Yes, I will be doing a Conversation with her. Here is Wikipedia:
Kimberly D. Bowes (born 1970) is an American archaeologist who is a professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. She specializes in archeology, material culture and economics of the Roman and the later Roman world. She was the Director of the American Academy in Rome from 2014–2017.[2] She is the author of three monographs…
While she is continuously focused on the archaeology and material culture of the Roman and later Roman worlds, her research interests have shifted from late antiquity and the archeologies of religion and elite space to historical economies with a distinct focus on poverty and the lived experience of the poor. Her forthcoming study on Roman peasants in Italy reflects a greater attention to non-elites in the studies of Roman archaeology and economic history and a shift in her methodology, integrating archaeological and scientific data, anthropological theory and historical economics become.
I am a big fan of her new book Surviving Rome: The Economic Lives of the Ninety Percent. So what should I ask her?
The post What should I ask Kim Bowes? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Tory Bruno, a veteran engineer and aerospace industry executive, has resigned from the top job at United Launch Alliance after more than a decade competing against the growing dominance of SpaceX, the company announced Monday.
The news of Bruno's sudden resignation was unexpected. His tenure was marked by a decline in ULA's market share as rival SpaceX competed for and won ever-larger US government launch contracts. More recently, Bruno oversaw the successful debut of ULA's Vulcan rocket, followed by struggles to ramp up the new rocket's launch cadence.
Bruno had a 30-year career as an engineer and general manager for Lockheed Martin's ballistic missile programs before taking over as president and CEO of United Launch Alliance in August 2014. He arrived as SpaceX started making inroads with its partially reusable Falcon 9 rocket, and ULA's leading position in the US launch market looked to be in doubt.
For the better part of two months last year, most of us had no idea how serious the problems were with Boeing's Starliner spacecraft docked at the International Space Station. A safety advisory panel found this uncertainty also filtered through NASA's workforce.
On its first Crew Test Flight, Boeing's Starliner delivered NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to the space station in June 2024. They were the first people to fly to space on a Starliner spacecraft after more than a decade of development and setbacks. The astronauts expected to stay at the ISS for one or two weeks, but ended up remaining in orbit for nine months after NASA officials determined it was too risky to return them to Earth in the Boeing-built crew capsule. Wilmore and Williams flew back to Earth last March on a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft.
The Starliner capsule was beset by problems with its maneuvering thrusters and pernicious helium leaks on its 27-hour trip from the launch pad to the ISS. For a short time, Starliner commander Wilmore lost his ability to control the movements of his spacecraft as it moved in for docking at the station in June 2024. Engineers determined that some of the thrusters were overheating and eventually recovered most of their function, allowing Starliner to dock with the ISS.
It turns out that few believe Donald Trump’s insistence that the economy is doing well for most people – any more than those same voters turned on Joe Biden and Kamala Harris a year ago.
Trump’s shouted, rat-a-tat presentation of defense economy storytelling in a presidential address this week fell flat, despite his exhortation of favored, cherry-picked economic numbers that he insisted tell a better record than what you and I experience in the supermarket, looking for jobs or housing, or clearly face in rising utility and health costs.
But then so are his claims about why Venezuela deserves to be punished, or whether millions will lost Obamacare coverage, or that everyone being picked up randomly by border agents is a criminal in hiding.
The biggest potential growth industry right now may be fact-checking.
Our legacy-come-to-fruition is that too many people don’t want to believe anything beyond their personal experience – whether in economics, vaccine safety, perceived dangers from transgender care and distaste for undocumented immigration or “weaponization” of justice against preferred candidates. Even more want news coverage that matches their pre-conceived notions about their ideological side, particularly on prices, jobs and consumer confidence.
At end of year, Trump seems to be flailing to persuade voters that he even understands the complaints, never mind coming up with useful solutions. So he turns ugly about culture issues that are easier to digest and one-off schemes to send out checks to troops from the taxes we already paid.
It’s useful to note that even when there are “facts,” – inflation and jobless numbers emerged this week – the government’s manipulation of how to count, when to count, and delayed or hidden information makes any assertion these days hard to accept at face value.
The long-promised release of the Jeffrey Epstein files seems to have backfired on the Trump administration, which sought to hold them until a congressional revolt forced their hand, and now are responding with a broad blackout pen that makes even the illegally delayed releases less than useful. Though we know Trump is mentioned repeatedly, we almost nothing of his presence in the released documents.
On prices, polling and public reaction are showing that Trump has lost trust and credibility.
Trump’s decision to offer rapid-fire presentation of his favored facts have trouble lining with lived experience. Gas prices dropped precipitously over a year ago though no one can find under $2 a gallon gas at any gas station and heating oil is up 9 percent, egg prices declined after passage of a bird flu and government infusion of a billion dollars in eggs imports, and “housing” costs will decline shortly because borrowing costs may be forced downward without reference to availability or the cost of rent and home ownership while jobs are falling.
The result is being described mostly in partisan political terms. Trump’s chosen blindness to “affordability” is seen as a fatal political blow that will result in a change in congressional majority next November, for example, or eating away now at his influence to dictate strategies foreign and domestic.
Fox News presented the Trump speech as if it were indisputable, though there were televised critics; Breitbart praised checks to military troops as a wonderful idea despite its predictable inflationary result and misuse of funds meant for military housing. Most mainstream outlets pointed out the gaps between what Trump says and what the various official and unofficial market surveys and voter polls say about the economy.
What we need, of course, is not more political cheerleading and more political spin. What we need are consistent measures of various economic trends that arrive on time and are useful for comparisons of the same measures over time. The Trump administration’s consistent strategy in economics and tariffs, immigration and crime, justice prosecutions and Homeland Security operations is to undercut, cancel and hide facts to make it more difficult to make useful comparisons – whether month to month or against previous presidential terms.
So, Trump simply asserts as true whatever he wants, whether it is about miracle cures for asthma and communicable disease, airline traffic, guns or environment. The same government that cannot count how many deportees actually had criminal records is now telling us what to believe about inflation and high prices that is not observable.
If he is only handed briefings pre-screened for spin, perhaps it’s no wonder he airs what comports with his autocratic choices.
That Trump lacks the wherewithal to question what he is handed and only has voice to insist is a bad quality for a leader.
“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.
The post Even Trump Backers Don’t Believe appeared first on DCReport.org.
1. Does AI weaken the Lucas critique? And a comment from Benjamin Manning.
3. Heritage Foundation is falling apart.
4. Kalshi Research, new arm of the company devoted to research on prediction markets.
5. Travel notes from a visit to Mecca.
6. Palmer Luckey on UAPs. I am not persuaded by his explanation, but clearly he (unlike most of you) has seen the data.
7. Russian billionaire has at least one hundred children (WSJ).
8. Jason Furman on the new economic data (NYT).
9. New Substack on abundance and growth.
The post Tuesday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
After the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) releases the monthly existing home sales report, I pick up additional local market data that is reported after the NAR. This is the final look at local markets in November.There is much more in the article.
There were several key stories for November:
• Sales NSA are down 0.5% YoY through November, and sales last year were the lowest since 1995!
• Sales SAAR (seasonally adjusted annual rate) have bounced around 4 million for the last 3 years.
• Months-of-supply is above pre-pandemic levels.
• The median price is up 1.2% YoY, and with the increases in inventory, some regional areas will see further price declines - and we might see national price declines sometime in 2026.
The median price is up 1.2% YoY, and with the increases in inventory, some regional areas will see further price declines - and we might see national price declines sometime in 2026.
Sales averaged close to 5.42 million SAAR for the month of November in the 2017-2019 period. So, sales are about 24% below pre-pandemic levels.
...
In November, sales in these markets were down 6.5% YoY. Last month, in October, these same markets were up 2.3% year-over-year Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA). The NAR reported sales were down 7.0% YoY in November, very close to this market sample.
Important: There was one fewer working days in November 2025 (18) as in November 2024 (19). So, the year-over-year change in the headline SA data was more than the change in NSA data (there are other seasonal factors).
...
More local data coming in January for activity in December!
Links for you. Science:
The effect of shingles vaccination at different stages of the dementia disease course
Considerations and perspectives on phage therapy from the transatlantic taskforce on antimicrobial resistance
A Troubling Rise in the Grisly Trade of a Spectacular African Bird
Upside-Down Skull Reveals That Neanderthal Noses Lacked Special Traits to Deal With Cold Air
COVID-19 mRNA Vaccination and 4-Year All-Cause Mortality Among Adults Aged 18 to 59 Years in France
While Scientists Race To Study Spread of Measles in US, Kennedy Unravels Hard-Won Gains
Other:
Hey, Does Anyone Want to Talk About Donald Trump’s Infirmities?
The Married Scientists Torn Apart by a Covid Bioweapon Theory
Joe Lonsdale Calls For Public Hangings (this might end up in a policy place he didn’t expect…)
I Wanted to Surprise My Family on Thanksgiving. ICE Deported Me Instead. How the Trump administration turned a college freshman’s life upside down.
Donald Trump’s Statue Removed in Texas Museum as Visitors Kept Hitting It
Mom of Karoline Leavitt’s nephew rejects White House narrative of her ICE arrest
Embattled Planned Parenthood Affiliate CEO Wanted to Halt Abortions. Sources level new allegations against Planned Parenthood Southeast interim CEO Mairo Akposé, who remains in her role after an investigation they call a “farce.”
Pardon the Corruption: Trump’s justification for invading American cities and other countries is to reduce the crime he is actively encouraging through his pardons
How a Cryptocurrency Helps Criminals Launder Money and Evade Sanctions
A Judge Just Drew the Line on the Supreme Court’s Terrible “Kavanaugh Stops” Decision
Jaime Harrison on the Disappearing Rural Democrat
Why Do People Feel Like They Are Falling Behind?
Trump’s A.I. Moon Landing
Half of the US Now Requires You to Upload Your ID or Scan Your Face to Watch Porn
The Fentanyl Killing America is from Top Ally India — Not Venezuela
Sin City’s A.I. Evangelists
A desperate Trump puts his racism on full display
The Vaccine Guardrails Are Gone
Is This Former Bravo Star Democrats’ Toughest Critic? The reality TV celebrity turned left-wing podcaster Jennifer Welch is fed up with President Trump. She also expects better from the Democrats. (good commentary from Atrios here)
Donald Trump’s Kennedy Center is showier, emptier and more political
Organized crime is strangling Latin America
The U.S. citizens getting caught in Trump’s immigration crackdown
Trump just pardoned a person responsible for more American deaths than Bin Laden
Trump’s latest anti-immigration push echoes the nativism of the 1920s
Why conservatives are obsessed with this bad college essay
Trump lashes out at Cuellar for running again as a Democrat after pardon
Investigation Reveals How Amazon Is Fleecing Public Schools With ‘Algorithm-Driven Pricing’
Why Miami’s Trump backers are clashing with the ‘America First’ wing over Venezuela
Real-world skills could become a requirement for high school graduation in Massachusetts
Tech workers face new H1-B scrutiny as Trump targets ‘censorship’
This release includes preliminary estimates for industrial production (IP) and capacity utilization for both October and November as well as revised estimates for May through September. IP rose 0.2 percent in November after ticking down 0.1 percent in October. On average, IP rose 0.1 percent per month across October and November, the same as the rate of increase in September and a somewhat slower average pace than the past 12 months. Manufacturing output was flat in November after dropping 0.4 percent in October. There were swings in both mining and utilities output over October and November, though, on net, both sectors posted gains. At 101.8 percent of its 2017 average, total IP in November was 2.5 percent above its year-earlier level. Capacity utilization was 76.0 percent in November, a rate that is 3.5 percentage points below its long-run (1972–2024) average.
emphasis added
Click on graph for larger image.Maybe absolutely nothing?
Last week, Matthew Yglesias wrote a ridiculous piece arguing that liberals (liberals is his term) should embrace the oil and gas industries to win votes. In response, Democratic Representative Sean Casten (IL-06), on Bluesky, performed a rapid scheduled disassembly on Yglesias’ piece.
But this post is not about the merits of that reply (though they are very good). At one point in the thread, Casten wrote, “And before team Yglesias responds by saying “yeah, but it’s bad politics to run on climate and energy”… I’d point out that I’ve won 4 elections in a very purple district running on climate and energy. Pro-tip: leadership is possible! You don’t have to be stupid to win!”
At that point chartfucker Lakshya Jain came to Yglesias’ defense with this snotty tweet:

This is essentially a category error by Jain, which isn’t surprising given that he is partly responsible for wasting hundred of millions of dollars on bad strategy for the 2024 election. What is so hilariously stupid about Jain’s statement is, if someone takes controversial stands and still manages to win (this is not moneyball, so WAR doesn’t matter; to quote the Raiders’ former owner, Al Davis, just win baby), that makes him a good politician. He is maximizing the utility of his office, not his electoral margin of victory.
Suppose Democrats passed some really good legislation, and is usually the case, lots of candidates underperformed in the next election, some even lost. Would anyone view that as a failure? Nope.
There are more and more signs that Democrats may come up winners in elections in the near future. In the congressional elections and in state elections in late 2026, and possibly the presidential election in 2028. That’s good, but it has a bad side to it.
Democrats have come up short in being the champions of the people for decades. Not that they should be against the rich, but it is everyone else who need a champion. Democrats held that banner but failed to deliver. It’s the reason someone like Trump could gain a significant following. It’s the reason he is back in the White House despite having tried to overthrow the country.
The entire political fiasco of recent years should not be looked at as something to be blamed on Trump. There will always be people like that will grab the opportunity to try to enrich and empower themselves while damaging anything in their way, if they are allowed to do so. It was the job of Democratic leadership, since they were carrying the banner of champion of the people, to not allow that to happen. They dropped that ball entirely. The fiasco of recent years? It’s the Democrat’s fault.
Democrats needed to learn their lesson from that and make a dramatic change.
There have long been a few champions the party could have followed, like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Now there are a few more Democratic leaders who have started to get serious about a big change or at least are talking that way. There has also been a small degree of greater action for the people generally, as with the fight in Congress to maintain insurance rates in the Affordable Care Act. But the change hasn’t been nearly enough. Not enough for what people really need, and not enough to avoid some future Trump-like fake populist to gain a following again. Not like Ms. Warren would seem to enact given her frequent promotion of steps like creating the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau which are not social programs but would significantly help people.
But now even many Trump voters are being disillusioned with him. Oof! Is that ever a loaded word. How can it possibly be that it has taken things going this far before they finally become disillusioned? And disillusioned is the word. People who have been under an illusion, finally starting to come out of it.
With that disillusionment it looks like Democrats could win some elections. They might now be able to do that without having made any real, substantial change. Leadership may feel the heat is off. No need for big change. That’s very unfortunate.
That sets up the possibility of more of a recurring cycle. Democrats get a turn in the majority in Congress, or possibly win the White House, but are ineffective, and frustratingly so (e.g., Obama). That followed by a backlash that brings MAGA-style Republicans back in charge in Congress, blocking most things that would be good for people generally. Or brings someone similar to Trump in too many ways into the White House. Perhaps J.D. Vance or some other post-Trump MAGA front person.
Democrats need such a shock that it could awaken them to the need to become truly bold, active champions of the needs of the ninety-eight percent. I take that back. I wouldn’t wish for such a shock. They’ve already had one that’s about all the country can handle. One that has darn near destroyed the country. And the leadership still hasn’t really gotten the message of what’s needed. Now if they have some wins and by luck and by default skate past the failures of the last few years without that change it just sets things up for more of the same.
“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.
The post Bad News, Dems off Hook Too Easy appeared first on DCReport.org.
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 4.3 percent in the third quarter of 2025 (July, August, and September), according to the initial estimate released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the second quarter, real GDP increased 3.8 percent.PCE increased at a 3.5% annual rate, and residential investment decreased at a 5.1% rate. The initial Q3 GDP report, with 4.3% annualized increase, was above expectations.
Due to the recent government shutdown, this initial report for the third quarter of 2025 replaces the release of the advance estimate originally scheduled for October 30 and the second estimate originally scheduled for November 26.br />
The increase in real GDP in the third quarter reflected increases in consumer spending, exports, and government spending that were partly offset by a decrease in investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased. ...
Compared to the second quarter, the acceleration in real GDP in the third quarter reflected a smaller decrease in investment, an acceleration in consumer spending, and upturns in exports and government spending. Imports decreased less in the third quarter.
Real final sales to private domestic purchasers, the sum of consumer spending and gross private fixed investment, increased 3.0 percent in the third quarter, compared with an increase of 2.9 percent in the second quarter.
The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 3.4 percent in the third quarter, compared with an increase of 2.0 percent in the second quarter. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 2.8 percent, compared with an increase of 2.1 percent. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9 percent, compared with an increase of 2.6 percent.
emphasis added
Always thought provoking:
Centaurs, Canaries and J-Curves: Pitfalls and Productivity Potential of AI
By Marcus Weldon
"Brynjolfsson occupies a unique position as both a Stanford University professor and the head of the digital economy lab at the Institute for Human Centered AI, which allows him the freedom to pursue analyses that are not compromised by a particular corporate or financial agenda, but are still grounded in economic reality and, at the same time, also account for the human part of the equation. Indeed, one of the primary conclusions of our conversation is that augmentation of human tasks is where the real economic gains are to be found, rather than in replacing human activity by automation, and consequently that, as he puts it, “We need to treat humans as an end and not just a means to an end.” But what is particularly striking is that this seemingly facile and human-validating imperative is anything but that: it is based on hard economic facts and rigorous analyses that are gradually revealed over the course of our conversation."
The above link also takes you to this video:
#########
Erik has been thinking about AI for a long time (even if not as long as the folks I posted about yesterday).
Another excellent post from Samir Varma, this time on the 1991 reforms in India that launched India’s second freedom movement:
Three men you’ve probably never heard of—P.V. Narasimha Rao, Manmohan Singh, Montek Singh Ahluwalia—may be the three most important people of the late 20th century.
Bold claim. Audacious, even. Let me defend it.
Here are the numbers. In 1991, over 45% of Indians lived below the poverty line—roughly 400 million people. By 2024, extreme poverty in India had fallen to under 3%.
That’s 400 to 500 million people lifted out of poverty.
The largest democratic poverty alleviation in human history.
….So there they stood.
The precipice was visible. A Hindu politician from a dusty village in Telangana who spoke 17 languages and wrote novels nobody wanted to read. A Sikh economist from a village that no longer existed, who took cold showers at Cambridge and kept dried fruits in his pockets. Another Sikh economist who’d been the youngest division chief in World Bank history and wrote a memo that would change a country.
Three men. All products of a civilization that absorbs contradictions—that somehow fits Hindus and Sikhs and Muslims and Christians and Jains and Buddhists and Parsis into one impossibly diverse democracy. A civilization where, as I’ve written before, any statement you make is true, AS IS its opposite.
India was bankrupt. The gold was gone. The Soviet model they’d followed for forty years was collapsing in real time. Every assumption that had guided Indian economic policy since independence was being revealed as catastrophically wrong.
The intelligentsia still believed in socialism. The party cadres still worshipped Nehru’s memory. The opposition would scream about selling out to foreign powers. The bureaucracy would resist losing its control. The protected industries would fight to keep their monopolies.
But the three men had something their opponents didn’t: a plan. The M Document—the years of thinking—the technocratic expertise accumulated across decades. They had political cover—Rao’s tactical genius, his willingness to let Singh take the heat while he worked the back channels. They had credibility—Singh’s Cambridge pedigree, Ahluwalia’s World Bank experience, Rao’s decades of political survival.
And they had something else: the crisis itself. The one thing that could break through forty years of socialist inertia. The emergency that made the previously impossible suddenly necessary.
Varma tells the story well. For the full history consult the indispensable The 1991 Project, full of documents, oral histories and interviews.
Hat tip: Naveen Nvn.
The post Three that Made a Revolution appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Oman feels more relaxed than much of the Middle East or Gulf, and vistas in Muscat can include the sea, white alabaster buildings, mountains in the backdrop, and some older castles.
There are plenty of foreigners around, but unlike in much of the Gulf most of the people you see are natives not migrants. English is spoken widely, and is present on most of the signs and menus. Women wear headscarves, but they are not usually veiled. The vibes are friendly and everything feels extremely safe.
Muscat is not quite “the linear city,” but most activity is located on or near one main road which stretches east-west. There is no center of town, and you find yourself going back and forth on that road multiple times a day. The plus is that you see the water and the mountains often. Nonetheless there is a monotony to getting around, and much of the town does not feel walkable.
Frequently you will see a poster of the current Sultan, next to a photograph of the previous Sultan, who ruled for fifty years. Does this dual presentation enhance or limit the credibility of the current Sultan? Was it the intent of the current Sultan, or was he somehow locked into that presentation by the interest groups and supporters of the previous Sultan?
The National Museum is very good, and shows that Oman historically, along with Yemen, has held the role of a great civilization. In fact, Oman drove out the Portuguese and then ruled Zanzibar from 1698 to 1856. That explains why the island has so many Arabic doors and motifs.
Per capita income, PPP-adjusted, clocks in at about 45k, but distribution is uneven and the country does not feel that wealthy. I cannot find a single number for median income, but I suspect it would underrate actual living standards. Even deep into the countryside you will find high-quality homes and roads, indicating that public funds are spent with some efficiency, at least relative to some comparison countries.
Misfat al Abriyeen is a small village, largely vertical, where they still use water and irrigation systems from at least two thousand years ago.
Nizwa is a town of about 80,000, about two hours from Muscat, with a much older and more traditional souk.
When driving around Oman, the Peter Gabriel soundtrack “Passion,” from The Last Temptation of Christ, is effective.
For food, try Persian at Shandiz or grilled fish at Turkish House, or Yemeni or Afghan offerings. There are several restaurants with “Omani food,” but the problem is that they are authentic, not that they are insufficiently authentic. You should try some, much of it is not bad but it is also not the best food in town. At one place they flat outright refused to bring me the dried, salted shark dish. Nor did I wish to order camel meat, which is supposed to be gamey. The soups with meat and barley are good, but basically for Omani food you wish to keep returning to the grilled fish.
Overall, Oman is an underrated travel destination. It is exotic and beautiful and comfortable, all at the same time. The further reaches of the country are renowned for hiking and birdwatching, but perhaps two days in Oman and a one day trip to the countryside is the optimal dose here?
For U.S: and many other citizens, it is easy to enter the country without a visa.
The post Muscat, Oman travel notes appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

In rare interviews, Russians speak candidly about their lives in the presence of war – animated to protect their identities
- by Aeon Video

