Let the agents democratize open source

The open source movement spent decades fighting for everyone's right to change software, through free access to code and permissive licenses to release improvements. But at the dawn of the AI revolution, as this mission is finally being broadly fulfilled, it's clear that "everyone" never actually meant everyone to some.

See, all programmers are equal, but some programmers are more equal than others. If you're a programmer being assisted by AI, you're not a real programmer. Therefore you aren't entitled to the same supposedly universal open source rights. Or so the self-serving thinking goes in the growing number of anti-agent camps springing up as part of a modern Luddite movement.

Projects big and small have been erecting new participation barriers on contributions aided by AI to preserve the privileges of the old programmer guilds. 

This is a protectionist tale as old as time.   

And the justifications are just as tired: It's about quality! It's about attribution! It's about workers! Spare me. It's about you, your insecurities, and your privileges.

Humans have been writing shitty software, with dodgy attribution and plenty of bugs, since five minutes after the profession materialized. Agents aren't perfect, slop is a problem, but giving more people the power to enjoy malleable computers is undoubtedly a huge win for the founding vision of open source. 

But as with so many social movements that purport to fight for freedom or equality, this AI backlash reeks of status games, envy, and what Nietzsche called ressentiment: How dare you make or change software without suffering through all that I had to endure learning this trade! This precious power is my reward for enduring the social humiliation of being a nerd!

What should be celebrated as the spread of computing freedoms is instead condemned because it diminishes the exclusivity of those who possessed it first.

Don't succumb to this insular, fearful, protectionist thinking. Programming is evolving. We don't exactly what the final shape will look like, but giving more people access to the fruits of computing freedoms is worth resisting the temptation to close the gates of participation.

FAA documents outline SpaceX plans for Starfall reentry vehicles

Starfall

Federal Aviation Administration documents have provided new details about a SpaceX project to develop and test reentry vehicles that could be used to support in-space manufacturing projects.

The post FAA documents outline SpaceX plans for Starfall reentry vehicles appeared first on SpaceNews.

UK facts of the day

At the peak, the year to March 2023, almost 1.5m immigrants came. The Office for National Statistics thinks that far fewer people left, so net migration amounted to 944,000.

…Net migration to Britain last year amounted to 171,000—the lowest level since 2012, if the pandemic years are excluded. The human haul will probably be even lower this year, largely because the number of economic migrants continues to fall fast…James Bowes of Warwick University thinks net migration might even turn negative in 2026…

The government’s attempt to filter for highly desirable immigrants is not working in practice. As expected, the number of visas given to care workers has plunged. But the number of visas given to IT professionals has also fallen, from about 28,000 in 2022 to 10,000 last year.

According to The Economist, most Britons still think immigration to the country is rising.  And it seems economically productive immigrants are being restricted too?:

Regardless of whether he or she arrived with a work visa or by other means, the average India-born employee in Britain earns £32,400 a year, whereas the average Nigeria-born employee earns £34,000. British-born people lag behind both, with average earnings of £30,900…

The Migration Observatory, a think-tank, has shown that people who arrive from outside the EU often earn little at first. Yet the wages of recent migrants have quickly exceeded the national average…

One of my fears is that, for informational and public choice reasons, it is unduly hard to crack down on unproductive immigrants only.

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The political right continues to gain ground in Latin America

A leftist senator and a rightwing populist outsider who calls himself “The Tiger” will go to a run-off presidential election in Colombia this month after no candidate won outright in the first round of voting on Sunday.

Iván Cepeda, a close ally of outgoing leftist president Gustavo Petro, will face Abelardo de la Espriella, a combative former criminal defence lawyer who won the largest share of the vote on Sunday with 10.3mn votes, a 43.7 per cent share, though he fell short of the 50 per cent plus one required to win outright.

Cepeda came in second with 9.6mn votes, a 40.9 per cent share, with 99.9 per cent of ballots counted on Sunday evening. No other candidate reached 7 per cent of the vote.

Here is more from the FT.   Note the right-wing candidate was not expected to do this well, though at current margins I am not sure why people keep ending up surprised.

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Gravity Waves From Super Typhoon Sinlaku

Gravity waves in the upper atmosphere appear as concentric rings in a nighttime, black and white satellite image. Clouds from a typhoon are also visible.
Atmospheric gravity waves generated by Super Typhoon Sinlaku are visible via mesospheric airglow in this nighttime image acquired with the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) on the NOAA-20 satellite on April 12, 2026, Universal Time (April 13 local time).
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

In mid-April 2026, Super Typhoon Sinlaku churned across the North Pacific Ocean and brought heavy rain and flooding to the Mariana Islands. The storm reached “violent typhoon” status—the highest intensity on the scale used by the Japan Meteorological Agency and roughly equivalent to a category 5 storm on the Saffir-Simpson wind scale. Sinlaku was one of only a handful of tropical cyclones of that intensity known to have occurred so early in the year in the region, meteorologists noted.

Sinlaku rapidly intensified over the ocean before its impacts reached land. Around the time of this strengthening, satellites began to detect that the typhoon’s effects also extended upward, into the upper atmosphere.

The nighttime image above, acquired with the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) on the NOAA-20 satellite, shows atmospheric gravity waves radiating from the typhoon. These waves, resembling ripples on a pond, were made visible to the sensor via airglow in the mesosphere. Airglow occurs when atoms and molecules, excited by sunlight during the day, later emit light to release excess energy.

The release of latent heat near the eyewalls of tropical cyclones is known to drive convection and the formation of tall cumulonimbus clouds. These “hot towers” can rise out of the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere, and generate waves that propagate into the stratosphere and mesosphere above. An analysis of past tropical cyclones revealed that gravity waves often occur around the time that storms are intensifying. Indeed, in the 24 hours prior to the acquisition of the image above, Sinlaku had strengthened from a category 2 to a category 5 storm.

“We’re seeing waves propagating radially and upward, in a cone-like shape,” said Joan Alexander, senior research scientist at NorthWest Research Associates. Alexander was surprised to see well-defined waves in the mesospheric airglow above the storm. Winds in the upper atmosphere can dissipate the waves before they reach such high altitudes, Alexander explained, but relatively light stratospheric winds at the storm’s latitude in April 2026 may have helped preserve them.

A relatively low amount of moonlight was fortuitous, as well. The VIIRS day-night band is sensitive to airglow in the mesosphere but also observes reflected moonlight. The Moon was about 25 percent illuminated on April 12, so some light reflected off clouds in the troposphere was visible, but not enough to overpower the signal from the airglow.

The signature of gravity waves in the stratosphere appears as concentric rings in infrared satellite data.
Thermal energy from gravity waves produced by Super Typhoon Sinlaku was detected in the stratosphere by the AIRS (Atmospheric Infrared Sounder) instrument on NASA’s Aqua satellite on April 13, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

Sinlaku’s gravity waves, in addition to appearing high in the atmosphere via airglow, were observed lower in the atmosphere by the AIRS (Atmospheric Infrared Sounder) instrument on NASA’s Aqua satellite. The image above depicts thermal emissions from gravity waves in the stratosphere on April 13. The rippling pattern appeared in April 14 observations, as well, indicating the storm’s continuing effects on the atmosphere.

Observing atmospheric gravity waves, particularly those caused by tropical cyclones, goes beyond scientific curiosity. Practical implications could include improved monitoring of storm development. “We’d like to use gravity waves to tell us if a storm is intensifying,” Alexander said, “which can be difficult to know, especially over the open ocean.” A geostationary satellite with the proper infrared imager would be able to observe gravity waves and track tropical cyclone evolution, she and colleagues have argued.

Furthermore, it’s critical to account for processes in the stratosphere in weather models, said Laura Holt, also a senior research scientist at NorthWest Research Associates. Stratospheric wind patterns are factors in long-term forecasts of the next Northern Hemisphere winter, for example, and tropical cyclones have a disproportionate influence because their sustained, intense convection drives prolonged gravity wave forcing of the stratosphere.

The effect of gravity waves even reaches into the realm of space weather. “For a while, people have seen signatures of hurricanes in ionospheric weather,” Holt said. Gravity waves can lead to traveling ionospheric disturbances—large-scale ripples in plasma density—and in some cases plasma bubbles, both of which can disrupt satellite signals and radio communications. “With space weather in particular,” Holt added, “a single event such as a tropical cyclone can be very important.”

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using VIIRS day-night band data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE, GIBS/Worldview, and the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS), and AIRS data from Hoffmann, L. Story by Lindsey Doermann.

References & Resources

Hoffmann, L., et al. (2018) Satellite observations of stratospheric gravity waves associated with the intensification of tropical cyclones. Geophysical Research Letters, 45, 1692–1700. 

NASA (2018, October 22) Why NASA Watches Airglow, the Colors of the (Upper Atmospheric) Wind. Accessed May 28, 2026.

NASA Earth Observatory (2026, April 14) Super Typhoon Sinlaku. Accessed May 28, 2026.

Nolan, D. S. (2020) An Investigation of Spiral Gravity Waves Radiating from Tropical Cyclones Using a Linear, Nonhydrostatic ModelJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 77, 1733–1759.

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The spinning origins of a planetary system

Today’s Picture of the Week, taken with ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), is in fact a series of images taken over the course of four years, showing a rotating disc of gas and dust around the young star AB Aurigae. This swirling cloud is a planetary system in formation and it is the perfect example to study their structure, letting us take a closer look at the dynamics of planet birth.

AB Aurigae is located in the Auriga constellation, 520 light-years away from Earth. While the overall rotation of the material within the disc is governed by the star’s gravity, there are features like “twists” signalling the places where planets could be forming. As the new planets interact with surrounding material and feed with gas and dust, they create disturbances that cause this phenomenon as the planet rotates around the star. These features are better seen in the right side of the video, which has been processed to enhance these structures.

The images were taken with the SPHERE instrument at the VLT, which blocks the glare of the central star, revealing the disc around it in great detail. In particular, the images show radial shadows caused by opaque clumps from denser parts of the disc that can be seen orbiting this star. These SPHERE observations will be key to understanding the precise way in which planets form around this star.

Links

What is so micro about tonight's blue micromoon?  What is so micro about tonight's blue micromoon?


Sunday 31 May 1663

(Lord’s day). Lay long in bed talking with my wife, and do plainly see that her distaste (which is beginning now in her again) against Ashwell arises from her jealousy of me and her, and my neglect of herself, which indeed is true, and I to blame; but for the time to come I will take care to remedy all.

So up and to church, where I think I did see Pembleton, whatever the reason is I did not perceive him to look up towards my wife, nor she much towards him; however, I could hardly keep myself from being troubled that he was there, which is a madness not to be excused now that his coming to my house is past, and I hope all likelyhood of her having occasion to converse with him again.

Home to dinner, and after dinner up and read part of the new play of “The Five Houres’ Adventures,” which though I have seen it twice; yet I never did admire or understand it enough, it being a play of the greatest plot that ever I expect to see, and of great vigour quite through the whole play, from beginning to the end.

To church again after dinner (my wife finding herself ill … [of her months – L&M] did not go), and there the Scot preaching I slept most of the sermon.

This day Sir W. Batten’s son’s child is christened in the country, whither Sir J. Minnes, and Sir W. Batten, and Sir W. Pen are all gone. I wonder, and take it highly ill that I am not invited by the father, though I know his father and mother, with whom I am never likely to have much kindness, but rather I study the contrary, are the cause of it, and in that respect I am glad of it. Being come from church, I to make up my month’s accounts, and find myself clear worth 726l., for which God be praised, but yet I might have been better by 20l. almost had I forborne some layings out in dancing and other things upon my wife, and going to plays and other things merely to ease my mind as to the business of the dancing-master, which I bless God is now over and I falling to my quiet of mind and business again, which I have for a fortnight neglected too much.

This month the greatest news is, the height and heat that the Parliament is in, in enquiring into the revenue, which displeases the Court, and their backwardness to give the King any money. Their enquiring into the selling of places do trouble a great many among the chief, my Lord Chancellor (against whom particularly it is carried), and Mr. Coventry; for which I am sorry. The King of France was given out to be poisoned and dead; but it proves to be the measles: and he is well, or likely to be soon well again.

I find myself growing in the esteem and credit that I have in the office, and I hope falling to my business again will confirm me in it, and the saving of money which God grant!

So to supper, prayers, and bed.

My whole family lying longer this morning than was fit, and besides Will having neglected to brush my clothes, as he ought to do, till I was ready to go to church, and not then till I bade him, I was very angry, and seeing him make little matter of it, but seeming to make it a matter indifferent whether he did it or no, I did give him a box on the ear, and had it been another day should have done more. This is the second time I ever struck him.

Read the annotations

Exonym Atlas

An exonym is a place name used by outsiders—for example, English speakers using Germany for Deutschland. The Exonym Atlas explores how other languages name countries and groups those names by usage. Fascinating to see the… More

Links 5/31/26

Links for you. Science:

A critical window to stop hantavirus is opening. Not all countries are managing exposed travelers the same way
Hantavirus in Africa: why climate change, rats and weak surveillance are worrying scientists
Neanderthal Dentistry, and the Scientist Glad Not to Have Experienced It
Andes Hantavirus Outbreak on a Cruise Ship, 2026
California’s Wildfire Season Is Already Overactive
Jasmine Clark is poised to be the first Black woman Ph.D. scientist in Congress
FDA’s own report shows no child deaths definitively caused by COVID vaccination

Other:

Elon Musk’s Plan to Make You Invest in SpaceX
The Trump Voters Who Want to Be Lied to
Autopsy of the autopsy: How the DNC’s 2024 post-mortem turned into a crisis (DNC statement here; original garbage here)
Bluesky is a record store
Empty rooms and Fifa cancellations – US hotels fear World Cup washout
The Case for Ska
Hating AI is good, actually
Kennedy Minus Kennedy
DC’s unpaid millions to snow removal companies could cost the city’s future storm response
Badges of Honor
Abortion clinic protesters eligible for payouts from new Trump ‘anti-weaponization’ fund
Tina Peters’ commutation has left election officials feeling betrayed
How Deepfakes Tore a High School Apart
My Son’s Hockey Team and the Crisis of American Resentment
Homeland Security’s Plan to Strong-Arm ‘Sanctuary’ Cities
JVRC April 28 – May 3, 2026: National Jewish Survey
Bluesky Says Kremlin Is Hacking Its Platform to Spread Propaganda
Why Trump’s Tax Immunity Could Save Him More Than $600 Million
8 Democrats Help Pass GOP Bill Forcing Teachers To Out Transgender Students
Eight Democrats vote to confirm a lifetime judge who wouldn’t say Biden won in 2020
SpaceX not the behemoth everyone thought
Book on Truth in the Age of A.I. Contains Quotes Made Up by A.I.
The real reason Democrats lost in 2024
One of DC police’s highest ranking officials resigns amid crime stats probe
Iran moved billions through Binance to fund regime—continuing into this month (one more reason why you don’t pardon criminals)
Customers say Trump Mobile is leaking their personal information (lmfao)
Sure Why Not
How A Republican Amendment Destroyed Bipartisan Support for Women’s History Museum (the person responsible for it is a real piece of work)
MAGA are so suddenly shocked we hate them back
You can no longer Google the word ‘disregard’ (fixed by now, I’m sure, but not encouraging)

In Case You Missed It…

…a week of Mad Biologist posts:

One Good Outcome of Gerrymandering: No More Rep. Andy Harris

Other Municipalities and States Don’t Have This Kind of Federal Interference

A Good Week for D.C.’s Crime Stats

Somos DR

Worry About a ‘Weak’ Image

Trump’s Iran Dithering Deepens Perception of Weakness

Left dangling between war and a nuclear-weapon free Iran, Donald Trump seems frozen about next steps in the Middle East – apparently worried most that he might look “weak” as a leader. There is no White House decision about a “framework” for ceasefire that is neither war nor peace.

More specifically, he said, he might look weak to political commentators, skipping over how he might look to Iran, Israel and Gulf nations, allies and the world.

Even in what he calls a global crisis, Trump seems to see his image first, and then maybe world peace.

Trump is asking the wrong question – again. Instead of worry about whether he looks weak, he should focus on whether he is effective – or even competent, whether he is able to recognize the complexity of Middle East negotiations, how to maintain alliances, or even the predictable outcome of ordering the U.S. military into action in the first place.

In fact, Trump does look “weak” – indecisive of what he wants done or how to get the job done. He looks “weak” in his inability to understand history with Iran to determine that an attack would not be a pushover, in his shunning of U.S. military and intelligence advice to listen instead to long-delayed pleas from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for an Iran attack, in his diplomatic bumbling that has led to the strangled Strait of Hormuz. Trump’s view of “strength” is belligerent threats which look less lethal when we see Iran seemingly dictating the terms of any pending ceasefire.

It is certainly “weak” to have the best-case scenario be the return to conditions that had been in place before the February attacks on Iran.

Indeed, even  if Trump decides soon to accept this agreement to extend a ceasefire and talk later, it will have followed such a baffling back-and-forth set of policy switches as to have undercut political, diplomatic and even military advantage.

What to Do

As Trump has dithered about why we are in Iran or what we need to do to get out, Iran is re-arming and digging out missiles and drones supposedly destroyed, the Israelis have renewed strikes and land grabs in Lebanon, Gaza and the West Bank, the Gulf nations are frittering their support for U.S. objectives, and Trump has managed to undercut the NATO alliance. Whatever else, it is not a picture of strength for the U.S.

Apart from all else, Trump now faces a time-pressured and election-minded vote in Congress to end hostilities against Iran altogether. Trying to maintain 50,000 troops in the Middle East while he lacks support at home for a war whose objectives keep changing again is no reflection of presidential strength.

Trump now faces only bad strategic choices and has opted to fall back on demands for patriotic embrace of whatever decision or non-decision he takes. Trump’s focus on halting any contrary word from within his government or among television critics is not winning allegiance, not stopping the anti-war commentary and, once again, does not mirror a picture of a strong leader.

In short, by his own actions, Trump is making his position increasingly “weak.”

Of course, underpinning Trump’s dwindling support are the twin policy choices he has forced on the government – retribution against enemies real and imagined, including political or personal foes, and prompting a succession of personal glory or get-rich schemes at the taxpayers’ detriment.

This week we finally saw federal district courts raise serious questions about Trump’s $1.776 billion payment-to-convicted-loyalists slush fund, declare that plastering his name on the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts is illegal, and halt construction of the gilded ballroom. The continuing drop in political polls as prices for food and gas rise is palpable. Popular reaction to Trump’s campaign to build self-glorifying monuments, to introduce a $250 bill with his own image – illegal without congressional approval – to pay millions to resurface the reflecting pools on the National Mall, and to turn the nation’s 250th birthday into a personal celebration for himself are running into a national buzzsaw.

“Weaker” has been Trump’s petulantly posted social media responses, lashing out at would-be enemies for following the law or boosting non-partisan causes. Trump is doubling down on Trump. It is a sure sign of political weakness that is bound to worsen if the November elections turn at least one house of Congress for Democrats.

The real antidote to a “weak” presidency is to change directions, not seek to stomp on dissent.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to this Issue

Why is Trump being criticized over Iran policy?

Critics argue that Trump’s shifting positions on Iran, unclear military objectives, and focus on political optics have weakened U.S. credibility and stability in the Middle East.

What impact could the Iran conflict have on U.S. alliances?

The conflict has strained relationships with NATO allies and Gulf nations while increasing concerns about regional instability and global energy disruptions.

How is Congress responding to U.S. involvement in Iran?

Some lawmakers are pushing for votes to limit or end U.S. hostilities against Iran amid concerns over unclear war objectives and domestic opposition.

Why is the Strait of Hormuz important?

The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global shipping route for oil and gas exports, and disruptions there can impact global energy prices and economic stability.


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The returns to good data are rising

When we want A.I. to solve real problems for real people, we need to make sure the data exists. That means cleaning up government data sets that are currently in a shambles (a project that the province of Alberta’s government found A.I. could make much faster and easier). It may also mean funding the creation of novel data sets that could eventually give A.I. systems traction on scientific problems that are currently beyond our capability to solve. Those data sets — like the Protein Data Bank — would be public goods, and so would need to be funded by the public.

Here is a longer NYT column on AI from Ezra Klein.  And this:

But much of the A.I. capacity will remain in the private sector. So a public agenda for A.I. should also give the private sector reason to work on public problems. Like in Operation Warp Speed, the government could define the outcomes it wants — a drug, a solution — and guarantee a market if it’s found and distributed equitably.

Negativism is not going to win in this sphere.

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The way we treat pigs is a sin

Photo by Humane Society via Wikimedia Commons

I consider myself a pretty good and decent guy, overall. I don’t commit crimes. I’m nice to the people I meet. I help out my friends. I take good care of my pet rabbit, and I donate lots of money to other people who take care of abandoned and sick rabbits. My politics might not always be correct or wise, but I want things like the end of poverty, the end of war, and so on.

And yet just down the highway from me, there are facilities for the mass torture of animals. In the United States, there are 73 million pigs in “concentrated animal feeding operations”, more commonly known as factory farms:

Source: OWID

There are many horrors experienced by chickens and other animals on factory farms, but the way pigs are forced to live is probably the worst. For most of their lives, female pigs (sows) are kept in tiny cages — either “gestation crates” when they’re pregnant, or “farrowing crates” when they’re nursing. A sow will spend most of her life in one of these cages.

In a gestation crate or a farrowing crate, sows don’t have enough room to turn around — all they can do is either stand or lie down in a pile of their own feces. Imagine living your entire life in an airline seat, where you couldn’t even get up to go to the bathroom or take your seatbelt off. That’s how these pigs live.

Pigs are social creatures — they exhibit “emotional contagion”, meaning that when one pig is scared or happy, other pigs start to feel the same, and they give comfort and support to other pigs who are in distress. Research suggests that they’re at least as smart as dogs, and probably smarter. But a pig in one of these crates will never get any social interaction in her entire adult life — she can’t even turn around to look at her babies.

This is torture. The pigs who are confined this way bite the bars of their cages, desperate for a freedom that will never come. They have their tails chopped off as babies (generally without anesthetic), so that they can’t chew each other’s tails in anguish. But no relief ever comes — they live out their entire lives and die in these tiny torture-cages.

I have no other word for this except “sin”. This is a sin. If there is a God,1 and if that God is in any way good and moral, then that God is looking down with disgust on the way my society treats pigs. I go about my daily life — hanging out with my friends, petting my rabbit, going out to eat at nice restaurants — never thinking about the horrible suffering that has engulfed the entire lives of those tens of millions of pigs.

And it’s for my own benefit that those animals are being tortured. When I eat delicious guanciale, sumptuous char-siu, or mouthwatering carnitas, I’m eating the flesh of animals who were tortured for their entire lives so that I could devour their faces and shoulders and bellies for a slightly cheaper price.

OK, so why don’t I just stop whining and become a vegetarian (or a vegan, since milk cows and hens are also treated badly)? Honestly, I should, and the fact that I don’t is monstrous in a way. But simply washing my own hands of this crime feels like a pitifully inadequate response. The vegetarian movement has been around in the West for over 150 years, and very little has changed — meat consumption is probably marginally lower than if there were no vegetarians at all, but abusive factory farming practices have only been refined and expanded. Furthermore, vegetarianism, though morally laudable, has an obvious economic limitation — when one person refuses to eat meat, it lowers the price of meat for everyone else, which raises other people’s meat consumption and partially offsets the vegetarian’s action.

On top of the obvious and demonstrated inability of individual action to solve this problem, it’s insufficient even from a moral stance. Suppose that our society farmed human beings for food. Would simply refusing to eat human flesh be enough to absolve me of culpability? I don’t think so. I would still have a responsibility to try to abolish the evil system.

In fact, “abolish the evil system” is exactly what voters in California and some other states are trying to do. In 2018, by an almost 2-to-1 margin, California voters enacted a law called Proposition 12 that heavily restricted the sale of meat from pigs, hens, and calves that weren’t raised with a minimum amount of space. Crucially, the partial prohibition extended to meat from animals raised inhumanely in other states. This followed on the heels of a similar law in Massachusetts two years earlier.

Courts have upheld the law, but Republicans in Congress are trying to undo it from the federal level. In 2025 they proposed the Save Our Bacon Act, which would ban states from enacting animal welfare laws like the ones voters approved in California and Massachusetts. The Save Our Bacon Act failed on its own, but this year it got incorporated into the Farm Bill, which has passed the House and is now being considered in the Senate:

Companies and industry groups have also worked with members of Congress for over a decade to introduce federal legislation to nullify laws like those in California and Massachusetts. The latest iteration is called the Save Our Bacon Act, originally proposed last year…This effort, which for years went nowhere as standalone legislation in Congress, now has a decent chance at becoming law as part of the new Farm Bill…

In late April, the House of Representatives passed its version of the Farm Bill, which included the language from the Save Our Bacon Act…It’s “really a Save Our Crate Act,” Brent Hershey, a hog farmer who opposes it, told me. “A vote for the farm bill,” he said, “is a vote to cage an animal that can’t walk or turn around.”

Lewis Bollard has a good post explaining what’s at stake. In fact, the current Farm Bill wouldn’t just reverse the recent anti-crate laws in California and Massachusetts — it would roll back much of the progress that has been made in farm animal welfare over the decade, as well as preventing any future welfare laws along similar lines:

The [Save Our Bacon] Act would stop any state or locality from regulating the sale of meat based on how it’s produced in another state. This would likely invalidate state and local bans on foie gras, crated veal, and more…It would also halt future legislative progress. Congress hasn’t passed a farm animal welfare law in decades. State laws are where reforms actually happen. The SOB Act would gut them by mandating they contain a giant loophole for out-of-state imports.

Why should Congress prevent the voters of California and Massachusetts from taking a stand against the evils of factory farming? First and foremost, it’s a case of a concentrated interest group — the pig farming lobby — making headway against a diffuse interest (voters with a conscience). In fact, if you believe the polls, a majority of the country — even a majority of those who regularly eat pork — would probably support measures like the ones in California and Massachusetts:

Across different incomes, genders, age or race, many regular pork buying Americans (defined as those who purchase pork at least 2-3 times per month) find the use of gestation crates on pregnant pigs (66%) and the practice of [tail] docking on piglets (53%) objectionable. These findings, and other key sentiments, are from a recent survey of over 2,000 US adults conducted by The Harris Poll…According to the survey, gestation crates are seen as unacceptable by two-thirds of Americans (66%), and a strong majority (73%) are more likely to buy pork products from companies committed to ending their use than from one that is not. Tail docking is also seen as unacceptable by just over half (56%) of Americans, and 62% of Americans think retailers and restaurants have a responsibility to ensure the cutting of piglet tails is not done by their pork producers.

A plurality of Americans want laws against animal cruelty strengthened in general, and in 2022 a poll by Data for Progress found that measures like those of California’s Prop 12 enjoy widespread national support.

There is a financial cost of switching to humane farming methods, but in the grand scheme of things it isn’t that high. After California passed Prop 12, the prices of affected products rose by about 20% relative to products that weren’t covered by the law. 20% is a significant increase; it’s possible that the American public, wearied by several years of inflation, is less inclined to care about pig torture than they were when the polls I cited above were taken.

But it would be a one-time bump in cost, and over the years the price would come back down at least somewhat, as farmers found more efficient ways to farm pigs without torturing them. In addition, California implemented the law in its typical inefficient way, forcing producers of legally compliant pork to jump through massive amounts of regulatory hoops in order to sell their product in the state. Efforts to make it easier to sell humanely produced meat would make it even cheaper to end these terrible practices.

In fact, I suspect that the American public is still in a mood to support animal welfare laws like this. The Save Our Bacon Act failed on its own, and its supporters had to end up sneakily burying it within the much bigger Farm Bill; to me, this suggests that even the SOB Act’s proponents knew how bad it would make them look if people started paying attention.

