Engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab make a breakthrough in rotor technology

A little more than three years since NASA's Ingenuity helicopter ended its pioneering mission at Mars, engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California are designing next-generation Martian rotorcraft to carry heavier payloads longer distances through the planet's low-density atmosphere.

Ingenuity was a resounding success, becoming the first airborne platform to explore another world. The dual-bladed helicopter made 72 flights, overachieving NASA's original goal of five flights over 30 days, after delivery to Mars by the Perseverance rover. By the time the mission ended with a crash-landing in January 2024, Ingenuity had shown scientists a new way to explore other worlds, using air to travel longer distances and reach locations inaccessible to ground vehicles.

NASA plans to send three more helicopters to Mars on the SkyFall mission, which could launch as soon as late 2028. SkyFall is set to ride to the red planet aboard a nuclear-powered spacecraft named Space Reactor-1, or SR-1, one of the tech demo initiatives announced earlier this year by NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman.

Read full article

Comments

Friday 8 May 1663

Up very early and to my office, there preparing letters to my father of great import in the settling of our affairs, and putting him upon a way [of] good husbandry, I promising to make out of my own purse him up to 50l. per annum, till either by my uncle Thomas’s death or the fall of the Wardrobe place he be otherwise provided.

That done I by water to the Strand, and there viewed the Queen-Mother’s works at Somersett House, and thence to the new playhouse, but could not get in to see it. So to visit my Lady Jemimah, who is grown much since I saw her; but lacks mightily to be brought into the fashion of the court to set her off.

Thence to the Temple, and there sat till one o’clock reading at Playford’s in Dr. Usher’s ‘Body of Divinity’ his discourse of the Scripture, which is as much, I believe, as is anywhere said by any man, but yet there is room to cavill, if a man would use no faith to the tradition of the Church in which he is born, which I think to be as good an argument as most is brought for many things, and it may be for that among others.

Thence to my brother’s, and there took up my wife and Ashwell to the Theatre Royall, being the second day of its being opened. The house is made with extraordinary good contrivance, and yet hath some faults, as the narrowness of the passages in and out of the Pitt, and the distance from the stage to the boxes, which I am confident cannot hear; but for all other things it is well, only, above all, the musique being below, and most of it sounding under the very stage, there is no hearing of the bases at all, nor very well of the trebles, which sure must be mended.

The play was “The Humerous Lieutenant,” a play that hath little good in it, nor much in the very part which, by the King’s command, Lacy now acts instead of Clun. In the dance, the tall devil’s actions was very pretty.

The play being done, we home by water, having been a little shamed that my wife and woman were in such a pickle, all the ladies being finer and better dressed in the pitt than they used, I think, to be.

To my office to set down this day’s passage, and, though my oath against going to plays do not oblige me against this house, because it was not then in being, yet believing that at the time my meaning was against all publique houses, I am resolved to deny myself the liberty of two plays at Court, which are in arreare to me for the months of March and April, which will more than countervail this excess, so that this month of May is the first that I must claim a liberty of going to a Court play according to my oath.

So home to supper, and at supper comes Pembleton, and afterwards we all up to dancing till late, and so broke up and to bed, and they say that I am like to make a dancer.

Read the annotations

Rescue mission for NASA’s $500 million space telescope passes key testing milestone

Engineers from Katalyst stabilize their Link robotic servicing spacecraft as it moves into a vibration chamber at NASA Goddard on April 15, 2026. The vibration chamber simulated the intense shaking Link will experience during launch. Image: NASA/Sophia Roberts

A mission to prevent a $500 million NASA space observatory from meeting a fiery demise just passed a notable prelaunch testing milestone. The Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, a spacecraft launched in 2004, is at risk of falling back through the atmosphere and burning up without intervention.

On Friday, NASA announced that the Link spacecraft, manufactured by Katalyst Space Technologies to intervene before Swift’s fate is sealed, completed its slate of environmental testing at the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Testing in the Space Environment Simulator concluded on Monday, May 4, and the spacecraft returned to Katalyst’s facilities in Broomfield, Colorado, for additional, prelaunch testing.

“The Swift boost attempt is a fast, high-risk, high-reward mission,” said John Van Eepoel, Swift’s mission director at NASA Goddard, in a NASA press release. “Swift will likely re-enter the atmosphere sometime later this year if we don’t attempt to lift it to a higher altitude. Katalyst has gotten to this point in just eight months, and we’re glad they were able to use NASA’s facilities to test Link and draw on our expertise to help tackle questions that popped up along the way.”

Swift doesn’t have it’s own onboard propulsion system and would naturally decay in orbit over time. However, increased solar activity in recent years accelerated the lowering timeline for the observatory, dropping it from about 600 km to 400 km, with anticipated reentry in late 2026 without intervention.

That’s why in September 2025, NASA awarded Katalyst a $30 million contract to develop a spacecraft capable of docking with Swift and boosting its orbit.

Kieran Wilson, Link’s principal investigator at Katalyst Space Technologies in Flagstaff, Ariz., and Hunter Robertson, a space systems engineer at Katalyst, stand next to their spacecraft inside the SES (Space Environment Simulator) at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., on April 17, 2026, ahead of thermal vacuum testing. During testing in the SES, Link fired its three ion thrusters, deployed one of its three arms, and experienced space-like hot and cold temperatures. Image: NASA/Sophia Roberts

“Given how quickly Swift’s orbit is decaying, we are in a race against the clock, but by leveraging commercial technologies that are already in development, we are meeting this challenge head-on,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, acting director, Astrophysics Division, NASA Headquarters, at the time.

“This is a forward-leaning, risk-tolerant approach for NASA. But attempting an orbit boost is both more affordable than replacing Swift’s capabilities with a new mission, and beneficial to the nation — expanding the use of satellite servicing to a new and broader class of spacecraft.”

“We’re in an unusual situation where the schedule dictates how much risk we’re willing to accept, rather than the other way around,” said Kieran Wilson, Link’s principal investigator at Katalyst. “The clock is ticking on Swift’s descent, so we have to find a balance between testing and problem solving that gives the mission the best chance of success.”

Swift is in an orbit inclined 20.6 degrees from the equator, which is why Katalyst selected Northrop Grumman’s Pegasus XL air-launched rocket in November to fly the mission.

“The versatility offered by Pegasus’ unique air-launch capability provides customers with a space launch solution that can be rapidly deployed anywhere on Earth to reach any orbit,” said Kurt Eberly, Director of Space Launch for Northrop Grumman. “The stringent mission requirements necessary to save the Swift observatory, including the unique low-inclination orbit and the tight mission timeline, all pointed to Pegasus being the perfect choice.”

The mission is set to launch in June. Link will first integrate with the Pegasus rocket at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia early in the month and then the company’s L-1011 aircraft will deploy the spacecraft from the Marshall Islands later in the month.

A graphical overview of the plan to extend the lift of NASA’s Swift observatory. Graphic: Katalyst Space Technologies

May 7, 2026

Today Tennessee state representative Justin Jones burned a Confederate battle flag in the rotunda of the Tennessee State Capitol in protest of the legislature’s redrawing of the state’s congressional district maps to erase the majority-Black 9th Congressional District. By cracking the city of Memphis into three pieces and joining them to white suburbs, the legislature turned all the state’s districts into Republican seats.

The actions of the Republicans in the Tennessee legislature are a direct response to the Supreme Court’s April 29 decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which found that in creating a second congressional district to enable Black voters to elect a representative of their choice, as mandated by the 1965 Voting Rights Act, the Louisiana legislature unconstitutionally took race into account when drawing the district lines. Although the Supreme Court’s clerk normally waits 32 days to finalize an opinion, the Supreme Court made the decision effective immediately to allow Louisiana, where the primary election was already underway, to redraw its maps.

Immediately, Republican-dominated state governments rushed to redistrict their states to eliminate majority-Black districts, thus slashing through Democratic representation in their states. As Khaya Himmelman of Talking Points Memo explained today, Louisiana’s Republican governor, Jeff Landry, immediately suspended a congressional primary election that was already underway in order to give Republican legislators a chance to change the maps to give at least one of the state’s two Democratic seats to Republicans.

Although a federal court injunction forbids Alabama from redrawing its maps before the 2030 census, Republican governor Kay Ivey called for the state to do so, and Republican attorney general Steve Marshall has filed an emergency petition with the Supreme Court to let the state revert to a map struck down in 2023 because it was racially gerrymandered.

Trump began this gerrymandering arms race last year, pressuring Republican Texas legislators to redistrict the state to help Republicans win the midterms and protect him from investigations and possible impeachment. As of today, Patrick Marley of the Washington Post noted, Republican-dominated legislatures in Ohio, Missouri, North Carolina, Texas, and Florida have redistricted to pick up Republican seats, while Tennessee, South Carolina, Louisiana, and Alabama are engaged in that process. In retaliation, Democrats have temporarily redistricted the states of California and Virginia.

Tennessee is now expected to send only Republicans to Congress. Just minutes after the Republicans cut Memphis into thirds to get rid of the voices of Black Democrats, Republican state senator Brent Taylor announced he was running for the new seat “to stand with President Trump and cement Tennessee’s conservative legacy for generations to come.”

In Tennessee, Representative Steve Cohen, who currently represents Memphis and who is the only Democrat in the Tennessee congressional delegation, posted: “And just like that, the TN GOP voted to enforce a racial gerrymander of Memphis and strip our city of effective representation for decades. Trump knows he HAS TO rig the game to keep his majority in November. And the TN GOP was willing to go along with it. It’s shameful. Next stop is the courts.”

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) has already sued to block the redistricting.

Cohen is right that the Republicans recognize the only way for them to win going forward is to skew the maps so that Democrats can’t win, because right now, at least, the administration is a dumpster fire.

This morning, Warren P. Strobel, John Hudson, and Ellen Nakashima of the Washington Post reported that the Central Intelligence Agency delivered a confidential analysis of conditions in Iran that suggests the administration has been badly off the mark in its public statements about the war.

Although Trump insists that the war had been an overwhelming military victory and that Iran is suffering so badly from the U.S. military blockade it will have to cave to U.S. demands quickly, the CIA report assesses that, in fact, Iran can survive for at least three or four more months before having to deal with more severe economic hardship. The report also assesses that Iran still has about 75% of the mobile missile launchers it had before the war and about 70% of its missiles.

Trump has told reporters that Iran’s economy is “crashing” and that Iran was down to 18% or 19% of its former missile stocks.

The content of the analysis is important, and so is the fact that CIA analysts are sharing it with reporters, suggesting they are disturbed by the administration’s current trajectory.

The administration insists the war has “terminated,” meaning that it does not have to honor the 1973 War Powers Act that requires the president to either withdraw troops or get congressional approval for continuing military actions. Today the U.S. and Iran exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran firing on three U.S. destroyers and the U.S. firing on two ships entering the strait.

While the Iranian military called the strikes a violation of the ceasefire, a U.S. official told Barak Ravid and Dave Lawler of Axios that the exchange did not mean the war had resumed. This evening, the president told Rachel Scott of ABC News in a phone call that the ceasefire is still in effect and “the retaliatory strikes against Iranian targets are just a ‘love tap.’”

As the national average for a gallon of gas hit $4.56 today, the British energy giant Shell announced its profits were up 24% in the first three months of 2026. This amounted to almost $7 billion, more than twice what Shell made in the previous quarter.

In the Wall Street Journal, John Keilman reported today that Whirlpool, which makes refrigerators and washing machines, said the Iran war has caused a “recession-level industry decline” and that Americans should expect to pay higher prices for appliances going forward.

While experts say there were about 14 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. in 2025, Trump border advisor Tom Homan told the Fox News Channel today that there are “well over 20 million” undocumented immigrants in the U.S. and “we’re going to do everything we can to arrest as many people as we can.”

But a new Pew poll shows that 52% of Americans already think Trump is cracking down too hard on undocumented immigrants. Politico adds that that number includes about a quarter of the people who voted for him in 2024. It also includes 67% of Latino voters, who had swung toward the Republicans in 2024.

Those poll numbers came before today’s story by Lisa Song, Maya Miller, Melissa Sanchez, and Mariam Elba of ProPublica identifying 79 children injured by tear gas or pepper spray during immigration encounters. While the reporters documented federal agents throwing tear gas and shooting pepper spray into crowds, the Department of Homeland Security said the fault for the children’s injuries lies with “agitators” and parents who put their children in harm’s way. “DHS does NOT target children,” it said.

The journalists assess that their count of 79 injured children is “likely still a vast undercount.”

Americans are paying dearly for the administration’s detention of immigrants. Just today, Patricia Mazzei and Hamed Aleaziz of the New York Times reported that the administration of Florida governor Ron DeSantis is talking with the Trump administration about closing the Everglades detention center known as Alligator Alcatraz. The center has been called unsanitary and inhumane since it opened about ten months ago, yet the cost of housing its 1,400 detainees is more than $1 million a day. DeSantis has asked for $608 million to run the camp for a year.

And then there are Trump’s increasingly high profile attacks on the pope. Pope Leo XIV is the first pope from the United States, and Trump seems determined to challenge him. The pope has spoken out against inhumane treatment of migrants and has called for peace through diplomacy, an observation Trump has taken as criticism of his war on Iran. Last week, Pope Leo appointed Bishop Evelio Menjivar-Ayala to become the new bishop of West Virginia. Menjivar-Ayala was once an undocumented immigrant himself.

Trump posted last month that Pope Leo was “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy,” and he has continued his attacks, saying Monday: “The pope would rather talk about the fact that it’s OK for Iran to have a nuclear weapon, and I don’t think that’s very good. I think he’s endangering a lot of Catholics, and a lot of people, but I guess if it’s up to the pope, he thinks it’s just fine for Iran to have a nuclear weapon.”

As Sarah Ewall-Wice reported in the Daily Beast, Pope Leo responded indirectly, noting that “[t]he mission of the Church is to preach the Gospel, to preach peace. If anyone wants to criticize me for proclaiming the Gospel, let them do so truthfully.” He continued: “The Church has spoken out against all nuclear weapons for years, so there is no doubt about that.”

Secretary of State Marco Rubio was at the Vatican today to ease tensions. The visit did not go particularly well. While Rubio gave Pope Leo a crystal football with the seal of the State Department, Pope Leo gave Rubio a pen made from the symbol of peace: olive wood. The Vatican’s statement did not suggest the men found much common ground, saying the meeting included “an exchange of views regarding the regional and international situation, with particular attention to countries marked by war, political tensions, and difficult humanitarian situations, as well as to the need to work tirelessly in support of peace.”

And finally, today the president himself is in the news…or, rather, out of it. Trump, both of whose hands have been covered in makeup lately, apparently to hide bruises, was supposed to have a meeting today with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil at 11:15 that was open to the press. The reporters waited three hours, but the event never happened. At 1:22, Trump’s social media account simply posted that “[t]he meeting went very well” and that representatives from the two countries would continue to meet.

Notes:

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/the-franchise/the-red-state-scramble-to-gerrymander-away-black-electoral-power-has-been-more-blatant-than-youd-expect

https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/05/court-gives-immediate-effect-to-voting-rights-act-decision/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/05/07/tennessee-redistricting-voting-rights-black/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/05/07/cia-intelligence-iran-trump-blockade-missiles/

https://www.axios.com/2026/05/07/us-iran-hormuz-strait-fire-exchange

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/gas-prices-iran-war-california-highest/

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/07/business/shell-profit-oil-iran-war.html

https://www.wsj.com/business/earnings/the-iran-war-is-crushing-whirlpools-profitsand-higher-prices-are-coming-98dd10bc?mod=hp_lead_pos4

https://www.pewresearch.org/race-and-ethnicity/2025/08/21/u-s-unauthorized-immigrant-population-reached-a-record-14-million-in-2023/

https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2026/05/04/about-half-of-americans-continue-to-say-trump-administration-is-doing-too-much-on-deportations/

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/18/immigration-poll-trump-deportation-campaign-00879549

https://www.propublica.org/article/kids-tear-gas-trump-immigration-crackdown

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/07/us/florida-alligator-alcatraz-possible-closure.html

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/01/pope-former-undocumented-immigrant-bishop-west-virginia

https://www.thedailybeast.com/vatican-humiliates-rubio-after-his-tense-summit-with-pope/

X:

RepCohen/status/2052481665080213523

rachelvscott/status/2052515580784066672

Bluesky:

thetnholler.bsky.social/post/3mlbr3rujp22j

thetnholler.bsky.social/post/3mlbzafdxlc2o

atrupar.com/post/3mlbzjftyi726

macfarlanenews.bsky.social/post/3mlc7hlbg4c2f

atrupar.com/post/3mlbtcaned22r

atrupar.com/post/3mlbtm7xonk2r

atrupar.com/post/3mlbtju4gbz2m

Share

Politics Chat, May 7, 2026

Politics Chat, May 7, 2026

Ask Almost A Doctor: The World Is An LLM Edition

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

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

Oh, and thanks to Kylie Robison for editing.

Enjoy.

Subscribe now

Marshm @marshm1 (via Substack)

What is the current state of virtual cells and working all the way up to virtual bodies that serve as useful models to test out new drugs, treatments etc? Can we ever really simulate biology bottom up in enough detail to be useful?

It is not feasible for me to answer whether cell foundation models are ever going to be useful. A better question is to ask what kinds of things these models can be useful for.

Invention shapes how we see the world, so naturally everything has to like, totally be a language model, man. For readers who don’t know, virtual cells and cell foundation models are AI systems trained on single cell (mostly RNA sequencing) data with the aim of learning some latent “language” of biology. These models are built on two types of data: massive atlases of cells just existing in their natural state, and perturbation data. The second kind of data is generated by taking cells, applying some condition (a drug, a CRISPR edit, environmental variable, etc), and sequencing them to see how they react. Don’t call it perturb-seq, though, since that’ll upset cell model makers. It’s important you know that this is a special thing.

I didn’t really have an answer prior to your question, but this was a great excuse to do a little experimentation to answer a very narrow aspect. The short answer, if you want to skip forward through a ton of work I did with Dr. Claude and Dr. Codex, is that I think eventually virtual cells will amount to something of substance for specific questions – like whether some binding event happens – just not every question.

I’m spending the next few months doing various things in clinical oncology, so I was curious to know whether current frontier cell foundation models could answer something pertinent to cancer. There’s a drug called Dabrafenib. It targets a mutation in the BRAF gene, V600E, that shows up in about half of all melanomas and a meaningful chunk of colorectal cancers. In melanoma, it works well enough that it got FDA approval. Response rates around 50%. In colorectal cancer with the exact same mutation, it basically does nothing (response rates around 5%).

Could a frontier virtual cell model have predicted these outcomes before a trial?

The model I used to dig into this is STATE from the Arc Institute, trained on the Tahoe dataset of drug perturbation responses across hundreds of conditions. You give it a cell’s baseline expression profile across 2,000 highly variable genes and a drug label, and it outputs a predicted post-treatment expression profile. I (with help from Drs. Claude Code Max and Codex) pulled the baseline single-cell RNA data from CellxGene Census composed of 300 melanoma cells from skin biopsies and 300 colorectal cancer cells filtered to primary tumors. The measurement is a delta that captures predicted post-drug expression minus a control, log-normalized, averaged across all 2,000 genes. In the simplest terms, it basically flattens a biological experiment down to one number that answers how much a drug alters a specific cell’s transcriptome.

Source, I made it

To my surprise, STATE did pick up a difference! Dabrafenib produced 46% more transcriptional disruption in melanoma than in colorectal cells (mean Δ of 0.21 vs. 0.14, as seen in Panel 1). Zooming into melanocyte identity genes specifically (DCT, TYR, GPM6B, CDH19), the model predicts Dabrafenib knocks all of them down by more than a log unit in melanoma (Panel 2). On the surface, that looks like the model correctly reading that Dabrafenib is doing something specific in a BRAF-dependent melanocyte lineage.

But we do REAL SCIENCE here, so I did add a control. I ran the same experiment with Erlotinib, an EGFR inhibitor that washed out in Phase 2 melanoma trials because EGFR isn’t a meaningful driver there. STATE predicted nearly identical results to the clinically useful drug Dabrafenib, showing 47% more disruption in melanoma along with the same suppression of melanocyte identity genes, and a gene-by-gene correlation of R = 0.847 for both drugs across all 2,000 genes (Panel 3). To me, it seems like the model wasn’t predicting drug mechanisms but more so doing some reading of cell-type context. Put differently, based on the way STATE understands the world, melanoma cells just respond louder to perturbations than colorectal cells do. It then follows that the results are what they are. Therein is the problem with cell models – it requires generalizing in a way that language models just aren’t able to do right now.

Is this solvable? I don’t know. Probably depends on whether you think LLMs can achieve artificial superintelligence. In any case, I hope this gave you a sense for what kinds of questions are interesting to answer with cell foundation models, and maybe a glimpse at the frontier.

You can find all data wrangling and code associated with this experiment here.

Christie @GetMentalWealth (via Twitter)

Do you think the future of brain disorders (Parkinson’s to schizophrenia) is curing them? Or getting very good at screening and treating them more effectively?

I am weary of using the word “cure” when talking about any chronic disease, but I think that long-term treatment options could become viable for some degenerative conditions soon. I should also say that I think Parkinson’s and schizophrenia are very different diseases, and the things that will enable a Parkinson’s “cure” will not provide much for people dealing with psychotic conditions.

Where biomedical science has succeeded is mostly in the world of cell engineering, which is very helpful when it comes to replacing lost cells in the body. Parkinson’s happens because some people lose a particular subset of neurons in their brain that leads to the classic rigidity, tremor and less commonly known psychiatric symptoms of the condition. Since the lack of a very specific cell type in a very specific location drives the disease process, it then makes sense that replacing these lost neurons should fix the disease, which actually has happened in some patients. Ashlee spoke with the CEO of a company working on this with some success, so I’m hopeful we can replace lost cells, but the degeneration will still continue. Considering that the average patient is diagnosed somewhere around 65 years old, it’s up to you whether you would consider replacement a cure, if those cells only last 5-10 more years. To me it isn’t, but maybe that’s semantics.

The important point about Parkinson’s is that, while we don’t understand the exact reason the substantia nigra die, we at least know that the cells are disappearing. It’s not everything, but it’s not nothing, either. That brings us to schizophrenia.

