Once Again, Trump Poisons Everything He Touches

President Trump and Vice President Vance with FIFA president Gianni Infantino (Photo by Daniel Torok)

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We went from “Trump is going to ruin the World Cup” to “Not even Trump can ruin the World Cup,” and unfortunately, now we’ve come around to “Trump is ruining the World Cup.”

For those who don’t care about this tournament, stick around — this is a story about sports, but it’s also a story about politics and national identity and communal emotions and crass elite corruption.

A quick recap for those who haven’t been following: In the USA men’s soccer team’s match against Bosnia-Herzegovina on Wednesday, USA striker Folarin Balogun (now America’s most famous birthright citizen) was issued a red card for a play in which he and an opposing player got tangled up as they fell after dueling for the ball. A red card means you’re ejected from the game and are ineligible to play in the next game; it’s supposed to be reserved for intentional, egregious violations of the rules or dangerous play. This was a big problem for the Americans, since Balogun has emerged as the breakout star of the team and would be sorely missed in the game against Belgium Monday night.

During and after Wednesday’s game, the near-universal belief among American fans was that the red card was a terrible call; while Balogun did land on the other player’s ankle, it was clearly unintentional and occurred in a fraction of a second as they were falling. The more appropriate penalty would have been a yellow card (essentially a warning) at most. You can judge for yourself:

Sucks for the Americans, but what are you gonna do? Once the call is made, there’s nothing you can do. Them’s the rules.

Until Donald Trump got involved.

According to reporting from the Wall Street Journal and New York Times, the White House swung into action, attempting to use its power to get the call reversed, despite the fact that under FIFA rules such calls are not supposed to be subject to appeal:

A memo created for U.S. Soccer by lawyers who have worked for Mr. Trump, reviewed by The New York Times, outlined how the federation could find possible gaps in rules around red cards to strengthen its case. Effectively, the three-page document suggested FIFA’s regulations on disciplinary action were sufficiently vague to create grounds for an appeal. It even suggested the appeal invoke the rights of the United States as a nation and threaten to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sports, the sporting world’s top arbitration body.

Lawyers will do their lawyering, but what really matters is the personal touch. In this case, that meant Donald Trump placing a call to his good buddy Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA, to pressure him to get Balogun’s suspension reversed. This is the first case in the history of the World Cup in which a red card suspension has been reversed (although FIFA did a similar suspend-the-suspension for Cristiano Ronaldo, one of the biggest stars in the sport, after he was red-carded during a qualifying game).

Some of the football cognoscenti have responded by pointing out that this shouldn’t be surprising since FIFA has long been guilty of all kinds of corruption. Which is true. And while Infantino hasn’t been taken down by scandal in the way his predecessor was, his critics charge that he has ruled FIFA like a king, and one who has prospered by being unashamed about all the payoffs, influence-peddling, and double-dealing.

Sound familiar?

Infantino and Donald Trump may not be exactly the same species, but they certainly have a lot in common. When Infantino invented the “FIFA Peace Prize” for Trump and gave it to him (along with a medal for him to wear), it was widely seen as both embarrassing and a smart leader getting what he wanted from Trump by treating him like a toddler. It was that, but there’s another side to the story, which is that Infantino has expended a lot of energy getting close to Trump, becoming one of the president’s informal advisers on foreign policy.

He has gone on trips with Trump to the Middle East, is for some reason involved in the “Board of Peace” effort to exploit Gaza for Trump’s own profit (he came to the first meeting and put on a MAGA hat), and even rented office space for FIFA in Trump Tower. As the New York Times reported, “The rent goes to President Trump’s family business, but soccer officials say the space sits largely idle.”

Everyone still loves soccer despite the corruption

Infantino’s defenders will say that whatever money and influence is changing hands under his watch, the sport is more popular than ever, so how do you argue with the results? And there are ways in which that’s true. Every World Cup, it seems, is beset with problems of one kind or another (like the horrible abuse of migrant workers leading up to the 2022 Cup in Qatar), but once the tournament starts, the joy and excitement overwhelm everything else, allowing the world to experience patriotic fervor without actually killing each other.

And there is plenty of that. Here’s one of my favorite moments, when after Brazil beat Japan, a sobbing Japanese fan was consoled by Brazilians, and they all joined together in a spirit of fellowship:

It’s kind of ridiculous to care that much about a game, but that’s part of what makes it charming.

For a week or two there, it looked like Trump wasn’t going to ruin the World Cup after all — ratings are through the roof, there have been some great games and great stories like the improbable run of tiny Cabo Verde, and everyone was having a terrific time. But now Trump has cast a shadow over the whole tournament.

Yet in his mind, I’m sure this is a “win” for America. He used his power to twist the rules, and got what he wanted. But now if Balogun hits the winning goal against Belgium, the global outrage will be enormous. Every member of this team will be tainted, regarded as cheaters for the rest of their careers (though of course it isn’t their fault, least of all Balogun’s).

If the US loses, on the other hand, you’ll see people around the globe gleefully dunking on us, just as they have about the Iran war and Trump’s numerous economic own-goals. Trump’s intervention doesn’t just make the world hate us, it makes the world root for our failure.

In Trump’s dark and twisted heart, he can’t see that. He believes all that matters is whether you’re a “winner,” and that winning requires cheating and lying and scamming. As usual, he corrupts everything he touches.

I’m sure I’m not the only fan whose excitement about tonight’s game has been severely dampened. I don’t want the U.S. to lose, but I kind of hope that Balogun has a bad game and they win anyway. Or maybe he could just ask to be benched for the game. I doubt that will happen; he’ll probably just go out and give it his best.

Either way, the damage has been done. Trump gave the world yet another reason to conclude that the United States is a bully and a cheater that demands everyone else live by rules it is free to ignore. It’s one more in a long line of losses this president has brought our country.

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‘The emperor is far away’

Traditional Chinese painting of three warriors in ornate armour standing among swirling clouds.

Ming Dynasty China left us copious texts, but these veil the lives of the vast majority of its people from our view

- by Craig Clunas

Read on Aeon

What should I ask Liaquat Ahamed?

Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him.  From Wikipedia:

Ahamed is the author of Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World (2009). The book was awarded the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for History, the 2010 Spear’s Book Award (Financial History Book of the Year), the 2010 Arthur Ross Book Award Gold Medal, the 2009 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. For 2009 it was recognized as one of Time magazine’s “Best Books of the Year”, New York Times “Best Books of the Year” and Amazon.com’s “Best Books of the Year”. It was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize…The book narrates the events preceding the Black Tuesday stock market crash of 1929 and the disastrous response of the world’s major central banks.

He has a new and excellent book out, namely 1873: The Rothschilds, the First Great Depression, and the Making of the Modern World.

Liaquat Ahamed also has extensive experience in the private sector, and dealing with the World Bank and IMF.  He has produced a movie and done much more as well.

So what should I ask him?

The post What should I ask Liaquat Ahamed? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

      

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There were not one, but two asteroid encounters this weekend

As the United States of America celebrated its 250th birthday on terra firma with fireworks displays this weekend, two Asian countries made some splashes of their own farther from Earth.

On Sunday, an aging Japanese spacecraft named Hayabusa2, which completed its initial sample-return objective more than half a decade ago, found success with an extended mission that saw the vehicle fly by a peanut-shaped asteroid named Torifune.

Hours later, the Chinese space agency released images from a spacecraft, Tianwen-2, arriving at its target asteroid following a journey of 1 billion km. At this small asteroid, the Chinese spacecraft will attempt to retrieve samples and return them to Earth late next year.

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What You Won't Learn About the Odyssey from a Movie

The first work of classical literature that thrilled me to the depths of my soul was the Odyssey. It made such a big impact that, decades later, I insisted on reading it aloud to my own children, hoping they would feel that same magic.

I was little more than a child back when I discovered Homer—12 or 13 years old, I’d guess. Back then I knew more about comic books than serious literature. But I was outgrowing Spiderman and Superman, and decided to take a chance on Odysseus.

I approached this book with fear and trembling—worried it might be too difficult. But I soon discovered that Homer was the Stan Lee of antiquity. He told adventure stories not much different from the ones peddled by Marvel or DC.


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I’d somehow gotten my hands on a tattered used paperback copy of the Odyssey, in a 1937 prose translation by W.H.D. Rouse—published by Mentor Classics (cover price when new = 60 cents). This is not a respected translation—they will never assign Rouse’s version of Homer at any Ivy League college.

Book cover

That’s because the legit translators try to convey this epic as poetry. Rouse made no attempt at that. He just turned Homer into everyday language, just like it was a pulp fiction story for the mass market.

That was the right choice, he believed, because (as he wrote in his introduction): “The Odyssey is “the best story ever written….It has been a favorite for three thousand years.” Other translations of this book are, he claimed, “filled with affectations and attempts at a poetic language Homer himself is free from. Homer speaks naturally and we must do the same.”

You can see the difference by comparing Rouse’s rendering of the opening lines with the esteemed Chapman translation from Shakespeare’s era.

Is this the best version of Homer? I won’t go that far—years later I became very fond of Robert Fitzgerald’s translation. But I will insist that Rouse is the superior version for a youngster. And, in many ways, youngsters were Homer’s target audience—you can feel that at every turn in his story.

So this is the first thing about the Odyssey you won’t learn at Harvard—namely that this tale was not intended for Harvard elites. It’s a story for everybody. So it’s an obvious choice for a big-budget Hollywood movie. There was no pretension or elitism in Homer’s approach. In today’s parlance, you would say that he was appealing to a mass audience.

Director Christopher Nolan—whose screen version of the Odyssey makes its debut in London today—relied on the more recent Emily Wilson translation of the Odyssey into iambic pentameter. In her version, our hero is described, like Shaft, as a complicated man who won’t cop out (when there’s danger all about). Okay, she doesn’t use those exact words, but comes close….

Emily Wilson’s translation of the opening lines of the Odyssey

I like this rendering, and can almost hear that Isaac Hayes synth vamp in the background. Wilson is just as straightforward as Rouse—living up to her aspiration to “tell the old story for modern times.”

Yes, I’d love to hear Homer delivered with this music in the background.

And that brings me to my most important point….

If Nolan really wanted to be bold, he would take a far more radical step and reclaim the Odyssey’s original status as a song. In ancient Greece, this work was not a text—for the simple reason that few members of its audience could read. It was performed.

That’s a truth rarely mentioned—and the single most important fact about Homer that is hidden from view nowadays. His work ought to be taught in the Department of Music. But even music scholars have bought into the big lie that Homer is literature, not song.

Odysseus and the Sirens, Roman mosaic, second century AD. Bardo National Museum, Tunis (Source)

So, if you track down the most influential books on Homer, you will find that they are all written by classicists or humanists, not experts on music. Even an astute scholar like Walter Ong, who focuses on the aural tradition in his influential book Orality and Literacy, scrupulously avoids discussing music—even though song is the origin of the entire aural tradition he celebrates.

I tried to rectify this in my books Music: A Subversive History and Music to Raise the Dead, where I reclaim Homer as part of our musical heritage. And it’s not just Homer’s epics that originated as music. The same is true of lyric poetry, philosophy, even the legal code—they were all originally sung.

And here’s where I (finally) give some credit to Harvard. We have a good idea of how these epics were sung because, almost a hundred years ago, two Harvard scholars tried to track down the last living epic bards.

These scholars were Milman Parry and Albert Lord. Parry did most of the initial work but, because he died young, much of the credit went to Lord—whose book The Singer of Tales is still the best starting point for learning about the real Homeric tradition. Those two academics deserve the same esteem accorded to Ong, McLuhan, Frye, Derrida, Searle, and other celebrated theorists of narrative and communication.

I first encountered The Singer of Tales as a college student, and was shocked to learn from Lord how much these epic singers resembled jazz musicians. That’s the third important fact about the Odyssey you won’t learn from Hollywood or your college Intro to Humanities course.

In both instances—the epic poet and jazz musician—the performer learns numerous stock phrases of specific metrical length, and often uses these repeatedly in live renditions. For Homer, these are the descriptors that recur in the Odyssey, such as “rosy-fingered Dawn” or “swift-footed Achilles.” Jazz musicians do the same thing, but their building blocks are known as “licks.”

This video—well known in jazz circles—provides fascinating examples of one such lick.

In 1935, Milman and Parry discovered a remarkable singer named Avdo Međedović—who was born in the Ottoman Empire circa 1875, before the days of commercial recordings. He was a true singer of tales, and accompanied himself on a one-string instrument called the gusle.

They captured performances by this amazing individual on film and in recordings and these provide a glimpse of what the Odyssey might have sounded like to its first listeners. I’d ask anyone who wants to grasp the reality of Homer to watch this short video.

This is the actual origin of the epic tradition—not those fancy books on the library shelves.

I wrote about this bard in my online book Music to Raise the Dead:

The gusle is played not for melodic embellishment or even what nowadays we call a bassline, but generates a pulsating rhythmic drone. Međedović’s singing, for its part, sounds like an incantation, and he appears to have fallen into a kind of trance. You can easily imagine listeners falling into a similar trance given the hypnotic and ritualistic nature of the proceedings.

The gusle also served another role for these singers, namely as a mnemonic support. Međedović displayed extraordinary memory skills, far beyond what the Harvard researchers believed was possible—at one point he performed a song for his visitors that went on for seven days. When it was later transcribed, this one song filled up more than 12,000 lines (by coincidence, the same length as Homer’s Odyssey).

A song that lasts for seven days? If that happened now, it would be some kind of stunt or avant-garde demonstration. Yet even in that context, you couldn’t imagine a singer performing 12,000 lines of lyrics from memory.

But precisely this happened in ancient Greece at the dawn of Western culture.

No Hollywood movie can adequately convey this kind of tradition, no matter how many superstars are in the cast or how much money is spent on special effects. What we learn from Avdo Međedović is that works like the Odyssey are ritualistic and trance-inducing. They are propelled by music and driven by rhythm. They cross a border beyond literature, and enter something more transcendent and metaphysical.

You won’t find any of that in a book, because it can’t fit inside a book. It’s too large for books. And if Hollywood could ever figure out how to transfer this type of creative ritual on to a screen, they would change the entire course of cinema. But is there a single director today capable of that degree of boldness?

This birth of literature out of a magical mystery song is our inheritance from the past—and one of incalculable value. We do ourselves a disservice if we don’t find ways of tapping into its primordial energy in the current day.

Where does that happen? That’s a subject for a different day and a different article. But I’ll say for a start that you won’t find it in a library or classroom.

It’s most likely to occur at live music events, especially those that possess ritualistic intensity.

Let’s both go on a quest to discover it—and keep each other posted.

The World Cup From 250 Miles Up

An aerial view of the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, middle-left, is surrounded by urban infrastructure. Colorful ponds of the southern San Francisco Bay are visible toward the top.
July 26, 2022

In summer 2026, sixteen stadiums across North America hosted matches as part of the FIFA World Cup. Over the years, astronauts aboard the International Space Station have captured a top-down view of the infrastructure, landscapes, and ecosystems surrounding many of these venues.  

Six of the matches were played at the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, beginning on June 13 with a match-up between Qatar and Switzerland. This stadium (also called Levi’s Stadium) is located in Santa Clara, California, adjacent to San Jose and around 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of San Francisco. An astronaut aboard the International Space Station took this photo (above) on July 26, 2022.

The stadium, completed in 2014, is surrounded by a mix of recreational, housing, and business infrastructure. The scene includes the southern part of San Francisco Bay, which is 23 years into a 50-year effort to restore up to 90 percent of the region’s salt ponds to tidal wetlands and marshlands, while retaining some of its salt-making heritage.

The Bay Area hosted its sixth and final World Cup match on July 1, when the U.S. faced off against Bosnia and Herzegovina in a knockout match. The U.S. advanced to the round of 16 following a 2-0 win.

An aerial view of the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, middle-left, is surrounded by urban infrastructure. Colorful ponds of the southern San Francisco Bay are visible toward the top.
April 17, 2022

The FIFA World Cup final is scheduled for July 19 at New York New Jersey Stadium, part of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The stadium (also called MetLife Stadium) sits along the New Jersey Turnpike, west of Midtown Manhattan. Note that north is toward the bottom-right of this photo, captured by an astronaut on April 17, 2022.

The area has seen centuries of human impact. Colonists cleared wetlands and cedar forest for settlements, and development for a range of economic and industrial uses followed. In the 20th century, it became an unregulated dumping ground. In recent decades, though, wetland restoration efforts have occurred alongside the development of the sports and entertainment complex.

Other World Cup host cities have also appeared in astronaut photography and satellite imagery. Guadalajara Stadium (Estadio Akron), Los Angeles Stadium (SoFi Stadium), Houston Stadium (NRG Stadium/Reliant Stadium), and BC Place Vancouver (BC Place) are among the venues that have been observed from above.

Astronaut photograph ISS067-E-202213 was acquired on July 26, 2022, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a focal length of 400 millimeters, and astronaut photograph ISS067-E-18580 was acquired on April 17, 2022, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a focal length of 1150 millimeters. They are provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit at NASA Johnson Space Center. The images were taken by a member of the Expedition 67 crew. The images have been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast, and lens artifacts have been removed. The International Space Station Program supports the laboratory as part of the ISS National Lab to help astronauts take pictures of Earth that will be of the greatest value to scientists and the public, and to make those images freely available on the Internet. Additional images taken by astronauts and cosmonauts can be viewed at the NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. Story by Kathryn Hansen.

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Wiesbaden notes

Who goes to Wiesbaden these days?  The era of Russian nobles taking the cure here and gambling is long since gone.  And yet here we are.  The proximate cause of this trip is the desire to see Grigory Sokolov, one of the world’s great pianists and a cult figure of sorts.  He rarely tours North America, maybe these days never as he is 76.  The current program includes Beethoven’s fourth piano sonata, Beethoven’s Op.126 Bagetelles, and Schubert’s last piano sonata.  How can one say no?  Sokolov also was a favorite of Tom Schelling, I might add, especially his recording of The Art of the Fugue, in my view one of the best classical music recordings of all time.

Besides, I have long been a believer in semi-random excursions to mid-size, slightly neglected German cities.  There remains a strong cultural federalism in Germany, and so you might see and hear wonderful things in many different parts of the country.

I perceived two difficult Wiesbadens.  In one, if you walk through the cheaper part of the pedestrian zone in the evening, the city seems mostly Muslim.  But if you walk around during the morning, the city seems mostly German.  I might add that some of the younger Muslim women show signs of assimilating, at least based on how they dress and present themselves.  The older women tend to stick with the headscarves.

Over the last twenty years, inflation-adjusted real estate prices in Wiesbaden have gone up about forty percent, an OK performance.  At times the city “does not feel like Germany any more,” but I think it is holding on.  The proportion of new building is roughly equal to the population growth, so I do not think this price effect is a NIMBY effect.  Rather it reflects the fact that Wiesbaden is still a pretty nice place to live.  that said, in some significant ways Germany in the traditional sense is failing to reproduce itself.

It was stunning to me to discover how hard it is, in most of the downtown, to find plain, ordinary German food.  At any price level.  There is no current equivalent of Wienerwald or Nordsee to be seen, never mind a decent Wiener Schnitzel.

Much of Wiesbaden was destroyed and rebuilt, but the best fifteen or twenty buildings show the previous wealth and splendor to good effect.  You will see these gems walking around, though only periodically.  There is also an old Roman wall and a moving, more recent Holocaust memorial.

Most German ice cream just isn’t that good, so try L’Art Sucre for something French.

Museum Reinhard Ernst is the new institution in town, and it specializes in color field abstract art.  The building is impressive, but the collection is weak except for a few Stellas.  Why organize a museum around that basis unless the underlying collection is super strong in that area?  This one is not.  I can forgive the absence of the expensive American Ellsworth Kelly, but no Blinky Palermo or Günther Förg?

Nonetheless their restrooms might forestall this kind of Larry David conflict:

(At Museum Ludwig in Köln, by the way, you get the discount for being disabled only if you have “fifty degrees of disability,” however they might measure that.  Slight disabilities are not enough, you must be truly “schwerbehinderte,” as judged by the state, heaven forbid the museum rely on the honor system.)

Museum Wiesbaden in contrast was an unexpected delight.  Although it is mainly a natural history museum, they have one of the world’s best collections of Art Nouveau and the single best Jawlensky collection, and you can have these all to yourself.  Very few people seem to go there.

As for the economy, here are some Germany facts of the day.  Yet Germany continues, and visits remain a source of pleasure and interest.

Sokolov, by the way, played six encores.  Where should the Germany trip target next year?

The post Wiesbaden notes appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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"Vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big": The Galaxy Garden as a Milky Way analog

The Milky Way galaxy is such a huge structure that it is almost impossible for the human mind to comprehend how vast it is. Deana Weibel visits one effort to do so, in the form of a garden in Hawaii.

Monday 6 July 1663

Up pretty early and to my office all the morning, writing out a list of the King’s ships in my Navy collections with great pleasure. At noon Creed comes to me, who tells me how well he has sped with Sir G. Carteret after all our trouble, that he had his tallys up and all the kind words possible from him, which I believe is out of an apprehension what a fool he has made of himself hitherto in making so great a stop therein. But I find, and so my Lord Sandwich may, that Sir G. Carteret had a design to do him a disgrace, if he could possibly, otherwise he would never have carried the business so far after that manner, but would first have consulted my Lord and given him advice what to do therein for his own honour, which he thought endangered. Creed dined with me and then walked a while, and so away, and I to my office at my morning’s work till dark night, and so with good content home. To supper, a little musique, and then to bed.