I also suspect — though I can’t prove — that the proponents of the Save Our Bacon Act care about more than just the support of the farm lobby. I suspect that part of the reason they’re so anxious to preserve abusive farming practices is that doing so affirms their right to abuse animals. The line “The cruelty is the point” probably applies here.

People who feel disempowered tend to take their frustrations out on those with even less power. Conservatives have certainly been feeling disempowered by the progressive drift of elite culture over the past few decades; by rolling back animal rights, perhaps they can demonstrate that at least they still have complete power over the pigs.

This disgusts me. In The Better Angels of Our Nature, Steve Pinker showed how economic development has tended to go hand-in-hand with less tolerance for animal cruelty. By passing a law that expanded the scope for animal cruelty, America would be slipping a little bit back down toward developing-country status. It’s moral degeneration, plain and simple.

I would hope that the advent of AI would give us humans a little bit of self-reflection about how we treat animals. Whether or not you believe that today’s AI represents a true superhuman intelligence, the rapidity with which Claude and GPT have rocketed to their current heights of ability should make even the most hardened skeptics realize that humanity is probably not the eternal pinnacle of power and intelligence in this universe.

And in a universe where humanity is neither the most powerful nor the most intelligent entity, we will desperately need a universal moral code where the strong protect the weak. Vernor Vinge, contemplating the advent of superhuman AI back in 1993, wrote:

[I.J.] Good proposed a “Meta-Golden Rule”, which might be paraphrased as “Treat your inferiors as you would be treated by your superiors.” It’s a wonderful, paradoxical idea (and most of my friends don’t believe it) since the game-theoretic payoff is so hard to articulate. Yet if we were able to follow it, in some sense that might say something about the plausibility of such kindness in this universe.)

The people who wrote the Save Our Bacon Act don’t believe in this Meta-Golden Rule. Instead, they believe that all of the moral value and weight in the Universe lies with them and their friends, and that they should have the right to inflict unimaginable cruelty on any being that doesn’t possess the power to stop them from doing so. I would hope that whatever being ends up judging humanity, be it the God of the Bible or some future superintelligence, doesn’t judge us by our factory farms.

Anyway, if you don’t want your society to torture pigs en masse for a few bucks, call your Senator and tell them not to pass the Farm Bill until the Save Our Bacon Act is stripped out of it.


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I actually do believe in God.

w/e 2026-05-31

We went on a group walk yesterday, not usually my kind of thing – the walking or the grouping – but it wasn’t far and it was a nice day and nice people. But I still tried to avoid talking to anyone; I have nothing to say. I did end up alongside one woman and, after the usual weather chat:

  • Her: What sort of things do you like doing round here?
  • Me: Erm… …
  • Her: Walking? Cycling? … Fishing? Any hobbies?
  • Me: Er… I don’t know. I don’t get out much.

In the past I might have tried to justify “making things on the web” as a hobby, even if it didn’t get me out and about, but these days… I’m barely even doing the minimum maintenance I should be doing, I have so little enthusiasm for it.

I also heard three separate people emphasising (rightly) the need to make the most of life now because we don’t know when we’ll lose our health or our life. I pondered my fifties sliding away, day by day, month by month. I’ve done next-to-nothing this week, feeling overwhelmed enough by my few obligations that the days between feel like they’re for nothing but waiting. So many things I could be doing but none of them that urgent or important so I do none of them.

But, yes, the weather’s nice isn’t it. We’ve completed the annual shift from relaxing in the living room to relaxing in the conservatory (or outside in the shade when it’s too hot). It’s a different place here, from winter to summer. Monday and Tuesday were a bit much – about 31C (88F) here – but we managed to keep the downstairs temperature below 25C (77F), even if upstairs crept upwards.


§ A photo looking down at some long grass with buttercups and clover flowers.
The lawn/meadow

§ This week we had a new power cable connected to the meter box, snaked around the corner into the garage, and into a new consumer unit, ready for a forthcoming battery and air-source heat pump. It’s a chunkier cable than I was expecting, thick, shielded and inflexible, like a mini undersea cable.


§ As a phrase, there are few that generate such multimedia nostalgic feelings, instantly conjuring up audio and accompanying graphic design, alongside memories of being decades younger, all wrapped around the nostalgia inherent in the very phrase itself:

So what were the skies like when you were young?


§ I’m not hopeful for the web these days. I mean, the good stuff will continue but if it was already swamped by worthless SEO-filled nonsense, AI is smothering it – from the ease of generating even more nonsense, to Google becoming more useless.

And even if you have the time, patience and ability to figure out what’s accurate, it’s not always possible. Today I shared a blog post about plug-in solar panels which was a useful summary of the changing rules in the UK, and how Amendment 4 of the BS 7671 wiring regulations “legalise plug-in solar systems” and says they can be DIY installed from July.

But the summary of Amendment 4 doesn’t mention anything any changes or additions related to solar power. Googling, there are plenty of blog posts repeating this info and then Reddit discussions linking to the blog posts. Occasionally you see commenters saying things like “Perhaps you can give me regulation numbers for the changes? Because I’ve had a really good look through my new copy of BS7671 and I can’t see these changes everyone seems so adamant are there.”

So while “do your own research” is often the tedious answer when faced with potential slop, in this case you can only do that if you pay £125 for a copy of the regulations and read through the whole thing (and understand it).

The problems of AI slop are even worse when the facts are proprietary.

I find myself wondering what it would take to make a new internet. To start again. A life raft. But it’d probably either sink or end up in the same place.


§ This week I got back to trying to figure out some playable guitar music I like, specifically this live version of Free Treasure by Adrianne Lenker, helped by this nice tutorial by Kyles Forester. I’ve been trying to work out the vocals’ tune, which I don’t really need but being able to put down the notation for it would help me figure out exactly how the guitar and vocals go together. As I’ve said before, when it comes to trying to play music I need the structure of notation – I can’t wing it with some vague ASCII tab that eschews bars, never mind note durations.

How hard could it be, I thought, to figure out the notes for the words? Almost impossible for me, it turns out. I can watch the video, then sing the same tune, but I find it very hard to tell if a sung note is the same as a note played on piano or guitar. Something about the sound itself being different. I spent ages on it, changing my mind every few minutes, moving things up and down.

One final google turned up this version of the tune with notes (again, no bars? no durations?!). It sounded OK when I played it. We’ve got it! But when I marked the notes in my in-progress score on Soundslice it sounded awful.

After much trial and error I eventually realised I had to set the score to be in D♭ and move all the vocal notes up one semitone.

Couple all that with the guitar having a capo at the sixth fret, and one string tuned down two semitones (EADGBD tuning), and I have no understanding of what’s going on or what the chords (C, G, D, Em) actually are. All those years as a child going to piano lessons, and learning to read music, and I do not understand keys, chords, at all. Still, I’m on my way with this one song now.


§ We finished season five of For All Mankind which I liked less than I apparently did season four. Until the final couple of episodes or so it was very boring, which feels like quite an achievement for a show about the difficulties of humans settling in space, discovering new life, and workers rising up against the power of capitalism. The latter uprising was pretty feeble and, like so much else in the show, felt bland and small. All the characters now are bland, the teenagers are especially bland (and annoying), even the clothes are all bland. Glimpses of Margo in prison are a reminder that there were once characters who could represent being passionate and conflicted beyond doing a frowny face occasionally.


§ Onward, onward, into the sixth twelfth of 2026.


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In Callais Ruling , Supreme Court Uses Stunningly Cold Language Toward Minorities

Often Some Sympathy is Expressed. Not This Time.

In the recent case in which the Supreme Court further gutted the Voting Rights Act – Louisiana v. Callais –  there was an unusual coldness in their conclusion. There was no attempt to even cover the harm with something like, “The law compels us to rule this way but we wish we could find better results for minority voters”. In rulings where judges are constrained by the law but wish there could be a better conclusion, such expressions, given in some legalese language, are frequent. In this case? Nope. Just, in so many words, you’re out of luck.

My point here is not to reanalyze the whole ruling. You can read about that in many other pieces. I’ll give a brief summary but only to get to how coldly it was delivered.

In the opinion Justice Alito presented in the Callais ruling, he went to great lengths to say that the law, as they were interpreting it, meant minority groups had virtually no recourse. If a state legislature draws voting districts in ways that diluted minority voters, and if the legislators declare any rationale for that, such as they, “aim to protect some or all incumbents” (yes they can protect incumbents regardless if that’s what a fair representation of voters would want) or, “promote the prospects of a particular political party” (yes, the court has declared party-favoritism is allowed regardless that it directly contradicts the idea of representative districts) then that reason has to be believed and the minority groups have no way to challenge that. Actually they can if they can show the legislators are lying and they actually intended to harm minority voting results, but everyone acknowledges that’s almost impossible to prove.

In cases like this where judges feel constrained by how the law is written but are concerned it leaves imperfect justice for some party they can express that in their opinion.

I discussed this aspect with retired Superior Court Judge Ralph Hess (Yavapai County, AZ). He noted that in some of his cases he would directly point out in his order what a party might do. For instance a defendant who must receive what he determined to be an excessively harsh sentence because the law required it, he might issue an order pointing out the defendant’s options for clemency. In other words where he as a judge followed the law but that left some party with what he determined to be incomplete justice he would at least issue an order to address that.

Likewise these very Supreme Court justices have gone out of their way at times to give pointers on how future litigants might achieve different results. Clarence Thomas is one of those who concurred with this gutting of the Voting Rights Act. He, in particular, has something of a pattern of writing a separate opinion in which he points out how he thinks future cases on some issue should be approached. For instance he would like to see regulatory agencies, like the EPA, greatly weakened and has written separate opinions pointing out what legal approach he thinks could achieve that, thereby giving future lawyers pointers on how to possibly succeed.

Alito, in this opinion gutting voting rights, gave none of that. No expression of sympathy, no pointers, no hoping for changes to the law, nothing. None of the other justices who agreed with the opinion wrote any separate opinion to state such concerns either. Alito’s coldness, seemed to suffice for them. Chief Justice Roberts who manages to present a moderate image, but who has advocated for similar extreme positions since long before he was a judge, likewise made no effort to offer concern for these results.

Justice Kagan, in her dissent on Louisiana v. Callais, even quoted just how cold this opinion was. Alito, in legalese that softens the sound of it, basically says that the ability of minority voters to elect their choice comes down to “whatever” results from a legislature doing anything it wants but covering it with any claim of reason other than race (pg 22, end of first paragraph). Justice Kagan, in disagreeing, quotes that and states it more clearly. “Assuming the State has left behind no smoking-gun evidence of a race-based motive [then protecting minority voting rights] will play no role. ‘Whatever’–whatever–results from the State’s asserted justification is all its minority citizens are entitled to. Even if the State has deprived those citizens of all opportunity to ‘elect representatives of their choice,’ the law will not protect them.” (Italics mine.)

Her repulsion at Alito tossing off any chance for minority voters, even in areas where they should have the majority of votes, as “whatever”, so much so that she repeats the word twice, gives a feel for how appalled she is at this callousness.

There is nothing much else to say here. Just that, by their own words, this is who your majority Supreme Court justices are.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT LOUISIANA V. CALLAIS

What did the Supreme Court decide in Louisiana v. Callais? On April 29, 2026, the Court ruled 6–3 that Louisiana’s congressional map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander and sharply narrowed Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The decision makes it much harder for voters of color to challenge redistricting plans that dilute their voting power.

Who wrote the Callais opinion, and who dissented? Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the six-justice conservative majority. The Court’s three liberal justices dissented, with Justice Elena Kagan writing the principal dissent.

Is Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act still in effect after Callais? Technically yes — the Court did not formally strike it down. But it narrowed the provision so severely that the dissent described it as all but a dead letter for redistricting challenges going forward.

Can minority voters still challenge gerrymandered maps? In principle, but the bar is now extremely high. If a legislature cites a non-racial reason for its map — such as protecting incumbents or favoring a political party — challengers essentially have to produce direct proof of intentional racial discrimination, a “smoking gun” most observers consider nearly impossible to find.

What was the “whatever” line in Kagan’s dissent? Kagan seized on the majority’s framing that, absent smoking-gun proof of racial motive, minority voters are entitled only to “whatever” a legislature’s stated justification happens to produce. She repeated the word to underscore how little protection the ruling leaves in place.

Why is the Callais opinion described as unusually cold? Judges who feel bound by an unwelcome legal outcome often soften it — expressing regret or pointing to other avenues of relief. This piece argues Alito did none of that: no note of sympathy, no roadmap for future litigants, and no concurring justice stepped in to add one.


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A new American exceptionalism?

From Paul Krugman:

Let me be clear: I am not arguing that European productivity is mismeasured, and never said that. I am, instead, arguing that standard measures of productivity do not have the implications for cross-country comparisons of living standards and economic welfare that many people – including many economists – think they have. To put it a slightly different way: people are using data that is unsuited for the kinds of comparisons that they are trying to make. Thus, the conclusions that they are drawing from the data are misguided. But this is not to say that the data are wrong.

The apparent misunderstanding by Aghion et al of what I am trying to say is also reflected in their discussion. Their presentation mostly centers on arguing that European productivity growth is in fact lower than US productivity growth. This is puzzling, because I am not arguing that European productivity growth matches or exceeds US productivity growth. Like Aghion et al, I am fully aware that European productivity growth is lower than in the U.S. But this is not the actual issue that I am trying to address. My question is whether the standard comparison of European and US productivity growth rates is a good indicator of what is actually going on in the two economies over time.

OK, but if U.S. innovation drives global living standards, is that not a very strong argument for modest capital taxes in the United States, weak labor union privileges, high U.S. pharma prices, and so on?  Imagine a mix of the libertarian and corporatist agendas, rather than the social democratic policies Krugman typically has argued for.  I doubt however if Krugman sees it that way, but I am no longer sure why not.

The post A new American exceptionalism? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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May 30, 2026

May 30, 2026 (Saturday)

Life was good in 1889 for the more than fifty wealthy industrialists who belonged to Pennsylvania’s South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club. Most of the men had made their fortunes in nearby Pittsburgh in the heady years after the Civil War. New national markets and a new national financial system made business boom across the country. Factories grew and railroads hammered across the country, moving grain east and manufactured products south and west.

Pittsburgh produced the iron and steel that fed the railroad industry and the growing cities. Men like Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick ran the steel mills, while there was also money to be made in real estate, storekeeping, lawyering, and accounting in the booming city. Bankers like Andrew Mellon, who would become the U.S. secretary of the treasury during the boom years of the 1920s, made enough money to reshape the country.

In 1880, Frick’s friend Benjamin Franklin Ruff, who sold coke (the high-heat fuel necessary to make steel), contracted to make railroad tunnels, and bought and sold real estate, proposed to Frick and other wealthy friends that they establish a secret and exclusive club in the mountains, where members could spend their summers away from the heat and dirt of bustling Pittsburgh.

Ruff owned an abandoned reservoir on Pennsylvania’s Little Conemaugh River in southwestern Pennsylvania. The reservoir had been created in 1852, when Pennsylvania finished damming the river to create a canal system. But railroads soon replaced canals, and the reservoir became obsolete. The state sold it, along with the South Fork Dam, to private interests. By 1880 it was in Ruff’s hands.

Ruff and his friends organized the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, which took control of the reservoir—renaming it Lake Conemaugh—and established a club on about 160 acres of land. The main building on the site was a 47-room clubhouse with a dining room that could seat 150. Sixteen members built large “cottages” along the lakeshore and spent their evenings at plays or musical performances.

At two and a half miles long and a mile wide, the lake was big enough to run the club’s two steam yachts or to enjoy on sailboats or canoes. It covered about 450 acres and was 70 feet deep. It held about 20 million tons of water. The club’s wealthy industrialists and financiers centered their summer relaxation around the artificial lake.

Private owners had already changed the lake and the dam significantly. The man who had bought the property from the state removed from the dam the five sluice pipes that allowed the removal of excess water, selling them for scrap. This meant there was no way to drain the reservoir either for repairs, or to lower water levels during periods of heavy rain.

As they prepared for summer recreation, the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club stocked the lake with black bass sport fish. Then, worried that the expensive bass might get washed downstream, they put screens over the dam’s spillway. To enable carriages to cross the dam, the club lowered it. There was no way to lower water levels in their Lake Conemaugh, but in what must have been an idyllic existence in the summers of the early 1880s, they ignored warnings that the changes they had made to the dam had weakened it dangerously.

There were 30,000 people, mostly Welsh and German immigrants, living in Johnstown, a factory town in the valley below Lake Conemaugh, about fourteen miles downstream from the South Fork Dam. The economy that had made fortunes for the men of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club was built on the labor of workers like the people in Johnstown. The men there worked in the blast furnaces, converters, rolling mills, or coal mines of Cambria Iron or worked for the Gautier plant making barbed wire. The steep hills of the region meant the drop in elevation from the lake to Johnstown was about 450 feet, more than 40 stories in a modern-day building. But there was little reason for members of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club to think about the people who lived downstream.

Until May 30, 1889, Decoration Day, when a torrent of rain began to fall.

On the morning of May 31, the president of the club, Elias Unger, observed from his farmhouse above the lake that “...the valley below me seemed to be all under water, and I couldn’t understand what all that meant.” Unger was at the farmhouse to oversee the construction of a sewage system for the club, and when he ran down to the dam, he immediately ordered the Italian workers from the sewage project to dig an emergency spillway to relieve pressure on the dam. But the workers hit rock and made little headway. Then Unger ordered workers to tear out the fish screens that had become blocked with debris, but it was too late. By 1:30 in the afternoon, after Unger had tried unsuccessfully to warn the people below, it was clear there was nothing to do but wait for the dam to fail.

A little before 3:00 in the afternoon on Friday, May 31, 1889, the South Fork Dam on Pennsylvania’s Little Conemaugh River broke. Unger said the dam failed “little by little until it got a head way, and when it got cut through it just went like a flash.”

As 20 million tons of water spilled downstream, it picked up houses, trees, bridges, railroad cars, animals, and people. The water measured at least 35 feet high and traveled at 40 miles an hour. As it traveled, it became a wall of debris, grinding through more than $4.4 billion of property in today’s dollars. It swept locomotives from their tracks, discarding some nearly a mile away.

The water consumed victims. And when the wave smashed into a stone bridge in Johnstown, the trapped debris caught fire, trapping more. Two thousand, two hundred and eight people died in the Johnstown Flood, the largest loss of civilian lives in the U.S. at that time. Ninety-nine entire families died. Bodies were found as far away as Cincinnati, four hundred miles away, and as late as 1911.

Gertrude Quinn Slattery later recalled that her father had been terribly worried about the heavy rains, warning that not a house would be left standing if the dam burst. Hearing the roar of the coming water, he grabbed one of his children and ordered the rest to “Run for your lives” to a nearby hill.

Slattery later recalled: “I can never forget what I saw! It was like the Day of Judgement I have since seen pictured in books. Pandemonium had broken loose, screams, cries and people were running; their white faces like death masks; parents dragging children, whose heads bobbed up and down in the water; a boat filled to capacity with eager, anxious passengers; household pets of all descriptions dangling from living arms; a wagon loaded to the breaking point lost a wheel and the despairing mortals riding therein were dumped down in a heap in the filthy water. They scrambled to their feet in less time than it takes to tell it, as the on-rushing mob moved rapidly forward, bent on self-preservation at any cost…and now a moving mass, black with houses, trees, boulders, logs and rafters was coming down like an avalanche.”

From around the world, people rushed to help the survivors. One of the first to arrive was Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross, who stayed for five months. She brought with her fifty doctors and nurses, and together they learned how to respond to a natural disaster.

But those survivors who hoped to hold the members of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club accountable were disappointed. Blaming the club members for the disaster, newspapers built the story into one of the biggest in American history. Even the pro-business New York Times reported that “justice is inevitable even though the horror is attributable to men of wealth and station, and the majority of the victims the most downtrodden workers in any industry in the country.”

But the club men denied responsibility for the disaster, and all four lawsuits launched against the club failed. Club members and law partners James Hay Reed and Philander Knox defended the club in court, claiming the flood was an act of God for which the members could not be held responsible. Reed went on to become a federal judge. Knox went on to become a U.S. senator, U.S. secretary of state, and U.S. attorney general.

Notes:

https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/benjamin-franklin-ruff.htm

https://web.archive.org/web/20131104032631/http://www.jaha.org/FloodMuseum/clubanddam.html

https://home.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/members-of-the-south-fork-fishing-and-hunting-club.htm

https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/the-south-fork-dam.htm

https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/colonel-elias-j-unger.htm

https://www.heritagejohnstown.org/attractions/johnstown-flood-museum/flood-history/facts-about-the-1889-flood/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4946313/

https://www.nps.gov/people/gertrude-quinn-slattery.htm

https://www.history.com/articles/how-americas-most-powerful-men-caused-americas-deadliest-flood

https://web.archive.org/web/20190603175721/https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/download/

https://yalelawjournal.org/pdf/399_gg153q8d.pdf, pp. 360–361

https://www.npca.org/articles/993-swept-away

https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/james-hay-reed.htm

https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/historyculture/philander-chase-knox.htm

https://courses.bowdoin.edu/history-2203-fall-2020-cgoldber/avoidance-of-legal-blame/

https://noonpi.com/the-johnstown-flood-2024-june/

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Week One in 250 to 250

This was the first week of videos from the 250 to 250 Project that we’re producing to honor the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. We’ve been trying to spread them all over social media, but I figure it’ll be worthwhile to do a roundup of that week’s videos every weekend in case some get overlooked.

We designed these to emphasize the agency of Americans—mostly everyday Americans—to change the country. Each falls into a category that defines what it means to be an American, including community, democracy, innovation, mobility, civil rights, education, conservation, and creativity.

You can follow these videos at the sites listed below, or under “videos” at my own YouTube page: Heather Cox Richardson. Or just wait until I send out the week’s roundup.

I hope you enjoy them. I’m finding them a lovely break from the pace and pressure of the daily news.

Follow Along | #WeAreAmerica250
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AIDS Memorial Quilt, Narrated by Cleve Jones

Cleve Jones is a human rights advocate, author, and lecturer who joined the gay liberation movement in 1972, co-founded the San Francisco AIDS Foundation in 1983, and founded the AIDS Memorial Quilt—one of the world’s largest community arts projects—in 1987.



Charter Oak, Narrated by Senator Chris Murphy

Senator Chris Murphy, who grew up in Connecticut and now represents the state in the Senate, tells the story of Connecticut’s Charter Oak, a lasting symbol of independence and American ingenuity at keeping it.



Battles of Lexington and Concord, Narrated by Governor Maura Healey

Maura Healey is the 73rd Governor of Massachusetts, the state’s first woman and first openly LGBTQ person elected to the position. Governor Healy recounts the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the opening salvos of the Revolutionary War.

Rita Moreno, Narrated by Ariana DeBose

Ariana DeBose is a dancer, singer, and actress who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Anita in Steven Spielberg's 2021 West Side Story. DeBose tells us about the inspiring and pioneering life of Puerto Rican singer, actress, dancer, and activist Rita Moreno who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Anita in Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise’s 1961 West Side Story.

Yellowstone, Narrated by Jon Tester

Former Montana Senator Jon Tester is a third-generation farmer and former school teacher who has served at the local, state, and federal levels of government. Tester explores the origins and influence of Yellowstone, America’s first national park.

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense, Narrated by Representative Jamie Raskin

United States Representative Jamie Raskin is the ranking member of the House Committee on the Judiciary. He was the majority whip of the Maryland State Senate and a constitutional law professor at American University. Representative Raskin shares how Thomas Paine’s Common Sense defined the stakes of the American revolution.

Erie Canal, Narrated by Pete Buttigieg

Pete Buttigieg is a former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, a veteran, and the 19th U.S. Secretary of Transportation. Secretary Buttigieg tells us about the Erie Canal, the engineering marvel that tied the interior of the continent to the United States.

John Peter Zenger, Narrated by Dr. Jelani Cobb

Peabody Award winner Dr. Jelani Cobb is a prolific author, journalist, and Dean of Columbia Journalism School whose work centers on race, politics, history, and culture. Cobb tells the story of John Peter Zenger, a colonial newspaperman whose trial for printing critical statements about the royal governor of New York helped to define freedom of the press.

Acadians, Narrated by Dr. Jason Herbert

Dr. Jason Herbert is a historian, public scholar, and outdoorsman from Kentucky. Herbert tells us about the Acadians, French settlers expelled from British Canada, who helped to create today’s Cajun culture.

Rubén Salazar, Narrated by Sylvia Salazar

Sylvia Salazar is a Colombian-born engineer turned political content creator and activist. She is the founder of Tono Latino, a platform that break downs U.S. politics in both English and Spanish. Here, Salazar details the life of pioneering Latino journalist Rubén Salazar, who nurtured the Chicano movement in the 1960s.

Constitutional Convention, Narrated by Dr. Heather Cox Richardson

Heather Cox Richardson is an award-winning historian and the author of Letters from an American. She’s the author of seven books, including the bestselling Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America. Richardson tells the story of the Constitutional Convention, where 55 delegates constructed the framework for a new government.

Women's Armed Services Integration Act, Narrated by Representative Chrissy Houlahan

United States Representative Chrissy Houlahan is an Air Force veteran, engineer, entrepreneur, and educator who is continuing her career of service as the first woman ever to represent Pennsylvania's 6th District in Congress. Representative Houlahan shares how the Women’s Armed Services Integration Act, proposed by Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith, changed the military forever.

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As Trump Takes Hits, He Lashes Out

Fingerprints of Climate Change: Storm Preparedness In A New Era

Hurricane Helene made landfall in Western North Carolina in September 2024. Eighteen months later, residents are still picking up the pieces — but as climate change intensifies storms, Helene was just the beginning.

Heather Divoky immediately went into disaster preparation mode when she heard Hurricane Helene was headed for Asheville. In the days leading up to the storm, the artist and poet transported her larger, more expensive art pieces from her studio in the River Arts District, just off the banks of the French Broad River, to her more elevated home in West Asheville.


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Caught In the Current logoGrowing up on the coast in Florida and North Carolina, Divoky moved to Asheville in 2020 because she considered its geography to be immune from the disastrous effects of hurricanes and extreme flooding. She thought of it as a “climate haven” — an inland location relatively exempt from the most severe, immediate impacts of climate change. “You see all this rain, but it never really hit Asheville,” she said. “So that was a big factor in us coming up here…it felt safer.”

But turns out she was wrong.

When Helene finally made landfall in Asheville and Western North Carolina after several days of circulating the Gulf of Mexico and the southern United States, it caught many residents, business owners, artists and even meteorologists by surprise. As a result, the absence of adequate storm preparedness measures had deadly ramifications, inflicting 107 deaths in North Carolina and causing billions in property damages for homeowners and businesses.

In the 18 months since the flood, Asheville has undergone a period of intense recovery. Local business owners and city officials have worked hard to get the economy back online and encourage tourists to return, which would significantly bolster the region’s economy. But what officials and regional planners have done to aggressively confront the area’s future storm preparedness is unclear. And while most agree the immediate aftermath needed to be addressed, some worry that decision-makers are failing to invest in infrastructures that will limit the devastation of future disasters.

“Any place in the country or the world that can get rain is not a climate haven,” said North Carolina’s Assistant State Climatologist Corey Davis. “We know rain events are getting more extreme. So if you can get rain, you can get too much rain.”

In other words, it can happen almost anywhere. The last three years alone provide a stark map of what water-related weather can do in areas that were not prepared for the storms that befell them. In July 2023, flash flooding surprised residents of Vermont, causing widespread destruction and 11 fatalities. Two years later, in July 2025, floodwaters swelled in Central Texas, resulting in one of the nation’s worst water-related disasters that killed 135 people, including 27 young girls and staff members at a sleepaway camp on the edge of a river. Regional leaders there had been warned of the dangers of possible flooding, but to no effect.