Medical error kills hundreds of thousands yearly. If AI is sophisticated enough to help, doctors must not stand in the way
- by Charlotte Blease
From Matthew Graham at Mortgage News Daily: Mortgage Rates Hold Steady to Start Holiday-Shortened WeekMortgage rates are tied to movement in the bond market and bonds were close enough to Friday's levels that mortgage rates were essentially unchanged today. This keeps the average lender in the lower portion of the narrow range seen over the past 4 months. [30 year fixed 6.24%]Tuesday:
emphasis added
“People are less weird than they used to be,” claims psychologist Adam Mastroianni. He describes this as “an epidemic of the mundane.”
The strangest thing, he believes, is absence of strangeness. Nobody wants to make waves—or even trickles. Conformity is the flavor of the month, and it tastes the same every month.
We live in a “smoothness society,” explains philosopher Byung-Chul Han. He points to the smooth, rounded contours of the iPhone as a symbol of society’s desire to remove friction. Our phone apps demonstrate the exact same thing. We scroll and swipe with such ease, and anything with complexity, nuance, or resistance is eliminated from consideration.
“The smooth is the signature of the present time,” he claims. Everything from the Brazilian wax job applied to human bodies to the wax coating put on fruits and vegetables aims at the same ideal.
Resistance is futile. Everything must be smooth. Paradise now really is that paved parking lot.
In a world without complexity or resistance, nothing ever changes. Most movies, music, books feel like stagnant rehashes of the same formulas. And that’s intentional.
For the first time in history, fashions don’t change. We don’t change.
Others have noticed this avoidance of anything new or different. Things are designed to blend in, not stand out. Jessica Stillman, writing in Inc., complains about a “blandness epidemic.” Brian Klaas calls it the “surefire mediocre.”
Everywhere you look, the system is serving up more of the same.
It’s not just in our imagination—the “world really is getting grayer.” A researcher recently studied photos of household items going back two centuries. An analysis of the pixels showed a scary collapse in color.
Even the Victorians—often considered as conformists—lived a more color-filled life. We have almost completely abandoned red and yellow and other bright hues in favor a boring black-and-white spectrum.
But what’s most striking is how this descent into grayness has accelerated during the last few years. The most popular color is now charcoal—and at the current rate it will soon account for half of the marketplace.
This runs counter to the mantra of marketing experts, who claim that products need to make a statement and capture the public’s attention.. They say that, but then turn around and launch another gray product into the look-alike marketplace.
In an attempt to counter this, Pantone announced recently that the color of the year in 2026 should be white. Some people complained. Others merely yawned. The shift from gray to white is one more measure of the tedium imposed by today’s tastemakers.
Not long ago, popular colors were striking and changed with regularity. There was a time when avocado was the preferred shade for kitchen appliances. Orange and red had their day. When Monsanto designed a house of the future for Disneyland back in 1957, the kitchen looked like this.
But the real problem isn’t our home decor—it’s the avoidance of risk-taking and the embrace of conformity in our behavior. And even in our inner lives.
People do this for a good reason. It doesn’t take much to stir up the crowd against you.
Just look at recent events. Sydney Sweeney wears jeans in a TV commercial, and people have a meltdown. Cracker Barrel changes its logo, and the anger spreads like a wildfire.
Never before in history have more people blown a gasket over so little. Is there any room for weirdness in this conformist world?
Even as the word diversity is said over and over, the opposite is apparent in almost every sphere of social life. I don’t think it’s coincidence that diversity is proclaimed most often by some of the most conformist corporations on the planet.
That’s the nature of newspeak in our time. Words come to take on an opposite meaning from what they apparently say. I call this the gentleman’s club phenomena—it’s the last place you would go in order to find a gentleman. The name is designed to hide the obvious.
That’s why the same corporations extolling creativity, diversity, and innovation work so hard to kill them. The words are, at best substitutes for reality, and at worst a smokescreen for hiding what’s actually going down.
It’s hardly surprising that the biggest investments right now are all targeted at swallowing and regurgitating the past. This is happening everywhere in the creative culture—with record labels focused on buying the rights to old songs and film studios regurgitating brand franchises from the last century. But even forward-looking tech is doing the same.
A trillion dollars is spent training AI on all the digital data of the past—forcing the bots to digest every book, every song, every image. Even in Silicon Valley, the future will be built on an endless rehash of yesteryear.
“Corporations didn’t intend to make the culture stagnant and boring,” I recently explained. “All they really want is to impose standardization and predictability—because it’s more profitable.”
But the end result is the same: repetition, conformity, and stagnation. Weirdness has been banished from the realm.
So even search engines no longer search. They just serve up an official AI answer—monolithic and smugly confident even when totally wrong—drawing on all this swallowed data from the past.
End of story.
That’s the reality of algorithmic society. it creates an endless information loop—like the snake swallowing its own tail. And a fog of sameness descends upon the land.
But this can’t last forever. Human history teaches us that societies resisting change eventually collapse from sheer inertia. And insurgents show up on the scene to accelerate the process—and bring on something new.
Maybe that will happen in 2026.
We should welcome the triumph of the weird. History books will later call them innovators, but they always start out as weirdos—enemies of normality and promoters of change.
That’s because the weight of a stagnant past eventually stirs up revulsion and rebellion. So the dominance of conformity is only short term. Vitality and change always triumph, sooner or later.
I believe we are approaching a moment of that sort right now. When everything feels too smooth and predictable, change is just around the corner. So be on the lookout for the weird resistance—it just might be our first glimpse of the future.
[Continued from yesterday. P.G.] …six or seven o’clock and so up, and by the fireside read a good part of “The Advice to a Daughter,” which a simple coxcomb has wrote against Osborne, but in all my life I never did nor can expect to see so much nonsense in print. Thence to my Lord’s, who is getting himself ready for his journey to Hinchingbroke. And by and by, after eating something, and talking with me about many things, and telling me his mind, upon my asking about Sarah (who, it seems, only married of late, but is also said to be turned a great drunkard, which I am ashamed of), that he likes her service well, and do not love a strange face, but will not endure the fault, but hath bade me speak to her and advise her if she hath a mind to stay with him, which I will do.
My Lord and his people being gone, I walked to Mr. Coventry’s chamber, where I found him gone out into the Park with the Duke, so the boy being there ready with my things, I shifted myself into a riding-habitt, and followed him through White Hall, and in the Park Mr. Coventry’s people having a horse ready for me (so fine a one that I was almost afeard to get upon him, but I did, and found myself more feared than hurt) and I got up and followed the Duke, who, with some of his people (among others Mr. Coventry) was riding out. And with them to Hide Park. Where Mr. Coventry asking leave of the Duke, he bid us go to Woolwich. So he and I to the waterside, and our horses coming by the ferry, we by oars over to Lambeth, and from thence, with brave discourse by the way, rode to Woolwich, where we eat and drank at Mr. Pett’s, and discoursed of many businesses, and put in practice my new way of the Call-book, which will be of great use. Here, having staid a good while, we got up again and brought night home with us and foul weather. So over to Whitehall to his chamber, whither my boy came, who had staid in St. James’s Park by my mistake all day, looking for me. Thence took my things that I put off to-day, and by coach, being very wet and cold, on my feet home, and presently shifted myself, and so had the barber come; and my wife and I to read “Ovid’s Metamorphoses,” which I brought her home from Paul’s Churchyard to-night, having called for it by the way, and so to bed,… [Continued tomorrow. P.G.]

I just got a new iPhone. I didn’t need a newer version. But my old one was broken in a way that wasn’t easily fixed. So I submitted myself to the hard wheel of planned obsolescence. I’m always happy for ever-improved image quality. Otherwise, for me, it was just a need for a new, undamaged phone. But this is one of the models which Apple tells you very frequently has their AI bundled into the device. Which I’m told is awesome. Or that’s what they’re telling me. A lot. And my sense generally is that Apple is the least over-the-top of the big techs in this regard.
As I’ve been using the new phone, I’ve noticed that the Apple texting app now takes suggested phrases and completing your words to the next level — as in kind of an absurd level.
Of course for the past few years, Gmail has offered you a range of phrases to respond to simple messages. And Gmail and other programs often anticipate your next word. The one part of this I find — I’ll it admit it — sometimes helpful is that I know if I make a general attempt to spell a word more or less right on a small device, the app will usually know what I meant and adjust to the word I intended spelled correctly. Usually. I guess it’s a bit like speaking French. You get the sound of the last syllable in the ballpark and it more or less works.
In any case, for a while I have felt the machine learning growth of anticipated next words or phrases trying to press itself into my intellection. Not barging in perhaps. But not filling any void. A bit aggressive.
When we write, the next word in order often appears in real time — just in time production, if you will. We don’t know just which word we’re going to write until we’re there. Current machine learning is often good enough with the next single word to know a word that could work — not simply one that makes grammatical and logical sense but one of a handful of words that you might have been about to choose. In an English sentence, often a certain progression of words can only be followed by a very small number of words immediately after it and make any idiomatic sense. But it is not necessarily the word I was going to choose or the one that precisely follows my meaning, the way I use words and whatever idiosyncrasies I bring to writing, good or bad. I feel this general and pervasive push to nudge me in the direction of the mean, the most common next word.
I haven’t generally found this to be a problem because I write fluidly and generally fast. I realized in early middle age that I write in a very specific way. I talk in my head and I transcribe those words. And the way I learned this is that I transcribe in a partly phonetic way. So I will occasionally write a word that sounds almost identical to another word that has a totally different meaning when it is spoken in a flow between other words. Listen and you can tell that the actual pronunciation of a word varies quite a bit depending on the words that come immediately before and after. They can be totally different words, ones I’d never mistake for one another when I’m thinking as opposed to transcribing. It looks weird and disconcerting to me (let alone to you) when I read it back with the part of my brain that thinks in conventional English spelling as opposed to phonemes or sounds. In any case, for this reason those next word suggestions seldom have time to register before I’ve written the next word.
But the new Apple chat app with the new hardware (Messages, I think it’s called) doesn’t just suggest next words or simple stuff like “thanks” or “sure” or “sounds great.” It seems to be trying to be anticipating altogether new directions in the conversation. I only just got the phone. So maybe I’m exaggerating a bit based on some limited interactions. But it’s definitely trying to up the ante in a big way. Do I still have a role here? Can we leave to me if I want to suggest lunch? I don’t have any particularly deep think on this other than the pretty obvious, and a general what the actual fuck? The interface seems to coat the letters of the words in a colorful shimmery frost when it wants to nudge me into the shotgun seat and just drive all on its own.
If you’ve read other pieces I’ve written about AI you can probably see where I’m going with this. The iPhone texting overhaul is of a piece with almost everything (not everything but almost) about AI at this moment, which is overwhelmingly a supply- rather than a demand-driven revolution.
They’ve got a lot of it and it’s cool and they want to ship it to market. There are a lot of things machine learning is definitely helpful with. In pre-machine learning terms, correcting my spelling is helpful. I’ve never been a good speller. But spelling has nothing to do with writing or language or communication. It’s purely technical. Proper spelling is an artifact of standardization and fairly recent. Helping me standardize or bring my spelling into line with spelling standardization is great. At a minimum, it limits people annoying me by emailing me to tell me how to spell a word. Same with those little squiggly lines that point out when I’ve probably left out a word; it’s hard to transcribe as fast as I speak in my head. But these other things really aren’t things I need help with or things I think many people even want help with. The direction of all this seems to be to what I guess we might call enslopenize a lot of momentary or not so momentary communication. Things that pop into our heads, where neologisms and slang comes from, the little abbreviations which are so deeply embedded in digital communications.
I could take this in a doleful direction — Silicon Valley force-feeding us AI to lose or get shoved out of the momentary spaces of creativity that makes us human and individual. But that’s not the way I tend to think about stuff. And more importantly, I don’t think that’s generally what’s happening here. I think it’s supply overwhelming demand, which is a very old story with generally predictable results. If there were enough demand in the places where I suspect AI is really powerful — finding patterns in massive troves of data which humans can review, doing calculations in aerial dogfights faster than any human possibly can and whatever other things I can’t think of — they wouldn’t be so pervasively coming up with these silly things that I think most people find annoying. That logic is mathematical in its clarity. Because this stuff isn’t cheap. I’m not a fool. I know there are a lot of things that current machine learning does that are very powerful and very valuable in concrete monetary terms. But as long as there’s this excess capacity driving the tech titans to force-feed me things are either silly or that are just easier to do myself (how much time do I save clicking the option to add ‘I’m’ as opposed to just typing ‘I’m’?), I’ll know there’s a hard economic disconnect in the works.
Elizabeth Lopatto, writing at The Verge:
60 Minutes had already begun promoting the now-censored segment online. Because it was pulled so late, it seems that CBS missed at least one platform for distribution: Canada’s Global TV. Some people used a VPN to watch it; at least one person recorded it, distributing it through an iCloud account.
The segment, which has been reviewed by The Verge, is a little shy of 14 minutes long. It features video of men, chained and bent double, being “paraded in front of cameras, pushed onto buses, and delivered to CECOT,” according to the segment’s narration. One former detainee, who CBS met in Colombia, said he was told he was “the living dead” at CECOT. After trying to seek asylum in the US, he says he was detained by customs and held for 6 months before being deported. He described horrific conditions at the prison, saying he was beaten until he bled and that he was thrown into a wall so hard he broke one of his teeth. He also described sexual assault by the guards. Another interviewed former detainee described what can only be called torture: being forced to kneel for 24 hours, and being put in a dark room, where they were beaten if they moved from the stress position. [...]
Anyway, best of luck to Weiss in playing DMCA whack-a-mole with the video of the story. The segment lives as online samizdat now. Thanks to Weiss’ censorship, it may very well wind up being the most-talked-about CBS News story this year.
There are a bunch of copies on social media, but most are video of the TV broadcast in Canada shot from an iPhone. The Internet Archive, however, has a clean copy that’s a direct screen recording. Watch for yourself.
David Folkenflik, reporting for NPR:
Just a day and a half before it was set to be broadcast, new CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss pulled a planned 60 Minutes investigative segment centering on allegations of abuses at an El Salvador detention center where the Trump administration sent hundreds of Venezuelan migrants last March.
Weiss told colleagues this weekend the piece — planned for Sunday night’s show — could not run without an on-the-record comment from an administration official. She pushed for 60 Minutes to interview Stephen Miller, senior advisor to President Trump, or someone of his stature. That’s according to two people with knowledge of events at the network who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing job security.
The correspondent on the story, Sharyn Alfonsi, condemned the decision in an email to 60 Minutes colleagues on Sunday evening, saying she believed it was “not an editorial decision, it is a political one.” [...] Alfonsi wrote that she and her colleagues on the story had sought comments and interviews from the Department of Homeland Security, the White House and the State Department.
“Government silence is a statement, not a VETO,” Alfonsi wrote in the email. “If the administration’s refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story, we have effectively handed them a ‘kill switch’ for any reporting they find inconvenient.”
It is not surprising in the least bit that Weiss tried to censor a jarring report on Trump’s illegal torture prison in El Salvador. It is, perhaps, slightly surprising how dumb this attempt is. Of course it’s a good principle of journalism to allow the other side of a story to comment or be interviewed. But the idea that the other side can just decline to participate and that means you can’t run the story is like fingers-in-your-ears “I can’t hear you!” playground nonsense. You run the story and say that the they declined to comment.
The decline of CBS as an institution continues.

