Up and to my office, where all the morning, and Sir J. Minnes and I did a little, and but a little business at the office. So I eat a bit of victuals at home, and so abroad to several places, as my bookseller’s, and then to Thomson the instrument maker’s to bespeak a ruler for my pocket for timber, &c., which I believe he will do to my mind. So to the Temple, Wardrobe, and lastly to Westminster Hall, where I expected some bands made me by Mrs. Lane, and while she went to the starchers for them, I staid at Mrs. Howlett’s, who with her husband were abroad, and only their daughter (which I call my wife) was in the shop, and I took occasion to buy a pair of gloves to talk to her, and I find her a pretty spoken girl, and will prove a mighty handsome wench. I could love her very well.
By and by Mrs. Lane comes, and my bands not being done she and I posted and met at the Crown in the Palace Yard, where we eat a chicken I sent for, and drank, and were mighty merry, and I had my full liberty of towzing her and doing what I would, but the last thing of all … [for I felt as much as I would and made her feel my thing also, and put the end of it to her breast and by and by to her very belly. – L&M] Of which I am heartily ashamed, but I do resolve never to do more so.
But, Lord! to see what a mind she has to a husband, and how she showed me her hands to tell her her fortune, and every thing that she asked ended always whom and when she was to marry. And I pleased her so well, saying as I know she would have me, and then she would say that she had been with all the artists in town, and they always told her the same things, as that she should live long, and rich, and have a good husband, but few children, and a great fit of sickness, and 20 other things, which she says she has always been told by others.
Here I staid late before my bands were done, and then they came, and so I by water to the Temple, and thence walked home, all in a sweat with my tumbling of her and walking, and so a little supper and to bed, fearful of having taken cold.
Don’t worry, folks, we’re keeping our PG rating here. I’m talking about Gross Domestic Product or GDP.
China’s economy is one-third larger than the US economy and growing twice as fast.
The data come from the World Bank. According to the data, China’s GDP last year was $41.2 trillion, compared to $30.8 trillion for the United States.
These numbers are GDP measured by purchasing power parity.
This measure applies a common set of prices to all goods and services, regardless of whether they are produced in the United States or China. This means a car, a washing machine, a hospital visit, and a haircut are assumed to carry the same price, regardless of which country each is produced in.
There is also an effort to adjust for quality differences, but this is undoubtedly imperfect. Nonetheless, it should get us in the ballpark, and for purposes of comparing living standards and economic power worldwide, it will generally be far more useful than the more commonly cited currency conversion measures.
That more widely applied measure takes domestic GDP, measured in China’s currency, and then converts it into U.S. dollars at the current exchange rate. It is not clear what this measure gets us, especially since it’s not unusual to see a currency rise or fall by 10 percent or more in a year, which would imply an implausible rise or fall in GDP.
Not only is China’s GDP one-third larger than the US economy, but it is also growing at twice the US rate. This means that the annual addition to GDP is far larger in China than in the United States. Here’s what the picture looks like, measured in dollars, for the first half of 2026. (Since we don’t yet have second-quarter GDP data for the United States, I used the 1.7% July 16th Nowcast from the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s GDPNow.)

China’s economy grew by just under $1 trillion in the first six months of 2026. The US economy is on track to grow by a bit more than $300 billion.
[Editor: Measured in dollars per capita—that is, per person—China’s growth is less than in the U.S.]
Unless growth in China slows sharply, or the growth rate of the US economy accelerates in a way no one other than Donald Trump is predicting, this gap will continue to widen.
The post China’s Is Bigger: Don’t Tell Trump appeared first on DCReport.org.
Lina Khan, who chaired the Federal Trade Commission under Joe Biden, is one of the smartest and most influential thinkers about antitrust in our high-tech era, and one who has blazed new paths in policymaking. I spoke with her at a Graduate Center event back in March, and caught up with her again earlier this week for another enlightening conversation.
For all my interviews and more, subscribe on YouTube.
. . .
TRANSCRIPT:
Paul Krugman in Conversation with Lina Khan
(recorded 7/14/26)
Paul Krugman: This week, I managed to get to talk to Lina Khan, who was the incredibly influential and smart head of the FTC in the previous administration—with the current administration doing everything it can to undo her work. She played an important role in the Mamdani transition team and has had a lot of smart thoughts about technology and policy right now. And I thought we could talk for a bit about this, well, it’s always a bizarre moment these days, but this is the bizarre moment we’re in. And so, hi.
Lina Khan: Hi, great to be here.
Krugman: I want to get into technology and AI, but I wanted to just start with something that just happened. One of your special causes, which is “Click to Cancel,” which you tried to get as a national policy, just went through in New York City. Can you talk a little bit about what was achieved here and why?
Khan: I’d be happy to. So, last week, the Mamdani administration announced that they are moving forward with two consumer protection initiatives. One was the finalization of a “Click to Cancel” rule, which basically says that businesses have to make it as easy to cancel a subscription as it is to sign up for one.
This rule is responding to the fact that we’ve seen a pretty significant pivot to service-based revenue, and more and more companies are relying on subscriptions as a regular business revenue line. And that has created an opportunity for firms to create a lot of friction when people are trying to unsubscribe. A lot of people can relate to situations where it’s very easy to sign up, or sometimes you’re enrolled without even your full knowledge or consent. But then once you try to cancel, companies can make you jump through all sorts of hoops. Maybe you signed up with one click online, but to cancel you have to phone somebody, except the hours are really restricted or there’s nobody there to pick up the phone. In some instances, you may actually have to go in person.
When we were at the FTC, we got thousands upon thousands of complaints, and people shared how, even during the pandemic when they were looking to cancel their gym membership, some gyms required that they go in person even after they had left the state. So this has been a growing problem, and people lose real money from it. I mean, there are estimates that, in New York City alone, people could be collectively losing over $160 million a year. So this rule, which is going to go into effect in October, is an incredibly important step forward.
The administration also announced that they’re going to be proposing a rule to tackle junk fees. These are the fees that oftentimes show up at the very end of a transaction, even though they were not reflected in the original advertised price. Sometimes they’re called convenience fees, service fees, or amenity fees. And these are non-discretionary; people have no choice but to see them included. Companies will, again, often not advertise them on the front end, which is both deceptive for consumers but also gives them an unfair competitive advantage, because honest businesses that are marketing the all-in price then lose business to those firms that instead do pricing where they market a lower price and then add all the additional fees at the end.
So, I’m really thrilled that the Mamdani administration is moving forward on these two initiatives, especially because we have seen some very serious backsliding at the federal level, where consumer protection initiatives have either been abandoned entirely or powerful companies that have connections to the White House can basically pay their way out of legal accountability. And so it’s incredibly important to see cities and states fill in that gap.
Krugman: I couldn’t actually quite figure this out, but there’s this other initiative from Mamdani: public interest technology. Are you involved with that?
Khan: It is something we considered during the transition and wanted to set up the administration with the option. But, yeah, this is basically... they will be creating a team that is going to be laser-focused on improving service delivery—technological service delivery, digital service delivery—to New Yorkers. And so there are all sorts of online portals that people have to interact with that are not really optimized; really important city websites that are still optimized for desktop, and when people try to use them on their phones, they break down. And so there’s going to be a lean team of technologists designed to go in and make sure that across city services, people are having a good experience and that these things are easy to use and functional for people.
I would say the effort has some analogs to what was done at the federal level with the U.S. Digital Service, which was a team in the White House of technologists back in the Obama era. When I was at the Federal Trade Commission, we similarly brought in a team of technologists, and we’ve seen that, especially as more and more commerce goes online, and more and more government services go online, it’s incredibly important to have technologists on board designed to make sure that these things are easy to use and well-functioning.
Krugman: I’ve seen a couple of areas where essentially governmental functions are initially done by trying to buy off-the-shelf technologies or bring in Microsoft or whatever. And I know of at least a couple of examples where it was a huge improvement just getting their own people because they kind of knew what people actually needed. So, I don’t know if you’re thinking along those lines or where it goes.
Khan: I think you’re right that it does get to this deeper issue of what does it mean for the government to have capabilities and to actually build those capabilities in-house. I think we’ve seen various eras where the government will largely rely on outsourcing, relying on various consulting firms. And there’s a first-order question as to whether the government is really getting a good return on investment there. I think we’ve all seen the news stories about New York City having paid millions of dollars to McKinsey to produce a report saying, effectively, “Put your garbage in garbage cans.”
But beyond that, I think over-reliance on outside consulting firms can also deprive the state of building in-house state capacity, which can be incredibly important for the long term. And so, again, I think the administration, through bringing some of these functions in-house, is also going to be investing in those long-term capabilities within government.
Krugman: Yeah. I’ll give you, just quickly, my own example. There are bigger ones, but everybody doing sort of macroeconomics now is utterly reliant on this thing called FRED, the Federal Reserve Economic Data, from the St. Louis Fed, of all places. And the thing is, they did not outsource. They just asked some of their own people, who actually knew what working economists needed, to produce a website that is really optimized for people like me, and that’s just incredibly helpful. I assume that there are many, many examples where that could be done.
Khan: Yeah. I mean, the other risk that you create if you are entirely dependent on some external actor is that a single business decision can render some of those products useless or severely degrade the capability overnight, or it turns out that there’s a new subscription and so there are all these additional costs. And so, either diversifying those inputs or creating more in-house capability is important insurance around some of that private power.
Krugman: Okay. And New York City would certainly be among the world’s 20 largest economies so this is not a small issue.
But these days, everyone is talking about AI all the time, in terms of the economics and a lot of political stuff. You were doing a lot of work on AI at the FTC, and you have written quite a lot since. I wanted to pick your brain a bit, but why don’t you tell me where we were going before the change in administrations on AI policy, and we can move forward from there.
Khan: At the Federal Trade Commission, we were really focused on both the competition implications of artificial intelligence technologies, as well as some of the protection implications. On the competition front, we were really focused on, first of all, understanding: what is the stack? What is each layer of the AI supply chain of sorts? And how do we make sure we understand what each of the economic properties are across the board?
And so you have the chips, you have these hyperscalers, you have cloud infrastructure, you have these models, and then you have various apps and services built on top of those models. And what we’ve seen in other markets, including Web 2.0 and in digital markets, is that it can be very easy for one of these layers to become monopolized because of certain network effects, and because of economic properties that lend those markets to tip quickly. If you allow monopolization without additional rules—such as common carriage or requiring equal access on equal terms—it can really result in other layers and other markets similarly becoming monopolized or otherwise becoming distorted, rather than principles of open and free and fair competition being really what’s allowing more of this economy to thrive and develop.
And so we were really looking at the AI stuff through that lens, trying to understand: are we already seeing certain layers where there are bottlenecks or gatekeepers emerging, and could that undermine fair and free competition in other layers in ways that could deprive the public of the full promise and innovation of some of these technologies? And so we had various investigations underway based on what we were hearing from market participants. But at the end of the day, we wanted to, again, make sure that inasmuch as this is a technological inflection point, there could be a lot of opportunity. How do we make sure that the best ideas have the opportunity to win, rather than existing gatekeepers using their power to basically pick and choose winners and losers in a way that results in more self-interested outcomes for them at the expense of the public and for the market as a whole?
At that point, we were hearing various concerns about Nvidia and various ways that they had become a core gatekeeper. We’ve heard concerns about the hyperscalers and ways in which firms that run cloud computing could be getting privileged access across the AI supply chain. And so those were some of the types of concerns that we were hearing at that time.
Beyond that, we were looking at potential consumer protection abuses of these technologies, ranging from abuse of people’s personal data. For example, with more and more AI firms looking to train their models, they’ve become even more hungry for data, including people’s personal data. And so we were starting to see things like Google [Workspace] or other types of service providers sometimes changing the terms of service, saying that they could now use the content of, say, people’s inboxes or their Google Docs to now start training their models without attendant protections for people’s data. And people had not been setting up their inbox or writing emails in a way where they were anticipating that suddenly a company like Google could be using all of that for training data. And so we made it very clear that these types of after-the-fact changes in terms of service could, in some instances, be illegal.
