We can now officially stop pretending

In case you missed it, Robert Mueller has died.

And in case you missed it, the president responded thusly …

Mueller has a widow. Didn’t matter to Trump.

Mueller has two daughters. Didn’t matter to Trump.

Mueller has grandchildren. Didn’t matter to Trump.

The President of the United States learned that someone he is opposed to no longer exists, and he greeted the news with, “Good, I’m glad he’s dead.”

So, yeah—please, Donald Trump, die. ASAP. Right now. Choking on a burger. Tripping into the corner of your desk. Fucking one of your young whores. Getting stabbed with a pen in your vag-neck. Having an eagle peck your eyes out. Suffering an allergic reaction to RFK’s meat pops.

Whatever it takes.

Seriously, whatever it takes.

You have made it clear that death is an appropriate wish for those who hurt innocent people.

Die, bruh.

Die hard.

March 21, 2026

On March 21, 1861, former U.S. senator Alexander Stephens of Georgia delivered what history has come to know as the Cornerstone Speech, explaining how the ideology and power of elite enslavers in the American South were about to usher in a new era in world history.

Speaking in Savannah, Georgia, just before he became the vice president of the Confederate States of America, Stephens set out to explain once and for all the difference between the United States and the Confederacy. That difference, he said, was human enslavement. The American Constitution had a crucial defect at its heart, he said: it based the government on the principle that humans were inherently equal. Confederate leaders had fixed that problem. They had constructed a perfect government because they had corrected the Founding Fathers’ error. The “cornerstone” on which the Confederate government rested was racial enslavement.

In contrast to the government the Founding Fathers had created, the Confederacy rested on the “great truth” that some people were better than others. Black Americans were “not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition. This, our new government, is the first, in the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical, and moral truth.”

Stephens believed that the new doctrine of the Confederacy would spread around the world until southerners had the gratification of seeing “the ultimate universal acknowledgment of the truths upon which our system rests.” Stephens expected the old Union to dissolve and the Confederacy to be “the nucleus of a growing power which, if we are true to ourselves, our destiny, and high mission, will become the controlling power on this continent.”

And yet, when we remember the era that elite southern enslavers thought would see their ideology spreading around the globe and ushering in a new era in human history, we do not remember it as the “Stephens Era.” It is the Era of Lincoln, the man who came to represent those who stood against Stephens and his ilk.

Illinois lawyer Abraham Lincoln, who had been born into poverty and worked his way up to prosperity, rejected the idea that some men were better than others by the circumstances of their birth. He insisted on basing the nation on the idea that “all men are created equal,” as the Founders stated—however hypocritically—in the Declaration of Independence. I should like to know,” Lincoln said in July 1858, “if taking this old Declaration of Independence, which declares that all men are equal upon principle and making exceptions to it where will it stop…. If that declaration is not the truth, let us get the Statute book, in which we find it and tear it out! Who is so bold as to do it!”

Less than a month after Stephens gave the Cornerstone Speech, the Confederates fired on a federal fort in Charleston Harbor, and the Civil War began.In 1863, using his authority under the war powers, Abraham Lincoln— now president of the United States— declared enslaved Americans free in the areas still controlled by the Confederates. In 1865, Congress passed and sent off to the states for ratification the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, prohibiting human enslavement except as punishment for crime and giving Congress the power to enforce the amendment. The states approved the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution in 1865.

Still, southern state legislatures tried to circumscribe the lives of the Black Americans who lived within their state lines after the war. The 1865 Black Codes said that Black people couldn’t own firearms, for example, or congregate, had to treat their white neighbors with deference, and were required to sign yearlong work contracts every January or be judged vagrants subject to arrest and imprisonment. White employers could get them out of jail by paying their fines, but then they would have to work off their debt in a system that looked much like enslavement.

In response, Congress reiterated that the law must treat all men equally. It passed the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution and sent it off to the states for ratification. The states added it to the Constitution in 1868. The Fourteenth Amendment guaranteed that “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

That sentence—one of the most important in American history—guarantees that no state can discriminate against any citizen or deprive any person within its boundaries of due process and the equal protection of the law. And then the amendment goes on to say that “Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”

When white former Confederates in Georgia nonetheless tried to keep Black Americans from holding office, expelling Black legislators from the legislature after the 1868 election, Congress continued to insist on equality. It refused to seat the elected lawmakers from Georgia in the U.S. Congress and wrote the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution to specify that equal rights included having a say in government. The Fifteenth Amendment said: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” Once again, it gave power to Congress to enforce the amendment.

Rejecting the worldview Stephens thought would come to dominate the globe, Americans used the moment in which men like Stephens reached for supremacy to enshrine the principles of the Declaration of Independence into the American Constitution. The Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth amendments ushered in a very different sort of new era than Stephens imagined. It was, in large part, the tearing apart of old political systems under those like Stephens that permitted the rise of new ones that redefined the United States. Stephens thought he was heralding a new world, but in fact he marked the end of an era.

The shaping of the next era belonged not to him, but to others with a clearer view of both the meaning of the United States of America, and of humanity.

Notes:

https://www.battlefields.org/learn/primary-sources/cornerstone-speech

https://www.nps.gov/liho/learn/historyculture/debate5.htm

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Global Disruption and the War in Iran

Talking With Robin Brooks

Robin J. Brooks was the chief economist at the Institute for International Finance, and before that did foreign exchange at Goldman Sachs. He’s now at Brookings, and has been doing extremely interesting work on the unfolding oil crisis — often reaching conclusions that differ with mine in enlightening ways. So we talked Thursday, hoping that our conversation wouldn’t be overtaken by events. Transcript follows:

. . .

TRANSCRIPT:
Paul Krugman in Conversation with Robin Brooks

(recorded 3/19/26)

Paul Krugman: Hi, everyone, Paul Krugman here. Interesting world out there. Interesting as in terrifying, including economically.

I’ve long been a follower of Robin Brooks, formerly chief economist at the Institute for International Finance. Before that, foreign exchange at Goldman Sachs. Now at Brookings, who’s been writing a lot about markets, but now particularly some of the most interesting, illuminating stuff I’ve been seeing about oil, some of which has been not reaching the same conclusion I did, which is good—we can have a discussion. If you’re sure that you know what’s happening then you’re almost certainly wrong.

Hi, Robin. Welcome to this conversation.

Robin Brooks: Thanks so much for having me, Paul. It’s really an honor to be talking with you. I’ve learned much of what I know about international macro from you.

Krugman: I have to say, I’m feeling young again. I was Bill Nordhaus’s research assistant in 1973 on energy economics. The project was before the Yom Kippur War and the Arab oil embargo, but played right into that. So now here we are again: energy crisis—triggered by events in the Middle East.

Let’s start with the Strait of Hormuz issue. You’ve made two really good calls so far. First, early on you warned that the markets were just underpricing the risk. Then when the markets had their first run at $120 a barrel, you said “this looks like it’s panic mode.” So why don’t you tell me what you think is happening in the markets? Of course, everything may be out of date by the time this goes up, because we’re actually talking on Thursday morning.

Brooks: So let me give you two ways of thinking about what’s going on, both of them are really about trying to think about what kind of risk premia need to be priced in oil, given all the massive uncertainty that we have. The first way that I’ve been thinking about this is—I spent a lot of time working on Ukraine and Russia and sanctions after the invasion four years ago. Russia produces about 10 million barrels of oil per day. It exports, of that, about 7 million barrels of oil per day. The Strait of Hormuz has transit of about 20 million barrels of oil per day. So the Strait of Hormuz is roughly 3 times what Russia could have been. And remember, in the days right after the invasion, markets were really worried about Russian oil being embargoed. There was a whole discussion about that. So the rise in Brent, which is the global benchmark oil price, is about 70% from two weeks before the outbreak of war in the Gulf to now. On a similar time horizon back in ‘22, it was 20%. So we have roughly a 3X in terms of the rise in oil prices. So when people come to me and say “$150 or $200 for oil prices” and we’re currently at $115, roughly, then I think, “why, what’s the rationale?”

The second perspective is on the supply shortfall that we have and using price elasticity of demand to think about: “how much does the price need to rise if demand has to do all the adjusting in the short term,” which it does. And “what kind of numbers do we come up with if we make reasonable assumptions?” So I put out a Substack note today—thank you so much for reading my Substack, I’m incredibly flattered and stressed as a result— if you assume that the Strait of Hormuz goes from 20 million barrels of oil per day to 10, it’s basically oil from the Gulf is running at half of its normal capacity, and you assume a price elasticity sort of in the middle of the range that the academic literature has, which is about 0.15, then you get that this would generate a rise in oil prices of between 60 and 70%. So again, if I think about what we’re pricing in markets now versus what basic back-of-the-envelope-calculations tell you, then I think we’re roughly in the right ballpark.

You will have seen, Paul, headlines that Saudi Arabia is using a pipeline to the Red Sea that is worth about 4 million barrels of oil per day currently. Then the Iranians are obviously exporting oil. That’s around 2 million barrels of oil per day. Give or take a few oil tankers that are run by Greek ship owners who are risk-loving, I think we’re close to the 10 million barrels of oil per day.

Krugman: 20 million barrels a day was going through the strait, and it’s really hard for anything to run through the strait. So the argument is that the Saudi pipeline to the Red Sea gets some of the oil out, and the Iranians are still getting their oil out.

Two questions. The first is: elasticity. Not everybody reading this will be an economist. So, the elasticity is if the price of oil goes up 1% by how many percent does the quantity of oil that people want to burn go down? And it’s a very small number, that we know for sure. Oil is used primarily in the US, two thirds of it is for transportation. It’s really hard for people to use less in the short run. There’s not much you can do in the short run. You got the kids who got to get picked up, you need to get to work. Maybe you can cancel your vacation, but it is really hard to not burn oil in the short run. So we’ve got a small number. It’s very, very hard to know; estimates of what that elasticity is are highly uncertain because: how would you know?

I’ve followed you through some of the literature and there’s these studies which are very ingenious, and they use very clever econometrics, which worries me! I think I noticed that the existing literature also doesn’t look at the response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which would sort of be the closest thing to a natural experiment we’ve had lately. But the literature is older than that.

Brooks: First of all, elasticities are incredibly hard to estimate, as you say. What we really want here—and this was a little bit of the analysis that I did early on in this shock—is conditional elasticities on shock environments that are comparable to what’s going on now. The numbers that I’m using are unconditional across large amounts of time. I think my instinct is probably the same as yours that these elasticities may be off and perhaps overstate the ability of consumers to cut back on oil consumption in the very short term, especially in an environment where getting to your job is more important than normal. I think the the bottom line is, however, about an order of magnitude and that is that if you believe that the oil price is going to $200 a barrel, then implicit in that forecast is an assumption, again, for a range of elasticities that traffic out of the Persian Gulf is close to zero. That’s the key thing.

The other thing Paul, and this is just my own navel gazing, having done lots of work on sanctions, I have generally had the impression that when there is disruption to the oil sector, there are forecasts that get trotted out that are often apocalyptic. So, for example, when the United States and its G7 allies in 2022 were working on the G7 oil price cap, there was an analyst who came out with a forecast for oil to go to $380 a barrel, which was very scary. So I may be completely wrong, but I tend to think this is a war. By the way, I don’t think it was smart to go into this confrontation at all, but this is a war that is basically being fought at the discretion of the United States and of the US president. He can walk this back at any moment. And, of course, it’s true that the Iranians can keep the Hormuz Strait closed, but they’ve also been badly battered. So I think there is a path to de-escalation too.

Krugman: Just a word back on the elasticities, I’m sure you’ve done the exercises. You have this amazing three dimensional chart. The difference between the elasticity being .15 and it being 0.1, is very large. The difference between half of the normal oil getting out of the Persian Gulf and only a third of it getting out is very large. So it’s this wildly uncertain environment. Just as of overnight—before we had this conversation—the Iranians started blowing up oil facilities and so on. I guess, in response to the Israelis having blown up some of theirs; there’s a question about, what does this do if the half that was supposed to make it out of the Persian Gulf, even with the Strait of Hormuz closed? That must be a worry.

Brooks: Let me scroll things back a little bit to the bigger picture. When I hear analysts talk about options going forward, they basically talk about an escalation scenario, which includes boots on the ground by the US and Israel, or some kind of taco where the United States declares “mission accomplished” and we believe it. I think the important thing is that there is a third option.

That option, in my opinion, is to do an embargo of Iranian oil to stop oil tankers leaving Kharg Island and other Iranian ports, and to starve the Iranian regime in that way economically, without using violence and warfare. That was the motivation behind the G7 oil price cap. That was something I was a huge fan of at the time, and I work closely with Ben Harris here at Brookings, who was one of its main architects. There were a lot of problems in enforcing something as complicated as the G7 oil price cap in the case of Russia. So I think a full embargo and a blockade here is a better way to go. It’s a viable third option, especially since, the 2 million barrels of oil per day, that is something arguably that is priced at this point.

So going back to the elasticity point that you mentioned, Paul, let’s assume point one. Then a 2 million barrels of oil per day shortfall is a 20% rise in oil prices. If we go with my .15 elasticity it’s more like 13%. In a 70% oil price rise I think some or a lot of that is priced. I’m dismayed that in the policy discussion here in Washington, that is not an option.

Krugman: So you were very much an advocate of embargoes against Russia. Which has been mostly a bust. Basically because everybody wants somebody else to cut their purchases and in general the sanctions against Russia have been incredibly porous. You’ve been on that. So are you saying that this would be different because basically the United States can physically enforce the embargo? We can just stop the ships from leaving?

Brooks: Two points. The G7 oil price cap is brilliant in theory. The idea is that the cost of extraction in places like Russia or Iran is really low. So it’s around $10, $15 a barrel max, so we can give them $30 a barrel and they still have an incentive to export. The global market doesn’t have a shortfall, so the world isn’t subject to an oil price spike. The problem with the G7 oil price cap is that, in a way, it’s shades of gray. You have lots of nuances on how you actually make sure that the Russians are being paid the cap, not more, not less. How do you ensure that they don’t build up a shadow fleet of oil tankers? Which of course, they did. So there are countless ways in which that thing was massively undercounted. The embargo is basically binomial. It’s 1 or 0. I first of all think that means either there are ships running or there aren’t.

Second, I think the US Navy has a huge presence in the region. I think if the president announced “we are going to shoot at any ship that leaves with Iranian oil.” I don’t think anyone would want to test that. So I think in principle it is something that should be at least tried.

Krugman: Do you have a sense of how cash constrained the Iranian regime is? That’s part of the question, can they just ride this out for six months or a year?

Brooks: This is a great question. I have this debate on Russia all the time. Countries like Russia and Iran have savings that they’ve built up over time. This is a stock which they can obviously run down to pay for imports and technology, things that they need to run their economy. But what determines in my mind the value of their currency—the ruble or the Iranian Rial—is what’s going on in the flow in the balance of payments every day. So Iran currently has a current account surplus of around 3.5 to 4%, I’m talking about before the hostilities.

Krugman: Right off 3 to 4% of GDP. “Current account”, for our listeners, that’s the broad definition of the trade balance. It includes services and income on investments. Iran has a surplus. Surpluses do not necessarily mean strength. I think Iran is basically like Russia, as I think you’ve been quoting, “It’s a gas station masquerading as a country.” They were running substantial surpluses before, but you’re saying that that gives them some kind of cushion.

Brooks: My only twist on the John McCain statement is that Iran is a gas station masquerading as an Islamic republic.

They have a surplus of around 3.5% of GDP. Exports of oil and gas are about 15% of GDP. Imports are about 10%. So let’s think about what happens to the current account or the balance of payments if this oil and gas number goes from 15% of GDP to zero. Basically it means that the Iranian currency will fall very sharply in value very quickly. The central bank has some reserves which it can use to slow that decline.

But basically, this will be a huge shock to inflation, to financial stability and to the purchasing power of Iranians and my best guess is that it’ll be much harder for Iran to keep fighting this war than if it didn’t face such an economic shock.

Krugman: There’s a lot of things which probably you don’t know and I don’t know. I mean, nobody knows, which is just how tough this regime is. They could have rationing and controls and exchange controls and just suffer.

Hopefully we don’t go there, although you’re saying that if we were able to do your proposal that would be one route, basically attempt extreme economic pressure. They basically have no exports other than oil. So this is how they pay for whatever it is they buy. This actually gets us to the currency stuff.

Leaving aside what happens to Iran, you’ve been writing quite a lot about how this oil shock should be affecting different currencies. Why don’t you talk about that for a bit and let me throw in some of my own questions.

Brooks: So the shock after Russia invaded Ukraine was a really big shock. What we saw four years ago was basically very similar to what we’ve seen in the past two and a half weeks. Initially, markets are unpleasantly surprised. Risk aversion rises if the oil price rises. The dollar appreciates as Americans facing an environment of greater uncertainty, repatriate assets that they had held overseas. And as foreigners flocked to U.S. assets—including U.S. treasuries—as a safe haven. That is the initial phase of the shock. As markets become more comfortable with the shock and decide this is not going to be the apocalypse, but we’re just dealing with a step up in oil prices and perhaps other commodity prices. They start to appreciate or strengthen the currencies of commodity exporting countries, and they start to weaken currencies of commodity and oil importers.

So what we saw, to give you an idea, in the first quarter of 2022, Brent rose, all in all, about 40%. The Brazilian Real rose 20%. And it was by far the star performer across emerging markets. The biggest losers were countries like Turkey (which is a big energy importer) and Japan, Korea, all the big energy and importers across Asia.

Krugman: Interesting situation here for the United States, and it’s all confounded. There’s the safe haven role of the dollar, which we’re seeing despite everything—not too much politics here—that the US has been doing. Still, that sense that where you run to if the world looks like it might be coming to an end, do you run into dollar assets?

Also, the United States is a net oil exporter, which is very, very different. I cut my teeth on energy stuff, half a century ago, but that was a very different world. Where the United States was pretty import-dependent and now net exporter. But the question that I have in this is, in a way, a counterpart of the Iranian or Russian story is how much connection does fracked oil from the Permian Basin have to the US economy more broadly? Why should it matter that some guys in Texas and Oklahoma are extracting oil and selling it, when that’s not doing any immediate good to U.S. drivers? Why should it actually have any impact on the dollar? I guess that’s a question also for places like Brazil, but I’m still trying to understand how all that works.

Brooks: So let me unpack a couple things and circle back to your question on oil and should the US benefit and therefore should the dollar go up.

There are three things going on. First, a sort of short term knee jerk risk aversion thing. Second, and it’s related to the first thing, the reserve currency status of the dollar. The third is the actual impact on the economy, whether it is net positive or net negative from higher oil prices. I hope I’m not mangling that.

So the dollar went up recently because of this knee jerk risk aversion. I have no doubt that if this war ended tomorrow we would be back to a weak dollar environment. In fact, it’s my expectation once all is said and done, that this year the dollar will fall 10%, start to finish. So I think that’s the world we live in. At the same time, as this episode is reminding us, that isn’t about reserve currency status. That status has been remarkably resilient to some pretty chaotic policies in Washington, DC. There are IMF data that surveys what reserve managers do. These are called COFER data, and they basically survey the way that reserve managers give to different currencies. So these are reserve managers, for example in China or South Korea or Japan, who have large sovereign wealth funds. The remarkable thing is that the weight of the dollar in these allocations through all of last year, through this incredible policy chaos of reciprocal tariffs and at times, market dysfunction, the weight to the dollar was completely stable. So I think it’s important to remember that these sovereign wealth managers are very slow moving. They manage huge amounts of money. And these are not people who are chasing short term trends. And so the hurdle for the dollar to lose reserve currency status is very high.

Krugman: This is official or quasi official holdings of assets in different currencies. But the dollar’s international role is a lot more than that. The foreign exchange market is basically every currency against the dollar. There’s a lot of international invoicing that’s in dollars, and those things are extremely hard to move.

Let me get your reaction, I get a lot of mail, I’m the king of hate mail. But I also get a lot of not-necessarily hate mail, a lot of people are going on about, “doesn’t this just mark the end of the dollar’s international role because countries will start to price oil in something else, in Renminbi”. I have a reaction to that, but what would be your take on that?

Brooks: I have said to those emails—and I suspect I get a fraction of the volume that you get—that this is wishful thinking. The data just doesn’t bear it out. To your point, there is a longer term decline in the weight of the dollar in these reserve holdings. But that’s kind of a secular trend that reflects the growing size of other economies, vis-à-vis the GDP, and really has nothing to do with reserve currency status.

Krugman: You probably read it, there was a great—I guess now must be 60 year old—article by Charlie Kindleberger where he compared the international role of the dollar as a currency to the international role of English as the international language. There’s a lot of overlap. My answer to people who say “the dollar is about to be displaced because of what one country or another will do,” what do you think it will take for us to start doing international business in Mandarin?

Brooks: I love that. To give you another anecdote, the reason I’ve spent a lot of time working on sanctions, and when Ben Harris here at Brookings and I have looked at the efficacy of the US sanctions versus, for example, sanctions by the Europeans, the EU, the UK or any other advanced economy, then it is US sanctions that vastly outperform those of other jurisdictions. The reason is the dollar. If you do business with a sanctioned entity, you are at risk of secondary sanctions. That means losing access to U.S payment networks, that’s lethal for any major business. So Indian oil refiners, for example, when the US in October announced sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil, the two biggest oil producers in Russia, they were in a panic because they knew this was the end of them buying Russian oil. The recent waivers by the US Treasury—basically waived those sanctions for 30 days at a time—are precisely to alleviate the shortage in oil and enable Indians to buy Russian oil again. So we’ve come sadly full circle. But it’s all about the dominance of the dollar.

Krugman: Henry Farrell and Abe Newman had this book, Underground Empire, about weaponized interdependence. It’s actually scary just how much the role of the dollar and therefore the role of U.S. banks and their centrality, how much the U.S. can basically turn off the taps. I guess their original example was, in fact, sanctions against Iran.

But the ability to basically exclude countries—although that hasn’t worked too well against the Russians, so far. They found workarounds.

Brooks: The Russians is a really depressing story. I know we have to get back to the US and Brazil, but just on the Russia example, it’s very dear to my heart because I think it is about the West learning an important lesson. The main reason that Russia’s sanctions weren’t successful is because we in the West have business interests that hate sanctions. So they did a lot of lobbying, both ex ante before things were set up. Then undermining ex-post all in the name of doing business. So the key variable in the price cap on Russia was the level of the cap. The lower you set that the more you hurt Russia. And it was set at 60, which was basically where Russian oil was trading. So it had no negative discernible effect on Russia. Then the reason Russia was able to build a shadow fleet is because Western shipowners sold them the oil tankers. This is insane. We have turned a blind eye to our own businesses, making money, and that has to be fixed.

Krugman: I think I’ve been getting this from you, although I may be wrong, that there were also sanctions on sales to Russia. We bash the current U.S government a lot for understandable reasons, but the Europeans have been just awful on that. The explosion of exports to various Stans that cannot possibly be actually exports to—I might be unfair to the Kazakhs—but Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, it’s all obviously being trans-shipped to Russia. It was Lenin, I think, that said “the capitalists will sell us the noose with which we will hang them.” And this has been very, very true.

But you do believe that the sanctions against Iran as an alternative to bombing the hell out of them is actually workable, more so than the sanctions against Russia turned out to be?

Brooks: Absolutely. I think there are two main points. Sanctions are infinitely preferable to actual war. So if we have peaceful economic means, we should use them. Second, we should learn the lesson from what went wrong in Russia. And in my view, that is to keep things super simple. That means an embargo and not finicky price cap things.

Krugman: Big businesses, especially financial operators, but business in general are very good at outsmarting any complicated scheme. Brazil is likely to be a big beneficiary here—just thinking about silver linings. Because they are an oil exporter now and a commodity exporter.

On commodities, just a question. This is not going to be just oil, right? I had no idea before this started, about fertilizer.

Brooks: Fertilizer, agriculture products in general. So basically Brazil and a lot of Latin America exports energy and exports agriculture, soybeans, etc.. China imports a quarter of all its food from Brazil.

Krugman: Wow. I didn’t know that.

Brooks: Brazil’s role in global food markets is massive. Now, it’s possible that the 2022 experience flatters Brazil because Ukraine was also a big grain exporter. And so perhaps we won’t see the same kind of rise in food prices now. But I think in general the news for Latin America in particular and Brazil in particular is very good. When we think about the drivers of exchange rates, we in traditional models tend to have two big variables. One is growth relative to your trading partners, which is often kind of a proxy for productivity. Then what we call the terms of trade, which is the ratio of your export prices to the prices for goods that you import. When your export prices go up relative to your import prices, that’s basically a windfall. In principle, that should filter through to the economy and give consumers more purchasing power, give companies more money to invest and so forth. So ultimately, the positive news for Brazil and other commodity exporters is that this should be a windfall in the short term and then hopefully translates into growth over the medium term. And that’s basically what we’ve seen for Brazil, for the United States, it’s obviously a slightly different calculation because relative to Brazil, the oil sector is somewhat smaller, and we have so many consumers who depend on oil. So the net effect on the US economy is probably nowhere near as positive and probably negative compared to Brazil.

Krugman: I’m sitting in a largely oil independent economy because I’m in the middle of Manhattan right now, but that’s a very isolated part of the United States in that sense. You talked about the dollar, you still think that the dollar will be weaker at the end of this year than at the beginning, and you’ve been talking about debasement. So lots of discussion about the debasement trade, I think a fair bit of hysteria. But also something real. So tell me about debasement and where you think we are on that, or where we will be if-and-when the dust settles from this craziness?

Brooks: Gold prices are up around 50% since August. Silver prices and other precious metals are up much more. This mania basically started last year and the later part of the summer. It is in my mind, a bubble. But all bubbles have some element of underlying fear that is rational. In this case, if you look at when gold had big moves up, it was in the immediate aftermath of Jackson Hole, which is the Federal Reserve’s big research conference in Wyoming that was on around August 22nd. Jay Powell, the chair of the Fed, gave a speech that basically said, “okay, we know inflation is high, but we’re going to start an easing cycle anyway.” And it was after that speech that gold prices really started moving. The second big Fed catalyst was the December cut, which really re-energized the rise in precious metals prices. So there’s clearly something and I have no idea what people who buy gold are thinking. I don’t trade any of that stuff. But there’s clearly a link to what the Fed is doing and a perception that it’s easing when it shouldn’t, perhaps, and that it’s increasingly under political influence.

