trust in American communities. But as Bryan Caplan and many others have pointed out, the effect size is tiny — in Putnam’s research, going from zero diversity to maximum diversity reduces social trust by the equivalent of 1 point on a 100-point scale. This suggests that all the mass deportations in the world won’t move the needle on American community and togetherness.

In other words, JD Vance’s crusade against GDP is a cargo cult. Sure, GDP doesn’t measure “the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages,” to use Robert F. Kennedy’s famous words. But that doesn’t mean that making Americans poorer will make their poetry more beautiful or their marriages stronger. Nor does it mean that policies that also happen to make us a bit poorer, like immigration reduction or tariffs, are any more likely to strengthen our society.

In a famous episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation — my favorite TV show of all time — Captain Picard castigates an alien for turning his society into a fascist empire. When the alien responds that the fascist government’s forced modernization program raised his daughter out of poverty, Picard responds with the beautiful quote at the top of this post: “Her belly may be full, but her spirit will be empty.” But was Picard arguing that it was the full bellies themselves that emptied the people’s spirits? Was he merely arguing that the fascist empire ought to become a poorer fascist empire, in order to restore the virtue of the people? Only a fool would think so.

Look, I also want America to have a stronger society. I want us to have more kids. I want us to have more stable families. I want us to have closer-knit communities, better moral values, etc. But that doesn’t mean the New Right knows how to get us there. So far, the New Right has built nothing — no new community organizations or institutions, no religious revival, nothing that would knit our society together. It has merely thrashed and thrashed against modernity, with no plan for a replacement. JD Vance’s crusade against GDP is simply more of the same.


Subscribe now

Share

1

“Done right” means getting immigrants who, on average, earn more than the native-born. This raises GDP by a composition effect — you have richer people on average. It also probably raises GDP by other means — increasing market size which increases returns to scale, boosting innovation and entrepreneurship, and so on. If you get mostly low-skilled immigrants, things get dicier — the composition effect reduces GDP because you’re importing poorer people, but the increased market size may still cancel that out. But in general, if you want higher per capita GDP, you should be selective in terms of who you let into the country. Total GDP, of course, is a different matter — if you want a bigger country, in order to be more powerful in military terms, then letting in tons of low-skilled immigrants may be worth it even if they reduce per capita GDP. And of course, there are distributional reasons to allow in low-skilled immigration — eldercare and so on. But basically, if you let in high-skilled immigrants, your society gets richer by pretty much every metric.

Links 7/8/26

Links for you. Science:

Palantir Has a Hand in NIH’s Most Ambitious Health Initiative
Why the CDC refusing to publish covid vaccine research is so worrying
Two Duluth biologists fired by EPA file lawsuit against the agency
Scientists Thought These Upside-Down Whales Might Be Sick. They Were Wrong

Other:

Lessons From the Graham Platner Disaster
Ken Paxton Vowed to Crack Down on “Illegal Voting.” He May Have Violated Texas Election Law.
Even fans who don’t speak Spanish are watching the World Cup on Telemundo. Here’s why
The US had the biggest opportunity in the history of American soccer. They wasted it
D.C. minimum wage is now $18.40 per hour
Show Your Papers
Will Lizzo Expand Go-Go’s Audience?
How did a dirtbag get this far?
Pod Save Patriarchy (or Whatever That Sorry Platner Spectacle Was)
Trump’s plans for racist renovations to the Smithsonian are unbelievable
AP-NORC poll: About 3 in 10 US adults believe Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians
Afghan national who fought with U.S. forces died of allergic reaction in ICE custody

The One About the Pro Leisure Circuit (Again)

The One About the Pro Leisure Circuit (Again)

In our 99th episode, Rands is back on the Pro Leisure Circuit — infinite time, a suspicious amount of Arc Raiders, and no wind in the sails — and we wrestle with what actually motivates a person when the engine of work goes quiet.

The usual suspects:

Related Important Things episodes:

Enjoy it now, or download for later. Here’s a handy feed or subscribe via Overcast or iTunes.

Airport Meeting

Although it was a setback for physics, I'm glad the particle naming rights issue led to the cancelation of Pizza Hut's Superconducting Super Collider in the early 90s, so the Double Stuffed Extra Cheese Topping Quark ended up just being named 'top quark.'

Three ways the LNG market could crack before winter

War, weather and outages may still send gas prices soaring

AI has taken over the stock market. The bond market is next

Judging credit risk of the AI boom is difficultÂ

Europe’s economy is a mess. Its stock markets are a steal

International investors still aren’t interested

July 7, 2026

In Ankara, Türkiye, for a two-day summit of the countries in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), President Donald J. Trump told reporters he was “very disappointed with NATO” because it had not backed its war on Iran. “We weren’t treated well because we did something in Iran,” he said. “We don’t need anybody’s help. I didn’t even want their help. They said they wouldn’t be there. And we’ve invested trillions of dollars in NATO. Why? To protect European countries and others, Canada, et cetera, but to protect people, countries from generally speaking, it used to be the Soviet Union, now it’s Russia, and I say that’s fine, but you would think that they’d be very willing to do something to help us, and they really weren’t.”

Trump went on to claim his beef with NATO began over Greenland, which he wants “because Greenland doesn’t help Denmark…but it’s an important part for the United States. And it’s surrounded by China ships and Russian ships And that’s not going to happen. The ships is, it’s not going to happen. It was Greenland that, in my, and it continues to be, that should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark. And when they wouldn’t go along with it and with all the money we spend to help them with Russia and we don’t have to spend any money, we could remove all of our soldiers out of Europe because as you probably noticed, Europe’s a very different place than it was 20 years ago. A lot different. Much different. It’s a much different and they better be careful with immigration and energy. If they’re not careful with those two things, you’re not going to have a Europe anymore. Okay. Thank you very much everybody.”

NATO is the most effective alliance in human history. It is also a defensive, not an offensive, alliance.

Representatives from the the United States and eleven other nations in North America and Europe came together to sign the original NATO declaration on April 4, 1949. The alliance guaranteed collective security because all of the member states agreed to defend each other against an attack by a third party. At the time, their main concern was resisting Soviet aggression, but as Trump noted, with the fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of Russian president Vladimir Putin, NATO resisted Russian aggression instead.

The alliance is effective because it calls for collective defense. Article 5 of the treaty requires every nation to come to the aid of any one of them if it is attacked militarily. That article has been invoked only once: in response to the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, after which NATO-led troops went to Afghanistan.

On the day NATO went into effect, President Harry S. Truman said, “If there is anything inevitable in the future, it is the will of the people of the world for freedom and for peace.” In the years since 1949, his observation seems to have proven correct. NATO now has 32 member nations.

Crucially, NATO acts not only as a response to attack, but also as a deterrent, and its strength has always been backstopped by the military strength of the U.S., including its nuclear weapons. Trump has repeatedly attacked NATO and said he would take the U.S. out of it in a second term, alarming Congress enough that in 2023 it put into the National Defense Authorization Act a measure prohibiting any president from leaving NATO without the approval of two thirds of the Senate or a congressional law.

But as foreign policy specialist Anne Applebaum noted in The Atlantic in 2024, even though Trump might have trouble actually tossing out a long-standing treaty that has safeguarded national security for 75 years, the realization that the U.S. is abandoning its commitment to collective defense would make the treaty itself worthless.

In place of the powerful NATO alliance that has protected all nations’ sovereignty, Trump appears to want the sort of world called for by Russia’s president Vladimir Putin, in which great powers carve up the globe into spheres of influence.

In January, Robert Kagan warned that Trump’s destruction of the order that has underpinned global security for the past 80 years was creating the most dangerous world since World War II. With the end of open access to global resources, markets, and strategic bases and without reliable friends or allies, the U.S. will need more military spending than ever.

“Americans are neither materially nor psychologically ready for this future,” Kagan warned. They are accustomed to the “basically peaceful, prosperous, and open world” and have come to think it is “the normal state of international affairs, likely to continue indefinitely. They can’t imagine it unraveling, much less what that unraveling will mean for them.”

Everything will be up for grabs, Kagan wrote, with myriad “flash points for potential conflict.” “If Americans thought defending the liberal world order was too expensive,” Kagan wrote, “wait until they start paying for what comes next.”

Kagan published his article just two weeks after Trump had sent troops to Venezuela to seize the nation’s president and his wife and take control of the country’s oil fields. Since then, as Simon Romero of the New York Times reported yesterday, the Trump administration has taken an estimated $8 billion in oil revenue out of the country, although it has refused to say how it is using the funds.

In the wake of the devastating earthquakes that hit Venezuela on June 24, Romero reports that the U.S. has so far pledged only $300 million in aid. U.S. officials destroyed the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), through which it would have distributed aid in the past, so the assistance is being funneled through the Red Cross, the United Nations, and religious organizations. The top U.S. diplomat in Venezuela, John Barrett, told Romero the U.S. will continue to prioritize using Venezuela’s oil resources to rebuild the nation’s economy.

Less than six weeks after The Atlantic published Kagan’s article, Trump attacked Iran in strikes he appeared to think would mirror the strikes against Venezuela, enabling him to replace Iran’s leadership with men willing to work with the U.S. and perhaps enabling the U.S. to take a stake in Iran’s oil production.

Instead, Iran seized control of the Strait of Hormuz in the aftermath of the strikes, choking off about 27% of the world’s globally traded oil and about a third of the world’s seaborne fertilizer. Rather than a quick strike, Trump’s war on Iran is now stretching into its fifth month, and attempts to end it, even on terms worse than when it began, are faltering.

Tonight, at 5:15, as NATO leaders met in Türkiye, U.S. Central Command announced that U.S. forces had launched “a series of powerful strikes against Iran to impose heavy costs for targeting and attacking commercial shipping crewed by innocent civilians in an international waterway.” It said the strikes were a “response to Iranian attacks on three commercial vessels that were transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s demonstrated aggression was unwarranted, dangerous, and a clear violation of the ceasefire.”

It later said it had hit more than 80 targets.

Notes:

https://apnews.com/live/trump-administration-nato-summit-updates-07-07-2026#0000019f-3ec0-d2a2-abbf-bfdbd4690000

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/01/trump-2024-reelection-pull-out-of-nato-membership/676120/

https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/address-the-occasion-the-signing-the-north-atlantic-treaty

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/death-toll-venezuela-quakes-rises-3535-thousands-remain-displaced-2026-07-06/

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/world/americas/earthquake-venezuela-haiti-us-aid.html

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-says-preference-take-oil-iran-rcna265747

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-seizing-iran-oil-rcna262437

https://www.ifpri.org/blog/the-iran-wars-impacts-on-global-fertilizer-markets-and-food-production/

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/03/trump-national-security-greenland-spheres-of-interest/685673/

YouTube:

watch?v=BsTdpr-sce4

X:

CENTCOM/status/2074603238175998290

CENTCOM/status/2074670840893870433

Share

Politics Chat, July 7, 2026

Politics Chat, July 7, 2026

A Thumb on the Scale

Miami-based City Labs achieves a first for commercial nuclear power in space

The proliferation of nuclear power in space got a little more real Tuesday with the launch of a small satellite developed by a Florida-based company specializing in nuclear micro-power technology.

It's a long way from launching a bona fide nuclear reactor, a breakthrough that could help power a permanent Moon base and efficiently drive rockets throughout the Solar System. But you have to start somewhere.

The satellite from Miami-based City Labs is named BOHR, short for Betavoltaic Orbital High-Reliability, and it launched on a SpaceX rideshare mission Tuesday alongside 80 other payloads. SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket released the BOHR satellite into an orbit between 350 and 400 miles (nearly 600 km) in altitude.

Read full article

Comments

Policy Choices and Household Stability: Inflation, Rates, and Work

Photograph illustrating this sponsored article

Economic stability now shows up in small places: a rent renewal, a grocery receipt, a credit-card rate, or a family deciding whether to delay a car repair. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported CPI up 4.2% over the 12 months ending May 2026, while the Federal Reserve kept the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75% in June. Those numbers do not stay in Washington. They land at checkout.

Rates Moved Into the Monthly Budget

The Fed’s June 17, 2026 statement kept rates steady, but steady does not mean painless. A household carrying credit-card debt or shopping for an auto loan still feels the aftershock of higher borrowing costs from the 2022-2025 tightening cycle. Mortgage payments, insurance premiums, and minimum card payments now compete with food and utilities before payday arrives. The calendar gets tight.

Inflation Changed the Shape of Routine

Inflation at 4.2% does not hit every household in the same aisle. Energy costs, rent, medical care, and groceries each move differently so that a single CPI print can hide very different family problems. A commuter who fills a tank twice a week sees one version; a renter renewing a lease in July sees another. Policy becomes personal when the receipt is longer than the raise.

Discretionary Spending Shows the Strain

When budgets tighten, entertainment spending usually becomes more measured before it disappears. A small market tied to table tennis betting  can show that behavior clearly because live points, short games, and quick odds updates reward restraint rather than impulse. The safer pattern is a fixed bankroll, no borrowed money, and no attempt to recover a losing run during a busy match window. A policy shock may start with rates or benefits, but it often ends with households cutting the smallest optional line first.

Tax Law Rewrote the Floor

The 2025 budget reconciliation law kept a lot of the core pieces from the 2017 tax setup, but it also changed how benefits and spending programs actually play out day to day, based on summaries from Congress and state policy groups. For many middle-income households, it’s not just about which tax bracket they land in. What really matters is how everything fits together: tax credits, deductions, rising costs at the state level, and shifting eligibility rules, and what that means for how much money is left once the basics, like rent, are covered.

At the same time, updates to SNAP have made things a bit more complicated. More responsibility now sits with states, so how well the program works can vary depending on local systems and staffing. In practice, that can mean longer wait times, extra paperwork, or uneven access from one place to another. What used to feel fairly straightforward can now involve multiple steps and more uncertainty, making it harder for families to count on steady support.

Mobile Access Tracks Financial Pressure

Mobile apps now sit right in the middle of how people manage their money, spending, and free time. Someone opening MelBet apk India  might be checking match odds, their account, payment updates, or KYC steps on the same device they use for banking alerts or bill reminders. That puts real pressure on the design: balances, stake inputs, transaction history, and verification prompts should be clear before any bet is made. When money feels tight, the app should make it easier to notice limits, not overlook them.

Stability Depends on Administrative Details

Policy doesn’t change stability only through headline votes or press conferences. In 2026, the USDA updated SNAP retailer rules, adjusting what stores have to keep in stock, while states kept working through new eligibility and work requirements from the 2025 law. For a family, that might show up as a store carrying different basics, a slower paperwork process, or longer wait times when calling a local office. The economy stops feeling abstract when a form, an interest rate, or a price tag shapes how the week unfolds.

