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

Links for you. Science:
The Backward Logic of Chickenpox Parties
What Are You Doing In There, Fish?
Would You Want This Guy As Your Dentist?
CDC tightens home monitoring guidance for high-risk hantavirus contacts
W.H.O. Declares Ebola Outbreak a Global Health Emergency
ArXiv to Ban Researchers for a Year if They Submit AI Slop
MIT president blames federal policy shifts for big drop in research on campus
Other:
Stop Scott Perry’s bad-faith attempts to control DC’s traffic laws
Democrats Shouldn’t Let Russell Vought Fly Under the Radar
Memphis Is “Under Full-Blown Occupation” by ICE. Here’s Why You May Not Know That.
Gas prices are rising. So is public transit ridership.
Trump’s Jan. 6 slush fund is ‘impeachable,’ says House Democrat
They’re Really Going For It. Trump’s plan to overturn the midterm elections comes into focus.
Pizza Hut Franchisee Sues Over AI Delivery System, Alleges $100 Million in Damages
Moral Clarity And The 2028 Presidential Primary
AI Is Too Expensive
The Written Word Is Having A Rough Week
Right-wing figures are spreading “plandemic” conspiracy theories about the hantavirus
Trump exempts himself, his family, and his businesses from U.S. tax laws
Reading the Ken Paxton-Trump Tea Leaves
Google is its own worst enemy. In its bid to push AI, it’s destroying its products and trying to kill the web too
Inside Jack Schlossberg’s Chaotic Campaign to Revive Camelot
How to Fix America’s Geriatric Politician Problem
An Interview With Jack Schlossberg: Legit Candidate? Expert Troll? Both? (imagine getting Chotinered by Vanity Fair)
Trump’s Iran war is pushing American farmers to the brink
Warner criticizes Trump administration’s VA jobs cuts
The Trump agenda has harmed the D.C. regional economy. Other regions should brace for impact.
Capital Intensive Industries
Former ‘gay cure’ ministry leader set to face judge after arrest linked to underage sex sting
The Great Satan, Ahmadinejad
Trumpworld’s new eyebrow-raising addiction that even health boss RFK Jr admits to using daily
The Morale of Tech Workers Is Plunging as Layoffs Mount
Trump’s Own Handpicked Lawyer Quits Treasury in Disgust at Massive $1.8B Grift
Trump says he will send an ‘Election Integrity Army’ into every state for midterms
Massie’s loss proves GOP voters do not tolerate opposition to Trump
One More Time: The Average American K-12 Student is Doing Fine Relative to the International Baseline
Township Leader Resigns in Tears Over OpenAI Data Center Death Threats
1. Which foreign food chains have made it in NYC?
2. Testing products on AI-generated buyers.
3. Are Vatican pronouncements rising in status?
4. A saner Argentina take. I notice that PTDS is spreading.
5. Yupsy-dupsy.
6. Japan lost three million people over the last five years (NYT).
The post Saturday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Fun show, good questions I thought.
Please enjoy this article on its own webpage. Trust me.
Chad Bown and Soumaya Keynes have a terrific new book with that title — a breezy survey of our chaotic new world of international economics, couched as advice for nations trying to get the upper hand. The book is here.
I spoke with them last week about their book and the world in general. Fun stuff in a slightly grim way, and I hope we kept the acronym level tolerable. Transcript provided by the Financial Times, lightly edited to remove the ums and ahs. u
TRANSCRIPT
Paul K: Hi everybody. I’m Paul Krugman, professor at the City University of New York, and an independent newsletter writer on Substack. You might have noticed that I’m not Soumaya Keynes, host of The Economics Show podcast. I’m here with Soumaya, as well as her longtime collaborator, Chad Bown, who is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, formerly chief economist at the US State Department. Together, these two have just written a book called ‘How to Win a Trade War’, and today we’re going to be asking just that. How do you win a trade war? Soumaya, Chad, hi.
Chad Bown: Hi, Paul!
Soumaya: Hi!
Paul K: So maybe I can start by asking a slightly funny question, which is, who are you? I know you’re Chad and Soumaya, but when we talk about how to win a trade war, who is this? You know, who’s the audience? Presumably not actually Donald Trump. It’s probably not Xi Jinping. I mean, everybody should read it, but who do you think might, in some sense, read it or at least be briefed on people who’ve read it?
Soumaya: Well look, if Donald Trump wants to read the book, then we are very willing to sign a copy. We’ll hand deliver it however he wants. The conceit of the book is that you, the reader, are really interested in fighting a trade war, right? And we are the two nerdy kind of reluctant guides saying, “Uh, if you really want to do it, then, you know, we’ll give you the evidence that you need. We’ll tell you everything there is to know,” You know, it’s not easy to fight and win a trade war. Um, and so, you know, at least arm yourself with the evidence of what’s happened in the past, what works, what doesn’t work. We kind of acknowledge that most readers may come to this not actually wanting to fight a trade war, right?
Um, so the point is it’s for... You know, it’s to help people understand, how to navigate this world of economic conflict as I feel like, you know, many people have become unwilling participants in these massive, massive geopolitical conflicts. It can be a bit bewildering. So the book is really supposed to be for everyone, right? To understand how we got here and where we go next.
Paul K: Okay. Because yeah, I found myself thinking that it was easier somehow to follow the line of argument is to think of myself yeah, still a little bit of delusions of grandeur, but imagine myself to be Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, or to imagine myself as Ursula von der Leyen, uh, uh, making policy for the EU.
But basically, you’ve got these two powers. We’ve got the United States, which is basically Donald Trump, and we’ve got China, which is a little bit more of an institutional thing. But they are certainly waging something that they consider trade wars.
Let’s talk a little bit about, how did we get here? How did we get to this point? I think, if we were holding this conversation around ten years ago, it mostly would have been, “Well, we’re economists. We understand free trade is great.” Uh, maybe fifteen years ago, even more so.
And, so you know, the answer is just, “Don’t do this, free trade.” So I think all three of us probably have had some visions on the road to Damascus about why that isn’t an adequate approach. Anybody want to start off on that?
Chad Bown: Maybe I’ll take a stab first. Um, so I guess to answer the question, we have to talk about what trade war we could or should be fighting because there are, I think, arguably multiple trade wars happening right now. You’ve got President Trump doing a lot of things. Um, but beneath, behind that, there’s another really big trade war that’s happening, and that’s the one having to do with China.
So let me start there. Um, I would say, and it’s not as if I noticed this at the time, but say in 2015, when China rolled out its Made in China 2025 strategy, industrial policy that said, you know, we’re gonna have these market share targets to dominate certain important sectors of the future, that was kind of a sign that China was thinking about things differently than I think other, other, traditional, the United States and others had been.
And then you fast-forward a couple of years with, Xi Jinping and his “dual circulation” strategy more clearly articulating the idea that China did not want to be interdependent with the rest of the world. It wanted the rest of the world to be dependent on China for their supply chain, so the United States to be dependent on China for sourcing stuff, but China to not have dependencies on the rest of the world.
When you start to think about a functioning trading system, as we’ve lived in for the post-war period since the, the late 1940s, it requires rules, all those things, but it also fundamentally requires a willingness to be interdependent, right? And to trust that I’m gonna export to you, you’re gonna import to me, and, and yeah, there’ll be sometimes some frictions, but by and large, that will be okay.
And China was saying, “No, we wanna have an asymmetric relationship, we wanna do what we wanna do, but we’re not all that interested in what you wanna do.” So for me, it was kind of seeing those things that really made me think that, ah, the world has changed. We’re in some sort of trade war, and really China is the part that’s driving this.
Soumaya: So my journey, I think, um, you know, there was an important moment for me in the first Trump administration, right? And so, you know, Trump, ran onto the scene, during his first term and started throwing tariffs at China predominantly. And you know, Chad and I had this podcast about trade, and we were the loudest voices saying, you know, “What are you doing? You gotta play by the rules, why not try to use the rule book to solve these underlying structural problems that we have with China?” Um, and you know, I was covering trade full-time at that time, and, you know, something that was happening behind the scenes, um, was that there were efforts to try and get some kind of coordinated plan to save the rules-based system, to try and solve some of the structural problems between China and the US by writing new rules.
So you had these trilateral discussions between the US, Japan, and the EU, and the idea was, okay, well why don’t we just write out the way in which we want China to behave, limits on subsidies, um, you know, new, new ways of protecting ourself against China’s subsidies. And the idea was, you know, they would agree on that common plan, then they might go to China and say, “Hey, look, we’ve got some new rules. You sign up to these, and look, President Trump will drop his tariffs.” That was the hope of some involved in that process. It certainly wasn’t Donald Trump’s plan. And I think, you know, a very fundamental way in which I have moved on from that is I just don’t believe that the solution to these problems lies in a new set of common rules that everyone is going to sign up to, right?
In fact, the Trump administration did go to the Chinese government with a list of requirements or requests in terms of, you know, China’s subsidy behavior, and the Chinese, you know, shredded it, right? They weren’t gonna change their system. and that’s really the backdrop to where we are today, which is, you know, the Trump administration, I think, pretty much most everyone else, has given up on the idea that the rules are gonna save us.
And that is kind of scary. It’s a bit, you know... It means that we can’t rely on the rule book to predict what’s going to happen next. It’s a much more chaotic power-based world, and we’re kind of feeling our way through.
Paul K: Yeah. Yeah, for what it’s worth, I, I’ve had sort of two moments of revelation about trade. One of them, which seemed terribly relevant but maybe a little less so now, was the work early 2010s on the China shock, where we started to realize that, hey, you know, the problems of adjustment and dislocation that come from rapid globalization are a lot bigger than… you know, economists have always understood that there were distributional issues, but they’re a lot bigger. And that, that was, that was revelatory and a bit of a shock. Um, but I think it’s actually not the core of the story now. And, and for me, the, the revelation was, um... It’s a little odd, but I’m gonna give you this, uh, really offbeat point at which I realized that we’re not getting this back, which was actually when Russia invaded Ukraine, when we realized, hey, this rules-based order, not just about trade, but everything.
We, sort of had taken it for granted that, all of the old stuff, all of the old demons had been banished. That we weren’t gonna have outright war in Europe. We weren’t gonna have countries just plain exploiting their power over trade for geopolitical gain. And, we now realize, I think I realized that, hey, all of that, all the things that we thought were fundamentals about the twenty-first century economy were actually basically dependent upon a benevolent hegemon. Not totally benevolent, not totally hegemonic, but still a lot of it depended upon basically the United States, which enforced the rules and obeyed its own rules for the most part. And, well, we’re not in that world anymore, not in Kansas anymore, among other places.
So it’s-- now it’s a much tougher world out there
Soumaya: Can I just add that I think economists have been on a sort of journey as well, right? Um, you know, and, and, and, you know, starting point, the starting point being, you know, your, your theory, right? We thought that one of the benefits of trade was, you know, agglomeration, right?
You know, huge efficiencies, huge economies of scale, that, you know, created these gains from trade and what we’ve seen now, I think, is that those agglomeration benefits are real, but in a world where we’re not friends with everyone and we don’t trust everything, they come with risk.
Where do you feel like economics has, has, has gone?
Paul K: Well yeah. I mean, it’s interesting. In some ways, the models were already there, and we understood that there are big advantages to agglomeration, although I think they’ve turned out to be bigger than we realized. And they, they really do... You know, I’ve been on my own little journey here about Europe versus the United States, and an astonishing amount is driven by, loosely speaking, the fact that Silicon Valley is on the US side of the Atlantic, right?
It’s just that there are some agglomerations that color all of the numbers. But in a world of open markets, agglomeration rules. Texas doesn’t obsess about the fact that California controls a lot of the IT sector. Why should Europe obsess about the fact that the United States controls a lot of it? But that was not the world that we’re living in now, where these things become very real. So the whole, Everything changes once you stop assuming that it doesn’t fundamtelly matter where stuff is produced. We’re talking a lot about high tech, but, if we talk about Chinese manufacturing ... It’s not just that China is good at a lot of stuff. China has a whole industrial ecosystem that gives them tremendous amounts of leverage in the world. I mean, China isn’t the only place that has rare earth deposits, but it’s the only place that has the industrial ecosystem that can process them at this point. And so that altogether, that creates a world where Section 232 and I think Article XXI of the GATT on national security -- I’m always testing my acronyms and numbers, uh, knowledge. But anyway, I thought if you’d asked me fifteen years ago, I would have said, “Well, all this national security stuff, that’s just an excuse. National security is the last refuge of the scoundrel.” But actually not now.
Soumaya: Yep
Paul K: So okay. Any other sort of revelations beyond the fact that, that it, it’s a scary world with nasty people in it?
Soumaya: So I have one which is, you know, you mentioned the, the China shock literature, right?
Paul K: Yeah
Soumaya: So this is this collection of papers showing the effects of, of, of imports from China.
Paul K: Right
Soumaya: And one paper that I thought was super interesting that came up as we were researching this book was, um, was about what happened in Canada, right?
When, when there was liberalization as part of, um,
Paul K: Oh Yeah,
Soumaya: Was it NAFTA or was it
Chad Bown: CUSFTA.
Soumaya: CUSFTA?
Soumaya: Yeah, so the predecessor, to, to NAFTA. Um, and actually, you know, this, this research found that, that the effects when, were really quite dissimilar from those China shock effects. People were able to adjust. There were export opportunities created by that trade deal.
People moved into those, those other industries. There’s also research looking at, um, you know, uh, liberalization and populism in, in Europe, right? And there seems to be this relationship between places that have stronger social safety nets, um, and the switch to right-wing parties. Um, and so, you know, I think one, one point that, that I would want to make is, you know, it’s important not to go to over-interpret what’s going on now and to kind of see it as this idea that, you know, all trade liberalization, you know, has losers and, and there’s just nothing we can do to, to address those, right?
There are cases where actually import liberalization, you know, we, we could cope okay with it, and economies adjusted and social safety nets worked. So I think it’s, you know, it’s important not to kind of over-correct after some of those instances where there was, you know, real pain in the past.
Paul K: I’m trying to remember how much in the book you really talk about the political economy of these-- the protectionist backlash. ‘Cause that is actually-- not as, you know, there was a simple story, “Oh, trade produces lots of losers, and now the public won’t have it.” And that’s not actually the story as far as I can make out. what did you say? I’m trying to remember the actual way you put it.
Soumaya: Chad do you remember, or shall I?
Chad Bown: No. Yeah. I mean, I-- Well, I mean, the, the story is that it’s complicated,right?
Paul K: Yeah
Chad Bown: And voters don’t, you know, kind of respond as cleanly as, you know, one might expect to what the economic implications are for them, right? And so one of the more recent China shock papers, in fact, has looked at the longer run impacts of the China shock and the reapplication of the tariffs in the first Trump administration, and has found that they didn’t really do the job of, you know, helping workers in those regions, right?
Didn’t improve employment or anything like that. But it did help President Trump’s party, in subsequent elections, right?
So there is maybe something to the idea that, well, okay, he may not be helping me, uh, you know, get a better job or, or my employment process, at least he’s fighting on my behalf, right?
And so what that means is it’s really messy to draw these links between all of this stuff in the political economy context.
Paul K: Okay, I didn’t know that. I somehow missed that. I know you did mention it, but it’s not so much if you look at kind of the vector of, of real wage changes or whatever, of employment changes, that that’s not, not really the story. It’s more about attitudes, sense of whether you’re led by somebody who’s standing up to foreigners.
I think in the end, the protectionism in the U.S. and I think in Europe is not really a, a mass public groundswell. There are parties who exploit it, but it’s not really this sort of simple deterministic, you know, losers fight back, and this is why we have a problem.
A lot of it more has to do with, again, the, the complexities of the political process.
Soumaya: Yeah, and so you can see this in, in, you know, both what’s going on in the US and, and also the EU. So if you think about what Trump did, right, he, he had to do this by using and arguably abusing, um, you know, arcane bits of US law, uh, because he didn’t have the support of Congress to, to apply these tariffs, right?
And so he kind of ran roughshod over the, the democratic process there. Um, uh, you know, in obviously in the case of IEEPA, that turned out to be overturned by the Supreme Court. and, you know, during the first Trump administration, companies were complaining quite a lot. I think during the second, those complaints were a little quieter. That’s probably some combination of, you know, worrying about retribution, but also maybe in some cases they adapted, right? And so I think one lesson of that episode could be that you may not have the constituents for protection at the beginning, um, but you could, you could develop those constituents if that protection is there for long enough. And then the contrast is with, is with what’s going on in Europe right now, right? There’s a huge discussion about whether the EU should essentially do more of what the US is doing and protect itself. And it’s just extraordinarily difficult, even though you’ve got these really acute problems, right?
German exporters being, you know, crushed in, in, in third markets. You know, the car industry really struggling to cope with that Chinese competition. and even then, right, even in the face of these really extreme Chinese export trends, even then it’s really, really difficult to get a consensus, right?
And so, it’s a question of, you know, can Europe ever act as decisively as the Trump administration? Maybe there’s a middle ground between kind of hopeless inaction and kind of maybe overaction? But yeah, that just speaks to that issue.
Paul K: Okay, we could go on. I actually just say quickly, the importance of institutional details, including the details of legislation that people wrote ago, uh, that were not intended for the purposes to which it’s being applied. It’s, it’s amazing. I mean, the fact that, that, uh, that Section 121 is written the way it, it is, and that IEEPA is written the way it is, suddenly turned out to be you know, the fate of the world is hinging on more or less accidental wording of decades-old legislation. It’s kind of amazing.
Soumaya: I was outraged when I, an economist, was the economics correspondent of The Economist magazine, started covering trade. I thought this was gonna be all about, you know, big intellectual battles of which model worked best, and actually, I essentially became a lawyer, um, working out, you know, what, what does the Section 301 statute mean?
What’s 232? How is this compatible with the World Trade Organization rules? You know, it’s, it, you, you get stuck in the legalese quite quickly, but as you say, these, these details really, really matter. Apologies for all of the lawyers. I’m not actually a lawyer.
Paul K: I knew somebody who taught a trade policy course long ago, but she would return term papers with, uh, just right at the top, a Y-H-T-M-A-A-I-Y-P, which was, “You have too many acronyms and abbreviations in your paper.” anyway, So, you know, so if we’re talking about Europe responding, taking the extreme constraints on European action, you know, how would you go to the Berlaymont in Brussels, and, and you’re gonna tell the European Commission, “Here’s, here’s what you should do in response to,” I think you said that America is a pirate and China is a warship, but anyway, they have these two quite different but also, but very seriously threatening, aggressive trade policy partners.
Two of the world’s three economic superpowers are not behaving the way they used to, and the most obvious case is, okay, you’re the, you’re sort of running the third power. What, what should you be doing?
Chad Bown: Well, um, engaging, right? And I think, uh, you know, as Soumaya indicated, Europe has been a little bit slow, uh, to engage in the, you know, are we willing to, “can we fight a trade war?” question. But they do seem to be there now. One of the really interesting lines for Europe at the moment is this issue of electric vehicles and the automotive sector.
Um, and what’s fascinating is, is, is the following: they’re essentially trying to see if they can learn from the Chinese model to encourage Chinese firms to build cars in Europe, right? So what was the Chinese model? The Chinese model was forced technology transfer. What made them successful at the time, or partly what made them successful was, you know, back in the early 2000s, there were a lot of Western automakers the United States, Japan, Korea, Europe, that all wanted access to China’s 1.4 billion potential drivers, right?
And China had high tariffs at the time, so exporting into China was really hard. China said, “We want you to build those cars here, and not only do we want you to build those cars here, but we want you to form joint ventures with local Chinese firms, and then teach them effectively, uh, how to make cars themselves,” right?
And partly, and they were successful. And part of the reason why they were successful, you know, we think, is there were lots and lots of these Western automakers competing against each other, all seeking to get access to that Chinese market. So you fast-forward today, and you say, well, okay, can Europe do the same thing, um, with respect to the Chinese technological leaders today in, in battery electric vehicles?
And while there may be, you know, at the moment, lots and lots and lots of EV manufacturers in China, um, BYD is the dominant one. Um, and behind that is the battery makers, which are BYD and CATL, right? And to, to sort of thwart that possibility, right, the idea that, well, maybe Europe could exploit, you know, divisions amongst Chinese firms and negotiate to get them to come into Europe, partner with German automakers, teach them how to make battery electric vehicles better, locate production here, create lots of jobs, the Chinese government has already set up a system of licensing for its technology and saying, “No, BYD, CATL, you know, these companies, you’re not allowed to just go out and negotiate with the Europeans.
We’re gonna be the one. The Chinese government is gonna be the one controlling access to that technology from foreigners, right?” So on one hand, you have the Europeans maybe seeking to learn from the Chinese model, and the other hand, you know, the, the Chinese already going a step beyond and saying, “Yeah, we’re not gonna let you learn from our model and, and get those jobs there in, in Europe.
Here’s how we’re gonna thwart those kinds of things.”
Paul K: Wow. And that’s really instructive because, you know, all of us spent years learning about why government intervention in trade is almost always a bad thing and how, um, uh, letting people buy wherever they want and not, not, certainly not blocking possible profitable opportunities is, is clearly going to hurt your country.
And now we’re sort of saying, “Oh, you know, this dirigiste, overall control.” And in this case, it’s not just geopolitical. It’s, well, you know, China can preserve effectively its technology advantage, even though it’s not fancy technology. And because, because they can close off the technology transfer.
So but you’re, you’re saying that basically, as I understand, that at least the EU, presumably Mark Carney’s middle powers need to be at least a little bit more like the Chinese.
Chad Bown: I think that’s right. I mean, I think, you know, one of the lessons that we took away from the book is we all need to learn a lot from each other, from the other players. But especially, you know, I think in the Western system we need to learn from China. That does not mean we need to adopt the Chinese model, right?
And so please don’t get me wrong But there are elements of what China does when it does industrial policy, when it does, in that earlier example, the transfer of technology, that if you wanna have those similar kind of outcomes be successful, you really do need to see what it was about the Chinese system that allowed them to be successful in those instances.
You may not be able to replicate it, right? So you need to, you need to learn those kinds of lessons as well. But yes, learn important lessons from China.
Paul K: So, I mean, EVs in Europe, I mean, the United States has decided that we’re going to have coal-burning cars or something. But, um, EVs in Europe, there is a question, should they even be trying? Shouldn’t they, say “Okay, if the Chinese are gonna sell you cheap vehicles, why not just drive cheap electric vehicles and, uh, work on your European, uh, comparative advantage, whatever that may be?”
Soumaya: I mean, this is actually a, a debate in the US, right? You’ve got some saying, you know, “Why won’t you let me buy a cheap EV? These, these things are…
Paul K: Right
Soumaya: …karaoke bars on wheels. I want a, I want a piece of that equipment.” Um, and you know, the arguments against are in-- you know, include one, this is actually an area where Chad and I had quite heated debate as we were writing the book, as Chad was much more in favor of banning things than, than I was. Um, and you know, that relates to some of the security risks around, you know, having Chinese software run some of these vehicles, the risks of surveillance, even being able to turn off the car remotely. Um, Chad was more gung ho about banning vehicles because of that concern than, than I was.
I wanted, you know… Surely it’s possible to come up with some kind of technical test, um, because, if we start banning cars on that basis, then, you know, what about smartphones, right? Last time I checked, there was quite a lot of electronic equipment that was made in China that could, in theory, carry the same risks.
So are we, are we really gonna be inconsistent? So there’s the security piece of that. There’s also just the political economy piece of that, right? Which is that, you know, the, the car industry is massively important in Europe. The political consequences of letting all of those smaller companies just shut down would be potentially devastating. And then third, there’s a kind of bigger argument about industrial capacity. When we don’t trust each other, is it really wise to be cutting manufacturing, or accepting the loss of manufacturing? Could there be some connection to innovation? The evidence on this isn’t as concrete as we’d like. But you know, is there something? Do the folks who worry about manufacturing having some kind of national security advantage, do they have a point, right? In some kind of heated conflict, do you actually need the capacity to scale up quickly? So actually having that industrial might is important.
Now, that doesn’t mean manufacturing jobs, but you know, I’m talking about overall manufacturing.
Paul K: You wrote the book obviously before the Iran war, and, but you do talk about supply chains and the threat of cutoffs, and that now seems immensely more real. I mean, how much does that change the way we think about, about trade wars?
Chad Bown: So I think, Iran and, and Strait of Hormuz, right? Obviously, from Iran’s perspective, the war, the physical war, the military aspects of it have to be absolutely devastating. But at the same time, they have been able to weaponize through their export restrictions, you know, imposed on not allowing things through the Strait of Hormuz, in a way that is, you know, orders of magnitude bigger than the size of their economy would otherwise suggest, right?
And so that’s part of the new world in which we live. Sometimes you have those kinds of supply chain disruptions, um, that can come up, um, by, you know, not recognizing just how serious those choke points are. I think there were a lot of folks that probably did recognize how serious those potential choke points were.
But as we have seen, through what’s happened since February, the world is now, you know, facing the consequences of, of those actions.
Soumaya: So just building on that, I think what we’ve seen so far with the Strait of Hormuz is that some of those disruptions haven’t hit yet, and that’s because companies have been doing, you know, one of the policies we, we discuss in the book, which is stockpiling, right? So we’ve had inventories, and they’ve been running them down. When the crisis first started, uh, you know, folks were asking how bad could this get? And the response was, “Well, as long as it doesn’t last for very long, it’ll be okay,” right? Because there are those buffers. And so, you know, the crisis, I think, highlights the importance of having those buffers, but also I think that, you know, there is a point about substitution. So, so, um, if you think about the drop in oil flowing out of the, the Strait of Hormuz, a third of that has been made up with oil flowing out through other ports, right? And so one of, one of the lessons here is that, you know, when thinking about your vulnerabilities, actually there’s always some slack in the system.
There are always some, some opportunities for substitution. They may not be, you know, fast, it may not be easy, but actually one of the lessons from history in extreme situations is that we tend to be a bit more adaptable than we sometimes fear. That said, obviously if this disruption goes on, there’s pain being felt, right?
We shouldn’t then swing too far in the other direction and say, “Oh, well, there’s no point in applying export controls because we can always adapt away.” That’s not true. As we are seeing now in, in, you know, some of the, the poorer countries who are on the front end of this, and as we will be seeing later these weapons are pretty, are pretty impactful and pretty dangerous.
Paul K: What struck me though, I mean, the Strait of Hormuz is a, it’s a, it’s a physical choke point, which is helpful for illustrating the concept, but it turns out there are all of these de facto choke points like rare earths, like, well, semiconductors. I mean, it’s not that so much stuff passes through the Strait of Taiwan, it’s the fact that basically everything runs on chips made in this island. So yeah. And you do talk about this. I mean, right there, there is definitely a case for policies that even at some cost make sure that critical stuff is made in some quantity in places that are, are less subject to this kind of disruption.
Gosh, for many years I was co-author of the bestselling international economics textbook. I don’t think we mentioned supply chains, export controls, any of that. I probably haven’t yet. I’d probably have to get that in the next edition. But anyway,
Soumaya: No don’t worry, you don’t have to. You can just assign our book as the top-up, and then it’ll be fine.
Paul K: That’s right No, definitely. Y-H-S-T-M-A-A-I-Y-P. No, you’re actually very good. I’m not doing the acronyms and, and, and the numbers, but it is something. Actually, I’ll give a quick quiz. Uh, do you know the answer? You probably do, but the, um, you know, all these numbered trade things, what act are they numbers from?
Soumaya: 74? 1974?
Paul K: Well, the answer is they’re from several different acts.
Soumaya: Ok well that was a trick question!
Paul K: So it’s really horrible that we, we’ve got a 122 and a 232 and, and they’re not from the same law, so it’s totally obscure. But anyway.
Soumaya: Should we wrap up here?
Paul K: Let me just ask last question, then I’ll let you go. Do you have a view-- how does this pan out? You’ve given some, some good advice to people who are not Donald Trump, effectively. I mean, maybe Trump would benefit from, but he’s not going to read it. And probably not Xi Jinping, but how do you think this shakes out? It’s, you know, it’s possible that, that Mark Carney and his middle powers or Ursula von der Leyen and the EU leadership will in fact think about these issues and, and quite possibly read your book, as they should. Um, what does the world look like in five years?
Soumaya: Okay. well look, I’m gonna be real. Um, I don’t think there’s gonna be some grand bargain, um, in the next five years, right? Which goes back to my point earlier about the rules aren’t gonna save us. And that underpinned the stability that we had for so long, right? That’s really the only outcome that would reduce the chaos, right?
And so without that, we’re kind of in this messy world where everyone is gonna be following this rule book that we’ve laid out. Everyone’s gonna be trying to stockpile, to subsidize, to, to look to see what everyone else is doing, to see what lessons they can learn. that’s gonna be, you know, pretty chaotic, I think, the chances are that there’s gonna be misinterpretation of, of what’s happening.
So just, you know, take an example, stockpiling is one of the main tools that, that countries are now deploying to try to protect themselves against, you know, weaponized shortages. but you know, there was a hearing too long ago where, where one of the US committee was quizzing experts on, on whether stockpiling was a sign that a country was about to attack, right?
You’ve got China building up massive stockpiles. What if that breeds suspicion, um, that there’s some kind of military preparation? And what if Western stockpiling breeds that suspicion on the other side, right? So you have this real risk of these awful self-fulfilling dynamics. so, you know, do all the nice things, right?
Communicate, try to coordinate with your friends, engage, be as transparent as you can, um, put in the effort, spend the money, subsidize, stockpile, do all of the things that are hard. but you know, you’re gonna have to put in, put in the effort and be consistent about it, because the dynamics are such that in a trade war, your adversary is gonna be taking advantage of any moment of weakness to, to try to strengthen their position.
Chad Bown: And I would say for me,, the only things I would add to that is, you know, to build upon the, please work with your partners and allies, right? It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to be fighting with them distracting them away from the really hard task at hand of fighting the real trade war that needs to be fought, which is dealing with these challenges with China.
And, every ounce of time that Europe or Canada or Japan or Korea has to deal with American tariffs, demands for, you know, invest here in my energy sector or something like that, instead of focusing on how do we most quickly, at lowest cost possible to deal with the affordability concerns, diversify some of these supply chains away from China while China is actively trying to prevent us from diversifying those supply chains away from us.
We need to do that kind of thing together. So focus on the trade wars that need to be fought, and let’s put the other trade wars to the side.
Paul K: Okay. That’s actually interesting because we’re basically saying that the, if not full on conflict, that trade war with China is basically gonna happen, at least a cold trade war. And that if only the United States would stop doing what it’s doing, that we could actually form an effective or might be able to form an effective precautionary bloc against it, which is optimistic. I guess that means, particularly if we get some better management back on the home front, we might actually be able to resolve this not too badly. That’s, that’s what passes for wild optimism in the year 2026. We’re all optimists now. This is, this great, sunny, uplands await
Paul K: All right. Well, Soumaya, Chad, thanks so much, thanks for the book, which is tremendously enlightening, and thanks for the not totally dire analysis at the end. Let’s, let’s, uh, hope for the best, and the best way to make it work is for everybody to read the book
Chad Bown: Thanks, Paul
Soumaya: Great advice.
There’s a race going on for the County Superior Court Judge gig (Office No. 41), and it features a little shell of a man who deserves to be a judge the way I deserve to lead the Society to End Profanity.
The shell of a man is named Charles Pell. And if you just scan his resume, you’d be inclined to think, “Oh, not a bad dude.” Pell is a Navy veteran, a former federal prosecutor, a USC Law grad and a father to this little guy …
Again, not bad.
But then, two months ago, Pell did something so, so, so, so disturbing and so, so, so, so nasty that it eliminates the military experience, the USC time, the cute kid. In his race for the judge gig, he filed a lawsuit against the Orange County Registrar of Voters, demanding his incumbent opponent appear on the ballot by her full name (Ami Sheth Sagel), as opposed to her listed name (Ami S. Sagel). And why, oh, why, would Charles Pell do such a thing? Like, why would he care what name Sagel goes by? Why would it worry him? Concern him? Consume him?
Easy: Xenophobia.
“Sheth,” Sagel has explained, is of Indian origin because (gasp) her parents are (gasp) Indian. And, because we’re living in the hellscape of 2026, when Ethiopians need to go back to their shit-hole country and brown people are being held in detention camps and white South Africans are greeted with open arms and the president can spew racist garbage without much backlash, Pell likely figured these things (Sheth!) matter. Remind Orange County’s majority white voters that Sagel is really Sheth, then pull the electoral upset …
And the weird part? Like, the weirdest part? Pell’s partner is Latina. His biological son is of mixed heritage. Which matters, quite literally, 0%. Hell, I actually think it’s cool. I love diversity. I love embracing cultures. I love compassion, empathy, kindness.
One might think Charles Pell would, too.
Of course, the lawsuit went nowhere. Wilfred J. Schneider Jr., a San Bernardino County Superior Court Judge, denied all four claims in a writ petition seeking to compel the Orange County Registrar of Voters to change Sagel’s ballot name and revise her candidate statement. And Pell has spent the last two months insisting he wasn’t being a jerk; just sticking to the rules and blah blah blah.
Not the behavior we’d like in a judge.
Or a human.
This morning, Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), who just lost his primary after President Donald J. Trump endorsed Republican challenger Ken Paxton, posted:
“An old, but apt fable:
“A scorpion wants to cross a river but cannot swim, so it asks a frog to carry it across. The frog hesitates, afraid that the scorpion might sting it, but the scorpion promises not to, pointing out that it would drown if it killed the frog in the middle of the river. The frog considers this argument sensible and agrees to transport the scorpion. Midway across the river, the scorpion stings the frog anyway, dooming them both. The dying frog asks the scorpion why it stung despite knowing the consequence, to which the scorpion replies: ‘I am sorry, but I couldn’t help myself. It’s my character.’”
Cornyn appears to be firing a shot across the president’s bow, and now that Trump has alienated Senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and John Cornyn of Texas by endorsing their opponents, there are six Republican senators who may be willing to stop moving in lockstep with him.
Trump’s war on Iran and the rising prices Americans are enduring in its wake are costing him support from all but his most fervent base, and there is no immediate solution that will make those problems go away. As Noah Berlatsky noted in Public Notice yesterday, no matter what he does in Iran, Trump will leave that situation with a loss. “[I]f Trump escalates, people are going to hate him. If he surrenders, people are going to hate him. If he dithers, people are going to hate him. He has no good options,” Berlatsky wrote, “which is why he’s spinning in place, hoping someone, anyone, will rescue him.”
There has been more noise today about how the U.S. and Iran are on the verge of an agreement, but so far it has come to naught. Luke Broadwater of the New York Times reported today that Trump met with advisors for two hours today in the Situation Room to discuss the agreement but came to no decision about it. What did happen today is that officials from both Chevron and Exxon warned that oil inventories are dangerously low, raising concerns about dramatic price spikes.
As Americans sour on Trump’s economy, lawmakers are backing away from his self-aggrandizing plans for a new $250 bill with his face on it for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. While the administration, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, is touting the plan, Scott MacFarlane of MeidasTouch notes that the necessary congressional approval is not forthcoming as lawmakers recognize that releasing a $250 bill raises images of gilded ballrooms and extravagance at a time when Americans are having trouble paying for gas and groceries.
It is currently against the law to put a living president on currency, so it will take an act of Congress to create this new bill. But, so far, only fifteen Republicans have cosponsored a bill to create the Trump $250 bill.
Trump’s other plans for demonstrating his power also took at least symbolic hits today.
Today Judge Christopher Cooper of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ordered the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to remove Trump’s name from the building, and from all official materials and signage, within fourteen days and blocked its plan to close for two years. As Chris Geidner of Law Dork explained, Cooper stood firm on Congress’s authority over the Kennedy Center. “Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name,” he wrote, “and only Congress can change it.”
Cooper also found that the board of the Kennedy Center agreed to close it for two years without advice of legal counsel and that Matt Floca, the Kennedy Center’s executive director and chief operating officer since Trump appointee Ric Grenell left, “had served in the role of Kennedy Center Executive Director for all of a few minutes before suggesting that the institution be shut down for years.”
Yesterday, Trump’s Freedom 250 organization, which he set up to compete with the bipartisan America 250 celebration of the nation’s birthday, announced that nine musical artists would perform at a sixteen-day “Great American State Fair” it was sponsoring on the National Mall. By today, most of the performers had pulled out after realizing that they had not been invited to be part of the nonpartisan America 250 but instead had been invited to Trump’s personal version of the anniversary celebration.
Dan Lamothe and Alex Horton of the Washington Post reported today that Trump is working hard for a certain kind of vibe at another Freedom 250 event: his Ultimate Fighting Championship matches at the White House for his 80th birthday on June 14. They reported that the Pentagon is trying to recruit hundreds of troops to show up to watch the matches in their uniforms. In addition to paying for their own travel, those military personnel must meet height and weight requirements.
U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia Leonie M. Brinkema temporarily stopped the Department of Justice from creating or operating the so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund, the $1.776 billion slush fund the administration created to pay off those convicted of committing crimes to help President Donald J. Trump overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The administration cannot transfer money to the fund, consider any claims for payments from it, or pay out any money from it.
Louise Radnofsky and Lydia Wheeler of the Wall Street Journal report that those challenging the fund are people and entities prosecuted or threatened by the Trump administration. The plaintiffs say the government is not treating them on a par with Trump loyalists as worthy of compensation for government “weaponization.”
Brinkema has scheduled a hearing on the case for June 12.
This afternoon, yesterday’s request by thirty-five federal judges that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams reopen the legal case Trump, his oldest sons, and the Trump Organization had brought against the IRS bore fruit. Although the Trumps dropped the suit, the Department of Justice used it as justification for the establishment of the $1.776 billion slush fund to pay off those who claimed the country’s legal system had been “weaponized” against them because they were convicted of crimes related to their actions to help Trump overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
Today Williams ordered Trump’s lawyers to respond to the judges’ filing by June 12 and to address the judges’ claims that the two sides in the case—the Trumps on the one hand and the Internal Revenue Service, which Trump oversees, on the other—were not in fact adversaries in the case.
Josh Dawsey, Sadie Gurman, and C. Ryan Barber of the Wall Street Journal reported that more than a dozen Republican senators have privately asked Trump advisors to get rid of the slush fund, suggesting it will be hard to defend on the campaign trail before this fall’s midterm elections.
As the courts and the American people challenge Trump, he is lashing out. He responded to the judge’s order to take his name off the Kennedy Center with a long social media screed in which he insisted that he alone was “saving a dying Performing Arts Center” and said he would “transfer this failing Institution back to” Congress, although of course it was never his to command.
“There has never been a President of the United States who has been treated so unfairly by the Courts as I but, that’s OK, I will continue to do, what is considered to be, a great job for the wonderful people of our Country.” Then, in another long screed, he complained that the New York Times “is doing everything possible to criticize the magnificent restoration of the Reflecting Pool.”
But as Trump lashes out, his loyalists are working to consolidate their power.
The Office of Management and Budget, overseen by director Russell Vought, who was instrumental in the construction of Project 2025, has proposed a sweeping change in federal rules that would put Trump’s appointees in charge of billions of dollars of federal grants. According to Ryan Quinn of Inside Higher Ed, the change would empower Trump’s appointees to kill grants that aren’t aligned with Trump’s priorities. That includes grants awarded to universities through the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.
Earlier this month, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) president Sally Kornbluth said that federally funded research at MIT is down 20% compared to last year. “That is a striking loss for one of the most influential and productive research communities in the world,” she said. The number of graduate students MIT takes on will also drop by about 20%, or about 500 fewer.
As Erica Orden of Politico reported yesterday, in the case of the firing of former FBI director James Comey’s daughter Maurene Comey from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Karen Lesperance, a lawyer for the Department of Justice, told Judge Jesse Furman of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York that the government’s position is that Trump has the power to fire anyone, even if he is doing so for political reasons. When Furman asked if there were any limits to that power—could he fire people to create an “all-white executive branch? Or all-Black?” he asked—Lesperance avoided the question.
Comey’s lawyer said the Justice Department’s position was a “novel and breathtaking theory about the scope of” presidential power.
Trump and his loyalists have tried for months now to get control of state voter lists but have lost repeatedly in court, since the Constitution establishes that states run elections. Today the United States Postal Service has proposed that it will send mail-in ballots only to voters who are registered with the federal government.
As Jacob Knutson and Jim Saksa of Democracy Docket note, this “would represent a massive expansion of federal control over voting, without congressional authorization.”
—
Notes:
https://washingtonian.com/2026/05/29/the-great-american-state-fair-meltdown-explained/
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/28/doj-case-presidential-maurene-comey-00942066
https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/postal-service-trump-attack-mail-voting-proposed-rule/
X:
JohnCornyn/status/2060335046515396809
Trump’s Truth:
Bluesky:

