A few days ago, a major newspaper published an unusual piece of film criticism. The author wants fewer films released—has a journalist ever asked for that before?
The writer’s hate is targeted on one specific genre: Musician biopics. “Aren’t we tired?” asked journalist Rebecca Shaw. “Wouldn’t it be a good time after four individual Beatles movies to have a break from this genre?”
She won’t get her wish. The exact opposite will happen.
We are still in the early days of pop and rock biopics. There are more coming—a lot more. A few days ago, Paramount signed a multiyear deal with Warner Music, which gives it a “first look” movie option on the label’s roster of music stars.
There aren’t any projects in development, though WMG’s roster includes legends like David Bowie, Cher, Phil Collins, the Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Aretha Franklin, Led Zeppelin, Madonna, Joni Mitchell, and Frank Sinatra, as well as contemporary stars such as Charli xcx, Coldplay, Dua Lipa, Bruno Mars and Cardi B.
As if that’s not enough, Warner Music has a totally separate deal with Netflix, focused on making music documentaries. And the next step is obviously AI-generated music videos or full-length films with those same artists.
They will milk that roster like it’s a prize Jersey cow. The more moos, the more moolah.
And you can bet your bottom stablecoin that every other big label is looking to sign similar deals. After all, the entire music industry wants to make bank on dead musicians—not living ones (they’re too cranky and hard to manage).
Nothing can stop them. That great bandstand in the sky is filled with talent. And in a music culture where most of the biggest names are septuagenarians or octogenarians or some-other-even-older-genarian, the ranks of the glorious departed are poised for rapid growth.
Yes, if you’re a musician, there’s never been a better time than now to be dead. Hollywood and the music industry are in total alignment on this.
And they now how have Michael to point at.
Maybe you thought Michael Jackson was canceled. After all, he faced repeated abuse allegations, and even made a big settlement to avoid trial—with more accusations coming to light after his death.
Maybe you thought Hollywood is driven by cancel culture. I keep hearing that nowadays.
But I now know better.
I’ve always been skeptical and conflicted about cancel culture. (See my views here.) But even I’m surprised by how fast it has disappeared as an economic force (and not just social media noise—which, like death and taxes, is now eternal).
In fact, there are plenty of recent examples of artists getting a boost from cancellation.

Here’s the unspoken truth: Everything in Hollywood is driven by money—and if the audience wants Michael Jackson, despite all the scandals, the entertainment industry will deliver him on a silver platter.

Even so, many were still skeptical about a Michael Jackson biopic. Hollywood wagered $200 million on this film—but what about that audience? Would mainstream America actually buy off on this? Can you really ignore this artist’s problematic private life in our sensitized post-Epstein environment?
We now know the answer is a resounding yes.

The Michael biopic is drawing huge crowds, and is the hottest movie in the US right now. The film has generated a stunning $700 million in ticket sales since its debut four weeks ago—that already makes it the second biggest music biopic in history, beating out Elvis (2022) and poised to surpass Bohemian Rhapsody (2018).
In a spillover effect, Michael Jackson songs have returned to the charts after the release of the film. This is a dream come true for the major record labels—their highest priority in 2026 is to shift the focus of the music industry from new songs to old songs. A few years ago, that might have seemed an impossible task, but it’s actually happening.
Check out the biggest hit songs right now. It’s not just Thriller thrilling again—the whole list is yesterday’s news.
The last time old songs were this popular happened before the Renaissance, during the so-called Dark Ages. Back then, the Church imposed this reverence for antiquated music. Nowadays the same thing is happening, but the proponents are the lawyers, accountants, and wannabe private equity bros who run the music business.
Get ready for more of this—in both the music industry and the film business.
Hollywood may still be in a state of crisis, but movies about musicians are hot—seven out of the top ten all-time singer biopics were released within the last decade. Even as superhero and sci-fi movie franchises falter, these celebrations of hit songs of yore gain in popularity.
You might say that music movies are the new franchises—and will get the same sequel/prequel/spinoff treatment
It’s already happening. For example, the first Elvis movie from 2022 was followed by a second one, directed by Sofia Coppola (told through the perspective of Priscilla Presley) in 2023. The King also shows up in Elvis and Nixon (2016), the Sun Records TV series (2017), and the HBO two-part documentary Elvis Presley: The Searcher (2018).
Yes, Elvis is alive—at least as a box office phenom. Or consider the four Beatles movies slated for release in 2028. Meanwhile those other franchises (Star Wars, Indiana Jones, etc.) are in the doldrums.
Michael Jackson is also destined for franchise status. The Michael biopic ended in the late 1980s, and left viewers with a teaser quote: “His story continues.”
“We absolutely have more story to tell,” brags studio exec Adam Fogelson. And if they can turn a tiny Hobbit into three films running 532 minutes, just imagine what they can do with the King of Pop—with his 35 gold records and all that Jackson 5 prequel material. If people keep buying tickets, the story could go on forever.
All this might not be so bad if musician biopics weren’t so fake. The whitewashing of Michael Jackson is just another example of the phoniness. I’m now old enough to watch films of this sort where I knew personally some of the people portrayed onscreen, and the gap between the film and reality is wider than Snake River Canyon—and way too wide to jump if you care at all about the real artists and real history behind these films.
Don’t get me wrong. I still enjoy these movies—but almost solely for the songs. The wise director puts them at the forefront of the film.
Bohemian Rhapsody is a perfect example of this. Most of the last half hour of the movie is just the reenactment of a single concert. That left us all feeling good when we walked out of the movie theater.
Yes, this is how you make a musician biopic.
So now you know that I’m no Grinch. I like familiar hit records as much as any other Who in Whoville. But I also like new music.
That’s always where vitality and excitement reside in our culture. That’s where surprises are still possible. That’s where the future is born.
Not long ago, Hollywood made millions of dollars from movies that featured all new songs. Can you believe it? Those films were called musicals, and in many years they were the biggest box office successes in the land.
Families would go see The Wizard of Oz or The Lion King or Mary Poppins, and fall in love with music they had never heard before. Disney exists as a film powerhouse today almost solely because its founder built his blockbuster movies around new songs. His successors have forgotten how to do that—or maybe they are just too lazy or risk-averse to try.
I’d like to see that happen again. And I don’t see why it’s not possible.
In those days, there were also movie musicals featuring rising pop and rock stars. The Beatles made movies with all new music. Elvis did the same. These happened at the outset of their careers, when they breaking down barriers and creating new sounds. Now those very same artists, most of them dead, are coming out with movies again—but they’re filled with songs old enough to get a 15% discount at Denny’s.
Sure there’s also a place for these jukebox movies filled with melodies from the last century—just like there’s a place for karaoke and cover bands and all those other tributes to the past. But none of these tributes would exist if some innovative musicians (and their record labels) hadn’t been willing to take a chance on these songs when they were new and untested.
So go ahead and see Michael. Feel free to stream all his old hits, and get up and do a moonwalk dance, too, if you want. But let’s also leave some space in the culture for new musicians, new songs, and new stories. Otherwise we’re just living in the past—and that’s a terrible disservice to the future.
I spoke about economics with Keynes (Soumaya) in the FT:
Nobel laureate Al Roth and the economics of organ sales
"The economist Alvin Roth been talking about kidneys since at least 2003, noting time and again that kidneys are in short supply, waiting lists are growing longer, and people are dying as a result.
"So why is Roth — who appears on this week’s episode of the Economics Show podcast — still banging on about kidneys? Well, because all of those things are still getting worse."
Here is the podcast:
and here is the transcript:
" Soumaya Keynes
So we always start this show with a silly question. So, on a scale of one to 10, how relaxed are you about marketisation? So 10, you’re extremely relaxed about having transactions in literally anything, and maybe five is the average person.
Alvin Roth
So I’m probably a 7.5, maybe 7.52."

Why must humans die? According to an ancient Indian folktale, death first came to Earth through an ill-fated love affair
- by Aeon Video

Sergiu Klainerman spent years proving that black holes won’t fly apart; and arguing that maths is not a human invention
- by Steve Nadis
Thanks for swinging by Southeastern Michigan. He are two things other things that this area continues to produce and export at scale that don’t get as much notice:
* Mortgages – The two largest residential mortgage lenders are located in Detroit: United Wholesale Mortgage ($164B of mortgage originations for 2025) and Rocket Mortgages ($113B). It’s a fragmented industry, but to give you a sense of their comparative scale, Chase is #3 lender @ $66B in originations. Detroit continues to be the home of financial services for many Americans’ largest purchase.
* Food – Michigan, not NY or Italy, is responsible for the scaling of pizza. Domino’s, Little Caesar’s, and Jet’s were all founded in Southeastern Michigan. Domino’s is the largest pizza company in the world, and in many global markets, Domino’s defines “pizza.” For instance, Domino’s market share of pizza in the UK is over 50%. So, the UK has adopted Michigan’s, not Italy’s, understanding of pizza.
One narrative for Michigan should be that it has continued to shape global culture, through scaled production of mortgages and pizza. It doesn’t get more American than cars + mortgages + pizza, does it?
That is from Jeff Withington.
The post What else is special about southeastern Michigan? (from my email) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Have you ever wondered how a telescope keeps its mirrors in the best condition to observe the cosmos? In today’s Picture of the Week, a truck carefully carries one of the mirrors of ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), wrapped to protect it from the harsh environment of Chile’s Atacama Desert. Its destination is the recoating facility that keeps the mirrors of this telescope perfectly shiny.
Despite being housed in enclosures that protect them from the extreme desert conditions during the day, telescope mirrors are still exposed at night, and therefore they need to be cleaned and recoated to keep their reflectivity. Dust that accumulates on the surface is regularly removed by spraying frozen carbon dioxide. Then, every 18 months or so, the mirror receives a new aluminium coating. For that, the mirror has to be removed from the telescope and slowly transported downhill to the recoating facility, a couple of kilometres away at basecamp. As the mirror is driven along, it is closely monitored by ESO staff walking alongside the transportation truck. ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) — currently under construction — also watches silently from Cerro Armazones, seen in the background of this image.
At the recoating facility, the 8.2-metre mirror is separated from its supporting cell, a structure that protects the mirror and maintains its shape, and cleaned to remove contaminants that could damage the coating process. The thin aluminium layer, crucial for the mirror’s reflectivity, is removed with a chemical wash and replaced with a new one. After a process that takes about 8 days, including tests to verify the results, the restored mirror is then driven back up to the VLT, where it can get back to work, collecting light from deep space.
That is from Alex Nowrasteh. And for some country by country graphs:
Here is that link. There might be some connection to smart phones, but it just does not seem that strong? Perhaps the phones give a fillip and a modest acceleration to an already in place trend? And are Kenya’s phones really all that “smart,” even today?
The post Why I am skeptical on the relationship between smart phones and fertility appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
The outermost layers of Earth’s atmosphere, the thermosphere and exosphere, are relatively busy places. In these layers, tens of thousands of trackable objects, including satellites and various types of debris, orbit the planet. They are also where dozens of tons of meteoric material enter daily, occasionally producing bright fireballs as the pieces burn up.
Given all of this, there’s a non-zero chance that an astronaut might spot something fiery in the distance when looking out from the dome-shaped cupola on the International Space Station. That’s precisely what one crew member saw and photographed as the station passed over West Africa on April 27, 2026. The astronaut was looking for Progress 95, an incoming cargo craft. Instead, they spotted a bright object directly below, streaking through the upper atmosphere. “I saw its tail grow and then split apart into a shower of smaller pieces,” they later wrote on social media. “It was quite a light show!”
The event was not caused by the cargo resupply ship. Progress 95 (also called Progress MS-34) docked safely on April 27 as planned. However, the astronaut may have witnessed the reentry and breakup of the rocket used to launch it, some other rocket body, a satellite, or other human-made space debris. It’s also possible that the light show was caused by meteoric material burning up. Without knowing exactly where the handheld camera was pointed, it’s hard to definitively determine the source, a scientist with NASA’s Crew Earth Observations office noted.
Most large orbital debris comes from fragmented satellites and launch vehicles. The material is concentrated within 2,000 kilometers of the surface and typically orbits at speeds of roughly 25,000 kilometers (16,000 miles) per hour, according to NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office. Though some of it can maintain a stable orbit for long periods, debris below a certain height faces atmospheric drag that pulls it earthward.
At altitudes below roughly 600 kilometers, debris typically falls back to Earth within several years. Above 800 kilometers, it could take centuries. Above 1,000 kilometers, debris can continue circling Earth for a thousand years or more. When debris descends and encounters a thicker atmosphere, atmospheric drag and compression increase. This typically heats debris to extreme temperatures and increases mechanical stresses until it breaks up and vaporizes.
Astronaut photographs ISS074-E-540106 – ISS074-E-540252 were acquired on April 27, 2026, with a Nikon Z9 digital camera using a focal length of 200 millimeters. They were provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit at NASA Johnson Space Center. The images were taken by a member of the Expedition 74 crew. The images have been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast, and lens artifacts have been removed. The International Space Station Program supports the laboratory as part of the ISS National Lab to help astronauts take pictures of Earth that will be of the greatest value to scientists and the public, and to make those images freely available on the Internet. Additional images taken by astronauts and cosmonauts can be viewed at the NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. NASA Earth Observatory triptych by Lauren Dauphin. Story by Adam Voiland.
Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

A dusting of white highlighted the Colorado Plateau around the deep gorge, while shadows created a visual illusion.

Along the northeast side of the Capital Beltway in Maryland, green spaces weave through the developed landscape.