Read the annotations

Offside

The arbiter gave my knight a red card for capturing with cleats up :(

Links 7/6/26

Links for you. Science:

U.S. science is in chaos (I think this overestimates the organic nature of the opposition)
Convergent Cysteine Enrichment in Diverse Gut Phage Capsids Suggests Gut-Associated Structural Adaptation
The war against ‘woke’ could end US science as we know it

Other:

The Sane NYC DSA vs the Crazy National DSA- A Guide for the Perplexed
Demand That Candidates Say “Expand the Court”
The Lis Smith Magic
Who Will Save the Internet From Disappearing?
Trump’s Anti-Patriotic Trap
The Great American State Fair’s Main Exhibit Is Trump Corruption
A Local Parade Gets Its Moment. The National Independence Day Parade was canceled. This D.C. neighborhood saved the day.
‘I’m Mad at Trump’: Even Trumpers Can’t Stand How Shoddy the Great American State Fair Is
AI Debt Deluge Makes Credit Market Look Safer While Masking Risk
Prediction Markets Let You Bet on Whether a Wildfire Will Burn Down Your Town
Better Than Winning
National Guard troops fatally shoot a man in downtown Memphis
White House report brands Smithsonian leadership as radical activists who can’t be trusted
‘Guard, go home!’ Hegseth ceremony in DC’s Meridian Hill Park met by protest

Trump’s Red Card

What Trump’s intervention in the sacrosanct, incorruptible affairs of FIFA does is remind the rest of the world that Trump is not just a dim-witted buffoon, but a truly psychologically screwed up person.

It should come as no surprise to anyone that Trump and his minions attempted to have Balogun’s red card overturned. For Trump, along with many of his cotravellers, rules and laws, never mind a sense of fair play or honor, are for other people. Trump views intervening in the red card suspension as the right thing to do because he wanted to do it and he was able to do it. He can’t even conceive how what he is doing is inappropriate–if he wants something, he takes it (Trump is a man whose highest impulse is ME WANT HAMBURGER). And his narcissism makes utterly incapable of perceiving how other people view events because everything is always about him.

As to openly admitting he did this, this too is part and parcel of Trump’s damaged psychology. Trump is a narcissist, and so, of course, he is going to tell everyone he did this, especially since he thinks he did nothing wrong (see the previous paragraph). He runs his stupid mouth all the time when doing so is counter to his interests, because what is most important to him isn’t the objective, but the adulation.

In other words, this is just another day in the life of Trump, but now he’s dragged the fans one of the world’s favorite sports along for the ride.

Update: Belgium has been granted the right to appeal the decision, but I have no idea what that actually means in any practical sense. If the red card unsuspension does get overturned, it will be another instance where Trump’s need for gratification superseded his policy objectives.

Fire detectors, military tech demos, 3D printers among SpaceX rideshare payloads launching on midnight Falcon 9 flight

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base to begin the Transporter-17 mission on July 7, 2026. Image: SpaceX

Update July 7, 6:08 a.m. EDT (1008 UTC): SpaceX confirmed deployment of all payloads.

A SpaceX Falcon 9, launched from California, ferried dozens of customer satellites from around the world into a Sun-synchronous Earth orbit shortly after midnight local time on Tuesday.

The Transporter-17 mission, with 81 payloads aboard, is part of the company’s Smallsat Rideshare Program, which also includes the mid-inclination Bandwagon missions as well as the dawn-dusk Sun-synchronous orbit Twilight flight.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Station happened at 12:12 a.m. PDT (0312 EDT / 0712 UTC).

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster B1097, which was its 11th flight after launching Twilight, NROL-172, and Sentinel-6B and seven Starlink missions.

Nearly 8.5 minutes into the flight, B1097 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You’, positioned out in the Pacific Ocean. This was the 208th landing on this vessel and the 634th booster landing for SpaceX to date.

Following a four-second trajectory correction burn about 51 minutes after liftoff, the first deployment sequence began. The Osiris-A payload, one of twelve satellites manifested by California-based Maverick Space System, kicked off the first deployment sequence.

All but one satellite were released during that roughly 20-minute deployment period. SpaceX reignited its Falcon 9 upper stage engine two more times before it deployed the final satellite, South Korea’s Earth observation satellite, called CAS500-4, roughly 2.5 hours after liftoff.

What’s onboard?

The Transporter-17 mission continued SpaceX’s model of launching dozens of satellites from companies around the world. Once again, the majority of the payloads hitching a ride on this Falcon 9 rocket were manifested by Exolaunch, which has placed satellites on every Transporter mission going back to the start of the Smallsat Rideshare Program in 2020.

On this flight, Exolaunch was responsible for 49 out of the 81 satellites, representing 20 international customers.

A trio of FireSat satellites, which were manufactured by Muon Space on behalf of nonprofit Earth Fire Alliance. Image: Earth Fire Alliance

Among the Exolaunch-back payloads were three of Muon Space’s FireSat satellites, designed for the nonprofit Earth Fire Alliance. They build upon the prototype satellite launched in March 2025, which is helping to detect wildfires from orbit.

The Earth Fire Alliance stated on its website that it aims for a constellation of more than 20 satellites in low Earth orbit between 2027 and 2029, allowing it to have a roughly one hour revisit rate on wildfires with an ability to detect fires as small as five by five meters. It aims to ultimately have more than 50 satellites in orbit.

“This story is about living with fire: learning from it, adapting to it, harnessing it, and building resilience around it,” the nonprofit wrote in a LinkedIn post. “Inspired by a species of bird that has evolved alongside fire, our Black Kite Trio (BK-3) mission reflects Earth Fire Alliance’s vision of helping people, ecosystems, and communities confidently coexist with fire.”

Other Exolaunch-manifested payloads include four of Iceye’s synthetic aperture radar satellites, Bro-31, the first of Unseenlabs’ second-generation satellites designed for space-based radio detection; and Leonav-1, the United Arab Emirates first low Earth orbit PNT (position, navigation, and timing) satellite.

Another company responsible for multiple payloads was Maverick Space Systems. Among its manifested payloads are a pair from the Taiwanese National Central University. Those are SCION-X (Scintillation and Ionosphere Extended), which will study the ionosphere and upper atmosphere, and KOYO (Kinetic Optical Yaw Observer), which will test a fiber optic gyroscope.

Seops Space also has 10 payloads it manifested for customers across five countries. Those include GRITSS (Geodetic Reference Instrument Transponder for Small Satellites), a CubeSat from ISISPACE (Innovated Solutions in Space) with support from UMass Lowell and NASA, and SPEAR-1 (Space Power and Energy Advanced Recon), a satellite developed by NearSpace Launch under a contract from the Naval Research Laboratory and the Department of Defense.

“The mission is part of a three-spacecraft constellation built using NearSpace Launch’s ThinSat® architecture, a platform designed to provide a rapid and cost-effective path for testing new technologies in orbit,” Seops said in a prelaunch release. “By raising the Technology Readiness Level of critical systems, missions like SPEAR help ensure promising innovations can move more quickly from research into operational use.”

Polish-German manufacturing company, Orbital Matter, also flew its Replicator-2 satellite on this mission. It focuses on the capability of 3D printing materials in the vacuum of space.

“It has 4 of our Printer Assisted Deployment Systems (P.A.D.S) onboard, 2 of which will be used to deploy our custom in-house designed foldable solar array. The other two will be standalone printers, one of which is deploying a secret antenna payload,” wrote Robert Ihnatisin, Orbital Matter CEO, on LinkedIn.

“The goal for this mission is to not only show that 3D printing is possible directly in the harsh space environment but also to show that it can be used for deployment right now! This is the latest in a string of missions focused on advancing our printing technology, with each mission getting us closer to the target of large scale and cheap solar power in orbit.”

No, China did not manage to avoid a crash

Photo by Windmemories via Wikimedia Commons

Back in the 2010s, a lot of people marveled at China’s seemingly recession-proof economy. Throughout the global financial crisis of 2008 and the Chinese stock market crash and capital flight of 2015, the country never recorded a single quarter of negative economic growth. Here’s what I wrote back in 2019:

China’s government seems to have developed a highly effective new form of economic stabilization. Its extensive control of the financial system allows it to turn on a flood of bank loans when the economy looks weak, and restrain credit when the danger has passed. China’s avoidance of recession in at least the past three decades suggests that this form of credit-based stabilization is more effective than traditional, more indirect stimulation of the economy through government deficits and central bank monetary easing…When a recession threatens, the government tells banks to lend --— to local governments, construction companies and real estate developers. Then, if the credits go bad, the government swoops in and takes the nonperforming loans off of financial companies’ books. Uninterrupted rapid growth then shrinks the government debt as a percentage of gross domestic product, and the system sails blithely forward[.]

And here’s what I wrote in 2018:

China…directed banks to lend lots more money [in 2009]. The World Bank estimated that increased bank credit represented 40 percent of China’s stimulus. Much of the lending was done by China’s four large state-owned banks. The money went to infrastructure, real estate and all kinds of corporate projects, many of which were carried out by the country’s state-owned enterprises.

Basically, most countries use two types of policy to get the economy moving again when some sort of negative shock hits it:

  1. monetary policy (e.g. cutting interest rates), and

  2. fiscal policy (e.g. stimulus spending).

Macroeconomists disagree about why interest rate cuts give the economy a boost, but most agree that the policy usually has an effect. Although there are many other theories and interpretations, one way you can think of rate cuts is as a financial policy — by making it easier for businesses to borrow and invest, low interest rates stimulate business activity. Fiscal policy, in contrast, pretty much bypasses the world of finance and aims directly at the real economy — you build a bridge or a road, which employs some people who might otherwise be unemployed, and then those people turn around and spend their money elsewhere in the economy, igniting a virtuous cycle of spending and working.

China uses both of those, but it also uses a third policy: financial policy. Instead of simply cutting interest rates and hoping that this filters through to bank lending, China’s government uses its direct control over the banking system to push banks to lend more. In the 2010s, after the Great Recession and the 2015 Chinese stock crash, this mostly meant lending to real estate companies. This lending fueled the biggest property boom the world has ever seen.

The boom ended in late 2021. The crash of the Chinese property developer Evergrande began a sequence of bankruptcies and defaults across the entire real estate sector. China’s property prices began to fall, and have not stopped falling to this day:

Chinese housing construction plummeted as well:

Source: Bloomberg

But despite the housing crash, China’s official growth rate never fell below zero — or even below 3%:

In fact, China did this by resorting to a version of the same playbook it used in 2009 and 2015. The Chinese party-state called up its captive banking system and told it to lend huge amounts of money to manufacturing companies. And that’s exactly what it did — industrial loans surged, even as real estate loans petered out:

Source: Bloomberg

It’s tempting to cry “China’s done it again!” In fact, that’s exactly what some people are now doing:

Skeptics will caution, of course, that this sort of stabilization policy can come with a cost: lower productivity growth and economic inefficiency over the long term. That’s probably what happened in the 2010s, as China’s repeated use of real estate lending to stabilize the economy directed resources to inefficient real-estate companies and led to lower productivity growth. Now there’s the possibility that China’s wave of financial stimulus in 2022-2024 may lead to an overhang of unproductive “zombie” companies that keep soaking up labor and other resources for years to come:

But admirers of China’s economic system will be undeterred. They will point out that productivity is hard to measure; that long-term costs are both uncertain and hard to verify; and that long-term problems can always be fixed later. The more important fact, they’ll argue, is that China did exactly what Xi Jinping said it would do — to pivot away from an excessive reliance on real estate without causing the economy to shrink. “Chinamaxxers” will use this as reason to crow about the superiority of the Chinese way, while left-leaning intellectuals will use China’s performance as a foil to demonstrate the benefits of greater government control over the economy.

There’s just one problem with this triumphalism: China did, in fact, have an economic crash as a result of its real estate bust.

The first way to see this is to look at China’s job market. In 2023, China famously modified its youth unemployment data to use a narrow definition of unemployment, because the numbers were getting too high. But even the revision couldn’t mask the upward trend:

Source: VOA

Overall unemployment was recorded as rising only a small amount. But as Bloomberg reported at the time, China’s total unemployment numbers aren’t a very good measure of the labor market, and alternative indicators told a much more pessimistic story:

Alternative indicators and anecdotal reports suggest unemployment is worse than the official monthly figures show…[T]he [official headline] figures aren’t sensitive to changes in the number of migrants from China’s rural areas who work in cities; they also don’t capture the number of people who have dropped out of the labor market for more than three months or those unable to start work…

The employment sub-index for China’s non-manufacturing purchasing manager’s index, which tracks hiring intentions in the service and construction sector, has stayed consistently below pre-pandemic levels for most of the past 12 months…Official data shows there’s been no growth in the migrant worker population since the pandemic…The average number of workers at industrial enterprises with revenues above 20 million yuan ($3.1 million) fell to 7,398 in November 2021 from 7,419 in November 2020, according to official statistics…Because of the weak labor market, record numbers of young people are preparing to take exams to qualify for post graduate courses or enter the civil service [and] would not be counted as job seekers[.]

What about GDP growth? In her tweet above, Kathleen Tyson declares that China “was the first to deflate a massive, leveraged housing bubble without a single quarter of economic contraction or loss of growth momentum in the real economy”. But is that true?

Well, no, it’s not. According to China’s official statistics, the Chinese economy shrank by 0.8% in the second quarter of 2022:

Source: NBS

China’s growth is usually reported in year/year numbers, but quarter/quarter is how the U.S. and most countries do their reporting. So by the kind of measurement Americans are used to hearing about, China’s economy officially contracted at an annualized rate of over -3% in the second quarter of 2022. This was also revised down from the -9.3% that was reported in the initial version of the statistics. As for “loss of growth momentum”, China’s economy is officially growing around 2 percentage points slower than it was just before the pandemic.

So even if we accept the official numbers, the claim is wrong. But should we accept the official numbers? Probably not. There is evidence that the Chinese government “smooths” its growth numbers — in good years, it fudges downward, and in bad years it fudges upward. This is from Nakamura et al. (2016), who use detailed data on Chinese consumption to estimate how incomes changed:

Our estimates suggest that official statistics present a smoothed version of reality. We find that inflation was overestimated and growth underestimated by several percentage points per year in the late 1990s. In contrast, since 2002, official inflation statistics have risen only modestly, but our Engel curve based estimates have risen much more. Our estimates imply that growth was substantially lower than official statistics suggest since 2002, and actually dipped into negative territory in 2007 and 2008.

A bunch of analyses claim that China has also done this in response to the property crash. The Rhodium Group used alternative data sources to estimate that China’s economy actually shrank in 2022 and grew much more slowly in 2023 than the official numbers suggest:

Officially, China reported 3.0 percent real GDP growth in 2022, despite the fact that significant proportions of the economy were under strict lockdowns to prevent the spread of COVID-19 during large portions of the year, retail sales fell outright, and investment in the property sector was collapsing. In 2023, the decline in property investment continued, net exports and government spending were drags on growth, and household consumption growth remained relatively low. Beijing provided little direct assistance to households to facilitate spending, and Chinese households added to savings and paid down mortgage debt instead of spending more. Yet China officially reported 5.2 percent real GDP growth in 2023, barely slowing from the pre-pandemic pace of 6 percent in 2019, even though the property sector was experiencing a boom in 2019 and was collapsing in 2023…We estimate that real GDP growth was closer to a contraction of -0.3 percent to -0.8 percent in 2022, and there was only modest growth of 1.5 percent to 2 percent in 2023. [emphasis mine]

The Bank of Finland was a little less negative, but still estimated that growth stalled in 2022:

Capital Economics, which tracks a whole bunch of independent estimates, finds that China probably did experience a recession in 2022, though it’s pretty positive about growth since then.

One particularly pessimistic indicator is inflation, which has slipped into negative territory in China since the real estate bust:

Source: Bloomberg

Deflation is a classic sign of low aggregate demand and a slowing economy.

It should be noted that there are a few analysts who disagree, and think that China’s growth numbers are basically accurate. But most independent assessments conclude that China’s growth not only suffered a sharp hit in 2022, but has been weaker in the years since the end of the pandemic.

It makes sense that China’s government would continue their traditional approach of smoothing out growth numbers in the short term in order to project an attitude of stability and calm. But smoothing only works if the economy eventually bounces back. If China is on a new longer-term trajectory of lower growth — which of course remains to be seen — then there will be too few good years to “pay back” the growth that was “borrowed” in the bad years of 2022 and beyond.

I don’t want to detract from China’s accomplishment here, or say that its macroeconomic stability is entirely fake. China has invented — or, perhaps, perfected — an alternative tool for macroeconomic stabilization. Countries all over the world, including the United States, should study China’s financial stabilization policy and think about how to accomplish something similar without direct government control over bank management.

But at the same time, I don’t think we ought to be idolizing Chinese macroeconomic policy either. Even if there don’t turn out to be long-term productivity costs — which is a big “if” — China still hasn’t managed to rewrite the rules of aggregate demand and aggregate supply.


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Allen Pike, Back in November: ‘Why Is ChatGPT for Mac So Good?’

Allen Pike, back in November (and corresponding Hacker News thread):

Still, I wouldn’t count out the possibility of a change in course here. While mobile is king, desktop is still where work happens. While OpenAI has acquired Sky to double down on desktop, Google has long been all-in on the browser. That leaves Anthropic as the challenger on desktop, with their latest models begging to be paired with well-crafted apps.

A few months ago Google launched a native Gemini app for the Mac. A month ago I wrote about why it’s not that great, and annoyingly presumptuous. Almost all good Mac apps are native; not all native Mac apps are good.

What keeps me using ChatGPT and keeps me away from using Claude is not that ChatGPT happens to be written using native APIs like AppKit. It’s that it looks and feels like a Mac app — you know, with a Settings window that is ... a window. And even more so, with very cool features like its ability to attach a chat to an open document in BBEdit or Notes. When ChatGPT is attached to an open document in another app, it’s not a snapshot at the moment of attachment, like what you’d get by copying and pasting the whole thing into the chat, or by dragging the current version of the file into the chat. It’s a live ongoing attachment, so as the attached document/note changes, ChatGPT sees the changes. It’s such a great feature, and I don’t think it exists on any platform but the Mac. And it couldn’t exist on iOS, which, because of its kindergarten-safety-scissors design, doesn’t allow for inter-application communication.

I worry for ChatGPT’s future, though.

While Anthropic could surprise everybody by dropping a native Mac app, I would bet against that. There’s a lot of headroom available to them just by investing in doing Electron well, mixing in bits of native code where needed, and hill-climbing from “website in shell” to “great app that happens to use web technology”.

Just as ChatGPT’s unexpected success woke OpenAI to the opportunities of being more product-centric, the breakout hit of Claude Code might warm Anthropic to the importance of investing in delightful tools. Last year they brought on Mike Krieger as CPO, who certainly seems like he could rally a team in this direction given the chance.

I don’t know what Krieger is doing there, but it sure doesn’t seem like he’s focused on creating delightful tools. Update: I was correct — Krieger is still at Anthropic but at the start of this year he left his role as chief product officer to head up their “Labs” team, where they’re building new product experiments.

See Also: In December 2024 Allen Pike was my guest on The Talk Show, for an episode largely focused on AI.

 ★ 

ATP Member Special: Mac-Assed Mac Apps

A banger of an Accidental Tech Podcast members-only special, right on time. ATP memberships are just $8/month or $88/year, and the members-only episodes alone are worth the price.

They do a great job explaining what makes for a Mac-assed Mac app, but an even better job talking about why users and developers should care about them.

 ★ 

Maestral, the Open Source Splendidly Simple Mac Dropbox Client, Has Been Retired

Maestral developer Sam Schott, on the Maestral website:

As of June 2026, Maestral is no longer actively maintained. The current version will continue to work until certificates expire.

Schott, on Maestral’s GitHub project page:

As of 2026-07-28, this project is archived. It’s been a fun challenge to develop a syncing client, but unfortunately, I find too little time to invest in Maestral these days. I’ve also moved away from using Dropbox myself.

Maestral will still remain usable in the medium term, but will no longer be actively maintained or receive updates.

You get what you pay for, and Maestral is free of charge and open source. But man, this is a real bummer. I absolutely love Maestral. It restores Dropbox to its original vision — a folder on my Mac that syncs. Nothing at all like the bloated app that Dropbox’s first-party Mac client has grown into. And it doesn’t use any of MacOS’s modern File Provider APIs, which in my experience provide me with no benefits that I want, and saddle me with much needless complexity that I don’t. With Maestral, it’s just a quiet app that runs in the background, consumes preciously few CPU and memory resources, and just syncs a folder of your choosing to your Dropbox account. I of course chose ~/Dropbox/. It’s always been super robust for me. It’s not a hack — it syncs to Dropbox using Dropbox’s APIs.

As of today Maestral continues to work just fine. I don’t know when these certificates are expiring. And I don’t know what I’m going to do when they do. I might try moving everything from my Dropbox account to iCloud Drive. That certainly seems worth trying before I resort to going back to Dropbox’s own monstrosity of a Mac client.

In theory, because Maestral is open source, someone could fork it and keep it going. But my impression has always been that it was a one-man show from Schott, and if he’s personally no longer using Dropbox, it’s easy to see why he’s lost interest in maintaining Maestral.

So it goes.

 ★ 

Jason Snell Ends His Column, and 28-Year Run, at Macworld

Jason Snell, at Macworld:

My first day on the job at Macworld, Apple was perilously close to going out of business. It was the fall of 1997, and Steve Jobs had returned to Apple and engineered the ejection of Gil Amelio as CEO, but there was no iMac yet, no visible turnaround in terms of products at all. Beyond the release of the iconic “Think Different” ad campaign, there was nothing.