Update May 30, 1:30 p.m. EDT (1730 UTC): SpaceX confirms deployment of the 24 Starlink satellites.
SpaceX launched its 50th dedicated Starlink mission of 2026 with a Falcon 9 launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base on Saturday morning.
The Starlink 17-41 mission added another 24 broadband internet satellites to the company’s low Earth orbit constellation. It consists of more than 10,000 spacecraft in orbit.
Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East happened at 8:25 a.m. PDT (11:25 a.m. EDT / 1525 UTC). The rocket will fly on a south-southwesterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.
SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1082. This was its 22nd flight after launching missions, like USSF-62, NROL-145, and OneWeb Launch 20.
More than eight minutes after liftoff, B1082 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You.’ This was the 199th landing on this vessel and the 617th booster landing to date for SpaceX.
Mary Childs, formerly of Planet Money, has a new podcast, called Mary in America.
I was the guest on her first interview:
Organs, Sex Work, and Drugs: A Nobel Economist on Why Banning Things Can Backfire, Mary in America
"A Nobel Prize-winning economist makes the case that our moral objections to controversial markets are getting people killed.
Alvin Roth won the Nobel Prize in Economics for figuring out how to build markets that work. Now he's turned his attention to the markets we refuse to build, and why that refusal has consequences nobody wants to talk about.
In this episode, Mary and Al dig into what he calls "repugnant transactions" — the deals that some people want to make and others think shouldn't be allowed. They get into why banning organ sales creates black markets where donors get operated on in apartments, why the same logic that ended Prohibition applies to the war on drugs, how surrogacy bans in Europe are turning babies into stateless people, and why it's easy to buy heroin but nearly impossible to hire a hit man.
Al's argument isn't that everything should be for sale. It's that if you care about outcomes more than intentions, you have to confront what your bans are actually doing.
Subscribe for new episodes every week.
Chapters:
00:00 Friendship Isn't A Market
00:32 Meet Nobel Economist Al Roth
01:02 What Makes a Market "Repugnant"?
02:58 Should We Pay People for Kidneys?
08:31 Why Drugs Thrive But Hit Men Don't
15:58 Surrogacy, Politics, and Unintended Consequences
21:45 Why Prohibition Keeps Failing
25:19 Markets, Morality, and Reality
28:19 The Rise of Prediction Markets
34:30 What Money Can't Buy"
Welcome to Edition 8.43 of the Rocket Report! A disclaimer: No one yet fully appreciates the ramifications of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explosion Thursday night on its launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Florida. What we know as of this writing is that much of Blue's sole orbital-class launch pad has been destroyed, and the New Glenn rocket will be grounded for an extended period of time. It is too soon for any hot takes, at least until the Sun rises at the Cape on Friday morning. One thing I am sure of is that we will be writing about this event for weeks, months, and years to come.
As always, we welcome reader submissions. If you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.
Charting China's contribution to space junk. There's a problem with the drastic uptick in Chinese space launches over the last decade. China appears to be ignoring long-established norms about disposing of the upper stages of rockets, Ars reports. These are the parts of the vehicle that separate from the first stage of a rocket and push a satellite or spacecraft into orbit. In the early decades of spaceflight, launch operators routinely left upper stages in orbit after they released their payloads. But most launch companies today reserve enough propellant in their rockets to remove them from orbit to avoid the risk of spent upper stages becoming a source of space debris. But China is not following this trend. There has been striking growth in China’s rocket body mass. In the past five years, the mass of Chinese rocket bodies in long-lived orbits has risen from less than 100 metric tons to 252, according to a new analysis by Space Domain Awareness expert Jim Shell.
Looking for extraterrestrial life in the form of biosignatures will involve peering into the constituents of a planetary atmosphere and identifying out of equilibrium gases that tell us something biological is going on. But here’s the problem, as demonstrated recently in work on the exoplanet K2-18b. We’ve identified dimethyl sulfide at this world, which might just be a life detection. On Earth, dimethyl sulfide comes from dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), a compound that is produced by phytoplankton and has a clear role to play in marine ecosystems. The problem is that subsequent research on K2-18b has pointed to possible instrumental errors and the relatively low level of statistical confidence in the detection.
Nothing turned up in a SETI check of this world with the Very Large Array (New Mexico) and MeerKAT (South Africa, precursor to the Square Kilometre Array), which isn’t particularly surprising. We’re going to be getting more biosignature candidates in the coming decades as our instrumentation keeps improving, but even with the Habitable Worlds Observatory, the result of any interesting detection is going to be a race to figure out ways to produce the same gases without biology. Microbial life may be all over the galaxy (I suspect that it is), but I’m less and less sure we’re going to get any biosignature detections that anyone will consider ironclad this way.
That makes technosignatures more interesting than ever, especially since there is a good case to be made that any civilization we detect will be substantially older than ourselves, and thus gifted with technological powers we may not be able to imagine. Astroengineering is but one wonderful example of what we might encounter, but would we recognize it? Asking the same about vast structures like Dyson spheres or swarms is a hot topic because we do have current tools for observing them, and also archival data that may just contain evidence of them. But we have to know what to look for.

To that end, a new paper has just arrived that is going to be a touchstone for technosignature research for some time to come. Clément Vidal (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium) and a large team of co-authors have produced the critical review document needed to consolidate what has been done so far and help newcomers to the work orient themselves with the directions that will be needed next. This is a satisfying event, because it also comes at a time when we are about to get the first graduate-level text on interstellar flight, which should itself inspire future careers. We’ve also just had Jason Wright’s first-rate textbook on SETI, which means that we are preparing the way for interstellar issues to become embedded in college and graduate school curricula. And that’s how we get the next generation of scientists.
Image: Philosopher Clément Vidal’s background in logic and cognitive sciences has led him into new formulations for SETI, as in his 2014 book The Beginning and the End: The Meaning of Life in a Cosmological Perspective. The current paper is an in-depth examination of past and present searches for technosignatures, with suggestions on the path forward. Credit: Clément Vidal.
Both these books are splendid, and I’ll have more on each as soon as the former is publicly released (very soon now). For now, though, let’s dig into the Vidal paper, which acknowledges the new Wright text and its coverage of the theory and practice of technosignature science as well as SETI itself. What Vidal and team set out to do is to create a definitive reference for the kind of technosignatures that have emerged thus far in the field, and the methods we might use to detect them. Those of us who think in terms of distant stars as possible sites for technosignatures may be surprised at the spatial scale strategy here, which actually begins with technosignature searching on Earth, then out to the Moon, the inner Solar System, the Oort Cloud and into interstellar space.
As I’m always interested in archival searches, I want to note the work of Beatriz Villarroel and team on plates from Palomar Observatory from the 1950s. This is of course before the satellite era, so it’s intriguing to find a number of unexplained point sources that disappear from subsequent plates. To guard against artifacts of the photographic emulsion, the team found a statistically significant (22 sigma) deficit of transients in Earth’s shadow. In other words, emulsion flaws are unlikely to be the source of the detected transients. Conceivably they could have been reflective objects that disappeared when entering the shadow. The findings are still being debated in the literature, but they point to the prospect of future searches on even older astronomical plates.

Image: This is Figure 5 of the paper. Caption: Nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950, from Villarroel et al. (2021): 10 x 10 arcmin field shown in POSS-1 and POSS-2 red bands. In the POSS-1 image we see a number of objects that cannot be subsequently found, marked with green circles. Purple circles are artifacts during the scanning process. About 9 objects are present in the POSS-I E image (left) from the 12th of April, but not in the POSS-2 image (right) from 1996. One slightly larger circle host two transients. In addition, the 9 objects are neither visible in the blue POSS-1 taken half an hour earlier, nor in a second POSS-1 red image taken six days later on April 18th. The 9 transients are not caused by a difference in depth or spectral sensitivity. The images are based on the DSS digitizations of the Palomar plates.
I won’t go through all the levels the authors mine other than to say that we move from searches for past Earth visitation and current research into Unidentified Aerial Phenomena through the question of ‘lurker’ or Bracewell probes in nearby space and even explore the Solar Gravitational Lens before moving into the kind of exoplanetary and stellar technosignatures that have thus far commanded the most attention in the field. We can’t limit this to our own galaxy because productive work has been done, especially by Wright’s team at Penn State, in examining numerous galaxies for the possible infrared signature of Dyson spheres or other large scale technologies.
Whereas the original Cocconi and Morrison paper on SETI (1959) assumed a signal deliberately sent in our direction by a species wanting to announce its presence, technosignatures demand no such intent to communicate, and rather than confining ourselves to particular slices of the electromagnetic spectrum, we should consider the possibility of going well past current laser strategies into areas only now coming online. Thus the emergence of low-freqency SETI via the multi-site LOFAR stations in Europe. Or consider the benefits of high-energy photons via X-ray lasers, which can can offer high rates of data transmission. Let me cite the paper on this:
In particular, X-ray lasers are capable of producing highly focused and intense X-ray beams with a very narrow divergence angle which allows for highly energy-efficient interstellar communication. While natural astrophysical sources of X-ray emissions are generally characterized by specific spectral lines, we could search for free electron lasers, which accelerate free electrons to nearly the speed of light, directing them through an alternating magnetic field in a way that produces highly coherent X-ray pulses (see Figure 20). Although above our present technological capabilities, fusion-powered X-ray lasers are another possibility to generate X-ray pulses.

Image: This is Figure 20 from the paper. Caption: Figure 20. A schematic illustration of a X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL). An electron gun fires a beam of electrons that are directed through an undulator after being accelerated through a particle accelerator. The beam of electrons then passes through an undulator, which is a periodic arrangement of magnets whose function is to produce the highly coherent X-ray pulses/beam. Diagram courtesy of Wikipedia, based on (Patterson and Abela 2010).
Another advantage: Lower background radiation as compared to radio waves, which make signals in this frequency range easier to detect against natural sources. Finding patterns of X-rays that do not jibe with natural sources would be sufficiently anomalous to catch our attention. X-rays also have advantages over longer wavelengths like radio waves because phenomena like scintillation are far less of a problem. I was interested to see that there have been archival searches through X-ray data. Michael Hippke and Duncan Forgan found in a 2017 paper that 19 candidate signals were present but could most likely be traced to astrophysical causes.
Bear in mind that at our current level of technology, a spectrum via the Chandra X-ray instrument takes five days to build. One suggested path forward is to move toward highly sensitive instruments with the necessary spectral resolution to detect the kind of narrow X-ray emissions such communications would represent. So it’s good to know that beyond Chandra and XMM-Newton we can look toward efforts like the European Space Agency’s Advanced Telescope for High ENergy Astrophysics (Athena), an X-ray telescope armed with X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) for high-resolution spectroscopy. A NASA flagship mission based on a concept called the Lynx X-ray Observatory made it into the 2020 Decadal Survey but as far as I know is not yet a confirmed mission.
So as we explore problematic options like X-rays (and the paper notes that G-class stars are good candidates here because they do not produce strong X-ray emission lines), we also push into little considered options like gamma rays, perhaps a signature of advanced propulsion. We also find interesting discussion in the paper on expanding the range by looking for communications signals happening within a target exoplanetary system, particularly as we begin to shift our own deep space communications into the laser range. Directed energy systems of the sort we have often considered here would produce a detectable signal, as would planetary radars used for self defense purposes.
And here’s an interesting thought. As far back as Philip Morrison in a 1962 paper, neutrino communication has been suggested for an advanced civilization. Neutrinos react only slightly with matter, meaning that most of the Sun’s outer layers would be transparent to them, with only the dense core layers capable of absorbing them. That means the Solar Gravitational Lens effect for neutrinos starts in the range of 30 AU, roughly the orbit of Neptune. A search for a Bracewell probe is thus possible at a distance much closer than a photon-based signature from a probe at 550 AU.

Image: This is Figure 8 from the paper. Caption: The Solar Gravitational Lens (SGL) is a region where gravitational and neutrino radiation starts to focus (respectively at 22.45 AUs and 29.6 AUs) while the focus of electromagnetic (EM) rays starts from 547 AUs. Human or ETI observational or transmitting probes placed at these regions would benefit orders of magnitude of gains. Figure adapted from (Maccone 2009, xxxi). Credit: Vidal et al.
The authors note that neutrinos have been proposed for communications with submarines as well as interstellar uses. From the paper:
Their extremely low interaction cross-section makes them good candidates for interstellar communication, since they rarely interact with matter: they can travel through interstellar dust, gas clouds, planetary and stellar objects, or even strong magnetic fields surrounding pulsars and neutron stars with negligible attenuation. In other words, neutrino emissions are immune to common interstellar communication issues like dispersion, scattering, absorption, or polarization rotation (problems prevalent with electromagnetic signals). This enables neutrino signals to propagate across interstellar distances while maintaining coherence and fidelity.
Supposing an interstellar civilization wanted to create an aeon-spanning beacon of the sort imagined by some SETI advocates, a neutrino signal would have the advantage of standing out as distinctly structured in whatever modulation scheme chosen. The energy demands of a system like this are unimaginably beyond our own, but searching for technosignatures demands thinking in extravagant terms. With neutrinos the senders free themselves from issues of dispersion and scattering, producing a signal that can reach across the galaxy and remain coherent. I also want to mention Centauri Dreams regular Al Jackson’s take on such a technology in A Neutrino Beam Beacon, based on his 2019 paper. Al has also published with Greg Benford on gravitational wave transmitter concepts. It would be startling to find that the actual galactic conversation was taking place via gravitational wave methods.
My talking about X-rays, gamma rays and neutrinos is just a way of opening the window into the range that this lengthy paper covers. Who knew, for example, how much work had already gone into the theoretical detection of a starship? The various angles into the matter include analyzing motivations for starflight itself, the chief of which must surely be the continuing existence of a species. From the paper:
Survival motivations include avoiding a death threatening supernova or migrating towards a nearby star as the home star fades away (Zuckerman 1985; Hansen and Zuckerman 2021). A pioneering study by Hansen (2022) looked for close stellar encounters in the solar neighborhood. The strategy is then to look for active interstellar migration, where “generation ships” are sent during a close encounter window, hitting this window because it would cost orders of magnitude less time and energy than crossing the otherwise vast interstellar spaces. Hansen proposes this method as a way to constrain search targets because a lot of heat or communication signatures might be associated with such migration.
Interesting, to be sure, but look how many starship technosignature ideas spin out of it. Let’s assume two habitable zone planets around the same star, or perhaps in a binary system, so that civilization has expanded to set up technologies on both worlds. Here’s prime fodder for a technosignature search, and indeed TO!-2267 is a recently discovered example. We might then look for both travel signatures as well as communications, a particularly interesting idea when both planets transit.

Image: This is Figure 25 from the paper. Caption: Illustration of a gravitational machine (Dyson 1963) for accelerating spacecraft using binary star orbital energy. Diagram based on Mallove and Matloff (1989, p. 141). Credit: Vidal et al.
Researchers have considered three-body interactions that result in high-velocity ejections, or even waste signatures (‘interstellar contrails’), perhaps to be found in archival data. Robert Zubrin has studied cyclotron radiation caused by the interaction of the interstellar medium with a magnetic sail, while Ulvi Yurtsever and Stephen Wilkinson have worked on the interactions of a relativistic spacecraft with Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) photons.
The list could go on, and I haven’t even gotten into Alcubierre-class ‘warp’ drive vessels and the perplexing technosignatures these might produce. Well, this I just have to quote, as temporal matters have their own fascination. Here the authors are discussing what they call a ‘bi-modal signal’ unique to a warp drive craft, for the bubble of spacetime as we observe it is moving faster than the speed of the emissions it is sending out:

This mechanism is a purely craft motion effect, since the craft is moving super-luminally, essentially outrunning the signals it produced earlier in its path. Thus, a distant observatory would record emissions that occurred at two different times simultaneously. One signal would move in the apparent direction of the craft’s motion, showing the emissions occurring in the correct, forward order in time. The second highly unusual signal would move in the opposite apparent direction, presenting the craft’s emissions in a reversed temporal order. This technosignature is considered a key observable (Lentz and Felton 2024) because there is no known natural phenomenon that could produce such a signal.
Image: This is Figure 26 from the paper. Caption: The York-time representation of an Alcubierre spacetime bubble, showing a localized region of warped space with contracted space ahead and expanded space behind. Credit: Vidal et al.
Whether a lightsail, a ramjet, or even a planetary or stellar engine, the interstellar craft has been examined in terms of observational consequences as what we often call ‘Dysonian SETI’ evolves. The unusual waveform of a starship undergoing velocity changes is worth noting as well, again a matter of developing the future tech in the form of sufficiently sensitive gravitational wave detectors. The authors point out that natural objects are also in the mix. Could ejected rogue planets be carrying interstellar colonists, a huge generation ship that might be identified through analysis of its trajectory?
We should have plenty to work with closer to home with the upcoming availability of the Vera Rubin Observatory and the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope looking for objects on hyperbolic trajectories that may be cometary or conceivably technological debris or even active probes. Anomalous occultations in the outer Solar System are obvious targets for existing resources, and radio searches of the Solar Gravitational Lensing region between the Sun and Alpha Centauri have already been conducted. Given the proximity of the outer regions of the Oort Cloud with what may be a comparable region around the Alpha Centauri stars, technosignature searches here seem warranted as well.
I send you to this paper with enthusiasm. Its 118 pages are packed with ideas and as you can see, hardly limited to what we might detect on an exoplanetary surface, although those settings do of course come into play. Given how exciting it has been to witness the birth of direct exoplanet observation since the mid-90s, the extension and consolidation of new ideas for SETI is moving along a similarly fast track, with the obvious and overwhelming exception that it has yet to uncover the kind of observable its practitioners are hoping to find. The massive upgrade in available data that Breakthrough Listen has provided has resulted in no detections. The notion that we have only begun to search is wearing thin. As Jim Benford puts it, “It is too late to say that it is too early to tell.” Clearly, the Fermi question maintains its vitality, and its implications.
The paper is Vidal et al., “The Search for Technosignatures: a Review of Possibilities,” begun as a collective workshop at the Penn State SETI Symposium (PSETI 2023) and now available as a preprint.

Forty hours a week, fifty weeks a year, forty years: a career is about 80,000 hours. Yet it’s striking how little serious thought goes into career decisions relative to, say, choosing a mortgage. Indeed, you are almost supposed to tell a story about how a random incident changed your life. One summer a circus came to town—and that’s the whole reason I became an economist! (True story!). Career advice, when it exists, often amounts to the platitude of “follow your passions!” Ugh. If you ask people what their passions are, music, arts and sports top the list but guess what? There aren’t enough jobs in those categories to go around.
Benjamin Todd’s newly updated book, 80,000 Hours is a unique examination of careers that runs the numbers in a serious way. The book is framed along Effective Altruism lines and it has some good public policy material. Pandemics, for example,
The world has plenty of religious cults, despots and would-be school shooters who might decide they want to take everyone else down with them…. The world [c]ould be one lab leak away from catastrophe.
Given what we know about the pace and accessibility of bioengineering tools, the chance that there will be a pandemic that kills over 100 million people during the next century seems high, plausibly similar or greater than the risk of large-scale nuclear war or climate change above six degrees. An engineered pandemic could also kill over 90% of the population,suggesting its overall scale is significantly larger.
But risks from pandemics are, even now, far more neglected than either of these. In comparison to $6bn–$10bn of philanthropic funding for climate change, and $1.6 trillion of total climate finance, pandemic prevention only receives $1bn of philanthropic funding, and total spending aimed at reducing the chance of worst-case pandemics is probably under $10bn.
See also my paper Pandemic Preparation Without Romance on what to do about it.
The opening chapters present the EA framing but most of the book has good advice even for the purely selfish–advice on building skills, networking and how to actually get a job. From what I have said so far, one might get the impression that the idea is to rationally choose your career at age 16 and then optimize your life around that plan. Not so! Todd rightly divides career paths into explore, build and deploy categories. Most people under-explore. It’s ok to jump around jobs and places, especially when you are young, so long as you are building skills and not just accumulating items for the CV. There’s evidence, for example, that scientists’ best work tends to follow periods of exploration with exploitation.
I also appreciate that Todd specifically warns about about armchair theorizing. Pro-and-con lists, for example, are ok but far less useful than getting out of the chair and actively exploring. Go talk with people, try something for a week, go somewhere. Look for cheap tests.
Start with what’s easiest. We often find people who want to, say, try out economics, who then apply for a master’s degree. That’s a huge investment of time. Instead, think about how you can learn This could mean first reading an economics textbook, or taking a single course.
You can think about creating a ‘ladder’ of tests. Start with the cheapest ways to test your options, then after each step, re-evaluate. A ladder might look like this:
a. Read our relevant career reviews, all our research on a given topic, and talk to LLMs about what the jobs are like (two to five hours).
b. Speak to someone in the area (two hours).
c. Speak to a friend to get an outside perspective on what’s best (two hours).
d. Speak to three more people who work in the area and read one or two books (twenty hours).
e. Given your findings, look for a relevant project that might take one to four weeks of work – like applying to jobs, volunteering in a related role, or doing a side project in the area – to see what it’s like and how you perform.
f. Only then consider taking on a two- to twenty-four month commitment – like a work placement, internship or graduate study. Being offered a trial position with an organization for a couple of months can be ideal because both you and the organization want to quickly assess your fit.
80000 Hours is The Random Walk Down Wall Street of career advice, the one book that really matters.
Explore, build rare and valuable skills, point them at a meaningful problem, and passion will follow rather than lead. And for those who don’t want to read a book, speak to an 80,000 Hours advisor. It’s a very cheap test.
The post 80,000 Hours: The Book appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Someone named “Squid” seems to be a “West Country legend.”
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.
Younger Americans have soured on the second Donald Trump presidency, but they are not protesting it.
Despite an unpopular Iran war and an even more unpopular Trump administration, college campus protests nationwide have gone silent. And at many schools, student activism is virtually nonexistent.
This silence comes in the wake of a relentless Trump administration war on campus speech that has involved lawsuits, arrests, deportations and expulsions.
Reports cite a range of complicated factors for the restraint, from apathy to technology-induced incapacity. But as public policy and law and social science experts, we believe students aren’t protesting for a very simple reason: They are afraid. They are self-censoring and disengaging from campaign activism to avoid punitive measures.
In law and social science, we call this impact a chilling effect—the behavioral tendency for people in face of a threat to self-censor and restrain their activities for self-protection.
It’s increasingly clear to us that these impacts are not incidental or ancillary to Trump administration policy. Rather, the chilling effects are the point. This is the closest thing to a consistent governing strategy in Trump’s second term.
Chilling effects can be subtle, but today they are everywhere. And it’s not just students who are chilled by Trump administration threats.
Professors are censoring themselves in lectures and rewriting syllabuses. Researchers are stripping grant applications of words that might attract federal scrutiny, or abandoning the topics entirely. Media outlets are modifying their news coverage to avoid Trump lawsuits or sanctions.
Law enforcement and regulatory agencies are refusing to investigate Trump-aligned actors inside or outside government, and major national law firms are declining cases challenging Trump administration policies.
Publishers are “stepping back” from LGBTQ+ books and other progressive subjects. Many in targeted immigrant communities are afraid to leave home to go to work or school.
In most cases, these people and institutions are not being specifically targeted or threatened by Trump. But they are afraid, and their fear is doing the administration’s work for it. They stay silent, avoid attention and confrontation, and look the other way. In other cases, they change their speech and behavior to accommodate or conform to the administration’s worldview.
Of course, there are counterexamples, such as the winter protests in Minneapolis in response to brutality by agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the recent “No Kings” rallies. But even here, the broader but less visible trend—chilling effects—is evident.
For instance, in recent reporting on the latest No Kings rallies, many media outlets observed that students were noticeably missing, despite the Trump administration’s unpopularity among younger Americans.
We believe none of this is by accident.
In a new book, “Chilling Effects: Repression, Conformity, and Power in the Digital Age,” one of us—Jon Penney—explains how law, technology, and state and corporate power are weaponized to chill and repress, and the dangers this poses for the United States and other democratic societies. The other—Bruce Schneier—has extensively studied the security infrastructure enabling this.
What we see isn’t gratuitous government cruelty, chaos or vengeance. Instead, we see a persistent strategy to maximize fear and chilling effects in ways that are corrosive to freedom and democracy.
Research suggests that surveillance, personal threats, uncertainty and abuse of power are key factors in doing so. The federal government has a clear and systematic pattern of employing these very mechanisms across a number of domains far beyond campuses.
They are evident in militarized raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and in journalists being arrested and indicted for reporting on protests. They are made clear in the long list of political enemies the Trump administration has investigated or threatened, including the Federal Reserve chairman. And they can also be seen in the weaponization of technology, including ramping up surveillance to target critics and protestors.
History offers some guidance on impacts.
During the McCarthy era, overreaching laws, surveillance, and public and private sector reprisals ostensibly targeted alleged communists. But the real aim was often to suppress progressive journalists, trade unions and political opposition.
In the 1960s, these same tactics were reused by Southern states to chill the Civil Rights Movement. Historians have written about how the widespread fear and conformity of these periods reshaped American society in enduring ways, including the destruction of progressive political movements and both delaying and muting the Civil Rights Movement itself.
When such state threats are systematized, they can foment a broader climate of fear, self-censorship and conformity. In that climate, dissenting speech, political opposition, democratic mobilization and other checks on power become increasingly difficult, even dangerous. It is no surprise, for instance, that Trump critics regularly admit to self-censorship, fearing for their safety.
Chilling effects are thus not only repressive—causing self-censorship—but productive. They produce conforming and compliant speech and behavior, which can have longer-term social impacts. They not only undermine protected rights and suppress accountability but can promote social change—even without a popular mandate to do so.
This latter point is often missed. It explains Trump’s assaults on universities and cultural institutions such as the Kennedy Center for the Arts and the Smithsonian. Often dismissed as peculiar Trump obsessions, they are fully consistent with Project 2025—the sweeping policy blueprint for Trump’s second term authored by a coalition of conservative groups and its call to target the “institutions of American civil society” and “wield federal power” to “reverse” decades of progressive cultural advancements.
In the near term, this means an increasingly weakened democratic society, with the government and its patrons enjoying freedom to pursue their objectives. Over the long term, this can mean a changed society as more conformist and compliant speech and culture become more widely accepted and entrenched.
In our view, this future is not inevitable, just as the McCarthy era “Red Scare” and violent civil rights era repression were not. In both cases, fear and chilling effects were resisted in law and civil society, as they can be today.
But the central mechanisms—surveillance, uncertainty, personal threats and abuse of power—would need to be addressed. For instance, new legislation could ensure justice for lawless government actors and constrain surveillance. Courts can block abuses of federal power, including illegal arrests, detentions and mass citizen databases.
The media, lawyers and civil society can hold the government accountable. And students, teachers, universities and cultural institutions can resist the tendency to self-censor and conform.
The citizen mobilization in Minnesota and the No Kings rallies are examples of that. But to resist chilling effects and their dangers over the long term, this would have to be the norm, not the exception.
This essay was written with Jon Penney, and originally appeared in The Conversation.
Until two years ago, West London’s Greenford Tube station used to flood whenever it rained heavily. The train tracks are aboveground, but the ticket office would often get inundated. Sandbags still line the corridor.
But in October 2023, a new family moved in nearby, determined to halt the water. The family members built their house from scratch with local wood and kept odd hours, sleeping all day and working only at dawn and dusk. They even put their young children to work.
The new neighbors were beavers.
In West London, conservationists got a government license to resettle a family of five beavers in a 20-acre urban park near the Greenford Tube station. It used to be a golf course, with a creek running through it. Within weeks, the beavers dammed up the creek, creating a pond that holds water and stops it from spilling into the city. They also diverted the creek’s flow into smaller tributaries, creating a wetland that better absorbs heavy rainfall — mitigating the risk of flooding downstream…
The beavers have also allowed the city to scrap expensive plans to dig a reservoir and levee.
Here is the full story, via Mike Doherty. Should you need a government license to resettle beavers?
The post How to improve British procurement appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Yesterday The Bulwark’s Lauren Egan ran an “exclusive” with an advance look at Project 2029 and its policy recommendations going into the 2028 election. TPM Alum Brian Beutler looks at it and concludes, in so many words, this ain’t it. I read the piece last night and that was exactly my conclusion.
First, a few points of context. Attitudinally and analytically I blanche at most things Egan writes. That’s not a criticism precisely. There’s nothing wrong with not sharing my viewpoints or outlook. I think it’s fair for me to share that background. I would also say that there’s a lot of hunger for a Project 2029. I had someone pitch me a few days ago on leading one up. But there doesn’t need to be just one. At least for now, we should be in a let 100 Flowers Bloom mode. There can also be different kinds. With that said though, what Egan published didn’t seem like anything like what I and I imagine others are talking about. It seems like a mix of positioning statement and policy portfolio. And some of those policies are good ones. It talks about affordability; it talks about breaking up monopolies, etc. That may have some role. But that’s an entirely different exercise.
If you look at the challenges faced today by Democrats, their reputational problems, lack of trust not only by unattached voters but by their own partisans, the biggest problem is that people think they are weak, their espousal of values doesn’t match their willingness to fight for those values and goals. At the most basic level, they don’t have a strong understanding of political power and how to use it. A Project 2029 should be mostly a blueprint for how to use trifecta power to the maximum extent possible by law and constitution to make thoroughgoing structural changes to the federal government to buttress against authoritarian fascist attack. Reinforcing the structures of civic democracy is a central part of that. To use a sports analogy, that doesn’t mean running good plays. It means reshaping the entire playing field. They’re not the same thing. That means starting as the sine qua non with things like ending the Senate filibuster and reforming the Supreme Court. But those are only the start. Those are the ones that make all the other reform and structural changes possible. They are also the talismans of seriousness. Because if you’re not willing to tackle those, you’re not any kind of player or even on the field.
The reason to do this is, above all, because it needs to be done. The country managed for a long time with a very imperfect system because none of its presidents actively wanted to govern as dictators or as though they owned the country. We don’t have that luxury any more. But there are secondary importances too. It is a demonstration that Democrats have become comfortable using political power to its maximal extent and are willing to do so. So it’s a demonstration of ability and willingness. The biggest reason for the Democrats’ unpopularity is the idea that they are weak and essentially useless. You can’t contest elections effectively, over time, without changing that perception. And you change the perception by changing the reality.
There is also a critical lesson about political accountability and consequences. For a couple of generations we have had a dynamic in which Republicans and the right more generally have busted norms, violated the law and used power to the greatest extent possible with the confident knowledge that Democrats would not require individual accountability or react in kind. That created a deep structural imbalance in American politics. That’s the story of the corrupted Supreme Court. Republicans packed the Court, and the Court descended into ever greater levels of corruption and abuses of power because of the confident and correct knowledge that there would be no consequences, that Democrats would act as though it were still 1985, 1995 or even 2005.
In the culture of payback and retaliation that currently informs a lot of our politics there is a really good question: where is this all going? A constant and perhaps escalating cycle of bad actions and retaliation perhaps descending into state breakdown or even civil war? That is a very real concern and danger. But there is a goal here beyond being on the top of the heap every few election cycles.
America is a big, big country. It’s filled with lots of different kinds of people. For partisans there is a persistent fantasy that one of the other sides will be comprehensively defeated in some big showdown. That’s not how it works. None of these different sub-communities are going anywhere. What we’ve seen under Trump is a kind of logical conclusion of his warlordist view of government. He wins a national election — quite narrowly — and he uses that power over the federal government to prey on the parts of the country that don’t support him. The end state you are looking for is what amounts to a truce. Because in fact civic society is based on a series of truces, the realization that there are no permanent victories or defeats and that decision to operate within a common set of rules on how to arbitrate differences.
The American right built the current corrupt Supreme Court because they were confident that the center-left had no appetite or ability to fight back or require accountability and reform in response. They were mostly right. Supreme Court reform is important because you can’t have democratic self-government in this country with this Court’s corruption. That’s the main reason to do it. It also teaches a lesson. Don’t spend too much time creating a big corrupt shiny object. Because the Constitution creates the tools to break it. And we’ll break it. Say goodbye to your constitutional golden calf. Sucks to be you. It’s critical for Democrats to demonstrate that they’re just as able to use political power as Republicans, ready to be just as audacious, not just because it’s critical that they do so but because it’s the only real path back toward some kind of constitutional equilibrium.

