Australia’s Cloudy Beauty

Wide patches of fog fill river valleys cutting through rugged, dark green mountains in eastern Victoria.
Fog fills networks of river valleys in eastern Victoria in an image captured by the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Terra satellite at 8:19 a.m. local time (22:19 Universal Time) on May 11, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin

It’s autumn in the Southern Hemisphere, which means it’s fog season in the Victorian Alps. NASA’s Terra satellite captured this view of morning fog filling valleys in several national parks across the mountains of eastern Victoria in May.  

As nights lengthen with the season, the atmosphere has more time to cool and approach the dew point—the temperature at which the air becomes saturated and water vapor can condense into radiation fog. Because cold air is denser than warm air, it sinks and drains into valleys, allowing fog to develop there first. In low-elevation areas, radiation fog usually fades as the Sun warms the ground, but it tends to linger in mountain valleys because they remain shaded longer. On this day, geostationary satellite imagery shows the fog persisting for about two hours.

Fog is a low-lying type of cloud composed of tiny water droplets suspended in the air. The main difference between a cloud and fog is that the base of fog reaches the ground, while the base of a cloud is generally well above the surface. Radiation fog forms in clear, calm conditions at night. In this case, a blast of cold, soggy weather primed the region by moistening land surfaces a few days prior to the arrival of a slow-moving high that brought calmer, warmer conditions that were conducive to fog formation. 

Many valleys in the mountains also have rivers, streams, and lakes, which amplified the process by providing a ready supply of water vapor. In the image above, zones of fog have formed along several water bodies, including the Mitta Mitta River, Buffalo River, Livingston Creek, Lake Dartmouth, and Snowy River.  

A narrow arch-shaped cloud is visible over the blue waters of Port Phillip Bay.
An arch-shaped cloud drifts over Port Phillip Bay in this image captured by the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Terra satellite at 8:19 a.m. local time (22:19 Universal Time) on May 11, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin

The same conditions fueled another noteworthy cloud a few hundred kilometers to the southwest. At about 8:19 a.m. local time (22:19 Universal Time), the Terra satellite captured an arch-shaped cloud over Port Phillip Bay, roughly stretching from St. Leonards on the bay’s western shore to Mount Eliza on the eastern side.

The feature likely formed as converging land and sea breezes interacted with the horseshoe-shaped terrain that defines the bay. Geostationary satellite imagery shows the arch-shaped cloud moving southward across the bay as the valley fog to the northeast faded.

NASA Earth Observatory image by Lauren Dauphin, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview. Story by Adam Voiland.

References & Resources

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Tahoe’s UI Issues Have Nothing to Do With Display Technology, and Maybe, Just Maybe, We Should Stop Assuming Gurman Knows Anything About Apple’s Vision Hardware Roadmap

Mark Gurman, in his Power On newsletter for Bloomberg over the weekend:

Though the Mac software introduced the same Liquid Glass interface seen in iOS 26, the design language hasn’t translated as smoothly to the larger displays and different input methods of desktops and laptops. Part of the reason is that Liquid Glass was created with more modern hardware in mind: the crisp OLED displays that are used on iPhones, some iPads and Apple Watches. The software also will be well-suited to the more glass-centric iPhone 20 coming in 2027.

Most Macs, in contrast, still rely on industrial designs introduced several years ago. The current look of the MacBook Air debuted in 2022, while the latest MacBook Pro and iMac designs date back to 2021. Macs also continue to use LCD displays, which don’t render translucency, shadows and glass effects as effectively as OLED screens.

If you’ve used Tahoe, you’re likely familiar with some of the quirks — particularly the transparency effects and shadows that can make lists and other text-heavy areas harder to read.

Trying to argue that the differences between LCD and OLED displays have anything to do with MacOS 26 Tahoe’s UI problems is like arguing that the reason your undercooked poorly prepared food tastes like shit is that it was designed to be served on higher-quality dinnerware. A nicer display is just a nicer display. A bad UI is a bad UI. Shitty undercooked poorly prepared food is shitty undercooked poorly prepared food.

You can actually see MacOS 26 Tahoe on an OLED display using Sidecar with a recent iPad Pro. It doesn’t help. You can also see iOS 26 and iPadOS 26 on devices that don’t have OLED displays. It looks fine. The notion that anything on MacOS 26 Tahoe was optimized for OLED displays makes no sense — there are no MacBooks or Apple desktop displays that use OLED. OLED MacBooks are purportedly coming at the end of this year or next year, but by the time that happens we’ll be mid-cycle for MacOS 27. Lastly, Apple just came out with the new $3,300 Studio Display XDR, using Mini-LED not OLED technology, in March. Even the future of Mac display technology is only partially OLED.

Last year’s Liquid Glass UI redesigns for iOS and iPadOS 26 were pretty good. The Liquid Glass redesign for MacOS 26 was pretty bad. That’s it. It has nothing to do with display technologies.

I’m happy to see Gurman report that the upcoming MacOS 27 release sports a revised UI, but you don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. Apple revises their UIs almost every year. Given the obvious problems with Tahoe and the pervasive criticisms from UI critics this year, it’d be absolutely flabbergasting if MacOS 27 did not reflect some noticeable changes.

Elsewhere in this week’s column, Gurman writes:

If a new Vision Pro-like device does end up coming together, I wouldn’t expect it for around two more years at least given the hardware resources are so concentrated elsewhere.

I suggest taking Vision headset product timelines from Gurman with a few grains of salt. In mid-October 2025 Apple announced and began shipping the second-gen Vision Pro, with a speed bump from the M2 to M5 chip. But in January 2025, Gurman wrote:

One thing missing from this 2025 road map is the Vision Pro. As of now, I don’t believe there will be a new headset from Apple shipping this year, though there theoretically could be an unveiling ahead of a release later. Signs point to a second-generation model coming in 2026 with an M5 chip.

Worse, in April last year, Gurman not only whiffed again on the second-gen model with M5 being released later in the year, he actually suggested that the M5 speed bump revision was cancelled:

So the company is pushing forward and is currently working on two new models, I’m told. Though Apple had previously considered doing a more basic refresh of the current hardware (changing the chip from the M2 to upcoming M5), it’s now looking to go further.

That exact “previously considered” product shipped just six months after Gurman wrote that. Signs point to Gurman having terrible sources — or just making shit up — regarding Apple’s Vision Pro hardware roadmap.

 ★ 

NASA’s Curiosity Takes Close Look at Rock That Got Stuck on Drill

2 Min Read

NASA’s Curiosity Takes Close Look at Rock That Got Stuck on Drill

A dark, brownish, roughly textured rock with a circular hole sits on the sandy-looking Martian surface. It has broken into several pieces after falling.
PIA26724
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Description

NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover used its Mast Camera, or Mastcam, to capture this view of a rock nicknamed “Atacama” on May 6, 2026, the 4,877th Martian day, or sol, of the mission. The rock had gotten stuck to the drill on the end of Curiosity’s robotic arm on April 25. Engineers spent several days repositioning the arm and vibrating the drill to try and get the rock loose, finally detaching the rock on May 1.

Atacama is estimated to be 1.5 feet in diameter at its base and 6 inches thick. It would weigh roughly 28.6 pounds (13 kilograms) on Earth (and about a third of that on Mars). The circular hole produced by Curiosity’s drill is visible in the rock.

This mosaic is made up of eight images that were stitched together after being sent back to Earth. The color has been approximately white-balanced to resemble how the scene would appear under daytime lighting conditions on Earth.

Curiosity was built by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California. JPL leads the mission on behalf of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington as part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program portfolio. Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego built and operates Mastcam.

To learn more about Curiosity, visit:

science.nasa.gov/mission/msl-curiosity

The post NASA’s Curiosity Takes Close Look at Rock That Got Stuck on Drill appeared first on NASA Science.

[Sponsor] Drata

Leverage autonomous AI agents to automate compliance, manage internal and third-party risk, and continuously prove your security posture.

 ★ 

iOS 26.5 Includes Beta Support for End-to-End Encrypted RCS Messaging

Apple Newsroom:

Starting today, end-to-end encrypted RCS messaging begins rolling out in beta for iPhone users running iOS 26.5 with supported carriers and Android users on the latest version of Google Messages. When RCS messages are end-to-end encrypted, they can’t be read while they’re sent between devices. Users will know that a conversation is end-to-end encrypted when they see a new lock icon in their RCS chats. Encryption is on by default and will be automatically enabled over time for new and existing RCS conversations.

I hope this leads to a future where all RCS messages are end-to-end encrypted, but I doubt it. Currently this E2EE RCS depends both on the carriers (of both parties) in a direct chat, and the software running on their devices. The carrier list is pretty broad, but as far as I can tell, it still doesn’t include Google’s own Google Fi.

But the indication for this is subtle. You have to read the small print metadata in each chat to see if it’s encrypted. The message text remains the same shade of green. If it’s a group chat and even one single member isn’t on a phone and carrier that supports E2EE RCS, the entire chat will not be encrypted.

With iMessage, all chats are always E2EE, and always have been. iMessage has been exclusively E2EE since it was created. With RCS you have to look in the metadata small print to check. That’s better than not supporting encryption at all, but my recommendation is to assume all RCS chats are not encrypted unless you double-check every time.

Other than bug fixes, encrypted RCS is the biggest new feature in iOS 26.5.

 ★ 

iPhone Models Ranked 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 6th in Counterpoint’s List of 10 Bestselling Phones Worldwide in Q1 2026

Samsung phones took spots 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9. The one phone not from Apple or Samsung in the top 10 was the Xiaomi Redmi A5 at #10. As I always say, take these numbers with a grain of salt, but according to Counterpoint, the bestselling phones, in order, are:

  1. iPhone 17
  2. iPhone 17 Pro Max
  3. iPhone 17 Pro

And Apple’s phone in spot #6 was not the iPhone Air, alas, but the year-old iPhone 16.

(Via Horace Dediu.)

 ★ 

The New PowerMac

Apple stopped selling the Power Mac G5 (with space) in August 2006, so I’m not sure how much they care about Kraft using “PowerMac” (sans space) as a trademark for protein-enhanced macaroni and cheese. (I feel like there’s got to be a joke to be made here about a “cheese grater”...)

 ★ 

Lisa Ramirez refuses to be underestimated

Lisa Ramirez.

Lisa Ramirez, a Democratic candidate in the CA-40 congressional race, wrote this piece as a response to my recent post.

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”

— Margaret Mead

The biggest problem with politics in this country is the money it takes to run for office. The next biggest problem is that people who complain about the money dictating our politics still use it as the measuring stick for campaign viability. I firmly believe that our democracy was designed to be powered by the people and if the people are awake, vigilant and engaged we can out-beat the spend 100 percent of the time.