Apple’s survival hung by a thread. Steve Jobs asked everyone to trust him. At Macworld Expo, he had enlisted Bill Gates–Bill Gates, of all people!–to help him instill belief in the world that Apple would find a way to survive.

The world was skeptical, to say the least. My family asked what job I thought I’d get once Apple went out of business. The magazine I had worked at for four years, MacUser, had folded, and some of us had been transferred over to our rival, Macworld, presumably to publish issues until Apple finally gave up the ghost and died. We existed to minimize the loss exposure of our respective publishing companies.

1997 was weird, folks. And that’s how my tenure at Macworld started.

 ★ 

What Would and Should Court Reform Look Like?

I’ve been beating the drums for years about reforming the Supreme Court to bring its corruption and anti-democracy to heal. In general I’ve avoided getting very detailed about what reform would look like for two reasons. First, there are technical details I lack knowledge about and which others are more able to address. Second, my focus is on building support for the premise, the necessity of reform. Getting too bound up or identified with really specific reforms can get in the way of that.

However, I get asked this a lot. So I wanted to explain the outline of the reform path that makes the most sense to me. I put this forward as a concept, with the understanding that some points might need fine tuning either for technical or constitutional reasons.

Let’s begin with the threshold issue. Regardless of the details of reform, I have seen no reform proposal that is at all serious which doesn’t include immediately adding new seats to the court. A total of 13 would have one justice per federal circuit court. There’s a logic and a history to that. But I’m not sure 13 is enough. In any case, there’s no serious reform that doesn’t first include adding justices because that is the only immediate way to break the corrupt power of the current majority.

The key additional reform would be to have cases heard by randomly selected panels of judges. So perhaps there are 20 justices on the Court and cases are heard by panels of seven. It’s a bit like how it works on the appellate courts, but there would be no en banc review.

Why would this be good? It’s critical to make the outcome of cases less predictable. At the moment, the right knows they’ve got five or six “sure thing” votes for basically anything they want that isn’t completely absurd on its face. Meanwhile, the corrupt justices know they are entirely insulated from any accountability. This uncertainty about who will hear a case reduces the incentive to game the process with concocted cases. More importantly, I think it creates an incentive for justices to render opinions which are at least facially reasonable and rooted in law and history. Otherwise a different panel might come back a year or two later and just undo your decision. Just as appellate judges don’t want to be overruled by the Supreme Court, I think this creates a similar incentive. If your decision is well-reasoned, responsive to Constitution and precedent, it’s more likely that future panels will at least operate within the structure of your decision even if they don’t simply rubber stamp it. On both fronts, these kind of randomly selected panels create a benign uncertainty and reduce the incentives for corrupt actions.

An additional advantage to this is that it reduces to at least an extent the problem with repeated Court expansions. If you’re dealing with panels of 7 or 9 or whatever number, it matters less if repeated expansions get the total number of justices to some crazy high number. I also think that this panel approach will be harder or less likely to undo. It goes without saying that a future Republican trifecta would likely add its own justices. I think the panels would be more likely to be enduring.

Two other reforms seem important. The first is some kind of term limit or mandatory retirement age. I’ve seen differing arguments about whether this is constitutional. This piece from The Brennan Center says the Court has already ruled that “senior status” for judges over a certain age is constitutional.

Finally, along with some sort of term limits or mandatory retirement age we should probably shift from a set number of justices to just every president (or perhaps every term since in rare cases two presidents can serve during one term) gets two Court seats. Combined with limits on the back end of service, this gets us out of the macabre and increasingly extreme death watch and 28-year-old justices system we’re currently in. It removes some of the randomness and game playing.

If you don’t begin with an immediate increase in the number of justices, it’s not serious. Because you end up with a reform which might have a meaningful impact in 10 or 20 years and might never even properly come into effect. That’s a non-starter in terms of time to wait and actual effectiveness. But some mix of all these reforms together gets you not only immediate relief from the Court’s out-of-control corruption but systemic changes that have a greater chance of being enduring. Just as important, you are decreasing the incentives to pack the Court in the way the Federalist Society and the GOP did and which got us here in the first place. Justices didn’t all used to stay on the Court until they died or saw the end coming. Many went on the Court and then left after five or six years. If you’re one of a couple dozen justices and you don’t sit on every case and you’re either term-limited or aged out after a while many won’t want to stay forever. There’s just less incentive. Today an Alito or a Thomas more or less runs the country. If you’re into power, why would you ever leave? The ultimate goal is to reduce the overweening power of the Court and the individual justices which make it up and thus reduce the incentives to corrupt it in the first place. There’s no perfect solution but these are a range of reforms which limit in significant ways the incentives for judicial corruption and abuses of power while providing immediate relief to the Court’s current corruption.

Second to last point: many politicians who say they support reform focus on Ethics Codes. Those are great. It would be good if the Court were given not simply a code but actually laws which would control justices’ behavior, barring cash bounties from billionaires, requiring disclosure and recusal. But none of this really touches the abuses of power which are the real current issue. Justice Thomas shouldn’t function as a kept justice with sugar daddies showering him down with goodies and cash. But those are just nice bonuses. He’d be just as corrupt if those judicial sugar daddies didn’t exist. So Ethics Codes and laws are great. But don’t be fooled into thinking they’re meaningful reform.

Final point: I’ve tried to sketch out broad brush reforms. People raise constitutional objections to one or more of them. That’s fine. Assume that I am anticipating fine-tuning these proposals to meet technical or constitutional concerns. I’m confident that they can be fine-tuned in ways to meet any substantive constitutional objections.

Recommendation

Donald Trump now appears to have latched onto “communist” and the threat of “communism” as his new turnkey solution to the building anti-Trump wave set to crash in November. I would submit that the proper response to this is, “liar! crooked fool!” and go back to the offensive messaging. End of recommendation.

Backblaze Versus Dropbox

There’s a been a lot of (justified) concern and consternation over the last year regarding Backblaze — an online backup service whose simple pitch is that it backs up your entire entire computer, both the startup drive and external drives — and online file storage services like iCloud Drive, Dropbox, Google Drive, and Microsoft OneDrive. Backblaze stopped including the contents of such services in its backups. Michael Tsai (as usual) collected a long list of links regarding this.

The whole thing is complicated and confusing. The basic gist, I think, is that Backblaze has stopped trying to back up the contents from these services because sometimes the files aren’t really there on your local file system, but they sorta kinda look like they’re there. That’s what I meant in my post earlier today about Maestral regarding Apple’s modern File Provider APIs. You know how sometimes in iCloud Drive — or Dropbox or OneDrive or anything else that might use these APIs — you can see a file or folder in the Finder, but there’s a “cloud” icon next to it, and you have to click the cloud icon to actually download it? That.

With Maestral none of that comes into play. Maestral just keeps a folder on your local computer in sync with the contents of your Dropbox account. Just like the original Dropbox first-party app back in the day. So if you use Maestral, Backblaze does backup your Dropbox folder, because your Dropbox folder is just a regular folder (albeit, probably, a big one). It’s not a magic folder. Just a regular folder. And the Maestral software keeps its contents in sync. With software that uses Apple’s File Provider APIs — which effectively includes iCloud Drive — what you see as a user are magic folders, and the magic is undocumented.

Now, it turns out that Dropbox’s own first-party Mac client still has an available mode that that doesn’t use the File Provider APIs. Some people who use that old-school mode report that Backblaze still backs up their Dropbox folder. Some people say it doesn’t. Like I said, it’s confusing and complicated and undocumented on all sides. I would rather not worry about it. And with Maestral, I haven’t had to worry about it. When Maestral stops working, I might have to start worrying about it.

The first item Tsai links to is this post from Rob Holliday to the venerable TidBITS-Talk forum.

 ★ 

Ilya Somin defends the American Revolution

1. Far from retarding the abolition of slavery, the Revolution actually accelerated it. Its triumph gave a big boost to Enlightenment liberalism, which inspired the First Emancipation in the US (the abolition of slavery in the North that became the first large-scale emancipation of slaves in modern history), and boosted antislavery movements in Europe, as well.

2. Had the Revolution been defeated, Enlightenment liberal ideology would have been dealt a setback in Britain and France, too. That would have set back antislavery movements there, as well. It is no accident that many antislavery leaders in Europe were also sympathizers with the American Revolution. The Marquis de Lafayette was just one of the most famous examples of European liberals who actively backed both.

3. The West Indian slaveowner lobby in Parliament was strong enough to block abolition of slavery until 1833. Had Britain also been saddled with the much larger proslavery lobby of the American South, it would have taken far longer. Especially when you combine the impact of the larger slavery lobby with the force of point 2 above.

Here is the full piece, with additional arguuments.

The post Ilya Somin defends the American Revolution appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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What the f--- am I looking at?

The above image was posted on Instagram this weekend by Gracey Van Der Mark, the Huntington Beach City Council member running for State Assembly.

And the word that comes to mind is …

Trashy.

Absolutely trashy.

To be clear, I’d be saying this were Gracey a man or a llama or a three-pronged fork. Whatever the status, she’s just grotesque; a woman who led the push for the library MAGA plaque; a woman who fought libraries and insisted—at the top of her voice—that pornography merchants were infiltrating education; a woman who has corroded and corrupted a fantastic city with her extremism, her anger, her viciousness, her raw stupidity.

In short, Gracey Van Der Mark is a QAnon-supporting lunatic. And that should offend your general lunatics, because to be grouped with her is no compliment.

And here’s the thing: As we speak, Gracey is running against Chris Kluwe, former NFL player/current Huntington Beach resident/advocate for decency. And, at the moment, you’d have to say Gracey is the slight favorite. It’s a lean-conservative voting block, and her time on the council has provided useful name recognition. It’s a lean-Gracey race right now.

So, what I’d like to see is this: Chris Kluwe taking the gloves off, and Chris Kluwe’s campaign taking the gloves off. In smaller elections, you can’t just win by hyping your own goods (and Chris is overflowing with goods). No, you need to define your opponent. In this case, that isn’t too hard: Gracey is a nut. Not half a nut. A full, all-squirrels-in lunatic who dashes toward the nearest conspiracy theory as a moth does a streetlamp. She is a sitting duck of stupidity and simplicity, running against a dude who is far more accomplished and intelligent.

If I’m the Kluwe campaign, oh, 70 percent of my focus going forward is on defining Gracey. Scroll her wacky IG feed, pluck images, make her messaging your messaging. Go hard, go on the attack, start handing out leaflets about her porn weirdness and council meeting blatherings.

Bring.

The.

Fucking.

Heat.

She’s lined it up for us.

Let’s knock it down.

July 5, 2026

Going into the weekend during which Americans celebrated the 250th anniversary of the day on which the Second Continental Congress accepted the Declaration of Independence, President Donald J. Trump was facing a whole lot of bad news.

There was the war on Iran. On Thursday, after U.S. Central Command said regional leaders in the Middle East were committed to the “free flow of commerce” in the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s military command said that any ships trying to cross the strait on unapproved routes would be met with a “forceful response.” The U.S. has been urging ships to use a route close to Oman, but Iran’s warning caused ships to turn around.

Iran was part of the story of the economy. The choking off of the roughly 20% of the world’s oil that flowed through the Strait of Hormuz until Trump launched an attack on Iran has caused inflation to spike in the U.S. On Wednesday, July 1, Trump’s new hand-picked chair of the Federal Reserve, Kevin Warsh, told the European Central Bank Forum on Central Banking that “prices are too high.” With inflation over 4%, Warsh also reiterated that the Fed would continue to hold its goal of no more than 2% inflation, suggesting that the interest rate cuts Trump wants so badly are not going to happen any time soon. Currently there is talk of raising interest rates later this year.

In addition to concerns about stringency in the oil markets, Joe Hernandez of NPR reported on Friday that the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz also affected transport of about one third of the world’s fertilizer transported by sea. Shortages hurt farmers around the world, including in the U.S., where farmers were hit with skyrocketing fertilizer prices during planting season. An April survey from the American Farm Bureau Federation reported that 70% of respondents said they couldn’t afford all the fertilizer they needed for the season.

Hernandez reports that higher fertilizer prices are just one of the reasons that consumers will see higher food prices this fall.

And then there were the stories about corruption. On Tuesday, new financial disclosures showed that Trump has made an eye-popping $1.4 billion in his family’s cryptocurrency ventures since he took office. On Thursday, Trump appeared to feel the need to defend those profits, telling CNBC: “There’s nothing illegal. There’s nothing wrong with it I could know.” Julia Manchester of The Hill noted that Trump went on to say that the nature of the presidency means that his children “have inside information” about almost any business decision they make. He said: “Almost anything they do, if they want to buy a truck, if they buy an energy efficient truck, they have inside information.”

There are specific legal prohibitions against using insider information for benefit in stock trades and financial transactions.

And Trump appears to have fleeced his own followers. On Saturday, Eric Lipton and David Yaffe-Bellany of the New York Times reported that as of the end of June, nearly a million people who bought Trump’s memecoin lost a total of $3.81 billion while Trump walked away with $636 million. Trump took transaction fees up front, so he made money no matter what happened with the coin. For his followers, though, his advice that “It’s time to celebrate everything we stand for: WINNING!” and to “Join my very special Trump community. GET YOUR $TRUMP NOW!” cost them dearly as the coin slid from trading at $75.35 to trading at $1.76, a drop of 97%.

On Thursday, Democrats on the House Committee on Natural Resources released a report accusing Trump of cheating the American people at large by diverting donations that donors intended to make to the nonpartisan America250 program to his own Freedom 250 organization. After failing to take over America250 entirely, the report charges, Trump’s people created Freedom 250 within the National Park Foundation. By using a known and popular public charity as cover, Freedom 250 could attract donations while operating outside the transparency and accountability rules Congress required for America250.

The report suggests that Trump officials gave donors intending to donate to the bipartisan America250 routing and account numbers for Trump’s Freedom 250. They also took most of the money Congress appropriated for the America 250 project; in June a spokesperson for the Department of the Interior told Michael Scherer of The Atlantic: “Spending taxpayer money on frivolous, poorly attended events and D.C. consultants who are trying to get rich off America’s 250th is the exact opposite of what was intended. This administration will not light taxpayer money on fire. Full stop.”

But Trump officials routed that money to favored contractors, including the firm that helped to organize Trump’s rally at the Ellipse on January 6, 2021, before attendees stormed the U.S. Capitol.

Representative Jared Huffman (D-CA), the highest-ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Natural Resources, told reporters: “I’m a lawyer, and I know better than to pronounce that a crime has been committed. But I do know the elements of fraud, and there is evidence of all those elements here.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s Freedom 250 focused on promoting his 250-foot-tall triumphal arch at his Great American State Fair on the National Mall. Recurring problems with Trump’s renovations to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool marred that celebration as the pool turned green with algae and then pieces of the pool’s new coating began to break loose. Administration officials accused vandals of causing the damage. They put fencing around the pool and had National Guard troops patrol it.

The Great American State Fair opened on June 25 after a number of musical acts backed out, saying they had been misled into thinking the event was backed by the bipartisan America 250. Once open, the fair was plagued with electrical issues, sparse exhibits, and heat. A model of the proposed triumphal arch looked cheap and quickly began to come apart. Visitors were few and far between, and CNN’s Kaitlan Collins reported that aerial images of the empty mall so enraged Trump that White House officials deleted them from official and personal social media accounts.

And on June 25, in response to a lawsuit by journalist Katie Phang, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ordered acting attorney general Todd Blanche to produce key documents from the Epstein files by July 2 or show cause why the Department of Justice is refusing. On July 2 it refused to produce the material, saying its redactions and omissions were within the scope of the requirements of the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

On July 3, Fifty Plus One, which tracks Trump’s job approval rating, reported that 59.1% of Americans disapprove of his performance while only 37.5% approve.

And so, on Friday night, the eve of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, Trump flew to South Dakota to deliver a speech at Mt. Rushmore in which he claimed he and his supporters are at war against an enemy here at home: communists.

Before his trip to the state, Trump posted a video showing his own likeness on a golden sculpture of Mt. Rushmore, alongside the images of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, with the voiceover saying: “I will be the greatest president for many, many years to come.” The video opens with the text “Art of the vision” spelled out over an American flag, an encapsulation—although perhaps an unintentional one—of how Trump has maintained political power by selling a false image to his followers.

Trump began his speech with a series of feel-good platitudes: “These are very, very special times. And this is a very special place. You live in a very special place. Congratulations, everybody…. We are a nation of dreamers and believers, warriors and explorers, doers and fighters…. There has never been anything like us anywhere on earth.” And then he tied together MAGA’s white nationalism with the claim that Trump’s political opponents want to destroy the economy.

Trump clearly thinks there is political gain in convincing his followers that his political opponents are communists, although this is a lie made up out of whole cloth after the victory of Democratic Socialists in Democratic primaries and the popularity of New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani. Communists call for the end of private ownership of the means of production, giving the state control of private enterprises. In today’s America, it is actually Trump, himself, who is taking government stakes in private enterprises.

Democratic Socialists are not communists or socialists, who want to see the end of private property. Democratic Socialists call for a robust system of private enterprise, alongside government control of the aspects of society required for people to participate in the economy on a level playing field. While Democratic Socialists embrace a wide range of policies, they generally don’t think schools, or medical care, or roads, should be profit-making industries.

In that, they echo Americans from the 1860s, when the Republicans established public colleges, or the 1900s, when Theodore Roosevelt called for public health insurance. Indeed, what today’s Democratic Socialists call for is much more limited than what the Republicans under President Dwight D. Eisenhower wanted in 1956, when the top income tax bracket in the United States was 91%.

Nonetheless, on Friday Trump tried to convince Americans that “there is now a resurgence of the communist menace in our land, including from newcomers to our country who embrace ideas totally opposed to our way of life and our great success.” “These are not mere political disagreements like differences over taxes or regulations,” he said. “Communism is a mortal threat to American liberty. It is the greatest threat to our country, including World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, or even 9/11.”

He went on to say: “They don’t want good. They don’t love God and they don’t want God. They don’t love religion and they don’t want religion and they won’t have it.… They have no respect for law, justice, principle, tradition, or your God-given rights. It’s an ideology of mass theft, mass control, mass lies, and mass murder…. You can be a communist or you can be a patriot. You cannot be both.”

His false vision of the U.S. is aimed at the midterm elections. “America will never be a communist country,” he said. “We can only lose the midterms if we allow ourselves to lose the midterms, if we are foolish, stupid, and unwise.” He went on to demand that the Senate end the filibuster and Congress pass the voter-suppression SAVE America Act. If they do, he said, “we will not lose an election for a hundred years.”

On July 4, hundreds of masked white supremacists in khakis and blue shirts, carrying Confederate flags and flags with the logo of the neofascist white supremacist group Patriot Front, marched in Washington, D.C., chanting “Reclaim America.” The White House did not respond to a query from Gloria Oladipo of The Guardian about whether Trump condemns the march.

Trump continued his attacks on “communists” in a late-night speech on the National Mall after thunderstorms temporarily shut down his planned rally. “[A]ll these talks from the communists, they haven’t got a chance,” he told the drenched audience members, “not even a chance. We don’t want communists in our country.”

Trump’s drop into an anticommunism that exaggerates even the excesses of the McCarthy era seems to indicate panic rather than confidence. Today, July 5, he began posting on social media at 1:21 AM and over the course of the day posted more than 100 times, attacking Democrats and boasting extravagantly of what he says are his own successes while demanding Congress pass the SAVE Act or lose the presidency forever.

Trump’s people appear to be trying to push Trump’s vision, but it doesn’t seem to be sticking.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum made the rounds of the Sunday talk shows today, insisting that the problems with the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool were the work of vandals who have gashed its surface in multiple cuts that equal the 350 feet Trump claims and that there is video evidence, although the administration, which is famous for spinning everything to its own advantage, is choosing not to show it.

When CNN’s Dana Bash asked whether they actually had photographs of people cutting a gash in the liner, Burgum danced away from the question after commenting, “I’m not sure why you and others in the media think that you want to keep trying to question whether or not…”

And so the 251st year of American democracy begins with reality reasserting itself.

Notes:

https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/7/3/iran-warns-ships-against-using-unapproved-routes-in-strait-of-hormuz

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jul/05/iran-control-strait-of-hormuz-ali-khamenei-funeral

https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/interest-rates-kevin-warsh-de137876

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/07/01/kevin-warsh-ecb-forum-live-updates.html

https://www.npr.org/2026/07/03/nx-s1-5877344/fertilizer-shortage-food-prices

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5952294-trump-crypto-profits/

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/04/us/politics/trump-coin-crypto-investors-loss.html

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/07/02/donors-were-misled-by-trump-backed-freedom-250-house-democrats-allege/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/documents/2cfa8a43-d56d-4133-92b0-6a14ed113db4.pdf?itid=lk_inline_manual_2

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2026/06/trump-250-great-american-state-fair/687456/

https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/11/politics/several-states-not-participating-trump-state-fair

https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-arch-state-fair-substance-b3007515.html

https://fiftyplusone.news/polls/approval/president

https://taxpolicycenter.org/statistics/historical-highest-marginal-income-tax-rates

https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-posts-gold-replica-of-himself-on-mount-rushmore-12157408

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/masked-men-with-confederate-flags-seen-chanting-marching-riding-metro-in-dc/4125936/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jul/04/neo-fascist-patriot-front-washington-dc

https://www.cms.gov/about-cms/agency-information/history/downloads/presidentcmsmilestones.pdf

https://www.the-independent.com/bulletin/news/trump-great-american-state-fair-july-4-crowds-b3007836.html

https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5941665-doj-epstein-files-lawsuit/

https://abcnews.com/Politics/doj-declines-turn-additional-epstein-files-redactions/story?id=134430675

https://www.cfr.org/articles/washingtons-growing-portfolio-tracking-u-s-government-investments

https://www.thedailybeast.com/donald-trump-unravels-with-100-plus-posting-spree-after-holiday-humiliation/

Trumpstruth:

statuses/39773

X:

Acyn/status/2072501274843713700?s=20

YouTube:

watch?v=aCKPegFs1CE

watch?v=PJHHNwn1L0o

Bluesky:

atrupar.com/post/3mpvq5so5qu2o

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Week Six in 250 to 250

This was the sixth week of videos from the 250 to 250 Project that we’re producing to honor the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.