GREENBELT, MD — For the first time since he was unlawfully deported to El Salvador in March, Kilmar Abrego Garcia appeared in person this afternoon in front of U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland. He is no longer detained by El Salvador, the Justice Department, or Immigration and Customs Enforcement. But as his lawyer pointed out he remains in a “literal double bind,” with a bracelet on one ankle from his criminal case in Tennessee and an ICE bracelet on the other ankle from his immigration case in Maryland.
Xinis is in a bind, too. Congress has largely taken jurisdiction over immigration cases away from federal courts. So after Xinis ordered Abrego Garcia’s release from ICE custody 11 days ago, the administration — in a Kafkaesque way — essentially restarted his immigration case. There is only so much Xinis can do in the narrow context of Abrego Garcia’s immigration case.
To underscore the point, Xinis was very careful not to overstep in court today — twice stating, “I’m not sticking my nose it” — as she delicately asked about the next steps in the parallel immigration case to get her bearings. Abrego Garcia’s attorneys are very mindful of the limits of Xinis’ authority, too, and didn’t force the issue.
Still, Xinis wasn’t willing to wash her hands of the case entirely. Her rationale was practical: Abrego Garcia was deported to El Salvador without lawful authority, and he was held in ICE custody without lawful authority. So she wants to see the government’s purported lawful authority for any future detention of him: Will it seek to detain Abrego Garcia again? Will it try to remove him to a third country? Will it finally allow him to be deported to Costa Rica, where he’s willing to go right now today?
The upshot of the hearing is that she will give the government until Friday to tell her its plans for him and the lawful basis for those plans. “If you’re going to take future action, then tell me what it is,” Xinis told the administration’s lawyers. “Just give it to me.”
Beyond Abrego Garcia’s own fate, this case remains a structural constitutional clash between the executive and judicial branches. The looming question is what consequences, if any, Xinis will impose on the administration for its conduct in defying her orders in the Abrego Garcia cases. We remain weeks or more likely months away from that reckoning.
Xinis was ticked off today about two new infractions by the government. In ICE’s own order releasing Abrego Garcia, his case officer indicated there was a final order of removal for Abrego Garcia, which is the opposite of what Xinis had ruled when ordering his release.
Who told the officer to do this? she asked. When the DOJ lawyers said the case officer was simply doing his best to release Abrego Garcia under the court’s tight deadline, Xinis wasn’t buying it, noting sarcastically that the high-profile case was just “hiding under a mushroom.”
“No one thought to give this order some consideration?” Xinis asked. “That’s a hard pill to swallow.”
She was even more incensed over a recent DOJ filing in the case that asserted she had issued her most recent temporary restraining order in the case ex parte, which in this context meant without notice to the government. The career DOJ lawyer in attendance agreed that the filing was incorrect.
“I’m growing beyond impatient with this happening. So you’ve admitted in open court it’s wrong,” Xinis admonished, adding, “I want to know who wrote that, and I want to know what all four lawyers who signed it were thinking.”
Xinis wasn’t done.
“Make sure it’s factually accurate because it’s getting to the point that we’re going to have a very long hearing in Abrego I,” Xinis said, in an apparent allusion to the contempt of court inquiry still pending in the original Abrego Garcia case, where the administration repeatedly flouted her orders, including the one to facilitate his return from El Salvador.
It was the only time today that the specter of contempt of court was explicitly raised.

Japan’s flagship H3 rocket suffered an issue with its second stage late Sunday resulting in the loss of the Michibiki 5 (QZS-5) navigation satellite.
The post Japan’s H3 suffers second-stage anomaly, QZS-5 satellite lost appeared first on SpaceNews.

Deal deepens contractor’s push into space-based sensing and optical communications.
The post CACI to buy space technology firm ARKA for $2.6 billion appeared first on SpaceNews.

Tory Bruno, the longtime chief executive of United Launch Alliance, is leaving the joint venture for another opportunity.
The post United Launch Alliance chief Tory Bruno resigns appeared first on SpaceNews.

21 December 2025, Čakovec — Genesis Space Flight Laboratories launches its Microgravity Research Rideshare Program, making it easier and more affordable to conduct retrievable experiments in space. From now on, […]
The post Microgravity Research Rideshare Program Launched by Genesis, Experiments from €6K to and from SSO appeared first on SpaceNews.

The time is ripe to end the “Wolf Amendment,” a congressional bar inhibiting civil collaboration between the United States and China in space. The impetus for the law was noble — an attempt to challenge human rights conditions in China and prevent leaks of space-related technology — but in practice the ban harms our security […]
The post It’s time to unburden space cooperation with China appeared first on SpaceNews.

New Mexico — December 22, 2025 — Desert Works Propulsion (DWP) today announced the expansion of its domestic electric propulsion development and testing capabilities to address growing demand for advanced […]
The post Desert Works Propulsion expands U.S. ion propulsion capability through domestic manufacturing partnership and test capacity growth appeared first on SpaceNews.

According to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it’s illegal to discriminate against anyone based on race or sex. That includes discrimination against White men. If your company or your nonprofit or your university or your government agency tries to avoid choosing White men for a job position, you have violated American civil rights law. Every year, including under Democratic administrations, the U.S. government brings cases against employers for discriminating against non-Hispanic White people, and it often wins these cases (Example 1, Example 2, Example 3).
But having a law against racial discrimination doesn’t automatically get rid of it. Those cases are hard to win, they take a lot of time and money to prosecute, and a lot of plaintiffs probably don’t even know they can sue. It’s not clear how many Americans even understand that the Civil Rights Act protects White men in the first place.
As an analogy, the U.S. government has been prosecuting anti-Black discrimination pretty vigorously for decades, but at least as of 2015, some still existed. A meta-analysis of field experiments by Quillian et al. (2017) found that employers in the early 2010s were still around 50% more willing to contact a White-seeming applicant for a job than a Black-seeming one:

(As a side note, the authors did find that discrimination against seemingly Hispanic candidates had fallen since the 1970s, and may have vanished entirely by 2015.)
So the law is not all-powerful. If a bunch of organizations in American society decide to discriminate based on race, the government has limited ability to stop them.
In a recent article titled “The Lost Generation”, Jacob Savage makes a convincing case that discrimination against White men rose significantly in America starting in the mid-2010s, and especially after 2020, especially in universities and the entertainment industry. Some excerpts:
The doors seemed to close everywhere and all at once. In 2011, the year I moved to Los Angeles, white men were 48 percent of lower-level TV writers; by 2024, they accounted for just 11.9 percent…White men fell from 39 percent of tenure-track positions in the humanities at Harvard in 2014 to 18 percent in 2023…
In the aftermath of George Floyd’s death…The New York Times solemnly promised “sweeping” reforms—on top of the sweeping reforms it had already promised. The Washington Post declared it would become “the most diverse and inclusive newsroom in the country.” CNN pledged a “sustained commitment” to race coverage, while Bon Appétit confessed that “our mastheads have been far too white for far too long”…
These weren’t empty slogans, either. In 2021, new hires at Condé Nast were just 25 percent male and 49 percent white; at the California Times, parent company of The Los Angeles Times and The San Diego Union-Tribune, they were just 39 percent male and 31 percent white. That year ProPublica hired 66 percent women and 58 percent people of color; at NPR, 78 percent of new hires were people of color.
“For a typical job we’d get a couple hundred applications, probably at least 80 from white guys,” the hiring editor recalled. “It was a given that we weren’t gonna hire the best person… It was jarring how we would talk about excluding white guys.” The pipeline hadn’t changed much—white men were still nearly half the applicants—but they were now filling closer to 10 percent of open positions…
White men may still be 55 percent of Harvard’s Arts & Sciences faculty (down from 63 percent a decade ago), but this is a legacy of Boomer and Gen-X employment patterns. For tenure-track positions—the pipeline for future faculty—white men have gone from 49 percent in 2014 to 27 percent in 2024 (in the humanities, they’ve gone from 39 percent to 21 percent)…At Berkeley, white men were 48.2 percent of faculty applicants in the Physical Sciences—but just 26 percent of hires for assistant professor positions. Since 2018, only 14.6 percent of tenure-track assistant professors hired at Yale have been white American men. In the humanities, that number was just six out of 76 (7.9 percent).
This is only a tiny portion of the article, which runs to 9000 words. These numbers are a smoking gun in terms of racial and gender discrimination, but Savage also documents plenty of examples where institutions were quite open and explicit about their desire to avoid hiring white men. He also talks to some White men who succeeded in the face of this discrimination, and finds that everyone knew the discrimination was in full force.
I am no lawyer, so don’t take my word for this, but much of what Savage describes seems grossly illegal. Until the Supreme Court’s recent ruling, diversity was an acceptable reason to have racial preferences in university admissions, but to my knowledge it was never an acceptable reason to discriminate in hiring. If anti-discrimination law were easy to enforce, most of these universities and media businesses would be getting slapped with enormous fines (just as many more businesses would have been slapped with fines for discriminating against Black, Hispanic, or Asian people over the years). But anti-discrimination law is very hard to enforce — partly because the burden of proof is so high, partly because people who sue for discrimination risk being personally stigmatized. And so most of the perpetrators are likely to escape scot-free.
Some people have argued that anti-White discrimination is not a big deal, because White men are still doing well as a group. Matt Bruenig has a good post showing that aggregate economic outcomes for White men haven’t really declined in recent years. For example, the percent of young White men who land in the top percentages of the earnings distribution has declined, but only by a small amount:

And the percentage of White men who work in arts and media bounces around, but has stayed around 2.5%:

Bruenig argues that to the extent that it seems that White men are vanishing from various occupations in America, this is due to the shrinking percent of White men in the American population.
Bruenig’s numbers help explain why the problem of discrimination against White men went unnoticed for so long. If you were in an industry or an institution that didn’t have much discrimination against White men, you could look around at wider society and still see White men succeeding at about the same rates as before. For example, I never personally encountered discrimination against White men in grad school — all the White guys I went to grad school with got good jobs, and all the people who ended up with the best jobs were White guys. Nor did I see anything at Stony Brook University or at Bloomberg.
There was thus nothing in my personal life to alert me to the increasing prevalence of discrimination against White men. And as Bruenig notes, the trend hadn’t yet shown up in aggregate statistics. So when I heard a few people start to complain on social media in the 2010s, I didn’t appreciate that anything had changed — especially because the people who complained tended to be the same right-wing types who were complaining about anti-White discrimination in the 2000s and the 1990s. The people who suffered personally from this discrimination — White men in progressive institutions and industries — were the ones who were most afraid to speak up about it.
Nor was I unusual in my slowness to realize that something had shifted. As of 2019, almost no White Americans thought that being White made it harder for them to get ahead, and only a third of Whites said they had ever experienced racial discrimination:


It thus wasn’t until 2020 or 2021, when a flood of credible reporting came out about the new discriminatory trend, and when my friends in the tech industry started to talk openly about it, that I realized that something big had changed.
But Bruenig’s analysis, while praiseworthy for its attention to hard data (unlike much of the discourse around this topic), is not a convincing argument against Savage’s thesis. First of all, the shifts Bruenig documents are small but not trivial — a decrease in the percentage of young White men who make it to the top 10% from 20% to 17% can’t be explained by the shrinking percent of White men in the population. And showing that about the same number of White men work in arts and media over the years doesn’t tell us much about the quality, salary, prestige, or advancement opportunities of the jobs in which they’re working.
The real reason that Bruenig’s analysis shouldn’t mollify us, however, is that we shouldn’t treat aggregate group outcomes as the end-all and be-all of economic fairness.
The capitalist system is remarkably effective at allowing people to succeed in the face of discrimination. Although anti-Black discrimination in audit experiments has remained more or less constant over time, Fryer (2010) shows that in aggregate, anti-Black discrimination explains less and less of the racial gap in outcomes over time — once you control for education levels, racial inequality in the job market went way down in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. And Hsieh et al. (2019) argue convincingly that improved allocation of talent across racial groups has contributed to rising U.S. GDP. Some percent of hiring managers may still be suspicious when they hear a Black-sounding name, but discrimination doesn’t keep Black Americans down nearly as much as it used to.
By the same token, discrimination against White men can be pretty common, especially within certain industries, without keeping White men down as a group. Imagine that instead of quitting because of management changes and a run-in with the Chinese Communist Party, I had been kicked out of Bloomberg for being a White man. I make a lot more money with this Substack than Bloomberg ever paid me. So aggregate income statistics would have actually shown a gain for White men as a group. But I still would have been rightfully resentful, because discrimination would have forced me to go out of my way and take more risks and take a more non-traditional path to success.
(Note: I love Bloomberg, and they never discriminated against me in any way. This example was only for the sake of argument.)
In the same way, lots of American White men may have responded to a wave of discrimination since 2014 by going around the traditional employment system — starting their own businesses, working in non-traditional industries like crypto, and so on. And ultimately, in terms of income, many of them may have turned out fine — so many that the aggregate racial statistics show only a modest change. But those people are still fully justified in being angry at the unfairness of racial discrimination. And even if only a small percentage of White men had their careers destroyed by the wave of discrimination since 2014, that’s still a serious injustice.
This is also why discrimination against White men in academia, the media, or other progressive-dominated spaces is not a remedy for discrimination against Black people and women that still exists in some corners of American society. If half of American industries discriminate against White people and the other half discriminate against Black people, things may balance out at the aggregate group level, but lots of both White and Black Americans will still experience the sting of unfairness from being personally denied jobs they deserve, and from being kept out of the industries they want to work in.
Anti-White and anti-Black discrimination are not like matter and antimatter; they don’t just cancel each other out. An America where every job has racial preferences, and you have to look around for the jobs that favor your race instead of relying on individual merit and trusting the system, would clearly be a dystopia.
Aggregate group outcomes are not enough to make the American system feel fair. If I have my heart set on being a professor but I can’t get an academic job because I’m a White man, the fact that the richest billionaires in America are mostly White men will provide me with exactly zero comfort. People don’t succeed as racial blocs; they succeed as individuals. And fairness has to be provided at the individual level. That’s why laws like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 quite rightly make no reference to aggregate group outcomes. A feeling of individual fairness is what makes our system function.
Notice I said “feeling”. In practice, the widespread perception of fairness is only imperfectly correlated with actual procedural fairness. It’s very hard to tell when you’ve personally been discriminated against, since you only have a sample size of 1. If you get turned down for a job, how do you know how good the other applicants were? If you get fired, how do you know it was because of your race and gender, rather than your job performance, or your cultural fit, or some personal conflict with a coworker? And so on. It’s a difficult signal extraction problem.
Discrimination can’t be eliminated. Instead, our goal should be to preserve trust in the system’s individual fairness. If people believe that the system is unfair, it will drive down trust in institutions and make it harder to provide public goods. One reason the second Trump administration is attacking academic science much more than the first Trump administration did is that Republicans’ trust in scientific institutions fell after 2020:

Some of that was related to Covid, of course, but some was probably due to the increased racial and gender discrimination that Jacob Savage’s article documents. It was not simply a function of right-wing media ginning up hysteria. It was real.
If we want to preserve or rebuild trust in America’s institutions, we have to make the bulk of people believe that those institutions are broadly free of discrimination.
How can that be accomplished? There’s no perfect solution. Even if institutions can be made more race-neutral and gender-neutral, the memory of the period of intense discrimination will persist for a long time. And opportunistic political agitators, amplified by social media, will continue to tell everyone that the system is unfair no matter how much we manage to curb the actual unfairness.
But I think there is one way we can make the system seem more fair, and that’s to aggressively and publicly enforce the law. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 forbids racial discrimination, and in some cases the 14th Amendment does too. So the best solution, I think, is to have lots of high-profile legal victories that make it clear to all Americans that racial and gender discrimination are prohibited in the United States. I wrote about this back in May:
Formal equality under the law does not guarantee actual fairness in society. The law is not all-powerful. But it’s a big loud public signal that says that the system disapproves of unfairness. Therefore, the best remedy for discrimination against White men is simply for White men who feel they’ve been discriminated against to sue, and sue, and sue again.
The alternative to individual fairness under the law is group racial conflict. If Americans decide that individual fairness is dead, and that their interests can only be served by collective racial “power” movements, then we will see the Republican party morph into a White power party, and the Democratic party morph into a “BIPOC” power party.1 Racial bloc politics will be very bad for the country’s future.
America already has good laws that mandate individual fairness. If those laws can be enforced in a very public and unambiguous way, then I think we may still escape the dystopian future of racial conflict and balkanization.
Or should I say, continue to morph, since we’ve already gone somewhat down this road.
According to Navigator Research, a significant number of Americans who voted for Donald Trump in 2024 now regret their choice. As the word cloud above suggests, this regret is largely driven by Trump’s utter failure to deliver on his economic promises.
What did he promise? Most media attention has focused on his claim that he would bring the cost of living way down, starting on “day one.” This claim never made any sense, especially because Trump’s policy agenda — centered on tariffs and mass deportation — was clearly inflationary, not deflationary. And Trump isn’t improving his standing with his reality denial “affordability” tour, which will clearly take the form of multiple speeches in which he demands that Americans reject the evidence of their own eyes and admit that prices are falling, not rising.
But while Trump’s gaslighting on prices is a natural and appropriate target for critics, we shouldn’t forget that the main goal of his policy agenda wasn’t lower prices, it was job creation. Specifically, Trump and his economic advisers claimed — and may even have believed — that they would create lots of manly jobs for manly men. They would revive American manufacturing, they claimed, by unilaterally imposing huge tariffs and thereby breaking all our international agreements (and, whatever the Supreme Court may say, U.S. law). They would create mining and construction jobs, they claimed, by killing renewable energy and gutting environmental protection in order to promote fossil fuels. They would deport millions of undocumented workers which would result, they claimed, in a job boom for native-born workers.
My snark about “manly” jobs isn’t gratuitous. Mike Konczal has an excellent review of the way the MAGA labor market story has failed, in which he emphasizes how regressively gendered Trump’s vision was and is:
I wish I could tell you that the reason people in their twenties can’t find jobs and the reason many of us are likely to be poorer over the next few years was more sophisticated than “we’re going to turn all the girlbosses into tradwives once they see all the manly men at the USA iPhone-screwing factory.” But I don’t think it is.
Let me acknowledge, by the way, that U.S. men are having real problems. But nothing Trump is doing will help.
And even on its own absurd terms, the MAGA jobs strategy has been an abject failure — as abject as Trump’s failure to bring down prices. Here are the current official employment numbers for manufacturing, construction and employment:
Contrary to Trumpist claims that the Biden expansion didn’t create “real” jobs, the economy added a substantial number of jobs in “manly” sectors from 2021 to 2024. Part of this expansion was driven by Biden’s green energy policies, which boosted both construction and manufacturing employment.
Trump has scrapped Biden’s green energy policies in favor of tariffs and fossil fuels. But it isn’t working. Instead, employment in “manly” sectors has fallen since Trump took office. And as Dean Baker points out, there are strong reasons to believe that even these job numbers are overstated, and will eventually be revised down further.
I’ll talk about the failure of Trump’s dirty energy strategy to create jobs on another occasion. For now, let’s talk about why tariffs aren’t reviving manufacturing.
Fundamentally, Trump and those who have his ear, especially Peter Navarro, his trade czar, made two big mistakes. First, they didn’t do the math. Second, they failed to understand the nature of modern international trade.
When I say that they didn’t do the math, I mean that as far as I can tell nobody with Trump’s ear made any effort to estimate how many U.S. manufacturing jobs would be created even if the tariffs had eliminated U.S. trade deficits (which they were never going to do.)
Others, however, myself included, have done the math. (Arithmetic has a well-known liberal bias.) Back in June Robert Lawrence of the Peterson Institute for International Economics did a careful calculation that confirmed but improved on my own back-of-the-envelope estimates: Even a “successful” tariff policy would do little to revive U.S. manufacturing. Lawrence estimated that even if Trump somehow managed to eliminate the U.S. trade deficit in manufactured goods,
the share of workers in production occupations in US manufacturing would increase by just under 0.9 percentage point, from 3.85 to 4.7 percent … the changes in employment with balanced trade would be far too small to produce a labor market that significantly increases the opportunities for men without college degrees or the many places that have not shared in US economic growth over the past five decades.
Moreover, the tariffs have not made a significant dent in the trade deficit. In fact, the deficit was bigger in the first 9 months of 2025 than during the corresponding period in 2024. Why? Because international trade is very different in 2025 from what it was in the days of William McKinley, whose tariffs Trump admires.
In the modern world nations mostly don’t sell each other completed consumer goods. Instead, the majority of trade involves sales of goods that are used to produce other goods. Last year the United States imported slightly less than $1.3 trillion worth of consumer goods plus autos, while importing more than $1.6 trillion worth of capital goods and industrial inputs. What this means in practice is that tariffs, which raise the prices of those capital goods and inputs, raise the production costs of U.S. manufacturers, in many cases making them less competitive with foreign producers.
So Trump’s plan to create manly jobs has, predictably, been a bust — a bust as complete in its way as his failure to reduce prices. The only difference is that in the case of jobs he actually tried to do something. But what he did was counterproductive.
No doubt Trump will continue to give speeches boasting about nonexistent success, telling voters that we have the hottest economy in world history, etc. But his attempt to gaslight the nation about jobs will go no better than his gaslighting on the cost of living.
MUSICAL CODA
I just had my first success using a browser agent - in this case the Claude in Chrome extension - to solve an actual problem.
A while ago I set things up so anything served from the https://static.simonwillison.net/static/cors-allow/ directory of my S3 bucket would have open Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * headers. This is useful for hosting files online that can be loaded into web applications hosted on other domains.
Problem is I couldn't remember how I did it! I initially thought it was an S3 setting, but it turns out S3 lets you set CORS at the bucket-level but not for individual prefixes.
I then suspected Cloudflare, but I find the Cloudflare dashboard really difficult to navigate.
So I decided to give Claude in Chrome a go. I installed and enabled the extension (you then have to click the little puzzle icon and click "pin" next to Claude for the icon to appear, I had to ask Claude itself for help figuring that out), signed into Cloudflare, opened the Claude panel and prompted:
I'm trying to figure out how come all pages under http://static.simonwillison.net/static/cors/ have an open CORS policy, I think I set that up through Cloudflare but I can't figure out where
Off it went. It took it a minute or so but it found exactly what I needed.