We were also focused on ferreting out how some of these AI tools could be turbocharging fraud and scams. And so we were already seeing at that time: an uptick in complaints around things like voice cloning fraud, the way that some of these AI tools can be used to mimic somebody’s voice. You call somebody’s grandparent, pretend their grandkid is in distress and needs thousands of dollars wired over immediately. We were seeing this as a growing vector of fraud that people were starting to lose a lot of money to. And so we wanted to make sure, at the very least, that these companies knew that the existing laws on the books, both from an antitrust and competition perspective as well as from a data privacy and consumer protection perspective, still applied.
Sometimes in Washington, there can be a pattern where firms try to use new technological moments to argue that existing laws are invalid or out of date and don’t apply. And we wanted to make sure there was no misunderstanding about that—that the existing legal tools in place absolutely applied.
The other thing we heard on the competition side was this issue of “interlocking directorates.” We were seeing a lot of AI partnerships and a lot of investments, famously Microsoft and OpenAI, and a whole bunch of other ones between Google and Amazon. And there was a lot of murkiness around what were the actual terms of these partnerships and investments, and could some of these investments, in turn, give outsized control to some of the existing monopolists over competitively strategic decisions? And so that was another area where we were looking under the hood to try to understand what’s really going on here in terms of these financial relationships.
Krugman: Going back into history, the trusts that originated “antitrust” as a term... that was kind of overlapping, interlocking control. It was basically when you had the same people overseeing many companies. I’m perhaps doing violence to the history here, but am I right?
Khan: Yeah, that’s right. The trust referred to basically a form of corporate control where this trust vehicle would basically roll up various entities and have financial control over various enterprises.
Krugman: Yeah. And the Standard Oil trust was the most famous, but by no means the only one. And did you have specifics about the kinds of laws that they wanted to put by the wayside? I mean, I’m sure, but just give it a little concreteness for us.
Khan: Yeah. I mean, I think one of the legal issues that is still percolating is this question around copyright. A lot of these models have been trained on existing information that is online, but much of that information has copyright associated with it. And so we would also hear from a lot of authors, artists, graphic designers, and people who produce content for a living who said they woke up one day to find out that this model had been trained on their life’s work and was now suddenly spitting out content in some instances that was competing with them. And yet, it was trained on them. And then because some of these firms controlled how search results are listed, they were now losing business to the AI version of their work.
And so there are some really serious, meaty legal issues embedded there around unfair competition and copyright. This is an instance where, in existing litigation, some of the AI companies are arguing for “fair use”—that they were basically able to scan and train on all of this information because it was effectively in the public commons. And so some of these issues are still being litigated.
But it’s really important to think about what the long-term incentives will be for newsrooms, for example, to still invest in news production and investigations if they’re not able to actually recoup their investments because it’s then just being swallowed up by some AI model. And so there are some serious long-term questions here around whether we are structuring our markets and structuring compensation structures in ways that are still going to incentivize the production of news or information content that we, as a society, decide is valuable.
Krugman: Yeah. One thing I’m hearing from people in the news business is that the rise of AI in search is sort of suppressing links. Instead of getting a link to the deep investigative report by The New York Times or Bloomberg or whatever, you get an AI summary of what was in it, and people never go to the links. That’s the kind of thing, I guess, we’re worried about in many domains.
Khan: That’s exactly right. And this is something that we had been seeing with Google even before 2022 or 2023, where they were giving privileged search results to some of their own vertical products in reviews, maps, or other types of search and travel verticals. But this problem is now being turbocharged, precisely for the reason that you said, and some of the statistics that are coming from publishers around just what a dramatic drop-off there has been in terms of search traffic to some of these publishers’ websites is just staggering.
And so we see: before, Google used to be a turnstile to the rest of the web, where Google was the starting point so you could get to other destinations. And now, especially with more of these AI tools summarizing what’s on other websites and keeping people just within Google’s ecosystem, it’s depriving all of these other publishers of the traffic and oxygen that they would need to continue being financially viable, even as those other publishers and producers are the ones that are creating the information and the content in the first place. And so I think these are going to be some serious challenges.
Krugman: Yeah, this is something where people that I know fairly well are actually quite seriously scared that their financial models are being undermined at lightning speed. One thing you can say about AI is that whatever is happening, it happens really fast.
Okay. The particular thing that got me wanting to do this interview was an Op-Ed that you published in The Times, I guess soon after leaving the FTC. That was February 2025. Although when I looked and saw that that was the date on it, I was shocked because, in my memory, it was so prescient that it had to have been written like late last year. But it was actually written at the beginning of last year. It was under the headline, “Stop Worshiping the American Tech Giants.” Can you summarize what you were saying there? Because it does seem incredibly relevant to where we are right now.
Khan: So, this was a piece that I wrote looking at the history of innovation in Silicon Valley and noting that, historically, the most paradigm-breaking innovations have come from markets that have allowed for real competition and allowed for new ideas to come in, get funded, and then to be able to really break into the market and compete on the merits of whether businesses or consumers like their products and services, as opposed to markets where you have gatekeepers basically deciding who gets to enter and who doesn’t get to enter.
And so I was noting in the piece that at this moment of growing investment in AI, we would do well to want to double down on that commitment to competition, rather than allowing the monopolies and incumbents of Web 2.0 to be the ones that get to decide who gets to come into this market and who gets to compete or not.
One of the catalysts for my writing this piece was the emergence of DeepSeek. This was an AI firm that originated in China. And it really shocked Silicon Valley and Wall Street when its model was rolled out, because it mirrored or rivalled the sophistication of American models but was able to do that with much more efficiency. And it really, I think, was a wake-up call from where I sat as to what it would mean to allow the American giants to just control these markets and innovate on the trajectories that they were determining, rather than allow for real competition.
And I think with the American AI giants, there’s this additional question around conflict of interest. Again, some of these very firms—the Microsofts, the Amazons, the Googles—have their own cloud computing businesses. And inasmuch as these AI models are heavily relying on cloud computing, I think there’s a question to be asked as to whether these firms are going to have the right incentives when it comes to wanting AI models to be efficient, if they are simultaneously making a lot of money from models that are not efficient. And so I think the DeepSeek revelation was something that brought that conflict of interest to bear.
Krugman: I sometimes hate that everything gets formulated in terms of competition with China, but at least part of the issue now is the idea of “national champions”—and we get to that in a minute or two—but that they are arguably, at least, putting us behind in competition with China. And then again, a lot of that has come to a head recently. People started to say, “Oh my God, we’re spending too much on tokens,” and a fair bit of turning to Chinese models. And that’s a huge move. And that was why, when I look back and read your piece, the date just popped out at me. I can’t believe you wrote that 18 months ago.
Khan: Yeah. I mean, I think you’re absolutely right. And there are some real historical parallels here when it comes to certain technological companies insisting that these markets are inevitably going to be monopolistic, and therefore the government should treat them as “national champions” and support their monopolization.
The piece also mentions Boeing as a cautionary tale here. There was a merger in the late 1990s that the U.S. government approved, where we allowed Boeing to buy up their last U.S. rival, McDonnell Douglas. And that merger, and what followed, basically has led us down a path where you then had Boeing’s planes falling apart, and people have died. And I think it’s unfortunate to have to admit that the lack of competition there probably played a role in Boeing not having to invest as much. There were other factors in terms of the culture internally—moving away from one that focused as much on engineering to instead one focused more on a McKinsey-type culture based on consulting—but I think we’ve seen how a lack of competition in some cases has really major consequences.
Krugman: Yeah. This is one of the things which I love about your analytical work: the interplay between the cutting edge and history. Because everything is new, but on the other hand, we’ve been here before. And I thought that the Boeing example, as how things would go wrong, was a little bit revelatory.
I know that you have a bunch of other things on your plate, but to the extent you’re following AI—and you may be following it more closely than I would imagine—where are we in that process now? Has the U.S. AI sector managed to get sloppy with monopoly already? I mean, everything now seems to happen at ten times the historical pace.
Khan: I think there are going to be some new openings for potentially having more competition. I think, even with some of the more open models, you’re seeing that they can themselves be an input into more competition. And historically, we’ve seen that with open source—there are a lot of committed people around it because they believe the philosophy, but open source as a business model can also be enormously lucrative because it can just really catalyze innovation. And so I think making sure that we still have a vector and markets that are going to be built around that openness is going to be incredibly important.
I think this issue of conflicts of interest is one that we need to take seriously and think through. Does it make sense to have the vertical integration that we do? Vertical integration can have, no doubt, various types of benefits, and there are sectors where having markets vertically integrated in that way can make a lot of sense. In markets where you are going to have one layer or multiple layers—the bottleneck layers, new layers where you have a lot of consolidation—allowing market participants in those gatekeeper-monopolized layers to also have a presence in layers that actually should be competitive. There’s nothing about economic properties that require those layers to be monopolized. But that’s when I think you can see a real problem. Because then you allow the monopolies to export their control and their consolidated power up and down the supply chain, distorting competition and distorting the trajectory of innovation.
And so I think that’s the kind of prism through which we really need to look at the AI stack, along with these questions of efficiency. And what are the underlying incentives here? Do we have the right incentives when it comes to wanting to promote more efficiency with these models?
Krugman: Right. And getting back to your example, at least as I understand it, if you have big players, either directly or with substantial ownership stakes, who are also in the business of selling compute, essentially they have no incentive to help the models use less compute—even though that would mean less environmental damage—and also have an incentive to favor profits there that are inefficient. And possibly, given that we do have a global economy, losing ground to rivals. Am I garbling this, or is that kind of how it is?
Khan: I think that’s right. I mean, the other thing is these AI technologies and advances are coming against the backdrop of markets that had already been monopolized, right? There are major litigations against Google, which has been found to be a monopolist three times over, and against Amazon and Apple. And these are companies, especially when it comes to Google and Apple, that already have very significant control over key portals and over key distribution points.
So, the way that most people interact with some of these AI models is through technologies owned by some of the existing gatekeepers—be it Microsoft, Apple, or Google. And so with those firms in particular, and especially Google and Microsoft which have invested more in AI, that’s where we also see potential conflicts of interest. We’ve already seen Google’s share of some of these markets go up because they’ve made such an aggressive push to use their existing monopolies in areas like Chrome and Google Search to make sure that it’s their AI services that get a leg up.
Krugman: Yeah. Just a quick sociological observation—this is striking. I remember in a way that hopefully you don’t, but the dot-com era: that was all the scrappy young guys in their garages, and this is all giant corporations—the already giant corporations, and guys who made their decabillions 10 or 15 years ago. In some ways, I almost sometimes feel like the AI investments are kind of a plutocrat midlife crisis playing out.
Sorry, but last point on this: One concern I have about the view of national champions is that we end up with—and I think you expressed this as well—having national policy directed to protect these incumbents, these players, even when they don’t have the right stuff. And now with talk of the Trump administration taking a stake in things, how big is that in your view?
Khan: Specifically the concern around state control?
Krugman: Well, not so much state control as that maybe if the Chinese have a better model, we start saying, “Oh, no. National security. It can’t be used here.” Or if there’s a smaller player that has a better model, that somehow or other there will be federal contracts, federal rules written to favor the big players who help pay for ballrooms and stuff like that.
Khan: It’s a huge concern. I mean, it’s no secret that the CEOs of some of these technology companies have made it a top business priority to curry favor with this White House. They were all sitting there on the stage at the inauguration. They all make regular pilgrimages to the White House, to various state dinners. And so I think there’s a very serious risk of capture—a very serious risk of regulatory decisions being made in ways that are not serving the public interest at large or serving competition at large, but instead are serving the narrow private interests of a very small number. And so I think those are very serious risks.
We’ve seen some debates in the White House and some policies that are veering in this way or that way. It seems like initially the White House had a very hands-off approach when it came to AI, and then they’ve started to take more interest in some of these specific models and where and when they’re being released. But I think, from a competition perspective, there is a very real risk that we’re going to see the biggest, most powerful incumbents, through their access to the White House and politically powerful individuals, be able to get rules and regulations that are personally favoring them and personally advancing them at the expense of the broader market, in the sense of startups and newer firms that in some instances may have better ideas.