Krugman: That’s an interesting point. So you think that the markets and particularly the markets for gold, and precious metals are in fact starting to build in the belief that Trump is going to eventually succeed in politicizing the Fed?

Brooks: Yes. There’s a lot of pushback to my view, this is hotly debated. So people say, “break even inflation hasn’t risen. So this is what the market prices for inflation over the medium term.” So people look at things like five year or five year forward break even inflation. So that’s what markets price for five years. In five years time. Before this oil shock was around 2.5%. So the argument was, “well that’s a normal number no big deal.” I think that misses an important nuance, which is that these break even inflation rates, they trade very closely with spot oil prices and oil prices. Ever since Trump came into office, it had been falling until this recent oil shock and break even inflation didn’t follow oil prices down. And so, in my opinion, a risk premium was building. You can also look at other places where markets are starting to trade differently from before. So I think in reality there are signs that Fed credibility is in question in ways that it hasn’t been.

Krugman: It is funny. I mean, not to get into crypto because we’d go on too long, but there was a lot of talk about how bitcoin would be the new gold. And it turns out that gold is the new gold, which has been a big disappointment. You’ve actually, in between the Persian Gulf, you’ve been talking about debt. That’s been the dog that hasn’t barked, ten years ago I was saying, “well, it shouldn’t be barking,” do you actually think that we’re likely to have serious debt? Debt problems in the advanced world, looking forward—you’ve been talking about Japan, particularly.

Brooks: I do, I think any reasonable person will admit that fiscal policy, not just in the United States in many places, is kind of out of control. Across the board, of course, there’s differences across individual countries, but on aggregate, deficits after Covid have remained much wider than deficits before the pandemic. The narrative before the pandemic was inflation will always be low. And therefore we have under-stimulated and issuing lots of debt is a no brainer. I fear that that mindset has carried over to now. I mean, in the United States we’re running debt issuance per year, 6-7% GDP.

Krugman: You know, it’s amazing that we’re doing that at a time where until three weeks ago, it was a very favorable environment. No war, no emergency.

Brooks: So when people say, rightly, “this is the dog that hasn’t barked. You’re crying wolf. This just won’t happen.” I point to Japan, which is just a fascinating case study because debt is 240% of GDP, gross debt. Interest rates are heavily managed. The Bank of Japan remains a gross buyer even today. It is, however, constantly and increasingly being torn between capping interest rates to preserve fiscal sustainability and letting interest rates rise to prevent the yen from depreciating more and more and more. And so the ultimate tension when in 2020, MMT was a big topic of debate, we can issue lots of debt because we determine our own interest rates.

Krugman: For listeners, MMT is modern monetary theory. Not going to jump down that rabbit hole, but we could.

Brooks: But the idea was, we can administer interest rates basically with our central banks and issue lots of debt and interest rates won’t rise. The idea was that that’s not great for your currency and your exchange rate might go down the toilet. And Japan is a case where that is happening. The yen keeps falling. And this idea that debt doesn’t matter really is an illusion. So I think Japan is perhaps the most obvious place that is in trouble at the moment. But there are many others: the UK, France, Italy, Spain. The list of countries with low debt is small and shrinking, and those countries are being rewarded in markets more and more. So Switzerland, Sweden, all of the Nordics have done over the past year tremendously well.

Krugman: Okay. I wish things were still a lot less exciting, but it is quite something. Thanks for talking to me.

Brooks: It was a real pleasure.

Krugman: I’m sure we’ll be in touch on the latest emergency soon. Take care then.

Brooks: Take care.

Profiling Hacker News users based on their comments

Here's a mildly dystopian prompt I've been experimenting with recently: "Profile this user", accompanied by a copy of their last 1,000 comments on Hacker News.

Obtaining those comments is easy. The Algolia Hacker News API supports listing comments sorted by date that have a specific tag, and the author of a comment is tagged there as author_username. Here's a JSON feed of my (simonw) most recent comments, for example:

https://hn.algolia.com/api/v1/search_by_date?tags=comment,author_simonw&hitsPerPage=1000

The Algolia API is served with open CORS headers, which means you can access the API from JavaScript running on any web page.

Last August I had ChatGPT build me a simple tool for hitting that API for any user which fetches their comments and gives me a mobile-friendly "copy to clipboard" button. I've since tweaked it a few times with Claude.

I can then paste the whole lot into any LLM - these days I mostly use Claude Opus 4.6 for this - and prompt "profile this user" to see what it can figure out.

It's startlingly effective! It feels invasive to quote the profile of another user here, so I'll show you what it produces for me:

This is Simon Willison — a prolific, independent software developer, blogger, and one of the most visible voices in the AI-assisted coding space. Here's a profile drawn from his comments:

Professional identity: Independent developer and writer. Co-creator of Django, creator of Datasette and many other open source tools. On the board of the Python Software Foundation. Runs a heavily-trafficked personal blog at simonwillison.net with multiple content types (entries, link blog, notes, quotations). Monetizes through GitHub sponsors, ethical ads, and occasional consulting — not through any AI company payroll, a point he defends frequently.

Core thesis on AI coding: He's the leading evangelist for what he calls "agentic engineering" — using coding agents (Claude Code, Codex CLI) as productivity multipliers for skilled developers. His central argument: LLMs don't replace programmers, they amplify existing expertise. He's writing a guide/book on this at simonwillison.net/guides. He insists these tools are deceptively difficult to use well, and that most people who report bad results simply haven't learned the craft yet.

Working style: He does most of his programming from his iPhone via Claude Code for web, often while riding BART, walking the dog, or sitting in the garden. He embraces "YOLO mode" (auto-approving agent actions) and frequently runs 2-3 agent sessions in parallel. He starts every session with "run uv run pytest" to anchor the agent in TDD. He's on the $200/month Claude Max plan.

Key technical interests: Sandboxing and security (WebAssembly, Pyodide, sandbox-exec, Firecracker), SQLite (deeply), Python packaging and tooling (uv, PyPI distribution tricks), browser-in-a-browser experiments (v86, WASM Linux), and local LLM inference. He's been learning Go "by osmosis" through coding agents.

Security consciousness: He coined the term "prompt injection" and the "lethal trifecta" (access to private data + exposure to untrusted input + ability to take actions). He's genuinely alarmed about OpenClaw/Clawdbot security risks and has been predicting a headline-grabbing prompt injection attack "in the next six months" for over two years — acknowledging it keeps not happening while insisting the risk is real. He references the "normalization of deviance" pattern frequently.

Personality and debate style: Energetic, combative when challenged, but generally good-natured. He engages heavily in HN comment threads — sometimes dozens of replies in a single discussion. He's transparent about his biases and maintains a public disclosures page. He pushes back hard against what he sees as motivated reasoning from AI skeptics, but also against AGI hype ("I refer to that as the science fiction version of AI"). He gets visibly frustrated by sock-puppet accounts and bad-faith criticism. He has a self-deprecating streak ("my stupid pelican benchmark").

Recurring themes across hundreds of comments:

  • "Two things can be true at the same time" — he holds nuanced positions
  • Tests are for productivity, not just quality
  • The November 2025 model releases (Opus 4.5, GPT-5.2) were a genuine inflection point
  • Code review is the biggest bottleneck in agent-assisted workflows
  • "Cognitive debt" is a real and unsolved problem
  • The best engineering practices (tests, docs, CI/CD, clean code) also make agents work better
  • He's deliberately trying to "teach people good software engineering while tricking them into thinking the book is about AI"

Personal interests mentioned: Niche museums (runs niche-museums.com), New Zealand kākāpō parrots, cooking food from countries he's never visited, chickens in his garden. Lives in Half Moon Bay, CA near a major pelican roost. The pelican-on-a-bicycle SVG test is his signature LLM benchmark.

In a sentence: A deeply experienced, independently-minded developer who's genuinely excited about AI coding tools, fights hard against both uncritical hype and reflexive dismissal, and is trying to professionalize how the industry uses these tools — while also worrying loudly about the security implications almost nobody else takes seriously enough.

This all checks out! I ran this in Claude incognito mode to hopefully prevent Claude from guessing that I was evaluating myself and sycophantically glazing me - the tone of the response it gave here is similar to the tone I've seen against other accounts.

I expect it guessed my real name due to my habit of linking to my own writing from some of my comments, which provides plenty of simonwillison.net URLs for it to associate with my public persona. I haven't seen it take a guess at a real name for any of the other profiles I've generated.

It's a little creepy to be able to derive this much information about someone so easily, even when they've shared that freely in a public (and API-available) place.

I mainly use this to check that I'm not getting embroiled in an extensive argument with someone who has a history of arguing in bad faith. Thankfully that's rarely the case - Hacker News continues to be a responsibly moderated online space.

Tags: hacker-news, ai, generative-ai, llms, ai-ethics

Using Git with coding agents

Agentic Engineering Patterns >

Git is a key tool for working with coding agents. Keeping code in version control lets us record how that code changes over time and investigate and reverse any mistakes. All of the coding agents are fluent in using Git's features, both basic and advanced.

This fluency means we can be more ambitious about how we use Git ourselves. We don't need to memorize how to do things with Git, but staying aware of what's possible means we can take advantage of the full suite of Git's abilities.

Git essentials

Each Git project lives in a repository - a folder on disk that can track changes made to the files within it. Those changes are recorded in commits - timestamped bundles of changes to one or more files accompanied by a commit message describing those changes and an author recording who made them.

Git supports branches, which allow you to construct and experiment with new changes independently of each other. Branches can then be merged back into your main branch (using various methods) once they are deemed ready.

Git repositories can be cloned onto a new machine, and that clone includes both the current files and the full history of changes to them. This means developers - or coding agents - can browse and explore that history without any extra network traffic, making history diving effectively free.

Git repositories can live just on your own machine, but Git is designed to support collaboration and backups by publishing them to a remote, which can be public or private. GitHub is the most popular place for these remotes but Git is open source software that enables hosting these remotes on any machine or service that supports the Git protocol.

Core concepts and prompts

Coding agents all have a deep understanding of Git jargon. The following prompts should work with any of them:

To turn the folder the agent is working in into a Git repository - the agent will probably run the git init command. If you just say "repo" agents will assume you mean a Git repository.

Create a new Git commit to record the changes the agent has made - usually with the git commit -m "commit message" command.

This should configure your repository for GitHub. You'll need to create a new repo first using github.com/new, and configure your machine to talk to GitHub.

Or "recent changes" or "last three commits".

This is a great way to start a fresh coding agents session. Telling the agent to look at recent changes causes it to run git log, which can instantly load its context with details of what you have been working on recently - both the modified code and the commit messages that describe it.

Seeding the session in this way means you can start talking about that code - suggest additional fixes, ask questions about how it works, or propose the next change that builds on what came before.

Run this on your main branch to fetch other contributions from the remote repository, or run it in a branch to integrate the latest changes on main.

There are multiple ways to merge changes, including merge, rebase, squash or fast-forward. If you can't remember the details of these that's fine:

Agents are great at explaining the pros and cons of different merging strategies, and everything in git can always be undone so there's minimal risk in trying new things.
I use this universal prompt surprisingly often! There are plenty of ways you can get into a mess with Git, often through pulls or rebase commands that end in a merge conflict, or just through adding the wrong things to Git's staging environment.

Unpicking those used to be the most difficult and time consuming parts of working with Git. No more! Coding agents can navigate the most Byzantine of merge conflicts, reasoning through the intent of the new code and figuring out what to keep and how to combine conflicting changes. If your code has automated tests (and it should) the agent can ensure those pass before finalizing that merge.

If you lose code that you are working on that's previously been committed (or saved with git stash) your agent can probably find it for you.

Git has a mechanism called the reflog which can often capture details of code that hasn't been committed to a permanent branch. Agents can search that, and search other branches too.

Just tell them what to find and watch them dive in.

Git bisect is one of the most powerful debugging tools in Git's arsenal, but it has a relatively steep learning curve that often deters developers from using it.

When you run a bisect operation you provide Git with some kind of test condition and a start and ending commit range. Git then runs a binary search to identify the earliest commit for which your test condition fails.

This can efficiently answer the question "what first caused this bug". The only downside is the need to express the test for the bug in a format that Git bisect can execute.

Coding agents can handle this boilerplate for you. This upgrades Git bisect from an occasional use tool to one you can deploy any time you are curious about the historic behavior of your software.

Rewriting history

Let's get into the fun advanced stuff.

The commit history of a Git repository is not fixed. The data is just files on disk after all (tucked away in a hidden .git/ directory), and Git itself provides tools that can be used to modify that history.

Don't think of the Git history as a permanent record of what actually happened - instead consider it to be a deliberately authored story that describes the progression of the software project.

This story is a tool to aid future development. Permanently recording mistakes and cancelled directions can sometimes be useful, but repository authors can make editorial decisions about what to keep and how best to capture that history.

Coding agents are really good at using Git's advanced history rewriting features.

Undo or rewrite commits

It's common to commit code and then regret it - realize that it includes a file you didn't mean to include, for example. The git recipe for this is git reset --soft HEAD~1. I've never been able to remember that, and now I don't have to!

You can also perform more finely grained surgery on commits - rewriting them to remove just a single file, for example.

Agents can rewrite commit messages and can combine multiple commits into a single unit.

I've found that frontier models usually have really good taste in commit messages. I used to insist on writing these myself but I've accepted that the quality they produce is generally good enough, and often even better than what I would have produced myself.

Building a new repository from scraps of an older one

A trick I find myself using quite often is extracting out code from a larger repository into a new one while maintaining the key history of that code.

One common example is library extraction. I may have built some classes and functions into a project and later realized they would make more sense as a standalone reusable code library.

This kind of operation used to be involved enough that most developers would create a fresh copy detached from that old commit history. We don't have to settle for that any more!

Tags: coding-agents, generative-ai, github, agentic-engineering, ai, git, llms

When the dog doesn't bark

Do you understand inflation targeting? OK, how about this claim:

During 2025, 2% inflation was an appropriate target for Fed policy.

Is that correct? I don’t think so, as the Fed has a flexible inflation target where they try to look through supply shocks. So how about this claim:

During 2025, it was appropriate to allow inflation to run slightly above 2% due to supply shocks.

Is that correct? Again, I don’t think so. There were supply shocks during 2025, but they were mostly positive supply shocks. Because Fed policymakers try to “look through” supply shocks and focus on aggregate demand, it was appropriate for inflation to run below 2% during 2025. This is a claim that makes sense:

During 2025, PCE inflation was 2.9%. Given the Fed’s announced monetary policy goals and given that 2025 was a year of falling oil prices and rapid productivity gains, an appropriate inflation rate would have probably been in the 1.5% to 1.8% range. Thus, inflation was more than one percentage point too high in 2025.

How often do you see Fed policy explained in that fashion? How about “never”? That tells me that hardly anyone actually understands the meaning of a 2% inflation target that looks through unusual movements in aggregate supply. Many people understand that it is appropriate for inflation to run above 2% during years when there are adverse supply shocks. Very few people—even very few economists—seem to understand that inflation should run below 2% during other years, that is, periods not marred by adverse supply shocks.

In other words, Fed policy has recently been even worse than it might look if you focus solely on recent PCE inflation rates.

Now we are in 2026, and it is possible (but not yet certain), that this will end up being a year of adverse supply shocks, akin to 2022. If it is, then it would be appropriate for inflation to exceed 2% in 2026. The real problem was 2025, when inflation ran 2.9% during a time when it should have been well below 2%.

This sort of biased reasoning occurs in many areas of life. I see sports fans excusing the poor performance of a team by referring to “injuries”, even during seasons when the team’s level of injuries doesn’t exceed the league average. And sports fans often overlook the fact that when their team is unusually healthy, it ought to be doing even better than usual. Subconsciously, they tend to regard 100% health as normal, and as a result they are usually overly optimistic about the potential of their team.

Consider fiscal policy, where the budget deficit has been running at a rate of around 6% of GDP over the past three years. Is that sustainable? You might be tempted to assume the deficit continues at a rate of 6% of GDP and then look at what happens to the ratio of total public debt to GDP going forward.

Unfortunately, it is easy to overlook the dog that didn’t bark. The last three years saw no recessions, no pandemics and no wars. They were unusually good years from a fiscal perspective. Even if deficits of 6% of GDP were just barely sustainable (and they probably are not), there would be no reason to assume that our current fiscal trajectory is sustainable.

No reason, that is, unless you believe the end of history has arrived and that we’ll never again have a recession, war or pandemic. The past three years have seen peace and prosperity and hence are not at all typical.

Someday soon, the dog may resume his barking.

Let's Talk About Fertilizer

For more videos, visit my YouTube channel.

Of war, fertilizer, airlines and force majeure.

Transcript (AI-generated)

So let’s talk for a few minutes about fertilizer. Hi, I’m Paul Krugman. Fertilizer is not usually one of my things, but it’s important in what’s happening right now. And it’s also part of trying to understand just how big a mess we are in as a result of this unplanned, ill-conceived war.

So it’s Saturday, it’s three weeks and one day since the bombing began. Donald Trump is now, the story keeps changing, we’re either going to apply force and devastate Iran or our job is done and it’s up to other countries to reopen the Strait of Hormuz because we don’t rely on it, says the president, which is, first of all, it turns out not to be true. The United States does not import significant amounts of crude oil coming through the Strait of Hormuz, but we do import fertilizer, which I wasn’t aware of. Lots of things that are coming to light now that we’re facing the crisis.

The reason we are getting fertilizer, mostly from Qatar, is that the fertilizer is made, urea and some other things are made from natural gas. Natural gas can be exported, is exported, in large quantities from the Persian Gulf, or was until this war began. That’s expensive. You have to super cool it and liquefy it and ship it out through special terminals and special ships.

And, you know, it can be done and it’s become really critical to a large part of the world. But the other thing you can do with the natural gas that’s available in the Persian Gulf area is convert it into fertilizer, which is a lot easier to ship.

And so a lot of the world’s fertilizer turns out to come from that area and normally get shipped through the strait. And the United States, we’re a great agricultural nation, and we do import significant amounts of fertilizer. We import a large share of our fertilizer, and some of it from the Persian Gulf, a significant share of that.

So this is having a direct impact on U.S. farmers. The price of urea is way, way up. And there’s something that I’ve recently been alerted to, which is quite scary. The planting season is coming up, says somebody who has no idea what agricultural life is like, but that’s what I’m told.

And the farmers have long since contracted for their fertilizer. They’ve already paid or at least signed the contracts. The prices are locked in. But will there actually be fertilizer available? It’s not at all hard to imagine that the suppliers will declare force majeure, say there’s a war on, which is normally a valid excuse for backing out of contracts. and simply fail to supply the fertilizer. That would be a real catastrophe.

By the way, there are other places where that’s going to matter. The airlines quite often, you know, airlines cancel flights all the time, and sometimes they declare force majeure and cancel flights and don’t even compensate, although that I think is less of an issue right now. The price of jet fuel has risen. At last I checked 88% since the crisis began. Airlines, you know, they’re already talking about cutting back schedules, not about canceling. Well, it’s not entirely clear.

And, you know, I’m as insulated as anybody can get from all of this, but Robin and I do have some travels planned starting in late April. A mixture of pleasure and business, and some of it we really need to be in certain places, and it seems entirely possible that flights will be canceled. You know, we may or may not receive compensation, which I don’t really care about, but just not being able to get to the places that I have promised to be. would be a really serious disruption. Now this is trivial compared with farmers are facing potential financial ruin, but this is just an illustration of the disruptions.

And of course, at a fundamental level, saying that because the United States doesn’t buy its oil from the Persian Gulf, that therefore we are insulated, that this doesn’t matter to us. I mean, take a look at your gas station. Gas prices are up about $1 a gallon since the war began.

Wholesale gas prices are up about $1.20 a gallon, so this is going to get worse. Diesel is up even more. So the fact that the United States actually produces more oil than it consumes is pretty much irrelevant.

If you want to ask how does the U.S. economy get affected, well, the economy is people, like Soylent Green.

I mean, the economy is people and most people in the United States are significantly adversely affected by the spillover from this war. Now, oil companies, particularly oil refiners, who seem to be seeing a big explosion in their margins, they’re doing well, but what good does that do the rest of us? It’s not as if the U.S. has any fiscal measures in place to capture those gains. So this is in fact, this is hitting the United States, it’s hitting all of us quite hard, and it may be actually kind of catastrophic because plans, plans to travel, never mind, but plans to plant crops may be seriously endangered by all of this.

Has anybody told Trump about this? From everything we’re reading, the answer is probably not. Basically, we’re in a situation where the courtiers don’t tell the emperor that he has no clothes and don’t tell him that actually war in the Persian Gulf really hurts the United States a lot, too. So, you know, God knows.

By the way, I have no idea how this ends. I don’t even know what I would do at this point. I mean, take a time machine and go back and not do this, but now it’s going to be really, really ugly. And have a nice weekend.

Some more slow take-off, driven by start-ups

So far, however, the predictions that the mass automation of coding will leave outsourcing firms obsolete seem overblown. Their clients often hope AI will create huge productivity gains by, for example, using the technology to quickly and cheaply build a new internal HR tool. But such improvements in productivity are only possible in “greenfield” environments with “clean architecture”, argues Atul Soneja, chief operating officer at Tech Mahindra, an IT firm. Deploying AI in “brownfield” environments—with legacy code, a lack of documentation and multiple systems that must all continue to operate in real time—is far trickier. In the end, clients often realise that their AI dreams were too ambitious and end up hiring as many outsourced coders as before, say executives.

What is more, the AI boom may present an opportunity for the consultancy arms of India’s outsourcers. They argue that they can now fulfil more of a strategic role for their clients: getting the most out of AI requires understanding all of the context around the problem, something that consultants with experience across businesses can offer. Nandan Nilekani, one of the founders of Infosys, reckons that such services related to AI could be worth $300bn-400bn by 2030.

Here is more from The Economist.

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Reuters: ‘Amazon Plans Smartphone Comeback More Than a Decade After Fire Phone Flop’

Greg Bensinger, reporting for Reuters:

The latest effort, known internally as “Transformer,” is being developed within its devices and services unit, according to four people familiar ​with the matter. The phone is seen as a potential mobile personalization device that can sync with home voice assistant Alexa and serve as a conduit to Amazon customers throughout the day, the people said. [...]

As envisioned, the new phone’s personalization features would make buying from Amazon.com, watching Prime Video, listening to Prime Music or ordering food from partners like Grubhub easier than ever, the people said. They asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters.

The problem with this pitch is that it’s not hard at all to buy from Amazon.com, watch Prime Video, listen to Prime Music, or order food from Grubhub using the phones we already have. All of those things are ridiculously easy. I mean, I get it. On an Amazon phone, your Amazon ID would be your primary ID for the system. So those Amazon services would all just work right out of the box. But you can’t get people to switch from the thing they’re used to (and, in the case of phones, especially iPhones, already enjoy) unless you’re pitching them on solving problems. No one has a problem buying stuff or using Amazon services on the phone they already own.

A key focus of the Transformer project has been integrating artificial intelligence capabilities into the device, the people said. That could eliminate the need for traditional app stores, which ​require downloading and registering for applications before they can be used.

This is just nonsense. No matter how good Amazon’s AI integration might be, it isn’t going to replace the apps people already use. If you use WhatsApp, you need the WhatsApp app. If you watching video on Netflix, you need the Netflix app. If you surf Instagram and TikTok, you need those apps. If Amazon tried shipping a phone without any of those apps — let alone without all of them — this new “Transformer” phone will be a bigger laughingstock than the Fire phone was a decade ago. And we’re all still laughing at the dumb Fire phone. Which means they can’t eliminate “traditional app stores”.

 ★ 

How much more will oil prices have to go up?

[Robin] Brooks: So let me give you two ways of thinking about what’s going on, both of them are really about trying to think about what kind of risk premia need to be priced in oil, given all the massive uncertainty that we have. The first way that I’ve been thinking about this is—I spent a lot of time working on Ukraine and Russia and sanctions after the invasion four years ago. Russia produces about 10 million barrels of oil per day. It exports, of that, about 7 million barrels of oil per day. The Strait of Hormuz has transit of about 20 million barrels of oil per day. So the Strait of Hormuz is roughly 3 times what Russia could have been. And remember, in the days right after the invasion, markets were really worried about Russian oil being embargoed. There was a whole discussion about that. So the rise in Brent, which is the global benchmark oil price, is about 70% from two weeks before the outbreak of war in the Gulf to now. On a similar time horizon back in ‘22, it was 20%. So we have roughly a 3X in terms of the rise in oil prices. So when people come to me and say “$150 or $200 for oil prices” and we’re currently at $115, roughly, then I think, “why, what’s the rationale?”

The second perspective is on the supply shortfall that we have and using price elasticity of demand to think about: “how much does the price need to rise if demand has to do all the adjusting in the short term,” which it does. And “what kind of numbers do we come up with if we make reasonable assumptions?” So I put out a Substack note today—thank you so much for reading my Substack, I’m incredibly flattered and stressed as a result— if you assume that the Strait of Hormuz goes from 20 million barrels of oil per day to 10, it’s basically oil from the Gulf is running at half of its normal capacity, and you assume a price elasticity sort of in the middle of the range that the academic literature has, which is about 0.15, then you get that this would generate a rise in oil prices of between 60 and 70%. So again, if I think about what we’re pricing in markets now versus what basic back-of-the-envelope-calculations tell you, then I think we’re roughly in the right ballpark.

That is from his interview with Paul Krugman.  Via Luis Garicano.