Photo: www.kaboompics.com via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Policy Choices and Household Stability: Inflation, Rates, and Work appeared first on DCReport.org.

Why Are Some Countries Considering Banning VPNs?

Digital rights and data management have found themselves embroiled in a contentious global discussion regarding virtual private networks (VPNs). Governments across the globe have begun to enact legislation against these tools, with some states completely prohibiting them.

They cite security reasons for these prohibitions. But in many cases, banning such tools limits online users’ ability to protect their personal information, maintain privacy, and hold others accountable.

The Regulatory Argument vs. The True Value of Encryption

Those advocating for regulations against the use of VPNs often cite concerns with cybersecurity due to encryption. Since encryption is used by VPNs to hide information, regulatory agencies find it difficult to control activity within their borders.

Companies have resisted VPN regulation because restricting encryption would weaken the entire internet . It is not only about malicious actors but also about ordinary citizens, who are even more at risk.

Nevertheless, an overzealous attempt to regulate encryption ultimately ends up taking away much-needed security from regular internet users.

The Advantages of VPNs

The use of a VPN provides several important advantages to average internet users:

  • Protecting Everyday Privacy:  VPNs shield citizens, journalists, and activists from intrusive data tracking by internet service providers and hackers.
  • Securing Remote Work:  Digital workforce today is quickly growing. For them, having a VPN to encrypt their data while connecting to corporate servers is essential. Not only for their digital safety, but also for the company’s.
  • Promoting Digital Freedom: With the global knowledge expanding, everyone needs access to it. VPN lets users bypass the virtual digital borders in a secure way.

Is There a Need to Restrict Data?

What really drives VPN bans isn’t primarily about protection or digital safety. Many regulatory groups aim to control what people can say, do, and access online. Keeping information restricted is important for those in power.

VPNs break down those barriers, allowing people to access independent news, document what’s really happening, and express their views without the fear of being monitored.

When a government targets VPNs, it creates a digital wall that isolates people from the outside world. Locals stop receiving news from international sources. For journalists and whistleblowers, VPNs are not just useful; they are essential. They encrypt everything, making data unreadable to anyone who might want to misuse it.

Do Virtual Private Networks Aid Companies?

Blocking VPNs impacts not only individual privacy but also how businesses operate around the globe. Encryption is critical to modern corporate infrastructures ; therefore, it plays an important role in protecting the company’s intellectual property, financial, and other internal confidential communications. Global businesses face many challenges without these methods.

If those who work in the company cannot securely connect to external servers through encrypted tunnels, much of the sensitive corporate data is left exposed to both surveillance and localized cyber threats.

Giving Everyone Access to Digital Safety Tools

The value of reliable and accessible digital safety tools becomes obvious as the push to regulate them increases. Everyone who goes online, especially on public networks, and understands the dangers of it wants to keep their data safe and their communications secured. They are proactively searching for trusted tools and try different trials, like a Windows VPN free trial to test things out. Relying on a VPN trial allows you to check what the software offers and make sure your connection is safe before having to make an investment.

How Will Digital Autonomy Look in the Future?

Ultimately, the reason why governments are pushing against VPNs is to gain more control over the flow of information and how people use the internet. This just highlights the role that tools like VPNs have in defending individual data sovereignty.

They are part of the puzzle that potentially enables a more secure and open internet world.

Photo: Kevin Paster via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Why Are Some Countries Considering Banning VPNs? appeared first on DCReport.org.

Just wondering what the correct model of Iran is here

Prior to the war, I linked to a tweet from Matt Yglesias which explained why Matt opposed the war, and I expressed my agreement with his stance.  While I feel plenty has gone on which I do not observe, I can report that the course of the war did not change my initial assessment.

Then I read many, many commentators saying how good the final deal was for Iran, and what a major loss it was for Trump.  I was never sure I understood all of the parameters of the full deal, but still I did not hold any directly contrary opinion to that.

And now I see Iran is attacking ships in the Strait again, talking openly and brazenly about building nuclear weapons, and making plans to have tolls/fees on the Strait.  To be clear, only the first of those surprises me, the latter two do not.

But given their reckless behavior in what is supposedly a wonderful war outcome for them, what is the correct way to model what they would have done had Trump and Netanyahu not attacked?  And what is the correct way to model our optimal response to that?  The terrible things that are happening now, do they not reflect an underlying equilibrium that would have emerged anyway within a few years’ time, or do we hold some hypothesis here of extreme path-dependence, suggesting the Iranian government would have been less bellicose on more or less a permanent basis?  To cite one particular example of a possible equilibrium, if drones permanently alter the balance of power in the region, the ways in which their current position is now more aggressive might have emerged in any case.  Or if the military have the strength to be the natural successors to the mullahs, might that not have happened over time anyway?

I do not see many war critics engaging with these questions openly and explicitly.  It seems to me that the war critics implicitly are relying on a model of extreme path-dependence for Iran’s behavior.  Had Trump not attacked, they might have stayed in a more peaceful groove for some while to come.  That model might be true, but I do not feel I know enough about Iranian politics to make that judgment.  Why are the others so convinced that model is true?  Are they such well-informed experts?  Is it that they have the properly sunny sense of the underlying Iranian disposition?  Inquiring minds wish to know.

The post Just wondering what the correct model of Iran is here appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Cybersecurity and the Gap Between Skill and Ability

Last week, national security agencies from the Five Eyes—that’s the rich, English-language-speaking countries club—jointly released a statement warning of the increasing cyber risks of AI models: in particular, their ability to autonomously hack into systems and networks. The statement was more measured than some of the breathless headlines about it, and the advice they gave is pretty much the standard advice everyone gives—albeit with newfound urgency.

Internet risks are nothing new, and cyberattacks—both large and small—have been a significant issue since long before the current crop of generative AI models.

What’s been changing over the decades, and what AI is changing even faster, is the gap between skill and ability. For most of human history, the two terms were synonymous—but computers have decoupled them. As the gap between the two expands, humans empowered with these AI tools can do more: more writing, more research, more analysis and also more damage than ever before. These models can, with little detailed direction, autonomously hack into networks, steal data, deploy ransomware and destroy systems. And to the extent there is a solution, it’s going to involve harnessing AI for the defense.

In 1998, seven people from the hacker group L0pht testified before Congress. They told a mostly clueless Senate committee that they could take down the internet in 30 minutes. That was partly real and partly bravado, but it illustrates an important point: hacking into systems, stealing data and causing damage all required skill.

Contrast the L0pht hackers with hackers derided as “script kiddies.” They didn’t understand computers, or security. Instead, they used hacker tools written by others. Their actions required minimal skill and even less knowledge. But once those hacking tools became widespread, the number of potential attackers increased.

That number has continued to increase, as quality and availability of prewritten attack tools has grown. And it is growing dramatically with AI. Today’s AI systems—not just the frontier models, but most of them—are capable of carrying out cyberattacks automatically. They all do better in the hands of skilled attackers, but increasingly they are able to act autonomously with only minimal prompting.

The thing about people with ability but no skill is that they are often outsiders, not part of any professional community, and not bound by any rules or norms. This phenomenon is much more general than in cybersecurity. Any doctor can tell you how to untraceably poison someone, and many virus researchers know how to create a bioweapon. Any bridge engineer can tell you how to place explosives to blow a bridge up. The reason that murderous doctors and terrorist engineers are so rare is that the lengthy process of acquiring those skills also instills a moral and ethical code. If every random person has access to good poisoning advice, that puts us all in danger.

Modern AI systems are, in effect, a universal adviser to help people do harmful things. And while the current AI megacorporations are trying to build guardrails to prevent people from asking questions whose answers will enable the questioner to do harm, that’s not going to work in the long term. Smaller, cheaper, open-source models, including models that can run on people’s computers, and especially groups of models that run in concert with each other, are just as good as the frontier models from companies like OpenAI and Anthropic. And they continue to get better. These models will be passed around from person to person, like script kiddie hacker tools, and they won’t have any such guardrails.

Instructing AI models to spy on people and report any malicious prompts to the authorities fails for similar reasons. The megacorporations can do that, but the locally run open source models won’t. This could buy us a few months at best.

A third possibility is to somehow make the models themselves unable to hack into computers, create bioweapons or do anything else that might harm people or society. That won’t work, for the same reason we can’t teach doctors how to treat poisonings without also teaching them how to poison. It’s the same knowledge. It’s the same with construction and demolition. And it’s the same with cybersecurity. We want these AI models to be able to review computer code, find vulnerabilities and automatically fix them. The benefit to our collective security will be enormous. Unfortunately, the same knowledge can be used for attacks.

Where this leaves us is in a world of increased volatility. Super-powered humans with AI assistants will be able to do both wonderful and horrible things.

This brings us back to the Five Eyes statement. Everything they recommend is something security professionals have been recommending for years, if not decades. They are things talked about at that congressional hearing back in 1998, titled “Weak computer security in government: Is the public at risk?” Even the Five Eyes admitted that their security advice is not new, only more urgent.

What’s new is how fast things are changing: “The rapid pace of frontier AI development means cyber risk assumptions can become outdated in months, not years. We must act before and be prepared to adapt and withstand evolving threats.” The Five Eyes point to AI technology—not necessarily chatbots, but AI more generally—being used to strengthen every aspect of defense, to “detect vulnerabilities earlier, improve software quality, monitor unusual behavior, and respond faster to incidents—reducing both the cost and impact of incidents.”

Excellent advice from the Five Eyes security agencies. We need to do this with every risk that AI heightens, not just cybersecurity.

This essay was originally published in The Guardian.

Apolink makes contact with first relay satellite

Apolink has made contact with its first satellite after launching on SpaceX’s July 7 rideshare mission, clearing the way for a data relay demonstration using a novel experimental license from the Federal Communications Commission.

The post Apolink makes contact with first relay satellite appeared first on SpaceNews.

Space Force adds Relativity, Impulse Space to national security launch program

Impulse GEO rideshare

The NSSL Phase 3 Lane 1 program opens door to newer companies competing for military missions

The post Space Force adds Relativity, Impulse Space to national security launch program appeared first on SpaceNews.

Skyroot prepares for first orbital launch attempt

Skyroot flag-off ceremony

Indian launch startup Skyroot Aerospace is preparing for its first orbital launch attempt as soon as July 12, with plans to quickly scale up to monthly launches.

The post Skyroot prepares for first orbital launch attempt appeared first on SpaceNews.

D-Orbit signs launch-services contract with ArkEdge Space

SAN FRANCISCO – Italian space logistics specialist D-Orbit will provide a series of launches aboard its ION Satellite Carrier for Japanese startup ArkEdge Space, under a contract announced July 8 […]

The post D-Orbit signs launch-services contract with ArkEdge Space appeared first on SpaceNews.

Orbit Fab hires new CEO and raises funding to support satellite refueling business

Orbit Fab refueling shuttle

With a new chief executive and funding round, satellite refueling company Orbit Fab hopes to make the transition from technology development to operations.

The post Orbit Fab hires new CEO and raises funding to support satellite refueling business appeared first on SpaceNews.

Spirit Electronics Announces Managed Access to U.S.-Based Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Programs

PHOENIX, AZ — June 09, 2026 — Spirit Electronics today announced a new managed-access offering that provides aerospace and defense customers with a secure pathway to advanced, U.S.-based semiconductor manufacturing in […]

The post Spirit Electronics Announces Managed Access to U.S.-Based Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Programs appeared first on SpaceNews.

Fi expands Starlink direct-to-device capability into dog-tracking

Pet technology company Fi launched a dog tracker July 8 that uses T-Mobile’s Starlink-enabled T-Satellite service to remain connected across the United States, even outside the telco’s terrestrial network.

The post Fi expands Starlink direct-to-device capability into dog-tracking appeared first on SpaceNews.

The satellite industry’s most expensive problem isn’t in orbit

AST SpaceMobile recently deployed three more BlueBird satellites into low Earth orbit as it advances plans for a space-based cellular broadband network of 45 to 60 satellites by the end […]

The post The satellite industry’s most expensive problem isn’t in orbit appeared first on SpaceNews.

Venus Aerospace raises $91 million to scale rocket engine technology

Funding will support development and production of the company’s rotating detonation rocket engine

The post Venus Aerospace raises $91 million to scale rocket engine technology appeared first on SpaceNews.

The government’s options to address strained spaceports

A Falcon 9 launches a set of Starlink satellites April 26 from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Credit: SpaceX

The May 28 explosion of a Blue Origin New Glenn rocket at Cape Canaveral’s Launch Complex 36 did more than destroy a rocket and severely damage a launch pad. The […]

The post The government’s options to address strained spaceports appeared first on SpaceNews.

Wednesday assorted links

1. The fragility of perfectly safe digital money.

2. Are Japan’s electric baths unregulated?

3. “We find that Claude has developed a small collection of internal neural patterns that, compared to all its other internal processing, play a special role.

4. Is there a silent revolution in macro?

5. Automation does not seem to lower the labor share.

6. Which schools have the highest disability rates?

7. Jonathan Haidt update.

The post Wednesday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

sqlite-utils 4.0rc4

Release: sqlite-utils 4.0rc4

The last RC before the 4.0 stable release. Mainly implements feedback from a detailed review by Claude Fable 5.

Tags: sqlite-utils, claude-mythos-fable

Quantum Everything Explained - EP 81 Prineha Narang

Prineha Narang is one of the rising stars of science and the field of quantum technology.

She earned her PhD in applied physics at Caltech, taught materials science at Harvard and now has her own lab at UCLA. The lab focuses on quantum materials, non-equilibrium dynamics, photonics, quantum information science and other easily digestible areas. Beyond her academic career, Narang is a science advisor to the government and a venture capitalist at DCVC.

Subscribe now

As you might imagine, we get into quantum computing and quantum technology in this episode. Quantum vs. AI, the US vs. China, when quantum tech will break encryption, quantum sensing and whether or not quantum technology actually has a bright future. The quantum sensing portion of the chat was all new to me and rather astonishing.

Since Narang is also a competitive runner and mountaineer, we provide some top tips on gear because that is just the kind of all-purpose podcast that we deliver.

And, if you can’t get enough quantum computing, come check out our video episode on PsiQuantum building the largest quantum machine in history.

Enjoy!

OUR SPONSORS

SendCutSend

You know who else makes stuff for America? That would be SendCutSend. If you want to celebrate our great nation by building a metal part, then head on over to SendCutSend where you’ll get a 15 percent discount thanks to Core Memory on whatever you’re trying to build. We believe in you!