And in between, in September 2024, Hurricane Helene made landfall in Buncombe County and Western North Carolina as a tropical storm, bringing catastrophic inland flooding, extreme winds, devastating storm surges and flash flooding.

As water funneled in from the mountains, the French Broad and Swannanoa rivers — two main waterways that run through the city — swelled to heights of 27 feet over what was typical. Over the next four days, the tropical storm brought more than 13 inches of rain to Asheville and up to 30 inches to the mountainous areas of the greater Buncombe County. To date, it was the worst flooding in the region’s history.

And while it was described as a “1000-year storm,” leading locals to believe they wouldn’t need to prepare for another one like it for many centuries, science experts say it’s critical people realize the next one could happen at any time.

“If I tell you that 2,500 square miles of Helene was a one-in-1000-year flood, you would not believe the number of people who tell me, ‘Oh great. We won’t have another flood for 999 years,'” said Jared Rennie, a scientist in the climatic science and services division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration branch in Asheville.

“But that’s not what that means. [The probability] is an annual occurrence,” he clarified. “What that means is, in a given year, the chances of that amount of rainfall to fall is 1 in 1,000. … Or if it’s a one-in-100-year event, [people think] it’s going to happen next century.” And then they get confused when there are three “one-in-100-year” events in five years. They say, “‘What does that mean?'” Rennie said.

These are the sorts of misunderstandings and distractions that lead to ill-prepared communities, experts say, with potentially disastrous consequences.

Divoky, like almost everyone who lives and works in this tourist outpost known for its beautiful mountains and flourishing arts scene, did not fathom any of this.

For more than a year before the storm, she worked happily in Pink Dog Creative, a vibrant collective of studios, coffeehouses and restaurants along the upper portion of the River Arts District, known locally as RAD. Steps away from the river, the district boasted more than 300 artists in what was repurposed in the early 2000s from an industrial corridor to a hip, mixed-use neighborhood that trumpeted river views and easy access to “Asheville’s scenic waterway.”

Deserted building in Asheville's River Arts District
A deserted building sits in Asheville’s River Arts District, steps away from the French Broad River. Over 18 months after Helene, it’s still waiting to be rebuilt. Photo credit: Sydney Woogerd

It was that same proximity that led to RAD suffering the most severe damage in the storm. More than 80% of buildings were affected, with two thirds of the district washed away or reduced to rubble. Over 100 artists were displaced, many of whom have yet to return. There is little hope of recovering what they lost, contributing to an estimated $1 billion in property damage in that district alone.

As for Divoky, who was able to save all of her portraits but was displaced from her approximately 300 square foot studio for two months, the 37-year-old says she has learned the hard lesson that climate havens do not actually exist. Divoky admits she should have known better, since her earliest memories were wrought by the terrible storms she survived as a child — hurricanes Florence and Bertha. Between the two, she lost most of her belongings including irreplaceable items like her grandmother’s quilts.

Now, reality has set in: “I swapped from the mindset of, ‘OK, I’m safe,’ to ‘I’ll never be safe, and now I just have to acclimate to that idea and be as prepared as I can.'”

Experts say she’s got that right. Today, while Asheville remains on a path to recovery, experts anticipate it is only a matter of time until the next major climate event strikes, which is not exclusive to extreme flooding.

“Last spring really wasn’t a one-off,” Davis, the climatologist, said. “It was a preview of what’s to come in these areas.”

Fingerprints” of Climate Change

Before Tropical Storm Helene hit, the area was already experiencing around eight to 10 inches of what meteorologists call “predecessor rains” caused by an unnamed stationary system that was triggered by the heightened moisture from the Gulf of Mexico. So when Helene made its way to Asheville four days later, it had technically “downgraded” to a tropical storm, signaling a weaker system using the metric of wind conditions.

But those back-to-back rainfall patterns, considered “compounding events,” created a sort of double whammy situation that “made things really bad,” said Rennie.

In the days leading up to the storm, meteorologists sounded the alarm for state and local authorities, forecasting an additional eight to 10 inches of rain concentrated on the French Broad, Swannanoa and Pigeon rivers. The storm’s arrival, which came on the heels of the predecessor rains, warranted a “high-risk day” warning.

“We don’t often see high-risk days, but when we do, they are serious. People need to stay off the roads, stay home if possible and be prepared to act immediately. This is a life-threatening situation,” wrote Trisha Palmer, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service, during a NWS briefing two days before the storm hit.

Later that same day, Sept. 25, Gov. Roy Cooper heeded these warnings, issuing a state of emergency for several counties in Western North Carolina including Buncombe County, which encompasses Asheville and the surrounding towns.

The following day, officials from Buncombe and Henderson counties held a virtual news conference warning residents of “catastrophic” and “historic” flooding, especially near the French Broad and Swannanoa rivers. Soon after, on Sept. 27, the State Emergency Operations Center was activated to “monitoring” status, enabling emergency preparations that included stationing North Carolina National Guard units and emergency response teams. Mandatory evacuations were implemented for waterfront towns using the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System, FEMA’s alert mechanism for local emergencies.

But the water was already cresting. For many, evacuation was no longer an option.

Railroad tracks alongside the French Broad River in Marshall, NC
Railroad tracks run alongside the French Broad River in Marshall, North Carolina, with debris and collapsed buildings still visible in March 2026. When the water crested to over 27 feet during Helene, the town experienced catastrophic flooding. Photo credit: Sydney Woogerd

Although meteorologists were aware of the likely potential for disaster, the disconnect between residents and state and local authorities had catastrophic ramifications.

Rennie said meteorologists do a “very good job at the physical science” but they are not great at science communication, making it difficult to accurately portray urgency to the public in the face of exacerbated weather conditions.

They knew the predecessor rainfall event and the system were coming, “but getting the people to react to it — whether it’s to evacuate or to prepare, ‘fill up your buckets’ — that’s something we’re still trying to figure out,” Rennie said.

This forecasting knowledge is invaluable, but it also leaves those who study weather events for a living feeling helpless when overcoming the public disconnect.

“People have survivor’s guilt. I have something called meteorological survivor’s guilt. I’ve kind of coined that, and I struggle with it because I knew what the forecast was,” Rennie reflected. “If you look back — and you know hindsight is 2020 — could we have had a bigger voice?”

Helene stands as the worst water disaster Western North Carolina has seen to date. But this flooding is not new for the region.

In the days leading up to Helene, meteorologists referenced Asheville’s last catastrophic flooding event: The Great Flood of 1916. Over two days, several inches of flooding nearly wiped away the surrounding mountain towns like Chimney Rock and Bat Cave. Hurricane Floyd also brought torrential rainfall in 1999, although it never reached the level of destruction seen in 1916.

Located in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Asheville sits like a bowl at the basin of the Swannanoa River, which feeds into the French Broad River, as both rivers flow from the surrounding mountains into the city. When the rivers swell, the city becomes extremely vulnerable to flooding.

“In some ways, Asheville is probably one of the more vulnerable spots in the state. They just don’t see those events as frequently as, for instance, places right along the coastline,” Davis said. “I think some of these historical events have given us clues that Asheville was not the climate haven that a lot of people would have liked to believe, but again, a lot of these big events have been historically infrequent.”

So when Helene hit, to experts, it seemed obvious; the clues had always been there. But to residents, this urgency was not so clear. Many failed to adequately prepare, never expecting the worst.

Mira Gerard, an art professor at Eastern Tennessee State University, owned Tyger Tyger Gallery in RAD, a testament to her late father, Jonas Gerard, who had repurposed the building as a painting studio until he passed away in 2021. She was one of the lucky few gallery owners in RAD who had flood insurance.

For Gerard, historical floods over the past 10-15 years dictated her decision-making. To her, severe flooding was always “not an if, it’s a when. When it happens, it’s gonna be big…but it hadn’t happened since 1916.”

In anticipation of the flooding, Gerard and a handful of artists relocated much of their artwork to higher floors of the building. But it was her gallery’s flood insurance, which cost her nearly $10,000 a year to maintain, that saved her. She ended up distributing approximately $250,000 to over 30 affected artists whose work was destroyed, damaged or lost in the flood.

“Nobody had insurance. And if they did, they didn’t talk about it,” Gerard said. “People I talked to unilaterally seemed to be saying, ‘I lost everything and didn’t have insurance.’ So I did not hear of anybody other than me.”

‘Climate Change’ Gets An Update In NC

NOAA Atlas 14 is the current standard for measuring precipitation frequency, supplying data on “1-in-N year” events. Government agencies like the National Weather Service use this language when communicating the strength of the storm to the public.
But the fact is, this nomenclature has become obsolete, experts say. And it needs to change.
Storms like Helene — “1,000-year storms” — are becoming alarmingly more frequent due to global climate change. In the last 25 years, there have been nine storms in North Carolina that would be considered a 1,000-year event.
Damage related to climate change

“Researchers have looked at the environment that caused Hurricane Florence to develop, what caused it to slow down, what caused it to produce those extreme rainfall totals, and found that the fingerprints of climate change are really all over a storm like that,” Davis said. “When Helene came in, we also started to recognize those fingerprints.”

Today, NOAA Atlas 14 is getting an update. Set to be released in 2026, Atlas 15 is currently under development. The updated system will use future climate projections to account for climate change. For the first time, the technology will be able to project rainfall patterns through the year 2100 and account for future trends. Once implemented, the new technology will help communities nationally become more resilient.

Road along the Swannanoa River with exposed pipes and shattered asphalt from Hurricane Helene
A stretch of road along the Swannanoa River reveals exposed pipes and shattered asphalt left over from Helene. The storm caused widespread road closures across Swannanoa and Western North Carolina in September 2024. Photo credit: Sydney Woogerd

This isn’t the only important shift on the horizon on the federal level. Another significant effort, led by those who recognize that climate change is not going away, is under way in the form of new legislation to create a National Weather Safety Board. Board members, who would be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, would investigate severe weather disasters, modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board. If the Board voted to launch an investigation, which would determine what went wrong during major weather disasters to better protect lives and property, it could issue reports with actionable recommendations to agencies like NOAA and the National Weather Service.

As severe storms and weather events worsen, action at the federal level is promising. But things are changing on the state level as well.

In late 2018, former Gov. Roy Cooper established the North Carolina Office of Recovery and Resiliency in response to Hurricane Florence. After Helene, new Gov. Josh Stein restructured that office into what’s now called “State Resilience Office.” He’s also put former state climatologist Kathie Dello, who has extensive experience liaising with communities, at the helm of it. In fall 2025, she was named the North Carolina assistant secretary of resilience.

The name change indicates that the highest office in the state is taking steps in the right direction, experts say.

Davis thinks it “also speaks to another element of their job, which is trying to figure out how to make the state more resilient, more prepared and better adapted. For storms like this, we know they’re not going away. If anything, they’re happening more often. They’re getting worse when they do happen, so I think that that’s a smart way of helping the state be prepared for events like this.”

The restructuring of the resiliency office in response to Helene is a promising sign that the state government is prioritizing storm preparedness and taking the weather effects seriously.

In 2025, Gov. Stein also delegated development of a new North Carolina Climate Science Report to the State Climate Office. Set to be released in October 2026, the updated report will feature a dedicated section on the ways in which storms are getting worse. These measures will help prepare people for the unexpected. Beyond storms, North Carolina is vulnerable to several climate threats.

Building Resilience Locally

Local and county decision-makers are also shifting preparedness strategies to make sure the fallout from Helene is never repeated.

Buncombe County, along with six municipal partners including the City of Asheville, approved the Helene Recovery Plan on Nov. 18, 2025, a comprehensive five-year strategy that aims to strengthen disaster preparedness and support long-term community resilience. The Preparedness Action Plan, a sub section of the larger report, will strengthen the county’s communication and alert systems and equip infrastructure with long-term safety precautions.

“We have to back that up and say, what’s our opportunity in the realm of mitigation, and how do we stop making such a mess, and when is it too late?” says Kiera Bulan, the interim sustainability director for the city of Asheville. “I think trying to balance those two things and not being so just completely reactive.”

On a city level, this indicates a shift in the way the Sustainability Department thinks about emergency response — pivoting from adaptation to mitigation.

“We know the real threats are here. We have to live with our climate realities that are present in this moment,” Bulan said. “And so that means hardening our buildings. That means thinking where we build, or what our evacuation plans are — being responsive to our climate realities.”

Without its state, county and community partnerships, the city of Asheville’s response to Helene has been limited to the buildings that fall directly under its jurisdiction. RAD, for example, is within jurisdiction. But even though the artist district is steps from the river and in direct and immediate threat if another major flooding event hits Asheville, the city has “made no decision to relocate” it, according to the local government’s “Asheville Asks” website.

But Helene-prompted changes are taking effect. In January 2025, the City Council unanimously voted to change zoning requirements in floodplains. Buildings are now required to elevate their foundations at least 2 feet above the base flood level. This was done in line with federal regulations to ensure property owners don’t lose critical funding from federal flood insurance coverage, which severely hindered property owners’ post-Helene recovery.

Mitigation-based strategies are also under way, including initiatives to support the community hubs that popped up during Helene, some of which have remained intact to provide community services for future disasters.

Leah Ferguson is the executive director of Thrive Asheville, a collaboration between local residents and community leaders to understand the specific challenges that face Asheville and the surrounding community. The nonprofit is currently partnering with the city to map the informal and formal resilience hubs — public spaces like the library, churches and community centers that proved essential during Helene in providing water, power and supplies when traditional infrastructure failed — in the hopes of better equipping residents for the next disaster.

“We’re not going to survive this by ourselves. That’s the thing about Helene, we didn’t,” Ferguson said. “We didn’t have communications. There was no information. We had no electricity. When the water went out, people didn’t even know you had to leave your house.” Organizations like Thrive Asheville are critical to filling in those gaps that the city can’t tackle on its own.

On the other hand, while the city has worked with county partners to update emergency response systems, there are currently no publicly available updated evacuation plans if residents need a safe way out.

Resiliency is experiencing an incredibly promising shift, experts say, especially in a purple state like North Carolina that has not always held climate change’s worsening effects at the top of its priorities.

But experts emphasize that building resilience on the local level is critical to ensuring the most vulnerable communities are protected not just from worsening storms but from other “quieter threats” — such as future extreme heat from warming weather, or the many wildfires that resulted from downed power lines mixing with fallen tree debris after Helene.

Regardless of the threat, everyone agrees it will take a multi-pronged approach to get the community ready for whatever is in front of them.

Asheville artist Heather Divoky at her studio in Pink Dog Creative
Artist Heather Divoky poses for a portrait at her studio in Pink Dog Creative. Photo credit: Grace Sawin

“When you’re just trying to survive…you don’t think about planning for the next big thing,” said Divoky, the Asheville artist who used to think she was safe from storms in Asheville. “You’re just thinking about trying to make it through the day.”

As a child, she experienced that tug and pull during bad storms in her own family: “That’s something that people see a lot, especially with hurricane preparedness and stuff like that. On my dad’s side, he’s always been like, ‘Well, you need to do this in case this happens.’ And my mom’s just like, ‘You just gotta hammer through it, girl.'”

Helene made one thing very clear to Divoky. That is, from now on, her dad’s approach is the way to go.

This article is part of Caught in the Current: Helene Recovery in Asheville and Beyond  a project that we have partnered on with the School of Journalism at Northeastern University.  Their enterprising students took on the story of Asheville, North Carolina, a community still dealing with the devastation of Hurricane Helene, 18 months later. As part of our mentoring program, we’re amplifying their efforts by sharing the amazing work produced by their students. Visit the official interactive magazine for the project HERE.


“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 and future mentoring projects like Caught In the Current.

The post Fingerprints of Climate Change: Storm Preparedness In A New Era appeared first on DCReport.org.

Meta Is Launching Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp Subscriptions for ‘Fun Features’

Sarah Perez, reporting for TechCrunch:

Meta is doubling down on its subscription offerings. On Wednesday, the social networking giant announced it’s now rolling out its consumer subscription plans globally for its flagship apps, Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp, and beginning tests of new subscriptions for businesses, creators, and Meta AI users.

For a few dollars per month, consumers subscribing to Instagram Plus ($3.99/mo), Facebook Plus ($3.99/mo), or WhatsApp Plus ($2.99/mo) will gain access to extra features, like profile customization, super reactions, and story insights, among other things.

In an announcement, Meta’s head of product, Naomi Gleit, noted that “more fun features” will be added in the future.

My first question about this was whether Meta would be using IAP on iOS and Android. On the one hand, Zuckerberg really resents Meta’s subservient position to Apple and Google in the mobile ecosystem — that’s what drove him to make a big wrong bet on the “metaverse” as the Next Big Thing. But on the other hand, what else are they going to do? Most people only use Meta’s platforms via the phone apps, and if they’re going to allow subscriptions via the apps, they have to pay Apple and Google their commissions.

This point wasn’t addressed in Perez’s article, so I asked her on Mastodon, and she confirmed that they will be using IAP through both the App Store and Play Store. I’m curious how much they’ll try (and get away with) steering people to the web — both to avoid the store commissions and for direct control over the subscription relationship.

 ★ 

Daniel Jalkut on AI

Daniel Jalkut, on Mastodon (cross-posted to Bluesky and Threads):

My take on AI is, essentially, everybody who’s against it is too against it and everybody who’s for it is too for it.

I concur with this take completely.

(Sidenote: The different reply threads on the three networks speak loudly to the cultural and algorithmic differences between them. Good lord has Meta steered Threads into “make people argumentative” engagement.)

 ★ 

Young MC is an American hero

Back when I was a high school senior, I was a tri-captain of the Mahopac Indians’ cross country team. We’d travel to all of our away meets via bus—meaning we’d head off to Carmel, to Brewster, to Peekskill, to White Plains. And in the lord’s year of 1989, that means we would play one song over and over and over.

“Bust a Move” by Young MC.

It was the jam. Our jam. The song that motivated us, inspired us, kept us loose. All these decades later, I know every single word, note, pause. I friggin’ love “Bust a Move.”

Of course, time passes. And through the years, Young MC somewhat faded into the abyss; a rapper who, with age, became more novelty than fresh face. There’s a scene in the George Clooney film, “Up In the Air,” that shows Young MC headlining a corporate convention in a hotel lobby, busting out “Bust a Move” to 100 or so attendees wearing lanyards and khakis. That felt on point.

But then …

Earlier this week, Young MC did something far more important than a song, an album, a tour. He became one of the first artists to pull out of the Washington, DC-based “Freedom 250: The Great American State Fair,” a June 26 event he initially believed to be a celebration of America, but one that he came to learn was organized and controlled by (blech) Donald Trump. As an ode to (blech) Donald Trump.

And I’m sure Young MC could have used the dough. And the attention. After all, hip-hop isn’t the landscape of 59-year olds. But instead, he chose righteousness and integrity. “I had no clue it was considered a ‘Trump-backed’ event, so that was new to me,” he told Rolling Stone. “My whole thing was ‘tell me what the event is, what it’s about, who you are, and then give me the choice of whether I want to do the event or not.’ I was never given that choice. I was told one thing and then it was a bait-and-switch.”

So what happened next? What followed?

Well, this …

Bret Michaels dropped out.

Martina McBride dropped out.

Morris Day dropped out.

C+C Music Factory dropped out.

One artist after another artist after another artist dropped out, until Trump—a loser of losers—posted this …

And while his words are the blatherings of a fool, they’re also reminder No. 654,321 that there is no loyalty when it comes to the president. These “third rate” artists weren’t third rate when they were invited—only when they backed out.

Only when they dared to bust a move.

PS: Young MC’s last release was a 2024 song called “Loose.” This is the Apple Music link. Let’s all support the dude and download it.

I Am Retiring from Tech to Live Offline

I Am Retiring from Tech to Live Offline

I've seen a lot of posts on forums from people threatening to quit their careers over AI. This is not one of those: Chad Whitacre is taking concrete steps, starting with this typewritten, scanned letter

I'm retiring from tech. Well, "retiring" is euphemistic. I'm stepping away from tech, and that includes Open Source. [...]

AI was the last straw. Have you heard of that island off India where the indigenous population kills any outsiders fool-hardy enough to land? They are doing the rest of us a favor by preserving a way of life we may need again someday, or at the very least should not want to see completely extinguished. A reminder. Never forget your roots. Here in Pennsylvania we have the Amish performing a similar function. Significantly less hostile, though still set apart, they bear witness to what was normal for all of us a couple short centuries ago: horse and buggy, wood stoves and lanterns. My intent is to be AI Amish, which means Internet Amish. Not 1780, but 1980. Neo-Amish. I'm fine driving a car and flipping a lightswitch, by which I mean that they don't make me into something I hate, which AI and [struck through: social media] [handwritten above: doomscrolling] do.

I'll admit that at first I wasn't entirely sure if this was serious. Then I found this earlier post by Chad from Feb 19 2026, Spitting Out the Agentic Kool-Aid:

I figured I’d better taste the Kool-Aid in order to form an opinion, so I dove into Claude Code with Opus 4.5 on a side project. I spent three 12+ hour days with it. I was intoxicated. My family was weirded out. [...]

It weirded me out too, when I unplugged for a long weekend. Something felt off. It was like I had another “person” in my head, sharing my inner monologue—but the “person” was a computer system owned by a budding megacorp.

[...] I am now also committing myself to disembarking from the titantic of technological accelerationism.

All efforts to address the problems of invasive technology are worthwhile, even those that are only partially effective. For my part, I have started trying to return more fully to a pre-screen, analog life.

It's accompanied by a video version of the essay which I found touching and sincere.

Chad has been trying to solve the open source sustainability problem for years - I talked with him about this at PyCon 2025 in Cleveland. That's a very tough nut to crack, and the disruption caused by AI looks to be making it even harder.

I'm glad that the Open Source Endowment will continue without him. I'm very much going to miss his online voice.

Via Hacker News

Tags: open-source, ai, generative-ai, llms, chad-whitacre, ai-ethics, deep-blue

Quoting Daniel Jalkut

My take on AI is, essentially, everybody who’s against it is too against it and everybody who’s for it is too for it.

Daniel Jalkut, via John Gruber

Tags: ai, john-gruber

The New Inequality

“To understand why people are so miserable about the economy,” Greg Ip recently wrote in the Wall Street Journal, “look no further than Thursday’s report on gross domestic product. Not how much GDP grew, but how it was divvied up.” Ip went on to document the growing divergence between wages, which are a declining share of national income, and corporate profits, which are taking an ever-larger share.

It’s not clear how much trends in the division of the economic pie between capital and labor — what economists call the factor distribution of income — are driving current economic discontent and anger. But there’s a growing public sense that the system is unfair and rigged against ordinary people. This sense partly reflects the reality that a rising share of economic rewards is going to shareholders as profits rather than to workers as earned income. It also reflects the fact that, even as a growing share of income accrues to wealth, within the growing upwards distribution of income within, there is growing concentration of wealth at the very top. In other words, a rising share of unearned total income is going to a very small number of people.

As a result, it is now widely recognized that the U.S. economy is far more unequal than it was a few decades ago. However much of the discourse about inequality is still stuck in the past — shaped by the perception that rising inequality is largely a consequence of greater inequality in paid income. According to the prevailing yet misguided story, rising inequality is due to higher earnings of those with more education.

That story was never entirely true even in the past. But to the extent it was ever true, it mainly explains rising inequality between around 1980 and 2000. Since then, and especially in recent years, the main story is one of rising oligarchy: more and more of the economy’s rewards are going to a small group that overwhelmingly derives its income from the assets it owns.

And the reality of rising oligarchy is important, not just for explaining current malaise, but for thinking about the possible implications for the future, especially the impact of AI.

Beyond the paywall I will discuss the following:

1. The old, earnings-based inequality: The big rise between 1980 and 2000, and its limited relevance since then

2. The economics of rising profits and stagnant wages

3. The growing concentration of wealth

4. Will AI produce an inequality apocalypse?

5. The political economy of oligarchy

Read more

Europe Versus America: A Response to the Critics

A note for most readers: This is inside economics baseball football, a discussion mostly among professionals — and covers issues that even economists seem to be perplexed by. You have been warned.

Phillipe Aghion, Antonin Bergeaud and Luis Garicano have written a response to my discussions of the Europe/US productivity gap. I respect their standing as serious analysts, who have produced a body of valuable work.

Yet I found their article baffling, because their arguments appear to rest on the same confusion about the implications of different national productivity trends that I am trying to clarify. In fact, their apparent confusion about the point that I am making – that people often misunderstand what productivity trends mean for cross-country comparisons -- is reflected in the very title of their article, The Mismeasurement of Europe’s Productivity.

Let me be clear: I am not arguing that European productivity is mismeasured, and never said that. I am, instead, arguing that standard measures of productivity do not have the implications for cross-country comparisons of living standards and economic welfare that many people – including many economists – think they have. To put it a slightly different way: people are using data that is unsuited for the kinds of comparisons that they are trying to make. Thus, the conclusions that they are drawing from the data are misguided. But this is not to say that the data are wrong.

The apparent misunderstanding by Aghion et al of what I am trying to say is also reflected in their discussion. Their presentation mostly centers on arguing that European productivity growth is in fact lower than US productivity growth. This is puzzling, because I am not arguing that European productivity growth matches or exceeds US productivity growth. Like Aghion et al, I am fully aware that European productivity growth is lower than in the U.S. But this is not the actual issue that I am trying to address. My question is whether the standard comparison of European and US productivity growth rates is a good indicator of what is actually going on in the two economies over time.

From my viewpoint, the starting point for the debate on the relative performance of the EU and the US should be the acknowledgment that a comparison of US-Europe productivity trends looks very different if you use two different metrics.

One method is to compare the growth in inflation-adjusted GDP per hour within countries. This is a standard way to make cross-country comparisons, but one that answers the wrong question. The other method is to compare the year-by-year value of output per worker-hour, adjusted for differences in national price levels to control for exchange rate instability, but not for changing price levels over time. This measure is, I would argue, much more meaningful for comparing trends in economic welfare across countries.

You might think, and I suspect that many observers have assumed, that these two approaches tell similar stories. But they don’t.

I’ve been in the Netherlands recently, looking at Dutch data. As a high-productivity nation with much lower measured productivity growth at constant prices than the US, the Netherlands, it turns out, offer a kind of reductio ad absurdum for many US-EU comparisons. So I’ll initially focus on Dutch data to make my point, although the basic story applies to much of the EU.

Let’s look at OECD estimates of GDP per worker-hour in the US and NL, adjusting the data two ways. The first (the blue line) looks at the ratio of NL to US productivity year by year at current prices, adjusted only for purchasing power parity. By this measure, Dutch productivity is slightly higher than US productivity now, probably because of the presence of highly capital-intensive industries associated with the port of Rotterdam. NL productivity was also slightly higher in 2000, with no significant trend:

Suppose, however, that we measure GDP and hence productivity growth adjusting for national inflation rates (the black line). The OECD uses 2020 as a base year, so the two measures of relative productivity are equal in that year. But as we move back in time, they diverge. By this measure, Dutch productivity was 25 percent higher than US productivity in 2000.

Was the Netherlands drastically richer and more productive than America a generation ago? I doubt that many people would agree with that proposition. It’s certainly not what people believed at the time.

But if you find this proposition implausible, you must also concede that the conventional understanding of the implications of differing productivity growth in Europe and the US is highly problematic. If we want to compare relative economic welfare in two countries over time, surely we want to compare the value of the goods each worker can produce in any given year, tracked over time.

Think about it. Do you really want to claim that Dutch workers were much more productive than U.S. workers in the year 2000 because the goods they produced per hour, although roughly equal in value to the goods produced per hour by US workers at that time, would eventually be worth much more than US production at prices that didn’t prevail at the time — but would prevail two decades later, in 2020? Huh? Yet, when using constant-price productivity comparisons, that is exactly the claim that people are making.