Claude's conclusion:
Found it! Your open CORS policy for the
/static/cors/directory onstatic.simonwillison.netis configured through Cloudflare Transform Rules, specifically a Response Header Transform Rule namedstatic.simonwillis.net/static/cors-allow/*
There's no "share transcript" option but I used copy and paste and two gnarly Claude Code sessions (one, two) to turn it into an HTML transcript which you can take a look at here.
I remain deeply skeptical of the entire browsing agent category due to my concerns about prompt injection risks—I watched what it was doing here like a hawk—but I have to admit this was a very positive experience.
Tags: anthropic, claude, browser-agents, cors, ai, llms, generative-ai, chrome, cloudflare, prompt-injection, ai-agents
I’ve only been to Detroit a handful of times and so feel uncomfortable waxing too eloquent about the state of the city. That said, it feels fair to describe Detroit as still quite odd.
The things that you know about – abandoned factories, dilapidated houses and the sprawl – all remain. So too do the efforts to freshen up the place. In the New Year, GM employees will move into the company’s new headquarters located downtown. GM will be occupying part of the Hudson’s Detroit complex, which includes gleaming buildings, a hotel, more offices, retail areas and condos. Hudson’s joins the restored Michigan Central Station as another completed mega project meant to shock Detroit’s economy and vibe back into thriving mode.
This video (available first to our paying subscribers) marks the start of a three-episode Detroit journey in which we’ll explore the city’s technology stalwarts and upstarts and in which we’ll try to give you a real feel for the state of the place. In this first installment, we’re heading to Slate Auto for an exclusive look at the company’s first electric truck factory. Slate has created an affordable, customizable truck that has the internet salivating, although the Trump administration has done little to help the start-up through its tariffs and whacking of EV credits.
The battle for the future of the Republican Party is underway — or at least the battle to determine who will lead it in 2028. As vice president, JD Vance has the inside track, but he knows the field will not clear for him. So he is working hard to articulate a vision, to define himself and the country he wishes to lead. That vision, articulated in a series of speeches and interviews over the last year and a half, is one of naked white supremacy and ethnonationalism.
The good news is that Vance is a terrible messenger for this hateful ideology, and his chances of taking it to the Oval Office are extremely slim. The bad news is that there is clearly a sizable market for it within the Republican Party.
Speaking Sunday at the annual Turning Point USA conference known as “AmericaFest,” Vance had a message for the assembled herrenvolk: White pride is back, baby!
“I refuse to apologize for being white” has long been a mantra of segregationists and Klansmen, an outgrowth of the fear that any sort of equality for racial minorities — legal, economic, educational — by definition meant putting whites in a subservient position, forced to hang their heads and apologize. Equality is perceived to be a reversal of the racial hierarchy: If we’re not in a state of privilege, free to abuse our lessers, then it can only mean we are being abused.
So who exactly has been demanding that JD Vance apologize for being white? Has that ever happened to him, a single time? Of course not. But this is a key element of Trumpism, of which Vance would like to be the heir: You have been humiliated, it says, but I will let you stand tall again. You, white people — and especially white men — have been hounded and oppressed, but those days are finally over.
Vance is aping Trump not just in this message, but in stating it so explicitly. That was one of Trump’s most important political innovations, to take the subtext and make it text. This belief that whites are the only oppressed people is being expressed daily in administration policy and communication, from the remaking of the refugee program to serve only white South Africans to the social media filled with Aryan imagery to the administration-wide push to find injustices committed against whites:
Every vice president dreams of ascending to the top job, and most of them try. When they do, they have an excellent chance of getting their party’s nomination, and a fair shot at becoming president. In the nearly 50 years between the Ford presidency and the second Trump presidency, eight people served as vice president. All but Dick Cheney subsequently ran for president, and among those seven, five became their party’s nominee. (The exceptions were Dan Quayle and Mike Pence. Must be something about Indiana.)
Vance no doubt understands that he won’t be able to clear the field the way a few of those VPs did; the contest for the Republican nomination in 2028 will be fierce and bitter. So he has been articulating a new vision for America, one that seeks to upend everything we thought we knew about Americanness. In particular, it rejects the conception of America as an idea and “American” as a status potentially open to anyone. Instead, Vance argues for a traditional blood-and-soil conception of national identity, familiar to ethnonationalist movements around the world.
He has been making this argument for a couple of years now, most notably in his convention speech in 2024, which used the rhetorical device of his family’s cemetery plot where multiple generations of true Americans are buried; if your family can’t similarly trace its lineage back to at least the Civil War, he implied, you can’t be truly American. And of late, Vance has been blaming every societal problem on immigrants, from high housing costs to limited health care access to antisemitism.
Not that he sees the rampant antisemitism inside the conservative movement as much of a problem. Commenting on the recent controversies around neo-Nazi right-wing influencer Nick Fuentes and the larger question of whether the GOP should be concerned that its ranks are overflowing with people just like him, Vance told a podcast, “If you believe racism is bad, Fuentes should occupy one second of your focus, and the people with actual political power who worked so hard to discriminate against white men should occupy many hours of it.”
That’s his recent innovation: While others on the right have been talking more and more about “heritage Americans,” and you don’t have to think too hard to figure out who is included and excluded from that category, Vance just comes out and says the word “white.”
That nasty little speech to Turning Point was full of dog-whistles and bullhorns. He brought up a candidate “for mayor Mogadishu — wait, I mean Minneapolis. Little Freudian slip there.” The audience cheered and laughed, of course — har har! For the record, people of Somali descent make up about 4% of the population of Hennepin County, where Minneapolis is located (about 50,000 of the county’s 1.3 million residents). The majority of them are native-born Americans, while most of the rest are naturalized American citizens. But for Vance, a city with a significant population of people who came, or whose ancestors came, from the wrong country can not be truly American. And we all know which countries are which; you won’t catch him complaining about, for instance, the German presence in the Texas Hill Country.
Vance wasn’t done after the Mogadishu crack. He said about Rep. Jasmine Crockett, “She wants to be a senator, though her street girl persona is about as real as her nails.” Street girl? Hmm, what could that mean?
He went on to say that “The only thing that has truly served as an anchor of the United States of America is that we have been, and by the grace of God we always will be, a Christian nation.” (Cue frenzied screaming and extended standing ovation.) He did throw non-Christians a bone, however: “I’m not saying you have to be a Christian to be an American. I’m saying something simpler and truer: Christianity is America’s creed.” In other words: We real Americans will let you stay here, but only if you pay fealty to OUR religion.
I have noted often that when they searched for a leader for their party in 2016, Republicans decided that they would rally behind literally the worst human being in America, the walking collection of character flaws known as Donald Trump. Dishonest, ignorant, cruel, petty, narcissistic, bigoted, a tax cheat and a con man and a sexual abuser — how could they have done worse? But in some ways, JD Vance is worse, for one reason. Trump was born this way; Vance decided to become a monster. After going through a series of personal reinventions and name changes, he settled on the most repulsive version of himself, believing that it would bring him the power he has long sought.
There are some problems, however. The first is that his ethnonationalist, exclusionary vision of America runs against everything we’ve been telling ourselves America is about for all our lives. That doesn’t mean it contradicts what America has often been in many ways, but the ideal of America as a place of inclusion holds extraordinary power. And what Vance is offering is therefore deeply un-American. It says that everything that has made our country dynamic and successful ought to be rejected, and it’s just hard to imagine a majority of American voters going for that.
Even more fundamentally, they won’t go for him. Vance is a black hole of charisma, just a personally unappealing figure. It’s a testament to his smarts, his opportunism, and his burning ambition that he has gotten this far. But you can’t become president when people instinctively recoil from you. And if anything, his increasing focus on whiteness will make him even more repellent.
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On average, financial markets respond to the monthly jobs report more dramatically than to any other piece of economic data. In this post I’ll explain why.
Recall that macroeconomics mostly focuses on three issues; inflation, the business cycle and long run economic growth. The first two are largely determined by movements in nominal GDP, that is, by monetary policy. And just as there is headline inflation and core inflation, there is headline NGDP growth and core NGDP growth. Before considering core NGDP, let’s review the concept of core inflation.
Cynics argue that core inflation is a silly concept, as it ignores the prices that consumers care about the most—food and energy. That’s not a good argument, because core inflation is not used to measure consumer welfare; it’s used to ascertain the underlying trend in inflation. Because food and energy shocks tend to be transitory, it turns out that core inflation better predicts future headline inflation than does headline inflation itself.
I’d argue that a similar consideration applies to NGDP. Nominal wages are the most important part of NGDP, because the business cycle is mostly a product of unstable NGDP in a world where hourly nominal wages are sticky. Volatility in NGDP doesn’t have much impact on the business cycle unless it impacts the labor compensation part of NGDP, which is a bit more than half of the total. (A bit over a quarter is capital income, while the remainder is depreciation and indirect business taxes.)
Many people are confused by claims that recessions are caused by both sticky wages and unstable wages. Isn’t that a contradiction? To see why it isn’t, consider an economy where wages had been growing at 4% a year for a decade. Now assume that NGDP growth slows to 2%, due to a tight money policy. If hourly nominal wages are sticky—say at 4%/year—then growth in total labor compensation is likely to slow down more gradually than NGDP, perhaps to 3%/year. But that means profit growth will slow especially abruptly, perhaps leading to a recession. Eventually, hourly wages begin falling, but at that point they are too high.
The opposite pattern occurred in 2020-22, when a rapid acceleration in NGDP growth caused profits to rise more rapidly than the more sticky wage component of NGDP, leading to a tight labor market with high levels of employment. In either case, the stickiness of nominal wages results in NGDP shocks impacting total employment—what I call the musical chairs model.
(Photograph by Mike Peel (www.mikepeel.net). - Own work)
This is the part that people find confusing. During a recession you get high unemployment because wages are too high, even though a recession is associated with gradually slowing wage growth. Thus, a tight money policy might cause equilibrium wage growth to slow from 4% to 2%, even as actual wage growth only slows from 4% to 3%, due to sticky wages. Paradoxically, wages become too high because of a policy that caused wage growth to slow.
The monthly jobs report (usually released on the first Friday of each month) provides three key labor market indicators:
Average hourly wages
Average weekly hours
Total payroll employment
If you combine the three, you get a rough estimate of the growth rate in total labor compensation. I think of that as “core NGDP”, the part of NGDP that is crucial for determining the business cycle. And whereas total NGDP is provided about four weeks after each quarter ends, this measure of “core NGDP” is provided just a few days after each month ends. That makes the jobs report the most timely indicator of current trends in NGDP growth.
There is much discussion of whether the Fed should care about the unemployment rate or focus exclusively on inflation. I don’t entirely agree with either side of the debate. Changes in total employment are one of three factors that affect total nominal wage growth (along with hourly wages and weekly hours.) While the Fed should not target the unemployment rate, a sudden rise in unemployment is usually an indicator of unstable NGDP growth, which will impact total labor compensation.
The best of all possible worlds would be stable NGDP growth and flexible wages. The second best world would be stable NGDP growth and sticky hourly wages. The worst of all worlds would be unstable NGDP growth combined with sticky nominal wages. We cannot have the best of all possible worlds. So, let’s use monetary policy to aim for the second best option—sticky wages and stable NGDP growth.
PS. If you’ve followed the logic of my argument, you will understand why the optimal policy would stabilize NGDP per capita, rather than total NGDP. The central problem in macroeconomics is sticky hourly wages.
PPS. Off topic: I read a recent Cowen/Tabarrok discussion of fiscal sustainability that was a bit sloppy with the facts:
TABARROK: If you look at taxes as a share of GDP, it has been between 17% and 20% for 50 years.
COWEN: Now it’s like 23%, isn’t it? 24%. It’s gone up permanently, yes.
TABARROK: I don’t think it’s that—not taxes. Spending has. Spending has. Actual taxes have not gone up as a share of GDP.
Alex is closer to the truth—it’s a bit below 17% of GDP. Facts matter! Trump is the one who put us onto an unsustainable path back in the late 2010s, when his tax cuts depressed tax revenue to a very low level. Some of the tax cuts might have been justified on efficiency grounds, but only if they’d been paid for with spending cuts. They were not.
TABARROK: Let’s turn to growth as a way of paying off the debt. Microsoft’s doing well, and AI’s doing well. Now, that should be raising real interest rates.
COWEN: Correct. It’s not.
TABARROK: It’s not.
How can they both be so confident? This graph showing 10-year TIPS yields doesn’t prove that the AI boom is raising real interest rates (relative to the late 2010s), but it sure as heck doesn’t prove they are not raising real interest rates:
I agree with Tyler’s claim that tax increases are the most likely way the debt unsustainability issue will be resolved, which is the core issue that they examined. This could explain why markets are not currently forecasting high inflation. But I felt the discussion was a bit too sloppy with the relevant empirical data. People need to be made aware of the fact that the budget deficit became unsustainable at a specific moment in time—the late 2010s.

A flight of Japan’s H3 rocket ended in failure on Dec. 22 after the upper stage experienced an anomaly.
In a post-launch statement, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) pointed to an issue with the LE-5B-3 engine, which is powered by a combination of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
“The second stage engine’s second ignition failed to start normally and shut down prematurely,” JAXA said. “As a result, QZS-5 could not be put into the planned orbit, and the launch failed.”
The rocket lifted off at 10:51 a.m. JST (0151 UTC) from the Tanegashima Space Center on Dec. 22 and had a nominal performance of the rocket’s first stage. There were two planned burns of the upper stage, according to the planned mission timeline.
The second burn was slated to last for more than four minutes in duration, but it ended abruptly.
“It would be impossible to carry out next liftoff without determining the cause (of the failure) and implementing preventive measures,” JAXA project manager Makoto Arita said at a press conference, according to Japan Wire by Kyodo News. The post-anomaly news conference was entirely in Japanese.
Its payload, the QZS-5 (Quasi-Zenith Satellite System) was the sixth satellite launched to provide local navigation services to Japan in order to augment the Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites, managed by the United States.
This is the second time that an H3 rocket suffered a second-stage anomaly since it debuted in March 2023. That inaugural flight was the first failure for the program.
Since then, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI), the rocket’s manufacturer, and JAXA have flown five successful missions with the 63-meter-tall (207 ft) rocket. The most recent of those was the launch of the HTV-X cargo spacecraft on Oct. 26, which flew to the International Space Station.