A true “grassroots” campaign is one that prioritizes localized knowledge and is genuinely grounded in relationships with the community over time. It is connection, community and consensus that delivers victories, not the dollars.

We don’t need to look too far back in history to know that money alone does not win races—people do. Zohran Mamdani defeated a Republican, a fellow Democrat, and an army of billionaire donors when he won the New York City mayoral election. If we count the independent expenditures, Andrew Cuomo outspent Mamdani by approximately $37 million!

In 2026 alone we can look to the U.S. Senate Primary, U.S. House District 2 and Senate District 9 races in Texas, where grassroots prevailed every single time!

And let’s not forget AOC or our history right here in Orange County when, in 1996, Loretta Sanchez was outspent by a factor of five but still won the primary and went on to beat B-1 Bob Dornan in the general election as the second Democrat elected to Congress in Orange County.

Still not convinced? For the moviegoers, we need look no further than streaming services for the feature-film versions of these true American stories: “The Long Game,” “Spare Parts,” “McFarland, USA,” “Moneyball”1 and “Norma Rae”—all ripe with examples of underfunded contenders triumphing over well-heeled opponents.

Does money matter? Absolutely, no matter how much I wish it didn’t. The dollars play a critical role in reaching voters so they know we exist. Advertising, canvassing literature, signs, etc.—they all cost lots of money. Yet, truth be told, it won’t take millions to win these primaries when you have two things: 1) a strong candidate whose demonstrated track record and character resonates with the people and 2) an army of volunteers who are hungry, who are inspired and who are motivated to step up in extraordinary ways.

It takes a candidate with a message that resonates. A candidate who embodies the qualities, characteristics and values that voters can connect with and relate to and want to fight for because she makes them feel heard. That is the campaign we have built and I continue to be shaped and inspired by our community of volunteers just the same.

Our 300-plus volunteers (none paid, no bots … and Republicans included) can speak from their heart as to why they are sacrificing their time to support our campaign. Our volunteers roll up their sleeves, start postcard parties, canvass on their own, create their own signs and stand out on street corners on a Friday night without me being there or even knowing. Our volunteers take to the streets and to the phones because they believe in the cause, the greater mission. They understand what’s at stake and what it’s going to take to win our country back. They know that by giving it all they’ve got, they are making a difference. Anyone can pay for canvassers; you can’t buy heart.

You can get ICE in an ice cream truck, but that doesn’t get ICE off the streets. Voters are looking for leaders who don’t just talk the talk but walk the walk. Leaders who are willing to walk with them, amplify their voices and fight for them. Leaders whose work is relevant not 25 years ago, but today. The challenges and crises this country is facing calls for new leadership. We need a closer, a Trevor Hoffman or Mariano Rivera—someone who will get the job done.

I have a work ethic that is unmatched by any candidate. I have garnered more support from every Dem Clubs whose members voted (minimum 70 percent, even when there were four candidates in the race!), the overwhelmingly majority vote of the delegates at the pre-endorsement conference and at the Convention (65 percent and 52 percent, respectively), and more votes than the other two candidates combined—despite being the last candidate to enter the race. This is my batting average at work and a testament to the decades of service I have given to this community.

My campaign has the money we need to land in the top two in the primary and win this seat. Every dollar is used strategically, intentionally and with precision. And what’s more valuable than the money is the people-power that fuels our campaign.

I think when there are leaders who really get what it means to be hungry, they fight harder. When you have a leader who knows not to take a vote, a voice or a volunteer for granted and who exhibits the kind of leader people want to see, that defines campaign viability.

The movement we are building is not a movement against something but it is a movement for something greater than ourselves and a vision for what is possible. It’s a fight for the heart of this country rooted in love and service to neighbor. The only limitation we face is the one we create in how we answer the timeless question of, “Who is my neighbor?” My answer: You are. Most great leaders understand this. This campaign is not about me, it’s about We.

Lastly, never underestimate the power of a woman or what she will do to protect her family and her community. What the Lisa Ramirez for Congress campaign is building in CA-40 is nothing short of miraculous.

If I believed that money was the determining factor, I would not be running, and I certainly wouldn’t have the tremendous support of voters, volunteers and donors. I invite your readers who agree with me to join our volunteer movement and/or make yes, a financial contribution at www.lisaramirez.com.

Lisa Ramirez is a Democratic candidate in the CA-40 congressional race.

1

Jeff’s note: As a sports writer, don’t get me started on “Moneyball.” Or just watch this.

Two Celebrations

American Conversations: Josh Marshall & Kate Riga of Talking Points Memo

May 10, 2026

There were two very different celebrations in Russia and in Hungary yesterday.

Russia celebrated Victory Day, the anniversary of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. Most of the Allies honor Victory in Europe Day, or V-E Day, on May 8, the day in 1945 that jubilant celebrations broke out as news spread of the Nazis’ unconditional surrender in Reims, France, on May 7, 1945. The Russians celebrate victory over the Nazis on May 9, for by the time the Germans surrendered to the Soviets in Berlin, the time difference meant it was already May 9 in Moscow.

May 9 is an important national holiday in Russia, marked with parades and honoring of relatives who fought in the war. In 2005, when Russia was still embracing democratic nations, more than fifty world leaders attended the sixtieth anniversary of Victory Day, including President George W. Bush; the leaders of China, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, Spain, and Denmark; the secretary-general of the United Nations; and the president of the European Commission.

But for the past several years, Russia’s president Vladimir Putin has used the event to demonstrate the nation’s military strength and to rally supporters behind him and the war in Ukraine. He has showcased troops and military hardware in a grand parade in Moscow’s Red Square.

This year, as Zahra Ullah of CNN reported, Putin followed his usual pattern of equating the troops fighting in Ukraine with those who fought in World War II. As he has often framed the war as a struggle against the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), he claimed today’s soldiers for Russia are “standing up to an aggressive force armed and supported by the entire NATO bloc.”

But the similarities between past celebrations and yesterday’s ended there. This year, the parade was dramatically scaled back. The parade included four parade units, including some from North Korea, and there was no heavy military hardware. Instead, screens spread across Red Square showed pre-recorded videos of drones, air defense forces, and submarines that state media claimed were from the front lines.

Although foreign leaders have attended the event in the past, this year there were few. As Matthew Luxmoore noted in the Wall Street Journal, Russian allies Venezuela and Hungary have recently lost their pro-Russian leaders, and Russian ally Iran is at war with the U.S. China’s leader Xi Jinping attended last year but did not attend this year. Russian officials allowed few foreign reporters to cover the event and warned people there could be restrictions on texting and the internet “to ensure security during the festive events.”

Putin’s scaled-back celebration reflects fear of Ukrainian drone strikes, which are hitting deep inside Russia. It also reflects growing discontent over the war and its devastation of the economy, and anger at the increasing repression with which Putin is trying to control opposition.

As former U.S. ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul noted in McFaul’s World, Putin’s war on Ukraine has now lasted longer than the Soviet Union’s war with Nazi Germany and has achieved none of the goals Putin set out for the conflict. He has not subjugated Ukraine and has not succeeded in regime change. He has not “demilitarized” Ukraine; indeed, Ukraine is more militarized than ever before and has become an important player in global weapons systems. And not only has Putin failed to stop NATO from expanding, but in response to his invasion of Ukraine, both Finland and Sweden have joined the defensive alliance.

Instead of achieving Putin’s goals, the war has killed or wounded more than 1.2 million Russian soldiers and eaten up the economy. As criticism of the regime has become more outspoken, the Kremlin has curbed access to the internet, not only exacerbating that criticism but also, as McFaul notes, making it harder for people to use mobile banking, order a taxi, or use other online services. Rumors are circulating that Putin is increasingly concerned for his own safety. Rather than walking to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier to lay flowers as usual, yesterday he took an armored bus.

Russia had announced a ceasefire for Friday and Saturday, but when it unraveled, President Donald J. Trump announced that he had persuaded Russia and Ukraine to agree to a three-day ceasefire that would cover the Victory Day celebration and allow an exchange of 1,000 prisoners from each country. After the announcement of the ceasefire, Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky trolled Putin with a formal presidential decree to “allow” a parade in Moscow. It said: “For the time of the parade…the territorial square of Red Square shall be excluded from the plan of application of Ukrainian weapons.”

By Sunday—after the parade—the ceasefire had already broken down.

Today McFaul noted: “Ukrainian warriors have stopped the invading Russian hordes. Putin is losing his war in Ukraine…. Putin would be wise to cut his losses.”

In Hungary, a different kind of celebration was underway as Péter Magyar took the oath of office as prime minister after winning a landslide victory over Putin ally Viktor Orbán.

In his 16 years of rule, Orbán rejected the liberal democracy his country used to enjoy, saying that its emphasis on multiculturalism weakened the national culture while its insistence on human equality undermined traditional society by recognizing that women and LGBTQ people have the same rights as straight white men. The age of liberal democracy was over, he said, and a new age had begun.

In place of equality, Orbán advocated what he called “illiberal democracy” or “Christian democracy.” “Christian democracy is, by definition, not liberal,” he said in July 2018; “it is, if you like, illiberal. And we can specifically say this in connection with a few important issues—say, three great issues. Liberal democracy is in favor of multiculturalism, while Christian democracy gives priority to Christian culture; this is an illiberal concept. Liberal democracy is pro-immigration, while Christian democracy is anti-immigration; this is again a genuinely illiberal concept. And liberal democracy sides with adaptable family models, while Christian democracy rests on the foundations of the Christian family model; once more, this is an illiberal concept.”

Orbán focused on LBGTQ rights as a danger to “Western civilization.” Arguing the need to protect children, his party has made it impossible for transgender people to change their gender identification on legal documents and made it illegal to share with minors any content that can be interpreted as promoting an LBGTQ lifestyle. After Orbán put allies in charge of Hungarian universities, his government banned public funding for gender studies courses. According to his chief of staff: “The Hungarian government is of the clear view that people are born either men or women.”

The American right wing championed Orbán, who called for the establishment of a global right wing to continue to work together to destroy liberal democracy and establish Christian democracy. Before Hungary’s April election, Trump not only repeatedly endorsed Orbán but also promised “to use the full Economic Might of the United States to strengthen Hungary’s Economy, as we have done for our Great Allies in the past, if Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and the Hungarian people ever need it.” Vice President J.D. Vance actually traveled to Hungary to campaign for Orbán.

But the Hungarian people overwhelmingly rejected Orbán and his party, giving Magyar’s party more than a two-thirds majority in parliament. This will give it the power to overturn not only the laws Orbán and his party passed, but also the changes Orbán made to entrench himself and his party in power permanently. Magyar promised to root out the corruption that has made Orbán and his cronies rich, to restore the rule of law and freedom of speech, and to repair Hungary’s ties with the European Union, which Orbán had frayed almost to the breaking point with his loyalty to Vladimir Putin.