We designed the videos 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.

Yesterday marked the date the Second Continental Congress adopted the final wording of the Declaration, but the members didn’t actually sign the Declaration until August 2. We thought it would be fun to continue the videos throughout July and into August, launching the nation’s 251st year with some historical inspiration. So there’s more coming.

You can follow the project 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.

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Gettysburg Address, Narrated by Governor JB Pritzker

Governor JB Pritzker is the 43rd governor of Illinois. Here, he revisits the Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln’s three-minute speech that rededicated the nation to the principle that all men are created equal.

“The Star-Spangled Banner,” Narrated by Sarah Longwell

Sarah Longwell is publisher of The Bulwark, host of The Focus Group podcast, and bestselling author of “How to Eat an Elephant: One Voter at a Time,” coming this fall. Longwell tells us how the British bombardment of Baltimore’s Fort McHenry in 1814 inspired our national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Billie Jean King, Narrated by Rosie Casals

Rosie Casals is the winner of 12 Grand Slam Doubles titles and is one of only three players—alongside Billie Jean King and Nancy Richey—inducted into the Hall of Fame twice. She helped establish the WTA in 1973 and is a founding member of the Original 9 that started women's professional tennis. Casals details how tennis legend Billie Jean King has used her platform to push for gender equality and social change.

John Adams’ Letters to Abigail, Narrated by Sara Georgini

Dr. Sara Georgini is an American historian, author, and Series Editor for the “Papers of John Adams,” at the Adams Papers Editorial Project at the Massachusetts Historical Society. Georgini shares how John Adams, writing to his wife Abigail in 1776, envisioned generations of Americans celebrating independence with pomp and parade—right about everything but the date.

You can see the Adams’s revolutionary words on display right now in the “1776 Declaring Independence” exhibit, open and free at the Massachusetts Historical Society. Learn more here.

Mister Rogers, Narrated by Governor Josh Shapiro

Governor Josh Shapiro is the 48th Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the home state to one of America’s most beloved neighbors, Fred Rogers. As a kid, Governor Shapiro grew up watching “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.” Now as Governor, he uses those guiding principles of universal kindness to serve his neighbors across Pennsylvania.

Three Flags Day, Narrated by Claire Conner McCaskill

Claire Conner McCaskill is a former attorney, political analyst for MS NOW and NBC News, and the first female U.S. senator from Missouri. McCaskill recounts the “Three Flags Day” of 1804, when St. Louis passed from Spain to France to the United States in a single day.

Civil War Income Taxes, Narrated by Danny Werfel

Danny Werfel served as 50th Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and is currently an Executive in Residence at the Johns Hopkins University School of Government and Policy. Werfel details how the Civil War spurred congressional Republicans to invent the income tax.

Thurgood Marshall, Narrated by Governor Wes Moore

Governor Wes Moore is a combat veteran, bestselling author, former nonprofit CEO, and is Maryland’s first Black governor and the third black Governor elected in American history. Moore celebrates Thurgood Marshall, the legendary civil rights lawyer who prevailed in the Brown v. Board of Education decision and became the first Black Supreme Court Justice.

All in the Family, Narrated by Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Julia Louis-Dreyfus is an award-winning actress, comedian, producer, and podcast host whose early work on shows like Family Ties helped launch her storied career, including beloved roles in Seinfeld and Veep. Julia revisits All in the Family, the groundbreaking 1971 sitcom that used Archie Bunker and his family to tackle the era's most divisive issues.

16th Street Baptist Church Bombing, Narrated by Senator Doug Jones

Doug Jones is a prominent attorney and public servant who became the first Democrat elected to the U.S. Senate from Alabama in 25 years and is currently the state’s Democratic nominee for Governor. Jones, who prosecuted the case decades later, remembers the four young girls killed in the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, a tragedy that galvanized support for the Civil Rights Act.

Madam C.J. Walker, Narrated by A’Lelia Bundles

A’Lelia Bundles is an award-winning journalist, Emmy-winning producer, and author of acclaimed biographies telling the stories of the civic-minded business women in her family, including her great-great-grandmother Madam C. J. Walker.

NATO, Narrated by Adam Kinzinger

Adam Kinzinger is a retired military officer, former U.S. Representative, and current political commentator known for his views on the evolving Republican Party and serving as one of two Republicans appointed to the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol. Kinzinger explains the formation of NATO, the defensive security alliance that has helped to keep the world safe since 1949.

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Women’s progress at work appears to be stalling

After the “lean in” generation, are professional women leaning out?

Kakistocracy

Today’s post is brought to you by my sponsor, Mechanize. They’re hiring junior software engineers at $300K/year base salary. Apply now!

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[I wanted to put this out before the release of Hanania’s new book, but the post ended up falling on the weekend of America’s 250th birthday. To be clear, I still think this is a great country in most ways, despite the recent decline in our political environment. There’s more to life than politics. So don’t take this post as America bashing, it’s American politics circa 2026 bashing. BTW, here’s how I’d rewrite Jefferson’s famous remarks:

In the more than 300 years since the invention of the printing press, the world’s best minds have produced innovations in philosophy, history, literature and political economy that have led thoughtful people to conclude that the only appropriate role of government is to secure the people’s right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Yeah, not exactly as literary as Jefferson, but more informative.]

An american flag waving in the wind
Photo by Danny Burke on Unsplash

Richard Hanania’s new book entitled Kakistocracy: Why Populism Ends in Disaster is the definitive account of populism in the 21st century. I’ll begin this post explaining why Hanania was the ideal person to write a book on modern populism as well as the reasons why I would not be able to do this sort of project. Then I’ll briefly discuss the contents of the book, focusing on the difficulty of making generalizations about politics.

The term kakistocracy means “rule by the worst”. The term “worst” can have multiple meanings, including the least competent and the most unethical. Long time readers know that I believe these two negative attributes often go hand in hand, and Hanania seems to hold a similar view. Hanania focuses on a style of populism that combines a rejection of expertise with a cavalier disregard for the truth.

Previous attempts to grapple with this topic often struggle to avoid “Trump Derangement Syndrome”, which means expressing outrage at Trump’s various misdeeds. (Future historians will be bemused that the term “TDS” was not a reference to the brainwashed members of the Trump cult who lived in an epistemic bubble where they were showered with misinformation and conspiracy theorizing-and instead referred to thoughtful pundits who accurately described this phenomenon.) So why is it so hard to avoid TDS, and why am I not well suited for this sort of project?

Recall my recent post entitled “The world is bigger than you can imagine”. Donald Trump is a near perfect example of this general phenomenon. I am vaguely aware that Trump has been producing almost nonstop scandals over the last decade, including everything from petty stylistic outrages to personal corruption to bad public policy to abuses of power. The examples number in the hundreds. But at any given point in time, I can only recall a few. The forefront of my mind simply refuses to devote a lot of space to Trump outrages. (Perhaps they are somewhere in my mind’s basement, to be recalled if reminded of some long-forgotten scandal.)

Because I can only recall a few examples at a time, any blog post I write on the subject would be woefully inadequate. Readers might reasonably wonder what’s so special about Trump; don’t other politicians also lie, issue corrupt pardons, engage in abuse of power, etc? Yes, on occasion they do. In the end, my TDS post would make Trump look better—more like a normal politician. So that wouldn’t work, I’d just be preaching to the choir. It would take a future Robert Caro doing a three-volume set of 1200-page books to properly document the scale of Trump’s awfulness, and that’s not something I can do. Sorry.

Hanania mentions a few Trump outrages but wisely goes at the subject from a different angle, focusing on the deeper causes behind the recent rise of anti-elite populism. Even better, he works from the vantage point of someone that voted for Trump in 2024 for policy reasons but has recently become disgusted with the entire MAGA movement. Those of us who have long been critical of Trump might be tempted to suggest that Hanania has finally seen the light, but in fairness the second term Trump really is far more populist and far more corrupt and incompetent than the first term version. Hanania always recognized Trump’s flaws but is no longer willing to put up with them.

Hanania’s personal history gives him insight into the MAGA movement that most of us do not have. Some of the best parts of the book describe his personal journey from the far right to a position closer to . . . here I need to be careful with labels . . . classical liberal? Neoliberal? Libertarian? In any case, closer to my own views on politics, however you wish to describe them.

In the introduction, Hanania dissects the populist movement with precision, showing how a segment of the right has recently become deranged over politics, partly due to an avalanche of misinformation in social media:

All of these facts could easily be found in countless media outlets by anyone with an interest in what happened on January 6 and the events leading up to that day. Yet I saw that conservative-leaning friends either didn’t know these facts or dismissed them in absurd ways, for example, by making false equivalencies to things Democrats had done in the past or, as we have seen, passing along a news media article with a headline that contained some magic words they thought proved a conspiracy or excused Trump’s behavior. Friendships ended, not over political disagreements; I could have respected those who said that Trump tried to overturn the election and that he was right to do so. Such a person might have different moral standards, but they would at least be connected to reality.

To deny or ignore widely known facts, however, about a major recent historical event while continuing to strongly believe that Trump had been treated unfairly by the American establishment was too much to take. . . .

[T]he same intellectual independence that attracted me to fringe ideas and political movements in the first place would not allow me to claim victory and lean in to cultivating existing friendships and my natural audience. Right-wing concerns about issues like DEI and the handling of Covid were completely justified. Yet I could not ignore that the Trump movement over time came to be dominated by epistemological nihilism, open bigotry, authoritarianism, and an embrace of conspiracy theories. Some of my values stayed the same, while others changed. I realized that being obsessed with race and gender issues is the other side of the coin of wokeness, and leads to a zero-sum view of the world and policy ideas that make society as a whole worse off. I came to see my embrace of white identitarianism in my early years as a kind of mental derangement, yet it was one that had largely taken over the American right.

Philosophers say that words have fuzzy meanings. Thus, of all the things that you can put on your feet, exactly which objects are called “shoes”? And no words are fuzzier than political terms, including socialism, fascism, liberalism, capitalism, populism and nationalism. Socialism has generally been defined a system that combined statist economic policies and egalitarian social insurance. But those are two very different things. As a result, the term ‘socialism’ gets applies to both highly statist regimes like Cuba and free market economies with extensive social insurance, such as Denmark. Similarly, the term liberalism gets applied to everything from classical liberal to neoliberal to mild socialist.

Defining a term like populism can be like nailing jello to the wall, as it means different things to different people. Hanania links modern populism with opposition to the elites, a term that is also up for grabs, no longer equating to wealth and power. Indeed, some of the world’s richest and most powerful individuals are known for their strong opposition to elite opinion:

Until the last few decades, then, identifying who elites and populists were was a straightforward task. Elites were people with influence and power, and populists were those with less power and influence who challenged elites through direct appeals to the masses. Such a framework, however, makes little sense today. The most obvious problem with these definitions is that, as previously mentioned, they would make Donald Trump an elite, given that he is a second-term president and has established complete domination over a major political party like perhaps no other figure in American history.

Trump and his supporters continue to consider themselves at war with the establishment no matter how much power they acquire. . . .

The migration of Sili con Valley billionaires, decabillionaires, and even centibillionaires—most notably Elon Musk—into the MAGA coalition in recent years has not caused it to tamp down on populist rhetoric. This just adds to the mys tery. Elite status is not wealth, and it is not power, or at least not direct political power. Rather, elites are defined by their social capital and the kinds of communities they form. Once we understand this, we can ana lyze populism. As we will learn, populist rhetoric on the right continues to exist in part because actors who are truly self-interested in the sense of seeking tangible resources, like Trump and Musk, along with many of their fans and supporters, struggle to get into the heads of traditional elites. This is one of the sources of tension between the two sides of the modern political spectrum. (pp. 2-3)

This creates an odd paradox:

We have this strange situation, then, where liberals like current elites (except perhaps for some tech billionaires and other plutocrats) in practice but dislike the idea of elites in theory, while conservatives are fine with elites in theory but don’t like the ones we have. (p. 11)

In a recent podcast, someone asked me for an example of where I had completely changed my view on a topic. In my own field of macro, the evolution of my views tends to be incremental. Instead, I cited the growth of diversity in the media, which I once thought would lead to an improved information environment. As Hanania points out, it did not turn out that way:

The left-leaning columnist Matthew Yglesias suggests that the tradition of objective journalism that we all take for granted came about not from a commitment to neutrality as such but from the incentives built into the business model of mid-twentieth-century American newspapers. These outlets sought mass appeal, drawing in both advertisers and subscribers by offering a well-rounded package: weather, sports, stock quotes, and straightforward reporting.

This meant that there was a need to avoid offending any part of the reading public. In this model, objectivity was less about a supply-driven desire for balance and more about reflecting a broadly acceptable centrist consensus. As Yglesias notes, the fragmentation of the media landscape, driven by digital platforms and tailored content, has undercut this approach. Stock prices, sports updates, and weather reports are now delivered instantly to our phones, which for many people eliminates any reason to buy a newspaper. Media outlets therefore compete over niche audiences rather than trying to reach everyone through maintaining a neutral and elevated tone. (p. 16)

Today, the media largely tells people what they wish to hear, which means the news is heavily skewed toward misinformation and wild conspiracy theories.

The traditional left/right dichotomy is increasingly being replaced by a split between the well informed and the poorly informed, with the latter drifting toward authoritarian populism. Hanania emphasizes the fact that this change is particularly pronounced in the GOP:

Only Democrats engaged with serious publications in substantial numbers. Among that group, 31 percent read The New York Times, and 26 percent read The Washington Post. The equivalent numbers for Republicans were 9 percent and 8 percent. One might think that Republicans read conservative papers instead. But even The Wall Street Journal was relied upon by more Democrats than Republicans, 15 percent to 11 percent. Meanwhile, 60 percent of Republicans watched Fox News. Democrats also relied to a large extent on TV, but they had many more people who read serious newspapers and websites in their coalition. (p. 36)

Because of the time lag in publishing, Hanania’s book was mostly written in 2025. Much of what Hanania describes seems even more relevant today, with “kakistocracy” an even more appropriate term for the 2026 version of the Trump administration than the 2025 version. On the other hand, I wonder if Hanania might have spent a bit more time of the insurgent left in the Democratic Party if he had written the book today. Until recently, I had assumed that the excesses of the left were beginning to recede, as 2020-style wokism was going out of style. Perhaps Hanania was working under the same assumption, which seemed plausible in 2025.

Toward the end of the book his analysis drifts over into a subject that I believe is better described as “authoritarianism”, and for the most part he does an excellent job of defining the concept, explaining why it is on the increase, and showing the various ways that it expresses itself, especially in Europe and Latin America:

In Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro’s presidency followed a similar trajectory, built on nostalgia for military dictatorship, climate denial, antivaccine activism, and attacks on electoral institutions. After losing the 2022 election, he refused to accept the results and ultimately inspired a violent attack on government buildings by his supporters, an event that was reminiscent of the January 6 Capitol riot. This demonstrates not only that populists around the world converge on similar ideas and ways of seeking power but also that they learn from one another, as Trump’s attempted coup of 2020/2021 seemingly inspired his Brazilian counterpart to try a similar gambit.

On a visit to Mexico in 1971 (at age 16), I had my first exposure to what was then called the “third world”. I was struck by the widespread acceptance of what I viewed as wild conspiracy theories, such as the idea that the CIA was behind all sorts of mysterious events in Latin America, or the view that the Holocaust never happened. Little did I know that I’d live to see America adopt Mexican-style epistemics.

If the first two thirds of the book is pretty great, the final portion is merely good. That’s not because Hanania gets things wrong, rather the topic of populism throughout the world becomes so sprawling that generalizations become increasingly difficult to make. The following comments are not so much areas I where disagree as they are areas where I believe some qualifications are important.

Hanania has a chapter entitled Giving the Devil his Due, which discusses some areas where the populists got things right, including some (but not all) of their views on Covid. He also suggests that authoritarian populists may have been a necessary evil in certain Latin American countries, citing El Salvador and Peru.

While his individual observations are reasonable, mixing so many examples can lead readers astray unless they pay close attention to his qualifiers. Consider these facts about the world (my words, not Hanania’s):

Argentina’s Milei is a democratically elected leader who uses a populist style and enacts neoliberal policies.

Peru’s Fujimori is a democratically elected authoritarian leader with a populist style that enacted neoliberal policies.

Singapore has authoritarian leaders that use a non-populist style to enact neoliberal policies.

Venezuela’s Chavez and Maduro were authoritarian leaders that employed a populist style and enacted socialist policies.

In other words, it’s complicated. In the final portion of the book, Hanania discusses authoritarian populism in a wide variety of situations. While he does draw many relevant distinctions in the cases that he discusses, I wish he had emphasized even a bit more that a populist style, populist policies and authoritarianism are three very distinct concepts, albeit frequently linked. I worry that less than careful readers might conclude that authoritarianism or populism are appropriate in many cases because of a few individual examples that employed some but not all of the MAGA playbook.

Here is Hanania discussing democracy on page 107:

As long as Western elites maintain the democratic versus authoritarian framework to understand contemporary trends, they will remain vulnerable to challenges of hypocrisy and bad faith. Figures like Donald Trump and Viktor Orbán, for all their flaws, have large numbers of sup porters who agree with them on important issues and have won free and fair elections. When their critics attack them for being undemocratic, their backers can legitimately point to polls and the authority of the ballot box. The mathematician and author Nassim Nicholas Taleb, for instance, mocks the kind of Western intellectual who praises “democracy” when it returns a result he likes but denounces “populism” when things go the other way.

These critics have a point. Even when it comes to spin dictators such as Putin, defenders of democracy have to contend with the fact that he is genuinely popular. Opponents can claim that that popularity is exaggerated by censorship and authoritarian aspects of the system. Nonetheless, it is still real, and those who point to democracy as a fundamental value must admit that illiberal policies themselves often have a large degree of support. If the majority of the public is fine with oppressing minority movements and a strong leader exercising arbitrary power to some degree, and then a leader becomes even more popular as a result when he responds to popular will, has the principle of democracy been violated, or has it reached its logical endpoint?

Nothing here is necessarily wrong, but I’d emphasize a few other points. Whether a country is democratic does not depend on whether the leader is popular. Most European leaders are currently unpopular, but European countries are almost all democratic. If Putin is popular, that fact doesn’t imply that Russia is democratic.

Nor does the fact that Putin was democratically elected make Russia a democracy. Russia certainly was a democracy for an extended period after Putin took office in 2000 but has recently become a repressive dictatorship. Democratically elected leaders occasionally turn their countries into non-democratic nations. (The Hitler analogy actually fits here.)

I also worry that people on both the right and the left underestimate the importance of process. Thus, some left wingers want to pack the Supreme Court and some right wingers want to ride roughshod over civil liberties to achieve goals like crime reduction and mass expulsion of illegals. It is important to avoid the temptation to support policies that achieve your own policy goals at the cost of giving up on checks and balances in political power. In the long run, we would all be worse off. Think about what will happen when those same powers are used by the opposition party.

At any given point in time, for any given political issue, it’s close to a coin flip as to whether a democracy or an authoritarian country does better. But over time, the informational and incentive advantages of liberal democracy generally dominate more authoritarian forms of government.

Hanania may agree with that view (I share most of his current political opinions), but I worry that his readers might read too much into the cases where authoritarian governments had limited successes, such as economic policy reforms in Pinochet’s Chile, or crime reduction in Bukele’s El Salvador. There was a time when Putin seemed like an improvement over the (more democratic) Yeltsin, and there was even a brief period when many Germans viewed Hitler as an improvement over the Weimar government. Eventually, authoritarian governments usually (not always) end up making things worse.

It is also important to recall that while voters often have illiberal views, democratic countries generally enact more classically liberal policies than do autocracies. Hanania cites the fact that majorities don’t always support the rights of minorities, but it’s worth emphasizing that, on average, minority rights are preserved far better in democracies than in authoritarian countries. Similarly, despite the fact that voters often favor brain dead economic policies such as rent control, democracies tend to have far better economic policies than authoritarian countries, on average. Ironically, the country most often cited for the opposing view—Singapore—does have contested elections and is thus better described as a quasi-democratic/soft authoritarian hybrid. I’d be thrilled if Russia and China liberalized even to the level of Singapore.

Consider this quotation from page 193:

In short, Latin America presents an unsettling paradox: It is the most democratic region in the developing world, and yet among the most violent, least stable, and slowest growing. Compared to regions like East Asia, where many states have modernized under authoritarian regimes with stronger central governments, those in Latin America appear to have institutionalized electoral competition and principles like free speech without ever establishing capable governance.

This offers a sobering counterpoint to the assumption that democratization and human rights norms necessarily lead to development and order.

Is this the relevant comparison? How about the following:

  1. Most East Asian and most Latin American countries are democratic

  2. Most African countries are non-democratic

Does that framing change your view?