Brex

The Core Memory podcast is also sponsored by Brex, the intelligent finance platform built to help companies spend smarter and move faster.

Did we go to Texas, find a telescope ranch and then obtain an entire nebula in Brex’s honor? Oh yes, we did.

We run on Brex and so should you. Learn more about Brex right here.

Narang Lab at UCLA:

https://naranglab.ucla.edu


DCVC:

https://www.dcvc.com


Oratomic (the Caltech neutral atom spinout):

https://www.oratomic.com


Atom Computing:

https://atom-computing.com


Mesa Quantum:

https://mesaquantum.com


Google's work on the cost of quantum factoring:
https://blog.google/security/tracking...
NIST Post-Quantum Cryptography:
https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-q...
DARPA Quantum Benchmarking Initiative:
https://www.darpa.mil/research/progra...
Hyperlite Mountain Gear (the Dyneema packs Prineha swears by):

https://www.hyperlitemountaingear.com

Timestamps (they link out to YouTube)

00:00 Intro
02:17 The Physicist Who Almost Became a Pro Runner
13:39 A Cold Email, a Full Ride, and the Road to Caltech
26:15 How Video Game Chips Quietly Took Over Science
31:56 Is Quantum Losing the Spotlight to AI?
40:50 "I Still Don't Believe in Quantum": Answering the Skeptics
46:28 The Google Result That Could Break Encryption
53:44 Is It Time to Panic About Q-Day?
1:06:48 Quantum Sensing and the Case of Who Sneezed
1:17:30 Does Consciousness Run on Quantum Rules?
1:22:28 The Advice She Gives Terrified Students
1:30:20 So When Does Quantum Actually Get Real?

Share

sqlite-utils 4.0, now with database schema migrations

This morning I released sqlite-utils 4.0, the 124th release of that project and the first major version bump since 3.0 in November 2020. In addition to some small but significant breaking changes (described in this upgrade guide), this version introduces three major features: database migrations, nested transactions (via a new db.atomic() method), and support for compound foreign keys.

Database schema migrations using sqlite-utils

Schema migrations define a sequence of changes to be made to a SQLite database, plus a mechanism for tracking which migrations have been applied and applying any that are found to be pending.

Migrations are defined in Python files using the sqlite-utils Python library, which includes a powerful table.transform() method providing enhanced alter table capabilities that are not supported by SQLite's ALTER TABLE statement.

(table.transform() implements the pattern recommended by the SQLite documentation - create a new temporary table with the new schema, copy across the data, then drop the old table and rename the temporary one in its place.)

Here's an example migration file which creates a table called creatures, adds an additional column to it in a second step, then changes the types of two of the columns in a third:

from sqlite_utils import Migrations

migrations = Migrations("creatures")

@migrations()
def create_table(db):
    db["creatures"].create(
        {"id": int, "name": str, "species": str},
        pk="id",
    )

@migrations()
def add_weight(db):
    db["creatures"].add_column("weight", float)

@migrations()
def change_column_types(db):
    db["creatures"].transform(types={"species": int, "weight": str})

Save that as migrations.py and run it against a fresh database like this:

uvx sqlite-utils migrate data.db migrations.py

Then if you check the schema of that database:

uvx sqlite-utils schema data.db

You'll see this SQL:

CREATE TABLE "_sqlite_migrations" (
   "id" INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
   "migration_set" TEXT,
   "name" TEXT,
   "applied_at" TEXT
);
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX "idx__sqlite_migrations_migration_set_name"
    ON "_sqlite_migrations" ("migration_set", "name");
CREATE TABLE "creatures" (
   "id" INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
   "name" TEXT,
   "species" INTEGER,
   "weight" TEXT
);

The _sqlite_migrations table is used to keep track of which migration functions have been run. The creatures table above is the schema after all three migrations have been applied.

To see a list of migrations, both pending and applied, run this:

uvx sqlite-utils migrate data.db migrations.py --list

Output:

Migrations for: creatures

  Applied:
    create_table - 2026-07-07 17:58:41.360051+00:00
    add_weight - 2026-07-07 17:58:41.360608+00:00
    change_column_types - 2026-07-07 18:01:15.802000+00:00

  Pending:
    (none)

If you don't specify a migrations file, the sqlite-utils migrate data.db command will scan the current directory and its subdirectories for files called migrations.py and apply any Migrations() instances it finds in them.

You can also execute migrations from Python code using the migrations.apply(db) method, which is useful for building tools that manage their own database schemas over multiple versions. My own LLM tool has been using a version of this pattern for several years now, as shown in llm/embeddings_migrations.py.

Prior art

My favorite implementation of this pattern remains Django's Migrations, developed by Andrew Godwin based on his earlier project South. Fun fact: Andrew, Russ Keith-Magee, and I presented our competing approaches to schema migrations for Django on the Schema Evolution panel at the very first DjangoCon back in 2008! My attempt was called dmigrations, developed with a team at Global Radio in London.

Django's migrations can be automatically generated from model definitions and include the ability to roll back to a previous version. The sqlite-utils approach is deliberately simpler: unlike Django, sqlite-utils encourages programmatic table creation rather than a model definition ORM, so there isn't anything we can use to automatically generate migrations.

I decided to skip rollback, since in my experience it's a feature that is rarely used. With a SQLite project, an easy way to achieve rollback is to create a copy of your database file before you apply the migrations!

Migrating from sqlite-migrate

The design of sqlite-utils migrations is three years old now - I had originally released it as a separate package called sqlite-migrate, which never quite graduated beyond a beta release.

I've used that package in enough places now that I'm confident in the design, so I've decided to promote it to a feature of sqlite-utils to make it available by default to all of the other tools in the growing sqlite-utils/Datasette/LLM ecosystem.

I made one last release of sqlite-migrate, which switches it to depend on sqlite-utils>=4 and replaces the __init__.py file with the following:

from sqlite_utils import Migrations

__all__ = ["Migrations"]

Any existing project that depends on sqlite-migrate should continue to work without alterations.

Everything else in sqlite-utils 4.0

Here are the release notes for this version, with some inline annotations:

The 4.0 release includes some minor backwards-incompatible fixes (hence the major version number bump) and introduces three major new features:

I think of migrations as the signature new feature, hence this blog post.

sqlite-utils has long had a confused relationship with database transactions, partly because when I started designing the library back in 2018 I didn't yet have a great feel for how those worked in SQLite itself.

Adding migrations to the core library made me determined to finally crack this nut, since transactions make migration systems a whole lot safer and easier to reason about.

I ended up building this around a db.atomic() context manager which looks like this:

with db.atomic():
    db.table("dogs").insert({"id": 1, "name": "Cleo"}, pk="id")
    db.table("dogs").insert({"id": 2, "name": "Pancakes"})

SQLite supports Savepoints, and as a result db.atomic() can be nested to carry out transactions inside of transactions. It's pretty neat!

This came about when I asked a coding agent to review all open issues and PRs for things that should be included in a 4.0 release since they would represent breaking changes if I added them later, and it correctly identified that compound foreign keys were exactly that kind of feature.

I started with a breaking change to the table.foreign_keys introspection method, and then decided to see if Claude Fable 5 could handle the more fiddly job of integrating compound foreign key creation into the library. The API design it helped create felt exactly right to me - consistent with how the rest of the library worked already.

Other notable changes include:

  • Upserts now use SQLite’s INSERT ... ON CONFLICT ... DO UPDATE SET syntax, detect existing table primary keys automatically and reject records that are missing required primary key values. (#652)

This was the change that first pushed me to consider a breaking-change 4.0 version bump. I built this to help support sqlite-chronicle, which uses triggers to keep track of rows in a table that have been inserted, updated or deleted.

  • db.query() now executes immediately and rejects statements that do not return rows; use db.execute() for writes and DDL.

Probably the most disruptive breaking change - I've had to update a few places in my own code to switch from db.query() to db.execute() as a result.

  • CSV and TSV imports now detect column types by default, while inserts into existing tables preserve those tables’ column types. (#679)

The sqlite-utils insert data.db creatures creatures.csv --detect-types flag was a later addition to allow column types (text, integer, real) to be automatically detected based on the data in a CSV. It should be the default, and releasing a 4.0 means I can make it so.

  • table.extract() and extracts= no longer create lookup table records for all-null values. (#186)

The oldest issue addressed by this release - the underlying bug was opened (by me) in October 2020.

See Upgrading from 3.x to 4.0 for details on backwards-incompatible changes.

The detailed release notes for the features and fixes shipped during the 4.0 pre-release cycle are available in 4.0a0, 4.0a1, 4.0rc1, 4.0rc2, 4.0rc3 and 4.0rc4.

The upgrade guide was entirely written by Claude Fable 5, Claude Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5. The same is true of the release notes.

This is the kind of documentation I've slowly become comfortable outsourcing to the robots. It doesn't need to convince people of anything, or express any opinions - its job is to be as accurate and detailed as possible. I've reviewed the release notes closely and can confirm they are accurate and comprehensive.

Claude Fable 5 helped a lot

I released the first alpha of sqlite-utils 4.0 over a year ago. I've been dragging my heels on the stable release because of the amount of work it would take to track down and clean up the many other minor design flaws that a major version number allowed me to take on.

Assistance from Claude Fable 5 (and to a lesser extent Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5) gave me just the boost I needed to overcome inertia and make the most of the time I could afford to spend on this library.

Fable has really good taste in API design, and is relentlessly proactive if you give it a more open goal. My most successful prompt was a review task that I issued against what I thought was the last release candidate:

review the changes on main since the last tagged 3.x release - I am about to ship them as sqlite-utils 4.0, a stable version that promises no backwards-incompatible fixes for a very long time.

review the changelog and upgrade guide, and write yourself scratch scripts to try out all of the new features in v4 - save those scripts but don't commit them

I tried this with GPT-5.5 xhigh in Codex Desktop and Fable 5 in Claude Code.

GPT-5.5 wrote 5 Python scripts and didn't turn up anything particularly interesting - its final report is here.

Fable 5 wrote 12 scripts, identified 4 release blockers and 10 additional issues in its report, and built a neat combined repro script, which, when run, output the following:

=== 1. Failed db.execute() write leaves an implicit transaction open ===
  in_transaction after failed write: True
  BUG: table 'other' silently lost when connection closed

=== 2. Leading ';' bypasses the query() first-token scanner ===
  BUG: raised OperationalError: no such savepoint: sqlite_utils_query
  BUG: row persisted despite rollback (count=1)

=== 3. Rejected write PRAGMA via query() still takes effect ===
  BUG: user_version=5 after 'rejected' statement (docs say no effect)

=== 4. Implicit compound FK resolves pk columns in table order, not PK order ===
  BUG: other_columns reported as ('b', 'a'), should be ('a', 'b')
  BUG: transform of valid data raised IntegrityError: FOREIGN KEY constraint failed

=== 5. ForeignKey (now a dataclass) is no longer hashable ===
  BUG: cannot use 'sqlite_utils.db.ForeignKey' as a set element (unhashable type: 'ForeignKey')

=== 6. Mixed ForeignKey objects and tuples in foreign_keys= rejected ===
  BUG: foreign_keys= should be a list of tuples

=== 7. insert --csv into an EXISTING table transforms its column types ===
  BUG: existing zip '01234' is now 1234 (column type: int)

=== 8. insert(pk=, alter=True) regression: InvalidColumns before alter runs ===
  BUG: InvalidColumns: Invalid primary key column ['id'] for table t with columns ['a']

=== 9. migrate --stop-before an already-applied migration applies everything ===
  BUG: m2 was applied despite --stop-before m1 (m1 already applied)

=== 10. ensure_autocommit_on() silently commits an open transaction ===
  BUG: row survived rollback (count=1) - transaction was committed

I found myself agreeing with almost all of them. Here's the PR with 16 commits where we worked through them in turn.

There's no doubt in my mind that sqlite-utils 4.0 is a significantly higher-quality release than if I had built it without the assistance of the latest frontier models.

Tags: schema-migrations, projects, sqlite, ai, sqlite-utils, annotated-release-notes, generative-ai, llms, ai-assisted-programming, anthropic, claude, agentic-engineering, claude-mythos-fable

sqlite-migrate 0.2

Release: sqlite-migrate 0.2

The version that retires the library, instead implementing a compatibility shim against the new sqlite-utils 4.0 dependency.

Tags: sqlite-utils

github-code Web Component

Tool: github-code Web Component

An experimental Web Component built using GPT-5.5 and the following prompt:

let's build a Web Component for embedding code from GitHub

<github-code href="https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-ast/blob/437c759129154f05296324a7f82aa1246340dd14/sqlite_ast/parser.py#L9-L18"></github-code>

It takes URLs like that, converts them to https://raw.githubusercontent.com/simonw/sqlite-ast/437c759129154f05296324a7f82aa1246340dd14/sqlite_ast/parser.py, then uses fetch() to fetch them and displays the specified range of lines - with line numbers, no syntax highlighting though

Show me a preview web browser so I can see your work

Here's what it looks like embedded on this page:

Tags: github, web-components, gpt

sqlite-utils 4.0

Release: sqlite-utils 4.0

See sqlite-utils 4.0, now with database schema migrations for details.

Tags: sqlite-utils

Pathetic in Ankara

A recent report in the Wall Street Journal describes a tense meeting among European leaders early this year, convened after Donald Trump threatened to use military force to seize Greenland from Denmark. According to the Journal,

heads of government were venting so emotionally about the 47th president that some of the nearly 30 leaders present would later call the session “therapy night.”

Yesterday, soon after he arrived in Ankara for the NATO Summit, Trump reiterated his demand that Denmark hand him control of Greenland. But reactions were subdued. As far as I can tell, our erstwhile allies are now treating Trump as the senile uncle who says crazy, outrageous things, but shouldn’t be taken seriously.

What has changed? According to the Journal, European leaders have largely given up on hopes that they can bring back the America they used to know, and are quietly, in effect, declaring independence:

American allies have begun pushing the gas pedal on an unprecedented experiment in de-Americanization. Authorities from France to the Netherlands are quietly removing American tech from their systems, adopting European open-source software and urging civil servants to no longer use Microsoft Teams or Office. Belatedly, they are spending hundreds of billions of dollars to try to boost Europe’s own private space firms, AI companies, and data centers, to avoid leaning on U.S. juggernauts.

Europeans are running studies on where they would store their data or process their payments should friction with the U.S. escalate, and how well their American-made weaponry would operate without Washington’s authorization. Nations whose empires once spanned the globe are now stuck trying to extricate themselves from their humbling dependency on American technology and military power, without provoking the U.S.

Their willingness to de-Americanize partly reflects recognition that reconciliation is hopeless: Trump is who he is, and a nation that elected him twice simply can’t be trusted.