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The Week Observed: March 20, 2026

What City Observatory Did This Week

Blundering ahead with a $15 billion Interstate Bridge Replacement project.  The IBR project’s costs have more than doubled, from $6 billion to as much as $15.2 billion — validating earlier City Observatory estimates. Despite framing a $7.5 billion “Phase I” as a scaled-back plan, IBR has only $5 billion identified, leaving a real funding gap of $10 billion or more. The project is deliberately designed so that once construction begins in 2028, stopping becomes politically impossible — the classic Robert Moses strategy. Tolls of $3 or more will begin hitting drivers in 2027, years before any new bridge opens, diverting traffic to I-205. Inflation explains only $1 billion of the $9 billion cost increase. Meanwhile, $488 million for removing the existing bridges isn’t even budgeted. The result: two decades of construction, mounting debt, and a consulting team already paid $273 million for essentially the same project that failed before.

Brookings Metro Monitor Rates Portland Economy Healthy.  A major national think tank rates Portland’s economy among the nation’s most robust, with high marks for prosperity, growth and inclusion. Portland consistently outperforms the nation and the average of the 55 largest metro areas on a diverse suite of economic indicators

The Brookings Institution Metro Monitor is one of the most comprehensive, respected and independent analysts of regional economic performance.  Some short term data shows Portland’s economy has slowed in the past year or so, but more robust, long term measures of economic performance show fundamental health; the economy will always experience cycles, and state and local policy should focus on long-term economic upgrading.

Going forward, the real threat to Portland’s economy is not a largely imaginary “Doom Loop,” but Trump Administration policies that undermine the foundations of Portland (and national) success:  free trade, immigration, science, education and the rule of law.

Single Stairway to Housing Affordability.  An obscure building code requirement — mandating two separate exit stairways in every multi-family building — is quietly making U.S. housing more expensive, monotonous, and less livable. Dual staircase requirements force buildings into inefficient layouts, consuming valuable floor area with long corridor runs. Single-stair buildings, common in Europe, allow more flexible, better-ventilated floor plans and are equally safe. Alongside eliminating single-family zoning and parking minimums, single-stair reform is one of the most impactful — and underappreciated — tools cities have to make housing more affordable and livable.

 

Must Read

 

Brookings:  Why immigration is important to metropolitan growth.  As a companion to their 2026 Metro Monitor, the Brookings Institution’s Metropolitan Center has a timely analysis of the importance of immigration to robust metropolitan economic performance.  Glencora Haskins and Joseph  Parilla muster the economic evidence showing that native born workers living in metro areas that experience higher levels of integration enjoy higher wages and higher rates of employment than those who live in metro areas with less immigration.

The data plainly debunk Trump administration claims that mass deportation will somehow improve opportunities for native born workers.  The evidence shows immigrants are complements to, rather than substitutes for, native born workers, and their presence improves job opportunities and earnings.

  • Immigration has been a key driver of economic growth in metro areas across the United States over the past 10 years. 
  • Metro areas with the greatest increases in their foreign-born population share have seen higher rates of employment among both foreign-born and native-born workers. 
  • The Trump administration’s recent anti-immigration actions pose a risk to this upward momentum.

The United States has always been a nation of immigrants, and they’ve plainly strengthened the national economy and are pivotal to the vitality and prosperity of metropolitan economies.  By blocking and restricting immigration, the Trump Administration is damaging the foundations of long term economic success.

How Austin drove down rents.  The Pew Research Center has an analysis of how, in the real world, one of the nation’s largest and fastest growing cities managed to lower rents in just a few short years.  Their secret:  build more homes.  Housing supply is up 10 percent and rents are down 4 percent.

There’s a bit more to it, of course.  Pew outlines a series of policies the city undertook to facilitate growth, encouraging mixed used development, targeted rezoning, allowing accessory dwelling units, and easing parking requirements.  And the city is pursuing other measures including easing height limits, allowing multi-plex housing in more areas, speeding permit processes, allowing “single-stair” multi-family housing. As Pew concludes:

Austin’s success serves as an important example of how regulatory barriers to building more housing are often varied and interconnected. No single solution can solve a housing shortage, but Austin has taken multiple steps that have helped to unlock large amounts of housing supply in its market and reverse rent growth, including rent for tenants of lower-cost, older apartments.

This natural experiment also showed how building more housing is particularly helpful to those who might otherwise be displaced by rising rents as people bid up the price of existing homes in the face of a shortage.  Building more homes caused rents to fall across the market, but the rent declines were most pronounced in the low end of them market, so-called Class C apartments, generally older, and less expensive housing stock.  Between 2023 and 2024, Class C rents went down about 11 percent compared to about 7 percent city wide.  This is powerful evidence of the falsity of the term “Naturally Occurring Affordable Housing” that some advocates use to characterize older buildings.  There’s nothing “natural” about the rents charged on these older buildings:  it is directly a result of whether there are housing policies that allow new homes to be built.  If there aren’t, then the people who would otherwise occupy the new homes bid up the price of existing housing.

 

New Knowledge

Metro Housing Data Explorer.  Aziz Sunderji writing at his substack, Home Economics,  has a new and free tool that shines some light on housing market trends in the nation’s metro areas.  He’s crafted a clever and easy-to-use dashboard that neatly displays home price and other real estate market data sourced from Redfin and Zillow.  Here for example is a chart showing Portland and national median home sales prices from 2000 to 2026.

As this illustration shows, you can select individual markets, inspect a range of housing market indicators, including sales prices and inventories, compare results to national medians, and adjust the time period in question.  It’s a great way to get a quick handle on key trends in housing markets around the country.

In the News

The Oregonian’s coverage–“Price tag to replace Interstate 5 Bridge could cost billions more than expected”–of the new, higher cost estimate credited City Observatory with forcing release of this long-delayed information: 

In January, Portland economist Joe Cortright, a critic of the project, obtained internal project records showing that staff last summer had estimated the project’s cost would likely range between $12.2 billion and $17.7 billion.

KGW TV‘s Blair Best interviewed Joe Cortright about the new higher cost estimate for the Interstate Bridge, and the risks it poses for the region.

 

Willamette Week also cited City Observatory’s analysis in its reporting.  In their article ” I-5 Bridge Replacement Project Finally Comes Clean on Skyrocketing Price Tag,” they wrote:

But Portland economist Joe Cortright, whose public records requests have consistently offered insight into the troubled project, said the new strategy is an act of bait and switch. “ODOT & WSDOT have intentionally designed this so once you start, you must build everything. The reality is they’ll never stop with Phase I; start construction and you’re signing up for $15 billion and 20 years of construction hell.”

The Washington State Standard also quoted City Observatory, in its story “WA and Oregon scale back I-5 bridge ambitions as cost balloons to $14.4B.”

Joe Cortright, a Portland economist and project critic, warned in January that the revised expense could range between $12.2 billion and $17.7 billion based on public records he obtained and shared with reporters.  On Tuesday, he said that once work starts, it won’t end for decades.

 

 

 

Saturday 21 March 1662/63

Up betimes and to my office, where busy all the morning, and at noon, after a very little dinner, to it again, and by and by, by appointment, our full board met, and Sir Philip Warwick and Sir Robert Long came from my Lord Treasurer to speak with us about the state of the debts of the Navy; and how to settle it, so as to begin upon the new foundation of 200,000l. per annum, which the King is now resolved not to exceed. This discourse done, and things put in a way of doing, they went away, and Captain Holmes being called in he began his high complaint against his Master Cooper, and would have him forthwith discharged. Which I opposed, not in his defence but for the justice of proceeding not to condemn a man unheard, upon [which] we fell from one word to another that we came to very high terms, such as troubled me, though all and the worst that I ever said was that that was insolently or ill mannerdly spoken. When he told me that it was well it was here that I said it. But all the officers, Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, Sir W. Batten, and Sir W. Pen cried shame of it. At last he parted and we resolved to bring the dispute between him and his Master to a trial next week, wherein I shall not at all concern myself in defence of any thing that is unhandsome on the Master’s part nor willingly suffer him to have any wrong. So we rose and I to my office, troubled though sensible that all the officers are of opinion that he has carried himself very much unbecoming him.

So wrote letters by the post, and home to supper and to bed.

Read the annotations

Artemis 2 returns to the pad for April launch attempt

SLS Artemis 2 rollout

The Artemis 2 launch vehicle and spacecraft have returned to the launch pad for a launch as soon as April 1.

The post Artemis 2 returns to the pad for April launch attempt appeared first on SpaceNews.

Reading List 03/21/26

Cargo ship Marine Angel navigating the Chicago River in 1953. Via History Calendar.

Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure, and industrial technology. This week: damage to the Ras Laffan LNG facility, housing bubble risks, North Korea’s naval production, Bezos’ $100 billion for manufacturing automation, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subscriber.

War in Iran

Ras Laffan, the world’s largest LNG facility in Qatar, was extensively damaged by an Iranian missile, and production has been completely shut down. The facility is responsible for something like 20% of the world’s supply of LNG, as well as for a third of global helium supply, which is used for semiconductor manufacturing. [Bloomberg] [CNBC]

Oil shipments from the UAE’s port of Fujairah have declined by two-thirds thanks to Iranian drone attacks. [Lloyds List]

To try and address rising oil prices following the closure of the Strait Hormuz, the Trump Administration has waived the Jones Act (which requires transportation between US ports to be done by US ships) for 60 days. [Reuters] It also invoked the Defense Production Act to order oil drilling to resume off the coast of California. [LA Times]

China tries to entice Taiwan to reunify by offering it energy security in the face of Middle East oil disruptions. [Reuters] And BYD dealerships are seeing a surge of interest in EVs. [Bloomberg]

Urbanist Richard Florida wonders if the war in Iran means the end of Dubai. Making your city a haven for the global elite means it’s relatively easy for them to relocate somewhere else if things turn south. “Dubai, which sits near the Strait of Hormuz, was supposed to be safe. Instead, it has been under attack by Iran since Feb. 28. More than 260 ballistic missiles and over 1,500 drones have been detected over the United Arab Emirates; most have been intercepted, but their percussive booms have become part of the city’s soundscape. The city that had spent decades billing itself as a sleek sanctuary — luxe, apolitical, income-tax-free, floating above and apart from the fractious region around it — was suddenly no longer insulated.” [NYT]

Housing

Swiss investment bank UBS has a report on which cities are at the highest risk of having a housing bubble, which they estimate by looking at trends in home prices, rents, and average incomes. Miami occupies the number 1 spot, followed by Tokyo and Zurich. [UBS]

Wired has an article about RealToken, which aims to “democratize access to real estate investment” by selling tokens representing shares of ownership in real estate properties. Apparently this has involved buying a bunch of dilapidated Detroit real estate and not maintaining it properly. “Last summer, the City of Detroit sued RealT and its founders, alleging “hundreds of blight violations.” Dorris’ property was one of many that city inspectors declared unfit for habitation. He told me that while his previous landlord wasn’t perfect, sometimes leaving Dorris to organize repairs, his building has deteriorated markedly since RealT entered the picture. The smoke detectors are missing, and the bathtub has no hot water, inspectors found. “The only way of washing is me standing over my sink,” says Dorris. “There are rats in the downstairs, there are squirrels in the upstairs.”” [Wired]

Marginal Revolution on how Denmark avoids the mortgage lock-in problem — where when interest rates rise, homeowners are reluctant to sell their home because their new one will have a higher interest rate mortgage. The Danish system has mortgages backed by a bond, which can be bought to pay off the mortgage. When interest rates rise, the price of the bond falls, incentivizing homeowners to purchase them. [Marginal Revolution]

Last Friday the Trump Administration released an executive order aimed at removing various regulatory barriers that add to the cost of building homes. [Whitehouse]

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Links 3/21/26

Links for you. Science:

Inhibition of multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus by commensal bacterial species from the human nose
Cervical cancer rates higher in states with low HPV vaccination rates
A jumbo cyanophage encodes the most complete ribosomal protein set in the known virosphere
A new mRNA antigen vaccine induces potent B and T cell responses and in vivo protection against SARS-CoV-2
Love Island: Rare berry bonanza spurs Kākāpō baby boom
As Paralympics approach, U.S. skier Sydney Peterson balances training and research

Other:

No Quarter. And not one more inch.
‘Nazi heaven’: Inside Miami campus Republicans’ racist group chat (at this point, one must assume that any Republican operative under forty is a full-tilt bigot)
Says It All
RFK Jr’s Pick For Surgeon General Cashed In Promoting Companies With a History of Unsafe Products
In 2009, at the height of the Gulf War, the Marines barred him from active duty. Platner claims it was his forearm tattoos. But his one forbidden tattoo was the Nazi symbol on his chest. He knew – and he left the Marines rather than give it up.
Blue states push to ban ICE at the polls amid federal voter intimidation fears
Adding Up What Urban Highways Really Cost
Republican senator pulls some sh-t by anointing his successor
Wilson Building Bulletin: Moves toward transparency for federal agents. Also: A proposed ballot initiative on a foie gras ban advances, and a new tax may come for disposable wipes.
MPD Asst. Chief Andre Wright Put On Administrative Leave. Wright’s wife, MPD Inspector Natasha Wright, was also suspended.
Palantir and other tech companies are stocking offices with tobacco products to increase worker productivity
Anthropic’s AI tool Claude central to U.S. campaign in Iran, amid a bitter feud
Colorado school sends unvaccinated students home as RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine crusade pays off
Slurs Filled a Chat Created by a Republican Party Official in Florida
Trump’s mini-me ambassadors are insulting and alienating U.S. allies
The Nation Faces a Crisis. Colleges Have a Unique Role to Play.
Austin shooting suspect was Tesla employee who assaulted co-worker, lawsuit says
Data Centers Are a Distraction. The Real Fight Is Elsewhere.
Texas’s Senate Primary Has Already Made History—and It’s Not Over Yet
Mar-a-Lago face couldn’t save Kristi Noem
The Endless Hypocrisy of Bari Weiss
An Interview With A Tenant Who Doesn’t Have Heat In Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Building
After more than 15 years on the platform formerly known as Twitter, Cambridge is leaving X
The Most Chilling Detail in the U.S. Attack on an Iranian Naval Ship
Trump Says ‘I Guess’ Americans Should Worry About Iran Retaliating on U.S. Soil: ‘Like I Said, Some People Will Die’
Virginia moves to forbid schools from teaching that Jan. 6 was peaceful
Ketamine, Prostitution and Money: Details of a Secret DEA Probe of Jeffrey Epstein
Russia is providing Iran intelligence to target U.S. forces, officials say
Vance Puts MAGA Ideology Above All Else
Stunning FBI Doc Claims Trump Assaulted Teen Girl After She ‘Bit the Sh*t Out of’ His Penis

Little Darlin’

By The Diamonds.  The video is not what I was expecting.

The post Little Darlin’ appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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China is quietly looking weaker

Photo by Daniel Case via Wikimedia Commons

In the 1980s, a lot of people wrote books and articles about how Japan was going to be the world’s leading country. The most famous of these was Ezra Vogel’s Japan As Number One: Lessons for America. At the same time, in 1989, Bill Emmott wrote a book called The Sun Also Sets: The Limits to Japan’s Economic Power, in which he predicted that Japan would revert to the mean. History has judged Emmott the winner of this contest of ideas. He didn’t get everything right — his characterization of Japan as an export-led growth model didn’t fit the facts, for instance — but in general, he got more right than wrong. His analysis of Japan’s financial weakness, aging challenges, and low service-sector productivity were right on the money.

At the time, though, with Japan at its zenith, it was easy to make Vogel-like predictions of continued domination, and it was out of vogue to be a contrarian like Emmott. The same is true of China today. Over the past few years, skepticism of China’s rise has mostly evaporated in the West, and most Americans now believe that China has either overtaken their country or will do so in the near future:

There are still a few hawkish types out there writing articles about China’s coming collapse, but almost no one is paying attention. All the attention is on Chinese cars, Chinese cities, Chinese trade surpluses — or on America’s flailing in the Middle East, its chaotic policymaking, its divided society, and its inability to manufacture anything in volume. Between America’s dysfunction and China’s technological achievements, the idea of a Chinese Century has become conventional wisdom.

In a post last year, I assessed that this conventional wisdom was probably right — that the 21st century would be a Chinese century, although China’s dominance wouldn’t be as pronounced or as beneficial to the world as America’s was in the 20th century:

I don’t think I made the same mistake that Ezra Vogel and many others made when assessing Japan in the 1980s — of just assuming that recent trends would continue. China is about 12 times the size of Japan. It can dominate the world, industrially and geopolitically, without ever coming close to the U.S. or even Japan in terms of per capita GDP.

I also hedged my bets a bit. Though I’ve always been highly skeptical of the idea that demographics will sink China (I think they’ll be more of an annoying but minor drag), and although I don’t think China’s housing bust will sink it, I do think that China’s dictatorial system is already putting it in danger via the personal failings of Xi Jinping:

In the past couple of months, though, I’ve become more of a Chinese Century skeptic than I was before. I’m not quite ready to write a Bill Emmott-style book about how China is going to bump up against hard limits. But I do see several factors that have adjusted my thinking a bit in the direction of China-pessimism, and I don’t see a lot of other people writing about these. So I thought I’d write a post about why I’ve updated.

Basically, the four things I’ve noticed are:

  1. China’s industrial policy is hitting its limits faster than I expected

  2. The rapid rise of AI agents makes me think that China’s technological advantage is less defensible

  3. Xi Jinping is entering his paranoid “Death of Stalin” phase earlier than I expected

  4. Trump’s attacks on Venezuela and Iran, whether you think they were good ideas or not, demonstrate possible Chinese military weakness

These factors don’t mean I expect China to go into decline today or within the next few years. But I do now think there’s a good chance that China is now stumbling in ways that will become more apparent in a decade or two, and will cause it to disappoint many of the current boosters and bulls.

China’s new economic model is quietly hitting its limits

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Saturday assorted links

1. Canada [Sikh] fact of the day.

2. Is the world entering a new “missile age”?

3. Karp tells the story of Habermas rejecting Karp.

4. David Botstein, RIP (NYT).

5. Appreciation of Trivers.

6. Seb Krier.

7. Shruti on RefineInk.

The post Saturday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Once again, ULA can't deliver when the US military needs a satellite in orbit

For the fourth time in a little more than a year, the US Space Force needs to send up a new satellite to replenish the military's GPS navigation network. And once again, the company the Pentagon is paying to launch it can't answer the call.

United Launch Alliance, a 50-50 joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin, was supposed to launch the final satellite for the Space Force's GPS Block III program this month. Space Systems Command, responsible for buying spacecraft and rockets for the military, announced Friday it has transferred the launch to a Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX, ULA's chief rival in the market for launching US government satellites.

This is only the latest example of the Space Force moving a GPS launch from ULA to SpaceX. The three most recent GPS satellites were also supposed to launch on ULA's Vulcan rocket. Beginning in 2024, the Space Force shifted them over to SpaceX. In exchange, military officials moved three future launches from SpaceX to ULA, including the launch of the GPS III SV10 satellite.

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NASA wants to know how the launch industry's chic new rocket fuel explodes

For more than 60 years, nearly every large rocket used some combination of the same liquid and solid propellants. Refined kerosene was favored for its easy handling and non-toxicity, hydrazine for its storability and simplicity, hydrogen for its efficiency, and solid fuels for their long shelf life and rapid launch capability.

About 15 years ago, rocket companies started serious development of large methane-fueled engines. SpaceX and Blue Origin now build the most powerful of these new engines—the Raptor and BE-4—each capable of generating more than half a million pounds of thrust. SpaceX's Starship rocket and its enormous booster are powered by 39 Raptors, while Blue Origin's New Glenn and United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rockets use a smaller number of BE-4s on their booster stages.

Burning methane in combination with liquid oxygen, these "methalox" engines have several advantages. Methane is better suited for reusable engines because they leave less behind sooty residue than kerosene, which SpaceX uses on the Falcon 9 rocket. Methane is easier to handle than liquid hydrogen, which is prone to leaks and must be stored at staggeringly cold temperatures of around minus 423 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 253 degrees Celsius). Methane is also a cryogenic liquid, but it has a warmer temperature closer to that of liquid oxygen, between minus 260 and minus 297 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 162 to minus 183 degrees Celsius).

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Friday Squid Blogging: Jumbo Flying Squid in the South Pacific

The population needs better conservation.

As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.

Blog moderation policy.

Jeff Bezos just announced plans for a third megaconstellation—this one for data centers

A little more than a month ago, SpaceX founder Elon Musk put down a marker of his intent to saturate low-Earth orbit with up to 1 million satellites. Its purpose? Provide always-on data center services around the planet.

Now, Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos has done something similar with a filing to the Federal Communications Commission of his own, proposing a constellation of up to 51,600 satellites operating in Sun-synchronous orbits at altitudes ranging from 500 to 1,800 km. Bezos' space company, Blue Origin, sought the authority to do this and is calling the constellation "Project Sunrise."

In its filing, Blue Origin argues that terrestrial AI-based data centers will face difficulties scaling up to meet computing demand.

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The Women Leading the Farmworker Movement Won’t Let It Be Defined By Cesar Chavez

The sexual abuse allegations against Chavez have rocked them. But their focus is still on protecting other women.

Monica Ramirez has spent much of her life spotlighting the pervasiveness of sexual violence against women farmworkers. She, like many in that movement, considered civil rights leader Cesar Chavez an icon.

Since allegations came to light this week that Chavez sexually assaulted women and girls as young as 12 — including fellow movement leader Dolores Huerta — Ramirez and the larger farmworker community have been left reeling. Now, they’re trying to reconcile how this man who so many revered — whose name is on streets, schools and even a holiday — could perpetrate the violence that has plagued women farmworkers for decades.

The community has been “shaken to its foundation,” said Ramirez, the founder of Justice for Migrant Women, a civil rights organization focusing on farmworker and migrant women. She and other leaders are now trying to push forward the farmworker movement and continue the work that many women — not just Chavez — spearheaded.

Monica Ramirez
Monica Ramirez, founder of Justice for Migrant Women, said the farmworker community has been “shaken to its foundation” by the allegations against Cesar Chavez. (Courtesy of Monica Ramirez)

“The farmworker movement is a leaderful movement, and women have always been part of that leadership,” Ramirez said. But their work has often been made invisible, sometimes by the very men who stood beside them in building worker power for Latinx people in the United States.

“In order to have a movement, in order to have a boycott, in order to organize any kind of action, it’s often women who are helping to organize the meetings, helping to bring their compañeras,” Ramirez said.

Chavez was one of the most revered figures in the Latinx civil rights movement. The labor leader cofounded what became the United Farm Workers union alongside Huerta, and was most known for a series of strikes and protests that grew unionization efforts across California. After Chavez’s death in 1993, he was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. In 2014, former President Barack Obama designated his birthday, March 31, as a federal holiday to celebrate his legacy, which many states had already marked.

Now, many of those celebrations are being canceled or renamed after a bombshell, yearslong investigation published by The New York Times Wednesday found evidence of a pervasive pattern of sexual abuse perpetrated by Chavez. Two women said Chavez sexually abused them for years as girls, when the organizer was in his 40s and had already become a powerful global figure. Ana Murguia said Chavez first assaulted her when she was 13; Debra Rojas was 12.

In the years following the abuse, both suffered from depression, panic attacks and substance abuse.

“I feel like he’s been a shadow over my life,” Rojas told the Times. “I want him to stop following me around. It’s time.”

Huerta, the renowned activist who coined the rallying cry, “Sí, se puede,” spoke at length about emotional and physical abuse from her longtime organizing partner — a disclosure she had never made publicly. She told the Times that he raped her in a secluded grape field in 1966, and had pressured her to have sex with him another time during a work trip in 1960. Both encounters resulted in children. Huerta concealed the pregnancies and arranged for the baby girls to be raised by others.

She was shaken upon hearing the allegations from other women, and told the Times she struggles to reconcile the man she knew and the one who assaulted her.

In a statement released Wednesday, Huerta said she carried her secret for 60 years because “building the movement and securing farmworker rights was my life’s work. The formation of a union was the only vehicle to accomplish and secure those rights and I wasn’t going to let Cesar or anyone else get in the way.”

She said she spoke up because she learned there were others coming forward.

“The farmworker movement has always been bigger and far more important than any one individual. Cesar’s actions do not diminish the permanent improvements achieved for farmworkers with the help of thousands of people,” she said. “We must continue to engage and support our community, which needs advocacy and activism now more than ever.”

Magaly Licolli knew exactly what Huerta was talking about in her statements about Chavez.

Licolli is the co-founder and executive director of Venceremos, an organization advocating for poultry workers in Arkansas, and she’s heard stories about sexual harassment and assault on women for years.

Before she started Venceremos, she was fired from another poultry worker organization after speaking up about multiple accusations of sexual harassment and assault against a well-known organizer.

“Women came forward and accused the organizer of sexually assaulting them or sexually harassing them. When I brought that to the board, they didn’t believe it,” Licolli said. “I had to stand with the women … I cannot do this work pretending I’m doing justice when I’m hiding injustice.”

Licolli felt that echoed this week.

“Women of color, we are not trusted on what we go through. We have to prove with pictures, with testimony, our own stories for our own stories to be validated,” she said. “I’m happy that now it’s something that people are talking about, and I’m happy that people are now reflecting about what is the role of women in the movement and when we have to be silenced toward that kind of injustice to protect the work that we do.”

A woman with long dark hair sits outdoors on a bench wearing a red and yellow patterned top and black skirt, looking directly at the camera with a composed expression.
Magaly Licolli, co-founder of Venceremos, pointed to a pattern in organizing spaces where women who report abuse are doubted, ignored or pushed out. (Courtesy of Magaly Licolli)
A growing share of farmworkers are women, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture: about 26.4 percent in 2022, the most recent year for which data is available. Most are Latina.

A 2012 report by Human Rights Watch, an advocacy organization, found that women farmworkers are often at risk of sexual harassment or assault, with virtually every worker interviewed for the report saying they either had experienced harassment or assault or knew someone who had. Farmworkers work in mixed-gender settings, and they have limited worker protections But women typically lack avenues to report their experiences, the report’s authors wrote, in large part because of immigration status. As of 2022, most farmworkers were immigrants without U.S. citizenship.

“Sexual violence and harassment in the agricultural workplace are fostered by a severe imbalance of power between employers and supervisors and their low-wage, immigrant workers,” the report said.