I mean, this is an age-old debate: what are the underlying market conditions that best pay for innovation? Is it monopoly or is it competition? The famous Schumpeter-Arrow debate. And at the end of the day, it comes down to this question of what type of innovation you are trying to promote. The empirical evidence shows that monopolies can be good at innovating, but they are primarily good at innovating in ways that deliver incremental improvements on existing technologies. Historically, the breakthrough innovations and the paradigm-shifting innovations have come from outsiders and have come from a competitive market.
And so I think that’s why it’s especially important, as we look down the inflection point of some of these AI technologies, that we’re not allowing extreme centralization of those systems, when it’s in fact openness and competition that have been such a key driver of American innovation and market growth.
Krugman: Yeah, in your op-ed, you point out that, I guess, the fundamental, sort of conceptual breakthrough that made what we call AI possible all came from Google, which just did nothing with it. It wasn’t until people left that they brought it to other places, and it started to become what we now see all around us.
Khan: That’s right. And sometimes if you talk to employees at some of these companies, they will note just the enormous amount of bureaucracy, an enormous amount of bloat and red tape that can start to hobble the ability of these bulking institutions to really deliver fast-moving innovations. And so that’s why you see that sometimes ideas that even came from within Google actually have to go outside to get the attention and space to really be able to deliver.
Krugman: Yeah. One of the great myths of our time is that the private sector is being efficient and innovative and only government is bureaucratic and slow. But if you’ve ever worked for or know anybody who works at a large corporation, it just ain’t so.
Okay, just an open-ended question: what competition issue are we not paying enough attention to right now? Just trying to think about all of that stuff going on. It’s so much AI-focused, but what else? What’s kind of nagging at you as you track what’s happening?
Khan: Well, I think one question is the way that AI and continuing technological advances and sophistication will intersect with other markets that are already very consolidated. And so as we see more and more integration of some of these AI tools in areas like healthcare, for example, or in areas like retail, I think there is an opportunity for these technologies to move. On the one hand, they could make these markets more open; but on the other hand, they could actually result in even deeper consolidation.
We’ve already seen a whole set of lawsuits noting how in areas like housing and agriculture, there is use of algorithms to facilitate price fixing and collusion. Because where you already have a lot of concentration, these tools can basically make it easier to collude, or make it easier to collude with more precision and sophistication. And so I think the intersection of AI and technology with the rest of the economy is going to be an area to keep watching.
Krugman: All right. Brave new world and really kind of alarming. I wish you were still in the federal government. But you’re by no means out of public policy. So thanks for talking.
Khan: Thanks for having me.
Tool: SQLite Query Explainer
Julia Evan's, in Learning a few things about running SQLite:
Maybe one day I’ll learn to read a query plan.
Big same.... which inspired me to have Fable build this interactive explain tool, which runs SQLite in Python in Pyodide in Web Assembly in the browser and adds a layer of explanation to the results of both EXPLAIN and EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN.
Approach with caution, since I don't know enough about SQLite query plans to verify the results myself, but it seems cromulent enough to me.
Tags: sql, sqlite, tools, julia-evans, pyodide, claude-mythos-fable
@claudeai account on Twitter:
Beginning July 20, Claude Fable 5 will be included in all Max and Team Premium plans, at 50% of limits.
Pro and Team Standard users will continue to have access to Fable via usage credits, and will receive a one-time $100 credit.
As I was saying last week, the competition from GPT-5.6 Sol (and maybe to a lesser extent Kimi 3) made untenable Anthropic's plan to remove Fable 5 from their subscription accounts and make it available exclusively through API pricing.
Why pay $100 or $200/month for a subscription plan that doesn't include Anthropic's best model?
Their original plan was driven by concerns over compute capacity. I wonder if they'll have to dial back their training efforts in order to make more GPUs available to help serve the model.
A lot of people were losing sleep over trying to make the most of Fable 5 before subscriber access was withdrawn. It's nice not to have to worry about the Fablepocalypse any more.
Update: Important to note that users on the $20/month plan will still not have access to Fable 5 on that subscription. The Max plans are $100 and $200/month.
Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, anthropic, claude, llm-pricing, claude-mythos-fable
The oldest commit in that repo is from 21 years ago, and that was the initial import of Quixote 2.4 from Subversion into Git.
Tags: computer-history, python, web-frameworks
Links for you. Science:
How Cycling Solved Sleep
Disease-resistant coral found that could help restore Florida’s reef
From collections to conservation: the indispensable role of natural history museums
Hegseth Announces New Required Pentagon Testosterone Tests: Who It Impacts
Salad greens scrutinized as cyclosporiasis outbreak spreads
Greenland research centre halts new collaborations with US to protect its scientists
Beyond intracellular–extracellular divide toward metapopulation infection biology
Other:
How Donald Trump Created the Worst Diarrhea Outbreak This Century. The ‘MAHA Trots’ are what happens when Republicans implement their anti-government agenda.
ICE Is Out of Control. Here’s What to Do About It.
Trump Can’t Admit That He Lost the Iran War
Ticket to Paradise? The D.C. Council Unanimously Passes Law To Protect Consumers. The Restricting Egregious Scalping Against Live Entertainment Amendment Act of 2025 aims to rein in unscrupulous sellers on third-party ticket sites.
Vance’s security detail ‘fed up’ with hastily arranged personal and family travel requests
Woodbridge is building a new homeless shelter. Just don’t try to walk there
After ICE shooting, immigration takes center stage in Maine Senate race
Trump’s Ex-Campaign Manager Is Running An Israeli Influence Operation Targeting the MAGA Base
FDA drug approval affects healthcare around the world, but political shortcuts could hurt the agency’s international reputation
New York Democrats hit pause on resource-gobbling data centers
Hegseth Orders Mandatory Testosterone Screening, Optional TRT for Troops 30 & Older
Rest in power, Denise Oliver Velez
What If American Power Is the Problem?
The Democrats Have an ICE Problem
Memphis pizza joint sparks backlash after owner refuses to serve National Guard troops
“Centuries Are Against Them”: On constitutionalized jingoism
How did the Platner campaign spend their money?
Federal officials probe whether White House teleprompter profited off Trump’s words
There is exactly one solution to ICE (video)
White House teleprompter operator made more than $100K betting on Trump’s speeches: Sources
Astonishing reason behind Trump’s ‘rushed’ DC projects exposed: whistleblowers
He was having a mental health crisis. Memphis task force agents came and shot him
Trump National Golf Club in Virginia Has a Pest Control Problem, Records Show
Spain are not covered in stardust. It’s one of the reasons they are in the World Cup final
Maine Governor Janet Mills tried to visit a memorial site for the man killed by an ICE agent. Protesters chased her away.
There is a terrible war in Sudan that includes intentionally slaughtering massive numbers of civilians. The group doing the slaughtering is funded by the United Arab Emirates. Both the U.S. and Britain have good relations with the UAE and apparently value those relations above pressuring them to stop funding the slaughter. While the reluctance of the U.S. to apply pressure might be the same regardless, it’s also true that a company close to UAE leaders gave a Trump family business a half a billion dollars. That’s exactly why this kind of corruption is so damaging.
David Cay Johnston has been reporting on the corruption of the Trump administration here on DCReport, via his Reality Check series and on it’s Facebook page. One of the biggest ways Trump family finances have been entangled in international relations was when the UAE invested a half a billion dollars in their crypto venture. The Wall Street Journal had a lengthy investigation of this particular scandal. The deal was not directly from the UAE government but from firms controlled by the brother of the UAE president. He also happens to be their National Security Advisor and leads their giant national wealth fund. So their government did not directly buy favor with Trump but did so behind the thinnest veil of indirectness. He certainly has a huge reason to be happy with both the country and the royals running it.
The deal also enriched Steve Witkoff who is the U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East and is U.S. Special Envoy for Peace Missions. Basically he and Jared Kushner are the point people on relations with the region. Kushner had previously benefited from UAE royal investments when they put $1.5 billion into his company. Actually now he’s up to $6.2 billion from investments by Mideast government connections. So Trump and all his key people involved in relations with the area have enormous reason to treat these royals as good, and beneficial, friends.
And maybe to also fear them. Can these investments be withdrawn if U.S. actions toward the UAE aren’t to their liking? How much of a blow to the Trumps crypto project and to the finances of Witkoff and Kushner would that be? That’s not clear from reporting on the deal itself.
When that deal was done the UAE seemed most interested in being allowed to buy specialized chips for use in A.I. systems. They had been blocked by the Biden administration for security concerns. Trump changed that policy and the UAE got the chips.
But were the royals playing a longer game? Wanting a general influence with Trump for future issues? Now the issue is that the UAE have been the major backers of these rebels killing civilians. Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times reported on how this militia has already overrun one city killing 60,000. Now they’re poised to overrun a larger city. They are, “particularly notorious for savagery … systematically killing men and boys over the age of 10 and gang-raping many women and girls.” The royals do not want pressure to back off on their support.
Frankly it’s not likely that Trump would put any focus on an issue like this even if it weren’t for the investments. It’s not the kind of thing that would interest him. He invaded Venezuela and took out Maduro because he wants to be seen as almost the ruler of all the Americas, and to get some of their oil wealth. In Iran he thought he could say they were on the verge of nuclear weapons. (Informed sources disagreed. Even Fox News had to acknowledge that.) He thought he could “solve” the Iran problem with one wave of bombings and be a hero. In each of those cases there was something in it for him. Regarding internal strife in Sudan? There’s nothing in it for him.
Britain too has been reluctant to pressure the UAE, as the Guardian has reported. They apparently have their own reasons for coddling them.
So the influence buying investments may make no difference in this case, but that’s the point. We don’t know. When a president or other key decision makers have their personal interests tied up with things they decide on, we can’t know. And of course it’s safest to assume these stakes do affect decisions. That’s true both in international relations and in domestic issues. How does Trump make decisions that might affect Intel and other companies he’s taken a big stake in? How does he make decisions about whether crypto is being regulated safely given his big stake in that?
There are also unforeseen costs U.S. interests might pay. To be clear, the major victims in this are the citizens in Sudan who may be about to lose their lives. It feels dismissive to follow that with “but”, but there are U.S. interests involved too. What other decisions will be made that will be different because of this influence? Which decisions will be bad ones? It’s in part our meddling in the Middle East for decades that made it easy for radical and militarized groups to gain support in hating us. Sometimes bad decisions take a long time to fester and become very costly. That’s a mistake we’ve made repeatedly in the region. Decisions based on, “What’s it going to cost me personally” completely leave out the wise, far sighted considerations of what would be best for the nation, both near term and very long term.
Trump’s personal history makes his corruption in office unsurprising, as any voter who cared about such things could have known. The Republicans standing in the way of controlling him, or of investigating and prosecuting him, are the ones truly to blame. They may get voted out but they’ll never pay any price for all the damage and harm. The “standing in the way”, though, can be ended, if we voters choose to end it.
“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 Is Trump’s Corruption Killing People In Sudan? appeared first on DCReport.org.
Living in a rural community offers plenty of advantages, from a slower pace of life to stronger community connections; however, accessing healthcare can be more challenging for older adults who live far from hospitals, specialists, and large medical centers.
As healthcare continues to evolve, there are more options than ever to help bridge these gaps. Understanding available resources, including preventative care appointments such as the Welcome to Medicare visit , can help rural seniors take a more active role in managing their health and accessing the care they need, even from a greater distance.
Many rural areas face shortages of healthcare providers. Rural residents often travel longer distances to see doctors, specialists, and diagnostic facilities. This can create obstacles for older adults who may no longer drive or who have mobility limitations.
In addition to travel concerns, some rural communities have fewer healthcare facilities overall. Hospital closures in rural regions have increased over the past decade, leaving many residents with fewer local options for emergency care and specialty treatment. These challenges can make it difficult to receive timely medical attention, particularly for chronic conditions that require ongoing monitoring.
Despite these hurdles, several healthcare solutions are helping improve access for rural populations.