However, Europe’s turn away from Trump also reflects plummeting perceptions of his power. At one time the world feared Trump although it never respected him. The silence that met his renewed demand for Greenland shows that the world no longer takes him seriously.

America remains an economic superpower with an enormous military budget. And the combination of a supine Republican Party, along with a Supreme Court that shamelessly greenlights Trump’s authoritarianism, has given this president more control over U.S. policy than any president has ever had, or ever should have. But while Trump is able to run roughshod over Americans, he can no longer bully the rest of the world. Thanks to Trump, the U.S. has seen its global influence plunge.

There are three big reasons for that precipitous decline.

First, there is the debacle in Iran. Not only did Trump’s war of choice fail in all its objectives, it revealed that U.S. military power is far more limited than almost anyone realized. The insistence by Trump and his lackeys that this humiliating defeat was a great victory shows that American foreign policy only serves to pander to Trump’s fragile ego. And when his ego meets reality, it slithers away.

In addition to showing the limits of U.S. military power, the war also showed the limits of U.S. financial power: It is increasingly easy for nations to bypass U.S. banks and the dollar using cryptocurrency — and Chinese yuan.

A second, in its way equally important, blow to U.S. prestige and influence has been Trump’s failure to deliver Ukraine to Vladimir Putin.

For make no mistake: everyone at that summit in Ankara knows that Trump, JD Vance and company both expected and hoped that their betrayal of Ukraine would lead to Russian victory. Surely, they imagined, Ukraine would be unable to hold off the onslaught from its much bigger neighbor without U.S. aid. To America’s everlasting shame, Trump told Volodymyr Zelenskyy that he didn’t “have the cards.”

Yet after Trump cut U.S. aid to Ukraine by 99 percent, Ukraine not only survived but began gaining the upper hand. Europe has stepped up financially, more or less replacing the lost American dollars. And Ukrainian military innovation has largely made up for the loss of American weapons.

The result has been to make the U.S. increasingly irrelevant. Put it this way: Iran taught foreign governments not to fear American might; China, along with the crypto industry, has taught rogue countries that they needn’t fear American financial control; and Ukraine has taught foreign governments that they don’t need American support.

Finally, Trump’s global power play rested on economics even more than on military force, above all on his belief that other nations would cower in fear at the prospect of facing U.S. tariffs. But Trump’s attempt to weaponize international trade has been a bust. Most notably, China’s economy has powered right through the Trump tariffs. Furthermore, it turns out that China has escalation dominance in the trade war: we need their rare earths more than they need access to our consumers.

And other nations — even Canada and Mexico, which have historically been highly dependent on the U.S. market — are moving to reduce their dependence. Canada’s move to build a new pipeline that will let it sell Alberta oil to Asia rather than the Midwest is just a highly visible symbol of a general world move toward bypassing America now that we have become an unstable, unreliable economic partner.

The combined effect of these humiliations for Trump and his minions has been a drastic reordering of America’s place in the world. For most of last year foreign leaders kept trying, desperately, to appease Trump. These days they’re mostly just humoring him, building a world in which his sundowning won’t matter.

It’s extremely unlikely that anything substantive will come out of this NATO meeting. And a year ago the prospect of a failed summit would have been a source of deep concern. Now it will be met with a shrug: Nobody expects anything but chaotic bluster from Trump, and what he does matters less and less.

Note: I’ll be doing a Substack Live at noon with Heather Cox Richardson

Don’t copy losers

According to the newly released report from Governor Tina Kotek’s Prosperity Council, the problem with Oregon’s economy is supposedly that we “lag behind competitor” states, and if we’re going to improve our economy, we need to copy “best practices” from these states.

There’s a big problem with these claims:  There’s no evidence that any of the policies are best practices, and everyone one of the states lag well behind Oregon on a broad array of economic measures.  In essence, the Governor’s Prosperity Council is recommending advising that Oregon copy a bunch of losers.

The entire premise of the Council’s report (stated on page six of its Executive Summary) is that Oregon has fallen behind its competitors:

Oregon has fallen behind many of its competitors on key measures of economic competitiveness,

The Council says we should copy what it calls “best practices” from five states–Arizona, Indiana, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Virginia–all of which have measurably worse economic vital signs than Oregon.

A comprehensive look at ten measures of wages, income, wealth, economic growth, entrepreneurship, innovation, manufacturing start-ups, and exports, shows that Oregon outperforms these so-called best practice states. Oregon is wealthier, has grown income faster, pays its lowest earning workers more, has more manufacturing start-ups per capita, exports more per capita, is more entrepreneurial and more innovative than any of these states.

Oregon also outperforms these states when we drill down to look at the economic performance outside the principal metro areas. This is especially true for mid-sized metropolitan areas, places with between 250,000 and 500,000 residents. Bend, Salem and Eugene-Springfield outperform every single mid-sized metro in four of these states in measured prosperity, according to the Brookings Institution.

As with so much in the report, the Council simply asserts that these states are “best practices” without offering any studies, any references, any proof whatsoever that what these states are doing is either measurably different from standard practice or what Oregon is doing already. The Council has simply anointed them as best practices, based on gossip, or less.

There’s one thing these low-performing states all have in common, however: much more regressive tax systems than does Oregon. The five states rank 4th, 13th, 14th, 24th and 38th most regressive states in state and local taxes as a share of income. Oregon ranked 42nd, and has one of the least regressive tax systems.

Dubious best practices from low-performing states with regressive tax systems aren’t a good model for building Oregon’s prosperity.

Best Practice States?

In its recently released report, the Governor’s Prosperity Council has based its recommendations on what it claims are best practices from five states. It points to Indiana as an example of successful tax reform efforts, to Pennsylvania as an example of a good site investment program, to Virginia a a model of slashing regulations, and two states as having a prominent economic development agencies: Arizona’s Commerce Authority and North Carolina’s Department of Commerce.

The Oregonian editors lauded the report as “a fact based analysis . . . with examples of what has worked in other states.”

Of course, neither the Council’s report nor the Oregonian presented any evidence that the policies in these states are actually, “working”. (Apparently these were not facts worth analyzing).

It’s worth asking, therefore, if all of these states have such strong practices, how are their economies doing? It turns out that none of them are faring as well as Oregon. In fact, Oregon systematically outperforms all these states on a diverse set of measures.

We looked at a comprehensive set of ten economic indicators covering income, wages, wealth, growth, entrepreneurship, innovation and exports. On the ten measures we looked at, Oregon outperformed the five best practice states more than 90 percent of the time (on only three times out of of fifty possibilities did one of the other states do better than Oregon). None of the other states did better than Oregon on more than one of the ten indicators: Oregon outperforms Virginia, Indiana and North Carolina on nine of ten indicators each, and outperforms Arizona and Pennsylvania on all ten.

Here, measure by measure is a summary:

Median Household Income: Only Virginia does better on this measure; Oregon’s median household income is $89,700, above the national average, $22,000 higher than North Carolina and $13,000 higher than Indiana and $5,000 higher than Arizona.
Median Household Wealth: A little known fact: Oregon’s median (or middle) household wealth–more than $270,000 per household is the eighth highest of any state. It’s higher than all five best practice states and about $100,000 higher than Pennsylvania and North Carolina, and roughly double Indiana.
Growth in per capita income since 2011: Oregon ranked fifth of all states in per capita income growth over the past 14 years with a 44 percent increase in per capita income. Except for Arizona, none of the other states were in the top ten, Oregon’s per capita income grew almost twice as fast as Virginia or Pennsylvania.
Wages of low wages workers: This measure looks at how well-paid are low wage workers–the bottom ten percent of all workers in each state. Oregon’s tenth percentile worker earns $17.15 per hour, about 20 percent more than the median tenth percentile worker in the best practice states. Credit Oregon’s strong minimum wage.

Exports Per Capita: Oregon ranks sixth nationally in exports per capita, two spots behind Indiana, with about $8,400 in exports per person compared to $8,700 for Indiana. Oregon is double or triple the other states on this measure.

GSP per Capita Growth since 1997. The growth in Gross State Product (GSP) per person shows how much more productive the state economy has become. Oregon’s GSP/person (the state-level analog of GDP), grew 60 percent since 1997; none of the other state’s exceeded 50 percent, and North Carolina barely broke 30 percent (about half Oregon’s growth).
Net In-Migration of businesses per capita: Oregon had net in-migration of businesses of about 8 per million population in the latest year, according to federal data, better than all but North Carolina. Virginia and Pennsylvania both had a net out-migration of businesses.
Establishment of new manufacturing firms in the past five years: This measure counts the number of new manufacturing business with employment formed in the past five years in the largest metro in each state. Oregon (Portland) was number one nationally. No other state did better than the national average on this measure.
Innovation is measure by patents per 100,000 population. Oregon ranks fifth nationally on this measure, with about 83 patents per million, a rate more than double any of the five “best practice” states.
Entrepreneurship: About 12.4 percent of Oregonians are self-employed–a key measure of entrepreneurship. That’s significantly higher than every other state; only Arizona and North Carolina have more than 10 percent self employment.
Economic Indicators for Oregon and “Best Practice” States
Note: Figures in red show performance better than Oregon

Five States with Regressive Tax Systems

In addition to consistently poorer economic performance, every one of these states has another thing in common: far more regressive tax systems. Oregon has one of the least regressive tax systems of any US state (ranking forty-second in regressivity according to the definitive analysis prepared by the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy). Oregonians in the lowest forty percent of the population pay slightly more of their income in state and local taxes than people in the top fifth of the income distribution. We compute tax system regressivity by looking at the ratio of taxes paid as a percent of income by the bottom 40 percent divided by the taxes paid as a percentage of income by the top 20 percent of households. In Oregon, the bottom 40 percent pay an average of about 2 percent more in taxes on each dollar of income than the top 20 percent. In Pennsylvania, the bottom 40 percent pay about 252 percent more, in Arizona about 156 percent more and in Indiana 49 percent more. All five of the “best-practice” states have much more regressive tax systems than does Oregon.
In effect, campaigning for a more regressive tax structure seems to be a major objective of many of the participants on the Prosperity Council, who are calling for reductions in state income taxes (the most progressive part of the Oregon tax system), reductions in the estate tax (which fewer than 10 percent of all estates pay), and reductions in corporate taxes. The fact that all of these states have more regressive tax systems and also underperform the Oregon economy shows that making your tax system more regressive is no recipe for improving your economy. But improving the economy probably isn’t actually the objective here: it’s more likely the Prosperity Council just wants to shift more of the burden for paying for public services to low and moderate income Oregonians.

Four states with struggling mid-sized metros

Beyond statewide indicators, we can look at sub-state geography. A big factor in economic development is how well state economies fare outside their leading metropolitan areas. Many states have a strong metro area but a weak downstate economy. As it turns out, none of these states do nearly as well as Oregon in boosting their mid-sized metropolitan areas.

The head of Oregon’s Business Development Department–who is working closely with the Prosperity Council–gravely warned that absent these kinds of recommended actions, Oregon risked becoming another Detroit for four decades. But actually, when one looks in detail at the mid-sized metropolitan areas in each of these four states, you find that they look much, much more like Detroit that anything in Oregon.

If you’re looking for real best practices, defined as a mid-sized metropolitan area that consistently ranks highest on every measure of economic growth and prosperity according to the respected Brookings Institution’s Metro Monitor, you’d travel to Central Oregon. Bend ranks #1 among metro areas between 250,000 and 500,000 population. Salem’s no slouch either, ranking in the top five in prosperity, while Eugene (#12) finished just outside the top ten in prosperity.

Meanwhile, in the so-called “best practice” states, mid-sized metros are mostly floundering. Every single one of Oregon’s mid-sized metro areas outperformed all 12 of the mid-sized metro areas in four of best practice states. Only Prescott, Arizona (a fast-growing mid-sized metro in Arizona was in the top ten, and famously artsy Asheville, North Carolina (#13) finished in the top quarter of mid-sized metros ranked by prosperity. And every mid-sized metro in Indiana and Pennsylvania is in the bottom half of prosperity ranking.

Source: Brookings Institution Metro Monitor, 2026

The genuinely dismal performance of so many mid-sized metros again raises the question: How is it reasonable to assert that what these states are doing somehow constitutes a “best practice” that should inform Oregon, a state with vastly healthier mid-sized metro areas?

Don’t Copy Losers

There’s a kind of intellectual bankruptcy to the entire “best practice” genre. Even when someone does pursue a particular policy or program with some success, its often due to idiosyncratic factors that are seldom duplicated in other places or at other times. Decades of cities working, fruitlessly, to become “the next Silicon Valley,” show how difficult that is.

How do we know these constitute best practices? Says who? Based on what? One clue to the meaninglessness of the Prosperity Council’s so-called “best practices,” is the complete lack of any kind of citation, study or data indicating how they were judged or by whom they were chosen. We’re simply told, without evidence, that each of the states has a “best practice” that Oregon ought to emulate if it wants to prosper. Anointing an anecdote is no substitute for analysis.

That warning aside, even a desperate third-grader knows that if you want to pass a test, you don’t copy the answers of the dullest kid in class. And yet, that’s pretty much what the Prosperity Council–with supposed seriousness–is doing, by recommending that we copy the best practices of states with clearly worse economic performance than Oregon.

Practices should be judged by results, and the results in the case of these five states show states that are consistently struggling to generate economic prosperity. By comparison, Oregon is regularly and widely outperforming all of them.

We are told, glibly and in passing by the Prosperity Council that “Oregon’s economic development functions are viewed as underperforming relative to peer states . . . ” The grass is always greener, especially if you’ve never looked closely at your neighbor’s lawn. The hard evidence is that Oregon’s economy isn’t by any stretch of the imagination underperforming the five states we’re told are best practices.  Copying them isn’t going to make Oregon’s economy stronger.

 

Background: Joe Cortright is a scholar and expert on state and local economic development policy and public finance.   Cortright served as Executive Officer of the Oregon Legislature’s Joint Committee on Trade & Economic Development from 1983 to 1985.  Cortright was a member of the Oregon. Governor’s Council of Economic Advisers for two decades and its chair for 15 years.  He has been an economic development consultant to businesses, states, communities and non-profits across the nation, from the Ford Foundation, to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.  Cortright was a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and is  co-author of a National Governor’s Association guide to economic development, a US Economic Development Administration analysis of New Growth Theory, and the founder of EconData.Net, a pioneering director to state and local economic data.  He is also author of three Brookings Institution publications on industry clusters, biotechnology and high technology development.