Josh Kovensky has a good piece up today on the collapse of the “Broadview Four” nee Six case in Chicago. What started off as yet another case of wild overcharging by the Trump Justice Department and politically motivated prosecution collapsed a week ago when a stunning level of prosecutorial misconduct was revealed in open court and all the remaining charges were dropped. The taint of the misconduct has already spread to other cases. The U.S. Attorney in Chicago, Andrew S. Boutros, has reacted with what he purports are important and until now neglected “reforms” to avoid anything happening like this again. (He has also been accused by one of the defense attorneys in the case of at least some level of involvement with the tainted grand jury.) But according to experts on grand juries, avoiding the levels of misconduct revealed in the case could have been done easily enough by just not breaking some of the most basic rules for how prosecutors must conduct themselves in grand juries.
It’s a galactic mess. But it’s also an example of the corruption of the Trump DOJ seeping down into depths of the Department.
The original lead prosecutor on the case was Sheri Mecklenburg, a 20-year veteran of the Chicago office. From what I can tell, she had a generally good if unremarkable reputation in the office. The understanding I got from defense attorneys in the case is that she appeared generally dismissive of the main conspiracy charge against the original six defendants. In other words, Mecklenburg’s heart didn’t seem entirely in the case. And that wasn’t terribly surprising since she was a longtime veteran of the office and, from what I understand, is known to have generally liberal politics.
To be clear, I’m not buying into the Trumpy assumption that prosecutors are really just political actors using their powers to achieve their political or ideological ends. I simply note this to make the point that she’s not some hard right-wing partisan who you might expect to eagerly jump into Trump-style corruption and misconduct. In any case, from October through February she was running the case and running it aggressively.
But then at the end of February, she abruptly withdrew from the case and took a position as a DOJ detailee working on the Senate Judiciary Committee under Dick Durbin (D-IL). According to reports at the time, there was little if any advance warning about Mecklenburg’s departure to the defense or the judge. It didn’t come up at all in the last hearing in the case before her departure.
When this happened, given the background I noted above, some assumed that she simply did not want to be involved in the case and found a way to parachute out of her involvement while still remaining at DOJ as she approached retirement eligibility. She was replaced by William Hogan, one of the most senior career prosecutors in the office. He’s known for working on gang and mob cases and is generally known for being pretty Trumpy in his personal politics. He is also known for being very aggressive, and himself has a history of serious misconduct for which he was fired from the same office in the early 1990s. (He was eventually reinstated after a five year fight before an administrative law judge.)
What came out, though, in that now-notorious court hearing is that all the key misconduct at the grand jury stage was by Mecklenburg. That hasn’t been adjudicated but this was what a junior attorney working with her said at the hearing. And she was the senior attorney presenting the case to the grand jury. So it could only have been her. The day after the hearing, she was dismissed by Durbin’s office. I’ve spoken to a number of attorneys from the Chicago area who have worked with Mecklenburg professionally over the years and in some cases know her personally to some degree. They’re all kind of stunned that she did this, both ethically but also that she would run such career risks on behalf of a case she likely had little ideological or professional sympathy for. (There is separate apparent wrongdoing tied to the redaction of the grand jury transcript. That’s under Hogan.)
To date, I’ve seen no clear explanation of this aspect of the case. Obviously there are various possible explanations: poor values and ethics, pressure, self-advancement, etc. Mecklenburg is, wisely, not talking publicly. And Boutros’s office is doing its best to throw her under the bus. But it seems to me at some level to be example of the effect of a general rot and disinhibition. When the Attorney General — first Pam Bondi and now the acting AG Todd Blanche — are acting openly in ways that are unethical and even criminal, that is going to have an effect. Boutros, the U.S. Attorney, is known as being Trumpy but he’s a real lawyer in the area, not someone Trump saw on X saying nice things about him. His office has brought a number of indictments, often on the basis at first at least on false ICE testimony. Until now, I don’t think there has been much evidence of bright-line misconduct. But there’s certainly been an aggressive culture of overcharging these cases, most of which have fallen apart.
The point I think is largely the same: Boutros put his office at the service of ICE and Trump. That’s going to involve a lot of rule-bending at a minimum. Perhaps Mecklenburg was under pressure. The word certainly went out within the office that these six needed to be indicted. But that still doesn’t adequately explain why a respected prosecutor would commit what I’m told are easily disbarment-level offenses. The general answer I think is that the leaders, appointees and supervisors set a tone. If they do it, how important is it for me not to? If there are no consequences, why hold back? Rules that go unenforced have little meaning other than as curiosities.
Now, the Broadview case is being referenced in other cases in Chicago and around the country as an example of the Trump-era DOJ’s pattern of misconduct and wrongdoing and as a call for judges to withdraw the assumption of “regularity”, i.e., the general assumption that the government is telling the truth and acting in a proper manner. The recent dismissal of the Kilmar Abrego Garcia case is another example of that. We’ll see many more.

TPM Reader TB dropped me a note this afternoon about today’s second post. He liked it. Then he wrote this: “You’ve pretty much conclusively won the argument on SCOTUS reform, starting with immediate unilateral expansion. You’ve written comparatively much less about the filibuster and I’m among those unconvinced that just nuking it is the best way forward or that that’s a win as a platform plank. Not passionately against it, just not clear on how concretely that plays out as a long-term win.”
I’ve written pretty extensively about abolishing the filibuster. But I haven’t done so in quite some time. So I welcome the opportunity to do so again.
I’d put the matter in three related arguments: 1) It’s bad on the merits and defies if not violates the constitution. 2) It hurts Democrats disproportionately. 3) The existence of the modern filibuster is a major driver of the loss of confidence in public institutions.
Item one. The federal constitution is based on majority rule. Power is dispersed. It’s not supposed to be simple to make big changes. But majorities in the House and the Senate are what the constitution envisions. There are exceptions: treaties, conviction of impeached officials, overriding presidential vetoes, constitutional amendments, et al. The existence of these special cases tell us clearly that the framers believed there were some cases where more than simple majorities should be required. It specified what those were. They did not believe that should be required for ordinary legislation. For many of us what the constitution actually says and requires is enough. Obviously the Senate can create additional internal rules – which can in fact be overruled at any time with a simple majority vote. But it is an innovation and I would argue a bad one. There’s no history here or tradition worth vindicating. It’s a tool that was never intended to operate as it currently does. It was built up by Southern segregationists who wanted a veto of federal laws enforcing the civil war amendments. It’s a bad rule and we should get rid of bad rules.
Item two. It does not hurt both sides equally. Republicans generally want two big things. Tax cuts and judicial appointments. The filibuster doesn’t affect either. Democrats, as the party of government, wants policies – health care laws, rights laws like the ADA or the VRA, a million other things. Democrats want legislation. So the filibuster actually limits Democrats far more than it does Republicans. Republican senators generally know this. They are extremely protective of the filibuster because it works for them. It’s true that absent the filibuster Republicans would be able to pass laws Democrats would not like. But in most cases the hot button examples are actually things that are very unpopular. That is another advantage the filibuster gives Republicans. It allows them to gain from espousing policies favored by the far right without actually having to pass any of them. But this is also how democracy is supposed to work. If you win majorities and pass laws what you support should actually go into effect.
Item Three: One of the great challenges we face is not simply Trump but the disenchantment with civic democracy and government which made Trump possible. A central reason for that loss of faith is the way the modern filibuster severed the tether connecting voting and electoral outcomes from policy results. I do not think people appreciate the depth of damage that does to people’s experience of or confidence in self-government. And why shouldn’t it. That is the essence of the ecosystem of civic democracy. You vote for people who say they’ll do X. They win. Then X doesn’t happen. Then people who understand the inner-workings of government explain, well, sure you voted for it but the Supreme Court said no. Or yes, you voted for it but there’s this thing called the filibuster where 60 votes are necessary to do anything. Those are important explanations. But really, they don’t cut it. Elections are supposed to matter. The filibuster makes them more or less not matter. That isn’t just bad if you lose an election. It introduces a toxin into the body politic. It creates gridlock. It makes electoral participation seem like a chump’s game. We cannot argue that the filibuster is solely responsible for all loss of faith in democratic self-government. That’s not credible. And we have the example of European democracies where there are parallels losses of public confidence in democracy without the filibuster. But it is a big, big driver of it.
In today’s moment there’s an additional factor. If you want to reenforce and reform the federal government to make it more resistant to authoritarian assaults you very literally have to get rid of the filibuster. Otherwise, you’re limiting yourself to only the anti-authoritarian measures the authoritarians will buy into. I can’t accept that. And I can’t accept the idea that we simply do nothing. Getting rid of the filibuster follows necessarily from those two conclusions. On top of that, it shouldn’t exist in the first place. It’s bad constitutionally. It’s bad for Democrats. It’s bad for confidence in civic democracy. (That’s quite bad!) It’s not even like gerrymandering where there is no choice but to fight fire with fire in order to eventually get back to a system in which districts are drawn by a reasonable set of non-partisan guidelines which do not privilege or limit the representation of particular groups. It’s bad on the merits and there’s no path forward for the country with it in place. That’s why the filibuster has to go.
The conventional history of industrialization is usually told through textiles. The story begins with spinning jennies, water frames, and power looms in eighteenth-century Britain, then proceeds through steam engines, factories, railroads, and mass production. In this narrative, precision engineering appears as a supporting character. Clocks, scientific instruments, artillery, and machine tools are important, but they are not the main story.
Interchangeable Parts I, made on Titles with my Bucket Art model
There is, however, another possible narrative. Instead of beginning with factories, it begins with precision. Instead of asking how production scaled, it asks how the modern world learned to make things reliably identical. From this perspective, marine chronometers, artillery reform, interchangeable manufacture, machine tools, and mass production appear not as separate stories but as successive phases of a single historical development.
The central hypothesis is that between roughly 1750 and 1800 France developed a distinctive culture of precision centered on military engineering, navigation, metrology, and scientific instrumentation. This culture did not itself create industrial capitalism. Instead, it created the conceptual and technical preconditions for industrial capitalism. The United States later inherited portions of this French precision culture and transformed them into a system of scalable industrial production.
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The resulting genealogy looks something like this:
French precision regime → artillery reform → precision measurement and gauging → interchangeable manufacture → American armories → machine tools → industrial scale.
Marine chronometry was not a parallel curiosity. It was one of the most advanced expressions of the same precision culture.
The starting point is not any particular invention but a set of institutions. Eighteenth-century France possessed a remarkable ecosystem linking the state, the military, scientific academies, engineering schools, observatories, naval establishments, and manufacturing arsenals. Figures such as Gribeauval, Borda, Berthoud, and Le Roy moved within overlapping networks concerned with measurement, standardization, calibration, and reproducibility. The common problem was not manufacturing as such. It was making reality legible, measurable, and governable.[1]
This perspective helps explain why apparently unrelated projects emerged at roughly the same moment. The Gribeauval reforms standardized artillery. Berthoud and Le Roy pursued increasingly reliable marine chronometers. Borda developed navigational and scientific instruments. Later generations created the metric system. These developments are usually treated separately because they belonged to different domains. Yet all addressed essentially the same question: how can performance be made independent of individual craftsmanship?
The case of artillery is especially revealing. Traditional artillery systems depended heavily on local variation, artisanal judgment, and ad hoc logistics. Gribeauval’s achievement was not simply to improve cannon design. His real innovation was systemic. He reduced the variety of calibers, standardized carriages, established measurement practices, and simplified logistical support. The result was not merely better cannon but a more coherent artillery system.[2]
Marine chronometry reveals the same logic operating at a higher level of precision. John Harrison’s great chronometers remain among the most astonishing achievements in the history of craftsmanship. Yet Landes argues that Harrison’s approach represented something of a technological cul-de-sac. The future belonged less to singular masterpieces than to designs capable of replication, maintenance, and standard manufacture. The French contribution was to shift attention from extraordinary clocks to reproducible chronometers.[3]
At first glance artillery and chronometers appear to have little in common. One is a large iron object measured in millimeters. The other is a delicate brass mechanism measured in fractions of millimeters. The connection emerges through the world of mechanisms and instruments.
The crucial intermediate technology was the gunlock. The firing mechanism of a musket required interacting moving parts—springs, tumblers, sears, pivots, and catches—that had to fit together reliably. Such mechanisms demanded a level of precision beyond that required for artillery but below that required for chronometers. More importantly, military demand created pressure for repeatability. If one lock failed, replacement mattered. Armies therefore had incentives to pursue standardization and eventually interchangeability.
This was the world of Honoré Blanc. Blanc’s famous demonstrations did not involve entire muskets but lock mechanisms assembled from collections of supposedly interchangeable parts. The significance of these demonstrations lay less in their immediate practical success than in the conceptual breakthrough they represented. Precision was no longer merely a property of individual objects. It was becoming a property of systems.[4]
The deeper bridge in the story may actually be the instrument makers rather than the gunsmiths. Scientific instruments, navigational instruments, clocks, chronometers, and gun mechanisms all belonged to a common artisanal ecosystem. The modern distinction between clockmakers, machinists, gunsmiths, and instrument makers had not yet fully emerged. The same culture of springs, pivots, tolerances, gauges, and geometric fitting linked all of these trades.
The most important artifact in this world was probably not the chronometer or the musket. It was the gauge.
A gauge transforms precision from an individual accomplishment into a transferable standard. A master craftsman may create a perfect component through skill and judgment. A gauge allows others to reproduce that component without possessing the master’s skill. Precision ceases to reside in people and begins to reside in systems. This shift may be the true conceptual breakthrough underlying modern industry.
The American story begins when this French precision culture crosses the Atlantic.
Benjamin Franklin represents the earliest connection. Franklin’s years in London and Paris immersed him in networks devoted to practical science, engineering, and useful knowledge. His significance lies less in transmitting specific technologies than in connecting the American republic to Enlightenment cultures of experimentation and technical competence.[5]
Thomas Jefferson presents a more intriguing case. Historians often place Jefferson and Hamilton on opposite sides of the early American debate over industrialization. Jefferson appears as the agrarian republican committed to a nation of independent farmers, while Hamilton appears as the advocate of finance, manufacturing, and industrial development. Yet this opposition obscures an important paradox.
Jefferson was fascinated by technology. He admired scientific instruments, architecture, surveying methods, agricultural improvements, and manufacturing techniques. Most significantly, while serving in Paris he encountered Blanc’s demonstrations of interchangeable manufacture and became an enthusiastic observer of the project.[6]
This creates a striking historical irony. The man later remembered as America’s great agrarian thinker helped import one of the foundational ideas of industrial manufacturing.
The paradox dissolves once we recognize that Jefferson opposed not technology but dependence. His fear was not machinery itself. His fear was the emergence of a propertyless industrial proletariat resembling those of Europe. Jefferson appears to have believed that technological sophistication could coexist with a republic of independent producers. Precision manufacturing and agrarian republicanism therefore appeared compatible rather than contradictory.
Whether this vision was historically achievable is another question. What matters is that Jefferson likely did not perceive any contradiction between admiration for interchangeable manufacture and commitment to a decentralized republic.
Hamilton’s role was different. If Jefferson imported a manufacturing technique, Hamilton imported a political economy. The Report on Manufactures argued for national development, industrial capacity, finance, and state support for productive enterprise. Hamilton supplied institutional frameworks. Jefferson helped transmit technical methods. Together they imported different aspects of the broader Atlantic transformation.[7]
The decisive American development occurred not in philosophy but in the armories. At Springfield and Harpers Ferry, the idea of interchangeability became linked to machine production. Figures such as John Hall, Simeon North, and Thomas Blanchard developed systems involving gauges, jigs, fixtures, inspection procedures, and specialized machine tools. The goal was no longer simply to produce precise parts. The goal was to produce precision systematically.[8]
This was the moment when precision ceased to be an artisanal achievement and became an industrial process.
Seen from this perspective, the history of industrialization unfolds through four stages.
The first stage is precision as craftsmanship. Harrison represents this world. Success depends on extraordinary skill embodied in individual artifacts.
The second stage is precision as standardization. Gribeauval, Le Roy, and Berthoud belong here. The objective is not perfection but conformity to standards.
The third stage is precision as interchangeability. Blanc and the American armories exemplify this phase. The critical insight is that any compliant component may replace any other.
The fourth stage is precision as infrastructure. Railroads, machine-tool industries, telegraph systems, and mass production belong to this world. Standards cease to govern individual artifacts and begin to govern entire networks.
The economic payoff of precision emerges only gradually. Precision by itself has limited economic significance. The true breakthrough occurs when precision enables substitutability. Once components become interchangeable, inventories shrink, repair becomes simpler, production scales more easily, and networks become possible. Precision becomes valuable not because objects are more accurate but because they become more fungible.
Textiles fit into this story in an interesting way. The early textile revolution was largely concerned with labor substitution, power transmission, and factory organization. Its initial trajectory was somewhat separate from the precision revolution. During the nineteenth century, however, the two streams converged. Textile mills increasingly depended upon machine tools, standardized components, and precision manufacture. The Lowell system belongs largely to this later phase of convergence. Factories supplied the organizational model; precision engineering supplied the technical foundation. Modern industry emerged when these two traditions fused.
The broader implication is that the history of industrialization may be understood as a transition from craftsmanship to protocols. The crucial question was never simply how to make better artifacts. It was how to make artifacts conform to standards independently of the individuals who produced them.
Gribeauval’s artillery, Berthoud’s chronometers, Blanc’s lock mechanisms, Jefferson’s observations in Paris, the American armories, and the machine-tool industry all represent successive steps in that transformation. The ultimate achievement was not the creation of precision. It was the creation of systems capable of reproducing precision indefinitely.
Notes
[1] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution: Arms and Enlightenment in France, 1763–1815 (1997); Jan Golinski, Science as Public Culture (1992).
[2] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Jonathan A. Grant, Rulers, Guns, and Money (2007).
[3] David S. Landes, Revolution in Time (1983); Rupert T. Gould, The Marine Chronometer (1923).
[4] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Merritt Roe Smith, Harpers Ferry Armory and the New Technology (1977).
[5] Edmund Morgan, Benjamin Franklin (2002); Joyce Chaplin, The First Scientific American (2006).
[6] Ken Alder, Engineering the Revolution; Silvio Bedini, Thomas Jefferson and His Copying Machines (1984); Jefferson correspondence from Paris period.
[7] Alexander Hamilton, Report on Manufactures (1791); Michael Lind, Land of Promise (2012).
[8] David A. Hounshell, From the American System to Mass Production, 1800–1932 (1984); Merritt Roe Smith, Harpers Ferry Armory and the New Technology (1977).
Last month, in the book club, we read Inventing Nature by Andrea Wulf, about the life and work of Alexander von Humboldt. This month, I ended up also reading Wulf’s earlier book on the Jena set, Magnificent Rebels, which is on our side quests list. Alexander von Humboldt, along with his brother William, were both part of this set, though the former was arguably on the margins of it rather than the core, in part because he was gallivanting around South America during the crucial period, and in part because he was not humanist-reactionary enough to belong. The Jena set arguably invented the modern (essentialized and rather narcissistic) idea of “human.”
This month’s main pick was Revolution in Time by David Landes, which I’ve owned for 15 years (bought and scanned when I was writing Tempo) but hadn’t actually read until this month. I’m almost done with it and now wish I’d read it earlier. Evolution in time-keeping through the period we’re studying right now (1600-2000) is a critical subplot but really hard to appreciate in conventional accounts of it.
I’m just starting to read the June pick, The Business of Enlightenment by Robert Darnton, which covers the diffusion of Enlightenment ideas after 1770, through the medium of the later editions of Denis Diderot’s Encyclopédie (the first edition of which was completed between 1749-1772), which was as epochal an event in publishing history as in intellectual history.
The ideas we’re juggling in World Machine theory are starting to get quite complex, so I’m overdue for some synthesis/integration effort. This essay is a trial assembly of the gear-shift mechanism between the Modernity Machine and the Divergence Machine. It probably won’t make a whole lot of sense if you’re coming in cold to this series. I recommend catching up by browsing my previous World Machines writings, or better yet, pointing your LLM at them, and getting tldr-ed up.
NOTE: I’m writing this essay as much for the in-development AI agent at the World Machines project (WMP), as for the human readers of this newsletter. Both the WMP and this book club are now being hosted by the SIGPSY group (Special Interest Group in Psychohistory; no we’re not kidding) that has just kicked off in the Protocol Institute discord. Future book club chats will be held in the group’s #psychohistory channel of the Discord — details and invite link on the book club page.
A complicated but elegant picture is taking shape now, of how the Modernity Machine began giving way to the Divergence Machine through a full-stack set of revolutions, from rarefied and intellectual to bloody and violent, which drove the gear shift in the political, cultural, and economic infrastructures of the world, starting with Europe.
The Darnton book, which might otherwise seem like a very oddly specialized and nerdy pick for our book club, is interesting precisely because it helps complete a picture of the gearshift dynamics in our world machines theory.
The book is not about the ideas of the Enlightenment itself (talk to ChatGPT about that if you’re participating in the book club), or even about the Encyclopédie itself, which was a late-stage synthesis of Enlightenment thinking. It is about the structural diffusion of Enlightenment thinking through the social fabric, transforming it from a subculture of marginal heretical ideas to civilizational infrastructure, through the best technological medium available at the time — print. The “installation” of the Encyclopédie completed the Modernity Machine, right on the eve of its obsolescence, and the beginning of its replacement by the Divergence Machine.
The story of Diderot and d’Alembert’s Encyclopédie was something like a second-order sequel to the first-order installation of print culture in the 15th century (which we read about last year in the The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe by Elizabeth Eisenstein). It was also very much like the installation of internet culture in our own time. As an encyclopedia, Diderot’s was an ancestor of Wikipedia, and like it, an expression of an infrastructural maturation, not just of an intellectual milieu.
The relationship of the publishing ecology around the Encyclopédie to the big names of the Enlightenment, like Newton, Bacon, and Locke, was something like the relationship of the internet in our time to names like Vannevar Bush and J. C. R. Licklider. The Encyclopedists, as the group contributing to, and publishing it came to be known, were something like the first wave of internet entrepreneurs in our time.
The Darnton book also puts the other history we’ve been exploring into perspective — the work of David Hume and Adam Smith (which coincided with the work of the Encyclopedists), Voltaire’s role as a thought leader (he was directly associated with the Encyclopedists), and the subtle influence of changing temporalities being driven by the maturation of time-keeping technology through the era.
I want to try and connect all these threads of development and paint a rough picture of how the transition between the Modernity Machine and Divergence Machines actually happened.
Let’s start with a timeline. It’s easy to get very confused by the complexity of various streams of events (I briefly badly confused myself by mixing up Roger Bacon (13th century) and Francis Bacon (17th century).
Here is a rough view of the timeline, which is something of a Doctor Who style ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey stuff.
1600: The intellectual phase of the Modernity Machine essentially ended around 1600, with the burning of Giordano Bruno at the stake in 1600 serving as a useful and macabre marker. Galileo, tried in 1633, is something of a transitional figure, playing a role in both WMs. So roughly between 1600 and 1640, the Modernity Machine entered production mode as completed infrastructure, and the seeds of the Divergence Machine were planted. It is worth noting that despite the name. the MM was firmly traditionalist, in the sense of being an operating system designed by and for the traditional ruling classes, monarchs, and religious authorities. The arrival of the MM was also a convergence to a kind of civilizational-infrastructural consensus that Europe was just starting to export to the rest of the world.
1620-1690: The ideas of the Enlightenment, in the form synthesized later by the Encyclopedists, took shape roughly between 1620 and 1690. Three works are foundational: Newton’s Principia (1687), Locke’s Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690) and Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum (1620). It is worth noting that this period also corresponds to the early settlement of what would become the United States, which had already begun to shape the psyche of Europe (starting with tobacco, ending with revolutionary catalysis).
1637-77 (Descartes and Spinoza): Two works have more complex relationships with the Enlightenment. Descartes’ Discourse on the Method (the “cogito ergo sum” book), 1637, was a prequel that the Enlightenment built on but superseded, while Spinoza’s Ethics (1677) was too radical for the Enlightenment proper to absorb, but sort of haunted it like a scary ghost in the Enlightenment infrastructure. Descartes doesn’t go far enough to be part of the Enlightenment, while Spinoza went too far. Leibniz appears in this sideshow tent of related figures too, but as marginal rather than structurally relevant, and something of a lolcow, thanks to Voltaire’s Pangloss parody. He does briefly re-emerge into relevance a couple of centuries later via Mach, Bergson etc. Interestingly, Leibniz has suffered a devaluation in status, similar to Bruno, through the reframings of our book club. But unlike Bruno, who I now think of as a largely irredeemable crackpot, Leibniz still retains critical value in the mathematics and computing storyline, if not in the philosophy storyline.
1749-1789: The Enlightenment, as an institution, as opposed to a set of abstract ideas, was essentially an institutional compromise between radical and traditional thought brokered by the Encyclopédie in the decade before the French Revolution; between objectivity (Newton), empiricism (Bacon), and a natural conception of self (Locke) on the one hand, and ecclesiastical authority, divine monarchial authority, and the individual self as a sort of expression of the will of the Christian God. So the Enlightenment represented a cautious and pragmatic rupture from tradition that had just enough institutional support, in an era where it was struggling to survive. The Encyclopédie threaded that needle, through a mix of covert and ironic subversion and some compromise. It survived through its first edition years despite (somewhat nominal) official censorship, but escaped Inquisition grade active suppression/elimination efforts. Too many people in the establishment were sympathetic to the Encyclopedists for it to be seriously suppressed. But after 1770 and up to the French Revolution, it basically installed the Enlightenment as institutionalized social reality.
1789-1799: The French Revolution, which to some extent drew inspiration from the American Revolution (which was culturally simpler, even if in other ways more profoundly consequential), marked the transition to the post-Enlightenment era. Immanuel Kant was the hinge figure (I’ve picked up this use of the word hinge from ChatGPT — delving into AI is good for your vocabulary), attempting to synthesize empiricism and idealism, subjective and objective, and personal and religious notions of self. A Critique of Pure Reason (1781) appears after the Encyclopedists, but before the Romantics.
1790-1807: Following this arc of Enlightenment, from ideas to institutionalization (pirates to navy?), German romanticism appears in some ways as a reactionary cultural movement that reacted to the decentering of the human effected by the Enlightenment with what we could call Humanism 1.0. The official position of this newsletter is that all humanisms are reactionary. Some are just confused and call themselves progressive, a pattern that started in Jena. I’d heard of some of the key figures (Goethe, Alexander von Humboldt, Schiller) but not of others (Fichte, the Schlegel brothers and their wives, Schelling, Humboldt’s brother William). It was an oddly schizophrenic movement that seemed to believe that the Enlightenment simultaneously went too far, and not far enough. Schizophrenic, but consequential. German romanticism created the romantic idea of the self that is still the default idea we’re enculturated into, around the world, by the liberal middle class.
1890s, 1910s, 2020s (Humanist spasms): Jena romanticism was a short-lived but intense phenomenon — just a decade or so, coinciding with the rise and fall of Napoleon (the romantics broadly supported both the French Revolution and Napoleon, which is sort of revealing in the same way people pivoting from Bernie to Trump is revealing). I think this is characteristic of humanist spasms between major technologically determined world machine eras. when humanist delusions of agency and significance are at a peak, along with anxieties about potential terminal insignificance. We see similar dynamics around the Bloomsbury group in the 1910-30 period (ironically associated with “modernist” literature). And we’re witnessing a similar period now, in anxious efforts to reclaim a human center for an AI age. The Pope’s recent encyclical on AI is notable more for clearly flagging the nature of humanist tendencies in any era than for things it says about AI. Modern trads, Progressive anti-AI types, Singularitarian AI doomers, AGI theologists, metamodernists, re-enchantment types, and the Catholic Church all share a loose humanism comprising a variety of flavors of neo-romanticism. Which to first order is just techlash+poignant poetry.
1848-89: The period of the Encyclopédie’s brief reign as the high-water-mark of civilization (roughly 1770-1789) is uncannily like the reign of the the early internet era, (roughly 1969-1993) and the neoliberal ideological tendency that accompanied it. Both were terminated by seismic geopolitical events (the American and French revolutions; the end of the Cold War and 9/11) and followed by a second wave of smaller revolutions (the revolutions of 1848, known as the springtime of nations, and the Arab Spring through Trumpism in our time). Modern nation-states may have been conceptually started with the Peace of Westphalia, but became a practical reality starting around 1848 (there are multiple books about this year; one is in our side quests list — Revolutionary Spring by Christopher Clark).
Trump as a Farcical Napoleon: There are uncanny but twisted similarities between the careers and historical roles of Napoleon and Trump, a case of history repeating itself, first as tragedy then as farce. Both had similar relationships with the prevailing revolutionary tendencies in their times, and similarly weird relationships with cultural elites. Curious learning: Napoleon was apparently much more attached to a self-image as a scholar than as a conquering general and emperor. He traveled with a personal librarian and campaign library while on the warpath and signed documents with his title as a memory of the French Academy of Sciences. I’d really like to read a comparative biography in about a decade.
End of History, 1806 vs. 1991: Hegel marks the completion of the philosophical transition away from the Enlightenment to the post-Enlightenment era, ending the brief reign of the Romantics. His is a complex legacy. While on the one hand he replaced the Enlightenment’s universalist pretensions with a historically contingent (and therefore structurally divergent) understanding of reality, the specific understanding he argued for was teleologically convergent towards an “end of history.” That’s always been one of my favorite ideas, in the form that emerged in our time, via Kojeve and Fukuyama, but I’ve always wondered why Hegel himself proclaimed the end to have occured at the Battle of Jena in 1806, when Napoleon steamrolled through Prussia via Jena. That always seemed oddly arbitrary to me. But now, in the context of Jena romanticism, it is somewhat clearer, and I realize I was unfairly thinking of Hegel as a small-minded creature of his own times. Hegel briefly overlapped with the Jena set in Jena, and had to leave in a hurry when Napoleon invaded (just barely saving the only draft of Phenomenology of Self — weird to think of a time when making backups was actually hard and losing valuable work was not attributable to sheer carelessness). But his choice of 1806 is at least as defensible as Fukuyama’s choice of 1991 (which I think is actually the correct date implied by the model).
According to World Machine theory, the Divergence Machine began to emerge around 1600, and was completed and put into production in 2000. So the 1750/1850 period is likely where the S-curves cross, so to speak; the rising curve of the DM intersecting the plateau of the MM and begining to disrupt it. Viewed in this light, the events in that period lend themselves to a specific interpretation.
First, the Enlightenment was divergent in content, but convergent in intent. The intellectual content was pluralist, as suggested by the fact that it took an encyclopedia to synthesize it, rather than a single authoritative interpretation. Its natural tendency was to spark a sort of Cambrian explosion of divergent thought, which did in fact happen, in the form of Romanticism and in the historicist-contingent Hegelian eras that followed. But on its own terms, the Enlightenment was convergent. It attempted to construct a monolithic understanding of the world and the place of humans within it, to directly compete with the similarly monolithic understandings of received tradition. By this account, we can think of the Enlightenment as a late-stage infrastructure project of the Modernity Machine. The Toyota Prius phase between IC and EV automobiles, so to speak.
But centrifugal forces overcame centripetal ones, and it was the post-Kant inheritors of the legacy of the Enlightenment who actually ported its logic to it’s natural home in the Divergence Machine. The idea of the self inaugurated by John Locke was taken to its natural conclusion by Fichte, who laid the foundations for thinkers like Freud who came a century later. The logic of the universe as first perceived by Newton, which led to a reductionist understanding of it, was engineered into the logic of divergence by Humboldt, who foreshadowed Darwin’s completion of the task of conceptualizing nature in divergentist terms.
Divergence dynamics fundamentally yield to, rather than resist, centrifugal forces, allowing the monolithic to give way to the pluralistic; objective consensus to subjective dissensus; and perhaps most importantly, the synchronized to the asynchronous.
This last is the counterintuitive lesson of the evolution of time-keeping: Clocks drove divergence as they improved, not convergence.
Technology is generally not considered part of the Enlightenment story, which is generally considered a story about science and philosophy. But it should be part of the story. Particularly a technology that was the computing of its time — time-keeping.
The most significant developments in time-keeping unfolded over exactly the same period that the events on our timeline unfold. Galileo’s pendulum discovery around 1637 begins the story, and John Harrison’s H4 chronometer, which finally claimed the Longitude prize in 1761, concludes it. Over that long century, clocks grew smaller, cheaper, and far more accurate. Accurate enough to help disrupt one world machine and power its successor.
A naive view of the history of the clock is that it led to convergence and synchronization of civilization. As it turns out, this is the opposite of the actual story. I’ve been sort of clumsily reconstructing the actual story since around 2018 (when I gave a talk about it), and I wished I’d actually read Landes earlier, because it makes the story clear, and I didn’t have to reinvent the wheel.
The big lesson of the book is that between the 13th century, when large mechanical clocks began to be built, and our era, when we finally shed our quartz wristwatches in favor of ubiquitous GPS-driven time displays on all our screens, two sets of changes unfolded in tension with each other: Time-keeping simultaneously got more precise (due to fundamental scientific-technical advances) and more decentralized (due to becoming smaller and cheaper, via a Moore’s Law type dynamic).
To put it crudely, in the Modernity Machine, time was inaccurate and centralized, under the authoritarian control of the owners and keepers of monumental water clocks and mechanical turret clocks in clock towers of the 14th century. For 300 years there was a steady but mostly futile push towards both accuracy and decentralization. Small, personal-scale mechanical timepieces (comparable to modern wristwatches) were being made as early as the 14th century. The problem was, though they were very clever mechanically, they were extremely inaccurate compared to larger clocks, which were themselves pretty bad and had to be constantly reset to match solar time. At the smallest scale, the value of mechanical clocks lay more in their ability to drive complicated clockwork toys (popular with nobility around the world) than tell time.
The 17th century changed that. Galileo’s pendulum made large clocks radically more accurate, and the development of the balance spring made small, personal scale clocks and watches more accurate than the clock towers of previous centuries. Externally imposed (by monarchs and priests) time authority gave way to internally maintained time discipline. External locus of control gave way to internal locus of control. The modern self was born, with an internally clocked psyche.
Basically clocks grew far more decentralized than they grew usefully accurate (beyond a point, accuracy gains had low marginal value for pre-digital humans), and drove devolution of control over time to the smallest scales. You could now organize your personal life by your personal watch, and gain all the benefits of accurate time-keeping, without subjecting yourself to time-keeping authority. You could coordinate with personal friends and networks without relying on centralized time.
Fichte’s Ich philosophy could not have been conceived without the personalization of time. The French Revolution was arguably in part a response to the pressures created by disruptive time-keeping technologies.
This story largely played out over precisely the period that our revolutionary tale and the gear shift from MM to DM happened.
Here is one way to cash out the difference: The MM ran on centrally controlled turret clocks, the DM ran on personal-scale spring-driven watches and clocks. It was a shift comparable to the evolution from mainframe computing to iPhones, except unfolding over a century instead of half a century, and preceded by 400 years of “mainframe clock” time instead of 20 years.
The development of a usable marine chronometer allowed planetary integration to finally go from dangerous exploratory activity to routine infrastructural activity. In a way, the chronometer did to the 19th century what AI is doing to our time. A fun learning from the Landes book — John Harrison gets the credit for winning the Longitude prize, but his clock was the equivalent of IBM’s Watson AI winning Jeopardy and Deep Blue beating Kasporov — impressive and technically a legal solution to the underlying challenge, but fundamentally a dead-end and not the path technical evolution actually took later.
Marine chronometry in the form that actually powered the colonial globalization era developed from a parallel and more practical and divergent French tradition that got transplanted to England, and was arguably also the genesis of interchangeable parts manufacturing. The French tradition emphasized robust and simple designs that could be easily copied and manufactured along industrial lines, and not coincidentally, France of the same era was also the point of origin of the Système Gribeauval which eventually influenced and found its fullest expression in the American system of interchangeable parts manufacturing (see my old blog post on Hall’s Law). I haven’t yet traced the direct connection between the Système Gribeauval and the chronometry story, but I’m convinced it’s there to be found. Both also curiously foreshadow the worse-is-better principle in computer programming from our era.
That’s just a taste. There’s a lot more insight to be found in the history of time-keeping for the future of computing and AI.
I want to conclude with a broader point. The mature clock, at cheap-and-accurate wrist-watch level, was a pure divergence driver, it desynchronized civilization that had previously been kept inefficiently synchronized by large turret clocks calibrated to solar time.
The clock is also divergent in a deeper way, as a new class of artifact that sustained seemingly endless variety. The technology of mechanical clocks existed in a dizzyingly pluralistic and varied design space of dozens of different types of escapements, hundreds of clever mechanical engineering tricks, and astoundingly complex mechanism powered mathematical calculations. An early genre of clocks was “equation” clocks, designed to keep clock time synchronized with Sun time. By the 18th century, mechanical clocks had gotten too accurate to be calibrated by the Sun, and could be used to actually track and measure variations in solar time. But since tradition (and inaccurate old clocks) were bound to solar time, for a transitional period, people needed to translate. Hence equation clocks to translate. Eventually, solar time was abandoned and mechanical clock time became the standard. Before then, clocks showed varying day/night hours to match a “day” defined by sunrise-to-sunset rather than a fixed 12 hours. After, sunrise and sunset times were allowed to vary on the mechanical clock.
Clocks then, weren’t just like computers in our time. They were computers. Rigidly specialized mechanical computers by our standards, but radically flexible and programmable by the standards of 18th century technology’s familiar technologies like swords or cannon. The clock was the first technology that could compute, be “programmed,” and inventively embodied by a dizzying and growing array of specific designs (which should be analogized to software rather than computer hardware). Designs that could not just keep time and translate among times, but also drive a near-biological ecology of clockwork devices. Steampunk is less about steam power than clockwork mechanical governance of devices.
This topic obviously bleeds into my book project (which I’ve refactored significantly and will be doing an update on soon), so I’ll save more thoughts for that.
But the tldr of this preliminary synthesis is that the cutover from the Modernity Machine to the Divergence Machine happened somewhere in middle century of 1750-1850, culturally marked by the culmination of the Enlightenment project, and the beginning of divergent post-Enlightenment projects that inherited its divergent soul. This transition was marked by revolutions at all levels from bloody to bloodless.