Set amid El Salvador’s modern, active volcanic landscape, tranquil blue waters fill a caldera formed by ancient eruptions.
The post Great Balls of Fire appeared first on NASA Science.
GDS weighs in on the NHS's decision to retreat from Open Source
Terence Eden continues his coverage of the NHS' poorly considered decision to close down access to their open source repositories in response to vulnerabilities reported to them as part of Project Glasswing.Now the Government Digital Service have joined the conversation with AI, open code and vulnerability risk in the public sector, published May 14th. Their key recommendation:
Keep open by default. Making everything private adds additional delivery and policy costs, and can reduce reuse and scrutiny. Openness should remain the default posture, with closure used sparingly and deliberately.
While they don't mention the NHS by name, Terence speaks the language of the civil service and interprets this as a major escalation:
Within the UK's Civil Service you occasionally hear the expression "being invited to a meeting without biscuits". It implies a rather frosty discussion without any of the polite niceties of a normal meeting. In general though, even when people have severe disagreements, it is rare for tempers to fray. It is even rarer for those internal disagreements to spill over into public.
Tags: open-source, security, ai, generative-ai, llms, gov-uk, terence-eden, ai-ethics, ai-security-research
Seventy-two years ago tomorrow, on May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court unanimously decided Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas. That landmark decision declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional because segregated schools denied Black children “the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Three years after the Brown v. Board decision, in the face of massive resistance to desegregation in the South, President Dwight D. Eisenhower proposed the Civil Rights Act of 1957 to protect the right of Black Americans to vote, using the federal government to overrule the state laws that limited voter registration and kept Black voters from the polls. To prevent the passage of the first federal civil rights legislation since 1875, South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond launched the longest filibuster in U.S. history, speaking for 24 hours and 18 minutes.
(Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) broke Thurmond’s record on March 31 through April 1, 2025, speaking for 25 hours, 5 minutes, and 59 seconds, but his speech was not a filibuster.)
Southern Democrats known as “Dixiecrats” managed to weaken the measure, but Senate majority leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX) managed to wrestle the Civil Rights Act of 1957 through Congress, and Black Americans and their white allies began trying to register Black Americans to vote.
But the law proved too weak to force white registrars to allow Black voters onto the rolls, and by 1961, activists with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC, pronounced “snick”) were at work in Mississippi to promote voter registration. In 1964 they launched the “Freedom Summer,” bringing college students from northern schools to work together with Black people from Mississippi to educate and register Black voters.
Just as the project was getting underway, three organizers—James Chaney, from Mississippi, and Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner from New York—disappeared outside Philadelphia, Mississippi. Lyndon Johnson, president by then, used the popular rage over the three missing voting rights workers to pressure Congress into passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, designed to try to hold back the white supremacists and to make it possible for Black Americans to register to vote. The measure passed, and on July 2, Johnson signed it into law.
On August 4, investigators found the bodies of the three missing men. Ku Klux Klan members working with local law enforcement officers had murdered them and then buried the bodies in an earthen dam that was under construction.
And still, white officials refused to accept the idea of Black voting. In Selma, Alabama, where the city’s voting rolls were 99% white even though Black Americans outnumbered white Americans among the 29,500 people who lived there, local Black organizers had launched a voter registration drive in 1963, but a judge stopped voter registration meetings by prohibiting public gatherings of more than two people.
Selma voting rights activist Amelia Boynton invited the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the city to draw national attention to its struggle, and he and other prominent Black leaders arrived in January 1965. For seven weeks, Black residents made a new push to register to vote. County sheriff James Clark arrested almost 2,000 of them on a variety of charges, including contempt of court and parading without a permit. A federal court ordered Clark not to interfere with orderly registration, so he forced Black applicants to stand in line for hours before taking a “literacy” test. Not a single person passed.
Then, on February 18, white police officers, including local police, sheriff’s deputies, and Alabama state troopers, beat and shot an unarmed man, 26-year-old Jimmie Lee Jackson, who was marching for voting rights at a demonstration in his hometown of Marion, Alabama, about 25 miles northwest of Selma. Jackson died eight days later, on February 26. Black leaders in Selma decided to defuse the community’s anger by planning a long march—54 miles—from Selma to the state capitol at Montgomery to draw attention to the murder and voter suppression.
On March 7, 1965, the marchers set out. As they crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, state troopers and other law enforcement officers met the unarmed marchers with billy clubs, bullwhips, and tear gas. They fractured the skull of young activist John Lewis and beat Amelia Boynton unconscious. A newspaper photograph of the 54-year-old Boynton, seemingly dead in the arms of another marcher, illustrated the depravity of those determined to stop Black voting.
On March 15, President Johnson addressed a nationally televised joint session of Congress to ask for the passage of a national voting rights act. “Their cause must be our cause too,” he said. “[A]ll of us…must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.” Two days later, he submitted to Congress proposed voting rights legislation.
Under the protection of federal troops, the Selma marchers completed their trip to Montgomery on March 25. Their ranks had grown as they walked until they numbered about 25,000 people. That night, Viola Liuzzo, a 39-year-old mother of five who had arrived from Michigan to help after Bloody Sunday, was murdered by four Ku Klux Klan members who tailed her as she ferried demonstrators out of the city.
A bipartisan majority of Congress passed the Voting Rights Act by a vote of 77–19 in the Senate and 333–85 in the House. Dr. King and Mrs. Boynton were guests of honor as President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 on August 6. Recalling “the outrage of Selma,” Johnson said: “This right to vote is the basic right without which all others are meaningless. It gives people, people as individuals, control over their own destinies.”
And yet, on April 29, 2026, the Supreme Court gutted the protections for the Black-majority districts Congress provided for in the Voting Rights Act after years of weakening the law in other ways. In its wake, Republican-dominated southern state legislatures are rushing to redraw their district lines to dilute the votes of Black Democrats.
Today, thousands of Americans, including eighteen members of Congress, traveled to Selma and Mongomery to call Americans to action to protect voting rights. Pastor Kenneth Sharpton Glasgow told Joseph D. Bryant of Alabama news site AL, “This moment is bigger than Democrats or Republicans. This is about democracy itself. This is about whether Black communities, poor communities, rural communities, formerly incarcerated people, and marginalized voices will continue to have representation and political power in America.”
Speakers united around the theme that those trying to gerrymander their way into control of Congress in defiance of voters had reawakened a movement. “They think they can draw us out of power,” Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) told an audience in Montgomery.
“They do not know the sleeping giant that they just awakened. Because it is not a coincidence, and our whole country must understand, that it was not until voting rights were ratified in this country that we got the Great Society. Because when Black Americans have the right to vote and that vote is protected, our schools get funded. When voting rights are protected, healthcare gets expanded. When voted rights are protected, our country moves forward. And Montgomery, that’s what they’re actually afraid of. They’re afraid of us coming together. They’re afraid of us protecting one another.”
—
Notes:
https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/online-documents/civil-rightAs-act-1957
https://www.booker.senate.gov/senator-bookers-marathon-speech
Bluesky:
I’m still in Europe, where one of the luxuries I’m experiencing is not having to think about Donald Trump and the nightmarish state of U.S. politics 100% of the time — more like 90%, but still. And by way of luxuriating in the slight emotional distance, I’ll postpone my next primer on healthcare for another week and talk more this week about European economic performance.
Last week I wrote about the question of whether Europe is really falling behind the United States economically. I argued that the conventional narrative of clear relative decline is wrong. And I followed up with a small formal model of the underlying logic of the situation as I see it.
I’m gratified to have started a wider discussion, with smart observers like Noah Smith and Luis Garicano weighing in. Judging from the conversation so far, however, I need to do more to explain my central point — which is that widely used comparisons of productivity growth can’t be used to judge European versus U.S. economic success.
In today’s post, then, I’ll try to offer more explanation, backed by some additional data and what I hope are useful analogies.
Beyond the paywall I will address the following:
1. Comparing Europe with America
2. The US-Europe paradox: Slow European growth, but without a growing gap
3. Explaining the paradox
4. What Europe should and shouldn’t worry about
The legal settlement under discussion between the IRS and Donald Trump is so blatantly outrageous that it takes the breath away.
Sourced reports from inside the IRS this week disclosed that there are serious talks underway to settle a $10 billion claim by Trump, along with two of his sons and the Trump family business, that they were wronged by a leak of some of his tax information.
The talks have included direct payments to the Trumps, forgoing audits, and, on Friday, a proposal for a $1.7 billion fund to recompense Trump political allies, including the more than 1,500 convicted for crimes arising from the Jan. 6. 2021, Capitol riots to keep Trump in office beyond a lost election.
Whatever the final amount of any such settlement or even the final payees, it means that that the Trump government will be paying taxpayer funds or another public benefit to the very president who oversees the department that would cough up the money.
There are legal arguments galore about the obvious conflict of interest, and a hearing before U.S. District Judge Kathleen M. Williams in Florida is set for May 27 to determine if a sitting president can constitutionally sue federal agencies he oversees.
Clearly, the entire basis of the court system is to pit adversarial arguments, not to have both sides representing the same client. It’s not even clear whether the Justice Department should be arguing for Trump or defending the IRS and Treasury.
Thus, internal talks about a settlement.
According to New York Times reporting, the Justice Department is assessing how to resolve the case, including evaluating settlement options that include compensation using taxpayer funds to an agreement that the IRS drop audits of Trump, his family, and his business entities.
The Trump lawsuit argued that IRS and Treasury failed to prevent a former IRS contractor, Charles Littlejohn, from gaining access to Trump’s tax documents, which were shared with ProPublica and The New York Times. Littlejohn went to prison for five years as a result.
The lawsuit skips over the fact that Trump is the only president not to share publicly information about his tax returns or to explain exactly what harm has befallen the Trump family or its enterprises as a result. How does being elected president, an office that invites scrutiny, constitute harm here? How has his family businesses suffered as they continue to draw oversized donations from billionaires and Trump faithful alike?
The $10 billion number seems plucked from the air. If Trump truly believes in the principle, he could have sued for one dollar.
Of course, Trump and his family businesses have repeatedly disregarded ethical rules and practices aimed at preventing government officials from profiting from public office. Clearly any substantial settlement payment in this case could dwarf his other self-serving government grifts.
The official White House stance is this: “President Trump continues to hold those who wrong America and Americans accountable.”
Obviously, Trump and this Justice Department have held a particular partisan view over what wrongs exist for which to seek accountability. That is how we have seen hundreds pardoned for Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot charges and prosecutions of Trump political opponents, as well as the dismissal of scores of Justice Department prosecutors who would not follow Trump’s insistence to bring charges against perceived enemies without evidence of crimes.
Among the most curious aspects to the settlement talk is that a successful agreement could simply avoid going to court to determine the most basic conflict of interest.
If a settlement comes before Judge Williams can decide whether the underlying lawsuit is valid, her authority to overturn any agreement would be limited. Even if the judge were to find such a settlement to be collusive or reached in bad faith, legally it would likely be viewed as a private agreement with a federal agency.
Apart from compensation, forgoing future audits of Trump businesses clearly would be a huge personal gain for someone who brags that his companies play fast and loose with tax laws. The leaked tax documents showing that Trump reported losses in his IRS audits could cost Trump more than $100 million.
As it happens, many legal experts see a defense to the Trump lawsuit on technical grounds about its filing and the bloated damages sought. There also is an argument about whether the IRS is responsible for the actions of a contractor who stole documents.
A similar lawsuit in 2024 ended in a public apology, not a government payout.
Trump already has built a legacy of personal gain in office that far exceeds that for any other president, with foreign gifts, including a Qatari royal jet, investments in cybercurrency or real estate businesses he or his family run with presidential promotion, and the continuing collections of tens of millions of dollars from those who seek influence with his office.
Still, arranging for a whopping payment by taxpayers whom Trump fleeced in his IRS tax avoidance schemes seems a huge cherry atop a grift sundae.
The Trump administration is attempting to bypass competitive bidding procedures to speed work on the proposed 250-foot, triumphal arch near Arlington National Cemetery by leveraging an existing White House contract with AECOM Services, documents obtained by The Washington Post show.
Park Service acting director Jessica Bowron requested permission April 22 to extend a White House contract for environmental assessment work to the arch site, which sits on National Park Service land a mile from the White House. Within an hour of her email White House officials approved the request.
The arch work now joined the multimillion dollar work to resurface and paint the reflecting pools and the ballroom as no-bid work.
“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 Topping the Grift Sundae appeared first on DCReport.org.
(Lord’s day). Up and in my chamber all the morning, preparing my great letters to my father, stating to him the perfect condition of our estate. My wife and Ashwell to church, and after dinner they to church again, and I all the afternoon making an end of my morning’s work, which I did about the evening, and then to talk with my wife till after supper, and so to bed having another small falling out and myself vexed with my old fit of jealousy about her dancing-master. But I am a fool for doing it. So to bed by daylight, I having a very great cold, so as I doubt whether I shall be able to speak to-morrow at our attending the Duke, being now so hoarse.
Links for you. Science:
Scientists Stunned After Finding Plant Thought Extinct for 60 Years
Restored Peatlands Could Become Carbon Sinks Within Decades
Trump Fired The Entire National Science Board. Here’s Why That Matters
‘There are so many bones everywhere’: The whale graveyards that transform the deep sea
Let Pluto Rest In Dwarf Planet Peace
Mexico City Is Sinking So Quickly, It Can Be Seen From Space
Bamboo-based plastic can be made to biodegrade quickly, but still holds up in tough conditions
Other:
A Federal Worker Was Fired for Filming DOGE. Now She’s Running for Congress. Alexis Goldstein, a former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau employee, was fired this year for recording DOGE’s incursion into the agency.
The Polarization Discourse Is Bad Faith Bullshit (very good)
Your Software Is Not Sentient. Software simulacrum is not true consciousness, the stripper at the strip club doesn’t actually love you, and nearly all of the biggest problems with “AI” have very ordinary human origins.
He Remade the Southern Baptist Convention in His Image. Then Came the Abuse Allegations.
What Sort of AI Bubble Are We In?
Florida voters sue over ‘extreme’ new House map
Trillions in Retirement Dollars Flow Into Opaque Trusts. A little-talked about investment product is taking over the 401(k) world, and offering asset managers a way to increase exposure to private markets. (WHEEEEE!!!!!!)
That’s The Way
The growing AI backlash
The National Mall Is Revamping Its Food Kiosks and Adding 25 Food Carts
Trump DOJ agrees to ‘return or destroy’ evidence seized from MAGA Congressman Andy Ogles
NYPD searching for suspects after string of antisemitic graffiti found across Queens
Media Matters secures complete and total victory against Federal Trade Commission
Maine Reasons Why Mills Faltered As Platner Surged
Taraji P. Henson Criticizes Celebs Attending Jeff Bezos-Backed Met Gala: ‘So Confused. WTF Are We Doing?’
The vanity presidency
Google Chrome silently installs a 4 GB AI model on your device without consent. At a billion-device scale the climate costs are insane.
Drone Dominance Isn’t the Vital Lesson of Ukraine
Winning, Losing, And The Platner Problem
Trump’s Case Against Comey Is Imploding—and Handing Dems a New Weapon
Inside Palm Beach County’s newly signed Trump trademark deal for airport renaming
White House lawyers prep staff for dealing with a Democratic Congress
Plantiff in Case That Destroyed Voting Rights Act Exposed as Jan. 6er
The K-Shaped Economy Is Reshaping American Cities
The AI Hard Drive Shortage Is Making It More Expensive and Harder to Archive the Internet
What Trump’s Trade War Is Doing to America’s Farmers
Minneapolis grapples with the impact of Trump’s largest immigration crackdown yet
NPR went looking for Polymarket’s Panama headquarters. It’s elusive
Trump Administration Closes Watchdog Office For Immigration Detention Abuses
Check your storage: Chrome may be downloading a 4GB AI model — here’s what we know