In his inauguration speech, Magyar vowed to “serve my country, not rule over it.” He noted that the corrupt members of the outgoing government “stole from the pockets of Hungarians” and left behind a huge budget deficit and a broken healthcare system. He vowed accountability for those who plundered the country and broke its laws, and promised to rebuild the nation’s shattered checks and balances. He urged Hungarians always to criticize their leaders and hold them accountable.

“We inherited a country where politics deliberately pitted Hungarians against each other,” he said, and he explained how Orbán mobilized supporters with hatred and fear, poisoning “the collective psyche of an entire nation.” “The Hungarian state must never again do this to its own citizens,” he said. He vowed to heal the country: “We will once again learn to think of ourselves as one nation,” he promised.

Then Magyar and members of his party walked out to the crowd outside the parliament on Lajos Kossuth Lajos Square. Magyar urged them to see themselves as one community. He assured them that the story of the day had not been written by politicians in backrooms, but by them. “[I]t was all of you. You wrote it, through your work, your hope, your concern, and your determination. This is now your transition to democracy, this is your homeland, your National Assembly, and we thank you!”

After Magyar spoke, as Roma singer Ibolya Oláh, a lesbian, began performing her anthem “Magyarország,” the crowd crossed the reflecting pool in front of the parliament building to surge forward, taking back their public spaces and their parliament, illustrating their faith in a new era for their country.

Notes:

https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-moscow-parade-ceasefire-cde7ec7a0fb10a3e2563171b931485e8

https://edition.cnn.com/2026/05/09/europe/russia-military-parade-ceasefire-intl-hnk

https://www.wsj.com/world/russia/putin-victory-day-parade-moscow-803efb57

McFaul's World
Growing Cracks in Putin’s Dictatorship
Since coming to power in 2000, Russian leader Vladimir Putin has built one of the most repressive and effective dictatorships in the world. That process accelerated sharply after his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, when, increasingly paranoid about his society’s reaction to the wisdom of that war, Putin cracked down on all internal diss…
Read more

https://www.csis.org/analysis/russias-grinding-war-ukraine

https://www.npr.org/2026/05/09/nx-s1-5816478/trump-russia-ukraine-ceasefire

https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-economic-support-viktor-orban-hungarian-election/

https://www.npr.org/2026/04/09/nx-s1-5779235/jd-vance-stumps-for-hungarys-orban

https://apnews.com/article/hungary-peter-magyar-inauguration-orban-a12b25cb022dedb777a54686e59c65a8

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2018/9/13/17823488/hungary-democracy-authoritarianism-trump

https://visegradpost.com/en/2018/05/12/viktor-orbans-full-speech-for-the-beginning-of-his-fourth-mandate/

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2021/11/19/22787269/conservatives-america-chris-rufo-patrick-deneen

https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2022/09/15/hungary-is-no-longer-a-full-democracy-but-an-electoral-autocracy-meps-declare-in-new-repor

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/10/vladimir-putin-suggests-ukraine-war-is-coming-to-an-end

https://telex.hu/english/2026/05/09/i-will-serve-my-country-not-rule-over-it-peter-magyar-sworn-in-as-hungary-s-new-prime-minister

X:

McFaul/status/2053510455784886304

zsoltsb/status/2053198434333544570

AlexTaylorNews/status/2053164567023288723

SzabadonMagyar/status/2053147093624078789

Bluesky:

united24media.com/post/3mlglex7ayp2t

onestpress.onestnetwork.com/post/3mlgb25wu7c2h

onestpress.onestnetwork.com/post/3mlg54y44mk2u

maks23.bsky.social/post/3mlfzb4ui6c2o

wartranslated.bsky.social/post/3mlegfaz7js25

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Mothers' Day

Your AI Use Is Breaking My Brain

Your AI Use Is Breaking My Brain

Excellent, angry piece by Jason Koebler on how AI writing online is becoming impossible to avoid, filtering it is mentally exhausting and it's even starting to distort regular human writing styles.

I particularly liked his use of the term "Zombie Internet" to define a different, more insidious alternative to the "Dead Internet" (which is just bots talking to each other):

I called it the Zombie Internet because the truth is that large parts of the internet are not just bots talking to bots or bots talking to people. It’s people talking to bots, people talking to people, people creating “AI agents” and then instructing them to interact with people. It’s people using AI talking to people who are not using AI, and it’s people using AI talking to other people who are using AI. It’s influencer hustlebros who are teaching each other how to make AI influencers and have spun up automated YouTube channels and blogs and social media accounts that are spamming the internet for the sole purpose of making money. It is whatever the fuck “Moltbook” is and whatever the fuck X and LinkedIn have become. It’s AI summaries of real books being sold as the book itself and inspirational Reddit posts and comment threads in which people give heartfelt advice to some account that’s actually being run by a marketing firm. [...]

Via @jasonkoebler.bsky.social

Tags: definitions, ai, generative-ai, llms, slop, jason-koebler, ai-ethics

Using LLM in the shebang line of a script

TIL: Using LLM in the shebang line of a script

Kim_Bruning on Hacker News:

But seriously, you can put a shebang on an english text file now (if you're sufficiently brave) [...]

This inspired me to look at patterns for doing exactly that with LLM. Here's the simplest, which takes advantage of LLM fragments:

#!/usr/bin/env -S llm -f
Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle

But you can also incorporate tool calls using the -T name_of_tool option:

#!/usr/bin/env -S llm -T llm_time -f
Write a haiku that mentions the exact current time

Or even execute YAML templates directly that define extra tools as Python functions:

#!/usr/bin/env -S llm -t
model: gpt-5.4-mini
system: |
  Use tools to run calculations
functions: |
  def add(a: int, b: int) -> int:
      return a + b
  def multiply(a: int, b: int) -> int:
      return a * b

Then:

./calc.sh 'what is 2344 * 5252 + 134' --td

Which outputs (thanks to that --td tools debug option):

Tool call: multiply({'a': 2344, 'b': 5252})
  12310688

Tool call: add({'a': 12310688, 'b': 134})
  12310822

2344 × 5252 + 134 = **12,310,822**

Read the full TIL for a more complex example that uses the Datasette SQL API to answer questions about content on my blog.

Tags: llm, llm-tool-use, llms, ai, generative-ai

Learning on the Shop floor

Learning on the Shop floor

Tobias Lütke describes Shopify's internal coding agent tool, River, which operates entirely in public on their Slack:

River does not respond to direct messages. She politely declines and suggests to create a public channel for you and her to start working in. I myself work with river in #tobi_river channel and many followed this pattern. Every conversation is therefore searchable. Anyone at Shopify can jump in. In my own channel, there are over 100 people who, react to threads, add color and add context, pick up the torch, help with the reviews, remind me how rusty I am, and importantly, learn from watching. [...]

As so often with German, there is a word for the kind of environment: Lehrwerkstatt. Literally: A teaching workshop. The whole shop floor is the classroom. You learn by being near the work. Being a constant learner is one of the core values of the firm.

Shopify wants to be a Lehrwerkstatt at scale and River has now gotten us closer to this ideal than ever. It’s osmosis learning, because it does not require a curriculum, a training plan, or a manager. It just requires everyone's work to be visible to the maximum extent possible. Everyone learns from each other.

I'm reminded of how Midjourney spent its first few years with the primary interface being public Discord channels, forcing users to share their prompts and learn from each other's experiments. I continue to believe that the early success of Midjourney was tied to this mechanism, helping to compensate for how weird and finicky text-to-image prompting is.

Tags: ai, slack, generative-ai, llms, midjourney, coding-agents, tobias-lutke

Quoting New York Times Editors’ Note

This article was updated after The Times learned that a remark attributed to Pierre Poilievre, the Conservative leader, was in fact an A.I.-generated summary of his views about Canadian politics that A.I. rendered as a quotation. The reporter should have checked the accuracy of what the A.I. tool returned. The article now accurately quotes from a speech delivered by Mr. Poilievre in April. [...] He did not refer to politicians who changed allegiances as turncoats in that speech.

New York Times Editors’ Note

Tags: ai-ethics, hallucinations, generative-ai, new-york-times, journalism, ai, llms

Remember Tariffs?

Remember tariffs? They have not gone away.

Hi, Paul Krugman with another video update from another cafe. You may remember that back in April 2025, which was seven years ago — well, actually just about one year ago, but it feels like longer — Donald Trump shocked us all with massive tariffs on basically everybody. It was an extraordinary policy move.

It was also clearly illegal. It was also clearly really very stupid from the point of view of any kind of rational economic strategy. All of that seemed like the biggest thing in the world at the time.

But of course it’s been overshadowed in the last 70 plus days by something new which was also illegal and massively stupid and even more so because it’s war. So the tariff issue has kind of receded in our perception. But it has not gone away.

Since the initial imposition of tariffs, we’ve had a lot of action. Again, it would be the biggest thing in the world if it wasn’t for everything else that is going on.

The whole legal basis of the tariffs was tossed out by the Supreme Court after having been ruled illegal by lower courts in several different hearings. The basis of the original tariffs was an obscure law called the International Economic Emergency Power Act, which clearly did not apply to the situation as of April 2025. When those tariffs were tossed, Trump responded or his people responded by invoking “Section 122.”

I know there’s a lot of section numbers in all of this stuff and one question is what law are they sections of. and the answer is mostly they’re all different laws but anyway, 122 is for a balance of payments emergency. It allows a 10% tariff — lower than the IEEPA tariffs — but that was also clearly illegal, and a court has just ruled that it was illegal too. So now that will be appealed and there will be a couple more stages and we’ll see what the Supreme Court does.

In many ways I think people kind of tuned this out because there’s a time limit on 122 tariffs —150 days — so by the time the courts reached a decision that story would probably be over anyway and the Trump administration would have turned to other tariffs.

But it turns out to actually not be good to ignore these tariffs because one thing we have learned — actually we should have known if we thought about it — was that when the administration imposes illegal tariffs and they are eventually ruled illegal, that is a machine for ripping off the American public. When the tariffs are imposed they get passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. When they are ruled illegal many of the companies that were importing goods get refunds — which is slowly getting underway for the original tariffs and will eventually happen, probably, for the new tariffs — but they don’t pass that on to consumers. And as I’ll explain in a minute, that’s not a result of conspiracy. It’s basically a policy failure, given the way this works. There’s no reason to think that consumers would benefit from the refunds on the past tariffs.

But in any case, what we’re seeing now is really, really destructive policies, although it takes a lot of bad economic policy to do as much damage as a war, especially a stupid failed war, but that’s where we are.