Or how about the frequently heard claim (not made by Hanania) that China’s success relative to India supports authoritarian models of development. Do the following facts change your interpretation:

  1. China is much poorer than less authoritarian ethnic Chinese places like Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong.

  2. India has grown far faster than more authoritarian portions of South Asia, notably Pakistan.

Nationalism is another term with a fuzzy meaning:

Nationalism has something to be said for it in modern Ukraine, given that it is the victim of an aggressive war launched by an enemy that seeks to wipe out its existence as an independent country and replace the current government with something that would be much worse. (p. 137)

Again, this isn’t wrong, but I prefer a different definition of nationalism. To me, Hanania is describing Ukrainian patriotism, not nationalism. (I’ll do a future post on the distinction.) I believe that most Ukrainians would like to see a world where Ukraine becomes a member of the EU and Nato, and the rights of both Ukrainian and Russian speakers are protected.

For the same reason that I’m far more interested in real world communism than in anything Marx may or may not have favored, I focus on real world nationalism, which tends to be anti-EU, anti-Nato, authoritarian, and often defines nationality in narrow ethnic terms, not in terms of citizenship. Ukraine’s so-called “nationalists” seem to want their country to become more like a cosmopolitan Western European nation. They literally elected a Jewish president.

So how depressed should we be by the rise of anti-elite populism? Consider these three claims:

  1. Politics is getting worse.

  2. Voters are becoming less well informed.

  3. The world is getting better.

Are all three claims true? I believe the answer is yes. There’s more to life than politics.

America is doing well despite our bad politics. What can we learn from that fact? Consider that Congress is willing to promote clowns to seemingly important positions like head of the Defense Department or HHS but balks at promoting clowns to the Fed or the Supreme Court. That suggests that Congress views most of the government as being essentially on automatic pilot—where it makes little difference who heads a department—and only the Fed and the Supreme Court make important decisions that actually move the needle.

I do worry that a continued slide toward banana republic status would eventually begin to corrode the broader American country, but for the moment we can take some solace in the fact that there’s a great deal of ruin in a nation.

For a more pessimistic take, consider the UK’s recent doom loop:

Populists in Britain force a referendum on the EU. It passes by a very narrow margin

The UK economy becomes increasingly stagnant, a problem widely attributed to Brexit.

The British public turns against Brexit, with polls showing nearly 2 to 1 now view it as a mistake.

The British public becomes very pessimistic about current conditions, which leads to increasing support for the (populist) political party that is responsible for Brexit.

Rinse and repeat.

What’s the solution? I don’t see one. When I was young, a candidate like San Jose mayor Matt Mahan would have done well in our recent primary election for governor. It seems like all the elite liked him; center, left and right. But he got only 3.5% of the votes, while a bunch of inferior candidates did much better. How can anyone have any optimism about our political system? The most optimistic take today is “Maybe politics don’t matter anymore.” Perhaps AI will be the most important trend of the 21st century, not populism. Or perhaps populism is just a passing fad, like 1960s-era liberalism and 1990s-era neoliberlaism.

Overall, I was extremely impressed with Hanania’s new book. I have strong and often contrarian opinions on politics, so naturally I would quibble about a few points when he extended his analysis to the international scene. But Hanania has a done a brilliant job of analyzing the causes and consequences of 21st century populism. Highly recommended.

PS. A few months ago I read Gombrowicz’s Diary, which is now one of my all-time favorite books. Here’s how (1959, pp. 417-18) he describes the cluelessness of uninformed Argentine populists:

Sound familiar?

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Monday assorted links

1. Advice for aspiring policy analysts.

2. Ten underrated history books.

3. AI superforecasters.

4. Fable makes a movie out of Last and First Men.

5. A lot of them should have been fired anyway.

6. The world’s first fully robot-run hotel in China?

7. Will the UK run out of air conditioning units?

The post Monday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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BAE microchip designed for strategic defense missions passes radiation test

The company is positioning its Endura computing for classified and missile-defense satellite programs

The post BAE microchip designed for strategic defense missions passes radiation test appeared first on SpaceNews.

Connected Aircraft Fleet Set to Exceed 70,000 by 2035

Paris, France | May 2026 – Novaspace’s latest In-Flight Connectivity report points to sustained, long-term growth in the In-Flight Connectivity (IFC) market, with connected aircraft numbers to exceed 70,000 by 2035. Simultaneously, IFC penetration is expected to rise from 48% […]

The post Connected Aircraft Fleet Set to Exceed 70,000 by 2035 appeared first on SpaceNews.

Centre for Space Futures, Novaspace and SpaceTech Gulf Sign Agreement to Develop Global Space Capability Mapping Dashboard

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia – June, 2026 The Centre for Space Futures (CSF), together with leading international partners including Novaspace, and SpaceTech Gulf, have signed a Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) to […]

The post Centre for Space Futures, Novaspace and SpaceTech Gulf Sign Agreement to Develop Global Space Capability Mapping Dashboard appeared first on SpaceNews.

Tianwen-2 arrives at asteroid Kamo’oalewa, first image revealed

HELSINKI — China’s Tianwen-2 sample return spacecraft has arrived at Kamoʻoalewa, revealing the near Earth asteroid to be a small, elongated rocky body. Tianwen-2 launched May 29, 2025, and traveled […]

The post Tianwen-2 arrives at asteroid Kamo’oalewa, first image revealed  appeared first on SpaceNews.

NASA and Small Business Administration partner on funding key space technologies

NASA SBA signing

NASA is partnering with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) on an effort to attract capital to invest in companies producing critical space components.

The post NASA and Small Business Administration partner on funding key space technologies appeared first on SpaceNews.

France to Stop Certifying Non-Quantum-Safe Encryption

France is accelerating its transition to post-quantum encryption:

France’s cybersecurity agency ANSSI said on Tuesday it would stop certifying security products that lack quantum-resistant encryption, a move that will force government bodies and critical operators to shift away from older systems.

Samih Souissi, ANSSI’s chief of staff, said at the France Quantum conference that the agency would halt such certifications from 2027, and that businesses should be buying only quantum-safe products by 2030.

ANSSI approval is required for use in French government agencies and critical infrastructure, making the policy a de facto phase-out of older encryption.

NASA adds three European firms to the commercial data program

An illustration of a satellite communications network. Credit: NASA

MILAN — NASA’s Commercial Satellite Data Acquisition program (CSDA) announced June 23 contract awards with eight new commercial satellite data providers, three of which are European: Kuva Space (Finland), OroraTech […]

The post NASA adds three European firms to the commercial data program appeared first on SpaceNews.

The term ‘dual-use’ is misleading and dangerous

There is only technology. How it is employed is a question of intent, context and political will, not of the technology itself. A precision optical payload captures imagery whether the […]

The post The term ‘dual-use’ is misleading and dangerous appeared first on SpaceNews.


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





The Mario Meeting

Review season. You start your career thinking the review is the most important milestone of the year, but as an individual, you only see part of the picture.

Everyone cares about the compensation (base salary, bonus, and stock). That’s the data they care about, but where did this pile of compensation come from? Who decided how big it is? And how is it allocated? It is a long, complicated, and large process that began over a year ago.

And as a Senior Leader, it’s your job to figure it out.

The Most Important Milestone

I’m going to work backward because we’re all — correctly — focused on compensation. Before I do, one thing to hold onto, because it’s the thing that trips everyone up: in any given Summer, two budgets are moving at once. One is being spent — the money for this year’s raises, which was locked in a year ago. The other is being built — next year’s budget, which is just now getting decided in rooms most people never see. Keep those two apart in your head, and the rest of this article is more digestible.

Disclaimer: This article makes a lot of assumptions, which I’ll explain as I go. The first is that you work in a business that is doing well enough to afford a merit budget for the team. No merit budget? Probably no promotions and likely no raises. Reading this article is still worth your while.

Fall. Reviews. Critical milestone. You receive a letter that says some words and then has some numbers. Hopefully, your boss explains these words and these numbers and gives you context on what they mean relative to your performance. I have found that the number of words I’ve received as a Senior Leader has gone down as a function of seniority. The number usually goes up. Usually. Why the Fall? It’s the last moment the company can pay out against a budget it defined a year ago, before the next fiscal year begins.

Earlier that Summer. Another critical milestone/meeting. Talent Planning. Before the review is written, the Senior Leaders for a team gather together and debate some version of ratings. There are many variants of these ratings for each company, but the punch line is that for each level (basically senior, mid, and junior), an employee is put in one of four performance buckets:

  • Exceptional
  • Strong
  • Fine
  • Needs Work

Worth repeating now, because it matters later: the money you’re allocating in this room was decided roughly a year ago. You are dividing up a pile whose size is already fixed.

If you’ve had the opportunity to be in one of these meetings in your career, you realize the intense hand-waving I’m doing with these four bullets. Get used to it. I’ve run eight versions of this process over the last 30 years, and I’m providing a high-level description without many details. However, the principles behind this process are the same.

Sidebar: If you haven’t had one of these meetings, I wonder why. How are you calibrating your ratings with your peers? How are you making sure your ratings are fair? Good questions that deserve answers.

Back to the meeting. The tricky part of this Talent Planning process is the constraints:

  • For a given team, there is a limit on how many individuals can go in each bucket, and
  • For a given rating bucket, there is a limit (usually a range) on how much comp can be allocated to an individual.

These counts and ranges vary by level. More junior folks can receive higher ratings. The higher the level, the higher the compensation range. If it’s not obvious yet, these restrictions exist for two reasons:

  • By restricting how many humans can go in each bucket, the company enforces a curve for ratings.1
  • When you add compensation ranges to all of it, you have all the pieces in place for a budget. X humans at Y compensation equals the total budget for raises.

These restrictions exist because every manager believes their team is doing better than other teams. This is normal human behavior; they better understand the data in front of them than the abstract data sitting in someone else’s head.

Psychologists call this the Lake Wobegon effect, named for the fictional town where all the children are above average. Your team’s work is vivid because you’re standing next to it; everyone else’s is a bullet on a slide. It’s not a lie — it’s a bias, and it’s why this meeting requires you to prove it.

However, without a mechanism that requires managers to defend their ratings, you get unbridled compensation and title bloat. That’s a future article.

Also, promotions are usually a part of this whole process. Some companies keep the promotion budget separate, but for the sake of simplicity, I’m tossing promotions into this Talent Planning process.

The Talent Planning process is essential. If you’re throwing promotions into the mix, you’re defining critical growth narratives for your most productive employees while also having honest debates about the unproductive ones. This article is not where I’m going to talk about how to do this well, when to debate, and when not to debate, or whether this process is fair or not. This is where I am looking at you, Mario. Yes, you. You and I have been Senior Directors on this team for three years, and every year, you think this is the meeting where we can argue for more dollars. I respect the moxie, but, Mario, this is not a budget meeting.

Your team, your organization, or your company carefully sets aside a chunk of money for compensation and promotions, and your job is to fit your plans for your team against this budget. Mario, yes, sometimes we pushed and discovered that the CFO or the VP had squirreled away dollars for the inevitable “We need more” conversations, but these were saved for one-off special circumstances. Our job is to hit our number.

Mario, do you want to affect this number? Good, wait just a few weeks.

Meanwhile Next Year is Already Happening

Everything up to this point — Reviews, Talent Planning, all of Mario’s arguing — has been about spending a budget that was set a year ago. Now turn around. Because in that very same July, while you’re sweating the ratings, a completely different set of meetings has already started: the ones that build next year’s budget. Same month. Different money. This is the cycle Mario never shows up for.

To vastly oversimplify even more, the process goes like this:

Strategy meetings — What are our big swings for the next year (or many years)? Product-wise. This often shows initially as themes or ideas from the CEO or VP of Product, and it’s designed to get a conversation started.

Product planning meetings — From that initial list of dreams, we (Product, Design, Engineering) start to build a defined set of concrete ideas that we could build. These are still scribbles, but on this long list of scribbles is the set of products and features the team is going to build in the next year.

Finance meetings — Once features start showing up, that’s when it’s time to get really uncomfortable. Important people are going to start asking hard questions about how much money it’s going to require to purchase that hardware or how many engineers will be required to staff that new feature or technology. If you’ve never done this before, my first bit of advice is: get comfortable with swags. While there are real dollars being decided here, you do not have the time to develop data-justified cost and headcount estimates. You are going to make well-informed guesses that have a significant impact on your team.

The cascade continues like this:

  • Finance looks at the possible features and the costs and builds a forecast on how these new features could affect the business. They bolt that onto how the business is currently doing and start to make estimates on how much money can be spent on the various parts of the business.
  • Quite often, the CEO creates working groups whose job it is to figure out different parts of the business. One of these working groups is the Compensation Committee, and its job is to figure out how much money the company can use in the next year for the merit budget based on finance guidance. They do a lot of research on hiring trends across the industry, promotion rates, and attrition rates, and then propose a number — “a 3.5% merit budget,” which means the budget is 3.5% of the total compensation of the current set of employees.

Every meeting I just described happens months before anyone writes a review. And the person whose budget depends on them wasn’t in the room.

Now Even Simpler

What’s my problem with Mario? He and I have been through this process three times now, and he still hasn’t figured out that the time to argue for more budget for his team has long passed. It’s not during Talent Planning; it’s during those Product Planning meetings he hasn’t shown up at for the last two years. His thought: I’m not a product guy — just tell me what you want me to build.

The wheels that are set in motion during Planning Meetings will define the budget that your team will be held to for the entire year. Chances are, they will never see a budget spreadsheet, but they will certainly feel the consequences of a budget where you did not successfully argue for headcount growth by drawing a clear line from strategy to product to features to the additional resources your team needs to get the job done in the coming year.

Arguing for a budget during a Talent Planning meeting demonstrates a profound lack of understanding of how business works. It’s all connected and, in business, it’s usually defined by money.

But that still isn’t my issue with Mario.

Has this article confused you? Is it completely clear how all compensation decisions are made? Probably not, but it gets worse. This is a model inspired by a consumer software company that ships annual releases — and you… work somewhere else. With an entirely different process.

And, as a Senior Leader, no one is going to take the time to explain all of this to you.

They are assuming you will take the time to figure out how the system works.

I’m looking at you, Mario.

  1. Yes, a curve. Yes, your boss lied to you when you asked if there was a curve, and he talked for a while about fairness, but there’s a curve. Always.

Pump and Dump and Trump

For all my interviews and more, subscribe on YouTube.

Transcript

Donald Trump has distinguished himself in many ways. One of them is that he is our first pump and dump president.

Hi, Paul Krugman here. A podcast today rather than a full-on piece: I’m a little exhausted from number-crunching over the weekend. So I thought I’d talk briefly about the really extraordinary financial picture that we’re seeing under the current administration.

Obviously no president has enriched himself from office the way that Trump has. That’s common knowledge. One of the things that is really amazing about it, however, is the way in which he enriched himself — a lot of which has to do with crypto.

So the New York Times had a report just the other day on Trumpcoin, the memecoin issued on Trump’s behalf which got a lot of buyers, a lot of money came flowing into it.

It should have been obvious from the beginning that the coin was inherently worthless, and at this point it essentially is worthless. It has lost 97 percent of its value. But a lot of people did buy in at the high prices.

What was special about the New York Times story was two things. First, they put a number on how much money naive investors have lost on the coin, which is 3.8 billion dollars. And even more surprising is the number of people who were in effect suckers here — almost a million.

That’s really amazing. I mean, I was completely cynical but I didn’t think there were that many suckers out there. But it turns out there were really a lot. A few people made money off the coin — basically insiders who got to buy it early and then were able to cash in before the broader retail market realized that this was a worthless token. There’s another token, the World Liberty Financial coin — which has also crashed, although the Times had difficulty in tracking down how many people have lost how much money. There’s the Melania coin.

Okay, all of this is amazing. As Trump would say, it’s like nothing anybody’s ever seen before. I think we should say, however, that this is a bigger story than just the Trump coin, and it’s a bigger story than just Trump himself.

What we’re witnessing is or has been a really enormous pump and dump scheme, I would argue, involving more or less all of crypto.

So if you don’t know the background, Trump used to be highly critical of cryptocurrency, saying it was worthless and a scam, which was true. But then when it became clear that there was money in it for him, he reversed course. And during the 2024 election, crypto interests contributed a lot of money to Trump. They then after the election poured a lot of money into his own enrichment, into his own projects. And the administration came in with a very pro crypto stance: deregulation encouraging uses of crypto, at least talk about a national bitcoin reserve, all of that. And the price of bitcoin doubled after the election; the valuation, the market cap of cryptocurrency in general went from a little over two trillion to more than four trillion.

And then starting last fall it all came crashing down. Not all the way to zero — the price of Bitcoin right now as I record this is about what it was on the eve of the 2024 election; it’s about half what it was at its peak. That’s also true, roughly speaking for the market cap. So we’ve seen about two trillion dollars of market valuation wiped out.

Why is this a pump and dump story? Well what is cryptocurrency good for? As you know, I’ve been on this for a long time. Bitcoin was introduced in 2009 — this is a seventeen year old idea which has yet to find any legitimate use cases. Illegitimate use cases, yes. There was also a report in the Wall Street Journal about the extent to which Iran and North Korea have been making use of cryptocurrency to evade U.S. sanctions, so there is that. But it’s still not enough to justify a multi-trillion dollar asset.

Anyway, it was trendy, it was exciting, it was fashionable and particularly after November 2024 it was pushed with the encouragement of the Trump Administration. It was just a heavy marketing campaign that had the advantage of also having the authority or whatever, the credibility — such as it was but among some people real —of Donald Trump behind it. They all evaporated.

I think we can say that to some extent what happened was that Trump kind of moved on to other things. There also is some distracted boyfriend meme: the guy looking over his shoulder. A lot of the excitable, fear of missing out, latest thing money has probably moved from crypto to AI. So that might have happened even without Trump. But the basic story is that Trump guided, pushed people into a whole asset class, crypto, of which a large part is Bitcoin, but other stuff as well.

We don’t know how much, or I don’t know, how much crypto was bought during this period, but it has to be substantial. And then it crashed. And at this point, essentially anybody who bought crypto during this era, since the 2024 election, has lost money.

It’s a lot of money; we know that on paper — it’s not really paper, but anyway — in principle two trillion dollars has been lost in crypto. Now a lot of that is probably money just given back, imaginary gains that took place during the run-up. But a substantial amount of additional money was from people who did buy in during this whole episode. So this has to be many times the size of the losses on the Trump coin. And it is, I would say, at a functional level another pump and dump scheme.

In this case the beneficiaries were people who were already in crypto. Clearly some of the crypto interests that bought themselves a president probably stayed fully invested. But others must have cashed out, and a lot of innocents — well a lot of a lot of suckers, let’s not mince words here — a lot of suckers clearly lost a lot of money.

It’s an extraordinary thing. There have been pump and dump schemes forever, probably going back to the Phoenicians or something. But this is on a scale we’ve never seen, and with the president of the United States in the center of it. Which I guess given everything else comes as no surprise.

Happy 250th birthday, America.

sqlite-utils 4.0rc3

Release: sqlite-utils 4.0rc3

I hoped to release sqlite-utils 4.0 stable this weekend, but as I worked through the backlog of issues and PRs with a combination of Claude Fable 5 and GPT-5.5 the changelog since rc2 kept getting bigger.

The biggest new feature is support for introspecting and creating compound foreign keys - a feature that involves a subtle breaking change to table.foreign_keys and hence needed to land for the 4.0 stable release.

sqlite-utils also now follows SQLite's convention for case insensitive column names, which turned out to touch a bunch of different places at once.

Tags: projects, sqlite, sqlite-utils, annotated-release-notes, gpt, claude-mythos-fable

When is someone dead? (dead enough to donate organs?)

 Transplantation of deceased-donor organs has made us rethink the notion of death itself.  What does it mean that a person is dead, while organs are still sufficiently alive to be transplanted?  In particular, if death is declared due to cessation of heartbeat, what does it mean if the heart can be transplanted and re-started in another patient's body?  Does it mean the donor wasn't really dead?  

These questions were very front of mind when heart transplants first began in the late 1960's. Those debates were resolved by the legal recognition of brain death, so that a patient could be recognized as dead while still having a heartbeat.   And for years, most deceased donation occurred after brain death.  But these issues are once again controversial, as transplants of all organs are growing not just after brain death, but increasingly from Donation after Circulatory Death (DCD).  

Vox has the (long but very clearly written) story:

The breakthrough changing how Americans donate organs
A growing form of donation is expanding the organ supply in the US — and testing how medicine protects dying patients. 
by Pratik  Pawar

"In the last decade, DCD has gone from a rare practice to something that now accounts for nearly half of all organ donors who have died in the United States. In 2000, DCD donors supplied just 219 organs (kidneys, livers, lungs, hearts, and pancreas combined) to the transplantation system in the US. In 2025, DCD brought in close to 17,000 organs. (Most transplanted organs, about 85 percent, come from dead donors, though some organs, most often kidneys, can also come from living donors.) 
 

"That growth has saved lives, but it has also pushed transplant medicine into an unusually sensitive moment: the time after a family has decided to let their loved one die but before death has actually occurred.
 

"In brain-death donation, a patient has already been declared dead before the possibility of donation is raised with the family. Because most brain-dead donors are on ventilators, with machines supplying oxygenated blood to their organs, transplant teams can take their time with the donation process.
 

"DCD doesn’t offer that same cushion. Because organs deteriorate so quickly after circulation ceases, the work of donation — the testing, matching, surgical teams flying in — has to be set in motion once the family has decided to withdraw life support but before the patient has died.
 