COMSO chief Col. Tim Trimailo says transparency, patience and a clear military value proposition matter as much as technical innovation
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South Korean optical payload developer TelePIX and Indian propulsion specialist Bellatrix Aerospace have teamed up on a very low Earth orbit geospatial demonstration mission slated for 2028.
The post Bellatrix and TelePIX plan 2028 air-breathing VLEO imaging demonstration appeared first on SpaceNews.

We are in the geospatial era of warfare in which information derived from satellites is as strategically critical as territorial control. The progressive dissolution of the distinction between the civil […]
The post Spatial data has become a weapon of war in the US-Iran war appeared first on SpaceNews.

A number of new Chinese state-led and commercial rockets are set for debuts and fresh first stage recovery attempts in the coming weeks and months.
The post China’s latest batch of new and reusable rockets are close to launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket exploded on its launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Florida, during a May 28 hotfire test, destroying the rocket and causing extensive pad damage.
The post New Glenn rocket explodes on Cape Canaveral pad appeared first on SpaceNews.

The low-orbit satellite constellation is intended to track aircraft, cruise missiles and other airborne threats
The post Space Force awards SpaceX $4.16 billion to build satellite network for airborne target tracking appeared first on SpaceNews.
With deadly precision, the Trump administration has launched dozens of attacks on small boats in the waters off South America, killing nearly 200 people in a campaign U.S. officials say is meant to curb the flow of illicit drugs to the United States.
But almost nine months into the operation, epidemiologists, addiction scientists and public health experts say cocaine, by far the top drug smuggled out of South America, is as easy to get in much of the United States as it was before the strikes began.
The findings — based on evaluations of street prices, lethal overdoses, purity of samples and drug seizures at U.S. borders — raise questions about the effectiveness of the largest U.S. military deployment in Latin America in decades.
Here is more from the NYT. And here is another report on supply elasticity, note that European airlines are still flying.
The post Supply is elastic, installment #1637 appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
This day is kept strictly as a holy-day, being the King’s Coronation. We lay long in bed, and it rained very hard, rain and hail, almost all the morning. By and by Creed and I abroad, and called at several churches; and it is a wonder to see, and by that to guess the ill temper of the City at this time, either to religion in general, or to the King, that in some churches there was hardly ten people in the whole church, and those poor people.
So to a coffee-house, and there in discourse hear the King of France is likely to be well again.
So home to dinner, and out by water to the Royall Theatre, but they not acting to-day, then to the Duke’s house, and there saw “The Slighted Mayde,” wherein Gosnell acted Pyramena, a great part, and did it very well, and I believe will do it better and better, and prove a good actor.
The play is not very excellent, but is well acted, and in general the actors, in all particulars, are better than at the other house.
Thence to the Cocke alehouse, and there having drunk, sent them with Creed to see the German Princess, at the Gatehouse, at Westminster, and I to my brother’s, and thence to my uncle Fenner’s to have seen my aunt James (who has been long in town and goes away to-morrow and I not seen her), but did find none of them within, which I was glad of, and so back to my brother’s to speak with him, and so home, and in my way did take two turns forwards and backwards through the Fleete Ally to see a couple of pretty [strumpets] that stood off the doors there, and God forgive me I could scarce stay myself from going into their houses with them, so apt is my nature to evil after once, as I have these two days, set upon pleasure again.
So home and to my office to put down these two days’ journalls, then home again and to supper, and then Creed and I to bed with good discourse, only my mind troubled about my spending my time so badly for these seven or eight days; but I must impute it to the disquiet that my mind has been in of late about my wife, and for my going these two days to plays, for which I have paid the due forfeit by money and abating the times of going to plays at Court, which I am now to remember that I have cleared all my times that I am to go to Court plays to the end of this month, and so June is the first time that I am to begin to reckon.
DCReport is proud to be partnering for the second consecutive year with Northeastern University’s School of Journalism to bring readers the stories of a community whose disaster has slipped from the national spotlight. This year’s project, Caught in the Current: Helene Recovery in Asheville and Beyond, documents life in Western North Carolina 18 months after Tropical Storm Helene devastated the region.
Student reporters from Northeastern’s “On the Ground” embedded reporting class traveled to Asheville in early March to examine the storm’s lasting impacts on the city, its residents, and its economy. Their reporting covers the cultural, artistic, political, social, and environmental landscape of a region still grappling with the fallout long after the news cameras moved on.
“We wanted to go to Asheville and its surrounding area to examine what happens to a community after the nation’s attention turns away from something else,” said Professor Carlene Hempel, Northeastern University’s faculty member leading the project. “We found that many Western North Carolina residents are still grappling with the fallout of the storm all these months later. ‘Caught in the Current’ is a collection of their stories — of loss, of continuing trauma, of recovery and of healing. But it is everyone else’s story too.”
The Asheville project follows last year’s inaugural collaboration, Flint Unfiltered: Stories from An American Water Crisis, in which Northeastern student journalists reported on the people of Flint, Michigan, a decade after the water crisis that made international headlines and then faded from view. As with Flint, the Asheville coverage will be dual-published on DCReport.org and Northeastern’s Caught In the Current multimedia magazine, and the two organizations plan to co-host a panel discussion in the near future.
The partnership is part of DCReport’s broader mentoring program for emerging journalists, launched with the Next Echo Foundation to pair experienced reporters and editors with the next generation of writers.
“Fostering the careers of student and early-stage journalists isn’t a side project for us — it’s central to what we do,” said David Cay Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist that is the Co-Founder and Editor-at-Large of DCReport. “And it’s just as important that we keep telling the stories that others either aren’t talking about, or haven’t talked about in a long time. Asheville is exactly that kind of story. The cameras left, but the people are still there, still rebuilding. Seeing these young reporters bring those voices forward is the whole point.”
In addition to amplifying the project via republishing the content and also sharing on social media and other communications, DCReport, via its parent organization, Next Echo Foundation, was also delighted to contribute a small financial grant to help offset some basic expenses for the students.
“Our partnership with DCReport was again incredibly helpful to us,” said Hempel. “It made a difference to our sources, from homeowners to top state officials, that their stories and words were going to reach a national audience. And it made a difference to my students that DCReport cares about impactful journalism and entrusted them to create these important and enduring packages.”
The end result is a beautiful multimedia experience featuring articles, podcasts, videos and an amazing soundscape across the Caught In the Current digital magazine, adding a powerful element that sticks with readers.
Coverage will roll out on DCReport.org starting Sunday, May 31, but readers are encouraged to take in the full multimedia experience by visiting the Caught In the Current website HERE.

Azariah Baker studied media advocacy as a master’s student at Northeastern University and graduated in May 2026. After earning a bachelor’s degree in music industry, she continued her education with concentrations on intellectual properties and advocacy for the rights of creatives from underrepresented communities. She has experience self developing a curriculum for young creatives centered around intellectual properties and copyrights. She is currently working on establishing a music supervision company that provides small independent creatives with low production budgets and free music for their visual media and art. Azariah served as our video and audio producer.

Hayes Botnick is a graduate student at Northeastern University studying media innovation and data communication. Hayes obtained his bachelor’s degree in English from Skidmore College in 2023. He is an experienced video editor and sound mixer, having worked on several feature films and independent projects throughout New York, New Jersey and Boston. Currently, he leads a course in the fundamentals of video editing with Adobe Premiere at Northeastern.

Ali Caudle graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and minors in law and public policy and women’s, gender and sexuality studies. Ali has worked as a digital media assistant at the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, a communications assistant at My Life My Choice and an editor for The Huntington News. Her reporting interests include legal issues and U.S. politics, with particular emphasis on state and local governance. Raised in San Francisco, she has lived in Montana, and is now based in Boston with her puppy, Willow. Ali served as our social media manager.

Eva Ciolek Passeri is pursuing a degree in journalism and political science at Northeastern University with a minor in sociology. She is interested in social justice, history, pop culture, environment and science communication. She serves as the podcast and archival team director for WRBB, the school’s radio station, where she also hosts her own show. She writes and photographs for The Huntington News, serves as a content creator and outreach leader for the SEDS Astronomy Club, and is a member of the pre-law fraternity Phi Alpha Delta. Eva served as our social media graphic designer and led our expert’s database.

Mia Filler graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and interaction design. She brings experience across social media strategy, UX/UI design, writing and video production. She completed two co-ops with the City of Cambridge in the Communications Office, where she produced public-facing content to communicate city values, initiatives and services to Cambridge residents. At Northeastern, she has written for The Huntington News and Tastemakers Magazine and served as a web and data visualization designer for Scout. Mia served as our data visualization editor.

Valentina Gutierrez graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 as an English and journalism combined major. She’s the president of Artistry Magazine, a journalistic arts and culture publication at Northeastern University. She’s also editor-in-chief of Northeastern’s Spectrum Literary Magazine and co-lead of Spectrum’s Creative Committee. In her free time, she enjoys reading, writing, thrifting her next fashion find and being active. Valentina managed our media partnership and public relations team.

Namira Haris graduated in 2026 with a master’s degree from Northeastern University, studying media innovation and data communication. She focuses on multimedia and data-driven storytelling, creating interactive web projects, videos, podcasts and visual investigations on social equity, technology and environmental impact. Namira is the assistant editor at Storybench and has experience in digital reporting, data tools and long-form multimedia journalism. She has also worked in editorial, digital content and strategic communications roles where she focused on analytics strategy. Namira served as the webmaster for our project.

Claire Ogden graduated with a master’s degree from the School of Journalism at Northeastern and is also a freelance journalist, arts writer and nonfiction film producer based in Somerville. She works as the communications specialist for Northeastern’s Center for Transformative Media and the Center for the Arts. In her free time, she loves running, rock climbing and watching documentaries. Claire served as our logistics coordinator.

Beck Orten is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in journalism and cultural anthropology with a minor in Arabic. Beck’s writing and photography have been featured in Northeastern’s Huntington News, the Addison Independent, VT Digger, Blue Marble Review and more. She is passionate about global perspectives and international politics, having traveled to Morocco, Palestine, Jordan and Turkey to volunteer, photograph and report. She enjoys both traditional art and graphic design. Beck served as the chief illustrator for our project.

Grace Sawin graduated from Northeastern University in 2026 with a degree in journalism and environmental science. She is passionate about environmental justice and public service and hopes to amplify community voices through her writing. She has previously completed two co-ops as a press assistant in the Office of Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and as a communications assistant at MIT’s Climate Change Engagement Program. At Northeastern, she is the editor-in-chief of Woof Magazine and the media director at WRBB 104.9 FM. Grace served as our chief copy editor and manager of classroom operations.

Sydney Woogerd is studying journalism and international affairs at Northeastern University with a focus on multimedia storytelling. She serves as co-photo director for The Avenue Magazine, a student-led fashion publication, where she directs visual strategy and creates editorial content. She has also contributed to The Huntington News and Artistry Magazine as a writer and photographer documenting community stories across Boston. In her free time, she enjoys yoga, baking and photography. Sydney served as our photo editor.
“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 DCReport and Northeastern University Journalism Students Reunite for A Second Year of Embedded Reporting appeared first on DCReport.org.
Thursday night's detonation of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket during a static-fire test produced a spectacular fireball over Florida, sending shards of the rocket flying far and wide, into the sea and across the coastal scrubland nearby.
With sunrise on Friday teams from Blue Origin, the US Space Force, and NASA will be able to begin more thoroughly assessing the damage to Blue Origin's facilities and begin picking up pieces of the rocket.
— Nick Johnson (@NickJohnson315) May 29, 2026
On Thursday evening, Blue Origin attempted to test fire its massive New Glenn rocket at its Florida launch site, but something went very wrong after engine ignition. The super heavy lift rocket exploded in spectacular and disastrous fashion.
The static fire test was being filmed by NASASpaceflight.com on its Space Coast Live feed, which captured video of the conflagration that followed the destruction of the booster. The first stage of New Glenn, fueled with methane, produced a massive fireball above the launch site along the Florida coast, LC-36A. It is possibly the most dramatic and powerful rocket explosion since the Soviet Union's N1 rocket was destroyed during a launch attempt in 1969.
Blue Origin's New Glenn just blew up at LC-36 while attempting to Static Fire ahead of NG-4.https://t.co/tANS0dWyIH pic.twitter.com/PztxFoBqIw
— NSF - NASASpaceflight.com (@NASASpaceflight) May 29, 2026

United Launch Alliance overcame adverse weather conditions to launch a batch of Amazon Leo’s broadband internet satellites on its Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Friday evening.
The countdown for the mission dubbed Amazon Leo 7 by ULA and Leo Atlas 07 (LA-07) by Amazon began at 12:13:30 p.m. EDT (1613:30 UTC) at T-minus 6 hours, 20 minutes. There countdown featured two planed, 30-minute holds with the first coming before fueling begins at T-minus 2 hours.
The second hold at T-minus four minutes had to be extended to allow for teams to get past a spot of unacceptable weather. Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 41 happened at 7:53 p.m. EDT (2353 UTC), shortly after sunset.
This was the seventh batch of production satellites that ULA launched on behalf of Amazon and the penultimate mission for the tech giant using an Atlas 5 rocket. The rocket flew on a north-easterly trajectory upon leaving the launch pad.
The 45th Weather Squadron forecast a dismal outlook for the Atlas 5 flight, stating that there was just a 30 percent chance for acceptable weather conditions during the window.
“For the next several days, an influx of moisture and westerly-to-southwesterly low-level winds will bring prime conditions for afternoon showers and thunderstorms along the east coast of Florida,” launch weather officers wrote. “For both the primary and backup launch days, there is high likelihood of weather violations. Almost every rule will have a chance to violate but the Cumulus Cloud Rule, Anvil Cloud Rules, and Surface Electric Fields Rule are the most likely.”

The rocket that launched on Friday was designated AV-113 and was the 109th launch of an Atlas 5 rocket to date. This was the 22nd launch of the rocket in the Atlas 5 551 configuration, which featured five solid rocket boosters.

Amazon purchased a total of 47 launches from ULA: 38 Vulcan rockets and nine Atlas 5 rockets. However, because the debut of Vulcan was delayed, Amazon moved its two prototype satellites (branded as Project Kuiper at the time) and flew them in 2023 on one of its nine Atlas 5 rockets one a dedicated mission called Protoflight.
After the LA-07 mission launches, Amazon Leo will have just one Atlas 5 rocket remaining. The Vulcan rocket remains grounded since the USSF-87 mission in February suffered an SRB nozzle burn through.
Amazon purchased more than 108 rockets in order to launch its first-generation constellation, which will consist of more than 3,200 satellites in low Earth orbit.
The Federal Communications Commission requires Amazon to have half its constellation in operation by the end of July 2026, but as of Friday afternoon, the company only has about 300 satellites in orbit. The company filed a request to relax that requirement and that is still being evaluated.
Amazon was counting on flying its satellites aboard Blue Origin’s New Glenn rockets starting as soon as June 4, but the May 28 explosion of the New Glenn rocket dashed those hopes. With the rocket’s launch pad seriously damaged, it wasn’t immediately clear when New Glenn would fly again.
Amazon Leo confirmed on Friday that its satellites were at the company’s payload processing facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center at the time of the explosion and were not harmed. Separately, ULA said that its launch pad infrastructure was not affected by the explosion.
“Teams are supporting the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Emergency Operations Center (EOC) and assessing ULA Atlas facilities for any crossover items. The team has completed an initial assessment, and the facility power and purges all appear nominal at SLC-41,” ULA said in a statement.
“The rocket remains safely on the pad. The rocket and spacecraft are healthy. The team will continue to monitor the launch vehicle and ground systems and provide updates when available.”
ULA said its final launch of an Atlas 5 551 rocket supporting the Amazon Leo constellation will launch in July 2026.

Today we will pour one out for the vaunted technical interview process, which is on its last leg. And we’ll talk a little about what’s replacing it.
This post has been almost 35 years in the making; that’s how long I have been conducting technical interviews. And for a few of those decades, I also worked to try to improve the process itself. I’ve had to care a lot about it, because it’s so broken.
It turns out interviewing was broken long before I learned the trade, and despite the many attempts to band-aid it, it’s still broken today. It has managed to survive in spite of that. But it is finally dying on its own. People are a bit unclear on what’s next, so we’ll talk about some of our options.
But it’s not an easy path I bring you, no silver bullet. Remember that, grasshopper, when you get to the end and come back to yell at me.
The Two Big Dogs
Back at Amazon, we had this elite group, the Bar Raisers, which I hear is similar to a role at Microsoft they call As-Appropriate (AA). In both cases, a trusted interviewer (the BR/AA) is assigned to every interview loop, and has the power to veto any unqualified people the interviewers try to sneak through. I was a BR, and also part of “Bar Raisers Core”: a small group Bezos and Dalzell tasked with defining the BR role itself, choosing new bar raisers, training them, and reporting on the program’s efficacy.
The BR and AA roles are a tacit acknowledgement that you can’t trust your interview teams to make good hiring decisions. Which even more broadly, suggests that if every single interview loop needs a babysitter, then it is a flawed process. But we were doing our best.
Of course we don’t frame it as babysitting, naturally. We cheerlead and rah-rah about keeping a “high hiring bar.” And BR/AA aren’t the end of it. There are tons of other interview process band-aids, all variations on how you conduct four to six interviews in a single day. Everything revolves around fitting the assessment into a single round or two of interviews. That part never changes.
None of these band-aids really help — we still all hire tons of false positives (unqualified) and turn away false negatives (actually qualified), despite every attempt to make the process perfect, or even good.
The reality is that talent evaluation, a corner of our industry that hasn’t changed much in five-ish decades, is embarrassingly busted. It just doesn’t work that well in practice.
The people who know this best, and who feel it most day to day, and who ultimately have the least power to change it, are all in HR. The tech side of the tech industry doesn’t want to change it because of inertia: the process has worked just barely well enough all these years to resist an overhaul. So all HR can do is show us how bad it is, and then try to do damage control when it fails. I’ll share an amazing story about this in the next section.
After Amazon, I kept on trying to improve the interviewing process while I was at Google. I spent years on Google Kirkland’s “Hiring Committee”, where we processed thousands of Microsoft résumés, would-be escapees from over the hill in Redmond. I published a 30-page internal résumé screening guide. I even wrote a blog post, Get That Job At Google, which is still handed out by Google recruiters, seventeen years later. I took this stuff pretty seriously back then!
In short, there is very little that I don’t know about the tech-assessment business. And I’m about to pull a Kitchen Confidential on it.
This post comes with a diagnosis and a prescription. But the important part is the diagnosis. I want to convince you that we need a radical change in how we assess people, and that tech interviews are on their last leg.
Let’s see how well I do. As for the solution, we can figure that out once we agree that it’s a problem.
Remember That Time We All Fired Ourselves?
The outcomes from interviewing are statistically terrible. Google did wave upon wave of analysis over the years, and all the results were incredibly depressing.
To name just a few off the top of my head: interviewers barely agreed with each other. Put the same candidate in front of two of our sharpest people and you’d routinely get a confident “strong hire” from one and a flat “no” from the other. There’s no oracle interviewer, not even Jeff Dean.
And once people were actually on the job, their interview scores told you next to nothing about how they’d do — at least the way we ran the loops. Hell, some of our star performers failed their Google interviews four or five times, finally got in after 2+ years, and then outshone everyone else.
Interviewing, it turns out, is a big game of darts. A “do I like you” dating round.
All we could find at Google, from all the statistics, is that there are a bunch of horrible unconscious interviewer biases keeping us from hiring people who ought to be working there. Google never published the results internally and I just got to hear rumors from HR friends, but yeah it was pretty bad.
Gergely asked me about the tech-assessment situation in one of our podcasts, and I told him a story that I think is relevant so I’ll recount it here. You can hear the longer, funnier version over on his podcast.
At Google, rather than putting a little black desk on every interview loop, they just assumed all the interviewers had their heads up their arses (an evidence-based assumption), and they formed a committee at each site called Hiring Committee (HC). This committee acted as the final arbiter and gatekeeper on all hiring for the site. And I was on it for quite a few years.
Our HC group at the time was roughly fifteen strong, and included many local powerhouse Googler colleagues, including co-inventors of huge technologies, authors of interviewing book series, and people who are now very senior leaders.
We felt like we knew our shit.
One day, the recruiters gave us a special round of packets to review. In these special packets, we were able to read the interviewer notes and candidate responses. All personal details were stripped out, and we were told it was a “calibration exercise.” We had to do our regular voting job with these special packets, and see how it went. I think we may have assumed they were from another site, since cross-site calibration was common.
Our group did our job, and voted not to hire about 2/3 of the packets. This was about par for the course.
But surprise surprise, this time, those were our own packets from when we had all interviewed at Google. The recruiters had tricked us into reviewing our own interview packets, and we had voted not to hire most of our own group.
For that brief moment, we all had a glimpse into how utterly broken our process was. The people-team had rubbed our noses in it.
But we never fixed it.

Change is Taboo
I once challenged the interview process at Google in a public mailing list, and an Important Eng Leader took me aside and told me I’d “farted in church.” People are not allowed to question whether the interview process is valid. Challenging it is akin to casting aspersions on the entire engineering staff. First of all, how dare you?
Moreover, many engineers and managers continue to defend the process, even knowing how broken it is, because it’s a gauntlet that they passed, so others must, too. Which sounds very silly when I say it like that, but you hear echoes of it whenever you suggest changing the process.
When you add it all up, and putter around with it for about 35 years, you ultimately find that interviewing, which aims to determine “can this person do this job,” is fundamentally unable to answer that question with any degree of reliability. It’s bordering on pseudoscience.
Bravo to Google for at least trying to measure it. They did find some actionable stuff. For instance, any more than four interviews and you’re just playin’ with your food. Stuff like that. But overall it was a bleak and mostly non-actionable picture.
Most companies never introspect at all on their own interviewing processes — at least, not in any real “we’re aiming to change this” sense. They might shuffle around which competencies get covered, or what the debrief meeting might look like.
The fundamental process — a short series of 1-hour interviews — hasn’t changed in fifty years. We have all been using the same stupid, broken interview process since before most of us were born. Dunno about you, but I’ve had enough of it.
So in today’s blog post, I’m going to show you everything that’s been tried, then point in the direction of a better way. And as an industry, we can start moving in that direction. As long as enough of us are doing approximately the same thing, it should gain traction.
I believe that within a few years we will mostly stop conducting technical interviews, and they will fade into a cute historical footnote like phrenology (which I would not be shocked to hear some interviewers still use). Interviewing will become just another somethin’ weird we used to do.
You ready? I am. Let’s goooo!
The Signal Problem
Talent assessment is a problem of signal. You need a lot of it. You want to try to paint an increasingly clear picture of the candidate, and that takes a lot of data.
The first signal source you get is a candidate’s résumé. “A résumé,” as Dave Barry tells us, “is much more than just a piece of paper. It is a piece of paper with lies written all over it.” Companies get thousands to millions of résumés per year, and the signal-to-noise ratio is awful. AI-assisted writing is exacerbating the problem, and résumés have become all but useless as a signal today.
What we used to do first was a technical phone screen. They were super hard, for both sides. Everyone hated them. Imagine writing code for someone with only audio. Zoom made them obsolete. But even those awful phone screens were still a much better signal than a résumé, because you get to spend time with the person.
The next level of signal is “work completed”, which includes credentials and assessments like coding academies and challenges, as well as the person’s OSS work. They are both weak signal sources because you don’t get to work with the person while they’re doing it. But they can be a useful tie-breaker or foot-in-the-door signal that boosts you to the next evaluation stage.
The hiring signal doesn’t start to improve dramatically until you get to on-site interviews. But even in-person interviewing is infamously unlike real-world work. How does interviewing at a whiteboard compare to working with them in real life? I think we all know the answer to that.
So you get a few minutes with their résumé, a half hour video screen, and a handful of in-person interviews. Today’s standard hiring process only involves collecting a few hours of signal, in order to make a decision that could last years.
Provisional Employment to the Rescue
The gold standard talent-assessment signal, when available, is an internship. This situates the candidate as a quasi-employee for typically around 3 months. They are part of a team, they get “real” work — as real as the team can make it, which varies — and they are evaluated on how well they complete that work.
A 3-month internship is self-evidently a much stronger signal than a one-day interview loop. Chances are, unless you really drop the ball on managing the internship (it’s easier to mess up than you’d think), then you’re going to have a much clearer picture of their skills and capabilities, and how well they “mesh” in your team, than you did at the start of the internship. The signal is so much stronger than the interview loop that you often ignore the interview feedback when making the final decision. It was just what got the intern their foot in the door, and the internship itself turns into the assessment.
I’ve seen companies go even further than an internship, in their quest to find the Right People For The Job. The first company I worked for, Geoworks, had a strict requirement: every single candidate had to complete a six-month co-op, before they would make the hiring decision.
The co-op resembled a summer internship, but we were highly paid full-time employees (with benefits for anyone who didn’t have them from school), doing hardcore real work for twice as long, all of us desperately wondering if we were going to get hired at the end of it.
There is a material difference between the signal from an internship (~7 weeks of usable work time after ramp-up) vs a co-op (5 months actually working). That year, 1992, Geoworks hired 3 out of 8 of us. Crazy high bar, it felt like they were making new Witchers. Sad for the ones who didn’t make it. But their approach produced a company of nearly all stars and superstars.
As evidence of the co-op’s effectiveness, Amazon acqui-hired the Geoworks Seattle office in 1999, a few months after I joined, bringing in nearly 30 engineers (I kicked off the process myself, and it was surreal to see my old coworkers wandering the halls a few months later.) Amazon leaders have said many times, and I’ve even heard it from an old-timer VP as recently as two weeks ago, that the Geoworks group was by far the strongest group of people they ever brought in. Many Geoworkers went on to do incredible things at Amazon and/or Google.
So the Geoworks 6-month co-op is platinum-level signal. Can you go further? How far are you willing to go? On the supply side, the University of Waterloo famously sends their Computer Science students through a total of six internships, giving them roughly 2 years of real-world work experience before they graduate. This boosts the signal out of Waterloo, and companies compete fiercely for Waterloo interns and grads above all other schools.
What we’re talking about here is provisional employment. It’s lazy evaluation before binding the “hire” variable. It doesn’t matter if it’s an internship, a co-op, or a contract-to-hire, it’s a temporary position, not a part-time one: Provisional employment is a different axis from fractional employment. Provisional employment is currently the best solution the industry has found for the problem of knowing reliably who to hire, before you hire them.
But wait, if provisional roles are so effective, why bother with making them provisional? Why not just hire people, put them to work, and fire them if they don’t work out?
If only it were so easy. Actually, it is, except for, you know, The Law. Most provisional employment schemes are workarounds for U.S. employment law, which, believe it or not, affords employees some protections, even if those protections are weak compared to other parts of the world.
In the U.S. you generally can’t just up and fire someone, even if they are underperforming, even if it’s at-will employment, without risking a lawsuit and some sort of cash outlay. This is what makes hiring decisions so high-stakes.
But if the employee is provisionally employed, well, that’s a different matter. Their internship or contract is just “over.” Thanks for playing.
So in situations where the company can get away with it, they can and absolutely do use provisional roles to defer making permanent role decisions for as long as possible.
You call this a rescue?
OK, then! If provisional employment is the answer (it’s not, but let’s pretend it is for the moment, since it’s best-of-class for now), then why aren’t more companies requiring internships before making their hiring decisions?
The reason is, hiring engineers has historically been so competitive that you couldn’t convince a senior engineer to do an internship. College kids might have all the freedom in the world, but adults have families and mortgages and need steady employment. They did not want to sign up for a job they might not get to continue after 3 to 6 months. A job where they’re actually being constantly evaluated for the go/no-go decision. It’s a no-brainer that they’ll go elsewhere.
So the industry converged on not requiring it.
That was the old equilibrium, and it only held because good engineers always had somewhere better to be. That assumption is starting to wobble. I won’t belabor what I think you all can already feel coming, but if a sizable slice of the skilled-labor pool ends up “between gigs” at the same time, there may be no elsewhere for them to go.
At that point, if there are enough people on the market, try-before-you-buy is no longer an insult that you’d never dare float to a senior engineer. It’s a foot in the door that they’ll be glad to have.
Today’s hiring process is heavily optimized, and it’s going to be hard to change. I suspect this is why we are seeing so many tweets from founders firing their HR teams. HR is designed to keep things compliant with laws that are struggling to keep up with the pace of change, so they’re admittedly in a tough spot. Just be aware that if you want to make radical changes to your hiring process, there will be strong pushback from all corners of your org.
In spite of that pushback, I see some forces appearing on the horizon which are converging to squeeze the system, after a half a century, to its breaking point.
We’re seeing the first breakdowns at the fringes — offline assessments poisoned by AI cheating, online interviews turning out to be fronts for sanctioned North Korean IT workers, résumé floods that cannot be dealt with in any reasonable way. The system is undergoing tremendous strain that it was never designed for.
There’s an even more fundamental breakdown happening, which is the rate of change of the shape of knowledge-work roles. Hiring used to be something that changed very slowly. Every ten years there would be a revolution: internet, mobile, cloud, and people would have to learn some new stuff, and update job descriptions. But for the most part, the fundamentals of computer science, software engineering, project management etc. have remained stable for decades.
This meant that it was pretty easy to do long-term planning for what kinds of questions you want to ask people, what sorts of things to evaluate candidates on, and how much faith you can put in the results. But that has changed almost overnight, and it continues to change pretty rapidly. We no longer know what job roles to post, what questions to ask, nor how to evaluate candidates properly using any of our existing processes.
So. It ain’t working. And yet we’re still not talking about what it will take to change it. Because it’s unthinkable. It’s farting in church.
Let’s talk about what a real rescue would look like.
Let’s Stop Simulating Work
Every step of the interview process is an elaborate attempt to simulate actually working with someone. Reading their résumé, you close your eyes and imagine what it would have been like to get all those Ph.D.s. They must be insufferable. Moving on! Then there’s the phone screen, where you try not to imagine them wearing a gorilla suit, and usually fail. Then the interview, where you learn how they actually smell.
Whiteboards, made-up design questions–it’s all just theater, trying to act like it’s real work.
We’ve already established that the gold standard of assessment is working directly with someone on real work, in a real environment, for as long as needed to make the call.
So the short answer is, stop simulating. Post real pieces of work, let the candidate do it, look at what they actually produced, and decide from that work.
We never did this before for all sorts of reasons. It’s a lot of work to carve out work. Hard to get people the credentials they need, etc. Carving up work might be easier with AI now in some cases, but still pretty hard if you’re a locked down enterprise.
Another reason is that on the supply side, nobody wants to sign up to do a bunch of free work just to be rejected. If you just put up work, the candidates incur all the risk, meaning they walk away with nothing if you don’t hire them. You can pay them, which helps soften it, but they’re still looking for full-time work that you might not offer them in the end.
So until very recently, the idea of using real work as an assessment tool has encountered too much resistance on both sides of the interview table.
Campfire Is The New Interview
If you spend any time doomscrolling on X, the new meta in SF is “come work with us for a few days.” Paid, real codebase, real ticket, real team. From what I’ve heard, it generates the best signal people have ever seen, by a mile. I don’t think it beats a six-month co-op, but it’s a hell of a lot better than a standard interview loop.
So there’s already a movement away from traditional interviewing, which is why I feel comfortable making the claim that it’s already starting to die out on its own. It’s being replaced by bringing people in for longer stints. I’ve been calling this working model the campfire: pull up a log, build something together, see how it feels. Bringing in outside contributors is pretty easy, as they’ll have agents and should be able to come up to speed very quickly. If they can’t, there’s your signal.
But even though people are experimenting with it, the way it’s done today is a mess. Every shop is reinventing a bespoke solution. And it’s unportable: candidates do brilliant work in a trial, they don’t get the offer for reasons, and the signal evaporates. The next company they campfire-interview at starts them at zero.
Count Work Twice
Big companies all have mountains of work. Heck, everyone has mountains of work. And most companies are engulfed in a forest fire of résumés. If you can carve real pieces off your work mountain, and connect them to that fire, you can make a campfire model that scales.
Great for you, you get outside help with your work mountain. But how can it be made fair for the candidates contributing work? Easy: You make the work count twice. Once for you: you get strong assessment signal, and some real output from candidates that you will often get to keep, or at least use as a starting point.
And then, importantly, each work item also counts once for the candidate: they walk away with a permanent, portable record of what they did and how well they did it, signed by you, whether or not you make an offer.
When candidates get to walk away with something of lasting value that they can keep forever, something that may even compound over time, it no longer feels like “six hours of free work to get rejected.” It feels like a six hour investment in a permanent small reputation bump. That’s infinitely better than a flat rejection.
Make Interviewing A Profit Center
Interviewing has always been a cost center. It costs engineer-hours to produce a yes or a no, which is why people have resisted increasing interviewing time to improve the signal. It’s already considered a lot. But if you run things campfire-style, it potentially flips into a profit center. And it can pay for itself twice: once in real work shipped, and once again in something else you could probably use more of, which is gravity.
Every stamp that you hand out, pass or fail, leaves a candidate richer than they showed up. This attracts strong candidates to you, because even your rejections are worth something to them. Stamp honestly and generously enough and you stop rooting around through a trickle of identical AI-polished résumés, and start standing up a reserve: people who’ve done real work with you, can prove it, and will pick up when you call.
But they can also walk away, and take their record with them.
This system is basically worth exactly what your honesty is worth. If you hand out gold stars to everyone, you’re just reinventing LinkedIn endorsements, which are worthless. Companies whose stamps mean anything will be the ones known for only handing them out for quality work. Being a hard, fair judge is an advantage for everyone.
Where Do the Stamps Originate?
Every rideshare platform already mints the kind of record we’re talking about here: star ratings, badges for this and that, rides completed, Grab and Uber have all of it. The one thing wrong with it is that it’s trapped on each platform and disappears if the driver leaves. The whole trick to reinventing talent assessment is letting the workers carry the assessments out the door.
I’m aware of some solutions evolving in this space, both commercial and open-source, and I’m excited to share more when I can. Candidly, I wanted to hand you a coherent solution today, and through a combination of running out of space, and Opus 4.8 being way too goddamn critical of everything all the time (jfc), I decided I’d hold it for now. We’ll all just have to start experimenting.
But now you have the shape of it. Please, treat any prescription I’ve made here as a sketch. Mostly I just want you to come around on the diagnosis, and agree that we need to fix it properly for the first time in 50 years. Maybe you conclude that everyone has to require six-month co-ops. I don’t care. As long as it’s not more of the same. I just wanted to move the Overton window a bit.
Personally, I think campfire is the most intellectually satisfying solution I’ve heard as a viable replacement for our aging interview infrastructure. Hope to see you at a campfire soon!
1. Where are the economies of scale in homebuilding?
2. Peter Thiel and Argentina (NYT).
3. Discourse on classical guitar.
4. How many dissertations are AI-written?
6. New algorithm for ranking VCs.
The post Friday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Back when I started blogging in 2011, I saw my main function as technocratic — I would discuss policy ideas with other intellectual econ types, and wise policymakers at the Fed, in Congress, or in the Obama administration might put those ideas into practice. Since 2016, however, technocracy has felt less and less important, and policymaking has felt more ideological. In the second Trump term, concern for costs, benefits, and the public good seems to have entirely gone out the window — policy is now driven either by the whims of an aging egomaniac and his personality cult or the echo chamber of the online right. Tariffs and immigration raids make no sense as economic policy; they are intended as part of a nativist, isolationist ideological project. The Democratic alternative is less bad, but is still increasingly ideological, centered around the idea that corporate profits are inherently bad.
This changes the nature of my job, and in fact makes it much harder. Whereas in the past I could just recommend policies, now I have to make arguments about what kind of country we should want to have in the first place. In order to get anyone to listen to my advice, I have to be a bit less technocratic and a bit more ideological. And I have to do that at a time when the main ideologies being offered to the American public are becoming more extreme.
And yet this is the job now, so I should stop complaining and just do it. Because I do have a pretty clear picture of what kind of country I think America should be. I believe that in the 20th century, under the leadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt, the United States devised the single best governing ideology that any country has ever created: liberal nationalism.
I’ll explain what I think that means, but first I want to take a detour and point out a recent debate between two prominent commentators on the political right. One is the pseudonymous “Roman Helmet Guy”, an anti-immigration right-wing nationalist. The other is Balaji Srinivasan, my college friend, who represents a libertarian perspective and who now lives in Singapore. Balaji tried to keep the debate civil, while Roman Helmet Guy (henceforth “RHG”) was vituperative, vulgar, and accusatory. But both made interesting and important points about identity and national allegiance, and the debate ended up illustrating some points I want to make about liberal nationalism. So let me present an abridged form of the debate.
RHG started the debate by accusing Balaji of being ungrateful to America:
Balaji responded by casting doubt on the degree to which an individual’s success is attributable to the country where he succeeded, and by arguing that the global online community embodies America’s founding ideals better than America itself:
The degree to which one's success is attributable to a country's platform is hard to separate out. Obama said to conservatives: "you didn't build that, someone else made that happen." That is certainly one view, that 100% of success was due to the country platform, and zero to the individual…
[E]ven if the US government fails, even if the polarization proves too much, even if the $175T in debt takes down a once-amazing country, the Internet will be there…[I]t reflects the best of American values — free trade, free markets, free speech, free exchange of ideas — and I believe we can rebuild from it, just as Europe rebuilt from Christianity after Rome.
RHG retorted1 that Americans like Balaji ought to be loyal to the people of America, not to its ideals or its institutions:
I am not loyal to a set of values. I am loyal to the American people. You were born here. You were raised here. Educated here, made rich here. You should be loyal to the American people too. The PEOPLE. Not a set of values, not an economic system…
You fled the country and now go on podcasts talking about how tech people can ‘avoid the collapse of America.’ To you, my country and my people are just something for your class to exploit for wealth and then move on. If my people vanished from this earth, your only thought would be “How does this affect my ROI?”…My people gave you everything, yet you have no gratitude. No loyalty.
Balaji pointed out that many of the people who built America were immigrants, and that building America didn’t mean that they betrayed their country of origin. He then argued that in the modern, polarized America, it’s impossible to be loyal to the entire people; you have to choose whether to be loyal only to the red half or the blue half:
[I]f someone tries being loyal to “the American people”, does that mean being loyal to the 75 million Kamala voters, the Blue Americans? Because if you’re loyal to them, you are unfortunately no longer loyal to the Red Americans…Just like there is no Korea, only North Korea and South Korea, there is unfortunately no America any more, only Blue America and Red America.
He also accuses RHG of promoting an unequal, racialized version of national identity, in which Indians and other minorities are required to be subordinate to WASP Americans:
[W]hat test do you propose to determine whether someone is a true American, aside from their current paperwork?…[L]oyalty means symmetry. I am loyal to you if you are loyal to me. But the way you're talking about loyalty translates to servitude. I've been polite, and engaged you in good faith, but we are strangers. Yet you are demanding gratitude and even deference (!) from me, implicitly on racial grounds…
Why would anyone be loyal to a MAGA faction that arbitrarily designates countless millions to be Grade B, C, and D [Americans]? You can't just redefine the social contract overnight…with some tweets, into a…blood-and-soil America that the WASPs themselves shut down...and then get extremely mad when others don't buy into it.
RHG, in his defense, declares that he is loyal to all Americans, regardless of race or politics:
The only thing the American people demanded from you was that you employ the capital that you accumulated in our country to strengthen America and her people. The capital you accumulated under the benevolent protection of millions of American soldiers and policemen who do pick up a gun every day and put their lives on the line to defend our people…
As to which Americans you should have been loyal to: All of them. America is not an ideology. Even the most ideologically deluded idiots are still Americans. And I am happy to embrace all American citizens as my brothers and sisters, regardless of background…The truth that you’ll never understand…is that no nation of Balaji Srinivasans will ever be strong. Because you would all flee the moment things got tough, just as you fled America.
Both of the debaters make important points here. Balaji is, of course, right that it’s perfectly fine to emigrate from your country of birth, especially if that country collapses or becomes ruled by a nightmare regime. Being a refugee is not a form of ingratitude, and it’s silly to hold people to a moral standard in which anyone who moves to a different country is a traitor.
(That said, I think Balaji is being excessively panicky when he paints America as being in a state of civil war. The danger to his person and his fortune from remaining in America would have been minimal. And it’s absurd to assert that you can only be loyal to one half of the American populace or the other; Red Americans and Blue Americans are simply not in a civil war.)
RHG also goes way too far when he dismisses the idea of loyalty to American ideals. A nation’s people are important, yes, but its values and institutions are also important. Should loyalty to the Russian people have made every Soviet citizen loyal to Joseph Stalin? Should loyalty to the German people have made every citizen loyal to Hitler? No, of course not. Countries aren’t just sets of people, they’re also systems for organizing those people — the United States of America was born in 1776, not when Jamestown was founded. It’s perfectly acceptable to love your people but to reject the regime under which they live.
But at the same time, RHG makes some important points of his own. He’s absolutely right that a country in which everyone packed up and moved at the first sign of trouble would be an ineffective country. Social change requires voice, not just exit; making change requires that someone stay and fight the system, and if people keep running away they eventually run out of places to escape to.
Similarly, a country needs to be able to tax its rich people and companies in order to fund public goods (defense, courts, infrastructure, science) and to provide a social safety net. If rich people and capital are perfectly mobile, raising taxes becomes impossible, and countries have to choose between underfunding public services and running exploding deficits. In a very real sense, rich people give back to the people of their nation by staying and paying taxes.
And contra Balaji, rich people do owe a lot to the system that allowed them to get rich. Entrepreneurs immigrate to America for a reason; it would have been very hard for Elon Musk to build PayPal, Tesla, or SpaceX in South Africa. And although America is an especially good place to get rich, any functioning state is better for upward mobility than a state of anarchy. Try seeing how rich you can get in Somalia!
Much of what makes America a good place to get rich is its institutions — good courts and property rights, public safety, government support for research, and so on. But RHG is right that much of it is due to the actions of the American people — the workers who fix the roads that rich people drive on and build the offices they work in, the law-abiding regular people who behave themselves instead of overloading the justice system with crime, the taxpayers who pay for the courts and the roads and the research.
Balaji made his first millions by founding the genomics company Counsyl, which benefitted enormously from taxpayer-funded genomics research. That money came out of the pockets of regular Americans. It was channeled through American institutions, yes, but regular Americans made sacrifices for the science that allowed Balaji to get rich. It’s not possible to put a dollar amount on the debt that Balaji owes to regular Americans, but I do think some expressions of gratitude would be in order, even if delivered from Singapore.
At the same time, this raises some problems for RHG’s flavor of nationalism. Who exactly are the “people” of America that RHG is demanding that Balaji be loyal to? RHG claims that he views all Americans as his “brothers and sisters”, regardless of their politics or their background. But who counts as an American? Is it citizenship alone? Does someone who takes the oath of citizenship immediately become Roman Helmet Guy’s brother or sister? And if so, why is RHG so doggedly opposed to new immigrants, when that just means adding to his family? And if RHG has some other criterion for true American-ness besides citizenship, what is it?
This is the problem at the heart of right-wing nationalism, and there’s just no way to resolve it. If you accept citizenship as the definition of Real American-ness, then you have to admit that immigration creates Real Americans, when immigrants naturalize and/or have kids in the U.S. But if you reject citizenship, you have to rely on some more limiting, restrictive, and ultimately divisive test — race, or number of generations in the country, or whatever.
Every time rightists try to put forward a new concept like “Heritage American”, it falls flat, because the dividing lines are so arbitrary and contested. Do you only include WASPs, and kick out the Catholics? That’s kind of a non-starter, electorally. Do you include Catholics but kick out Jews? Do you bring in Jews but kick out people of Chinese and Indian and Mexican descent? What about Black Americans? Any attempt to designate a core “American people” by ethnicity, religion, or race is a non-starter electorally, so rightists typically either stick to vague hand-waving or spout deeply unpopular views from behind pseudonyms on social media.
Americans, meanwhile, overwhelmingly reject race, religion, and ethnicity as criteria for true American-ness. Most Americans of both parties are civic nationalists, of the type that make Roman Helmet Guy’s blood boil — they believe that the most important things for being a real American are citizenship, belief in the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, obeying the law, and voting in elections:

Americans themselves have little use for the kind of restrictive nationalism that rightists like Roman Helmet Guy are trying to sell them. (In fact, support for skilled immigration — the type of immigration that brought Balaji’s parents and millions of other Indians to the U.S. — is extremely high among both Republicans and Democrats.)
But this doesn’t mean that Americans would do better with rootless globalism, of the kind Balaji has embraced. The internet has created many “vertical communities” of like-minded people who chat with each other online, but those are no substitute for traditional communities of people who live near each other in physical space. Roads, schools, police, national defense, and plenty of other public goods and services can only be provided at the spatial, local level.
And in countries where people don’t feel a sense of kinship with their neighbors, public good provision becomes very hard. It’s hard to build a road if you think a lot of the benefit will go toward groups of people you don’t like. It’s harder to get people to allow the construction of new housing in their back yards when they think that people they don’t like will live there. Ethnic bloc politics is poison for democracies. A social safety net is hard to provide if you think the welfare benefits will go to groups of people you distrust or despise. And so on.
Homogeneous countries don’t have to worry as much about this problem, but a diverse country like America needs to work harder to forge people of disparate backgrounds into a single unified whole. Just saying “America has no culture except for multiculturalism” doesn’t cut it, because if Americans have nothing to bind them together in a sense of shared destiny and shared interests, the country will literally fall apart.
In the 20th century, America had an ideology that was committed to forging a single national identity from a dizzying array of backgrounds. That ideology was liberal nationalism, as promoted by the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, and by his ideological successors (including Republicans like Dwight Eisenhower).
FDR might seem an unlikely candidate for the paragon of liberal nationalism, given that he tossed around 80,000 Japanese Americans in concentration camps during World War 2 and compromised with segregationists. But those actions have to be viewed in the broader context — in an era in which racism and xenophobia were at their peak in the U.S., and growing all over the world, FDR strove mightily to turn the country in a new, more pluralistic direction.
FDR ended forced assimilation policies for Native Americans, and gave them greater autonomy on tribal lands. He maintained a group of Black advisors, created plenty of programs to help Black people economically, created cultural programs to publicize Black achievement, and preserved the testimonials of former slaves. He created campaigns promoting interfaith understanding and cooperation, helping to reduce America’s traditional anti-Catholic prejudice as well as antisemitism. His Federal Writers Project employed writers to document America’s cultural diversity.
FDR also strongly promoted the notion of America as a nation of immigrants — an idea that still deeply holds sway over the American psyche, despite rightists’ attempts to get rid of it. Here’s a radio program that the Roosevelt Administration created to promote this idea:
And everywhere, the Roosevelt administration pushed back against the sort of restrictive right-wing nationalism that was common in the early 20th century. The Department of War made a film in 1943 (released in 1947) called “Don’t Be a Sucker”, in which it advocated for an ideology of national unity and derided the kind of demagogues who tried to divide the country along ethnic and religious lines:
FDR and the liberal nationalists were not modern multicultural progressives. They strongly believed in national unity. This obviously meant patriotism, respect for American institutions, and a shared sense of national purpose during World War 2, but it also meant a lot more. FDR and the New Dealers — and especially the Office of War Information — advanced the notion that America had a unifying culture, set of democratic ideals, sense of history, and way of life that transcended Americans’ different backgrounds. The history of the New Deal is littered with examples of attempts to forge American-ness into a sort of shared civic religion.
The legacy of this liberal nationalism lives on strongly in the beliefs and values of the American people, as evidenced by the responses to the poll above about American-ness. But the civic religion that sustained American unity through the triumphant 20th century has been abandoned by the political activist classes — the modern left and right. It’s difficult to imagine today’s leftists crowing about the idea that people of various backgrounds are “Americans All”. And it’s nearly impossible to imagine today’s rightists admiring a poster like the one above but with the names Patel, Zhang, Hernandez, and Khan.
The reason American policy is insane right now is because the country is being torn apart. And it’s being torn apart by a political activist class that has abandoned the unifying ideology of 20th century America — the ideology that defeated both fascism and communism, forged a kaleidoscope of ethnicities into a single nation, and sustained U.S. prosperity and economic dominance for 70 years.
Both the rightist and leftist projects in America are doomed to fail. There’s only one ideology that can save this country, and it’s the one that worked for us before. Bring it back.
RHG also, rather ridiculously, accused Balaji of “treason” for badmouthing America from foreign shores. We need more education about what treason means.
A Poem/1 arrived the other day, not out of the blue, I did order it.
It’s an AI clock, which updates once a minute with a new time based poem. Worth noting at this point that each poem is generated centrally and the clocks are just fetching them. So only one bottle of water used per minute, rather than one per minute per clock - or whatever the standard measurement of AI use currently is.
It’s charming, because there’s something obviously off about each poem, it’s very much an AI throwing words together with a LLM, rather than, you know, good.
A Vogon Clock, if you will.
Which is slightly snappier than a Millstone Clock, from actual worst poet in the universe; Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings of 37 Wasp Villas, Greenbridge, Essex.
This is the kind of non-threatening AI that I like, one that is entertainingly not going to steal anyone’s job, apart from perhaps Paula’s.
It reminds me of very early Midjourney image generation, here’s v1 when it first came out and I asked it to create some spaceports…
…Conan the Barbarian in the style of Klimt…
And, uh, some kittens…
I think where I’m landing with AI is; I like AI that run locally, on my own (often low powered) devices, preferably ones I can train with my own data, i.e. the type of thing artists have been exploring with GANS/Neural Networks.
The AIs I’m not keen on; the ones using giant data centres, trained off pirated books, that take your job and lie to you.
I’m sure I’m being hypocritical somewhere, and the line-in-the-sand I’ve draw in very wishy-washy and prone to ebb and flow.
I’m not throwing the whole of AI in the bin, I just like it to be obviously a bit rubbish, rather than slickly looking not rubbish (while still being rubbish).
One of the reasons why I got the Poem/1 is that Matt has made it nice and easy to send text to the device via a simple API.
The docs are over here: https://poem.town/developer/web-api
I know, I know, working with various eInk displays with a laptop, or Raspberry Pi, or esp32 (probably, idk), is supposed to be pretty trivial, but I legit don’t have the time. But give me an API endpoint I can throw text at, and it just-work™️ and I’m all in.
In this case I piggybacked on the code already in Kitty that sends these questions to the Vestaboard, and got it to also hit the Poem/1 API. Took about three minutes in total, and now Kitty can bother me in yet another way.
Great.
This video from Russell Davies (not that one), is worth a watch, at x1.5 speed.
There’s a whole bunch of things to unpack there which I’m not going to because I’m supposed to be at some social event in about 30 minutes, in this heat, with lots of people, WHY?! But I digress, as we all know I love paper.
I have code that;
Creates a todo list written by Kitty on her pen plotter
Dynamically creates a calendar template, also to be pen plotted (here’s a public version: https://revdancatt.com/calendar)
Generates pages for my notebook
Writes out my daily journal in my own handwriting, for reasons.
Creates PDFs based on my week, that gets sent to my ReMarkable eInk tablet so I can annotate them by hand “offline”.
That first one isn’t particularly CRM, the second isn’t very innovative - I can just go buy a calendar, or print one normally - the third is a little closer; it’s a page design that I’ve iterated over until I’ve landed at something that properly works for me.
None of these are particularly what Russell is talking about, but the skeleton in there; code to drawing machine, code to PDF, backed by my own data and a bit of Kitty AI (although you could throw that AI part away).
I’ve also been doing some research into paper based “daybooks”, logbooks and ledgers that businesses used to use to track pretty much everything over hours, days, months and years well before digital came along.
All of which is to say, I think I agree with Russell, that there’s something in the space of paper based systems - that are dynamically created daily/weekly/monthly.
I love a good workbook, where I can sit somewhere cozy, with a pen and a drink (soda) and fill it in. A weekly workbook that was generated based on [criteria], both for corporations and individuals sounds great.
I’ve linked to it before, and I’ll link to it again, here’s Tom Sachs’ Caprice Owner’s Manual: https://store.tomsachs.com/products/caprice-zine-second-edition
Please also see;
https://store.tomsachs.com/products/tom-sachs-picasso-zine-copy
https://store.tomsachs.com/products/rocket-factory-phase-ii-experience-report-zine-nft
Licia He posted on instagram the other day; see post here, the replies from Liz, and Kerrie are good too…
…while you’re here check out Kerrie’s recent post too, it’s very good.
What I think we’re all looking for is a way to make documenting our process easier.
This is why I have Kitty interrupting my day to ask me what I’m doing; so it can be recorded.
This is why I’d love a printable/drawing-machine-able weekly workbook to fill in.
This is why I try and write this newsletter once every other week (and started another one: https://aaaaaahriso.substack.com/p/the-joys-of-under-construction), and make videos, etc. and why, when people confidently tell me they’re going to write a weekly newsletter I’m properly rooting for them, and wishing them well. But my goodness the practice of talking about what we do is hard.
So if someone could please make a local, on device AI, paper based, dynamically generated, personalised thing (and I’m okay with eInk too), I would love that thanks.
Even better if it can use a fountain pen, just to be fancy.
I’ve run out of time and email length (according to both this social thing I’ve gotta go to, and Subtack), so I didn’t get to show you this: https://www.patreon.com/posts/may-lines-update-158598396 - that link will have to do instead, it has nice photos I wanted to include, but as normal I’ve reached my photo quota.
Thursday 11th June, 2026 - that’s when the next newsletter will go out, if you have anything to go in the next one you’ve got just under two weeks to let me know about it 😁
And I’m done, any typos are proof of being written by a human!
Love you all
Dan
🧡
Hey folks! I had a few other projects that I really needed to get finished this week, which left me with limited time to put a blog post together. My plan for next week is something for the worldbuilders out there, a sort of ‘guide’ to different kinds of army structures, drawing on a number of the series we’ve done looking at different ways armies could be raised.
That said, I don’t want to leave you with nothing to read on a Friday so here are some suggested things:
From Kiran Pfitzner (‘Dead Carl’), an older essay of his I found interesting, “The Kaiser and a ‘Mediocre Man’ Theory of History: A Case Study in the Historical Importance of Incompetence.” We’ve never done a full take-down of Thomas Carlyle style ‘great man’ history here (we should, at some point), but one of the real objections to it is that not only is history often shaped by impersonal forces (so not singular leaders at all), but often history is shaped not by ‘great men’ but by greatly incompetent men in positions of leader (a possibly which Carlyle’s ‘heroic’ great man theory does not really permit).
He also had a wonderful more recent essay, “Rights and Righteousness: From ‘The War People’ to ‘A People at War,’” which builds off of a discussion of The War People (recommended here back in February!) to think more broadly about how armies are shaped by conditions of service and how and why those conditions evolved from the 17th century into the 20th. Perhaps most on point is the reminder he offers that just because the resources for war expanded from the 18th century to 1945 does not mean they will so expand forever.
I also really liked James’ meditation on the Melian Dialogue in Thucydides and how it should be understood today, “American Melos.” The Melian Dialogue is one of those very famous passages in Thucydides that is often taught in isolation – often in political science contexts – where the removal of the context Thucydides assumes his reader knows (because they had all lived through it) really warps and undermines the passage. I think we probably ought to do a second ‘Trip Through’ Thucydides focused on the Dialogue at some point; maybe soon.
So we’ll be back next week with something more substantive!
Patrick offered his observations here, I will add a few points of my own.
I very often think in terms of regions and geographic places. Currently, artistic movements (of most sorts, not just “New Aesthetics”) seem to lack a centrality of place. New York City is no longer the center of the art world, high rents being one reason for that but not the only one. It is simply no longer the city’s essence. The rebellious spirit is largely gone. Los Angeles has good galleries and plenty of creativity, but never quite stepped up as a number one city for the visual arts. The Bay Area, in spite of all of its money, remains quite behind. Berlin in some ways feels like it could be an art center, but it is not one. Germany is too complacent. Central Europe more generally has the heritage and still the potential, but I do not see “the engine of growth” there. Paris and London are for certain high-end artistic activities, but they too are not centers of creative ferment at the ground level. The visual arts scene in China has declined precipitously with restrictions on freedom of speech and creation.
Overall, looking through the applications my opinions of Spain and Mexico went up. My opinion of parts of Africa, including South Africa, is relatively high, though that was not reflected in the applications I read. Rather it is from my travel. But I fear that none of those locales have the global oomph to lead the way more generally.
So currently I am still looking for a regional center or centers for the next set of artistic revolutions. I see the contemporary world as failing at that.
I also would say that “Asian women” — from all over — put in a pretty impressive showing. I take that to be a marked reason for optimism. Perhaps future artistic revolutions will be less geographically centered than the past ones?
The post What I have been learning doing New Aesthetics appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
While not as good as last week, which had no homicides, as of 9 am today, D.C. had only one homicide this week, bringing the total for year to 32*. At this time last year, there had been 65 homicides. While car-related crimes are much lower than during the same time period last year, they do seem to be on an upswing, along with robberies. This is still very promising, especially the homicide numbers.
We are definitely on pace for another 33 percent drop in homicides for the third straight year, not that one would know this based on news reporting–which is why I cover this stuff. Because people’s attitudes about city crime are completely unfounded.
*Three of the 35 murders reported this year actually occurred in other years (e.g., a missing persons case from 2023 turned into a homicide case this year with new evidence).
Links for you. Science:
‘Highly problematic for a thousand reasons’: NIH employees criticize Trump-era requirement to scrutinize grants with words related to diversity
Salmonella outbreaks linked to backyard poultry send 54 to the hospital
‘I couldn’t breathe’: the sinister spread of France’s killer seaweed
Large Ebola Outbreak Is Declared in Congo. Dozens of deaths and hundreds of infections are suspected, an African agency said. Health experts were alarmed that the outbreak hadn’t been announced sooner.
Blumenthal, Grijalva Introduce Bill to Save Endangered Butterflies, Fish, Plants, Mollusks
An American Eel In The Chicago River? Angler’s Rare Find Raises Questions
Long a dream, it’s now real: a fast and accurate TB test that doesn’t need phlegm
Other:
Rollback: What Happens When Rights Were Never Really Law. (this is very good, though I disagree with the speed of possible remedy: Democrats would have to pack the court, and, to be safe, willing to strip the Supreme Court of jurisdiction when they write legislation)
Donald Trump steals $1.8 billion in taxpayer money to pay off seditionists for trying to overturn the 2020 election in his favor
The smoking guns in Trump’s new financial disclosure. Trump publicly praised companies the same day he bought their stock.
Mapping the household-level transmission of monetary policy
Lauren Boebert suggests Trump withheld funds to Colorado over prosecution of election denier
Researchers Wanted Preschool Teachers to Wear Cameras to Train AI
The Billionaires Are Afraid
Prosecute These Corrupt Bastards!
A Rather Obvious Callback By The Writers
Denial is a river James Comey should be dunked into
The Thing About Griping About Bluesky. Let a thousand mutually suspicious communities bloom.
Donald Trump Is Stealing Your Money
The E-Trade presidency: Trump trades stocks while America burns
Trump and His Advisers Clearly Haven’t Actually Read Thucydides
Majority of Noem’s Unreviewed Commutees Reoffend
Minnesota county charges an ICE officer in a nonfatal shooting during Trump’s immigration crackdown
People are using their laptops on BART. Officials think they know why
Inside The Investigation Of Eric Trump’s Kids-Cancer Charity
Five dead, including two suspects, after shooting at San Diego mosque
Actually, Democracy Dies in H.R.
The Pistons Did Everything Wrong
Palantir Gets an Initial $3.9 Million to Spy on Federal Workers
A puddle in a Brooklyn crosswalk has festered so long it’s developed its own ecosystem
A Different Kind of Fading President
American Jobs with AI Exposure Really Are Starting to Disappear, Data Show. It’s a slight drop so far, but a bleak trend nonetheless.
US moves to end job protections for hundreds of health department workers
Xavier Becerra Pushed to Inflate a Black Man’s IQ to Execute Him as California AG
My Son’s Math Homework Is Essentially Just Pokémon
In DC’s single-family zones, the legacy of the Federal Housing Administration’s Jim Crow era endures
When Will Americans Realize the Truth? Republicans Wreck the Economy.
Managing multiple debts can make it difficult to stay organized and control interest costs over time. A cash-out refinance from PNC Bank can provide a way to simplify your financial picture by consolidating those debts into a single mortgage. While this approach is not right for every situation, it can be effective when used strategically.
With this type of refinance, you replace your existing mortgage with a new, larger loan and take the difference in cash. That cash can then be used to pay off other debts, such as credit cards, personal loans, or other high-interest balances. Instead of managing several payments with different due dates and interest rates, you are left with one monthly mortgage payment. This can simplify budgeting and reduce the risk of missed payments.
One of the main reasons this strategy can be effective is the difference in interest rates. Mortgage rates are generally lower than those associated with credit cards and other unsecured debts. By consolidating higher-interest balance s into your mortgage, you may reduce the total interest you pay over time. This can make your overall debt more manageable, especially if you were previously carrying balances with significantly higher rates.
Credit cards and similar debts can be difficult to pay down if only minimum payments are made. A refinance converts those balances into a structured loan with a defined repayment schedule. This structure can help create discipline around repayment. Each payment predictably reduces your balance, making it easier to track progress and stay committed to becoming debt-free.
Consolidating debt through a refinance can also improve monthly cash flow. By spreading repayment over a longer period and potentially lowering your interest rate, your total monthly obligation may decrease.
This can free up room in your budget for other priorities, such as savings or essential expenses. However, it is important to remember that extending repayment may increase the total interest paid over time, even if monthly payments are lower.
This strategy depends on having enough equity in your home to support a larger loan. Lenders typically require you to maintain a certain level of equity after the refinance, which limits how much cash you can take out.
If you have built substantial equity through payments or home value appreciation, you may have more flexibility to consolidate debt in this way.
While this approach can offer benefits, it also comes with important risks. The most significant is that unsecured debt becomes secured by your home. If you are unable to keep up with payments, your property could be at risk. It is also important to avoid accumulating new debt after consolidation. Paying off credit cards with refinance funds only to build those balances again can create a more difficult financial situation.
A cash-out refinance may not be the right choice if you plan to move in the near future, have limited equity, or are already managing your debt effectively. In some cases, alternative strategies such as targeted repayment or balance transfers may be more appropriate.
Evaluating your full financial picture is essential before deciding to move forward.
A cash-out refinance can be a useful tool for consolidating debt when it aligns with your financial goals and circumstances. By lowering interest rates, simplifying payments, and creating a structured repayment plan, it can help you regain control over your finances.
The key is to approach it thoughtfully. Understanding both the benefits and risks ensures that using your home equity supports long-term financial stability rather than creating additional challenges.
Photo: Mikhail Nilov via Pexels
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The post When a Cash-Out Refinance Can Help You Consolidate Debt appeared first on DCReport.org.
I’m not sure if this link works outside the US, but Apple TV’s MLS Wrap-Up show has highlight from the LA Galaxy vs. Houston Dynamo FC match they shot exclusively using iPhone 17 Pros. Follow the link, choose “English”, and then choose “Full Replay” — then skip to 40m:15s or so.
They show one of the professional camera rigs they used, with a long lens attached. I’d say the match footage looks good, but also definitely does not look as good as usual. Impressive for a phone camera, but I’d be a tad annoyed if I were a Galaxy or Dynamo fan and one of my team’s matches was used for a stunt like this.
Dan Goodin, reporting for Ars Technica:
The technique, laid out in a research paper, exploits a side channel, a form of leak resulting from physical manifestations such as electromagnetic emanations, data caches, or the time required to complete a task. By measuring the manifestations, attackers can decrypt encrypted traffic and infer other confidential data. [...]
“Web browsers have evolved from simple document viewers into complex platforms capable of running sophisticated applications,” the paper authors wrote. “Companies like Google, Microsoft, and Adobe have developed full-fledged office suites, photo- and video editors, or even integrated development environments (IDEs) that run entirely within the browser.” The authors went on to note: “While these features enhance the capabilities of web applications and allow completely novel use cases, they also increase the browser’s attack surface, and some have already been shown to introduce new vulnerabilities.”
Unlike previous contention side-channel attacks on SSDs, FROST runs exclusively in the browser. It uses JavaScript that interacts with the OPFS (origin private file system), an allocated storage space that’s reserved for a specific site to run code needed to complete a given task. Websites can create one with no interaction required by the visitor.
JavaScript, as I have suggested many times, was a terrible mistake for the web. It’s absurd that a web page can access local storage space.
Because .000001 percent of local residents follow these things, I am using this space to let you know that Orange County’s Treasurer-Tax Collector is a woman named Shari (The Key Tosser) Freidenrich.
The Key Tosser has been on the job since 2010. She is responsible for overseeing our county’s $15 billion investment pool. She is one of three trustees handling the county’s near-$25 billion employment retirement system. She is a CPA who graduated from Washington State and is a past president of the Rotary Club of Huntington Beach. She loves scarves, pearls and berating underlings.
With the primary a couple of days away, there are four things you need to know about The Key Tosser:
• 1. Voting to re-elect Shari Freidenrich is a huge mistake.
• 2. The Key Tosser recently bragged about appearing with these losers (Tony Strickland? Really?) at this Loser-a-Thon (Four words: HOT. RODS. AND. HANDGUNS.) …
• 3. Earlier this year, according to multiple reports, The Key Tosser attempted to fire her top deputy, Dana Schultz, mere days after Schultz filed papers to run against her in our ongoing elections. Which is either (a) Horribly unethical. (b) Illegal or ( c) Both. Wrote Noah Biesiada of the Voice OC: “While Freidenrich is one of the few independently elected department heads at the county, the county HR department and legal team ultimately intervened to stop Schultz’s firing, despite the fact that Freidenrich said Schultz is an at-will employee.”
• 4. The Key Tosser so damn good at her job that—due to ineptitude and/or lack of trust—the Orange County Board of Supervisors voted to transfer the investment division’s personnel and functions from the Treasurer-Tax Collector’s office to the County Executive Office [aka: Freidenrich was stripped of her primary responsibility]. This, from an April 14, 2026 OC Register piece: “According to a 2022 independent investigation, Freidenrich threw office keys at one employee, which violated workplace violence policies, and threateningly pointed her finger at another’s face. County officials also said Freidenrich’s management of the treasurer’s office led to delays in issuing refunds to schools, filing tax liens and cashing property tax checks, which resulted in incorrect late fees and penalties for taxpayers. Former administrators of Freidenrich’s office have said that her investments were too conservative and failed to generate adequate returns.” [You can read more about her at this handy dandy website]
• 5. (Bonus)—Politics be damned, she’s profoundly bad at her job.
•••
Again, I am aware the Treasurer-Tax Collector race is probably the 800th thing you’re thinking about right now, well after this, this, this, this and this. And this and this. And, oh, this. But it’s a profoundly impactful gif, and if you have yet to vote, make sure Shari Freidenrich is a hard no and Dana Schultz is an easy, easy, easy yes.
If nothing else, it’ll save the keys from future damage.
In case you’re not following the upcoming Los Angeles mayoral primary, well, it’s quite the little shit show …
The top two vote getters will advance to the general election in November, making it a coin flip between Karen Bass, the (fairly unpopular) Democratic incumbent, Nithya Raman, a Democratic city council member and activist, and Spencer Pratt, the destructive MAGA idiot best known for, well, this sorta shit …
Wait. One more. There is also Rae Chen Huang, a senior organizer at Housing Now! CA and community organizer.
Ah, Rae Chen Huang …
Against all odds and logic, the little-known Huang is polling at 9 percent, which means she simultaneously has no shot at winning but a solid shot at being the person who propels the legitimately dangerous Pratt toward the general. You see, without Rae Chen Huang in the race, those nine percent votes go almost entirely to either Bass or Raman—all but guaranteeing the general election involves two sane, reasonable public servants who can battle over real issues.
So why won’t Rae Chen Huang, who—again—has 0.00% chance of victory—step aside?
Answer: Ego.
Ego.
Ego.
Ego.
Ego.
Seriously, this kind of shit drives me to drink. You entered the race—great! You put up a fantastic fight—great! You emerged as a potential future star—great! You have enough swagger that the winner might listen to you—great! But what are you accomplishing at this point? What are you adding, besides a boost to Pratt’s odds?
I don’t discuss this much, but once upon a time—nearly two decades ago—I ran for city council in my old hometown of New Rochelle, N.Y. It was a long-shot bid, but I just didn’t love everything the leading Democrat stood for. As the days passed, however, and it was clear my run was toast, I backed out and endorsed Barry Fertel, who wound up winning and doing an excellent job. Simply put, I wanted to help avoid a Pratt-like nightmare. I took the bullet.
Politics are not pretty. They’re petty, sad, gross, dispiriting. Like the 1996 New York Jets, things generally don’t go your way. You lose more than you win; fall more than you sprint.
But, ultimately, they should be about the greater good.
Not about ego.
It’s an excellent bet that future books and films made about the Trump Era will begin with an image of the White House this week. The world-famous Rose Garden has been replaced with a patio that looks like one at Mar-a-Lago. The East Wing is rubble. And on the sweeping South Lawn, right outside the front door of the White House, construction is underway on a massive Ultimate Fighting Championship arena for cage matches to be held on Trump’s 80th birthday.
Now treating the nation’s capital as his property, Trump appears to be leaning on his past role as a real estate developer as a solution in Iran remains elusive, inflation in the U.S. climbs, and his popularity drops.
In addition to turning back to real estate, Trump seems to be lashing out to reassert his dominance over those who have hurt him.
Last night, Hannah Rabinowitz, Paula Reid, and Kara Scannell of CNN reported that the Department of Justice under President Donald J. Trump has launched a criminal investigation into whether 82-year-old E. Jean Carroll, the journalist who successfully sued Trump for defamation and for sexual assault, committed perjury in her testimony by saying she was not being paid to launch the lawsuit when it turned out later that billionaire Reid Hoffman had paid some of her legal fees and expenses.
Trump also refiled his $10 billion defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal over its publication of an article describing a card for sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s fiftieth birthday. The card shows a crude sketch of a girl, bearing words that refer to “certain things in common” and saying, “A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy Birthday—and may every day be another wonderful secret.”
Trump’s lawsuit says that the article damaged his reputation and that the card is fake, although it came from Epstein’s estate. The estate later provided a copy of the card to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, which published it on its own website.
U.S. District Judge Darrin P. Gayles tossed out the original lawsuit last month, saying that Trump came “nowhere close” to establishing that the article’s authors acted with “actual malice” to defame him, but said Trump could amend the lawsuit and refile it. Yesterday, he did.
On Tuesday, Alan Feuer of the New York Times noted that Trump’s politicization of the Department of Justice means grand juries as well as judges appear to be losing faith in the department. Although it is a common saying that prosecutors can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich, government prosecutors have had trouble getting the indictments Trump wants against his perceived political enemies.
In part this is because Trump has replaced career prosecutors with inexperienced loyalists, as Feuer notes, but it is also because of trumped-up charges against people like former FBI director James Comey and the six Democratic lawmakers who released a public video reminding military and intelligence personnel that they must not obey illegal orders.
Federal judges have been accusing prosecutors of misconduct, most recently in a case last week in Chicago in which a grand jury indicted six people, including a Democratic congressional candidate, for interfering with a federal agent and conspiring to interfere with a federal agent at a protest at a detention facility.
As Julie Bosman of the New York Times reported, U.S. District Judge April Perry dismissed the case after she discovered that prosecutors had talked to individual grand jurors outside the courtroom and removed those jurors who refused to indict, as well as apparently overstating the strength of the evidence against the defendants. After making these maneuvers, the prosecutors then tried to hide evidence of them by redacting the transcripts from the grand jury.
Judge Perry said: “I have read hundreds, if not thousands, of grand jury transcripts involving prosecutors who are the most junior of prosecutors to several U.S. attorneys who appeared before the grand jury. I have never seen the types of prosecutorial behavior before a grand jury that I saw in those transcripts.”
If Trump can end the rule of law, he can do as he wishes.
At least some of what he appears to want is corrupt dealings that put money into the pockets of himself and his family members. Today Robert Faturechi of ProPublica reported that Trump’s trade advisor Peter Navarro personally pressured the Pentagon to loan $620 million to Vulcan Elements, a small North Carolina startup company in which Donald Trump Jr. has a financial stake.
Navarro and Don Jr. appear to be close, and a Pentagon official told Faturechi that “[t]he call came from the White House: We have to get this done.”
According to Faturechi, the Pentagon invested $620 million in Vulcan, a rare-earth magnet company, and another $80 million in its partner ReElement. The Commerce Department provided another $50 million in incentives, and the government took a $50 million stake in Vulcan.
When Trump Jr.’s venture capital firm 1789 Capital invested in Vulcan in August 2025, the company was worth about $200 million. After the government investments, that valuation jumped to around $2 billion. Bloomberg reported last week that the investment in ReElement might not go through because of concerns over its ability to scale up its technology.
A spokesperson for the Pentagon told Faturechi that the Vulcan deal was sped up as defense officials balance “lightning speed with rigorous diligence to close high-impact deals that directly strengthen America’s defense and empower our warfighters.”
And yet, despite their evident attempt to warp the U.S. legal system to their own purposes, Trump and his MAGA loyalists insist that they are the ones against whom the Department of Justice has been used. That is their justification for the $1.776 billion slush fund for paying off those who were convicted of crimes for their participation in Trump’s schemes to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
Last night, a group of thirty-five former federal judges took on that slush fund.
As Maegan Vazquez of the Washington Post reported, the former judges, appointed by members of both political parties, asked U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams to reopen the legal case Trump, his oldest sons, and the Trump Organization brought against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a “judicial review of the extraordinary—and historically unprecedented—circumstances presented by this litigation and by the collusive ‘settlement’ that invokes this litigation as the legal justification for its terms.”
Trump, his sons, and the Trump Organization dropped the lawsuit after Williams appeared to question whether it was actually a legitimate lawsuit, since Trump was both the plaintiff and the person in charge of the IRS, then announced they had reached a “settlement agreement” with the Department of Justice. Williams was clear in her order closing the case that there was “no settlement of record” in it.
The judges expressed concern that the Trumps were manipulating the judicial system, “which threatens to undermine confidence in the administration of justice.” They suggested that “this ‘case’ that the parties purport to have ‘settled’ is itself a fraud on the Court.” They also maintain that “this ‘settlement’ is a product of collusion and is itself a fraud on the Court,” and that “[f]raud on the court is established by clear and convincing evidence.”
“The parties have used this lawsuit—which was never an adversarial proceeding over which the Court even had jurisdiction—as a means to allow a ‘commission’ controlled by the President to dole out $1.776 billion in taxpayer dollars without constitutional or congressional authority to do so, and to confer unlawful private benefits to the President and his family by purportedly prohibiting the United States from prosecuting any and all claims against them.”
“To be clear,” the judges wrote, “the parties’ settlement was not, and never will be, legally justified.”
—
Notes:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/26/ufc-arena-white-house-trump-birthday
https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.693830/gov.uscourts.flsd.693830.59.0_2.pdf
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/28/trump-epstein-suit-wall-street-journal-00941055
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/21/us/chicago-ice-protesters-charges-dropped.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/26/us/politics/trump-justice-department-grand-juries.html
https://www.propublica.org/article/donald-trump-jr-vulcan-deal-white-house
https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.706172/gov.uscourts.flsd.706172.63.0.pdf
Release: datasette 1.0a31
Another significant alpha release, with two new headline features.
Datasette now offers users with the necessary permissions the ability to both execute write queries against their database and to save stored queries (renamed from "canned queries") both privately and for use by other members of their Datasette instance.
There's more detail in SQL write queries and stored queries in Datasette 1.0a31 on the Datasette blog, which now has three posts introducing new features since the blog launched two weeks ago.
Here's an animated demo from the blog post showing how the new execute query interface lets people get started with templated insert/update/delete queries from tables they have permission to edit:

Tags: projects, sql, sqlite, datasette, annotated-release-notes
The most interesting thing about Anthropic's $65B Series H announcement is this line (emphasis mine):
Since our Series G in February, adoption has continued to grow across global enterprise customers, and our run-rate revenue crossed $47 billion earlier this month.
Anthropic have made a bit of a habit of sharing their "run-rate revenue" in this kind of announcement, which is an annualized projection of their current revenue - typically calculated by taking the most recent month and multiplying by 12.
Earlier this year:
I had Claude Opus 4.8 make me this chart using Matplotlib (Claude: "a data line chart is more straightforward matplotlib work—not really a design piece"):

Back in April Axios CEO Jim VandeHei wrote that he could not find "any company — in any industry, in any era — that has scaled organic revenue this quickly at this level as Anthropic" - and that was when they were at a paltry $30 billion.
(Also in Axios today is an anonymously sourced note that "An AI consultant tells Axios one of their clients recently spent half a billion dollars in a single month after failing to put usage limits on Claude licenses for employees" - times that by 12 and you get an extra $6 billion in annualized run-rate!)
Ed Zitron was extremely skeptical of that $30 billion number - I wonder if his skepticism will update for the new $47 billion figure.
I've seen a few people dismiss this as untrustworthy, because the numbers come from Anthropic. That doesn't hold up: these numbers were included in announcements of their fundraises, and lying to investors who just put in $65 billion would be securities fraud. They're even less likely to lie given that the real numbers will no doubt come out in their S-1 when they file for their IPO.
Anthropic shipped Claude Opus 4.8 today. My favourite thing about it is this note in the release announcement:
Users will find Opus 4.8 to be a modest but tangible improvement on its predecessor. There’s still more to be done: we’re working on developing and releasing models that provide many of the same capabilities as Opus at a lower cost.
It's so refreshing to see an AI lab honestly describe a release as a minor incremental improvement over the previous model!
Honesty seems to be a theme. Here's my other favorite note from that announcement:
One of the most prominent improvements in Opus 4.8 is its honesty. We train all our models to be honest---for instance, to avoid making claims that they can't support. But a general problem with AI models is that they sometimes jump to conclusions, confidently claiming to have made progress in their work despite the evidence being thin. Early testers report that Opus 4.8 is more likely to flag uncertainties about its work and less likely to make unsupported claims. This is borne out in our evaluations, which show that Opus 4.8 is around four times less likely than its predecessor to allow flaws in code it has written to pass unremarked.
That linked system card includes the following:
Claude Opus 4.8 had the lowest incorrect-rate of the six models on every benchmark—the most direct measure of factual hallucination. It achieved this mainly by abstaining on questions about which it was uncertain rather than by answering more questions correctly.
Not much has changed since 4.7.
It's priced the same as Opus 4.5/4.6/4.7 - $5/million input and $25 per million output. "Fast mode" is twice that price, which is a significant reduction from their previous models - fast mode on 4.6/4.7 remains at $30/$150. Note that fast mode is only available to organizations that are part of the research preview, "Contact your account manager to request access".
Both the reliable knowledge cutoff and the training data cutoff are January 2026, the same as for 4.7.
The context window is still 1,000,000 tokens, and the max output is 128,000 tokens.
The What's new in Claude Opus 4.8 document has some of the more interesting details. These caught my eye:
Mid-conversation system messages. Claude Opus 4.8 accepts
role: "system"messages immediately after a user turn in themessagesarray (subject to placement rules). This lets you append updated instructions later in a long-running conversation without restating the full system prompt, which preserves prompt cache hits on the earlier turns and reduces input cost on agentic loops.
See also this update to the Anthropic Python SDK. Being able to steer the system prompt mid-conversation sounds really powerful. I was worried this would be incompatible with the abstraction provided by my own LLM library, which expects a single system prompt per conversation... but it turns out my recent redesign should handle that just fine.
Lower prompt cache minimum. The minimum cacheable prompt length on Claude Opus 4.8 is 1,024 tokens, lower than on Claude Opus 4.7.
I checked and 4.7's minimum was 4,096.
Here are pelicans riding bicycles for all five thinking levels, low, medium, high, xhigh, and max:
This time I ran them using the LLM CLI, exported the logs to Markdown and then had Claude Opus 4.8 build me an HTML tool that could render that Markdown with the svg fenced code blocks displayed as SVGs on the page.
(I later had GPT-5.5 xhigh in Codex update that code to remove any XSS holes. I'm sure Claude could have done that if I'd asked, but GPT-5.5 is my code security blanket at the moment.)
The max one was clearly the best, but it did take 25 input, 17,167 output tokens for a total cost of 43 cents!
Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, anthropic, claude, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-release
Release: llm-anthropic 0.25.1
- New model: Claude Opus 4.8 (
claude-opus-4.8).- New
-o fast 1option for fast mode, for organizations with that feature enabled on their account.- Default max_tokens for each model now defaults to that model's maximum output rather than 8,192. #72
See also my notes on Opus 4.8 - I used this new release of llm-anthropic to generate the pelicans.
Tool: markdown-svg-renderer
A slightly customized Markdown rendering tool with special treatment for fenced code SVG blocks - it both renders the image and provides a tab for switching to the code view.
You can paste in Markdown or give it a URL to a CORS-enabled Markdown file or Gist. Here's an example where it loads a Markdown file full of LLM pelican logs for Opus 4.8.
Paul Krugman, describing a few striking data visualizations:
YouGov’s surveys subdivide Republicans into those who do and those who don’t support MAGA — and the economic views of these two groups are very different. A remarkable 65 percent of non-MAGA Republicans say that the economy is getting worse, while only 11 percent say that it is getting better. [...]
Aside from MAGA Republicans, Americans are bunched at the upper left, with few people seeing the economy getting better and the vast majority seeing it as getting worse. Non-MAGA Republicans are much more similar in their views to independents, and even to Democrats, than they are to MAGA.
So how big is the group that believes that we have a good economy? Only 19 percent of Americans.
The MAGA/non-MAGA split amongst self-identifying Republicans is striking. Non-MAGA Republicans have views on the economy that almost exactly mirror those of independents — neither of which are that far from those of Democrats.
And let’s face it, “MAGA” is a euphemism for the Donald Trump cult of personality. These are the people who think it’s fine, just fine for him to be putting his name on buildings, his signature (and perhaps face) on currency, putting his face on “special” edition US passports, erecting gold statues of himself, holding a UFC fight on the White House lawn to celebrate his birthday — not to mention the not-even-trying-to-hide-it-or-excuse-it abject corruption.
It’s rather depressing that 20 percent of the US population is in this cult. But I take solace that it’s only 20 percent. That’s not that much higher than the 13 percent who believe “Bigfoot / Sasquatch is a real, living creature”. This whole thing is a political boil that is starting to burst. Rats leave sinking ships.
Donald Trump’s chief economist said something interesting the other day. Yes, the remarks by Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, were stupid, but that goes without saying. The point is that they were stupid in an interesting way.
On Fox News, Hassett was, as usual, boasting about how great the economy is, when he was asked why Americans aren’t feeling it — why the long-running Michigan index of consumer sentiment has hit its lowest level ever. He responded by claiming that the index “is being driven by Democrats who have Trump derangement syndrome.”
Well, yes indeed … someone is deranged here.
The Michigan survey tracks respondents by party, and politics clearly does affect economic perceptions. Democrats were much more positive about the economy under Biden than Republicans; they became much less positive, while Republicans became much more positive, when the White House changed hands:
At this point, however, independents’ views of the economy are similar to those of Democrats. Republican optimism, not Democratic pessimism, is out of line with the views of most Americans.
But wait, there’s more. YouGov’s surveys subdivide Republicans into those who do and those who don’t support MAGA — and the economic views of these two groups are very different. A remarkable 65 percent of non-MAGA Republicans say that the economy is getting worse, while only 11 percent say that it is getting better:
Let me present these data slightly differently:
Aside from MAGA Republicans, Americans are bunched at the upper left, with few people seeing the economy getting better and the vast majority seeing it as getting worse. Non-MAGA Republicans are much more similar in their views to independents, and even to Democrats, than they are to MAGA.
So how big is the group that believes that we have a good economy? Only 19 percent of Americans.
Given these numbers, Trump officials should conclude that they have failed in some way. The great majority of Americans — essentially everyone who isn’t a total Trump loyalist — believes that the economy is getting worse. And there are good reasons for that negativity. Inflation is way up as a result of Trump’s tariffs and his Iran war. Because of this surge in prices, real personal income has declined sharply:
And even if Trumpists believe that these numbers are somehow misleading and that the economy is really in great shape, they should acknowledge that they are failing to make their case to the American public.
Trump and his minions, however, never admit to failure. We’ve all seen that in the case of the Iran war: Trump keeps claiming that it’s a glorious victory and that reporters pointing out that it isn’t are “treasonous.”
They bring the same mindset to economic sentiment. If the public hates Trump’s economy, the problem must be with the politically deranged public, not with Trump.
Still, let’s look at it rationally. (I know, rationality has a well-known liberal bias.) The 19 percent of Americans who support MAGA, many of whom literally believe that Trump was sent by God, say that the economy is good. The other 81 percent of Americans say that it’s very bad. Which group is more likely to have economic perceptions that are warped by politics?
Seriously, who’s deranged here?
MUSICAL CODA
The NYT has the story:
"While cigarette sales have fallen across much of the world, China has moved in the opposite direction.
"Cigarette consumption in China rose 39 percent from 2003 to 2023, even as it fell 26 percent in the rest of the world. The 2.4 trillion cigarettes sold in China each year account for nearly half the global total, according to a report by a nongovernmental organization founded by former officials from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
...
"The failure to slow cigarette sales is a measure of the clout wielded by China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, which both regulates the industry and operates the country’s dominant cigarette maker, the China National Tobacco Corporation.
"The company generated roughly $244 billion in profit and tax revenue in 2025, about 7 percent of national government revenue and nearly what China says it spends on defense."
In 2015 I wrote Baltimore Arrests are Down and Crime is Way Up and, as I predicted, Baltimore tipped into an high crime equilibrium. After the Freddie Gray riots, arrests declined and crime shot up but crime stayed high even after arrests rebounded. In my view, the surge fed on itself: higher crime strained police resources, and that strain—in and of itself—reduced the probability of punishment, sustaining the high-crime equilibrium, as in my crime wave paper.
Yet, beginning around 2022 crime in Baltimore—most especially murders—began to fall.
In April, Baltimore had four homicides, the lowest total for any single month since at least 1970. So far this year, there were 38, compared with 51 in the same period last year. At the current rate, Baltimore would end 2026 with fewer than 100 homicides. There were 323 just four years ago.
How did we get from a city in which the question was how high can crime rise, to one where the question is how low can it go? The answer might be linked to the nationwide decline in murder, spurred by a restoration of policing as the excesses of the George Floyd years recede. But that raises the question of what cities across the country are doing right.
So what caused the decline? We can’t be entirely sure as national trends confound but Charles Fain Lehman has a good piece in the FP arguing plausibly that the answer boils down to carrots, sticks and the non-random nature of murder. Begin with the latter. A significant subset of murders are highly predictable. A gang member gets gunned down today. Next week, you can expect retaliation. Moreover, you know who is going to do the murder even more than you know who is going to be murdered. Namely, a close associate—a fellow gang or family member—will be the one to do the killing. Sometimes pre-Cog is not so hard.
So with this in mind, Baltimore, under a new mayor and tough on crime prosecutor, began to intervene in the murder cycle before it happened, i.e. a focused deterrence program based on Boston’s Operation Ceasefire.
The approach involves a detailed investigation of every shooting that happens in the city. Every week, the Baltimore Police Department and its partners review the week’s incidents….For every shooting, GVRS prescribes reaching out to known associates of the victim.
…At one recent coordination meeting, about 20 people gathered around the table of the conference room at Baltimore’s Doxa Ministries Church Without Walls. Under the direction of Reginald Williams from the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, they talked through two new “referrals” associated with the victim of a recent shooting. One had a long criminal history and was on house arrest. Another, barely an adult, was himself a victim a few years earlier.
Both men will have their doors knocked on by several of the meeting’s attendees. They will be offered services—job training, tattoo removal, relocation, whatever they need to get out of the “life.” But they will also get a clear message, delivered verbally and in the form of a letter from Mayor Scott: Baltimore is watching them—and will come after them.
Carrots, sticks, and a little Pre-Cog. Together they appear to be working.
The post Why are Murders Down in Baltimore? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
It was less than two months ago that the third flight of Blue Origin's heavy-lift New Glenn rocket left a customer's payload in an unusable orbit. Investigators have now identified the cause of the failure, and Blue Origin is preparing to launch the next New Glenn mission as soon as next week.
The Federal Aviation Administration and Blue Origin announced the closure of the failure investigation May 22. Yesterday, officials confirmed Blue Origin's next launch will loft a payload of 48 commercial satellites for Amazon's broadband network in low-Earth orbit. This will be the most satellites Amazon has launched on a single rocket, surpassing previous flights on United Launch Alliance's Atlas V, SpaceX's Falcon 9, and Europe's Ariane 6.
Blue Origin and Amazon, each founded by Jeff Bezos, have not officially revealed a target launch date, but public notices of airspace and maritime closures suggest the mission is set to lift off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida, as soon as next Thursday, June 4. Blue Origin is expected to roll the New Glenn rocket to its launch pad in the coming days for a test-firing of its seven main engines, fueled by liquified natural gas and liquid oxygen.

Mozart’s genius lay in writing music of such power that he could draw his audience into morally wrenching predicaments
- by Dorian Bandy
We document a new source of fluctuations in inflation inequality. When the cost of upstream inputs rises, varieties within a product category tend to have similar absolute price increases. However, the same absolute price increase constitutes a larger percentage change for low-price products, resulting in excess inflation at the low end (“cheapflation”). Since low-income households tend to buy lower-priced varieties, the inflation rates they face are disproportionately sensitive to upstream costs. Using data on food-at-home purchases, we show that this mechanism generates cycles in inflation inequality and excessive volatility in inflation for low-income households relative to high-income households. This channel parsimoniously accounts for observed fluctuations in inflation inequality over time, including surges in cheapflation and inflation inequality during both the Great Recession and the 2021–2023 post-pandemic inflation. Official statistics mask these within-category differences in inflation and thus understate the differences in inflation experienced by low- and high-income households by 70–90 percent. We provide evidence that this mechanism applies to a range of consumption categories beyond food at home. The same mechanism also leads to systematic differences in inflation across cities and import price inflation across countries in response to nationwide and global cost shocks.
That is from a new NBER working paper by Kunal Sangani.
The post Are we undermeasuring inflation for lower earners? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
The matchup in Texas between James Talarico and Ken Paxton is vital to control of the Senate, and will probably be the most expensive such race in history (a record currently held by the 2020 Georgia race that put Jon Ossoff in office). It will also be one of the ugliest campaigns any of us have ever seen, absolutely saturated with anxious masculinity and appeals to homophobia. What would happen if you gave a bunch of middle school boys whose dads never hugged them a billion dollars so they could air ads screaming “You’re gay! You’re totally gay!” for the next five months? We’re about to find out.
We’re not supposed to use the phrase “toxic masculinity” anymore, because that makes some men feel bad and then they vote for fascists. Fair enough. But this campaign is going to be all about anxious masculinity, quivering, quavering, insecure, overcompensating, loser masculinity of the kind conservatives have been cultivating for a long time. This campaign will put it front and center in a manner so explicit that it will provide a test of just how far the right can take this kind of appeal.
First, let’s set the context. One of the key differences in how Republicans and Democrats campaign is that because Democrats care about policy, they often believe that policy is the way to win elections. You offer an agenda crafted to maximize your appeal, you criticize your opponent’s substantive record, you show people what’s truly at stake in the election and convince them that you’re the better choice. Sometimes, that works.
Republicans, on the other hand, think that the way to win elections is to tap into powerful emotions, especially negative ones: fear, hatred, anger, resentment, bigotry. For Democrats, “issues” means important matters with policy implications that affect people’s lives; for Republicans, “issues” means character flaws about their opponents (real or invented) and things that make voters’ blood boil. There is sometimes overlap between these two conceptions of what an “issue” is, but often there isn’t.
In this case, Republicans could run a non-crazy issue-based campaign. Texas is a red state that hasn’t elected a Democrat statewide in over 30 years, and party identification alone might be enough to prevail; it certainly would have been if John Cornyn had become the nominee. But because Paxton is one of the most flamboyantly corrupt politicians in America — he was impeached by Texas Republicans in the legislature, and among the charges was that he pressured a wealthy developer who may or may not have been bribing him to hire his mistress — things get more complicated.
So what’s the answer? Had Jasmine Crockett won the Democratic primary, Republicans would have gone into a frenzy of race-baiting that would have made George Wallace blush. But since Talarico is a white guy, they’ve gone with gay-baiting. And it’s not just Paxton himself, but the entire Texas Republican Party and the entire national Republican Party, all the way up to the White House.
The foundation was laid before the runoff between Paxton and Cornyn. Republicans were waiting for an incident they could use to illustrate the idea that Talarico is effeminate, and they got it when the Democratic nominee took Barack Obama to his favorite taco joint and ordered a potato, egg, and cheese taco, a perfectly normal taco enjoyed every day by untold numbers of people possessing Y chromosomes. Republicans immediately started calling Talarico “a vegan,” not because they don’t know that vegans don’t eat eggs or cheese (and Talarico isn’t even a vegetarian, let alone a vegan), but because they’re happy to lie and they think vegans are gay.
Presumably, any real man would only order a steak, pork loin, brisket, ham, oxtail, bacon, and liver taco, very loudly and aggressively lest anyone in earshot think for a moment he wasn’t absolutely bursting with testosterone. Because real men don’t eat what they want to eat, they eat what they think other people will think is manly.
“Vegan” has now become part of a litany of insults Republicans throw at Talarico, all of them oriented toward making voters think he’s light in the loafers and loose in the wrist. That includes the idea that he is “Low-T,” a phrase used to induce insecure middle-aged men to spend thousands of dollars on scammy “male enhancement” supplements. And while in a more innocent time Republicans used to do this with insinuation to retain deniability (remember how they said John Kerry “looks French”), in the era of Trump, that kind of subtlety is for wimps. So we get this exchange, distinguished not only by the fact that the putrid Stephen Miller just came out and said Talarico is a member of the minority group that is to MAGA what the Jews were to the Nazis, but because the Democratic Party responded with an appropriate clap-back:
Not that I condone such vulgar rhetoric as a general matter, but at times it’s necessary to be firm and concise, especially when dealing with a worm like Miller. Every interaction like this is a demonstration to voters, and one of the things Democrats need to show is that they won’t just sit back and take whatever abuse Republicans decide to dish out.
So what are we really talking about here? The Republican argument, distilled down to its essence, is this:
James Talarico is kinda gay. Or trans, or whatever.
If you vote for him, that makes you kinda gay.
You don’t want people to think you’re gay, do you?
This is driven by the most pathetic version of manhood imaginable, one in which being a man entails constant performances of stereotypical masculinity, with an eye cast forever over one’s shoulder to ensure that anyone watching knows you’re a real man being manly, eating manly food, dressing in manly clothes, walking with a manly gait, and driving a manly pickup. If I were to suggest that an actual real man eats whatever the hell he wants and votes for anyone he thinks is a better candidate, whether that candidate is male or female or gay or trans or anything else, these fearful little boys would cry “No! If I don’t vote for the manliest man someone might think I’m not a man!”
So behold, the pulsating hunk of virile man-meat that is Ken Paxton:
One of the ironies of this whole period is that the conservatives trying hardest to convince everyone that they’re super-butch are the most pathetic, spineless lickspittles for Donald Trump. This guy is the one before whom they have debased themselves — a walking collection of character flaws, a vain, insecure, shallow, moronic, amoral bully who dodged the draft, whines constantly about how everyone is being mean to him, spends hours on his makeup and hair, and couldn’t do a push-up if his life depended on it.
And all these supposedly manly Republican men snickering about other men being gay would literally get down on all fours and lick the soles of Trump’s shoes if he told them to. Literally. Do you think they wouldn’t? Of course they would. These are not men. They’re sniveling little boys without an ounce of masculine strength between them. When you watch those cabinet meetings where they go around the table so each person can offer their pathetically over-the-top praise of Trump, do you think “Wow, look at how strong they are”? No, you think, “What a bunch of losers.”
Sadly, none of that means that the attacks on Talarico won’t work. Lots of male voters will respond in precisely the way Republicans hope, because they’ve been conditioned all their lives to view their masculinity as fragile and tenuous, always in danger of being lost if they fail to perform it in the correct ways. For many, all it takes is someone saying, “I don’t know, that seems pretty gay” for them to run in the other direction.
There are a number of options for how Talarico and Democrats can respond (he’s now drawing attention to a sweetheart deal Paxton’s office gave an accused child predator), but one of them ought to be to point out that your average bookish 10-year-old boy is more of a man than the collection of cowards and snowflakes who populate the Republican Party. Just imagine if you could convince people that screeching “He’s gay!” is about the least manly thing one can do?
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Over the last few months we’ve examined the extent of the construction industry’s productivity problem. We’ve looked at a variety of construction productivity metrics, both for the US and for countries around the world, and found that construction productivity almost always rises much less in construction than it does in industries like manufacturing; often, it doesn’t improve at all. We’ve analyzed trends in construction costs in the US and around the world, and noted that construction almost never gets any cheaper: construction costs almost always rise at or above the level of overall inflation. And we’ve considered the most obvious strategy for solving this problem — moving the construction process into a factory — and we saw that the cost savings from prefabricated construction are frequently much less than hoped, often never materializing at all.
Now that we’ve mapped the contours of the problem, we can begin to explore its deeper nature to understand why, specifically, construction productivity is so resistant to being improved, and why construction costs stubbornly refuse to fall.
We’ll start by looking at one of the most important mechanisms by which production processes can get cheaper: economies of scale. Many processes have lower unit costs as production volumes rise, thanks to a variety of scaling effects: fixed costs can be spread more thinly, equipment gets cheaper on a per-unit basis due to area-volume relationships, improved production methods are developed as a result of learning-by-doing, and so on. However, in construction these effects are modest at best, even in sectors like homebuilding with very large production volumes.
In homebuilding, we’ll see that the limits to these economies of scale are in large part dictated by the nature of the production process. Economies of scale work by eliminating the difference between the costs of the raw inputs to a process and the final costs of production. In a highly efficient, high-volume production process, the costs of the output will gradually approach the costs of the material inputs. But in conventional homebuilding in the US, this difference is already small, giving scale-based strategies relatively little margin to close.
We’ll examine economies of scale in construction through the lens of housing construction in the US. For many sectors of construction, difficulty in achieving economies of scale could be attributed to the fact that only a small number of buildings of a particular type get built in the US each year. There were, for instance, only 10 skyscrapers taller than 200 meters built in the US in 2025. Semiconductor fabs, urban subways, and airports are similarly built in very small numbers. It’s hard to achieve economies of scale when there’s no scale to be had. Houses, on the other hand, are built in very large numbers. There were over 1.3 million housing starts in the US last year, including 942,000 single-family homes. This isn’t large compared to other types of manufactured goods — the US consumed over 7 billion cans of vegetables in 2025, for instance — but it’s certainly large enough for economies of scale to appear.
However, evidence suggests that homebuilding in the US exhibits relatively modest economies of scale. For one, the level of concentration in the homebuilding industry is relatively small: housing construction in the US is done by a large number of comparatively small firms. A 2022 study by Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies (JCHS) found that the US had over 65,000 firms engaged in homebuilding, and that even the 100 largest firms combined were responsible for less than 50% of the homebuilding market. In homebuilding, the four largest firms held around 18% of the market, compared to 90% in aircraft manufacturing, 86% in wireless telephone service, and 58% in automobile manufacturing. Concentration in the homebuilding industry has been rising over time (primarily due to the growth of the two largest builders, Lennar and D.R. Horton), but it’s still much lower than in many other industries. This level of concentration isn’t what you’d expect to see if economies of scale in homebuilding were substantial.
Another, earlier JCHS study that looked at US homebuilding in the late 1990s and early 2000s found that construction costs were actually higher for the largest US homebuilders than for smaller US homebuilders. It also found that large and small homebuilders had similar gross margins on homebuilding (the difference between the costs to produce a home and what they sold it for). If there were major economies of scale in homebuilding, all else being equal we’d instead expect to see larger firms have lower construction costs and greater gross margins.
More recent data suggest these trends have continued. If we look at the gross margins of public homebuilders, we see virtually no relationship between gross margins and number of homes produced. Lennar, which built over 80,000 homes in 2025, has similar gross margins and average home selling prices to United Homes Group, which sold just 1,192 homes in 2025. LGI Homes and D.R. Horton had nearly identical selling prices and gross margins, but the former sold 4,685 homes in 2025 and the latter sold over 84,000. Looking at different years doesn’t alter the picture much.
This isn’t a smoking gun, as there are other reasons why larger firms might not have higher gross margins than smaller firms. Large firms might be deliberately selling at a lower price to try to capture or maintain market share, as Lennar states it does. But it’s consistent with there being few economies of scale in the homebuilding industry.
In his history of the US homebuilding industry, homebuilder Ned Eichler describes the economies of scale available to homebuilders through the end of the 20th century. While he notes that homebuilders building several hundred homes per year could achieve substantial cost advantages compared to much smaller builders, there appeared to be little advantage in increasing scale beyond that. Writing in the 1980s, Eichler noted that “[n]ot even the largest firm has any of the advantages of dominant companies in other fields… What little technology exists is available to all.”
In the late 1940s and 1950s, as large-scale merchant builders (100 units per year or more) became the dominant suppliers of homes, most of the postwar improvements in production organization and techniques were made. As unit costs began to rise rapidly in the 1960s, because of higher quality, high land and site development costs, and inflation, there was heightened interest in the possibility of another round of increased efficiency from greater scale and technological breakthroughs. Many firms did grow, mostly by geographic expansion. Several broke out of the 100 to 1000 unit range to annual volumes over 5000. By 1980 US Home brought its unit production to 15,000. However, there were no significant changes in technology or even methodology. Nor is there clear evidence that US Home, Ryan, Pulte, or other multicity builders have yet achieved economies of scale.
Today, large homebuilders continue to use the same basic homebuilding methods that much smaller builders do, and builders like Lennar and D.R. Horton effectively subcontract all of their actual homebuilding to local contractors. (Lennar’s 2025 annual report, for instance, notes that “[w]e hire subcontractors for site improvements and virtually all of the work involved in the construction of homes.”) Large homebuilders do note that they’re able to achieve some scale economies by getting volume discounts on material purchases, but evidence suggests that these savings are relatively modest. Group purchasing organizations, such as CBUSA, pool material orders together in order to receive volume discounts from suppliers; CBUSA boasts that it gives independent builders “the purchasing power of a top 10 National Builder.”1 But the savings it offers works out to around $9,500 per house for the builders who use it, or around 6% of the material costs of an average new home.
You sometimes see claims that economies of scale in homebuilding could be achieved with assembly line-style construction, building hundreds or even thousands of homes at once on enormous tracts the way the US did in the 1940s and 50s. But evidence suggests that savings from this style of construction are somewhat modest, and may not materialize at all. Older versions of Craftsman’s National Construction Estimator provide percentage cost deductions for some tasks if they’re done on “tract work,” but these reductions are typically modest (10-20%) and are only available for a small handful of tasks.2 (One exception is carpentry, which does see large labor cost reductions for tract construction in some editions, but this on its own isn’t enough to shift the overall cost of a house substantially.) Likewise, Levitt and Sons famously built thousands of houses in enormous “Levittowns” using a sort of “reverse assembly line”: worker teams would go from house to house, performing a particular set of tasks and then moving on to the next one. But the cost of Levittown houses doesn’t appear to be all that different from those built by other, much smaller homebuilders at the time.
We can sharpen our understanding of economies of scale in homebuilding by looking at one particular subset of housing construction: manufactured homes. Manufactured homes, formerly known as mobile homes, are built using largely the same technology as conventional homes, but instead of being built on-site, the homes are produced in a factory, mounted to a steel chassis, and transported to their final location via truck. Roughly 100,000 manufactured homes are produced in the US each year.
Manufactured homes are a useful lens for understanding economies of scale in homebuilding, because they eliminate so many factors that might be expected to restrict them. Economies of scale require repetition — making approximately the same thing over and over again — and such repetition is particularly achievable with manufactured homes:
Conventional homebuilding is subject to different building code requirements in different jurisdictions, depending on what version of the code has been adopted. But manufactured homes are built to one set of national requirements, the federal HUD code.
Conventional homes are constructed on-site, and those sites might have substantial variation between them. But manufactured homes are produced repetitively within controlled factory locations.
Conventional home construction takes place on constantly changing jobsites, with constantly changing construction crews, a constant churn that might disrupt opportunities for learning-by-doing. Manufactured home construction, which takes place within a single location, should be less susceptible to this sort of disruption.
There’s some evidence for greater economies of scale in manufactured home construction compared to conventional homebuilding. Specifically, the manufactured home industry shows substantially higher concentration than the conventional homebuilding industry. The three largest manufactured home producers are Clayton Homes (49,000 units per year), Cavco (about 20,000 units per year), and Champion (roughly 26,000 units per year).3 Together, they make up roughly 90% of the US manufactured home market, similar to the level of concentration we saw in other industries.
However, despite this level of concentration, actual production economies of scale in manufactured home building appear relatively modest. We can see this by looking at the operations of four public manufactured home companies. The first two, Champion and Cavco, produce around 26,000 and 20,000 homes per year, respectively. The third, Legacy Housing, makes around 1,700 manufactured homes a year. And the last, Nobility Homes, makes just a few hundred manufactured homes each year.
Each of these homebuilders is catering to broadly similar segments of the market, since manufactured homes tend to be purchased by lower-income buyers. Their annual reports all note that the typical manufactured home buyer has a low household income, though they disagree on the exact number – Cavco thinks it’s less than $40,000, Champion thinks it’s less than $60,000, and Legacy thinks it’s less than $75,000. As we saw with conventional homebuilders, there doesn’t seem to be much relationship between gross margins on factory homebuilding and production volume. Nobility homes (391 shipments in 2025) and Legacy homes (1703 shipments in 2025) actually have better gross margins on home sales (32% and 28% respectively) than the much larger Champion and Cavco (27% and 23%).
More importantly, all four of these manufacturers use essentially identical production methods. Nobility Homes has one factory in Florida, Legacy has two factories in Texas and one in Georgia, and Champion and Cavco each have several dozen factories spread across different states. These factories are similar: each is typically 100 to 200 thousand square feet, employs 100 to 300 people, and produces several hundred homes a year. In other words, there do not appear to be large economies of scale at the factory level. Even relatively modest production volumes (20,000 units annually) get spread among dozens of different factories. By comparison, a single modern car factory will produce several hundred thousand cars a year.
There are some exceptions to this: Clayton Homes recently announced renovations to an existing factory that will allow it to produce 3,000 homes annually. But overall Clayton fits the basic pattern, as production of its 49,000 homes is spread amongst 41 production facilities.
Within the manufactured home facilities, we see the adoption of various efficiency-enhancing strategies compared to how work would be done on a conventional jobsite. As with Ford’s assembly line, work is arranged so that tasks take place at worker height, eliminating extraneous movements like bending or stretching. With conventional home construction, workers first complete the outside shell of the house to create a waterproof environment to work in, but this means the remaining work must be done within the cramped interior of the partially completed house. Manufactured homes, built under a factory roof, aren’t subject to this restriction and can be built from the inside out. Permanent stations can be set up with equipment for various repetitive operations, such as cabinet assembly. (We see this same sort of strategy adopted in large-block ship construction, with as much work as possible done outside the ship on prefabricated blocks, minimizing the amount of work that needs to be done in the cramped conditions of the assembled ship.)
However, the work remains a highly labor-intensive operation. Workers are in large part doing the same tasks that they would be in conventional construction; those tasks have just been made somewhat easier to perform. Equipment use is likewise somewhat modest: we don’t see the huge arrays of robot arms or automated machinery that we see in car manufacturing or other mass production industries. Per their annual reports, the value of the equipment that Nobility Homes, Legacy Housing, and Cavco operate is just one-third to half the value of the actual buildings. At a car manufacturer like Ford, by contrast, the value of the equipment and tooling is over three times as much as the value of the buildings that contain them.
Part of the reason manufactured homebuilders use a large number of low-capacity factories is high transportation costs. Both Nobility Homes and Cavco note in their annual reports that the cost-effective shipping range for their products is around 350 miles (around a day’s drive). This is a result of dollar density — the value of the product divided by the volume or mass of it. Products with high dollar density, like electronics, are very valuable in proportion to the amount of space they take up and can be effectively shipped long distances; iPhones can be made in a factory in China and then shipped all over the world. Products with low dollar density, like toilet paper, have low prices in proportion to the amount of space they take up, and are harder to ship long distances. If it costs $2,000 to ship a container from China to the US, that $2,000 will be a small fraction of the value of the cargo if the container is filled with iPhones, but a large fraction of the value of the cargo if it’s full of lumber or kitty litter. The lower the dollar density of a product, the less cost-effective it is to ship it long distances. Manufactured homes have very low dollar density, and thus can’t be shipped very far cost effectively.
But transportation costs can only explain part of this distributed manufacturing strategy for manufactured homes. For one, if there were substantial economies of scale at work, it would be worth it for manufacturers to ship longer distances in spite of the higher costs; transportation costs are proportionately high for manufactured homes, but they’re not that high, on the order of a few dollars per mile. Transportation costs thus suggest a sort of ceiling as to the extent of economies of scale that can be achieved for manufactured homes. For another, manufactured home producers often have multiple facilities much closer together than the cost-effective driving distance. Legacy Housing has factories in Commerce, Texas, and Fort Worth, Texas, that are around 100 miles apart. Cavco has three factories in the Phoenix metro area, two factories in North Carolina that are 120 miles apart, and two factories in Georgia that are less than 75 miles apart. If there were substantial economies of scale at the factory level, we’d expect these nearby factories to be combined into larger operations.
Thus even in a homebuilding sector with many tailwinds enabling economies of scale, scaling effects still appear to be relatively minor. Manufactured housing is produced in a controlled factory environment and built to the standards of a single national code, both of which should enable the highly repetitive production necessary for capturing economies of scale. And yet the scale of most production facilities is low, factories employ little in the way of high-volume automated equipment, and very small-scale operators producing a few hundred homes a year appear roughly as competitive as companies producing tens of thousands of homes a year. These patterns suggest that there’s something about the homebuilding process itself that makes capturing economies of scale difficult.
The easiest way to understand the difficulties of achieving economies of scale in homebuilding is to look at the relationship between input cost and output cost in various industries.
The graph below shows what’s known as the “crack spread” for gasoline production in the US Gulf Coast between 2014 and 2019. The crack spread is the difference between the price of crude oil and the wholesale price of gasoline. It essentially tells us how much margin oil refineries have to work with — how much they can afford to spend on the various production processes per barrel of oil processed. We can see that the crack spread for gasoline was typically around $15 a barrel for most of this period, compared to a crude oil price of around $50-70. In other words, the ratio of the price of wholesale gasoline to the price of crude oil was around 1.2 to 1.3.