Let’s talk for a second about the tariffs. The crucial point for the immediate effects is this. When a tariff is imposed, the tariff is paid by importers, which is either companies that specialize in import-export or fairly often U.S. companies or retailers that are buying stuff from abroad and arranging for it to be shipped, either to be used in production or to be sold on to US consumers.

From their point of view, the tariff is a cost per unit sold. It’s a marginal cost, to use economic jargon. And so, of course, they have every incentive to pass the tariff on to consumers, unless foreigners bear the tariff, which actually doesn’t happen, although Trump insists that it does.

When the tariff is eventually ruled illegal, you can’t say oh well sorry about that but water under the bridge. If you’ve collected taxes from somebody and you didn’t have the right to do that then rule of law at the most minimal level says you have to pay it back. Which is in fact going to happen to a lot of a lot of the Trump tariffs. But that is not a marginal cost. The amount that an importer gets as a refund from illegal tariffs that were imposed in the past doesn’t depend on how much they sell now.

So it’s not a marginal cost, again, to use the economics jargon. Some people have been saying that the fact that there’s no sign that the tariff refunds will be passed on to consumers is somehow monopoly power or collusion or something. Well, I’m not saying there isn’t monopoly power and collusion, but you don’t need that. That’s exactly what you would expect even if there was lots of competition among the importers. The refund doesn’t affect the price that a company needs to charge to make back its expenses. It doesn’t affect the price they need to charge to stay in line with their competitors.

So we have created a machine which rips off consumers when the tariffs are imposed, then hands a bunch of money to corporations when the tariffs are ruled illegal.

So this is really not great stuff, and it’s pretty big. The Trump tariffs have been something like 1% of GDP, and most of them illegal and therefore a ripoff of consumers. That’s a big deal. That’s hundreds of billions of dollars that were taken for no good reason.

It almost seems beside the point to point out that the tariffs have also failed. All of the things that they were supposed to do rebuild manufacturing — manufacturing employment is down — reduce the trade deficit — the trade deficit isn’t down — haven’t happened. So this was all a really large burden on the US public completely without any payoff.

What happens from here? Well, you might think that maybe at least Trump and maybe at least the people around him have learned a lesson and they’ll stop doing such stupid things.

Not going to happen. Nothing is learned here. The latest is that Kevin Hassett, the administration’s chief economist, more or less, says that we’re going to have 6% growth this year. Which is, doesn’t happen except when you’re coming out of a deep, deep recession. The last time it happened, except for recovery from COVID, was in 1984, Morning in America. There is no reason at all to think that we’re going to have Morning Under Trump.

So another policy disaster, although it’s overshadowed by the war.

But this is really, really bad. Take care.

Will our Hyper-Gilded Age Usher in Genuine Populism?

Elon Musk is no Andrew Carnegie

America used to be a middle-class society. But income and wealth disparities began rising rapidly during the Reagan years, and by the late 80s many observers began drawing parallels between the new era of inequality and the Gilded Age.

At this point, however, it’s clear that we are not experiencing a mere replay of the reign of the robber barons. We are living through something much worse. The tech bros make the “malefactors of great wealth” called out by Theodore Roosevelt look benign by comparison.

Some widely used measures of inequality suggest that income disparities, which soared in the 1980s and 1990s, have plateaued since then. But the concentration of wealth at the top is continuing to soar. Today’s oligarchs control a huge share of America’s wealth — much larger than their share even at the end of the 1980s:

The growth in wealth concentration is even more extreme if we look at the very, very top. Gabriel Zucman, one of the world’s leading experts on wealth and income inequality, argues that the concentration of wealth is now much higher than it was at the peak of the Gilded Age:

Source

Tellingly, unlike the robber barons of yore, many modern plutocrats show little sense of gratitude for their good fortune, little inclination to give back to society by devoting a significant part of their wealth to good works. Forbes reports that Elon Musk and Peter Thiel have devoted almost none of their wealth to philanthropy, while Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos are only slightly better.

More important than the stinginess of the superrich, however, is the fact that their wealth has brought great political power, arguably more than the robber barons ever possessed — power that they abuse on an epic scale.

Thanks to the Roberts Supreme Court’s “Citizens United” ruling, plutocrats are able to pump vast amounts of money into elections. Here’s a recent headline from the New York Times:

One example of many: Peter Thiel bankrolled J.D. Vance’s Ohio Senate campaign, burying his Democratic populist rival under a flood of PAC money. Without Thiel’s big bucks, J.D. Vance would not now be a heartbeat away from the presidency.

And Elon Musk actually controlled a significant part of U.S. government operations in 2025 — control that he used, among other things, to eviscerate foreign aid. Those aid cuts have already led to hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths, mostly children, with millions more deaths likely to come.

The big political question going forward is whether there will be a significant backlash against the concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a small number of mean-spirited men.

I believe that there will be such a backlash, indeed that it is already starting, and that there is a political opening for some genuine populism if politicians have the courage to take a stand.

Polling suggests that an overwhelming majority of Americans — roughly speaking, almost everyone except MAGA Republicans — now consider the gap between rich and poor a major problem:

Source: YouGov

And anger over the Trump administration’s corruption — which isn’t the same as anger over the power of the superrich but overlaps with it — is clearly on the rise, becoming a major issue for the midterms.

What we need to push back against 21st century oligarchy are political figures who won’t let themselves be intimidated by the hysteria the wealthy always exhibit at any hint of an effort to limit their privileges. That hysteria is on full display right now in New York City, where some of the wealthy are crying persecution over a planned tax on expensive pieds-a-terre — apartments owned by nonresidents. It’s even more extreme in California, where a proposal for a one-time wealth tax has led Google’s Sergey Brin to compare the state to Soviet Russia.

What politicians and pundits need to understand is that while the ultrawealthy would like us to believe that concern about their excessive power and privileges is a radical, left-wing, anti-centrist position, it isn’t. It is, in fact, a view shared by a large majority of Americans. And in any case, as G. Elliott Morris has shown, few voters, even those who describe themselves as moderate, really support what pundits call “centrism.”

It’s true that any politician who proposes a pushback against modern American oligarchy will face a tidal wave of lavishly funded venom. But given the realities of who today’s plutocrats are and what they do, there are big opportunities for leaders willing to pull an FDR and declare, “I welcome their hatred.”

MUSICAL CODA

Quoting James Shore

Your AI coding agent, the one you use to write code, needs to reduce your maintenance costs. Not by a little bit, either. You write code twice as quick now? Better hope you’ve halved your maintenance costs. Three times as productive? One third the maintenance costs. Otherwise, you’re screwed. You’re trading a temporary speed boost for permanent indenture. [...]

The math only works if the LLM decreases your maintenance costs, and by exactly the inverse of the rate it adds code. If you double your output and your cost of maintaining that output, two times two means you’ve quadrupled your maintenance costs. If you double your output and hold your maintenance costs steady, two times one means you’ve still doubled your maintenance costs.

James Shore, You Need AI That Reduces Maintenance Costs

Tags: coding-agents, ai-assisted-programming, generative-ai, agentic-engineering, ai, llms

Links 5/11/26

Links for you. Science:

Here’s the Covid-19 vaccine paper the CDC censored. RFK Jr. and the CDC’s top official, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, don’t want you to read this. That’s exactly why you should.
Biotech is in a high-stakes game. RFK Jr.’s FDA keeps changing the rules.
A bill to gut endangered species protections faced a major setback this week
Researchers perplexed by growing numbers of ‘zombie’ fish deep in Lake Superior
Dogs’ brains began to shrink at least 5,000 years ago, study finds. Research offers insights into domestication of dogs but it remains unclear why they ended up with smaller brains than wolves
The Measurement Problem Has a Donut Hole
The Triumph of Ego Depletion

Other:

Newsworthy
Will the White House press be even more submissive?
The Loneliness of Donald Trump
Schumer’s Enemies Within. Democratic donors are feeling jazzed about the midterms but still haven’t made peace with leadership over the party’s post-’24 aimlessness. Support for Chuck Schumer, in particular, has become a litmus test for candidates and donors alike.
The Peak Comeback Kid Column
Trump blames No Kings for assassination attempt
D.C. AG Sues Multifamily REIT Over ‘Illegal Hidden Fees’
Sen. John Fetterman backed a stock trading ban — but his household reported buying shares tied to industries he oversees
College Football’s Biggest Gambling Scandal Also Reveals How to Prevent It
Are ICE warehouses just another Trump grift?
Stephen Colbert Gets Ready to Hang It Up
Virginia’s Paid Family Leave Law Signals Shift in the South
Conspiracy America
Virginia’s new law blocks counties from banning solar
Claude-powered AI coding agent deletes entire company database in 9 seconds — backups zapped, after Cursor tool powered by Anthropic’s Claude goes rogue
‘Disappointed,’ ‘Surprised,’ ‘Betrayed’: 12 Trump Voters on What Has Gone Wrong (I’m not a fan of the information deficit hypothesis in general, but, Dear Gritty, these people are just stone cold ignorant)
Study Finds A Third of New Websites are AI-Generated
Deranged Trump Rants Edited Out of 60 Minutes Interview After Shooting
AI’s Economics Don’t Make Sense
Alito Pens Decision That ‘Eviscerates’ The Voting Rights Act
Supreme Court limits key provision of the landmark Voting Rights Act
Leaf Eaters
The YOLO Presidency: Trump is focused on becoming one of history’s “great men.”
Supreme Court Deals a Death Blow to the Voting Rights Act
The Pentagon May Not Be Telling Trump the Full Picture About the War
Dario Amodei, hype, AI safety, and the explosion of vibe-coded AI disasters
Make Greater D.C. Again? GOP embraces bid to add Arlington and Alexandria to the capital
Book bans and culture wars came for libraries. They’re still standing strong.
How Long Are DC Homeowners Staying Put? A Long Time
Trump administration rejects women picked for soybean board, appoints men instead

SpaceX launches intelligence-gathering satellites for the National Reconnaissance Office

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket stands in the vertical launch position ahead of the NROL-172 mission. Image: SpaceX

Updated May 11, 10:48 p.m. EDT (0248 UTC): SpaceX landed its booster on the drone ship.

The National Reconnaissance Office flew its 13th mission supporting an intelligence-gathering constellation it calls the “proliferated architecture” on Monday night.

As with the first dozen missions, this batch of satellites (of an undisclosed quantity) will fly to orbit on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The mission, dubbed NROL-172, launched from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Liftoff happened at 7:13:50 p.m. PDT (10:13:50 p.m. EDT / 0213:50 UTC), nearly four hours after the opening of the window.

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1097. This was its ninth flight following the launch of the Twilight rideshare, Sentinel-6B, and six batches of Starlink satellites.