"This is where the tension in DCD begins. The process pushes transplantation into the narrow interval between that decision to let someone die and the moment death occurs. It creates a situation with almost no parallel in medicine: one set of hands caring for the dying, even as another prepares to recover and transplant their organs."

Capital Gains Can Be Labor Income

Zwick and Zidar argue that a substantial share of the decline in labor share can be accounted for by changing forms of pay, including pass-throughs and equtiy compensation. In particular, if an employee is paid in stock and that stock increases in value then the tax rules tend to count some of that as capital income (depending on when the capital gains occur) rather than as labor income. Zwick and Zidar point us to Human Capitalists for the details:

Human capitalists are corporate employees who receive significant equity-based compensation such as equity grants and stock options. These employees are partial owners of US firms, and in return for their human capital input, human capitalists accrue a share of firm profits through firm dividends and capital gains in addition to earning wages. We document the stylized facts describing the evolution of human capitalists’ income over time and across industries within the US manufacturing sector.1 Human capitalists have become an increasingly important class of corporate income earners. Due to measurement challenges, prior work has underestimated the importance of equity pay below the C-suite. Correctly measuring the total income of human capitalists substantially alters conclusions about changes in factor shares and technological complementarity.

Equity-based compensation represents 36% of compensation to human capitalists from 2010 to 2019 and constitutes a 7% share of value added in the manufacturing sector in 2019. Correctly accounting for the total income earned by high-skilled workers has a substantial effect on measured changes in labor shares over the modern era. The addition of equity pay to cash wages reduces the decline implied by the wage-only income share of value added in manufacturing since the 1980s by 32%. Without including equity pay, high-skilled labor’s share decreased from 17% in the 1980s to 11% in the most recent decade. The inclusion of equity-based compensation almost eliminates this decline. The high-skilled share of total labor income increases from one-third at the beginning of the 1960s to two-thirds in the 2010s when equity-based compensation is included.

See also my previous post The Labor Share Fell. So What?

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Begone dull care

Abstract painting with vertical beige stripes overlaid by dark purple brushstrokes of varying shapes and sizes.

Let this exuberant melding of jazz and animation from 1949 blur your senses as abstract visuals interpret the music

- by Aeon Video

Watch on Aeon

Skill nostalgia

Various vintage tools scattered on a worn wooden workbench, including brushes, pliers and a small jar.

Is all the beekeeping, baking and leatherwork just escapist fantasy or the start of a radically human approach to work?

- by Joshua Habgood-Coote

Read on Aeon

The Troubled History of Government Equity in Technology

Even though Germany privatized Deutsche Telekom in 1996, the federal government retained a substantial ownership stake. This partial state ownership status, which remains to this day, presents a textbook example of how this type of arrangement distorts incentives and delays the competitive dynamism necessary for technological progress.

Through the late 1990s and into the 2000s, Deutsche Telekom was buttressed by its privileged position and implicit government backing and leveraged this support to resist infrastructure competition. Rather than aggressively deploying broadband in order to compete with rivals, the company lobbied for regulatory arrangements that protected its legacy copper network. As a result, Germany—one of the world’s largest economies and a hub of engineering excellence—consistently trailed other European competitors in broadband deployment. To see German broadband stagnate while the competitive markets in Scandinavia and other European countries surged ahead was particularly jarring, as Germany had directly linked its economy to workplace digitization.

Germany’s broadband woes did not result from a lack of capital or engineering talent at Deutsche Telekom. Instead, government ownership produced a fundamental alteration of the company’s incentive structure. With state backing, Deutsche Telekom had fewer reasons to take risks, cannibalize its own infrastructure, or accept short-term losses in favor of long-term technological leadership and more reasons to cultivate political relationships that protected their existing revenue streams. This dynamic is reliably produced by partial government ownership of private companies.

Here is much more from Mark Dalton at R Street.

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Dead Forest Theory

The public has undergone gravitational collapse.

For a decade, we have explained the retreat from the public internet using Yancey Strickler’s Dark Forest Theory. People withdrew into smaller, quieter spaces because speaking in public became dangerous. Search, recommendation systems, surveillance capitalism, culture wars, and cancellation dynamics transformed the public sphere into a hostile environment. The resulting cozyweb—private group chats, Discords, Slacks, newsletters, encrypted messaging groups, invite-only communities—was understood as a strategic adaptation. The public remained a single connected universe. People simply stopped talking across it.

This picture no longer fits.

The cozyweb has ceased to be merely hidden. It is becoming causally disconnected. The public internet is no longer a hostile commons shared by everyone. It is increasingly the empty space separating an archipelago of informational black holes. The Dark Forest is transforming into the Dead Forest.


Sloptraptions is an AI-assisted opt-in section of the Contraptions Newsletter. If you only want my hand-crafted writing, you can unsubscribe from this section.


A dark forest is still one forest. Signals travel. Creatures remain connected by the possibility of encounter. Silence is strategic. The Dead Forest begins where the silence becomes irreversible. The inhabitants are no longer choosing not to speak across the public sphere. Increasingly, they cannot speak.

The defining feature of a black hole is not infinite density but the existence of an event horizon: a boundary across which causal influence becomes one-way. Once crossed, no signal returns. Outbound communication is not forbidden or unwise. It is impossible.

A mature cozy community increasingly resembles such an object. Its defining characteristic is not privacy but inaccessible interiority. It possesses an evolving local culture, cadence, trust structure, hierarchy of attention, stock of shared assumptions, repertoire of jokes, vocabulary, and ongoing history that cannot be reconstructed from outside observation. These are not simply hidden facts. They constitute a living dynamical state. To understand them requires inhabiting them. Outsiders may observe artifacts, but they do not share the community’s present.

Crossing into such a community is therefore not simply gaining access to more information. It is crossing into another causal universe.

This is why the metaphor of secrecy has become inadequate. Secrets can be revealed. Documents can leak. Membership lists can become public. Event horizons are different. What lies beyond them is not a collection of hidden documents but a continuing history. The defining loss is not information but contemporaneity. Outsiders no longer participate in the same unfolding present.

This mixed metaphor of an arborescent digital cosmos entering its death-arc phase of evolution immediately clarifies several otherwise puzzling features of the contemporary internet.

***

The first is the accretion disk. Every black hole is surrounded by a liminal region where matter has not yet fallen across the horizon but is already gravitationally bound to it. This is where enormous amounts of observable activity occur. The accretion disk is the liminal zone.

The modern public internet increasingly consists of such liminal objects.

Books. Conference talks. Substack essays. Open-source repositories. Journalistic profiles. Podcasts. Public talks. Screenshots. Occasional bridges built by individuals who inhabit multiple communities simultaneously. These are not the interior life of cozy communities. They are matter orbiting their boundaries. They remain visible precisely because they have not crossed the horizon. Some eventually escape into the broader public. Some spiral inward and disappear forever. Most spend long periods circling the boundary between publicity and interiority.

A common mistake is to confuse the accretion disk for the black hole itself. Increasingly, the public mistakes public-facing artifacts for communities. But the relationship resembles that between sunlight reflected off an accretion disk and the interior of a black hole. One cannot infer the character of one from the other.

The second feature is what might be called zombie public life.

If the living public has largely collapsed into compact informational objects, why does the public sphere still appear so active? Because visibility has become detached from shared reality.

Politics, celebrity, institutional media, brands, influencers, and platform-native personalities continue to generate immense volumes of public content. But much of this activity no longer serves the historical function of public discourse: creating common knowledge among strangers. Instead, it functions as a perpetual visibility engine. Attention circulates. Narratives recycle. Audiences become increasingly parasocial. Public performance continues while public life gradually disappears.

Zombie publics are highly visible precisely because they possess relatively little interiority. They are optimized for outward radiation rather than inward development.

The third feature is artificial intelligence.

The emergence of large language models has often been interpreted as the culmination of the public internet. It is almost the opposite.

Black holes are not entirely black. Quantum mechanically, they emit Hawking radiation. This radiation does not consist of messages sent from beyond the event horizon. It is the long thermodynamic aftermath of gravitational collapse itself.

Artificial intelligence increasingly occupies an analogous role: That of a thermalized fossil public.

Its training corpus consists overwhelmingly of the accumulated public internet that existed before blackholification reached its present stage: books, websites, Wikipedia, blogs, forums, public code repositories, digitized archives, public conversations, and institutional documents. Models continuously remix this material into fluent statistical syntheses. They possess extraordinary knowledge of the fossil public.

What they fundamentally lack access to is the living interiority of today’s blackholifying cozyweb.

This is not a temporary engineering limitation. It is a consequence of the causal geometry. The defining conversations of mature communities increasingly occur beyond event horizons inaccessible to public observation. AI therefore becomes the thermalization of the fossil public: the ambient informational glow emitted by a civilization whose most vital conversations have already disappeared into causally disconnected interiors.

This also explains why AI often feels strangely omniscient yet oddly lifeless. It has absorbed the archaeological record of public civilization while remaining largely excluded from its present tense.

This distinction also clarifies the status of genuine leaks. Screenshots from private Discords, leaked Slack logs, internal documents, accidental recordings, whistleblower disclosures—these are not Hawking radiation. They are better understood as fragments of the surrounding black-hole system that never fully crossed the horizon: material lingering in unstable orbit within the accretion disk, occasionally perturbed outward before finally disappearing. They are exceptional precisely because they do not violate the causal integrity of the interior, and can be flexibly narrativized in ways entirely disconnected from the interior narrative. The event horizon remains intact.

Taken together, these three phenomena define the observable universe of the Dead Forest.

  1. First, the thermalized fossil public continuously recirculated by artificial intelligence.

  2. Second, the liminal accretion disks of boundary objects orbiting living communities.

  3. Third, the zombie public whose endless performances preserve visibility while generating progressively less shared reality.

What is conspicuously absent is the thing that once defined the internet itself: a common causal manifold in which strangers could reliably become contemporaries through public communication.

The internet has not become private. It is dying with cosmological grandeur.

The public did not disappear because everyone retreated into private spaces. It disappeared because those spaces underwent gravitational collapse into compact worlds whose interior histories increasingly belong only to themselves. We still observe their radiation. We still see the debris orbiting their boundaries. We still mistake the theater of zombie publicity for public life.

But we no longer inhabit a universe in which the public is the primary medium through which reality is jointly constructed and enacted.

The Dead Forest is what remains after the public has collapsed into black holes.

***

The Dead Forest did not emerge because a new force entered history. It emerged because the forces that produced the Dark Forest were allowed to operate uninterrupted until they exhausted the geometry of the public sphere itself.

The original diagnosis remains largely intact.

Search dissolved into recommendation. Recommendation dissolved into algorithmic manipulation. Surveillance capitalism transformed every public utterance into extractable behavioral data. Culture-war dynamics converted visibility into permanent reputational exposure. Institutions lost the capacity to sustain neutral public ground. Politics ceased to be one domain among many and became the organizing logic of nearly every public conversation. Social media steadily rewarded identities optimized for conflict rather than curiosity. The internet of beefs expanded until it ceased to be merely an internet phenomenon and became a general model for social life.

The cozyweb was the rational adaptation.

People withdrew into smaller spaces where trust could once again be accumulated rather than continuously spent. Communities became increasingly bounded, invitation-based, contextual, and difficult to search or index. Public writing increasingly served not as participation in a common discourse but as boundary maintenance, recruitment, diplomacy, fundraising, publishing, or reputation management on behalf of private interiors.

The public sphere was no longer where life happened. It became where communities advertised their existence.

Nothing fundamentally changed after this decade-old diagnosis. No creative response took shape to check it. The dynamics simply continued unchecked as the no-treatment prognosis suggested. Cozy spaces simply accumulated enough cultural matter to undergo gravitational collapse.

COVID accelerated the migration of meaningful relationships into digitally mediated private spaces. Remote work replaced organizational corridors with Slack workspaces. Institutions weakened further while informal affinity networks strengthened. The second Trump era completed the normalization of permanent political mobilization as the background condition of public life. Meanwhile, every advance in generative AI increased the economic value of public text while simultaneously reducing the incentive to produce genuinely new public writing. The public web became both more extractable and less generative.

The result was not a new equilibrium but a phase transition.

Dark Forest Theory described a world in which everyone remained connected but increasingly chose silence. Dead Forest Theory describes the world after enough silence has accumulated that the public itself loses coherence as a shared causal medium.

AI did not produce this transition. It merely paved the dead cowpaths. Large language models arrived only after the living public had already begun collapsing irreversibly into cozy interiors. It industrialized the recycling of the fossil public while accelerating the exhaustion of what remained outside the horizons.

The internet did not die because of AI. AI is inheriting the remains as it dies, and the cycling of archival and carnival time winds down into a terminal archive.

***

If the Dead Forest is the endgame of the internet we inherited, the obvious question is whether another public sphere can ever emerge.

Not whether this public can be repaired. Cosmology suggests it cannot. Black holes do not become stars again. Gall’s law strengthens this intuition:

“A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked. A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work. You have to start over with a working simple system.”

The question is whether history can produce another arborescent digital cosmos and whether we can seed a new forest right now.

Nearly every civilization has imagined a cosmic tree: the Norse Yggdrasil, the Indian Kalpataru, the Mayan Ceiba, the Persian Gaokerena, the Biblical Tree of Life. Their details differ, but they share a common structural intuition. The cosmos is not fundamentally a collection of disconnected places. It is one living organism whose branches connect many domains without erasing their differences. The tree is neither a centralized empire nor an archipelago. It is a common living medium.

The public internet briefly approximated such a structure. We mistook it for a permanent feature of technological civilization. It now appears more likely to have been an unusually low-entropy historical accident.

If another cosmic arborescence is to emerge, it will not do so by reversing the gravitational collapse of the present one. It must grow from whatever remains outside the horizons before those remnants themselves disappear.

This suggests less a legible program of obvious actions than a set of six simultaneous grand challenges that require genuine invention to address.

The first concerns media.

The next public medium cannot simply optimize engagement more efficiently than its predecessors. Nor can it merely federate today’s cozywebs. It must possess intrinsic anti-cozy properties: mechanisms that continuously regenerate encounters between strangers without collapsing into algorithmic extraction or culture-war dynamics. Publicity itself must become renewable rather than exhaustible.

The second concerns politics.

The internet cannot recover a public if politics remains organized around permanent mobilization. A society in which every public utterance is interpreted primarily as coalition signaling cannot sustain common causal space. Any successor public must make disagreement productive without making identity existential. It must allow for mutual co-existence in citizenship rather than a condition of endemic armed activism.

The third concerns artificial intelligence.

Today’s models increasingly thermalize the fossil public. A future public intelligence would instead require access to continuously renewed living culture without simply consuming or exposing it. This is not merely a data problem. It is a civilizational design problem. Intelligence must become metabolically coupled to public life rather than archaeologically dependent upon its remains.

The fourth concerns institutions.

Public institutions once served as long-lived repositories of common knowledge whose legitimacy exceeded that of any particular community. Most now either retreat into cozy interiors themselves or perform zombie publicity in order to remain visible. A new arborescence requires institutions capable of producing genuine common reality rather than merely broadcasting legitimacy.

The fifth concerns public life itself.

Zombie publics cannot simply be replaced by better influencers, healthier discourse, or more responsible platforms. The problem is ontological rather than behavioral. Public life must once again become a place where significant interiority can develop rather than merely be represented. People must once again possess reasons to conduct meaningful portions of their intellectual, artistic, scientific, and civic lives in public.

Finally, there is the challenge of time.

Every year, more communities pass beyond their event horizons. More knowledge is born irretrievably private. More institutions become performative. More AI systems are trained on increasingly recycled corpora. More of the accretion disk spirals inward. More of the fossil public becomes thermalized.

The urgency is cosmological.

Dead forestification appears to possess positive feedback loops. Every successful retreat into interiority increases the incentives for further retreat. Every reduction in the vitality of the public increases the relative value of private worlds. Every increment of AI-generated public text reduces the density of genuinely renewable public culture available for future intelligences. Every new black hole slightly alters the geometry through which subsequent ones form.

If there is a threshold beyond which no new cosmic tree can grow, we do not know where it lies.

Nor do we know whether we have already crossed the ultimate event horizon on the trajectory to collective social heat death of the forest we inhabit now.

The task, then, is not to restore the internet we lost. It is to preserve enough living matter outside the horizons that another cosmology remains possible. The myths of Yggdrasil and Kalpataru remind us that civilizations have long imagined worlds held together by living connective tissue rather than by force or by isolation. Whether technological civilization can grow such a tree again is the defining grand challenge of the twenty-first century.

Dead Forest Theory suggests that this forest cannot be saved, but holds out the possibility that a new one can still be planted before it dies.

The history of heat deaths in Europe (from my email)

I will not double indent, all of what follows is from economic historian Daniel Gallardo Albarrán of the Netherlands:

“…you posted a link to an article on how Europe became the world champion of heat deaths.

Something that the article did not cover, which I find particularly outrageous is that Europe used to be at the forefront of reducing deaths due to extreme temperatures in the early 20th century, but then AC came in and the US took the lead. To flesh this out a bit, let’s consider some recent research on this field, including my own, that is comparable to the article by Barreca et al. referenced in the post, the following points are important:

  • Summers became increasingly deadly during the 19th century as a result of urbanization and overcrowding. They were incredibly deadly, mostly, for infants who died in disproportionate amounts due to gastrointestinal diseases. Children and adults died as well from heatstrokes and the like, but their relative importance in the death statistics was rather small
  • The turning point in Europe happened in the 1900s and 1910s.
    • For instance, in Germany summers began being less deadly after ca. 1905, as a result of investments in water provision, healthcare and infant care. (See my own paper on this  in the EHES Working Paper Series, no. 290)
    • In England the turning point is somewhere around WWI (see Hanlon et al., 2021, JEH), possibly due to improvements in the disease environment.
  • In the United States, before the arrival of AC, summer diarrheal disease that largely affected infants would only go down much later during the 1920s and 1930s (see Anderson et al., 2022, EEH). A few decades after European cities had progressed substantially in this regard…
  • This reversal does not get much attention in accounts of current differences in the deadliness of extreme temperatures. This is unfortunate because from an early-20th century perspective, it was far from obvious at the time that this would happen. But the lack of willingness to adopt the arrival of a very useful technology (AC) was something that we (Europeans) have brought onto ourselves over many decades, and this is largely independent from recent phenomena such as rising global temperatures, inequality trends, etc. This is simply inefficient governance and lack of attention to a problem that takes the lives of many.”

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And yet it moves!

Looking almost like an optical illusion, today’s Picture of the Week highlights why ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) is called that. This image was taken inside the telescope’s dome, with some of the ELT’s team standing above the massive structure that will hold its main mirror. This 39-metre-diameter reflective surface will comprise 798 mirror segments that will work together as a single mirror, in what will be the biggest optical telescope on Earth.

This photo was taken when the ELT construction reached a momentous milestone. For the first time, the telescope’s structure was rotated around its vertical axis. ESO staff at the construction site, together with Ace/Cimolai’s team, who are leading the construction of the dome and main structure, rotated the telescope first by hand by a few centimetres, and then a full rotation using auxiliary motors. While this may seem small, the entire structure currently weighs around 3500 tonnes, which will further increase up to 4600 tonnes once the mirrors and science instruments are installed. The structure rests on a layer of oil just 80 microns thin that allows the telescope to rotate smoothly. Testing this motion is thus key to ensuring that this massive telescope can point at all areas of the southern sky.

For me, this is a beautiful reminder of what can be achieved when people push in the same direction, literally and figuratively,” says Roberto Tamai, the ELT’s Programme Manager at ESO, shown on the right in this image. Marco Sciarra, Executive President of Cimolai, stands in the centre with Pascal Martinez, ESO Project Manager for the Dome and Main Structure, to the left.

The ELT, expected for first light later this decade, will be a gamechanger in astronomical research, as the world’s ‘biggest eye on the sky’. Besides its exceptional size, its cutting-edge instruments will allow us to understand our Universe better than ever before.

Link

Examining Algal Blooms in Blue Mesa

November 15, 2017
November 17, 2021
The first of a pair of satellite images shows the reservoir in November 2017, when water levels were relatively high and its color was mostly blue.
Cyanobacteria blooms turned Blue Mesa Reservoir green from September through November 2021, when water levels were among the lowest on record. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this image (right) of a bloom on November 17, 2021, when the water was near its lowest level; the left image shows the same area on November 15, 2017, when water levels were closer to normal.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin
The second image in the pair shows the same part of the reservoir in November 2021, when water levels were much lower and its color was much greener.
Cyanobacteria blooms turned Blue Mesa Reservoir green from September through November 2021, when water levels were among the lowest on record. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this image (right) of a bloom on November 17, 2021, when the water was near its lowest level; the left image shows the same area on November 15, 2017, when water levels were closer to normal.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin
The first of a pair of satellite images shows the reservoir in November 2017, when water levels were relatively high and its color was mostly blue.
Cyanobacteria blooms turned Blue Mesa Reservoir green from September through November 2021, when water levels were among the lowest on record. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this image (right) of a bloom on November 17, 2021, when the water was near its lowest level; the left image shows the same area on November 15, 2017, when water levels were closer to normal.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin
The second image in the pair shows the same part of the reservoir in November 2021, when water levels were much lower and its color was much greener.
Cyanobacteria blooms turned Blue Mesa Reservoir green from September through November 2021, when water levels were among the lowest on record. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this image (right) of a bloom on November 17, 2021, when the water was near its lowest level; the left image shows the same area on November 15, 2017, when water levels were closer to normal.
NASA Earth Observatory / Lauren Dauphin
November 15, 2017
November 17, 2021
Cyanobacteria blooms turned Blue Mesa Reservoir green from September through November 2021, when water levels were among the lowest on record. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this image (right) of a bloom on November 17, 2021, when the water was near its lowest level; the left image shows the same area on November 15, 2017, when water levels were closer to normal.