Subscribe now

Schizophrenia is an unfortunate case where we don’t understand the mechanism enough to have a plausible path towards a cure. It’s a disease with both symptoms that are “added” to a person’s reality, termed positive symptoms in the medical community (hallucinations, delusions, disorganized behavior) and symptoms that take away from someone’s reality, called negative symptoms (flat affect, depression, social isolation). Most antipsychotics work via dopamine receptor blockade, which work fairly well at managing positive symptoms. About 70% of all patients experiencing a first time psychotic episode will get relief from the current crop of drugs. Unfortunately we don’t have great solutions at handling negative symptoms. The end result is that patients might not have hallucinations, but they still struggle to hold down a job or feed themselves due to the underlying cognitive architecture inherent to their disease. I have yet to see anything even directionally close to something that can help us both understand an individual’s neuron architecture, let alone rewrite it reliably.

Gviv @Gviv (via Substack)

What does water/dehydration do to the brain at a cellular level?

I just sat for the second part of my US Medical Licensing Exam and this one was actually considered a “high-yield” (meaning high chance of seeing it on the exam) topic. The first thing to understand is that electrolytes dictate fluid dynamics in the body much more than water itself.

Dehydration triggers a shift where water moves from the intracellular space to the hypertonic extracellular environment (blood vessels). In the brain, this results in acute cellular shrinkage as water exits neurons through specialized aquaporin channels. Because the brain is physically constrained by a rigid skull, this sudden volume loss creates significant mechanical tension on the bridging veins that anchor the brain to the dural membranes. If the shrinkage is rapid or severe enough, these vessels can rupture, resulting in an intracranial hemorrhage. The end result is mechanical stress that manifests as basically anything from lethargy to seizures.

You didn’t ask, but I think it’s interesting to consider the clinical implications of correcting this. To defend its volume during prolonged dehydration, the brain initiates a compensatory synthesis of other chemicals (organic solutes like taurine, glutamine, and inositol). These molecules increase the intracellular osmolality to match the salty environment of the blood, allowing the brain to pull water back into the cells and restore its volume. However, this adaptation creates a dangerous osmotic trap during medical intervention. If free water is replaced too quickly with intravenous fluids, the extracellular fluid becomes hypotonic compared to the solute-heavy interior of the adapted brain cells. Water then rushes into the neurons with enough force to cause massive cerebral edema and potential brain herniation. This necessitates the “high-yield” clinical rule of slow sodium correction, ensuring the brain has sufficient time to shed its protective osmoles and avoid a catastrophic rebound in pressure.

Now you’re ready to sit for Step 2.

Jonathan Whitaker @johnowhitaker (via Twitter)

Did DNA synthesis costs stall? What would it take to make laborious cloning obsolete, and when do you think that might happen?

You have no idea how much I hate molecular cloning. It is so pointlessly tedious, but it used to be way worse. Today we have basically idiot proof enzymes that are so efficient I’ve actually managed to stitch things together that shouldn’t actually work.

Though I’m sure it’s possible to get more efficient than Golden Gate or Gibson Assembly, the real gain I think will come when there’s a CRO you can shoot over a large sequence to and say “make this for me.” What that actually would entail is 1) a really good automated lab and 2) cheap synthesis. In my mind, the question becomes whether cloning is needed in a world where synthesis is extremely cheap.

Cloning emerged as a molecular solution to the problem of wanting to recombine and edit existing strands of DNA you have on hand to make other things. This is useful in situations where you have some “base” you like but want to modify just a portion of it in many different ways. You basically strip away the part you want gone, and add in stuff to replace it. This is necessary because as of right now it is not economically or technically feasible to synthesize massive strands of DNA.

It’s not an interesting answer, but I just don’t see how the tedium of the process can disappear without at least having a substantially better (1) than exists in the US or China, and likely (2). Hopefully someone in the US will solve that first, but if not I’m sure the Chinese CROs are on it.

Nicole @elocinationn (via Twitter)

(paraphrasing) Could you eradicate mosquitoes with EMF?

I was really excited to learn about the EMF remote-controlled mice described in a paper that made the rounds a few weeks ago. I was less excited to learn that it might have been faked. I will defer to my friend Richard Fuisz (and guest of Core Memory) here on the specifics, but it looks like maybe some fraud might be happening.

Let us assume for a moment that it is completely real, and think through what it would take to implement such a thing in mosquitoes. For context I worked on engineering mosquitoes as a member of George Church’s lab at Harvard, and published a couple papers on designing new ways of using CRISPR/Cas9 to suppress mosquito populations. Unfortunately, these approaches largely haven’t scaled. There are many reasons for that, but the biggest one is finding a way of propagating a designed gene – EMF sensitivity, in this case – through a wild population. When that happens we call it a gene drive.

I’m not going to describe the whole thing, as I’ve already done that elsewhere, but the gist is that we can edit mosquito embryos with CRISPR/Cas9 such that the adults that emerge from those embryos have traits we consider desirable for disease control (see figure above for how that works).

The biology hasn’t quite caught up to the engineering plans, though. There are some groups that have successfully demonstrated the ability to drive a gene through a caged population, but it isn’t clear that the gene in the EMF paper has a mosquito-analog. That’s potentially solvable with engineering. Another critical problem is that adult mosquitoes have very particular mating dynamics. They are extremely sensitive to deleterious effects of inserting large genes (which gene drive constructs are) into mosquitoes. Adults come out of this with small wings, thin cuticles, and other stuff, all of which gets them eventually kicked out of the wild population. Hard to build a sustainable gene drive if that’s how your construct is. Also probably resolvable, but much more of a pain than mosquito nets or insecticide coated paint.

To directly answer your question, my guess is this is possible, but likely not going to work as well as we need it to. Buy some DEET and lock in for the summer. Pro tip: if you notice some bites on your body, place a warm rag over the area for a few minutes – it helps kill the swelling.

Thanks for reading Core Memory! This post is public so feel free to share it.

Share

California

Woke up this morning to a horrible, gut-stabbing text about Virginia. Then saw this

It’s awful.

I’m not gonna try and sugarcoat it, or make people feel better, or spew some Rachel Platten anthem. What is happening, right now, in the United States of America is nothing short of a kidnapping of democracy.

I know this sounds naive, but for much of my life I believed in the ultimate goodness and decency of people. Like, yeah, you’re a conservative Tennessee congressman. Yeah, you like Donald Trump. But no way would you strip Memphis (a city that’s uber liberal and 65-percent Black) of its governmental representation. Right, like nobody would ever, ever be that awful?

Right?

Right?

Sigh.

So here we sit. An absolutely evil man as president. A bunch of spineless, access-to-power-consumed losers surrounding him. Judges who can’t even admit the results of the 2020 president election. Corruption, power, authoritarianism, cruelty. It’s all right there; all bubbling to the surface; all a harsh reminder that—no, the ultimate goodness and decency of people is not a guarantee.

So how do we, the Truth OC community, survive? How do we manage?

For me, it’s one word: California.

Beautiful, amazing, awesome, liberal California.

I love this state. I love this state’s politics. I love the ocean. I love the hiking. I love driving along the Pacific Coast Highway. I love a breakfast burrito at the Orange Inn. I love hearing the birds, seeing the blooms, catching an Angels game for $5 (seriously—five bucks!) and sticking around for the fireworks. I love the expansive parks, I love the sunsets, I love my neighborhood.

I fucking love California.

And if that means, for my mental sanity, I sometimes have to divorce myself from the United States of America … from the racism of Tennessee … from the ignorance of Alabama … from the gluttony of Mar-a-Lago … from the efforts to wipe out progress …

If that means I sometimes have to remind myself that, in many ways, my nation is California; my people are Californians; my heart is here, my love is here …

… well, that’s OK.

We live in America.

But, right now, I am a Californian.

PS: In the comments, tell me stuff you love about the state. Please.

American Conversations: Georgia Supreme Court Candidates Jen Jordan & Miracle Rankin

Gerrymandering Arms Race

Hidden Costs

Unlocked Repost: Curing U.S. Health Care, Part I

Content on this Substack is free 6 days a week; the Sunday primers, which are an immense amount of work, are the only exceptions. But I will make some primers free with a lag, starting with the first installment of my health care series.

In 2008, much to their own surprise, leading Democrats unified around a program of major health care reform. Policy wonks had spent years developing the concepts behind what eventually became Obamacare; big Democratic victories in the 2006 midterms and the prospect of controlling both Congress and the presidency made it possible to imagine turning those ideas into reality. During the Democratic primary, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama advocated similar plans, based on those ideas, for expanding insurance coverage.

And it happened! The Affordable Care Act was enacted in 2010. When it was fully implemented in 2014, millions of Americans got health insurance:

A graph with a line going up

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Impressive as the raw numbers are, they don’t tell the whole story. Before the ACA, even upper-middle-class Americans often found it impossible to get health insurance if they had pre-existing medical conditions. Many Americans were trapped in jobs they wanted to leave but couldn’t for fear of losing their employment-based coverage. Meanwhile, dire predictions from the usual suspects about runaway costs proved wrong. In fact, overall U.S. medical spending has grown much more slowly since the ACA was enacted than before.

But the U.S., alone among advanced nations, still falls far short of providing universal health care. As you can see from the chart above, 8 percent of the population was still uninsured in 2024, a number that is set to rise over the next two years as a result of Republican policies. True, many of the uninsured in 2024 were undocumented immigrants, who we don’t try to cover. But there are still a lot of uninsured. Moreover, a significant number of Americans who have health insurance are in fact underinsured. As a result, they are at risk of incurring devastating healthcare costs and are sometimes forced to forgo needed care. This number is set to rise sharply in the next two years as a result of Republican policies adopted under Donald Trump.

And not only is the U.S. unique among advanced countries in its under-provision of health care coverage, it also incurs by far the world’s highest healthcare costs per capita.

So now may well be a good time to get behind a new push for major health reform — an effort, if you like, to finish the job begun under Obama.

Today’s primer is devoted to the economics of health reform. During his failed effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Donald Trump famously complained, “Nobody knew healthcare could be so complicated.” Actually, we did know — and it’s not that complicated. Health economists understand the principles very well. And because health policy varies greatly among advanced nations, we know a lot about what works and what doesn’t.

This will be the first in a series about health reform. Beyond the paywall I’ll address the following:

1. Why markets can’t be trusted to deliver healthcare

2. Routes to universal healthcare

3. What works?

In a follow-up post I’ll discuss the pros and cons of different approaches, and possible paths forward for the United States.

Why markets can’t be trusted to deliver healthcare

No modern nation leaves the delivery of healthcare up to free markets. Granted, the U.S. healthcare system is more privatized than that of any other high-income nation. Yet even in America, government accounts for 48 percent of healthcare spending, while private insurers — who paid only a third of the bills — are both heavily regulated and extensively subsidized.

Why don’t we leave healthcare up to the market? Because while markets can be extremely effective at organizing economic activity, they are effective only under certain conditions. A classic 1963 analysis by Kenneth Arrow, a future Nobel laureate, showed that healthcare meets none of those conditions. Arrow pointed out that, unlike markets for regular goods and services, the delivery of healthcare is beset by problems of risk and “asymmetric” information, in which some players know more than others — which can be a market-killer.

Crucially, in any given year most health outlays are spent on a relatively small number of people — people who have serious conditions that require expensive treatment. No one knows in advance whether they will be one of those high-cost people. And only the very wealthy can afford to pay for expensive healthcare out of pocket.

As a result, modern medicine is available to the vast majority of Americans only thanks to health insurance. But private health insurance — that is, health insurance provided by for-profit insurance companies — is riddled with problems.

First, private insurers face the constant risk that those who choose to buy insurance are more likely to need expensive care than those who forgo buying insurance. To offset that risk, private insurers must do one of two things. They can charge very high premiums. But this drives away healthier people and makes the pool of those who want to buy insurance even worse — the so-called “death spiral.” Alternatively, private insurers can deny coverage to anyone with pre-existing conditions – in other words, deny coverage to those who need healthcare the most.

Furthermore, private insurers have every incentive to avoid paying for care whenever they can, notably by rejecting payment for treatment they claim is unnecessary. One could say, like Tessio in The Godfather, that this is “only business” — after all, a private company serves the interests of its shareholders. But the cold logic of profit maximization strikes harder when it involves matters of life or death. Thus Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing the CEO of United Healthcare because of his grievances over denied claims, has become something of a folk hero.

Finally, we are a country in which it is widely believed that the types of people that private insurers don’t want to cover — the elderly, people with pre-existing conditions, and the like — should have access to healthcare. After all, they didn’t choose to get sick or grow old. Many people, even if they have relatively conservative views about economic policy, feel that basic healthcare should be available to all a nation’s citizens. Here’s what polling from Pew shows:

Is it the federal government’s responsibility to make sure all Americans have health care coverage (%)?

A graph of a graph of a number of different colored lines

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Source

Note that even 41 percent of Republicans say yes.

There is, then, powerful logic — economic, emotional, and political — that militates against leaving healthcare up to the vagaries of the marketplace. And consistent with that view, the U.S. federal government plays a huge role in paying for healthcare through Medicare (healthcare coverage for those 65 and over) and Medicaid (healthcare coverage for low-income Americans). It also shapes how the private healthcare insurance market operates.

But unlike other advanced countries, we do not have universal guaranteed healthcare. Too many Americans are still uninsured or under-insured, and the numbers are growing. Why?

In the never-ending debates over healthcare policy in the United States, Republicans continue to argue that universal coverage is unworkable or unaffordable. Which is flatly contradicted by the facts: all other advanced countries provide it. Furthermore, there are three well-established ways to achieve universal coverage.

Routes to delivering universal healthcare

When setting up a healthcare system, a country faces two big choices.

First, who pays? Most healthcare must be paid for by insurance. Will the insurance be provided by a government insurance program like Medicare that is funded through taxation or by private insurers that charge premiums?

Second, who delivers the care? Will it be a system of public provision, in which the government runs the hospitals and clinics, with doctors and nurses as public employees? Or will it be a system of private provision, in which private hospitals and clinics deliver the care?

I have categorized these choices with a matrix that contains some international examples of each system. An asterisk indicates that the system isn’t a pure example; in practice national healthcare systems are often hybrids, with a mix of public and private roles:

A table with text on it

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Source: Commonwealth Fund

The lower left box is empty because there are no real world examples of countries in which private insurers fund government-run hospitals. There are, however, many examples of the three viable systems (see the Commonwealth Fund’s survey for a wider sample). Notably, within the United States there are examples of all three of the viable systems. Let’s look at each one of these in slightly more detail.

Public funding, public providers: There is a long tradition in the United States of decrying “socialized medicine.” But in reality there are numerous examples of the government directly providing of a service to its citizens. Consider primary and secondary education: 90 percent of U.S. children attend free public schools, and most of the rest go to religious schools. Why is healthcare that different? If people want to have healthcare, why not just give them healthcare?

The most famous example of a system in which the government both pays for and delivers healthcare is Britain’s National Health Service, which directly operates most hospitals and many clinics. Sweden and New Zealand have broadly similar systems. The U.S. Veterans Administration is yet another example: it operates its own hospitals and clinics while serving more than 9 million people — comparable to the population of Sweden and larger than that of New Zealand.

Public funding, private providers: A system of public funding of healthcare is often called a “single payer” system by policymakers. And that “single payer” is the government, which pays for healthcare from tax revenues.

People sometimes confuse “single-payer” systems with government-run healthcare systems like the British NHS. Under single payer, however, the government pays the bills but doesn’t operate the hospitals or directly pay the doctors and nurses. Care is provided by private hospitals and clinics, which are sometimes nonprofit, sometimes for-profit.

Most Americans are familiar with single-payer healthcare, whether they realize this or not. (According to surveys, many Medicare recipients don’t believe that they receive any government benefits.) The U.S. actually has two single-payer systems. Medicare covers most medical expenses for every citizen 65 or older. Medicaid is a “means-tested” program that in most states covers Americans whose incomes are less than 133 percent of the poverty line.

These are large programs. Combined, they cover 128 million Americans, more than a third of the population, while paying a significantly larger share of total U.S. health expenses (43 percent) than private insurers (33 percent). However, not everyone is eligible, and the majority of Americans with insurance are covered by private insurers.

Other countries have universal single-payer systems (with, as always, complicating details.) Canada and Australia both have single-payer systems (named Medicare in both countries). Taiwan is an interesting case to contrast with the United States. Its system was created in 2005, when U.S. progressives were formulating Obamacare. America created a complex system that basically added onto its existing government and private market institutions. But Taiwan, which was effectively able to start from scratch, followed the advice of healthcare experts and implemented a straightforward single-payer system.

Private funding, private providers: Private health insurance works badly without government intervention. It is, however, possible to achieve universal coverage via private insurers with a combination of regulation and subsidies.

The classic approach involves a “three-legged stool” of government policies:

· Insurers are required to accept all applicants, and prohibited from charging higher premiums to individuals based on their medical history

· Individual purchase of health insurance is mandatory

· The government provides subsidizes the premiums of lower-income households

The first requirement prevents private insurers from discriminating against the elderly and those with pre-existing conditions. The second requirement prevents healthier individuals from refusing to buy insurance and thereby causing a “death spiral”. And the third requirement makes healthcare coverage affordable for all.

The Netherlands introduced a system along these lines in 2006, replacing its previous patchwork of public and private insurance. Germany and Switzerland have conceptually similar systems. And the three-legged stool was at the core of the ideas behind Obamacare, although one leg — mandatory purchase of insurance — was sawed off in 2019, during Trump I.

What works?

Healthcare policy is an area in which advocates of reform don’t need to speculate about the feasibility of their plans, because all major routes to universal coverage have already been tried in multiple countries. So of the three alternative routes to universal coverage — “socialized medicine,” single-payer, and regulated/subsidized private insurance — which works? That is, which can deliver health care for all at acceptable cost?

All of them.

Britain’s NHS, long the exemplar of direct government provision of healthcare, is currently in a crisis brought on by bad management and years of underinvestment. But it performed very well for many years. And our own Veterans Administration, a once-despised agency that experienced a rebirth after it was reformed in the 1990s, continues to deliver a high standard of care.

The Commonwealth Fund ranks Australia’s single-payer system highest among the ten nations it studied. Canada is less highly rated, but Canadians are nonetheless much more satisfied with their system than we are with our far more expensive healthcare.

Yet relying on private insurance can also be successful. The Dutch system rivals Australia’s success on the Commonwealth Fund’s metrics.

Furthermore, all three approaches deliver universal coverage while costing much less per person than the U.S. system.

So we know that we can do much better. Not only is the path to a better healthcare system well trodden, three different paths are well trodden,

But can we go down one of those paths? The next post in this series will look at what makes universal health coverage work, and the possibilities for U.S. reform.

Using Claude Code: The Unreasonable Effectiveness of HTML

Using Claude Code: The Unreasonable Effectiveness of HTML

Thought-provoking piece by Thariq Shihipar (on the Claude Code team at Anthropic) advocating for HTML over Markdown as an output format to request from Claude.

The article is crammed with interesting examples (collected on this site) and prompt suggestions like this one:

Help me review this PR by creating an HTML artifact that describes it. I'm not very familiar with the streaming/backpressure logic so focus on that. Render the actual diff with inline margin annotations, color-code findings by severity and whatever else might be needed to convey the concept well.

I've been defaulting to asking for most things in Markdown since the GPT-4 days, when the 8,192 token limit meant that Markdown's token-efficiency over HTML was extremely worthwhile.

Thariq's piece here has caused me to reconsider that, especially for output. Asking Claude for an explanation in HTML means it can drop in SVG diagrams, interactive widgets, in-page navigation and all sorts of other neat ways of making the information more pleasant to navigate.

I wrote about Useful patterns for building HTML tools last December, but that was focused very much on interactive utilities like the ones on my tools.simonwillison.net site. I'm excited to start experimenting more with rich HTML explanations in response to ad-hoc prompts.

Trying this out on copy.fail

copy.fail describes a recently discovered Linux security exploit, including a proof of concept distributed as obfuscated Python.

I tried having GPT-5.5 create an HTML explanation of the exploit like this:

curl https://copy.fail/exp | llm -m gpt-5.5 -s 'Explain this code in detail. Reformat it, expand out any confusing bits and go deep into what it does and how it works. Output HTML, neatly styled and using capabilities of HTML and CSS and JavaScript to make the explanation rich and interactive and as clear as possible'

Here's the resulting HTML page. It's pretty good, though I should have emphasized explaining the exploit over the Python harness around it.

Screenshot of a dark-themed technical document titled "What this Python script does". Body text: "This is a compact, deliberately obfuscated Linux-specific local privilege-escalation proof-of-concept. Its apparent goal is to tamper with the in-memory image/page cache of /usr/bin/su, then execute su to obtain elevated privileges." A yellow-bordered callout reads: "Safety note: This explanation is for code understanding, reverse engineering, and defensive analysis. Do not run this on systems you do not own or administer. On a vulnerable kernel, code like this can alter the behavior of a privileged executable." Left column heading "High-level summary": "The script opens /usr/bin/su read-only, decompresses an embedded binary payload, and then processes that payload in 4-byte chunks. For each chunk, it performs a carefully arranged sequence involving Linux's kernel crypto socket interface, AF_ALG, pipes, and splice(). The important point is that this is not ordinary file writing. It never calls write() on /usr/bin/su. Instead, it appears to rely on a kernel bug/primitive involving spliced file pages and the crypto API to get controlled bytes placed into the page-cache representation of a privileged executable." Numbered steps follow: "1. Open target executable — /usr/bin/su is opened read-only. 2. Decode hidden payload — A zlib-compressed hex blob is decompressed into bytes. 3. Patch in 4-byte chunks — The helper function is called repeatedly with offsets 0, 4, 8, ...". Right column heading "Why it looks strange" contains a table with Pattern and Purpose columns: "import os as g — Short aliasing to make the script compact and harder to read. socket(38, 5, 0) — Uses raw numeric Linux constants instead of readable names. Compressed hex blob — Hides binary payload bytes and keeps the script small. splice() — Moves file-backed pages through pipes without normal user-space copying. try: recv(...) except: 0 — Triggers the kernel operation and ignores expected errors."