One of the biggest improvements in rural healthcare access has been the expansion of telehealth. Virtual appointments allow patients to meet with healthcare providers through video calls or telephone consultations without leaving home.
Telehealth can be especially valuable for routine follow-up visits, medication reviews, mental health counseling, and consultations with specialists located hundreds of miles away. For many rural seniors, a virtual appointment can eliminate hours of travel while still providing access to quality care.
Even individuals who are not particularly tech-savvy can often participate with the assistance of family members, caregivers, or local community organizations. The good news for rural residents is that Medicare telehealth coverage has been extended through December 31 st , 2027.
Having a trusted primary care provider remains one of the most important steps in maintaining good health.
For rural seniors, establishing a strong relationship with a local provider can help reduce unnecessary emergency room visits and improve long-term health outcomes. Regular checkups allow physicians to identify potential health concerns before they become serious health problems.
Preventative care appointments are particularly important because they help monitor conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and osteoporosis. Early detection often leads to more effective treatment and better quality of life.
Many rural communities offer healthcare support through local organizations, public health departments, and nonprofit programs. These resources can provide services that complement traditional medical care.
Community health clinics often offer affordable preventative services, screenings, vaccinations, and wellness programs. Senior centers, faith-based organizations, and local volunteer groups may also help connect residents with healthcare information and support services.
Some organizations also provide transportation assistance for medical appointments, which can be an especially valuable resource for older adults who have limited transportation options.
Mobile healthcare units are becoming more popular in rural areas. These clinics on wheels travel to underserved communities and provide services such as health screenings, vaccinations, laboratory testing, and routine medical care.
Mobile clinics help bring healthcare directly to residents who may otherwise face significant travel barriers. For seniors living in remote areas, these services can offer a convenient way to receive essential care closer to home.
Preventive care remains one of the most effective tools for maintaining health as we age.
Seniors in rural areas may sometimes postpone care because of travel challenges or scheduling difficulties. However, delaying preventive services can often lead to more serious health complications later down the road.
Making healthcare a priority, even when access requires extra planning, can significantly improve long-term outcomes.
As we established, accessing healthcare in rural areas presents its unique challenges, but today’s healthcare landscape offers more answers than ever before. Thanks to these solutions, rural seniors can receive the care they need while remaining in the communities they love.
Remember, take advantage of all of the available resources your area has to offer, and prioritize preventive care. Rural older adults can overcome many of the barriers that have traditionally limited healthcare access. With the right support and planning, quality healthcare can be within reach no matter where someone calls home.
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The post How Rural Seniors Can Access Better Healthcare Services appeared first on DCReport.org.
Why it is really the Oregon Regressivity Council. With great fanfare, the Oregon Governor’s Prosperity Council released its report last month, but there are good reasons to believe the business dominated group was misnamed. While it claims to care about prosperity, its key policy aims seem to be dramatically increasing the regressivity of the Oregon tax system. While the report says it is worried about a $40,000 per year single worker paying a couple of percentage points more in taxes than in neighboring states (a claim that isn’t true according to independent analysts, In fact, Oregon’s tax system charges lower income families less than in neighborhoring Washington State. While the incidence of state and local taxes in Oregon is a “picket fence” with income group paying about 10.5 percent of income, the neighboring Washington tax incidence is a steep staircase, with those at the bottom paying moire than Oregon, and the lowest 20 percent of the population paying about three times as much of their income in state and local taxes as the richest one percent.

And despite caring for low and middle income families, all of the project’s policy prescriptions do essentially nothing for low and middle income earners. Instead,, every one of the project’s immediate actions invovles cutting taxes for the ten percent largest businesses, the five percent wealthiest estates, and millionaires. And the project’s principle long-term recommendation is that Oregon needs to make its tax system more regressive–to better match the state’s the Council says we are competing against. The Council proposes slashing income taxes and moving to sales taxes or other consumption taxes, which inherently shift more of the responsibility for payment to those with the lowest incomes.
Revealed preference and another suburban apologia. The very sharp Noah Smith offers up a perplexing defense of the merits of the American suburb in his substack essay: The American Suburbs are better than you think. It’s worth a read, but also deserves a careful and critical reading.
Noah positions his case as a kind of urbanist apologia to (or for) suburban living. There’s little question that, whatever their advantages and problems, millions of Americans who live in suburbs do their best to lead happy, productive lives. But that begs the question of whether suburban living represents any kind of preference, or is they way they’d really like to live. There’s a tendency, as we’ve argued at City Observatory, to treat the settled pattern of suburbanization as a “revealed preference” of the consumer. This kind of argument takes n a “body count” view of growth, to claim suburbs are triumphing, and claim that growth of suburbs represents consumer choice. What that misses is that choices are constrained, and many people are priced out of the places they would prefer.
And actually, Noah knows this. The pattern of habitation we observe in the US is a product of our inability to provide the kinds of urban space that are in high demand; suburbanization is due in significant part to the shortage of cities. As Noah says:
The demand for life in cities like NYC exceeds America’s willingness to supply these environments; this raises rents in places like NYC, which pushes a lot of people into the suburbs who don’t want to be there. Forcing those city types into the ‘burbs raises rents for people who like suburbia. Basically, everyone would be happy if America had a few more Manhattans and a lot more Brooklyns.
Immigrants, cities and innovation. There’s abundant evidence that immigrants have fueled long term US economic growth, and also that dense knowledge networks in cities have played key roles in promoting innovation. A new paper examines a rich and detailed set of historical data to show how immigration to particular cities played a central role in powering US growth in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
There’s little question that the “Age of Mass Migration” (1880–1920) transformed the American economy. The influx of 20 million people provided a massive labor force, new research from Costas Arkolakis, Sun Kyoung Lee, and Michael Peters suggests we’ve been missing a critical variable: geography. It turns out that the secret sauce of American innovation wasn’t just who arrived, but which cities, and which urban industrialnetworks they became embedded in..
The study, which links historical census records to the entire universe of US patents, reveals that immigrants were not merely “hands” for factories, but active participants in the nation’s “urban innovation hubs.” In part, the US attracted some of the betst and brightest, European engineers and crafts-people. And this talent infusion settled disproportionately in high-intensity cities like New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia, meaning immigrants effectively plugged themselves into the most productive knowledge networks of the era. This spatial sorting was so powerful that it accounted for roughly a quarter of the total GDP impact of this migration wave. The authors find that without these international arrivals, US income per capita would have been 8.2% lower by 1940.
“In this paper, we highlight a novel third mechanism: space. Migrants could have contributed to US growth by settling in the urban innovation hubs of New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia, where most innovative activity took place. . . . We find that without the inflow of international migrants between 1880 and 1920, US income per capita would have been 8.2 percent lower by 1940, and that both immigrants’ innate skills and their concentration in urban innovation hubs drive most of this effect.”
The study is a potent and timely reminder of the importance of two essential foundations of US economic exceptionalism: immigration and cities. Both of these foundations are currently under assault from the Trump Administration. The ability of our major cities to serve as incubators of new ideas and new businesses, fueled by infusions of talent from around the world, is very much in question.
Arkolakis, C., Lee, S. K., & Peters, M. (2026). Immigration, Innovation, and the Geography of Growth. (Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper No. 2538). Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University. http://cowles.yale.edu/
The Urbanist quoted City Observatory’s Joe Cortright in its coverage of the $15 billion Interstate Bridge Replacement Project, which is blundering ahead with only about a third of needed funds identified.
“Fewer vehicles will use the I-5 bridges and the I-5 between Portland and Vancouver once we implement tolls. The traffic will go from about 127,000 vehicles a day to 77,000 vehicles per day, and will basically never recover between now and 2050,” Cortright told the Oregon Transportation Commission in May. “So essentially, you will be building capacity that will be going unused at a time when we’re facing real shortages, you will have squandered billions of dollars on capacity that we won’t use, and at the same time, that will divert traffic to I-205 and gridlock, or greatly reduce the capacity, of I-205. This is a transportation own goal of epic proportions to put that much money into a project that actually makes our transportation system worse.”
Retirement brings the promise of finally slowing down, but for many seniors, navigating healthcare expenses feels like signing up for another full-time job. There is a dangerous myth that turning 65 and enrolling in Medicare means your medical bills simply disappear and your healthcare is now 100% free. The reality is far from that, and much more complex.
Whether you are researching supplemental policies or reading opinion pieces about why medicare advantage plans are bad , you quickly realize that federal health insurance is not a comprehensive, zero-cost safety net. It is merely a foundation. If you enter retirement assuming your coverage is absolute, you risk draining your carefully accumulated nest egg faster than it took to grow.
To protect your financial security, you must understand exactly what your coverage provides and leaves behind.
Many people assume Medicare is entirely free because they paid Medicare taxes throughout their working years. While that is generally true for Medicare Part A, it is not true for the rest of your coverage.
Medicare Part B requires a standard monthly premium. This premium is automatically deducted from your Social Security check.
To have prescription drug coverage, you must purchase a standalone Part D plan or find a bundled Advantage plan. These can come with their own monthly premiums and cost-sharing.
If you were a high earner during your working years, or if you take large distributions from your retirement accounts, the federal government imposes an Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA). This surcharge can increase your baseline Part B and Part D premiums.
Since Medicare Parts A and B do not cover 100% of your healthcare costs, many beneficiaries opt for additional coverage to help with cost-sharing. Depending on the exact plan type you choose, you can expect to pay an additional premium or at least still some cost-sharing as you go along with the services done.
Original Medicare does not have a hard cap on how much you can spend in a single year. If you face a catastrophic medical event, the math can become terrifying and seem never-ending.
For standard Medicare Part B, after you meet your annual deductible, the federal healthcare program typically covers 80% of approved Part B services. You are responsible for the remaining 20% coinsurance. While 20% might not sound intimidating for a routine blood test, it becomes a massive financial liability if you need expensive outpatient surgery or costly chemotherapy treatments. Unless you purchase a private Medigap (Medicare Supplement) policy to help cover that remaining 20%, your financial exposure is technically unlimited.
If you opt for a Medicare Advantage plan (which is required by law to have an out-of-pocket maximum) the 2026 limits can still exceed $9,250 for in-network care. For a senior on a fixed income, hitting that limit in a single year can be a major financial blow, but it still beats what 20% uncapped could amount to if you needed something major done like open heart surgery.
Original Medicare is strictly designed to treat acute medical conditions. It notoriously excludes several critical areas of senior health, meaning you must pay 100% of these costs out of pocket unless you have specialized supplemental coverage.
The most glaring omissions include routine dental, vision, and hearing care. To put it more frankly, yes, that means Medicare does not provide coverage for services and treatments such as routine eye exams, glasses or contact fittings, hearings aids, tooth extractions, dentures, root canals, and routine teeth cleanings. You are expected to pay completely out of pocket unless you have additional coverage of your own to help with these costs.
This is one of the largest financial blind spots for aging Americans. Medicare covers skilled nursing care (such as rehab after a stroke or a broken hip) but only for a very limited number of days.
It explicitly excludes “custodial care.” If you or your spouse eventually need daily, non-medical assistance with bathing, dressing, eating, or safely navigating your home, Medicare pays zero dollars. Many aging adults will need some type of long-term care in their remaining years.
If that care eventually requires a private room in a nursing facility, know that those costs will be steep. If you do not have long-term care insurance or a dedicated, savings strategy, these out-of-pocket expenses can erode your portfolio at an alarming rate.
Medicare is not a magical shield against all medical expenses. If you can prepare and avoid these hidden costs now, you can pivot your financial planning into active defense mode. If you haven’t already, start funding your Health Savings Account (HSA) aggressively while you still can, budget for supplemental plan costs, and come up with a long-term care strategy you’re comfortable with. The best way to enjoy a stress-free retirement is to ensure your healthcare liabilities are fully fleshed out long before you need the care.
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The post The Hidden Costs Seniors Face Even After ‘Full’ Medicare Coverage appeared first on DCReport.org.

Skyroot Aerospace’s Vikram-1 rocket successfully lifted off on its inaugural flight July 18, becoming the first commercial Indian rocket to reach orbit.