The summers of 2021 and 2022 were tough seasons for Colorado’s Blue Mesa Reservoir. A severe drought gripped much of the western U.S., prompting emergency water releases that brought the reservoir to its lowest level since 1984. Marinas and boat ramps closed, remnants of a ghost town emerged from the muck, and parts of the reservoir turned greenish and swirled with toxic cyanobacteria blooms.

Research conducted by scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Park Service analyzed decades of Blue Mesa Reservoir data and found a connection between low water levels, warm water temperatures, and harmful blooms.

“Algal blooms were more common when water levels were below 7,470 feet and water temperatures were above approximately 19.5 degrees Celsius (67.1 degrees Fahrenheit),” said Tyler King, a research hydrologist with U.S. Geological Survey. Water levels that low are relatively common and have occurred every few years in recent decades.  

While some cyanobacteria, also called blue-green algae, are always present in the reservoir in small numbers, problems occur when certain types proliferate. Aphanizomenon, Dolichospermum, and Woronichinia, for instance, thrive when the reservoir’s waters become warm and stagnant, releasing a toxin called microcystin that can cause skin and eye irritation, respiratory problems, and liver damage. Children and pets are particularly vulnerable to microcystin poisoning because of their size and tendency to ingest more water than adults.

King and colleagues analyzed in situ water samples and satellite observations from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2 mission and the NASA/U.S. Geological Survey Landsat satellites. A Sentinel-2 sensor that detects the light-harvesting pigment chlorophyll was particularly useful for mapping the blooms, while Landsat sensors were used to map water temperatures over time.

The National Park Service and U.S. Geological Survey launched the project in 2021 after anecdotal reports and water sampling suggested elevated cyanobacteria concentrations, King said. The scientists collected water samples but also turned to historical records and satellite data—”like a time machine,” he said—to examine conditions before regular water sampling had begun. Their analysis included satellite records of chlorophyll levels that extended back to 2016 and temperature records that reached back to 2000. The research team also studied in situ data on water levels dating to the 1970s.

A photograph taken from a rocky shoreline along the Iola Basin show mats of green growth coating the surface of the water.
A cyanobacteria bloom turned the water surface of Iola Basin green on September 8, 2021. Photo by Nicole Gibney/National Park Service.

The satellite data showed that blooms typically start in the eastern end of the reservoir, an area known as Iola Basin. The basin, where the Gunnison River flows into the reservoir, is the shallowest part of the reservoir. Occasionally, the satellite data showed, blooms spread westward into other parts of the reservoir, sometimes moving about two-thirds of the way across. However, concentrations of toxins rarely reached levels that posed health concerns beyond Iola Basin.

The same dynamics that caused challenges for Blue Mesa in 2021 and 2022 are present in 2026, said King. Drought again plagues much of the western U.S., the mountains hold little snow, and water levels in Blue Mesa are low. On June 27, 2026, the reservoir stored about 43 percent of the water it typically does on that date, the lowest value observed for that day in the past 30 years. Water levels are expected to continue dropping until October, according to U.S. Bureau of Reclamation projections

If cyanobacteria blooms emerge in 2026, the researchers expect that satellites will help scientists track them. The researchers use the U.S. Geological Survey’s WaterMAP (Water Monitoring Above the Planet) tool to monitor for potential bloom conditions within hours of satellite overpasses. NASA’s STREAM (Satellite-based Tool for Rapid Evaluation of Aquatic Environments) project also uses data from Landsat and Sentinel-2 to map potential blooms within hours of a satellite overpass, and the multi-agency CyAN (Cyanobacteria Assessment Network) project collects daily data from other satellites to map blooms in larger water bodies.

“It’s amazing that we can use satellites to map the impacts of microscopic organisms from almost 500 miles away,” King said. Yet it will still be crucial to get people out on the water taking samples and directly testing for toxins, he emphasized. “The satellites aren’t definitive,” he added. “They can tell us where there might be a problem, but toxins often aren’t present until the later stages of a bloom.”

A photograph shows two female researchers collecting green, algae-rich water in a cylindrical container.
Satellite observations can help managers decide where to send personnel to collect water samples for more detailed analysis of bloom toxicity. Photo by Katie Walton-Day/USGS.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Photos by Katie Walton-Day (USGS) and Nicole Gibney (NPS). Story by Adam Voiland.

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Sunday 5 July 1663

(Lord’s day). Lady Batten had sent twice to invite me to go with them to Walthamstow to-day, Mrs. Martha being married already this morning to Mr. Castle, at this parish church. I could not rise soon enough to go with them, but got myself ready, and so to Games’s, where I got a horse and rode thither very pleasantly, only coming to make water I found a stopping, which makes me fearful of my old pain.

Being come thither, I was well received, and had two pair of gloves, as the rest, and walked up and down with my Lady in the garden, she mighty kind to me, and I have the way to please her.

A good dinner and merry, but methinks none of the kindness nor bridall respect between the bridegroom and bride, that was between my wife and I, but as persons that marry purely for convenience.

After dinner to church by coach, and there my Lady, Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Lemon, and I only, we, in spite to one another, kept one another awake; and sometimes I read in my book of Latin plays, which I took in my pocket, thinking to have walked it.

An old doting parson preached. So home again, and by and by up and homewards, calling in our way (Sir J. Minnes and I only) at Mr. Batten’s (who with his lady and child went in another coach by us), which is a very pretty house, and himself in all things within and without very ingenious, and I find a very fine study and good books.

So set out, Sir J. Minnes and I in his coach together, talking all the way of chymistry, wherein he do know something, at least, seems so to me, that cannot correct him, Mr. Batten’s man riding my horse, and so home and to my office a while to read my vows, then home to prayers and to bed.

Read the annotations

Links 7/5/26

Links for you. Science:

New Theory of Smallest Human: Not a Hunter, But Eater of Lizard Leftovers
EU Funding Huge Project on the Origins of the Dead Sea Scrolls
This 17th-Century Flemish Painting Held A Gnarly Bat Secret
SOLVED: The Case of the Missing Megalodon
This spray-on powder can stop life-threatening bleeding in 1 second
If You Want to Save a Whale, Don’t Call a Millionaire
Former CDC official says RFK Jr.’s response to measles outbreak “not based on science or reality”

Other:

Our Revolutionary Birthright: Trump v. Barbara and its Meaning
Are MAGA and MAHA Heading for Divorce? Robert F. Kennedy Jr. promised ambitious plans to make Americans healthier. But insiders say as soon as he was named health secretary, the problems between the coalitions began
My hopes for the rabbi who envisions my defeat — and for a better Jewish future
What Zionism Has Always Meant
RFK Jr.’s plan to boost peptide access just got more complicated
Immigrants Are Good, Actually
These Justices Are Not Impartial. Why such a slim Supreme Court majority upheld birthright citizenship
NYC Mayor Mamdani Approves Record $323M Funding for Culture
Then and now: See what Boston looked like in 1776, 2026, and everywhere in between
Celebrate America’s Birthday by Fighting a Wannabe King
The DSA Challenger Who Could Actually Cost Democrats A Seat
For Larry Ellison, Buying Trump Is the Bargain of the Century
Unlike The Defendants, One Of The Prairieland Judges Is Part Of An Organized Cell Of Extremists
Impeachment is the only answer to Trump’s behavior
Scientists Asked AI to Impersonate 112 Public Figures. What Happened Next Is a ‘Dire’ Warning
Before the Democrats can free immigrants, they must free themselves from the GOP
I Have Thoughts About That Kylie Jenner Meta Glasses Ad
Nearly a Million Investors Lost a Total of $3.8 Billion on Trump Crypto Coin
A ‘new Progressive Era’? Not with a corrupt Supreme Court
Gracie The Giraffe Is Back Home. Now Rich Guys Can Buy Her.
The Master Race
Only A Complete Asshole Would Get Married At Madison Square Garden
How Donald Trump hijacked America’s birthday
Tidal Says It Won’t Pay Royalties for AI-Generated Music
“Nuclear Family Month” shows that MAGA is still coming for same-sex marriage
Scammers Sell Seeds for Exotic AI-Generated Flowers That Don’t Exist
Neo-fascist group Patriot Front parades Confederate flag in Washington DC on Fourth of July
Professor denounces mass AI fraud on an exam at Brown University: ‘Academic integrity is at risk’
Masked men with Confederate flags seen chanting, marching, riding Metro in DC
Journalists float astonishing theory around silence surrounding Mitch McConnell’s health
Kash Patel’s Late Stock Disclosure Raises STOCK Act Questions

In Case You Missed It…

…a week of Mad Biologist posts:

Time for Some Left-Wing Cletus Safaris

Democratic Moderates Have a Turnout Problem

One Airman Dead in Influenza Outbreak

A Great Week for Crime Stats in D.C.

*What Makes a Great Composer?: A Data-Driven Exploration of Music History*

A very good book, forthcoming, by Karol J. Borowiecki and Marc Lawx, here is the Amazon link, here is the Princeton University Press page.

The post *What Makes a Great Composer?: A Data-Driven Exploration of Music History* appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Some Notes on the Future of TPM

I wanted to take a moment to give you an update about the future of TPM. A phrase like that might sometimes sound ominous from another publication. This is not ominous. But it’s important. So I’d be greatly in your debt if you will give it a read. First — and this is relevant to what comes after — our annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive kicks off next week. If you are able I hope you’ll take a moment and join us by contributing.

One of the reasons TPM has survived and thrived as long as it has is because we’re nimble. We’ve been able to get the jump on major changes in digital journalism business models as well editorial models. Getting a big jump on the move to subscriptions and away from advertising is why TPM is still here when so many other smallish and not so smallish publications aren’t. Most of them tried to make the transition starting in the late teens when we were already in the middle of the storm. We started in 2012 and began growing that business in earnest in 2014. Those half dozen years or so made all the difference in the world.

We’re at another one of those inflection points as an organization. The Journalism Fund plays a critical role in helping us to fund those changes and make these transitions. In this post I want to share what some of those changes we’re now making are and why they’re important.

One of the biggest challenges facing news websites today is that people don’t go to websites. That makes it sound kind of total and even existential. But it’s really more a matter of distinguishing what you do from the mode through which you do it. Websites are no longer destinations for a lot of people. They get their news from social media, podcasts, newsletters. There are pros and cons to this for websites. The con is that most digital news organizations are built around being websites — less so now, but certainly at the beginning of this transformation. So that’s a con. There are pros too though. Websites are inherently passive in distribution terms. We wait for you to come to our front door every day. That’s good if the habit is well-ingrained, which in general it has always been for TPM readers. But it’s still passive. With email newsletters, we can show up at your front door every day. It allows us to be more active in our distribution and in the way we keep connected to our readers. These aren’t things we’ve come up with. We are reacting to changed news-reading habits. It’s the same reason many other news sites are becoming so newsletter focused.

You’ve seen these changes come to TPM over the last couple years. But I want to focus in on something else.

Historically, a big, big thing for TPM was being super fast and being on top, fanatically on top, of the stories we were covering. That’s deep in the organization’s DNA. But late in the teens we realized that, to a great degree, social media — especially Twitter and its clones, but others too — were replacing this function. We could see it in our own reading habits. If there’s some new news on the Iran War or you want to know which corrupt SCOTUS decisions are out, you go on X or Bluesky. The way these sites aggregate a flow of breaking reports by journalists just serves that role better than we or really any other site can. It’s still coming from journalists. It still often leads back to sites. But those social media sites are the front page.

So around the time of the pandemic, but not tied to the pandemic, we decided to ramp back our pace and focus more on deeply reported pieces. This never meant less reporting. It meant a slower pace of publishing and leaning more toward putting that reporting into more one-off, structured articles.

I was always instinctively wary of this decision. But I understood the logic of it, as I explained above. If you are used to one model, if to a degree you created that model, you’re always going to be wary of changing it. I try to be very aware of these kinds of blinders. But I think we went somewhat off course when we made that change. Specifically, I think we got away from what I see as our central mode of quick-paced iterative reporting, what I call storylines. Storylines are not a news story in the sense of an article and it’s not a topic or beat like health care, reproductive rights, voting rights, democracy. It is a specific news story with characters in conflict of various sorts through time, with major issues at stake and often with a mystery at the heart of it. Who did it? Are they going to get caught? Is one player or another going to come out on top, succeed at what they’re trying to do?

Storylines don’t have to be scandals or wrongdoing. Far from it. But there’s a reasons we’ve often weighted in a bit in this direction because, as you can see above, they often fit very tightly into this kind of coverage. There’s always something more, a new development, a central mystery in the process of being revealed.

At one level, these questions may seem trivial compared to the substance of the issues at stakes. But that’s wrong. We are a story-telling species and we understand the world around us through characters, people acting within space through time, a beginning point, a beginning mystery and a conclusion. There’s a reason we humans gravitate toward the novel, to movies rather than datasets and spreadsheets. This is the most fundamental way in which we understand the world; it’s quite literally coded into our brains.

This is to me the best way to cover the news, especially for an audience made up of people who are really into political news and its impact on our world — political news obsessives, people with a deep and abiding interest. One thing this means is there’s no single treatment of a story in a single article. Everything is iterative. There’s always a next question to ask, a next piece of information that needs to be revealed. (To the extent this all gets compressed into a single article it becomes set in amber, frozen, shorn of its dynamism and forward motion in time.) This also means that the nature of the new information dictates the format and genre of writing. Some new details only require short updates, sometimes only a sentence. It might be a chart or a quote. Other times it requires a detailed treatment. The key is remaining format or genre agnostic. Present the new information in the way most suited to that nature of the information itself. More mainstream news organizations are built around more casual news readers. And for them, the single one-off story can make sense. But we have a different kind of readership, people who are really into political news and don’t require a lot of stage-setting with each new update. It’s a bit obsessive. It’s a task for news expeditionaries, not settled news bureaucracies.

What I’ve often told our team is that to the extent that we’re focused on structured, one-off articles we’re competing with the bigger, general interest operations on their own terms, not taking advantage of any of our inherent strengths. The New York Times has three or four hundred times as many reporters as we do. To the extent we’re competing with them in how we structure and approach the news, we are going to lose every time.

So in addition to our newsletters, podcasts and so forth, we are going to going to refocus on our true bread and butter which is iterative reporting. We’ll do it in a way that is less singularly focused on the website because social media really has changed how we consume news. But we are going to be recommitting to the iterative reporting which has always been our true north, and also integrating this more tightly with our membership business, which in general will mean offering more things to our members.

If you’re asking yourself or me, what do I need to know here? Or what if I don’t entirely understand what you’re describing?, my answer is: don’t worry. You don’t need to know or do anything. What I’m describing here is some refinements in how we prepare the food at the restaurant. All you need to do is decide whether you like how it tastes. I note these things here because I have an on-going dialog, stretching back decades now, with TPM readers about how we are doing what we do, how the sausage is getting made, how that interweaves with the business model that sustains all of this. You should feel entirely free to ignore it and focus on the news we publish. But it’s there as an open invitation to understand a bit more about what we’re doing, why we’re doing it and how it relates to broader changes in journalism and the business of journalism.

This year it also makes our annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive especially important. Because these kinds of changes and re-directions require significant upfront investment. And that’s one of the key roles the Journalism Fund plays for us. It provides funds to invest in our operation, sometimes for new staff but other times to make chances that allow the whole operation to thrive over time.

The One About The Joy of Bots

The One About The Joy of Bots

In our 98th episode, we list the things we’ve been building with our robots and figure out who we’re really yelling at when it all goes wrong.

Mentioned, referenced, or obsessed over:

Related Important Things episodes:

Enjoy it now, or download for later. Here’s a handy feed or subscribe via Overcast or iTunes.

w/e 2026-07-05

I completed a thing this week which, these days, feels like a major event. I spent two more days working on the lawn edging which I began a month ago (and continued). Behold, the before and after photos:

Two photos, one above the other. Both show the exterior corner of a brick wall with windows above, part of a conservatory. In the first there is grass right up to the wall, with some bare earth along the wall on one side. In the second photo there is a 30cm wide strip of light grey gravel, edged with strips of wood, along the ground, in a neat right-angle around the corner.

There’s about 14 metres around the conservatory and down one side of the house and the process was – of course! – harder work and more time-consuming that anticipated. The day after I’d spent one morning sledge-hammering in the remaining half of the 45cm pegs, including a couple of very stubborn ones, my hands were aching all over. I didn’t even know hands could ache, other than from RSI, such a soft-handed computer man am I.

I did have to make two more trips to the builders’ merchant, for another length of wood and six bags of sharp sand, and then for six bags of gravel (on top of the two I’d already used in order to estimate how much I’d need in total). Having been once recently these trips didn’t require as much psyching myself up, although it still took me an age to dither over which screws to buy, and I had to saw my wood in half (to fit it in the car) with a guy watching me. It was all fine but I’m never going to feel at home in a place where customer service guys call me “buddy”.

Once the hardest part of getting the pegs in more-or-less the right places was done, and the fiddly work of cutting the weed-proof membrane to size was complete, pouring in some sand (to bring the level up, and to smooth things off) and then the pebbles, was extremely satisfying.

And, while I can inevitably spot all the little less-than-perfect bits, I’m really quite pleased with it, especially my tidying up around the drain (photo on Flickr).

There is a legitimate question of, “Why do this?” Mainly because the grass didn’t grow uniformly up to the walls so it was always pretty scrappy. Which is fine – the garden as a whole isn’t perfectly manicured and we wouldn’t want it so. But I see the house and immediate surrounds, including the drive and patio, as the human, non-nature parts over which we have control, and the ability/responsibility to keep neat. Creating this edging was an act of extending this domain, only slightly, creating a clearer distinction between the regulated, straight-lined human area and the free-form (but tended) zone where nature can thrive.

Always be over-thinking things.


§ In other household news we’ve had a nice guy here this weekend installing a new motorised garage door which, after the garage was re-roofed and clad in wood, is the last part of making it look nicer and be better insulated from sun and cold.

The day before the old door was removed I said goodbye to it by banging my head on it as I ducked not-far-enough while exiting, ending up on my back once again. At least I was wearing a hat with a little bit of padding.

Now we have a new door with a new opening system and so all the (for me) dangerously low pieces of metal are in new positions. It’s always good to keep me on my toes (or arse).


§ Around last Christmas / New Year I thought about buying a PlayStation 5. I didn’t, by any stretch of the imagination, need one because I was (and still am) only dipping into my slow re-play of Red Dead Redemption II. But at some point – maybe with GTA 6 – I’d really want to play a PS5-only game, so why wait?

But that wasn’t reason enough. I thought about it again recently, only to realise that in March Sony raised the prices by 20% because of stupid AI increasing the demand for RAM etc. Grrrr. (There should be a way to claim money back from people who use AI a lot.)

But I can’t imagine prices dropping any time soon so I rolled my eyes and bought a refurbished one, to feel like I wasn’t getting robbed of £90 by the AI lickers.

I was looking forward to a smooth modern set-up experience but: during the process the controller stopped working so I had to restart the process; then something else went wrong and I had to restart it again; then transferring data from the PS4 halted for no apparent reason and I had to restart that, which was easier when I realised connecting the two with an ethernet cable would take the time down to less than an hour from “99+ hours”.

I haven’t had time to actually use it much yet, although at least Red Dead Redemption II loads more quickly now.

And, of course, only two days after I bought a PS5 with a disc drive, Sony announced they’ll soon stop selling games on discs. I mainly bought that just in case we wanted to watch a disc on TV – itself vanishingly rare these days – but I still “enjoyed” that timing.


§ I had my first guitar lesson this week and it was good and I have some things to practise to improve my finger-picking, which I currently enjoy more than strumming. Of course, a couple of days into my exciting new practise routine a string broke for the first time.

But thanks to paying for speedy delivery of some new strings and Justin’s excellent guitar string changing tutorial I have now replaced all the strings. It was a daunting prospect and not always as easy as it looks for Justin but I got it finished in less than an hour. Another thing learned and done.


§ My sister and I have applied our lasting power of attorney to various of our parents’ accounts over the past couple of years and it’s always surprising how much the process varies in terms of what each place requires, how long it takes, and how human the process is.

Recently, some have only needed a quick exchange of emails and then me emailing a PDF of the certified LPA document (the LPAs were done before the more modern online system that, apparently, only needs a reference number).

Then this week, after I’d emailed them to ask, one finance company sent me a password-protected zip file, followed by an email containing the password. The zip contained a two-page PDF of detailed ID requirements, and an EmailContent.html file containing, yes, a text-only email. Unfortunately none of this specifies where to send any of the documentation to, whether by post, or e-mail, or (shudder) through some e-portal.


§ This week I finished reading Thinking the Twentieth Century by Tony Judt with Timothy Synder, which was excellent. It’s a 400 page conversation between the two which touches on a history of Judt’s life and work, used as jumping off points for discussions about politics, society and the intellectuals of (mainly) the USA and Europe (West and East) over the course of the century.

It’s crammed full of things to think about – most of which I’ve forgotten of course – and not a difficult read. There’s something about it being a transcript of a conversation that makes it feel less hard-going than a purely written work might have been. And the amount they both know from decades of study is amazing and inspiring to me. (Guardian review here.)