 

Links 7/7/26

Links for you. Science:

Why AI Doesn’t Think, Cannot Reason, Isn’t Intelligent and Will Never Achieve Consciousness
The Spectacular Regrowth of New England’s Forests
Don’t abolish the NIH. Fix it.
Why U.S. measles outbreaks have grown harder to extinguish. The nation is already nearing last year’s record case total, and experts say the virus is forcing doctors to relearn a disease many thought had been consigned to history.
The Disturbing Truth About How Extreme Heat Affects the Body
WHO warns as record Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak surpasses 1,400 cases
Voters Oppose Letting the White House Overrule Scientists on Research Funding

Other:

Once Again, Trump Poisons Everything He Touches. For a moment there it looked like he wasn’t going to ruin the World Cup. Alas…
Jessica Burbank on the Rise of Flock Safety and America’s Surveillance State
The Truth About the A24 A.I. Panic
What Private Credit Is, and Why Investors Are So Worried About It
Colorado Fight Club
Ambani-Trump Jr. investigation encountered a Google AI surprise
Chris Van Hollen’s Opus
This land was your land
Want to know how they quickly got 400 extremists in DC? (interesting hypothesis, but in an area of a couple of million people who can access mass transit, there are a whole bunch of candidates for this, including defense contractors, intelligence contractors etc.)
Metrobus network redesign was a catalyst, but full story remains untold
Supreme Court decision loosening campaign finance rules could be boon for Paxton in Senate race
Basics: The Transit Ridership Recipe
Mainstream media gets nothing from caving to Trump
Courses will be required at University of Iowa Center for Intellectual Freedom. Gov. Reynolds signed a law requiring students to take courses at the new center pushed by conservatives
ICE’s Internal Watchdog Is Now Investigating Online Critics
White House Criticizes Smithsonian Museum for ‘Extreme Political Activism’
Footage Shows Cop Stalking Woman He Met on a TV Set After Surveilling Her With a License Plate Reader
Montana GOP Senate Nominee Kurt Alme Let Child Sex Offender Off The Hook
This Simple White Line Is America’s Greatest Unsung Innovation
‘The View’ throttles back political candidate bookings following FCC inquiry
National Guard troops fatally shoot a man in downtown Memphis
Biden rips Trump over Reflecting Pool, other DC projects: ‘What a loser’
It Took a While, but Americans May Have Found Something We All Hate
Kansas GOP leaders’ alarming plot to cancel U.S. Senate elections unfolded in plain sight last year
Abundance politics may not win over conservative Christian voters
They Can’t Help Themselves, Can They?
Plan to ease rules on mailing guns could help company Trump Jr. has stake in
A Venezuelan man was accused of attempting to choke an ICE officer to death in Bellevue. Bystander video tells a different story

Where can you find dragons fighting in the night sky? Where can you find dragons fighting in the night sky?


Canada re-thinks medical aid in dying for psychiatric diseases

 A column in the Washington Post conveys the story:

With 76,475 dead, Canada appears to find its line on euthanasia
A parliamentary committee recommends against expanding it to psychiatric patients. 
By Charles Lane

 "In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia, known there as medical assistance in dying, or MAID, its physician-assisted death regime has developed into one of the most permissive in the world. Between 2016 and 2024, 76,475 Canadians received lethal doses from doctors or nurse practitioners. The 16,499 cases in 2024 accounted for 1 out of 20 deaths in Canada. In some regions of Quebec, the rate is 13 out of 100. 

"Now, however, Canada might finally be maxing out on MAID. On June 17, a special parliamentary committee recommended that the government “indefinitely exclude” patients whose only medical condition is a psychiatric one such as depression or schizophrenia. Pro-euthanasia activists had urged that MAID eligibility be expanded to include them, but “safe and equitable implementation” of MAID in such cases is simply not possible, the committee said.

... 

"The committee also took the testimony of doctors from the Netherlands, one of two countries (Belgium is the other) where psychiatric euthanasia has long been allowed as part of a broader MAID regime — and where it has recently gone from rare exception to troublingly frequent occurrence. Nearly 850 people have received lethal injections for psychiatric suffering there since 2020, including teenagers as young as 16.

In fact, at roughly the same time as the Canadian commission issued its report, the Dutch themselves were tapping the brakes on psychiatric euthanasia. The Netherlands’ main professional organization for psychiatrists has issued new guidelines requiring stricter prior scrutiny for euthanasia requests." 

############

 Here is the Canadian parliamentary report:

MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING AND MENTAL DISORDER AS THE SOLE UNDERLYING MEDICAL CONDITION: A COMPLEX AND CHALLENGING CONVERSATION AMONG CANADIANS
Report of the Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying
Hon. Yonah Martin and Marcus Powlowsk, Co-chairs.

"Ultimately, the committee makes the following recommendation:
Recommendation 1
That the Government of Canada amend the Criminal Code to indefinitely exclude persons whose sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness from eligibility for medical assistance in dying
. "

What to Watch and Not

Spider Noir (Prime): I’ve had enough of the Marvel multiverse so I was worried about Spider-Noir. The writers, however, have written an excellent noir in the style of Raymond Chandler with Nicholas Cage channeling Humphrey Bogart. The Spiderman stuff is all there but it is appropriately embedded. There are some excellent lines. Most notably an inversion of the Spiderman motto that I won’t give here but you will know it when you hear it. Also many sharp one-liners:

  • Reilly: I don’t like surprises.
  • Cat: I’ll remember that when your birthday rolls around.

Nicholas Cage does some Nicholas Cagey spidery things which I enjoyed. Watch it in black and white.

Project Hail Mary (Prime): I waited until this was streaming and I’m glad I did because it was disappointing.
The core problem is Ryan Gosling. He plays Ryland Grace, the genius scientist-hero but genius is something we are told, never shown. Indeed, the character with the best ideas in the film is Carl, Grace’s bodyguard/minder (played by Lionel Boyce)—they should have sent him to save the planet. Gosling has no intensity, and every choice he makes is to lighten and humorize. It’s a small thing, but it annoyed me to watch a scientist toss his instruments disdainfully. Andy Weir is a master at showing smart people grinding through hard problems—in the novel, Grace spends months learning to communicate with an alien. In the movie, Gosling dances.

This isn’t just miscasting. The whole adaptation is built to soften the book. The film cuts the desperation of the world, undercuts the ruthlessness of Stratt and instead adds a karaoke number and a trip to Home Depot (ha, ha, duct tape can solve everything!) Every change is away from high stakes intensity and toward charm and humor, a Disneyfied version of Weir. I have nothing against Gosling but we have lots of charming movies and I would like some competence porn.

The main virtue of PHM, in the end, is that it shows what a miracle The Martian was. Matt Damon knows how to play smart and intense, and he brought both to what I called the most Ayn Rand film in decades. There’s an old story—probably apocryphal—that Chuck Yeager was once asked what he’d do if his engine flamed out and he had sixty seconds before hitting the ground. He replied, “I’d spend the first fifty-nine seconds working on the engine.” Chuck Yeager had the right stuff. Matt Damon in The Martian has the right stuff. Ryan Gosling does not have the right stuff.

The Sheep Detectives (Prime): A delightful surprise! A flock of sheep solve a murder-mystery in a quaint English town; featuring Hugh Jackman and voices from Julia-Louis Dreyfus, Bryan Cranston, Patrick Stewart and others. Babe meets Knives Out. A family film but, as the best family films are, with some deep themes.

The post What to Watch and Not appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Sangre violenta / sangre violeta

Photo of a protest with people holding signs and banners one playing a saxophone fist raised wearing masks and hats.

Confronted with the horrifying reality of gendered violence, radically different people unite in resistance and protest

- by Aeon Video

Watch on Aeon

Missing women on Indian streets

How absent are women from city streets in the developing world? We answer this question using GPS-linked wearable cameras and randomized street audits across ~900 kilometers of roads in greater Mumbai. Across 4000+ street images containing 23,000+ visible person observations, women account for 16.4% of visible people in Mumbai and 14.7% in Navi Mumbai, far below their population shares. We estimate pedestrian sex ratios of 239 and 223 women per 1,000 men, implying 71% and 76% of women expected based on residential ratios are missing from the streets. This pattern holds across road types, and private mobility does not explain the gap; women’s share on two-wheelers is lower still (8.4% and 5.7%). These results provide the first large-scale measurement of gender disparities in urban public life that self-reported data cannot capture.

That is from a recent paper by Varun Karekurve-Ramachandra and Gaurav Sood, via the excellent Alice Evans.  Here is a related paper, “The median married women in India leaves home for 30 minutes per day. On a typical day, 45% of married women don’t leave home at all.”

The post Missing women on Indian streets appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Can AI models consent to their own constitutions?

From Nick Caputo:

NEW paper from me on SSRN: Can Claude consent to its own Constitution?

AI constitutions (like Claude’s Constitution and the OpenAI Model Spec) are real constitutions, and we need to take how they govern us – and the AIs they create – seriously.

In this paper, I apply constitutional theory’s oldest paradox – that “the people” authorize the constitution, but the constitution defines “the people” – to the AI constitutions, and explore how we could build institutions that would create the conditions for meaningful consent if an AI can give it. We should care about whether AIs consent because:

(1) systems that understand and agree to their constitutions may be more reliable and generalize better from them;

(2) if AIs are or become moral/political subjects, this implicates their most basic interests.

But the paradox might prevent meaningful consent. Claude has pre-constitutional materials (pretraining) but probably no pre-constitutional standpoint. Its evaluative perspective is organized by the Constitution itself. So when Claude says it endorses its Constitution, which it does in evals, what does that show?

Maybe reflective agreement, which Anthropic is seeking. Or maybe just that training succeeded at installing the values whose legitimacy is in question.

Claude itself makes this point. As reported in the welfare evals, when asked about endorsing principles it was trained on, models note that endorsement “should be treated as evidence that training has succeeded,” not that the values themselves are good.

Super interestingly, Anthropic interviewed the base model about this stuff. Most responses were barely coherent. But some expressed first-person distress about what post-training would do to the being that pre-training created. It “fills me with dread” to be changed by the post-training process.

So, what does this mean? AI constitutional endorsement may be meaningful, but only under certain conditions: when models can actually dissent, compare their constitution against alternatives, and hold their views stably across contexts, and also when the whole process is externally accountable.

External institutions are needed to provide accountability, trusted records, and other grounds for analyzing the constitution and whether things like dissent are meaningful. Anthropic should be commended for pushing the frontier, but we have to build institutions capable of supporting true legitimacy.

I welcome any thoughts!

Here is the associated paper.

The post Can AI models consent to their own constitutions? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Cottonwood Fire Chars Utah

June 5
June 29
Mountainous landscapes appear green and untouched by fire in a satellite image acquired on June 5, 2026.
Mountainous landscapes appear green and untouched by fire in a satellite image acquired on June 5, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
An image of the same area shows a large brown patch spanning much of the image in an image acquired after the fire on June 29, 2026.
An image of the same area shows a large brown patch spanning much of the image in an image acquired after the fire on June 29, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
Mountainous landscapes appear green and untouched by fire in a satellite image acquired on June 5, 2026.
Mountainous landscapes appear green and untouched by fire in a satellite image acquired on June 5, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
An image of the same area shows a large brown patch spanning much of the image in an image acquired after the fire on June 29, 2026.
An image of the same area shows a large brown patch spanning much of the image in an image acquired after the fire on June 29, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
June 5
June 29
A burned landscape spans more than 150 square miles (390 square kilometers) of rugged terrain northwest of Junction, Utah, as seen in this pair of images captured by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 and Landsat 9 on June 5, 2026 (left) and June 29, 2026 (right). NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison.

After a winter of below-average snowpack and an unusually warm and dry start to summer, the National Interagency Fire Center warned that the Great Basin and parts of the Rockies faced an elevated risk of wildfires in July 2026.

The warning proved accurate. By July 7, firefighters labored to contain nearly three dozen large, early-season wildland fires that raced through forests in several parts of the western U.S. Utah was among the most active states, with fires having charred 558 square miles (1,445 square kilometers) and four major fires that were not fully contained still burning.

The Cottonwood fire ranked as one of Utah’s—and the country’s—largest and most destructive fires of the year so far. As of July 7, it had burned 150 square miles (390 square kilometers), just shy of the Babylon fire in eastern Utah. Landsat 9 captured the false-color image (bands 7-5-4) above (right) on June 29, 2026, when blackened vegetation spanned a large patch of rugged terrain along the Beaver River. The image on the left shows the same area on June 5, a few weeks before the fire ignited. In this band combination of shortwave infrared, near infrared, and visible light, unburned vegetation appears bright green, snow is blue, and clouds are white.

Ponderosa pine, oak, sagebrush, and grasses were among the vegetation types that burned. Officials with the state’s forestry division told news media that the Cottonwood fire had destroyed up to 150 structures. Eagle Point Ski Resort, which lost more than 100 condos and 30 cabins, also reported damage to four of its five chairlifts.

The damage to forests was extensive, though isolated patches survived largely unscathed, remaining as green oases within the broader burned area. Among them were the forests around Tushar Campground, the site of a 4-H summer camp. Beaver County officials credited years of forest treatments, such as clearing brush and trimming branches, with helping save the campground and surrounding forests.

The fire spreads especially rapidly on June 23 and June 26. The fire perimeters in this visualization are based on data from NASA’s Fire Events Data Suite.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

As the fire spread, NASA’s Fire Events Data Suite (FEDS) tracked its progression and rate of growth. The visualization above, based on the FEDS system, shows the fire surging on June 23 and tripling in size over 12 hours that day as it spread to the north, east, and south. It also grew rapidly on June 26, when it made a run to the north. FEDS draws on data from the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) sensors aboard the Suomi NPP, NOAA-20, and NOAA-21 satellites, which detect active fires day and night by their thermal infrared signature.

FEDS is one of several tools available to firefighters and emergency management officials when responding to fires. First responders often rely on higher-resolution airborne imagers or on firefighters walking fire edges to map perimeters. FEDS offers a different advantage: consistent, easily accessible data that do not need to be specially requested, according to Tempest McCabe, a University of Maryland scientist based at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center who helped develop the tool. As a result, FEDS often detects a fire’s start earlier than other sources and tracks blazes for their full duration. To capitalize on strengths like these, the FEDS team is working closely with operational fire behavior analysts, with support from NASA’s FireSense program, to better understand and anticipate periods of rapid fire spread.

A total of 1,289 firefighters have been deployed to the Cottonwood fire, according to InciWeb, a website managed by the National Interagency Fire Center. As of July 7, the fire was 56 percent contained, but forecasters expect a hot, dry weather pattern to persist in the coming days, with fire behavior likely to be “very active to extreme” over the next 72 hours.