Now, I have tried to explain the apparent paradox that Europe has lower productivity growth than the US but has not seen a decline in relative output per hour at current prices by pointing to the fact that the US and European economies produce different mixes of goods, with the US mix tilted toward high-tech goods with rapid productivity growth but falling relative prices. I’m open to alternative explanations of the US-EU paradox. But the paradox is there and needs explanation.

OK, as I read Aghion et al they offer four criticisms of my analysis, as follows:

First, international comparisons of GDP using purchasing power parity are problematic and unreliable: This is, of course, true. But estimates of real GDP, which are supposed to let us compare GDP within a single country in different years, are also, and I would argue equally, problematic. In a sense both comparisons of different national economies at a single point in time and comparisons of a single national economy at different points in time are imperfect metaphors resting on imperfect numbers. But I’m not aware of any reason to believe that these imperfections bias the comparisons I’ve been making in any systematic way.

Second, productivity at constant national prices has risen much faster in the US than in Europe. Why, yes. That’s not a refutation of my analysis, it’s precisely where I started — I wanted to understand how to reconcile these different rates of productivity growth with the fact that relative European productivity and purchasing power at current prices have not declined. The same data that underly the chart above show this for US and NL productivity at 2020 prices:

These numbers show US productivity rising 1.6 percent per year, while NL productivity rises only 0.6 percent per year. But that comparison is already incorporated in my discussion. So citing such numbers as a supposed refutation of my analysis simply misses the point. In particular, I have no idea why Aghion et al believe that a table showing multiple estimates of higher productivity growth in the US contributes to the discussion.

Third, “Current PPPs and national deflators are giving sharply different answers to what at first sight looks like the same price question, but as we saw, is not.” Indeed. That’s exactly the point I’ve been trying to make. The important point is to ask which is the right question — and if we’re asking whether Europe is falling behind in purchasing power and living standards, PPPs, which say that it isn’t, are the right measure.

A related point: Aghion et al assert as a problem with current-price comparisons that “If the US produces more of the goods whose prices fall rapidly, then valuing both economies at today’s prices can make part of the earlier volume gain look smaller.” Color me confused. That’s not a problem with these comparisons — it is precisely the mechanism I invoke to explain the apparent US-EU growth paradox. See the formal model I laid out!

Finally, Aghion et al assert that the U.S. lead in technology “has led to higher US wages and profits, and the gap is widening each year.” OK, that’s the crux of the discussion. But this assertion — which they don’t back with any data — is simply untrue. And I began this whole discussion with the observation that it isn’t true. The sum of profits and wages is factor income, which is by definition equal to GDP. Let me switch from the Netherlands to the euro area as a whole, which has somewhat lower GDP per capita than the US adjusted for differences in the price level. But this gap has not widened over time:

Or, if you want an independent data source, look at mean household income as estimated by LIS, the cross-national data center in Luxembourg. Between 2000 and 2021, these data show nominal income rising 3.1 percent annually in the Netherlands, 3.3 percent in the U.S. Given slightly lower inflation in Europe, this does not show a widening gap. My guess is that people simply assume that the gap must have widened because they know about the standard productivity growth comparisons. But my whole point is that these comparisons don’t mean what people think they mean.

The bottom line here is that while I could of course be wrong about the US-EU comparison, the Aghion et al critique doesn’t make the case that I’m wrong. The data that they claim refute my argument are basically the same data I used to make that argument and are completely consistent with what I’ve been saying. They are, in fact, exactly what my attempts to model the paradox predict we’d see.

Again, I’m quite willing to be proved wrong. But if we’re going to have a serious discussion, the critiques have to go beyond simply restating productivity data that show Europe lagging. They need to acknowledge the reality that despite these data, comparisons between the US and Europe at each point in time don’t show the gap between Europe and the United States widening, and at least try to explain why.

Quoting Karen Kwok for Reuters Breakingviews

Anthropic defines “run-rate revenue” in two parts. Use the last 28 days of sales ⁠from customers charged on a consumption basis and multiply it by 13. Then, multiply the monthly subscription take by 12, ​and add the two together.

Karen Kwok for Reuters Breakingviews, citing "a person familiar with the matter"

Tags: anthropic, ai

How we contain Claude across products

How we contain Claude across products

A complaint I often have about sandboxing products is that they are rarely thoroughly documented, and in the absence of detailed documentation it's hard to know how much I can trust them.

Anthropic just published a fantastic overview of how their various sandbox techniques work across Claude.ai, Claude Code, and Cowork.

We constrain where and how an agent can act with process sandboxes, VMs, filesystem boundaries, and egress controls. The goal is to set a hard boundary on what an agent can reach. For example, if credentials never enter the sandbox, they can't be exfiltrated, regardless of whether the cause is a user, a model finding a “creative” path, or an attacker.

Claude.ai uses gVisor. Claude Code, run locally, uses Seatbelt on macOS and Bubblewrap on Linux. Claude Cowork runs a full VM (Apple's Virtualization framework on macOS, HCS on Windows).

There's a lot in here, including some interesting stories of risks they missed such as the api.anthropic.com/v1/files exfiltration vector covered here previously.

This reminded me it's time I took another look at Anthropic's open source srt (Anthropic Sandbox Runtime) tool - it's mature enough know that I'm ready to give it a proper go.

Tags: sandboxing, security, ai, generative-ai, llms, anthropic, claude, claude-code

Running Python ASGI apps in the browser via Pyodide + a service worker

Research: Running Python ASGI apps in the browser via Pyodide + a service worker

Datasette Lite is my version of Datasette that runs entirely in the browser using Pyodide in WebAssembly.

When I first built it four years ago I used Web Workers and code that intercepts navigation operations and fetches the generated HTML by running the Python app.

This worked, but had the disadvantage that any JavaScript in <script> tags would not be executed - breaking some Datasette functionality and a whole lot of Datasette plugins.

This morning I set Claude Opus 4.8 the task (in Claude Code for web) of figuring out how to run Python ASGI apps in Pyodide using Service Workers instead, and it seems to work! Here's a basic ASGI FastCGI demo and here's a demo that runs Datasette 1.0a31.

I'm still getting my head around exactly how it works, but once I've done that I plan to upgrade Datasette Lite itself.

Tags: javascript, python, datasette, asgi, service-workers, pyodide, datasette-lite, claude-code


Central North Pacific 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Central North Pacific 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image





"In the long run, the public interest depends on private virtue." JQ Wilson

 

 Here's a photo from the lobby of the American Enterprise Institute, which I visited as part of my recent book tour.  It seems particularly apt right now.

IMG_5286.jpeg 

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Earlier: 

Saturday, May 16, 2026  Moral Economics: video of the AEI book event (you can listen to me read from the book) 

 

 

Blue Origin gets national security launch task order hours before New Glenn explosion

U.S. Space Force, National Reconnaissance Office ‘remain committed partners with Blue Origin’

The post Blue Origin gets national security launch task order hours before New Glenn explosion appeared first on SpaceNews.

Sunday assorted links

1. A new theory of galaxy formation?

2. Using AI to sell your house (NYT).

3. Ryan Graves.

4. Henry Oliver on reading Proust and also The Golden Bowl, an excellent essay.

5. On Spotify and Apple Music, are now about half of new song releases done by AI?

6. Is Indian cultural soft power somewhat receding?

7. Grok is this true?

8. Ten EU countries are breaching the fiscal rules (FT).

9. Tracking aircraft from space?

The post Sunday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Reading List 05/30/26

House building using the “Oraaflex” modular construction system, via Wikipedia.

Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure and industrial technology. This week we look at a California chemical leak, weapons-grade plutonium for nuclear reactor startups, a startup that will clean your house to get robot training data, Blue Origin’s rocket explosion, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subscriber.

Housekeeping items:

  • I spoke at the Reagan National Economic Forum about energy and AI infrastructure. You can watch my panel here.

War in Iran

Iran ends 88-day long internet blackout. [The Hill] And Iran claims that the fees it’s charging to allow ships to pass aren’t tolls but “safety and environmental protection fees.” [MSN]

Housing

West coast cities such as Seattle and Portland are considering a “vacancy tax” to try and deal with the problem of empty commercial office space. Such taxes already exist in Washington DC and San Francisco. [The Urbanist]

Relatedly, developer Asher Luzzatto is trying to revitalize Denver’s downtown, which currently sits at a 40% office vacancy rate. “Luzzatto’s approach is to turn that old formula inside out, transforming desolate urban cores into welcoming places to live. He plans to convert half of the Energy Center plus two other downtown Denver office buildings into about 1,100 apartments. He’s also planning a bookstore, art gallery, children’s museum and daycare center. He acquired all four buildings for pennies on the dollar. In a matter of months, the Los Angeles native has taken control of more than 7% of Denver’s traditional downtown office space.” [WSJ]

What was it like to live in an apartment in ancient Rome? [Common Edge]

Manufacturing

In California, damage to a tank of methyl methacrylate (a substance used to make plastic) put 50,000 people under an evacuation order due to the possible risk of an explosion. Fortunately the problem was resolved without the tank exploding. [BBC] At “In the Pipeline,” chemist Derek Lowe talks about methyl methacrylate and how it could potentially cause an explosion. “There’s a key energetic aspect to these polymerizations: they’re thermodynamically favorable, and these bond formations give off a bit of heat as they occur. This heats up the solution as a whole, and that in turn speeds up the reactions all by itself! Which means even more heat as even more molecules polymerize. . .and now you see why storage of large quantities of these monomer compounds is not for the unwary. You have to keep them away from anything that can start a free-radical chain reaction, and that means light and heat for starters, but also not letting them sit in contact with many metals and alloys, etc.” [Science]

In other “damaged chemical tank” news, one person was killed at a chemical tank explosion at a paper mill in Washington state. [USA Today]

Nvidia plans to spend on the order of $150 billion in Taiwan each year. [Reuters]

Chinese tech firm Huawei claims a major chip design breakthrough. “Huawei said Monday at a tech conference in Shanghai that by 2031, its high-end chips would have transistor density equivalent to 1.4-nanometer processes, which is considered the industry’s cutting edge.” [MSNBC] And Chinese battery manufacturer Calb is building a battery factory in Portugal that will produce on the order of 4% of the country’s GDP. [X]

A report on the state of US missile manufacturing. “America’s missile production hinges on a small number of ammonium perchlorate facilities, meaning a single plant accident can bring output to a standstill; a concentration risk that has no real equivalent elsewhere in the defense industrial base. AP production relies on narrow workforce pipelines for specialized energetics handling, layered environmental and explosives permitting, and purpose-built manufacturing equipment. Each of these inputs is hard to duplicate quickly, even with dedicated funding, which is why decades of rhetoric about supply chain expansion have produced so few second sources in practice.” [Contrary]

Inside Ukraine’s efforts to manufacture thousands of ground-based drones. [TWZ]

Read more

Lifestyle and living standards arbitrage

Since the Eisenhower administration, the U.S. hasn’t collected comprehensive statistics on the number of citizens leaving. Yet data on residence permits, foreign home purchases, student enrollments and other metrics from more than 50 countries show that Americans are voting with their feet to an unprecedented degree. A millions-strong diaspora is studying, telecommuting and retiring overseas.

The new American dream, for some of its citizens, is to no longer live there.

In the cobblestoned streets of Lisbon, so many Americans are snapping up apartments that the newest arrivals complain they mostly hear their own language—not Portuguese. One of every 15 residents in Dublin’s trendy Grand Canal Dock district was born in the U.S., according to realtors, higher than the percentage of Americans born in Ireland during the 19th-century influx following the Potato Famine. In Bali, Colombia and Thailand, the strains of housing American remote workers paid in dollars have inspired locals to mount protests against a wave of gentrification.

More than 100,000 young students are enrolled abroad for a more affordable university degree. In nursing homes mushrooming across the Mexican border, elderly Americans are turning up for low-cost care.

On a conference call last month hosted by Expatsi, a relocation company, almost 400 Americans signed up to learn how to move to Albania. The former Stalinist state offers a special visa allowing U.S. citizens to live and work there, with no tax on foreign income for a year, no questions asked.

“Previously, the Americans leaving were super-adventurous and well-credentialed,” said Expatsi founder Jen Barnett, a 54-year-old Alabama native who moved to Yucatán, Mexico, in 2024.

“Now they’re ordinary people, like me,” she said as she ticked through growth numbers.

Here is more from the WSJ.  And we are not yet into the era of “AI-savvy Americans being paid lots to help foreign countries manage their own transitions.”

The post Lifestyle and living standards arbitrage appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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How global logistics got me over my fear of personal agents

Ok a bunch of friends have their own personal AI agent using OpenClaw or Hermes or whatever.

Confession time: I don’t.

I haven’t found I need one. I’m a heavy user of agents for coding, sure, and a few isolated tasks. I haven’t found I need one digging through my notes or sending emails for me.

But really because of two fears:

  • Data security. I’m cautious of something that can non-deterministically execute and get tricked into emailing confidential info or accidentally delete old photos without me noticing.
  • Psychic integrity – I’ll say more about this in a bit.

So I’m a scaredy cat, whatever. Those concerns have kept me away.

Well, you know, concerns go out the window when you have your back against the wall? Last weekend, that’s what happened.


I’m shipping clocks.

Yes, finally, I know. It’s been a journey. I’m really grateful for the support and the patience of all my backers.

But, you know, 700 have left the warehouse in Hong Kong, and 640 or so have been delivered. The rest are in transit.

And last weekend…

Well, I’d shipped out 120 or so mainly to the UK and the US and everything had gone fine, very smooth.

I think I had two or three queries from US customs about import clearance and they just wanted a bit more information about the package. I filled in an online web form with a longer description than on the commercial invoice.

Shipping paused because the warehouse ran out of bubblewrap or something. That’s on me.

Then the next 500+ went out and I woke up on Saturday morning to 15 requests from FedEx for extra docs for customs clearance.

Ok that’s fine, I thought, percentage-wise this is approx the same.

So I started going through the requests. It wasn’t the simple text fields on the web this time. FedEx needed a worksheet. A worksheet is a detailed PDF that you have to complete, and they decide whether import is allowed based on that information.

The clock worksheet is not so bad. But it needs to have the tracking number at the top of the PDF, so it’s a different file for every package.

You go to the FedEx website which is arcane. Then you click around, upload the PDF, and you wait a few days and then the package clears customs and is on its way.


While I’m doing these 15 worksheets, which was the expected number, another 15 emails arrived.

I always do my best to embody the three virtues of a great programmer which are, according to Larry Wall

  • Laziness
  • Impatience
  • Hubris.

So I figured that although it wasn’t taking too long to edit these forms, adding the tracking number to each, it would be appropriately lazy to spend essentially the same amount of time (a little more actually) to make a Claude Code skill where I type /toolbox:make-clock-worksheet <tracking> and the PDF is created and opened on my desktop so I can drag and drop it into the website.

SIDE NOTE: I have a private repo on GitHub which is my personal Claude Code plug-in called toolbox. It has all my custom skills and I can sync them between my machines and I improve them over time. Everyone should do this.


I woke up the next morning and another hundred queries had arrived.

I don’t know what kind of flag had gone off in FedEx internal systems but I think they believe I am smuggling watches or something. Because all the questions about my clock are like, ok so what kind of movement does your so-called “clock” have and how big is the movement (btw it’s not a clock unless it’s bigger than X by Y) and yeah so this “clock” how many jewels does it have.

Jewels? My clock has no jewels. Watches often have jewels, right? Watches are a great way to plausibly move value across borders. No kidding the Swiss have private banks and premium watches, a coincidence I’m sure.

(I have since been informed that jewels in watches are actually tiny and used mechanically as bearings so (a) TIL and (b) apologies for unnecessarily disparaging Switzerland.)

Anyway so I have to officially declare that these packages are not watches, they’re clocks, but I have a hundred of these things to fill in.

It is at this point that I realise what a freight forwarder is for.

But it’s just me, and I’ve got to get through these forms, and it’s a long holiday weekend, and I am seriously not going to be grinding through FedEx’s website for the next two days.


I gave in, I had to:

Claude Code, here you go, have my Gmail.

Claude Code, here you go, drive a web browser without me even looking.

Then I built an agent to process my email, navigating the FedEx website and uploading worksheets for me when that was the request (all the requests are subtly different), replying to emails from humans and attaching the worksheet when that was what had to happen.

I started conservatively, human-in-the-loop as you’re supposed to do, centaur-style, checking the drafts, but there isn’t the time. I admit it. I surrendered.

And then Monday, the holiday day itself, was pleasant in the end.

My family left for a few days. I sat in the garden in the sun washing down the bbq keeping half an eye on my agent as it worked its way through my inbox autonomously. What a life! Idyllic.


What I hadn’t quite internalised about personal agents is that they’re slow.

So time-elapsed is more but time-attended is lower.

It’s an odd kind of efficiency and doubly relaxing.


So it turns out I have a personal AI agent now.

Or at least the beginnings of the kind I am ok with.

Although it can send email on my behalf, which risks my data, I haven’t crossed the Rubicon to that psychic risk I mentioned before which would be allowing it to read and write into my notes.

My notes.

Let me tell you my theory about AI psychosis.

A lot of people keep a lot of notes.

I keep a lot of notes too, that’s how I write this blog, and in particular I like the serendipity of running across old ideas in my own notes – that’s common for other people too (2021).

We used to call it having an outboard brain and it’s true, I think for a certain kind of person, your notes become part of your extended cognition, and you “know something” whether that knowledge is within your skull or within your notes, same same, it’s just a matter of look-up latency.

My theory is that allowing something else to write into your notes does something bad to your psyche.

I had a glimpse of this: a few years ago I asked ChatGPT to write a blog post in my style. (This was before chat could browse the web; my blog is well represented in the training data.)

It was pretty good so I pasted it into my notes as a record (but never posted it of course). I got scared off using ChatGPT to help with my blog pretty early when I was talking through an editing decision and it came up with a turn of phrase that was so perfect and so unique that I couldn’t resist it. But it didn’t represent any thinking that I had done to arrive at it, this perfect metaphor, so it wouldn’t bear my weight when I leant on it. Those two experiences terrified me.

Anyway so recently I was browsing my drafts folder and I ran across the bottom half of this fake blog post without noticing the context at the top, and it was like when the elevator drops faster than you’re expecting because I read these words but they didn’t feel buttressed with even a glimmer of memory in my head, so I was gaslighting myself – had I really written that note? I mean there it is, it sounds like me, but I can’t think around those words.

The feeling of not being able to trust the permanence and integrity of the physical world around you is one thing.

Not being able to trust what’s going on in your own mind is another.

Am I the same person as I was yesterday?

So unnerving.


All of which to say is that, for me, my personal theory is that AI psychosis comes from undermining your intrinsic faith in the workings of your own self.

And that comes from allowing an LLM that speaks in your voice to potentially write into your notes which, for a certain kind of person, is part of cognition itself. The AI doesn’t need to actually change your notes, the potential is enough.

Which eventually makes you go loopy.


So I have this fear of risking my own psychic integrity, which has so far kept me away from allowing a personal agent to run on my own machine – I love automation but at a healthy arm’s length…

Yet needs must. And here we are. All it took was 100 emails requesting 100 custom PDFs.

I’ve opened the door and now it’s the slippery slope. The slope ends with outsourcing consciousness itself, and the prospect of humanity becoming a population of voluntary p-zombies is a high-probability eschaton that I’ve talked about before.

I’m making a note here to

  • record my feelings at this moment: how naive will this look in a year or two?
  • celebrate 640 or so clocks in people’s homes, more in transit, and 300 online right this second.

For both: thank you FedEx.


More posts tagged: eschatology (10), that-ai-clock-and-so-on (14).

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How to Destroy a Literary Reputation in One Move

This would typically be behind a paywall. But I’m making it available to everybody. So enjoy!

If you value this kind of coverage of culture and media, consider taking out a premium subscription.


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Media Companies Invent a New Kind of Stupid

by Ted Gioia

Imagine if sports journalism were like an actual sporting competition—and the best team wins.

In that kind of contest, could any periodical in history surpass this lineup:

  • William Faulkner reports on a hockey game.

  • Robert Frost covers baseball.

  • Carl Sandburg offers golfing tips.

  • John Steinbeck contributes a story about fishing.

  • Ernest Hemingway writes on bullfighting.

This sounds like an editor’s fantasy. But these are actual stories and bylines from Sports Illustrated.

For a period of fifty years, this magazine set the gold standard for sports journalism. Nobel and Pulitzer winners wrote for them. Sports Illustrated even convinced John F. Kennedy to write a freelance article. In fact, that was one of the first things JFK did after getting elected president.

Magazine cover

How do you kill a brand as powerful as Sports Illustrated?

It’s easy, you can do it in one just one move. You just need to embrace the most exciting, futuristic technology of the 21st century.

That’s what Sports Illustrated did. The world’s most respected sports magazine gave up on Hemingway and Faulkner, and started publishing AI slop. The editors clearly wanted to hide this—they pretended that the articles were written by actual human beings. They even created fake bios with photos for the non-existent authors.

When a journalist from Futurism asked them about this, they quickly deleted everything.

Former SI journalist Jeff Pearlman now mocks the magazine as an “empty vessel for selling sh*t to idiots and for getting people to gamble away their money on sports.”

But the damage was already done. The magazine’s reputation was on the mat, like those bloodied boxers it had covered over the decades.

Just 55 days later, Sports Illustrated announced that it was laying off most of its workforce. The media reported that Sports Illustrated would stop operations completely.

A few months later, a new publisher stepped in as savior. But there wasn’t much to save—at least as a journalism business.

The latest move happened yesterday. The new owner laid off 12% of its workforce, including several of the remaining skilled journalists from the pre-AI era. Some of them are in desperate shape.

Former SI journalist Jeff Pearlman now mocks the magazine as an “empty vessel for selling sh*t to idiots and for getting people to gamble away their money on sports.”

It’s now a brand name, he insists, with nothing behind it.

That’s all Sports Illustrated is. It’s a name. It’s something to put on cruise ships. It’s something to put on clubs. It’s something to put on popcorn. Literally, there’s a Sports Illustrated popcorn.


This is what AI actually delivers in the media world right now.

The exact same thing happened to the people running National Novel Writing Month. They embraced AI—and then they soon went out of business.

You might think that others would learn from this example, but this month the folks at the Commonwealth Prize are in the process of self destructing over AI. The judges didn’t test for AI until after giving out the prize—an unwise move in the current environment.

Is Business Insider now going to learn this same painful lesson?

Check out this timeline:

That whole ugly drama played out in just one year. Say what you will about AI, but it sure is fast.

What will happen next? Only time will tell, but if I worked at Business Insider, the first question I’d ask ChatGPT is about job openings elsewhere.

Which media outlet will be the next to discover the wonders of AI? If you’re a journalist, you better hope it’s not your employer.

We will continue to track this at The Honest Broker. That will be necessary because AI isn’t going away—although the companies that use it just might.

Saturday 30 May 1663

Up betimes, and Creed and I by water to Fleet Street, and my brother not being ready, he and I walked to the New Exchange, and there drank our morning draught of whay, the first I have done this year; but I perceive the lawyers come all in as they go to the Hall, and I believe it is very good.

So to my brother’s, and there I found my aunt James, a poor, religious, well-meaning, good soul, talking of nothing but God Almighty, and that with so much innocence that mightily pleased me. Here was a fellow that said grace so long like a prayer; I believe the fellow is a cunning fellow, and yet I by my brother’s desire did give him a crown, he being in great want, and, it seems, a parson among the fanatiques, and a cozen of my poor aunt’s, whose prayers she told me did do me good among the many good souls that did by my father’s desires pray for me when I was cut of the stone, and which God did hear, which I also in complaisance did own; but, God forgive me, my mind was otherwise. I had a couple of lobsters and some wine for her, and so, she going out of town to-day, and being not willing to come home with me to dinner, I parted and home, where we sat at the office all the morning, and after dinner all the afternoon till night, there at my office getting up the time that I have of late lost by not following my business, but I hope now to settle my mind again very well to my business.

So home, and after supper did wash my feet, and so to bed.

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The Backyard Features That Make Kids Want to Stay Outside Longer

Children rarely stay outside because adults tell them to. They stay outside when the environment naturally gives them reasons to keep moving, imagining, building, climbing, or creating games on their own. The difference becomes obvious quickly. Some backyards hold children’s attention for hours without effort, while others lose their appeal within fifteen minutes no matter how expensive the setup looks.

What works best usually has less to do with oversized entertainment features and more to do with whether the space encourages freedom, movement, and imagination naturally. Kids tend to stay outside longer when outdoor spaces feel active instead of overly controlled.

Parents often notice the biggest difference after creating environments where children can move continuously without needing constant adult direction to stay engaged.

Play Structures Work Best When They Allow Multiple Types of Play

One reason some backyards hold children’s attention longer is that the environment supports different types of activity at the same time. Kids move between climbing, swinging, balancing, pretending, hiding, and inventing games naturally when spaces feel flexible instead of overly structured.

Simple play areas often outperform highly complicated setups because children use them differently every day. A swing set may become a pirate ship one afternoon and a fort the next. Climbing structures encourage movement while still leaving room for imagination.

Outdoor play systems from https://www.swingsetmall.com/  reflect why physical backyard play remains valuable for families trying to create environments that pull children away from constant indoor screen time more naturally.

Children usually stay outdoors longer when the environment keeps changing emotionally through play rather than relying only on fixed entertainment.

Shade and Comfort Matter More Than Parents Expect

A surprising number of outdoor spaces fail because children become physically uncomfortable too quickly. Direct sun exposure, overheated seating, poor airflow, and hard surfaces quietly shorten outdoor play without parents always realizing why.

Kids naturally stay outside longer when they can alternate between active movement and calmer shaded recovery spaces comfortably. Trees, covered areas, softer seating, and cooler surfaces make outdoor environments feel less exhausting during warmer weather.

Comfort matters emotionally too. Children settle into longer outdoor routines when the backyard feels safe and relaxing instead of physically draining after short periods of activity.

The best outdoor spaces support energy without overwhelming children physically.

Loose Objects Encourage Creativity Better Than Fixed Entertainment

Photograph illustrating this sponsored article

One overlooked feature that keeps children engaged outdoors is flexibility. Loose outdoor toys, movable items, chalk, balls, blankets, forts, gardening tools, and simple materials often hold attention longer than highly specific entertainment systems with only one intended use.

Children naturally invent games when environments leave room for imagination. The backyard becomes more interactive because kids actively shape the experience themselves instead of passively consuming entertainment already designed for them.

This freedom creates longer periods of uninterrupted outdoor play because the activity evolves continuously rather than ending once one game becomes repetitive.

Outdoor spaces work best when they invite participation instead of simply displaying features.

Family Rituals Quietly Keep Kids Outside Longer

Children also spend more time outdoors when the backyard becomes connected to family routines instead of functioning only as a separate play area. Outdoor dinners, evening conversations, gardening, small celebrations, and shared activities create emotional attachment to the space itself.

Objects tied to meaningful family moments often strengthen those emotional connections too. Keepsakes and gifts connected to important milestones, including items from Little Rose Shop , reflect how families naturally build emotional meaning around traditions, celebrations, and shared experiences that children continue remembering long after the moment itself passes.

Backyards feel more inviting when they become part of ordinary family life rather than occasional special-use areas only.

Children Stay Outside Longer When Parents Relax Too

Another important factor is the emotional atmosphere. Children usually sense quickly whether adults feel stressed, impatient, or constantly worried outdoors. Backyards become more inviting when parents also appear comfortable spending time there instead of treating outdoor play like another supervised task.

Relaxed environments encourage children to settle into slower, more creative play patterns because they stop feeling rushed toward structured activities constantly. Simpler routines often create longer outdoor engagement than highly scheduled entertainment plans.