United Launch Alliance announced its president and chief executive officer, Tory Bruno, resigned from the company, effective Monday, Dec. 22.
The news came in a statement from Robert Lightfoot, Lockheed Martin’s Vice President of Strategy and Business Development, who serves as the Lockheed Martin Board Chair for ULA. The company is a joint venture between Lockheed Martin and Boeing.
“After nearly 12 years leading United Launch Alliance (ULA), current ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno has resigned to pursue another opportunity,” Lightfoot said. “We are grateful for Tory’s service to ULA and the country, and we thank him for his leadership.”
Lightfoot announced that John Elbon, who previously served as ULA’s Chief Operating Officer, was elevated to the Interim CEO position, while the board seeks a permanent replacement.
“It has been a great privilege to lead ULA through its transformation and to bring Vulcan into service,” Bruno said in a social media post. “My work here is now complete and I will be cheering ULA on.”
Bruno joined ULA from Lockheed Martin in August 2014, succeeding Michael Gass. His previous career included roles in the U.S. Navy’s Fleet Ballistic Missile program.
During Bruno’s tenure at ULA, the company performed 83 orbital launches. Those included the final flight of a Delta 4 Heavy rocket in April 2024 and the inaugural flight of a Vulcan rocket in January 2024.
This is the second major shift in ULA’s leadership this month. On Dec. 8, ULA announced Elbon would retire in early 2026 and that Mark Peller, who was previously the Senior Vice President of Vulcan Development and Advanced Programs, would assume the COO role on Jan. 1, 2026. Peller now assumes that role a couple weeks early.
After twenty-six years, Microsoft is finally upgrading the last remaining instance of the encryption algorithm RC4 in Windows.
of the most visible holdouts in supporting RC4 has been Microsoft. Eventually, Microsoft upgraded Active Directory to support the much more secure AES encryption standard. But by default, Windows servers have continued to respond to RC4-based authentication requests and return an RC4-based response. The RC4 fallback has been a favorite weakness hackers have exploited to compromise enterprise networks. Use of RC4 played a key role in last year’s breach of health giant Ascension. The breach caused life-threatening disruptions at 140 hospitals and put the medical records of 5.6 million patients into the hands of the attackers. US Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) in September called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Microsoft for “gross cybersecurity negligence,” citing the continued default support for RC4.
Last week, Microsoft said it was finally deprecating RC4 and cited its susceptibility to Kerberoasting, the form of attack, known since 2014, that was the root cause of the initial intrusion into Ascension’s network.
Fun fact: RC4 was a trade secret until I published the algorithm in the second edition of Applied Cryptography in 1995.
The author is Philippe Sands and the subtitle is
So recommended, and added to my own list. And yes I did buy another book by Philippe Sands, the acid test of whether I really liked something.
The post *38 Londres Street* appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
1. Andrew Hamilton’s “Music for People Who Like Art.”
2. Rebuilding Ukraine’s cities.
3. Do the Swiss face an identity crisis? (FT)
4. Alex Karp buys a large Aspen monastery.
5. Artists who died this year (NYT).
6. German exports to China, as a share of German gdp.
The post Monday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Earlier I posted some questions on my blog for next year: Ten Economic Questions for 2026. Some of these questions concern real estate (inventory, house prices, housing starts, new home sales), and I’ll post thoughts on those in this newsletter (others like GDP and employment will be on my blog).There is much more in the article.
I'm adding some thoughts, and maybe some predictions for each question.
Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2025.
10) Housing Inventory: Housing inventory decreased sharply during the pandemic to record lows in early 2022. Since then, inventory has increased but is still below pre-pandemic levels. Will inventory increase further in 2026?
First, a brief history. Here are a few times when watching existing home inventory helped my analysis.
Starting in January 2005, I was very bearish on housing, but I wasn’t sure when the market would turn. Speculative bubbles can go on and on. However, the increase in existing home inventory in late 2005 (see red arrow on graph below) helped me call the top for house prices in 2006.
Friday night, the Trump administration under direction from Plaguelord and HHS Secretary Kennedy decided to stop recommending childhood vaccines. This is both expected and very bad. I think there will be few immediate consequences fortunately, so that hopefully gives us time to reverse these horrible decisions in 2029 (which will be small consolation for those who are affected by this murderous idiocy).
The problem–and our possible salvation–is that this collapse in health will take time. Like many things, it will decay gradually and then suddenly. Most people will still be protected by vaccination, and the majority of young kids will still receive vaccines. So we will see an increase in sporadic outbreaks. At some point–and I’m not smart enough to know exactly when that is (and it will depend on the disease, the efficacy of the vaccine, and so on)–we will start having self-sustained, low level transmission of these diseases, and once that happens, we will then be very close to the dam breaking.
That said, right now we can coast on previous vaccination policy: there is a lot of (immunological) ruin in a nation, to use Adam Smith’s phrase. I hope and believe we can get to 2029 without too much American Carnage (to use a phrase), but if we don’t move quickly then, we could be in a very bad place. This isn’t to trivialize the stupid and needless deaths and illness that will accrue due to Plaguelord Kennedy’s insanity, but there is a path out of this, if we are able to walk it.
Part of getting on that path is impeaching Kennedy. Impeach him now.
Links for you. Science:
CDC panel recommends delaying birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine
This Microbe ‘Plays Dead’ in NASA Clean Rooms, and We May Have Sent It to Mars
Deep-sea mining tests impact over a third of seabed animals
Kennedy’s Methodical 2-Decade Quest to Dismantle Vaccine Policy
The HPV vaccine is safe and cuts cervical cancer risk by 80%, 2 large reviews find
The Virus That Took My Father Could Become a Greater Threat
Say Hello to Hepatitis B, Baby. Anti-vax ACIP are bumbling their way to higher rates of pediatric liver cancer…and worse
Other:
After the DC National Guard Shooting Comes the Big Lie
GOP bill to overhaul D.C. bail system could balloon jail population. Republicans in Congress want to end cashless bail in D.C. and hold more suspects in jail before trial. Watchdogs say it could push the jail system to the brink.
The Trump-Epstein Emergency Isn’t in the Files. Trump has distorted the political landscape so badly that it’s warping the moral intuitions of people and institutions of account.
Have Trump’s Tariffs Hit the ‘High-Water Mark’?
Donald Trump’s War on Christmas
Anita Bonds Will Not Seek Re-election, Adding To The Already-Chaotic 2026 Campaign Season. By 2027, D.C. will have a new mayor and could get as many as six new councilmembers.
‘This hurts’: UNL eliminates 4 programs despite faculty, student pleas (Nebraska)
RFK Jr.’s vaccine advisory panel is beset by incompetence, bias, and procedural chaos
Where Did Anti-Trans Laws Start? How a Forgotten Houston Ordinance Turned Into a Massive, Nationwide Culture War
The Anti-Trans Playbook: The current crusade against trans people imperils not just their rights but the survival of the legal doctrine built to protect all women from discrimination.
5 takeaways from the chaotic, combative vaccine advisory meeting
Sure Why Not (remember, the person babbling this nonsense had Trump’s ear a few months ago)
The Revolt of the Republican Women
LeBron James’s Scoring Streak Tells The Story
The Last Video Rental Store Is Your Public Library
Mark Kelly’s Double Tap: National security Democrats launched a preemptive strike on Trump’s misuse of the military. Weeks later it’s paying off in ways even they didn’t predict. Or maybe they did.
Scientists Are Increasingly Worried AI Will Sway Elections
Winter is coming. Not all weather offices are ready.
Trump’s Birthday Added To National Park Free-Entry Days After Dropping MLK Day And Juneteenth
He carries shelter dogs around the city in a backpack to help get them adopted
Markey, Healey blame Trump’s cut of $87M grant for pause at Somerville startup’s construction of green cement plant
The CDC’s change to hepatitis B vaccination is even worse than it seems
Will Hoosiers shoot themselves in the foot? A look ahead at 2026 suggests that Indiana legislators would be wise to hedge their bets.
Experts fear for US childhood vaccine schedule after hepatitis B guideline change
How the dollar-store industry overcharges cash-strapped customers while promising low prices
Analysis of the latest ACIP meeting at the CDC: Vaccines—and rigorous science—are increasingly under attack.
American Freakshow: Our Reality TV-Driven Media Is Killing Our Democracy
‘Unauthorized’ Edit to Ukraine’s Frontline Maps Point to Polymarket’s War Betting
Bleak House: Republicans are increasingly resigned to losing their House majority, a fate they ascribe to Speaker Mike Johnson’s mismanagement, and to the redistricting crusade prosecuted by the White House itself.
Inside the economics of Candace Owens’s media empire and the Macron lawsuit threatening to unravel it
This second inventory graph is courtesy of Altos Research.Science fiction writers have long speculated on worlds in which humans coexist with intelligent robots.
And forewarned is forearmed. The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SWFA) has taken steps to protect its members from large language models, in the context of awards for writing science fiction:
"The following rules for the Nebula Awards® are effective starting with the award year beginning January 1, 2025:
...
"Works that are written, either wholly or partially, by generative large language model (LLM) tools are not eligible.
Works that used LLMs at any point during the writing process must disclose this upon acceptance of the nomination, and those works will be disqualified. "
###
An extremely warm and very moist airmass over California to start the week; record low Sierra snowpack persists Well, the last 3-4 weeks sure have been exceptionally warm across most of the Western United States. Record warmth has occurred literally every day across a substantial chunk of the western third of the country. Accordingly, December […]
The post A wet and stormy week ahead in California, with substantial SoCal flood risk and initially warm Sierra rain transitioning to very heavy snow first appeared on Weather West.
Thus, it would seem that Rousseau compels us to choose either science or morality. If we choose morality ,we must enforce ignorance by maintaining political control over the sciences and the arts. We must believe in something like creationism because it says that nature was created for our good, and not believe in technology that exploits nature by exposing its disadvantages and hardships, such as cloning human beings to avoid the troubles of natural birth. But if we choose science, we run the risk of an explosion as human morals worsen as human power grows…There is hardly any issue today more fateful than the questison of whether modern science is the friend of politics and morality, as Hume says, or the enemy, as Rousseau says.
That is from Mansfield’s forthcoming book The Rise and Fall of Rational Control.
The post Harvey Mansfield on Rousseau and the dilemma of our age appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
1. I have been reading in the history of archaeology, and have profited from Eric H. Cline, Three Stones Make a Wall: The Story of Archaeology, which is a very good introduction to what the subtitle claims. There is also Toby Wilkinson, A World Beneath the Sands: The Golden Age of Egyptology, and Jason Thompson, Wonderful Things: A History of Egyptology, volume 2, The Golden Age: 1881-1914.
2. Elizabeth Alker, Everything We Do is Music: How 20th-Century Classical Music Shaped Pop. A very good and readable book on this interaction, with excellent discussions of Donna Summer, Stevie Wonder, La Monte Young, and Penderecki, among many others.
3. Arindrajit Dube, The Wage Standard: What’s Wrong in the Labor Market and How to Fix It. Dube notes his main theme is that employers have discretion in setting the real wage. A good overview of his work in labor economics. I would stress that if you think “tight labor markets” are good for workers, you should be obsessed with doing lots to favor capital.
4. Richard H. Davis, Religions of Early India: A Cultural History. A very useful background read for understanding later Indian history and religions, as well as the more general spread of religion throughout the southern regions of Asia. Avoids the common mistake of becoming too obscure on these topics.
For those interested in the longer term, there is Hilary Greaves, Jacob Barrett, and David Thorstad, editors, Essays on Longtermism: Present Action for the Distant Future.
There is Kevin Kelly, Colors of Asia: A Visual Journey, Photos and Design.
Alvaro Rivas, Marx in the Age of AI: How Artificial Intelligence Reshapes Value, Class, and Ideology is a short but serious look as to how Marxian concepts might apply to AI, for instance whether surplus value will be earned on the AIs, or for that matter on non-human animals.
You will find a different intersection of topic areas in Dominic Roser, David Zhang, and J.D. Bauman, All the Lives You Can Change: Effective Altruism for Christians.
The post What I’ve been reading appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
2025 — another exciting year — comes to an end. With all the groundbreaking discoveries made, milestones achieved and beautiful pictures captured, we can look back at yet another successful year. At the same time, we excitedly look ahead for the next year to come. Our 2026 new year's resolutions are clear: continue to advance innovation, set our ambitions high and safeguard our dark and quiet skies! Let us therefore enter the new year with purpose, unity and vision. We look forward to a great year! Until then, it is time to relax and enjoy! We wish you restful holidays with your family and friends and a happy new year!
(Lord’s day). Lay long in bed, so up to Church, and so home to dinner alone with my wife very pleasant. After dinner I walked to my brother’s, where he told me some hopes he had of bringing his business to pass still of his mistress, but I do find they do stand upon terms that will not be either fit or in his power to grant, and therefore I did dislike his talk and advised him to give it quite over.
Thence walked to White Hall, and there to chappell, and from thence up stairs, and up and down the house and gallerys on the King’s and Queen’s side, and so through the garden to my Lord’s lodgings, where there was Mr. Gibbons, Madge, and Mallard, and Pagett; and by and by comes in my Lord Sandwich, and so we had great store of good musique. By and by comes in my simple Lord Chandois, who (my Lord Sandwich being gone out to Court) began to sing psalms, but so dully that I was weary of it. At last we broke up; and by and by comes in my Lord Sandwich again, and he and I to talk together about his businesses, and so he to bed and I and Mr. Creed and Captain Ferrers fell to a cold goose pye of Mrs. Sarah’s, heartily, and so spent our time till past twelve o’clock, and then with Creed to his lodgings, and so with him to bed, and slept till… [Continued tomorrow. P.G.]

New NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said he wants NASA to move faster on programs such as Artemis but acknowledged he needs time to get up to speed on NASA’s activities.
The post Isaacman emphasizes accelerating NASA programs as he takes agency’s reins appeared first on SpaceNews.