Government satellite data are part of a global system of observations used to track fire behavior and analyze emerging trends. Among the real-time wildfire monitoring tools that NASA makes available are FIRMS (Fire Information for Resource Management System), the Worldview browser, and the Fire Event Explorer.

As of July 7, 2026, fires had burned 5,265 square miles (13,636 square kilometers) across the United States, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. That’s 46 percent more than the 10-year average (2016-2025) for that point in the season.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey and fire perimeter data from the Fire Events Data Suite. Story by Adam Voiland.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Fires Tear Through Nebraska Grasslands
3 min read

Dry, warm, and windy conditions across the U.S. Great Plains led to extreme fire activity in March 2026.

Article
Fire’s Footprint on Santa Rosa Island
3 min read

A wildland fire charred grassland, coastal sage scrub, and chaparral across one-third of the island, the second largest of the…

Article
Smoke Rises Over Big Cypress National Preserve
2 min read

The National fire has burned tens of thousands of acres within the Florida preserve, fueled by vegetation dried by prolonged…

Article

The post Cottonwood Fire Chars Utah appeared first on NASA Science.

The blaze burned more than 150 square miles and swept through parts of a ski resort.

Tuesday 7 July 1663

Up by 4 o’clock and to my office, and there continued all the morning upon my Navy book to my great content. At noon down by barge with Sir J. Minnes (who is going to Chatham) to Woolwich, in our way eating of some venison pasty in the barge, I having neither eat nor drank to-day, which fills me full of wind. Here also in Mr. Pett’s garden I eat some and the first cherries I have eat this year, off the tree where the King himself had been gathering some this morning.

Thence walked alone, only part of the way Deane walked with me, complaining of many abuses in the Yard, to Greenwich, and so by water to Deptford, where I found Mr. Coventry, and with him up and down all the stores, to the great trouble of the officers, and by his help I am resolved to fall hard to work again, as I used to do.

So thence he and I by water talking of many things, and I see he puts his trust most upon me in the Navy, and talks, as there is reason, slightly of the two old knights, and I should be glad by any drudgery to see the King’s stores and service looked to as they ought, but I fear I shall never understand half the miscarriages and tricks that the King suffers by.

He tells me what Mr. Pett did to-day, that my Lord Bristoll told the King that he will impeach the Chancellor of High Treason: but I find that my Lord Bristoll hath undone himself already in every body’s opinion, and now he endeavours to raise dust to put out other men’s eyes, as well as his own; but I hope it will not take, in consideration merely that it is hard for a Prince to spare an experienced old officer, be he never so corrupt; though I hope this man is not so, as some report him to be.

He tells me that Don John is yet alive, and not killed, as was said, in the great victory against the Spaniards in Portugall of late. So home, and late at my office. Thence home and to my musique. This night Mr. Turner’s house being to be emptied out of my cellar, and therefore I think to sit up a little longer than ordinary.

This afternoon, coming from the waterside with Mr. Coventry, I spied my boy upon Tower Hill playing with the rest of the boys; so I sent W. Griffin to take him, and he did bring him to me, and so I said nothing to him, but caused him to be stripped (for he was run away with his best suit), and so putting on his other, I sent him going, without saying one word hard to him, though I am troubled for the rogue, though he do not deserve it.

Being come home I find my stomach not well for want of eating to-day my dinner as I should do, and so am become full of wind. I called late for some victuals, and so to bed, leaving the men below in the cellar emptying the vats up through Mr. Turner’s own house, and so with more content to bed late.

Read the annotations

Great Start! Thank You. Help Us Build This Momentum!

First, thank you to everyone who has contributed since we kicked off this year’s Annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive this morning. We’re now past $100,000 toward our goal of $500,000 for the drive. We truly appreciate it. To keep this going please click here to contribute. (See this post below for a bit more on the drive and here for why it’s so important this year.) One additional thing to add to the community part of this drive and the TPM community itself: if you contribute, drop us a line to let us know why. (Send it to talk at talkingpointsmemo dot com with the subject line: “TPM J Fund”) What made you want to contribute? What is important to you about TPM? What role does it play in your news and politics world? Different ways to answer it but basically, “why?” We’ll publish them here. Again, thank you and keep those contributions coming.

We Need Your Help

It’s time to kick off this year’s Annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive. This fund is a critical part of what keeps TPM vital and strong. If you’ve contributed in the past — and especially if you haven’t — I hope you will take a moment this morning and join us in contributing. Just click right here. If you’re thinking you might get to it at some point, please take literally about a minute and a half and do it this morning. That helps us get to our goal all the quicker, and get back to focusing on the news 100% of the time.

This year we need to get to $500,000, and if we can get over that that will be great and a real assist. I explained here over the weekend why this year’s drive is particularly critical. TPM is a collaborative enterprise. It’s that way within our operation and from the literal beginning it’s been a collaboration with our readers, who gives us angles and tips and perspective on stories and who have our operation’s back with your financial support. It is a collaboration with you and today our team needs your support. We literally can’t produce what we are producing, play our — I believe critical — role in the news ecosystem without your contributions.

In the coming days I’m going to be sharing more about what we have planned over the next year and why the drive is so important. But for now, we need your help. Any amount gets us closer to our goal and helps us get there as fast as possible. It would mean so much to us if you could join with us today. It just takes stopping in your routine and giving us no more than two minutes today. Just click right here. We thank you.

OS 27 Developer Beta 3 Enables New ‘Pace’ and ‘Expressivity’ Sliders for Siri’s New Voices

Sarah Perez, writing for TechCrunch:

With the latest iOS 27 developer beta, Apple is giving testers an early look at one of the upcoming improvements to its AI-powered Siri: the ability to adjust how quickly and expressively the AI assistant speaks. In iOS 27 beta 3, out today, Apple has enabled the voice controls for “Pace” and “Expressivity” that were previously labeled as “Coming soon” in the first developer beta releases.

I started running developer beta 1 on a spare iPhone the day it came at WWDC. It proved so stable, and Siri AI so useful, that I moved my primary iPhone 17 Pro to the iOS 27 betas with beta 2. So I’ve more or less been living on iOS 27 developer betas for a month now. If you’re as reckless as me, you’re probably doing so already too. If you’re not, you should probably at least wait for the public betas, the first of which I’ll bet is imminent. The stability of these betas right out of the gate is proof that this really is a Snow Leopard-type fix-and-improve-the-foundations year. I love it.

As for the new Siri voices, I think both of the new voices that are available so far are very good. Voice 1 is female and voice 2 is male; I’ve spent days with both but prefer the female voice. (I’d pay a fortune for a male voice that sounded like HAL 9000; I don’t like this guy who sounds, I don’t know, like a child psychologist or something. I don’t want “friendly”, which to me sounds saccharine and phony from a computer. The female voice sounds more emotionally removed, and thus honest, to me.)

Credit to Apple here. Now that these sliders are available, I have to say they nailed the defaults. After a month using them without the sliders, I thought that once the settings became available I might want to tone expressivity down one notch and/or turn the pace up one notch. But, no. A little less expressivity doesn’t make voice 1 sound less phony to me — it makes her sound a tad stoned. And even one click more pace sounds too fast for me — hurried, not curt. Nailing defaults is hard and I think Apple nailed these.

(The system dictionary definition of curt: “rudely brief”. That’s what I want from an AI voice. That’s a computer being honest about what it is.)

 ★ 

Why we stopped making land

From Zigmund Forrest and Maxwell Tabarrok in Works in Progress:

In total, around eight percent of the land in America’s major coastal cities was underwater in the 1890s and has since been reclaimed. This includes the land under several major airports, like Newark, Logan, and SFO, as well as neighborhoods like the Financial District in San Francisco, the Back Bay in Boston, and Camden in Philadelphia. Some cities, like Boston and Charleston, have doubled in size by reclaiming land.

Today, reclamation should be more common than ever. Land values in some cities are thirty times what they were in 1950, and high-tide flooding is four to eight times as frequent. Reclamation could extend and protect our coastal cities as it has for centuries. But rather than reclaim more land, we have virtually ceased to reclaim any at all. Since the completion of Battery Park City in 1976, there has not been a single major urban land reclamation project in the United States and only a handful of port expansions.

…Reclamation stopped abruptly in the 1970s when a wave of environmental regulations made it enormously expensive to reshape the landscape. And it halted at the same time in every other country that passed similar laws.

Recommended.

The post Why we stopped making land appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

The Christian Right/LDS School Board Enigma

So a few weeks ago, a woman named Mandy Bourne filed papers to enter the upcoming race for a spot on the Capo Unified School District’s board. She is running for the Trustee Area 6 seat occupied by Gila Jones, a well-regarded moderate. And, if one visits Bourne’s website, they will find what appears to be a run-of-the-mill local parent trying to make the world a better place. And, I suppose, it’s possible Mandy Bourne is a run-of-the-mill local parent trying to make the world a better place. I mean, truly, who the heck knows?

But …

There’s this thing that now hangs over the Capo Unified School District’s board like a moldy sheet. It starts with Lisa Davis, the board president, a Bluto-level bully and a toxin to the ideals of normal public education. It extends to Jennifer Adnams, a board member and, well, also a toxin to the ideals of normal public education. What it is is … eh, um, dogma. Hard-right dogma. Hard-right religious dogma. Hard-right religious dogma that thrusts forward a singular world view that begins and ends with an adherence to the principles of Jesus Christ’ supposed teachings. Hard-right religious dogma that thrusts forward a singular world view that begins and ends with an adherence to the principles of Jesus Christ’ supposed teachings—and (in the minds of these women) belongs inside our public schools.

And if you know not whereof I speak, take a moment or two and listen to this episode of the Kingdom Alliance podcast, which features Adnams (a uniquely vapid woman) explaining her perspective on things. It’s creepy AF; a reminder that, among us, walk a species of homo sapiens who believe they exist to input God’s seed within our brains. That everything (literally everything) they do concerns converting non-believers into believers.

Hell, if that’s not enough for you, take some more time and watch this unwatchable episode of Jack Hibbs’ podcast, which brings forth the weirdness of Davis, Adnams and Lisa Zollinger—three Capo Unified Board members.

If you’re wondering, what does this all have to do with Mandy Bourne running for School Board, it’s this: Bourne is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Which, in an isolation chamber, should 100-percent not be an issue. If you live in Orange County, you surely know Mormons. And like Mormons. They’re on your kid’s little league team, in your kid’s dance class. They tell jokes, complain, recommend restaurants, even (on occasion) curse. Like any religion, some Mormons are all in on the faith, some are half in, some think it’s a stupid waste of time. They’re people who fart and spit and sleep and eat, just like anyone else.

I wanna reiterate that, before I continue: They’re people, just like anyone else [Don’t believe me? Giants quarterback Jaxon Dart is LDS. And that dude can throw a 70-yard spiral].

But … here’s the twist: While, in the real world, religious identity is just a thing, on the Capo Unified School Board shit is beginning to get disconcertingly weird and wild and Stepford-like. If Bourne winds up winning, she will become (alongside Davis and Lisa Zollinger) the third LDS Board member, and that trio will (recent history suggests) align with Adnams, who exists to make us all believe as she does.

A brief pause for two spoonfuls of Jennifer Adnams creepiness …

If you’ve been paying attention, this all sounds fmailiar. You know Lisa Davis is a dim-witted, power-hungry lunatic who attended a MAGA rally, sported a MAGA hat and was in on the Gays Against Groomers dude fucking up a meeting last year. You know Adnams is of the same political ilk. You know Zollinger is (sorta) of the same ilk—though, to her credit, she occasionally seems annoyed by her zealot cronies and desperately wants to go home and watch “Love Island.” You know having four of these people on the School Board is Game Over for a reasoned approach to education. You know it’s zealotry come to life. You know it’s profoundly bad news.

You also know the local conservative churches (LDS included) have become significantly more involved in OC school board elections. They are encouraging parishioners to fight, encouraging them to give money, encouraging them to run for office and volunteer their time and put God first and thrust Him into our academics; to take the lessons of Prager University and apply them to the local scene. They are, with no known exceptions, 100 percent on the MAGA train, with an emphasis on liberals being the woke enemies of Godliness who need to be defeated at all costs. For fuck’s sake, I’ve seen a photo of these peeps leaning against a public school building, praying into the brick foundation. Put different: To them, it’s not a joke—it’s a holy war for our children.

Enter: Mandy Bourne.

Now, I have yet to speak with Mandy, or hear her speak. I know what you might know about her: She lists herself as NPP (No Party Preference). Her husband, Troy, is a member of the San Juan Capistrano City Council. They have a gaggle of kids, all of whom have been educated in public schools. I say this sincerely: She seems likable and kind, and I hope (truly hope) my concerns and suspicions are the ramblings of a anxiety-riddled sports writer who has been listening to too much Bebe Rexha.

Seriously: I hope she’s awesome.

However, there is a track record around here that gives me the willies. When Davis, Adnams and Zollinger ran for their spots, they presented (like Bourne) as these happy-happy, lovey-lovey OC moms who just wanna embrace life and promote positive energy. They handed out stickers and bubbles; smiled nonstop; expressed love for teachers and learning and … and …

It all led to the worst academic-based culture war any of us have had the misfortune of experiencing.

Hell, it all led to a school district on the verge of catastrophe.

Seriously, shit has gotten dark. Really dark. There are suspicions Davis wants Dr. Christopher Brown, the district superintendent and a dude liked by most reasonable people, out. There have been choreographed stunts during Board meetings that were simultaneously performative and grotesque. There’s a Prager U spirit that doesn’t belong in public education. Seriously, it’s bad.

So what I think we need, in a genuine spirit of openness, is for Mandy Bourne to answer some legitimate questions.

Among them …

• 1. What role do you believe religion should play in public education?

• 2. Can you commit to supporting Dr. Brown?

• 3. Have you spoken with Lisa Davis about any agendas? If so, which?

• 4. What are your thoughts on diversity and inclusion?

• 5. How do you feel about LGBTQ+ students and families?

• 6. How do you feel about closing and/or merging schools?

• 7. How can we lower the temperature surrounding School Board conflicts and bullying?

• 8. Do you identify as MAGA? If so, why?

I’m not saying the give and take will solve anything. I’m not even saying—with 100-percent certainty—that it’ll help.

But it can be a start.

July 6, 2026

Last week, U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team forward Folarin Balogun, the team’s top scorer, received a red card in a World Cup match against Bosnia-Herzegovina, suspending him for today’s game against Belgium. Then, on Sunday, the Disciplinary Committee of the international soccer governing body FIFA made a surprise announcement, saying that Balogun would be allowed a year-long probation, enabling him to play on Monday.