The post Skyroot Aerospace reaches orbit on first Vikram-1 launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

NASA and Draper have terminated plans for a lunar lander mission after significant delays in development of the spacecraft.
The post NASA terminates Draper lunar lander mission appeared first on SpaceNews.

Defense Production Act funding was awarded to Martin Materials Solutions, a small business that makes radiation-resistant cover glass used on spacecraft solar arrays and thermal-control systems
The post Pentagon awards $7.1 million to expand U.S. production of cover glass for satellites appeared first on SpaceNews.
Today’s culture briefing is free for everyone. Enjoy!
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A few weeks ago, I warned about problems brewing at Netflix (and other streaming platforms). In just the last few days, these problems have gotten worse, much worse—and the situation has reached crisis proportions.
Even more revealing—the crisis is now spreading through the tech world like a wildfire. It’s no exaggeration to say that Netflix dragged down the entire NASDAQ today, after the release of its disappointing quarterly results.
That’s because savvy investors on Wall Street now grasp what’s really going on. They fear that the root cause of Netflix’s woes portends the collapse of the dominant business strategy in tech today.
This is hugely important—and not just for investors or technocrats. All of us will be impacted by how this plays out. And I have a strong hunch that what is bad for Netflix might just be good for you and me.
That’s because Netflix’s failed strategy is audience capture. And you and I are part of the audience it wants to keep in captivity.
More on that below—but let’s start by looking at damage done to Netflix’s stock. When I warned about it in June, the price had already dropped 45%.
But today, shareholders woke up to this.
After today’s debacle, Netflix will have wiped out the entire last two years of stock price gains.
This is usually where I take a victory lap, and point out that I warned of the danger three weeks ago. But there’s bigger story here that must be told.
The disappointing revenue report yesterday is just the tip of the iceberg. The company’s reluctance to provide viewership numbers is an even more revealing sign of how bad things really are.
Netflix once bragged regularly about its growing user base. But yesterday they refused to share updated viewership numbers until 2027!
Yet even without those metrics, I’ve seen evidence of a coming corporate collapse—but only if you dug into the numbers.
Last week, for example, we learned that Netflix’s audience is skipping the second season of the platform’s hottest offerings.
That’s scary stuff for Netflix. But it gets worse. The audience is also losing interest in the platform’s brand new series.
The situation is so dire that even Netflix’s biggest new series of the second quarter failed to get renewed. But if the platform can’t count on its new hits, will anything save it?
Netflix doesn’t want to tell us about users canceling their subscriptions. But just go over to Reddit and other platforms where people say what they really think about the company. You will get an earful.
Funny I was talking to my wife about how Netflix has practically nothing left we want to watch and maybe it was time to move on. If this price increase goes through that would be the final straw. I suspect a lot of others are getting close to that limit….
Another frustrated customer didn’t even make a comment—just shared some numbers. But the numbers paint a dismal picture.
Netflix got into this mess by pursuing a simple strategy: (1) Reduce the number of new scripted series (which peaked in 2022), but (2) Raise subscription prices.
That is the “audience capture” strategy mentioned above. The idea is that the audience got captured years ago with cheap subscription prices, and now the platform can squeeze them mercilessly—offering less and charging more. Netflix has been pursuing this agenda for several years now.
Ah, but Netflix isn’t the only company building its future on audience capture. It’s getting used at almost every streaming platform. And even companies outside of the media space are practicing variants of it. You see it at Google, Meta, X, Apple, etc.
It’s shocking how many companies have learned this technique. The entire printer and toner business is now built on audience capture. The same is true of the software industry—don’t even get me started on my Microsoft Office subscription fiasco. And, of course, all those customer loyalty programs (variants on the frequent flyer gimmicks that started this craze years ago) are examples of the same stale strategy.
Even the AI world is turning into an audience capture business—both for itself and its customers. This is one of the key reasons for my frequent criticisms of AI slop. It feeds into step one of the strategy outlined above. The companies use AI to reduce the cost of content, thus boosting margins while reducing their dependence on human creators.
Audience capture has always existed, but never to this extent. When I consulted at BCG we called it a milking strategy, where you raised prices and reduced capital investment in a business—which was now your cash cow. You squeeze all the money you can from it, for as long as you can.
But back then we realized that milking only worked in the short term. Eventually you killed the cow. And the risk is the same today with “audience capture”—which is just a new name for that poor old bovine.
Sooner or later, the audience refuses to be held captive. And that’s happening now at Netflix—hence the stock sell-off.
But it’s happening elsewhere too, although few are paying attention. Look at the share price at Spotify or Disney for ther examples.
Did you know that Mark Zuckerberg’s social media empire has stopped growing? In the first quarter, Meta saw a decline in users for the first time in the company’s history.
This is not just a coincidence. Meta is the king of audience capture, and when it starts losing that audience, other tech companies ought to pay attention.
You should expect to see more problems of this sort at audience capture corporations. And that’s bad news for the technocracy, because this manipulative strategy is everywhere. If it stops producing results, they will need to take drastic steps.
But their nightmare is our blessing. That’s because the end of audience capture means tech companies will need to return to serving customers, not holding them in bondage.
They aren’t ready to take that step—not now, at least. Pleasing customers is hard work. Milking cows is a simpler business. But they won’t have a choice. The cattle are finally resisting. They might even stampede!
Moo, moo, moo!

I give the leading audience capture companies 12-18 months at most before the worst consequences of their overreach hit their financial statements. And it may happen even faster.
If they were wise, they would start acting now. But whether they fix the root cause of their audience capture mess now or later, the end result will be the same. That captive audience will find itself liberated.
If I’m right, this may represent the biggest shift in the consumer economy of our time. So check back here for updates—because this will be a bumpy rodeo ride for all parties.

Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure and industrial technology. This week we look at a setback for California Forever, a $500 million artillery shell plant not producing any shells, the difficulty of recycling EV batteries, manufacturing wire harnesses, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subscriber.
Housekeeping items this week:
Origins of Efficiency is apparently one of the most purchased books by startup founders, according to Brex (a credit card aimed at startups).
We’ve previously seen homeowners in the Bay Area asking for OpenAI or Anthropic stock when they sell their house, but apparently you also see landlords asking for equity share as part of the leasing agreement. (I’ve seen some claims this is fake, but Byrne Hobart noted that this sort of deal took place with Paypal.) [X]
A setback for California Forever, which is trying to build a new California city northeast of the Bay Area. Part of the plan involved a huge new shipyard, but one of the tenants for that shipyard, automated vessel startup Saronic, is now setting up shop in Texas instead. [SF Chronicle]
California Forever’s bid to recruit a major industrial tenant for a planned waterfront shipbuilding facility in Solano County has slipped away, a significant blow to the ambitious but heavily scrutinized billionaire-backed plan to build an entire new city on thousands of acres of farmland.
Defense startup Saronic Technologies, which designs and builds autonomous water crafts, has chosen Texas — where the company has been considering the Port of Brownsville — over Solano County for its $3.2 billion Port Alpha automated shipyard, according to multiple sources familiar with the negotiations.
In my essay about build to rent housing, I noted that one developer I spoke to said that one benefit of rental housing was giving access to good school districts to people who couldn’t otherwise afford to live there. A recent paper in Real Estate Economics suggest this is actually a pretty significant benefit (though I haven’t read this paper closely). [Wiley]
Using a unique data set of linked student-housing-unit records from North Carolina and a fixed effects research design, we document an association between increases in the supply of single-family rental units (SFRs) and the likelihood that economically disadvantaged children attend higher performing schools. Drawing on exogenous variation in the allocation of SFRs across neighborhoods, we find that children in renter households were more likely to experience improvements in school quality when relocating to areas with an ample supply of SFRs zoned for high-performing schools. Using a shift-share identification strategy with school-level data, we also provide evidence supporting the generalizability of our results to other markets throughout the United States.
The Wall Street Journal on how Baby Boomers, unlike their parents, aren’t necessarily downsizing to smaller homes when they retire. [WSJ]
A cool video of automated carbon fiber manufacturing. [X] And a cool video of Tesla ripping out the Model X/Model S production line. [X]
The New York Times on the enormous setbacks in US EV manufacturing. Manufacturers pivoted away from them so quickly that in one case Chevy cancelled production of an EV between when they gave a review model to a publication and when that review came out. “In purely financial terms, the combined cost of this industry about-face remains nothing short of staggering: This year, Stellantis alone was forced to write down $26 billion in E.V.-related losses. (Ford reported a slightly less ghastly $19 billion loss.) But somehow, it’s the long-term repercussions that look worse. “The way I’d put it,” the auto journalist Martin Padgett told me recently, “is that we pulled a U-turn while the rest of the world was pushing forward.” [NYT]
Related, things look pretty bleak for US EV manufacturer Lucid Motors. “Lucid Group on Tuesday denied as “completely false” a blog post saying it was considering a potential take-private transaction or a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, after the electric-vehicle maker’s shares tumbled more than 50% in what would be their steepest one-day decline [BP: though they ended the day down 16%, not 50%]. Lucid said it had sufficient liquidity to fund operations well into the next year, and had not formed a special board committee to explore the reported scenarios. It also said restructuring adviser AlixPartners was assisting the company on improving execution and operations, and was not recommending bankruptcy.” [Reuters]
A $500 million plant for producing 155mm artillery shells has yet to produce any, despite coming online more than two years ago. The culprit seems to be the fact that General Dynamics tried to repurpose the original shell manufacturing equipment, designed for a different type of artillery shell, rather than spin up an entirely new production line. [The War Zone]
Everyone who has played with oobleck (a mixture of cornstarch and water) remembers the first surprise. Lower your hand into it slowly and it behaves like thick cream. It yields, slumps, and lazily flows around your fingers. Strike it with your fist and it abruptly becomes stone. Run across a pool of it and it supports your weight; stand still and you sink.
The remarkable thing is that nothing about the water changes. The chemistry remains exactly the same. What changes is the microscopic relationship among the suspended starch particles. Under gentle motion they drift past one another, lubricated by thin films of water. Under rapid deformation those lubrication layers fail. Frictional contacts appear, force chains span the material, and what moments ago was a viscous liquid becomes, briefly, a solid.
Oobleck is the canonical non-Newtonian fluid because its viscosity is not a constant. It depends on how you drive it.
Sloptraptions is an AI-assisted opt-in section of the Contraptions Newsletter. If you only want my hand-crafted writing, you can unsubscribefrom this section.
It has another party trick. Spread it on a vibrating speaker and it begins to dance. Instead of randomly splashing about, it grows fingers, towers, rippling ridges, and standing waves. Certain frequencies produce stable patterns that seem almost alive. The same material that appears to be an inert sludge under ordinary conditions reveals an unexpected repertoire of organized behavior under periodic forcing.
I have been thinking about this image because it increasingly feels like the right metaphor for intellectual life in the age of AI.
The dominant story about large language models is that they commodify ideas (see my April 2025 post, LLMs as Index Funds). They make writing easier, synthesis cheaper, and arguments more accessible. My study group colleague Sachin formulated a stronger version of the claim: LLMs do not merely commodify ideas after they appear. In an age where everyone is talking to the same LLMs about shared contemporary concerns, LLMs precommodify ideas.
Instead of discovering ideas through conversation, we increasingly discover them privately by interrogating roughly the same handful of archival statistical hyperobjects. Millions of people working on similar problems descend similar gradients through the same latent space. Before we ever speak to one another, we have often traversed remarkably similar conceptual pathways. We have encountered the same analogies, anticipated the same objections, and converged on similar decompositions.
Communication becomes uncanny. You don’t learn what someone thinks. You recognize where they’ve already been. You start inhabiting a radically unsurprising hive mind. Ironically, AIs are aligning humans with each other even as humans struggle to figure out whether aligning AIs is even a well-posed notion (I believe it is not).
This is different from pre-AI modes of idea and behavior diffusion from human point sources through mimesis, preference cascades, or common knowledge. Those modes required public interaction to produce convergence. Here the synchronization occurs before public discourse even begins. The alignment is invisible because it happens through countless private conversations with a common semantic substrate.