At 8.5 minutes after liftoff, B1097 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You’, positioned in the Pacific Ocean. This was the 196th landing on this vessel and the 610th booster landing to date for SpaceX.

Given the nature of reconnaissance operations, the NRO doesn’t offer much detail on these satellites or specifics on their capabilities. It did state in its prelaunch press kit that having hundreds of satellites as part of this constellation will “provide greater revisit rates and increased coverage, and eliminate single points of failure.”

For this mission, the NRO did add some additional information by noting that its Geospatial Intelligence Systems Acquisitions Directorate (GEOINT) is contributing to the satellite constellation.

“GEOINT’s contribution to the NRO’s proliferated architecture includes electo-optical, radar, and relay satellites,” the NRO said. “Additionally, these relay satellites enable inter-satellite optical communications and serve as a key component of the NRO’s resilient communications architecture as well as the Department of War’s (DoW) upcoming space-data network.”

The mission patch for the NROL-172 mission. Graphic: National Reconnaissance Office.

The NROL-172 mission is the second flight booked on a Falcon 9 rocket as part of the National Security Space Launch (NSSL) Phase 3 Lane 1 contract, managed by the United States Space Force’s Space Systems Command (SSC). The first of those was the NROL-145 mission, which launchd on April 20, 2025.

The two missions were assigned to SpaceX as part of the NSSL Task Order (NTO)-2 on Oct. 18, 2024.

“The Lane 1 path is ideal for shorter, more responsive mission timelines in addition to being the ideal entry avenue for prospective NSSL providers,” said USSF Col. Jim Horne, Launch Execution Senior Materiel Leader,” in a press release at the time.

Since the launch of NROL-145, there were two other missions supporting the proliferated architecture constellation: NROL-48 on Sept. 22, 2025, and NROL-105 on Jan. 16, 2026. Those two missions secured for launch onboard SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets through a procurement structure outside of the SSC’s NSSL program

In a statement to Spaceflight Now on Monday, a NRO spokesperson said it sometimes used procurement structures outside of the NSSL contract, as a bridge between the conclusion of NSSL Phase 2 and of Phase 3 Lane 1. Like with all the missions leading up to NROL-145, a NRO spokesperson said both the NROL-48 and NROL-105 missions were procured using “the same structure as with earlier proliferated launches.”

“During a satellite system acquisition lifecycle, cost, schedule, and performance analyses are completed to determine the best way to develop, acquire, launch, and operate systems to meet Intelligence Community and warfighter requirements,” the spokesperson said. “During those analyses, NRO makes decisions to meet those requirements most efficiently and effectively. For NRO’s proliferated architecture, NRO recognized a bridge was needed between Phase 2 to Phase 3 Lane 1. This resulted in some missions being procured outside of NSSL. Going forward, future proliferated architecture missions will be launched with a mix of NSSL Phase 3 Lane 1 and missions procured through other acquisition vehicles.”

“The NRO has been a staunch supporter of NSSL since its inception and is committed to using National Security Space Launch (NSSL) Phase 3 for major system acquisitions,” the NRO spokesperson said. “The NRO is partnered with USSF Space Systems Command’s Assured Access to Space Team in the acquisition of Phase 3 and influenced the development of Phase 3, Lane 1 – as a means of procuring flexible launch solutions with tailorable mission assurance.”

“When considering our launch cadence and need for tailorable mission assurance, the NRO recognized that we needed a bridge between Phase 2 to Phase 3 – Lane 1. This resulted in some missions being procured outside of NSSL. NSSL has, and will continue to be, the NRO’s principal mechanism to procure launch services.”

Former NASA chief of staff returns to lead agency launch operations

NASA’s former chief of staff has returned to the agency in a new role overseeing launch operations, a move that raised some concerns on Capitol Hill.

Tianzhou-10 cargo spacecraft arrives at Tiangong space station

China launched the Tianzhou-10 cargo spacecraft late Sunday, docking with the Tiangong space station hours later to deliver supplies, equipment, experiments and propellant.

Thinkie: Wider Scope

I came across the following example & I wanted to write about it but I realized it was a good example of a Thinkie & I haven’t written about thiat Thinkie yet so here it is. Whew! Quite the opening sentence.

Pattern: You’re stuck thinking about a complicated problem.

Transformation: Look at the problem in its wider context. What are the “sources & uses” (…

Read more

BlackSky’s Lyn Chassagne on using satellite imagery to solve problems

In this episode of Space Minds, Mike Gruss talks with BlackSky’s Lyn Chassagne about AI’s role in the imagery sector, how international partners are thinking about sovereignty and the quest […]

The post BlackSky’s Lyn Chassagne on using satellite imagery to solve problems appeared first on SpaceNews.

Creotech plans $118 million capital raise, investment in new satellite factory

WARSAW, Poland — Polish space technology company Creotech Instruments has announced plans for a $118 million fundraise that will allow the company to open a new satellite production facility in Poland by 2029 as part of a new long term development strategy. Creotech Instruments hopes to quadruple its manufacturing capacities to around 40 satellites annually […]

Special Operations Forces test mobile platform for direct satellite imagery access

The software, developed by SkyFi, operates on tactical Android devices

Cowboy raises $275 million to build rockets with orbital data center upper stages

Cowboy Space, founded less than two years ago as Aetherflux to develop space-based solar power, has raised $275 million at a $2 billion valuation to build rockets with upper stages that would serve as data centers once in low Earth orbit.

Failing to pass a defense budget is a self-inflicted wound in the space race

As we have learned from the current conflicts in Ukraine and Iran, space-enabled capability has become critical to all we do in the military. It is persistent (always there) and operates in denied areas (first in the battlefield). These capabilities provide critical combat effects: intelligence, missile threat warning, rapid communications and necessary and amazingly accurate […]

China wants more robots but not fewer workers

A human-first approach to automation

America is experiencing a productivity miracle

AI hasn’t—yet—got much to do with it

Roth and Fisman at Cambridge Public Library, discussing Moral Economics: THIS Evening

 Alvin E. Roth at the Cambridge Public Library   Monday, May 11 at 6 pm 

Alvin E. Roth at the Cambridge Public Library 

 


Harvard Book Store and the Cambridge Public Library welcome Alvin E. Roth—Nobel Prize–⁠winning economist, the Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics at Stanford University, and the George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration Emeritus at Harvard University—for a discussion of his new book, Moral Economics: From Prostitution to Organ Sales, What Controversial Transactions Reveal About How Markets Work. He will be joined in conversation by Ray Fisman—who holds the Slater Family Chair in Behavioral Economics at Boston University.

Ticketing

RSVP for free to this event or choose the "Book-Included" ticket to reserve a copy of Moral Economics and pick it up at the event. Following the presentation will be a book signing.

Note: Books bundled with tickets may only be picked up at the venue the night of the event, and cannot be picked up in-store beforehand. Ticket holders who purchased a book-included ticket and are unable to attend the event will be able to pick up their book at Harvard Book Store up to 30 days following the event. This offer expires after 30 days. Please note we cannot guarantee signed copies will be available to ticket holders who do not attend the event.

About Moral Economics

A Nobel Prize–⁠winning economist shows us why we have to deal in trade-offs when we can’t agree on what’s right and what’s wrong.

Some of the most intractable controversies in our divided society are, at bottom, about what actions and transactions should be banned. Should women and couples be able to purchase contraception, access in vitro fertilization, and end pregnancy by obtaining an abortion? Should people be able to buy marijuana? What about fentanyl? Can someone be paid to donate blood plasma, or a kidney?

Disagreements are fierce because arguments on both sides are often made in uncompromising moral or religious terms. But in Moral Economics, Nobel Prize–winning economist Alvin E. Roth asserts that we can make progress on these and other difficult topics if we view them as markets—tools to help decide who gets what—and understand how those markets can be fine-tuned to be more functional. Markets don’t have to allow everything or ban everything. Prudent market design can find a balance between preserving people’s rights to pursue their own interests and protecting the most vulnerable from harm.

Combining Roth’s unparalleled expertise as market design pioneer with his incisive, witty accounts of complicated issues, Moral Economics offers a powerful and innovative new framework for resolving today’s hardest controversies.

Bios

Alvin E. Roth is the Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics at Stanford University and the George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration Emeritus at Harvard University. A pioneering expert in the field of market design, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2012. A member of the National Academy of Sciences and past president of the American Economic Association, he lives in Stanford, California.

Ray Fisman holds the Slater Family Chair in Behavioral Economics at Boston University. His research focuses primarily on corruption, both in the U.S. and globally. It has appeared in leading economics journals including the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, Quarterly Journal of Economics, and Review of Economic Studies, and has been widely covered in the popular press, in such outlets as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, the Economist, and the Washington Post. His next book, on the economics of business social responsibility, will come out in 2027.

Masking Policy

Masks are encouraged but not required for this event.

Co-Sponsor

The Cambridge Public Library serves as a doorway to opportunity, self-development, and recreation for all its residents, and as a forum where they may share ideas, cultures, and resources among themselves and with people around the globe. Learn more at cambridgema.gov/cpl.

Orion never had a sword like this. Orion never had a sword like this.


Color Off the Mid-Atlantic Coast

Bright milky blue ribbons of water are visible along the coast along with patches of brown and green in some areas.
Colorful waters swirl off the Mid-Atlantic coast in an image captured by the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Aqua satellite on May 3, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

Starting in early April, NASA satellites began to detect a patch of brownish, blue-green water lingering off the coasts of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia. The colors and patterns were most intense in the shallow coastal zone where the waters of Raritan Bay, Delaware Bay, and Chesapeake Bay merged with the Atlantic Ocean—an area known as the Mid-Atlantic Bight

It’s a part of the ocean that remote sensing scientists typically describe as being “noisy” or “dirty” because rivers often discolor coastal waters with plumes of suspended sediment, water stained with colored dissolved organic matter, and an array of microscopic and aquatic plant life. All of this can mingle with ephemeral phytoplankton blooms, sometimes in mucky waters against a varied backdrop of seagrass, sand flats, and rocky sea bottoms. 

This mix creates optical complexity that has long made it harder for scientists to distinguish and categorize phytoplankton blooms in shallow coastal zones compared to the deeper, darker, more uniform waters of the open ocean. Yet with the arrival of missions like PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean Ecosystem), which launched in 2024 and measures more wavelengths of light than previous ocean color missions, scientists are growing increasingly confident in identifying phytoplankton blooms even in optically complex coastal areas.