Rocket Lab successfully launched a Japanese radar imaging satellite Dec. 21 in the final flight of a record-setting year for the company.
The post Rocket Lab wraps up record launch year appeared first on SpaceNews.
The past few days I’ve been back in Essex, my sister and I continuing the task of sorting through every item accumulated in the family home over six decades.
An almost impossible quantity of things carefully preserved in every drawer, cupboard, box, filing cabinet, corner, nook and cranny. Some can be easily thrown away, some deserves finding a good home, some is heartbreakingly sentimental, and then lots of, “oh, hmm, what do we do with this?”
As usual I was slightly dreading coming here, backwards to all the memories, in order to be faced with so many tiny decisions over and over again. But within a day I, we, don’t want to leave. Everything is so familiar, so just right, so much part of us and our first half-centuries. How can it be that at some point we’ll no longer be able to sit in the same chairs in the same rooms and look at all these familiar things?
We’re dismantling lives. Wanting to go back to a couple of years ago. Wishing we could spend another Christmas here in this house where we grew up, in the town where Mum and Dad made their lives, rooting themselves into the history and politics of the place.
So many tears now because of so many happy memories.
§ Back home the builders have nearly finished the garage renovations after four weeks, with a brand new, non-leaking roof, OSB board on the inside walls, new lights and power sockets, and wood cladding on the outside.
The builders were lovely and we were able to be unknowledgably vague about our needs and leave it to them to decide the plan and do a good job. But it will be nice to not have builders around soon.
§ We watched The Mastermind (Kelly Reichardt, 2025) which was good but I maybe went into it expecting “heist” rather than “Kelly Reichardt” and so was a little disappointed when it didn’t follow a typical, increasingly tense, heist tale but instead decreasing amounts of things happened until it ended.
§ It is tiring, all the sorting. All the bending down, standing up, moving things around, and then the endless stream of decision-making, working out what to do with every individual sheet of paper, etc. But we’ve made visible progress. Still so much to do, for next time.
I might have a break from weeknotes next weekend. We’ll see. Have a good seasonal week or fortnight. Well done, we all made it.
2. Some new estimates of tariff pass-through rates. I do not in fact find near-full pass through over such a short time horizon intuitive? Especially since SCOTUS may strike down the tariffs.
3. Are immigration researchers biased?
4. Are insurers retreating from Obamacare?
5. Alex Honnold will be free soloing 1700-foot Taipei 101 in Taiwan, no ropes of course. To be televised live on Netflix.
6. “Global suicide rates have declined by 29% from 2000 to 2021“
The post Sunday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
On Friday the University of Michigan released its latest report on consumer sentiment, and it revealed deep dissatisfaction with the economy. The survey respondents rate current economic conditions as the worst in the past fifty years.
As I documented in the first installment in this four-part series on affordability, the depth of this negativity far outstrips what standard measures of economic conditions tell us about the current state of the economy. In the second installment I examined various factors that may explain why Americans feel that their lives have become less affordable – factors, like the burden of higher interest rates, that are not captured in the standard measures. In the third installment I proposed a series of practical policy steps to improve general affordability – such as removing Trump’s tariffs and building more low-cost housing.
Yet, even when we go beyond the standard economic measures when assessing today’s economy, we are still unable to fully explain Americans’ extreme economic negativity. The economy of 2025 is still not worse than the economy of 2009, which was ravaged by the after-effects of the 2008 financial crisis. Neither is it worse than 1980, when the economy was suffering both high unemployment and double-digit inflation.
So in an effort to explain this conundrum, I will focus today’s installment, the last in the series, on three considerations that go beyond our standard interpretation of affordability. But, as I will argue, these three considerations significantly affect how people feel about the economy.
The first is inclusion: Do people feel able to afford goods and services that allow them to be full members of society? That is, do the feel able to live the American dream? The second is security: Even when people have reasonably high purchasing power, do they worry that they could easily fall off the edge? Finally, there’s fairness: Do Americans feel that the system is rigged against ordinary people like themselves?
Beyond the paywall I’ll examine each of these three issues. And in concluding, I will discuss how the public’s concerns about affordability can be the driver for real, and much needed, economic reform in America.
Every time you are inclined to use the word “teach”, replace it with “learn”. That is, instead of saying, “I teach”, say “They learn”. It’s very easy to determine what you teach; you can just fill slides with text and claim to have taught. Shift your focus to determining how you know whether they learned what you claim to have taught (or indeed anything at all!). That is much harder, but that is also the real objective of any educator.
— Shriram Krishnamurthi, Pedagogy Recommendations
Tags: teaching
A couple of months ago, I received a request from a random Internet user to add CSRF protection to my little web framework Microdot, and I thought it was a fantastic idea.
When I set off to do this work in early November I expected I was going to have to deal with anti-CSRF tokens, double-submit cookies and hidden form fields, pretty much the traditional elements that we have used to build a defense against CSRF for years. And I did start along this tedious route. But then I bumped into a new way some people are dealing with CSRF attacks that is way simpler, which I describe below.
1. More women wear the full veil at Tysons, especially on Friday and Saturday nights.
2. There are more Christmas decorations at Mall of the Emirates.
3. You will find a “Borders bookstore” — replete with the original font — at the Emirates locale.
4. At the Emirates mall you hear much more Russian, and many of the core signs are in Russian too. I guess that is the biggest difference?
The post Mall of the Emirates, Dubai, vs. Tysons Corner mall, northern Virginia appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
…two weeks of Mad Biologist posts:
Trump Administration to End Affirmative Action for Male College Applicants
Trump’s Primary Problem Isn’t Aging, It’s Narcissism
Impeach HHS Secretary and Plaguelord Kennedy. Impeach Him Now.
Some Thoughts on and Context for the U.S. Measles Outbreak
Plaguelord and HHS Secretary Kennedy Retaliates By Canceling Grant Awarded to Critics
Here's an appreciation of the great economic sociologist:
Michel Callon (1945–2025): A life with passion for economies
Koray Caliskan &Alexandre Mallard, Journal of Cultural Economy, Published online: 15 Dec 2025 https://doi.org/10.1080/17530350.2025.2595423
"Readers of the Journal of Cultural Economy will likely remember Michel Callon for the remarkable line of inquiry into markets that he initiated in the 2000s. Yet to recall how he approached the economy throughout his intellectual journey – and how, in doing so, he transformed our very understanding of economies – is a good way to honor an intellectual beacon of our times."
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Earlier:
Senator Mike Lee has a new bill that encourages the President to authorize letters of marque and reprisal against drug cartels:
The President of the United States is authorized and requested to commission, under officially issued letters of marque and reprisal, so many of privately armed and equipped persons and entities as, in the judgment of the President, the service may require, with suitable instructions to the leaders thereof, to employ all means reasonably necessary to seize outside the geographic boundaries of the United States and its territories the person and property of any individual who the President determines is a member of a cartel, a member of a cartel-linked organization, or a conspirator associated with a cartel or a cartel-linked organization, who is responsible for an act of aggression against the United States.
SECURITY BONDS.—No letter of marque and reprisal shall be issued by the President without requiring the posting of a security bond in such amount as the President shall determine is sufficient to ensure that the letter be executed according to the terms and conditions thereof.
My paper on privateers explains how privateers were historically very successful. During the War of 1812, roughly 500 privateers operated alongside a tiny U.S. Navy. The market responded swiftly—privateers like the Comet were commissioned within days of war’s declaration and began capturing prizes within weeks. Sophisticated institutional design combined combined profit incentives with regulatory constraints:
Privateers cost the government essentially nothing compared to building and maintaining a navy. Private investors financed vessels , bore the risks, and operated on profit-seeking principles. Moreover, privateers unlike Navy vessels had incentives to capture enemy ships, particularly merchant ships, not just blow them and their occupants out of the water. Of course, capturing the drugs isn’t very useful but it’s quite possible to go after the money on the return journey–privateers as hackers–which is just as good.
Here is my paper on privateering, here is the time I went bounty hunting in Baltimore, here is work on the closely related issue of whistleblowing rewards and here is the excellent historian Mark Knopfler on privateering:
The post Bring Back the Privateers! appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
From athletes like Simone Biles and Michael Phelps to scientists like Marie Curie and Albert Einstein, identifying exceptional talent is essential in the science of innovation. But how does talent originate? Did the most talented athletes, scientists, and musicians reach peak performance relatively early or late in their career? Did they forgo mastering multiple sports, academic subjects, and musical instruments to reach world-class performance in only one? In an Analytical Review, Güllich et al. looked at published research in science, music, chess, and sports and found two patterns: Exceptional young performers reached their peak quickly but narrowly mastered only one interest (e.g., one sport). By contrast, exceptional adults reached peak performance gradually with broader, multidisciplinary practice. However, elite programs are designed to nurture younger talent.
That is from a new article in Science by Arne Güllich, Michael Barth, David Z. Hambrick, and Brooke N. Macnamara. Via Atta Tarki. But are they conditioning on a collider? Short players seem to do pretty well in today’s NBA…
The post How to rise to the very top? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Or more specifically Nenad Tomašev, Matija Franklin, Julian Jacobs, Sébastien Krier, and Simon Osindero:
AI safety and alignment research has predominantly been focused on methods for safeguarding individual AI systems, resting on the assumption of an eventual emergence of a monolithic Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). The alternative AGI emergence hypothesis, where general capability levels are first manifested through coordination in groups of sub-AGI individual agents with complementary skills and affordances, has received far less attention. Here we argue that this patchwork AGI hypothesis needs to be given serious consideration, and should inform the development of corresponding safeguards and mitigations. The rapid deployment of advanced AI agents with tool-use capabilities and the ability to communicate and coordinate makes this an urgent safety consideration. We therefore propose a framework for distributional AGI safety that moves beyond evaluating and aligning individual agents. This framework centers on the design and implementation of virtual agentic sandbox economies (impermeable or semi-permeable), where agent-to-agent transactions are governed by robust market mechanisms, coupled with appropriate auditability, reputation management, and oversight to mitigate collective risks.
Here is the link, this is some of the most important work of our time. Here is the previous MR post on Krier.
The post Séb Krier, continued appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

In a prelude to the real deal, the four astronauts of the Artemis 2 mission boarded their Orion spacecraft inside the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center on Saturday afternoon.
The three Americans and one Canadian participated in a launch day rehearsal referred to as the countdown demonstration test or CDDT. It was the first opportunity for everyone involved with the mission to be on hand and to go through the motions of the big day with the fully integrated rocket in the loop, instead of just data simulations. The test appeared to reach its conclusion with a cutoff of the simulated countdown at the T-29 seconds point at 5:51 p.m. EST (2251 UTC).
Astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen departed the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building at around 12:20 p.m. EST (1720 UTC), sporting their orange pressure suits, for a 5.5-mile journey to the Vehicle Assembly Building where the Space Launch System rocket and their Orion Capsule was waiting for them. After a few minutes of remarks to stand-ins for their family members and other NASA officials gathered outside, the crew boarded their transport vehicle and hit the road.

Originally, the astronauts were to be driven in new electric vehicles from a company called Canoo Technologies. However, that company went bankrupt earlier this year and according to a NASA statement to Spectrum News 13, in October, the agency instead leased Boeing’s Astrovan — used to transport astronauts for CST-100 Starliner missions — to serve as the transport vehicle.
The crew departed the building about three hours later than planned. A NASA spokesperson blamed the delay on communications issues, but could provide no further details other than that the issues were resolved and the test proceed.
The rehearsal is already running at least a month behind schedule. It was scheduled for November 19 but NASA postponed that, eventually blaming “a blemish” on a thermal barrier surrounding the Orion crew access hatch which prevented its closure.
The test was rescheduled for Dec. 17, but that too was abruptly delayed without explanation.

The CDDT is similar to the terminal countdown demonstration tests performed during the space shuttle era. Those launch day rehearsals were done at the pad as they are for SpaceX Crew Dragon missions.
During an Artemis 2 briefing in September, Artemis Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson said after the crew enters the Orion capsule, they will perform a communications check, strap in, configure the crew module and proceed with the countdown to just before the terminal count before a planned stop.
“As part of that, we’ll also do an egress demonstration and that will be what we call CDDT part one,” Blackwell-Thompson said. “Once that testing is complete, we have some other servicing ops that we’ll take care of in the Vehicle Assembly Building.
“We will go ahead and do our flight termination system test and we’ll start closing out the vehicle compartments as part of our final closeouts of SLS.”
The timing of the rollout of the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft will be contingent on a smooth CDDT and FTST. The rocket will be travel about four miles from the VAB to the pad at Launch Complex 39B.
The second part of the CDDT will happen shortly after the rocket gets to the pad. Blackwell-Thompson said they’ll use that time to review the emergency egress system, which is a zipline style basket system to get away from the rocket before the launch escape system is armed.
After some additional work, like doing some communications testing at the pad, the astronauts will be brought to the pad to run through the process of using the emergency egress system.
Once all of that is done, the stage will be set for the wet dress rehearsal, where teams will practice loading the SLS rocket with more than 730,000 gallons of liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen.
The launch of Artemis 2 is currently slated for no earlier than February 6. NASA also says the launch will take place no later than April 2026.
My thanks to Finalist for sponsoring last week at Daring Fireball. Finalist is a remarkable, ambitious, and novel app for iPhone, iPad, and the Mac from indie developer Slaven Radic. It’s a planner — a digital take on traditional paper planners. Its motto: “Most productivity apps help you organize tasks. Finalist helps you finish them.”
One aspect of Finalist that makes it different from most to-do/task apps is that instead of setting due dates for tasks, you add tasks to specific days. This really resonates with me. With most apps in this domain, the top-level items are tasks, and tasks have (optional) due dates. With Finalist, the top-level items are days, and days have tasks and events. This might sound like I’m splitting semantic hairs but it gives Finalist a very different feel, one that’s more natural to me. If you’ve got unfinished items from yesterday, Finalist lets you move them all forward to today with one tap. Or, move some forward, and leave others behind. Or, just leave them all behind and move on. Up to you. I like that.
Finalist integrates with the system in all the ways you’d hope, including with the system calendar APIs and the Reminders app. So events in your system calendar and items from Reminders show up on your days in Finalist. Finalist lets you create events (calendar items), reminders (to-dos that are synced with Reminders), tasks (to-dos that exist only in Finalist), journal entries (like notes to yourself), and section headers if you have a busy day and need to group certain items together. Oh, and “habits”, too — recurring to-dos for habits you want to build or break. It sounds like a lot, but it all fits together neatly, covering the gamut of stuff you’d track in a daily paper planner. And everything in Finalist syncs between platforms (iPhone, iPad, Mac) with iCloud. There’s no account to create — it just uses iCloud, which is private and simple.
It’s not minimalist, but it’s not complicated. I’ve had a lot of fun learning to use Finalist just by exploring it. It’s thoughtful and intuitive. Like any civilized app, Finalist’s tags allow you to include spaces and capital letters in tag names, and don’t start with a stupid # character. And, design-wise, Finalist is very handsome — it offers customizable color themes and makes terrific use of the typographic features of the San Francisco system font.
Subscriptions cost $5/month or $30/year. A lifetime license costs just $60. It supports Family Sharing too.
I’m kind of blown away by how robust and thoughtful Finalist is. It’s not a web app with iOS and Mac clients. It’s a suite of native apps designed with care for Apple’s platforms. Auteur software, with a distinctive brand and vision, while remaining idiomatically native. Bravo to Slaven Radic. I strongly encourage you to check it out.