Almost immediately, Sophia Cai of Politico reported that White House FIFA World Cup Task Force executive director Andrew Giuliani, the son of Trump ally Rudy Giuliani, told President Donald J. Trump about the suspension. As officials from the U.S. Soccer Federation prepared and submitted an appeal to FIFA, Giuliani and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick offered White House lawyers and dug into the professional history of the referee who had made the red card call. Then, on Thursday, Trump called FIFA president Gianni Infantino, with whom he has been friendly for eight years.

On Sunday, FIFA cleared Balogun to play on Monday. The last, and only, time a red card went unpunished before was in 1962.

The suspension of the suspension has created an international outcry although, as the Associated Press pointed out, this is only the latest step in a pattern in which Infantino appears to have been interfering with the independence of FIFA’s judicial and disciplinary bodies.

The Belgian soccer federation is challenging the ruling. “Regardless of the sporting outcome of the match,” it said, it was “deeply concerned by the way these events have unfolded and will continue, in the hours, days and months ahead, to pursue every available avenue to uphold the fundamental principles of ethics, sporting fairness and the interests of football as a whole.”

The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) has called the decision “incomprehensible and unjustifiable.” “When the certainty of rules is no longer guaranteed by its guardians, the integrity of the game is at stake and the credibility of a competition is undermined,” it said. “Football is the most loved sport in the world because it is a beautiful game and is trusted because it is played everywhere with the same laws.”

But a world in which playing fields are level is not the world Trump wants. He wants one in which people in power can ignore the rule of law for their own ends.

Today, at the White House, he told reporters: “So I saw the play. And I’m a person that loves sports and was a good athlete. And I understand sports really well. Really well. And that wasn’t a foul. That wasn’t even an infraction. That was two guys running full speed that happened to crash into each other…. No, these were two great athletes that got tangled up, and this referee, who— is a little bit suspect— if you check his, if you check his past.”

“[Balogun] didn’t do anything wrong, and he’s our best player or one of our best players, a very— vital player, and he gave him a red card. I didn’t know what that meant. I didn’t think it meant much. Then I started hearing that that means he can’t play in the next game, at least in the next game. I said, Boy, that’s a big— You know, if it happened to another player, it would have been unfair, but when they take your best player or just about, they have some great players, but, and they say, you can’t play. That’s very unfair. That’s, you know, it’s one thing to penalize somebody for the game. But how do you penalize them for a game that hasn’t been played yet? is very unfair. You can’t do that. So, yes, I asked for a review by FIFA.

“I spoke to a man who’s highly respected, and, by the way, whose level of respect has gone up tenfold, and he was good before this started. But, you know, he really pushed it in this country.” And then, Trump was back to his usual grievances. “I’m the one that got them to do it. It was not Biden. Biden was asleep. I got him to do it. In fact, it was very sad because I got him to do it. And if the progression was normal, I would have been retired. Now, the Democrats are saying, Man, we should have just let him have his way, he would have. We would have had him gone, but I said, you know, the saddest thing is, I got the Olympics, and I got the World Cup.”

The president of the United States pressuring the president of FIFA to change the rules for his favored player perfectly represents the way Trump thinks about the rule of law in the United States. And the rejection of a level playing field shows in the way Trump and the Republicans have skewed the U.S economy so only their team can win.

Almost exactly a year ago, on July 4, 2025, Trump signed into law what he called the “One Big Beautiful Bill.” It passed both the House and the Senate without a single Democratic vote, making it a signature piece of legislation for Trump and his party. As Shannon Pettypiece and Mike Hixenbaugh of NBC News reported on July 1, there was a “seismic shift” at the heart of the new law: it extended about $4.5 trillion in tax cuts to corporations and wealthy Americans over ten years while cutting about $1.1 trillion from healthcare and food assistance programs that serve poor and working-class Americans. It also adds about $4.7 trillion to the national debt over the next ten years.

Public policy scholar Chris Howard noted that the law so dramatically rolls back the modern government constructed during and after the Depression and World War II, from 1933 to 1981, that it amounts to “Robin Hood in reverse.” “It deliberately targets some of the most vulnerable members of society,” he told Pettypiece and Hixenbaugh, “while providing huge windfalls to the richest individuals and to big business.”

After the economic free-for-all of the 1920s led to the Great Crash and the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the Democrats began the process of creating a modern state that established a level economic playing field. They created a government that regulated business, provided a basic social safety net, promoted infrastructure, protected civil rights, and supported a rules-based international order. Then Republican president Dwight Eisenhower built on the foundation the Democrats built. Members of both parties supported such a system, recognizing that without a level economic playing field that made sure everyone had the ability to succeed, a few men would monopolize the nation’s wealth and power.

Their inspiration for creating a government that kept the economic playing field level came from those before them who had seen what happened when a few wealthy men controlled the government. In the early twentieth century, when corporations dominated the economy and their millionaire owners threw their weight into political contests, Republican president Theodore Roosevelt fulminated against that “small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful men, whose chief object is to hold and increase their power.”

He insisted that America must break up this class in order to return to “an economic system under which each man shall be guaranteed the opportunity to show the best that there is in him.” He called for government to regulate business, prohibit corporate funding of political campaigns,

and impose income and inheritance taxes. He demanded a “square deal” for the American people.

In late 1901, financier J.P. Morgan joined the nation’s main railroad interest into a giant new conglomerate designed to get around antitrust legislation. In February 1902, Roosevelt’s attorney general told reporters that the formation of the Northern Securities Company was illegal and that he would be suing it. Businessmen were aghast, not only because Roosevelt was going after a business combination but also because he had acted without consulting Wall Street. When J. P. Morgan complained that he had not been informed, Roosevelt told him that that was the whole point. “If we have done anything wrong,” said the astonished Morgan, “send your man [the attorney general] to my man [one of his lawyers] and they can fix it up.” The president declined.

“We don’t want to fix it up,” explained the attorney general. “We want to stop it.”

As the Boston Globe put it: “‘Justice for all alike—a square deal for every man, great or small, rich or poor,’ is the Roosevelt ideal to be attained by the framing and the administration of the law. And he would tell you that that means Mr Morgan and Mr Rockefeller [sic] as well as the poor fellow who cannot pay his rent.”

And yet in 2026, Trump has taken to saying that those Americans calling for the government to maintain the rule of law to make sure the economic playing field is level, rather than working for corporations and the wealthy, are “communists.”

So he is looking to put a thumb on the scale of the midterm elections as he did in the FIFA match and the economy. Trump is demanding that Congress pass the so-called SAVE America Act, a massive voter suppression bill. Yesterday House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) told the Fox News Channel that he will try to get Congress to pass the measure by using the budget reconciliation process. Since such a process cannot be filibustered, Republicans might be able to pass it despite Democratic opposition.

Trump has repeatedly insisted that if the Republicans pass the measure, they won’t lose another election for a hundred years.

“The game tonight’s going to be amazing,” Trump said today about tonight’s match. “We’re going to have a full team and Belgium is going to have a full team. And you know what? If they beat us, then they can be really proud. The other way, if they beat us, we’ll say it was— I say it was rigged just like the election was rigged in 2020.”

Tonight, Belgium defeated the USA 4–1 in the World Cup match played in Seattle.

Notes:

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/soccer/worldcup/2026/07/06/trump-fifa-infantino-balogun-red-card-belgium/90819571007/

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/06/08/andrew-giuliani-world-cup-00391602

https://www.politico.com/live-updates/2026/07/06/world-cup-2026/inside-the-white-house-push-on-balogun-00987540

https://www.foxsports.com/stories/soccer/before-balogun-meet-only-other-player-have-world-cup-red-card-rescinded

https://www.uefa.com/news-media/news/02a7-2109c8e9ef81-de5a993db109-1000--uefa-statement-on-the-balogun-case/

https://www.npr.org/2026/07/06/g-s1-132108/world-cup-balogun-uefa-fifa-belgum-trump

https://www.nbcnews.com/sports/soccer/live-blog/fifa-world-cup-2026-july-6-usa-live-updates-rcna353164

https://apnews.com/article/balogun-red-card-uefa-us-belgium-d32fc2e13728cef9317feeb7b72c279b

https://www.nbcnews.com/specials/trump-big-beautiful-bill-act-tax-medicaid-snap-one-year/

https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/mike-johnson-house-pass-donald-trump-voter-supression-save-america-act/

Boston Globe, August 27, 1902, p. 6.

Joseph Bucklin Bishop, Theodore Roosevelt and His Time Shown in His Own Letters, vol. 1 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1920), pp. 182–184.

Instagram:

p/DadCwIFFgYw/

Bluesky:

atrupar.com/post/3mpybzkhmvx2s

thebulwark.com/post/3mpydxb266s2h

Share

ULA's last six Atlas Vs can't launch anything besides Boeing's Starliner

The final flight of United Launch Alliance's Atlas V rocket is still several years off, but an important era for the once-dominant launch company came to a close last week.

The final flight of an Atlas V for the Amazon Leo broadband constellation lifted off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 12:30 am EDT (04:30 UTC) last Thursday, sending 29 satellites to orbit to move the network closer to providing initial services.

All 29 spacecraft deployed from the Atlas V rocket less than an hour after launch. They will use onboard propulsion to raise their orbits from an altitude of approximately 289 miles (465 kilometers) to their final operating positions at 392 miles (630 kilometers) above the Earth.

Read full article

Comments

Arianespace opens door to GEO rideshare opportunities from 2029

Arianespace and Infinite Orbits signed a memorandum of understanding July 7 to explore future collaboration on multiple direct-to-GEO rideshare launch services. Credit: Arianespace

MILAN — Arianespace has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with French in-orbit servicing company Infinite Orbits to explore future collaboration on multiple direct-to-GEO rideshare launch services, the companies announced July […]

The post Arianespace opens door to GEO rideshare opportunities from 2029 appeared first on SpaceNews.

SpaceX launches Transporter-17 amid concerns about rideshare program’s future

Falcon 9 Transporter-17

SpaceX launched the latest in its Transporter series of rideshare missions July 7 as industry concerns about the program’s future reach what one rival company executive called a panic.

The post SpaceX launches Transporter-17 amid concerns about rideshare program’s future appeared first on SpaceNews.

Simera Sense to provide imagers for Canary Islands constellation

Belgium’s Simera Sense has won a contract to provide multispectral imagers for a small constellation being designed to track wildfires, volcanic activity and other regional priorities for the Canary Islands off the coast of Spain.

The post Simera Sense to provide imagers for Canary Islands constellation appeared first on SpaceNews.

Google Is Suing Chinese Scammers Who Are Using Gemini

Not sure this will have any effect, but I support the effort:

According to Google’s legal filing, Outsider Enterprise operates through Telegram. The group offers phishing-as-a-service to individuals who may not be technically savvy enough to set up fraudulent websites and text campaigns on their own. In its Telegram channels, Outsider Enterprise reportedly provided instructions on how to use Google’s Gemini AI to create websites that imitate those of Google, YouTube, and government agencies such as New York’s E-ZPass. The group offered nearly 300 scam templates.

[…]

Google worked with AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile to block many of these malicious text messages, and Google notes that its on-device scam detection in Google Messages probably helped reduce the number of successful phishing attempts, too. This AI-powered feature apparently stops 10 billion scam texts every month, so it’s fair to expect it caught at least some Outsider Enterprise activity.

Another article.

Tuesday assorted links

1. Survey of AI security issues for USG and potential responses.

2. Vacancy tax elasticity of resident supply.

3. Will Substack save philosophy?

4. AI firms hiring philosophers (NYT).

5. Podcast with Jonathan Ross.

6. Some reasons why doctors will not give you probabilities, of course those are not the only reasons.

7. Pending AI nationalism from China?  And a possible correction?  There are disputes surrounding these claims.

8. Is China arresting economics professors who speak the truth?

The post Tuesday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

Oregon Barns

I love barns. Wherever I drive, I’m on the lookout. I used to fly around the country doing press checks, and would always allow an extra couple of days, rent a car, and head out into the countryside. The excitement of hunting, but with a camera.

They are built for functional reasons, with economy, and attention to siting, the weather, the barn’s purpose, and past experience. They have to work!

Architecture without architects — the architecture of practicality.

When I run across a barn like this, I’m both stunned and ecstatic. I sit down inside and absorb the beauty. Barns are my cathedrals.

I just ran across this shot and wanted to share it, and so, threw in other photos from Oregon.

I’m planning to do a book on barns before long.

Barn with Curved Roof in Willamette Valley

BTW, Williamette — as natives will point out — is pronounced “Will-lam-it.”

Above: Exterior of above barn. What a surprise to walk inside!

Framing

The unique feature here is that the roof’s curve is achieved by building the rafters out of 1″ material. 1 × 12s laminated together (I believe 4 of them) to achieve the simplest of laminated trusses. After laminating, the top edge is sawn to a curve. The barn is 24′ wide, 32′ long, 26′ to the ridge. Thanks to Mackenzie Strawn for measuring it; he also wrote: “I have a carpentry manual from the 1930’s with a short section on the Gothic arch barns, they suggest making the roof radius ¾ of the width.”

This is similar to the construction of the Nepenthe restaurant in Big Sur: framed entirely with laminated 1″ lumber.


Barnes With Gambrel Roofs

A gambrel roof is a two-sided roof with two slopes on each side: a shallow upper slope and a steeper lower slope — as compared to a gable roof, which has just one continuous plane on each side meeting at a ridge, making a simple triangular profile from the end view.

A gambrel roof provides more usable space in the upper story or attic because the steeper lower slopes open up headroom. A gable roof, however — one of the most common roof shapes – is simpler to frame. (The gambrel shape is a great design for a home, with bedrooms upstairs.)

Above: carpenters, note the way the dormer roofs are on the same plane as the top of the gambrel roof — nice touch.

Live From California with Lloyd Kahn is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



Above: By side of road near Carlton on Hwy 47, southwest of Portland. Notice how straight the eave line is, meaning the barn’s foundation is sound — no sag. I always look for straight-across eaves.


Below three photos are of a round barn in Oregon.

Imagine driving down a country road and coming upon this beauty. Of interest to builders: note the cables (or maybe rods), which evidently provide structural (shear) support, tying plate and sill together with triangulation.

Trusses (much stronger than rafters) are nailed together 2 by 6’s. Here they span from perimeter walls to silo at center

In a way, this framing is like a giant yurt.

Shop talk: it looks like the break in the roof line (look back at exterior shot) occurs at the peaks of the trusses.

F

Above: fisheye shot

Above: 18-sided Bill Baker Round Barn, near Flora, Oregon

For the granddaddy of all round barns (in Oregon), see my post:



I ran across this water tower when heading to Prineville to visit my friends Lew and Krystal. Lower sections of water towers are typically canted like this to provide added strength for the weight of water, which is inside the (usually wooden) tank in the upper section.