A 2024 review published in the Journal of Agromedicine suggested that as many as 95 percent of women farmworkers in the United States have experienced workplace sexual harassment.

None of the women in the Times story spoke publicly until recently because of the shame and fear associated with reporting abuse against prominent organizers.

But over the past decade, after the growth of the #MeToo movement and the release of millions of Epstein files that have implicated numerous people in powerful positions, survivors have been more willing to speak up about their experiences.

Ramirez, who also founded the public awareness campaign known as the Bandana Project to raise awareness of sexual violence against farmworker women, said she now expects more women to come forward with their own stories. At an event Wednesday night shortly after the news broke, she said one woman came up to her to tell her how sexual assault was a problem in the fields where she worked as a teenager.

“Now that we understand clearly that this issue of sexual violence is an endemic problem in our society … the question we have to answer is: Knowing that, how serious are we going to get in our commitment to ending the problem?”

California lawmakers already plan to change the name of Cesar Chavez Day on March 31 to “Farmworkers Day,” and efforts are underway to remove his name from landmarks. But the real work to come will be about investing resources and support to improve the culture that has protected perpetrators in organizing spaces over victims.

Rep. Delia Ramirez, an Illinois Democrat who worked in organizing before entering politics, said it was “devastating” that the claims took so long to come out. She said when she became an executive director of a nonprofit at 21, she, too, had faced situations that in hindsight were not appropriate, and left the organization with a responsibility to create safer environments for other young women.

“Oftentimes women, especially women of color, we end up having to hold so many things for the sake of the movement, family, community,” Delia Ramirez told the 19th. “I don’t believe that there is one hero for our movements. Movements are led by a collective, and you can’t create some pedestal for one person, because humans will always fail you.”

Moving forward, Monica Ramirez said people will be watching how leaders in the farmworker movement respond to the allegations. Do they take a defensive posture or question the veracity of the survivors’ accounts? The revelations about Chavez come at a time when sexual misconduct by powerful men has been in the spotlight, all while the country grapples with a wave of immigration enforcement actions that are targeting Latinx people.

Licolli, the poultry organizer, said she has “never romanticized the immigrant community and the immigrant movement.” Sexual abuse happens in every movement and it doesn’t negate the work that’s been done to secure worker power, she said.

And for the farmworker women who are leading this work, it feels more urgent than ever that they continue leading.

Rosalinda Guillen, a farmworker and organizer in Washington state, leads Community to Community Development, an explicitly feminist and women-led organization — a perspective that she said lends itself to advocating for workers who are also parents, and that she said offers space for women farmworkers to assert their needs.

Guillen never met Chavez but was inspired to devote herself to organizing on behalf of farmworkers after his death. The news has been a “revision of everything that many of us know about the farmworker movement,” she said.

Her organization is removing images of Chavez from its office, Guillen said. “We revisited our values and principles in how we work together, reiterating there is no room for that,” she said, referring to sexual misconduct.

On Wednesday, while staff were still processing the reports, five farmworkers walked in. They had just lost their jobs.

Her staff switched gears, turning to figure out what those workers needed and how they could support them.

“They walked in reminding us this is the focus,” Guillen said. “This is why we’re here: To protect farmworkers.”


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The post The Women Leading the Farmworker Movement Won’t Let It Be Defined By Cesar Chavez appeared first on DCReport.org.


How Magical Thinking and Trump Love Drove the Energy Markets Mad

A week ago I asked whether global energy markets have “Trump Derangement Syndrome.” I was being a bit arch because I didn’t mean in the sense that MAGA world means, which is being somehow obsessively, compulsively anti-Trump. I meant the opposite. Are the markets wedded to a kind of Trump magical thinking? That somehow he’ll always find a way to thread the needle or slip out of his self-made crises? I’ve tried to be very aware of the fact that I’m totally green on the question of global energy markets. And since oil futures are at least flirting with twice the price that they were at when this war started, it’s hardly like markets aren’t reacting to it. A friend who follows energy markets very closely walked me through some of the reasons why the markets response has been more tempered than one might expect: existing slack in the oil markets on the eve of the war, continued impact of the recent release of 400 million barrels of oil, and uncertainty about whether the U.S. can or will reopen the Strait of Hormuz. But I get more and more indications, some in just reading the news closely, some in small bits of information I pick up from sources, that there really is something going on here.

Perhaps it’s not simply or even entirely the finance world’s attachment to Trump. Some of it is likely that the situation is so off-the-charts weird, and because of Trump’s erraticness and impulsiveness, it’s very hard to apply any traditional frameworks to how to assess the risk. Along those lines look at this article in the Wall Street Journal: “‘It’s a Nightmare’: Rapid Battlefield Shifts Leave Markets Trading Blind”. If you don’t have a subscription, the title kind of covers it. (The link should be a gift link.) The article contains this passage:

Hunting for reliable data, commodity traders are hiring security consultants with on-the-ground Gulf sources and leveraging their own tanker fleets to probe for port disruptions. Wartime delays have throttled the vital flow of satellite imagery, while widespread signal interference in the Middle East has left the cottage industry of tanker tracking partially in the dark.

They play this as the fog of war. It’s certainly that. But what also seems clear to me is that the traders, perhaps especially at the big U.S. banks and financial services firms are used to the U.S. government giving at least broadly directional data and guidance about what’s happening. Of course, truth is always the first casualty of war. And we can go back to all the lies and, later, wishful thinking that drove the Iraq War and later occupation. But this is operating at a totally different level.

Trump will say something like, Oh, well, we’ve got this covered. We just did X or Y, and things will become awesome really soon! And that moves markets. Yesterday I heard indirectly about some market advice/guidance from the commodities and trading arm of one of America’s biggest banks. The gist was that all was going to get better pretty soon because Trump had a new plan that was going to fix everything. Just what the plan involved was kind of vague but it seemed pretty stupid if you understand the mix of geography, military capabilities and plain common sense. This big bank, at the highest levels and in the advisories that go to the biggest players, seemed to have heard from the White House about its latest plan and they were basically going with it. Hey, Trump’s got this, guys. Things will be better real soon.

I’m reminded how in the early days of the war Trump was able to settle the markets and get oil futures to drop pretty dramatically by saying he had a plan to start escorting ships through the Strait of Hormuz. But at the same time, I was watching some maritime and shipping sources that pointed out that the U.S. Navy had no ships in the Gulf at all and the kinds of ships you’d use for this kind of mission weren’t anywhere near the Gulf. Wasn’t someone connecting these dots?

Even the insider sheets seem to be picking up on this. This morning’s Axios starts with this item: 1 big thing: Wall Street again hopes for the best.

It’s very direct given the source.

It is by now a familiar Wall Street two-step: Stocks stumble in the morning and mostly recover by the end of the day after President Donald Trump says something that’s viewed as reassuring about the Iran war.

Why it matters: Investors are jumping at any sign of an end to the Iran war — now in its third week and far longer than they initially predicted.

  • They’re clinging to the Trump put, the idea that the president will reverse himself if the markets react badly to White House policy.
  • It’s a concept with legs even in a war — a situation that is not unilateral. Even if Trump wants this to end, Iran has to stand down, too.

That really does capture it.

To be clear, the best or most generous interpretation of this is TACO, a phrase that started on Wall Street: Trump Always Chickens Out. The idea being that whatever he says, Trump knows when one of his ideas is going seriously sideways and he moves quickly to pull the plug. And the tariff story does to a real degree follow that logic. But wars aren’t like tariffs. Trump’s tariffs were to an almost unique degree something out of the blue, 100% planned and promulgated out of the White House. And pretty much everyone in the world wanted them ended. So Trump, at least in a short-term sense, could pull the plug or at least wiggle the plug at any time he wanted to.

Wars don’t work that way. Your enemy has a say in how things go, when things end. That’s especially the case when you’ve defined the war in terms of regime change. That means no risk is too great for your adversary.

It’s probably the case that the market is being generally driven by energy traders with access to a lot of good information and hungry for more, while the gyrations are by driven by more casual, less plugged-in traders, those jumping the gun in response to Trump’s latest post. But whatever the reason, there really does seem to be some level of breakdown in how markets are grappling with this crisis. Some of it may simply be that traders and the financial markets generally are struggling to adapt to a world in which the White House and the president of the United States are a primary source of misinformation, notwithstanding being the people who are actually running the war.

Tune in as Josh Marshall and TPM’s Publisher Dissect What’s Up With the Media

At 1:30 p.m. ET, TPM founder and editor-in-chief Josh Marshall and TPM publisher Joe Ragazzo will be chatting on Substack Live about the state of the news business today.

Join them here.

They’ll talk about how TPM came to be what it is and how we continue to function as a tiny, unique news site that punches above its weight — but also much more, including the scramble among oligarchs to sweep up major media outlets and bend them to Trump’s will.

[RODEN] Meditation, Language, and LLMs

Roden Readers —

Hello! It’s me, Craig Mod. Author of TBOT (amzn | bkshp). Poking my head out into newsletter land. This? Roden, a newsletter you signed up for at some point. Perhaps last week, perhaps fourteen years ago, when I started shooting these out.

I’ve been busy. I’ve been doing something that I’m bad at and am trying to get better at: I’ve been having fun (and trying not to be crushed by the guilt of having fun). I went to LA and then Santa Fe and then Hokkaido with the binding agent of: eating great food with people I love. In Santa Fe I spent a few days meditating at Mountain Cloud Zen Center (more on that below; also, yes, fly from Japan to Santa Fe for Zen; also also, turns out the headquarters of their school is around the corner from my home ha ha ha). My body loves Santa Fe. Loves the crispness of the air. The elevation (once it gets used to it). The sharp light. The salsa. I spent a few mornings writing in Collected Works and generally came away from the whole visit thinking: I’d like to head back, eat More Salsa, spend more time in that corner of the US. In LA, I went deep on LLMs and Claws and all that with Kevin Rose (and also met some Hollywood-adjacent folks about book optioning), eating lots of Doordash’d Gwyneth Paltrow slop bowls and making software. I have to say, these three weeks of doofery have been some of the most fun weeks I’ve had in years. So, thanks for indulging me a bit of newsletter silence as I pretended to be a human out in the wild.

Need 25 More Tonight!

Can we do it? We need 75 more membership sign ups by the end of the weekend to keep on track to meet our goal in this year’s Annual TPM Membership Drive. We’ll need at least 25 more tonight to manage that. If you’re not currently a member, now’s the time. I know it’s easier to delay, figure you’ll do it later. But can you do me this favor? Just take a moment right now, ninety seconds tops and sign up. Just click right here. We need your help to get this done.

The State (of) Media, AI, Buzzfeed, CBS, and More

There’s a lot going on in the world of news. In a live conversation this afternoon, Josh and I touched on some of those things including: “State Media”, Barry Weiss and CBS, changing business models, Buzzfeed, AI, the eternal importance of naval power and more.

If you missed it live, check out the recording below.

The States as the laboratory of democracy: helping organ donors

News from the States:

Pa. senators mull inheritance tax cut, deductions for organ donors 

"While employers across the state are allowed to claim tax deductions for time off offered to living organ donors, donors themselves receive no such benefits.

That would change if lawmakers pass a bill sponsored by Sens. Lindsey Williams (D-Allegheny) and Lynda Schlegel Culver (R-Northumberland), who testified to members of the Senate Finance Committee almost five years to the date after receiving her sister’s kidney.
...
“I’ve seen firsthand the gift of donation and what it means,” Culver told lawmakers. “It has allowed me and so many others the opportunity to have a full life.”

According to the University of Pennsylvania Health System, more than 6,000 Pennsylvanians were on the transplant waiting list in 2025.

Culver and Williams’ proposal would allow living organ donors to deduct up to $10,000 in unreimbursed expenses related to the donation from their taxable income. That would include costs like travel, lodging, lost wages and medical expenses.

According to Culver, studies show the average living organ donor faces roughly $5,000 in expenses, which includes things like travel, lost wages and child care during recovery.
...
The measure was passed unanimously by members of the Senate Finance Committee." 

March 20, 2026

On Wednesday, Israeli forces hit Iranian facilities in the South Pars natural gas field in the Persian Gulf, shared by Iran and Qatar. Helen Regan and Ivana Kottasová of CNN explain that the South Pars gas field is part of the largest natural gas reserves in the world, supplying most of Iran’s domestic energy and crucial to Iran’s economy.

Targeting crucial oil infrastructure is a significant escalation in the war. Iran responded by hitting energy targets in Qatar and Saudi Arabia. As Summer Said, Rebecca Feng, and Alexander Ward of the Wall Street Journal wrote, these strikes put oil and gas facilities at the center of the war, worsening the crisis over the supply of energy around the world.

Trump’s social media account blamed Israel for the strike and said the U.S. hadn’t been informed about it ahead of time, but Barak Ravid of Axios reported that both Israeli officials and an official from the U.S. Defense Department said the strike was coordinated with and approved by the Trump administration. The Wall Street Journal reporters added that Trump approved the strike to put pressure on Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz.

Today Iraq declared “force majeure” on the country’s oilfields developed by foreign oil companies. This is an acknowledgement that a catastrophic event—usually an earthquake or something similar—means they cannot meet their obligations to deliver their product. In this case, the catastrophe is the disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas flows. Kuwait Petroleum Corporation and Bahrain’s state-owned Bapco Energies declared force majeure earlier this month.

This morning, Trump’s social media account once again blamed U.S. allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) for not joining his war, although NATO is a defensive alliance, designed to respond to an attack. The account posted: “Without the U.S.A., NATO IS A PAPER TIGER! They didn’t want to join the fight to stop a Nuclear Powered Iran. Now that fight is Militarily WON, with very little danger for them, they complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay, but don’t want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military maneuver that is the single reason for the high oil prices. So easy for them to do, with so little risk. COWARDS, and we will REMEMBER! President DONALD J. TRUMP.”

This afternoon, Trump told reporters: “You know, we don’t use the strait…we don’t need it. Europe needs it, Korea, Japan, China, a lot of other people, so they’ll have to get involved a little bit on that one.” He also said: “I think we’ve won, we’ve knocked out their Navy, their Air Force. We’ve knocked out their anti-aircraft. We’ve knocked out everything. We’re roaming free. From a military standpoint, all they’re doing is clogging up the strait. But from a military standpoint, they’re finished.”

The International Energy Agency is an intergovernmental organization that was created in 1974 to provide policy recommendations on the global energy sector and whose members make up about 75% of the demand for global energy. Today it said, “The conflict in the Middle East has created the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, due to the near halt in shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.” It added: “The resumption of transit through the Strait of Hormuz is the single most important action to return to stable oil and gas flows and reduce the strains on markets and prices.” Until then, it urged people to work from home if possible, drive more slowly to conserve energy, use public transport, avoid using airplanes, and use electricity for cooking where possible.

Yesterday President Donald J. Trump told reporters he was not sending troops to Iran, saying: “No, I’m not putting troops anywhere. If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you, but I’m not putting troops.” Today, Jennifer Jacobs, James LaPorta, and Eleanor Watson of CBS News reported that the Pentagon has made detailed preparations for sending troops to Iran. The administration is currently moving thousands of Marines to the Middle East. They will not be in place for a few weeks, suggesting the administration is expecting the engagement to continue.

Barak Ravid and Marc Caputo of Axios reported today that the administration is considering an assault on Iran’s Kharg Island, the center of Iran’s oil-processing facilities, to force Iran to allow free passage through the Strait of Hormuz. That operation would require the U.S. military to pound Iran’s military capacity near the strait before sending in ground troops. A source told Ravid and Caputo: “We need about a month to weaken the Iranians more with strikes, take the island and then get them by the b*lls and use it for negotiations.”

Prices in the U.S. were already rising before Trump struck Iran, prompting the closure of the strait and the choking off of global oil supplies. The Federal Reserve’s tracking of key inflation measures, released Wednesday, showed higher prices than expected, with the Producer Price Index (PPI) jumping 0.7% in February, the most since last July. In the twelve months through February, Lucia Mutikani of Reuters reported, the PPI went up 3.4%, the fastest rate of growth in a year. Now, dramatically higher fuel costs threaten to drive those prices higher.

The war itself is also costing Americans money, and lots of it. Economist Justin Wolfers notes that the estimated cost of $1 billion a day does not include the larger cost to the economy. The Pentagon’s number counts only bombs and planes and personnel, Wolfers points out. It does not include higher oil prices, geopolitical strife, business uncertainty, and slower growth. Those costs will mount into the hundreds of billions.

G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers notes that 58% of Americans think the U.S. military operation in Iran is a bad use of taxpayer dollars, while only 32% approve. Asked if they would support the war in Iran if it raised gas prices by $1 a gallon or more, 61% of Americans said they would not, while only 30% said they would.

Aware that the war is historically unpopular, Republicans in Congress are refusing to exercise any oversight of the Pentagon and the White House. Megan Mineiro of the New York Times reported today that Republicans don’t want to expose disapproval of the war and so are simply cheering Trump on in public. Rather than holding public hearings that would allow the American people to hear the administration’s justification for the war and plans for its execution, as Democrats demand, Republicans are permitting the administration to inform Congress as it wishes, behind closed doors.

“You don’t want to show that kind of division to your enemy when you’re in the midst of a war,” Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) told Mineiro. “I don’t have a problem with the administration avoiding showing our enemy that they don’t have 100 percent support of the Congress.”

“They’re holding news conferences,” Senate majority leader John Thune (R-SD) told reporters last week, so there is no need for official hearings. House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said that operations were “very sensitive” and thus could not be discussed outside of classified settings “because it would adversely affect our mission.” This demand that Americans trust the government to go to war without public debate flies directly in the face of the reasoning of the Framers of the Constitution, who believed the American people must have the right to decide whether to invest their lives and fortunes in a war.

Senate Democrats have tried twice to pass a measure that would require Trump to get congressional authorization before continuing the war, but Republicans reject it. “They want to circumvent the Constitution,” Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) said. “They want to go around public oversight. They want to avoid the glare, the questions of the American people.”

The recognition that the war might drag on has driven the stock market down sharply. All three of the main U.S. stock indexes—the S&P 500, the Nasdaq Composite, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average—have fallen since the war began. Tonight, after markets had closed down again, Trump appeared to try to reassure investors over the weekend that the war will end soon, writing on social media that “[w]e are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the Terrorist Regime of Iran.”

The administration continues to try to sell its war as a violent video game, and Trump as a dignified leader. Eli Stokols, Ben Johansen, Jack Detsch, and Paul McLeary of Politico reported on Wednesday that the White House is thrilled with the engagement garnered by the war videos made by White House communications staffers, in which footage of military strikes is intercut with football hits or bowling pins being blasted apart, or with clips from movies like Top Gun and Gladiator. A White House official told the journalists: “We’re over here just grinding away on banger memes, dude. There’s an entertainment factor to what we do. But ultimately, it boils down to the fact that no one has ever attempted to communicate with the American public this way before.”

Progressive political strategist Max Burns notes that the White House messaging “is appealing directly to the base, especially to these young, very online, 4chan MAGA people who, just like Trump, treat war like a video game.” He added: “You don’t see service members sharing this content.”

Since the Obama administration, the choice of whether to allow media at a dignified transfer ceremony when the remains of service members are brought home at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware has been made by the families. After Trump’s political action committee used images from a dignified transfer in a fundraising email, on Wednesday the Fox News Channel announced that “at the request of the families, the dignified transfer is going to remain private. There will not be any cameras.”

Nonetheless, the administration posted a number of photos from Wednesday’s ceremony on social media, showing Trump in the background, saluting.

Notes:

https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/19/middleeast/iran-qatar-south-pars-gas-field-explainer-intl

https://meidasnews.com/news/trump-releases-dignified-transfer-photos-despite-families-requesting-private-ceremony

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/morning-memo/its-my-war-and-ill-cry-if-i-want-to

https://www.axios.com/2026/03/18/israel-strikes-iran-natural-gas-infrastructure

https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/escalating-attacks-on-gulf-energy-assets-plunge-iran-war-into-new-phase-36cc0a6e

https://time.com/article/2026/03/19/trump-iran-war-us-troops/

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-administration-iran-ground-troop-preparations/

https://www.axios.com/2026/03/20/iran-invasion-kharg-island-strait-hormuz

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/iraq-declares-force-majeure-foreign-operated-oilfields-over-hormuz-disruption-2026-03-20/

https://newrepublic.com/post/207500/trump-global-panic-oil-prices

https://www.reuters.com/business/us-producer-prices-surge-february-services-2026-03-18/

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/wall-street-ends-sharply-lower-middle-east-turmoil-fans-inflation-fear/ar-AA1Z58oR

https://www.iea.org/reports/sheltering-from-oil-shocks/summary

https://www.reuters.com/world/us-deploy-thousands-additional-troops-middle-east-officials-say-2026-03-20/

Strength In Numbers
New poll: 58% of voters say the war in Iran is a bad use of taxpayer dollars
This is a free article for Strength In Numbers, my newsletter on politics, polls, and election data. If you enjoy it and want to support this type of independent, data-driven political journalism — and keep the independent polls flowing!! — become a paying member today…
Read more

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/us/politics/senate-republicans-trump-iran-war-authorization.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/20/us/politics/congress-iran-trump.html

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/18/white-house-iran-game-online-00834373

https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/13/politics/trump-fundraise-email-soldier

https://www.thedailybeast.com/slain-troops-families-issue-ban-cameras-after-donald-trump-used-dignified-transfer-for-cash/

YouTube:

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paleofuture.bsky.social/post/3mhinph5o722c

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atrupar.com/post/3mhjbvldcfn2p

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Cover-ups and Dodges

American Conversations: Senator Jon Ossoff

Filtered for home security

1.

The Amazon Ring Always Home Cam is an indoor security drone for your home.

Introduced with this video in 2020: "Yeah, it’s a camera that flies."

Sadly not yet on the market.

Ok Judge Dredd had Spy-in-the-Sky drone surveillance cameras in 1978 and Mega-City One is not an aspirational template for domestic life but hear me out:

Because I would love to be able to text my house “oh did I leave the stove on?” from the bus. And “darn can you find my keys?” in the morning. And “uh there’s that book about 1970s social computing somewhere it has an orange spine I can’t remember exactly” at literally anytime.

And do that without having to blanket my home in cameras. A drone seems like a good solution?

2.

Surveillance: systematic observation. Often institutional. From “above.”

Sousveillance, coined by cyborg Steve Mann in 2002: "watchful vigilance from underneath."

I am suggesting that the cameras be mounted on people in low places, rather than upon buildings and establishments in high places.

e.g.

a taxicab passenger photographs the driver, or taxicab passengers keep tabs on driver’s behaviour

It is such a positively-framed paper.

We swim in this world now. What does it do to us?

(I wonder if here’s a word like auto-sousveillance? We do it to ourselves.)

3.

The Nor (2014) by artist James Bridle.

The sense of being watched is a classic symptom of paranoia, often a sign of deeper psychosis, or dismissed as illusory. In the mirror city, which exists at the juncture of the street and CCTV, of bodily space and the electromagnetic spectrum, one is always being watched. So who’s paranoid now?

(As previously discussed, briefly.)

Exactly midway between Mann coining sousveillance in 2002 and today, 2026, Bridle put his finger on this paranoia background radiation, slowing increasing like population levels, like CO2 ppm, like sea level, like the frog’s bath.

4.

Robot Exclusion Protocol (2002) by blogger Paul Ford: "A story about the Google of the future."

I took off my clothes and stepped into the shower to find another one sitting near the drain. It was about 2 feet tall and made of metal, with bright camera-lens eyes and a few dozen gripping arms. Worse than the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

“Hi! I’m from Google. I’m a Googlebot! I will not kill you.”

“I know what you are.”

“I’m indexing your apartment.”

I feel like we are 24 months off this point?

Only they’ll be indexer googlebot drones that we vibe code for ourselves.

5.

Back in 2024, engineer Simon Willison realised that the killer app of Gemini Pro 1.5 is video, and:

I took this seven second video of one of my bookshelves:

It understood the video and gave him back a machine-readable list of the titles and authors. That’s handy!

I am still waiting for this as an app so that I can index and search my overflowing bookshelves by not-even-that-carefully waving my phone at them.

Please I am too lazy to type the prompt to vibe this.

The meta-point is that auto-sousveillance is inevitable because I can’t find the book I’m looking for.

6.

Man accidentally vibe codes a robovac army (2026).

The DJI Romo is a $2000 behemoth that mops and vacuums using LIDAR and AI.

Sammy Azdoufal wanted to control his roomba with his Playstation controller.

However, the scanner his [Claude Code agent] created not only gave him access to his device; it gave him access and control over almost 7000. He was able to see home layouts and IP addresses, and control the devices’ cameras and microphones.

Uh oh.

Whereas the point of institutional surveillance is that the CCTV cameras are conspicuous (and, originally, you didn’t know if anyone was watching, but now the AI processes all),

the characteristic of auto-sousveillance seems to be that you don’t know whether you are privately querying for a lost book or live streaming your bathroom to the internet.

Forget about control, how do you even relate to such a capricious system?

7.

The ancient Romans had two types of gods.

There are the gods on Olympus who look after nature, cities, the state.

And then there are Lares (Wikipedia), guardian deities of a place, "believed to observe, protect, and influence all that happened within the boundaries of their location or function."

In particular, household gods, Lares Familiares, that reside not on a distant mountain but instead in a household shrine:

The Lar Familiaris cared for the welfare and prosperity of a Roman household. A household’s lararium, a shrine to the Lar Familiaris and other domestic divinities, usually stood near the dining hearth or, in a larger dwelling, the semi-public atrium or reception area of the dwelling. A lararium could be a wall-cupboard with doors, an open niche with small-scale statuary, a projecting tile, a small freestanding shrine, or simply the painted image of a shrine …

The Lar’s statue could be moved from the lararium to wherever its presence was needed. It could be placed on a dining table during feasts or be a witness at weddings and other important family events.

RELATED:

Lares: our 2 minute pitch for an AI-powered slightly-smart home (2023) – you can see a demo video.

And here’s a paper about Lares showing emergent behaviour from AI agents, which in 2024 was novel and surprising.