Tags: html, security, markdown, ai, prompt-engineering, generative-ai, llms, llm, claude-code

NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach

2 Min Read

NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach

This colorized image of Mars was captured by NASA’s Psyche mission on May 3, 2026, about 3 million miles (4.8 million kilometers) from the planet.
PIA26750
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

Description

This colorized image of Mars was captured by NASA’s Psyche mission on May 3, 2026, about 3 million miles (4.8 million kilometers) from the planet. The spacecraft is approaching the planet for a gravity assist on May 15 that will give it a boost in speed and adjust its trajectory toward asteroid Psyche for eventual arrival in 2029.

The spacecraft is approaching Mars from a high-phase angle, meaning that the planet appears only as a thin crescent, like our own crescent Moon seen around its new Moon phase. From this viewing geometry, the Sun is out of frame and “above” both Mars and Psyche.

Figure A is a zoomed-out view from the imager. No stars are visible in the background since they are much dimmer than the sunlight being reflected by Mars.
Figure A

Figure A is a zoomed-out view from the imager. No stars are visible in the background since they are much dimmer than the sunlight being reflected by Mars.

The observation was acquired by the multispectral imager instrument’s panchromatic or broadband filter, with an exposure time of just 2 milliseconds. Even with this very short exposure time, the crescent is extremely bright and parts of the image are oversaturated. The light seen here is sunlight reflected off the surface of Mars and also scattered by dust particles in its atmosphere. Because the quantity of dust in the atmosphere can vary rapidly over time, the anticipated brightness of the crescent was hard to predict before this early image was acquired.

The dustiness of Mars leads to sunlight being scattered by its atmosphere, making the crescent appear to extend farther around the planet than if it had no atmosphere (as with our Moon).Of note, on the right side of the extended crescent, there appears to be a gap, which coincides with the planet’s icy north polar cap. The cap is currently in winter and mission specialists hypothesize that seasonal clouds and hazes may be forming in that region, possibly blocking the atmospheric dust’s ability to scatter sunlight  like it does elsewhere around the planet.

The Psyche mission’s imager team will be acquiring, processing, and interpreting similar images in the lead-up to the close approach on May 15. The images are primarily designed to calibrate the cameras and to characterize their performance in flight as a practice run for the approach to asteroid Psyche in 2029.

For more information about the Psyche mission, read: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/psyche/

The post NASA’s Psyche Mission Captures Mars During Gravity Assist Approach appeared first on NASA Science.

To End His Misbegotten War, Trump Will Have to Change His Mind

The Cross Section is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

It can be awfully confusing for the casual news consumer to figure out what is going on with the Iran war, since on an average day we’ll hear that the two sides are trading fire, that the cease-fire is holding, that an agreement to end the war is near, and that no progress has been made on such an agreement.

So here’s the reality: As it stands now, how quickly this war comes to an end has little if anything to do with developments on the ground. There will be no tide-turning bombing campaign or brilliant military gambit that will determine who wins. In fact, neither side will “win” in any real sense.

That last fact has erected a psychological hurdle that our emotionally fragile president must climb over in order to bring this debacle to a close. All that’s required is for him to act against his instincts, his prejudices, his misconceptions, and everything he believes.

The strength delusion

While there are certainly mid-level staffers in the Trump administration with a realistic grasp of the dynamics of international conflict, unfortunately the people at the top echelon are in the grip of a delusion, one that says the “stronger” force always wins.

“We live in a world,” White House aide Stephen Miller said on TV in January with a barely contained glee, “that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power.” Rules, laws, international agreements — those are for losers. Winners deploy large-scale violence and get what they want. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth agrees. He spent years arguing that military lawyers and international conventions have unduly restrained American “warfighters” from doing what needs to be done; if only we could unshackle our war machine from concern about “stupid rules of engagement,” there is nothing it could not accomplish. No one believes this more passionately than the president himself: The way you win is through intimidation, force, and maximum violence, and if that doesn’t get you the victory you want, you just have to do it more.

That he could believe this after America’s experience in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq — not to mention dozens of other conflicts around the world over the last century or so — is evidence of a simple mind at work. Though if you wanted to be generous, you could say that Trump’s entire life has shown him that rules and laws don’t apply to him, so maybe he figured that the lessons of modern warfare — such as “You can’t win a war through air power alone” — wouldn’t apply to him either.

But they do. He put the idea that victory always goes to the side with more bombs to the test, and it failed. The question now is, can he admit — not to the world, which he will never do, but at least to himself — that his whole understanding of how war works was wrong? Can the world’s most prideful man swallow his pride? Because that’s what will be required.

The confidence man

As hard as it can sometimes be to distinguish between what Trump actually believes and what he repeats in an effort to mislead the public about the situation at hand, it is clearly important to Trump to see this situation, like all situations, as one in which he has all the power and his opponent has none. Nearly every day, he says that the leaders of Iran “want to make a deal so badly” or that they’re “desperate to make a deal,” or that they’re “begging to make a deal.”

This is obviously untrue, but if Trump believes it, it would make him unwilling to accept the idea that if there is to be a negotiated settlement, not only will Iran have to make concessions, but he will too. Given everything he has done and said, there isn’t much doubt that he sincerely believes that threats and force are not just one path to winning this war, but the only path. Negotiation is just a matter of filling in the details on his grand victory. “All [Iran’s leaders] understand is bombs,” Trump reportedly told an aide, which is a positively deranged thing to say at this point. We’ve been bombing them plenty, and the bombs have failed to achieve our goals. How on earth could he think, after the last 10 weeks, that more bombing will get the Iranian government to surrender?

The most logical answer is that his pre-existing beliefs have not yet been punctured by reality. Every few days, he threatens on social media that if Iran does not surrender, then the real violence will begin, as though that prospect will so terrify the Iranian regime that they will fold. Here’s an excerpt of an event he did the other day in the Oval Office:

REPORTER: You’re facing an opponent right now in Iran that has refused to submit. You seem optimistic now that you may be closer to a deal. What’s different about this moment now than in other moments where a deal has seemed close?

TRUMP: Well, why do you say they refuse to submit? You don’t know that. You don’t know what’s going on.

REPORTER: They were firing on US ships a few days ago.

TRUMP: Yeah, a few days ago it’s a long time ago, in the world of war, a few days ago. No, they want to make a deal badly, and we’ll see if we get there, if we get there, they can’t have nuclear weapons. It’s very simple. But what’s not to submit?

So they had a Navy with 159 ships and now every ship is blown to pieces and lying at the bottom of the water. They had an air force, lots of planes, and they don’t have any planes. They don’t have any anti-aircraft. They don’t have any radar left. Their missiles are mostly decimated. They have some, they have probably 18, 19%, but not a lot by comparison to what they had. And the leaders are all dead. So I think we won.

This recitation of the destruction US weapons have caused is reminiscent of the “body count” reports the American military would give during Vietnam to prove how well that war was going. He ends by saying “So I think we won.” Force not only will deliver victory, it has delivered victory. All that’s left is for Iran to loudly and publicly proclaim that Trump has bested them so he can be hailed by all as a victor. “They have to cry uncle,” he has said more than once. “That’s all they have to do. Just say, ‘We give up.’”

Trouble is, the Iranians will not give him what he wants. The regime has its own motives, interests, and incentives, none of which will disappear if we bomb them some more.

What’s so maddening about the place we’re in now is that the broad terms under which this conflict will end are pretty straightforward and obvious to everyone. The US and Israel will cease their attacks, Iran will allow free transit through the Strait of Hormuz, it will accept some form of limits and monitoring on its nuclear program, and it will get economic compensation through some combination of sanctions relief and the release of its frozen funds.

Yes, there are sticky details to work out, including for how long the nuclear limits will last. But as long as Trump demands utter capitulation — they give us everything we want, and we give them nothing in return — Iran will not agree and the war will not end. The only way it will end is if Trump realizes what a terrible mistake he made. And that could take a while.

Thank you for reading The Cross Section. This site has no paywall, so I depend on the generosity of readers to sustain the work I present here. If you find what you read valuable and would like it to continue, consider becoming a paid subscriber.

Leave a comment

Subscribe now

Crystal Gazing

'Beyond that lies a vale of fire through which my vision cannot penetrate' is the kind of fun thing geologists, heliophysicists, and early universe cosmologists have a lot of opportunities to say.

Friday assorted links

1. Eigenism.

2. Steven Nadler, Spinoza, Atheist.  A good and very readable introduction to the Dutch philosopher.

3. Neal Katyal talk on what really won the SCOTUS tariff case.

4. “What America lacks relative to Europe is not price-sensitive leisure travelers but routes where almost everyone is a price-sensitive leisure traveler.”  From Matt Y.

5. The White House is distancing itself from the very tough AI regulation idea.

6. Musical longevity is reaching its peak this year.

7. Are these the emerging megaregions?

The post Friday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

Thoughts, Not Thinking?

I saw a post on the changing build/buy/customize tradeoff & thought, “I should weigh in. The XP world has been grappling with this for decades.”

I dug in. Figured out the tradeoff curves. Speculated how they would change. It’s a pretty good framework, I think. I learned things putting it together.

But…

(There I go with the Boomer Ellipsis thing…) I looked …

Read more

Military space boom meets Beltway friction

Garrant: 'We are ready to award and execute at speeds that have never been seen before, but that would be for naught if we aren’t able to produce and deliver at speed and scale'

The post Military space boom meets Beltway friction appeared first on SpaceNews.

CEO Series: Terran Orbital’s Peter Krauss on understanding scalability in space

In this episode of Space Minds, Mike Gruss talks with Terran Orbital’s Peter Krauss about what he’s learned about culture from primes and startups. He also explains how to understand […]

The post CEO Series: Terran Orbital’s Peter Krauss on understanding scalability in space appeared first on SpaceNews.

How to build a lunar mass driver

Casey Handmer May 2026

What?

Elon has recently (late 2025, early 2026) been talking about building many terawatts of orbital AI compute and launching some components from Moon factories with a mass driver. This is an old idea, enabled by the Moon’s relatively low gravity and lack of an atmosphere. See, for example, The Moon is a Harsh Mistress and The High Frontier

The fundamental problem with The High Frontier is that the set of products that can be made in space and sold on Earth while making money is very limited, due to the sheer cost and difficulty of accessing space. In general, they are observations and communication, which in both cases distributes the product using radio waves, which are much cheaper than physical return of artifacts from space.

In 2019, I wrote that Starlink was likely to be incredibly lucrative and I’m happy to see this is the case, with over $10b in revenue last year. Space AI takes this business model and ramps it up to 11. Why? Starlink has already established that converting a space solar photon into an electron and using it to relay bits of information around the world is extremely profitable. Space AI is a great way to vastly increase both the total demand for space data bits as well as the value per bit, as the tokens encoded by these bits have already proven to have stupendous economic value and apparently unlimited demand.

Why?

Starship promises a near future with launch costs to LEO of perhaps $100/kg. With electric propulsion, large quantities of cargo, including solar powered AI can be positioned anywhere in cis-Lunar space for an incremental cost beyond that. For AI hardware, most of the cost is in the GPU/TPU die, which contributes almost no mass, while most of the mass is in the solar panel and radiator, which cost (relatively speaking) almost nothing. 

Here’s a spreadsheet I put together last year with some basic first-principles analysis. At even $500/kg, launch cost is only 5% of the total satellite deployment cost, so a lunar mass driver is unlikely to drastically improve the economics of space-based AI, by reducing launch costs. 

It’s also unlikely to have low start up costs! 

Instead, we must look to a future where Starship costs stop falling from experience and economies of scale and rise to unaffordable levels, perhaps comparable to the Shuttle’s $50,000/kg, because of a constraint on launch capacity.

In my spreadsheet, I estimate that one Starship can deliver about 15 MW of solar power to orbit. Last year, China produced over 1 TW of solar photovoltaic panels. Supposing we weren’t constrained by chip fabrication and Starship was fully operational, it could launch 1 TW to orbit per year with just 67,000 launches, or one every 8 minutes. 

This might seem like a lot, but the world currently sustains about 100,000 commercial flights per day! In a world where SpaceX can turn around a launch site in an hour, only seven or eight pads would be necessary to keep up with this rate of launch, requiring a fleet of perhaps 10 boosters and a few hundred Starships. 

Nor would this launch rate defeat our global oil production. One Starship launch consumes roughly 10,000 barrels of oil (equivalent), and the world currently consumes 100 million per day. So 67,000 launches per year is less than a week of the world’s current supply of oil. It may require a few gas pipelines in Texas to be upgraded, and of course by the time this happens solar synthetic fuel will be a recognized and mature technology. 

There has been some speculation about damage to the upper atmosphere of the Earth caused by huge launch volumes. 

In any case, we’re talking about a launch volume of hundreds of thousands of Starships per year, or more than 10 million tonnes of cargo per year, with a total launch revenue of about a trillion dollars – equivalent to about six weeks of the global oil and gas industry!

The lunar mass driver must transcend this scale. 

What does the lunar mass driver drive?

The Moon is made of rocks. Primarily volcanic rock, similar to Earth basalts. As ores go, they are not preferred sources of metals on Earth. Though they contain nearly every metal – the net present value of the metal in 1 tonne of basalt is about $1300 vs the $20 price as crushed gravel – they’re mixed together and generally considered energetically infeasible to extract. We’re working on this at Terraform but the energy demand is a fact of life. 

In one model, the lunar mass driver fires raw rocks into Lunar orbit, to be processed in space using copiously available space solar power. In another model, moon rocks are pre-processed to increase their metal content, or even converted into finished products, before launch. Blue Origin has demonstrated a process to convert Lunar regolith (dirt) into a functioning solar panel, but it’s not clear what the energy return on energy invested for this process would be.

The Moon’s surface itself can be a tough place to do anything energetic, because it is subjected to 14 Earth days of shade during the long lunar night, followed by 14 days of unrelenting sun during the day. Any serious infrastructure will require serious power, either from extremely large nuclear reactors operated near the poles to create functional shaded radiators, or from energy beamed up from the Earth or from Lunar orbit, or both. 

For the following I’ll assume the driver is shifting dumb rock. It doesn’t change much but the g-tolerance of raw materials is a big plus! 

How big is my mass driver?

Let’s run some numbers around mass flow rate. We’re not going to the trouble of building a mass driver for no reason, we’re doing it to alleviate the burden on Earth of launching 1000 Starships every day, to push total human compute into the 10s of TWs incremental increase per year. 

So let’s assume one mass driver launches 10 million tonnes of rock per year. Taking into account rock refining losses and expansion this implies a Lunar fleet of a few dozen mass drivers, but you have to start somewhere. 10 million tonnes per year is 1 tonne every 3 seconds. 


We can calculate the total energy expenditure too. Delta-V to LLO is 1.6 km/s, and we assume that Delta-V is cheaper to come by in orbit, thanks to solar powered tugs. We only need the lunar mass driver to get rocks into orbit, where they are collected and moved to wherever they need to go. 

So total kinetic power is 0.5*mdot*v^2 = 450 MW, assuming 90% driver efficiency. The 10% waste covers ohmic losses, cargo-sled recycle weight, and active cooling. 

Why not stack some additional assumptions on top of this result? 

Let’s assume an equivalent price of $10/kg, reflecting that random rocks orbiting the moon are not quite as valuable to the customer as a finished satellite orbiting the Earth – where all the customers are. This implies that each lunar mass driver makes $100b/year. Assuming that 10% of this revenue pays for the power plant, this works out to $2.50/kWh, which is about 10x higher than a typical US rate payer in 2026. 

Can a 450+ MW nuclear power plant be built and operated on the Moon for a 10x cost increment relative to Earth? I’m not sure but it’s not forbidden by the laws of physics. 

For reference, a reactor of this scale would typically cost $2-4b on Earth and weighs perhaps 1000 T. 

I previously estimated that a radiator-constrained space reactor mounted into a Starship could generate perhaps 3 MWe, implying several hundred launches for the power of one mass driver. A much larger, monolithic space reactor of 500 MW scale would need to be completely re-engineered, requiring delivery, an enormous radiator (many hundreds of acres, assuming permanent shadow), and other hassles. But it could be done. 

Orbit, what orbit?

Low lunar orbits are, in general, unstable, due to the presence of gravitational anomalies called mascons (or mass concentrations) in various places corresponding to ancient impacts. There are, however, four classes of frozen orbits (~27°, 50°, 76°, 86°) on the Moon that are relatively stable, so provided the mass driver has a latitude and launch azimuth high enough to access these, the launched rocks won’t necessarily immediately return to obliterate the launch site two hours after launching. On a long enough timescale any passive payload launched from the surface of the Moon into Lunar orbit will run into the surface, so the trick is to launch payloads into converging bunches and scoop them up in orbit, performing circularization and/or relay transportation using some kind of orbital tug. It’s also possible to launch rocks from the Moon into more distant libration orbits, but I don’t cover that case in this post.

Technical implementation

The launcher in this image looks a bit like a rail gun. But rail guns pass current from rail to rail through the sabot (projectile enclosure) and suffer rail erosion at far higher rates than we can tolerate.

The lunar mass driver will be a maglev in disguise. 

In this section I draw on my ancient experience as a levitation engineer at Hyperloop back in about 2016. 

The job of the track is to accelerate a passive cargo-carrying sled to high speed over a short distance. The sled must be controlled over six degrees of freedom. Unlike a passenger maglev, where propulsion forces are a fraction of gravitational forces, a mass driver is optimized for highly efficient acceleration. 

Assuming a launch speed of 1.6 km/s, v^2 = 2 a s gives track length and acceleration as inversely proportional. 

If rocks can survive 1000 gs of acceleration (they can) then the launch track need only be 128 m long (or 256 m including the sled catching portion), greatly reducing its mechanical and construction complexity. Can an electromagnetic launch system deliver 1000s of gs? 

A helpful intuition pump for this is to consider how much force a permanent magnet can deliver. A commercial neodymium magnet can easily support 20x its own weight, but 2000x is highly non-trivial. Bear in mind that no matter how cleverly built, the track will have to be toleranced with non-zero gap between the sled and the maglev track. 

Add to this the fact that the acceleration is diluted by the mass ratio of the magnet to the rest of the system. I can imagine a launch sled which is 70% magnets, 10% structure, and 20% rocks, in which case even an optimal launch system would have to take a 30% haircut on acceleration. 

There are a few ways to skin this cat, but probably the easiest is with a synchronous linear motor along a pair of parallel tracks with the sled suspended in between. At any meaningful level of acceleration, gravitational forces from the Moon round to zero. It is possible to include, for example, some null flux electrodynamical suspension system for guidance, but if you’re using the sled magnets for anything other than acceleration then you’re throwing away performance and making the track longer. 

On this note, achieving anything like the necessary levels of magnetic shear force requires very very large, very flat magnets. In my model below, they are 20 cm wide, 2.8 cm thick, and 9 m long, entirely enclosed by an electromagnetic stator, and connected via high strength steel shear panels to the payload bucket. 

It’s not impossible to build long tracks but, having seen this close up at Hyperloop, it becomes extremely difficult to achieve sub millimeter alignment precision over long distances. To give a flavor of this, the Shanghai Pudong transrapid Maglev operated with a ride height of about 1 mm. It is built on an elevated steel reinforced concrete trackway whose foundations were dug to a depth of 80 m into the Pudong silt. Shanghai, like many cities, is built on a river delta. Literally thousands and thousands of tonnes of concrete and steel to form the track way. You would think that it would be stable enough that the track could be calibrated once during construction and then would be fine, but in fact the track had to be re-aligned, by a custom designed track maintenance vehicle, twice per day, to account for such perturbations as tidal deformation of the crust of the Earth. 

The Moon does not have saturated silty deltas or wildly varying tidal forces (being tidally locked) but it does have a very extreme temperature cycle over its 28 Earth-day day, so probably the best way to achieve dimensional stability, as well as a measure of meteorite protection, is to bury the track under a few meters of dirt.

(I asked AI to make a better version of this diagram but it wasn’t right. Motion is into the page. 200 kg of moon rocks can fit in a container 40 cm on a side.)

(Here’s an OnShape model. Below, diagrams of how the whole thing goes together.)

The cart oscillates back and forth on the track, launching rocks for ¼ of its cycle, with the rocks separating from the sled bucket at the midpoint of the track. The slow down step can recover some momentum as power, provided there’s a place to store it! At 1000gs, launch takes just 0.16s and the complete cycle (accelerate, release rocks, slow down, fly back to rock loading site) is as short as 0.64 s, not including time to reload rocks. At the 10 million tonnes per year rate, each launch would carry about 200 kg, with a total sled weight of 1000 kg loaded and 800 kg empty. This launch and recycle process would load the structure with up to 1000 T, that is 10 MN, of force, at about 1.4 Hz. That’s a pretty wild vibrational environment for the ground anchoring system to endure. 

Power = force*velocity, peaking at 16 GW at the middle point of the 256 m long mass driver, a lot more than the average demand. Power consumption averages 1.75 MW per meter, but much of this is recycled. Assuming 3% loss as ohmic heating, we’re still looking at 50 kW per meter, easily enough to justify an active coolant loop. For the purposes of this post, I assume any waste heat pumped and dumped in a permanently shadowed radiator used primarily by the power reactor. Beaming power up from the Earth would require a receiver rectenna several km across. 

Structurally, the entire launch rail must endure tremendous forces, variable loads (due to unbalanced cargo), impacts from micrometeorites and rock spray during rocket landings, electrostatic and thermal nonsense caused by the Lunar day night cycle, and lots of other things. Fortunately, it has no moving parts and no wear surfaces!

So while the mass driver could be brought to the Moon over several launches in pieces, it needs a sophisticated anchoring system to react out loads and cope with extreme thermal swings during the Lunar day/night cycle. 

What do you think, Claude?

In which I roast myself with the latest AI so you don’t have to. Also some more technical detail. 