This is one reason calmer backyard layouts tend to work better than overcrowded setups filled with too many competing distractions. Open space leaves more room for imagination and movement naturally.

The Best Outdoor Spaces Feel Easy to Use

The backyards children use most consistently are usually the ones that feel easy to enter, easy to move through, and easy to enjoy without preparation becoming complicated.

Accessible toys, visible play areas, comfortable seating, shade, movement-based features, and open space all contribute to outdoor environments that naturally invite longer play sessions.

Children do not usually care whether a backyard looks expensive or perfectly designed. They care whether it feels fun, flexible, and emotionally comfortable enough to keep exploring without getting bored quickly.

The outdoor spaces that work best are rarely the most elaborate ones. They are the ones children keep returning to voluntarily day after day without anyone needing to force them outside at all.


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How Long a Roof Replacement Actually Takes From Start to Finish

If you are looking up at your house and realizing your old shingles have seen better days, your very first thought is probably about the cost. Your second thought, however, is almost certainly about the chaos. No one wants their home to look like a construction zone for weeks on end, which is why homeowners always ask how long the process takes. When you hire a dependable roofing contractor  to handle the job, the timeline is often much faster than you might expect. Let us break down exactly what happens from the moment the crew arrives to the final cleanup.

The Factors That Change the Timeline

Before looking at the standard schedule, it is important to realize that no two houses are exactly the same. A simple ranch-style home is going to be a much faster job than a three-story Victorian with multiple peaks and valleys.

The biggest variables include:

  • The size of your home:  More square footage simply means more material to move.
  • The pitch of the roof:  Steep roofs require extra safety gear and slower movement.
  • The weather:  Rain, high winds, or extreme heat will halt a crew instantly.
  • The materials:  Standard asphalt shingles go down much faster than slate or cedar shakes.

Day One: Delivery and Preparation

The actual physical work usually starts a day or two before the hammers start swinging. A large truck will drop off bundles of shingles, underlayment, and flashing right in your driveway.

On the official start morning, the crew arrives early, usually around seven or eight o’clock. Their first task is protecting your property. They will do the following:

  • Drape heavy tarps over your landscaping
  • Move patio furniture out of the blast zone
  • Position a giant dumpster near the roofline

This setup takes about an hour or two, but saves your plants and windows from stray debris.

The Messy Part: Tearing It All Down

Once everything is protected, the real noise begins. The crew uses specialized pitchforks and shovels to rip off your old shingles. They start from the peak and work their way down, tossing the old materials directly into the dumpster.

For a standard home, the tear-off process takes anywhere from three to six hours. If your roof has two layers of old shingles because a previous owner skipped a tear-off, this phase can take twice as long. During this time, your home will be incredibly loud, so it is a great day to take the dogs to the park or work from a local coffee shop.

Inspecting and Preparing the Deck

With the old shingles gone, your roof is bare. The crew will inspect the wooden plywood boards underneath, which are known as the decking. If they find soft spots, water damage, or rotted wood, they have to replace those sections before moving forward.

If your deck is in great shape, they immediately start laying down the new foundation. They install an ice and water shield along the edges, followed by a breathable underlayment across the entire surface. This creates a waterproof barrier that keeps your home safe even if a shingle blows off down the road. This phase usually wraps up by the end of the first afternoon.

Installing the New Materials

This is where you finally get to see your investment come together. The crew starts nailing down the new shingles, working in precise, overlapping rows from the bottom up. They will also install new flashing around your chimney, vents, and valleys to ensure water cannot sneak into the seams.

On a standard, average-sized home, a skilled crew can finish laying the shingles in a single day. If you have a massive home or complex architectural details, the installation might spill over into day two or day three.

The Final Cleanup and Inspection

Professionals leave your yard looking better than they found it. Once the last ridge cap is nailed down, the crew shifts into cleanup mode. They will pick up large scraps, sweep your gutters, and use massive magnetic rollers across your lawn and driveway to catch every single stray nail.

The site supervisor will then walk the property with you to ensure you are happy with the work. Once the dumpster is hauled away, your life goes right back to normal.

Final Word

At the end of the day, most standard roof replacements take just one to two days of actual manual labor. Choosing a licensed and experienced roofing contractor ensures the project stays on track and your home remains protected through every single step.

Photo: Ryan Stephens via Pexels


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The Beauty Prep Mistakes That Ruin Elegant Event Styling

Elegant event styling usually depends less on dramatic fashion choices and more on how well every detail works together. Hair, makeup, skincare, clothing fit, accessories, and preparation timing all shape the overall appearance long before someone arrives at the event itself. Weddings, church functions, formal dinners, galas, and family celebrations often feel most polished when preparation remains organized and realistic rather than rushed or overly complicated.

Many styling mistakes happen because people focus too heavily on the final outfit while overlooking the preparation process leading up to the event. Last-minute beauty decisions, rushed grooming appointments, uncomfortable fabrics, and overcomplicated routines can quickly affect comfort and confidence during occasions where people expect to feel their best. In many cases, smoother preparation creates a more elegant appearance than trying to dramatically change everything at once.

Last-Minute Hair Removal Often Creates Problems

One of the most common beauty prep mistakes involves waiting too long to handle waxing or skin preparation before formal events. Irritation, redness, uneven texture, or sensitivity can become far more noticeable under makeup, photography lighting, or fitted clothing when treatments happen too close to the event date.

People also underestimate how much the type of wax affects overall comfort and skin reaction. Comparisons involving hard vs soft wax  often come up during event preparation because different waxing methods tend to work better for different skin types, body areas, and styling timelines leading into formal occasions.

Elegant Styling Depends on Comfort Too

Formal styling rarely looks convincing when someone feels physically uncomfortable throughout the event. Tight shoes, stiff fabrics, heavy layers, or overly restrictive outfits often affect posture, movement, and confidence much faster than people expect once the event begins.

This is one reason many people now focus more heavily on balancing elegance with wearability during formal preparation. Clothing that feels comfortable to sit, walk, and socialize in usually photographs better as the evening progresses because people remain more relaxed naturally.

Preparation Timing Changes the Final Result

Photograph illustrating this sponsored article

Many beauty routines become stressful simply because too many appointments and decisions happen within the final 24 hours before an event. Hair coloring, facials, tanning, waxing, nail appointments, makeup trials, and outfit adjustments all require recovery time that people often fail to schedule realistically.

Spacing preparation more carefully throughout the week usually creates a calmer experience overall. Smaller timelines also reduce the likelihood of rushing through important details once event day arrives.

Outfit Styling Often Works Best When It Feels Intentional

Elegant event styling tends to look strongest when clothing choices feel coordinated without appearing overly forced. Accessories, fabrics, colors, and grooming routines generally work better when they support the overall atmosphere naturally instead of competing for attention individually.

Formalwear collections from Designer Church Suits  are often part of these styling preparations during church functions, family celebrations, and formal gatherings where people want outfits that feel polished while still remaining comfortable enough for longer events and social settings. Elegant styling usually feels more convincing when movement and comfort remain part of the overall look.

Overcomplicated Beauty Trends Rarely Hold Up All Night

Social media often encourages highly dramatic makeup, hair, and beauty trends that look impressive for short videos but become difficult to maintain during full evenings of movement, conversation, dining, and photography. Heavy products, uncomfortable hairstyles, and overly detailed routines frequently lose their polished appearance faster than simpler styling approaches.

This is why many professional stylists focus more heavily on durability and balance during event preparation. Makeup, skincare, and hair routines that remain stable for several hours usually create better long-term results than highly elaborate looks requiring constant maintenance.

Elegant Styling Usually Comes From Preparation

Most polished event appearances are not created through one perfect product or last-minute beauty trick. They usually come from preparation habits that reduce stress and allow people to feel comfortable throughout the occasion itself.

Well-timed grooming, manageable beauty routines, comfortable clothing, and realistic preparation schedules often contribute more to elegant styling than constantly chasing dramatic trends. In many cases, the people who look most polished at formal events are simply the ones who prepared early enough to enjoy the experience without feeling rushed by it.


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Links 5/30/26

Links for you. Science:

Asteroid 2026 JH2 Is About to Fly Right Past Earth—Relatively Speaking
WHO declares major outbreak of rare Ebola virus species an international emergency
Scientists Discover Strange New Crystal Formed by Nuclear Blast
CDC says 41 people across the U.S. are being monitored for hantavirus
Climate Change Is Creating a New Kind of Weather Disaster
Researching while Chinese
NIH ousts infectious-disease leaders as COVID scientists face US charges

Other:

Nothing Magic Happens When His Poll Numbers Drop
The 51st’s D.C. voter guide
Granting Tina Peters Clemency Is a Big Mistake
Illness Is Not a Personal Failure
Trump’s $1.8b slush fund could turn into giant can of worms
Kennedy Fires Leaders of Key Health Task Force
Israeli security minister stirs diplomatic outrage with flotilla activist abuse video
Maryland delegates mock colleague’s accent, accuse him of spying for China
Stephanie Haridopolos alters, then removes, LinkedIn profile
MAHA’s latest conspiracy? Blaming Bill Gates for spike in tick bites
After Town Bans Flock, Councilmember Crashes Out, Proposes Internet and Phone Ban
White House ballroom is turning into a symbol of Trump’s failures
Bari Weiss Is Already on the Outs at CBS News
Bari My Heart at 57th Street. As it closes in on its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount leadership has had informal discussions about changing Bari Weiss’s mandate at CBS News (and, eventually, CNN) in ways that would give her less control over TV.
Trump & Cronies’ Top 10 Corruption Scandals
Colorado Democrats officially censure Gov. Jared Polis for Tina Peters clemency
AI Rage Is Inextricably Fused With Justified Loathing Of The Extraction Class. ‘Deal With It’
This is Not Normal. Trump’s Total Party Control
The Failed Game Theory Of Democratic Electoralism
Will progressives realize the truth? Voters reward the GOP when Democrats succeed (not sure I agree entirely with the mechanism, but the pattern is noteworthy)
Bracing For The Next Redemption
The Democratic Message Is Right There For the Taking
Cassidy and Cornyn, Caucus With Ds, You Cowards
Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire goes woke with Rosa Parks revisionism
Prosecute These Corrupt Bastards!
Meet Connecticut’s Billionaire-Backed Dark-Money Democrat
There Has Never Been an Example of Presidential Corruption Like This
Donald Trump May Have Found A Way For There To Be No ‘Limits’ On His Agenda
A Bipartisan Amendment Would End Police License Plate Tracking Nationwide
Christian conservative GOP candidate accused of secret same-sex relationship with online hookup

Somos DR

Observed at the corner of 14th and Corcoran Streets NW, Logan Circle, D.C.:

Untitled

Saturday assorted links

1. Which foreign food chains have made it in NYC?

2. Testing products on AI-generated buyers.

3. Are Vatican pronouncements rising in status?

4. A saner Argentina take.  I notice that PTDS is spreading.

5. Yupsy-dupsy.

6. Japan lost three million people over the last five years (NYT).

7. The most 2020s art ever?

The post Saturday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

Yours Truly on TBPN Yesterday

Fun show, good questions I thought.

 ★ 

How to Win a Trade War

Chad Bown and Soumaya Keynes have a terrific new book with that title — a breezy survey of our chaotic new world of international economics, couched as advice for nations trying to get the upper hand. The book is here.

I spoke with them last week about their book and the world in general. Fun stuff in a slightly grim way, and I hope we kept the acronym level tolerable. Transcript provided by the Financial Times, lightly edited to remove the ums and ahs. u

TRANSCRIPT

Paul K: Hi everybody. I’m Paul Krugman, professor at the City University of New York, and an independent newsletter writer on Substack. You might have noticed that I’m not Soumaya Keynes, host of The Economics Show podcast. I’m here with Soumaya, as well as her longtime collaborator, Chad Bown, who is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, formerly chief economist at the US State Department. Together, these two have just written a book called ‘How to Win a Trade War’, and today we’re going to be asking just that. How do you win a trade war? Soumaya, Chad, hi.

Chad Bown: Hi, Paul!

Soumaya: Hi!

Paul K: So maybe I can start by asking a slightly funny question, which is, who are you? I know you’re Chad and Soumaya, but when we talk about how to win a trade war, who is this? You know, who’s the audience? Presumably not actually Donald Trump. It’s probably not Xi Jinping. I mean, everybody should read it, but who do you think might, in some sense, read it or at least be briefed on people who’ve read it?

Soumaya: Well look, if Donald Trump wants to read the book, then we are very willing to sign a copy. We’ll hand deliver it however he wants. The conceit of the book is that you, the reader, are really interested in fighting a trade war, right? And we are the two nerdy kind of reluctant guides saying, “Uh, if you really want to do it, then, you know, we’ll give you the evidence that you need. We’ll tell you everything there is to know,” You know, it’s not easy to fight and win a trade war. Um, and so, you know, at least arm yourself with the evidence of what’s happened in the past, what works, what doesn’t work. We kind of acknowledge that most readers may come to this not actually wanting to fight a trade war, right?

Um, so the point is it’s for... You know, it’s to help people understand, how to navigate this world of economic conflict as I feel like, you know, many people have become unwilling participants in these massive, massive geopolitical conflicts. It can be a bit bewildering. So the book is really supposed to be for everyone, right? To understand how we got here and where we go next.

Paul K: Okay. Because yeah, I found myself thinking that it was easier somehow to follow the line of argument is to think of myself yeah, still a little bit of delusions of grandeur, but imagine myself to be Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, or to imagine myself as Ursula von der Leyen, uh, uh, making policy for the EU.

But basically, you’ve got these two powers. We’ve got the United States, which is basically Donald Trump, and we’ve got China, which is a little bit more of an institutional thing. But they are certainly waging something that they consider trade wars.

Let’s talk a little bit about, how did we get here? How did we get to this point? I think, if we were holding this conversation around ten years ago, it mostly would have been, “Well, we’re economists. We understand free trade is great.” Uh, maybe fifteen years ago, even more so.

And, so you know, the answer is just, “Don’t do this, free trade.” So I think all three of us probably have had some visions on the road to Damascus about why that isn’t an adequate approach. Anybody want to start off on that?

Chad Bown: Maybe I’ll take a stab first. Um, so I guess to answer the question, we have to talk about what trade war we could or should be fighting because there are, I think, arguably multiple trade wars happening right now. You’ve got President Trump doing a lot of things. Um, but beneath, behind that, there’s another really big trade war that’s happening, and that’s the one having to do with China.

So let me start there. Um, I would say, and it’s not as if I noticed this at the time, but say in 2015, when China rolled out its Made in China 2025 strategy, industrial policy that said, you know, we’re gonna have these market share targets to dominate certain important sectors of the future, that was kind of a sign that China was thinking about things differently than I think other, other, traditional, the United States and others had been.

And then you fast-forward a couple of years with, Xi Jinping and his “dual circulation” strategy more clearly articulating the idea that China did not want to be interdependent with the rest of the world. It wanted the rest of the world to be dependent on China for their supply chain, so the United States to be dependent on China for sourcing stuff, but China to not have dependencies on the rest of the world.

When you start to think about a functioning trading system, as we’ve lived in for the post-war period since the, the late 1940s, it requires rules, all those things, but it also fundamentally requires a willingness to be interdependent, right? And to trust that I’m gonna export to you, you’re gonna import to me, and, and yeah, there’ll be sometimes some frictions, but by and large, that will be okay.

And China was saying, “No, we wanna have an asymmetric relationship, we wanna do what we wanna do, but we’re not all that interested in what you wanna do.” So for me, it was kind of seeing those things that really made me think that, ah, the world has changed. We’re in some sort of trade war, and really China is the part that’s driving this.

Soumaya: So my journey, I think, um, you know, there was an important moment for me in the first Trump administration, right? And so, you know, Trump, ran onto the scene, during his first term and started throwing tariffs at China predominantly. And you know, Chad and I had this podcast about trade, and we were the loudest voices saying, you know, “What are you doing? You gotta play by the rules, why not try to use the rule book to solve these underlying structural problems that we have with China?” Um, and you know, I was covering trade full-time at that time, and, you know, something that was happening behind the scenes, um, was that there were efforts to try and get some kind of coordinated plan to save the rules-based system, to try and solve some of the structural problems between China and the US by writing new rules.

So you had these trilateral discussions between the US, Japan, and the EU, and the idea was, okay, well why don’t we just write out the way in which we want China to behave, limits on subsidies, um, you know, new, new ways of protecting ourself against China’s subsidies. And the idea was, you know, they would agree on that common plan, then they might go to China and say, “Hey, look, we’ve got some new rules. You sign up to these, and look, President Trump will drop his tariffs.” That was the hope of some involved in that process. It certainly wasn’t Donald Trump’s plan. And I think, you know, a very fundamental way in which I have moved on from that is I just don’t believe that the solution to these problems lies in a new set of common rules that everyone is going to sign up to, right?

In fact, the Trump administration did go to the Chinese government with a list of requirements or requests in terms of, you know, China’s subsidy behavior, and the Chinese, you know, shredded it, right? They weren’t gonna change their system. and that’s really the backdrop to where we are today, which is, you know, the Trump administration, I think, pretty much most everyone else, has given up on the idea that the rules are gonna save us.

And that is kind of scary. It’s a bit, you know... It means that we can’t rely on the rule book to predict what’s going to happen next. It’s a much more chaotic power-based world, and we’re kind of feeling our way through.

Paul K: Yeah. Yeah, for what it’s worth, I, I’ve had sort of two moments of revelation about trade. One of them, which seemed terribly relevant but maybe a little less so now, was the work early 2010s on the China shock, where we started to realize that, hey, you know, the problems of adjustment and dislocation that come from rapid globalization are a lot bigger than… you know, economists have always understood that there were distributional issues, but they’re a lot bigger. And that, that was, that was revelatory and a bit of a shock. Um, but I think it’s actually not the core of the story now. And, and for me, the, the revelation was, um... It’s a little odd, but I’m gonna give you this, uh, really offbeat point at which I realized that we’re not getting this back, which was actually when Russia invaded Ukraine, when we realized, hey, this rules-based order, not just about trade, but everything.

We, sort of had taken it for granted that, all of the old stuff, all of the old demons had been banished. That we weren’t gonna have outright war in Europe. We weren’t gonna have countries just plain exploiting their power over trade for geopolitical gain. And, we now realize, I think I realized that, hey, all of that, all the things that we thought were fundamentals about the twenty-first century economy were actually basically dependent upon a benevolent hegemon. Not totally benevolent, not totally hegemonic, but still a lot of it depended upon basically the United States, which enforced the rules and obeyed its own rules for the most part. And, well, we’re not in that world anymore, not in Kansas anymore, among other places.

So it’s-- now it’s a much tougher world out there

Soumaya: Can I just add that I think economists have been on a sort of journey as well, right? Um, you know, and, and, and, you know, starting point, the starting point being, you know, your, your theory, right? We thought that one of the benefits of trade was, you know, agglomeration, right?

You know, huge efficiencies, huge economies of scale, that, you know, created these gains from trade and what we’ve seen now, I think, is that those agglomeration benefits are real, but in a world where we’re not friends with everyone and we don’t trust everything, they come with risk.

Where do you feel like economics has, has, has gone?

Paul K: Well yeah. I mean, it’s interesting. In some ways, the models were already there, and we understood that there are big advantages to agglomeration, although I think they’ve turned out to be bigger than we realized. And they, they really do... You know, I’ve been on my own little journey here about Europe versus the United States, and an astonishing amount is driven by, loosely speaking, the fact that Silicon Valley is on the US side of the Atlantic, right?

It’s just that there are some agglomerations that color all of the numbers. But in a world of open markets, agglomeration rules. Texas doesn’t obsess about the fact that California controls a lot of the IT sector. Why should Europe obsess about the fact that the United States controls a lot of it? But that was not the world that we’re living in now, where these things become very real. So the whole, Everything changes once you stop assuming that it doesn’t fundamtelly matter where stuff is produced. We’re talking a lot about high tech, but, if we talk about Chinese manufacturing ... It’s not just that China is good at a lot of stuff. China has a whole industrial ecosystem that gives them tremendous amounts of leverage in the world. I mean, China isn’t the only place that has rare earth deposits, but it’s the only place that has the industrial ecosystem that can process them at this point. And so that altogether, that creates a world where Section 232 and I think Article XXI of the GATT on national security -- I’m always testing my acronyms and numbers, uh, knowledge. But anyway, I thought if you’d asked me fifteen years ago, I would have said, “Well, all this national security stuff, that’s just an excuse. National security is the last refuge of the scoundrel.” But actually not now.

Soumaya: Yep

Paul K: So okay. Any other sort of revelations beyond the fact that, that it, it’s a scary world with nasty people in it?

Soumaya: So I have one which is, you know, you mentioned the, the China shock literature, right?

Paul K: Yeah

Soumaya: So this is this collection of papers showing the effects of, of, of imports from China.

Paul K: Right

Soumaya: And one paper that I thought was super interesting that came up as we were researching this book was, um, was about what happened in Canada, right?

When, when there was liberalization as part of, um,

Paul K: Oh Yeah,

Soumaya: Was it NAFTA or was it

Chad Bown: CUSFTA.

Soumaya: CUSFTA?

Soumaya: Yeah, so the predecessor, to, to NAFTA. Um, and actually, you know, this, this research found that, that the effects when, were really quite dissimilar from those China shock effects. People were able to adjust. There were export opportunities created by that trade deal.

People moved into those, those other industries. There’s also research looking at, um, you know, uh, liberalization and populism in, in Europe, right? And there seems to be this relationship between places that have stronger social safety nets, um, and the switch to right-wing parties. Um, and so, you know, I think one, one point that, that I would want to make is, you know, it’s important not to go to over-interpret what’s going on now and to kind of see it as this idea that, you know, all trade liberalization, you know, has losers and, and there’s just nothing we can do to, to address those, right?

There are cases where actually import liberalization, you know, we, we could cope okay with it, and economies adjusted and social safety nets worked. So I think it’s, you know, it’s important not to kind of over-correct after some of those instances where there was, you know, real pain in the past.

Paul K: I’m trying to remember how much in the book you really talk about the political economy of these-- the protectionist backlash. ‘Cause that is actually-- not as, you know, there was a simple story, “Oh, trade produces lots of losers, and now the public won’t have it.” And that’s not actually the story as far as I can make out. what did you say? I’m trying to remember the actual way you put it.

Soumaya: Chad do you remember, or shall I?

Chad Bown: No. Yeah. I mean, I-- Well, I mean, the, the story is that it’s complicated,right?

Paul K: Yeah

Chad Bown: And voters don’t, you know, kind of respond as cleanly as, you know, one might expect to what the economic implications are for them, right? And so one of the more recent China shock papers, in fact, has looked at the longer run impacts of the China shock and the reapplication of the tariffs in the first Trump administration, and has found that they didn’t really do the job of, you know, helping workers in those regions, right?

Didn’t improve employment or anything like that. But it did help President Trump’s party, in subsequent elections, right?

So there is maybe something to the idea that, well, okay, he may not be helping me, uh, you know, get a better job or, or my employment process, at least he’s fighting on my behalf, right?

And so what that means is it’s really messy to draw these links between all of this stuff in the political economy context.

Paul K: Okay, I didn’t know that. I somehow missed that. I know you did mention it, but it’s not so much if you look at kind of the vector of, of real wage changes or whatever, of employment changes, that that’s not, not really the story. It’s more about attitudes, sense of whether you’re led by somebody who’s standing up to foreigners.

I think in the end, the protectionism in the U.S. and I think in Europe is not really a, a mass public groundswell. There are parties who exploit it, but it’s not really this sort of simple deterministic, you know, losers fight back, and this is why we have a problem.

A lot of it more has to do with, again, the, the complexities of the political process.

Soumaya: Yeah, and so you can see this in, in, you know, both what’s going on in the US and, and also the EU. So if you think about what Trump did, right, he, he had to do this by using and arguably abusing, um, you know, arcane bits of US law, uh, because he didn’t have the support of Congress to, to apply these tariffs, right?

And so he kind of ran roughshod over the, the democratic process there. Um, uh, you know, in obviously in the case of IEEPA, that turned out to be overturned by the Supreme Court. and, you know, during the first Trump administration, companies were complaining quite a lot. I think during the second, those complaints were a little quieter. That’s probably some combination of, you know, worrying about retribution, but also maybe in some cases they adapted, right? And so I think one lesson of that episode could be that you may not have the constituents for protection at the beginning, um, but you could, you could develop those constituents if that protection is there for long enough. And then the contrast is with, is with what’s going on in Europe right now, right? There’s a huge discussion about whether the EU should essentially do more of what the US is doing and protect itself. And it’s just extraordinarily difficult, even though you’ve got these really acute problems, right?

German exporters being, you know, crushed in, in, in third markets. You know, the car industry really struggling to cope with that Chinese competition. and even then, right, even in the face of these really extreme Chinese export trends, even then it’s really, really difficult to get a consensus, right?

And so, it’s a question of, you know, can Europe ever act as decisively as the Trump administration? Maybe there’s a middle ground between kind of hopeless inaction and kind of maybe overaction? But yeah, that just speaks to that issue.

Paul K: Okay, we could go on. I actually just say quickly, the importance of institutional details, including the details of legislation that people wrote ago, uh, that were not intended for the purposes to which it’s being applied. It’s, it’s amazing. I mean, the fact that, that, uh, that Section 121 is written the way it, it is, and that IEEPA is written the way it is, suddenly turned out to be you know, the fate of the world is hinging on more or less accidental wording of decades-old legislation. It’s kind of amazing.

Soumaya: I was outraged when I, an economist, was the economics correspondent of The Economist magazine, started covering trade. I thought this was gonna be all about, you know, big intellectual battles of which model worked best, and actually, I essentially became a lawyer, um, working out, you know, what, what does the Section 301 statute mean?

What’s 232? How is this compatible with the World Trade Organization rules? You know, it’s, it, you, you get stuck in the legalese quite quickly, but as you say, these, these details really, really matter. Apologies for all of the lawyers. I’m not actually a lawyer.

Paul K: I knew somebody who taught a trade policy course long ago, but she would return term papers with, uh, just right at the top, a Y-H-T-M-A-A-I-Y-P, which was, “You have too many acronyms and abbreviations in your paper.” anyway, So, you know, so if we’re talking about Europe responding, taking the extreme constraints on European action, you know, how would you go to the Berlaymont in Brussels, and, and you’re gonna tell the European Commission, “Here’s, here’s what you should do in response to,” I think you said that America is a pirate and China is a warship, but anyway, they have these two quite different but also, but very seriously threatening, aggressive trade policy partners.

Two of the world’s three economic superpowers are not behaving the way they used to, and the most obvious case is, okay, you’re the, you’re sort of running the third power. What, what should you be doing?

Chad Bown: Well, um, engaging, right? And I think, uh, you know, as Soumaya indicated, Europe has been a little bit slow, uh, to engage in the, you know, are we willing to, “can we fight a trade war?” question. But they do seem to be there now. One of the really interesting lines for Europe at the moment is this issue of electric vehicles and the automotive sector.

Um, and what’s fascinating is, is, is the following: they’re essentially trying to see if they can learn from the Chinese model to encourage Chinese firms to build cars in Europe, right? So what was the Chinese model? The Chinese model was forced technology transfer. What made them successful at the time, or partly what made them successful was, you know, back in the early 2000s, there were a lot of Western automakers the United States, Japan, Korea, Europe, that all wanted access to China’s 1.4 billion potential drivers, right?

And China had high tariffs at the time, so exporting into China was really hard. China said, “We want you to build those cars here, and not only do we want you to build those cars here, but we want you to form joint ventures with local Chinese firms, and then teach them effectively, uh, how to make cars themselves,” right?

And partly, and they were successful. And part of the reason why they were successful, you know, we think, is there were lots and lots of these Western automakers competing against each other, all seeking to get access to that Chinese market. So you fast-forward today, and you say, well, okay, can Europe do the same thing, um, with respect to the Chinese technological leaders today in, in battery electric vehicles?