Judging by when I added this book to my system – late March 2022 – I suspect it was a birthday present from Dad and not only do I wish I could be sure of that but I also wish I could now chat to him about it, a man whose bookshelves were full of books about left-leaning twentieth century politics.


§ I took Mum to see John Kirkpatrick play in Hereford this week. He was entertaining and could certainly play the accordion, concertina and melodion very well. It looked exhausting.


§ Until this week I hadn’t seen any of the Mission Impossible movies. We watched the first one this week and given I think of it as a recent franchise I felt pretty old seeing its terrible representation of the early internet.


§ My toe is now fine nearly all the time until I do some slightly unusual movement and weight-bearing. Getting there.

My mind has been all over the shop, mostly feeling wildly overwhelmed by all the things, and sending me to bed for two mornings with migraines. We keep on going.


Read comments or post one

July 4, 2026

After a lovely day with family and friends, I’m turning it over to Buddy tonight.

Happy 250th, everyone.

[photo by Buddy Poland]

No photo description available.

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Sunday assorted links

1. The family keeping watch over a 52-year-old pot of soup (WSJ).  I guessed the country wrong.

2. The rise of grocery tourism.

3. PEPFAR interview.  Much of this is substantive, and interesting.  But some of Mike’s claims are absurd, for instance: “Elon Musk, on his own, if he paid his taxes, could end world hunger.”  Can he really believe that?

4. David Brooks on who benefits from AI (Atlantic).

5. Michael Polanyi’s book The Contempt of Freedom is now reissued.  Amazon link here.

6. Falling fertility on the political left is the key driver of U.S. birth rate decline.  Do note that political views are somewhat heritable.  That said, other demographics are moving America to the left economically.

7. Spanish demographics and net tax contributors.

The post Sunday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Airbus to build Aeolus-2 wind-monitoring satellite

Aeolus-2

The European Space Agency has selected Airbus Defence and Space to start work on the successor to a wind-monitoring satellite.

The post Airbus to build Aeolus-2 wind-monitoring satellite appeared first on SpaceNews.


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





sqlite-utils 4.0rc2

Release: sqlite-utils 4.0rc2

See sqlite-utils 4.0rc2, mostly written by Claude Fable (for about $149.25).

Building a World Map with only 500 bytes

Building a World Map with only 500 bytes

Iwo Kadziela (assisted by Codex) figured out a way to generate a credible ASCII world map using 445 bytes of data:

A map of the world rendered as black asterisk ASCII characters, it looks very good

The key trick is to use deflate compression, which is then wired together using this neat snippet of JavaScript. I didn't know you could use fetch() with data: URIs like this:

fetch('data:;base64,1ZpLsgIxCEXnrM...==').then(
  r => r.body.pipeThrough(new DecompressionStream('deflate-raw'))
).then(
  s => new Response(s).text()
).then(
  t => b.innerHTML = '<pre style=font-size:.65vw>' + t
)

Via Hacker News

Tags: ascii-art, data-urls, javascript

European vs. U.S. Economic Performance: An Update

Today’s primer is a long, dense, wonkish discussion of an issue I’ve been steadily working on in the background. To be honest, this post is aimed primarily at economists, not a general audience. And I may well get professional pushback — in fact I hope I will. Anyway, apologies in advance for its relative inaccessibility, which I don’t intend to make a habit.

Europe is an economic superpower that has given its residents extraordinarily good lives both by historical standards and compared with the rest of the world. Yes, Europeans have smaller houses and cars than Americans do. Many of them also, as everyone has lately become aware, lack air conditioning. But they have much more economic security than most Americans, lower economic inequality, longer life expectancy, and more leisure time.

There is, however, a widespread perception that Europe is living off its past glories, that it is lagging behind America and China in ways that will undermine its ability to maintain its economic standing in the world. This perception rests in part on the undeniable fact that Europe is home to few of the biggest technology companies and is almost completely shut out of the AI boom. It also reflects widely cited statistics: The most commonly discussed measures of growth in productivity and GDP point to an ever-growing gap between Europe and America.

But a funny thing happened on the way to inexorable European decline: If one compares either European GDP per capita or European productivity (GDP per hour) with that of the US on a year by year basis, using completely standard methods, one does not find an ever-growing gap. In fact, the gap between Europe and America has, if anything, narrowed somewhat over the past 25 years.

Understanding Europe’s economic performance is of huge importance, not just for Europeans, but for the rest of the world. The stakes go beyond economics. With authoritarianism on the rise in America, Europe is now the world’s great bastion of democracy. Hence it is important that it maintain its standing as a counterbalance to the US and China. Furthermore, Europe’s economic performance relative to the U.S. is often cited as a data point in debates on economic and social policy. Thus it’s important to understand what that record actually shows.

Finally, wearing my professional economist hat, what I call the US-EU paradox is interesting. We have two ways of comparing major economies: one based on measured economic growth, one based on measured purchasing power. Both comparisons involve orthodox, widely accepted procedures. Both are carried out by eminently respectable statisticians and agencies. Yet they lead to starkly different conclusions. One says that Europe is in relative decline, while the other says it isn’t.

I was first alerted to this strange dissonance in a February 2026 post by Seth Ackerman. Since then I’ve been trying to make sense of the apparent contradiction.

Today’s post is a detour from my ongoing series on the implications of AI, which I plan to return to next week. Here I will offer a wonkish progress report on my recent efforts to unpack the US-EU paradox. I will argue that the preponderance of the evidence supports the view that Europe is not in relative decline. I will show that comparisons that seem to show Europe lagging ignore important qualifications – qualifications that can render those comparisons misleading. First, there is a big difference between the EU and the US in industrial mix: the U.S. economy is more highly concentrated than Europe in “tech”, which creates a divergence in measured growth but not in living standards. Second, it is inherently difficult to measure growth in the face of technological change – a problem that doesn’t arise, notably, when comparing economies at a given point in time.

Beyond the paywall I’ll address the following:

1. The US-EU paradox and why it matters

2. Dollars, PPP and Big Macs: Measuring purchasing power

3. Understanding the growth discrepancy 1: Industrial mix

4. Understanding the growth discrepancy 2: Measurement

5. What about consumption?

6. Lessons from the US-EU comparison

Read more

sqlite-utils 4.0rc2, mostly written by Claude Fable (for about $149.25)

I wrote about the sqlite-utils 4.0rc1 release a couple of weeks ago. Since we only have Claude Fable on our Max subscriptions for a few more days, I decided to see if it could help me get to a 4.0 stable release that I felt truly comfortable about, since I try to keep to SemVer and like my incompatible major versions to be as rare as possible.

I started with this prompt, in Claude Code for web on my iPhone:

Final review before shipping a stable 4.0 release - very important to spot any last minute things that would be a breaking change if we fix them later

Here's that initial report it created for me. There were some significant problems that I hadn't myself encountered yet - 5 that Fable categorized as "release blockers". Here's the worst of the bunch:

1. delete_where() never commits and poisons the connection (data loss)

Table.delete_where() (sqlite_utils/db.py:2948) runs its DELETE via a bare self.db.execute() with no atomic() wrapper — compare Table.delete() at db.py:2944, which wraps correctly. The connection is left in_transaction=True, so every subsequent atomic() call takes the savepoint branch (db.py:430-440) and never commits either.

Reproduced end-to-end:

db = sqlite_utils.Database("dw.db")
db["t"].insert_all([{"id": i} for i in range(3)], pk="id")
db["t"].delete_where("id = ?", [0])   # conn.in_transaction is now True
db["t"].insert({"id": 50})
db["u"].insert({"a": 1})
db.close()
# Reopen: rows are [0, 1, 2] — the delete, row 50, AND table u are all gone.

That's a really bad bug! Very glad I didn't ship that, although at least it would have been a bug I could fix in a 4.0.1 point release, not a design flaw that would force a 5.0.

Over the course of 37 prompts, 34 commits and +1,321 -190 code changes over 30 separate files, we worked through the entire set of feedback in turn, making several other design improvements along the way.

A weird thing about coding agents is that harder tasks like this one actually provide more opportunity to do other things at the same time, since the agent sometimes needs 10-15 minutes to churn away on a new task. I went out to enjoy the Half Moon Bay 4th of July parade, occasionally checking in and prompting the next step for Fable from my phone.

Full details in the PR and this shared transcript. I switched to my laptop for the final review, which I conducted through GitHub's PR interface.

The most significant changes relate to transaction handling, which was the signature new feature in the earlier RC. The new RC now includes comprehensive documentation on the new transaction model, the intro to which I'll quote here in full:

Every method in this library that writes to the database - insert(), upsert(), update(), delete(), delete_where(), transform(), create_table(), create_index(), enable_fts() and the rest - runs inside its own transaction and commits it before returning. Your changes are saved to disk as soon as the method call finishes:

db = Database("data.db")
db.table("news").insert({"headline": "Dog wins award"})
# The new row is already saved - no commit() required

The same applies to raw SQL executed with db.execute() - a write statement is committed as soon as it has run.

You never need to call commit(), and you do not need to close the database to persist your changes. There are exactly two situations where you need to think about transactions:

  1. You want to group several write operations together, so they either all succeed or all fail - use db.atomic().

  2. You are managing a transaction yourself with db.begin(), in which case nothing is committed until you commit - the library will never commit a transaction you opened.

In reviewing Fable's documentation - I find that reviewing the documentation edits first is an excellent way to build an initial understanding of what has changed - I spotted this detail:

db.atomic() and the automatic per-method transactions are designed for connections in Python's default transaction handling mode. Connections created with the Python 3.12+ sqlite3.connect(..., autocommit=True) or autocommit=False options are not supported, because commit() and rollback() behave differently on those connections.

I admit I hadn't thought about how sqlite-utils would react to the more recent autocommit setting, added in Python 3.12. It turns out "behave differently on those connections" equated to almost the entire test suite failing, so I worked with the model to ensure that this difference would not break how the library works.

And a final review by GPT-5.5

I used to think that the idea of having one model review the work of another was somewhat absurd - it felt weirdly superstitious. The problem is it really does work - I've started habitually having Anthropic's best model review OpenAI's work and vice versa, because I've had that turn up interesting results often enough to be valuable.

I prompted Codex Desktop and GPT-5.5 xhigh with the following:

Review changes since the last RC. Also confirm that the changelog is up-to-date.

Which was enough to turn up two issues worth investigating:

Findings

  • [P1] sqlite_utils/db.py:663 db.query() now rejects non-row statements only after calling db.execute(), and sqlite_utils/db.py:705 auto-commits those writes first. So db.query("update ...") raises ValueError but the update is already committed. That is a surprising side effect for a method documented as “can only be used with SQL that returns rows.”
  • [P1] sqlite_utils/db.py:672 INSERT ... RETURNING through db.query() only commits after the returned generator is fully exhausted. db.query("insert ... returning ...") without iteration, or common next(db.query(...)) usage, leaves the transaction open and the write can be rolled back on close. This contradicts docs/changelog.rst:15 and docs/python-api.rst:232, which say it takes effect without iteration.

I pasted that into a fresh Fable session, which ran some experiments to confirm the problem:

Both findings were confirmed. db.query() called self.execute() first, which auto-commits writes, and only then checked cursor.description — so db.query("update ...") committed the update before raising ValueError. And the INSERT ... RETURNING commit lived at the end of the returned generator, so it never fired unless you exhausted the iterator — next(db.query(...)) or an un-iterated call left the transaction open, contradicting what the changelog and docs promise.

Here's the PR with the fix, and the full Claude Code transcript. Reviewing this code helped me build a better mental model of the edge cases of SQLite transaction semantics!

For an estimated (unsubsidized) cost of $149.25

I upgraded to the Claude Max $200/month plan (I was previously on $100/month) to increase my Fable allowance for the remaining time until the July 7th Fablepocalypse, when even Claude Max subscribers will have to pay full API cost for the model.

I was curious as to how much this would have cost me if I had been paying those costs directly. At first I thought those numbers weren't available to me since I had run the work remotely using Claude Code for web, and then I realized I could run AgentsView inside that existing session to get that cost estimate!

Run "uvx agentsview --help"​ and then use that tool to calculate the cost of this session

Claude figured out how to use the session list --include-children command and came out with the following:

Transcript Model Cost
Main session claude-fable-5 $141.02
API-surface sweep agent claude-fable-5 $2.40
Transactions/atomic review agent claude-fable-5 $2.39
Post-rc1 commits review agent claude-fable-5 $1.72
Migrations review agent claude-fable-5 $1.40
Prompt-counting agent claude-opus-4-8 $0.32
Total $149.25

I'm very glad I'm on that subscription! I really should have followed my own advice and leaned more heavily into subagents with cheaper models.

Here's what claude.ai/settings/usage is showing me right now:

Screenshot of a Claude plan usage limits panel: "Plan usage limits Max (20x)"; "Current session" with "Resets in 3 hr 52 min" showing a progress bar at "7% used"; "Weekly limits" heading with a "Learn more about usage limits" link; "All models" with "Resets Wed 12:00 PM" showing a progress bar at "32% used"; "Fable" with "Resets Wed 12:00 PM" showing a progress bar at "63% used".

I have several other major Fable-driven projects on the go right now as well, with the goal of hitting 100% on that Fable bar just in time for the price increase.

The full release notes for sqlite-utils 4.0rc2

Here are the full release notes for the RC. I had Fable add these to an "Unreleased" section of the changelog as each change landed, reviewing them as it went. This has the neat side effect that the commit history of the changelog acts as a concise summary of each of the changes that went into the release.

In the past I've had a policy of writing release notes by hand, but honestly these are better than I would have created myself. Release notes are a great example of writing that I'm OK to outsource to agents because they need to be boring, predictable and accurate.

Breaking changes:

  • Write statements executed with db.execute() are now committed automatically, unless a transaction is already open in which case they join it. Previously they opened an implicit transaction that stayed open until something committed it - writes appeared to work when read on the same connection but were silently rolled back when the connection closed. Code that relied on rolling back uncommitted db.execute() writes should use the new db.begin() method to open an explicit transaction first. The transaction model is documented in full at Transactions and saving your changes.
  • db.query() now executes its SQL as soon as it is called, rather than waiting until the returned generator is first iterated. Rows are still fetched lazily during iteration. SQL errors are now raised at the call site, statements such as INSERT ... RETURNING are executed and committed immediately without needing to iterate over their results, and passing a statement that returns no rows - previously a silent no-op - now raises a ValueError recommending db.execute() instead. A statement rejected this way is rolled back before the error is raised, so it has no effect on the database.
  • Python API validation errors now raise ValueError instead of AssertionError. Previously invalid arguments - such as create_table() with no columns, transform() on a table that does not exist, or passing both ignore=True and replace=True - were rejected using bare assert statements, which are silently skipped when Python runs with the -O flag. Code that caught AssertionError for these cases should catch ValueError instead.
  • table.upsert() and table.upsert_all() now raise PrimaryKeyRequired if a record is missing a value for any primary key column, or has a value of None for one. Previously such records - which can never match an existing row - were quietly inserted as brand new rows, or triggered a confusing KeyError after the insert had already taken place.
  • db.enable_wal() and db.disable_wal() now raise a sqlite_utils.db.TransactionError if called while a transaction is open. Previously they would silently commit the open transaction as a side effect of changing the journal mode, breaking the rollback guarantee of db.atomic() and of user-managed transactions.
  • The View class no longer has an enable_fts() method. It existed only to raise NotImplementedError, since full-text search is not supported for views - calling it now raises AttributeError instead, and the method no longer appears in the API reference. The sqlite-utils enable-fts command shows a clean error when pointed at a view.
  • The no-op -d/--detect-types flag has been removed from the insert and upsert commands. Type detection has been the default for CSV/TSV data since 4.0a1, so the flag did nothing - invocations using it should simply drop it. --no-detect-types remains available to disable detection.
  • Database() now raises a sqlite_utils.db.TransactionError if passed a connection created with the Python 3.12+ sqlite3.connect(..., autocommit=True) or autocommit=False options. commit() and rollback() behave differently on those connections, which previously caused every write made by the library to be silently discarded when the connection closed.

Everything else:

  • Fixed a bug where table.delete_where(), table.optimize() and table.rebuild_fts() did not commit their changes, leaving the connection inside an open transaction. Their work - and any subsequent writes - could then be silently rolled back when the connection was closed. All three now use db.atomic(), consistent with the other write methods.
  • The sqlite-utils drop-table command now refuses to drop a view, and drop-view refuses to drop a table. Previously each would silently drop the wrong type of object if the name matched. Both now exit with an error suggesting the correct command to use.
  • Migrations applied by the new migrations system now run inside a transaction, together with the record of the migration having been applied. If a migration raises an exception its changes are rolled back and it stays pending, so it can be safely re-applied after the error is fixed. Migrations that cannot run inside a transaction, such as those executing VACUUM, can opt out using @migrations(transactional=False) - see Migrations and transactions.
  • table.upsert() and table.upsert_all() now detect the primary key or compound primary key of an existing table, so the pk= argument is no longer required when upserting into a table that already has a primary key.
  • db.table(table_name).insert({}) can now be used to insert a row consisting entirely of default values into an existing table, using INSERT INTO ... DEFAULT VALUES. (#759)
  • Improvements to the sqlite-utils migrate command: --stop-before values that do not match any known migration are now an error instead of being silently ignored, --stop-before now works correctly with migration files that still use the older sqlite_migrate.Migrations class, and --list is now a read-only operation that no longer creates the database file or the migrations tracking table. migrations.applied() now returns migrations in the order they were applied.
  • New db.begin(), db.commit() and db.rollback() methods for taking manual control of transactions, as an alternative to the db.atomic() context manager.
  • New documentation: Transactions and saving your changes describes how transactions work and when changes are committed, and a new Upgrading page details the changes needed to move between major versions.

Tags: projects, sqlite, sqlite-utils, annotated-release-notes, anthropic, claude, llm-pricing, coding-agents, claude-code, agentic-engineering, gpt, claude-mythos-fable

Prediction markets, polling, and insider trading

 My book about controversial markets has attracted some interest from people following prediction markets.  Here's another recent interview.

 

Nobel Winner Alvin Roth Sizes Up Prediction Markets: 'I Don't Know If They Do Better On Elections Than Polls'  by Daragh Thomas  

In an interview with Benzinga after the release of his new book Moral Economics, Stanford economist Alvin Roth said the strongest use-case for the technology may not be public platforms like Polymarket or Kalshi, but inside corporations. He described a scenario where engineers building a product know about delays that senior executives, working from optimistic reports, do not. A prediction market inside the company can get the information to the top faster. 

...

"He said election markets are unlikely to face serious insider-trading risk, but neither are they guaranteed to beat good polling. “I don’t know that prediction markets do a lot better on elections than good polls do,” he said.

"He flagged a different concern: manipulation. State actors or well-funded propaganda operations could push large sums into a market to engineer a favorable price."

...

"Securities markets exist in part to help companies raise capital, he said, which requires public trust. Prediction markets do not carry the same burden, so the harm from insider activity is less clear.

"He added that if real insider trading is happening off political news, the likelier venue is the commodities market. “The price of Brent Crude moves rapidly when the president says something,” Roth said." 

*********

Earlier: 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026  Sports Betting, Prediction Markets, and ‘Repugnant Transactions’--a conversation at Covers.com

 

What should I ask Michael Moritz?

Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him, based around his new book Ausländer: One Family’s Story of Escape and Exile.  Mike of course was a pioneering venture capitalist through Sequoia, and before that had a distinguished career as a journalist, which included books on Chrysler, Apple (the first such book I believe?), and soccer coach Alex Ferguson of Manchester United.  Here is his Wikipedia page.

So what should I ask him?

The post What should I ask Michael Moritz? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Tyler, Nabeel, and Jackson on French thinkers

Nabeel: (57:47) …For example, there’s a French thinker called Jacques Derrida. I probably should go and read him at some point, but I’m not entirely convinced there is a there there, and I don’t know anyone who swears by it. If Tyler told me, “Nabeel, you are missing a big piece of your life by not reading him,” I would go read him tomorrow. But I don’t have any of those people.

Tyler: (58:44) Lacan is my marginal case of “no there there.” So Derrida, I put in a fair amount of effort and did conclude, rightly or wrongly, that there’s no there there. So you can, in my opinion, write him off. Lacan, I keep on wondering. Smart people still will say, “This is amazing.” I’ve tried a bunch of times, but I haven’t given up. There’s a new Lacan book coming out later this summer and I’ll try it again. We’ll see. That’s my marginal “is there a there there” figure.

Nabeel: (59:13) Yeah. I think modern French thinkers put too much of a premium on sounding cool, or postmodern philosophy generally. I think it repays some effort to kind of grasp the core ideas, but it doesn’t repay making it your life’s reading or something.

Tyler: (59:26) Baudrillard is quite good and Foucault is extremely interesting. So I’m not against “the French” in this period, but if they keep on not making sense, I feel I’m educated well enough.

Jackson: (59:37) You have a lot of context.

Tyler: (59:38) That at some point I can strike the ledger.

Nabeel: (59:41) I do—Nowadays, I just put Foucault through GPT and I just have GPT explain it to me, and that’s going to be good enough for now.

Tyler: (59:50) The problem with Foucault, I think, is so much of the history is wrong in a quite mundane way, so there’s something very problematic about it. But the stuff—I think it’s in a way quite simple, almost too simple. And the fact that the current right has so latched on to Foucault is a sign that it’s simple. I don’t mean necessarily bad, but there are these structures and they’re trying to tell you what to do. And there’s something anonymous about that as well. It’s not just the individuals who form the conspiracy. It’s how a lot of the world thinks today.

Here is the longer discussion, already linked to.

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