Multiple NASA satellites—including PACE, Aqua, and Terra—have captured images of colorful water in recent weeks. While some of the color visible in the images may be due to outflows from coastal rivers and sediment churned up by spring storms, “there are likely phytoplankton blooms happening,” said Anna Windle, a research scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center supporting the PACE science team. “Diatoms typically dominate blooms early in the spring, but we are seeing some signs of coccolithophores mixed in as well,” she said. PACE data helped confirm that at least some of the greens and blues offshore are phytoplankton blooms by mapping chlorophyll in the region on the same day.

Diatoms are a class of phytoplankton that often experience explosive growth in their population in the spring when the combination of river runoff, increased sunlight, and seasonal shifts in winds and currents brings upwellings of cool, nutrient-rich water to the surface. Diatom-dominated blooms typically appear greenish in natural-color satellite imagery. 

Coccolithophore-dominated blooms generally have a brighter, chalkier, more turquoise look to them. The milky appearance is a product of the coccolithophores—tiny plant-like organisms that live in the upper layers of the ocean and surround themselves with scaly platings called coccoliths made of calcite, or calcium carbonate.

These highly reflective hubcap-shaped scales are only a few thousandths of a millimeter thick, but coccolithophores are found in such massive numbers during blooms that their plates play a key role in global biogeochemical cycles. The organisms are responsible for about one-half of modern precipitation of calcium carbonate in the ocean, according to one estimate. Off the Mid-Atlantic, coccolithophore blooms generally occur in the late spring or summer, after surface water temperatures have warmed and diatom blooms have lowered nutrient levels somewhat.

Phytoplankton are to the ocean what grasses and ground cover are to land: primary producers, a key food source for other life, and the main carbon recyclers for the marine environment. Diatoms, coccolithophores, algae, and other forms of phytoplankton are floating organisms that absorb sunshine, sponge up nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus, and create their own food through photosynthesis.

The ocean surface is typically quite nutrient-rich in the spring after cold winter weather and winds have mixed the water vertically, bringing nutrients upwards. “But over time, as big spring phytoplankton blooms grow, they deplete the nutrients,” said Rutgers University oceanographer Oscar Schofield. “Unless big river outflows or storms replenish the nutrients, we’ll likely see this bloom start to decline in the coming weeks.”  

NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview. Story by Adam Voiland.

References & Resources

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The post Color Off the Mid-Atlantic Coast appeared first on NASA Science.

Basil Halperin on eclectically optimal policy

David Beckworth recently interviewed Basil Halperin on his podcast MacroMusings. The interview focused on two primary issues: the effect of AI on the macroeconomy and how to think about optimal monetary policy. I see Halperin as a pragmatist in the tradition of Bennett McCallum, which is one reason why he’s my favorite young macroeconomist. Later, I’ll offer some comments on recent trends in the economy.

Halperin’s model suggests that if extremely rapid AI growth were to occur, it would lead to much higher interest rates. The fact that we do not see extremely high rates is taken as evidence that the financial markets do not expect explosive growth over the next decade or two:

Halperin: . . . I think it’s totally plausible that we just get something like the late ’90s, the dot-com boom, where we have a large surge in growth. AI companies make a lot of money and continue to have really fast revenue growth, like the 10 times a year that Anthropic has had last year. Not reaching the 30% GDP growth, certainly in the next five years, again, that some people take very seriously.

Maybe 20 years down the line, things change. I do think that rapid acceleration really is possible in the long run if we have something closer to full automation of human labor. Those sci-fi scenarios, I actually do think our models say that’s quite possible. Economic history says rapid economic speed-ups are quite possible. In the next five years, the next 10 years even, maybe even the next 20 years, that’s where the markets are not seeing this. Markets are pretty good at predicting the future, its own form of artificial intelligence.

Beckworth: You’re hopeful that, within my lifetime, I will see transformative AI?

Halperin: “Hopeful” is a strong word because big changes are both good and scary.

Others have argued that an AI boom might actually lower interest rates, but I don’t find the assumptions about income distribution in those models to be plausible.

The interview is full of great observations. Here he pushes back on the view (which I once held) that AI might solve our public debt problems:

Faster growth means higher tax revenue, but faster growth in general equilibrium means higher interest rates, that is, higher rates on new debt. The average maturity of Treasuries is like six years or something so the US has to roll over its debt stock every six years or something like that. After six years, we’re going to be stuck with all those higher new interest rates. Hence then, the question is this R versus G, or really R minus G, is the effect of AI on interest rates or on growth larger? What determines that? . . .

And this is what the empirical estimates in my paper with Zach and Trevor would find where . . . we have some nice data showing that R and G are indeed lined up. Higher growth leads to higher interest rates or correlationally leads to higher interest rates. We estimate something around one for the slope of that relationship, this elasticity of intertemporal substitution. I would say that higher growth leads to one-for-one higher interest rates so that new debt is not any easier or any harder to pay off as a response to AI. That would say that AI is not a magic solution to our debt problem.

Halperin is a fan of NGDP targeting, citing the influence of George Selgin’s book Less Than Zero:

[Selgin’s] book has influenced me a lot. I think, to my very idiosyncratic taste, it’s one of the most conceptually important works on monetary economics in the last 30 or 40 years because it really drills in on what should central banks actually be doing from a number of directions that the formal literature eventually developed on, even if George’s work wasn’t mathematically formalized so much and wasn’t so much directly cited. He previewed works in top journals that were published 20 or 30 years later, including inspiring my paper that you mentioned with Daniele Caratelli.

Milton Friedman is another influence:

Halperin: . . . If the real interest rate is going to rise, if r-star is going to rise, that means monetary policy needs to pay attention to that, to either not keep interest rates too low so that you have some inflationary outcome, or not have interest rates too high to have excess unemployment, like the Citrini scenario. That’s the second point.

A third point is that I think monetary policy can be helpful to not screw up how the economy goes during an AI-driven transition, but cannot solve the problem. This really is a question for fiscal policymakers. It is a question of redistribution. What monetary policy should be sure to do is just not screw things up. I keep saying Friedman in this episode, maybe appropriately because he’s the GOAT, as your boss, Tyler, would say.

What monetary policy can do versus what it can’t do: What it can do is ensure that it doesn’t screw up the economy in response to shocks. That’s the fundamental lesson of his 1968 presidential address, famous paper. Implementing the less-than-zero policy that Selgin recommends or this countercyclical inflation that comes out of my work would be one plausible way of doing that.

Halperin agrees with Bennett McCallum that because we don’t know exactly which form of wage and price stickiness is the most important, we need a robust approach to monetary policy that is relatively optimal under a wide range of assumptions.

Halperin: Even zooming out, is sticky prices obviously the most important nominal friction in the world? I’ve written a paper on this. That’s still not clear to me. Sticky prices as opposed to sticky wages or sticky nominal debt contracts or sticky information. No one’s done a head-to-head comparison of all these different frictions. I think that’s desperately needed. Though, it’s not clear how you do that. Otherwise, I would have written the paper. . . .

That’s the core logic of what we show to be optimal in the model. The way that gets you NGDP targeting or nominal wage targeting or this countercyclical inflation is that if this firm was having a positive productivity shock, it’s producing more stuff. Output’s going up. Y is going up. It’s cutting its price. Every other firm is keeping prices constant, but that one firm is lowering its prices. The average level of prices in the economy is then falling. Y up, P down. In a baseline setup, those are one for one. P times Y, nominal GDP, is kept constant. You can also see this as nominal wage targeting. Stabilizing nominal wages ensures that the nominal costs of all those unaffected firms is stabilized so that they don’t want to change their prices. Nominal wage targeting is another way we frame optimal policy in the paper. All of these terms—NGDP targeting, nominal income targeting, nominal wage targeting—all of these things are pointing to this countercyclical inflation, looking through shocks rather than aiming for strict inflation stabilization, which is the baseline new Keynesian logic. . . .

The way I think about this is that NGDP targeting or something like it is eclectically optimal.

Back in 2011, I had this to say about Bennett McCallum:

McCallum first proposed NGDP targeting some time around 1980. McCallum has an interesting position within the field of macroeconomics. Unlike me, he is comfortable with the IS-LM approach. Unlike me, he is comfortable working with rather sophisticated new Keynesian models. But unlike people like Michael Woodford, he has always insisted on the importance of the quantity of money (rather than merely the effects of monetary policy on interest rates.) And unlike most new Keynesians, he’s argued that NGDP targeting is superior to the various flexible price inflation targets that are frequently proposed. I think this is rather unusual, as when your model includes both P and Y separately, there is no obvious reason to put the same coefficient on the reaction function for each variable. So I’ve always seen him as being in the mainstream of modern macro research, but a little off to the side of that mainstream.

I met him only once, and that was at a conference in March. He has a very appealing personality; quiet and very polite. . . . I have great respect for his intuition. He seems to have a good sense of which developments in macro are fruitful and which are not.

Like McCallum, Basil Halperin seems to have absorbed both the best of New Keynesian economics and the best of Milton Friedman thought. He also favors NGDP targeting. He also seems to have excellent intuition about which sort of macro models are plausible and which are not—a skill that’s hard to teach. Even their personalities seem a bit similar, as both come across as being very polite. (Here’s a much longer post explaining McCallum’s excellent intuition.)

Next, I’ll offer some related observations on the current state of the economy.

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These people are not in danger. These people are not in danger.


Meta to Start Capturing Employee Mouse Movements, Keystrokes for AI Training Data

Katie Paul and Jeff Horwitz, reporting for Reuters in late April:

Meta is installing new tracking software on U.S.-based employees’ computers to capture mouse movements, clicks and ​keystrokes for use in training its artificial intelligence models, part of a broad initiative to build AI agents that can perform work tasks autonomously, the company told staffers in internal memos seen by Reuters.

The tool, called Model Capability Initiative (MCI), will run on work-related apps and websites and will also take occasional snapshots of the content on employees’ screens, according to one of the memos, posted by a staff AI research scientist on Tuesday in a channel for the company’s model-building Meta SuperIntelligence Labs team.

I love this. Anyone who works at Meta knows who they’re working for. I hope they’re all as creeped out by this as I would be. What I’d really like to know is how far up the chain does this go? If they have any honor, every single employee at the company, right up to Zuckerberg, would get this MCI spyware. What’s good for the goose is good for the gander. I presume that’s not the case, and there’s a two-class system where if you’re high enough in the org chart, you don’t get it. I would love to hear from any little birdies about this, but I don’t have many little birdies in Menlo Park. (Alan, baby, help me out?)

Also:

Meta is planning to lay off 10% of its workforce globally starting on May 20 and is eyeing additional large cuts later this year.

If I worked there I’d raise my hand to get a buyout, but, I’d never work there in the first place.

Horwitz, by the way, won a 2026 Pulitzer for his investigative coverage of Meta.

 ★ 

Look, Ma. A U.F.O!