And while there may be, you know, at the moment, lots and lots and lots of EV manufacturers in China, um, BYD is the dominant one. Um, and behind that is the battery makers, which are BYD and CATL, right? And to, to sort of thwart that possibility, right, the idea that, well, maybe Europe could exploit, you know, divisions amongst Chinese firms and negotiate to get them to come into Europe, partner with German automakers, teach them how to make battery electric vehicles better, locate production here, create lots of jobs, the Chinese government has already set up a system of licensing for its technology and saying, “No, BYD, CATL, you know, these companies, you’re not allowed to just go out and negotiate with the Europeans.

We’re gonna be the one. The Chinese government is gonna be the one controlling access to that technology from foreigners, right?” So on one hand, you have the Europeans maybe seeking to learn from the Chinese model, and the other hand, you know, the, the Chinese already going a step beyond and saying, “Yeah, we’re not gonna let you learn from our model and, and get those jobs there in, in Europe.

Here’s how we’re gonna thwart those kinds of things.”

Paul K: Wow. And that’s really instructive because, you know, all of us spent years learning about why government intervention in trade is almost always a bad thing and how, um, uh, letting people buy wherever they want and not, not, certainly not blocking possible profitable opportunities is, is clearly going to hurt your country.

And now we’re sort of saying, “Oh, you know, this dirigiste, overall control.” And in this case, it’s not just geopolitical. It’s, well, you know, China can preserve effectively its technology advantage, even though it’s not fancy technology. And because, because they can close off the technology transfer.

So but you’re, you’re saying that basically, as I understand, that at least the EU, presumably Mark Carney’s middle powers need to be at least a little bit more like the Chinese.

Chad Bown: I think that’s right. I mean, I think, you know, one of the lessons that we took away from the book is we all need to learn a lot from each other, from the other players. But especially, you know, I think in the Western system we need to learn from China. That does not mean we need to adopt the Chinese model, right?

And so please don’t get me wrong But there are elements of what China does when it does industrial policy, when it does, in that earlier example, the transfer of technology, that if you wanna have those similar kind of outcomes be successful, you really do need to see what it was about the Chinese system that allowed them to be successful in those instances.

You may not be able to replicate it, right? So you need to, you need to learn those kinds of lessons as well. But yes, learn important lessons from China.

Paul K: So, I mean, EVs in Europe, I mean, the United States has decided that we’re going to have coal-burning cars or something. But, um, EVs in Europe, there is a question, should they even be trying? Shouldn’t they, say “Okay, if the Chinese are gonna sell you cheap vehicles, why not just drive cheap electric vehicles and, uh, work on your European, uh, comparative advantage, whatever that may be?”

Soumaya: I mean, this is actually a, a debate in the US, right? You’ve got some saying, you know, “Why won’t you let me buy a cheap EV? These, these things are…

Paul K: Right

Soumaya: …karaoke bars on wheels. I want a, I want a piece of that equipment.” Um, and you know, the arguments against are in-- you know, include one, this is actually an area where Chad and I had quite heated debate as we were writing the book, as Chad was much more in favor of banning things than, than I was. Um, and you know, that relates to some of the security risks around, you know, having Chinese software run some of these vehicles, the risks of surveillance, even being able to turn off the car remotely. Um, Chad was more gung ho about banning vehicles because of that concern than, than I was.

I wanted, you know… Surely it’s possible to come up with some kind of technical test, um, because, if we start banning cars on that basis, then, you know, what about smartphones, right? Last time I checked, there was quite a lot of electronic equipment that was made in China that could, in theory, carry the same risks.

So are we, are we really gonna be inconsistent? So there’s the security piece of that. There’s also just the political economy piece of that, right? Which is that, you know, the, the car industry is massively important in Europe. The political consequences of letting all of those smaller companies just shut down would be potentially devastating. And then third, there’s a kind of bigger argument about industrial capacity. When we don’t trust each other, is it really wise to be cutting manufacturing, or accepting the loss of manufacturing? Could there be some connection to innovation? The evidence on this isn’t as concrete as we’d like. But you know, is there something? Do the folks who worry about manufacturing having some kind of national security advantage, do they have a point, right? In some kind of heated conflict, do you actually need the capacity to scale up quickly? So actually having that industrial might is important.

Now, that doesn’t mean manufacturing jobs, but you know, I’m talking about overall manufacturing.

Paul K: You wrote the book obviously before the Iran war, and, but you do talk about supply chains and the threat of cutoffs, and that now seems immensely more real. I mean, how much does that change the way we think about, about trade wars?

Chad Bown: So I think, Iran and, and Strait of Hormuz, right? Obviously, from Iran’s perspective, the war, the physical war, the military aspects of it have to be absolutely devastating. But at the same time, they have been able to weaponize through their export restrictions, you know, imposed on not allowing things through the Strait of Hormuz, in a way that is, you know, orders of magnitude bigger than the size of their economy would otherwise suggest, right?

And so that’s part of the new world in which we live. Sometimes you have those kinds of supply chain disruptions, um, that can come up, um, by, you know, not recognizing just how serious those choke points are. I think there were a lot of folks that probably did recognize how serious those potential choke points were.

But as we have seen, through what’s happened since February, the world is now, you know, facing the consequences of, of those actions.

Soumaya: So just building on that, I think what we’ve seen so far with the Strait of Hormuz is that some of those disruptions haven’t hit yet, and that’s because companies have been doing, you know, one of the policies we, we discuss in the book, which is stockpiling, right? So we’ve had inventories, and they’ve been running them down. When the crisis first started, uh, you know, folks were asking how bad could this get? And the response was, “Well, as long as it doesn’t last for very long, it’ll be okay,” right? Because there are those buffers. And so, you know, the crisis, I think, highlights the importance of having those buffers, but also I think that, you know, there is a point about substitution. So, so, um, if you think about the drop in oil flowing out of the, the Strait of Hormuz, a third of that has been made up with oil flowing out through other ports, right? And so one of, one of the lessons here is that, you know, when thinking about your vulnerabilities, actually there’s always some slack in the system.

There are always some, some opportunities for substitution. They may not be, you know, fast, it may not be easy, but actually one of the lessons from history in extreme situations is that we tend to be a bit more adaptable than we sometimes fear. That said, obviously if this disruption goes on, there’s pain being felt, right?

We shouldn’t then swing too far in the other direction and say, “Oh, well, there’s no point in applying export controls because we can always adapt away.” That’s not true. As we are seeing now in, in, you know, some of the, the poorer countries who are on the front end of this, and as we will be seeing later these weapons are pretty, are pretty impactful and pretty dangerous.

Paul K: What struck me though, I mean, the Strait of Hormuz is a, it’s a, it’s a physical choke point, which is helpful for illustrating the concept, but it turns out there are all of these de facto choke points like rare earths, like, well, semiconductors. I mean, it’s not that so much stuff passes through the Strait of Taiwan, it’s the fact that basically everything runs on chips made in this island. So yeah. And you do talk about this. I mean, right there, there is definitely a case for policies that even at some cost make sure that critical stuff is made in some quantity in places that are, are less subject to this kind of disruption.

Gosh, for many years I was co-author of the bestselling international economics textbook. I don’t think we mentioned supply chains, export controls, any of that. I probably haven’t yet. I’d probably have to get that in the next edition. But anyway,

Soumaya: No don’t worry, you don’t have to. You can just assign our book as the top-up, and then it’ll be fine.

Paul K: That’s right No, definitely. Y-H-S-T-M-A-A-I-Y-P. No, you’re actually very good. I’m not doing the acronyms and, and, and the numbers, but it is something. Actually, I’ll give a quick quiz. Uh, do you know the answer? You probably do, but the, um, you know, all these numbered trade things, what act are they numbers from?

Soumaya: 74? 1974?

Paul K: Well, the answer is they’re from several different acts.

Soumaya: Ok well that was a trick question!

Paul K: So it’s really horrible that we, we’ve got a 122 and a 232 and, and they’re not from the same law, so it’s totally obscure. But anyway.

Soumaya: Should we wrap up here?

Paul K: Let me just ask last question, then I’ll let you go. Do you have a view-- how does this pan out? You’ve given some, some good advice to people who are not Donald Trump, effectively. I mean, maybe Trump would benefit from, but he’s not going to read it. And probably not Xi Jinping, but how do you think this shakes out? It’s, you know, it’s possible that, that Mark Carney and his middle powers or Ursula von der Leyen and the EU leadership will in fact think about these issues and, and quite possibly read your book, as they should. Um, what does the world look like in five years?

Soumaya: Okay. well look, I’m gonna be real. Um, I don’t think there’s gonna be some grand bargain, um, in the next five years, right? Which goes back to my point earlier about the rules aren’t gonna save us. And that underpinned the stability that we had for so long, right? That’s really the only outcome that would reduce the chaos, right?

And so without that, we’re kind of in this messy world where everyone is gonna be following this rule book that we’ve laid out. Everyone’s gonna be trying to stockpile, to subsidize, to, to look to see what everyone else is doing, to see what lessons they can learn. that’s gonna be, you know, pretty chaotic, I think, the chances are that there’s gonna be misinterpretation of, of what’s happening.

So just, you know, take an example, stockpiling is one of the main tools that, that countries are now deploying to try to protect themselves against, you know, weaponized shortages. but you know, there was a hearing too long ago where, where one of the US committee was quizzing experts on, on whether stockpiling was a sign that a country was about to attack, right?

You’ve got China building up massive stockpiles. What if that breeds suspicion, um, that there’s some kind of military preparation? And what if Western stockpiling breeds that suspicion on the other side, right? So you have this real risk of these awful self-fulfilling dynamics. so, you know, do all the nice things, right?

Communicate, try to coordinate with your friends, engage, be as transparent as you can, um, put in the effort, spend the money, subsidize, stockpile, do all of the things that are hard. but you know, you’re gonna have to put in, put in the effort and be consistent about it, because the dynamics are such that in a trade war, your adversary is gonna be taking advantage of any moment of weakness to, to try to strengthen their position.

Chad Bown: And I would say for me,, the only things I would add to that is, you know, to build upon the, please work with your partners and allies, right? It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to be fighting with them distracting them away from the really hard task at hand of fighting the real trade war that needs to be fought, which is dealing with these challenges with China.

And, every ounce of time that Europe or Canada or Japan or Korea has to deal with American tariffs, demands for, you know, invest here in my energy sector or something like that, instead of focusing on how do we most quickly, at lowest cost possible to deal with the affordability concerns, diversify some of these supply chains away from China while China is actively trying to prevent us from diversifying those supply chains away from us.

We need to do that kind of thing together. So focus on the trade wars that need to be fought, and let’s put the other trade wars to the side.

Paul K: Okay. That’s actually interesting because we’re basically saying that the, if not full on conflict, that trade war with China is basically gonna happen, at least a cold trade war. And that if only the United States would stop doing what it’s doing, that we could actually form an effective or might be able to form an effective precautionary bloc against it, which is optimistic. I guess that means, particularly if we get some better management back on the home front, we might actually be able to resolve this not too badly. That’s, that’s what passes for wild optimism in the year 2026. We’re all optimists now. This is, this great, sunny, uplands await

Paul K: All right. Well, Soumaya, Chad, thanks so much, thanks for the book, which is tremendously enlightening, and thanks for the not totally dire analysis at the end. Let’s, let’s, uh, hope for the best, and the best way to make it work is for everybody to read the book

Chad Bown: Thanks, Paul

Soumaya: Great advice.

Charles Pell's grotesque maneuver

Nah, bruh. Hard pass.

There’s a race going on for the County Superior Court Judge gig (Office No. 41), and it features a little shell of a man who deserves to be a judge the way I deserve to lead the Society to End Profanity.

The shell of a man is named Charles Pell. And if you just scan his resume, you’d be inclined to think, “Oh, not a bad dude.” Pell is a Navy veteran, a former federal prosecutor, a USC Law grad and a father to this little guy …

Again, not bad.

But then, two months ago, Pell did something so, so, so, so disturbing and so, so, so, so nasty that it eliminates the military experience, the USC time, the cute kid. In his race for the judge gig, he filed a lawsuit against the Orange County Registrar of Voters, demanding his incumbent opponent appear on the ballot by her full name (Ami Sheth Sagel), as opposed to her listed name (Ami S. Sagel). And why, oh, why, would Charles Pell do such a thing? Like, why would he care what name Sagel goes by? Why would it worry him? Concern him? Consume him?

Easy: Xenophobia.

“Sheth,” Sagel has explained, is of Indian origin because (gasp) her parents are (gasp) Indian. And, because we’re living in the hellscape of 2026, when Ethiopians need to go back to their shit-hole country and brown people are being held in detention camps and white South Africans are greeted with open arms and the president can spew racist garbage without much backlash, Pell likely figured these things (Sheth!) matter. Remind Orange County’s majority white voters that Sagel is really Sheth, then pull the electoral upset …

And the weird part? Like, the weirdest part? Pell’s partner is Latina. His biological son is of mixed heritage. Which matters, quite literally, 0%. Hell, I actually think it’s cool. I love diversity. I love embracing cultures. I love compassion, empathy, kindness.

One might think Charles Pell would, too.

Of course, the lawsuit went nowhere. Wilfred J. Schneider Jr., a San Bernardino County Superior Court Judge, denied all four claims in a writ petition seeking to compel the Orange County Registrar of Voters to change Sagel’s ballot name and revise her candidate statement. And Pell has spent the last two months insisting he wasn’t being a jerk; just sticking to the rules and blah blah blah.

Not the behavior we’d like in a judge.

Or a human.

May 29, 2026

This morning, Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), who just lost his primary after President Donald J. Trump endorsed Republican challenger Ken Paxton, posted:

“An old, but apt fable:

“A scorpion wants to cross a river but cannot swim, so it asks a frog to carry it across. The frog hesitates, afraid that the scorpion might sting it, but the scorpion promises not to, pointing out that it would drown if it killed the frog in the middle of the river. The frog considers this argument sensible and agrees to transport the scorpion. Midway across the river, the scorpion stings the frog anyway, dooming them both. The dying frog asks the scorpion why it stung despite knowing the consequence, to which the scorpion replies: ‘I am sorry, but I couldn’t help myself. It’s my character.’”

Cornyn appears to be firing a shot across the president’s bow, and now that Trump has alienated Senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and John Cornyn of Texas by endorsing their opponents, there are six Republican senators who may be willing to stop moving in lockstep with him.

Trump’s war on Iran and the rising prices Americans are enduring in its wake are costing him support from all but his most fervent base, and there is no immediate solution that will make those problems go away. As Noah Berlatsky noted in Public Notice yesterday, no matter what he does in Iran, Trump will leave that situation with a loss. “[I]f Trump escalates, people are going to hate him. If he surrenders, people are going to hate him. If he dithers, people are going to hate him. He has no good options,” Berlatsky wrote, “which is why he’s spinning in place, hoping someone, anyone, will rescue him.”

There has been more noise today about how the U.S. and Iran are on the verge of an agreement, but so far it has come to naught. Luke Broadwater of the New York Times reported today that Trump met with advisors for two hours today in the Situation Room to discuss the agreement but came to no decision about it. What did happen today is that officials from both Chevron and Exxon warned that oil inventories are dangerously low, raising concerns about dramatic price spikes.

As Americans sour on Trump’s economy, lawmakers are backing away from his self-aggrandizing plans for a new $250 bill with his face on it for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. While the administration, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, is touting the plan, Scott MacFarlane of MeidasTouch notes that the necessary congressional approval is not forthcoming as lawmakers recognize that releasing a $250 bill raises images of gilded ballrooms and extravagance at a time when Americans are having trouble paying for gas and groceries.

It is currently against the law to put a living president on currency, so it will take an act of Congress to create this new bill. But, so far, only fifteen Republicans have cosponsored a bill to create the Trump $250 bill.

Trump’s other plans for demonstrating his power also took at least symbolic hits today.

Today Judge Christopher Cooper of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ordered the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to remove Trump’s name from the building, and from all official materials and signage, within fourteen days and blocked its plan to close for two years. As Chris Geidner of Law Dork explained, Cooper stood firm on Congress’s authority over the Kennedy Center. “Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name,” he wrote, “and only Congress can change it.”

Cooper also found that the board of the Kennedy Center agreed to close it for two years without advice of legal counsel and that Matt Floca, the Kennedy Center’s executive director and chief operating officer since Trump appointee Ric Grenell left, “had served in the role of Kennedy Center Executive Director for all of a few minutes before suggesting that the institution be shut down for years.”

Yesterday, Trump’s Freedom 250 organization, which he set up to compete with the bipartisan America 250 celebration of the nation’s birthday, announced that nine musical artists would perform at a sixteen-day “Great American State Fair” it was sponsoring on the National Mall. By today, most of the performers had pulled out after realizing that they had not been invited to be part of the nonpartisan America 250 but instead had been invited to Trump’s personal version of the anniversary celebration.

Dan Lamothe and Alex Horton of the Washington Post reported today that Trump is working hard for a certain kind of vibe at another Freedom 250 event: his Ultimate Fighting Championship matches at the White House for his 80th birthday on June 14. They reported that the Pentagon is trying to recruit hundreds of troops to show up to watch the matches in their uniforms. In addition to paying for their own travel, those military personnel must meet height and weight requirements.

U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia Leonie M. Brinkema temporarily stopped the Department of Justice from creating or operating the so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund, the $1.776 billion slush fund the administration created to pay off those convicted of committing crimes to help President Donald J. Trump overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The administration cannot transfer money to the fund, consider any claims for payments from it, or pay out any money from it.

Louise Radnofsky and Lydia Wheeler of the Wall Street Journal report that those challenging the fund are people and entities prosecuted or threatened by the Trump administration. The plaintiffs say the government is not treating them on a par with Trump loyalists as worthy of compensation for government “weaponization.”

Brinkema has scheduled a hearing on the case for June 12.

This afternoon, yesterday’s request by thirty-five federal judges that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams reopen the legal case Trump, his oldest sons, and the Trump Organization had brought against the IRS bore fruit. Although the Trumps dropped the suit, the Department of Justice used it as justification for the establishment of the $1.776 billion slush fund to pay off those who claimed the country’s legal system had been “weaponized” against them because they were convicted of crimes related to their actions to help Trump overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Today Williams ordered Trump’s lawyers to respond to the judges’ filing by June 12 and to address the judges’ claims that the two sides in the case—the Trumps on the one hand and the Internal Revenue Service, which Trump oversees, on the other—were not in fact adversaries in the case.

Josh Dawsey, Sadie Gurman, and C. Ryan Barber of the Wall Street Journal reported that more than a dozen Republican senators have privately asked Trump advisors to get rid of the slush fund, suggesting it will be hard to defend on the campaign trail before this fall’s midterm elections.

As the courts and the American people challenge Trump, he is lashing out. He responded to the judge’s order to take his name off the Kennedy Center with a long social media screed in which he insisted that he alone was “saving a dying Performing Arts Center” and said he would “transfer this failing Institution back to” Congress, although of course it was never his to command.

“There has never been a President of the United States who has been treated so unfairly by the Courts as I but, that’s OK, I will continue to do, what is considered to be, a great job for the wonderful people of our Country.” Then, in another long screed, he complained that the New York Times “is doing everything possible to criticize the magnificent restoration of the Reflecting Pool.”

But as Trump lashes out, his loyalists are working to consolidate their power.

The Office of Management and Budget, overseen by director Russell Vought, who was instrumental in the construction of Project 2025, has proposed a sweeping change in federal rules that would put Trump’s appointees in charge of billions of dollars of federal grants. According to Ryan Quinn of Inside Higher Ed, the change would empower Trump’s appointees to kill grants that aren’t aligned with Trump’s priorities. That includes grants awarded to universities through the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.

Earlier this month, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) president Sally Kornbluth said that federally funded research at MIT is down 20% compared to last year. That is a striking loss for one of the most influential and productive research communities in the world,” she said. The number of graduate students MIT takes on will also drop by about 20%, or about 500 fewer.

As Erica Orden of Politico reported yesterday, in the case of the firing of former FBI director James Comey’s daughter Maurene Comey from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Karen Lesperance, a lawyer for the Department of Justice, told Judge Jesse Furman of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York that the government’s position is that Trump has the power to fire anyone, even if he is doing so for political reasons. When Furman asked if there were any limits to that power—could he fire people to create an “all-white executive branch? Or all-Black?” he asked—Lesperance avoided the question.

Comey’s lawyer said the Justice Department’s position was a “novel and breathtaking theory about the scope of” presidential power.

Trump and his loyalists have tried for months now to get control of state voter lists but have lost repeatedly in court, since the Constitution establishes that states run elections. Today the United States Postal Service has proposed that it will send mail-in ballots only to voters who are registered with the federal government.

As Jacob Knutson and Jim Saksa of Democracy Docket note, this “would represent a massive expansion of federal control over voting, without congressional authorization.”

Notes:

https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/judge-pauses-trumps-anti-weaponization-fund-during-legal-challenge-facda6a8?mod=bluesky

Public Notice
Trump has no way out on Iran
Read more

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/05/29/world/iran-war-us-trump-deal/96858bf5-a1a8-5397-8020-9b85fba3e098

https://washingtonian.com/2026/05/29/the-great-american-state-fair-meltdown-explained/

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/insight/exxon-chevron-warn-of-oil-price-spike-as-inventories-plunge/gm-GM4E85FDB0

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/05/29/pentagon-recruiting-troops-watch-white-house-ufc-fights-memos-show/

https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/trumps-1-8-billion-settlement-fund-sparks-alarm-inside-white-house-a9703af9

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/government/science-research-policy/2026/05/29/omb-proposes-rules-establishing-political

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/05/15/mit-president-blames-federal-policy-shifts-big-drop-research-campus/

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/28/doj-case-presidential-maurene-comey-00942066

Law Dork
Federal judge ends Kennedy Center name change, bars two-year closure plans for now
On Friday, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper blocked, for now, the Trump administration’s plans to close the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for two years and ordered the center to — quite literally — take President Donald Trump’s name off of the building…
Read more

https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/postal-service-trump-attack-mail-voting-proposed-rule/

https://www.npr.org/2026/05/28/nx-s1-5838002/treasury-department-prepares-250-bill-with-trumps-face-on-it

X:

JohnCornyn/status/2060335046515396809

Trump’s Truth:

statuses/38874

statuses/38877

Bluesky:

joycewhitevance.bsky.social/post/3mmyopuliis22

macfarlanenews.bsky.social/post/3mmyw6hbzys2z

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Weaponizing the Department of Justice

SpaceX launches 50th Starlink mission of 2026

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Station on the Starlink 17-41 mission on May 30, 2026. Image: SpaceX

Update May 30, 1:30 p.m. EDT (1730 UTC): SpaceX confirms deployment of the 24 Starlink satellites.

SpaceX launched its 50th dedicated Starlink mission of 2026 with a Falcon 9 launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base on Saturday morning.

The Starlink 17-41 mission added another 24 broadband internet satellites to the company’s low Earth orbit constellation. It consists of more than 10,000 spacecraft in orbit.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East happened at 8:25 a.m. PDT (11:25 a.m. EDT / 1525 UTC). The rocket will fly on a south-southwesterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1082. This was its 22nd flight after launching missions, like USSF-62, NROL-145, and OneWeb Launch 20.

More than eight minutes after liftoff, B1082 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You.’ This was the 199th landing on this vessel and the 617th booster landing to date for SpaceX.


Atlantic 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Atlantic 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image






Eastern North Pacific 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Eastern North Pacific 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image





Mary Childs, formerly of Planet Money, has a new podcast, called Mary in America (on which we talk about Moral Economics)

 Mary Childs, formerly of Planet Money, has a new podcast, called Mary in America.

I was the guest on her first interview: 

Organs, Sex Work, and Drugs: A Nobel Economist on Why Banning Things Can Backfire, Mary in America
 

"A Nobel Prize-winning economist makes the case that our moral objections to controversial markets are getting people killed. Alvin Roth won the Nobel Prize in Economics for figuring out how to build markets that work. Now he's turned his attention to the markets we refuse to build, and why that refusal has consequences nobody wants to talk about. In this episode, Mary and Al dig into what he calls "repugnant transactions" — the deals that some people want to make and others think shouldn't be allowed. They get into why banning organ sales creates black markets where donors get operated on in apartments, why the same logic that ended Prohibition applies to the war on drugs, how surrogacy bans in Europe are turning babies into stateless people, and why it's easy to buy heroin but nearly impossible to hire a hit man. Al's argument isn't that everything should be for sale. It's that if you care about outcomes more than intentions, you have to confront what your bans are actually doing. Subscribe for new episodes every week. Chapters: 00:00 Friendship Isn't A Market 00:32 Meet Nobel Economist Al Roth 01:02 What Makes a Market "Repugnant"? 02:58 Should We Pay People for Kidneys? 08:31 Why Drugs Thrive But Hit Men Don't 15:58 Surrogacy, Politics, and Unintended Consequences 21:45 Why Prohibition Keeps Failing 25:19 Markets, Morality, and Reality 28:19 The Rise of Prediction Markets 34:30 What Money Can't Buy"

Evolving Strategies in the Search for Extraterrestrial Civilizations

Looking for extraterrestrial life in the form of biosignatures will involve peering into the constituents of a planetary atmosphere and identifying out of equilibrium gases that tell us something biological is going on. But here’s the problem, as demonstrated recently in work on the exoplanet K2-18b. We’ve identified dimethyl sulfide at this world, which might just be a life detection. On Earth, dimethyl sulfide comes from dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), a compound that is produced by phytoplankton and has a clear role to play in marine ecosystems. The problem is that subsequent research on K2-18b has pointed to possible instrumental errors and the relatively low level of statistical confidence in the detection.

Nothing turned up in a SETI check of this world with the Very Large Array (New Mexico) and MeerKAT (South Africa, precursor to the Square Kilometre Array), which isn’t particularly surprising. We’re going to be getting more biosignature candidates in the coming decades as our instrumentation keeps improving, but even with the Habitable Worlds Observatory, the result of any interesting detection is going to be a race to figure out ways to produce the same gases without biology. Microbial life may be all over the galaxy (I suspect that it is), but I’m less and less sure we’re going to get any biosignature detections that anyone will consider ironclad this way.

Emergence of the Technosignature

That makes technosignatures more interesting than ever, especially since there is a good case to be made that any civilization we detect will be substantially older than ourselves, and thus gifted with technological powers we may not be able to imagine. Astroengineering is but one wonderful example of what we might encounter, but would we recognize it? Asking the same about vast structures like Dyson spheres or swarms is a hot topic because we do have current tools for observing them, and also archival data that may just contain evidence of them. But we have to know what to look for.

To that end, a new paper has just arrived that is going to be a touchstone for technosignature research for some time to come. Clément Vidal (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium) and a large team of co-authors have produced the critical review document needed to consolidate what has been done so far and help newcomers to the work orient themselves with the directions that will be needed next. This is a satisfying event, because it also comes at a time when we are about to get the first graduate-level text on interstellar flight, which should itself inspire future careers. We’ve also just had Jason Wright’s first-rate textbook on SETI, which means that we are preparing the way for interstellar issues to become embedded in college and graduate school curricula. And that’s how we get the next generation of scientists.

Image: Philosopher Clément Vidal’s background in logic and cognitive sciences has led him into new formulations for SETI, as in his 2014 book The Beginning and the End: The Meaning of Life in a Cosmological Perspective. The current paper is an in-depth examination of past and present searches for technosignatures, with suggestions on the path forward. Credit: Clément Vidal.