Missing or under-treated

  1. Sled recycle losses. You bury the second 128 m of deceleration in “recover some momentum as power.” Empty sled at 1.6 km/s = 1.02 GJ. At 1.56 Hz and 90% recovery, that’s 160 MW of pure dissipation, not in your 450 MW budget. At 80% it’s 320 MW. You either need to argue >95% round-trip electrical recovery (hard given switching losses on multi-GW pulses), or your reactor is closer to 700–800 MW. [CH: Correct, there’s a very steep penalty for higher parasitic power losses.]
  2. Pulsed-power infrastructure. 16 GW peaks at 1.5 Hz with bidirectional flow. The capacitor banks / flywheels for this dominate the system mass and probably the cost. ITER’s pulsed power is tens of GW for comparable durations and it’s a building. On the Moon, this is the actual hard engineering problem, more so than the rail itself. Worth a paragraph. [CH: There are several ways to skin this cat.]
  3. Catcher architecture. 56,000 launches/day into LLO requires tug coordination at obscene tempo. Velocity dispersion at exit sets apogee error: 0.1% velocity error → ±5 km position error after a half-orbit. Either you hit launch precision <10⁻⁴ (very hard with thermal drift on a 256 m structure) or your catcher needs km-scale capture and active pursuit. The catcher fleet plausibly outweighs and outcosts the driver. [CH: I have also waved my hands about what to do with rocks in lunar orbit – they still need to be converted into solar computronium somehow!]
  4. Δv beyond LLO. Customer is in Earth orbit, not lunar orbit. LLO→GEO ≈ 3.9 km/s, LLO→LEO higher with aerocapture. You save ~9 km/s vs Earth launch but you’re not at the customer. The relevant comparison is (launch + tug from LLO) vs (Earth launch), not (launch) vs (Earth launch). Worth one paragraph stating the tug budget. [CH: As stated, the assumption is that Moon launch delta V is the expensive part we’re trying to overcome.]
  5. Chemical-lander baseline. A dumb LOX/LH2 (or LOX/CH4) lander from the Moon to LLO needs ~1.8 km/s, mass ratio ~1.7. If you have any propellant production at all, chemical wins until volume is huge. Mass driver’s case rests on (a) no propellant feedstock available at scale, or (b) volume past the crossover. State this; the reader will ask. [CH: There’s no good reason to synthesize prop on the Moon and the gear ratio makes flying chemically propelled shuttles to and from LLO pretty silly.]
  6. Reactor radiator. 450–800 MW thermal, polar shadow, ~700 K reject → tens of thousands of m². Your 2025 Mars-reactor post implies a tonne/m² class radiator. This is hundreds of tonnes of radiator alone, which dwarfs a 1000-T terrestrial reactor mass. The 10× cost premium claim wants more support. [CH: True, as a good rule of thumb, a space reactor’s radiator will weigh about as much as everything else put together.]
  7. Magnet survivability at 1000g. NdFeB is brittle. Sintered blocks 9 m long under 1000g shear and oscillating tension fatigue is not obviously feasible. Either bonded magnets (lower B), or segmented with structural steel, which eats into your 70% magnet mass fraction. [CH: Actually building magnets and a sled structure which can make this work is serious engineering.]

Alternatives

The Moon’s lack of an atmosphere means you can also operate a lunar sling. A tower with extendable tethers whirls around to obtain high speeds without as high g loads. I see no reason why entrepreneurs couldn’t build a range of lunar launching solutions!

Conclusion

Lunar mass drivers do not violate the laws of physics. Their tech can be developed and tested thoroughly in labs on Earth at prices that are reasonable in comparison to the complexity and cost of Starship development. They are unlikely to be able to compete with Starship flying at any level of volume from Earth (where the chip fabs are) to space (where the infinite sunlight is), unless Earth launch is supply limited in some way. Order of magnitude, this is beyond 100 TW per year deployment. For reference, 10 TW of compute is roughly equal to the total economic output of the entire world’s supply of natural intelligences. We live in interesting times!

How Long Do We Wait for New Inventions?

In her book on the history of the laser, historian Joan Bromberg notes that the technological and scientific predecessors of the maser (which itself preceded the laser - two critical technologies whose developmental histories I sketched in this piece two months ago) were in place for decades before physicist Charles Townes had the insight to combine them:

Stimulated emission had been known to physicists for over 30 years, and “regenerative” oscillators, that is, oscillators with feedback, were well known to engineers. Why, then, was Towne’s insight so novel? The answer appears to be that in 1951, physicists and engineers in the United States were not yet sufficiently acquainted with each other’s territory to find it natural to put the two ideas together.

This sort of decades-long wait between when a technology first becomes possible, and when it actually appears, seems common, or at least seems like it might be common. I’ve previously written about why it took so long for wind power to be widely deployed after it became technologically possible, and people often idly speculate whether inventors in the Roman Empire could have built a steam engine, or why we waited so long to put wheels on luggage.

Knowing how long this gap between when an invention becomes possible, and when it actually appears, is useful, because it tells us something about the nature of technology and technological progress. What factors govern whether some new technology appears? How much does mere technical possibility matter, and how much do things like cross-pollination of knowledge, economic feasibility, and political factors contribute? Knowing more about how long it takes for an invention to appear once it becomes technically possible can help us answer these sorts of questions.

I wanted a better sense of how long it takes for some technology to appear once its necessary predecessors are in place. So I used AI to try and find out.

Method

To do this, I used a list of 190 major inventions that I’ve used for previous analyses of technology. For each invention, I asked Claude Opus 4.7 how much earlier it could have been invented.

This required pinning down what exactly I mean by “could have been invented.” For one, it’s often possible to build a working example of some technology long before it’s capable of solving a real problem. Working incandescent light bulbs were built decades before Edison, but they weren’t useful for providing indoor illumination until Edison developed one that lasted for many hours without blackening or burning out. For another, it’s often possible to build something before the problem that it solves has been articulated. Surgical masks — a cloth covering over the face — could have been invented thousands of years ago, but inventing them only makes sense once the germ theory of disease has been articulated.

Nonetheless, I decided to use “could a working example of this technology be built” as my meaning, ignoring whether that technology would be practical or economically useful. In part I chose this criterion to follow the contours of the inventions list, which for the most part is when things were first invented, not when they first improved to the point of becoming practical for regular use. For instance, the list includes the ballpoint pen as being invented in 1888 by John Loud, even though practical ballpoint pens didn’t appear until the 1930s. I also chose this criterion because pinning down technical possibility seemed difficult enough without also having to consider questions like “would someone in this time period be willing to pay for a technology that worked roughly this well?”, which seems like a much harder question.

I specified “could a working example of this technology be built” as follows: I asked Claude to assume an inventor working in a well-equipped, era-appropriate workshop with a team of highly skilled engineers and craftsmen. Could they, using knowledge and technology available at the time, build a working example of the technology in five years?

I allowed the hypothetical team to build one required precursor technology, if that technology was simple enough that the team could plausibly build it along with the invention in question. For instance, Edison’s light bulb was predicated on the demonstration of Sprengel’s 1865 mercury vacuum pump, using those insights to achieve vacuum high enough that the filament wouldn’t burn out quickly. However, a Sprengel mercury pump is not amazingly complicated — it works by dropping mercury through a glass tube, forcing air out along with it — and it’s plausible that a team working to build a better incandescent lamp could have invented it as a collateral innovation as part of their improvement efforts. (Edison, after all, had to invent lots of other technology — generators, distribution systems, etc. — along with his bulb to make it practical.)

I also allowed the fictional team to generate new knowledge through iteration and engineering-style experimentation, but I did not allow them to discover new scientific frameworks or make novel key empirical observations guided purely by scientific curiosity. So a team trying to build an electric motor in the early 19th century in this simulation could not just summon up Oersted’s critical observation that electric current creates a magnetic field, and a team trying to invent the transistor in the early 20th century would not have access to the band theory of quantum mechanics.

You can read the entire prompt I used here.

For the output, I had Claude list a range encompassing two dates. The first is the earliest plausible date for when the inventor’s team could have succeeded with some charitable assumptions and a bit of luck. The second is the straightforward date, when multiple independent teams would be likely to converge on a working model of the invention. Along with the date range, I had Claude list the necessary prerequisite technologies and scientific knowledge, and give a short explanation of its reasoning. An example of the output from Claude for an invention is below:

Claude gave ranges for 166 of the 190 inventions. The other 24 it flagged, mostly either because it was a scientific discovery rather than an invention (like X-rays) or because its real-life invention was a serendipitous accident that couldn’t be expected to be recreated earlier (like Perkin’s invention of mauve dye). You can read the full document with all Claude’s answers here.

One issue I noticed reading through the answers is that I didn’t do quite enough to pin down cases like the surgical mask, which are gated almost entirely by conceptions of the problem. There’re a few other items like this, notably Morse Code and Braille, and while Claude did a reasonable job of handling them (it gave answers for Morse Code and the surgical mask which assumed that they needed to wait until the problem was articulated, and flagged Braille) but if I was re-running this simulation I would give more specific instructions for handling cases like these.

Are the AI’s answers any good?

Based on previous work I’ve done using AI to answer questions about the nature of technology and science, I expected the answers I got to be reasonably good, though not perfect. But while AI hallucinations have become much less of a problem, the ability of an AI model to provide quality output on tasks like this is definitely still a moving target. So I took several steps to try and verify Claude’s answers.

First, I did spot checks for various specific, verifiable claims that Claude made regarding various required predecessors. In the arc lamp example above, for instance, I checked whether Galvani published research on electric current in 1791 (he did). And for 20 of the inventions, I fed the entire output back to Claude, and asked it to pair each verifiable claim with a reliable source, and flag any cases where the claims were incorrect or a reliable source couldn’t be found. (I then checked these sources for accuracy.) This yielded an accuracy rating of around 97% — only a tiny number of verifiable claims were inaccurate, and the inaccuracies were relatively minor (such as a claim that something was common by the 1850s when it should have been the 1860s.)

Screenshot from a verification run.

Checking people and dates is one thing, but this doesn’t tell us the most important part: whether Claude correctly identifies the actual binding constraints for creating a given invention. To try and verify this, I read through Claude’s analysis of several inventions that I know well enough myself.

Here’s the first sample answer, which Claude produced for the Fleming valve:

The Fleming valve is essentially an Edison-effect lamp with the cold electrode brought out as a usable anode and the device used as a rectifier. All physical prerequisites — evacuated bulb, carbon filament, sealed lead-throughs, battery, galvanometer — were in place by 1880. The binding item is the Edison effect itself (1883). If we treat thermionic emission as off-limits before 1883 (it required Edison to notice the unilateral current in his lamps, not something a rectifier-builder would set up to look for), the earliest plausible date is essentially 1883–1890: a motivated team aware of Edison’s observation could have made the small inferential leap to “this rectifies AC” almost immediately, especially once Hertz (1887) created a clear use case for a sensitive RF detector. Earliest straightforward sits in the late 1890s, after Hertzian-wave work motivated multiple labs (Marconi, Lodge, Braun, Fleming) to seek better detectors than the coherer; Fleming himself was investigating the effect from the early 1890s and could have arrived at the diode concept several years before his 1904 patent. The historical 1904 date reflects how long it took to connect Edison’s curiosity finding to the practical problem of wireless detection.

Here’s the second, the Wright brothers’ airplane:

The Wright Flyer is a clean case where the binding constraint is the lightweight internal combustion engine. Cayley had laid out the basic principles of fixed-wing flight by 1810, gliders were practical from mid-19th century, and Wenham’s wind tunnel (1871) plus Lilienthal’s glider work (1890s) gave aerodynamic data. The three-axis control concept is team-discoverable through glider iteration — it’s an engineering insight, not a scientific discovery. The hard prerequisite is a roughly 10-hp engine weighing under ~200 lb, which only becomes feasible after the Otto cycle (1876) and Daimler/Benz refinements of the mid-1880s; steam plants of earlier eras were too heavy. With a Daimler-class engine available by ~1885 and Lilienthal-style glider knowledge accumulating, a motivated team could plausibly assemble a Flyer-equivalent in the late 1880s (earliest plausible). By the late 1890s prerequisites were widespread enough that multiple teams (Langley, Maxim, Ader, the Wrights) were actively converging — making 1895–1903 the straightforward window. The historical 1903 date reflects how genuinely difficult the integrated control problem was, not missing prerequisites.

And here’s the third, for the jet engine:

The turbojet is a system-integration invention rather than a new-phenomenon invention; nothing in it requires post-classical physics. The binding constraint is the maturity of turbomachinery — specifically a compressor and turbine pair efficient enough that the cycle yields net positive thrust, plus turbine blades that survive the combustion-gas temperatures. Parsons’s steam turbine (1884) and the first gas-turbine attempts (Stolze, Armengaud-Lemale, ca. 1900–1906) demonstrate that the basic building blocks existed by the early 20th century, though early gas turbines barely broke even because compressor efficiency was marginal. A motivated team in 1905–1915 with access to Parsons-class turbomachinery, a centrifugal compressor, and contemporary nickel-chromium steels could plausibly run a short-duration jet — Whittle’s 1937 W.U. ran on similar materials. By the mid-1920s, compressor efficiency, high-temperature alloys, and aerodynamic theory had matured enough that multiple teams could converge straightforwardly, which is essentially what happened: Whittle (UK) and von Ohain (Germany) independently produced running turbojets within a few years of each other. The historical lag from “straightforward” to flight reflects funding skepticism and the engineering grind of making it light, reliable, and aircraft-ready, not a missing fundamental.

All three of these answers are pretty close to what I would have given. The Fleming valve is basically gated by the incandescent light bulb. Once the bulb existed, the phenomenon of thermionic emission (then named the Edison Effect) was quickly observed, and could have been exploited soon after by a motivated person. The connection to radio is also correct — Fleming was in fact a consultant for the Marconi Company, and invented the Fleming valve specifically for use in early radios.

For the Wright brothers’ airplane, a lightweight engine was indeed an important gating technology, and needing to wait until Otto’s internal combustion engine got light enough in the 1880s is a reasonable judgment. Thomas Edison worked on the problem of mechanical flight in the 1880s, but judged that what was needed was an engine with a very high power-to-weight ratio, and only made some cursory attempts to build one before giving up. Samuel Langley, one of the Wright brothers’ contemporaries, invested an enormous amount of his aircraft development efforts into building an extremely efficient gasoline engine; the resulting Manly-Balzer engine held the record for power-to-weight ratio for many years. The Wrights’ efforts were notable not because the brothers thought the engine was unimportant, but because they (correctly) thought that by the early 1900s engine technology was advanced enough that obtaining a good-enough engine wouldn’t be overly difficult.

You could argue that the “earliest plausible” date for the airplane could be pushed back somewhat earlier, into the 1870s or so, by someone building a barely-working airplane with a janky, dangerous steam engine. Langley, in fact, built several model aircraft that successfully flew using these sorts of engines. But Claude’s answer here seems defensible. And like Claude, I similarly would have noted that the control problem was extremely difficult, and the solution to it non-obvious, even if there weren’t technical barriers preventing it from being solved with the available contemporary tech.

For the turbojet, Claude is right on both gating technologies: sufficiently efficient compressors, and turbine blade materials that are capable of withstanding high temperatures. And it’s right as to when the technologies started to get good enough: the first gas turbine that could (barely) do actually useful work appeared in the early 1900s, and stainless steels (which Whittle did in fact use for his first turbine blades) started to appear in the 1910s. I probably would have pushed the “earliest plausible” date somewhat later — maybe 1915-1925 — but Claude’s conception of a sort of barely-working jet engine that’s not really good enough to use in an actual airplane a few years early doesn’t seem impossible.

Based on these checks, I think Claude’s answers are probably reasonably defensible most of the time. And what’s more, they show how genuinely difficult it is to answer these sorts of “how early could a technology have appeared?” questions. Even limiting ourselves to questions of technical possibility and not actual commercial or societal usefulness, good answers to these questions require knowing both a lot of history of some particular technology AND having deep technical knowledge of various technologies as they existed at various points in time. Answering “how early could an airplane have been built?” requires knowing not just who the various flight pioneers were and when they did their work, but the state of steam and internal combustion engine technology at various points in the 19th century and how far they could have plausibly been pushed. There are just vanishingly few people with this sort of deep knowledge about even a few technologies, much less 190 of them spread across two centuries. So while I don’t expect the AI’s answers to be perfect, I think it’s probably collectively a much better analysis than you’d get from almost any single human.

The results

So, how long do we have to wait for new inventions? To start, let’s look at a scatterplot of the results from the Claude simulation. The graph below shows how much earlier on average each invention could have appeared, for both the “earliest plausible” and “earliest straightforward” date ranges.

We can clearly see a few trends on this graph. One is that for most inventions, the gap between when it could have been invented and when it was actually invented is not particularly large. Of the 166 inventions Claude estimated a date for, 107 of them (64%) had an “earliest plausible” date 50 years or less from the actual date, and 150 of them (90%) had an “earliest straightforward” date 50 years or less from the actual date. For more than half the inventions, the average earliest straightforward date of invention was 10 years or less from the actual date.

Conversely, there were a relatively small number of inventions where the gap between “could have been invented” and “was invented” was very large. 30 inventions (18%) had an average gap of more than 100 years between “earliest plausible” and actually invented, and eight inventions had a gap of more than 1000 years. You can see this clearly on a histogram, which shows a large bump of small time gaps, and a long tail of fewer, larger gaps.

The inventions with the longest period between “could have been invented” and “was invented” are below.

There’re a few interesting trends observable here. Many of the longest-delayed inventions — the hypodermic needle, general anaesthetic, stethoscope — are medical inventions. (You could argue the surgical mask could be in this category as well). For the hypodermic needle, this probably needed to wait until the existence of some substance that needed to be injected (such as morphine, first synthesized in 1804), but for other medical inventions this possibly also reflects folks’ reluctance to do inventive-tinkering in a medical context. For general anaesthetic, for instance, the trial and error of getting the dose right was incredibly dangerous, and the inventor Hanaoka Seishu “crippled his mother and blinded his wife perfecting the dose.”

Several of the longest-awaited inventions are ones where the version in the list is an early, impractical version of the one that actually solved a problem. So the “dandy horse” — a two-wheeled, wooden vehicle that was a predecessor of the bicycle — could have been built in antiquity, but the dandy horse wasn’t particularly practical as a means of transportation, and actually useful bicycles had to wait for the improved manufacturing technology of the later 19th century. Likewise, the version of the ballpoint pen that Claude thinks could have been invented much earlier is John Loud’s 1888 version, but Loud’s pen worked poorly and wasn’t successful. Actually useful ballpoint pens are surprisingly difficult to manufacture (China famously couldn’t manufacture them until very recently), and credit for the “useful ballpoint pen” is usually given to Lazlo Biro in 1938. (Claude correctly notes that “useful” versions of both these inventions would need to wait until much later.) Judson’s early zipper and de Martinsville’s early sound-recording device are also examples of early, not-particularly-useful inventions.

Other inventions on this list seem like they might be a case of the surrounding social or technological conditions needing to be right for the invention to appear. So Otis’ elevator safety brake needed to wait until elevators were in higher demand, which probably didn’t occur until steam engines or some other similar power source came along (though maybe you could have water-driven elevators much earlier). Barbed wire perhaps needed to wait until enclosing very large areas of land for grazing became something people needed to do.

And some inventions seem like they might have been genuinely useful had someone thought of them earlier, and simply nobody did. Blanchard’s pattern-tracing lathe, Neilson’s hot blast, and the safety pin all seem like they fall into this category, though perhaps there were good reasons these didn’t appear earlier.

Going back to the scatterplot, the other obvious trend on this chart is that the gap between when an invention becomes possible and when it appears has narrowed over time. If we graph the average and median gaps for inventions by 20-year time periods, we can see that they have fallen over time.

For the 60 post-1900 inventions, every one has a “straightforward” invention date of 50 years or less than the actual date, and 75% of them have a straightforward date of 10 years or less before the actual date. Of the 30 inventions with a gap of more than 100 years between when they could have been invented and when they actually appeared, 29 of them were invented before 1900. So the process for creating new inventions seems to be getting more and more efficient — opportunities are getting noticed and exploited sooner and sooner, up through 1970 at least (which is when the list of major inventions extends to).

We can also look at how wait times vary by type of technology. The chart below shows average wait times by different categories, for both inventions overall and for just post-1900 inventions. We can see that medical inventions have the longest wait, while electronic inventions have the shortest wait.

We can also look at what types of factors tend to be bottlenecks. For some inventions, the bottleneck is primarily scientific: the limiting factor for the transistor is the band theory of quantum mechanics, and the limiting factor for the radio was Hertz’s demonstration of electromagnetic waves. But for other inventions, it’s primarily technological: the turbojet had to wait not for some new physical theory, but until compressor technology and high-temperature steels appeared; likewise the airplane had to wait not for some novel theory of aerodynamics but until a light enough engine appeared. The chart below shows how often “science” or “technology” was the limiting factor for a given invention, for both inventions overall and post-1900 inventions.

In both cases, technology is the bottleneck far more often than science (though of course if you removed enough technological bottlenecks eventually you’d hit a scientific one, and vice versa).

Conclusion

There is of course only so much you can learn from this sort of exercise: at the end of the day, this is based on an AI’s best guess, not a thorough analysis of the various controlling factors by experts. But while I wouldn’t swear to its accuracy, I think the answers are probably mostly pretty good, and enough for us to draw some general (if tentative) conclusions about the nature of technological progress.

My main takeaway is that we mostly don’t wait all that long for new inventions. Since 1800 most inventions have appeared within a few decades of when it was possible to build them, and since 1900 these gaps been even narrower. It also seems likely that medical inventions are more likely to have long wait times than other types of inventions, and that the limiting factor for how early some new technology could appear is most likely to be technological, rather than scientific.

Rocket Lab announces large launch contract and plans to acquire space robotics company

Archimedes test

Rocket Lab announced May 7 the largest launch contract in the company’s history as it also moves to acquire a space robotics company.

The post Rocket Lab announces large launch contract and plans to acquire space robotics company appeared first on SpaceNews.

SatVu zooms in energy facilities in Cuba, India and Australia

SAN FRANCISCO – British startup SatVu released imagery from HotSat-2, a thermal satellite built to keep tabs on energy infrastructure. HotSat-2, built by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., is the second […]

The post SatVu zooms in energy facilities in Cuba, India and Australia appeared first on SpaceNews.

Lunar Outpost raises $30 million

Pegasus

Lunar Outpost, a developer of lunar rovers, has raised $30 million as it works to revamp designs to meet NASA’s revised Artemis architecture.

The post Lunar Outpost raises $30 million appeared first on SpaceNews.