May 9, 2026

If you google the history of Mother’s Day, the internet will tell you that Mother’s Day began in 1908 when Anna Jarvis decided to honor her mother. But “Mothers’ Day”—with the apostrophe not in the singular spot, but in the plural—actually started in the 1870s, when the sheer enormity of the death caused by the Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War convinced writer and reformer Julia Ward Howe that women must take control of politics from the men who had permitted such carnage. Mothers’ Day was not designed to encourage people to be nice to their mothers. It was part of women’s effort to gain power to change society.

The Civil War years taught naïve Americans what mass death meant in the modern era. Soldiers who had marched off to war with fantasies of heroism discovered that newly invented long-range weapons turned death into tortured anonymity. Men were trampled into blood-soaked mud, piled like cordwood in ditches, or withered into emaciated corpses after dysentery drained their lives away.

The women who had watched their hale and healthy men march off to war were haunted by its results. They lost fathers, husbands, sons, and brothers. The men who did come home were scarred in both body and mind.

Modern war, it seemed, was not a game.

But out of the war also came a new sense of empowerment. Women had bought bonds, paid taxes, raised money for the war effort, managed farms, harvested fields, worked in war industries, reared children, and nursed soldiers. When the war ended, they had every expectation that they would continue to be considered valuable participants in national affairs, and had every intention of continuing to take part in them.

But the Fourteenth Amendment, which established that Black men were citizens, did not explicitly include women in that right. Worse, it introduced the word “male” into the Constitution when it warned states against preventing “male inhabitants” from voting. In 1869, the year after the Fourteenth Amendment was added to the Constitution, women organized two organizations—the National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association—to promote women’s right to have a say in American government.

From her home in Boston, Julia Ward Howe was a key figure in the American Woman Suffrage Association. She was an enormously talented writer who in the early years of the Civil War had penned “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” a hymn whose lyrics made it a point to note that Christ was “born of woman.”

Howe was drawn to women’s rights because the laws of her time meant that her children belonged to her abusive husband. If she broke free of him, she would lose any right to see her children, a fact he threw at her whenever she threatened to leave him. She was not at first a radical in the mold of reformer Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who believed that women had a human right to equality with men. Rather, she believed strongly that women, as mothers, had a special role to perform in the world.

For Howe, the Civil War had been traumatic, but that it led to emancipation might justify its terrible bloodshed. The outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870 was another story. She remembered:

“I was visited by a sudden feeling of the cruel and unnecessary character of the contest. It seemed to me a return to barbarism, the issue having been one which might easily have been settled without bloodshed. The question forced itself upon me, ‘Why do not the mothers of mankind interfere in these matters, to prevent the waste of that human life of which they alone know and bear the cost?’”

Howe had a new vision, she said, of “the august dignity of motherhood and its terrible responsibilities.” She sat down immediately and wrote an “Appeal to Womanhood Throughout the World.” Men always had and always would decide questions by resorting to “mutual murder,” she wrote, but women did not have to accept “proceedings which fill the globe with grief and horror.” Mothers could command their sons, “who owe their life to her suffering,” to stop the madness.

“Arise, women!” Howe commanded. “Say firmly: ‘We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience. We, women of one country, will be too tender of those of another country, to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs.’”

Howe had her document translated into French, Spanish, Italian, German, and Swedish and distributed it as widely as her extensive contacts made possible. She believed that her Women’s Peace Movement would be the next great development in human history, ending war just as the antislavery movement had ended human bondage. She called for a “festival which should be observed as mothers’ day, and which should be devoted to the advocacy of peace doctrines” to be held around the world on June 2 of every year, a date that would permit open-air meetings.

Howe organized international peace conferences, and American states developed their own Mothers’ Day festivals. But Howe quickly realized that there was much to be done before women could come together on a global scale. She turned her attention to women’s clubs “to constitute a working and united womanhood.”

As Howe worked to unite women, she came to realize that a woman did not have to center her life around a man, but rather should be “a free agent, fully sharing with man every human right and every human responsibility.” “This discovery was like the addition of a new continent to the map of the world,” she later recalled, “or of a new testament to the old ordinances.” She threw herself into the struggle for women’s suffrage, understanding that in order to create a more just and peaceful society, women must take up their rightful place as equal participants in American politics.

While we celebrate the modern version of Mother’s Day on May 10, in this momentous year of 2026, it’s worth remembering the original Mothers’ Day and Julia Ward Howe’s conviction that women must have the same rights as men, and that they must make their voices heard.

Notes:

https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/rbc/rbpe/rbpe07/rbpe074/07400300/07400300.pdf

Julia Ward Howe, Reminiscences, 1819-1899 (Boston: 1900).

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Brett Channing comes to Aliso Viejo

So last week week, the Aliso Viejo City Council introduced the new city manager, Brett Channing.

And, before we dive into the nitty gritty of what it all means, I’d like to welcome Brett to town with this image of a donut.

Now that that’s out of the way—Channing!

He is a man I have yet to meet, yet a man it would be wise to befriend, for his new salary is (this is not a misprint) $342,000 per year, plus (also not a misprint) phone, transportation, vacation package, 240 hours of paid leave (seriously—two hundred and forty hours) and all sorts of perks, goodies and office desk doodads. Here’s the contract. Put different: If anyone in local government has the means to throw the kick-ass Chanukah party of 2026, it’s Brett. Bring the chips and guac, y’all!

And, to be clear, I am not dogging Brett Channing. For all I know, he winds up doing a great job and, upon retirement, Aliso Viejo will be coined, “Brettville.” Hell, this Q&A makes him sound like a lovely chap. I’m being serious—perhaps he kicks ass. That would be tremendous.

But, well, this whole jamboree makes no sense. Let’s review …

So, last December Mitzi Ortiz, the Aliso Viejo city manager, died at age 45. By all accounts, Ortiz was a lovely person and committed public servant. A good egg, as my Grandpa Nat would have said. And it was (technically) up to the five-member Aliso Viejo City Council to find a replacement. Normally, when people are blessed with human skulls and IQs clearing 50, this would involve hiring an executive search firm to line up a slate of candidates. After all, one can argue this is the most important position in the metropolis.

According to sources inside City Hall, however, instead of enlisting a head hunter, Tim Zandbergen and Garrett Dwyer (both council members, both MAGA bruhs) decided they would take the lead.

What followed was, well stupidity. Resumes were solicited, phone calls were made, Samantha Fox DVDs were watched—and Zandbergen and Dwyer offered up a handful of finalists who were vetted in a hyper-specific and impressive manner that involved breaking down the qualities, examining past experiences, researching municipal trends apparently very little. And with almost no public scrutiny.

They chose Channing.

And, to reiterate, I’ve got no beef with the man. He might wind up great. Better than great. Uber great!

But riddle me this: David Doyle, Ortiz’s predecessor, was paid approximately $350,000 for his (shitty) services before being fired in 2024. Ortiz, his replacement (and—gasp!—a woman of color) had to settle for $70,000 less. And now Channing is back, bling blinging his best life. Why the skyrocketed pay? Why the tight lips? Why so little (aka almost no) transparency? Well … hmm … um … it’s not entirely clear.

The Aliso Viejo City Council is made up of five people. Four of the five are white Trumpy dudes who, together, look like the the members of a reunited Grade-D midwestern boy band who moonlight as pharmaceutical salesmen …

… and the fifth is Tiffany Ackley (aka: a woman whose brain wasn’t hollowed out by the MAGA virus, and serves as the glue holding together any lingering morsels of municipal sanity).

When one attends a council meeting, there is a palpable weirdness—Ackley fighting for reason, the four boy band members fighting against Pride flags and non-existent DEI efforts. It forces one to question whether, for $342,000, they’re hoping for more than a well-run city and a pioneering spirit.

It forces one to question what the hell just happened.

Is Europe in Economic Decline?

The world's most complex machine - Works in Progress Magazine

An ASML chipmaking machine

I’m in Europe for a few weeks, giving myself some physical (if not mental) distance from Trumpland. So I decided to take a short break from my healthcare series to write about the European economy — specifically the perception that Europe is in economic decline. According to conventional wisdom, Europe is falling far behind the United States. It has lost any dynamism it once had and is quickly becoming a museum of its former glories.

This perception is widespread: at Davos in January Howard Lutnik, Trump’s Commerce secretary, gave a speech that was so insulting toward Europe that Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, walked out. The Wall Street Journal recently published an article under the headline “What happens when Europeans find out how poor they are?” which asserted an equivalence between the European economy and the poorest U.S. states, such as Alabama and Mississippi.

Granted, what would you expect from an Epstein pal, stablecoin profiteer, Trump minion like Lutnick? Yet smart Europeans are also concerned: in 2024 Mario Draghi, one of history’s greatest central bankers, issued a report on EU competitiveness that highlighted Europe’s lagging productivity and raised serious alarms.

But how accurate is this perception of European underperformance? While there are valid reasons to be concerned about Europe’s future, the trash talk reflects ignorance of the real issues. And even economically sophisticated, Draghi-type discussions are, I would argue, misleading. Europe is simply not poor the way Mississippi is poor. Moreover, by many measures — arguably the most important measures — Europe is, in fact, keeping up with the United States.

Europe, along with China and the United States, is an economic superpower. And, at this point in time, it is arguably the world’s only democratic superpower. However, misperceptions about its economic performance keep it from playing the global role that it should and is so desperately needed.

So while this primer is primarily informational, intended to give an overview of Europe’s long-term economic performance and how it compares to that of the U.S., it is also a wake-up call to Europeans to stop being gaslit by American triumphalism and to realize their own strengths – strengths that are critically needed in a world of encroaching authoritarianism.

Beyond the paywall I will address three questions:

1. Does Europe have a lower standard of living than the U.S.?

2. Is Europe falling behind the U.S.?

3. Has Europe failed to match its global influence with its economic power?

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Quoting Andrew Quinn

One could say in the first quarter-century of my life, that while I was always fascinated by programming, I could never overcome the guilt of not really knowing whether the tool I am building right now isn’t already superceded by some much better implementation someone else has already written 30 or 40 years ago; I could write a TSV-aware search and replace, or I could find out about awk and solve that entire class of problems in one fell swoop, for example. My central conceit is that this is a trap. You need to reinvent a couple of wheels to get to the edge of what we know about wheel-making, not a thousand wheels, and not zero; probably four or five is sufficient in most domains, maybe closer to twenty or thirty in the most epistemically rigorous and developed fields like mathematics or computer science. Each wheel you reinvent, and every directed question you ask along the way, will propel you faster to the true frontier than that same amount of time spend in idle study, or even five times that amount.