Both these books are splendid, and I’ll have more on each as soon as the former is publicly released (very soon now). For now, though, let’s dig into the Vidal paper, which acknowledges the new Wright text and its coverage of the theory and practice of technosignature science as well as SETI itself. What Vidal and team set out to do is to create a definitive reference for the kind of technosignatures that have emerged thus far in the field, and the methods we might use to detect them. Those of us who think in terms of distant stars as possible sites for technosignatures may be surprised at the spatial scale strategy here, which actually begins with technosignature searching on Earth, then out to the Moon, the inner Solar System, the Oort Cloud and into interstellar space.

As I’m always interested in archival searches, I want to note the work of Beatriz Villarroel and team on plates from Palomar Observatory from the 1950s. This is of course before the satellite era, so it’s intriguing to find a number of unexplained point sources that disappear from subsequent plates. To guard against artifacts of the photographic emulsion, the team found a statistically significant (22 sigma) deficit of transients in Earth’s shadow. In other words, emulsion flaws are unlikely to be the source of the detected transients. Conceivably they could have been reflective objects that disappeared when entering the shadow. The findings are still being debated in the literature, but they point to the prospect of future searches on even older astronomical plates.

Image: This is Figure 5 of the paper. Caption: Nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950, from Villarroel et al. (2021): 10 x 10 arcmin field shown in POSS-1 and POSS-2 red bands. In the POSS-1 image we see a number of objects that cannot be subsequently found, marked with green circles. Purple circles are artifacts during the scanning process. About 9 objects are present in the POSS-I E image (left) from the 12th of April, but not in the POSS-2 image (right) from 1996. One slightly larger circle host two transients. In addition, the 9 objects are neither visible in the blue POSS-1 taken half an hour earlier, nor in a second POSS-1 red image taken six days later on April 18th. The 9 transients are not caused by a difference in depth or spectral sensitivity. The images are based on the DSS digitizations of the Palomar plates.

I won’t go through all the levels the authors mine other than to say that we move from searches for past Earth visitation and current research into Unidentified Aerial Phenomena through the question of ‘lurker’ or Bracewell probes in nearby space and even explore the Solar Gravitational Lens before moving into the kind of exoplanetary and stellar technosignatures that have thus far commanded the most attention in the field. We can’t limit this to our own galaxy because productive work has been done, especially by Wright’s team at Penn State, in examining numerous galaxies for the possible infrared signature of Dyson spheres or other large scale technologies.

Expanding the Already Daunting Search Space

Whereas the original Cocconi and Morrison paper on SETI (1959) assumed a signal deliberately sent in our direction by a species wanting to announce its presence, technosignatures demand no such intent to communicate, and rather than confining ourselves to particular slices of the electromagnetic spectrum, we should consider the possibility of going well past current laser strategies into areas only now coming online. Thus the emergence of low-freqency SETI via the multi-site LOFAR stations in Europe. Or consider the benefits of high-energy photons via X-ray lasers, which can can offer high rates of data transmission. Let me cite the paper on this:

In particular, X-ray lasers are capable of producing highly focused and intense X-ray beams with a very narrow divergence angle which allows for highly energy-efficient interstellar communication. While natural astrophysical sources of X-ray emissions are generally characterized by specific spectral lines, we could search for free electron lasers, which accelerate free electrons to nearly the speed of light, directing them through an alternating magnetic field in a way that produces highly coherent X-ray pulses (see Figure 20). Although above our present technological capabilities, fusion-powered X-ray lasers are another possibility to generate X-ray pulses.

Image: This is Figure 20 from the paper. Caption: Figure 20. A schematic illustration of a X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL). An electron gun fires a beam of electrons that are directed through an undulator after being accelerated through a particle accelerator. The beam of electrons then passes through an undulator, which is a periodic arrangement of magnets whose function is to produce the highly coherent X-ray pulses/beam. Diagram courtesy of Wikipedia, based on (Patterson and Abela 2010).

Another advantage: Lower background radiation as compared to radio waves, which make signals in this frequency range easier to detect against natural sources. Finding patterns of X-rays that do not jibe with natural sources would be sufficiently anomalous to catch our attention. X-rays also have advantages over longer wavelengths like radio waves because phenomena like scintillation are far less of a problem. I was interested to see that there have been archival searches through X-ray data. Michael Hippke and Duncan Forgan found in a 2017 paper that 19 candidate signals were present but could most likely be traced to astrophysical causes.

Bear in mind that at our current level of technology, a spectrum via the Chandra X-ray instrument takes five days to build. One suggested path forward is to move toward highly sensitive instruments with the necessary spectral resolution to detect the kind of narrow X-ray emissions such communications would represent. So it’s good to know that beyond Chandra and XMM-Newton we can look toward efforts like the European Space Agency’s Advanced Telescope for High ENergy Astrophysics (Athena), an X-ray telescope armed with X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) for high-resolution spectroscopy. A NASA flagship mission based on a concept called the Lynx X-ray Observatory made it into the 2020 Decadal Survey but as far as I know is not yet a confirmed mission.

So as we explore problematic options like X-rays (and the paper notes that G-class stars are good candidates here because they do not produce strong X-ray emission lines), we also push into little considered options like gamma rays, perhaps a signature of advanced propulsion. We also find interesting discussion in the paper on expanding the range by looking for communications signals happening within a target exoplanetary system, particularly as we begin to shift our own deep space communications into the laser range. Directed energy systems of the sort we have often considered here would produce a detectable signal, as would planetary radars used for self defense purposes.

Neutrinos, Gravitational Waves and Other Exotica

And here’s an interesting thought. As far back as Philip Morrison in a 1962 paper, neutrino communication has been suggested for an advanced civilization. Neutrinos react only slightly with matter, meaning that most of the Sun’s outer layers would be transparent to them, with only the dense core layers capable of absorbing them. That means the Solar Gravitational Lens effect for neutrinos starts in the range of 30 AU, roughly the orbit of Neptune. A search for a Bracewell probe is thus possible at a distance much closer than a photon-based signature from a probe at 550 AU.

Image: This is Figure 8 from the paper. Caption: The Solar Gravitational Lens (SGL) is a region where gravitational and neutrino radiation starts to focus (respectively at 22.45 AUs and 29.6 AUs) while the focus of electromagnetic (EM) rays starts from 547 AUs. Human or ETI observational or transmitting probes placed at these regions would benefit orders of magnitude of gains. Figure adapted from (Maccone 2009, xxxi). Credit: Vidal et al.

The authors note that neutrinos have been proposed for communications with submarines as well as interstellar uses. From the paper:

Their extremely low interaction cross-section makes them good candidates for interstellar communication, since they rarely interact with matter: they can travel through interstellar dust, gas clouds, planetary and stellar objects, or even strong magnetic fields surrounding pulsars and neutron stars with negligible attenuation. In other words, neutrino emissions are immune to common interstellar communication issues like dispersion, scattering, absorption, or polarization rotation (problems prevalent with electromagnetic signals). This enables neutrino signals to propagate across interstellar distances while maintaining coherence and fidelity.

Supposing an interstellar civilization wanted to create an aeon-spanning beacon of the sort imagined by some SETI advocates, a neutrino signal would have the advantage of standing out as distinctly structured in whatever modulation scheme chosen. The energy demands of a system like this are unimaginably beyond our own, but searching for technosignatures demands thinking in extravagant terms. With neutrinos the senders free themselves from issues of dispersion and scattering, producing a signal that can reach across the galaxy and remain coherent. I also want to mention Centauri Dreams regular Al Jackson’s take on such a technology in A Neutrino Beam Beacon, based on his 2019 paper. Al has also published with Greg Benford on gravitational wave transmitter concepts. It would be startling to find that the actual galactic conversation was taking place via gravitational wave methods.

My talking about X-rays, gamma rays and neutrinos is just a way of opening the window into the range that this lengthy paper covers. Who knew, for example, how much work had already gone into the theoretical detection of a starship? The various angles into the matter include analyzing motivations for starflight itself, the chief of which must surely be the continuing existence of a species. From the paper:

Survival motivations include avoiding a death threatening supernova or migrating towards a nearby star as the home star fades away (Zuckerman 1985; Hansen and Zuckerman 2021). A pioneering study by Hansen (2022) looked for close stellar encounters in the solar neighborhood. The strategy is then to look for active interstellar migration, where “generation ships” are sent during a close encounter window, hitting this window because it would cost orders of magnitude less time and energy than crossing the otherwise vast interstellar spaces. Hansen proposes this method as a way to constrain search targets because a lot of heat or communication signatures might be associated with such migration.

Interesting, to be sure, but look how many starship technosignature ideas spin out of it. Let’s assume two habitable zone planets around the same star, or perhaps in a binary system, so that civilization has expanded to set up technologies on both worlds. Here’s prime fodder for a technosignature search, and indeed TO!-2267 is a recently discovered example. We might then look for both travel signatures as well as communications, a particularly interesting idea when both planets transit.

Image: This is Figure 25 from the paper. Caption: Illustration of a gravitational machine (Dyson 1963) for accelerating spacecraft using binary star orbital energy. Diagram based on Mallove and Matloff (1989, p. 141). Credit: Vidal et al.

Researchers have considered three-body interactions that result in high-velocity ejections, or even waste signatures (‘interstellar contrails’), perhaps to be found in archival data. Robert Zubrin has studied cyclotron radiation caused by the interaction of the interstellar medium with a magnetic sail, while Ulvi Yurtsever and Stephen Wilkinson have worked on the interactions of a relativistic spacecraft with Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) photons.

The list could go on, and I haven’t even gotten into Alcubierre-class ‘warp’ drive vessels and the perplexing technosignatures these might produce. Well, this I just have to quote, as temporal matters have their own fascination. Here the authors are discussing what they call a ‘bi-modal signal’ unique to a warp drive craft, for the bubble of spacetime as we observe it is moving faster than the speed of the emissions it is sending out:

This mechanism is a purely craft motion effect, since the craft is moving super-luminally, essentially outrunning the signals it produced earlier in its path. Thus, a distant observatory would record emissions that occurred at two different times simultaneously. One signal would move in the apparent direction of the craft’s motion, showing the emissions occurring in the correct, forward order in time. The second highly unusual signal would move in the opposite apparent direction, presenting the craft’s emissions in a reversed temporal order. This technosignature is considered a key observable (Lentz and Felton 2024) because there is no known natural phenomenon that could produce such a signal.

Image: This is Figure 26 from the paper. Caption: The York-time representation of an Alcubierre spacetime bubble, showing a localized region of warped space with contracted space ahead and expanded space behind. Credit: Vidal et al.

Getting Technosignatures into the Universities

Whether a lightsail, a ramjet, or even a planetary or stellar engine, the interstellar craft has been examined in terms of observational consequences as what we often call ‘Dysonian SETI’ evolves. The unusual waveform of a starship undergoing velocity changes is worth noting as well, again a matter of developing the future tech in the form of sufficiently sensitive gravitational wave detectors. The authors point out that natural objects are also in the mix. Could ejected rogue planets be carrying interstellar colonists, a huge generation ship that might be identified through analysis of its trajectory?

We should have plenty to work with closer to home with the upcoming availability of the Vera Rubin Observatory and the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope looking for objects on hyperbolic trajectories that may be cometary or conceivably technological debris or even active probes. Anomalous occultations in the outer Solar System are obvious targets for existing resources, and radio searches of the Solar Gravitational Lensing region between the Sun and Alpha Centauri have already been conducted. Given the proximity of the outer regions of the Oort Cloud with what may be a comparable region around the Alpha Centauri stars, technosignature searches here seem warranted as well.

I send you to this paper with enthusiasm. Its 118 pages are packed with ideas and as you can see, hardly limited to what we might detect on an exoplanetary surface, although those settings do of course come into play. Given how exciting it has been to witness the birth of direct exoplanet observation since the mid-90s, the extension and consolidation of new ideas for SETI is moving along a similarly fast track, with the obvious and overwhelming exception that it has yet to uncover the kind of observable its practitioners are hoping to find. The massive upgrade in available data that Breakthrough Listen has provided has resulted in no detections. The notion that we have only begun to search is wearing thin. As Jim Benford puts it, “It is too late to say that it is too early to tell.” Clearly, the Fermi question maintains its vitality, and its implications.

The paper is Vidal et al., “The Search for Technosignatures: a Review of Possibilities,” begun as a collective workshop at the Penn State SETI Symposium (PSETI 2023) and now available as a preprint.

80,000 Hours: The Book

Forty hours a week, fifty weeks a year, forty years: a career is about 80,000 hours. Yet it’s striking how little serious thought goes into career decisions relative to, say, choosing a mortgage. Indeed, you are almost supposed to tell a story about how a random incident changed your life. One summer a circus came to town—and that’s the whole reason I became an economist! (True story!). Career advice, when it exists, often amounts to the platitude of “follow your passions!” Ugh. If you ask people what their passions are, music, arts and sports top the list but guess what? There aren’t enough jobs in those categories to go around.

Benjamin Todd’s newly updated book, 80,000 Hours is a unique examination of careers that runs the numbers in a serious way. The book is framed along Effective Altruism lines and it has some good public policy material. Pandemics, for example,

The world has plenty of religious cults, despots and would-be school shooters who might decide they want to take everyone else down with them…. The world [c]ould be one lab leak away from catastrophe.

Given what we know about the pace and accessibility of bioengineering tools, the chance that there will be a pandemic that kills over 100 million people during the next century seems high, plausibly similar or greater than the risk of large-scale nuclear war or climate change above six degrees. An engineered pandemic could also kill over 90% of the population,suggesting its overall scale is significantly larger.

But risks from pandemics are, even now, far more neglected than either of these. In comparison to $6bn–$10bn of philanthropic funding for climate change, and $1.6 trillion of total climate finance, pandemic prevention only receives $1bn of philanthropic funding, and total spending aimed at reducing the chance of worst-case pandemics is probably under $10bn.

See also my paper Pandemic Preparation Without Romance on what to do about it.

The opening chapters present the EA framing but most of the book has good advice even for the purely selfish–advice on building skills, networking and how to actually get a job. From what I have said so far, one might get the impression that the idea is to rationally choose your career at age 16 and then optimize your life around that plan. Not so! Todd rightly divides career paths into explore, build and deploy categories. Most people under-explore. It’s ok to jump around jobs and places, especially when you are young, so long as you are building skills and not just accumulating items for the CV. There’s evidence, for example, that scientists’ best work tends to follow periods of exploration with exploitation.

I also appreciate that Todd specifically warns about about armchair theorizing. Pro-and-con lists, for example, are ok but far less useful than getting out of the chair and actively exploring. Go talk with people, try something for a week, go somewhere. Look for cheap tests.

Start with what’s easiest. We often find people who want to, say, try out economics, who then apply for a master’s degree. That’s a huge investment of time. Instead, think about how you can learn This could mean first reading an economics textbook, or taking a single course.

You can think about creating a ‘ladder’ of tests. Start with the cheapest ways to test your options, then after each step, re-evaluate. A ladder might look like this:
a. Read our relevant career reviews, all our research on a given topic, and talk to LLMs about what the jobs are like (two to five hours).
b. Speak to someone in the area (two hours).
c. Speak to a friend to get an outside perspective on what’s best (two hours).
d. Speak to three more people who work in the area and read one or two books (twenty hours).
e. Given your findings, look for a relevant project that might take one to four weeks of work – like applying to jobs, volunteering in a related role, or doing a side project in the area – to see what it’s like and how you perform.
f. Only then consider taking on a two- to twenty-four month commitment – like a work placement, internship or graduate study. Being offered a trial position with an organization for a couple of months can be ideal because both you and the organization want to quickly assess your fit.

80000 Hours is The Random Walk Down Wall Street of career advice, the one book that really matters.

Explore, build rare and valuable skills, point them at a meaningful problem, and passion will follow rather than lead. And for those who don’t want to read a book, speak to an 80,000 Hours advisor. It’s a very cheap test.

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How to improve British procurement

Until two years ago, West London’s Greenford Tube station used to flood whenever it rained heavily. The train tracks are aboveground, but the ticket office would often get inundated. Sandbags still line the corridor.

But in October 2023, a new family moved in nearby, determined to halt the water. The family members built their house from scratch with local wood and kept odd hours, sleeping all day and working only at dawn and dusk. They even put their young children to work.

The new neighbors were beavers.

In West London, conservationists got a government license to resettle a family of five beavers in a 20-acre urban park near the Greenford Tube station. It used to be a golf course, with a creek running through it. Within weeks, the beavers dammed up the creek, creating a pond that holds water and stops it from spilling into the city. They also diverted the creek’s flow into smaller tributaries, creating a wetland that better absorbs heavy rainfall — mitigating the risk of flooding downstream…

The beavers have also allowed the city to scrap expensive plans to dig a reservoir and levee.

Here is the full story, via Mike Doherty.  Should you need a government license to resettle beavers?

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From Cannons to Chronometers to Factories

The conventional history of industrialization is usually told through textiles. The story begins with spinning jennies, water frames, and power looms in eighteenth-century Britain, then proceeds through steam engines, factories, railroads, and mass production. In this narrative, precision engineering appears as a supporting character. Clocks, scientific instruments, artillery, and machine tools are important, but they are not the main story.

Interchangeable Parts I, made on Titles with my Bucket Art model

There is, however, another possible narrative. Instead of beginning with factories, it begins with precision. Instead of asking how production scaled, it asks how the modern world learned to make things reliably identical. From this perspective, marine chronometers, artillery reform, interchangeable manufacture, machine tools, and mass production appear not as separate stories but as successive phases of a single historical development.

The central hypothesis is that between roughly 1750 and 1800 France developed a distinctive culture of precision centered on military engineering, navigation, metrology, and scientific instrumentation. This culture did not itself create industrial capitalism. Instead, it created the conceptual and technical preconditions for industrial capitalism. The United States later inherited portions of this French precision culture and transformed them into a system of scalable industrial production.


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The resulting genealogy looks something like this:

French precision regime → artillery reform → precision measurement and gauging → interchangeable manufacture → American armories → machine tools → industrial scale.

Marine chronometry was not a parallel curiosity. It was one of the most advanced expressions of the same precision culture.

The starting point is not any particular invention but a set of institutions. Eighteenth-century France possessed a remarkable ecosystem linking the state, the military, scientific academies, engineering schools, observatories, naval establishments, and manufacturing arsenals. Figures such as Gribeauval, Borda, Berthoud, and Le Roy moved within overlapping networks concerned with measurement, standardization, calibration, and reproducibility. The common problem was not manufacturing as such. It was making reality legible, measurable, and governable.[1]

This perspective helps explain why apparently unrelated projects emerged at roughly the same moment. The Gribeauval reforms standardized artillery. Berthoud and Le Roy pursued increasingly reliable marine chronometers. Borda developed navigational and scientific instruments. Later generations created the metric system. These developments are usually treated separately because they belonged to different domains. Yet all addressed essentially the same question: how can performance be made independent of individual craftsmanship?

The case of artillery is especially revealing. Traditional artillery systems depended heavily on local variation, artisanal judgment, and ad hoc logistics. Gribeauval’s achievement was not simply to improve cannon design. His real innovation was systemic. He reduced the variety of calibers, standardized carriages, established measurement practices, and simplified logistical support. The result was not merely better cannon but a more coherent artillery system.[2]

Marine chronometry reveals the same logic operating at a higher level of precision. John Harrison’s great chronometers remain among the most astonishing achievements in the history of craftsmanship. Yet Landes argues that Harrison’s approach represented something of a technological cul-de-sac. The future belonged less to singular masterpieces than to designs capable of replication, maintenance, and standard manufacture. The French contribution was to shift attention from extraordinary clocks to reproducible chronometers.[3]

At first glance artillery and chronometers appear to have little in common. One is a large iron object measured in millimeters. The other is a delicate brass mechanism measured in fractions of millimeters. The connection emerges through the world of mechanisms and instruments.

The crucial intermediate technology was the gunlock. The firing mechanism of a musket required interacting moving parts—springs, tumblers, sears, pivots, and catches—that had to fit together reliably. Such mechanisms demanded a level of precision beyond that required for artillery but below that required for chronometers. More importantly, military demand created pressure for repeatability. If one lock failed, replacement mattered. Armies therefore had incentives to pursue standardization and eventually interchangeability.

This was the world of Honoré Blanc. Blanc’s famous demonstrations did not involve entire muskets but lock mechanisms assembled from collections of supposedly interchangeable parts. The significance of these demonstrations lay less in their immediate practical success than in the conceptual breakthrough they represented. Precision was no longer merely a property of individual objects. It was becoming a property of systems.[4]

The deeper bridge in the story may actually be the instrument makers rather than the gunsmiths. Scientific instruments, navigational instruments, clocks, chronometers, and gun mechanisms all belonged to a common artisanal ecosystem. The modern distinction between clockmakers, machinists, gunsmiths, and instrument makers had not yet fully emerged. The same culture of springs, pivots, tolerances, gauges, and geometric fitting linked all of these trades.

The most important artifact in this world was probably not the chronometer or the musket. It was the gauge.

A gauge transforms precision from an individual accomplishment into a transferable standard. A master craftsman may create a perfect component through skill and judgment. A gauge allows others to reproduce that component without possessing the master’s skill. Precision ceases to reside in people and begins to reside in systems. This shift may be the true conceptual breakthrough underlying modern industry.

The American story begins when this French precision culture crosses the Atlantic.

Benjamin Franklin represents the earliest connection. Franklin’s years in London and Paris immersed him in networks devoted to practical science, engineering, and useful knowledge. His significance lies less in transmitting specific technologies than in connecting the American republic to Enlightenment cultures of experimentation and technical competence.[5]

Thomas Jefferson presents a more intriguing case. Historians often place Jefferson and Hamilton on opposite sides of the early American debate over industrialization. Jefferson appears as the agrarian republican committed to a nation of independent farmers, while Hamilton appears as the advocate of finance, manufacturing, and industrial development. Yet this opposition obscures an important paradox.

Jefferson was fascinated by technology. He admired scientific instruments, architecture, surveying methods, agricultural improvements, and manufacturing techniques. Most significantly, while serving in Paris he encountered Blanc’s demonstrations of interchangeable manufacture and became an enthusiastic observer of the project.[6]

This creates a striking historical irony. The man later remembered as America’s great agrarian thinker helped import one of the foundational ideas of industrial manufacturing.

The paradox dissolves once we recognize that Jefferson opposed not technology but dependence. His fear was not machinery itself. His fear was the emergence of a propertyless industrial proletariat resembling those of Europe. Jefferson appears to have believed that technological sophistication could coexist with a republic of independent producers. Precision manufacturing and agrarian republicanism therefore appeared compatible rather than contradictory.

Whether this vision was historically achievable is another question. What matters is that Jefferson likely did not perceive any contradiction between admiration for interchangeable manufacture and commitment to a decentralized republic.

Hamilton’s role was different. If Jefferson imported a manufacturing technique, Hamilton imported a political economy. The Report on Manufactures argued for national development, industrial capacity, finance, and state support for productive enterprise. Hamilton supplied institutional frameworks. Jefferson helped transmit technical methods. Together they imported different aspects of the broader Atlantic transformation.[7]

The decisive American development occurred not in philosophy but in the armories. At Springfield and Harpers Ferry, the idea of interchangeability became linked to machine production. Figures such as John Hall, Simeon North, and Thomas Blanchard developed systems involving gauges, jigs, fixtures, inspection procedures, and specialized machine tools. The goal was no longer simply to produce precise parts. The goal was to produce precision systematically.[8]

This was the moment when precision ceased to be an artisanal achievement and became an industrial process.

Seen from this perspective, the history of industrialization unfolds through four stages.

The first stage is precision as craftsmanship. Harrison represents this world. Success depends on extraordinary skill embodied in individual artifacts.

The second stage is precision as standardization. Gribeauval, Le Roy, and Berthoud belong here. The objective is not perfection but conformity to standards.

The third stage is precision as interchangeability. Blanc and the American armories exemplify this phase. The critical insight is that any compliant component may replace any other.

The fourth stage is precision as infrastructure. Railroads, machine-tool industries, telegraph systems, and mass production belong to this world. Standards cease to govern individual artifacts and begin to govern entire networks.

The economic payoff of precision emerges only gradually. Precision by itself has limited economic significance. The true breakthrough occurs when precision enables substitutability. Once components become interchangeable, inventories shrink, repair becomes simpler, production scales more easily, and networks become possible. Precision becomes valuable not because objects are more accurate but because they become more fungible.

Textiles fit into this story in an interesting way. The early textile revolution was largely concerned with labor substitution, power transmission, and factory organization. Its initial trajectory was somewhat separate from the precision revolution. During the nineteenth century, however, the two streams converged. Textile mills increasingly depended upon machine tools, standardized components, and precision manufacture. The Lowell system belongs largely to this later phase of convergence. Factories supplied the organizational model; precision engineering supplied the technical foundation. Modern industry emerged when these two traditions fused.

The broader implication is that the history of industrialization may be understood as a transition from craftsmanship to protocols. The crucial question was never simply how to make better artifacts. It was how to make artifacts conform to standards independently of the individuals who produced them.

Gribeauval’s artillery, Berthoud’s chronometers, Blanc’s lock mechanisms, Jefferson’s observations in Paris, the American armories, and the machine-tool industry all represent successive steps in that transformation. The ultimate achievement was not the creation of precision. It was the creation of systems capable of reproducing precision indefinitely.

Notes

[1] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution: Arms and Enlightenment in France, 1763–1815 (1997); Jan Golinski, Science as Public Culture (1992).

[2] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Jonathan A. Grant, Rulers, Guns, and Money (2007).

[3] David S. Landes, Revolution in Time (1983); Rupert T. Gould, The Marine Chronometer (1923).

[4] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Merritt Roe Smith, Harpers Ferry Armory and the New Technology (1977).

[5] Edmund Morgan, Benjamin Franklin (2002); Joyce Chaplin, The First Scientific American (2006).

[6] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Silvio Bedini, Thomas Jefferson and His Copying Machines (1984); Jefferson correspondence from Paris period.

[7] Alexander Hamilton, Report on Manufactures (1791); Michael Lind, Land of Promise (2012).

[8] David A. Hounshell, From the American System to Mass Production, 1800–1932 (1984); Merritt Roe Smith, Harpers Ferry Armory and the New Technology (1977).

Time, Enlightenment and Romanticism Between Modernity and Divergence

Last month, in the book club, we read Inventing Nature by Andrea Wulf, about the life and work of Alexander von Humboldt. This month, I ended up also reading Wulf’s earlier book on the Jena set, Magnificent Rebels, which is on our side quests list. Alexander von Humboldt, along with his brother William, were both part of this set, though the former was arguably on the margins of it rather than the core, in part because he was gallivanting around South America during the crucial period, and in part because he was not humanist-reactionary enough to belong. The Jena set arguably invented the modern (essentialized and rather narcissistic) idea of “human.”

This month’s main pick was Revolution in Time by David Landes, which I’ve owned for 15 years (bought and scanned when I was writing Tempo) but hadn’t actually read until this month. I’m almost done with it and now wish I’d read it earlier. Evolution in time-keeping through the period we’re studying right now (1600-2000) is a critical subplot but really hard to appreciate in conventional accounts of it.

I’m just starting to read the June pick, The Business of Enlightenment by Robert Darnton, which covers the diffusion of Enlightenment ideas after 1770, through the medium of the later editions of Denis Diderot’s Encyclopédie (the first edition of which was completed between 1749-1772), which was as epochal an event in publishing history as in intellectual history.

The ideas we’re juggling in World Machine theory are starting to get quite complex, so I’m overdue for some synthesis/integration effort. This essay is a trial assembly of the gear-shift mechanism between the Modernity Machine and the Divergence Machine. It probably won’t make a whole lot of sense if you’re coming in cold to this series. I recommend catching up by browsing my previous World Machines writings, or better yet, pointing your LLM at them, and getting tldr-ed up.