The result is an intellectual medium that increasingly resembles flowing oobleck.
Notice that oobleck in its resting state is not water. It is already a thick suspension. It flows, but reluctantly. Likewise, AI-mediated discourse does not become silent. It continues to move, but with a peculiar viscosity. Every new conversation encounters the same familiar conceptual structures. The medium remains fluid, yet oddly resistant to surprise. This is a basic consequence of what I dubbed oozification a few years ago. What I didn’t think through was the nature of ooze.
This is where the metaphor becomes more interesting than the diagnosis.
Most critiques of AI implicitly assume that this thickening is simply a degeneration. If discourse has become semantic sludge, then the goal must be to recover the crystalline independence of earlier intellectual life.
But that is not what happens with oobleck.
Oobleck does not become interesting by becoming water again.
It becomes interesting when it dances.
The question is therefore not how to restore an earlier informational ecology. The question is what kinds of forcing excite new collective modes in an increasingly precommodified medium.
To see why this matters, it helps to contrast the AI world with the media environment that preceded it.
The internet of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries often behaved more like a Newtonian fluid approaching turbulence. Increase the flow and you obtained more mixing. Communities collided unexpectedly. Memes mutated. Strange combinations emerged from chance encounters. The dominant instability was turbulent diffusion. More communication meant more recombination.
The AI era appears to change the constitutive law of the medium itself.
Increasing communication no longer guarantees additional mixing because so much of the mixing has already occurred privately inside the model. Real turbulence becomes harder to generate. More discussion often produces not richer turbulence but stronger semantic coupling. Everyone has already explored roughly the same conceptual basin before arriving at the meeting.
If the old public sphere resembled a river becoming turbulent, the new one resembles a dense suspension becoming jammed.
That sounds pessimistic, but it may instead be an invitation to invent new forcing functions. One example is study groups. Much of my information diet over the last few years has been mediated by weekly or biweekly study groups on several topics. I’m part of 5 regularly in two discord communities with somewhat different vibes, and help curate a few more indirectly.
The striking thing about my study groups is not that the participants know things the public does not or have special skills. Quite the opposite. These groups are non-specialist groups picking and reading publicly available information, and actively using LLMs to understand specialized material. We actively lean into the precommodified ooze. Everyone is talking to the same frontier models as everyone else, in response to the same public provocations.
What the group contributes is not information, but rhythm.
A week or two of solitary exploration.
A fixed moment of synchronization.
Another week or two of divergence.
Another synchronization.
Ideas are repeatedly compressed, relaxed, compressed again. The oscillation is slow enough for individual trajectories to diverge, but fast enough that the shared context remains alive. The novelty emerges not from any single participant nor from the LLM, but from the temporal pattern imposed on the collective. The very idea of precommodification, appropriately enough, came up in one of these study groups, a couple of weeks before it popped more broadly in the zeitgeist. The alpha is in the temporality not the data.
Precommodification, ironically, becomes the raw material for prescience under appropriate forcing functions. At least in this narrow case, social oobleck can dance.
The lesson generalizes beyond study groups.
Perhaps the important input factor is no longer novel ideas but novel excitation patterns of the precommodified ooze.
The important institutions of the future may distinguish themselves less by possessing proprietary knowledge than by discovering productive temporal excitation modes. Weekly reading groups. Quarterly synthesis retreats. Long-lived research circles. Communities that periodically separate and recombine. Organizations that deliberately alternate between independent AI-assisted exploration and tightly synchronized human integration.
Notice that all of these are protocols.
They do not primarily specify what people should think. They specify when people should diverge, when they should converge, and how long they should remain in each phase.
The protocol becomes a forcing function.
This suggests a broader principle.
As AI oozifies everything it touches, it also changes what it means to create value.
In the industrial age, we optimized machines.
In the information age, we optimized networks.
In the AI age, we may find ourselves optimizing excitation.
The frontier shifts from discovering better ideas to discovering better excitation patterns that make familiar ideas self-organize into unfamiliar structures.
The entrepreneur, researcher, teacher, or institution of the future may therefore resemble less an inventor than the designer of a resonant cavity — a context tank. Their contribution is not another insight extracted from the same latent space. It is the temporal architecture that allows a synchronized medium to produce patterns that none of its participants, nor even the models that preconditioned them, could have generated alone.
Can the oobleck dance?
That is no longer a question about a cornstarch suspension.
It is a question about knowledge ecologies after precommodification.
If AI has indeed turned discourse into a dense semantic ooze, then the future belongs not to those who lament its viscosity, nor to those who merely stir it harder, but to those who discover the frequencies at which it unexpectedly comes alive.
Everyone seems to be launching and landing rockets these days.
Last week, China joined the club of countries that have launched an orbital mission and brought its booster safely back to Earth, which is just the beginning of public and private ventures in that country aggressively pushing into rocket reuse. Also in Asia, Japan's space agency has been conducting hop tests, and Honda recently performed vertical reuse tests.
In the United States, of course, SpaceX launches and lands reusable rockets every few days. Blue Origin, although its New Glenn booster is temporarily grounded, has also demonstrated the ability to both land and re-launch a large orbital booster. Other US companies, including Stoke Space, Rocket Lab, and Relativity Space, are all making credible progress toward partially or fully reusable rockets.
1. How Roman concrete lasted for so long.
2. All restaurants in Germany are worthy of five stars?
3. They are making improvements to Refine.
4. New limits on graduate student visas? Should we/can we make the PhD three years only?
5.”I need him to make a decision.”
7. “Where will we be next year?”
The post Saturday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.
After a multi-year legislative struggle, France's Assemblée Nationale legalized medical aid in dying for some patients.
Le Monde has the story:
"With this bill, we are facing death head-on," declared French President Emmanuel Macron on March 10, 2024. More than two years later, the Assemblée Nationale cast a definitive vote on Wednesday, July 15, on the bill establishing a right to assisted dying. With the adoption of the law, France joins 11 other countries where people with severe illnesses can obtain a lethal substance on medical prescription, based on criteria varying from one legal system to another.
"The "French end-of-life model," a phrase Macron used in 2023, originated from the president's own initiative. However, its design resulted solely from the work of MPs after four rounds of readings, the Sénat having rejected the bill three times. Supporters have praised the bill as "balanced" and "secure," offering safeguards to ensure that recourse to assisted dying remains "an exception." Its critics, however, argue that the "safeguards" provided are not sufficient for preventing "abuse."
##########
The Catholic Courier summarizes some of the opposition to the bill:
France’s bishops criticize vote legalizing ‘assisted dying’
Caroline De Sury/OSV News | 07.16.2026
"PARIS (OSV News) — France’s bishops are strongly criticizing a “radical choice” made by French lawmakers to legalize “assisted dying.”
"A watershed vote by the National Assembly July 15 legalized assisted dying, including euthanasia and assisted suicide in certain cases.
"Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline of Marseille and president of the bishops’ conference, lamented that “members of parliament have enshrined in French law the possibility of causing death.”
...
"For the bishops, one of the greatest dangers of the law stems from the fact that the principle that death can constitute a medical response to suffering has now become part of the legal heritage of the country. The choice to die can then be asserted as a right that could be extended to others.
“Experience in other countries shows that the criteria for access to assisted dying always tend to broaden, to the detriment of palliative care,” they noted.
"Meanwhile, “the effects of such legislation are not yet fully measured, but they are already taking shape,” the bishops warned. “Our relationship to vulnerability, old age, disability, and illness will change,” they added.
“The poorest are likely to be the first to pay the price: not wanting to be a burden on their children or grandchildren, elderly people in precarious situations may feel pressured to die,” the prelates warned.
"Catholic care facilities could face legal action for refusing euthanasia, assisted suicide on their premises
For the bishops today, the most immediate and concrete concern is that, if the law goes into effect, care facilities — foremost among them Catholic institutions — could face legal action if they refuse to allow euthanasia or assisted suicide to take place on their premises. As it stands, the law will require the head of the facility or department to authorize outside practitioners to perform the lethal procedure.
"The bishops have therefore announced that they will “closely monitor the referrals to the Constitutional Council” that were announced prior to the vote.
...
"On July 14, while France was celebrating Bastille Day — the country’s biggest national holiday — Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu surprised many by announcing that he would appeal to the Constitutional Council to submit the text of this law — to which he is personally opposed — for review. He justified this final recourse by citing the lack of agreement between the two chambers, the National Assembly and the Senate. A few days earlier, Senate President Gérard Larcher had announced his intention to take the same step.
"The Constitutional Council may approve the entire bill, strike down certain provisions, or issue interpretive reservations before the law is promulgated by Macron. The referral requested by the prime minister will focus in particular on the absence of a conscience clause allowing healthcare facilities — such as the Catholic nursing homes run by the Little Sisters of the Poor — to be legally authorized to refuse to provide such “assisted dying” services on their premises.
"Pending the outcome of the appeal, the bishops of France have reiterated their call to Catholics in France to “bear witness that another path is possible — one of faithful presence and attentive care that alleviates physical or psychological suffering, without ever abandoning anyone.”
Roughly 37,000–40,000 Americans die in auto accidents every year. We now have large‑scale, real‑world evidence—from Waymo and a joint analysis with Swiss Re—that driverless operations can be substantially safer than matched human driving within their current operating domains. The latest data show that over 220 million miles driven, Waymo vehicles–in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Phoenix, Austin and Atlanta–have 94% fewer serious injuries, 82% fewer air bag deployments, and 93% fewer pedestrian injuries. The evidence is not fully independent, but it is unusually transparent, large‑scale evidence.
So with thousands of lives annually in the balance who is against autonomous vehicles (AVs)? Trial lawyers. Remarkably the trial lawyers saw the writing on the wall very early and the have been lobbying against AVs for nearly a decade! The American Association for Justice, the trial lawyers’ lobby, has been a prominent opponent to AV legislation (see also reports here). (They have been joined by Democrats worried about labor and demanding that heavy trucks be excluded).
The trial lawyers earn a huge amount litigating ordinary auto accidents–Annual U.S. auto insurance payouts (liability + PIP/MedPay) are on the order of $180–220B and trial lawyers are very eager to retain the right to sue car manufacturers for product liability. In my view, product liability isn’t useful as a safety device in this field. Instead, the solution is simple. Every car should be required to be insured, regardless of driver. Indeed, Waymo vehicles are already insured at $5 million liability coverage per vehicle, far higher levels than most human drivers are covered.
The UK’s Automated and Electric Vehicles Act 2018 does basically this–a single insurer covers the vehicle whether the human or the automated system is driving; the victim is compensated directly by the insurer, no need to establish product defect; the insurer then subrogates against the manufacturer if the software was at fault. Victims get paid fast, manufacturers face the cost of their defects through recoveries and premiums, and the high-transaction costs (i.e. lawyer fees!) and messy manufacturer-versus-victim litigation is replaced by insurer-versus-manufacturer bargaining between repeat players who settle efficiently.
The great thing about this system is that insurance almost certainly deters better than tort: fleets generate data that makes experience rating precise, so insurers become continuous safety regulators, whereas litigation delivers a noisy, lagged, lottery like signal depending on safety-irrelevant factors of the jury and the locale.
We have the best data on Waymo, Tesla data is murkier but note how well this works with the insurance system. Let the insurers decide how much to charge Tesla robotaxis and FSD drivers–they will internalize the externality far better than tort lawyers. In short, insurance works great for accident victims but not for trial lawyers. Indeed, if the trial lawyers have their way accident victims will continue to be buried in an invisible graveyard.
Hat tip: Andy Hall and Jon Slotkin.
The post Trial Lawyers Lobby Against Autonomous Vehicles appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Building the infrastructure we will need for interstellar exploration requires an imaginative look at today’s technologies as applied to distant targets. Indeed, we can leverage the scientific interest in, say, an orbit around each of the ice giants to explore launch capabilities through beamed energy, but we will also need to consider how we can use economical smallsats to provide stationkeeping nodes in such studies. Advances in miniaturization and the growing sophistication of CubeSats all point in the same direction. We can exploit our early flybys by fleshing out an observational smallsat matrix around targets at system’s edge to form a robust data and communications network.