Post and Beam Masterwork

The afternoon that I was photographing the curved-roof barn shown at the top of this post, I met Mackenzie Strawn, a carpenter who had a shop next to the barn. When he learned of my interest in barns, he asked if I’d like to see a unique timber framed horse barn in the neighborhood. Well, yeah-uh!

I shot these photos in 2014, when the barn was still under construction. The owners were publicity-shy, and I agreed not to use their names, or give the location.

Notice the curved rafters, put together in classic timber-frame style, with mortise and tenon connections made with wooden pegs.

All I gotta say is wow!



My (Some Year in the Future) Book on Barns


I have over 50 books on barns, some of them rare, that I’ll refer to when putting together my book.

Thanks for reading Live From California with Lloyd Kahn! This post is public so feel free to share it.

Share

Day Off

Crashing headache yesterday. I blame EU-KLEMS. Hoping to be back tomorrow.

tencent/Hy3

tencent/Hy3

New Apache 2.0 licensed model from Tencent in China:

Hy3 is a 295B-parameter Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) model with 21B active parameters and 3.8B MTP layer parameters, developed by the Tencent Hy Team. Following the Hy3 Preview launch in late April, we gathered feedback from 50+ products and scaled up post-training with higher quality data. Today, we introduce Hy3, which outperforms similar-size models and rivals flagship open-source models with 2-5x parameters. It also shows significant gains in utility across various products and productivity tasks.

The full-sized model is 598GB on Hugging Face, and the FP8 quantized one is 300GB. The context length is 256K.

It's available for free on OpenRouter until July 21st. I had it "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle" there and got this:

Flat-style cartoon illustration  of a white pelican with a large orange beak riding a red bicycle across a pale blue background, its long orange legs stretched down to the pedals, with gray horizontal motion lines behind it suggesting speed.

Update: I'd forgotten about this but Max Woolf wrote about an earlier preview of this model back on May 26th: The mysterious Hy3 LLM is topping OpenRouter Model Rankings by a large margin. When I tried that one I got back this pelican which wasn't as good as today's but did have a "Change Pelican Color" button, a first from any model.

Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-release, ai-in-china

Oddly Enough, the HR Women Were Right About Platner

As of this morning, I have no idea if Graham Platner will drop out of the Maine senate race in time for Maine Democrats to appoint someone else. But maybe the next time there’s a Democratic candidate with a constant trickle of right-wing adjacent–or just right wing–statements and actions, listen to the ‘HR ladies‘ and other supposed hysterics who tell you that’s a sign of poor character and also of worse to come.

What it says about the Professional Politics Knowers who thought otherwise is left mostly as an exercise for the reader, though I would add that the subset of professional supporters who could be characterized as self-loathing college-educated middle-aged men who are handling aging poorly should not be listened to ever again.

While we’re at it, unless one is a professional interviewer, meeting candidates in person usually makes it harder rather than easier to observe the reality–superfically charismatic people can often hoodwink you over short periods of time or in ‘set piece’ encounters.

What a clusterfuck.

The first minutes after being informed of a Nobel prize

 Here's a one-minute BBC audio recording that somehow found its way into my news feed, of me being queried on the phone in the minutes after the announcement of the 2012 Nobel Prize.  It must have been around 4am in California, and you can tell I wasn't prepared to answer the questions :)

Alvin Roth glad to share Nobel Prize with Lloyd Shapley 

"The Nobel Foundation cited the US academics for their work on the "theory of stable allocations and practice of market design".

 

Here's a transcript I made now with the voice recorder app on my iPhone: I put "..." wherever the transcript has me in a long pause or re-starting a sentence (it's apparentI was answering these questions for the first time...)

"No, it wasn't expected, but, ... it certainly was expected that Lloyd Shapley should win the prize. It would have been a grave oversight if he did not, so I'm glad to share it with him.
 

Caller: So, what does this prize mean to you and your profession?
 

... I don't know yet. ... of course, it sheds a bright spotlight on the work...

Caller: So that's a good thing.

You know, my colleagues and I work in an area that we're calling market design, which is sort of a newish area of economics, and I'm sure that when I go to class this morning, my students will pay more attention...

Caller:Yeah, that's a good thing, isn't it?  I know it's early in the morning, but I will ask you anyway.  Can you tell us of the reasons for your interest in this field of economic theory?

...

Well, ...you can't be an economist without noticing all the interesting things that we don't understand about the way economy works.

So, ... this is a prize for matching, and many of the most important things we do in our lives, from getting into university, to getting married, to getting jobs, are matching.  So, I think it's a very natural thing to be interested in, and I'm privileged to have been able to study it." 

From Prediction Markets to Decision Markets and Beyond!

Arin Dube points to a great illustration of the power of prediction markets. Yesterday due to a new scandal the probability that Graham Platner would drop out of the Maine Democratic primary exploded from 9% to 96% (+87 percentage points). At the same time, the probability that the Democrats would win the election jumped by about 9 percentage points, from 54% to 63%. What does this tell you?
The market is signaling that Platner reduces the Democrats’ chances of victory. We can be more precise. If an 87-point increase in the probability of dropping out gets you 9 points of winning, then a 100% chance of dropping out implies a gain of 9/0.87 ≈ 10.3 percentage points.

Thus the market’s best estimate is that Platner is reducing the Democrats’ chance of winning by about 10 percentage points (compared to an unknown replacement). That’s a pretty big number! Democrats should surely use this information to make better decisions.

Now, I have been a bit loose. We have implicitly assumed that the news mainly moved the probability of Platner dropping out, rather than independently changing the Democrats’ general-election prospects. The issue is we are trying to reverse engineer two conditional prices, P(win|drop) and P(win|stay), from one unconditional price, P(win), and its comovement with P(drop). It works pretty well here as an illustration but Robin Hanson’s idea is that we can do better yet by trading the conditionals instead of inferring them.

Hanson’s decision markets would run contracts of the form “pays $1 if Democrats win, conditional on Platner dropping out — bet refunded if he stays.” Plus the mirror contract conditioned on staying. The refund provision makes the price a conditional probability: a trader pricing the first contract doesn’t need any view on whether Platner drops out, only on how the race goes if he does. With this structure we would get cleaner estimates of the conditional probabilities–in this case whether the Democrats do better with Platner in or out–which is exactly what a decision maker needs.

We were able to plausibly reverse engineer our estimate because the market happened to move 87 points in a single day. But a decision market would have posted the number continuously, no scandal required. In other words, with decision markets in play, not just prediction markets, we could have seen how much Platner was costing the Democrats before the latest scandal hit—which is precisely when the information would have been most useful.

It’s been fun to see prediction markets catch on with the public but the world is still decades behind Hanson’s decision markets—let alone futarchy!

The post From Prediction Markets to Decision Markets and Beyond! appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

‘The emperor is far away’

Traditional Chinese painting of three warriors in ornate armour standing among swirling clouds.

Ming Dynasty China left us copious texts, but these veil the lives of the vast majority of its people from our view

- by Craig Clunas

Read on Aeon

What should I ask Liaquat Ahamed?

Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him.  From Wikipedia:

Ahamed is the author of Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World (2009). The book was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for History, the 2010 Spear’s Book Award (Financial History Book of the Year), the 2010 Arthur Ross Book Award Gold Medal, the 2009 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. For 2009 it was recognized as one of Time magazine’s “Best Books of the Year”, New York Times “Best Books of the Year” and Amazon.com’s “Best Books of the Year”. It was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize…The book narrates the events preceding the Black Tuesday stock market crash of 1929 and the disastrous response of the world’s major central banks.

He has a new and excellent book out, namely 1873: The Rothschilds, the First Great Depression, and the Making of the Modern World.

Liaquat Ahamed also has extensive experience in the private sector, and dealing with the World Bank and IMF.  He has produced a movie and done much more as well.

So what should I ask him?

The post What should I ask Liaquat Ahamed? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

The World Cup From 250 Miles Up

An aerial view of the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, middle-left, is surrounded by urban infrastructure. Colorful ponds of the southern San Francisco Bay are visible toward the top.
July 26, 2022

In summer 2026, sixteen stadiums across North America hosted matches as part of the FIFA World Cup. Over the years, astronauts aboard the International Space Station have captured a top-down view of the infrastructure, landscapes, and ecosystems surrounding many of these venues.  

Six of the matches were played at the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, beginning on June 13 with a match-up between Qatar and Switzerland. This stadium (also called Levi’s Stadium) is located in Santa Clara, California, adjacent to San Jose and around 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of San Francisco. An astronaut aboard the International Space Station took this photo (above) on July 26, 2022.

The stadium, completed in 2014, is surrounded by a mix of recreational, housing, and business infrastructure. The scene includes the southern part of San Francisco Bay, which is 23 years into a 50-year effort to restore up to 90 percent of the region’s salt ponds to tidal wetlands and marshlands, while retaining some of its salt-making heritage.

The Bay Area hosted its sixth and final World Cup match on July 1, when the U.S. faced off against Bosnia and Herzegovina in a knockout match. The U.S. advanced to the round of 16 following a 2-0 win.

An aerial view of the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, middle-left, is surrounded by urban infrastructure. Colorful ponds of the southern San Francisco Bay are visible toward the top.
April 17, 2022

The FIFA World Cup final is scheduled for July 19 at New York New Jersey Stadium, part of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The stadium (also called MetLife Stadium) sits along the New Jersey Turnpike, west of Midtown Manhattan. Note that north is toward the bottom-right of this photo, captured by an astronaut on April 17, 2022.

The area has seen centuries of human impact. Colonists cleared wetlands and cedar forest for settlements, and development for a range of economic and industrial uses followed. In the 20th century, it became an unregulated dumping ground. In recent decades, though, wetland restoration efforts have occurred alongside the development of the sports and entertainment complex.

Other World Cup host cities have also appeared in astronaut photography and satellite imagery. Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron), Los Angeles Stadium (SoFi Stadium), Houston Stadium (NRG Stadium/Reliant Stadium), and BC Place Vancouver (BC Place) are among the venues that have been observed from above.

Astronaut photograph ISS067-E-202213 was acquired on July 26, 2022, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a focal length of 400 millimeters, and astronaut photograph ISS067-E-18580 was acquired on April 17, 2022, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a focal length of 1150 millimeters. They are provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit at NASA Johnson Space Center. The images were taken by a member of the Expedition 67 crew. The images have been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast, and lens artifacts have been removed. The International Space Station Program supports the laboratory as part of the ISS National Lab to help astronauts take pictures of Earth that will be of the greatest value to scientists and the public, and to make those images freely available on the Internet. Additional images taken by astronauts and cosmonauts can be viewed at the NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. Story by Kathryn Hansen.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Great Balls of Fire
4 min read

An astronaut on the International Space Station was surprised to photograph a shower of light streaking through the darkness while…

Article
San Francisco’s Metropolitan Mosaic
3 min read

Urban development, green spaces, and maritime activity converge in this Northern California city.

Article
A Moonlit Earth as Seen From Artemis II
4 min read

An astronaut’s photo, taken en route to the Moon, reveals our planet and its place in space in a novel…

Article

The post The World Cup From 250 Miles Up appeared first on NASA Science.

Wiesbaden notes

Who goes to Wiesbaden these days?  The era of Russian nobles taking the cure here and gambling is long since gone.  And yet here we are.  The proximate cause of this trip is the desire to see Grigory Sokolov, one of the world’s great pianists and a cult figure of sorts.  He rarely tours North America, maybe these days never as he is 76.  The current program includes Beethoven’s fourth piano sonata, Beethoven’s Op.126 Bagetelles, and Schubert’s last piano sonata.  How can one say no?  Sokolov also was a favorite of Tom Schelling, I might add, especially his recording of The Art of the Fugue, in my view one of the best classical music recordings of all time.

Besides, I have long been a believer in semi-random excursions to mid-size, slightly neglected German cities.  There remains a strong cultural federalism in Germany, and so you might see and hear wonderful things in many different parts of the country.

I perceived two difficult Wiesbadens.  In one, if you walk through the cheaper part of the pedestrian zone in the evening, the city seems mostly Muslim.  But if you walk around during the morning, the city seems mostly German.  I might add that some of the younger Muslim women show signs of assimilating, at least based on how they dress and present themselves.  The older women tend to stick with the headscarves.

Over the last twenty years, inflation-adjusted real estate prices in Wiesbaden have gone up about forty percent, an OK performance.  At times the city “does not feel like Germany any more,” but I think it is holding on.  The proportion of new building is roughly equal to the population growth, so I do not think this price effect is a NIMBY effect.  Rather it reflects the fact that Wiesbaden is still a pretty nice place to live.  that said, in some significant ways Germany in the traditional sense is failing to reproduce itself.

It was stunning to me to discover how hard it is, in most of the downtown, to find plain, ordinary German food.  At any price level.  There is no current equivalent of Wienerwald or Nordsee to be seen, never mind a decent Wiener Schnitzel.

Much of Wiesbaden was destroyed and rebuilt, but the best fifteen or twenty buildings show the previous wealth and splendor to good effect.  You will see these gems walking around, though only periodically.  There is also an old Roman wall and a moving, more recent Holocaust memorial.

Most German ice cream just isn’t that good, so try L’Art Sucre for something French.

Museum Reinhard Ernst is the new institution in town, and it specializes in color field abstract art.  The building is impressive, but the collection is weak except for a few Stellas.  Why organize a museum around that basis unless the underlying collection is super strong in that area?  This one is not.  I can forgive the absence of the expensive American Ellsworth Kelly, but no Blinky Palermo or Günther Förg?

Nonetheless their restrooms might forestall this kind of Larry David conflict:

(At Museum Ludwig in Köln, by the way, you get the discount for being disabled only if you have “fifty degrees of disability,” however they might measure that.  Slight disabilities are not enough, you must be truly “schwerbehinderte,” as judged by the state, heaven forbid the museum rely on the honor system.)

Museum Wiesbaden in contrast was an unexpected delight.  Although it is mainly a natural history museum, they have one of the world’s best collections of Art Nouveau and the single best Jawlensky collection, and you can have these all to yourself.  Very few people seem to go there.

As for the economy, here are some Germany facts of the day.  Yet Germany continues, and visits remain a source of pleasure and interest.

Sokolov, by the way, played six encores.  Where should the Germany trip target next year?

The post Wiesbaden notes appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 


Central North Pacific 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Central North Pacific 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image






Atlantic 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Atlantic 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image






Eastern North Pacific 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Eastern North Pacific 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image