NOTE: I’m writing this essay as much for the in-development AI agent at the World Machines project (WMP), as for the human readers of this newsletter. Both the WMP and this book club are now being hosted by the SIGPSY group (Special Interest Group in Psychohistory; no we’re not kidding) that has just kicked off in the Protocol Institute discord. Future book club chats will be held in the group’s #psychohistory channel of the Discord — details and invite link on the book club page.


A complicated but elegant picture is taking shape now, of how the Modernity Machine began giving way to the Divergence Machine through a full-stack set of revolutions, from rarefied and intellectual to bloody and violent, which drove the gear shift in the political, cultural, and economic infrastructures of the world, starting with Europe.

Enlightenment: From Idea to Infrastructure

The Darnton book, which might otherwise seem like a very oddly specialized and nerdy pick for our book club, is interesting precisely because it helps complete a picture of the gearshift dynamics in our world machines theory.

The book is not about the ideas of the Enlightenment itself (talk to ChatGPT about that if you’re participating in the book club), or even about the Encyclopédie itself, which was a late-stage synthesis of Enlightenment thinking. It is about the structural diffusion of Enlightenment thinking through the social fabric, transforming it from a subculture of marginal heretical ideas to civilizational infrastructure, through the best technological medium available at the time — print. The “installation” of the Encyclopédie completed the Modernity Machine, right on the eve of its obsolescence, and the beginning of its replacement by the Divergence Machine.

The story of Diderot and d’Alembert’s Encyclopédie was something like a second-order sequel to the first-order installation of print culture in the 15th century (which we read about last year in the The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe by Elizabeth Eisenstein). It was also very much like the installation of internet culture in our own time. As an encyclopedia, Diderot’s was an ancestor of Wikipedia, and like it, an expression of an infrastructural maturation, not just of an intellectual milieu.

The relationship of the publishing ecology around the Encyclopédie to the big names of the Enlightenment, like Newton, Bacon, and Locke, was something like the relationship of the internet in our time to names like Vannevar Bush and J. C. R. Licklider. The Encyclopedists, as the group contributing to, and publishing it came to be known, were something like the first wave of internet entrepreneurs in our time.

The Darnton book also puts the other history we’ve been exploring into perspective — the work of David Hume and Adam Smith (which coincided with the work of the Encyclopedists), Voltaire’s role as a thought leader (he was directly associated with the Encyclopedists), and the subtle influence of changing temporalities being driven by the maturation of time-keeping technology through the era.

I want to try and connect all these threads of development and paint a rough picture of how the transition between the Modernity Machine and Divergence Machines actually happened.

Let’s start with a timeline. It’s easy to get very confused by the complexity of various streams of events (I briefly badly confused myself by mixing up Roger Bacon (13th century) and Francis Bacon (17th century).

The Timeline of the Shift

Here is a rough view of the timeline, which is something of a Doctor Who style ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey stuff.

  • 1600: The intellectual phase of the Modernity Machine essentially ended around 1600, with the burning of Giordano Bruno at the stake in 1600 serving as a useful and macabre marker. Galileo, tried in 1633, is something of a transitional figure, playing a role in both WMs. So roughly between 1600 and 1640, the Modernity Machine entered production mode as completed infrastructure, and the seeds of the Divergence Machine were planted. It is worth noting that despite the name. the MM was firmly traditionalist, in the sense of being an operating system designed by and for the traditional ruling classes, monarchs, and religious authorities. The arrival of the MM was also a convergence to a kind of civilizational-infrastructural consensus that Europe was just starting to export to the rest of the world.

  • 1620-1690: The ideas of the Enlightenment, in the form synthesized later by the Encyclopedists, took shape roughly between 1620 and 1690. Three works are foundational: Newton’s Principia (1687), Locke’s Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690) and Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum (1620). It is worth noting that this period also corresponds to the early settlement of what would become the United States, which had already begun to shape the psyche of Europe (starting with tobacco, ending with revolutionary catalysis).

  • 1637-77 (Descartes and Spinoza): Two works have more complex relationships with the Enlightenment. Descartes’ Discourse on the Method (the “cogito ergo sum” book), 1637, was a prequel that the Enlightenment built on but superseded, while Spinoza’s Ethics (1677) was too radical for the Enlightenment proper to absorb, but sort of haunted it like a scary ghost in the Enlightenment infrastructure. Descartes doesn’t go far enough to be part of the Enlightenment, while Spinoza went too far. Leibniz appears in this sideshow tent of related figures too, but as marginal rather than structurally relevant, and something of a lolcow, thanks to Voltaire’s Pangloss parody. He does briefly re-emerge into relevance a couple of centuries later via Mach, Bergson etc. Interestingly, Leibniz has suffered a devaluation in status, similar to Bruno, through the reframings of our book club. But unlike Bruno, who I now think of as a largely irredeemable crackpot, Leibniz still retains critical value in the mathematics and computing storyline, if not in the philosophy storyline.

  • 1749-1789: The Enlightenment, as an institution, as opposed to a set of abstract ideas, was essentially an institutional compromise between radical and traditional thought brokered by the Encyclopédie in the decade before the French Revolution; between objectivity (Newton), empiricism (Bacon), and a natural conception of self (Locke) on the one hand, and ecclesiastical authority, divine monarchial authority, and the individual self as a sort of expression of the will of the Christian God. So the Enlightenment represented a cautious and pragmatic rupture from tradition that had just enough institutional support, in an era where it was struggling to survive. The Encyclopédie threaded that needle, through a mix of covert and ironic subversion and some compromise. It survived through its first edition years despite (somewhat nominal) official censorship, but escaped Inquisition grade active suppression/elimination efforts. Too many people in the establishment were sympathetic to the Encyclopedists for it to be seriously suppressed. But after 1770 and up to the French Revolution, it basically installed the Enlightenment as institutionalized social reality.

  • 1789-1799: The French Revolution, which to some extent drew inspiration from the American Revolution (which was culturally simpler, even if in other ways more profoundly consequential), marked the transition to the post-Enlightenment era. Immanuel Kant was the hinge figure (I’ve picked up this use of the word hinge from ChatGPT — delving into AI is good for your vocabulary), attempting to synthesize empiricism and idealism, subjective and objective, and personal and religious notions of self. A Critique of Pure Reason (1781) appears after the Encyclopedists, but before the Romantics.

  • 1790-1807: Following this arc of Enlightenment, from ideas to institutionalization (pirates to navy?), German romanticism appears in some ways as a reactionary cultural movement that reacted to the decentering of the human effected by the Enlightenment with what we could call Humanism 1.0. The official position of this newsletter is that all humanisms are reactionary. Some are just confused and call themselves progressive, a pattern that started in Jena. I’d heard of some of the key figures (Goethe, Alexander von Humboldt, Schiller) but not of others (Fichte, the Schlegel brothers and their wives, Schelling, Humboldt’s brother William). It was an oddly schizophrenic movement that seemed to believe that the Enlightenment simultaneously went too far, and not far enough. Schizophrenic, but consequential. German romanticism created the romantic idea of the self that is still the default idea we’re enculturated into, around the world, by the liberal middle class.

  • 1890s, 1910s, 2020s (Humanist spasms): Jena romanticism was a short-lived but intense phenomenon — just a decade or so, coinciding with the rise and fall of Napoleon (the romantics broadly supported both the French Revolution and Napoleon, which is sort of revealing in the same way people pivoting from Bernie to Trump is revealing). I think this is characteristic of humanist spasms between major technologically determined world machine eras. when humanist delusions of agency and significance are at a peak, along with anxieties about potential terminal insignificance. We see similar dynamics around the Bloomsbury group in the 1910-30 period (ironically associated with “modernist” literature). And we’re witnessing a similar period now, in anxious efforts to reclaim a human center for an AI age. The Pope’s recent encyclical on AI is notable more for clearly flagging the nature of humanist tendencies in any era than for things it says about AI. Modern trads, Progressive anti-AI types, Singularitarian AI doomers, AGI theologists, metamodernists, re-enchantment types, and the Catholic Church all share a loose humanism comprising a variety of flavors of neo-romanticism. Which to first order is just techlash+poignant poetry.

  • 1848-89: The period of the Encyclopédie’s brief reign as the high-water-mark of civilization (roughly 1770-1789) is uncannily like the reign of the the early internet era, (roughly 1969-1993) and the neoliberal ideological tendency that accompanied it. Both were terminated by seismic geopolitical events (the American and French revolutions; the end of the Cold War and 9/11) and followed by a second wave of smaller revolutions (the revolutions of 1848, known as the springtime of nations, and the Arab Spring through Trumpism in our time). Modern nation-states may have been conceptually started with the Peace of Westphalia, but became a practical reality starting around 1848 (there are multiple books about this year; one is in our side quests list — Revolutionary Spring by Christopher Clark).

  • Trump as a Farcical Napoleon: There are uncanny but twisted similarities between the careers and historical roles of Napoleon and Trump, a case of history repeating itself, first as tragedy then as farce. Both had similar relationships with the prevailing revolutionary tendencies in their times, and similarly weird relationships with cultural elites. Curious learning: Napoleon was apparently much more attached to a self-image as a scholar than as a conquering general and emperor. He traveled with a personal librarian and campaign library while on the warpath and signed documents with his title as a memory of the French Academy of Sciences. I’d really like to read a comparative biography in about a decade.

  • End of History, 1806 vs. 1991: Hegel marks the completion of the philosophical transition away from the Enlightenment to the post-Enlightenment era, ending the brief reign of the Romantics. His is a complex legacy. While on the one hand he replaced the Enlightenment’s universalist pretensions with a historically contingent (and therefore structurally divergent) understanding of reality, the specific understanding he argued for was teleologically convergent towards an “end of history.” That’s always been one of my favorite ideas, in the form that emerged in our time, via Kojeve and Fukuyama, but I’ve always wondered why Hegel himself proclaimed the end to have occured at the Battle of Jena in 1806, when Napoleon steamrolled through Prussia via Jena. That always seemed oddly arbitrary to me. But now, in the context of Jena romanticism, it is somewhat clearer, and I realize I was unfairly thinking of Hegel as a small-minded creature of his own times. Hegel briefly overlapped with the Jena set in Jena, and had to leave in a hurry when Napoleon invaded (just barely saving the only draft of Phenomenology of Self — weird to think of a time when making backups was actually hard and losing valuable work was not attributable to sheer carelessness). But his choice of 1806 is at least as defensible as Fukuyama’s choice of 1991 (which I think is actually the correct date implied by the model).

The Gear Shift

According to World Machine theory, the Divergence Machine began to emerge around 1600, and was completed and put into production in 2000. So the 1750/1850 period is likely where the S-curves cross, so to speak; the rising curve of the DM intersecting the plateau of the MM and begining to disrupt it. Viewed in this light, the events in that period lend themselves to a specific interpretation.

First, the Enlightenment was divergent in content, but convergent in intent. The intellectual content was pluralist, as suggested by the fact that it took an encyclopedia to synthesize it, rather than a single authoritative interpretation. Its natural tendency was to spark a sort of Cambrian explosion of divergent thought, which did in fact happen, in the form of Romanticism and in the historicist-contingent Hegelian eras that followed. But on its own terms, the Enlightenment was convergent. It attempted to construct a monolithic understanding of the world and the place of humans within it, to directly compete with the similarly monolithic understandings of received tradition. By this account, we can think of the Enlightenment as a late-stage infrastructure project of the Modernity Machine. The Toyota Prius phase between IC and EV automobiles, so to speak.

But centrifugal forces overcame centripetal ones, and it was the post-Kant inheritors of the legacy of the Enlightenment who actually ported its logic to it’s natural home in the Divergence Machine. The idea of the self inaugurated by John Locke was taken to its natural conclusion by Fichte, who laid the foundations for thinkers like Freud who came a century later. The logic of the universe as first perceived by Newton, which led to a reductionist understanding of it, was engineered into the logic of divergence by Humboldt, who foreshadowed Darwin’s completion of the task of conceptualizing nature in divergentist terms.

Divergence dynamics fundamentally yield to, rather than resist, centrifugal forces, allowing the monolithic to give way to the pluralistic; objective consensus to subjective dissensus; and perhaps most importantly, the synchronized to the asynchronous.

This last is the counterintuitive lesson of the evolution of time-keeping: Clocks drove divergence as they improved, not convergence.

Clocks and Asynchronicity

Technology is generally not considered part of the Enlightenment story, which is generally considered a story about science and philosophy. But it should be part of the story. Particularly a technology that was the computing of its time — time-keeping.

The most significant developments in time-keeping unfolded over exactly the same period that the events on our timeline unfold. Galileo’s pendulum discovery around 1637 begins the story, and John Harrison’s H4 chronometer, which finally claimed the Longitude prize in 1761, concludes it. Over that long century, clocks grew smaller, cheaper, and far more accurate. Accurate enough to help disrupt one world machine and power its successor.

A naive view of the history of the clock is that it led to convergence and synchronization of civilization. As it turns out, this is the opposite of the actual story. I’ve been sort of clumsily reconstructing the actual story since around 2018 (when I gave a talk about it), and I wished I’d actually read Landes earlier, because it makes the story clear, and I didn’t have to reinvent the wheel.

The big lesson of the book is that between the 13th century, when large mechanical clocks began to be built, and our era, when we finally shed our quartz wristwatches in favor of ubiquitous GPS-driven time displays on all our screens, two sets of changes unfolded in tension with each other: Time-keeping simultaneously got more precise (due to fundamental scientific-technical advances) and more decentralized (due to becoming smaller and cheaper, via a Moore’s Law type dynamic).

To put it crudely, in the Modernity Machine, time was inaccurate and centralized, under the authoritarian control of the owners and keepers of monumental water clocks and mechanical turret clocks in clock towers of the 14th century. For 300 years there was a steady but mostly futile push towards both accuracy and decentralization. Small, personal-scale mechanical timepieces (comparable to modern wristwatches) were being made as early as the 14th century. The problem was, though they were very clever mechanically, they were extremely inaccurate compared to larger clocks, which were themselves pretty bad and had to be constantly reset to match solar time. At the smallest scale, the value of mechanical clocks lay more in their ability to drive complicated clockwork toys (popular with nobility around the world) than tell time.

The 17th century changed that. Galileo’s pendulum made large clocks radically more accurate, and the development of the balance spring made small, personal scale clocks and watches more accurate than the clock towers of previous centuries. Externally imposed (by monarchs and priests) time authority gave way to internally maintained time discipline. External locus of control gave way to internal locus of control. The modern self was born, with an internally clocked psyche.

Basically clocks grew far more decentralized than they grew usefully accurate (beyond a point, accuracy gains had low marginal value for pre-digital humans), and drove devolution of control over time to the smallest scales. You could now organize your personal life by your personal watch, and gain all the benefits of accurate time-keeping, without subjecting yourself to time-keeping authority. You could coordinate with personal friends and networks without relying on centralized time.

Fichte’s Ich philosophy could not have been conceived without the personalization of time. The French Revolution was arguably in part a response to the pressures created by disruptive time-keeping technologies.

This story largely played out over precisely the period that our revolutionary tale and the gear shift from MM to DM happened.

Here is one way to cash out the difference: The MM ran on centrally controlled turret clocks, the DM ran on personal-scale spring-driven watches and clocks. It was a shift comparable to the evolution from mainframe computing to iPhones, except unfolding over a century instead of half a century, and preceded by 400 years of “mainframe clock” time instead of 20 years.

The development of a usable marine chronometer allowed planetary integration to finally go from dangerous exploratory activity to routine infrastructural activity. In a way, the chronometer did to the 19th century what AI is doing to our time. A fun learning from the Landes book — John Harrison gets the credit for winning the Longitude prize, but his clock was the equivalent of IBM’s Watson AI winning Jeopardy and Deep Blue beating Kasporov — impressive and technically a legal solution to the underlying challenge, but fundamentally a dead-end and not the path technical evolution actually took later.

Marine chronometry in the form that actually powered the colonial globalization era developed from a parallel and more practical and divergent French tradition that got transplanted to England, and was arguably also the genesis of interchangeable parts manufacturing. The French tradition emphasized robust and simple designs that could be easily copied and manufactured along industrial lines, and not coincidentally, France of the same era was also the point of origin of the Système Gribeauval which eventually influenced and found its fullest expression in the American system of interchangeable parts manufacturing (see my old blog post on Hall’s Law). I haven’t yet traced the direct connection between the Système Gribeauval and the chronometry story, but I’m convinced it’s there to be found. Both also curiously foreshadow the worse-is-better principle in computer programming from our era.

That’s just a taste. There’s a lot more insight to be found in the history of time-keeping for the future of computing and AI.

I want to conclude with a broader point. The mature clock, at cheap-and-accurate wrist-watch level, was a pure divergence driver, it desynchronized civilization that had previously been kept inefficiently synchronized by large turret clocks calibrated to solar time.

The clock is also divergent in a deeper way, as a new class of artifact that sustained seemingly endless variety. The technology of mechanical clocks existed in a dizzyingly pluralistic and varied design space of dozens of different types of escapements, hundreds of clever mechanical engineering tricks, and astoundingly complex mechanism powered mathematical calculations. An early genre of clocks was “equation” clocks, designed to keep clock time synchronized with Sun time. By the 18th century, mechanical clocks had gotten too accurate to be calibrated by the Sun, and could be used to actually track and measure variations in solar time. But since tradition (and inaccurate old clocks) were bound to solar time, for a transitional period, people needed to translate. Hence equation clocks to translate. Eventually, solar time was abandoned and mechanical clock time became the standard. Before then, clocks showed varying day/night hours to match a “day” defined by sunrise-to-sunset rather than a fixed 12 hours. After, sunrise and sunset times were allowed to vary on the mechanical clock.

Clocks then, weren’t just like computers in our time. They were computers. Rigidly specialized mechanical computers by our standards, but radically flexible and programmable by the standards of 18th century technology’s familiar technologies like swords or cannon. The clock was the first technology that could compute, be “programmed,” and inventively embodied by a dizzying and growing array of specific designs (which should be analogized to software rather than computer hardware). Designs that could not just keep time and translate among times, but also drive a near-biological ecology of clockwork devices. Steampunk is less about steam power than clockwork mechanical governance of devices.

This topic obviously bleeds into my book project (which I’ve refactored significantly and will be doing an update on soon), so I’ll save more thoughts for that.

But the tldr of this preliminary synthesis is that the cutover from the Modernity Machine to the Divergence Machine happened somewhere in middle century of 1750-1850, culturally marked by the culmination of the Enlightenment project, and the beginning of divergent post-Enlightenment projects that inherited its divergent soul. This transition was marked by revolutions at all levels from bloody to bloodless.

Supply is elastic, installment #1637

With deadly precision, the Trump administration has launched dozens of attacks on small boats in the waters off South America, killing nearly 200 people in a campaign U.S. officials say is meant to curb the flow of illicit drugs to the United States.

But almost nine months into the operation, epidemiologists, addiction scientists and public health experts say cocaine, by far the top drug smuggled out of South America, is as easy to get in much of the United States as it was before the strikes began.

The findings — based on evaluations of street prices, lethal overdoses, purity of samples and drug seizures at U.S. borders — raise questions about the effectiveness of the largest U.S. military deployment in Latin America in decades.

Here is more from the NYT.  And here is another report on supply elasticity, note that European airlines are still flying.

The post Supply is elastic, installment #1637 appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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DCReport and Northeastern University Journalism Students Reunite for A Second Year of Embedded Reporting

After the Cameras Leave: Asheville, 18 Months Later

DCReport is proud to be partnering for the second consecutive year with Northeastern University’s School of Journalism to bring readers the stories of a community whose disaster has slipped from the national spotlight. This year’s project, Caught in the Current: Helene Recovery in Asheville and Beyond, documents life in Western North Carolina 18 months after Tropical Storm Helene devastated the region.

Student reporters from Northeastern’s “On the Ground” embedded reporting class traveled to Asheville in early March to examine the storm’s lasting impacts on the city, its residents, and its economy. Their reporting covers the cultural, artistic, political, social, and environmental landscape of a region still grappling with the fallout long after the news cameras moved on.

“We wanted to go to Asheville and its surrounding area to examine what happens to a community after the nation’s attention turns away from something else,” said Professor Carlene Hempel, Northeastern University’s faculty member leading the project. “We found that many Western North Carolina residents are still grappling with the fallout of the storm all these months later. ‘Caught in the Current’ is a collection of their stories — of loss, of continuing trauma, of recovery and of healing. But it is everyone else’s story too.”

The Asheville project follows last year’s inaugural collaboration, Flint Unfiltered: Stories from An American Water Crisis, in which Northeastern student journalists reported on the people of Flint, Michigan, a decade after the water crisis that made international headlines and then faded from view. As with Flint, the Asheville coverage will be dual-published on DCReport.org and Northeastern’s Caught In the Current multimedia magazine, and the two organizations plan to co-host a panel discussion in the near future.

The partnership is part of DCReport’s broader mentoring program for emerging journalists, launched with the Next Echo Foundation to pair experienced reporters and editors with the next generation of writers.

“Fostering the careers of student and early-stage journalists isn’t a side project for us — it’s central to what we do,” said David Cay Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist that is the Co-Founder and Editor-at-Large of DCReport. “And it’s just as important that we keep telling the stories that others either aren’t talking about, or haven’t talked about in a long time. Asheville is exactly that kind of story. The cameras left, but the people are still there, still rebuilding. Seeing these young reporters bring those voices forward is the whole point.”

In addition to amplifying the project via republishing the content and also sharing on social media and other communications, DCReport, via its parent organization, Next Echo Foundation, was also delighted to contribute a small financial grant to help offset some basic expenses for the students.

“Our partnership with DCReport was again incredibly helpful to us,” said Hempel. “It made a difference to our sources, from homeowners to top state officials, that their stories and words were going to reach a national audience. And it made a difference to my students that DCReport cares about impactful journalism and entrusted them to create these important and enduring packages.”

The end result is a beautiful multimedia experience featuring articles, podcasts, videos and an amazing soundscape across the Caught In the Current digital magazine, adding a powerful element that sticks with readers.

Coverage will roll out on DCReport.org starting Sunday, May 31, but readers are encouraged to take in the full multimedia experience by visiting the Caught In the Current website HERE.

Meet the Northeastern Team of Talented Emerging Journalists

Azariah Baker | Audio/Video Editor

Azariah Baker studied media advocacy as a master’s student at Northeastern University and graduated in May 2026. After earning a bachelor’s degree in music industry, she continued her education with concentrations on intellectual properties and advocacy for the rights of creatives from underrepresented communities. She has experience self developing a curriculum for young creatives centered around intellectual properties and copyrights. She is currently working on establishing a music supervision company that provides small independent creatives with low production budgets and free music for their visual media and art. Azariah served as our video and audio producer.


Hayes Botnick | Dataviz Reporter

Hayes Botnick

Hayes Botnick is a graduate student at Northeastern University studying media innovation and data communication. Hayes obtained his bachelor’s degree in English from Skidmore College in 2023. He is an experienced video editor and sound mixer, having worked on several feature films and independent projects throughout New York, New Jersey and Boston. Currently, he leads a course in the fundamentals of video editing with Adobe Premiere at Northeastern.


Alina Caudle | Social Media Manager

Ali Caudle

Ali Caudle graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and minors in law and public policy and women’s, gender and sexuality studies. Ali has worked as a digital media assistant at the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, a communications assistant at My Life My Choice and an editor for The Huntington News. Her reporting interests include legal issues and U.S. politics, with particular emphasis on state and local governance. Raised in San Francisco, she has lived in Montana, and is now based in Boston with her puppy, Willow. Ali served as our social media manager.


Eva Ciolek Passeri | Database Editor

Eva Ciolek Passeri

Eva Ciolek Passeri is pursuing a degree in journalism and political science at Northeastern University with a minor in sociology. She is interested in social justice, history, pop culture, environment and science communication. She serves as the podcast and archival team director for WRBB, the school’s radio station, where she also hosts her own show. She writes and photographs for The Huntington News, serves as a content creator and outreach leader for the SEDS Astronomy Club, and is a member of the pre-law fraternity Phi Alpha Delta. Eva served as our social media graphic designer and led our expert’s database.


Mia Filler | Dataviz Editor

Mia Filler graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and interaction design. She brings experience across social media strategy, UX/UI design, writing and video production. She completed two co-ops with the City of Cambridge in the Communications Office, where she produced public-facing content to communicate city values, initiatives and services to Cambridge residents. At Northeastern, she has written for The Huntington News and Tastemakers Magazine and served as a web and data visualization designer for Scout. Mia served as our data visualization editor.


Valentina Gutierrez | Partnerships Manager

Valentina Gutierrez

Valentina Gutierrez graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 as an English and journalism combined major. She’s the president of Artistry Magazine, a journalistic arts and culture publication at Northeastern University. She’s also editor-in-chief of Northeastern’s Spectrum Literary Magazine and co-lead of Spectrum’s Creative Committee. In her free time, she enjoys reading, writing, thrifting her next fashion find and being active. Valentina managed our media partnership and public relations team.


Namira Haris | Web Developer

Namira Haris

Namira Haris graduated in 2026 with a master’s degree from Northeastern University, studying media innovation and data communication. She focuses on multimedia and data-driven storytelling, creating interactive web projects, videos, podcasts and visual investigations on social equity, technology and environmental impact. Namira is the assistant editor at Storybench and has experience in digital reporting, data tools and long-form multimedia journalism. She has also worked in editorial, digital content and strategic communications roles where she focused on analytics strategy. Namira served as the webmaster for our project.


Claire Ogden | Logistics Coordinator

Claire Ogden

Claire Ogden graduated with a master’s degree from the School of Journalism at Northeastern and is also a freelance journalist, arts writer and nonfiction film producer based in Somerville. She works as the communications specialist for Northeastern’s Center for Transformative Media and the Center for the Arts. In her free time, she loves running, rock climbing and watching documentaries. Claire served as our logistics coordinator.


Rebecca Orten | Chief Illustrator

Rebecca Orten

Beck Orten is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in journalism and cultural anthropology with a minor in Arabic. Beck’s writing and photography have been featured in Northeastern’s Huntington News, the Addison Independent, VT Digger, Blue Marble Review and more. She is passionate about global perspectives and international politics, having traveled to Morocco, Palestine, Jordan and Turkey to volunteer, photograph and report. She enjoys both traditional art and graphic design. Beck served as the chief illustrator for our project.


Grace Sawin | Manager of Classroom Operations & Chief Copy Editor

Grace Swain

Grace Sawin graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a degree in journalism and environmental science. She is passionate about environmental justice and public service and hopes to amplify community voices through her writing. She has previously completed two co-ops as a press assistant in the Office of Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and as a communications assistant at MIT’s Climate Change Engagement Program. At Northeastern, she is the editor-in-chief of Woof Magazine and the media director at WRBB 104.9 FM. Grace served as our chief copy editor and manager of classroom operations.


Sydney Woogerd | Photo Editor

Sydney Woogerd

Sydney Woogerd is studying journalism and international affairs at Northeastern University with a focus on multimedia storytelling. She serves as co-photo director for The Avenue Magazine, a student-led fashion publication, where she directs visual strategy and creates editorial content. She has also contributed to The Huntington News and Artistry Magazine as a writer and photographer documenting community stories across Boston. In her free time, she enjoys yoga, baking and photography. Sydney served as our photo editor.

This article is part of Caught in the Current: Helene Recovery in Asheville and Beyond  a project that we have partnered on with the School of Journalism at Northeastern University.  Their enterprising students took on the story of Asheville, North Carolina, a community still dealing with the devastation of Hurricane Helene, 18 months later. As part of our mentoring program, we’re amplifying their efforts by sharing the amazing work produced by their students. 


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The post DCReport and Northeastern University Journalism Students Reunite for A Second Year of Embedded Reporting appeared first on DCReport.org.

Newborn stars are forming in the Eagle Nebula.  Newborn stars are forming in the Eagle Nebula.


Areas of Severe Thunderstorms Monday