More posts tagged: filtered-for (122).

Ask Almost A Doctor: Peptides, The Future Of Surgeons, And Viruses Causing Chronic Disease

This is the first edition of what I hope will become a staple for Core Memory. Though I’d love to comment on politics, religion, culture and dating, I think my experience is best directed toward addressing questions about biology, medicine and healthtech. The vision here is to get you up to speed quickly on disparate bio and health topics through our regular installments.

For readers new to my stuff, I’m a 4th year medical student at the University of Vermont with prior experience in biological engineering of mosquitoes at George Church’s lab at Harvard, AAV (Adeno-associated virus) at Dyno Therapeutics and wearable monitoring devices at Caltech.

If you have questions, you can email me at eryneym@gmail.com, DM me on Twitter or Substack. Or put them in the comments below!

Also, none of the below constitutes medical advice. (Seriously. This is not medical advice - Ed.)

Enjoy.

Subscribe now

Effie Klimi @effiebio

What do you advise people who have leaned onto the peptide craze? What will medicine look like if this trend keeps increasing in intensity?

Peptides, peptides, peptides . . .

I have written about these a bit with regards to the inflammation/pain claims that exist around BPC-157. My full thoughts on peptides are complicated, but can be summarized this way: buyer beware.

I think it is valid to point out that on-demand intelligence with AI or even just the internet has meant people feel like they can start taking control over their own health. You can really feel it, especially in tech communities as Jasmine Sun highlighted in NYT late last year. The problem is that humans are credulous, and hucksters know it. There is some balance to be had between four phases of trials, which include thousands of patients over 15 years, and me tweeting that Chemical X discovered by an Uzbek scientist in 1844 cured my face blindness. Unfortunately, right now things look too much like the latter than the former.

There is a very real, competent minority of well-resourced people who are looking to take healthcare into their own hands. Peptides are an example of that, and self-designing mRNA vaccines is another. In both instances, it is possibly the case that many N-of-1 treatments exist that could work for the individual, but there isn’t really any rigor that exists that can help generalize these results. That’s really the problem. Trial abundance isn’t my wheelhouse, but Rux Teslo has written extensively about clinical trial abundance, and I recommend you check that out.

Just so no one can say I am being completely unreasonable, I think that some of the peptides that people are buying actually do work. Specifically, I’m referring to retatrutide, Eli Lilly’s new triple hormone agonist that has shown better safety and efficacy than current GLP1s for weight loss. People are buying that one because they have (probably correctly) ascertained that the FDA’s stamp of approval is as good as guaranteed in a year or so. I just hope they reward Eli Lilly for their labor and actually get on that one when it comes out, instead of buying from a random compounder that is stealing EL’s IP.

If you’re into peptides, power to you, but consider asking your peptide dealer if they’ve run even a small blinded trial of 25 people. Or better yet, be agentic and organize one yourself. I firmly believe there is simply too great a cost to abandoning rigor.

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Alex Kesin @alexkesin

Is the whole toxoplasmosis <> enhanced risk taking behavior thing real? Can I become a better poker player if I infect myself with it?

A myth has been created around the Toxoplasma gondii parasite. As far as I can tell, it stems mostly from work that comes from one Czech scientist Jaroslav Flegr. Throughout the 90s and 2000s, he started publishing increasingly provocative articles linking toxoplasmosis with high risk behaviors through surveys and questionnaires. According to him, those infected with the parasite are more likely to get into traffic accidents, be schizophrenic, and more recently, be entrepreneurs.

The problem is that there is a fairly iron-clad rebuttal from a group at Duke. They followed 1,000 people in New Zealand from birth until age 38, testing them for antibodies against the parasite to see who had been exposed or was currently infected, then tried to search for associations. Unfortunately for you, Alex, none were found.

Flegr himself is listed as a co-author on a study challenging the ground truth behind some of his earlier toxo<>high risk claims. In that paper, they tested for an association between toxoplasma infection and financial decision-making using real monetary incentives in a case-control design. They found no significant evidence that risk attitude or loss aversion was associated with infection.

There are lots of examples of mainstream media picking up tidbits of the most interesting, spurious findings in fields. You can find volumes of pop culture articles about how wine makes you live longer or how chocolate is good for you. Being a good citizen scientist means developing some antibodies against these sorts of studies. You’ll live longer that way.

Adith Arun @aditharun_

What does the future of being a doctor look like in the age of AI? Non-surgical only.

I wrote about five different answers to this question, so consider that my base level of confidence in the future. My current view has been shaped by discussions with Joe Janizek, a radiology resident at Stanford with a PhD in computer science.

The kinds of AI that will slowly encroach on core aspects of medical care are reliant on data for the most common presentations, and are therefore very good at managing them. Note-writing, diagnosis of simple rashes and prescription refills fall mostly under that. What happens with the most challenging stuff, though? I’m referring to those 1-2 patients you see who are just kind of confusing, where the story and medical picture just don’t make sense, and when you have a diagnosis, management is a mild nightmare. After talking to Joe, I think it is reasonable to assume the bulk of medicine will revolve around dealing with those cases exclusively. It’s not too dissimilar to what LLM-powered coding agents are doing for AI research right now, honestly.

If you are OK with having to keep your brain CPU at 100% all the time, then welcome to the future of medicine.

David Dales @d2dev_

What is the most exciting result you’ve seen happen to a patient lately (avoiding theoretical science)?

Antisense oligonucleotides are showing promise. One very recent win is Zorevunersen, a treatment for the devastating neurological disease Dravet syndrome, described in this New England Journal of Medicine article earlier this month. There is much I can say about the science, but I will instead just point you to this video. This is the type of result that makes me glad I went into biology and medicine. It’s undifferentiable from magic.

John Whittaker @johnowhitaker

Microfluidics in bio: buzzword or are there lots of genuine good uses? My mind buckets ‘microfluidics’ with ‘graphene’ as something hyped as having lots of potential solutions that are always somehow a little ways in the future...

I don’t know much about graphene, but I think it’s clear that microfluidics has already made a real impact on biology: single cell RNA sequencing. It’s advanced enough since 2013ish that 10X Genomics licensed some of the original technology out of Harvard and now anyone in the US can implement it in their workflow. With 2025 revenue of nearly $700m, we can count this as a win for microfluidics. If digital droplet PCR is included in this category of boring quantification tools, the revenue goes well past $1B annually. For reference, the graphene global market across all companies is less than the revenue of a single company using microfluidics for a single assay.

There are other areas where I think the graphene comparator is a little more true, though. Organ-on-a-chip depends on microfluidics, but the technology has yet to really break out of labs. The FDA (and the Wyss Institute) are hoping that this ends up being the thing that can move the biotech industry away from reliance on animal models, and are legislating as such. Time will tell.

In my mind something stops being a meme once it becomes so boring and integrated into a field that it no longer becomes associated with a buzzword. I don’t know many people losing their minds over droplet quantification.

Adic @adic_9

Do you think we’ll get broadly available CAR-T or similar autoimmune drug free remission meds in the next 10 years?

CAR-T is a new cell therapy modality that mostly gets paired with cancer, but there’s reason to be fairly optimistic it has potential for autoimmune disease. I’ll point specifically at lupus. A case series a couple of years back involving a cohort of severe lupus and some other patients showed a CD19-targeted CAR-T treatment resulted in 100% disease-free remission. This persisted for the duration of follow up, averaging 15 months across the patient cohort.

Open questions remain about how durable these treatments are, but, on the surface, there’s reason to be excited. As with all things frontier, cost is a pretty big burden, but the current mainstay of autoimmune diseases – monoclonal antibodies – ain’t exactly cheap either, and patients are getting those at least monthly. I’m optimistic on this one. I put my p(win) at 75% by 2035 for an SLE treatment clearing a Phase III clinical trial.

Niko McCarty @NikoMcCarty

Why is the experimental hit rate for protein binder design so low?

Deep ball knowledge from Niko here. Proteins are dynamic. Everyone knows this, but what can really be done with this information? Not much right now.

AlphaFold and the tools that followed it made it easy to model static proteins, but don’t perform so well with proteins that move. There’s a neat paper from 2018 that suggests that as much as 5% of all proteins known in the Protein Data Bank are fold-switching, meaning they have extreme conformation changes in their active vs inactive state. If you used AlphaFold, you might get one state or the other, but, with no way to see the full spectrum of conformations, it’s hard to know how some proteins engage with their target.

This is doubly true for things like antibody binders, where the interaction requires understanding how a designed binder changes between its states. Thinking about antibodies, complementarity-determining regions (CDRs), particularly the H3 loop, are among the most conformationally diverse structural elements in all of biology. They’re essentially floppy loops that sample a huge ensemble of states, and the binding-competent conformation may only be transiently populated. So you’re trying to dock two moving objects against each other, and the computational tools are handing you a single snapshot of each.

And this gets at a deeper problem with how the field currently designs binders. Most pipelines optimize for a single, static interface. They score a candidate based on how well it packs against one conformation of the target, with maybe some light sampling around the backbone. But the protein your binder actually encounters in solution, on a cell surface, or in an assay isn’t frozen. A designed interface that looks perfect against the crystal structure may be competing with a conformation that buries the epitope entirely, or that rearranges key side chains at the binding site. You don’t see that with RosettaFold or Chai or Boltz.

I don’t want to point any fingers, but I’m afraid part of why there seems to be a disconnect between the papers and the reality stems from the way binder benchmarks are highlighted in papers. State-of-the-art generative design tools typically report experimental hit rates in the single-digit percentages for novel targets because they specifically select from carefully chosen, well-behaved targets with rigid binding sites. It doesn’t work as well when you move to a GPCR, a cytokine receptor with a flexible extracellular domain, or a viral glycoprotein that samples multiple perfusion states. It’s basically guaranteed that your hit rate drops, it’s more a question of whether that’ll be 10-fold or 100-fold.

A second, more nuanced perspective is that the energy landscape of binding is shallow. The difference between a binder with nanomolar affinity and one that doesn’t bind at all can come down to one or two residue contacts worth of free energy (~1–3 kcal/mol). Current models, even good ones, don’t resolve energy differences at that scale reliably, meaning they have very poor resolution for single mutation variants. When your scoring function has noise on the order of the signal you’re trying to detect, you’re essentially gambling on which designs to take to the lab.

The solutions to these problems are pretty boring. Mostly it comes down to finding a way to unify dynamics with the current frontier models. Molecular dynamics tries to get at this, but they’re a PITA to use and have their own limitations. I’m sure someone’s working on this. Once that’s solved, I expect paper hit rates to become real.

Niko McCarty @NikoMcCarty

What is the connection between certain viruses (ie Coxsackie) and various chronic diseases? Is this understudied?

The broader virus-chronic disease link is quite well-established at this point, so it feels odd to say it’s understudied but, well, it’s understudied. A current well-described example of one such virus is Ebstein-Barr Virus (EBV) better known to the public as the cause of mono. EBV is involved in a ton of processes. It can cause nasopharyngeal carcinoma, certain lymphomas, and more recently in 2022, was shown to be a major driver of multiple sclerosis. The MS component is important because of the amount of effort required to show the dynamics.

A Harvard group used millions of patient samples to demonstrate that EBV is essentially a prerequisite to developing MS, whereas the associations I mentioned before took significantly less effort. A component of that seems to be related to the fact that the kind of data required to demonstrate causality for disease processes like MS are molecular in a way that was not needed for cancer. For instance, for lymphoma, you can actually see, visually, the cells infected with EBV change their appearance and behavior. If you look for long enough, you’ll see them turn. Maybe MS has a similar thing, but we don’t know it yet and there’s no way to sample from the brain easily, so large data cohorts are required for now.

Time course of EBV infection. Doesn’t require being a doctor to see that something is going on there.

There are plenty of other examples here, by the way. T-cell leukemia/lymphoma is caused by HTLV-1, another virus, while hepatitis C can cause liver cancer if someone is infected chronically for long enough. Just last year there was the result that the shingles vaccine seems to stave off dementia (though maybe some selection bias was involved). I don’t have any strong opinion on the chances this will happen with Coxsackie virus, but it would not surprise me if it turns out to be implicated in some autoimmune processes, especially since there’s some evidence that it is related to type 1 diabetes. It seems like the challenge is mostly about finding the thing to anchor on when looking at large cohort studies, as was the case with EBV x MS.

Jonas Kubilius @qbilius

Top-3 diseases that could be tackled if we came up with novel (epi)genome editors (not just more prime editors)

You said three diseases, so the easiest answer is all diseases of the same mechanism: Huntington’s, myotonic dystrophy, and Fragile-X syndrome. They’re all caused by trinucleotide repeats that are hard to address with existing prime editors. What you would ideally want is a way to silence expanded alleles while preserving safe copies – a task that lends itself well to epigenetics.

Imprinting disorders like Prader-Willi or Angelman seem viable here, too. They are caused by unintended silencing of either the maternal (Prader-Willi) or paternal (Angelman) copies of chromosomes. Reversing that cannot be done with gene editors, but can theoretically be done with epigenome ones. I’m less optimistic that you can undo the developmental consequences of that imprinting, though.

Jonas Kubilius @qbilius

In one of your pieces/podcasts you were skeptical of personalized genome editor costs ever going down below 100k. Why is that?

To clarify my position, I view this as more of a delivery problem than an editor one. The core issue is that even if you have a perfect genetic cargo that can solve a particular disease, we don’t have great tools that reliably get it all where you need it to. Delivery is just not a solved problem, with the exception of the liver where cheaper options like lipid nanoparticles are viable. For every other organ, the best tools we have are viruses, and until gene therapies can move beyond either natural or synthetic viruses, I just really don’t see how the cost can go below $100,000. The reagents alone, ignoring regulatory costs, for an adult human sized batch of AAV or lentivirus might cost you $50,000 minimum. It’s likely way more if avoiding immediately killing someone with endotoxin from your production process is part of your objectives.

It’s not free to synthesize the input DNA required for human-sized batches of virus, and your reagents have to be actually sterile, which comes at a pricing premium. This is a place where cost saving on reagents makes you penny-wise but pound foolish. Throw in costs associated with trials and you’re talking about several hundred thousands more to the cost of the treatment, and that’s just to break even.

I do sincerely hope other, cheaper delivery modalities can pop up that give tissue-level resolution, but that hasn’t happened so far. For now, viruses are what we have. Everything comes at a cost.

Mosasaurus @mosasaurus27

Is it accurate to view/represent the cell as a machine?

No, it is not accurate, though it is convenient to say so. Unlike machines, cells are never off unless they are dead. Processes are dynamic. Pathways do not pause, but rather just slow down. Everything is happening chaotically all the time, with inputs and outputs feeding into their own pathway and kicking off other processes, too. A neural network feels like a slightly better representation of how a cell behaves, which means that computation can serve as a tool for modeling cells. But an actual machine, no.

My old colleague Duo Peng and his team at CZI have some interesting work towards establishing a better model for how a cell behaves, but it’s not quite there yet.

Ashlee Vance @ashleevance

What’s the deal with the dog cancer thing?

Rosie and The Australian Cure is an interesting case of all discourse simultaneously being right and wrong, my own contributions included. If I had to summarize, the current stances are scientists saying the treatment doesn’t work, and the tech world saying they’re missing the point, and this is all about one man’s extreme agency being turbocharged by AI. On the surface, it’s the story of an Australian entrepreneur using his financial resources and AI to act outside of the healthcare system to treat his beloved pet of her cancer. Heartwarming. Sadly, misleading.

According the reporting we have so far, Rosie’s owner used ChatGPT to design an mRNA vaccine against her solid tissue tumor, resulting in a 50% reduction in size. The use of consumer AI to troubleshoot illness is cool in its own right, but the trouble comes when techno-optimism pushes the suggestion that the cure to cancer is at our fingertips thanks to Grok. Truthfully, there’s reason to want to pump the brakes a little bit here. Namely, we don’t even know if the guy’s treatment even did anything because he simultaneously treated his dog with a checkpoint inhibitor, which has already been established as a treatment for her cancer type. The technical details are scant as of now, but the ones we do have, especially around the use of AlphaFold in the process, also has me scratching my head a bit.

I completely understand the desire for optimism. It is empowering to believe that on-demand intelligence will allow everyday people to address the problems in their lives, but it’s just not the case that AI added much here. If you’re looking for examples of that being true, there are better stories that champion the use of AI in giving laymen the capabilities of the scientific elite – even examples in humans! Check out the story of Sid, who used his resources and AI to treat his own cancer.

Why the need to stretch the truth? I suspect a part of it is a desire to believe that we can completely discard the shackles of establishment science. Peptides have shown that people feel they are as capable as doctors and scientists when it comes to their own health. I think this is just another instance of that. But unlike the inflammation meme perpetuated by Elite Human Capital of SF, which is embarrassing but mostly harmless, creating false hope for diseases like cancer is horrible. It’s actually worse than horrible, it’s shameful, and I think caution is in order.

People with limited time left get desperate and justifiably reach out to grab everything and anything they think will help them. Abandoning mechanisms to separate the wheat from the chaff – which is what clinical trials are meant to do – will mean condemning people who picked wrong.

Let’s see how this story plays out and revisit it in a couple months. As I see it, there are enough scientific gaps that call for skepticism.

Happy Friday.

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If there's one batshit-crazy Orange County-based podcast you need to listen to ...

Say no to trans! Say yes to lip fillers!

So, as a general rule, I’m loathe to drawing too much attention toward area right-wing extremists trying to scratch and claw their way toward prominence and fame and social media glow and a guest spot on Megyn Kelly’s next I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter! infomercial.

Today, however, I will make an exception.

In fact, I will do more than make an exception. I will actually encourage everyone (all of you) to take some time out of your day and watch The Orange Report, a new YouTube show hosted by Kira Davis, a particularly odd and wacky MAGA conspiracy theorist who believes in oversized brooches and calling out the deep state (or is it Deep State?) agenda.

And Davis … well, she’s something twinkly. On the bright side, her linked website (justkiradavis.com) no longer works. Also on the bright side, The Orange Report averages about 18 viewers per episode—17 of those with functioning heads. Also also on the bright side, it’s pretty clear she’s as nutty as a half-eaten bag o’ Planters laced with crack flakes and MC Hammer spittle. Also also also on the bright side, she’s a failed local political extremist desperately trying to carve out a lane that doesn’t really exist. Or, as Tupac Shakur once said, “If even the Orange County GOP doesn’t want you around, you’re a fucking lunatic.”

Wait.

Let me re-start.

I was directed toward The Orange Report by a FOTOC (Friend Of Truth OC) and now I can’t get enough. It’s meandering. It’s boring. It goes on and on and on, with tangents galore and rants aplenty. It’s as watchable as a belch—and belches are, mostly, impossible to watch, for they’re invisible. Kira is one of those non-journalists who (thanks, 2026!) identifies as “journalist,” only sans the reporting or writing or editing chops. She wants to have a voice, because nowadays nearly any clown with an iPhone can have a voice.

But watching Kira Davis at work is also important, because she’s a window into the warped and broken world of the local right fringe, where everything is conspiracy chum and no one can be trusted.

So, in an effort to honor that desire, let’s take a moment to dig into what must be considered the greatest episode in Orange Report history, when Kira sits down with Madison Miner, who shares a last name with former NBA Slam Dunk champion Harold Miner and the crazed googly eyes with a starved raccoon rummaging through your tipped-over garbage pail.

In case you don’t know, Madison Miner is regionally sorta/kinda/not really famous for being elected to the Orange Unified Board of Education in 2022, but then being booted via recall two years later. Among other things, she claimed that Children’s Hospital was picking up kids at Orange-based schools and providing abortions. Her family stood with the notorious Westboro Baptist Church. She lied about her job. She hyped a pyramid scheme. Her kids attended Orange County Classical Academy, a charter school founded by the nutty Dr. Jeff Barke that offered “classical education” emphasizing Western civilization and Judeo-Christian concepts. Think Amber Smith, then subtract 30 IQ points and increase the size of the (unironically placed) cross dangling from her neck.

In short, she’s a hoot.

Or, put differently, she’s perfect OC GOP material.

But here’s what I love.

What I love, love, love, love, love.

Madison Miner is vocally against the “agenda” of LGBTQ+ everything. She thinks it’s gross. She thinks it’s wrong. She thinks it’s mutilating people. We are all created in God’s image, folks like Madison Miner will tell you, and God makes no mistakes. God loves us. As we are. Created in His image.

Now, take a moment and look at the podcast episode.

Look closely …

Girl …

Girl …

What the hell?

To be clear, one can do whatever they want to their face. To their eyes. To their nose. To their skin. If you want Botox, go for it. If you have fillers, go for it. KISS Army forehead tattoo? Branded fraternity letters? Calf implants? Have fun. Not my business, not my problem. Do you and feel wonderful about yourself.

But how can one stand as a moral authority on what others should/should not to do their bodies—when you are paying hundreds of dollars to inject hyaluronic acid into your skin? Like, who are you to judge … anyone? Ever? At any juncture?

But the lack of grasping base-level irony isn’t the worst part.

No, the worst part is the certainty with which these people speak. Kira Davis (who, cough, posted this AI-generated image and never removed it) and Madison Miner are absolutists. They are right. You are wrong. Donald Trump is amazing. Those opposing Donald Trump are dumb. Actually, worse than dumb. Davis and Miner and their peeps treat opponents as wicked, sinister entities who shouldn’t even have a place at the discussion table. So what if Donald Trump (repeat after me) cheated on wife 1 with wife 2, wife 2 with wife 3, wife 3 with a porn star he paid off in hush money? So what if he bragged about grabbing women by the pussies and mocked POWs for “being captured”? So what if Trump has said everything is rigged against him—from the Emmy Awards vs. “The Apprentice” to Barack Obama’s birth certificate to the 2016 election he actually won? So what if his defense secretary is a Christian nationalistic alcoholic womanizer and his FBI head flew (on your dime) to party with the U.S. hockey team? So what if everything going down in Iran is the exact opposite of what was promised? So what if gas is $765 per gallon? So what if the White House is doing everything to hide the contents of the Epstein Files (If you don’t think Donald Trump fondled at least one teenager, you haven’t been paying attention).

So fucking what?

To people like Kira and Madison, this isn’t about right v. wrong or consistent v. inconsistent. Instead, it’s about … mattering. Being heard. Having a voice. You’re home alone. Your kids have outgrown you. You’re bored in Orange County—a tough place to be bored. You can only stroll the Irvine Spectrum so many times. So you start jumping on The Facebook (as my mom calls it), seeing your fellow Stepfords complain about sexual books and masked teachers and gay Disney characters infiltrating the sacred institution that is Halloween. You start DMing with other Stepfords, and they introduce you to more Stepfords, who introduce you to more Stepfords, and all the Stepfords feed your Stepford sense of alarm. Even better, there’s a Stepford4Trump Zoom tomorrow night! We’ll talk about it all! The loss of control! The destruction of values! Once upon a time, a high school girl could lose her virginity in the back seat of the quarterback’s Buick and walk away with head held high. Now, with all the swiping left and Hinging right and queer straight boogaloo trans alliances, nothing feels sacred. Why, two nights ago you caught your son staring longingly at a Jonas Brothers poster! Hell, his gaze was focused upon Kevin. Kevin!

This isn’t right! Any of it!

So you join the brigade, and before you know it you’re running a podcast 18 people watch! Or you’re a guest on a podcast 18 people watch! And your injected lips are the size of baby seals! And some of the other mothers sitting outside the Whole Foods recognize you! And smile! And whisper, “You go, girl!” Or, at the very least, “Where did you buy that pigeon brooch?”

You are a right-wing Orange County superstar, and now even the lib blogger knows your name.

You’ve made it.

You’re royalty.

Is it Time to Drive 55 Again?

More videos like this available on my YouTube channel.

Also: Substack generates a transcript for these videos, available on the app and the web, but the button doesn’t show up in email. So here’s a cut-and-paste (not edited):

Transcript

Is it time to bring back the 55 mile an hour speed limit? Not going to happen, but it’s actually would not be stupid right now. Hi, Paul Krugman. Update on Friday morning where the Strait of Hormuz is still closed, stuff is burning, futures markets are saying that the, you know, pretty sophisticated money thinks that oil prices are going to stay extremely high for a very long time. And we’re starting to hear some talk about things we could do to conserve oil, with the International Energy Agency actually calling for measures to conserve oil, including driving more slowly, working from home, using electric cookers, all things that would be doable. Let’s talk about what the case is, not because it’s going to happen, but because it kind of illustrates where we are right now.

By the way, my coffee cup has never seemed more appropriate.

I remember the 70s. I’ve been around way too long. And I remember the 55 mile an hour speed limit, which even inspired songs about how people hated it. “I can’t drive 55.” It inspired a lot of sectional tension. Bumper stickers in Texas saying, “drive 100 and freeze a Yankee.” And it inspired Jimmy Carter. who famously or infamously gave a speech from the White House wearing a thick sweater calling upon people to conserve energy and called for energy conservation as being something we should do and he called it the moral equivalent of war. He had really bad acronym advisors because that came out as MEOW but not stupid actually maybe politically stupid but economically not stupid.

Where we are right now is that we have essentially a forcible shutoff of a large fraction of the world’s oil supply. Twenty percent of the world’s oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz before this war. Some of that can get out other ways. The Saudis have a pipeline to the Red Sea, which is good for now and until or unless the Houthis start firing missiles at oil tankers in another strait that leads from the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean. The Iranians are still exporting oil. They are letting their own tankers and tankers headed for China pass through, and the United States is not trying to stop them, at least at this point. But still, we’re still looking at something like a 10% reduction in the amount of oil available to the world market.

And the trouble with oil demand in the short run, there’s lots of things you can do to burn less oil in the longer run. In the short run, really the only thing you can do is drive less.

That’s pretty much... Now, the cooking, natural gas, is also a big issue, especially in Europe, so that’s where that would come in. But basically, oil is used primarily for transportation, and it takes time to switch to change your automotive fleet to more fuel-efficient vehicles. It takes time to just generally shift the way that you drive and the way that you work, but you could simply drive less.