Rocket Lab joins Raytheon on space interceptor program for Golden Dome

The company also announced a new contract to fly hypersonic test flights for Anduril

The post Rocket Lab joins Raytheon on space interceptor program for Golden Dome appeared first on SpaceNews.

Redwire pursues opportunities in landers and power systems for NASA’s moon base plans

NASA lunar base

Redwire is taking a renewed interest in lunar landers given the demand signal from NASA to support the agency’s ambitions to develop a moon base.

The post Redwire pursues opportunities in landers and power systems for NASA’s moon base plans appeared first on SpaceNews.

A Better Week for D.C. on the Crime Front

While the only good week is a week with no homicides, a decline in the number of homicides is better than the alternative. With two homicides, homicides increased to 27* this week–there were 50 homicides at this same time last year. As has been the case throughout the year, car-related crimes and muggings are down compared to the same time last year.

Trending in the right direction, but I am still hoping for a zero homicide week next week.

*Officially, we have had 30 murders this year, but three of the murders occurred in other years, with arrests that were not made until this year.

Links 5/7/26

Links for you. Science:

Scientists Gave a Bunch of Salmon Cocaine. This Is What Happened Next
Former NASA astronauts launch new group to promote U.S. constitutional values
The US CDC on the brink
Why millions of adorable bees are emerging from this cemetery
Honeybees understand basic math
A Top Ten List of Vaccine Misinformation from RFK Jr
Medical data of 500,000 UK volunteers listed for sale on Alibaba

Other:

Trump looms large in debate of teen curfew in D.C. (one more reason D.C. needs statehood)
REPUBLICANS TELL THEMSELVES THAT ATTACKING ANTI-RACISTS IS ANTI-RACIST
Seriously, Tucker Carlson? Come On. Media figures who have turned against Trump only in recent weeks have forfeited the right to be taken seriously in the future.
The FTC Is Ramping Up to Target Transgender Rights
The Many Rewards of Playing Hardball
What I Learned About Billionaires at Jeff Bezos’s Private Retreat
Food Stamp Work Rules Don’t Increase Employment, Researchers Say
Did you miss The 51st’s mayoral debate? You can watch it here
A Very Unpopular President
Trump threats against Iran are a boon for prediction markets, including some backed by his son
The Vindication of Bidenomics
You Are Actors In History. A humble reminder for our decadent elites.
Event Horizon
AI Tools Are Helping Mediocre North Korean Hackers Steal Millions
JetBlue allegedly used private customer data like internet history to set prices, lawsuit says
[Republican] SC prosecutor who is running for attorney general now faces ethics probe
The “Freakout” and the “Abyss”: When Texas Republicans gerrymandered at Trump’s direction, the Washington Post told readers to calm down. When Virginia Democrats responded, the editorial board found the end of democracy.
Forget ‘Abolish ICE.’ Tom Steyer Wants to Jail ICE Agents.
The Justice Department Sides With the Ku Klux Klan
‘In-your-face racism’ at an elite campus: Black students raise alarm at Pomona College
Newly Deciphered Sabotage Malware May Have Targeted Iran’s Nuclear Program—and Predates Stuxnet
How thin is Pete Hegseth’s skin?
Palantir Employees Are Starting to Wonder if They’re the Bad Guys
Elon Musk’s near-daily online posts about race are turning off some fans
‘We’re going to [expletive] take those dudes’: Vermont police told ICE to stand down. The federal agents didn’t listen.
What RFK Jr. Doesn’t Get About Paid Family Care
Ukraine’s Second Miracle Year
Texas Tech Issues Ban On Students Writing On LGBTQ+ Topics
Pentagon fires ombudsman overseeing military newspaper after calling it ‘woke’
Trump Wrecked in Brutal New Fox Poll: “He’s in a Bad Mood”

The UFO files

Here is the web site, with some of the files released, I have not yet had a chance to look or to read any reliable summaries.  More releases are expected, and as of this moment the Kalshi market is at 25 or so.

The post The UFO files appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

A simple point about diversification

In recent times a significant percentage of the S&P 500 run-up has been driven by a small number of tech and AI stocks.  Plus the effects of AI can be expected to be further reaching yet for some while.

That makes it harder to diversify against risk, as there is a single dominant variable, namely “AI risk” or something similar.  There is AI risk both in your portfolio and on your human capital, though possibly those will offset each other to some degree.

Presumably the equity premium should rise as a result?  People will want more portfolio safety as a protective offset, and be gunshy about such a heavy equities bet on one major technology.

If you have a longish time horizon, do you feel brave enough to act on that view?

Or perhaps instead there is some simple way to hedge against AI risk?

One “stupid” equilibrium that no one will want to talk about is the following: buy lots of Nvidia, but if that doesn’t pay off make sure you are doing an MBA and planning a career in non-AI-implementation consulting.

The post A simple point about diversification appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

The Annals of Self-Womping

Yesterday I wrote a post basically arguing for a broad resistance to allowing the avalanche of corrupt and criminal conduct under the second Trump administration to take on the color of normality and acceptability. The answer to that is broad criminal accountability. The post was entitled, “The Law is Coming.” This was partly a reference to a phrase I used frequently during the first Trump administration, after which the cause of accountability was at best uneven and ultimately a failure, a story we all know well and from bitter experience.

The phrase is part prediction, part aspiration. It certainly isn’t a mere statement of fact like the second law of thermodynamics or the unbreakable grip of gravity on matter. The future is created by actions of people living in the present. But in response this morning I’ve read a few responses saying: No, that’s not true. There will be no accountability. I know. It can’t happen. Another reader says, the costs of accountability are too great. There are too many armed and violent people invested in the Trump regime. You can’t antagonize them. This is far from the predominant response. But there were a few.

If this works for you, I have no objection. It doesn’t work for me. Political change and political action are hard. I cannot dispute this. It’s a cardinal fact of public life. But this kind of defeatism or self-womping is, first of all, not really backed up by any history. Things change. They frequently change when those in power are so deeply unpopular and discredited. Indeed, this kind of self-willed defeatism and dignity loss is especially curious at a time when those in power are so on the ropes. But it’s really more a form of self-care, a kind of militant assertion of confidence in a future outcome — even a negative or dystopian one — because confidence about the outcome outweighs the substance of the outcome and thus provides a sense of predictability, a more comfortable posture than facing into the wind.

It’s time to carefully but urgently rethink payments to kidney donors. My op-ed in the Washington Post

 This morning the Washington Post published my op-ed online (which is scheduled to appear in the print edition on Sunday). 800 words is hardly enough to explain why I think what I do...I could write a whole book about that.

But here's the op-ed: 

Why paying people to donate kidneys is a good idea

With 90,000 patients waiting for a kidney, compensating living donors would save lives.

 

 

Are Democrats Warming to Reforming the Supreme Court?

Yesterday, Lauren Egan — who authors The Bulwark’s newsletter about Democrats — sent out a newsletter edition entitled “Get Ready for the Dem Court-Expansion Litmus Test.” (Egan tends to be fairly dismissive of Democrats’ intentions, with a kind of mainstream media vibe.) Today Chief Justice John Roberts is complaining that the public is misinformed thinking that the Supreme Court is made up of corrupt political actors. As I’ve written repeatedly, there are deep inertia pools of opposition to Supreme Court reform. It’s a much heavier, though just as critical, lift than contesting the gerrymandering wars or abolishing the filibuster. But these and other hints show that a movement and a coherent push are beginning to take shape.

Calling something a “litmus test” is always bit of a dig. It suggests not a reasoned political demand but a kind of unthinking, unreasoned box checking, groupthink. But a central point for the Trump opposition to embrace is to speak with actions and political power rather than allowing elite gatekeepers to divert them into debates about propriety or semantics. So yes, call it a litmus test or really whatever you want. No Democrat should get elected to any federal office without a credible plan to reform the Supreme Court and rid it off its corruption, along with the willingness to enact such a plan. Importantly, this is a cause any and every Democratic voter can help advance with their actions, at town halls, in conversations with elected officials, in small donor giving, on social media. You don’t need to be in a position to pass laws yourself. You don’t need to write six-figure checks. You can simply add to the chorus of Democratic opinion and become part of convincing the people in office that it’s the only way forward and the only way for them to stay in office. It’s already starting to happen. It turns out the depths of the Court’s corruption provide powerful motivation and encouragement.

As for Roberts, in advance of actual reform the next best thing is making the threat or reality of accountability hit home for the authors of the corruption. So it should hearten you every time the Chief Justice has a whine-fest like this. He hears you. The Supreme Court descended to this level of corruption because of a total lack of accountability. Checks and balances are at the heart of the American system. Opposing centers of power and paths for political accountability are built into the system. There are complex reasons why there’s so comparatively little of that for the federal judiciary generally and the High Court specifically. They’re mostly centered on the perception that the judiciary is the weakest branch and thus least in need of protection against. Because of that, the first big abuses of power went unanswered. That only increased the appetite for greater abuses of power. There was no counter-force, no threat of accountability to keep the appetite to abuse the Court’s power in check.

Any institution is susceptible to individual bad actors. The institution itself becomes corrupt when individual acts of corruption become commonplace, accepted and open. The current Supreme Court is like a municipal government which has gone from individual officials taking the occasional bribe to one in which bribery is pervasive and public, where they’re openly solicited and accepted.

As I wrote last week, I think we’ve gone past the point where the threat of accountability can restrain this Court’s corruption. That might have worked in 2012 or perhaps as late as the late teens. I think that window has closed. But we still shouldn’t see a bright line between the credible threat of reform and a thorough house-cleaning taking place. It is critically important that Democrats be building Court-reforming majorities in 2026 and have it be a major part of legislative action in the next Congress, even if actual reform is basically impossible with a Republican president in place. The threat of accountability shapes behavior. Ideally, that threat would spur members of the Court to curtail their corrupt actions, generating a kind of race to 2029 in which members of the corrupt majority tried to deprive the reform movement of oxygen by making reform less necessary.

Is that likely? Can the problem be solved without changes to the structure, membership and size of the Court? I doubt it. But this is the kind of thing you allow to play out. Have multiple paths to achieving the goal. The point is that the threat of accountability and reform creates incremental steps toward achieving the goal, not only in building consensus and power to enact reform but in curtailing corrupt behavior. It’s not a binary either/or.

The key point is that democratic self-government in the United States is simply not possible with this level of corruption so deeply embedded into the architecture of the federal government. You can’t have meaningful elections if the consequences elections are routinely tossed out by what amounts to a unaccountable Guardian Council controlled by one political party.

The eye in your pocket

A street scene with blurry pedestrians in background and eye poster on post in foreground.

Things have jobs: pillows are made for comfort, scissors are sharp, and digital devices are made to track your every move

- by Carissa Véliz

Read on Aeon

Sentences to ponder

Exposure increases interclass (high- and low-parent-income) marriage but has no detectable effect on interracial (White and Black) marriage. A spatial marriage market model predicts that residential segregation—one of many forms of exposure—accounts for more than one third of marital sorting by class but less than 5% by race.

That is from a new NBER working paper by Benjamin Goldman, Jamie Gracie & Sonya Porter.

The post Sentences to ponder appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

Former NASA chief takes helm of national security space firm

Before he became NASA administrator in 2018, Jim Bridenstine was a naval aviator who then served as a US representative from Oklahoma for three terms, sitting on the Committee on Armed Services. Now, five years after leaving NASA, Bridenstine is returning to those military roots.

This week, Bridenstine was named chief executive of a Maryland-based company, called Quantum Space, that builds "advanced maneuverable spacecraft."

"For us, national security space is a priority," said Bridenstine in an interview.

Read full article

Comments

My 9 Rules of Criticism

Even I’m suspicious of critics, and I’m a member of the priesthood. One of my favorite movie scenes, from the film Birdman, shows Michael Keaton confronting a hostile drama critic—and saying everything artists have wanted to tell reviewers since the beginning of time.

It ain’t pretty. But he’s in trouble now, because critics always get the last word. The poor artist doesn’t have a Slurpee’s chance in hell.

You might be surprised at the amount of hate mail critics get. Or maybe you wouldn’t—perhaps you’re sending it yourself. Somebody should collect all this vitriol and put the best examples in a book. I’d call it The Critic Gets Criticized, but artists might just call it Payback.

Despite all that, critic is a great job. You get to spend your life in creative environments face-to-face with inspiring artists and soul-shaking works. You seek out greatness as your daily routine. That’s a sweet gig, even when you’re working overtime.


If you want to support my work, please take out a premium subscription (just $6 per month).

Subscribe now


Sure, the pay rate is lousy. But you get free tickets to concerts, and a few autographs along the way. There are far worse ways to earn to living. I know because I’ve had a more than a few of those jobs.

But if you pursue any vocation, you should want to do it well—criticism is no exception. So with that in mind, I offer nine suggestions below to anybody considering a career in this field.

I primarily focus on music criticism here, but these observation apply to any creative field—and to most other pursuits where criticism is practiced (in the workplace, raising children, teaching, etc.).

Let’s start at the top.

Read more


How Poverty Fell

The share of the global population living in extreme poverty fell dramatically from an estimated 36% in 1990 to 9% in 2015. We describe how this decline happened: the extent to which changes within as opposed to between cohorts contributed to poverty declines, and the key changes in the lives of households as they transitioned out of (and into) poverty. We do so using cross-sectional and panel sources that are representative or near-representative of five countries that collectively accounted for 75% of global poverty decline between 1990 and 2015. The data show that overlapping birth cohorts experienced the decline of poverty together over time, such that poverty decline can be viewed as a primarily within-cohort phenomenon. Within cohorts, the data reveal substantial churn, casting the challenge of escaping poverty as a “slippery slope” more than a long-term trap. The data also illustrate a diversity of pathways out of poverty: sectoral transitions, migration, and changing occupational choices and female labor force participation can all account for some part of poverty reduction, but in all but a handful of cases, a majority of households exiting poverty did so without experiencing these changes.

That is from a new NBER working paper by Vincent J. Armentano, Paul Niehaus & Tom Vogl.

The post How Poverty Fell appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

I want my MTV

You know when I’m home on my own I don’t watch much TV like actual TV, but I do watch music videos on YouTube on the TV.

Sometimes new music but often ones I know really well. Music videos are such a vibe.

And it’s social too? I’ve spent many evenings with friends that just turn into swapping music vids on the big screen.


I seem to listen to music only while doing something else, e.g.:

  • while watching music videos, as above
  • while running
  • while playing Grand Theft Auto and actually that was the majority component of my enjoyment of GTA5 back in the day: beating someone up and nicking their car, tuning the radio station to something good, then chilling driving the hills of Los Santos listening to the tunes (GTA5 has excellent playlists) watching the sunsets (GTA5 has excellent sunsets).

Incidentally GTA6 is coming out in November and apparently it cost $1 billion to make.

Gonna play the heck out of it not just for the music but because of its status as a cultural artefact: the final big game built before LLMs.

No-one will ever invest that much in a game again, no software will ever encode this quantity of hands-on human labour again. The last of the great pyramids.

You think any studio will ever again spend years recording human-authored dialogue from human voice actors for NPCs in story branches that the player may encounter? No way. As much as I am looking forward to playing the first AAA title that does something unique and infinite with AI, we are at the end of an era.


Anyway so music videos.

I’m an Apple Music subscriber. They know what I like and also the old tracks I go back to.

Apple TV should have a special channel that connects to my Apple Music and streams music videos for this week’s Essentials or New Music playlists.

A mix of whatever’s new and sometimes Video Killed the Radio Star too.

YouTube could do this in a second, they have all the content. Just a big button that explicitly constrains the auto-play to music only, that would do it.

But they are weirdly against building around specific use cases: I would love them to do something around ambient live streams (as previously requested) and it feels like a missed opportunity.

So this is a freebie for Apple instead. Call it music television or MTV for short, I think it could catch on.

Tracy Arm’s Post-Tsunami Landscape

July 26, 2025
August 19, 2025
Satellite view of a fjord with a glacier occupying the right half and open water on the left. Much of the fjord valley walls are covered with exposed rock and green vegetation.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
Satellite view of a fjord with a glacier occupying the right half and open water on the left. The glacier’s front has retreated, and brown has replaced previously green areas on land where a tsunami stripped away the vegetation.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
Satellite view of a fjord with a glacier occupying the right half and open water on the left. Much of the fjord valley walls are covered with exposed rock and green vegetation.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
Satellite view of a fjord with a glacier occupying the right half and open water on the left. The glacier’s front has retreated, and brown has replaced previously green areas on land where a tsunami stripped away the vegetation.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison
July 26, 2025
August 19, 2025
The shores of Tracy Arm, a fjord in southeast Alaska, are stripped of vegetation following a landslide and tsunami that occurred on August 10, 2025. The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 and Landsat 9 show the area in the weeks before and after the event, respectively.

Carved over millennia by the pressure and motion of glacial ice, the valley walls cradling the Tracy Arm fjord in southeast Alaska continue to be reshaped. In summer 2025, following the rapid retreat of South Sawyer Glacier, a large landslide sent rock careening into the fjord, altering the wider landscape in a matter of minutes.

The slide culminated on the morning of August 10, 2025, when at least 64 million cubic meters of rock slid downslope. Material entering the fjord induced a tsunami that stripped trees and other vegetation from the opposing fjord wall up to 1,578 feet (481 meters) above sea level. While this peak was the highest “runup” reached by the tsunami, shores and islands down the fjord also saw substantial destruction.

NASA-USGS Landsat satellites captured these images on July 26 (left) and August 19 (right), before and after the event, respectively. “The bright landslide scar on the north side of the fjord is striking, as is the ‘bathtub’ ring around the fjord showing the areas where the forest was leveled by the tsunami,” said Dan Shugar, a geomorphologist at the University of Calgary.

Note that Sawyer Island, about 6 miles (9 kilometers) from the landslide, also turned from green to brown. Only a few trees still stood at the island’s higher elevations.

An aerial view shows a glacier ending in a fjord with small icebergs in the water. A recent landslide scars the foreground fjord wall, while a tsunami has stripped vegetation from the opposite wall.
The landslide scar and the zone where vegetation was stripped by the resulting tsunami are both visible in this aerial photo of Tracy Arm and South Sawyer Glacier, captured on August 13, 2025.
U.S. Geological Survey/John Lyons

In the months following the slide, Shugar and colleagues combined satellite, airborne, and ground-based observations with eyewitness reports and simulations to build a more complete picture of how the event unfolded. Their analysis, detailing the event from its lead-up through its aftermath, was published May 6, 2026, in the journal Science.

In addition to the details outlined above, the researchers showed that water continued to slosh around the fjord—a phenomenon known as a “seiche”—for more than a day. Both the landslide and seiche produced seismic signals detected around the world, the former equivalent to a magnitude 5.4 earthquake.

The Landsat images also reveal significant retreat at the front of South Sawyer Glacier in less than a month. “Part of that occurred between the date of the first image and the date of the landslide,” Shugar said. “But part of it is from the landslide itself, which broke off a big chunk of the terminus of South Sawyer Glacier, resulting in a slurry of icebergs in the fjord.”

The exact mechanisms that caused the landslide remain uncertain and could have involved a combination of factors. Rainfall, which was moderate prior to the event, and the rapid retreat of glaciers can both destabilize a slope. What is clear, however, is that the glacier’s retreat exposed a new area of open water, leaving it vulnerable to a landscape-reorganizing tsunami. 

A satellite view shows Tracy Arm, centered, in context with other nearby waterways and glaciers in southeast Alaska.
Tracy Arm and other nearby fjords connect with Stephens Passage, a major waterway in southeast Alaska, visible in this image captured on August 19, 2025, by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 9.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

No one was injured in the event, though it did catch some by surprise. Kayakers camping on Harbor Island near the fjord’s mouth had their gear swept away, and passengers aboard a small cruise vessel in neighboring Endicott Arm reported swings in water levels and a strong current associated with the tsunami. Brentwood Higman of Ground Truth Alaska, a co-author of the paper, noted that a glacier’s shift from relative stability to renewed retreat, visible in satellite images, could serve as an important indicator that an area has become more susceptible to landslide and tsunami hazards.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Photograph by John Lyons/U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Kathryn Hansen.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Landslide and Avalanche Debris Litter Hubbard Glacier
4 min read

Satellite-based radar images show where a powerful earthquake in the Yukon, Canada, sent rock, snow, and ice spilling across the…

Article
Cyclone Rains Spur Papua New Guinea Landslides
3 min read

Heavy rains from Tropical Cyclone Maila triggered a deadly landslide in the mountains of East New Britain.

Article
Record-Setting Retreat of Hektoria Glacier
5 min read

Scientists relied on satellite data to understand how the Antarctic glacier lost so much ice so rapidly.

Article

The post Tracy Arm’s Post-Tsunami Landscape appeared first on NASA Science.

Smart Glasses for the Authorities

ICE is developing its own version of smart glasses, with facial recognition tied to various databases.

Nature’s hardware store: building the future with biology

Illustration of a futuristic dome structure on a barren landscape with distant hills and scattered boulders.

What if the tools for sustainable space exploration could be found in cellular life on Earth? A NASA astrobiologist explains

- by Aeon Video

Watch on Aeon

The origins of Indians

A bustling outdoor market with people trading and transporting goods on a foggy street.

Genetic studies support what historians have argued for decades: ancient India was a place of migration and mixture

- by Kiran Kumbhar

Read on Aeon

Thursday 7 May 1663

Up betimes and to my office awhile, and then by water with my wife, leaving her at the new Exchange, and I to see Dr. Williams, and spoke with him about my business with Tom Trice, and so to my brother’s, who I find very careful now-a-days, more than ordinary in his business and like to do well. From thence to Westminster, and there up and down from the Hall to the Lobby, the Parliament sitting. So by coach to my Lord Crew’s, and there dined with him. He tells me of the order the House of Commons have made for the drawing an Act for the rendering none capable of preferment or employment in the State, but who have been loyall and constant to the King and Church; which will be fatal to a great many, and makes me doubt lest I myself, with all my innocence during the late times, should be brought in, being employed in the Exchequer; but, I hope, God will provide for me.

This day the new Theatre Royal begins to act with scenes the Humourous Lieutenant, but I have not time to see it, nor could stay to see my Lady Jemimah lately come to town, and who was here in the house, but dined above with her grandmother. But taking my wife at my brother’s home by coach, and the officers being at Deptford at a Pay we had no office, but I took my wife by water and so spent the evening, and so home with great pleasure to supper, and then to bed.