The thing that is going to vitalize the development of small satellite packages is a new kind of propulsion system of the sort recently developed at MIT. The problem is easily stated: A small spacecraft – think suitcase size or less – has to maximize payload while ensuring flexibility in adjusting trajectory or tweaking orbital parameters. Chemical thrusters can give you rapid maneuvers and orbital insertion while electrical thrusters can produce low-thrust for long-haul cruise purposes or stationkeeping. Both systems are bulky, which has led to the kind of trade-off that is holding back smallsats for longer deep space missions.
The MIT work, discussed in a recent paper in the Journal of Propulsion and Power, describes a way to combine both types of thruster by extending existing ‘electrospray’ thrusters into the realm of chemical propulsion. Electrospray technology was used successfully on the LISA Pathfinder mission in 2015, which was essentially a demonstrator mission to study the detection of gravitational waves. The tiny thrusters could produce thrust in minute increments that allowed the spacecraft to maintain position without introducing vibrations. Observations that are ‘jitter-free’ become possible..
The basic electrostatic thruster can be the size of a small coin or a computer chip. An electric field acts on a propellant – a conductive liquid – which is being fed to each thruster, the latter sitting on top of a reservoir of the propellant.
Let’s pause for a moment on the conductive liquid, which the paper refers to as an ‘ionic liquid. ‘ I’m seeing these described as a liquid salt at room temperature. The liquid is made up of negative and positive ions without a neutral solvent, which makes the fluid electrically conductive. In other words, there is no need to ionize the propellant. The idea is simply to pull the ions out of the ionic liquid using an electrical field. A storage benefit also accrues: These liquids are non-evaporative and can be stored without pressurized tanks or seals. The electric field charges a specified amount of ions, which are then channeled out of the reservoir through the thruster tips as a spray.

Image: These four flight unit electrospray thrusters were delivered by MIT Space Propulsion Laboratory to NASA for the upcoming Green Propulsion Dual Mode (GPDM) mission. Insert: The emitter arrays. Image credit: Amelia Bruno.
So we know that electrospray thrusters work. Moreover, the method is scalable, allowing thrusters to work in tandem for larger missions. Being able to combine this technology with more powerful chemical methods dramatically extends the possibilities for missions to other planets without the thrust penalty of conventional electrical propulsion systems. Amelia Bruno (MIT Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics) is lead author of the new paper:
“If you can have chemical and electrical propulsion in one small package, it’s the best of both worlds. This opens the door for small satellites to do even more science, more observations, and more interesting missions, all on a smaller and cheaper platform.”
The step forward here is the discovery that a chemical propellant can work with the same system and deliver higher levels of thrust when needed. It’s two propulsion methods working off the same tank of propellant. MIT has introduced a ‘green’ monopropellant developed originally by the US Air Force for chemical propulsion. Called ASCENT (Advanced Spacecraft Energetic Non-Toxic), the ionic liquid propellant is free of the health hazards of hydrazine for those working with it – hence the ‘green’ in the above reference. In this case, green means lower overall costs with fewer environmental liabilities.
The flight demonstrator that grows out of this is called the Green Propulsion Dual Mode (GPDM) mission. Scheduled for launch in November of this year, the mission is to be the first in-space checkout of this form of propulsion, testing the switching from chemical combustion mode to electromagnetic acceleration mode. A single propellant tank will feed the chemical thruster as well as the array of four electrospray thrusters. A Falcon 9 launch vehicle will deploy the 6U CubeSat with the new propellant onboard as a secondary payload.
Recent tests have shown that electrospray thrusters fueled with ASCENT operate successfully over periods lasting up to 100 hours and although the propellant was originally designed for chemical propulsion, it turns out to be just as efficient as the various ionic liquids the team has experimented with in their electric thrusters. Thus a single tank of fuel aboard a CubeSat can be used to produce both chemical and electrical propulsion in a compact system. No previous satellite has ever been designed with a shared propellant tank.
Paulo Lozano is a professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT:
“We could send CubeSats to Mars, or the asteroid belt, where they could make the journey slowly, using electrospray thrusters. You could then use your chemical thrusters to quickly move to look at interesting features. You could have a lot more flexibility to do a lot more things.”
Marshall Space Flight Center leads the the Green Propulsion Dual Mode mission, with MIT supplying hardware and subsystems, along with Georgia Tech. The NASA Small Spacecraft & Distributed Systems (SSDS) program manages the GPDM project. Keep an eye on this program.
The paper is Bruno et al., “Performance Characterization of Electrospray Thrusters with Energetic Ionic Liquid Monopropellant,” Journal of Propulsion | Power published online 31 May 2026 (abstract). Also available is Tong et al., “Mission Architecture for the Green Propulsion Dual Mode Mission,” presented at the 38th Annual Small Satellite Conference and available here.

Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him. From Wikipedia:
Luis Garicano Gabilondo (pronounced [ˈlwis ɣaɾiˈkano]; born 1967) is a Spanish economist and politician who was a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from 2019 to 2022. He was also vice president of Renew Europe and vice president of the European political party Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE Party). Before entering politics, he was a professor of strategy and economics at IE Business School in Madrid and at the London School of Economics (LSE). After leaving the European Parliament he has returned to academia as a visiting professor at Columbia Business School and at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. In 2023, returned to LSE as full professor at the School of Public Policy.
He is one of the leading European economic liberals, here is his home page. Here is his Google scholar page. Here is Luis on Twitter. he also has a very good book coming out called Messy Jobs, co-authored with Jim Li and Yanhui Wu. So what should I ask him?
The post What should I ask Luis Garicano? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Joanna Stern explains why this emoji is correct today: 📅. (This one too: 📆)
Sean Hollister, reporting for The Verge (gift link):
Here’s Google’s full statement on withdrawing its proposed modifications to Judge Donato’s permanent injunction, via Google spokesperson Dan Jackson:
We’ve agreed with Epic to withdraw our motion to modify the US Court’s injunction rather than prolonging this process which creates uncertainty for the ecosystem. This allows us to focus on executing our recently announced global business model evolution to deliver greater app store choice, lower prices, and more opportunities for developers and users. We remain committed to maintaining Android’s industry-leading security and fostering a competitive ecosystem where every app store and developer has the freedom to compete. In parallel, we continue to comply with the US Court’s injunction.
Google had previously announced that it would launch its sideloaded Registered App Store program in the rest of the world, beginning with the new version of Android later this year. That means there may be two different tracks for Android: stores-within-a-store in the United States and Registered App Stores everywhere else.
Google is already informing US app developers that their apps and game listings will automatically be provided to third-party app stores starting July 22nd, unless they opt out, and it’s launched a specific page for its Play Catalog Access Program for third-party app stores to enroll.
I presume that this new agreement between Google and Epic includes ripping up the “no criticism of Play Store” gag order that the highly principled Tim Sweeney had agreed to in exchange for $800 million back in March?
Anyway, it will be interesting to see what developers do. My guess is that all the big app developers will opt out of this. Games, though, maybe not?
MG Siegler, writing at Spyglass:
In that light, we can see the dilemma. But there were also probably about a dozen better ways to do this roll-out — as highlighted by how fast they’re fixing these things — and they just missed the mark. While they undoubtedly knew there would be some backlash, they probably didn’t realize there would be this much. Again. All that points to perhaps a disturbing trend where OpenAI doesn’t really understand their user base. Which you almost can understand given how they clearly stumbled into ChatGPT in the first place. Still, here they are with those billion users. A problem that all of their competitors would love to have. But still a problem if you want to fundamentally change what you are as a product.
But those are bigger, existential issues. All I wanted was chat back in the ChatGPT app. Front and center. And I got it. It’s not perfect. It’s still bloated. But at least it’s usable again now and not a confusing mess of ideas out of the box.
MG is pretty scathing, but I still think he’s taking it too easy on OpenAI for what a colossal fuck-up this remains. There was nothing wrong with the way things were, with two apps — the simple ChatGPT and the complex Codex. (Well, the Codex Mac app being an Electron turd was wrong, but that complaint seems quaint at this point.)
Adding “ChatGPT” as a tab to Codex is fine. Renaming Codex to “ChatGPT” is stupid. They have not made ChatGPT “ChatGPT” again.
There is nothing — not one single tiny feature — in the new ChatGPT app that makes me want to use it instead of ChatGPT Classic. And there is so much in ChatGPT Classic that works better or just isn’t available in the new ChatGPT. You can’t even just delete a chat in the new app — you have to “archive” it first, then fish around to find the archive and delete it there.
I don’t think the problem is that OpenAI “doesn’t really understand their user base”. I think it’s that decisions are now being made by AI research eggheads who don’t understand their own products. They think this makes sense. So of course they don’t understand their user base — who uses the ChatGPT product — either. I mean what sense does it make that the ChatGPT app for iOS and Android is still the old ChatGPT, which on the Mac is now “ChatGPT Classic”, but there’s a totally different app that is an entire order of magnitude more complicated on the Mac now named “ChatGPT”?
The only good solution is to pretend this last week didn’t happen and go back to calling ChatGPT “ChatGPT” and Codex “Codex”. If they want to give one of them a new name, don’t call ChatGPT “ChatGPT Classic” — instead rename Codex “ChatGPT Codex”. There, done. All problems solved.
The Codex app is clearly capable of amazing things. But the reason that there are a billion users of ChatGPT but only a few million users of Codex — by OpenAI’s own accounting — is because ChatGPT is simple and focused and based on a single coherent concept: chat. The frustration of the eggheads now running product at OpenAI is obvious: how come these hundreds of millions of morons using ChatGPT aren’t running Codex instead? Somehow they thought they could fix this by giving Codex the ChatGPT name. This is like if Apple had gotten rid of the Messages app on the Mac and replaced it with Xcode, which they renamed to “Messages”. Now they’ve put an “iMessage” tab in the Xcode sidebar and re-released the Messages app everyone knew and loved as “Messages Classic”.
OpenAI separated itself from its competition — especially Anthropic — by being good at product. Now their product decisions are being made by people who don’t understand why Apple makes both iMovie and Final Cut Pro, or GarageBand and Logic Pro.
Thibault “Tibo” Sottiaux, the OpenAI engineering lead who’s taking the most public credit for this and thus probably deserves the most blame, on Twitter/X:
Evening! We’ve gotten lots of great feedback on the new ChatGPT desktop app (which we didn’t get totally quite right on the first try), and as a result, we’ve made some changes.
1/ ChatGPT conversation history and projects are now visible in the sidebar. Also, your Chat and Work history now sync across web, mobile, and desktop. Local tasks still stay on your computer.
How in the world did they ship this without sync?
2/ You can now easily switch between Chat and Work modes inside ChatGPT on desktop, which is now also consistent with how it shows on web and mobile.
Bringing back “chat” to ChatGPT is literally the least they needed to do. Hiding chat in an obscure corner of the interface from an app named “ChatGPT” would be like removing text editing from TextEdit.
The updates OpenAI shipped yesterday address some of the abject incoherence of the initial rollout of the “new” ChatGPT, but it’s still dogshit. The new app remains a 1.5 GB Electron monstrosity (and if it’s not technically Electron that’s because they’ve created another bloated layer of abstraction around Electron — Sottiaux oversees the only engineering group in the world that looked at Electron and thought it was too slim and close to the metal).
Here’s the software update dialog I saw today in the old version of ChatGPT, which is now named ChatGPT Classic:
What they’re trying to say here is that if you’ve ever installed the new ChatGPT the “Install Update” button in this dialog will do nothing. It will take some time to do nothing, but ultimately do nothing. Except quit ChatGPT.
If you’ve never installed the new ChatGPT, this dialog box will update the old ChatGPT to the latest version, which is now renamed “ChatGPT Classic”. If you have tried the new ChatGPT, you need to install ChatGPT Classic manually, even though you’re seeing this update dialog box in a slightly older version of the app you want to keep using. But at least they now offer a supported way to install ChatGPT Classic.
This whole thing makes the “New Coke”/”Coke Classic” fiasco from the 1980s look like a well-thought-out change.