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) was defeated in a three-way primary against two Trump-aligned challengers tonight. Emine Yücel has our story.
Rep. Julie Letlow (R-LA), endorsed by Trump, and Louisiana’s state treasurer, former congressman John Fleming, will proceed to a runoff next month. Cassidy, with about 25 percent of the vote, will not.
It’s another reminder of how, in 2026, the Republican Party is an entity wholly owned by Trump, where even the most mild ambivalence about the president is thoroughly punished. Indiana’s primaries in April gave us one example of this; tonight we have another.
Cassidy was one of the few remaining Republicans in the Senate to vote to convict Trump during his 2021, post-Jan. 6 impeachment trial. (Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska are the other Republicans who took that vote and remain in office.)
More recently, Cassidy partially bucked Trump through an embarrassing storyline involving RFK Jr.: The now-Secretary of Health and Human Services promised Cassidy, Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, that he would chill with the anti-vax agenda if confirmed. We all know what happened next. As Emine details in her piece, Kennedy secured Cassidy’s critical vote for confirmation, than ignored that commitment, leaving Cassidy limply reminding everyone from the Senate floor that Kennedy is a liar.
Though he later opposed other unqualified health nominees, such as Casey Means for Surgeon General, Cassidy’s misguided vote for Kennedy is shaping up to be his legacy.
I arrived in Essex on Friday evening for a few more days of sorting through the old family/parents’ home. We’ve made loads of progress over past months but there is still a daunting amount to do.
On Saturday morning Royal Mail collected five boxes – 80kg – of old copies of Renewal, Dissent and The Problems of Communism on their way to the Internet Archive for scanning and storage at some point in the future. Having given several other piles of journals to various archives and libraries, these, the last ones left, happily filled some Internet Archive gaps.
I then went to the local library, where I’d take five boxes of local history books a few months ago, to pick up three boxes of local history books, the ones they didn’t want. So, in aggregate, the first day here was progress, but not as much as hoped.
§ On Wednesday evening I made the mistake of reading something at the same time as walking into the kitchen, the top of my head inevitably colliding with the low doorway. It’s been a while since I’ve done it bad enough to end up on the floor. It’s an odd couple of seconds while one’s mind and body work out what’s happened and what to do:
I took it very easy for the next day or so.
§ On my way through London I went to see Akira at the Prince Charles Cinema. Despite having a flyer for it on my wall sometime early 90s I’d never seen it before. It was OK. Maybe I’d have liked it more if I’d seen it back then? All a bit silly and I didn’t connect with anything.
§ We finished re-watching Rubicon, most of which I’d forgotten since the first time around. It’s not perfect, even leaving aside the slightly hurried and inconclusive “we got canceled” ending, but it’s still good stuff. Very little action, lots of talking and figuring things out. I loved the characters of Kael and Spangler again, both interesting in different ways, and I’d love to see more of both. Grant is funny in his pomposity one moment and his awkwardness the next, and then touching in his fear about his family life. The nerdy workplace romance that was only hinted at, buried under the urgency of tracking down terrorists, was so sweet.
§ I know we’ve made progress here but there’s still so, so much to do. I don’t want to leave this place and yet I’m desperate to be free of it all.
1. University of Vermont enrollments expected to fall fifteen percent this year.
2, New NSF initiative, which seems set to bypass universities?
3. Are firms migrating from the US to Europe, or vice versa?
4. Soft tissue star injuries in the NBA are getting worse.
5. NY high school has 21 valedictorians all with A+ averages.
7. Are smartphones behind the decline in birth rates? (FT)
8. Patrick Collison on Detroit.
The post Sunday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Dwarkesh tours one of Jane Street’s datacenters. It’s extraordinary how much compute goes into finance. (I once predicted that the finance AIs would be the first to become conscious, since they have the most compute.) More generally, however, this is a peek inside the remarkable economics, technology and physics of a datacenter. Did you know the electrical signal in a copper wire can travel faster than light in fiber…and that matters! Amazing.
The post Dwarkesh in the Datacenter appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Well this is a strange thing to write about on an economics blog, isn’t it? When I started this blog, I made a deal with myself that I’d write about whatever I felt like writing about, even if it doesn’t fit my usual output. I’ve given my sci-fi and anime recommendations, talked about my clinical depression, and even published a chat with a robot. I also did one self-help post, about how to have friends past age 30:
But today might be the strangest post of all — I’m going to give some dating advice for men. If that doesn’t interest you, my apologies; I’ll be back with more econ-ish content in the next post.
For what it’s worth, I do think dating advice is an important topic of public concern. Data on romance and relationships is always iffy, because it’s based on surveys where definitions change, people lie, and samples tend to be biased. But it sure looks like young Americans aren’t dating as much anymore. Here’s Shadi Hamid in the Washington Post:
Over two-thirds of young adults have either not dated at all or only gone on a few dates in the last year. One of the main reasons? They lack confidence and don’t know how to approach the opposite sex, according to a report on America’s “dating recession” from the Wheatley Institute and the Institute for Family Studies…If trends continue, one-third of young adults will not get married and one-fourth won’t have kids.
Anecdotally, from talking to younger people and looking at other data sources, this seems to be the general trend. And I think it’s a negative trend, because having done happiness research in grad school, I’m well aware that romantic relationships are one of the most important predictors of long-term happiness.1 Young Americans have become much more unhappy, so I think if people had better dating lives, some of that could be reversed. Better romantic relationships could also help the fertility rate — these days, birth rate collapse is due mostly to fewer and fewer people forming couples at all.
So here’s a blog post with my dating advice. I realize that many of my readers will not find this post particularly useful. It’s specifically aimed at men, so if you’re a woman, I apologize — as a man, I’m just much more qualified to talk to other men about this. Also, most of my male readers are probably already married or in relationships, so they probably don’t need this advice. So I hope that even if it’s not useful, this post will still be entertaining to the people who don’t need it.
Also, before you read this post, please be warned: I’m going to talk very matter-of-factly about sex and sexuality. If you think sex is a topic unbecoming for a serious econ blogger to talk about, or if you feel it’s taboo or sacred, then please skip this post and accept my apologies. Personally, I think our society’s romantic problems are well past the point where we can afford to treat sex as something mystical that will just take care of itself without us needing to think or talk about it explicitly, but if you disagree, I respect that.
Additionally, please be warned that although I will sometimes use the word “girls” to mean “women”, in keeping with the American colloquial usage of the term “girls” to refer to adult women in a romantic context, everything I say should be taken to only apply to adults and adult relationships. (And now is a good time to say — and it should also go without saying — that the most important piece of advice when dating is to always obtain consent.)
You’ll also notice that my advice is very general stuff. It’s not about techniques for getting a date or getting someone into bed. It’s about how to think about dating — who to get advice from, what to expect from a normal dating life, how to be comfortable about various aspects of the process, and so on. I view specific techniques for attracting women as less important — they’re heavily dependent on cultural context, personality type, and a bunch of other factors. In general, I think once you have the right mindset about dating and romance, you can just experiment to find the specific methods that work.
My basic pieces of dating advice for men are:
Think carefully about what you actually want from dating and romance.
Be very distrustful of people who talk to you about dating and romance on the internet; these people rarely have your best interests in mind.
It’s crucial to realize that sex and romance are achievable by regular, average men — not just by hyper-attractive or high-status “Chads”.
Women want regular, average men for lots of reasons — for companionship, for sex, and for helping to raise kids.
Being attractive is important, but so are A) actually wanting romance, and B) learning to communicate with women.
First, let’s talk about why you would even want to take advice from me.
There are a lot of guys on the internet and in the media who will offer you dating advice — on forums, in self-help books, even in coaching sessions you can sign up for. These gurus almost invariably tout their expertise in the matter — they pick up hot chicks with ease, they’ve slept with hundreds of women, and so on.
I’m definitely not one of those guys. I’m an unmarried man over 40, and my “body count” is certainly not in the hundreds. In fact, for a decade, I was uninterested in sex and dating (probably as an aftereffect of depression). If you want to learn how to walk into a party and go home with the hottest girl in the room, or hook up with 100 women on dating apps, I’m not someone who can tell you how to do that.
Instead, despite my long period of asexuality, I’m basically a normal, average guy. I’ve had a number of long-term relationships — I’m in one right now — and some shorter-term hookups too. I’m pretty unexceptional. As a lonely single man, why would you take advice from an average shlub like me?
Well, maybe you wouldn’t. If you really want to be the charming hot guy who gets all the girls — the “Chad”, as they say — you should go get advice from one of those guys. (Having read a few of those books, I think Mark Manson’s Models is probably the best.) Or maybe you should just practice until you get good enough to write a seduction guide of your own.
But is that really what you want? I think most men just don’t think about this question very much. A lot of men assume that getting laid is very hard, so they should just aim to become as good at it as humanly possible. Others simply accept the old stereotype that men want to sleep with as many women as they can, without considering whether they themselves fit that stereotype.
The truth is that lots of men wouldn’t actually like to be a Chad. Sleeping with hundreds of women might sound awesome if you’re currently sleeping with zero women, but once you start actually making a bit of progress in that direction, you quickly realize how soul-crushing and lonely that lifestyle can be. A lot of men — maybe even most men — get emotionally attached to our sex partners. There are well-known natural mechanisms for this. For those guys, going through one woman after another, again and again, for years and years, is just making and breaking those attachments again and again. That’s not fun, that’s self-punishment.
So if you wouldn’t really enjoy the Chad lifestyle, why would you want advice from a guy who does enjoy it? If you were looking for your dream home — or even just for a place to live for the next few years — would you really want to take house-hunting advice from a guy who switches apartments every week and lives out of a suitcase? Maybe, maybe not.
Maybe it would also help to get advice from some average, regular guys. In the days before the internet, most of the male role models in any guy’s life — fathers, athletic coaches, teachers, bosses — would be average, regular guys. When we all went online, we lost that. I don’t want to set myself up as a role model, but perhaps the internet could benefit from more average-guy input.
Another thing to consider is this: A lot of the people on the internet offering romantic advice are trying to exploit you. Seduction gurus, of course, make money from getting you to buy their books, watch their videos, take their courses, or attend their seminars. That’s just typical capitalism; some of them are probably offering good products, while others are probably just slick salesmen.
But most of the people on the internet are trying to exploit you in less obvious ways. Twitter trolls want your likes and retweets, and redditors want your upvotes. Political activists want you to attach yourself to their cause. Lonely people want your company, while sadists just want to enjoy your suffering. Very few of the people online who make pronouncements about sex and romance are doing it because they want you to get a girlfriend and be happy. If you did that, you might get off social media, and they’d be left all alone.
So why am I any different? Because this is just a one-off blog post, for one thing. I usually write about economics, and I have no plans to pivot to writing about sex and dating. I don’t actually care if you view me as an expert here, or if you agree with me — after this I’m going to go back to writing about interest rates and industrial policy.
My reason for writing this is simply that — as regular readers of this blog are probably aware — I want to see more people in this world be happy, well-adjusted, and fulfilled. Sex and romance are a big part of that. If just one or two people get a healthier outlook on that aspect of life from reading this post, then my time won’t have been wasted.
It’s impossible to be on the internet these days without encountering “incels”. The term is short for “involuntary celibate”, meaning a guy who can’t get laid even though he wants to.2 In recent years, the term has come to mean a specific ideology. You can read an academic summary of incel ideas here, or a more simplified account here. I can try to summarize the basic worldview here.
Essentially, the incels believe that women are only attracted to a very small number of men — guys who are extremely handsome, extremely high-status, extremely rich, etc. This, they believe, naturally shuts almost all men out of the dating market and condemns them to involuntary celibacy. All the girls go for the top few guys (the “Chads”), leaving all the other guys out frustrated and alone.
For a lonely or sexually frustrated man — especially young men, without much sexual experience — this is an incredibly seductive and powerful idea. I would bet that most young men at least toy with ideas like this at some point in their lives. For about a year and a half while I was in college, I independently came up with ideas fairly similar to this. (I changed my mind when I got a girlfriend, but that’s precisely the problem — guys who believe the incel canon often get “blackpilled” into not even trying to find a girlfriend at all, which only seems to confirm their beliefs.) In fact, you can find instances of men making incel-adjacent claims for centuries.
It’s also natural — and not necessarily unhealthy — for men to get together and complain about their romantic difficulties as a way of bonding with other men. Women do this too. Getting together with your same-sex friends and saying “Men, amirite?” or “Women, amirite?” is a time-honored activity, and I think it’s probably usually benign.
The problem emerges when this activity moves onto the internet. When frustrated young guys gather in forums for like-minded people, they amplify each other’s worst fears and become an echo chamber. They also expose themselves to trolls — sadists who go on those same forums and tell naive young men that they’ll never get laid, just to laugh at their misery.
Nowadays, it’s almost impossible to talk about dating and romance on the public internet without being attacked by incels. Freddie DeBoer wrote about this a couple months ago, in an excellent post called “The Incel’s Veto and Other Observations”:
He writes:
The incel’s veto is the specific prohibition against men ever frankly discussing sex in any positive way that directly reflects the fact that they have sexual experience and thus have earned the consent of women…[I]n the 2020s we live in a weird discursive space where our perceptions of romantic and sexual behavior are constantly being filtered through the lens of the people who have experienced very little of either. The incel’s veto helps spread the ubiquitous online assumption that nobody is getting laid, anywhere, ever, and that it’s inherently pathological to treat sex and romance as not just healthy aspects of human life but as mundane and achievable.
I recently got a taste of the “incel’s veto”, when some incels found a video of my birthday dinner from 2025 and got very mad at the various happy couples in the video.
Incel ideology is certainly not the only toxic, unhelpful package of beliefs about sex and romance that’s going around on the internet. There are many others. But I find that young men are especially susceptible to this one.
And incel ideas also contribute to a peculiarly toxic strain of right-wing politics. Some percent of incels turn to the “red pill” — they believe that if women can be barred from having jobs, it will force them to accept lower-status men as mates out of pure economic necessity. Have you ever read a fairy tale about a prince who tries to force a poor girl to marry him, even though she clearly hates him? Red Pill ideology basically thinks we can scale that approach up to industrial levels, so that every regular guy becomes the evil prince.
None of this is good for our society. We shouldn’t want men getting “blackpilled” into despair or “redpilled” into right-wing nonsense. Fortunately, the incel worldview just isn’t true — it’s based on a hodgepodge of exaggerations, bad assumptions, and misreading of the data.
For example, the claim that only a few men get all the women is just empirically false. The blogger Maximus at the blog The Nuance Pill has documented this exhaustively:
For one thing, according to surveys, although sexlessness has risen among young Americans in recent years, it’s about the same for young men and young women:

And when we look at who’s had sex in the past year, the picture is the same:

Sexlessness rates of ~30% for young people is pretty bad news, in my opinion, but the number is pretty equal for men and women. And in any given year, most men and women are monogamous, with only a few people having large numbers of sex partners. Other surveys like the General Social Survey show the exact same pattern, reducing the likelihood that these results are being driven by bad survey technique or large-scale lying.
It turns out that the tendencies that the incels believe drive all of sex and dating are real, but pretty weak. Yes, male sexlessness is more common than female sexlessness, but only a little bit. Yes, there are more men than women who report a large number of sex partners, but the difference is very small. A majority of young people are just having sex with exactly one other person — no more, no less.
The same principle holds when we look at other standard incel beliefs. Maximus has a good X thread laying out the evidence of inequality on dating apps. Incels will often tell you that a few men get all the likes and matches on apps, while most women get both. In fact, it’s pretty gender-equal. For Hinge, men show a little more inequality, but not a lot more:

And the same is true of Tinder matches:

As the thread goes on to show, the fact that the average woman gets much more attention on dating apps than the average man is due not to inequality of interest, but to A) the fact that there are a lot more men on dating apps than women, and B) men are a lot more likely to initiate contact than women.
Other common incel talking points are similarly exaggerated. It’s true that in modern rich nations, men are somewhat more likely than women to never have children, but the difference is just a few percentage points in most rich countries:

(And some of this difference may be due to more women wanting children.)
The same was usually true throughout human history. Before agriculture, more women reproduced than men, but the ratio was not large, and in some regions it was flipped. There was a period after the invention of agriculture where the ratio was very high, due to things like war, kings siring tons of kids, etc., but it’s hard to argue that this was due to women’s choices.
Anyway, this is only the tip of the iceberg; I can do a longer post about incel tropes if people want. The short version is that almost every incel trope is grounded in a slight statistical tendency that incels exaggerate wildly. When you look at the actual numbers, the same simple fact asserts itself again and again: Most men have sex, most men and women are both pretty monogamous, and most men reproduce.
It might seem like I spent a long time here debunking some fringe online ideology in a post about dating advice. But I did this because it gave me a chance to show, with data, the central fact that motivates the rest of my advice: Dating and sex are very achievable for a regular guy. You do not have to be 6’5”, work in finance, or have a trust fund. You just have to be a regular, normal, typical guy.
Are there guys who have some special problem that prevents them from dating? Yes, of course! There are men with physical disabilities that prevent sexual function. There are men with depression (which basically prevents you from doing anything), and other mental illnesses. There are men with erectile dysfunction. There are some men for whom the struggle for economic survival absorbs all their time and money. There are men in prison. There are men who are gay and in denial about it. There are asexuals who just don’t want to date.
My advice, unfortunately, is not going to work for those men. There are doctors, psychotherapists, and other professionals who can help with some of those problems, but not all of them. Some men really do draw the short straw and get screwed over by circumstance.
But for the average, typical guy, dating is a very possible mission. That’s who my advice — speaking as a guy who is fairly average in this regard — is aimed at.
As I said above, my general advice to men is to think less about what women want, and more about what you want from dating and romance in the first place. But OK, why would women want a regular, average man?
A lot of men genuinely have no idea how to answer this question. They have no idea what a regular, average man has to offer to women. You hear guys joke that they “tricked” women into sleeping with them, or dating them, or marrying them and spending the rest of their lives with them and bearing their children. That joke is based on a core of real insecurity — the idea that the average guy is fundamentally undesirable to women, and that to get a woman to want him, he has to either be exceptional — a Chad — or to pull the wool over women’s eyes and get them to act against their best interest.
This is crazy. As we saw from the chart above, most men have sex in any given year. That means some women must want them. They can’t all be super hot or super rich or super famous. Most of them must be regular, average guys. Short guys, ugly guys, poor guys, nerdy guys — most of them are getting laid. And it’s just not realistic to think that most women are “tricked” into sleeping with these men.
Freddie DeBoer puts it well:
Though it opens me up to criticism, I still believe that men getting women to engage in consensual and enthusiastic sex is not the moon landing. It’s not a feat of engineering requiring years of specialized training and a jaw that could cut glass. It is, in fact, one of the most democratically distributed activities in the entire history of our species, something that nervous people, ugly people, broke people, awkward people, people with bad teeth and worse haircuts and zero social media presence have been managing to do, successfully and repeatedly, for roughly three hundred and fifty thousand years of anatomically modern human existence.
The numbers simply don’t lie. Most women must have some reason to desire sexual, romantic relationships with regular, average men.
What are those reasons? In my experience — especially from having lots of female friends and watching them with their boyfriends and hookups and husbands — it boils down to three basic things:
Companionship
Good sex
Help with raising kids
Companionship is far and away the most important of the three. Once a woman stops living with her parents, her life becomes a lonely enterprise. If a man doesn’t keep a woman company, who will? She has friends, but most of them eventually move away or withdraw into their own families, and have less time for her. She has coworkers, but she’ll change jobs (or they will). Her romantic partner is the only person who sticks with her — who moves with her, who always sees her at the end of the day, who will be there for her at the end. Consider this chart:

Now consider this poll:

Companionship means keeping a woman company — going to dinner, cuddling on the couch, talking about life, etc. But it means a lot more than that. It means helping with unexpected challenges, like health problems or finances. It means giving her advice on her job or her personal problems. It means throwing spiders out of the house when she’s too scared to grab them in a cup.
This, from what I can see, is the main reason women want men. And the Chad who’s going to be on to a different woman next week, or who’s sleeping with five women at a time, just isn’t going to provide this sort of steady companionship.
The second thing women want from a man is good sex. Sex is a very important part of romantic relationships — there’s a reason we don’t marry our platonic friends. A lot of men seem to think that women are inherently asexual, or at least have much lower drive than men, but this is just wrong. Research shows that the strongest predictor of sexual satisfaction in women is just how often they have sex. Men do have stronger libidos than women on average, but the difference is small — by some reckonings, it’s less than half as big as the male-female difference in height.
For a man, this basically means two things:
You should learn to be comfortable about sex, including the idea of sex and the actual act itself.
You should learn to be good at sex.
A lot of guys have hangups about sex. Sometimes these are religious, sometimes they’re related to feelings of inadequacy, sometimes they’re related to simple squeamishness and modesty. But women have these hangups too! And more, in fact — women have the risk of pregnancy, and they run the risk of having a man get violent during sex.
Men have to help women out by being as comfortable about sex as they can. You basically just have to get over your hangups as much as possible. That’s easier said than done, of course. Obviously, one way to get comfortable with sex is to do it a whole bunch of times (but if you can do that, you probably won’t need my advice). But there are other ways. You can talk to friends about it. You can read stuff that people — especially women — write about sex on the internet. You can even go to therapy.
But the important piece of advice here is about the goal: to make sex something that you’re not scared of, disgusted by, mystified about, or overawed by.
You should also be good at it, of course. Being good in bed won’t just help you keep a girlfriend; it’ll make you more confident about the value you can provide to women, as a man. The most important way to be good in bed is simply to pay attention to your partner and observe what makes them feel good. It’s kind of astonishing how quickly this will make you a good lover.
Incidentally, this is why a woman might want to have sex with a regular, average guy, instead of a Chad type who has slept with a million women. The Chad type won’t have as much time for her, for one thing — he’ll be off with one of his other girls, or he’ll get bored and dump her. That doesn’t make for a great sex life. And despite his extensive experience, the Chad’s approach to sex will be pretty standardized and generic, since A) he’s calibrating to the average of a bunch of different women, and B) he’s not going to spend much time with any one woman so he doesn’t need to invest much time and effort learning what she likes.
Anyway, if you haven’t had much sex, there are still ways you can prepare. One thing you can do is read things women have written about sex, to get some ideas.3 If you do this, you’ll quickly learn what a huge variety of different things women desire.
In 1973, the author Nancy Friday asked a huge number of women about their sexual fantasies, and compiled them into a book called My Secret Garden. This book is incredibly eye-opening, because what you realize is that different women want a huge variety of different things. In fact, if you’re the kind of guy who thinks women are all the same, my advice is to read My Secret Garden and realize how incredibly different they actually are.
Anyway, a third thing many women want from men — eventually — is help raising kids. Most women want to have kids at some point, and being a single mom is very difficult, both financially and time-wise. They want to find a good, dependable man to help shoulder the financial, logistical, and physical burden of child-rearing. (This doesn’t mean a dad needs to make more money than the mom does — even if she makes $200,000 and he makes only $80,000, that’s a 40% boost to family income. That’s a lot.)
Most Chad-type guys aren’t going to be good dads. And so lots of women are just bored with these kinds of guys, since they can’t fantasize about being together for the long term. Hooking up with Chads might be convenient, or even fun, but for lots of women it’ll feel empty because they know it’s just a fleeting dalliance.4
Anyway, I’ll quote Freddie DeBoer’s essay one more time:
The woman across from you at the coffee shop may be someone who will never ever want to fuck you - that is often the case - but she’s also not a jewel locked in a vault that only a six-foot-three hedge fund manager with a Greek statue’s bone structure can crack. Rather, she’s a human being with free will and a body that wants things, a mind that gets lonely sometimes, a heart that may like very much to find someone else to press against in the dark… a person, in other words. Just like you, you absolute disaster, with your anxieties and your weird hobbies and your fridge that only has condiments in it! Just like you. Just like you.
Yes.
Biologist Frank A. Beach described three types of female sexual behavior: attractivity, proceptivity, and receptivity. When I took a class on human behavioral biology from the famous Robert Sapolsky, he noted that these terms could also describe three very general things that anyone — men or women included — needs in order to actually have sexual success.
You can think of attractivity as how attractive you are, proceptivity as how much you want sex and romance, and receptivity as how easily you can tell who wants you back.
Most dating advice for men focuses on attractivity. There’s the easy stuff: Stay at a healthy weight, go to the gym and get in shape, learn to dress well. I think you should definitely do all that stuff! Being hotter won’t automatically make women like you, but it certainly won’t hurt, and it’ll make you feel more confident.
There’s also a ton of stuff about “game” — pickup lines, flirtation, seduction techniques, and so on. This is definitely a part of being attractive, for both men and women. Attractiveness isn’t just physical — a hot-looking person who sits silently in a corner is probably not going to have as much romantic success as someone who goes out there and tries to talk to people in an attractive manner. My view on this is that each person should develop their own method of flirting — it’ll feel more authentic than trying to copy someone else’s canned routine. But really, I’m just not an expert in this at all.
Proceptivity, on the other hand, is incredibly neglected. As someone who spent a decade not wanting sex or romance at all, I can guarantee you that if you don’t actually want these things, you’re not going to get them.5 You might want a girlfriend in the abstract sense, but if you don’t have the raw drive to go out and get one — to ask out the girl at the coffee shop, to get on the dating apps, to have your friend set you up, etc. — the desire is likely to remain abstract and unfulfilled.
How can you make yourself want sex and romance more? Well, I do put some credence in the research showing that porn overuse decreases libido, so I advise men to cut down or eliminate their use of porn. But usually, I think the main problem with proceptivity is that men don’t think carefully about what they want from sex and romance.
If you think that dating means you have to approach a million women in bars or on apps, like the seduction gurus do, then it might not sound appealing — especially if you’re shy and introverted. If you’re a romantic kind of guy who just wants one special girl, and you think dating has to be about having one-night stands with dozens of people, you might just avoid the whole thing.
A good way to increase proceptivity, I think, is to sit around and imagine what your ideal dating and romantic life would look like. It probably won’t go exactly like that — reality rarely matches our fantasies — but it’ll help you envision a dating process that you would actually enjoy doing, rather than one you think you have to go do because someone told you to. The more clearly you can envision your ideal romantic life, the easier it’ll be to figure out the first steps toward that life, and the more motivated you’ll be to take those steps instead of sitting at home watching YouTube.
Another impediment to proceptivity is the fear of rejection. In American culture, men are expected to take the lead romantically, and this means they’ll often end up getting rejected. A lot of guys are so scared of this rejection that they dread even trying to date in the first place.
I don’t have any silver bullet to eliminate the fear of rejection; it’s something a lot of people struggle with, and nothing I say is going to magically make it fine. One thing you can do, of course, is just bite the bullet and practice asking people out and getting rejected until you get used to it. But a lot of guys who are shy or introverted aren’t going to be able to do that.
For those people, I think the only solution is to try to get a healthier perspective on rejection. One such perspective is: Rejection is not a bad thing. If a woman doesn’t want you, that’s fine; you’re in the same situation you were in before you even thought about asking her out. And if you keep getting rejected by a bunch of different women, that’s useful feedback — it helps tell you that you’re doing something wrong, and that you need to adjust. Thinking of rejection as some sort of personal humiliation is pointless. It doesn’t mean you’re a loser, or inherently unattractive, or destined to be alone, etc. It’s not some test that you should have passed. I realize it’s easier to say these things than to believe them, but I think it’s a healthy perspective to aim for.
Anyway, this brings us to receptivity. As a man, being able to figure out when a woman is interested in you is incredibly important. If you aren’t good at this, women might get scared by you, or think you’re a creep. But it’s hard! Most men aren’t born with the magic ability to know whether a woman likes them. You can get good at this, but it requires lots of practice — and in the meantime, it’s easy to make mistakes.
But I think there is a way to compensate for low receptivity, especially when you’re just starting out dating. It’s to be clear and explicit. If you are romantically interested in a woman, ask her on a date, and use the word “date”. Say “Would you like to go on a date with me?”.
This accomplishes several things. First of all, dating apps have made women very accustomed to using the word “date” all the time, so if you don’t use the word, they might feel strange or confused. Second of all, saying “date” removes ambiguity from a situation — instead of having to sit there wondering whether someone likes you or not, you can just ask them out and find out immediately. If she’s not interested, you can just move on quickly and not waste your time, instead of agonizing for weeks over the uncertainty. Third, saying “date” avoids the dreaded “friend zone”, because it makes it clear that you want something other than friendship.
In fact, this is really my one and only piece of concrete advice about how to get a date. There’s a heck of a lot more to it, of course, but I think that if men have the right mindset toward the whole thing, then learning how to do it in practice will be fun and exciting instead of heartbreaking and terrifying. If you start with the right attitude toward dating and romance and sex, the other pieces will eventually fall into place.
Correlation isn’t causation, but the mechanism is well-understood.
A female incel is called a “femcel”.
Another is to have platonic female friends who you’re close enough to that you can talk openly about sex. But please don’t use this as a way to try to hit on your friends. The purpose of having platonic female friends is to have friends, not to get laid!
In fact, I have friends who are Chads who keep getting dumped every time they try to give up their promiscuous ways and settle down with one special girl. Women just don’t take them seriously, even when they want to be taken seriously. If you’ve slept with 200 women, it’s very difficult to convince the 201st that she’s different.
Well, not very often at least.
More colleges are admitting more students from early admissions/early decision applications, and fewer students from their waitlists.
The WSJ has those stories.
Starting from the end, waitlists:
The Only Thing Harder Than Getting Into College Is Getting Off the Wait List. College wait lists have ballooned to give schools options; ‘Why continue stringing me on?’ By Roshan Fernandez
"The University of California, Berkeley had almost 6,500 students on its wait list last year. It ended up admitting none of them.
"The only thing harder than getting into college, it seems, is getting off the wait list. At some schools, the wait list is far more selective than the college’s overall acceptance rate.
...
"For colleges, it’s harder than ever to predict who will enroll because students are applying to more schools. Colleges have always used wait lists to manage enrollment, but the lists have ballooned in recent years. It’s part of many colleges’ elaborate cat-and-mouse game to manage yield, or the share of admitted students who enroll. And wait lists have turned increasingly unruly, with fewer standard protocols than traditional admissions.
###########
And before the waitlists come the early applications:
The College-Admissions Chess Game Is More Complicated Than Ever
Students have to submit final decisions Friday after a byzantine cycle
By Roshan Fernandez
"Many schools are leaning in to early application windows, filling more of their classes through early rounds. At Tulane University in New Orleans, about two-thirds of admissions offers to the Class of 2030 were extended via nonbinding early action, a spokesperson said. The school has also offered early decision since 2016.
"At some schools, early-round acceptance rates are three to four times higher than the regular round, which is why many admissions consultants suggest applying early. Colleges say this reflects a higher-quality applicant pool.
...
"The moves come on top of a long-practiced yield-protection tactic: rejecting or wait listing applicants who seem overqualified and therefore unlikely to enroll."
This is the eighth and final chapter of my SQLAlchemy 2 in Practice book. If you'd like to support my work, I encourage you to buy this book, either directly from my store or on Amazon. Thank you!
Whether you are building a traditional web application, or a web API that works alongside a web front end or smartphone app, SQLAlchemy is one of the best choices to add database support to a Python web server. In this chapter two example integrations with Flask and FastAPI will be demonstrated. These are two of the most popular Python web frameworks and should serve as examples even if you use another web framework.
I participated in an Open to Debate debate at Johns Hopkins not too long ago, argued yes, and my side saw a twelve-point shift in our favor. Here are some links:
Links to the full debate:
YouTube: https://youtu.be/AuPz09dpLSc
Also to be broadcast over NPR.
The post “Is the scientific enterprise too risk-averse?” appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
When I was young, the South Korean model was generally lumped in with places like Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong as a case of “export-led growth”. Even in the early 1970s, South Korea was still poorer than the North. There was no consensus that East Asia would do better than Latin America (or indeed that America would do better than the Soviet Union.)
I hate the term “export-led growth”, as on its face it would seem to imply that South Korea got rich by running trade surpluses. But exactly the opposite is true. During the three and a half decades of near double-digit growth (roughly 1963-97), Korea ran almost nonstop trade deficits, apart from a few years in the 1980s. This graph is from an excellent Doug Irwin paper that discusses the Korean reforms of 1964-65…
Here is more from Scott Sumner.
The post South Korea facts of the day appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Samantha Cole, writing for 404 Media:
Late Thursday evening, Thomas Dietterich, chair of the computer science section of ArXiv, wrote on X: “If generative AI tools generate inappropriate language, plagiarized content, biased content, errors, mistakes, incorrect references, or misleading content, and that output is included in scientific works, it is the responsibility of the author(s). We have recently clarified our penalties for this. If a submission contains incontrovertible evidence that the authors did not check the results of LLM generation, this means we can’t trust anything in the paper.” [...]
“The penalty is a 1-year ban from arXiv followed by the requirement that subsequent arXiv submissions must first be accepted at a reputable peer-reviewed venue,” Dietterich wrote. Dietterich told me in an email on Friday morning that this is a one-strike rule — meaning authors caught just once including AI slop in submissions will be banned — but that decisions will be open to appeal.
I see no cognitive dissonance in being pro-AI, in general, but vehemently anti-slop.
Nate Anderson, writing at Ars Technica:
But I was surprised this weekend to suddenly find myself cut off; Reddit simply would not let me visit the site on my mobile phone. Instead, a new overlay popped up, saying, “Get the app to keep using Reddit.”
There was no way to skip, bypass, or close the overlay. It did not provide any instructions or alternatives for continuing to use the mobile web version. What it did offer was a large button I could press to get the app. If I did so, the overlay told me, I would be able to “search better” and “personalize your feed” — two things I don’t care to do. [...]
I reached out to the company to ask what was going on. According to a spokesperson, “We recently started running a test for a small subset of frequent logged-out mobile users that prompts them to download the app after visiting the site. These users are already familiar with Reddit and we’ve seen that the experience is much better for them in the app. The app offers a more personalized experience and users can more easily find communities that match their interests.”
Yes, they’re doing this for the users’ benefit. Sure.
Brandon Pho, reporting for San Jose Spotlight:
The lawsuit filed Monday alleges that instead of cracking down on deceptive ads designed to trick users out of their money, Meta has hamstrung its own fraud prevention teams and helped fake companies bypass its filters to enable the tech powerhouse to enjoy an estimated $7 billion in ad revenue from the scams every year. [...]
The county lawsuit seeks attorney fees and a ruling barring Meta from further alleged violations of false advertising and unfair competition laws. Much of the lawsuit’s allegations stem from a 2025 Reuters investigation suggesting Meta was at one point involved in one-third of all successful Internet scams in the U.S.
The company has vowed to fight the lawsuit.
“This claim relies on Reuters reporting that distorts our motives and ignores the full range of actions we take to combat scams every day,” a spokesperson for the company told San José Spotlight. “We aggressively fight scams on and off our platforms because they’re not good for us or the people and businesses that rely on our services.”
Reuters’s Jeff Horwitz and Engen Tham were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting for their reporting on this story. As the adage goes, if the facts are on your side, pound the facts. If the law’s on your side, pound the law. If neither are on your side, pound the table.
I have to say, though, it does not seem scalable for individual counties to be suing Meta.
Steven Levy, writing for Wired last month after Apple’s CEO transition was announced, under the provocative headline “Apple’s Next CEO Needs to Launch a Killer AI Product” (News+ link to get around Wired’s miserly paywall):
Much more recently, I quizzed Ternus and global marketing head Greg Joswiak about Apple’s future, specifically its plans to get ahead of the AI transformation. Ternus acknowledged that AI is “an immense kind of inflection point,” but couched it as one of many leaps that Apple has navigated. Each hit product — the Apple II, the Mac, iTunes, the iPod, the iPhone, iPad — piggybacked on a previous product. “We never think about shipping a technology,” he said. “We want to ship amazing products, features, and experiences, and we don’t want our customers to think about what [underlying] technology makes it possible. That’s the way we think about AI.”
That’s fine, but I look back to the mid-2000s when everybody was waiting for Apple to come out with a phone. When Jobs finally delivered in January 2007, the product defined the mobile era. It’s a big ask for Ternus to do something similar for the AI age — but it’s an opportunity that must be seized. AI threatens to disrupt the entire iPhone ecosystem. By the end of this decade, it’s unlikely that people will swipe on their phones to tap on Uber or Lyft. They will just tell their always-on AI agent to get them home. Or that agent will have already figured out where they need to go, and the car will be waiting without the friction of a request. “There’s an app for that,” may be replaced by “Let the agent do that.”
I’m a huge longtime Steven Levy fan, but this is nonsense. It’s hard to read this and not worry that he too has lost his mind to the AI snake-oil hypesters. What Ternus told him is exactly right. The Apple way is never to ship a technology. The iPod wasn’t about MP3 files. It wasn’t about 1.8-inch hard drives. It was about music. The iPhone did define the mobile era (which we’re still very much in), but Apple doesn’t need to capitalize on every single market the mobile era opened up. Social media is a defining component of the mobile era. It comprises the entirety of Meta’s value and a sizable slice of Google’s (via YouTube). Apple doesn’t have a social network business. It’s fine — because the way people consume and create social media is using their phones.
Does AI “threaten to disrupt the entire iPhone ecosystem”? It’s possible, but it doesn’t seem nearly as likely to me as Levy asserts. Changing the iPhone ecosystem? Sure — that’s already true. Obviating the iPhone ecosystem? I don’t see it. Levy’s argument reminds me of the hype around “the cloud” when that first became a term. It’s so meaningless when used broadly (e.g. “Everything will soon be in the cloud”) that it could mean anything. It’s step #2 in the gnomes-stealing-underpants master plan.
The idea that AI agents “will have already figured out where [we] need to go, and the car will be waiting without the friction of a request” strikes me as pure fever dream high-on-the-hype fantasy. I’m just going to step outside a restaurant when I’m done eating a meal and a ride-share is going to be there, waiting for me, without my having hailed it? Every time? And I’m going to find this pleasing, not creepy? And ride-share drivers are going to respond to all these requests, because the requests will never be wrong? And this is going to happen, somehow, without my carrying a phone with me? And this is going to happen in the next four years? I don’t think I’d want this even if it were plausible, but it doesn’t sound plausible.
Actual products have to be real. Actual experiences have to rely on actual products. How exactly in Levy’s end-of-this-decade scenario will we tell our “always-on AI agent” to get us home? What microphone is listening to the command? What speaker is telling us the request was understood and acted upon? What screen do we look at to see how far away the hailed car is? I’d bet a pretty large sum of money that in 2030, when someone hails a ride-share vehicle to take them home, the most common product they’ll use to do that will be their phone. Whether they’re doing it via a verbal command issued to an “always-on AI agent” or good old tapping and swiping, it’ll be a phone.
If you think that people will buy smaller devices to replace their phones, and use those to talk to “always-on AI agents” instead, you have to answer some questions. What company is the best in the world at making smaller-than-phone personal computing devices? What device will people use as their camera? What device will people use as their screen, for watching videos, playing games, texting, and (one hopes) reading? My answers to those three questions: Apple, phone, phone. Why would smaller devices — you know, like watches, earbuds, and, say, glasses — work independently rather than pair with the phone that you’re almost certainly still going to be carrying with you?
Only a fool would argue that Apple can stand on the sidelines and ignore AI. It’s very different from, say, social media that way. Social media doesn’t pervade everything in technology. You can ignore social media as a user. (And you’re probably more productive, and happier, if you do.) A company can eschew social media as a business. AI, on the other hand, is pervasive. It can’t be ignored. But it’s just technology.
Wireless networking is pervasive too. But Apple doesn’t have “a killer wireless networking product”.1 Wireless networking simply pervades everything Apple makes. I’m hard pressed to think of a single product Apple makes that doesn’t use some combination of Wi-Fi, cellular, Bluetooth, and proprietary wireless protocols. There was a time, not too long ago, when Apple didn’t make a single product with wireless connectivity. Now it’s pervasive in all their devices. That’s more what AI is going to be like. There’s not going to be one “killer AI device”. Everything is going to be an AI device, to some extent, just like how everything today is a wireless connectivity device, to some extent.
AirPort qualified, arguably. But Apple walked away from it, alas. ↩︎
President Donald J. Trump arrived back in the United States of America today after a three-day state visit to China. Isaac Arnsdorf, Michael Birnbaum, and Michelle Ye Hee Lee of the Washington Post note that the summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping yielded “exactly what Xi aimed to achieve with the visit.” Its pageantry and Trump’s gestures of friendship and admiration showed the U.S. and China as peers, something previous U.S. leaders have rejected.
In an interview with Fox News Channel personality Sean Hannity that aired today, Trump said: “It’s the two great countries. I call it the G-2. This is the G-2. I think it’ll go down as a very important moment in history.”
Former China director on the National Security Council Julian Gewirtz, who served under President Joe Biden, told the Washington Post reporters: “Xi has done something Chinese leaders have been working toward for decades—bringing an American president to Beijing as an undisputed peer. Xi used the opulent optics of the visit to make clear to the world that China and the United States are the two dominant, equally matched superpowers. There is no going back.”
Xi has said before he thinks “the East is rising and the West declining.” Referring to that idea Thursday, before the two leaders met in Beijing, Xi made it clear he sees the U.S. as a declining power and pondered, “Can China and the United States overcome the ‘Thucydides Trap’ and create a new paradigm of major country relations?”
The Thucydides Trap is a theory, put forward by Harvard political scientist Graham Allison, that when a rising power threatens to replace an existing power, the conflict between the two tends to spark a war.
As if to illustrate that the U.S. is a declining power, the Chinese media downplayed the importance of a visit from a U.S. president. As James Palmer of Foreign Policy noted, on the day Trump arrived, the main story on the front page of the state-run English-language newspaper China Daily was the visit of the president of Tajikistan the day before. The Chinese Communist Party newspaper featured Trump’s visit on page 3.
Trump seemed to miss the larger context of the honors he so clearly enjoyed, telling the Fox News Channel’s Brett Baier that the summit was a success and that the most significant win for the United States was “relationship. It’s all about relationship. I have a very good relationship with President Xi and with China. And it sounds like something that doesn’t mean anything, but it’s everything in dealmaking and problems we’ve solved. The two of us have solved a lot of problems between— that somebody else would have maybe done very badly with. We’ve solved a lot of problems over the years.”
Tamara Keith and Jennifer Pak of NPR noted that Xi did not return Trump’s personal praise, speaking instead about relations between the U.S. and China.
Keith and Pak also reported that Trump boasted the visit had produced “some fantastic trade deals, good for both countries” and told Sean Hannity of the Fox News Channel that China had agreed to buy soybeans and Boeing aircraft, before adding: “I sort of, I think it was a commitment. I mean, you know, it was sort of like a statement, but I think it was a commitment. It’s a great thing. It’s a lot of jobs.”
China has not commented on any promised purchases. It did warn that if the U.S. mishandles the question of Taiwan, a self-governing island Beijing claims, it could put the “entire relationship” between the U.S. and China in jeopardy, and that “the most important issue in China-U.S. relations” is Taiwan. The U.S. did not mention Taiwan in its own readout of the meeting.
Trump had stayed quiet on social media while in China, but once he left the country he had things to say. Somebody must have explained the meaning of Xi’s Thucydides Trap comment, but rather than taking offense, Trump on May 14 said Xi “was referring to the tremendous damage we suffered during the four years of Sleepy Joe Biden and the Biden Administration, and on that score, he was 100% correct. Our Country suffered immeasurably with open borders, high taxes, transgender for everybody, men in women’s sports, DEI, horrible trade deals, rampant crime, and so much more!
“President Xi was not referring to the incredible rise that the United States has displayed to the world during the 16 spectacular months of the Trump Administration, which includes all-time high stock markets and 401K’s, military victory and thriving relationship in Venezuela, the military decimation of Iran (to be continued!)—Strongest military on earth by far, economic powerhouse again, with a record 18 trillion dollars being invested into the United States by others, best U.S. job market in history, with more people working in the United States right now than ever before, ending country destroying DEI, and so many other things that it would be impossible to readily list. In fact, President Xi congratulated me on so many tremendous successes in such a short period of time.
“Two years ago, we were, in fact, a Nation in decline. On that, I fully agree with President Xi! But now, the United States is the hottest Nation anywhere in the world, and hopefully our relationship with China will be stronger and better than ever before!”
At 4:52 this morning, Trump turned back to his plans for remodeling Washington, D.C. He announced that he intends to put his “NATIONAL GARDEN OF AMERICAN HEROES” in West Potomac Park, then after claiming that the people playing golf at his Doral club “are absolutely in love with” the 22-foot gold statue of him recently installed there, posted above a picture of himself walking with Xi:
“China has a Ballroom, and so should the U.S.A.! It’s under construction, ahead of schedule, and will be the finest facility of its kind anywhere in the U.S.A. Thank you for all the support I have been given in getting this project going. Scheduled opening will be around September of 2028. The man I am walking with is President Xi, of China, one of the World’s Great Leaders! President DONALD J. TRUMP”
Trump appears desperate to be included as an equal in the world of strongmen, apparently not understanding that America’s strength was always about its alliances.
Yesterday, members of Congress and Pentagon officials both were blindsided by the sudden decision by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to cancel the deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland after the troops were already on their way and much of the necessary equipment was already in Poland. Poland is a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) ally. The U.S. troops were going there as part of a nine-month rotation in which they would have trained with NATO allies.
Congress has tried to beef up the U.S. presence in Europe, warning that reductions would invite Russian aggression. Last year it passed a law limiting the number of troops Trump could withdraw from Europe and the circumstances under which he could do so.
Former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe Lieutenant General Ben Hodges told Paul McLeary and Jack Detsch of Politico that the Army’s role in Europe “is all about deterring the Russians, protecting America’s strategic interests and assuring allies. And now a very important asset that was coming to be part of that deterrence is gone.” Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ) posted: “Once again the President and Pete Hegseth show that they are not committed to security in Europe. Actions like this make us less safe and embolden [Russia’s president] Vladimir Putin. At every turn the two of them cower to Russia.”
European allies have worried for years now about Russian aggression. A signal that the U.S. is losing interest in NATO allies heightens that concern, especially coming, as it does, less than two weeks after Hegseth announced the U.S. will withdraw 5,000 troops from military bases in Germany following German chancellor Frederich Merz’s criticism of Trump’s handling of his war on Iran.
Today Connor O’Brien of Politico reported that the Republican chairs of the House and Senate Armed Services committees were surprised and angry at the news that Hegseth was recalling the troops from their deployment in Poland. At a hearing with Army officials—who said they had only been informed of the decision days ago—House Armed Services chair Mike Rogers (R-AL) said: “We don’t know what’s going on here, but I can just tell you we’re not happy with what’s being talked about, particularly since there’s been no statutory consultation with us.”
Committee member Don Bacon (R-NE) said the canceled deployment “is a slap in the face to Poland; it’s a slap in the face to our Baltic friends. It’s a slap to the face of this committee.”
But Trump seems more interested in acting like an autocrat than in consulting Congress, a body that his ally Steve Bannon has compared to the Duma, the Russian assembly that does what Putin tells it to. In addition to the extraordinary corruption already public, Bill Allison and Jess Menton of Bloomberg reported yesterday that a new financial filing shows that in the first quarter of 2026, Trump or his investment advisors made more than 3,700 trades—over 40 a day—“totaling tens of millions of dollars and involving major companies that have dealings with his administration.”
Allison and Menton note that Trump did not move his assets into a blind trust with an independent manager, as his predecessors did if they traded in stocks at all (former presidents Biden and Barack Obama did not). Instead, his sons Don Jr. and Eric manage the business as it operates in areas that are directly related to government policies decided by Trump himself. Trump invested in major companies with business affected by what he decided to do, including Nvidia, Intel Corp, Netflix, Paramount Skydance, Warner Bros Discovery, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon.
Wall Street executives told the journalists they were “baffled” by the high volume of trades and concerned about the appearance of conflicts of interest. “All of this raises questions that you’d rather not raise as a president,” wealth manager Matthew Tuttle told the reporters. “So now people are asking why is he buying Nvidia and other companies now? When you’re the president you know everything, so any stock you buy, there’s a huge question mark.”
White House spokesperson David Ingle told the reporters that Trump “only acts in the best interests of the American public” and that “[t]here are no conflicts of interest.”
—
Notes:
https://foreignpolicy.com/2026/05/15/trump-xi-summit-china-us-presidential-visit/
https://www.npr.org/2026/05/15/nx-s1-5822512/trump-china-xi-summit-takeaways
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/03/world/asia/xi-china-congress.html
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5878959-xi-trump-taiwan-leverage/
https://thehill.com/policy/international/5877843-thucydides-trap-xi-jinping-china-trump-us-taiwan/
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/01/hegseth-withdrawal-us-troops-germany-00903551
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/14/poland-pentagon-hegseth-troop-withdrawl-surprise-00922169
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/15/poland-troops-congress-driscoll-00923303
https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/trump-second-term-policies-gifts-494731c7?mod=RSSMSN
YouTube:
Bluesky:
[...] in the last 10 years I’ve learned to really love and respect CSS as a technology.
So I decided years ago that I wanted to react to “CSS is hard” by getting better at CSS and taking it seriously as a technology, instead of devaluing it. Doing that changed everything for me: I learned that so many of my frustrations (“centering is impossible”) had been addressed in CSS a long time ago, and that also what “centering” means is not always straightforward and it makes sense that there are many ways to do it. CSS is hard because it’s solving a hard problem!
— Julia Evans, Moving away from Tailwind, and learning to structure my CSS
Tags: css, julia-evans
For more videos, visit my YouTube channel.
I’m away but alas staying in touch with political news at home, and thought I would check in with one of the best public opinion quants about where we stand right now …
TRANSCRIPT:
Paul Krugman in Conversation with G. Elliott Morris
(recorded 5/13/26)
Paul Krugman: Hi everyone. Returning today to G. Elliott Morris, my favorite polling and public opinion analyst. We’ve had an eventful time with redistricting and there’s a lot of stuff going on, so we’ll see where this goes. The big news is, of course, the Court leaving Democrats stunned by overruling the referendum with Virginia redistricting, which now gives Republicans a substantial lead. You’ve been doing some analysis. How should we think about how this changes November?
G. Elliott Morris: Yeah. Big picture is: as long as Democrats are still winning the popular vote by four points, they’re still taking back the House of Representatives. A lot has changed over the last three weeks. First, the Supreme Court has invalidated section two of the Voting Rights Act. This was the portion of the law that prevented state legislatures or other state bodies from diluting the power of black voters.
Krugman: Right.
Morris: This, of course, matters for our partisan calculations, because black representatives in the South tend to be Democrats. Now the Supreme Court has said states can divvy up their votes. Republican-led states in the South, including Tennessee, Alabama, and Louisiana, have since passed, or are about to pass, maps that will take away three Democrats at least, and potentially five. So that is quite a few seats. On top of that, there has been other redistricting news. Virginia voters had passed a constitutional amendment to adopt a Democratic gerrymander that has been struck down. So Democrats in Virginia are going back to their old map, and they will lose two seats because of that—two seats that they would have otherwise gained. So, if you’re catching up on the math here, that’s three seats lost from the Democrats. It would have only been one; now it’s three.
But then we have redistricting in Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, and Missouri. If you add up all of those Republican states, they have taken away about 13 seats from the Democrats, and Democrats have gained only five or so out of California, the only state they have really redistricted. If you add up all this, then Democrats are down about six seats from the gerrymandering wars that Donald Trump started last year. And that could be potentially decisive in a close race.
Krugman: My very informal impression was that prior to all of this stuff, the kind of Republican bias of the voting was largely gone, and that the House majorities tended to more or less reflect the popular vote. But now we’re in a situation where we’re back with probably the biggest ever Republican lean there.
Morris: Yeah. So the 2024 congressional map was technically still biased toward the Republicans. If in a perfectly average year with perfectly average candidates—and that is the big “if”—if 2024 had been rerun, we would have expected Democrats to lose the majority of seats, even if they had won the popular vote by about a point. The big benefit in 2024 was that recruitment by Democrats in close seats was really, really good. So they beat expectations. But if you rerun it, it still would have been slightly biased towards Republicans. Now we’re at around a Republican bias of four points, which is close to the bias right after the 2010 redistricting. What happened in 2012? So this is pretty bad. We’re getting to the point where the structural bias in basically every electoral institution at the federal level is significantly overweighting Republican votes, just by the fact of where they live or who’s in charge of drawing the maps.
Krugman: A few weeks ago, I talked with Kim Lane Scheppele, my old friend from Princeton, about Hungary. And, you know, a lot of what Orbán did was, in fact, basically whatever the Hungarian word for gerrymandering is, but on a heroic scale. She said that they basically weighted rural voters by about 3 to 1 over urban voters. But of course, that was overtopped by a huge wave election. And you would still think that the most likely scenario, given the current polling, is probably still that the Democrats are going to probably crest.
Morris: I think the 2026 election will be significantly pro-Democratic, and that the gerrymandering won’t matter. It won’t matter in terms of who wins the majority of the seats. Democrats will still be down six seats, at least, from where they should be. But if they’re gaining twelve, then, you know, they’re still managing to recapture the House because it was so close last time. Republicans only had three extra seats at the last election. So it’s a pretty easy wave election for the Democrats. But they’ll still be down seats, like they’re still deprived of representation in the South. And more importantly, in 2028, when we’re not expecting Democrats to have such a large wave—unless the country comes to its senses. I know you talk a lot about tariffs here. That’s a big example. Then we’re expecting a much closer election. And in that 2028 scenario, this gerrymandering could give Republicans the majority, even if Democrats win the popular vote.
Krugman: Just a quick, amateur question on this stuff: to what extent is there the possibility of a “dummy-mander”? I was just thinking about the Hispanic vote—that the Republicans may have drawn these districts on the belief that the 2024 Hispanic vote was going to remain. And they seem to have really lost that, at least if the polling is at all right. Does this mean there’s a possibility that the Republicans have essentially diluted their own support in order to wipe out Democratic districts, and that they’ve opened the possibility of losing a lot of normally red seats?
Morris: So, it’s a great question. I’ve done some math on this. My own simulations of election outcomes, where I assume rationality. But Republicans basically went after five districts in Texas. Maybe two or three of those are highly susceptible to a dummy-mander. In which case, if you do the math and Latinos move 20 points toward the Democrats, and everyone else only moves ten points to the Democrats—assuming Latinos are moving twice as much as everyone else, which is pretty close to what happened in the 2025 elections—then Republicans only gain two seats out of Texas, but they’re still gaining seats. So there is a possibility that they have drawn themselves too thin in the case of a big Latino backlash. But they’re just subtracting some seats that they could have otherwise gained. So it’s not the fact that they’re going to lose overall in terms of the overall gerrymandering. In other words, they’re still coming out ahead.
Krugman: Okay, that’s slightly depressing, but I’ll take it. I find myself wondering: if we really have a very clear, massive, public backlash against Republicans, but these maneuvers keep them in control of the House, how much damage does this do to legitimacy and feelings about the government?
Morris: I don’t know how much worse feelings of legitimacy or approval of the government could get. I mean, approval of Congress is 20%, SCOTUS is 20%, and Trump’s approval rating is 35%—only by virtue of that question being really partisan-polarized. If you actually ask Americans how they approve of Donald Trump’s handling of stuff like prices and tariffs, then it’s closer to 25%. So, it would be very striking to have lower confidence in the US government to solve the problems of everyday people. Basically, this might make an impact on how Americans view the functioning of their democracy or what have you. And actually, from my point of view, that type of education could be useful for stuff like electoral reform or proportional representation. But we don’t have to get into that for now. But it’s pretty bad out there. It’s pretty bleak out there, Paul.
Krugman: The unpopularity of Donald Trump is really extraordinary, and the unpopularity of the policies. Things have really gone downhill. Things were really going downhill, I think, even before the Iran war.
Morris: Yeah. If I’m telling the story of the Trump administration, I’m looking at five main events besides his inauguration, which is itself a sort of negative signal to the American people. I’m looking at the Liberation Day tariffs in April of last year, which caused a drop in Donald Trump’s approval rating and then mostly trickled along, slightly dipping as every day people are realizing what the administration is doing. They tend to react negatively to the president regardless of what he does. This was true for Biden as well, by the way. It’s just a sort of weird factor of political psychology here. And then the next event I’m looking at is a sort of confluence of immigration events that happened from May to June of 2025. So you have the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Donald Trump sends the National Guard to LA and to Chicago. And this creates a lot of negative press attention for him. And you see his approval rating on the economy and deportations overall drop again by about 5 or 10 points. And then he trickles around; he’s losing support. And then over the next six months, really not much happens in his approval rating. And then the government shutdown happens, and a lot of Americans come around to the news that Donald Trump has basically defunded a lot of Medicaid and premiums are going to increase. That, of course, sets in in January of this year. And then I would be looking at the Iran war. You would also want to add the killings in Minnesota as well. That was a big signal to Americans about the negative outcomes of Trump’s deportation agenda and militarization of U.S. cities, essentially. So those events are about immigration and prices. The health care thing is still kind of a price anxiety. And you can see his approval rating dropping. His approval rating was positive when he started. He’s at -25 or so now in our polling; he’s closer to -30. So it is worth emphasizing: very few people like Donald Trump. If you walk down the average American street, you will encounter between three out of ten or four out of ten people who actively support what he is doing. And that’s very low for a president of the United States historically, and in absolute terms, it is just worth emphasizing that people do not like this period.
Krugman: Yeah, I had forgotten that he did have a positive approval briefly.
Morris: He did have a bit of a honeymoon when he started. But it really deflated very fast.
Krugman: And it’s extraordinary, actually. It feels like much longer ago than it was.
Morris: There seems to be an awful lot of enabling of Donald Trump on the part of congressional Republicans. A lot more than you would expect based on his approval ratings overall and his approval ratings in their districts. Now, in my opinion Trump reacts to public opinion only from a narcissistic point of view. He shares the polls when they’re good and he calls them fake news when they’re bad. He’s constantly talking about how much the public loves him. That is the type of thing a narcissist would do. But in terms of reining in political actions from the White House, I do think we’ve seen rather little evidence that the polls are meaningfully moving him.
Now, there are a couple of cases. The big one is the retreat from Minneapolis after the killing of Rene Goode and Alex Pretti there. There was a dramatic increase in support for abolishing ICE and a dramatic decrease in approval ratings for ICE and the president’s immigration and deportations agenda right after that. So it seemed to matter in terms of public opinion. But look, I think we’re in an environment where most legislators, especially on the right, are insulated from general electorate opinions, especially the opinions of the average person who might not turn out to vote. And that is enabling an awful lot of bad behavior on the part of the president. And partisanship is really an overwhelming force for bad on the right, given the president’s proclivities. So I think you are right here to say, you know, the polls are the polls. And it is important to say that people don’t like this. But Trump is not necessarily the type of actor you would expect given that information.
Krugman: I just wonder, because the papers are full almost every day with some scandalous or just outrageous behavior. Kash Patel’s personal brand of bourbon and all of that stuff. But one of the things I learned from you about swing voters, and you have a very straightforward definition of being badly or poorly informed, which is just: do they know who controls Congress? But I wonder whether any of this stuff even reaches a lot of voters.
Morris: Yeah, I doubt the average person knows about the Kash Patel whiskey—the “cash money” whiskey. By the way—I’m a big fan of whiskey, and that seems like a real betrayal to all the whiskey fans. Yeah, there’s a problem here, which is that most legislators just really don’t care what the public thinks, including in their district and including overall. And really, nowhere is that clearer than in the Republican Party when Donald Trump is passing tariffs that will cause inflation or asking for $1 billion for his ballroom, etc. And the voters who aren’t really paying attention to the news might not hear about that stuff, but it doesn’t mean it doesn’t matter. And they are getting signals of the president’s incompetence from stuff like gas prices going up. And just a general news environment being bad about the President of the United States. So some of this does filter through to them.
Krugman: Okay. Let’s go on to the vibecession. There’s a lot of payoff in the economics and business punditry world for turns of phrase. And Kyla Scanlon with the vibecession, as I think she said.
Morris: Yeah, she should get a Nobel Prize for vibecession.
Krugman: Yeah, she’s set for life on just that one term, although she’s actually very good on other things. But it is quite amazing, right? Just before we recorded this, the latest survey of household economic dynamics from the Fed came out, and so even leaving aside the approval ratings and so on, public views about how they’re doing—most people still say we’re doing okay—but the views about the state of the economy have just fallen off a cliff. As we might expect, people are incredibly negative. The first question is: do we think that, in some sense, people are more negative than the reality? But do you have a different take on that?
Morris: I will just respond directly to the last thing, which is yes, there is a vibecession. The vibes are still lower than you would expect. Even fundamental indicators and even this one that Jared Bernstein has proposed—that I’ve sort of back-tested in some modeling: the excess inflation number. Even if you account for excess inflation, or just price levels being higher than people expect, consumer sentiment as measured by the University of Michigan is still about 10 to 15 index points lower than you would expect. So there is still some level of anxiety out there that is breaking from our historical understanding of economic anxiety.
Krugman: Okay. So you think that there is, in fact, still a mystery component, at least based on the consumer confidence index.
Morris: Yeah, I guess the other way to say it is that those historical models that predict consumer sentiment are still missing something. Maybe they’re missing that people are reacting more to inflation now than unemployment or other structural variables than they were in the past. And you have to find some way to account for that. I mean, I’ve tried every way possible. Even if you P-hack it, you really can’t get there.
Krugman: People may not know, but P-hacking is essentially playing with variables until you get something that is statistically significant.
Morris: Except that it isn’t really, because we’ve tried all the alternatives to find the thing that seems to work. By random chance, you would have arrived at an answer. But what I’m saying here is, even by random chance, you cannot arrive at a prediction of consumer sentiment that is perfect. There’s some fundamental break around two years ago in the vibes about the economy. And it’s lower even if you account for stuff like excess prices. And that’s got to be an important part of our story.
There’s a subset of internet commentators, mainly on Bluesky, who insist that the economy is actually good and the vibes are just wrong for no reason. I don’t think that is right, but I wouldn’t go so far as to say there’s no vibecession. I think it’s somewhere in the middle.
Krugman: Okay, so I guess there should have been a break two years ago. But you think that things are worse now relative to the fundamentals than they were in 2023?
Morris: Yes. If you predict consumer sentiment with excess inflation via the S&P 500, economic growth, and such—you can get a very good prediction—almost perfect out-of-sample until December 2024 or January 2025.
Krugman: Which is an awfully convenient result if you are focusing on Trump-related sources of economic pressure.
Morris: But it also is around the time when the president started passing inflationary policies. So it could just be that people, after January 2025, were hyper-aware of inflationary policies like tariffs, or just the “horse in the hospital” aspect of this presidency. Maybe they’re mapping that onto their economic sentiment. I am still searching for answers for the last year or so. But if you include excess prices in your model of consumer sentiment, this basically fixes, I think, the original vibecession aspect through the end of 2024. But now we’re in a sort of different vibecession environment, perhaps related to Trump. I’m not sure.
Krugman: Okay, so “Vibecession II,” which is to go along with “Trump II.” So, you really are saying there is basically a “Vibecession II,” which is interesting, and that there’s something that goes beyond all the solutions that we’ve tried to find to explain why people were so depressed in 2024. Now, even with all of that, something else has happened now.
Morris: Yeah. I think I can explain the vibecession of 2022, 2023, and 2024 very well as an excess price shock.
Krugman: Alright.
Morris: I don’t think we have a good explanation, economically or otherwise, for the 2025-2026 vibe session—”Vibcession 2: Electric Boogaloo.”
Krugman: Yeah. Well, of course, people are feeling really bad because we have crazy tariffs, we have cuts to health care. And you know Trump is so terrible. So, of course, people are feeling something terrible. But I don’t think that’s what’s going on in the minds of the average American. So, there is something going on there.
Morris: If I were putting on my political scientist—maybe political psychologist—hat, it is very possible that the amount of coverage about the Biden economy in derogatory terms, and inflation and the blame of the president for inflation in 2022 and 2023, caused voters to think about the president more and then think about the direction of the national economy. And therefore, if that is true, then getting a figure like Trump into office would cause a pretty negative backlash in overall economic sentiment, even if it’s not causing this negative backlash in their personal financial situation, as you know.
Krugman: Yeah. I mean, it probably doesn’t matter for the public views, but in my view, Biden bore very little responsibility for that inflation. It was supply chain disruptions in the aftermath of COVID, and European Union inflation was basically identical to U.S. inflation. But this time around, you really have to say, well, the 3.8% inflation that we just got is—
Morris: Yeah, you could definitely put a “Trump-flation” label on it, at least for the time being. Jerome Powell said so. “Daddy” said so. So you gotta listen.
Krugman: Yeah. No, it’s pretty amazing. So for listeners, in all of these discussions, economists like to talk about inflation, which is the rate at which prices are rising. And the conventional approach to understand consumer sentiment is to talk about inflation and then unemployment and maybe some other things as well. But if you talk to actual people, they talk a lot about what things cost. And so there’s this argument that says people are upset because even though inflation came way down from its peak in 2022, prices didn’t. The level of prices leveled off rather than coming down. But this split raises a lot of problems. So why don’t we talk about the excess inflation?
Morris: So, this work is based on the theory that voters react negatively to a shock in prices, or really a shock in inflation. Especially if inflation had been low for some amount of time—20 or 30 years in the most recent case. To measure excess prices, I’ve built on economist Jared Bernstein‘s work. So our model for this is to predict what prices would have been today using inflation from the last 20 years or so. And then we measure the residual between actual nominal prices and the prediction of prices. And at least in my work, when I say “prices,” I mean the index price of vehicles, shelter, and of food. But the results are actually the same if you use PCE.
Krugman: Personal Consumption Expenditure, as the Federal Reserve calls it.
Morris: Which is like the CPI, Consumer Price Index, but it’s arguably a little bit better, and the Federal Reserve relies on the PCE.
Krugman: Yeah.
Morris: So it really doesn’t matter what goods you’re looking at. Today, prices are about 15% higher than they would have been given 2% inflation over the last six years or so, basically since COVID. And if you add that variable to some model of consumer sentiment that has traditional measures of economic activity like inflation, the S&P 500, and unemployment, then you do get a much better prediction of consumer sentiment over time, including in the 1970s when the change in the price level was even worse than it was over COVID.
Krugman: There’s what I think of as the “Morning in America” problem. You may think people are upset now because things cost a lot more than they did before COVID, but, well, that was also true in 1984 under Ronald Reagan. It turns out that the increase in consumer prices in Ronald Reagan’s first term was almost identical in percentage terms to the increase in prices under Biden. But of course, Ronald Reagan ran as a triumphant rescuer of the U.S. economy. “It’s morning in America”. And Biden was deeply unpopular. And the explanation, which I think all of us working on this have come to, is that at the beginning of the 1980s, people were expecting lots more inflation. And at the beginning of 2021, they were not. And that’s kind of what you’re measuring.
Morris: Yeah. And this isn’t just me talking, either. If you look at the political scientists’ voter psychology work on what they call “retrospective economic perceptions” and predict those ratings based on changes in economic indicators, then inflation causes a much more negative impact on economic evaluations after a period of what they call “good times” when inflation is low. So psychologically, this works, too. If people are primed to see increases in prices of 10-15% for a decade and then they see it again, they react less negatively than they do in, say, your COVID-era price spike after 30 years of low inflation.
Krugman: Yeah. Although what is kind of interesting—and I know that you’ve been doing statistical modeling and I’m just pulling stuff out of my—
Morris: Well, I’m not an economist and I don’t have a Nobel laureate.
Krugman: Well, yeah, but that was a long time ago. But anyway, in the mid-’70s, people were still completely shocked. I mean, I’m also an old guy, and I remember the ‘70s, and we were all really, really shocked. And yet, consumer sentiment, even in the Ford administration, was not as negative as it has been lately. And still, times were really good in the ‘60s and up through about ‘73. I’m still kind of shocked at just how bad perceptions are now. But your models seem to track the ‘70s okay.
Morris: They do. Yeah. And they do because of this adjustment for the good times versus the bad times. So if you take our excess price measure, which again is just the percent difference between expected prices and actual prices in nominal terms, and you adjust for the average inflation in the CPI over the last decade, then you essentially decrease the excess price measure for the ‘70s and hold it about constant for the post-COVID period, mainly 2023 being the peak. And you get a much better fit in the model. So this is built on our voter psychological theory that people react more negatively to higher prices after a period of good times than bad times. So things are being triangulated here in our overall story of the impact of excess prices, even if, as I said at the beginning, this isn’t a complete explanation for the vibe session here in 2026, which is somewhat different somehow.
Krugman: Just an interjection—I’m a garrulous old guy here—but I associate stagflation with the taste of Hamburger Helper because I was working summers as an undergraduate as a research assistant, and my friends and I, in our dreadful shared apartment, were using a lot of Hamburger Helper because we didn’t know how to cook. And also meat was really expensive, or seemed so at the time. So, yeah. But it’s interesting that people were not as depressed. And I think that maybe they had already kind of internalized that the economy can be tough or something.
Morris: That’s, in effect, what we’re saying here. They weren’t as surprised. They’d internalized high prices as something that could happen in their lifetimes. You know, I was but a twinkle in my daddy’s eye in 1970. But you can do a lot worse than Hamburger Helper. Hamburger Helper is a good staple food for your working-class person.
Krugman: Well, I had some roommates who insisted on soybeans with everything, and that I could have done without. But anyway, it was the ‘70s.
So this question of what do we think are the prices that people expected—and you’ve been basically fitting a trend to recent price movements, right? And projecting forward? I think you’re using something like the average inflation rate over the past five years to project forward? Or how are you getting that?
Morris: For excess prices? I mean, it’s the trend in prices. So that is mathematically equivalent to the average inflation from the 15 years prior to whatever date you are predicting on. 15 years prior to the five years prior. So the idea is that people have formed their expectations for inflation over some period of the last ten years on average.
Krugman: So, we have direct measures, supposedly, of what inflation people expect. There are surveys. There’s University of Michigan. And some surveys, but especially University of Michigan, do ask people what they expect the inflation rate to be over the next 5 to 10 years, which kind of gives you a medium-term expected inflation. And you can get an implied inflation forecast out of the bond market—the TIPS spread, the break-even inflation, whatever jargony stuff. But there is an implied inflation forecast. So those are not necessarily congruent with lagged—
Morris: Just the excess price measure.
Krugman: Yeah. So here’s my question: let’s say consumer expectations of inflation over the next five years are somewhat elevated now. They’re higher than they were. This is not, I think, the way it comes out in your analysis, but I would have thought that would make it easier to end the excess price stuff. Because if you want to have prices lower than what people are expecting, given that they’re expecting higher inflation at this point, then they’ll be pleasantly surprised if we only have 2% inflation. But I think that is not how you’re seeing it, right?
Morris: No, I’m not using the survey measure of what you would expect your inflation to be over the next five years.
Krugman: So what you’re doing is sort of saying that people’s expectation of inflation is something like inflation over the last five or ten years. And you have actually used the expected inflation of the survey, which says, “What if inflation is actually that high, and then it’s going to be really bad ?” But I would have turned that around and said, “Well, people are already expecting pretty high inflation, so they’ll be pleasantly surprised if it’s lower than that. And that should make it easier to get back to a price level that people find acceptable.” But I don’t know if I’m making sense.
Morris: Yeah, you’re making some sense. But we are not using a psychological measure of excessive prices, and that is different from a survey measure. We are using an actual mechanical level of excess prices from the residual of the trend. So one way to reconcile the fact that the objective measure of excess prices, rather than the survey-based measure, is more explanatory—you could say people are bad at predicting prices in the future, just in general, which would be true. Or that the survey isn’t picking up on anxiety about the price level with that variable as well as you would expect. And one thing to mention here is that the University of Michigan’s measure of what I’ve called “price anxiety”—which is just the percent of people who have a bad opinion of the economy—the percent of those people who attribute it to worse personal finances is at an all-time high. And it surged in 2021 and 2022 and stayed there; it never came back down. Which is similar, you’ll notice, to the trend on consumer sentiment through the University of Michigan. I don’t have the Conference Board data in front of me or memorized.
So it is possible that people are bad at predicting what prices should be. One idea would be if we took the expected change in prices over the next year and divided it by average CPI—overall inflation—over the ten-year period preceding. I wonder if that number would be at an all-time high. That’s a very easy check after the fact. I bet it would be near an all-time high.
Krugman: Probably getting too meta, but what we’re trying to predict is a variable that is consumer sentiment, which is not a behavioral thing. It’s like asking, how do people answer a questionnaire? And this is a question: should we also be using questionnaire-type answers to predict it? Obviously, at some level we’re interested in objective economic stuff, but I wonder whether we should inherently prefer the objective economic stuff as a way of predicting. I’m not making a whole lot of sense here but—
Morris: No, this is making sense to me because I spend a lot of my time thinking about the difference between our perceptions of objective reality and these survey-based measures which, for whatever reason, can deviate from that. And my argument would be that we should be using the survey-based measurement of anxiety in addition to our “economic fundamentals”—our structural variables—because our models and our job as modelers is fallible. And we can’t rely on the people when they tell us in surveys that they are anxious for whatever reason, instead of pouring cold water on it because our models don’t line up.
Maybe this is just my opinion, but you are right. Of course, we want to know how people are reacting to objective conditions on the ground. And the only way we can really do that is by looking at the match between executive positions lying around and some other outcome variable. So, I’m acknowledging it’s tricky. There’s no clear answer, I guess.
Krugman: So, two questions left. S&P 500, and again, if people don’t know, that is the broad index of the stock market—that really shows up as something that explains how people feel.
Morris: Yeah, the annual change in the S&P 500 is pretty direct to consumer sentiment, even after controlling for stuff like your annual change in CPI, PCE, etc.
Krugman: So that’s really kind of interesting, because the vast majority of Americans own very little stock, so the impact of the S&P 500 on most people’s economic position is really kind of small. I’m wondering whether that’s more like a signal. People like me are always saying the stock market is not the economy. But it’s not clear that’s how people see it.
Morris: Yeah. The S&P 500 impacts media coverage quite a lot. And in our models, we try to control for negative media sentiment. But again, our empirical analysis of media sentiment is often different from how people are interpreting this. So I tend to really land on one answer here, which is, if you look at the polling on price anxiety—the percent of people who are saying their situation is worse because of personal finance issues—that’s at an all-time high. And if you trust the people, that is pretty explanatory of consumer sentiment on its own. But it requires some hurdles to get there.
Chart 7A in the University of Michigan shows the percent of people whose finances are worse and who say personal finances is the reason why.
Krugman: Yeah. So I mean, at some level, if our numbers say that personal finances are actually better, but people say they’re worse, at some level, customers are always right.
Morris: Yeah. Exactly. But that leaves us at a loss for an explanation. It does leave us putting our shoulders up.
Krugman: Last thing. And again, I’m just throwing stuff out there because I’m puzzling over this stuff myself. So a lot of these issues are in some ways harking back. I still always think that “Morning in America” in 1984 is in many ways a crucible for making sense of all this stuff. But 1984 as a year was closer to the end of World War II than it is to today. And it was a very, very different country then. And I always wonder, are we trying to get a model that fits a society that has changed immeasurably over time?
Morris: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, so much of the vibe session discourse—not necessarily Kyla Scanlon, but I believe Nate Silver wrote this article for the New York Times Opinion Page that was about how the consumer sentiment index broke down. This was after The Economist had done something similar, I believe. Much of the discussion of that was based on the idea that you could build a model of consumer sentiment historically. And now it’s breaking down. And one conclusion from that is that people aren’t thinking about the economy rationally anymore. But another conclusion is that they’re thinking about the economy differently than they have been previously. And that seems entirely legitimate to me. And if that is the case, then we should be looking at the polling data and the perceptions data more and the fundamentals indicator less to explain consumer sentiment.
Krugman: Okay, but the big news to me is that we really are seeing sort of a second downward leg in the vibecession.
Morris: “Vibecession 2.0,” yeah.
Krugman: Which is really quite remarkable. It’s going to matter enormously in many ways, obviously in the elections. So that’s news to me and actually worth highlighting.
Morris: Well, now you have a headline.
Krugman: Now I do. Hey, gotta feed the beast on Substack, as you know.
Morris: Yeah. Right. Well, look, in terms of consequences, and maybe to go back to where we started: Donald Trump’s approval rating on prices is like 30% or less, and from 70%—it’s down -40 or so. And that was the last time I looked at this, which was a week and a half or two weeks ago. And he’s been losing ground very fast. That is congruent with an electorate that is very upset about prices, even if the objective data don’t explain why to us. So there’s some triangulation of the anxiety in terms of evaluations of the president. And if that number stays as low as it is, then we should expect the type of rout in the midterms that is large enough to overcome, basically, effectively, the Republican cheating through gerrymandering over the last decade or so. That might be where I would leave it.
Krugman: Yeah.
In preparation for a lightning talk I'm giving at PyCon US this afternoon I decided to figure out how many names OpenClaw has actually had since that first commit back in November.
Thanks to this first_line_history.py tool (code here) the answer, according to the Git history of the OpenClaw README, is:
Warelay → CLAWDIS → CLAWDBOT → Clawdbot → Moltbot →🦞 OpenClaw
Or in detail (the output from the tool):
2025-11-24T11:23:15+01:00 16dfc1a # Warelay — WhatsApp Relay CLI (Twilio) 2025-11-24T11:41:37+01:00 d4153da # 📡 Warelay — WhatsApp Relay CLI (Twilio) 2025-11-24T17:47:57+01:00 343ef9b # 📡 warelay — WhatsApp Relay CLI (Twilio) 2025-11-25T04:44:10+01:00 14b3c6f # 📡 warelay — WhatsApp Relay CLI 2025-11-25T12:48:40+01:00 4814021 # 📡 warelay — Send, receive, and auto-reply on WhatsApp—Twilio-backed or QR-linked. 2025-11-25T13:50:18+01:00 d51a3e9 # warelay 📡 - Send, receive, and auto-reply on WhatsApp via Twilio or QR-linked WhatsApp Web; webhook setup in one command 2025-11-25T13:51:13+01:00 4d2a8a8 # 📡 warelay — Send, receive, and auto-reply on WhatsApp—Twilio-backed or QR-linked. 2025-11-25T14:52:43+01:00 1ef7f4d # 📡 warelay — Send, receive, and auto-reply on WhatsApp. 2025-12-03T15:45:32+00:00 a27ee23 # 🦞 CLAWDIS — WhatsApp Gateway for AI Agents 2025-12-08T12:43:13+01:00 17fa2f4 # 🦞 CLAWDIS — WhatsApp & Telegram Gateway for AI Agents 2025-12-19T18:41:17+01:00 7710439 # 🦞 CLAWDIS — Personal AI Assistant 2026-01-04T14:32:47+00:00 246adaa # 🦞 CLAWDBOT — Personal AI Assistant 2026-01-10T05:14:09+01:00 cdb915d # 🦞 Clawdbot — Personal AI Assistant 2026-01-27T13:37:47-05:00 3fe4b25 # 🦞 Moltbot — Personal AI Assistant 2026-01-30T03:15:10+01:00 9a71607 # 🦞 OpenClaw — Personal AI Assistant
Up with my mind disturbed and with my last night’s doubts upon me.
For which I deserve to be beaten if not really served as I am fearful of being, especially since God knows that I do not find honesty enough in my own mind but that upon a small temptation I could be false to her, and therefore ought not to expect more justice from her, but God pardon both my sin and my folly herein.
To my office and there sitting all the morning, and at noon dined at home. After dinner comes Pembleton, and I being out of humour would not see him, pretending business, but, Lord! with what jealousy did I walk up and down my chamber listening to hear whether they danced or no, which they did, notwithstanding I afterwards knew and did then believe that Ashwell was with them. So to my office awhile, and, my jealousy still reigning, I went in and, not out of any pleasure but from that only reason, did go up to them to practise, and did make an end of “La Duchesse,” which I think I should, with a little pains, do very well. So broke up and saw him gone.
Then Captain Cocke coming to me to speak about my seeming discourtesy to him in the business of his hemp, I went to the office with him, and there discoursed it largely and I think to his satisfaction.
Then to my business, writing letters and other things till late at night, and so home to supper and bed. My mind in some better ease resolving to prevent matters for the time to come as much as I can, it being to no purpose to trouble myself for what is past, being occasioned too by my own folly.
The company will build a communications satellite to test protected communications technologies for contested environments
A Falcon 9 launched a Dragon cargo spacecraft May 15 carrying nearly 3,000 kilograms of cargo to the International Space Station.
NASA has released the final request for proposals for a Mars telecommunications system, confirming requirements that limit the companies that can bid on it.
Company executives acknowledge ‘investor confusion’ as Space Force reorganizes York’s primary customer, the Space Development Agency

Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure and industrial technology. This week we look at Tokyo’s cheap housing and expensive land, the House response to the Senate housing bill, an IED near an Alabama dam, Fervo’s IPO, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subscriber.
Housekeeping items:
No essay this week because of a respiratory illness that is carving through our household like Sherman through Georgia, but I’m working on a piece about the build to rent housing industry that should be out next week.
I gave a talk about why major building collapse is so uncommon at Antithesis’ Bug Bash a few weeks ago. You can watch the talk here.
The Economist on why the closure of the Strait of Hormuz doesn’t seem to have yet created a worldwide oil crisis: other exporters (like the US) have raised their output, and many larger importers (like China) are importing less. [The Economist]
On the other hand, it seems like supplies of various petroleum products are starting to get thin. The owner of an oil change company is claiming that US consumer motor oil supplies are going to start getting thin in a few weeks. [X] And European jet fuel stockpiles are apparently almost exhausted. [X]
Some Japanese snack manufacturers are changing to black and white packaging due to ink supply disruptions. [AP News] The disruptions are due to a shortage of naphtha, a light fraction of crude oil. Interrupted naphtha supplies are also apparently poised to cause disruptions to the Japanese semiconductor industry. [Threads]
The UAE has started to build large anti-drone cages around its infrastructure to protect it from Iranian drone attacks. [The War Zone] And it’s also building a second oil pipeline to increase how much oil it can export outside the Strait. [X]
Thanks to Trump’s Jones Act Waiver, there have now been at least 45 cargo trips between US ports via non-US ships. [Cato]
Alex Armlovich on how making it easier to build housing both reduces rents and increases land values in the city of Tokyo. “The famous (relative) cheapness of Tokyo housing is not a story about cheap land. A one-acre detached house in central Tokyo would cost more than $100 million in dirt before you broke ground. The land is pricey but the structures are cheap. Admittedly, Tokyo’s rents and prices are not as cheap per square foot as buildings in the US Sunbelt’s midsize cities, but cheap by the standards of any 10-million-plus Anglosphere metro area. Tokyo built its way to relative affordability without ending up with low land values, and the values themselves look reasonable for a productive, agglomerated megacity that simply didn’t artificially restrict its own supply.” [Abundance and Growth]
Ezra Klein moderates a debate on housing policy between the leading Democrat candidates for Governor. [YouTube] And CA Yimby declined to endorse any candidate for governor, not because none of them had good housing plans, but because all of them did. [Cal Matters]
The house comes out with its response to the Senate’s 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act. The house bill notably does not contain the onerous restrictions on build-to-rent housing that the Senate bill does. [Politico]
Are homes sitting empty because it’s too expensive for people to sell them? “According to Flock Homes, for many retirees “the tax bill triggered by a sale far exceeds the cost of simply leaving the home empty.” This includes capital gains taxes (paid on the profit from the sale) and depreciation recapture taxes (which sellers of rental properties face). The federal capital gains exemption, which applies to the sale of primary residences, was not factored into the analysis of vacant homes. Mortgage payments were not included in the analysis, since many older homeowners own their homes outright.” [NYT]
Number of sellers vs number of buyers in the US housing market. [X]
Links for you. Science:
N.I.H. Reinstates Employee Put on Leave After Criticizing Trump Research Cuts
What Physical ‘Life Force’ Turns Biology’s Wheels?
CDC communication undermines trust in vaccines
Combined Antibiotic and Herbicide Pollution Accelerates the Horizontal Transfer of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Coastal Microbial Communities
She set out to become a clinical psychologist. Now she’s leading a US movement to save science
Fake Authors, Real Citations: Scientists Discovered a Preprint Plagiarism Network
An Open Letter to Jay Bhattacharya
Other:
Pundits are wrong about the Democrats’ “missing” voters
The supreme court trusts America not to be racist. I don’t
Republicans admit plot to evade historic third Trump impeachment
US ‘drowning in misinformation’ under RFK Jr, autism advocates say
Trump regime isn’t done tormenting federal workers
Did a Time Traveling Superintelligent AI Try to Warn About White House Correspondents Dinner Shooting? An Investigation
Oh No The Capital Allocation System Allocated Capital Badly Again
DC teens tell city leader what’s causing takeovers and how they’re missing the mark
People Using AI to Represent Themselves in Court Are Clogging the System
Somewhere After Midnight In My Wildest Fantasy
SXSW Used AI-Powered Trademark Tool To Censor Dissent on Instagram
A dark chapter returns: Stripping citizenship
How Texas Republicans Turned on George W. Bush
Trump wants do-over of failed airline fantasy — at taxpayers’ expense
Apple Fixes Bug That Let FBI Extract Deleted Signal Messages After 404 Media Coverage
Comey indictment reveals a desperate DOJ — and president
S.B.F. Alternate Histories & Ellison “Ticking Fee” Fears (if Bankman-Fried had not been caught, he would likely be the world’s third richest man)
Road pricing in DC will benefit drivers the most
The Real Reason Everything Feels So Expensive Right Now
The invention of buses
Millionaire taxes gain steam as states face budget crunches
Who Killed Spirit Airlines?
A D.C. Landlord Named as a Straw Buyer in the Attorney General’s RICO Case Has Been Indicted in a Separate Drug Conspiracy in Virginia
Trump finds a ‘Southern Strategy’ to save his dreams of dictatorship
When The Fascist Rump Is All That’s Left. Democrats need to prepare for partisan trench warfare in 2027; instead they’re preparing to rerun the failed strategies of the past.
OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft Back Bill to Fund ‘AI Literacy’ in Schools
Dario Amodei, hype, AI safety, and the explosion of vibe-coded AI disasters
The National Links Trust’s Battle with the Trump Administration, Explained
Multiple High-Ranking D.C. Police Officials Were Served With Notices of Termination Following an Investigation of Crime Stats
Krugman on How Trump Accidentally Screwed Himself on Iran
Here is some Weberian verstehen (or is it?), but from unexpected quarters:
Large Language Models (LLMs) are trained on a prodigious corpus of human writing and may reveal human preferences over characteristics of life courses, such as income, longevity, and working conditions. We present OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 and a broadly representative sample of Americans with pairs of life stories and ask them to choose the life they would prefer for themselves. A person’s choice is better predicted by the LLM’s choice than by another person’s choice over the same stories, and LLM valuations of several life attributes are similar to those derived from human responses. Our results suggest that LLM responses offer a scalable and cost-effective complement to existing methods for studying human preferences.
That is from a new NBER working paper by
The post Revealing Life Preferences Through LLMs appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
A couple days ago I found myself in a brief online (social media) argument with a Court-reformer member of the legal academy insisting that, contrary to my claims, it’s totally false that there are no reformers in the academy. Of course I never said there were no reformers in the academy. What I said, what I think is undeniable, is that the legal academy as a group or a community, and especially its most powerful voices, have been deep in the SCOTUS-reverencing camp. And for more clarity here we’re talking really about the liberal + mainstream academic legal community. It goes without saying that this applies, on a contingent basis certainly, to the conservative legal movement which not only participates in the corruption of the Roberts Court but is in effect its deep root structure, from which the Roberts Court is simply the degenerate, swaggering oak dominating the canopy and blocking out the sun which civic democracy needs to flourish.
In any case, I’ve been getting a lot of your emails from the legal academy and please keep them coming. This isn’t surprising. Historically, our biggest TPM Reader community professions are higher education and lawyers. (We don’t have to break every stereotype.) So the legal academy is sort of an obvious ground zero for TPM Readership and I guess makes my campaign of denigration somewhat paradoxical. In any case, as I noted a few days ago, every profession has pretensions beyond its area of true expertise. The late 19th professionalization movement very much affected the history profession. Indeed, it’s the only reason it’s even considered a profession. But historians can’t take away your right to an abortion or mutilate your constitutional order into an autocracy. At worst they can rob the past of its mystery and fascination and reduce it to a few stale or precious debates occluded with obscure and ornate jargon. So it’s really no comparison.
More seriously, I’m very interested in hearing from you because I’m very interested in what is happening right now within the legal academy. For all my potshots the legal academy has a key role in all this. High profile legal academics, especially those in the towering heights of the profession and the clerkship networks, embracing the reform mantle would and will be huge. My sense from a distance is that we’re in the midst of or at the beginnings of a sea change on this front for the simple reason that 2025 and the beginnings of 2026 have simply left no available space for a defense of the legitimacy of this Court. In a way, it is the mildest of silver linings of having the Biden presidency sandwiched between two Trump presidencies. It made it simply to deny that the Court’s corrupt majority is anything but a group of Republican functionaries attempting to rule through country and buttress Republican rule in the guise of constitutional interpretation – the case analogs are too tight, the time separating those analogs are too short.
In any case, ye righteous among the legal academics, lemme know what’s happening.
1. Can opportunities for tax evasion increase tax revenue?
2. Auren Hoffman on the new jobs market.
3. Using AI agents for economic precommitment.
4. The progress against pancreatic cancer.
5. Christian philosophies of technology. The full (new) Substack is here.
6. Economic graduate program enrollments are falling.
The post Saturday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Observed in Blagden Alley, D.C.:

Here is a brief appreciation from Olivier Blanchard, link now corrected.
The post Ned Phelps, RIP appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Here’s something I never expected to write: Jacobin, the magazine of the DSA-aligned left, has a good article on central planning. In an interview, Vivek Chibber lays out essentially the Mises–Hayek–Kornai critique of central planning. Information problems, incentive problems and the consequent failures are laid bare. Moreover, Chibber refuses to lay the blame at the feet of Stalin, poverty, or the Russians. Nor does he wave hopefully at supercomputers and AI, as is fashionable today on the planning-curious left:
The dilemma is this. There is a problem of information. Supercomputers will in fact help process information better. But if the information coming in is junk, and if that junk is built into the system because of the incentives that operators have in workplaces to lie, you will not have a planning system that can be put on its feet through the advent of computers or artificial intelligence or anything like that. I don’t see any reason to think that that strategic misalignment of incentives is simply there because of Russian backwardness or poverty.
Even the pedestrian is shocking coming from Jacobin:
Normally in capitalism, what do managers do? They want to make profits. The way to make a profit is by trying to sell, at the lowest price possible, the best-quality good that you can.
A vivid conclusion:
Melissa Naschek: What do you think leftists should learn from the failure of fully planned economies?
Vivek Chibber: What they should learn is that the burden of proof is on us, on the Left, if we want to continue with this slogan of replacing the market with the plan. The burden of proof is on us to show that it can work. You might say that along with this ought to come a kind of humility about facts and about the world.…it would be criminally negligent to ignore the experience of decades upon decades of planning and say to yourself, “Well, that wasn’t what my vision of socialism is, so I’m going to ignore it.” Because if you do that, I can guarantee 100 percent you will end up repeating many of the mistakes and falling into the same dilemmas that the planners did.
I could offer critiques. Stalin was not an impediment to central planning but a consequence of it. And to warn that ignoring the experience of central planning risks repeating “the same dilemmas that the planners did” is a bloodless way to describe dictatorship, famine, and mass murder. But that would be churlish. Let me end instead by saying that I agree with this:
If we’re actually serious about changing the world, people on the Left … should be the most remorseless and the most merciless when it comes to facts.
Replace “people on the Left” with “we” and the line is exactly right.
The post Hayek in Jacobin appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Article about the bigfin squid.
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.
You can watch the AEI book event (and hear me read the first paragraph of the book, and chat about it for about 20 minutes) followed by discussion by Alex Tabarrok, Judd Kessler and Nick Gillespie, and Q&A, all introduced an moderated by Sally Satel.
Here’s a picture taken by Peter Jaworski
https://www.youtube.com/live/-TL4nlCpZEc
It remains one of America’s most interesting cities, and now it is seeing a continuing comeback. Downtown remains mostly empty of foot traffic, but I was stunned to see new office buildings and signs of budding prosperity. It did not feel abandoned or hopeless.
Detroit Institute of Art is one of America’s best art museums, showing impeccable taste, though it is notable how much the picture donations simply disappear after some point in time. This is a temple for those are skeptical about modern art, as you will not find it reprensented much here. The American art, the Rembrandt Visitation, the Poussin Holy Family, the Breughel, and the huge Diego Rivera murals are all to die for. The average quality of painting is high as well.
Baobab Fare, not too far from the museum, is a good Burundian (!) restaurant in town.
I was lucky enough to visit the General Motors research and development complex in Cranbrook, mostly designed by Eero Saarinen, due to the ingenuity of Dan Wang (it is mostly not open to the public). Around 20,000 people work there, and it remains a temple of modernist architecture, perhaps anachronistic in effect but beautiful nonetheless. I had not realized how strong the colors were, as that does not come through in the photos.
The Saarinen (papa Saarinen!) house in the Cranbrook Art Museum is perhaps the best Art Deco design I have seen. The museum itself has excellent architecture, sculptures, and gardens, rather than being much of an art museum proper.
Here are good NYT photos of that part of the joy ride.
Overall a trip to the Detroit area is one of the very best American visits you can do, highly recommended, automobile required of course that is why they call it the Motor City.
The post Detroit notes appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Why do weapons sustain durable peace in some societies but provoke perpetual violence in others? We develop a theory in which the value of human life and the frequency of violence are jointly determined by weapons technology and economic conditions. Lethal weapons deter conflict but raise mortality, taxing the future returns to investing in one’s livelihood. When those returns are high, deterrence dominates and peace and investment reinforce each other. When those returns are low, the mortality tax dominates, agents divest from the future, the value of life falls, and violence deepens, a trap that deadlier weapons worsen. Whether weapons pacify or destabilize depends on the interaction between their offensive characteristics and the baseline prosperity of the society they enter. The theory illuminates four historical episodes: how Medieval Iceland (930–1262) sustained stateless order without a sovereign; why Tokugawa Japan (1603–1868) contained firearms within an institutional order that sustained two centuries of peace and growth; why firearms traded into West Africa and among Native American nations (17th–18th century) produced escalating violence and persistent underdevelopment rather than deterrence; and why the Comanche of the southern plains (c.~1750–1850) rose to regional dominance on horse and gun complementarities and then collapsed as sustained raiding into northern Mexico hollowed out the prosperity base on which their own order depended. The model also refines the logic of nuclear deterrence and generates testable predictions about urban gun violence in high-poverty neighborhoods.
That is from a new paper by Samuel Lee, Ilari Passivirta, and Alexander Zentefis, via the excellent Kevin Lewis.
The post Weapons, Wealth, and the Fates of Societies appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Hey folks, fireside this week! Next week we’ll cap off our look at the Carthaginian army by covering some of the ‘odds and ends’ components (slingers, elephants), before looking at how that mixture of troop-types was employed in battle during the third century.