Sir Thomas Crew this day tells me that the Queen, hearing that there was 40,000l. per annum brought into her account among the other expences of the Crown to the Committee of Parliament, she took order to let them know that she hath yet for the payment of her whole family received but 4,000l., which is a notable act of spirit, and I believe is true.

Read the annotations

Rocket Lab announces five-launch Neutron deal as it continues aiming for late 2026 debut

Rocket Lab conducts a launch simulation of its Neutron rocket from Launch Complex 3 at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport within NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on Oct. 3, 2025. Image: Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab announced the block sale of five Neutron rocket launches and three Electron rocket flights to a secret customer.

While the company didn’t disclose the value of the contract, it said it surpassed its previous record, which was a $190 million contract for 20 hypersonic, suborbital test flights of the Haste version of its Electron rocket for the Department of Defense.

During a first quarter 2026 earnings call on May 7, Adam Spice, Rocket Lab’s Chief Financial Officer, said they ended the quarter with about $2.2 billion in backlog, with launches accounting 41.5 percent of that.

“We are actively cultivating a strong pipeline that includes multi-launch agreements, large satellite platform contracts, and an increasingly diverse set of satellite component and subsystem merchant opportunities across government and commercial programs,” Spice said. “These larger, needle-moving opportunities can introduce lumpiness and backlog growth, but they are critical drivers of long-term value and scale for the business.”

Rocket Lab Founder and CEO Sir Peter Beck said that investors should watch for “placing of items on test stands” as the benchmark of progress towards the first Neutron launch during the fourth quarter of 2026. He said they are working on an “aggressive schedule” to get to the pad.

“The teams has made tremendous strides on the stage one tank design refinements and have improved both the tank strength margins and manufacturability and give us confidence in the structural performance,” Beck said, referring to an unintended rupture of a first stage tank during a test at Wallops Flight Facility earlier this year.

“We’ve cleared separation events at full flight loads on the second stage article and interstage development system, which is great news. We’re now testing the resilience of the off-nominal separation events,” Beck added. “So, if you see something broken on the test stand from here on, know that’s completely intentional.”

The rocket will be powered by nine, liquid methane-fueled Archimedes engines on the first stage, which are designed to provide nearly 1.5 million pounds of thrust at liftoff, similar to the 1.7 million pounds of thrust achievable on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

Beck said that “extensive testing” of the engines is ongoing at their test stands at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.

“This is for both the stage one version of the engines and for the vacuum-optimized Archimedes that will power stage two,” Beck said. “It’s non-stop hot fires across both test stands as the team really stretches the performance of these engines while running them in the full range of gimbal angles for the thrust structure.

“Since completing qualification, the team has gotten stuck into fitting it out with all the flight set of avionics and fluid systems. That’s taking place at our Middle River facility before it’s sent out to Launch Complex 3 for integrated systems testing on the pad.”

Neutron features a unique payload fairing design, which Rocket Lab calls ‘Hungry Hippo.’ Those fairing halves remain attached to the first stage and open to release the second stage.

“Our qualified reusable fairing system has been covered in TPS or thermal protection system once arriving in Virginia,” Beck said. “Integration of the avionics and fluid systems on this part of the vehicle continues as well.”

Once Neutron makes its debut, Beck said they aim to replicate the Electron rollout by launching Neutron once during year one, three times during year two, and five times during year three. For comparison, Electron completed 2025 with 21 Electron rocket launches, after it debuted in May 2017.

May 6, 2026

It has not been a banner day for members of the Trump administration.

Evan Hill, Jarrett Ley, Alex Horton, Tara Copp, and Dan Lamothe of the Washington Post reported that Iranian strikes since February 28, when U.S. and Israeli air strikes began, have caused far more damage to U.S. military sites in the Middle East than Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and the U.S. government have admitted.

While the damage from the Iranian strikes, which have killed and wounded servicemembers, is itself important, so is the underlying story: the U.S. government is hiding the true cost of the war in Iran from the American people. The journalists note that it is “unusually difficult” to get satellite imagery from the Middle East right now because less than two weeks into the war, the U.S. government asked two of the largest commercial providers of satellite imagery, Vantor and Planet, “to limit, delay or indefinitely withhold the publication of imagery of the region while the war is ongoing.”

The companies complied, forcing the journalists to turn to high-resolution satellite imagery published by Iran’s state-affiliated media, cross-checking it with lower-resolution imagery from the satellite system the European Union uses.

Global affairs journalist David Rothkopf wrote today in The Daily Beast: “Not since Vietnam have we seen a more systematic effort by an administration to lie about the nature, costs, consequences, and results of a war than we have seen from the White House on Iran.”

Early this morning, Barak Ravid of Axios, who often reports information from White House insiders, wrote that the White House believed it was close to a memorandum of understanding with Iran that would end the war and lay the groundwork for future negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program, although there was plenty of hedging in the article.

Once again, there were fortuitously timed trades before the story broke. Adam Kobeissi’s Kobeissi Letter, which comments on global capital markets, noted that about 70 minutes before the Axios story, someone took about $920 million worth of crude oil shorts and bet the market would drop, meaning they promised to provide about 10,000 contracts for oil at the current price. Within two hours, oil prices had fallen more than 12%, making the entity a profit of about $125 million.

On social media, Trump’s account continued to whipsaw between pressing for an end to the war and threatening apocalyptic destruction if Iran doesn’t agree to U.S. demands. “Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to, which is, perhaps, a big assumption,” he wrote, “the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end, and the highly effective Blockade will allow the Hormuz Strait to be OPEN TO ALL, including Iran. If they don’t agree, the bombing starts, and it will be, sadly, at a much higher level and intensity than it was before. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

The administration’s shifting justifications and claims about the Iran war are “dizzying,” Ben Finley, Matthew Lee, and Farnoush Amiri of the Associated Press wrote today. Yesterday, after calling the war “concluded,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth spent the day selling Trump’s Project Freedom to open the Strait of Hormuz, only to have Trump call Project Freedom off with a post on social media.

Mosheh Gains, Courtney Kube, Andrea Mitchell, Natasha Lebedeva and Daniel Arkin of NBC News reported tonight that Trump’s abrupt about-face came after Saudi Arabia told the U.S. it would not permit the U.S. military to use Saudi airspace for the operation.

This afternoon, the U.S. fired on an Iranian oil tanker as it tried to pass through the U.S. blockade, and Israel launched strikes on a suburb of Lebanon’s capital, Beirut. China’s foreign minister Wang Yi said today that China is “deeply distressed” by the conflict and called for a ceasefire. “We believe that a comprehensive ceasefire is urgently needed, that a resumption of hostilities is not acceptable,” he said. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was in China today, where he met with Wang. Trump is due to visit China on May 14. Trump wants a solution to the Iran War before that meeting, and the Iranians know it, giving them leverage over a deal.

This evening, the speaker of Iran’s parliament,* M.B. Ghalibaf, posted: “Operation Trust Me Bro failed. Now back to routine with Operation Fauxios.”

Hegseth is not the only member of the administration in trouble in the news today. After journalist Sarah Fitzpatrick wrote an April 17 story in The Atlantic detailing FBI director Kash Patel’s drinking and inability to perform his job, Patel sued both The Atlantic and Fitzpatrick for defamation, asking for $250 million in damages.

The Atlantic and Fitzpatrick stood by the story, which had two dozen sources. Fitzpatrick noted that after she published the piece, additional informants came forward to corroborate her findings.

Today, Ken Dilanian and Carol Leonnig of MS NOW reported that the FBI has launched a criminal leak investigation into who talked to Fitzpatrick. Sources told the reporters that such an investigation, called an “insider threat investigation,” usually involves government officials who may have given away state secrets or classified documents. Focusing on leaks to a reporter is “highly unusual,” they say. Although it remains unclear what steps the investigation has taken, Dilanian and Leonnig note that it could allow FBI agents to obtain Fitzpatrick’s phone records and examine her social media contacts.

One of the sources told the reporters that FBI agents feel ”deep concern” about the probe. “They know they are not supposed to do this,” one source told the reporters. “But if they don’t go forward, they could lose their jobs. You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.”

FBI spokesperson Ben Williamson denied the story, telling Dilanian and Leonnig: “This is completely false. No such investigation like this exists and the reporter you mention is not being investigated at all. Every time there’s a publication of false claims by anonymous sources that gets called out, the media plays the victim via investigations that do not exist.”

Under Patel, the FBI has already investigated a New York Times reporter who wrote a story about an FBI security detail assigned to Patel’s girlfriend and searched the home of a Washington Post reporter.

Today the FBI raided the offices and business of Virginia state senator L. Louis Lucas, 82, a Black woman who led the movement to redraw Virginia’s districts after Republicans redrew districts in Republican-dominated states. The Fox News Channel was on the scene, suggesting it had been tipped off by the FBI.

Meanwhile, Fitzpatrick published a new story today in The Atlantic reporting that Patel travels with “a supply of personalized branded bourbon” with the label “KASH PATEL FBI DIRECTOR” and an FBI shield. She explains: “Surrounding the shield is a band of text featuring Patel’s director title and his favored spelling of his first name: KA$H. An eagle holds the shield in its talons, along with the number 9, presumably a reference to Patel’s place in the history of FBI directors. In some cases, the 750-milliliter bottles bear Patel’s signature, with ‘#9’ there as well.”

In what sure reads like a journalist burying a subject with evidence, Fitzpatrick lists the places and occasions on which Patel has given out bottles of the whiskey and explains that he has transported the whiskey on a Department of Justice plane including to the Olympics in Milan, Italy. When a bottle went missing during a “training seminar” with Ultimate Fighting Championship athletes in Quantico, Virginia, Patel was angry enough that he threatened to make his staff take polygraphs and face prosecution.

Fitzpatrick notes that “[s]everal current and former FBI employees, including multiple senior leaders, told me that the director regularly handing out his own personally branded bourbon, including to civilians outside the bureau, was unheard-of.” They explain: “The FBI has traditionally had a zero-tolerance approach to unauthorized use of alcohol on the job and for its misuse while off duty.”

“Handing out bottles of liquor at the premier law-enforcement agency—it makes me frightened for the country,” George Hill, a former FBI supervisory intelligence analyst, told Fitzpatrick.

Ron Filipkowski of MeidasNews noted: “The journalist who is being sued by Kash Patel and reportedly being investigated by the FBI is out with a new story. Is there a Pulitzer for being a fearless badass? If so, she should win it.”

Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg reported today that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche will ask the Supreme Court to let the Department of Justice (DOJ) intervene in the case of columnist E. Jean Carroll, who won an $83.3 million jury verdict against Trump for defamation after he lied that he had not sexually assaulted her. Although the Department of Justice is supposed to represent the American people, Trump’s appointees are using the department as Trump’s personal law firm.

If the Supreme Court allows the DOJ to step in, swapping the U.S. government for Trump in the case, the case would have to be dismissed because plaintiffs can’t sue the federal government for defamation. Judges from the appeals court have already refused to permit such a swap, but Blanche is giving it another shot.

Finally, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was in front of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee today for a closed-door interview about his relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. He was not under oath for his testimony, a requirement Democrats want for those testifying before the committee and committee chair James Comer (R-KY) does not.

Lutnick had said he had cut all ties with Epstein in 2005, only to have information come out that, in fact, the two maintained contact until at least 2018, years after Epstein’s 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution for a minor.

Asked why he had taken his wife and their four young children to Epstein’s private island in the Caribbean in 2012, Lutnick told the committee that he didn’t remember and that it was “inexplicable.”

Indeed.

*Edit at 12:00 on May 7: Last night I incorrectly identified M.B. Ghalibaf as Iran's foreign minister. He is the speaker of Iran's parliament. I apologize for the error.

Notes:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2026/05/06/iran-us-bases-satellite-images/

https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-scandal-that-should-be-the-end-for-fratboy-defense-secretary-pete-hegseth/

https://www.axios.com/2026/05/06/iran-us-deal-one-page-memo

https://apnews.com/article/iran-us-israel-war-china-may-6-2026-3d061a90ccde095178d9b988d94d08f3

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/6/araghchi-in-beijing-how-china-could-shape-the-direction-of-the-us-iran-war

https://www.reuters.com/commentary/breakingviews/trump-xi-summit-augurs-more-risk-than-relief-2026-05-06/

https://apnews.com/article/trump-iran-war-confusion-messaging-contradiction-20471bb90ad7abd6381a761fffeb8e96

https://www.reuters.com/world/fbi-director-kash-patel-sues-atlantic-court-records-show-2026-04-20/

https://www.ms.now/news/fbi-investigating-leaks-to-journalist-who-wrote-explosive-article-on-kash-patel-sources

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2026/05/kash-patel-investigation-atlantic/687072/

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2026/05/kash-patel-fbi-bourbon/687066/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/05/06/virginia-fbi-raid-lucas-cannabis/

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/06/e-jean-carroll-justice-department-supreme-court-00908303

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/howard-lutnick-congressional-showdown-epstein-files-island-visit-rcna343523

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/06/howard-lutnick-commerce-epstein-00908865

https://www.forbes.com/sites/alisondurkee/2026/05/06/howard-lutnicks-ties-to-epstein-explained-as-he-testifies-before-congress-today/

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trumps-abrupt-u-turn-plan-re-open-strait-hormuz-came-backlash-allies-rcna343845

X:

KobeissiLetter/status/2052016279746195616

KobeissiLetter/status/2052138102311792823

josh_wingrove/status/2052028495375544795

danielbshapiro/status/2052026196917993535

micah_erfan/status/2052049612345622735

Bluesky:

ronfilipkowski.bsky.social/post/3ml7mwoscdc2t

atrupar.com/post/3ml6mvats2c2f

Share

Antonio Villaraigosa is everything wrong with the governor's race.

If there is one weirdly satisfying lesson I’ve learned from the whole Truth OC experience, it’s this: Politicians are (with rare exception) egomaniacal douches.

And you may be thinking, “Bruh, how is that even slightly satisfying?”

The answer is simple. No matter how far apart left and right, MAGA and non-MAGA, east and west, north and south may seem, there are universal truths that bind us all. And one of the greatest truths is that, to seek higher office, one must have an Andre the Giant-sized ego. One must think he/she/they are The Answer. One must think nobody else can capably do the job. One must believe he/she/they is universally beloved and darn close to perfect. I’m telling you—this applies to Donald Trump, to Joe Biden, to George W. Bush, to Barack Obama, to Pete Wilson, to Gray Davis, to the majority of your local congressional members. Or, put different: I am a big Katie Porter fan. I want her to be the next governor. But what type of sane human does this?

Answer: An egomaniacal douche.

I digress.

As we speak, we are inching terrifyingly close to the June 2 gubernatorial primary, where the top two vote getters (party affiliation be damned) will advance to the general election. Last I checked, all of the polls read similarly to this

Read it.

Read it again.

And again.

Antonio Villaraigosa is the former mayor of Los Angeles, as well as former speaker of the California State Assembly. He entered the race months ago, which was certainly his right, but it’s just never really happened for him. There has been no fire. No great moment. No rise in the polls. No, “You know who we need? Villaraigosa!!!!!”

Nope.

And I understand, to a certain degree. You’re 73. The spotlight shines on others. You’re bored. You love power. You love attention. You start thinking about one last ride in the sun. Hell, Jerry Brown had a comeback for the ages. So why not Villaraigosa? Why not Antonio? So you run your ass off. You shake hands, hold press conferences, have some shiny moments in the debates. You feel revived and refreshed and perfectly tailored for a Return of the Jedi-esque revival.

Only, eh, we’re less than a month out, and you have no shot. Even worse, there is a somewhat decent chance we wind up with two Republicans in the grand finale if Democratic voters split their votes among all the (cough) egomaniacal douches.

And you know this.

You’ve been told this. By friends. By advisors. By media members. “Antonio, you can’t win. It’s a statistical impossibility.”

But … no. You will not step aside. You will not urge your followers to back Xavier Becerra or Tom Steyer. You will not rise to the moment.

You are Joe Biden.

You are Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

You are Dianne Feinstein.

You are Antonio Villaraigosa.

You are ego.

Cocktails With Sam Altman’s New Model

No software company in history has been worshipped quite like OpenAI. The fans are devoted, occasionally unhinged, and a non-trivial number of them appear to believe Sam Altman is something closer to a prophet than a tech executive. That energy was thick in the air on Tuesday night at the company’s exclusive GPT-5.5 launch party in San Francisco. (Yes, we have parties for AI models here - Ed.)

The company had its AI model choose the party’s date, time, and even its attendees. Out of more than 8,000 applicants only 200 were chosen to attend. The prompt told Codex to optimize for “people who make the Codex internet feel real” rather than the biggest AI social media stars. This resulted in a real mixed bag of patrons, which became a topic of conversation throughout the night.

After my purse and my person were poked and prodded at four separate security checkpoints, I made it to the event space. There was boba served upon entry, several bars featuring cocktails like Token Refresh (white rum and kiwi) and Multimodal Fizz (gin and passionfruit). Various tables had Goblin Mode and GPT 5.5 stickers strewn about. Two photo booths stood by the stage that created AI-generated pics for attendees as goblins, astronauts, pixel art race car drivers, and poorly drawn sketches.

Subscribe now

As I maneuvered through the crowd, I noticed a familiar face standing alone. It was Altman’s husband Ollie, a warm-spirited and generally shy Australian who works in tech. I asked him if his husband was in attendance, and as if on cue, Altman came waltzing over with a big grin and a Token Refresh in hand.

Read more

Notes on the xAI/Anthropic data center deal

There weren't a lot of big new announcements from Anthropic at yesterday's Code w/ Claude event, but the biggest by far was the deal they've struck with SpaceX/xAI to use "all of the capacity of their Colossus data center".

As I mentioned in my live blog of the keynote, that's the one with the particularly bad environmental record. The gas turbines installed to power the facility initially ran without Clean Air Act permits or pollution control devices, which they got away with by classifying them as "temporary". Credible reports link it to increases in hospital admissions relating to low air quality.

Andy Masley, one of the most prolific voices pushing back against misleading rhetoric about data centers (see The AI water issue is fake and Data center land issues are fake), had this to say about Colossus:

I would simply not run my computing out of this specific data center

I get that Anthropic are severely compute-constrained, but in a world where the very existence of "AI data centers" is a red-hot political issue (see recent news out of Utah for a fresh example), signing up with this particular data center is a really bad look.

There was a lot of initial chatter about how this meant xAI were clearly giving up on their own Grok models, since all of their capacity would be sold to Anthropic instead. That was a misconception - Anthropic are getting Colossus 1, but xAI are keeping their larger Colossus 2 data center for their own work.

As an interesting side note, the night before the Anthropic announcement, xAI sent out a deprecation notice for Grok 4.1 Fast and several other models providing just two weeks' notice before shutdown, reported here by @xlr8harder from SpeechMap:

Effective May 15, 2026 at 12:00pm PT, the following models will be retired from the xAI API: grok-4-1-fast-reasoning, grok-4-1-fast-non-reasoning, grok-4-fast-reasoning, grok-4-fast-non-reasoning, grok-4-0709, grok-code-fast-1, grok-3, grok-imagine-image-pro. After May 15, 2026, requests to these models will no longer work.

This is terrible @xai. I just spent time and money to migrate to grok 4.1 fast, and you're disabling it with less than two weeks notice, after releasing it in November, with no migration path to a fast/cheap alternative.

I will never depend on one of your products again.

Here's SpeechMap's detailed explanation of how they selected Grok 4.1 Fast for their project in March.

Were xAI serving those models out of Colossus 1?

xAI owner Elon Musk (who previously delighted in calling Anthropic "Misanthropic") tweeted the following:

By way of background for those who care, I spent a lot of time last week with senior members of the Anthropic team to understand what they do to ensure Claude is good for humanity and was impressed. [...]

After that, I was ok leasing Colossus 1 to Anthropic, as SpaceXAI had already moved training to Colossus 2.

And then shortly afterwards:

Just as SpaceX launches hundreds of satellites for competitors with fair terms and pricing, we will provide compute to AI companies that are taking the right steps to ensure it is good for humanity.

We reserve the right to reclaim the compute if their AI engages in actions that harm humanity.

Presumably the criteria for "harm humanity" are decided by Elon himself. Sounds like a new form of supply chain risk for Anthropic to me!

Tags: ai, llms, anthropic, ai-ethics, ai-energy-usage, xai, andy-masley

GitHub Repo Stats

Tool: GitHub Repo Stats

One of the things I always look for when evaluating a new GitHub repository is the number of commits it has... but that number isn't visible on GitHub's mobile site layout. I built this tool to fix that, using this prompt:

Given a GitHub repo URL or foo/bar repo ID show information about that repo absorbed via wither REST or graphql CORS fetch() including the number of commits in the repo and other useful stats

Example output for simonw/datasette and simonw/llm.

Tags: github

The Super-Rich are Different from You and Me

Transcript

The super rich are different from you and me. They are pettier and more self-centered than most of us can easily imagine.

Hi, Paul Krugman here. This video is partly me trying to show that yes indeed I am on vacation, sort of, although on my laptop too much of the time.

But anyway, I’m at least working on the laptop sitting in cafes. But I also wanted to do a follow-up on a post earlier this week in which I talked about Jeff Bezos feeling now that he needs to sell his ostentatious, bad taste yacht because people are paying attention to the ostentatiousness and the bad taste — which is, kind of, what did he expect. But it is news that rich people are feeling some of the heat, that some of the backlash is starting to get to them.

Today I want to talk about a story that’s a couple of days old but is more along the same lines and has some other resonance I think is worth talking about.

So, Ken Griffin is a hedge fund billionaire. was a big Trump supporter, although not a reliable one, and he happens to be the owner of the most expensive apartment ever purchased in America, at least as far as we know, a $200-something million place on Central Park South.

Zoran Mandani, New York’s very interesting mayor, has called for a pied-à-terre tax, a tax on luxury residences exceeding $5 million that are owned by people who are not residents of New York, who are therefore not paying New York City income taxes. It’s a wealth tax, but a limited one. It would definitely raise some money, but of course has got people irked. And he put out a video which featured a shot of the building in which Ken Griffin has his apartment.