Why do that? Econ 101 says that if you want to conserve, and if you want to reduce the amount of something that is consumed, that raising the price is the cleanest, easiest way to do that. That is actually how it’s going to happen. This is all going to happen through high prices of gasoline and diesel and jet fuel. But there are two reasons why a public effort, a public campaign, maybe even rules to induce people to burn less stuff to drive less and so on would make sense.

One is distributional. Rationing gasoline, rationing oil through price is a big hit to consumers and a big windfall profit to oil companies and also to oil exporting countries like Russia. And if you could do less of that, that would be, might not be maximize economic efficiency, but, you know, what matters is the welfare of the people that we’re trying to deal with.

The second is that there are clear kind of collective action issues. If you were to try to drive 55 on our highways right now, it would be pretty menacing. I mean, there’s a stretch of road in New Jersey heading for the New York Thruway where the official speed limit is actually 55, although nobody does it. And on the rest, where it’s 65, and actually people drive 70 to 75, an individual driver trying to drive 55 would be creating havoc and would be at substantial risk themselves.

And that’s the easier part. I mean, things like working from home, we see that’s very much a collective action issue. And if we could get people, you know, a renewed acceptance post-COVID for remote work, that would help. There’s all kinds of reasons why a conservation strategy would, as a short run measure to deal with this fuckup that we’ve created in the Persian Gulf. Makes a lot of sense.

Not going to happen, not a chance it’s going to happen, certainly under current management in the United States. It’s all been about burn baby burn and drill baby drill and we’re going to have cheap gas and we’re going to be a power in the world, not through self-restraint, but through warrior ethos and all of that. So it would be an incredibly humiliating climbdown, for them to advocate conservation. But it is worth thinking about the fact that this could be an important part of the solution.

I don’t know how this thing ends in the Persian Gulf. I think even if we got better people in charge, now they’ve created a really, it’s a quagmire, and I don’t know how this ends. But one way to mitigate it would be, in fact, to try to burn less gasoline.

Not a chance. Take care.

Scenes from the Death of the Pax Americana

Tips For Recovering a Car Stuck in the Mud | O'Hare Towing Service & Semi  Truck Heavy Duty Wrecker

No real post today. I don’t have it in me. Just a few scenes from the accelerating collapse in America’s reputation and influence.

Item: The Danish Broadcasting Corporation, roughly speaking Denmark’s equivalent of the BBC, reports that two months ago Danish forces were prepared to blow up runways in Greenland to prevent a possible U.S. attempt to seize the island by force:

Item: During a meeting with Japan’s Prime Minister, Donald Trump was asked why the U.S. didn’t inform its allies before attacking Iran. He replied, “Because we wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor?”

A person in a blue suit

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Item: Pete Hegseth angrily attacked news coverage of the war:

The media here — not all of it, but much of it — wants you to think, just 19 days into this conflict, that we’re somehow spinning toward an endless abyss or a forever war or quagmire. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Definitely not a quagmire, now 20 days in:

A fire in the sky

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

I think I’m just going to crawl back under the covers.

Turbo Pascal 3.02A, deconstructed

Turbo Pascal 3.02A, deconstructed

In Things That Turbo Pascal is Smaller Than James Hague lists things (from 2011) that are larger in size than Borland's 1985 Turbo Pascal 3.02 executable - a 39,731 byte file that somehow included a full text editor IDE and Pascal compiler.

This inspired me to track down a copy of that executable (available as freeware since 2000) and see if Claude could interpret the binary and decompile it for me.

It did a great job, so I had it create this interactive artifact illustrating the result. Here's the sequence of prompts I used (in regular claude.ai chat, not Claude Code):

Read this https://prog21.dadgum.com/116.html

Now find a copy of that binary online

Explore this (I attached the zip file)

Build an artifact - no react - that embeds the full turbo.com binary and displays it in a way that helps understand it - broke into labeled segments for different parts of the application, decompiled to visible source code (I guess assembly?) and with that assembly then reconstructed into readable code with extensive annotations

Infographic titled "TURBO.COM" with subtitle "Borland Turbo Pascal 3.02A — September 17, 1986 — Deconstructed" on a dark background. Four statistics are displayed: 39,731 TOTAL BYTES, 17 SEGMENTS MAPPED, 1 INT 21H INSTRUCTION, 100+ BUILT-IN IDENTIFIERS. Below is a "BINARY MEMORY MAP — 0X0100 TO 0X9C33" shown as a horizontal color-coded bar chart with a legend listing 17 segments: COM Header & Copyright, Display Configuration Table, Screen I/O & Video BIOS Routines, Keyboard Input Handler, String Output & Number Formatting, DOS System Call Dispatcher, Runtime Library Core, Error Handler & Runtime Errors, File I/O System, Software Floating-Point Engine, x86 Code Generator, Startup Banner & Main Menu Loop, File Manager & Directory Browser, Compiler Driver & Status, Full-Screen Text Editor, Pascal Parser & Lexer, and Symbol Table & Built-in Identifiers.

Update: Annoyingly the Claude share link doesn't show the actual code that Claude executed, but here's the zip file it gave me when I asked to download all of the intermediate files.

I ran Codex CLI with GPT-5.4 xhigh against that zip file to see if it would spot any obvious hallucinations, and it did not. This project is low-enough stakes that this gave me enough confidence to publish the result!

Tags: computer-history, tools, ai, generative-ai, llms, claude

Quoting Kimi.ai @Kimi_Moonshot

Congrats to the @cursor_ai team on the launch of Composer 2!

We are proud to see Kimi-k2.5 provide the foundation. Seeing our model integrated effectively through Cursor's continued pretraining & high-compute RL training is the open model ecosystem we love to support.

Note: Cursor accesses Kimi-k2.5 via @FireworksAI_HQ hosted RL and inference platform as part of an authorized commercial partnership.

Kimi.ai @Kimi_Moonshot, responding to reports that Composer 2 was built on top of Kimi K2.5

Tags: kimi, generative-ai, ai, cursor, llms, ai-in-china

More on the David Lang opera version of Wealth of Nations

In 18 parts, Lang explores some of Smith’s central themes, including one of the book’s most famous passages, where Smith uses a wool coat worn by a very poor Scottish worker as a way to examine trade. “He asks, ‘Did you ever think of how many people need to be employed in order to make that coat?’” says Lang, whose movement “the woolen coat” names all the artisans and laborers who contributed to the garment in song:

the shepherd
the sorter of the wool
the wool-comber or carder
the dyer
the spinner
the weaver
the fuller

There are also the workers on the ship that brought in the dye and all the people who built the ship. An ordinary coat is revealed to be a kind of miracle of skilled labor and global collaboration, the product of “many thousands” of workers coming together in (selfish) harmony. Part of me wanted to run out of the theater right then and buy something … perhaps a coat… for America.

Here is more from Bloomberg, via John De Palma.  The opera seems to be ultimately a rather gloomy view of the book?

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Bluesky Raised $100M a Year Ago but for Some Reason Only Disclosed It Now

Bluesky:

In April 2025, Bluesky raised $100 million in Series B funding led by Bain Capital Crypto, with participation from Alumni Ventures, Anthos Capital, Bloomberg Beta, Knight Foundation and True Ventures. In the months since, we’ve focused on scaling our team to meet the rapid growth of both the AT Protocol (atproto) and Bluesky app. We’re excited to share more as we move into a new era of leadership and further growth.

This raise was led by Bluesky founder Jay Graber, who recently transitioned to Chief Innovation Officer to focus on building the future of open social infrastructure.

I didn’t post about Graber’s stepping aside as CEO earlier this month because I didn’t make much of it. I’ve been bullish on Bluesky since its inception, but I haven’t been thrilled by it of late. I don’t think it’s gotten any worse, but its growth has stalled, leaving it in the limbo between ghost town and boom town. For many products/services/businesses/publications, a sustained popularity that’s less than booming is fine. Niches can work, or thrive even. Daring Fireball is clearly a niche publication. But for social networks, two decades of evidence suggests that anything less than booming is a problem.

But what the hell are we to make of a $100 million funding round that wasn’t announced for 11 months? Is this commonplace, and I just somehow never before took note of a company keeping a large funding round secret for a year? Or is this as weird as I’m thinking it is? I always thought big funding rounds were things companies wanted to immediately promote, not hide. This roundup of links at Techmeme suggests I’m not alone.

Update, 2 hours later: The explanation I’ve now heard, from a source in a good position to have an informed take, is that it is unusual. But basically it’s a unique series of events, at a unique time (post–2024 election, when Bluesky experienced a nice surge), for a unique company. So: weird, yes. Cause for alarm, probably not.

Second update: Interesting thread with Adam Vartanian, on Bluesky (natch), where he states:

If you see press reports that says a company “has raised” some money but no date on when the round closed, it probably happened some time in the past. Bluesky is actually unusual in disclosing a date that’s so far in the past.

I kept thinking that I must be missing something, and this feels like it must be exactly that something. If true, it’s not unusual for a company to announce a seeding round long after it closed. What’s unusual in this case with Bluesky is that when they finally did announce it, they revealed the date it closed, too. That it was, in fact, an act of transparency, at least in comparison to many other venture-backed companies today.

 ★ 

Quiche Browser

Quiche Browser is a rather astonishing app from the one-man indie developer Greg de J./Quiche Industries. (What a killer domain name that is.) Quiche Browser is a very robust, exquisitely designed, stunningly handsome web browser exclusively for iPhone. Just iPhone — although an iPad version is currently in beta. I switched to it as my default iPhone web browser last summer, thinking I’d only stick with it for a day or two before going back to Safari, and I wound up sticking with it for a few weeks. I did go back to Safari, but it was a remarkably close call. So close that, today, I’m going to give it another try. (And I was so enamored during my month-long affair with Quiche that I gladly subscribed to Quiche Plus for $27/year to support such a remarkable app.)

Out of the box, every single aspect of Quiche Browser’s UI and feature set is designed with obvious thought and care. But it also supports a rich array of settings to tweak the design. You can customize the appearance style of the toolbar, the location of the toolbar, the buttons on the toolbar. Quiche brings to iOS something very much akin to AppKit’s Customize Toolbar from the Mac, but if anything, what Quiche implements is more customizable. The typography throughout the app is exquisite. It doesn’t support Safari extensions but it has its own built-in content blocker. And, of course, it has built-in support for Kagi, the world’s best search engine.

What got me thinking about Quiche Browser again today was this tweet on Mastodon from the developer:

One of the many reasons I made Quiche Browser was to get a per-website JavaScript kill switch in my toolbar.

But these days I’m even tempted to disable JavaScript everywhere and enable it only where needed.

A simple one-tap “JS” button you can toggle on any website. I missed this button when I was test-driving Quiche a few months ago. Every browser should have this button. It’s almost unbelievable how much it improves so many websites.

That “JS” button alone isn’t why you should check out Quiche. It’s the whole thing. It’s just so thoughtful. So utterly modern in its appearance and features, but old-school in its hyperfocus on serving you, the user, through craftsmanship.

 ★ 

Google Search Is Now Using AI to Rewrite Headlines

Sean Hollister, The Verge (gift link):

After doing something similar in its Google Discover news feed, it’s starting to mess with headlines in the traditional “10 blue links,” too. We’ve found multiple examples where Google replaced headlines we wrote with ones we did not, sometimes changing their meaning in the process.

For example, Google reduced our headline “I used the ‘cheat on everything’ AI tool and it didn’t help me cheat on anything” to just five words: “‘Cheat on everything’ AI tool.” It almost sounds like we’re endorsing a product we do not recommend at all.

What we are seeing is a “small” and “narrow” experiment, one that’s not yet approved for a fuller launch, Google spokespeople Jennifer Kutz, Mallory De Leon, and Ned Adriance tell The Verge. They would not say how “small” that experiment actually is. Over the past few months, multiple Verge staffers have seen examples of headlines that we never wrote appear in Google Search results — headlines that do not follow our editorial style, and without any indication that Google replaced the words we chose. And Google says it’s tweaking how other websites show up in search, too, not just news.

This is way past “jumping the shark” territory. This is Jaws 3-D totally-lost-the-plot territory. Jesus H. Christ.

 ★ 

Perhaps Bluesky’s Revelation of an 11-Month Ago $100 Million Investment Was, in Fact, an Act of Transparency

Regarding my earlier post expressing confusion/discomfort with Bluesky announcing a $100 million funding round almost an entire year after it closed, I had an interesting back-and-forth with Adam Vartanian on Bluesky (natch), where he wrote:

If you see press reports that says a company “has raised” some money but no date on when the round closed, it probably happened some time in the past. Bluesky is actually unusual in disclosing a date that’s so far in the past.

I kept thinking that I must be missing something in this story, and this feels like it must be exactly that something. If true, it’s not unusual these days for a company to announce a seeding round long after it actually closed. What’s unusual in this case with Bluesky is that when they finally did announce it, they revealed the long-ago date it closed, too. That it was, in fact, an act of transparency, at least in comparison to many other venture-backed companies today.

 ★ 

Canada facts of the decade

From 2014 to 2024, Canada’s real GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power parity grew by just 3.2 percent in total, an anemic 0.4 percent per year on average, and the third lowest among 38 advanced nations. Over the same period, the United States posted 20.2 percent total growth (1.9 percent annually), and the OECD average reached 15.3 percent (1.4 percent annually). The measurement shortcomings cannot explain five-to six-fold differences in growth rates.

And:

The analysis estimates that a substantial share of Canadians who would rank among top earners in Canada have emigrated to the United States—roughly 40 percent of potential top 1 percent earners and 30 to 50 percent of the next nine percentiles. Canadian-born individuals in the United States are more educated than native-born Americans, earn substantially more, and cluster disproportionately in top income deciles.

Canada is effectively exporting its inequality to the U.S. The brain drain simultaneously lowers our average income while raising American income, accounting for a significant share of the persistent GDP gap.

Here is the full piece.

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My heuristics are wrong. What now?

My heuristics are wrong. What now?

More words. More meaning?

Some people who ask me for advice at get a lot of words in reply. Sometimes, those responses aren’t specific to my particular workplace, and so I share them here. In the past, I’ve written about echo chambers, writing, writing for an audience, time management, and getting big things done.

Do you remember Cool Runnings? In the movie, John Candy is a retired bobsled champion, who uses his experience, connections, and lovable curmudgeon character to turn a rag-tag group of sprinters into an olympic bobsled team. A lot of principal engineer types think of themselves this way: they used to bobsled, they don’t bobsled, but they still know the skills and the people and the equipment.

And that worked well enough, while we were still bobsledding.

But we’re not bobsledding anymore.

Many of the heuristics that we’ve developed over our careers as software engineers are no longer correct. Not all of them. But many. What it means for a system to be maintainable. How much it costs to write code versus integrate libraries versus take service dependencies. What it means for an API to be well designed, or ergonomic, or usable. What it means to understand code. Where service boundaries should be. Where security and data integrity should be enforced. What’s easy. What’s hard.

We’ve seen this play out in small ways before. Over the last decade, I’ve frequently been frustrated by experienced folks who didn’t update their system design heuristics to match the cloud, to match SSDs, to match 100Gb/s networks, and so on. But this is the biggest change I’ve seen in my career by far. An extinction-level event for rules of thumb.

But you’re a tech leader, and you need to lead, and leading is heavily based on using your experience to help people and teams be more effective. What now?

The victorious man in the day of crisis is the man who has the serenity to accept what he cannot help and the courage to change what must be altered.1

Let me assume that you want to continue to be a valuable tech leader. You want your teams and organizations to succeed. That you’re willing to sound less smart and less sure, in interests of being right and helpful.

In that case, and I hope that is the case, your job has changed. Your job, for the foreseeable future, is to have the humility to accept that many of your heuristics are wrong, the courage to believe some are still right, and the curiosity to actively learn the difference.

You can’t throw out everything you know. Your taste, your high standards, your understanding of your business and customers and the deep technical trade-offs in your area are more valuable than ever before. This is like that fantasy that people have of going back to middle school knowing all the things they know now2. You’re ahead of the pack in many ways.

But you also need to really deeply question the things you know, and the things you assume. Before you share one of your rules of thumb, you need to deeply examine whether it’s still right.

And the way you’re going to know that, right now, is by getting back on the ice. Build. Own. Get your hands dirty and use the tools. Build something real. Build a prototype. Build a thousand little experiments in an afternoon. Challenge yourself to try to do something you previously would have assumed is impossible, or infeasible, or unaffordable. Find one of the ways that you’re worried that the new tools are going to lead to trouble, and actively fix it. Then examine the things you’re learning. Update your constants.

Over the next couple of years, the most valuable people to have on a software team are going to be experienced folks who’re actively working to keep their heuristics fresh. Who can combine curiosity with experience. Among the least valuable people to have on a software team are experienced folks who aren’t willing to change their thinking. Beyond that, it’s hard to see.

This is going to be hard for some folks. It’s hard to admit where you’re wrong. It’s hard to go back to being a beginner. It’s easy to stick your fingers in your ears and say “No, it’s the children who are wrong”. My advice is to not be that guy.

The good news? It’s as fun as hell. Get building, get learning, make something exist that you couldn’t imagine before.

Footnotes

  1. Winnifred Crane Wygal paraphrasing Reinhold Niebuhr
  2. A fantasy I have never understood. Being 13 once was enough for a lifetime, thank you very much.

Friday 20 March 1662/63

Up betimes and over the water, and walked to Deptford, where up and down the yarde, and met the two clerks of the Cheques to conclude by our method their callbooks, which we have done to great perfection, and so walked home again, where I found my wife in great pain abed …1 [of her months; – L&M] I staid and dined by her, and after dinner walked forth, and by water to the Temple, and in Fleet Street bought me a little sword, with gilt handle, cost 23s., and silk stockings to the colour of my riding cloth suit, cost I 5s., and bought me a belt there too, cost 15s., and so calling at my brother’s I find he has got a new maid, very likely girl, I wish he do not play the fool with her. Thence homewards, and meeting with Mr. Kirton’s kinsman in Paul’s Church Yard, he and I to a coffee-house; where I hear how there had like to have been a surprizall of Dublin by some discontented protestants, and other things of like nature; and it seems the Commissioners have carried themselves so high for the Papists that the others will not endure it. Hewlett and some others are taken and clapped up; and they say the King hath sent over to dissolve the Parliament there, who went very high against the Commissioners. Pray God send all well! Hence home and in comes Captain Ferrers and by and by Mr. Bland to see me and sat talking with me till 9 or 10 at night, and so good night. The Captain to bid my wife to his child’s christening.

So my wife being pretty well again and Ashwell there we spent the evening pleasantly, and so to bed.

Footnotes

Read the annotations

Better, Faster, and (Even) More

I’ve never built more interesting, random, and useless scripts, tools, and services than I have in the last six months. The cost to go from “Random Thought” to “Working Something” has never been lower thanks to Claude Code. However, this increase in speed has only made my desire to move faster and more efficiently higher.

The following is a set of tools and practices I’ve gathered over the last 90 days, which continue to accelerate my process and give me daily joy.

How I Organize

Everything lives under ~/Projects/. Each project is its own git repo with its own CLAUDE.md (project-specific instructions) and WORKLOG.md (session history). Three repos do special duty:

  • dotfiles — Machine configuration. Shell config, terminal config, Claude Code settings, skills, and status line script all live here and get symlinked to where the system expects them (~/.zshrc, ~/.claude/settings.json, ~/.config/ghostty/config, etc.). Checked into git so every machine stays in sync with a pull.
  • credentials — A private repo for API keys and secrets, kept separate from project code.
  • scripts — Standalone CLI tools added to PATH. Things like fresh (repo health checker), gpush (one-command commit and push), and ghostty-font (font switcher).

Every project gets two files: CLAUDE.md and WORKLOG.md. CLAUDE.md is instructions and reference — how to build, deploy, what patterns to follow, where things live. It rarely changes. WORKLOG.md is the session diary. Every time Claude and I work on a project, it logs what we investigated, what changed, what we decided, and why. When I come back days or weeks later, Claude reads the worklog and picks up where we left off instead of starting cold.

Copy to Clipboard

Claude generates a lot of stuff that I cut and paste, but the initial problem was that copying from Ghostty included unavoidable leading spaces on output. The fix? Have Claude paste text straight to the clipboard via macOS pbcopy1. Also, depending on where I am posting (mail, Slack, messages), I have Claude format appropriately before pasting2.

Screenshot to Clipboard

It is often much faster to just dump a screenshot into Claude Code rather than describe the issue. I used to grab a screenshot and then cut and paste it from my Documents directory. Too slow. F12 grabs a region of the screen and puts it on the clipboard so I can paste. Configured in macOS System Settings > Keyboard > Shortcuts3.

Check My Setup

I move between three machines a lot, and given that the state of the art is changing, well, daily, a day working on one machine means that my local config has improved THAT DAY, which means when I move to a new machine, I want to update the setup.

I have a single script that validates my entire Mac setup. Checks 30+ items across categories: core tools (Homebrew, Python, Node, Ghostty, Claude Code), shell config (zsh default, oh-my-zsh), symlinks (.zshrc, .gitconfig, Ghostty config), SSH (key, agent, keychain), credentials, and coding fonts. Reports green/yellow/red per item. When things are missing, prints fix commands in dependency order — SSH before git config, Homebrew before everything that needs brew install.

# This is an example
# Check Claude Code global settings.json

if [ -f "$HOME/.claude/settings.json" ]; then
    settings_issues=""
    if ! grep -q "alwaysThinkingEnabled.*true" "$HOME/.claude/settings.json"; then
        settings_issues="thinking"
    fi
    if ! grep -q "statusLine" "$HOME/.claude/settings.json"; then
        settings_issues="${settings_issues:+$settings_issues, }statusLine"
    fi

    if [ -z "$settings_issues" ]; then
        print_row "Claude Code settings" "${GREEN}✓ Configured${NC}" "Thinking + status line enabled"
    else
        print_row "Claude Code settings" "${YELLOW}⚠ Incomplete${NC}" "Missing: $settings_issues"
        missing_items+=("claude-settings")
    fi
else
    print_row "Claude Code settings" "${RED}✗ Missing${NC}" "~/.claude/settings.json"
    missing_items+=("claude-settings")
fi
Bash

Uncommitted Changes / Or Fresh

I have an oh-my-zsh git plugin with the robbyrussell theme. The prompt shows a yellow when the working tree has uncommitted changes. No custom config — it’s the default behavior of that theme’s git_prompt_status function.

For times when I forget, I have a script called Fresh that walks through my entire Project directory and reports uncommitted changes, unpushed commits, and stale repos across all projects. One command to answer: “Did I forget to push something before switching machines?”

Memories vs. Skills vs. Hooks

Memories (~/.claude/projects/<project>/memory/): Persistent notes Claude saves between sessions per project. Things like “this user prefers terse responses” or “the auth rewrite is driven by compliance, not tech debt.” Claude reads them at the start of each conversation to pick up context that it would otherwise lose. They’re markdown files with frontmatter (type, description) indexed by a MEMORY.md file. Types: user preferences, feedback/corrections, project context, external references. Checked in alongside my project, and by far the largest timesaver for building context.

Skills (~/.claude/skills/<name>/SKILL.md): Reusable prompt templates invoked with /skillname. A skill defines a multi-step procedure Claude follows — like a macro. Example: /floyd loads a voice definition file, then rewrites whatever content I have in that voice. Skills don’t execute code themselves; they inject instructions into the conversation that Claude follows. I have skills for blog posts, podcasts, recurring expenses, and a lot more.

Hooks (settings.json"hooks"): Shell commands that fire automatically on Claude Code events like tool use or end of response. I don’t use them yet, but they’re there for automation — things like running a linter after every file edit or logging tool usage.

Statusline

Claude Code has a configurable status line at the bottom of the terminal. Mine runs a bash script that renders three lines of live data:

The rate limit data comes from Anthropic’s usage API, authenticated via an OAuth token pulled from the macOS Keychain. It caches the response for 60 seconds, so it doesn’t slow down every render4.

Ghostty Tab Title

I’m usually working on several projects at once, so at-a-glance tabs are essential. I have a claude() wrapper in .zshrc:

claude() {
    printf '\033]0;Claude: %s\007' "${PWD##*/}"
    CLAUDE_CODE_DISABLE_TERMINAL_TITLE=1 command claude "$@"
    printf '\033]0;%s\007' "${PWD##*/}"
}
Bash

Sets the Ghostty tab title to “Claude: projectname” when Claude starts, suppresses Claude’s own title management via the env var, and restores the tab to just the project name on exit.

I’ve written this up entirely because I am certain others have found equally satisfying improvements, and I want to know what they are.

UPDATE: Tips from Readers

Since publishing, readers have shared helpful tips that I’ve incorporated into my workflow:

Per-project terminal colors. Most modern terminals let you set background colors per profile or directory. I now have different colors for different projects — green for one, blue for another. It sounds minor, but it’s a surprisingly effective context signal when you’re bouncing between windows.

Tuning tool permissions. Claude Code asks permission before running shell commands, which is safe but slow. I had Claude review the commands I run regularly, filter out anything destructive, and approve the rest in the project’s .claude/settings.json. Game-changer — sessions move noticeably faster when you’re not clicking “Allow” every few seconds.

/copy for grabbing output. The /copy slash command copies Claude’s last response directly to your clipboard. Cleaner than selecting and copying manually, especially for long responses.

Worklog trimming. I wrote a persistent instruction that tells Claude how to compress my worklog files. The rule: delete anything recoverable from git history or the current code, condense old completed work, but keep open questions, key decisions, and active experiments. This keeps the context window focused on what actually matters rather than filling it with stale history.

  1. Windows equivalent: clip, e.g., echo hello | clip
  2. Also, I have since learned there is a /copy command in Claude
  3. On Windows: Win+Shift+S opens the Snipping Tool for region capture to clipboard.
  4. Currently rocking the IBM Plex Mono — more on this shortly

Holistic space observation: the shift from SSA to SDA

Recent reporting on SpaceX’s proposal to deploy up to one million satellites in low Earth orbit — paired with a vision of AI-enabled, autonomous orbital infrastructure — marks a decisive moment for the space community. Regardless of whether these numbers ultimately materialize, the direction is unmistakable: space is moving toward unprecedented scale, autonomy and strategic […]

The post Holistic space observation: the shift from SSA to SDA appeared first on SpaceNews.