Andrew Quinn, footnote on Replacing a 3 GB SQLite database with a 10 MB FST (finite state transducer) binary

Tags: careers, sqlite

Links 5/10/26

Links for you. Science:

I Was Treated for Tuberculosis While Millions Were Robbed of Care
Cocaine Pollution Seems to Make Salmon Swim Farther Than Usual. Scientists Don’t Know the Long-Term Consequences
‘Why is publishing so expensive?’
The Destroyed Remnants of a Lost World Are Falling to Earth, Scientists Discover
Doctor, wife of acting U.S. attorney general, appointed to NIH advisory council
Trump fires all 24 members of the U.S. National Science Foundation’s governing body
A new way to stop global spread of pathogen once linked to Ireland’s Great Famine

Other:

It Is 2006… It is 2026…
Transit, school decisions are putting DC students in danger
D.C. child care workers got life-changing raises. Now they may be cut.
Trump’s Losing Streak Takes a Truly Humiliating Turn
The Trouble with Trump’s Bunker and Ballroom
Walking near a D.C. school raises the chance of being hit by a car, data shows
A Bad Look: Eight years ago, I argued the White House Correspondents’ Dinner should end. The years since have only made the case stronger. And Saturday wasn’t even the worst part.
Do Not Authorize The F@cking Ballroom. A message to frontline Democrats.
‘I was left unprotected’: Star golfer accuses school administrators of failing to remedy harassment from male teammates
Hegseth’s Useful Tool: Gen. Christopher LaNeve, the new chief of staff of the U.S. Army, has enjoyed a spectacular rise from obscurity, often at the expense of more popular generals that Pete Hegseth has purged—fueling suspicions that he’s become a proxy in Hegseth’s feuds and an active participant in his “slow-motion coup.”
A town of 7,000 planned so many data centers, it’s like adding 51 Walmarts
It’s time to fire Kash Patel
Making Sense of the Iran War
Originalist Judges Are Spitting On the Constitution and Think You Won’t Notice
HORRORS OF ZORRO: First claims of men being gang raped at Epstein’s Zorro ranch revealed in bombshell doc – amid probe over ‘buried girls’
Kick Him Right In the Ballroom
Elite impunity has fueled the fantasy that catastrophes are for other people.
A MODEST PROPOSAL: THE NEW YORK TIMES SHOULD FACT-CHECK ITS FOCUS GROUPS
Cultifying the U.S. Military
Tim Heidecker and Onion Chief Ben Collins on Their Infowars Takeover — and Bringing Down Alex Jones: “The Final Gasps of a Beached Whale”
Is the Justice Department lying about Saturday’s “shooting”?
‘The Apprentice’ Shows Donald Trump Morphing From Man to Cartoon
The Only Thing Americans Care About
Data Centers Reveal America’s Economic Development Brain Rot
Georgetown Law’s Finest
Mood in Russia turns bleak as war in Ukraine drags on and economy suffers
MAGA’s Strange Quiet After the Shooting
The hardest-working staff at the airport? These two good boys.
At Least The War Is Over
Pennsylvania Race Pits Corporate Defender Against Union Organizer. Ryan Crosswell is running to represent Pennsylvania’s Seventh District after a career helping bosses fight their workers.

In Case You Missed It…

…a week of Mad Biologist posts:

Democratic House Candidate Jack Schlossberg Says Lazy and Ignorant Things About D.C. Statehood

Well, Vinay Prasad Was Wrong About the Moderna mRNA Flu Vaccine

A Better Week for D.C. on the Crime Front

f/e 2026-05-10

Two weeks of notes, in the middle of which I went to Glasgow for three nights and then Edinburgh for the same. A “holiday”. I was lucky with the weather and had a good time.

I was touristing with my friend J, from Germany, and despite having seen very little of each other over the past 30+ years, we got on fine, saw several sights, drank nice coffees, and ate nice foods. Neither of us had been to Glasgow before, and there:

  • We did the Sightseeing Bus one day which does make you (me) feel like a complete dork, when you’re looking out at locals from the open top deck while a tour guide explains buildings to you, but is also a really good way to get a good overview of a place, as well as “hop-off”, see a sight, and “hop-on”, until you’ve completed a loop.
  • We went to the Riverside Museum which is full of many, many old vehicles of all kinds, from a Sinclair C5 and skateboards, through many intricate model ships, up to a fire engine, steam engines, and subway cars. The building’s quite nice – by Zaha Hadid Architects – although we noticed the standard feature of specialized, bespoke roofs: damp patches on the ceilings.
  • We also popped into the huge and impressive Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum but only stayed long enough to look at the French and Dutch paintings.
  • We went to three good secondhand bookshops, all very close: Voltair & Rousseau, Thistle Books (Instagram), and Caledonia Books.
  • We went to some nice cafes/coffeeshops: Ottoman Coffeehouse (impressive interior, fancy coffees), Offshore (lovely bright corner spot near the bookshops), Willow Grove (friendly little place), The Spitfire Cafe on High Street (light, nice breakfast, dubious theme to take a German to), Through the House (minimal, modern, nice), Rose & Grants (Instagram) (good breakfast).
A photo of a slice of toast with feta, spinach, and hollandaise sauce on top, topped with pea shoots.
Breakfast at Rose & Grants, Glasgow

We left plenty of sights unseen. We stayed at the Premier Inn on St Enoch Square which was fine if typically characterless, although the square itself was a bit of an adventure of an evening… I imagine it’ll get “cleaned up”, for better or worse, when they redevelop the adjoining shopping centre soon.

Then off to Edinburgh where I stayed with my sister in Leith, not far from the awesome bright yellow offshore wind turbine foundations that – I assume arrive there before being taken out to their resting place. In Edinburgh:

  • I went in Armchair Books, Edinburgh Books (which seems to have a great built-in sound system of big cabinet speakers, playing classical), and Tills Bookshop.
  • We went for a 10.6km walk in the Pentlands, where we could have been more lucky with the weather – no views through the grey back to the city.
  • We had a tour of Edinburgh College of Art, where my sister works, which is preparing for the annual grad show, so lots of bare rooms ready for exhibition, and great views up to the castle. Art colleges are the best.
  • More good coffee and food at The Walnut (a lovely dinner), The Haven Cafe (Instagram) (great breakfast, as ever), Cult Coffee (cosy cavernous place), Ante (cool coffees and pastries).
  • I went round to T’s for coffee and chat, and met A for the same just before I headed home.
A photo looking over some still water at several tall yellow tripods and cylinders, reflecting in the water under a cloudy sky. They're several stories tall.
Wind turbine foundations

All-in-all, very good. I’m glad to have visited Glasgow for the first time; very different to Edinburgh, both with the pros and cons. I could have had longer in both but I was pretty knackered by the end and ready to come home.

I felt a bit dazed for the first couple of days back home, after nearly a week of being constantly around other people. Decompressing. Then a day or two of being really pretty down for – amazingly – the first time in three or so weeks, followed by a bit of being furious at myself and the world for all the usual vague reasons. As I write, I’m back to an even keel.


§ I made a little progress on destroying the broken concrete pond just before I went away but haven’t yet continued, thanks to an aching shoulder and neck incurred on the first night away in an unfamiliar bed, which has not yet quite eased up.


§ This week I actually went to a gig! In Hereford! In desperately googling for things that might interest me in this county I came across this series of monthly gigs which looked like it might be interesting. Always hard to tell with things like that, and I would not have said “psych/wyrd folk” is necessarily my cup of tea, but worth a try.

So I went along this month and saw Alex Rex who was good and funny and bleak, supported by George Nash whose percussive guitar playing was very impressive (although I don’t really get “storytelling” as it applies to instrumental music). There were less than 20 people there in a small room, but I’ll be going back to try out more.


§ Rouvy, which I use for cycling on a bike trainer at home, got bought by Zwift and despite the inevitable “nothing will change” protestations from Rouvy, has me (and the folks on r/Rouvy) apprehensive about the future. I love Rouvy’s “real” videos of cycle routes compared to Zwift’s computer graphics, and I hope those won’t disappear…


§ A photo looking out through a window at Edinburgh Castle up on its cliffs under an almost clear sky. In front of and below the window are several white rectangular boxes, plinths and platforms.
Edinburgh Castle from Edinburgh College of Art

§ In an effort to extend our WiFi more reliably to the other side of the house we got a UniFi Express 7 on the basis that (a) it might provide better WiFi than our Huawei 4G modem does, (b) it will give us a clearer idea of how strong/weak the WiFi is around the house, and (c) if we want to extend it, we can buy another of the same – further units can behave as mesh endpoints connected to the original one as a router.

Other options include ethernet cables (I do not want to cable the house), or powerline networking (I’m sceptical our power sockets etc will make this any better than wireless).

After a false start at the first attempt, today I got it all set up and working, with some help – after exhausting google and reddit – from Professor C.G.P. Tee. It turns out that even if I enable Bridge Mode on the modem, Three are still “using carrier-grade NAT (CGNAT)” upstream so there’s no simple escape from being “double NATed”. Which, as I understand it (I don’t), isn’t really a problem for our needs, so I’ve disabled Bridge Mode on the modem (but kept its WiFi turned off) as the simplest, least troublesome solution for now.

My first job was as a sysadmin, responsible for the company’s computer network etc. and I did not know anything about networking then. Very little has changed over the past three decades. But I do now have access to UniFi’s very nice and very complicated control panels to reinforce just how little I understand.


§ In Glasgow, J and I saw Rose of Nevada (2025, Mark Jenkin) at the nice Glasgow Film Theatre. It was good, interesting, slightly spooky.

And at home Mary and I watched Wake Up Dead Man (2025, Rian Johnson) which, like all Benoit Blanc mysteries, suffered because it includes the character Benoit Blanc. I was enjoying the ride up until he appeared and then proceedings dragged every time he was on screen, as if it was time itself slowing down that caused the movie to extend to an unjustifiable 1 hr 25 min.


§ Many things to be doing over the next couple of weeks for which I am bracing myself.


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 Here's his tweet on that:

I did a 3 hour  @OriginsProject podcast with Nobel Laureate Alvin E. Roth on his wonderful new book, Moral Economics, that I thought was one of the best podcasts I have recorded. Except I forgot to hit record! Lost it all! With amazing grace and perseverence, he agreed to redo it 2 hours later. What resulted may have been even better. My colleague and friend @slsatel at AEI (who will do an event with him there May 14 ) told me he was a mensch. And boy was she right. I cannot believe his kindness. Thank you Al! And your book is truly inspiring. Hope to release the podcast next week. Watch it and then buy the book! Or buy the book and then watch it. :)

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WorkOS

My thanks for WorkOS for, once again, sponsoring Daring Fireball for the last week. If you’re ready to sell to enterprise customers, your product may be ready — but is your auth infrastructure?

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