Griffin went wild. He said this is a personal attack on me, it’s putting me at risk. He even compared himself to Donald Trump facing assassination attempts and just in general went wild, as if this was the most evil horrible thing ever.

First of all the sheer again self-centeredness and pettiness is kind of amazing. Griffin has also threatened — I’ve actually written about him before when he made a big splash of moving his firm from Chicago to Miami and then fairly soon started renting a lot of space in Manhattan because it turned out that New York was a better place to do the hedge fund business. Now he’s saying he’s going to pull out of or threatening to pull out of New York because of this.

You know, Griffin has investors. They should care about him locating his operations where it makes sense as a business proposition, not about where he feels like pulling them out of personal spite. His feeling that Mamdani dissed him is not a reason to to move his business to a place where it can’t be done as well. so that’s kind of a bad thing in and of itself, but also again the self-centeredness is quite amazing.

But this apparently is what great wealth does to people. F. Scott Fitzgerald said that they’re careless people, but there’s more than. They’re people who put their minor discomforts on a level with matters of life and death for normal human beings.

Let me also say something that is not terribly rigorous but still substantive. I do not understand why someone with that much money would want to have a residence in Manhattan. Certainly why they would want to live in Manhattan, which Griffin sort of presumably does only part-time.

New York City is not at this point a city for the working class or or the middle class. It’s expensive. Things cost a lot. Real estate costs an awful lot. I saw a an article in a local West Side publication saying that the Upper West Side is a haven for independent minds. My immediate thought was, yeah, independent minds who can afford to pay $1,700 a square foot.

But it is a paradise basically for the 5%. The city has never been safer. It has never offered a greater diversity of cuisine, of culture. It’s a great place. Not quite the same as places with cafes where you can sit for hours and no one will bother you; they’re kind of scarce in New York. But anyway but it’s great for the affluent.

But if you’re super rich, if you spend your time being driven around in a car with tinted windows, if you don’t go anywhere without an entourage and probably at the upper limits of wealth with bodyguards, then you lose the whole the life of the streets.

New York is a place to to wander around. It’s a place to try out an ethnic restaurant that you haven’t been in before. (Everything in New York is an ethnic restaurant.) Basically, the random happenstances of life are a big part of what makes the city worth living in.

I knew somebody who had an upper floor apartment on Central Park South. It wasn’t his. He had a position at an institution where the apartment came with the job. And his family actually hated it despite the vast panoramic view of Central Park because there was no neighborhood. Many of the apartments were vacant most of the time because they were owned by oligarchs, princelings, and sheikhs. People didn’t support local stores, didn’t support any of the things that make urban life worth living.

So I’m not even sure what the point is if all you’re going to do is be chauffeured around, if you’re going to eat only at see-and-be-seen high-profile restaurants. I used to say you might as well be living in Dubai. Well, New York has the advantage of not being hit by cruise missiles currently. But still, what is the point?

But anyway, there it is.

And the extent to which America’s oligarchs put their personal foibles, their pettiness, their small senses of discomfort or lack thereof on a par with major issues is a huge source of evil right now. Elon Musk, who doesn’t feel that people give him enough credit, got to take his personal obsessions to the Trump administration and played them out in DOGE cuts. Among other things, the current estimate is that his destruction of USAID has killed 600,000 people, mostly children, so far. This is awesome.

I have to say, if displaying Ken Griffin’s apartment building helps win support for a progressive agenda, fine. Griffin and people like him should look at themselves in the mirror and ask, who are we? What are we doing with our lives?

Take care.

Grand Theft Oil Futures

Source: CNBC, Financial Times, BBC, Reuters

At this point it’s almost routine: Almost every time Donald Trump makes a major announcement about the Iran War, that announcement is preceded — sometimes by only a few minutes — by huge and hugely profitable bets in the oil market.

The influential Kobeissi Letter documents the latest example:

BREAKING: According to our analysis, ~$920 million worth of crude oil shorts were taken 70 minutes before an Axios report claimed the US and Iran were near a “14-point” deal to end the war.

At 3:40 AM ET today, nearly 10,000 contracts worth of crude oil shorts were taken without any major news.

This is equivalent to ~$920 million in notional value, an unusually large trade for 3:40 AM ET.

At 4:50 AM ET, just 70 minutes later, Axios reported that the US is “close” to a “memorandum of understanding” to end the Iran War.

By 7:00 AM ET, oil prices had fallen over -12% with these crude oil shorts gaining approximately +$125 million.

Minutes later, Iran launched the “Persian Gulf Strait Authority” and oil prices surged +8%.

What just happened?

Image

As the BBC among others has documented, this isn’t the first time, or the second time, that this has happened. Again and again, just before Trump makes announcements that raise hopes about the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, one or more “whales,” very large traders, sell large quantities of oil futures, almost instantly reaping big profits as prices fall.

What’s truly remarkable is that this keeps happening even though the pattern has become familiar. This tells us two things: The Trump administration is making no real effort to crack down on whoever is trading using inside information, and these inside traders are operating with a complete sense of impunity, assured that they can get away with it.

The stench of corruption is overwhelming. Yet aside from the raw corruption, these incidents also raise a larger question. The insiders ripped off the parties who sold futures to them at what turned out to be very unfavorable prices to the sellers. What broader damage does this kind of unchecked insider trading do?

There’s both a narrow and a broad answer.

The narrow answer involves economic efficiency. How is the functioning of the economy affected by the realization that somebody — it’s not hard to make guesses, but we don’t know for sure — is trading oil futures based on advance knowledge about what will soon appear on Truth Social or Fox News?

It took me a while to figure this out. But I think I have an answer.

First, ask yourself what purpose is served by the oil futures market. Unlike the prediction markets Polymarket and Kalshi, the oil futures market is not intended to be mainly a vehicle for gambling. Instead, it is a market that serves to reduce risk through hedging.

Here’s how it works. There are people and institutions, such as oil producers, who will need to sell oil at a future date. They want to lock in the price today on those future sales. There are also people and institutions, such as airlines, who have a future need for oil and would like to lock in the price today. Thus the futures market lets both sellers and buyers of oil eliminate a major source of risk – fluctuations in the price of oil. This reduces uncertainty in the economy as a whole.

But what if there are substantial players in the futures market with inside information? Then if you are, say, a corporation trying to lock in the price of oil you plan to buy next month, you may not be making a mutually beneficial deal with future sellers. You may, instead, be being played for a sucker — paying what in retrospect will have been an excessive price — by people who know what’s about to appear in the president’s social media feed.

The same could apply to sellers of oil futures, although the examples of insider trading we know about involved Trump insiders getting ahead of falling, not rising, prices.

Either way, the effect of traders’ suspicion that they may be losers in a rigged game will be to make them reluctant to play at all — reluctant either to buy or to sell oil futures. And this will mean losing the risk-reducing benefits of a properly functioning futures market.

Now, insider trading of oil futures probably isn’t big enough to do critical damage to those markets. But it does do damage, which hurts all of us, not just the buyers who got stuck with the immediate losses.

And beyond the narrow economic losses, insider trading on oil is part of the broader rise of what we can call the predation economy.

Under Trump II, corruption runs rampant. Success in business depends not on what you know but on who you know, and there are no rules beyond having — and, obviously, buying — the right connections.

This is bad for everyone who doesn’t have those connections. It’s bad for economic growth. And it undermines the moral basis of the economy and society as a whole. It’s the path of how a country slides into third-world status.

I’ll have much more to say about the predation economy in future posts.

MUSICAL CODA

llm-gemini 0.31

Release: llm-gemini 0.31

Here's my write-up of the Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite Preview model back in March. I don't believe this new non-preview model has changed since then.

Tags: llm-release, gemini, llm, google, generative-ai, ai, llms

Big Words

Tool: Big Words

I'm using my vibe coded macOS presentations tool to put together a talk, and I wanted to add a slide with some text on it. The tool only accepts URLs, so I put together a quick page that accepts query string arguments and turns them into a simple slide.

Here's an example: https://tools.simonwillison.net/big-words?text=simonwillison.net&gradient=1&size=9.5

Double click or double tap the page to access a form for modifying the different options.

Screenshot of a slide editing tool showing a slide on the left with "simonwillison.net" in heavy white sans-serif text on a black-to-blue gradient background, and a "Slide settings" panel on the right with: TEXT field containing "simonwillison.net", TEXT COLOR white, BACKGROUND black, "Use gradient background" checked, SECOND COLOR blue, ANGLE 135°, FONT "System sans-seri", WEIGHT "Heavy", SIZE 9.5vmin, unchecked Italic / Uppercase / Drop shadow checkboxes, and Reset and Save URL buttons.

Tags: vibe-coding, tools

Behind the Scenes Hardening Firefox with Claude Mythos Preview

Behind the Scenes Hardening Firefox with Claude Mythos Preview

Fascinating, in-depth details on how Mozilla used their access to the Claude Mythos preview to locate and then fix hundreds of vulnerabilities in Firefox:

Suddenly, the bugs are very good

Just a few months ago, AI-generated security bug reports to open source projects were mostly known for being unwanted slop. Dealing with reports that look plausibly correct but are wrong imposes an asymmetric cost on project maintainers: it’s cheap and easy to prompt an LLM to find a “problem” in code, but slow and expensive to respond to it.

It is difficult to overstate how much this dynamic changed for us over a few short months. This was due to a combination of two main factors. First, the models got a lot more capable. Second, we dramatically improved our techniques for harnessing these models — steering them, scaling them, and stacking them to generate large amounts of signal and filter out the noise.

They include some detailed bug descriptions too, including a 20-year old XSLT bug and a 15-year-old bug in the <legend> element.

A lot of the attempts made by the harness were blocked by Firefox's existing defense-in-depth measures, which is reassuring.

Mozilla were fixing around 20-30 security bugs in Firefox per month through 2025. That jumped to 423 in April.

Bar chart titled "Firefox Security Bug Fixes by Month" with subtitle "All Sources • All Severities" on a dark purple background, showing monthly counts: Jan 2025: 21, Feb 2025: 20, Mar 2025: 26, Apr 2025: 31, May 2025: 17, Jun 2025: 21, Jul 2025: 22, Aug 2025: 17, Sep 2025: 18, Oct 2025: 26, Nov 2025: 19, Dec 2025: 20, Jan 2026: 25, Feb 2026: 61, Mar 2026: 76, Apr 2026: 423 — a dramatic spike in the final month.

Via Lobste.rs

Tags: firefox, mozilla, security, ai, generative-ai, llms, anthropic, claude, ai-security-research

Prolost Watches 1.0

Stu Maschwitz:

Prolost Watches is an iPhone app for managing your watch collection. It’s part database, part journal; designed for the detail-obsessed mind of the watch fanatic. As you log each day’s choice of watch, insights are revealed. Wear logs trace a path on the map. Events from the past are resurfaced at opportune times. Finances mange themselves as you buy and sell. Your entire collection lives in your pocket, and you get to enjoy all your watches, even the ones you’re not wearing. [...]

Prolost Watches is a one-time purchase. There’s no subscription, no ads, no account, and no server. Your data is secure and private, and never leaves your device. Pre-order now for US$14.99, with expected release on June 16 at US$19.99.

I’m friends with Stu, I have my own little obsessively curated watch collection, and, for some of my interests in life, I love keeping a log of activity. So I jumped at the chance to beta test Prolost Watches. And it turns out, my watches are not one of those things I want to track in a log or database. I just want to continue doing what I’ve been doing ever since I went from owning only one watch to two: I pick the one I’m in the mood for that morning and I wear it for the day.

I feel the same way about sleep tracking. I’m fortunate in that I sleep great every night. I’ve been sleeping better this past year than I have in my entire life. So while I have my Apple Watch(es) set to track my sleep overnight — because why not collect the data? — I don’t look at it or worry about it most days because all it tends to do is add a little stress to my mind over something I ought not have even an iota of stress regarding. (I like wearing an Apple Watch while I sleep not for the sleep tracking but because it’s easy to read in the middle of the night in the dark.)

But, that’s me. I obsessively track other things that most of you would think are a bit nutty to track. You don’t get to pick your obsessions, but you know what they are. If you’ve got a few watches and you think you’d be interested in tracking how often you wear each one, you should already have the above link to Prolost Watches open in a tab.

Interesting too, is how Maschwitz made Prolost Watches:

Bitrig has changed a lot since I used the iPhone version to create the ill-fated version of Drinking Buddy. It’s now a native Mac app that allows prompt-base creation of native SwiftUI apps for iPhone, as well as iPad, Mac, and Apple Watch. It has a built-in simulator, and can preview your apps on your device as well. If Lovable (which I used to create the shipping version of Drinking Buddy) is at one end of the spectrum — easy for anyone to use with little experience, and Claude Code running in the terminal is at the other, Bitrig is in a sweet spot right in the middle: a little nerdy, but with some well-considered creature comforts that, in my case, made it mostly a delight to craft and refine a complex app.

The iPhone version of Bitrig got swept up in Apple’s infuriating but unsurprising crackdown on iOS vibe-coding apps a few months ago. It’s still in the App Store, but hasn’t been updated in over five months. The Mac app is in active development. It’s kind of bananas that the iPhone is a nearly 20-year-old platform and you still can’t use an iPhone app to make iPhone apps. And when developers, like Bitrig, found ways to build atop LLM capabilities to make iPhone apps that can make iPhone apps, Apple put the kibosh on it.

 ★ 

The Greatest Match Cut in Cinematic History, Improved by Amazon Prime

I’m sure there’s a scene marker right at the cut, so that’s why an ad got inserted there. But, my god. Someone at Amazon should go to prison for this.

(I think it’s a total coincidence that the Febreze ad seems roughly color-matched to the sky. But scroll down in the Bluesky thread for some links to the absolute genius campaign from Cerveza Cristal beer, with spots specifically designed to integrate into Star Wars when it was broadcast on commercial TV in Chile. “Your father wanted you to have this when you were old enough” might be the funniest TV commercial ever made.)

Update: Here’s Todd Vaziri’s 2026 HD remaster of the original jump cut, for your comparison. Enjoy.

 ★ 

Severe Thunderstorms and Heavy Rainfall Across the South; Heat Spreads Across the West and Southern Plains

NASA Sends Mars Helicopter Blades Beyond Mach 1

1 Min Read

NASA Sends Mars Helicopter Blades Beyond Mach 1

A wide shot inside a dark, cylindrical testing chamber with vertically ribbed walls. In the center, a large silver metal support structure holds a rotor with two long, dark blades. A person in a white lab coat stands to the right of the rig.
PIA26649
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Description

Engineer Fernando Mier-Hicks inspects a test stand used to investigate the performance of next-generation Mars helicopter rotor blades at high speeds inside the 25-Foot Space Simulator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California in November 2025. Data from the tests indicate that the rotors could surpass the sound barrier without breaking apart.

The test campaign was funded by the agency’s Mars Exploration Program in pursuit of maximizing the capability of future aircraft flying at the Red Planet. A division of Caltech in Pasadena, JPL manages the Mars Exploration Program for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

The post NASA Sends Mars Helicopter Blades Beyond Mach 1 appeared first on NASA Science.

NASA’s Next-Gen Mars Helicopter Rotors Are Moving Fast

1 Min Read

NASA’s Next-Gen Mars Helicopter Rotors Are Moving Fast

A man in a white clean room suit inspects a horizontal three-bladed rotor. To the right, a vertical two-bladed rotor with a checkered pattern is mounted. Both sit within a large, white industrial testing chamber filled with scaffolding and equipment.
PIA26648
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Description

Engineer Jaakko Karras inspects a next-generation Mars helicopter rotor blade prior to supersonic speed testing in the 25-Foot Space Simulator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California in November 2025. The three-bladed rotor hanging horizontally in the foreground is the next-gen rotor being tested. The vertically aligned two-bladed rotor provided a “headwind,” enabling the tips of the three-bladed rotor to go beyond Mach 1. Data from the tests indicate that the next-gen rotor could surpass the sound barrier without breaking apart.

The agency’s Mars Exploration Program funded the test campaign in pursuit of maximizing the capability of future aircraft flying at the Red Planet. A division of Caltech in Pasadena, JPL manages the Mars Exploration Program for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

The post NASA’s Next-Gen Mars Helicopter Rotors Are Moving Fast appeared first on NASA Science.

Why We’re Not Talking About What Happens After Families Split

I’ve been covering policy and social issues for 14 years. There’s a gap in our national conversation that honestly bothers me. We talk endlessly about healthcare reform, tax policy, military spending—all the usual stuff that dominates cable news. But something affects roughly 750,000 families every single year in America: divorce .

We barely mention it.

Not the celebrity tabloid version—the actual policy nightmare that hits regular people trying to navigate a system designed to drain their bank accounts.

The System Nobody Wants to Fix

Politicians avoid this topic entirely. There’s no good sound bite, no easy villain to point at during campaign season. But when I started digging into how our courts actually handle family separations, I found something disturbing. The average contested case costs between $15,000 and $30,000. That’s assuming things go smoothly, which they don’t 62% of the time.

When basic legal processes cost more than most people make in three months, people can’t access them.

I talked to a woman in Michigan who’d been trying to finalize her separation for 11 months. She wasn’t fighting over a mansion or business empire. They’d agreed on everything—custody, property division, all of it. But the paperwork required 47 different forms in her county, each needing specific language that changes based on whether you have kids, property, or debts.

She eventually paid $4,200 to an attorney just to fill out forms correctly.

What Courts Won’t Tell You

Courts have zero incentive to simplify this. Court clerks can’t give legal advice because of liability issues, so they hand you a stack of papers and say “good luck.” Attorneys benefit from complexity since billable hours increase when everything’s confusing. And lawmakers? They’re mostly attorneys themselves who came up through that same system.

So nothing changes.

But some things are changing. I’ve watched the rise of “legal tech” over the past six years. Companies automated the document prep part—you answer questions in plain English, software generates the right forms for your jurisdiction. Costs drop to $69 to $299 instead of thousands.

The Bigger Picture We’re Missing

This connects to everything we cover in mainstream political discourse. Economic mobility? Hard to climb out of poverty when you’re spending savings on legal paperwork. Access to justice? We’ve created a two-tier system where wealthy people get experienced lawyers and everyone else gets confused by incomprehensible forms.

Kids get caught in this bureaucratic mess. About 630,000 children are involved in these cases annually. When parents can’t afford to finalize things properly, custody arrangements stay informal and unstable. Support payments don’t get enforced.

I’m not saying we need some massive federal program with billions in new spending. But maybe we could start by asking why something affecting 2.4 million adults every year (plus their kids) gets less policy attention than farm subsidies or tax breaks for specific industries.

You won’t find this in party platforms during election season. Won’t see congressional hearings about it on C-SPAN. But the gap between what actually affects people’s daily lives and what we debate in public forums keeps growing wider.

Photo: www.kaboompics.com via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post Why We’re Not Talking About What Happens After Families Split appeared first on DCReport.org.

Thursday assorted links

1. School shootings are declining quite a bit.

2. Dean Ball on the real reasons to regulate AI.

3. Noah on development economics, link now corrected.

4. Peter Frampton update (NYT).

5. What have we learned about human communication?

6. Polymarket on hantavirus.

The post Thursday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

 

Do Americans really hate AI?

We might be heading towards a populist backlash towards AI, but we’re not there yet. Outside the tech bubble, Americans really don’t care about AI yet.

AI is Americans’ 29th most important issue, according to the fantastic survey @davidshor ran that everyone is rightly looking at.

It’s not surprising that Americans will answer sentiment questions about AI negatively, as they’ve been negative towards tech for a while. But it’s a big leap from negative sentiment to meaningful political action.

Americans have been negative on social media for 10 years, and there has been no meaningful political action. And that’s despite all the other hallmarks of backlash people are saying about AI—violent extremists (people forget there was a shooting at YouTube HQ), protests, etc.

My prediction: we will get real populist backlash to AI when the unemployment moves by, say, 2 percentage points and people see it as caused by AI.

That is part of a longer tweet from Andy Hall.

The post Do Americans really hate AI? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

What Daily Life Looks Like Inside a Modern Assisted Living Home

Assisted living has shifted significantly over the last twenty years. The old picture of clinical corridors and fixed meal schedules no longer matches what actually happens. Today’s residences feel far more like close-knit neighborhoods, where independence, comfort, and personalized support guide each part of the day. Families walking through these communities often leave struck by the warmth, the considered daily rhythms, and the real bonds between staff and residents.

Mornings Begin With Choice and Comfort

Each morning moves at the resident’s preferred speed. A few head outdoors for an early walk through the gardens, while others linger over coffee and a plated breakfast with neighbors in a dining room modeled after a casual restaurant. Care staff pass through without fanfare, offering assistance with grooming, medication cues, or a helping hand when balance becomes tricky.

Meal planning carries the same thoughtfulness. Kitchen teams prepare rotating selections that accommodate specific dietary needs, such as low-sodium entrees, diabetes-appropriate choices, and texture-adjusted servings. That attention matters considerably, and families exploring assisted living in Taylorsville  often look closely at how communities personalize daily nutrition and care. According to the National Council on Aging, roughly 54% of older adults manage at least one chronic health condition, which puts proper nutrition at the center of daily wellness.

A Day Built Around Engagement

As breakfast winds down, the activity schedule steps in. Residences today view engagement as foundational to wellness rather than an optional add-on. Findings from the National Institute on Aging connect steady social contact with reduced rates of cognitive decline, depression, and heart-related illness.

Families researching assisted living in Taylorsville soon notice how current communities build enrichment directly into the day. Gentle yoga, art rooms, gardening groups, and memory-care sessions give residents something genuine to look forward to. Offerings flex around personal capabilities, so a neighbor easing back from surgery can take part alongside a resident celebrating her ninetieth birthday without feeling singled out.

Wellness Beyond Physical Care

Newer residences recognize that well-being stretches past physical health alone. Counselors, chaplains, and licensed therapists on staff handle emotional and spiritual needs through meditation gatherings, grief circles, and simple conversation groups scheduled across the week.

Movement programming fills in the rest of the picture. Therapy rooms, warm-water pools, and low-impact strength classes help seniors hold onto their mobility. Research in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society found that regular activity can reduce fall risk by up to 23%, which is why exercise options appear on almost every daily calendar.