An oil refinery is an enormous, expensive process facility that costs billions of dollars to construct. But because refineries produce such a large amount of gasoline and other petrochemicals, this cost can be spread very thinly across the refinery’s output, and the price of the final products is not all that much higher than the costs of the material inputs.
Likewise, consider car manufacturing. A few years ago, car industry analyst Munro & Associates conducted an analysis of the production costs of BMW’s i3 electric car. The report breaks down the various costs of production for different parts of the car, letting you see the cost of the inputs, the number and cost of the various operations performed on it, and the cost of the completed assembly.
We can see that the ratio of output costs to material input costs is higher than with gasoline production, around 1.8 on average. For complex manufactured goods that require a lot of distinct operations (the motor assembly alone has almost 5,000 parts and almost 30,000 assembly steps), it’s hard to achieve an output-to-input ratio as low as can be seen in a scaled continuous chemical production process.
More generally, any factory or production process will take some physical inputs, perform some set of transformations on them, and produce some series of outputs. If those transformations are involved or complex, requiring a lot of expensive machinery or labor-intensive operations, the ratio of the cost of the outputs to the cost of the inputs might be quite high. But even with a large number of complicated steps or very expensive equipment, this ratio can be driven down by taking advantage of economies of scale: spreading the fixed costs of your equipment out over a larger production volume, or using higher-capacity equipment or processes that has lower per-unit costs. As production volumes rise and a process gets more efficient, the ratio of the output costs to the input costs should theoretically approach one.
Elon Musk calls the ratio of the final cost of a product to the cost of its raw materials the “idiot index.” A high idiot index suggests a highly inefficient process with a lot of wasteful operations that could be dramatically improved. A low idiot index suggests a process with much less room for substantial improvements. (It was allegedly the high idiot index of rockets that convinced Musk he could beat existing aerospace companies and that SpaceX was worth pursuing.)4
Armed with this concept, let’s look at the cost breakdown of a typical US single-family home, courtesy of Craftsman’s National Construction Estimator. The chart below shows the hard costs of construction: what it takes to put up the actual, physical building.
The most important takeaway here is that the hard costs of constructing a single-family home are roughly 50% labor and 50% materials. This means that the ratio of the costs of the output to the costs of the physical inputs (drywall, lumber, concrete, etc.) is around 2. This is a very low ratio: it’s only slightly higher than the ratio we saw with various BMW i3 subassemblies.
With car manufacturing, this low ratio is achieved by way of scale, spreading the costs of expensive equipment and hundreds of workers over a very large output. If BMW tried to assemble its i3 cars one at a time, outside of a factory, the output-to-input ratio and the overall costs would be vastly higher, the same way that the craft method of car building was far more expensive than Ford’s mass production methods.

In home construction, however, this low ratio is a product of the fact that the amount of transformation taking place on the inputs is relatively modest. It takes a relatively small amount of labor and equipment to transform lumber, drywall, concrete, shingles, and other building materials into a finished home.
The fact that the ratio between costs of constructing a home and the costs of the various materials is already so low is fundamentally what makes achieving substantial economies of scale difficult. For complex manufactured goods, when this ratio is high — when there are a lot of labor-intensive operations or transformations required to turn input materials into a final product — the strategy for efficiency improvement is relatively straightforward. Build some machine to perform some particular task, sequence it together with other machines performing different tasks, and then use those machines to produce as much output as possible. The machines might be expensive to develop and build, and you’ll need new, expensive workers to keep the automated systems running. But with high production volumes this trade-off is worth it: all these costs get spread out thinly, and the ratio of output costs to input costs trends downward. This is broadly what Ford did for production of the Model T, and it’s how production for things like lightbulbs evolved in the early 20th century.
But when the ratio between output costs and input costs starts out low, as it does with homebuilding, it’s hard to take advantage of this strategy: the potential savings are just too small. I’ve noted previously that it takes a lot of expensive automation to duplicate the efforts of a small number of construction workers with hand tools, and when I was at Katerra, executives would often bemoan how hard it was for their capital-intensive production to compete with “Bubba and his truck” — low overhead contractors using manual labor and not much else. The ratio of output costs to input costs doesn’t give enough “bite” for production economies of scale to act on, and there’s little to be gained in production economies by dramatically increasing the scale of your homebuilding operation.
Economies of scale are often one of the most powerful forces available for making some process more efficient. But economies of scale operate on the difference between the costs of the raw inputs to some process and the costs of the final product. When this difference is large, there are often substantial economies of scale that can be achieved. You can introduce automated equipment or other large fixed costs that reduce your overhead costs when spread over a large enough production volume. You can use larger-capacity equipment that has lower per-unit costs than smaller-capacity equipment. You can gradually make some process more efficient via learning-by-doing. All these strategies will whittle away the difference between your raw input costs and the costs of your final product.
But when this ratio is already low, economies of scale have little room to operate. Thanks to the relatively modest requirements for transforming construction materials into finished houses, homebuilding has the sort of ratio of output costs to input costs observed in high-volume production operations like car manufacturing. Once the low-hanging fruit is captured, such as more efficiently arranging the work in manufactured home factories, there’s little production efficiency to be gained from further increases in scale.
Thinking about economies of scale in terms of the ratio of output costs to material input costs does suggest strategies for achieving them:
You could find sectors of construction, such as nuclear power, where the ratio of output costs to input costs is very high, and thus have more opportunities for efficiency improvements.
You could vertically integrate backwards into the production of raw materials and components, in the hopes of driving down those costs.
You could find a way to use fewer and/or cheaper raw materials.
We’ll look at the viability of these strategies in future essays.
The combined starts of CBUSA members would make it the fifth largest single-family homebuilder in the US.
Newer versions of the Cost Estimator have no such deductions.
Clayton Homes also produces around 10,000 other types of homes each year.
Note that I’m using this concept slightly differently than Musk. Musk’s idiot index is about the costs of the raw materials, whereas for some of these examples I’m considering the cost of purchased components as well, but the basic idea is the same.

Missile defense has traditionally been framed around detection, tracking and interception. Golden Dome changes that calculus, broadening the focus to the entire distributed infrastructure enabling the architecture, placing propulsion front […]
The post The Propulsion Imperative Behind Golden Dome appeared first on SpaceNews.

At most major European space summits, the sovereignty debate has long been overshadowed by talk of launchers, constellations and the symbolism of a national presence. On the sidelines, however, the […]
The post Europe’s biggest space opportunity comes after launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

The Virgin Galactic spaceplane used for the company’s first commercial flights has returned to service to train its pilots for its next-generation spacecraft.
The post Virgin Galactic returns Unity to flight to prepare for next-generation spaceplane appeared first on SpaceNews.

A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket exploded on its launch pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Thursday night, in a major setback for Blue Origin, the company founded by Jeff Bezos.
The rocket erupted in a giant fire ball that engulfed the launch pad at 9 p.m. EDT (0100 UTC) as the engines appeared to be igniting for a pre-launch test known as a static fire. New Glenn had been slated to launch a batch of satellites for another Bezos venture, Amazon Leo, as soon as Thursday, June 4.
“All personnel are accounted for and safe. It’s too early to know the root cause but we’re already working to find it,” Bezos wrote in a post on social media. “Very rough day, but we’ll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. It’s worth it.”
The Amazon Leo satellites had not been transported to the launch site from its payload processing facility to be integrated with the rocket. This was set to be the first of 24 launches that Amazon Leo booked on New Glenn rockets.
With two unrelated launches scheduled for Friday, May 29, Space Launch Delta 45, which manages the Eastern Range, released a statement to confirm that “The Eastern Range remains fully mission capable for National Security Space Launch and continues to support operations at all other launch complexes.”
“The Eastern Range serves as a Department of Defense test and training range supporting critical development, testing, evaluation, and launch activities that advance national security and space capabilities,” an SLD 45 spokesperson said. “These operations often involve developmental systems and emerging technologies, and the nature of such testing carries inherent risk, including the potential for anomalies.”
Blue Origin had just received clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration to resume launches of its New Glenn rocket on Friday, May 22. During the New Glenn 3 (NG-3) mission, the rocket suffered an in-flight anomaly with its upper stage that prevented it from placing AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird-7 satellite into the correct orbit.

“The FAA oversaw and accepted the findings of the Blue Origin-led investigation. The final mishap report identified the direct cause of the mishap as a cryogenic leak that froze a hydraulic line and led to a thrust anomaly during the second stage engine burn,” the FAA said in a statement on May 27.
“Blue Origin identified nine corrective actions to prevent reoccurrence of the event. The FAA will verify that Blue Origin implements corrective actions prior to the launch of the next New Glenn mission.”
The FAA told Spaceflight Now the static fire explosion would not prompt a new investigation by that agency: “This test was not within the scope of FAA licensed activities. There was no impact to air traffic.”
The anomaly Thursday night appeared to destroy at least one of the lightning protection towers at LC-36 and the transporter erector. Until a full assessment is completed, it’s impossible to know exactly how long it will take to resume launch operations at pad.
If the issue is connected back to the main propulsion system and the rocket’s methane-fueled BE-4 engines, that might have a direct impact on United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan rockets. That launch vehicle was grounded due to a solid rocket booster anomaly, but both vehicles use the BE-4 engine for their first stages.

NASA is also heavily relying on Blue Origin and it’s New Glenn rocket to support the Artemis Program and its Moon Base ambitions. On Tuesday, the agency held an event to announce several contract awards for future missions, including tapping Blue Origin to deliver a pair of lunar terrain vehicles to the lunar surface using its Blue Moon Mark 1 lander.
Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mark 2 crewed lander was also selected by NASA as one of two landers for the Human Landing System program. It along with SpaceX’s Starship rocket will be used to dock with the Orion spacecraft on future Artemis missions and bring astronauts to the lunar surface and back up into lunar orbit.
A version of the Blue Moon Mk.2 is also slated to participate in the Artemis 3 mission, which will be an Apollo 9 style demonstration in low Earth orbit to buy down risks for the Moon landing missions. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said on Tuesday that Artemis 3 was scheduled to launch in mid-2027.
“NASA is aware of the anomaly that occurred tonight at Launch Complex 36 involving Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Spaceflight is unforgiving, and developing new heavy-lift launch capability is extraordinarily difficult. We will work with our partners to support a thorough investigation of this anomaly, assess near-term mission impacts, and get back to launching rockets,” Isaacman wrote in a statement on social media. “We will provide information on any impacts to the Artemis and Moon Base programs as it becomes available.”

The last major launch pad explosion at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station was back in September 2016 when a helium tank rupture caused a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket to explode at Space Launch Complex 40, a few miles north of Launch Complex 36.
Because SpaceX already had multiple launch pads when that explosion happened, it was able to resume Falcon 9 launches from Vandenberg Space Force Base in January 2017, followed a month later by its first launch from pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center. However, it wasn’t until the launch of CRS-13 in December 2017 when SpaceX returned to flying rockets off of pad 40.
Launch Complex 36 is currently Blue Origin’s only orbital launch facility. The investigation into the root cause of the accident is likely to be completed long before Blue Origin can get the pad back into operation.

Observable Space, a company that develops optical systems for laser communications and space domain awareness, has raised $90 million and secured a U.S. Space Force contract.
The post Observable Space raises $90 million and wins Space Force contract for optical systems appeared first on SpaceNews.

In December 1972, Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt spent 75 hours on the lunar surface during Apollo 17. They drove a rover, conducted three spacewalks and collected samples across the […]
The post Setting up a permanent lunar presence needs investment in biology appeared first on SpaceNews.

WARSAW, Poland — The Italian-Dutch company Revolv Space has announced that French in-orbit services provider Infinite Orbits has selected its Solar Array Drive Assemblies (SADAs), the devices used to manage […]
The post Revolv Space enters in-orbit servicing market with Infinite Orbits deal appeared first on SpaceNews.

AMSTERDAM — A senior German military official said Europe needs a coordinated approach to military space operations and proposed the creation of a European Space Component Command hosted by Germany […]
The post Germany pushes European military space command initiative appeared first on SpaceNews.

In this episode of Space Minds, David Ariosto talks with Lux Aeterna CEO Brian Taylor about the problems with disposable satellites and the use for on-orbit servicing. Sponsored by Arcfield […]
The post CEO Series: Lux Aeterna’s Brian Taylor on what’s next for on-orbit servicing appeared first on SpaceNews.

These facilities are intended to ensure military space missions can continue during wartime when installations could come under attack
The post Space Force plans nationwide network of ‘resilient operations centers’ appeared first on SpaceNews.
It may seem like a distant memory now, but as of the mid-2000s, U.S. natural gas production had been flat for a decade, and the U.S. was importing liquefied natural gas (LNG), with plans to import much more. Then shale gas happened. Advances in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling caused U.S. natural gas production to increase significantly, and the U.S. went from being a net importer of natural gas to being the world’s largest exporter. This paper calculates how much shale gas has saved U.S. natural gas consumers. Using price differences between the United States, Europe and Japan, we calculate that U.S. natural gas consumers have saved $3.1-$4.3 trillion between 2007 and 2025, equivalent to $164-$227 billion annually. Access to low-price U.S. natural gas has been particularly valuable during major supply shocks such as the war in Ukraine, and the benefits of shale gas have been experienced broadly across sectors and states.
That is from a new NBER working paper by Lucas W. Davis.
The post How Much Has Shale Gas Saved U.S. Consumers? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Along the Vetrivier (Vet River) in South Africa, a patchwork of circular and rectangular fields spreads across what is otherwise a semi-arid part of the Free State province. The water brings life to an array of crops, contributing to the agricultural productivity of the wider Maize Triangle.
The agricultural area shown in this image lies about 110 kilometers (70 miles) north of Bloemfontein. The scene is reminiscent of a modern abstract painting. Colorful circles mingle with straight-edged fields in combinations of red, green, and blue. But each color carries physical meaning, providing clues about crop types and revealing how they changed over the course of the Southern Hemisphere’s growing season.
Data for the visualization were acquired by the NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) satellite during 10 passes over the area between November 2025 and March 2026. L-band radar observations, which can “see” vegetation’s structure instead of its color, were analyzed to produce per-pixel statistical measures across the scene. By combining radar scattering behaviors observed across multiple dates into a single composite, scientists built a compact summary of seasonal agricultural activity and change.
“It’s a pretty picture, but there are also important things that it communicates to us,” said Paul Siqueira, a scientist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and ecosystems lead of the NISAR science team. “With NISAR, crops like maize and sunflower appear differently than forests because of their size differences and period of growth.”
In this false-color composite, green indicates a vegetated area; red represents an unvegetated surface; and blue indicates how rapidly a vegetated area changed over the season. For instance, stable vegetation—such as forested areas—display a light blue component. Plants that change structure throughout the season, such as wheat and maize (corn), have a darker blue component.
In practice, most pixels contain a mix of these colors, producing the visualization’s rich and varied palette. For example, plants that grow rapidly (contributing some green) and are harvested early (contributing a large red component) make fields appear orange. Sunflowers are known to exhibit this pattern in the region, though ground validation would be needed to confirm their presence in any given field.
The processing behind the visualization is relatively straightforward, but it is based on a large amount of data. NISAR sends radar signals to Earth and measures how they bounce back; the orientation of the returned radar waves (cross-polarized or co-polarized) carries information about the structure of vegetation and surfaces. By combining radar measurements from multiple satellite passes and calculating statistics for each pixel, scientists built the detailed map of the landscape’s characteristics throughout the growing season.
The technique provides a repeatable way to monitor crop development, the impacts of irrigation, and land-use change across large regions. As NISAR collects more data, researchers will be able to compare seasons, track field-to-field differences in growth patterns, and better understand how agricultural systems respond to water availability and climate variability.
Image by Paul Siqueira (UMass Amherst) of the NISAR science team using data from the NISAR GCOV product, and prepared for NASA Earth Observatory by Michala Garrison. 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.

From autumn color to a winter-white finish, forested areas around Blacksburg trade foliage for snow over the span of two…

Scientists pioneered a new system that combines data from multiple Earth-observing satellites to identify forest clearing up to 100 days…

The circular geologic feature in northwestern Africa can be hard to recognize from the ground, but it is obvious when…
The post Painting the Growing Season in the Maize Triangle appeared first on NASA Science.

SpaceX launched its penultimate planned flight in May, sending its Falcon 9 rocket flying from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Friday morning.
The Starlink 10-53 mission will add another 29 broadband internet satellites to the company’s low Earth orbit megaconstellation. The network consists of more than 10,000 spacecraft.
Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 40 happened at 8:57 a.m. EDT (1257 UTC). The rocket flew on a north-easterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.
The 45th Weather Squadron forecast an 80 percent chance for favorable weather during the launch window. Meteorologists are tracking the possibility for interference from cumulus and anvil clouds.
“The subtropical ridge axis will move south of the Spaceport by Friday, leading to an influx of tropical moisture,” launch weather officers wrote. “Westerly-to-southwesterly low-level winds will bring prime conditions for afternoon showers and thunderstorms along the east coast of Florida for several days, some of which could develop in the morning hours.
“For both the primary and backup launch windows, isolated showers and thunderstorms could develop towards the end of the windows, with possibly lingering anvil clouds towards the beginning of the windows.”

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1085. This was its 16th flight following the launches of missions, like NASA’s Crew-9, Fram2, and Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission 1.
Nearly 8.5 minutes after liftoff, B1085 landed on the drone ship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas.’ This was the 152nd touchdown on this vessel and the 616th booster landing for SpaceX to date.

Which web platforms do I trust?
Choosing between them is like picking which Mafia wiseguy gets my protection money. Most platforms stopped serving users long ago—and have now switched to audience capture strategies. That’s the modern equivalent of the company store1, where prices are set based on pain thresholds, not market value.
In an audience capture business, you make it hard for users to leave—and then see how much you can squeeze out of them. Spotify serves as a case study for this approach.
The company kept prices low until it had captured a large user base, but now has switched to harvesting—routinely boosting its price, each time just a little bit more. They recently announced the third price increase in less than three years. Subscribers are the proverbial frog in the pot of boiling water—if the temperature rises slowly enough, they get cooked without ever realizing it.2
That’s the state of play for Spotify users right now. They still think they are in a hot tub at the resort, but they’re actually on the dinner menu at Regeringsgatan 19 in central Stockholm.3
Almost all of the news from Spotify is unpleasant these days—but also quite revealing. We’re now in a volatile situation that could result in a completely different streaming environment five years from now.
Up this morning, and my wife, I know not for what cause, being against going to Chelsey to-day, it being a holy day (Ascension Day) and I at leisure, it being the first holy day almost that we have observed ever since we came to the office, we did give Ashwell leave to go by herself, and I out to several places about business. Among others to Dr. Williams, to reckon with him for physique that my wife has had for a year or two, coming to almost 4l. Then to the Exchange, where I hear that the King had letters yesterday from France that the King there is in a [way] of living again, which I am glad to hear.
At the coffee-house in Exchange Alley I bought a little book, “Counsell to Builders,” by Sir Balth. Gerbier. It is dedicated almost to all the men of any great condition in England, so that the Epistles are more than the book itself, and both it and them not worth a turd, that I am ashamed that I bought it.
Home and there found Creed, who dined with us, and after dinner by water to the Royall Theatre; but that was so full they told us we could have no room. And so to the Duke’s House; and there saw “Hamlett” done, giving us fresh reason never to think enough of Betterton.
Who should we see come upon the stage but Gosnell, my wife’s maid? but neither spoke, danced, nor sung; which I was sorry for. But she becomes the stage very well.
Thence by water home, after we had walked to and fro, backwards and forwards, six or seven times in the Temple walks, disputing whether to go by land or water. By land home, and thence by water to Halfway House, and there eat some supper we carried with us, and so walked home again, it being late we were forced to land at the dock, my wife and they, but I in a humour not willing to daub my shoes went round by the Custom House. So home, and by and by to bed, Creed lying with me in the red chamber all night.
Walking away from your pet to enter treatment feels impossible. Your companion is often your greatest source of comfort during your darkest times. Choosing between your health and your pet’s safety should not be a decision you have to make. Los Angeles addiction treatment centers are changing to better understand this bond. Many now offer programs where your pet stays by your side as you recover. Here is the step-by-step process to secure a spot at a pet friendly rehab Los Angeles .
Finding a program that welcomes animals requires more than a quick search. You need to know exactly what kind of care the facility provides and how they handle pets on their property.
“Pet-friendly” can mean different things. Some inpatient residential facilities allow you to live with your pet in your room. Others might only allow pets during specific hours or for pet-assisted therapy sessions. You also have the option of partial hospitalization (PHP) programs. These allow you to attend daily clinical sessions while returning home to your pet at night. Be clear about your clinical needs before you check for pet policies.
Facilities have strict rules to ensure the safety of all residents. Most common restrictions involve size and species. Many centers limit dogs to 40 pounds or less. They rarely accept exotic pets like reptiles or birds. Call the admissions office directly to ask about your specific animal. Never assume they will make an exception to their weight or species rules.
Look beyond the basic “yes” to your pet’s presence. Ask if the facility has a designated pet relief area on-site. Find out if there are walking paths or if you must leave the grounds to exercise your dog. Some centers provide crates and food bowls, but others expect you to bring everything. Verify if you are responsible for feeding and cleaning up after your pet, or if staff assists with these tasks.
Your choice of center is a critical decision point for your recovery. Do your due diligence before you commit to any program.
Always verify that a facility has a current license from the California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS). A center might have a great pet policy, but that means nothing if they lack proper clinical accreditation. Visit the DHCS website to search for the facility by name. Confirm they are in good standing before you move forward with any enrollment steps.
Review every document the facility hands you regarding your pet. You will likely sign a legal agreement covering pet behavior and liability. Pay close attention to what happens if your pet causes damage or injures someone. Ask how the facility handles emergencies, such as if your pet suddenly falls ill while you are in a therapy session. If possible, ask for testimonials from other residents who brought their pets to the program.
Your pet needs to be ready for a life change just as much as you do. Ensure they are healthy and prepared for a new environment.
Facilities will demand proof that your pet is safe to be around other people. Get a copy of all vet records, including rabies, Bordetella, and DHLPP vaccinations. Schedule a pre-admission checkup with your vet to confirm your pet is healthy enough for travel and life in a communal setting. A clean bill of health is a standard requirement for all pet-friendly centers.
Your pet must be house-trained and non-aggressive. Facilities often screen pets to see how they handle being in small, shared spaces with strangers. If your pet gets anxious when left alone, work on crate training before you check in. A calm, well-behaved pet is much more likely to be accepted by other residents and staff.
Moving into treatment is a logistical hurdle. Make it easier by planning your pet’s needs well in advance.
Pack a bag specifically for your animal. Include a 30-day supply of food, their favorite bedding, a few toys, and their grooming tools. Keep a folder with their medical records and a copy of the facility’s pet policy. Having familiar items, like their bed, helps your pet feel secure in an unfamiliar place.
Life in recovery is unpredictable. You need a contingency plan if you have to change facilities or if your pet cannot stay for the entire duration of your stay. Identify a trusted family member or friend in the Los Angeles area who can take your pet on short notice. Keep their contact information with your facility paperwork at all times.
The admissions office will evaluate your situation to see if you and your pet are a good fit for their program.
Be honest during your admissions interview. Explain your relationship with your pet and why their presence is vital to your mental health. Most centers want to know how the pet behaves in groups and if they are prone to barking. This conversation helps staff determine how to best integrate your companion into your daily schedule.
Ask about the specific rules for your pet during your clinical hours. You might have designated visiting times if your pet cannot be in group therapy. Some centers allow pets in individual sessions, while others restrict them from certain areas of the building. Clarify these boundaries now to avoid stress later.
Check the cost of bringing your pet. Some facilities charge a non-refundable deposit or a daily pet care fee. These costs are often not covered by insurance. Ask for a written breakdown of all potential charges during the sign-up process. Ensure you have the funds ready to cover these extra expenses before your start date.
The final step is the paperwork. Do not rush through this part of the process.
You will likely sign a waiver stating you are responsible for your pet’s actions. This includes any property damage or incidents with other residents. Understand what your liability insurance covers before you sign. If you feel uncomfortable with the terms, ask for clarification or speak to the facility director.
Try to schedule your arrival and your pet’s arrival at the same time. This helps minimize separation anxiety for both of you. Coordinate with the intake team to ensure your room is ready for an animal before you walk through the door. Having a smooth move-in process sets a positive tone for your entire stay.
Once you are settled, use your pet as a resource for your recovery.
Focus on the physical and emotional calm your pet brings to your life. Research shows that interacting with a pet lowers cortisol levels and blood pressure. Use this to your advantage during difficult days. A simple walk or playtime session can distract you from cravings and help you focus on the present.
There will be days when treatment feels overwhelming. Your pet can be a constant, grounding force during those times. If you feel vulnerable or are struggling with detox, lean on your companion for support. Follow the facility rules, but keep your pet close to maintain that emotional anchor that keeps you focused on your goal of sobriety.
Maintaining the human-animal bond during early recovery is a powerful tool. It provides stability and companionship that can make your time in a Los Angeles addiction treatment program much more successful. By vetting your options carefully, preparing your pet, and understanding the facility’s rules, you create the best environment for lasting change.
Key Takeaways for Enrollment:
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Summer always sounds relaxing in theory, but once people begin spending entire days outdoors, priorities start changing quickly. A quick afternoon at the beach feels very different from twelve straight hours spent moving between swimming, walking, restaurants, outdoor events, road trips, and late-night social plans. The items that once seemed optional suddenly become the things people rely on most.
This is usually the point where summer stops being only about appearance and starts becoming more about comfort, flexibility, and practicality. Long exposure to heat, crowded spaces, changing temperatures, and constant movement tends to make people more selective about what they wear, carry, and include in their routines. The small details that improve comfort often end up shaping the overall experience far more than expected.
One thing many people underestimate about summer is how exhausting prolonged heat exposure can become after several consecutive days outdoors. Even enjoyable activities like beach trips, outdoor dining, music festivals, or travel can feel physically draining once heat, humidity, and fatigue begin building up over time.
This often changes the way people structure their routines. Instead of focusing entirely on activities themselves, many individuals begin paying more attention to recovery afterward. Better hydration, lighter meals, earlier mornings, slower evenings, and more relaxed nighttime habits become much more valuable during busy summer periods.
Even conversations around winding down after long outdoor days have changed. Some adults look for simpler evening habits that help create calmer routines after overstimulating schedules, including things like herbal teas, screen-free evenings, cooling showers, or products such as buy delta 9 gummies from Snoozy , which are sometimes discussed as part of nighttime relaxation routines for adults after long summer days.
The longer people stay active outdoors, the more they usually appreciate routines that help them slow down afterward instead of maintaining nonstop stimulation from morning until night.
Most people have owned swimwear that looked great initially but became uncomfortable after several hours outdoors. Tight waistbands, awkward fits, thin materials, or styles that constantly require adjustment usually become frustrating very quickly during full beach days or long poolside afternoons. This is why comfort-focused swimwear has become increasingly important over the last few years.
Instead of choosing pieces designed only for photos or short outings, many women now prioritize styles that work across multiple activities throughout the day. Walking along the beach, sitting at outdoor restaurants, relaxing near pools, or spending hours in the sun requires clothing that feels supportive and practical. Styles like high waisted bikini bottoms are popular because they balance comfort, coverage, and versatility without sacrificing style.
People also tend to appreciate adaptable clothing more once summer schedules become busier. Swimwear that transitions naturally between different settings often feels much easier to manage during long outdoor days than pieces designed only for one specific occasion.