For this week’s musing, I figured I would answer a question that always come up in discussions of the Second Punic War: why didn’t Hannibal just take Rome? First it is worth noting this is hardly just a modern misconception – the idea that Hannibal ought to have just stormed Rome itself after Cannae shows up even in the ancient sources. But the answer to ‘why didn’t Hannibal just take Rome’ is that he couldn’t.
I want to address two different versions of that question, one which asks why he didn’t take Rome and one that asks if Hannibal should or could have taken Rome if he had siege equipment, reflecting an assumption that it was just Hannibal’s lack of siege equipment that prevented him from swiftly taking the city.
Let’s address the siege equipment side of the equation first: I think this assumes siege and defense technology more akin to warfare in the age of gunpowder where siege artillery both needed to be produced in advance (you can’t throw together cannon in a hurry) and then moved to the siege site and also where attempting to breach a fortress without cannon simply wasn’t going to work.
By contrast, the basic elements of siege warfare in antiquity are not catapults, but earthwork ramps, wooden towers and battering rams, all of which can be constructed on site out of local timber resources. Catapults – which in antiquity means torsion-powered catapults, not counter-weight or traction trebuchets – required more engineering expertise and preparation, but were often a ‘nice to have’ element of a siege, not a ‘must have.’ Catapults aren’t usually expected to breach walls, but rather to degrade them by smashing apart the crenelation (the zig-zag pattern that creates a protected fighting position on the top of the wall) or collapse towers.
That said, after Cannae, Hannibal has access to Capua and Tarentum – both of which revolted from the Romans in the aftermath of the battle. Between the two (and his soon alliance with Philip V), if Hannibal needed engineers who could build him torsion catapults, he can absolutely get them. His army is certainly also capable of building ladders, rams and towers, though again this would be done on site. In short, if Hannibal wanted to get siege equipment, he absolutely could.
Siege equipment isn’t the problem: logistics and geography are.
Rome is located along the Tiber at the meeting point of two regions: Latium (where the Latins live) to the south and Etruria (modern Tuscany, where the Etruscans live) to the north. Rome itself, in 216 is a walled city that hasn’t yet spilled well outside of its walls (as it will do in the two centuries following). It’s also not undefended: Roman recruitment focuses on relatively young men (from 17 to the late 20s), meaning that even after the disaster of Cannae, Rome does not lack 30- and 40-year old veterans able to take up arms to defend the city. Recall that the Roman dilectus normally only recruits iuniores (ages 17-46), but could recruit seniores (47+) in an emergency or to garrison the city itself against attack. So if Hannibal marches on Rome, he will find a walled city with a large garrison.
That means a long siege, even if he has siege equipment. Remember, catapults aren’t going to produce a breach quickly: their purpose is to degrade fortifications to enable escalade (attacking over the wall) using towers, ladders or – most reliably and frequently – an earthwork ramp (called a mole). If he attacks Rome (or any other large, fortified town) Hannibal is going to be stuck in place for quite a while.
And that’s a fatal problem, for reasons that have to do with that geography. Even after Cannae, none of the towns of Etruria or Latium have revolted from Rome. What that means is that the territory around Rome is studded over with Latin and Etruscan towns – functionally all of them walled. To march from the nearest major friendly settlement (Capua), Hannibal would have to bypass about a dozen fortified Latin towns, leaving them intact and hostile in his rear.
Which in turn has two obvious operational problems. The first is that the Romans can continue raising military force, so while Hannibal settles down to spend months besieging Rome, the Romans could be pulling together another massive army from their Italian socii, which would be forming up behind Hannibal. That in turn puts his smaller army in a really risky position and does so while he is effectively rooted to one spot and thus unable to maneuver. And that matters because Hannibal’s run of success up to this point has been in a large part predicated on his ability to maneuver and thus have the Romans engage him on ground of his choosing. By besieging Rome, he’d be allowing the Romans to dictate where and when their relief army challenged his siege and forced a pitched battle.
But there’s another even more immediate problem: logistics. Because the towns of Latium are fortified, Hannibal cannot access their grain stores without seizing them, which he cannot do without besieging them. The short of lightning campaigns of conquest that generals like Alexander III perform relied in no small part on cities like this ‘surrendering in advance,’ but the Latins and Etruscans had already refused to do this (and indeed, had also not done it when Pyrrhus actually did a lightning intimidation march on Rome back in 280; he couldn’t stop to besiege the city either).
Worse yet, with those cities garrisoned and untaken in his rear, Hannibal’s ability to forage supplies would be fatally hampered. If he tried to dispatch foraging parties – dispersing his already numerically inferior force – he would be vulnerable either to having his small foraging parties picked off by forces sortieing out of those Latin or Etruscan towns or, if he greatly enlarged his foraging party, to having his besieging force overwhelmed if the large Roman garrison sallied out.
In short, the presence of fortified Latin and Etruscan towns all around Rome, dominating the countryside and thus the agricultural supply base Hannibal needed for operations in the region, fatally complicated any effort to besiege Rome directly. In order to move against Rome directly, Hannibal would have needed to painstakingly besiege each Latin town in turn until he could open a clear supply route from Capua through to Rome.
In practice, what actually happens is that Hannibal first focuses on trying to secure his new ‘base’ in southern Italy and ends up basically playing whack-a-mole: Hannibal’s army could only be in one place, but the Romans could deploy multiple armies. Usually, one of these armies shadowed Hannibal to limit his foraging, contain his movements and frustrate his efforts to besiege settlements that remained loyal to Rome, while another army advanced the task of systematically reducing the communities that had revolted, besieging them one by one. Hannibal is able to win some victories in that struggle, but never to actually take the initiative and so he ends up slowly but steadily losing ground.
One of these days, I suppose, we ought to do a full run-through of the Second Punic War, because there is a lot more war happening then most casual students of ancient history generally realize. The Romans and Carthaginians (and their allies) are in any given year actively engaged in major operations in southern Italy (usually with more than one Roman army) and Spain, with supporting operations in Illyria (against Philip), Sicily (against Syracuse) and northern Italy (against the Cisalpine Gauls), all supported by naval operations (both sides have active fleets, although the Carthaginians make a clear choice not to directly challenge the Roman navy). So there’s a lot going on in most years that simply don’t get covered in treatments of the war unless they go really in-depth.
Fortunately, if you do want to untangle the first two Punic Wars, this week’s book recommendations will help you do so.