Afternoons Filled With Purpose and Connection

The afternoon hours lean social. Residents make their way toward interest groups, learning classes, and scheduled excursions. Book discussions, bridge matches, and knitting circles produce the sort of everyday friendships that make a place feel lived-in. Visits between generations are another common sight, with nearby schools, scout troops, and volunteer groups showing up on a predictable basis.

Technology now has a steady role in these hours, too. Video-call setups keep residents in touch with grandchildren a few states away, while tablet-based puzzles and memory games sharpen focus. AARP research shows nearly 70% of adults over 65 currently use smartphones or tablets, a noticeable rise from a decade back. Staff cheerfully guide anyone still getting comfortable with the screens.

Personalized Care Woven Into Daily Life

Help remains nearby without feeling heavy-handed. Care teams follow individual service plans covering bathing, dressing, medication oversight, and mobility support. Digital health records keep nurses, physicians, pharmacists, and family members aligned in real time.

Those living with memory loss receive focused support within secure neighborhoods. These spaces rely on soft palettes, personal life-story displays, and dependable routines that reduce anxiety. Person-centered practices have steadily replaced the uniform approach that shaped senior care a generation ago.

Evenings Bring Relaxation and Togetherness

As the light softens, the dining service transitions into slower, quieter hours. Some residents settle in for movie nights, live performances, or cultural events; others prefer a corner of the library or a late visit from family finishing their workday.

Safety holds steady through the night. Overnight staff stay on shift, emergency call buttons sit within easy reach, and wellness rounds continue on schedule. Restful rooms feature blackout curtains, adjustable beds, and noise-reducing touches. Families settle in at home, knowing their loved ones are supported in a setting that still feels personal.

Conclusion

Daily life inside a modern assisted living community looks very different from the outdated stereotypes many people still carry. Residents keep their independence, form real friendships, and receive care that adjusts as needs change. Chef-prepared plates, wellness programs, and relaxed evening gatherings give shape and meaning to each day. For families considering senior care options, these residences strike a careful balance of autonomy, safety, and connection that supports aging with dignity .

Photo: Jsme MILA via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post What Daily Life Looks Like Inside a Modern Assisted Living Home appeared first on DCReport.org.

How Bulk Cheese Purchasing Simplifies Inventory Management

Restaurants, caterers, and food service operations know that dairy inventory can be tricky to manage well. Cheese stands out as especially demanding because each variety has its own shelf life, temperature requirements, and turnover rate. Purchasing in bulk brings order to that chaos, cutting down on how often teams need to reorder while keeping costs and stock levels far more predictable. The result is less time spent chasing supplies and more energy directed at the food itself.

Why Frequent Small Orders Create Problems

Ordering cheese in small batches several times a week adds layers of work that most kitchens can do without. Every delivery triggers its own paperwork, scheduling, and inspection process. That pulls staff away from prep and service tasks where their time matters most. This is why it is crucial to work with a trusted wholesale cheese supplier . They take away the entire burden and chaos.

There is also a reliability issue. A kitchen that depends on twice-weekly mozzarella or cheddar shipments faces twice the exposure to courier delays or supplier hiccups. When a delivery falls through during a Friday dinner rush, the scramble for substitutes can throw off an entire menu.

How Buying in Volume Streamlines Supply Chains

Shifting to bulk orders collapses several small transactions into one larger, more manageable delivery cycle. The administrative load shrinks immediately: fewer invoices to process, fewer receiving windows to staff, and less back-and-forth with procurement contacts.

Working with a trusted wholesale supplier strengthens this approach even further. A consistent source delivers uniform quality across large shipments, which takes much of the uncertainty out of stock planning. Teams can set reliable reorder thresholds based on actual consumption data rather than guessing when they might run low.

Cost Advantages That Affect the Bottom Line

Suppliers almost always offer better per-unit pricing for larger commitments. Volume discounts, tiered pricing structures, and reduced freight charges are standard incentives for sizable orders. For any operation that treats cheese as a staple ingredient, those savings add up fast.

Think about it across a full quarter. A pizzeria moving through 200 kilograms of mozzarella each month might save 10 to 15 percent simply by consolidating weekly orders into a single monthly purchase. That recovered margin can fund equipment repairs, new menu testing, or additional training for kitchen staff.

Simplified Storage and Rotation Practices

Standardizing Refrigeration Protocols

Receiving larger quantities at once gives teams a reason to tighten their cold storage systems. With more product on hand, disciplined rotation is no longer optional. First-in, first-out practices become a daily habit, keeping spoilage rates low and freshness consistent across every plate.

Assigning dedicated refrigeration zones to different cheese types also speeds up kitchen flow. When cooks know exactly where to find aged Parmesan or fresh ricotta, prep time drops noticeably during peak hours.

Reducing Waste Through Better Planning

Businesses that buy in bulk tend to forecast more carefully. Knowing that a single shipment needs to last two or four weeks encourages us to pay closer attention to how much product we actually use. Many operations see measurable drops in waste after switching, largely because they start treating consumption data as a planning tool rather than an afterthought.

Strengthening Supplier Relationships

Placing consistent, high-volume orders builds the kind of trust that benefits both parties. Suppliers naturally prioritize accounts that bring steady revenue, and that often translates into tangible perks. Preferred buyers may get early access to seasonal varieties, more flexible payment arrangements, or priority fulfillment when supply runs tight across the market.

Strong partnerships  also open up customization options. Buyers can request specific aging profiles, block dimensions, or packaging formats suited to their kitchen setup. Suppliers, in return, gain the demand visibility they need to plan production with greater confidence.

Tracking Inventory With Greater Accuracy

Fewer deliveries mean fewer data entry points, reducing the chances of record-keeping errors. Each bulk shipment generates a single clean entry that accounts for weeks of supply. Spotting consumption trends, flagging unusual spikes, and calibrating future orders all become simpler with tidier data.

Clean records also make financial forecasting more reliable. When purchasing patterns stay stable from month to month, finance teams can project dairy expenses with a level of precision that scattered weekly orders rarely allow.

Conclusion

Bulk cheese purchasing gives food service operations a clear, practical route to better inventory control. Consolidated orders, lower per-unit costs, deeper supplier partnerships, and more accurate tracking records all feed into smoother day-to-day workflows. For kitchens and catering teams willing to commit to a volume-based buying strategy, the payoff is less administrative burden, less product waste, and the kind of consistency that keeps customers coming back.

Photo: Dave H via Pexels


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post How Bulk Cheese Purchasing Simplifies Inventory Management appeared first on DCReport.org.

The Only 3 Instagram Growth Companies Worth Your Money

You poured an entire afternoon into cutting the perfect Reel and walked away with forty views, mostly from people who already have your phone number. Social media strategists are increasingly blunt about it: the old “post it and hope” routine doesn’t build an audience anymore. Publishing into the void is a bit like performing for an empty theater. Working with an organic follower-growth service is closer to handing a megaphone to someone standing in the middle of a busy plaza. The data backs this up: durable results now depend on staying squarely within Instagram’s rules so the followers you pick up are real and your account stays healthy. Stop burning weeknights on metrics that don’t move the needle. The three companies below have built systems designed to pull your profile out of the manual grind.

SocialWick

Hunting for people who genuinely connect with your content is brutal when broad hashtags are your only lever. SocialWick  functions more like a dedicated specialist parked next to your account. Rather than blasting your posts at a giant, indifferent crowd, the platform leans on AI to home in on users who are already deep in your niche. What sets it apart from the wider pack of digital marketing tools is its “Lookalike” modeling, building a pool of prospects whose behavior closely tracks the followers you already love . The AI walks through a three-step routine to lock in your ideal viewer profile. Crucially, the password to your Instagram never changes hands, so nothing about your account is exposed to outside parties. AI-driven targeting is one strong path to growth; engagement-led strategies are another.

Famety

Curious how the rival café down the street suddenly added 500 followers? Famety is often the answer. The mechanic is simple human psychology: when a stranger likes your photo, you tend to tap their profile out of curiosity. Famety automates that nudge by sending likes to people who already follow your direct competitors.

This “competitor targeting” zeroes in on accounts whose audience overlaps with the one you want, producing organic-feeling interactions that actual humans respond to. Instead of suspicious overnight surges, the platform leans on “drip-feed engagement”, releasing those likes gradually across the day so the activity reads as a real person scrolling at normal speed. That measured pace is precisely how you lift a lagging engagement rate without flagging Instagram’s safety systems.

FameViso

Inflating your follower count is pointless if none of those new accounts ever react to anything you post. FameViso treats this as the core problem to solve, behaving more like a tight bouncer at the door of your profile and scaling your presence without leaning on fake numbers.

Rather than scooping up anyone with a pulse, the service deliberately seeks out real users with a demonstrated interest in your specific niche. The mechanism behind that precision is something the platform calls “Negative Filters”, essentially an automatic screen that weeds out bots, spam-heavy accounts, and dormant “ghost” profiles before they ever land in your follower list. Keeping that list clean means the people seeing your posts are actually around to like, comment, and share, which lifts engagement on its own.

How to Spot a Fake Growth Service

Handing your login over to a shady provider is the digital version of giving a stranger keys to your shop. The first marker of a safe Instagram growth provider  is how they connect to your account, reputable teams use secure authorization protocols and never ask for your raw password, which is also how they stay aligned with Instagram’s rules. A second marker: real account managers behind the scenes, not blunt-force scripts that get profiles flagged within hours. Verify the social proof too, look for independent reviews on third-party sites instead of trusting whatever testimonials are bolted to the company’s homepage. Before you spend a dollar, put four questions to their support team:

  • Will you ever request my actual Instagram password?
  • Are the actions on my account performed by people or by bots?
  • What’s your policy if my account gets restricted?
  • Can you show trackable ROI tied to real followers?

Once you’ve vetted a partner properly, a structured plan on top of that foundation is what turns the spend into a real return.


CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT MISSION

The post The Only 3 Instagram Growth Companies Worth Your Money appeared first on DCReport.org.

Starfighters hires Blue Origin veterans to accelerate air-launch platform

Starfighters Space has hired two former Blue Origin New Glenn managers to help advance its air-launch system toward flight demonstrations and operational cadence.

The post Starfighters hires Blue Origin veterans to accelerate air-launch platform appeared first on SpaceNews.

Skyroot raises $60 million ahead of first orbital launch attempt

Skyroot flag-off ceremony

Indian launch startup Skyroot Aerospace has raised $60 million in a funding round that gives the company a valuation of more than $1 billion.

The post Skyroot raises $60 million ahead of first orbital launch attempt appeared first on SpaceNews.

Speed tops price in national security contracting decisions

Gen. Chance Saltzman speaks April 15 at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs. Credit: Space Foundation

A decade ago, the space technology company Stellar Exploration needed about three years to build, test and deliver a small satellite propulsion system. Today, the same system takes about a […]

The post Speed tops price in national security contracting decisions appeared first on SpaceNews.

As satellite imagery evolves, its role in operations comes into view

DENVER – In the last year, leaders from the Republic of the Marshall Islands, a 181-square kilometer landmass surrounded by two million square kilometers of water, wanted to reduce the […]

The post As satellite imagery evolves, its role in operations comes into view appeared first on SpaceNews.

Donald Trump’s foreign policy gets a muscular finance arm

The Development Finance Corporation’s loan book may soon rival the World Bank’s

Odin Space opens U.S. office in Los Angeles

DENVER – Odin Space, a British startup focused on mapping and analyzing sub-centimeter orbital debris, announced plans May 7 to establish its first U.S. office in Los Angeles. “We are […]

The post Odin Space opens U.S. office in Los Angeles appeared first on SpaceNews.

Roadmap for a space-to-space economy

Provisioner

Launch is the foundation of the space industry, to the point that many conflate it with the space industry in entirety because it is literally the loudest, most spectacular element […]

The post Roadmap for a space-to-space economy appeared first on SpaceNews.

Anthropic to consider using SpaceX orbital data center satellites

SpaceX ODC Sat

Artificial intelligence company Anthropic will study use of orbital data centers being developed by SpaceX.

The post Anthropic to consider using SpaceX orbital data center satellites appeared first on SpaceNews.

Well, Vinay Prasad Was Wrong About the Moderna mRNA Flu Vaccine

Quelle surprise! Earlier this year, anti-vaxxer and former* head of FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research Vinay Prasad rejected Moderna’s application for a mRNA-based flu vaccine because Prasad is a stupid, pig-headed man who is so enamored of his own brilliance he thinks he is smarter than thousands of biologists** he did not like the comparison vaccine used, even though the FDA had approved that decision. Fortunately, after much hue and cry, Prasad was overruled (probably due to pressure from the White House).

Yesterday, the results from this vaccine trial were published. It seems pretty damn effective (boldface mine):

The results — which showed the mRNA shot performed about 27% better — could help bolster the vaccine’s chances of approval after the Food and Drug Administration rejected Moderna’s original submission earlier this year…

The trial, funded by Moderna, included more than 40,000 adults ages 50 and up who were randomly assigned to get the mRNA vaccine or one of four standard flu shots during the 2024–2025 flu season. With the exception of very young children, older adults are generally at greater risk of severe complications from the flu than younger groups. The trial involved 301 sites across 11 countries, including the U.S.

The results found that fewer people got sick in the mRNA flu vaccine group — about 2%, compared with 2.8% in the standard flu shot group.

Side effects such as fatigue, headache and arm pain were more common in the mRNA group, but were mild and short-lived. People often have similar reactions after getting a traditional flu shot.

An mRNA flu shot could make a huge difference in flu prevention. Because it takes months to make a traditional flu shot, global health officials pick the strains up to 12 months before peak flu season. That time lag may result in mismatched strains. For example, last summer a strain called H3N2 subclade K emerged, making changes on the surface protein of the virus, raising concerns about the effectiveness of the flu shot, which was targeted to H1N1 and H3N2 (flu type A) and a Victoria virus (flu type B).

One other advantage of mRNA vaccines is that, unlike egg-based vaccines, there is no within-egg evolution of the virus used to make the vaccine, which might affect the efficacy of egg-based vaccines.

Make no mistake about it, a 27 percent decrease in infection is significant, and would like prevent a lot of hospitalizations (and death). Since I do not have a great time when I get the COVID vaccine, I guess I will find out if that is mRNA-specific or COVID antigen-specific. Anyway, this is good news.

Neither Prasad nor Kennedy, who championed Prasad, should have ever been appointed to their positions. Impeach Kennedy, impeach him now.

*Prasad previously left, then returned, then left again. Hopefully, there will not be a third time for that asshole.

**It is amazing, in a 42 car pileup kind of way, how Prasad and a plucky few iconclasts genuinely believe that they have discovered some hidden flaw that the entire medical research community has ignored. They do this routinely.

The myth of the petrodollar

The dominance of America’s currency runs deeper than oil

DeepSeek and Alibaba rescue China’s office landlords

Technology firms are reviving (a few) Chinese commercial-property markets

UniCredit’s lowball bid for Commerzbank causes consternation

A bad-tempered battle for a big German bank

The Right to Choose to Die. Alvin Roth interviewed by Tim Phillips 1 May 2026 (VoxTalks Economics)

 Disputes about medical aid in dying are as contentious in Britain as in the US. Here's some discussion on VoxTalks Economics, in connection with my (imminently) forthcoming Moral Economics.*

The Right to Choose to Die      Alvin Roth interviewed by Tim Phillips 1 May 2026 
"Content note: this episode discusses assisted dying, end-of-life choices, and suicide. Some listeners may find the content distressing. 

 ...

"This week Tim Phillips talks to Al Roth of Stanford University about how economics can contribute to the debate on medical aid in dying (MAID). Roth, a Nobel Prize laureate, has written a new book that argues this, and similar debates, often miss the key insight: the binary choice of “allow” versus “ban” rarely reflects reality. For example, in the United States, he explains that physicians in jurisdictions where assisted dying is illegal are familiar with the practice of administering doses of drugs that will relieve pain, but also end life.

Roth's argument is not that assisted dying is always right. It is that a moral position that ignores the costs of a ban is not more ethical — it is less honest. Economists, he says, bring one specific thing to this debate: the insistence that trade-offs be made explicit. " 

 The right to choose to die Season 9 Episode 27  May 1

And here's the (automatically generated) transcript...

####

The UK version of Moral Economics is here

AGI Could Lower Interest Rates

Standard models predict that expectations of artificial general intelligence (AGI) should elevate long-term interest rates. I show that this prediction need not hold. I develop a heterogeneous-agent asset pricing model in which AGI, or more broadly, transformative AI (TAI) capable of automating most human labor, can lower interest rates even as it dramatically accelerates growth. Under baseline calibrations, the risk-free rate falls to near zero despite growth rising from 2% to 11%, and the equity premium expands from 6% to over 20%. The effect on yields is negative and muted for all maturities, even under aggressive assumptions about the speed of AI adoption. These results advise caution when interpreting long-term bond yields as a signal of market expectations of transformative AI.

That is from a new paper by Caleb Maresca of NYU.  Via the excellent Kevin Lewis.

The post AGI Could Lower Interest Rates appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

William Stanley Jevons as polymath

In the 1860s Jevons built a Logical Abacus, sometimes called a logical piano, a kind of early computer that could perform (some kinds of) logical operations faster than humans could. It is held in the Museum of the History of Science at Oxford University, and you can think of its structure and operation as broadly akin to a player piano in music. It was limited in its powers, and geared mainly toward replicating Boolean logic, but extreme in its ultimate ambitions. Jevons understood the potential. In his written presentation of the project, Jevons cites the work of Charles Babbage, and noted that “material machinery is capable, in theory at least, of rivalling the labours of the most practiced mathematicians in all branches of their science.  Mind thus seems able to impress some of its highest attributes upon matter, and to create its own rival in the wheels and levers of an insensible machine.” Jevons understood that science would be able to tackle some of the most difficult projects, and he wanted to be on as many of those frontiers as possible. He understood that his own work was a mere beginning, and he wanted to press forward as much as possible.25See Jevons (1870, the quotation from p.498), and also Maas (2005, chapter six). For a general background on Boolean logic, see Hailperin (1986).

Jevons also studied molecular motion in liquids and developed the concept of “pedesis,” a precursor of what we now call Brownian motion. That said, Jevons thought his pedesis was an electrical phenomenon related to osmosis, and so he turned out to be incorrect in his fundamental hypotheses. Nonetheless, this topic, like the others, showed he was an observant mind and obsessed with developing theories to explain anything and everything. He wasn’t just a pedant, rather he made real contribution to a number of scientific fields above and beyond economics.26On Jevons on pedesis and Brownian motion, see Brush (1968).

Jevons also was a “born collector” in the words of Keynes, and an extreme bibliomaniac. He accumulated thousands of books, and he lined the walls of his house and attic with them, and also stored them in piles in the attic, which became a problem for his wife upon his passing.

That is from my recent generative book The Marginal Revolution: Rise and Decline, and the Pending AI Revolution.

The post William Stanley Jevons as polymath appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

Comments

Related Stories

 

A Sea of Spinning Clouds

Parallel lines of cloud vortices appear downwind of a small, ice-covered island.
Von Kármán vortex streets appear on the lee side of Peter I Island in this image acquired with the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 on February 11, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison

Over the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica, winds can whip around the globe relatively unimpeded by land. Intrepid sailors termed these southern latitudes the Roaring Forties, Furious Fifties, and Screaming Sixties on account of the strong prevailing winds.

When those winds encounter a barrier like an island, the disruption in airflow can be beautiful. One impediment, shown here, is remote Peter I Island. This ice-cloaked volcano lies at 68.86 degrees south latitude in the Bellingshausen Sea, some 400 kilometers (250 miles) off the coast of West Antarctica and more than 1,800 kilometers (1,100 miles) from Cape Horn, Chile.

On an austral summer day in 2026, the Landsat 8 satellite captured this image of von Kármán vortex streets downwind of the island. These counterrotating spirals form as flowing air is deflected, slows, and spins into eddies. A stiff, but perhaps not quite “screaming,” wind was likely blowing that day. Wind speeds typically need to be 18 to 54 kilometers (11 to 34 miles) per hour for vortices to form. With stronger gales, the eddies cannot maintain their shape. The following day, vortex streets appeared within a complex array of cloud types near the island.

Where the clouds parted around the island, some of its icy edifice became visible to the satellite. A 100-meter-wide circular crater sits at its summit, 1,640 meters (5,380 feet) above sea level. The Smithsonian Institution’s Global Volcanism Program describes the island as a “shield-like volcano,” but there are no records of recent eruptions.

A rugged, ice-covered island is partially veiled in cloud and surrounded by fractured sea ice in an oblique-view photo taken from an airplane.
Peter I Island is nestled among sea ice and clouds in this photo, taken from NASA’s DC-8 airborne science laboratory during an Operation IceBridge flight on November 3, 2011.
Photo courtesy of Christopher Shuman, UMBC (retired)

Scientific research on Peter I Island has been limited due to its remote location and the challenging ice conditions surrounding it. The island was discovered in 1821 by the Russian explorer Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen and named for a tsar, but no one landed on it until 1929. The relatively few studies since have focused on geology, biodiversity, and the climate history recorded in its ice.

NASA surveyed the island during an Operation IceBridge campaign in 2011. This airborne science mission collected a suite of measurements over Earth’s polar ice in the period between the ICESat and ICESat-2 satellite missions to sustain the record of observations in these regions. While NASA’s DC-8 aircraft flew back to Chile from Antarctica, where teams spent the day measuring the Getz Ice Shelf and Thwaites Glacier from the air, the crew on board caught a rare glimpse (above) of the remote island.

NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Photo courtesy of Christopher Shuman, UMBC (retired). Story by Lindsey Doermann.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Showy Swirls Around Jeju Island
2 min read

Winds blowing past the volcanic landmass near the Korean Peninsula created a trail of spiraling clouds, while murky water churned…

Article
Satellite Spots a Spawn
3 min read

The activity of herring around Vancouver Island in British Columbia brightened coastal waters enough to be detectable from space.

Article
Seeing Blue During Schirmacher’s Summer Melt Season
5 min read

A network of meltwater lakes and drainage channels made an Antarctic ice shelf known for its blue ice areas even…

Article

The post A Sea of Spinning Clouds appeared first on NASA Science.

Which way is Which way is