Many summer problems are surprisingly easy to predict. Dead phone batteries, dehydration, sunburn, uncomfortable shoes, or forgotten sunscreen often end up affecting the entire day. People who spend long hours outdoors regularly tend to prepare differently because they understand how quickly discomfort can build once temperatures rise.
Portable chargers, oversized tote bags, refillable water bottles, sunglasses, cooling towels, and lightweight layers often become daily necessities rather than optional extras. The same applies to practical footwear. Stylish sandals may look appealing initially, but supportive shoes usually become far more valuable after several hours of walking through hot streets, beaches, or crowded outdoor events.
Summer also tends to involve far more movement between locations than people expect. A single day may include commuting, swimming, shopping, dining outdoors, attending social events, and staying outside until late evening without returning home. Because of this, portable organization and comfort-focused packing strategies quietly become part of many people’s seasonal routines.
At the beginning of summer, most people focus mainly on enjoying warm weather and spending more time outdoors. After repeated exposure to strong sun and heat, priorities often shift toward recovery, protection, and comfort instead. Feeling overheated for multiple days in a row tends to affect energy levels, mood, sleep quality, and overall patience much more than many people anticipate.
This explains why lightweight fabrics, breathable materials, hats, cover-ups, and hydration products become increasingly important throughout the season. People also begin adjusting schedules to avoid the hottest parts of the day whenever possible. Morning beach visits and evening outdoor dinners often become more appealing simply because they feel physically easier to enjoy.
Outdoor lifestyles have also become more flexible in recent years. Instead of planning separate outfits for every activity, many individuals now prefer versatile summer essentials that work across multiple settings. Swimwear, sandals, oversized shirts, and comfortable accessories that transition naturally between casual environments tend to simplify busy summer schedules considerably.
One overlooked part of summer is how socially demanding it often becomes. Outdoor gatherings, vacations, concerts, pool parties, rooftop dinners, festivals, and weekend travel can create packed schedules very quickly. Although these experiences are enjoyable, they also require far more physical and mental energy than many people realize.
Constant exposure to crowds, noise, sun, travel, and activity can eventually create a sense of overstimulation, especially during long stretches of busy weekends. This is one reason why people increasingly value quieter recovery habits during summer instead of nonstop activity. Small moments of comfort often become more meaningful after spending entire days outdoors around large groups and constant movement.
Many people also begin simplifying routines intentionally during summer because overly complicated schedules become difficult to maintain. Easier meals, breathable clothing, practical bags, comfortable swimwear, and calming nighttime habits usually feel far more sustainable over time than high-maintenance routines designed only around appearance.
Interestingly, the products people appreciate most during summer are rarely the most expensive or complicated. Comfortable clothing, breathable swimwear, reliable sandals, hydration, portable chargers, sunscreen, lightweight bags, and relaxing evening routines often end up having the biggest impact on daily comfort.
People usually remember how they felt during summer more than what they purchased. Feeling overheated, uncomfortable, exhausted, or stressed can easily affect otherwise enjoyable experiences. In contrast, small practical comforts often make outdoor days feel smoother, lighter, and more enjoyable from beginning to end.
As more people spend extended time outdoors throughout summer, priorities naturally shift away from appearance alone and toward routines that support comfort, energy, and flexibility during long active days.
Photo at top: Oveth Martinez on Unsplash
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Anyone who has spent time hunting for a casino bonus knows the routine. You find something that looks right, the wagering requirement is reasonable, the games are ones you actually play, the amount is worth claiming. You click through and discover the offer ended three weeks ago. Or the terms have changed so significantly since the listing was written that the headline figure is functionally meaningless. This is not an occasional inconvenience. It is the standard experience on most bonus directories, and it reflects how those platforms are built: to aggregate at volume and update rarely. A casino bonus finder that does not remove dead offers is not finding bonuses at all. What players actually need is not more offers but fewer offers that are actually live, accurate, and claimable today. That is the problem casinobonusesfinder.com was built to solve, starting with verification before publication and never stopping there.
The bonus graveyard problem has a straightforward cause. Most comparison platforms are built around acquisition rather than accuracy. An operator submits a promotional listing, it gets published, and the platform earns a commission when players click through. There is no structural incentive to remove the listing when the offer expires or when the terms change, because a dead listing still generates clicks. Players bear the entire cost of this misalignment in time spent and deposits made on false assumptions.
The scale of the problem is significant. Casino operators update promotions frequently, adjust wagering requirements without notice, and sometimes change withdrawal caps or game eligibility after a promotion has been live for weeks. Many review sites do not track these updates at all. Players end up claiming offers that work differently from what they expected, or find that an offer they selected carefully is no longer available by the time they try to redeem it.
The specific ways expired and misleading bonuses damage the player experience include:
CasinoBonusesFinder addresses this through a three-layer system that runs continuously rather than at fixed intervals.
|
Layer |
Who Runs It |
What It Does |
|
Pre-publication review |
Editorial team |
Checks terms accuracy, licensing, and availability before listing |
|
Automated daily audit |
Platform systems |
Scans for expiry, term changes, and offer availability in real time |
|
Community flagging |
30,000+ active members |
Reports broken codes, changed terms, and failed redemptions |
When a bonus fails any of these checks, it is removed rather than kept live with a note. Bonuses that receive a pattern of negative community reports lose visibility progressively before being pulled entirely. A public issue log tracks every change, which means players can see the history of a listing rather than just its current state.
The user-level tools add another dimension. Once a player claims or dismisses an offer, it disappears from their feed permanently. Non-working bonuses can be removed with a single click. This means each return visit shows a cleaner set of offers rather than the same outdated catalogue with a few new entries added at the top.
Tony Sloterman, Head of Product at Casino Bonuses Finder , has put it directly: a bonus should be checked like a contract. If the rules are unclear or unstable, players should not see it. The roadmap builds on this with a real-time expiry tracker designed to catch outdated promotions before they reach any player’s feed, and a hidden rule scanner that will automatically flag maximum cashout caps and other restrictive clauses embedded in lengthy terms documents.
The broader principle behind all of it is straightforward. Showing players fewer offers that are accurate is more useful than showing them thousands of offers that may or may not be live. The bonus graveyard problem is not technically difficult to solve. It requires a platform that is built to solve it rather than one that profits from leaving it in place.
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Casinos are everywhere these days, from adverts on TV to recommendations on the App Store, but casual players are no longer signing up blindly. Even if they’re not high-rollers, these players are making sure the casino has fair deposit terms before even glancing at the sign-up button.
Deposit size has become one of the first things they check, alongside licensing and reviews, as players prioritise affordability and control before committing any money. This article explores why this trend has come about and what potential players should know before going ahead.
When you think about scoping out online casinos, most people will think about looking for licensing and legitimate parent companies. However, deposit size is now a major factor in choosing an online casino because casual players don’t want to have to spend $50 to get a foot in the door.
Instead of focusing only on games or bonuses, users increasingly compare platforms based on how much they need to deposit to meet the minimum allowance. This is usually anywhere from $10 to $20, and explains why 20 deposit casinos for casual players are now at the top of most review sites.
Mobile gaming has reinforced this affordable trend by encouraging quick and spontaneous play sessions. Think of any apps you use. They’re likely built to make the experience effortless, with no time to consider how much you want to spend. This ethos is also true for iGaming sites.
Beginners in particular want to avoid high upfront costs, preferring platforms where they can test games without significant financial pressure — usually via a low minimum deposit or no deposit bonus.
Sure, casinos set and advertise the minimum deposits, but individual payment methods play a major role in determining how low deposits can go. One method might allow $10, but for another, this might not be possible due to rules and T&Cs.
E-wallets such as PayPal, Skrill, and Neteller often allow lower minimum deposits and faster processing times, with the minimum spend being $10. Debit and credit cards like Visa and Mastercard are widely accepted but may have slightly higher thresholds at around $20.
Other options also show the variety in the payment space. Prepaid options such as Paysafecard offer strict budgeting control and can allow deposits between $10 to $20, while cryptocurrency deposits vary depending on fees and platform policies, but can sometimes have no limit at all (provided the casino can also facilitate this).
Jonas Kyllönen, Online Casino Expert at Mr. Gamble , explained that “The difference between payment method limits means that a casino can feel more or less accessible depending on your personal payment preferences. This is why e-wallets are such a popular method for users.”
While it is true that payment providers set limits, deposit expectations also vary significantly by region. We’ll walk you through the main ones below.
In Europe, low minimum deposits are more common and widely accepted due to strong regulation and a mature online gambling market. For example, it’s not uncommon for UKGC-licensed casinos to offer £5 deposits.
In the United States, on the other hand, deposit structures tend to be more standardised, with slightly higher entry points on average — usually around $20 to $30.
Asia presents a more mixed landscape, with some platforms offering very low deposits (e.g., $3) while others cater to higher-spending users who can deposit $30+ in one go, of course, depending on local regulations.
Paavo Salonen, Online Casino Expert at Mr. Gamble stated that “When looking for online casinos, it’s critical to take into account where they are based. Not only does this influence the minimum deposit regulations, but it can also affect whether they accept you as a player. It’s best to play in casinos that are based in the same region as you.”
Players now actively watch for warning signs before committing money, and this includes deposit minimums but also branches beyond this factor. These other checks include unclear payment requirements, aggressive pressure to increase spending, ‘too good to be true’ marketing, and overly complex bonus terms.
Poor transparency around licensing or payment processing is another major concern. If an operator doesn’t give this information away, there might be something shady going on.
Here are the main checks you should make before choosing an online casino and how you can make the check.
|
Red Flag |
How to Check It |
|
Unclear deposits |
Read deposit page & FAQ |
|
Pressure tactics |
Watch for pushy prompts or pop-ups |
|
Complex bonuses |
Review full bonus terms & wagering rules |
|
No licensing info |
Check footer for regulator details (e.g. UKGC, MGA) |
|
Poor support |
Test live chat or response times قبل depositing |
Ultimately, as casual players become more informed and cautious, they are using it to make more controlled decisions in online gambling. We urge players to always gamble responsibly and take advantage of responsible gambling controls as needed.
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The post Why Casual Players Are Looking More Closely at Deposit Size Before Choosing an Online Casino appeared first on DCReport.org.
Here is much more from Anton Korinek and Patrick McKelvey. Via the excellent Samir Varma.
The post AI in gdp appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
1. “Robinhood launched agentic trading and an agentic credit card today that will allow AI agents to trade equities and make credit card purchases on customers’ behalf.” With cash back, of course.
3. Why has Napoleon so rarely been captured well on screen?
4. Guatemala agrees to joint strikes, with the U.S., against drug gangs (NYT).
6. Emmanuel Roman on the need for deeper and thicker European capital markets (FT).
The post Thursday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Right now, D.C., not official Wor-Shing-Tun, but the mainland colony of the District of Columbia is debating a teenage curfew policy. Ordinarily, this wouldn’t be of much interest to anyone other than the local juveniles and their parents, but one of the features of being a colonial subject is that every policy debate, no matter how small can become an excuse for federal authorities to curtail the limited Home Rule we have. Your state or municipality doesn’t have to consider this argument by Council Member and mayoral candidate Kenyan McDuffie*:
This is not only a public safety matter. It is a Home Rule matter.
Local residents and elected officials know DC best and do not need federal intervention to keep our city safe and invest in our youth. However, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro has spent months making the national argument that the District cannot govern itself. President Donald Trump has deployed the National Guard on DC streets and floated proposals to try 14-year-olds as adults. Every week that this Council allows curfew authority to lapse, it hands the White House and its allies fresh evidence for that narrative and justification for federal intervention in our local affairs.
I don’t really have a strong opinion on the curfew issue per se, but it is ridiculous that the Congress and president of these United States are wasting their time over a local curfew ordinance.
And unlike virtually every other American, the residents of D.C. must consider if we will lose the limited self-governance we have because Fox News has whipped up another panic over ‘teenage flash mobs.’** Other Americans don’t have to live like this***, and neither should the residents of D.C.
D.C. statehood now.
*For what it’s worth, I don’t plan on voting for McDuffie. He’s a competency candidate who hasn’t been very competent, and he always attempts to reach a compromise, even when one side isn’t worth compromising with. He has been endorsed by the kinder, gentler version of the Green Team–and that’s not a compliment.
**You can read about the American Carnage here. It really seems to be much ado about very little, not nothing, but very little. There is a long D.C. tradition of neighborhoods undergoing gentrification freaking out over crowds of Black teenagers, while not giving them any options for entertainment. It’s also worth noting this happened seven months ago. That said, places like Fox News have been running footage of large groups of Black teenagers for months in an attempt to convince viewers that inner city violence is out of control.
***If there were a way to make Oklahoma live like this for a week, D.C. statehood would be a sacrament.
Russia has passed a law authorizing its central bank and other financial institutions to repel drone attacks with their own defense systems, as the country struggles to defend against Ukrainian strikes.
The law, passed by Russia’s lower house of parliament on Tuesday, will allow staff at Russia’s central bank to be armed and to operate the systems used to down unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV, or drone) attacks without the involvement of special forces.
Here is the full story.
The post Those new service sector economics jobs? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
"Nobel Prize-winning economist Alvin E. Roth discusses the moral limits of markets, how bans create black markets, and why harm reduction often works better than prohibition."
"Today's guest is Nobel Prize-winning economist Alvin E. Roth, the author of Moral Economics: From Prostitution to Organ Sales, What Controversial Transactions Reveal About How Markets Work.
He talks with Nick Gillespie about why some voluntary transactions provoke moral outrage even when no one is being directly harmed. Roth explains why black markets often emerge when governments try to ban activities with persistent demand, why both markets and prohibitions require social support to function, and how unintended consequences can make moralistic policies backfire. They discuss the war on drugs, prostitution, surrogacy, same-sex marriage, price gouging, and why Iran remains the only country in the world with a legal market for kidney donors.
They also explore Roth's work designing kidney exchange networks and school choice systems, how digital technology and private transactions make certain bans harder to enforce, and why harm reduction may work better than prohibition in areas ranging from drug policy to sex work."
x
In Texas yesterday, Republican primary voters chose Trump-backed state attorney general Ken Paxton over incumbent senator John Cornyn by more than 27 points to be the Republican candidate for senator. President Donald J. Trump endorsed the scandal-ridden Paxton last week after Senate Republicans had dumped $90 million into the race to defend Cornyn. Democrats will now use their advertisements calling attention to Paxton’s many scandals against them.
As Philip Elliott of Time magazine noted, Republicans can look forward to dumping another $250 million into trying to get Paxton elected, money that they needed to flip Democratic seats elsewhere.
Trump backed Paxton because he didn’t think Cornyn was loyal enough to him, despite the fact that Cornyn voted with Trump 99.2% of the time. Trump preferred Paxton’s attacks on Democrats and his flaunting of his MAGA identity despite—or perhaps because of—Paxton’s many scandals.
As CNN’s Patrick Svitek explained, in 2015, shortly after he took office as Texas attorney general, Paxton was indicted on charges of felony securities fraud, a case ending in March 2024 with an agreement that Paxton would pay restitution and complete community service. In 2020, Paxton’s top aides reported him to the FBI for abusing his office. He fired four of them. A judge later agreed they were fired improperly and awarded them $6.6 million. In 2023 the Texas House, dominated by Republicans, impeached Paxton on a bipartisan vote; under pressure from Trump, the Texas senate acquitted him. And then, last year, his wife, state senator Angela Paxton, filed for divorce on “biblical grounds.”
Trump appears to see politics as a dominance sport, much like the mixed martial arts fighting promoted by Ultimate Fighting Championship, whose arena is currently going up on the lawn of the White House for the fights Trump will host on his birthday, June 14. Brian Wiechert of WBAL-TV explains that workers are putting up a massive 90-foot-tall structure called The Claw to loom over a temporary octagon fighting arena in a way that the White House and the Washington Monument will be framed for television during the event.
With his destruction of the East Wing of the White House, the paving of the Rose Garden to create a patio that looks like the one at Mar-a-Lago, and now the framing of the White House through a UFC arena, Trump has asserted his dominance over the People’s House. Similarly, with his purging even of loyalists in favor of extremists, he is asserting his dominance over the Republican Party, turning it fully into the MAGA Party.
In a similar moment in the 1850s, elite enslavers who dominated the Democratic Party demanded party members line up behind their determination to spread human enslavement to the West. Although the 1820 Missouri Compromise that admitted Missouri as a slave state protected the rest of the land in the Louisiana Purchase north of Missouri’s southern border from enslavement, Democrats in 1854 forced through Congress the Kansas-Nebraska Act permitting slavery there.
Their purity test was a harbinger of a dramatic political realignment.
Frustrated that the existing parties, the Whigs and the Democrats, were not taking a strong enough stand against the demands of elite enslavers, those opposed to the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the spread of slavery abandoned their old political allegiances and came together. Conventions across the North called upon all free men to fight together “for the first principles of Republican Government and against the schemes of aristocracy, the most revolting and oppressive with which the earth was ever cursed or man debased.”
As voters swung away from the Democrats in the 1850s, those Democrats left in office represented the most extreme districts and were themselves the most extreme members of the party. They tried to rally their base by appealing to racism, warning that Black Americans would murder white people unless they remained enslaved and insisting that anyone opposing the spread of slavery was endangering the country and that the U.S. had always been a nation of and for white men.
The echoes of that tactic today are blaring as Trump and MAGA Republicans try to cement their power through racism and culture war issues. Trump today insisted—completely falsely—that ethnic Somalis in Minnesota, almost all of whom are American citizens, are “all crooks.”
Media Matters yesterday reported that Proud Boy Enrique Tarrio said he expected those Trump supporters convicted of crimes for their actions around the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol would use the money Trump has promised them from the $1.776 billion slush fund to spread “conservative culture” and to run for office to take over the system.
The “not one of us” theme is also playing out in Texas, where Republicans appear to be attacking Democratic candidate for senator James Talarico primarily with accusations that he is not manly enough for Texas, falsely saying he is a transgender vegan. Paxton has called Talarico “tofu Talarico,” “six-gender Jimmy,” “James Talafreako” and “low-T Talarico” and has said that Talarico “is a threat to our very way of life and our values. “
But Talarico seems to have gotten the memo. He welcomed Cornyn supporters to his campaign and responded to the Republican attacks by telling Ben Meiselas of Meidas Touch: “I’m an eighth-generation Texan. I’ve been eating barbecue since before Ken Paxton’s first indictment. If all they have on me is lying about me being a vegan, I feel pretty good about our chances this November.”
He has refused to take the bait and has stood firmly on the idea of a government that works for everyday Americans. To Meiselas, he made a point of suggesting that “many of my family members, my friends, my neighbors” voted for Trump because they thought he would lower costs, end forever wars, release the Epstein files, and “drain the swamp.” Instead, “he’s done the exact opposite.” Talarico said he wants to “speak directly to those Texans who feel disillusioned, who feel like the system doesn’t work for them, that it only works for billionaires and puppet politicians like Paxton and Cornyn.” If “we can bring those Texans together across all these divisions in our politics, if we can see past the distractions and the culture war tactics, I think we can do something extraordinary,” Talarico said. “We can end thirty years of one-party rule in Texas, and we can transform American politics in the process.”
Today his campaign announced a tour called “THE PEOPLE vs. KEN PAXTON.”
Unlike anti-Nebraska candidates in 1854, Talarico and other Democratic candidates this year have the advantage of running against a party whose leader is openly corrupt. In addition to the $1.776 billion slush fund, the fortune in cryptocurrency deals, and so on, David A. Fahrenthold of the New York Times reported today that “the contractor given a no-bid contract to repair the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool is being paid an inflated and excessive profit margin.” The government is paying $13.1 million for the pool work, seven times what Trump initially said it would cost.
Maxine Joselow and Andrea Fuller of the New York Times also reported today that Trump is using $7 million worth of the entrance fees visitors have paid to national parks across the country to pay for the work on the reflecting pool. He is also using nearly $60 million in those national park fees to repair nine ornamental fountains in the capital.
And the administration appears determined to hide what it’s doing. It proposed today in sweeping language that it will require federal employees to sign a nondisclosure agreement, a tool Trump has relied heavily on to protect him from potential exposure for wrongdoing. As Don Moynihan explained in Can We Still Govern, the new role would make it impossible for the American people to know what government officials are doing.
That secrecy is hurting the American people in obvious ways. Sarah Owermohle of CNN reports that the administration has barred key U.S. officials from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases from talking to officials at the World Health Organization, from which Trump withdrew the U.S. This limitation has been relaxed slightly since the outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship with U.S. passengers and a breaking Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Now U.S. officials can attend small virtual meetings “in a listening capacity.”
After a trip yesterday to Walter Reed Military Medical Center, after which Trump posted that “Everything checked out PERFECTLY” and the official White House social media account went further, posting, “PERFECT BILL OF HEALTH!” and, in even bigger letters, “PERFECT PHYSICAL.” Trump once again appeared to fall asleep today at a Cabinet meeting.
He did, though, threaten to “blow up” U.S. ally Oman if it doesn’t “behave” over Trump’s demands to open the Strait of Hormuz. “Oman will behave just like everybody else. Or else we’ll have to blow them up. They understand that. They’ll be fine.”
Yesterday the U.S. military struck another small boat in the eastern Pacific, bringing the number of boats struck in the eastern Pacific and the Caribbean to fifty-eight. At least 194 individuals have been killed. The administration insists the boats are trafficking drugs but has produced no evidence for that accusation, and as Eric Schmitt of the New York Times reported today, “military experts say the strikes are illegal, extrajudicial killings.”
Taking these patterns, along with others, into consideration, G. Elliott Morris at Strength in Numbers assesses that although Texas voters haven’t elected a Democrat statewide in thirty-two years, the Texas Senate election is a toss-up.
In the midterm election of 1854, northerners tore through the ranks of congressmen who had voted for the Kansas-Nebraska Act. There were 142 northern seats in the House of Representatives; voters put “anti-Nebraska” congressmen in 120 of them. Anti-Nebraska coalitions elected eleven senators and swept Democrats out of state legislatures across the North. Still disorganized in 1854, by 1856, those in the new coalition opposed to the Slave Power had turned to a new political party, the Republican Party.
By 1859, that new party found a champion, Illinois lawyer Abraham Lincoln, who articulated a new vision of government that worked not for a wealthy cabal, but for the American people.
—
Notes:
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/27/us/politics/reflecting-pool-contractor-trump.html
https://time.com/article/2026/05/26/paxton-defeats-cornyn-trump-texas-talarico/
https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/26/politics/ken-paxton-controversies-james-talarico-texas-senate
https://www.wbaltv.com/article/ufc-fight-white-house-video/71411665
https://minnesotareformer.com/briefs/most-somali-people-in-america-and-minnesota-are-citizens/
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/27/climate/park-service-fees-washington-trump.html
https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/25/politics/global-virus-response-trump-administration
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/27/donald-trump-oman-threat-strait-hormuz
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/27/us/politics/two-survivors-boat-strike.html
Francis Curtis, The Republican Party; A History of Its Fifty Years’ Existence and a Record of Its Measures and Leaders, 1854–1904 (New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1904), p. 190, at https://archive.org/details/republicanpartyh01curtuoft/
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Taking today off, mostly. Taking this out from behind the paywall.
On March 23, 2010 President Barack Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act — usually referred to either as the Affordable Care Act or as Obamacare — into law. Joe Biden, then the vice president, could be overheard whispering “This is a big fucking deal.” And it was.
The ACA, which went into full effect in 2014, created a system of subsidies and regulations designed to make health insurance available to many Americans who had previously been left out. It worked: In 2010 there were 47 million uninsured people in America, but by 2016 this number had dropped to 27 million. This still fell short of the universal health insurance that every other advanced nation has, but it was real progress.
In 2017, during his first term, Donald Trump tried to destroy the ACA, replacing it with the American Health Care Act — legislation that would have eliminated most of the provisions that expanded health insurance under Obama.
At the time the Congressional Budget Office projected that the G.O.P.’s replacement bill would nearly double the number of Americans without health insurance, increasing the total uninsured population by 23 million and undoing all of the progress achieved under the ACA.
However, the attack on Obamacare failed by one vote in the Senate, and the ensuing public backlash against the G.O.P. delivered a large victory in the 2018 midterms to the Democrats. After these developments many observers assumed that the ACA had become a more or less permanent feature of American life.
Such assessments, however, failed to take into account the deep hostility of the U.S. right toward policies that expand access to healthcare. As we’ll see, this hostility goes back generations. And the second Trump administration has taken actions that the CBO projects will add 16 million people to the rolls of the uninsured by 2034.
How did we get here? And now what? Today’s primer will analyze the political economy of U.S. healthcare since the 1940s and the combination of danger and opportunity created by the current crisis.
Below I will discuss the following:
US health care on the eve of Trump II
80 years of US health politics
The Obamacare story
The new assault on healthcare
U.S. health care on the eve of Trump II
In my previous primer I explained that access to modern healthcare depends crucially on having health insurance. I also explained that there are three ways nations can guarantee more or less universal health insurance: insurance that covers major healthcare costs for every citizen.
1. The government can provide care directly, as it does most famously in the UK.
2. It can act as the universal insurer, as it does in Canada.
3. It can use regulations and subsidies to corral private insurers into covering everyone, as it does in the Netherlands.
All of these methods can work and do work in some nations.
By contrast, the U.S. healthcare system is a patchwork of different programs that falls short of universal coverage yet achieves a relatively high level of coverage using versions of all three approaches. In the U.S. the private sector plays a larger role in healthcare than in any other advanced country. However, we are far from having a free-market healthcare system.
To illustrate the patchwork nature of the U.S. healthcare system, here is a breakdown of how the U.S. population was covered in 2024:
A majority of Americans are covered by private insurers through employer-provided insurance and, to a limited extent, through individual plans that people have purchased themselves. However, more than a third of the U.S. population is covered through government programs: Medicare and Medicaid, which are government insurance programs, or military programs including the VA system of hospitals and clinics.
Furthermore, the US system looks less private and more public if we look at the dollars spent rather than enrollment. Seniors, whose healthcare costs are much higher than those of younger Americans, are covered by Medicare. As a result, the government pays a substantially higher percentage of total healthcare costs than private insurers pay:
Moreover, private health insurance is regulated and subsidized by the federal government to a greater extent than is generally realized. Notably, the tax code provides an effective subsidy for employment-based insurance: health insurancebenefits provided by your employer aren’t considered taxable income, giving employers an incentive to offer health insurance benefits rather than paying higher salaries and letting employees buy their own insurance. This tax break, however, is only available, roughly speaking, to companies that offer the same plan to all of their workers, regardless of their medical history or rank in the corporate hierarchy. That is, companies that offer healthcare as a non-taxable benefit can’t deny coverage to employees with preexisting conditions or limit the plan to their top executives.
The great majority of individual policies are purchased via the “exchanges” which were set up by the Affordable Care Act. Companies selling individual policies are also prohibited from discriminating on the basis of medical history. And around 80 percent of those covered by individual private insurance receive government subsidies to help pay for their premiums.
So U.S. healthcare is, as I said, a patchwork — but one in which the government plays a crucial role in promoting health insurance coverage, even in the seemingly privatized parts of the system.
About 92 percent of the U.S. population, and a somewhat higher percentage of legal residents, has health insurance, but the gaps in the system and its complexity still leave millions without coverage. And the persistence of widespread uninsurance has large costs, even to those with insurance. For example, U.S. hospitals spend tens of billions a year on uncompensated care, costs that must be passed on to other patients. And lack of health insurance leads many Americans to forego preventive care, which ultimately both raises costs and causes long-term health problems that are a drag on productivity and the economy as a whole.
Why, then, doesn’t the U.S. government eliminate the patchwork and achieve universal healthcare by paying healthcare bills directly, Canada-style, or by implementing a comprehensive system regulating and subsidizing private insurers so that everyone is covered, Netherlands-style?
The answer to those questions lies in the special history of U.S. health policy, which has been strongly shaped by two forms of American exceptionalism: The power of big money and racial antagonism.
80 years of U.S. health politics
Efforts to move the United States to universal health coverage go all the way back to the New Deal: FDR considered including health insurance as part of Social Security, introduced in 1935, but backed off because he considered it too heavy a political lift.
Harry Truman made a serious push for national health insurance in 1947. However, this push ran aground in the face of fierce opposition from the American Medical Association, which denounced his plan as “socialized medicine.” The AMA feared that a national health system would hurt doctors’ incomes. Crucially, southern Democrats, a key part of Truman’s coalition, turned against his proposals because they feared that national health insurance would force the desegregation of southern hospitals.
Over time, private health insurance grew in order to fill the void. However, private insurers avoided covering senior citizens because of their higher costs. Yet when the idea of Medicare – single-payer universal health insurance limited to senior citizens – was floated, fierce opposition persisted. Notably, in 1961 the AMA launched Operation Coffee Cup, in which doctors’ wives were urged to host gatherings of their friends in which they could listen to an LP of Ronald Reagan warning that socialized medicine would destroy American freedom:
Nonetheless, Lyndon Johnson managed to push Medicare through, along with Medicaid — also single-payer health insurance, but only for the poor. Notably, segregationist concerns about national health insurance weren’t wrong. When Medicare was introduced in 1965, administrators made great efforts to ensure that hospitals benefiting from federal funds were desegregated.
The next major push for health reform came in 1993, under Bill Clinton. Unlike earlier efforts, Clinton’s push was as much about cost control as about universal coverage. Health spending grew much faster than GDP between 1960 and 1990, largely because medical innovation greatly expanded the range of conditions that could be treated:
While making more conditions treatable is a good thing in itself, the rising cost of healthcare threatened both to become a growing economic burden and to undermine the private health insurance that covered large numbers of Americans. In an effort to contain these costs, Clinton’s health proposal involved corralling Americans into what were basically HMOs, still a novelty at the time. Unfortunately, the perception that this would limit individual choice left the plan vulnerable to attack from special interests, especially the insurance industry, which ran many attack ads:
Like Truman’s effort in 1947, Clinton’s health reform ran aground. This failure weighed strongly on Democrats. By the time they were willing to try again, after Barack Obama’s 2008 election victory, they had settled on an incremental, less ambitious strategy that for the most part supplemented the existing healthcare system rather than changing what was already in place.
The Obamacare story
After their big victory in the 2008 elections, Democrats were ready to try again. The Affordable Care Act was enacted in 2010, although most of its provisions didn’t take effect until 2014. Compared with the Clinton effort, it was notable for what it didn’t do. Specifically, it made no significant changes to employment-based health insurance, which covers almost half the population. Nor did it change Medicare, which, contra Ronald Reagan, didn’t end freedom but had become immensely popular.
Instead, the ACA sought to expand health insurance coverage in two ways.
First, it made the individual market, in which individuals without employer-provided coverage buy their own health insurance, viable. It did so through a combination of regulation — prohibiting insurers from discriminating against people with preexisting conditions — and subsidies — the government subsidizes much of the cost of premiums on a sliding scale that depends on one’s income. There was a third component, a penalty for Americans who didn’t have health insurance – essentially forcing healthy people to buy health insurance in order to lower premium costs for everyone. But this leg of the “three-legged stool” was sawed off during the first Trump administration. The result was that some healthy people dropped out, which led in turn to higher premiums. However, subsides kept enough healthy Americans in the insurance market that the nation avoided a “death spiral” of rising premiums and falling enrollment.
In its initial years, the ACA subsides for individual health insurance, while literally lifesaving for many Americans, were generally considered inadequate. As I’ll show in a moment, enrollment faltered for a few years after 2016, largely due to Trump administration policies. However, in 2021 the Biden administration enhanced the subsidies, especially for middle-income individuals, and enrollment recovered.
Why did Democrats pursue this fairly complex approach to expanding healthcare access, rather than simply going for asingle-payer system, commonly known as “Medicare for All”? By leaving employer-based insurance plans untouched, this approach reassured those satisfied with their employer-based coverage that nothing would change. Moreover, this approach headed off opposition from the insurance industry by effectively buying that industry off: private insurers were able to keep their existing business while gaining new business through the expanded market for individual policies. As a result, Obamacare didn’t face the kind of attacks that doomed the Clinton plan.
While the expansion of the individual market got much of the public’s and media’s attention, the ACA also greatly expanded Medicaid coverage.
As originally devised, Medicaid was only partly financed by the federal government; the rest of the money came from the states, which also ran the program. And while state Medicaid programs must meet basic standards to qualify for federal funds, they have substantial discretion in determining eligibility. Before the ACA blue states had relatively generous Medicaid programs, while red states typically covered only the very poor.
The ACA tried to address this disparity across states by establishing a nationwide floor on Medicaid eligibility. With this floor, anyone with income less than 133 percent of the poverty line was covered, with the federal government bearing almost all of the costs for this eligibility expansion. However, in 2013 the Supreme Court ruled that states had the right to opt out of Medicaid expansion.
At the state level, opting out of the ACA Medicaid expansion made no sense financially. By expanding Medicaidcoverage, a state could insure substantial numbers of its residents at little cost, since the federal government would cover the costs. This coverage expansion would also bring money into a state’s economy and help keep its hospitals open. Why reject these benefits?
Yet 25 states initially rejected Medicaid expansion, and 10 states, including Texas and Florida — America’s 2nd and 3rdmost populous states — still haven’t been willing to accept free money:
As the map above makes clear, refusal to expand Medicaid has mainly been an issue in southern states; the initial map of Medicaid expansion versus non-expansion almost precisely matched the battle lines at the start of the U.S. Civil War in 1861. To be blunt, expanding Medicaid would disproportionately help black people, and in a large part of the U.S. politicians were willing to pay a substantial fiscal and economic price to deny some of their constituents that aid.
Despite this resistance to anything that helps nonwhites, the Affordable Care Act led to a substantial expansion of health insurance coverage for Americans. Here are the changes in Medicaid enrollment and the number of people with individualinsurance policies after the ACA was fully implemented in 2014:
As beneficial as it was for Americans, the expansion of coverage under the ACA still fell short of universal healthcare. In 2024, approximately 8 percent of the U.S. population remained uninsured. The ACA did, however, move the United States much closer to universal healthcare than it had been before.
Nor was the cost excessive. Although Obamacare was mostly aimed at expanding coverage rather than reducing costs, it did include a number of provisions, such as financial incentives for integrated care, that were intended to “bend the curve” — that is, reduce the rate at which healthcare spending was rising. And in fact, as David Cutler and Lev Klarnet have documented, total U.S. healthcare spending is well below projections made before the ACA was enacted:
But many of the achievements of Obamacare will soon be destroyed unless legislation enacted under the second Trump administration is reversed.
The new assault on healthcare
Public approval of the Affordable Care Act was low before it was enacted and remained fairly low during its first few years. After Trump tried to destroy it in 2017, however, it became very popular. And conventional political logic says that this should have made Obamacare unassailable.
But the U.S. right truly hates government programs that provide widespread healthcare — and Donald Trump is especially hostile to anything that can be regarded as part of Barack Obama’s legacy. The second Trump administration and its allies in Congress have taken two actions that will, over time, almost completely undo the expansion of health insurance since the ACA was enacted.
First, they refused to renew the expanded healthcare subsidies introduced during the Biden years. This has already drastically increased insurance premiums for millions of Americans, leading many to drop coverage. Early estimatessuggest that 5 million or more people may drop out of the individual insurance market this year alone, with millions more downgrading to policies that provide inadequate coverage.
Second, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — the combination of tax and spending cuts Republicans enacted last year — will drastically cut funding for Medicaid. CBO estimates that these cuts will cause around 10 million Americans to be kicked off Medicaid by 2034.
The combined effect of these actions, if they aren’t reversed, will be the health insurance catastrophe shown in the chart at the top of this post.
How can and should Democrats respond? And what should be the agenda for future healthcare reform?
To be continued …
SQLite does not accept pull requests without prior agreement and/or accompanying legal paperwork that places the pull request in the public domain. However, the human SQLite developers will review a concise and well-written pull request as a proof-of-concept prior to reimplementing the changes themselves.
SQLite does not accept agentic code. However the project will accept agentic bug reports that include a reproducible test case. Patches or pull requests demonstrating a possible fix, for documentation purposes, are welcomed.
The most recent commit to that file removed "(currently)" from "SQLite does not (currently) accept agentic code", with the commit message "Strengthen the statement about not accepting agentic code".
Meanwhile the SQLite forum was being flooded with so many AI-generated bug reports - of varying quality - that they've now split those off into a new SQLite Bug Forum. D. Richard Hipp is resolving issues on there with a flurry of commits to the codebase.
Via Alex Garcia on the Datasette Discord
Tags: sqlite, ai, d-richard-hipp, generative-ai, llms, coding-agents, ai-security-research
The first review of the pilot for AI prescriptions refills in Utah is out and it looks very reasonable. In the 72% of cases where the AI recommend a refill at least one of two physicians agreed in 97% of cases.
In the 28% of Cases Where the AI Escalated to a Physician Without Recommending Renewal
o When the AI declined to recommend renewal without further information, a human telehealth appointment was arranged.
▪ For these patients, 69% of physician reviews agreed that the escalation was appropriate, and more information was needed to authorize a renewal.
▪ In the other 31% of cases, the physician determined the escalation was overly cautious.
● For a new system like this, overcaution is appropriate and welcome. In the long term, reducing overcaution without compromising safety would improve patient access to care, but we aren’t rushing to see that happen.
The founders of Doctronic, the firm running the AI doc, write:
The cost of compute drops roughly 10x every five years. At the same time, the demand for care continues to rise. An AI consultation that costs a few dollars today will cost pennies in a few years. So if AI can safely handle even a fraction of care, we’ve turned an unsolvable supply problem into an engineering problem. And engineering problems have solutions.
The post Doc in a Box appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

In the early 1970s, genetic engineers launched the most controversial revolution in science since the atomic bomb
- by Aeon Video

Attacked by the Left and Right, the Enlightenment can only be saved through use of its greatest legacy: permanent critique
- by Eliane Glaser

The Federal Aviation Administration will require SpaceX to complete an investigation into its latest Starship test flight before allowing the vehicle to fly again.
The post FAA requires mishap investigation into latest Starship launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

The land is always changing, sometimes by human hands: cities are built, farms expanded, and forests logged. Other changes lie mostly outside people’s control: wildfires burn through communities, and hurricanes reshape coastlines. For most of the past four decades, observations from the Landsat satellite record show that humans have dominated changes to the U.S. landscape. Recent research revealed a shift in that trend, suggesting that disasters might be catching up.
In a NASA-funded study published in Nature Geoscience, scientists analyzed nearly 35 years of data from NASA/USGS Landsat satellites to better understand what has been shaping the continental U.S. landscape. The researchers, led by former Landsat science team member Zhe Zhu, found that “human-directed disturbances” like logging, agricultural expansion, and construction have declined, while “wild disturbances” like wildfires and hurricanes—disasters that can be influenced by human activity but are not controlled by people—have risen in frequency and intensity.
Robert Emberson, associate program manager for the NASA Disasters program and not affiliated with the study, said that understanding the forces transforming the U.S. landscape is critical for future planning. “If you know what’s causing them, you can begin to plan around disasters,” Emberson said. “Any understanding of causal factors impacts the adaptation strategy.”
This research is especially useful for policymakers working to prepare communities for resilience, he said. For example, a region expecting to see increased wildfires could strategically perform prescribed burns, remove brush or dry grass around homes, and construct new buildings with fire-resilient materials.
Between 1988 and 2022, 18 percent of the land area in the continental U.S. was disturbed at least once, the researchers found. Adding repeated disturbances, the cumulative area disturbed rises to almost 700,000 square miles, equivalent to nearly one-third of the continental U.S. Humans drove more than half of that change, clearing or developing over 446,000 square miles of land—that’s bigger than the size of Texas and California combined. For example, the animation above, composed of Landsat images from 1985 to 2025, shows the expansion of Reno, Nevada, into a previously undeveloped desert landscape.
Meanwhile, wild disturbances—disasters like wildfires, hurricanes, and landslides—drove much of the remaining change, transforming more than 165,000 square miles of the continental U.S. The Landsat images in the animation below show areas burned by wildfires in Eldorado National Forest west of California’s Lake Tahoe from 1985 to 2025. Major fires in 1992, 2014, and 2022 cleared large swathes of forest, leaving behind bare ground that slowly reforested.
Although human activity has disturbed a larger cumulative area than wild events, the trends over time are moving in opposite directions. That is, land disturbance caused directly by people has been decreasing, while wild disturbance has been increasing.
Specifically, human-directed land disturbances decreased by nearly 232 square miles (600 square kilometers) each year over the course of the study period. Researchers attribute this change to declines in construction, agricultural expansion, and logging, likely brought about by a combination of policy changes, technological improvements, and the 2008 financial crisis’s effect on construction.
In contrast, land affected by wild disturbances increased by more than 77 square miles (200 square kilometers) per year. Fire, drought-related stress, and wind disturbances all became more frequent, likely due to climate warming and other environmental factors, the study authors wrote.
“What this study basically tells me is that what we’ve been doing is not working,” said Ramakrisna Nemani, a retired NASA scientist and co-author on this study. “We have to go back and come up with new strategies on how to deal with these natural disturbances.”
The study’s findings drew on the deep archive of Landsat data, which has long been a key resource for detecting change on Earth’s surface. Think of it like a “spot-the-difference” game. Historically, identifying differences between images required scientists to manually identify the source of the change; for example, using ground observations combined with satellite imagery to determine whether a bare spot resulted from wildfires or logging. For this study, scientists trained a new machine-learning algorithm to do that differentiation work for them.
They fed the algorithm 40 years of land-change data acquired by satellites, manually inspecting and identifying changes at 50,000 locations. After a decade of work, they developed a product that achieves more than 75 percent accuracy across most disturbance types.
The resulting product details the causes of disturbance across the continental U.S. over the course of nearly 35 years. With this information, communities can analyze the past to better plan for the future. “The USA is entering a new era of disturbance,” the study authors wrote. “The challenge now is to transform our relationship with disturbance from one of control to one of coexistence.”
NASA Earth Observatory image by Lauren Dauphin, based on data from Qiu, S. et al. Animations by Ross Walter, Landsat Project Science Support. Story by Madeleine Gregory, Landsat Project Science Support.
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Here is the audio, video, and transcript. Most of all, we cover Ptolemaic Egypt. Here is part of the episode summary:
Tyler and Toby cover how Alexander took over the empire almost without a fight, why Alexandria became the Manhattan of the ancient world, whether the era was as philosophically fertile as it was scientifically, whether your ancient doctor’s visit had positive expected value, what Egypt was actually exporting and selling, whether living standards rose above subsistence or stayed Malthusian, how the ethnic divide between Greek rulers and Egyptian subjects shaped society, what constrained the Ptolemaic Empire from becoming the next Rome, whether Cleopatra has been overhyped, what Julius Caesar was really thinking when he sided with her over her brother, the new frontiers in archeology, whether Herodotus can be trusted, what ancient Egypt knew about Israel and India, when Egyptian jewelry peaked and why, what triggered the sudden emergence of civilization across the ancient world, why a six-year-old Tyler knew King Tut better than Napoleon, and much more.
Excerpt:
COWEN: Either technologically or institutionally, what is it that the Persians had that the Egyptians did not?
WILKINSON: The Persians had a pretty formidable army. Their military technology was certainly superior to the Egyptians at the time that they conquered Egypt originally in the 6th century BC. Like many empires, I suppose, throughout history, they overreached themselves. They overextended themselves, and they found it increasingly hard to hold together this empire stretching all the way from the Aegean to the borders of India. Bits of the empire started to fragment and pull away. Egypt had always had this very strong sense of its own identity. When it had a chance to throw off the Persian yoke, it took it.
COWEN: Let’s think about some of the achievements of Ptolemaic Egypt as an era. Infrastructure. What did they do that was most impressive?
WILKINSON: Build Alexandria. Alexandria the city was a new foundation established by Alexander the Great to bear his name. Unlike all previous ancient Egyptian cities, it was a city built from the outset for commerce. It was a city built on the Mediterranean coast with a great natural harbor, with facilities for loading and offloading ships. It had a great lighthouse guarding the entrance to its harbor, which became one of the wonders of the world. The whole city was really designed from the get-go as a great commercial center looking outwards to the Mediterranean, rather than inwards to the rest of Egypt.
COWEN: Canals, artificial lake. What else did they do?
WILKINSON: They built a city quite unlike anything previously seen in the valley of the river Nile. In fact, any inhabitant today of a modern city would recognize the grid iron pattern of streets. Streets intersecting at right angles, that was something completely unheard of until this point in Egypt with vast public buildings. This was the Manhattan of the ancient world, if you like, in scale, in grandeur, and in the level of commercial activity.
And:
EN: What were the main exports of the Alexandria region? What are they selling, making?
WILKINSON: Oh, the two big exports that account for the lion’s share of Egypt’s wealth at the time are gold and grain. Gold has been mined in Egypt for millennia up to this point, but it’s still the place in the ancient world that produces large quantities of gold. Of course, gold has always been a great currency of international commerce.
Then Egypt is famed as the breadbasket of the ancient world. It produces a superabundance of grain thanks to the fertility of the Nile and the benign climate. It produces more than it needed for its own consumption, by comparison with poorer agricultural regions in Greece and Asia Minor, which struggled to produce enough food. Yes, gold and grain were the absolute engine of Egyptian prosperity.
COWEN: There’s metalwork, there’s glass. What else is there, manufacturing, as we would call it today?
WILKINSON: Oh, yes. There’s a big ceramics industry, so producing not just pots, but terracotta statues and votive objects. There’s glassmaking, as you’ve said. There’s advanced metallurgy, goldsmithing, ironworking, copper and bronze foundries. There’s what we might call the decorative arts, so sculpture, painting. All of these things thrived in ancient Alexandria.
COWEN: Do they have living standards sustainably above subsistence, or is this a Malthusian equilibrium, where they get some wealth and then more people survive and the wage falls again, and it doesn’t get much above what is required to keep people alive?
Recommended, informative and interesting throughout. And I am very happy to recommend all of Toby’s books, including his latest
The post My excellent Conversation with Toby Wilkinson appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Yes, I will be doing a Conversation with him. Richard does have a new book coming out, Kakistocracy: Why Populism Ends in Disaster. While I liked the book (and blurbed it), I do not feel our conversation about the book would be that interesting — too much beating up on the stupidities of other people, which is an activity not in short supply. So we agreed to (mostly) discuss Joseph Conrad’s Nostromo instead. Given that, what should I ask Richard?
The post What should I ask Richard Hanania? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.