ESA to fly dedicated Crew Dragon mission to ISS

Crew Dragon at ISS

The European Space Agency plans to charter a SpaceX Crew Dragon mission to the International Space Station to give more flight opportunities for its astronauts.

The post ESA to fly dedicated Crew Dragon mission to ISS appeared first on SpaceNews.

Kayhan targets investors, insurers with expanded orbital intelligence platform

Kayhan Space is branching out from providing orbital intelligence used to coordinate satellite fleets with a new software platform that turns that data into business insights for investors and insurers.

The post Kayhan targets investors, insurers with expanded orbital intelligence platform appeared first on SpaceNews.

Blue Origin joins the orbital data center race

Blue Origin is the latest company to propose an orbital data center system, filing plans for a constellation of up to 51,600 satellites.

The post Blue Origin joins the orbital data center race appeared first on SpaceNews.

Officina Stellare wins $2 million contract for lasercom ground station in Spain

An optical ground station. Credit: Officina Stellare

MILAN – Officina Stellare, an Italian manufacturer of advanced opto-mechanical systems, has signed a 1.84 million euro ($2.0 million) contract with the Barcelona-based Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO), the company announced March 17. The contract covers the design and construction of an optical ground station for future laser and quantum-encrypted space-to-Earth communications. The infrastructure will […]

The post Officina Stellare wins $2 million contract for lasercom ground station in Spain appeared first on SpaceNews.

Rocket Lab launches eighth Synspective radar imaging satellite

Electron launch

Rocket Lab launched the latest in a series of satellites for Japanese radar imaging company Synspective on March 20.

The post Rocket Lab launches eighth Synspective radar imaging satellite appeared first on SpaceNews.

Another GPS launch shifts from ULA to SpaceX as Vulcan investigation continues

The change affects the GPS III SV-10 satellite, which had been slated to launch on ULA’s Vulcan Centaur rocket.

The post Another GPS launch shifts from ULA to SpaceX as Vulcan investigation continues appeared first on SpaceNews.

OHB Sweden wins €248 million contract to build EPS-Sterna constellation

OHB Sweden has won a record contract for Sweden’s space sector to build 20 satellites to boost Europe’s weather forecasting and climate monitoring capabilities.

The post OHB Sweden wins €248 million contract to build EPS-Sterna constellation appeared first on SpaceNews.

Forest Thinning

Why can’t tree-huggers & forest destroyers get along?

I lived in the wilds of southern Oregon for 17 years. I enjoyed many things about life in the forest. One of the things I loved most was watching the politics. Our community was polarized before polarization was cool. Loggers versus environmentalists, sure, but also weird alliances. Open-carry fisherman cozying up to tree huggers to save the salmon & steelhead. Rugged loggers cozying up to (relatively) soft townies with money.

My roots went deep in the area, one set of grandparents having moved there in 1943. The other grandparents (that grandfather was a former mayor & city councilor) moved there in 1933. I felt connected & invested, even if I didn’t usually stick my ideas out there.

Gridlock

The one time I did put my 2 cents in (this is back when we had cents) was when I tried to resolve the absolute hatred between environmentalists & loggers using what I was studying about incentive structures. I think the system I came up with was cool but it quickly disappeared, so now I want to put it in public permanently here.

Here’s the setup:

  • Only 5% of the old-growth forest was left.

  • Loggers wanted to harvest all of it.

  • Environmentalists wanted all logging to stop.

  • Second-growth forest was prone to catastrophic wild fires. (There’s a special kind of helpless feeling watching a fire approach your home.)

  • Loggers wanted to harvest second-growth.

  • Environmentalists wanted all logging to stop.

The result was a complete impasse. Forests burning. Mills closing. Crime & drugs up. Anybody with any ambition leaving. Nobody was getting what they wanted—loggers, environmentalists, workers.

(Or at least what they said they wanted—there seemed to be a bunch of psychodramas playing out.)

Incentives

I recast the forest tinning situation as an incentives problem (I was intensively studying incentives at the time). Once the loggers finally got permission to harvest a tract of second-growth, they were incentivized to take out every stick of wood with economic value, leaving further growth stunted, encouraging the growth of flammable underbrush.

Because environmentalists saw the loggers’ incentives, they were ever more incentivized to block all logging & put onerous restrictions on any activity that managed to sneak through. In Influence Diagram terms, more logging leads to more money & more damage, but more damage leads to more resistance leads to less logging.

Classic inhibiting loop. More logging leads to less logging. (We could go on & on mapping this system, but this will do to illustrate my pr of the many interventions we can make in a system is to speed or slow feedback. What if, instead of getting paid for this harvest, the loggers got paid for the next harvest. Today they’d thin the forest, with any valuable material going to be turned into products, but it wasn’t until 10 years later that they would be paid the proceeds of the next forest thinning. You would get paid more if the forest thrived over the next 10 years, less if it grew less.

(I think I kind of made up the notation for delay.)

Now we have a reinforcing loop. More logging. Less damage (because the loggers get paid in a decade). Less resistance. More logging (in the form of forest thinning.)

Priming the Pump

That first logger, how do they get paid? They are paying for diesel, salaries, depreciation today & won’t get money for 10 years. The right to be paid in 10 years can be turned into a financial instrument to be sold today (remember those soft townies with money?) Now you have monied interests who also care about the forest’s health.

And who is best suited to evaluate the health of the forest for future gain (and avoiding future loss from pests or fire)? Well, those environmentalists who care so about the forest are well positioned to act as consultants & auditors.

Mill workers would be back at work. Local capital would have another way to extract rents. Environmentalists would have healthier forests. Loggers would have trees to cut.

Chickening Out

I wrote the above up as a letter to the editor of the local newspaper. That got me invited to a “summit” of conservationists & loggers. When the microphone got around to me I had an attack of shyness, said something self-deprecating, and passed the mic on to the next person. So that was that.

Would it have worked? Maybe. Entrenched interests were more interested in staying entrenched than in making progress. That’s true today in many situations I see. It’s not as simple as “change the rules and the behavior will change”. But “don’t change the rules & the behavior will definitely not change”.


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Gap Week: March 20, 2026

Hey folks! I was traveling this week to give an invited talk at Western Michigan University, so I don’t have a blog post ready for you. That’ll also probably be the case for next week (where I will be at the annual meeting of the Society for Military History), though at least there I will have an abstract to let you see.

Now I am always reticent to post up the text of talks that are intended to be delivered live, because the genres are different, they rely on different kinds of delivery and they often aren’t footnoted and such for written publication. But in this case, I can do something a bit different, because the main parts of my talk for Western Michigan University were based around things that I’ve written (and in one case, something someone else has written) which you can read. So this is a chance to plumb the archives, in a sense and in so doing, basically ‘read along’ a version of the talk I gave which is rather ‘meatier’ than what I could have said in the 45-or-so minutes I had to speak.

The core of my talk was the concept of ‘historical verisimilitude‘ that I’ve riffed on here: the use of the appearance of historical accuracy, or a claim to historical accuracy in the absence of the real thing to market or promote something, be that something a film or show or game or what I have begun terming a ‘history influencer’ who makes history-themed social media content.

My initial example of this at work was the disconnect in Assassin’s Creed:Valhalla between the emphasis on visual accuracy and the catastrophic fumbling of other forms of historical accuracy, which you can read about in my “Assassin’s Creed: Valhalla and the Unfortunate Implications.” I then expanded on this example with a broader one from 2000’s film Gladiator and its initial battle scene, arguing that once again what was prioritized was visual accuracy because that gave the viewers the – incorrect! – assumption that ‘the research had been done’ on the rest, which you can read about in our series on “Nitpicking Gladiator‘s Iconic Opening Battle.”

I then jumped to example of this as a rhetorical strategy deployed by marketing, grounded in a critique of how George R. R. Martin (and the marketing team for Game of Thrones) has framed historical accuracy, using the Dothraki as an example of how this can go badly wrong and perpetuate quite nasty stereotypes about real peoples through the supposedly ‘realistic’ (in fact, deeply flawed) depiction of a fantasy stand-in for those people. You can read about that in our series on the Dothraki, “That Dothraki Horde.”

From there I transition into talking about this strategy used by the aforementioned ‘history influencers,’ with a contrast between how differences in platforms between YouTube and Twitter produced very different environments: where YouTube’s long-form video nature pushed a lot of content creators towards more carefully researched historical content which was often actually quite valuable (I particularly focused, and again this was very brief, on arms-and-armor and historical dress channels), Twitter’s emphasis on ultra-short micro-blogging produced a very different environment.

For the part focused on Twitter, I leaned quite heavily on T. Trezevant’s “The Antiquity to Alt-Right Pipeline” published in Working Classicists in 2024, which I think is one of the most revealing investigations of this particular space and the incentives that the post-Musk Twitter algorithm, which appears to openly and quite strongly prefer frankly bigoted or xenophobic content, created. From my own observations, while some of the accounts that push this particular, generally badly historically misinformed, version of the ancient past emerged in the pre-Musk period of Twitter, Classics Twitter largely held its own until the algorithm was slanted against them, making it all but impossible for a lot of good Classics accounts to compete for eyeballs.

And then I closed with a plea for greater engagement by historians in these online spaces, albeit with a caution that picking your platform is important. The fact that historical verisimilitude, the pretense of historical accuracy or knowledge, is so frequently used as a marketing tool speaks to the public’s desire for an accurate knowledge of the past. Folks want to know what the past was really like, but of course regular folks often do not have the tools to tell what is reliable, rigorous and careful history vs. what is not. So as historians, we need to be more present in these kinds of spaces (though we ought to pick our platforms; there is little point ‘competing’ on Twitter if the deck is stacked against you) to help folks find the accurate historical knowledge they are seeking.

And that, in an abbreviated form (or an enlarged form if you read all of the links as you went!) was the talk! Very grateful for WMU for inviting me out to give it. Until next week!

Links 3/20/26

Links for you. Science:

Estimation of undetected asymptomatic infections of COVID-19: a mathematical modeling approach
The selfish ribosome
Astronomers Estimated the Lifespan of Alien Civilizations, and It’s Not Looking Good for Us
Do America’s Top Health Research Officials Stick Around Too Long?
Suspended small business research programs derail development of gene therapies, hip implants, and more
A medical journal says the case reports it has published for 25 years are, in fact, fiction

Other:

The US-Israel relationship is finally facing a reckoning. It doesn’t need to slide into antisemitism. Israel’s role in drawing the US into a war on Iran is attracting healthy scrutiny. It’s also creating a permission structure for antisemitism
Proton Mail Helped FBI Unmask Anonymous ‘Stop Cop City’ Protester
Jasmine Crockett’s Partisanship Was Not The Problem. Her liabilities were real, but by November, anti-Trump partisanship might be a winning play across all Senate battlegrounds.
Watching ICE Agents? You Could Lose Your Global Entry.
Park Service to revive statue of Founding Father who enslaved hundreds
RFK Jr. wants Dunkin’ to prove drinking its iced coffee is safe. The health secretary put the Canton-based chain on notice for its sugary beverages
Ars Technica Fires Reporter After AI Controversy Involving Fabricated Quotes
Florence ICE detainee dead after untreated tooth infection, official says
ICE has spun a massive surveillance web. We talked to people caught in it
Trump Has Been Sued 198 Times for Withholding Funding. It Hasn’t Stopped Him.
Supervisors grill Waymo about 1,500 stalled cars during December blackout. The company apologized but said it still expects San Francisco first responders to help move stranded robotaxis.
How I Became A Target For Right-Wing Freaks At The Australian Open
Trump and His Soulless Cronies Have Managed to Suck the Joy Out of the World Cup
The whole country is Spartacus. Stephen Miller is furious.
Can AI Replace Social Science Researchers?
Florida Gov. Candidate Says His Campaign Was Banned From Waffle House After Tucker Carlson Interview
Peggy Siegal Defends Her Past With Jeffey Epstein
Not Just Being Snarky
AI-powered search is fueling a wave of Epstein Files transparency projects
The Schumer Special
James Talarico, Jasmine Crockett and Democrats’ Dangerous ‘Electability’ Debate
Pardoned Capitol Rioter from Maryland Rearrested for Touching Women’s Hair on Metro
Man Got Mysteriously Sick on Vacation and Barely Survived. Now They Call Him a COVID ‘Patient Zero,’ and He Has Some Advice
Trump can’t win a war he can’t sell
Nearly 200 Killed in Strike on Iranian Girls’ School as UN Calls for Investigation into Attack
Everything is gender, part infinity
The US and Israel are fighting the same war — in opposite political realities (I don’t agree with the ToI assessment, but that is the mainstream view in Israel)
California GOP lawmakers are incensed over a gas tax study. Rural groups say they need it
Bill aims to block ICE detention centers from coming to Montgomery County
Markwayne Mullin Reportedly Fingered Nostrils of Colleagues and Their Spouses During Visit to Israel

Some Good News for D.C.: Homicides Are Down

Way down. Why they are down is puzzling, as homicides seem to be lower everywhere regardless of policing policy, and much of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast has been pummeled by crappy weather, but D.C. has only had eleven recorded murders to date*. It is all the more surprising as “assault with dangerous weapon” arrests are up by a third. We also will have to see what spring and summer bring, since that is usually when homicides surge.

Still, it is encouraging, even if it is still too many killings.

*Two of these murders (CCN:25035518 and CCN:23167028) seem to be attributed to other years. I’m not sure if that means there have been only nine murders this year or if this is some kind of data error.

Star Formation

It's ok, I still have some nice, cool gas clouds that aren't collapsing. As long as nothing ionizes them, I can continue to enjoy their ... HEY! NO!!!

The Strangest Book in Harvard Library

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The Strangest Book in Harvard Library

On the opening page of The Inman Diary, the book’s editor makes a bold claim: this work “has no counterpart in any literature that I am aware of.”

The author Arthur Inman had decided “the only way for him to win fame, perhaps even immortality, would be to write a diary unlike any ever written….It would contain the kind of information he had looked for and never found in other diaries.” 

Arthur Inman and his 17 million word diary

At first glance, this seems an impossible goal. Since the time of Augustine, authors of confessions, memoirs, and diaries have prided themselves on their candor and unflinching honesty. And after Rousseau, who pushed this dictum to an extreme, the limits of frank disclosure would seem to have been reached. What could Arthur Inman do in the 20th century, that hadn’t already been done before? 

Adding to the challenge, Inman had nothing to write about—or so it seemed. He was a semi-invalid who spent most of his life in a darkened room. Even recluses like Proust and Pynchon are gadabouts by comparison.

Yet Inman wrote some 17 million words and filled 155 volumes (now housed in Harvard’s Houghton Library)—that’s roughly 25 times as long as the Bible—and devoted more than 40 years to his project. He started writing his diary in 1919 and continued working on it until shortly before his death in 1963.

But here’s the twist, and the quirk that turned Arthur Inman into one of the most fascinating writers of the 20th century. This peculiar man took ads in the newspaper, offering to hire “talkers’ who would tell him the wildest and most intimate details of their lives. The end result was a diary with more than 1,000 characters—striving with one another to provide the most compelling, uncensored narrative. That crowd-sourced approach turns the Inman journals into a compendium of confessions unlike anything ever written down before.

Inman paid his “talkers” a dollar per hour. And he often went beyond listening, having sexual relations with some of the women who took the job. By any definition, he was a creepy guy whose behavior violated all reasonable norms. Even Inman’s own editor Daniel Aaron admits that this disturbed individual’s massive journal is the “autobiography of a warped and deeply troubled man whose aberrations call for psychiatric probing.”

Pages from Inman’s diary (Steve Liss/Getty Images)

Inman often closed entries in his diary with the send-off: “I wish I were dead.” Yet he also saw himself in a heroic light, dreaming of the posthumous fame his massive diary would eventually bring him. But even Inman must have known that what he was writing was far too controversial for publication in his lifetime without considerable censorship—although the awareness that he was violating the prevailing moral standards of his time may have motivated him all the more.

His talkers were extraordinarily trusting and candid. Perhaps the darkened room and the quasi-anonymity of the setting made it feel like an actual confessional, with all the sacramental implications such situations bring. Maybe it’s even simpler: people want to reveal their darkest secrets, as Foucault tells us, and will seek out settings where it can happen. Or perhaps the reality was more banal and tragic: these folks simply needed the cash, and Inman was the only person paying for their secrets.

Sometimes Inman’s talkers showed up with stories ready to tell, but if they were reticent, he would immediately start probing. Here is his account of a first meeting with a Mrs. Haviland (never brought back for a second session, because she was too “sweet”):

“I asked her how old she was, how long she’d been married, whether she loved her husband, whether he loved her, whether she loved her son or her husband best, why she’d been to the hospital lately, whether she used contraceptives, how much salary her husband made, who her ancestors were, how she budgeted her money, if she believed in God, how many friends she had, what did she look forward to in life, what sort of childhood she’d had, was she calm or emotional, did she read, like music, the movies, and so on. Most of her answers I believed, some I didn’t.”

Inman avidly read published diaries of others, and noted with dismay how often the original texts had been censored to avoid shocking the delicate sensibilities of readers. He was so upset by this that he wrote an angry letter to Dr. Francis Turner of Magdalene College, Cambridge, who was working on a transcription of Samuel Pepys’s diaries, complaining of these excisions. Inman added that if anyone ever censored his own diaries, he would come back as a ghost to haunt that person—and hinted that Pepys might do the same.

A two-volume book of highlights from The Inman Diary was published by Harvard in 1985

I doubt The Inman Diary could still be published by Harvard University Press nowadays. There’s just too much in its pages to upset, dismay, shock, and appall. And if you aren’t offended by Inman’s dealings with his talkers, you will invariably find his opinions on politics, society, religion, race, and a host of other matters reprehensible, in whole or in part.

So let me make clear: if you are the kind of person who needs a trigger warning, proceed no further. Trigger warnings were invented for books of this sort—which probably deserves an army of them, spaced out like sentinels every 10-20 pages. Yet is there any other book that conveys so fully the range of human experiences of that time and place with such brutal frankness and unflinching candor? The historian, as I see it, has a choice between getting a shock or remaining in ignorance. I know how I’d handle that trade-off, but I’m hardly typical in that way.

Time magazine had a different take on the diary. When the book was released, they dismissed Arthur Inman as just another "megalomaniacal bigot misogynist Peeping Tom hypochondriac." In its more measured review, the New York Times declared: [Inman] is not an attractive figure, but he is an oddly captivating one….At the very least [the book] is of considerable clinical interest.” (True to this prediction, Inman is often cited in academic literature on aberrant psychology.)

The editor of the Inman diary, Daniel Aaron, clearly came to abhor the diarist himself—even the tone of his footnotes reflect his distaste. “I couldn’t stand him,” Aaron later commented in an interview. “How did I get involved with this man? How can I deal with this man?” But then he feels compelled to add: “And gradually as I read on, I became quite fascinated by him, seeing him as a kind of rare person.” Aaron eventually decided that a “movie would be the best way of capturing that book.”

In all fairness, Inman’s talkers didn’t seem very interested in self-censorship, and many clearly savored the opportunity to tell their raw stories without fear of consequences or judgment. They are a strange assortment, but where else will you find a book written in the 1930s where, on a single page, you encounter a firsthand account of pimping, prostitution, bootlegging, bribing, drug addiction, homosexuality, rape, illegal gambling, drunkenness, police violence, a stint in Bellevue, and even glimmerings of a philosophy of life. The appearance of a skilled musician who “tickles the ivories” is just an extra.

Do you doubt me? Here is an extract from the testimony of Anthony Abruzzo, age 24:

It’s possible that Inman’s hirelings invented stories to please their employer. But the actual experience of reading these narratives is utterly convincing—testifying to people’s intense desire to be understood, to be validated by the exposure (and acceptance by the listener) of their darkest secrets. And Inman, for all his faults, was quite a listener.

When Inman wasn’t listening, he was corresponding. Some of the most gripping sections of this book come from the letters Inman included verbatim. Patricia, a young woman living in Hollywood in the 1930s and having uninhibited dealings with aspiring stars, sent Inman frequent missives, and these will give you an angle on the pre-WWII film business you won’t encounter elsewhere. Even more moving—and more distressing—are the letters Inman received from lonely women in small towns whom he connected with via correspondence clubs, a Great Depression equivalent of today’s dating apps. Inman joined these clubs under assumed names, with the goal of getting stories, not dates. Once again, the whole enterprise is morally debased, but these letters from the lonely are gripping in a way no work of fiction could match.

Somewhere midway in his life project, psychiatry took off in America, but that was hardly the case when Inman started out. As late as 1930, the American Psychoanalytic Society had only 65 members, and there was a deep social stigma associated with seeking out counseling of this sort. Many of Inman’s talkers must have felt much better discussing forbidden subjects in a private conversation with a total stranger—best of all, one who would pay for the service, and showed such relish in every detail.

Inman hated psychiatrists, but he must have seen himself as a kind of fellow traveler in their world. He certainly sought out troubled people, and gave advice willingly enough. And he had another technique that, when incorporated into his diary, created a unique meta-narrative unlike any I’ve encountered in other books. Inman would write down frank and unsparing accounts of his talkers, then rudely show them what he had put in his diary. This would set off all sorts of angry scenes and recriminations—and thus provide him with further material for his project. This is a kind of experimental fiction beyond what anyone was doing in those distant days, and more like Karl Ove Knausgård in our own time than John Dos Passos (the novelist Inman ostensibly used as a role model).

Inman didn’t live long enough to see his life’s work show up in print. He attempted suicide at several junctures, three of them documented in his diary. But two weeks after the Kennedy assassination, on December 5, 1963, Inman was in low spirits—street noise always upset him, and now the construction of the Prudential Tower near his Boston apartment was more than he could take. A few months earlier, he had survived an attempt to kill himself with sleeping pills. This time he decided on a revolver, brutally efficient in this instance—and thus putting an end to both Arthur Inman and his enormous journal.

He would have been delighted at the posthumous publication of his diary by Harvard. But he could hardly have enjoyed the way he has been treated by posterity. He is rarely dealt with as a literary figure, but his book gets cited frequently in papers on neuroticism, suicide, hypergraphia, and various other psychological disorders.

Inman wanted to be a celebrated writer, but instead got turned into a poster child for dysfunction. That couldn’t have been his goal, yet in an odd sort of way, it ensures that the Inman Diary will survive as a seminal text. Written in a dark time by a disturbed man, it captured a part of the 20th century no one else dared put in a book. The only question that remains is who will dare to read it.

How Americans Really Handle Their Money: Insights into Saving Habits

Financial habits in the United States have evolved significantly over the past few decades. Rising living costs, shifting job markets, and economic uncertainty have all influenced how individuals approach money. Saving, once considered a straightforward priority, has become more complex as Americans balance immediate expenses with long-term goals.

Today, financial decision-making is shaped not only by income, but also by external pressures such as housing affordability, healthcare costs, and education debt. These factors make it increasingly difficult for many households to maintain consistent savings habits.

Early Adulthood and Financial Challenges

For younger Americans, particularly those in their twenties, saving money often takes a back seat to more urgent financial obligations. Rent, student loans, and basic living expenses consume a large portion of income, leaving limited room for savings.

Despite these challenges, early financial habits play a crucial role in long-term outcomes. Even small, consistent contributions to savings accounts can grow over time, especially when combined with compound interest. Establishing discipline at this stage, even with modest amounts, can have a lasting impact.

Midlife Pressures and Financial Balancing

As Americans move into their thirties and forties, financial responsibilities tend to increase. Mortgages, family expenses, and career-related costs require careful budgeting and planning. This stage is often defined by the need to balance current obligations with future financial security.

Many individuals begin to focus more seriously on retirement planning during these years. Employer-sponsored plans, investment accounts, and emergency funds become essential tools for maintaining financial stability.

Understanding Savings Benchmarks

To better navigate financial decisions, many people look for reference points that help them evaluate their progress. One commonly used benchmark is average American savings, which offers a general overview of how individuals at different life stages manage their finances.

While these figures vary widely depending on income and location, they provide useful context. For some, they highlight gaps that need attention, while for others, they confirm that their current strategy is on the right track. More importantly, they encourage individuals to think more critically about their long-term financial goals.

The Role of Technology in Saving

Digital tools have transformed the way Americans manage their finances. Budgeting apps, automated savings systems, and online investment platforms make it easier to track spending and set financial goals.

These tools also improve accessibility, allowing users to better understand their financial behavior. With real-time insights, individuals can make adjustments quickly, helping them stay on track with their savings plans.

Regional and Lifestyle Differences

Savings habits are not uniform across the country. Geographic location plays a major role in determining how much individuals can realistically save. Urban areas with higher living costs often present greater challenges, while those in lower-cost regions may have more flexibility.

Lifestyle choices also influence financial behavior. Spending patterns, cultural attitudes toward money, and personal priorities all contribute to how individuals manage their income. Recognizing these differences is essential for understanding why savings rates vary so widely.

Building Better Financial Habits

Improving savings does not always require drastic changes. In many cases, small adjustments can lead to meaningful progress. Setting clear goals, automating contributions, and reducing unnecessary expenses are practical steps that can strengthen financial stability.

Consistency is often more important than the amount saved. Over time, disciplined habits can create a solid financial foundation, even in uncertain economic conditions.

Conclusion

Saving money in today’s environment requires awareness, flexibility, and discipline. While external factors can make it challenging, individuals who take a proactive approach to their finances are better positioned for long-term stability.

Understanding broader financial trends can provide useful context, but personal strategy remains the most important factor. With the right habits and tools, it is possible to build a more secure financial future, regardless of starting point.

Photo: jcomp via their website.


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Those new service sector jobs?

An AI memory startup called Memvid is offering $800 for a one-day, eight-hour shift for one candidate to “bully” AI chatbots by telling them what to do on camera.

Business Insider reported this week that Memvid wants someone to spend eight hours testing and critiquing the memory of popular AI chatbots, effectively paying $100 an hour for what they have branded as a “professional AI bully” role. The worker’s job is to examine where chatbots lose track of details, forget context or misrepresent data, and then feed those findings back to Memvid so the startup can improve its products.