On to Recommendations.
I want to lead with L’Expérience Hoplitique, titled in English The Hoplite Experiment: about the routes in ancient Greece, a fascinating effort to simulate hoplite battle with reenactors at scale (200 to each side). Now I think it is worth noting up front that this sort of experimental approach is almost unavoidably wholly captive to its assumptions: these fellows aren’t in actual mortal peril (or even wearing armor) and so they are not responding organically to a threat environment: instead they are playing a role laid out by the organizers, so the results of the experiment will be to a very large degree controlled by the assumptions of those planners. Nevertheless, there’s a lot of value here, because of the ways such an experiment can reveal or demonstrate the emergent properties of those assumptions. In particular, the dynamics of the advance and the rout here – essentially experiments in crowd dynamics – are quite revealing. That said, I think the use of a more-or-less shoving othismos here (it appears only briefly because they were trying to study the rout) is a product of reenactors using blunts and I remain deeply unsure that real humans would really stay that close for that long under that much threat.
We also got a new Pasts Imperfect this week, which features an interesting essay by Matthew Vernon connecting the film Sinners (2025) with the medieval Old English epic Beowulf. I find I really like Vernon’s restrained but interesting argument here – not that Sinners adapts or even was inspired by Beowulf, but that the two stories are riffing off of the same themes of sin and the unknown, ‘how novel social arrangements emerge in times of terror’ and of course expressing that terror (in the real world the product of real humans) as monstrous outside forces. Humans being humans, we tend to return to similar stories to express similar anxieties, a reminder that we are connected by our humanity even when separated by gulfs of centuries.
Also worth noting in the same issue of Pasts Imperfect is the important story that the ACLS, the American Historical Association and the Modern Language Association were able to win a court case over the mass cancellation of grants at the NEH (the ‘DOGE’ing’ of the NEH, as it were). We’ve talked before about how small a portion of the federal budget the NEH represents, how meager humanities funding is and yet these cuts left pretty deep wounds in fields that are already struggling. Equally, PI includes one of the many videos to come out of the depositions for this case which are, collectively, remarkably revealing in just how vapid the DOGE’ing was, an exercise of raw power by individuals – most of them quite young and inexperienced – who did not understand much of anything about the programs and projects they were killing.
Finally, on a modern military topic, I want to highlight over at Secretary of Defense Rock (SODRock)’s History Does You, an essay, “Square Peg in a Round Hole: AirPower against Mobile Targets and Missiles: A Case Study of Operation Crossbow, Scud Hunting and Iran.” SODRock here makes the point that the failure to disable Iran’s missile arsenal – upwards of three-quarters of which remains intact, reportedly – actually fits into a broader pattern where mobile launch systems are simply extremely hard to target effectively from the air. Readers will, of course, know that I think that the sharp limits of airpower is a lesson that both military and civilian leadership need to take on board and have also largely failed to do so. Airpower remains seductive because it feels easy and safe, but it is also often ineffective. It is not an easy solution to use in place of the hard solutions of diplomacy or boots-on-the-ground.
On to this week’s book recommendation and here I have something of a two-fer for you all. I’m going to recommend what I think are the best two campaign histories of the Punic Wars, J.F. Lazenby, The First Punic War: A Military History (1996) and J.F. Lazenby, Hannibal’s War: A Military History (1998). Both have been in-print for basically forever, so the volumes are affordable and it isn’t hard to find used copies floating around.
Now I feel like I need to be clear what these books are and what they are not. These really are campaign histories: the focus is on the movement of armies, the position, nature and outcome of battles and the overall strategic position. There is some broader thematic analysis – Lazenby is willing to critique Carthaginian strategy (unfairly, I’ve argued) and praise Roman strategy (fairly) and recognize the greater effectiveness of the Roman military system (also fair) – but this is not a ‘war-and-society’ approach, nor is Lazenby aiming to give the reader a description of the whole of the Roman or Carthaginian military system. Instead, both volumes are a ‘and then what happened…’ narrative of their respective wars. Generally, I think one might fairly critique these books as being, as we’d say, somewhat ‘under-theorized’ in that regard.
That may sound rather more negative than I intend, but I don’t mean it as such – I am simply pointing out what Lazenby has not attempted in these two books.
What Lazenby has attempted in these two books is to provide that clear, direct campaign history. That turns out to matter quite a lot because these are big, long wars with many moving parts. The First Punic War (264-241) lasts 23 years and is fought at sea and on land (on both Sicily and North Africa, with brief raids into Italy and Corsica and Sardinia), while the Second Punic War (218-201) runs a ‘mere’ 17 years and has fronts – often simultaneous fronts – in northern Italy, southern Italy, Spain, Sicily, North Africa, Corsica and Sardinia, Illyria and Greece. The sources for these wars are also complex: Polybius is great when you can get him, but he ‘cuts out’ (lost text) for much of the Second Punic War and even for the First Punic War where his full treatment survives, his narrative can be usefully supplemented by other sources (often very obscure other sources).
Lazenby takes all of that – the various fragmented, sometimes conflicting, scattered sources and the complexities of tracking operations in a bunch of different theaters – and forms it into a single narrative that lets the reader track the development of each war on a year-to-year basis. The ample notes also let the reader themselves quickly find the passages he is looking at to see why Lazenby makes the assessments he does. In this sense, I think the two Lazenby volumes provide the best foundation to then begin pushing into some of the more ‘thematic’ treatments of elements of the war, which often presuppose a basic knowledge of what happened, where and when. I will note that Lazenby’s prose is more than a little dry, but that can be its own virtue: he is generally quite clear, valuable when trying to keep track of a complex conflict with many moving parts.
Adam Lisagor returns to the show to talk about Hovercraft, his new virtual presentation camera app for Mac, and how he’s developing it with AI coding tools. Also, delicious Japanese spite sandwich cookies.
Sponsored by:
Release: inaturalist-clumper 0.1
Part of the infrastructure I use for publishing my iNaturalist sightings on my blog. I've been running this in production for a few weeks now, inspiring some iterations on how it works, so I decided to ship a 0.1 release.
You can see an example of the output in this JSON file.
Tags: projects, inaturalist
Maxwell Zeff, reporting for Wired (News+ link):
OpenAI told staff on Friday that it would reorganize the company as part of an ongoing effort to unify its product offerings, Wired has learned. OpenAI cofounder and president Greg Brockman will now lead the company’s product strategy, in addition to his work on AI infrastructure, OpenAI confirms to Wired. Brockman was previously assigned to oversee OpenAI products on an interim basis while the CEO of AGI deployment, Fidji Simo, was on medical leave; the change is now official. [...]
The company tells Wired that Simo remains on medical leave, and expects her return, noting that she worked directly with Brockman on these organizational changes.
Yours truly, last month:
OpenAI’s work environment seems not merely overwhelming, but torturous. I have no reason to believe Simo’s medical leave is anything but a legitimate medical leave, but I wouldn’t be surprised if she never comes back. (What’s the point of being CEO of AGI deployment when there is no AGI to deploy?)
Her title might as well be “CEO of Technology That Doesn’t Exist”.
My thanks to Drata for sponsoring last week at DF. Their message is short and sweet: Leverage autonomous AI agents to automate compliance, manage internal and third-party risk, and continuously prove your security posture.