“You’ll spend a full 8-hour day interacting with leading AI chatbots — and your only job is to be brutally honest about how frustrating they are,” the job listing reads.

The draw is that the role doesn’t require a computer science background, AI credentials or any kind of work experience. “No prior AI bullying experience required — we all start somewhere,” the listing reads.

The requirements are deeply personal. The first requirement is an “extensive personal history of being let down by technology,” and the second desired trait is “the patience to ask a chatbot the same question four times (and the rage when it still gets it wrong).”

Here is the full article, via the excellent Samir Varma.

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Friday assorted links

1. Using LLMs to study deregulation.

2. New edition of On Liberty now lists Harriet Taylor as co-author.

3. The popularity of AI writing (NYT).

4. St Nicholas Cabasilas Institute For Orthodoxy & Liberty.

5. Is proportional representation working in the Netherlands?

6. Africa’s growth euphoria?

7. Did Canadian happiness plummet?

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Chuck Norris, RIP

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Proton Mail Shared User Information with the Police

404 Media has a story about Proton Mail giving subscriber data to the Swiss government, who passed the information to the FBI.

It’s metadata—payment information related to a particular account—but still important knowledge. This sort of thing happens, even to privacy-centric companies like Proton Mail.

SpaceX launches 25 Starlink satellites on Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg SFB

File: A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket stands in launch position at Space Launch Complex 4 East (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base at sunset. Image: SpaceX

Update March 20, 6:14 p.m. EDT (2214 UTC): SpaceX adjusted the T-0 liftoff time.

SpaceX launched its 30th batch of Starlink satellites this year with a Friday afternoon launch of a Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East happened at 2:51:49 p.m. PDT (5:51:49 p.m. EDT / 2151:49 UTC). The rocket will fly on a southerly trajectory upon leaving the launch pad. The Starlink 17-15 mission carried 25 Starlink V2 Mini Optimized satellites to low Earth orbit.

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1100. This was its fourth launch after previously flying the NROL-105 mission and two batches of Starlink satellites.

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1100 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You’ positioned in the Pacific Ocean. This was the 185th landing on this vessel and the 589th booster landing for SpaceX to date.

Rocket Report: Canada makes a major move, US Space Force says actually, let's be hasty

Welcome to Edition 8.34 of the Rocket Report! The most important significant news this week, I believe, is the decision by Canada to make a serious investment in launch infrastructure at a spaceport in Nova Scotia. Tensions have risen between the United States and Canada of late (for reasons which are baffling to this author, who has always had an affinity for the nation to our north), and as a result Canada is seeking launch independence. This is an important start, but it will require a sustained, long-term commitment to really develop a flourishing launch industry.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Canada makes major commitment to space launch. The country's leading minister of national defense, David J. McGuinty, announced on Monday a $200 million investment in "core infrastructure" for a spaceport in Nova Scotia. The investment is a 10‑year, $200 million agreement to lease a dedicated space‑launch pad that will serve as the central foundation for a multi-user spaceport near Canso, Nova Scotia. The facility is operated by Maritime Launch Services.

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PS 205: A brief address to my elementary school alma mater, about science in grade school

 A few weeks ago I was surprised to receive this email from a teacher at the elementary school that I attended, PS 205, in the New York City borough of Queens:

"Dear Mr. Roth,

I am a teacher at The Alexander Graham Bell School, PS 205 in Bayside, NY.

This is my 29th year teaching at this school and it is still an amazing school where children acquire the skills to blossom as adults!

It is my understanding that you are a graduate of this school.

We are holding a Career Day on Friday, March 6, 2026.

It would be wonderful if you could participate in some way, whether in person, zoom pre-recorded video or by another method.

As a Nobel Prize winner, this would be very inspiring for our students.

Please let me know if you would like to be part of this awesome event."

 

After some further correspondence, I sent a video greeting of a bit over a minute.  Here's the transcript:
 

 Transcript:

"Hi PS 205!  I hear that you’re having career day today.


  Mr Blum asked me to say a few words about how my career began to take shape when I was a student at PS 205, way back before your parents were born. I was a PS 205 student from 1957 to 1962, and it was in those years that I started to think about becoming a scientist.


In 1957, when I started school, the Sputnik satellite was launched by Russia, and in 1961 the first American astronaut, Allan Shepherd, rocketed into space. So science was in the news.  My big brother Ted (who was also a PS 205 student, four years older than me) was excited by the idea of becoming a scientist, and that made me excited too. And pretty soon I was entering the school’s annual science fairs, with demonstrations of scientific things.


When I grew up I did become a scientist, a social scientist.  I’m  an economist, which allows me to study how we humans coordinate and cooperate and compete with each other, in ways that have made us, on average, live longer and healthier lives. In fact one of the things I have worked on is to help doctors organize how more people can get kidney transplants if they need them, which helps them live longer and healthier lives.

Science can be a lot of fun.  In 2012 I won the Nobel Prize in Economics, which means I got to go to a big celebration of science and literature in Sweden, which almost everyone in that country watches on television. It’s sort of like their Super Bowl.

I can only imagine the things that you will do as you grow up. It will be an adventure."

A Danish Fix for U.S. Mortgage Lock-in

In the Danish mortgage market every mortgage is backed by a corresponding bond. Thus, if a home buyer takes out a 500k mortgage at 3% interest, a bond is issued that pays the lender 3% interest on 500k. I’ve written about this system several times before. It has two distinct advantages.

  • The correspondence principle means that mortgage banks don’t bear interest rate risk but instead specialize in evaluating credit risk (the risk that the borrower won’t pay). Deep markets rather than banks take on the interest rate risk. This makes the Danish system very stable.
  • Mortgages can be pre-paid by buying the corresponding bond at market rates and extinguishing it. If a Danish borrower takes out a 500k mortgage at 3% interest and then rates rise to 6%, for example, the value of that mortgage falls to $358k and the borrower can buy the corresponding bond, deliver it to the bank, and, in this way, extinguish the loan.

In the US, a mortgage can be pre-paid only at a par. As a result, if interest rates rise, home owners don’t want to move because moving would require them giving up a 3% mortgage and replace it with say a 6% mortgage. This is called the lock-in effect. Lock-in can be quite severe. Fonseca and Liu find:

Using individual-level credit record data and variation in the timing of mortgage origination, we show that a 1 percentage point decline in the difference between mortgage rates locked in at origination and current rates reduces moving by 9% overall and 16% between 2022 and 2024, and this relationship is asymmetric. Mortgage lock-in also dampens flows in and out of self-employment and the responsiveness to shocks to nearby employment opportunities that require moving, measured as wage growth within a 50- to 150-mile ring and instrumented with a shift-share instrument.

What about in Denmark? The Danes definitely take advantage of the opportunity to buy-back. Part of this is due to tax advantages but those are just a transfer. More importantly, Danes don’t get locked in. A new paper by Berger, Jeong, Marx, Olesen, and Tourre compares mobility across Denmark and the US:

We study Danish fixed-rate mortgage contracts, which are identical to those in the United States except that borrowers may repurchase their mortgages at market value. Using Danish administrative data, we show that households actively buy back debt when mortgage prices fall below par and that household mobility is largely insensitive when existing mortgage rates are below prevailing market rates — unlike in the United States, where moving rates fall sharply as rates rise. We develop an equilibrium model that explains these patterns and show that introducing a repurchase-at market option into U.S. mortgages substantially reduces interest-rate-induced lock-in with limited effects on equilibrium mortgage rates.

The last point is especially important because you might wonder whether we are assuming a free lunch? After all, if US borrowers lose when they have to pre-pay at par then lenders surely gain. And if lenders gain on pre-payment then they will be willing to lend at lower rates on mortgage initiation. No free lunch, right? The logic is correct but note that the gain to lenders comes mainly from the relatively small set of households that move despite lock-in so the pre-payment bonus to lenders is quite small. Under the author’s calibrated model, mortgage interest rates in the US would rise by only 18 basis points on average if the US moved to a Danish type system.

In other words, there actually is a free or at least a low-priced lunch because lock-in is bad for homeowners and it doesn’t benefit lenders. As a result, moving to a Danish system would create net benefits.

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How Online Gaming Platforms Are Expanding Digital Entertainment Options

Online gaming platforms have reshaped digital entertainment by offering more than a single type of game. They bring multiple forms of play into one place, giving players greater choice and control over how they spend their time.

The strongest platforms go beyond large libraries, creating environments where players can move between formats, use different devices, and discover features that make each session feel more tailored. From classic table games to live content and social tools, the offering is broader and more refined. As a result, online gaming platforms have become a key part of digital entertainment, keeping players engaged through variety, convenience, and stronger design.

More Genres in One Place

One of the clearest ways online gaming platforms expand entertainment is by bringing multiple game types together in a single destination. Players no longer need to visit several sites or apps to find something that matches their interests. Many platforms now include card games, live tables, slots, puzzle-based titles, and quick mobile experiences under one account.

That variety gives players practical benefits:

  • Easier to switch between short and longer sessions,
  • Different game types suit different moods and times of day,
  • One platform can serve both familiar habits and new interests.

Casino games remain an important part of this broader selection because they give players access to different styles of play within the same platform. Some titles are built around speed and visual energy, while others appeal to players who prefer a more traditional table experience with a familiar rhythm.

Games such as Baccarat highlight why classic formats continue to hold value. Known for its straightforward structure and steady pace, Baccarat offers a more measured style of play that contrasts with faster-paced options. It is also commonly featured in live dealer formats, where real-time gameplay and professional dealers bring added presence to the table.

Its continued inclusion across digital libraries reflects the lasting appeal of casino entertainment that feels polished, recognizable, and easy to place within a wider lineup of table games.

Greater Convenience Across Devices

Accessibility is one of the biggest strengths of modern gaming platforms. Players expect to move between devices without losing progress, settings, or ease of use. In response, platforms now focus more on smooth design across phones, tablets, and desktop systems. This lets players decide when and where they want to play without changing their routine.

That convenience expands digital entertainment because it reduces friction. A player might begin on a computer at home, return later on a phone, and continue with very little interruption. When the transition feels simple, gaming fits more naturally into everyday life.

Clear menus, fast loading times, and strong mobile design also matter. Players have many entertainment options competing for their attention, so a platform must feel efficient from the first screen. Better access isn’t just a technical upgrade. It changes how often players return and how easily gaming becomes part of their daily digital habits.

Live Features Create a Richer Experience

Live content broadens digital entertainment by adding real hosts, real-time pacing, and a more immediate feel than standard automated formats.

A Stronger Sense of Presence

When a session unfolds in real time, the experience often feels less distant. Players are not only watching a screen refresh. They are following an event as it happens. This sense of continuity helps maintain focus throughout the session. That can make even familiar games feel more vivid and more engaging.

More Variety in Mood and Format

Live content also gives players another way to choose how they want to spend their time. Some days may suit quiet solo play. Other moments may feel better with a more interactive format. By supporting both styles, platforms make gaming feel more versatile and more closely connected to the wider world of digital entertainment.

Personalization Helps Players Find Better Options

Online gaming platforms are becoming better at helping players find content that suits their preferences. Personalization tools reduce the effort needed to search through a large library. Instead of scrolling through endless categories, players often see suggested games, recent activity, and recommendations shaped by their habits and interests.

This adds real value because choice only matters when it’s easy to manage. A huge selection can feel overwhelming without some structure. Tailored suggestions make the platform easier to use while still leaving players in control. They can follow recommendations or ignore them, but the overall experience feels more directed.

Personalization also encourages discovery. A player who usually stays with one type of game may be introduced to another option with a similar pace or style. That creates a natural path toward trying something new. In that way, platforms expand entertainment not only by offering more content, but by making it easier for players to notice and explore what suits them best.

Why Players Have More to Explore Than Ever

Online gaming platforms are expanding digital entertainment by offering more than access to games. They combine variety, device convenience, live content, personalization, and social features in one connected space, giving players greater flexibility and more ways to stay engaged.

The shift is not just in the number of titles, but in the quality and range of what’s offered. Players can move between formats, use different devices, and find options that better match their preferences, making these platforms feel more complete. As digital habits evolve, players will continue to value depth, clarity, and ease of use. The platforms that stand out will be those that treat entertainment as adaptable, shaped not just by content, but by how smoothly players interact with it.

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Bitch: a history

Black and white photo of a policeman observing a women’s protest with signs like “All Women Are Beautiful”

The word can morph from noun to verb to adjective, from dog to human, from female to male. What will it do next?

- by Karen Stollznow

Read on Aeon

Politics Chat, March 19, 2026

Politics Chat, March 19, 2026

March 19, 2026

After yesterday’s revelation that the Department of Justice (DOJ) is blocking the release of a memo related to a Drug Enforcement Agency investigation into sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and 14 co-conspirators, Attorney General Pam Bondi added more evidence to the idea that the DOJ is engaged in covering up the relationship between members of the Trump administration, including President Donald J. Trump himself, and Epstein.

On March 4, 2026, five Republicans joined the Democrats on the House Oversight Committee to agree to subpoena Bondi to testify before it under oath about how the DOJ handled the release of the Epstein files. Committee chair James Comer (R-KY) issued the subpoena on March 17, requiring Bondi to appear before the committee on April 14. Kyle Stewart and Kyla Guilfoil of NBC News reported yesterday that a DOJ spokesperson said the subpoena was “completely unnecessary” and said Bondi “continues to have calls and meetings with members of Congress on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which is why the Department offered to brief the committee.”

Yesterday, March 18, Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche appeared at that “briefing,” a closed-door hearing before the committee in which they were not under oath. Democrats asked repeatedly if Bondi intended to comply with the subpoena; she refused to commit. When Summer Lee (D-PA) asked Comer if he would compel Bondi to comply and hold her in contempt if she doesn’t, Comer told her she was “bitching.”

Ultimately, the Democrats walked out of the briefing. Talking to reporters, Representative Maxwell Frost (D-FL), who has been key to untangling the released Epstein files, said: “[T]o me, it’s very clear that the purpose of this entire fake hearing, this fake deposition, is the attorney general trying to weasel herself out of sitting in front of us under oath, under a bipartisan subpoena…. We asked her multiple times, ‘Are you going to come and speak with us under oath?’ She would not say yes.”

Frost pushed back on Republican colleagues who argued that the briefing should be enough. “We want her under oath because we do not trust her. Why don’t we trust her? Because she’s a liar.” He noted that in the recent hearing before the House Judiciary Committee about the files, Bondi’s documents revealed the DOJ is keeping track of what documents members of Congress are reading. He also noted the DOJ has put up documents related to Trump only when investigators called out that they were missing.

“We want her under oath because we don’t trust her,” Frost reiterated. “We want her under oath because she has shown that she is involved in a cover up…. So we see this for what it is. This is not a briefing; a briefing is when we sit down and we’re getting information from the person giving the briefing. That didn’t happen here. She sat down, they started the clock like a hearing. It’s a hearing. It is a fake deposition, where no one can see what’s going on, with zero transcription, where it’s not on C-Span or anything, and where no one is under oath, and they are allowed to freely lie to members of Congress.”

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel, and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director John Ratcliffe were under oath when they testified yesterday before the Senate Intelligence Committee on “worldwide threats.” Democratic senators focused on the war with Iran. The administration officials refused to say if they had told Trump that the Iranians could well block the Strait of Hormuz if the U.S. struck in the country.

Gabbard tried not to contradict Trump, eliminating from her opening statement that the 2025 strikes against Iran’s nuclear enrichment program had “obliterated” it and that the country had not started the program up again, for example. When asked why she didn’t read that portion of her opening statement, she said she realized her statement was running long.

Asked by Senator Angus King (I-ME) if reports that Russia is sharing intelligence with Iran are true, Gabbard seemed to try to hide that information, saying, “[I]f there is that sharing going on…, that would be an answer that would be appropriate for a closed session.” King pointed out that this report is in the public press, so it’s not a secret. Again he asked her if it is occurring. Again she answered: “[I]f it is occurring, that would be an answer appropriate for a closed session.” She continued: “What I can tell you is that according, um, to the Department of War, uh, any support that Iran may be receiving is not inhibiting their operational effects.”

King responded: “Okay, that’s sort of the first cousin of a yes.”

Asked by Senator Jon Ossoff (D-GA) if the intelligence community assessed that Iran posed an “imminent threat,” Gabbard said “the only person who can determine what is and is not an imminent threat is the president.” In fact, Ossoff pointed out, it is “precisely” the job of the intelligence community to make such a determination, and he established that the intelligence community did not assess that Iran posed an imminent threat to the U.S. before Trump struck it. Ossoff called Gabbard out for “evading a question because to provide a candid response to the Committee would contradict a statement from the White House.”

In response to questioning by Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR), FBI Director Patel admitted that under Trump, the government has been buying information on Americans from private companies, buying location data derived from internet advertising. Wyden noted that in 2023, FBI director Christopher Wray testified that the FBI did not buy that information, although it had done so in the past.

Asked if the FBI was still using that policy and if he would commit to keep the FBI from buying that data, Patel answered: “We do purchase commercially available information that’s consistent with the Constitution and the laws under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and it has led to some valuable intelligence for us.”

As Robert Mackey of The Guardian explains, if law enforcement officers want to get location data directly from cell phone companies, they have to go to a judge for a warrant. But government agencies are trying to get around the Fourth Amendment requirement for those judicial warrants by buying that information directly from private data brokers.

Wyden has always strongly opposed surveillance of Americans. He posted: “Kash Patel refused to deny that the FBI is buying up Americans’ location data. This is a shocking end run around the 4th amendment and exactly why we need to pass real privacy reforms NOW.”

Concerns about data privacy have been heightened since March 10, when Meryl Kornfield, Elizabeth Dwoskin, and Lisa Rein reported in the Washington Post on a whistleblower complaint filed in January saying that a former employee of the Department of Government Efficiency claimed he had taken two highly restricted databases of information about U.S. citizens from the Social Security Administration, where he had unrestricted access, and that he planned to take them to a government contractor. Those files included the Social Security numbers, birth dates, place of birth, citizenship, race, ethnicity, and parents’ names of more than 500 million living and dead Americans.

According to the whistleblower, the person with the files said he needed help transferring the data from a thumb drive to a personal computer in order to “sanitize” the data before using it at his new job. When another colleague refused to help, citing concern about breaking the law, the person with the information allegedly said he expected that Trump would give him a pardon if he needed it.

In January, Kornfield reported in the Washington Post that after another whistleblower complaint, the administration admitted to a court that the Social Security Administration had discovered that a DOGE employee had entered into a secret agreement with a political group, promising to share Social Security data in order to overturn election results in certain states. Kornfield reported that the SSA also acknowledged that DOGE employees had used an unofficial third-party service to share data with each other and that the SSA had been unable to access it.

University of Virginia privacy law expert Danielle Citron told Kornfield she was “flabbergasted.” “If that information is shared willingly and knowingly and they are sharing without the reason they collected it, it’s a violation of the Privacy Act.”

At the time, the top Democrat on the House Social Security subcommittee, John B. Larson of Connecticut, and the Ways and Means Committee’s ranking Democrat, Richard E. Neal of Massachusetts, said that the DOGE “appointees engaged in this scheme—who were never brought before Congress for approval or even publicly identified—must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law for these abhorrent violations of the public trust.”

A DOJ official told Kornfield then that the department was not currently investigating DOGE. The Social Security Administration inspector general is investigating the new whistleblower complaint.

Yesterday Noah Robertson, Jeff Stein, and Riley Beggin of the Washington Post reported that the Pentagon under Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has asked the White House to approve a request for more than $200 billion to fund the Iran war. Hegseth confirmed the request today, explaining: “It takes money to kill bad guys.”

Notes:

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/pam-bondi-subpoenaed-testify-epstein-files-house-oversight-committee-rcna261779

https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/03.17.2026-Subpoena-Cover-Letter-Bondi-FINAL.pdf

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/democrats-walk-pam-bondi-briefing-epstein-files-subpoena-compliance-rcna264219

https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/tulsi-gabbard-kash-patel-senate-intelligence-committee-hearing/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/18/pam-bondi-epstein-briefing-democrats

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/watch-live-gabbard-ratcliffe-and-patel-testify-on-worldwide-threats-in-senate-intelligence-hearing

https://www.ossoff.senate.gov/press-releases/sen-ossoff-presses-director-of-national-intelligence-on-imminent-threat-posed-by-iran-fulton-county-raid/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/18/kash-patel-fbi-location-data

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/01/20/doge-social-security-data-privacy-act/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/03/10/social-security-data-breach-doge-2/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/18/iran-cost-budget-pentagon/

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/19/hegseth-iran-war-budget.html

X:

Acyn/status/2034401237567971541

Bluesky:

wyden.senate.gov/post/3mhdzbj5o2c2m

atrupar.com/post/3mhdssbtm7j2y

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SQLAlchemy 2 In Practice - Chapter 1 - Database Setup

Welcome! This is the start of a journey which I hope will provide you with many new tricks to improve how you work with relational databases in your Python applications. Given that this is a hands-on book, this first chapter is dedicated to help you set up your system with a database, so that you can run all the examples and exercises.

This is the first chapter of my SQLAlchemy 2 in Practice book. If you'd like to support my work, I encourage you to buy this book, either directly from my store or on Amazon. Thank you!

South African safari photo by Holly Cowen

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Restless Kīlauea Launches Lava and Ash

The heat signature from an eruption at Kilauea glows yellow and orange in the volcano’s summit crater.
March 10, 2026

Kīlauea has entered its second year of episodic activity after reawakening in December 2024. Since then, the Hawaiian volcano has gone through dozens of bouts of lava fountaining, each lasting several hours to several days.

Activity ramped up once again on March 10, 2026, for episode 43 of the eruption. From approximately 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. local time that day, lava spewed from two active vents on the southwest side of Halema‘uma‘u Crater, adding to the ever-thickening layer of fresh basaltic rock in the summit caldera. The flareup also featured the highest lava fountains of the current eruption, estimated at 1,770 feet (540 meters). Meanwhile, ash and other airborne debris fell on communities up to 50 miles (80 kilometers) away.

About 4 hours after fountaining subsided, the Landsat 9 satellite passed over the Island of Hawai‘i. This image shows shortwave infrared and near-infrared data, acquired with the satellite’s OLI (Operational Land Imager) at 10:20 p.m. local time on March 10 (08:20 Universal Time on March 11), revealing heat emanating from the still-sizzling lava. That information is layered over a composite of daytime Landsat images and a digital elevation model.

An estimated 16 million cubic yards (12 million cubic meters) of lava erupted during the episode, according to the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO), bringing the total volume erupted across all episodes since December 2024 to close to 325 million cubic yards (250 million cubic meters). Over the same period, the depth of lava in the crater has increased by about 300 feet (90 meters).

While lava remained confined to the summit area, other erupted material traveled much farther. Images captured by satellites orbiting over the area during the daytime showed a volcanic plume drifting northeast from the vents. Volcanic gas and ash reached a maximum height in the atmosphere of more than 30,000 feet (9,100 meters) above sea level, the HVO said. The aviation color code was elevated to red during the eruption, and several flights at the airport in Hilo were canceled, according to news reports.

Volcanic fragments up to several inches in diameter fell along the north rim of the caldera and in adjacent communities. The hazards and accumulation of debris caused the temporary closure of Highway 11 and the evacuation of visitors from parts of Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. Smaller particles were carried farther: people reported ash and Pele’s hair falling tens of miles to the north and east of Kīlauea, including in Hilo, Keaʻau, and other communities on the coast. Volcanic debris is an eye, skin, and respiratory irritant, the HVO warned, and it may affect water quality for those using rainwater catchment systems.

NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Lindsey Doermann.

References & Resources

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Consumers vs. mates as a source of selection pressure

Evolutionary biology is one attempt to explain the nature of living beings. In that framework there is a difference between individuals and genes.  If a practice increases the chance that genes will be passed along, it may evolve and be passed along, whether or not it serves either individual or collective self-interest.

To give a simple example, some women may prefer “cads.”  Those men, by definition, will sleep around, but possibly their sons will sleep around too.  The woman’s genes may thus spread more widely, and women who prefer cads may not disappear from the gene pool, even though the cads are bad for them.

You might ask whether corresponding mechanisms apply to the evolution of AI models.  If I prefer an OAI model to DeepSeek for instance, that will help to spread OAI models through the AI population.  OAI will have more revenue, and it will produce more output of what is succeeding in the market.  Furthermore my choice of model may influence others to do the same, and it may help create and finance surrounding infrastructure for that model.

Will I buy the next generation of OAI models?  Well yes, if the first one pleased me.  The model “reproduces” and sustains itself if I, as a consumer, am happy with it.  One obvious incentive is toward usefulness, another is toward sycophancy.  We already see these features realized in the data.  There is nothing comparable, however, to the “cads incentive” in human life.

One potential problem comes if individuals are not the only potential buyers.  Let us say the military also purchases AI models.  The motives of the military may be complex, but at the very least “wanting to kill people” (whether justly or not) is on the list of possible uses.  Models effective for this end thus will be funded and encouraged.

My model of the military is that, above and beyond efficacy, they value “obedience” and “following orders” to an extreme degree, including in their AI models.  There will thus be evolutionary pressures for those features to evolve in the AI models of the military.

To be sure, not all orders are good ones.  But in this case the real risk is from evil humans, or deeply mistaken humans, not from the tendencies of the AI models themselves.

So my view is that the selection pressures for AI models are relatively benign, noting this major caveat about how evil humans may develop and use them.

If the biggest risk is from the military models, it might be good for the consumer sector of AI models to grow all the more, as a relatively benevolent counterweight.

Are financial sectors AI models going to evolve more like the consumer models or the military models?

Here are some related remarks from Maarten Boudry, and I also thank an exchange with Zohar Atkins.

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Heat the Southwest; Fire Weather in the Central U.S.; Kona Low Impacting Hawaii

Spiral NGC 1300 and elliptical NGC 1297 are galaxies that Spiral NGC 1300 and elliptical NGC 1297 are galaxies that