Linus Torvalds:
I realize that some people really dislike AI, but this is an area where I’m willing to absolutely put my foot down as the top-level maintainer.
Linux is not one of those anti-AI projects, and if somebody has issues with that, they can do the open-source thing and fork it.
Or just walk away.
AI is a tool, just like other tools we use. And it’s clearly a useful one.
It may not have been that “clearly” even just a year ago, but it’s no longer in question today.
There are other questions around AI (like what the economy of it will actually look like in the end), but “is it useful” is no longer one of those questions. Anybody who doubts that clearly hasn’t actually used it.
Speaking of BBEdit, version 16 dropped just before WWDC, and adds a slew of nifty improvements, headlined by vastly expanded support for Shortcuts. You can also search for text in images, use the W3C HTML syntax checker, and of all things, use vi keyboard emulation. There’s a lot more, of course — and as always the changes, improvements, and additions are copiously documented in the release notes.
New licenses are $60, upgrades from v15 cost $30, and upgrades from older versions are $40. In the Mac App Store it’s a $5/month or $50/year subscription.
See also: Jason Snell at Six Colors and Adam Engst at TidBITs.
Sean Malseed — “Action Retro” on YouTube — created a Markdown editor for the original Macintosh. Source code on GitHub; intro video on YouTube. It’s written in C, not Pascal, and uses the modern Retro68 GCC-derived compiler.
I absolutely love that this exists. I don’t like the actual app at all. I guess “full screen” mode is the point of some “distraction free” editors, but I for one would never look twice at a Mac app that didn’t use windows. Full-screen mode just wasn’t a thing back then, except for games. ArtfulType is not a Mac-assed 1984 Mac app.
If I wanted to write in Markdown on a classic Mac, I’d use BBEdit, which was the app I originally created Markdown for use in. And one of two apps I primarily still use it in. But BBEdit won’t run on an original 128 KB Macintosh, because Rich Siegel didn’t create it until 1989, and the earliest public version was BBEdit 2 in 1992. BBEdit 2.1.3 does run in System 5 on Infinite Mac, but crashes if launched on System 3. I 100 percent see the appeal of using a 1980s retro Mac, but I don’t see the appeal of using one that can’t run System 6.
Joanna Stern at New Things, last month:
Last month, just days after my book went on sale, AI knockoffs of the ebook version flooded Apple Books. There was Joanna Stern On I Am Not A Robot by Sophie Mercer. I AM NOT A ROBOT by Finn Tech. I AM NOT A ROBOT by Joana Stern — with one “n.” (Watch our latest video showing all these titles and more.)
In total, I found ten AI-generated ebooks clearly riding on mine, with AI-generated covers mimicking the style of my real one — the same blue, yellow and red color palette. Most were priced at $9.99, but some have gone as high as $20.99. [...]
After I contacted Apple about my own book’s clones back in May, the knockoffs quickly disappeared. [...] But now, a month after that first Apple cleanup, the problem is back. At the start of this week, there were at least three other I AM NOT A ROBOT counterfeits on Apple Books. (They seem to have since been removed.)
And I’m not alone. Lena Dunham’s Famesick has multiple lookalikes on the platform. Haley Sacks’s Future Rich Person has copycats that even use AI generated images of women on the cover that resemble the real author.
Kashmir Hill at The New York Times today (gift link):
Recently, I received a strange text from a new acquaintance. “You have your own biography???” it read. “How did you neglect to tell me this?”
This was news to me. I went to Amazon to investigate. There it was. A biography of Kashmir Hill — title: “The Biography of Kashmir Hill” — had been released nearly a year earlier, in August 2025. My life story had a mottled brown cover and a publisher I’d never heard of before. It had no reviews until I wrote one, asking, as the subject of this work, if I could please speak to the author. The hardcover cost $26.99, which seemed a bit steep, but my editor splurged on a copy and I was forced to read it.
My biography is 90 pages long and should be shorter. It combines facts about me that are widely available on the internet, such as where I grew up, with generic insights that could be true of anyone, like a horoscope spread over dozens of pages. “You cannot understand Kashmir Hill without understanding her contradictions,” my biographer wrote, along with an excruciatingly long description of my elaborate coffee-making ritual. (Fact check: My husband does it.)
It’s not just an e-book problem. Printing services are so cheap nowadays that some of these mooks (like one “author” Hill spoke to) are commissioning print editions for hundreds of these slopfests.
Arjun Kharpal, reporting for CNBC, back on July 2:
Europe’s top court on Thursday upheld Google’s fine of around 4.1 billion euros ($4.67 billion) over alleged anti-competitive practices.
In 2018, the European Commission slapped Google with the record-breaking penalty on the grounds that it abused Android’s mobile dominance to give unfair advantage to its own apps via pre-installation deals with smartphone makers.
Google has been appealing the ruling through the EU court system. But the European Court of Justice (ECJ), Europe’s top court, dismissed Google’s appeal. Google has no further right to appeal.
Google last year booked $132 billion in profit; this fine is about 3 percent of that. But in 2018, when the fine was initially assessed, Google booked “just” $31 billion in profit — this fine, if they’d paid it then, would have been about 15 percent of their annual profit. (And they booked only $13B, $19B, $16B, and $14B in profit going back from 2017 to 2014.)
There’s never a reason not to string the appeal process out, but it’s especially true when your profits are growing at an exceptional rate. By growing their profits around 5×, they’ve reduced the relative pain of this fine by 5×.
Roblox executives Nick Tornow and Vlad Loktev, on the Roblox blog:
Twenty years ago, Roblox launched with a simple idea: “You make the game.” At the time, that was a radical proposition — most games were made by studios and professionals, and the idea that anyone could be a creator was far from obvious. But we believed it. And the millions of creators who built on Roblox proved it. As we look to a future where any one of Roblox’s 132 million daily active users could come up with the next hit game, we’re taking that original idea further than we ever have. Over the coming months, we’ll share a series of announcements that will give every creator a clear runway to go further and fulfill the promise of “You make the game” for more people than ever before.
Today, we’re announcing Build, a new mobile-first creation tab within the Roblox app, and a new suite of AI-powered tools within Studio for creators of every level. On July 28, we’ll begin testing these new agentic tools. With Build and Studio, creators can delegate the parts of development that don’t require their full attention.
This sounds really cool and fun. But you know what else was really cool and fun? AI coding apps that ran on iOS, like Bitrig, Replit, and Vibecode — all of which Apple put the kibosh on back in the winter. You of course are free to use any tool you want to build apps for iOS on a desktop computer, but Apple decided to disallowing building iOS apps on iOS.
But it’s OK for Roblox to allow AI-assisted game generation on iOS ... because Roblox is already so big and popular? How can Apple justify allowing Roblox to do this while disallowing anyone else?
Chance Miller, 9to5Mac:
Here are the new monthly prices for Apple Music and Apple One as of today:
Apple Music:
- Individual: $11.99 (up from $10.99)
- Family: $19.99 (up from $16.99)
- Student: $6.99 (up from $5.99)
Apple One:
- Individual: $19.95 (unchanged)
- Family: $27.95 (up from $25.95)
- Premier: $39.95 (up from $37.95)
Wired, back on May 15:
OpenAI says it’s folding ChatGPT, its AI coding agent Codex, and its developer-facing API into one core product team. The company says that Codex is increasingly powering its consumer and enterprise offerings, which are gaining the ability to perform digital tasks autonomously on behalf of users.
Other OpenAI leaders are also taking on larger roles at the company as part of the changes. OpenAI’s head of Codex, Thibault Sottiaux, has been tapped to lead the company’s core product and platform teams. Sottiaux was a key leader in building Codex into one of the company’s fastest-growing products of all time. He’s also one of the leaders overseeing development of OpenAI’s forthcoming “super app,” which aims to combine Codex, ChatGPT, and the company’s Atlas web browser into a unified desktop application.
I’ll give them credit for sticking with a plan for two whole months to get this out the door. But the problem is they went the wrong way. Instead of putting the eggheads from Codex in charge of ChatGPT, they should have put the product-minded people from ChatGPT in charge of Codex. Codex, I’m finally learning, is sprawling and confusing. It needs a strong dose of focus, clarity, and coherence — attributes that ChatGPT exhibited in spades. Instead, by putting the Codex dorks in charge, they’ve injected ChatGPT with confusion, incoherence, and sprawl.
Claude, the app OpenAI’s leadership is obsessed with copying now, is so goddamn confusing that it has Extensions, Plugins, Capabilities, Skills, and Connectors — and they’re all different things. You’ve let your own AI overuse turn your brain to mush if you think that makes sense, but even more so if you think that’s the model to copy.
I’ve been waiting for a while now for someone to explain all of this clearly and succinctly, worried that maybe it was my job to figure it out and do the clear succinct explaining. All of this dogshit from OpenAI and Anthropic presents itself as though it can be explained clearly and succinctly. But it’s just a veneer of coherence. It’s all just been thrown together in an AI blender and poured out as mush.
We’re now ten days into this year’s Annual TPM Journalism Fund Drive. Just over half way to our goal we’re now into the toughest part of the drive. We’re past the first rush of contributions but still pretty far from the goal of $500,000 when momentum starts to build again. If you’ve been considering making a contribution this year please make it today. It will go a long way toward keeping us on track for our goal. Just click right here. It’s your dollars that make what we do possible, keep TPM vital and moving forward. We can’t do this without you.

In press conference comments today, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin threatened that state election officials could face jail time if they fail to cooperate with the White House’s purported efforts to “secure” the midterm elections, which seems to involve a range of illegal demands from the White House, Department of Homeland Security and the Justice Department. The specific demand is for states to feed their voter rolls into the federal “SAVE” database which purports to identify noncitizens on the rolls. Mullin seems to be saying that if states refuse to bend to these illegal White House demands, the federal government will then scrutinize those states’ election returns (by seizing ballots?) and hold state election officials criminally responsible for any illegal voting. (Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon has already sent out threats all 50 states and D.C. along these lines).
We have here again the old story. States run elections in the United States. This is guaranteed and mandated by the federal Constitution. Congress can set uniform rules for administering elections. The executive branch plays no role at all in setting rules for elections or administering them. The White House’s strategy is to use illegal means (threatened criminal punishment against state officials) to assert power or compel authority the Constitution simply doesn’t allow. This isn’t how anything works. A president cannot legitimately create by force powers that the Constitution specifically denies him.
We saw in yesterday’s Oval Office address the odd duality of this moment. You have in President Trump someone who recognizes no limits, no laws or constraints on his power and is motivated only by the will to dominate. You can’t put anything past him. Unlike in 2020, he has loyal anti-constitutional appointees at all the key loci of state power — DOJ, DHS, DOD. At the same time we saw in that speech yesterday an image of desperation and decay and a public and even a press corps newly unwilling to buy his lies. As journalist and Columbia Journalism School professor Bill Grueskin said on Bluesky, it seemed like a watershed moment where most mainstream media organizations were unwilling to give Trump the assumption of good faith or reality usually granted to all presidents. Even Fox seemed mostly unimpressed.
That speech wasn’t even well put-together propaganda. And in recent months Trump has faced repeated reverses in the courts for almost all his election subversion angles. The man and his White House have the stiff stench of a loser around them. He seemed sickly, aggrieved, weak and deranged. The whole effort is best seen as a tantrum kicked up by what is mostly the failure of his election subversion dreams, an aging would-be tyrant shaking his fists at the clouds. As we’ve noted again and again, you successfully achieve authoritarian takeovers in periods of relative popularity, not when you’re deeply unpopular and have a head of state in increasingly palpable state of physical and mental decline.
And yet, even a decrepit and degenerate president has great powers of executive action. Trump has executive authority, which in most cases means him acting and others being forced to react. They say that possession is nine-tenths of the law. And executive power has a similar dimension. It’s the ability to act affirmatively, to refuse and disregard — things that go beyond the formal dictates of law.
The key, as we’ve discussed many times, is that the states are also sovereigns. They are subordinate to federal law. But they are also executive actors and they have governments separate from the ligaments and levers of power of the federal government. There’s a reason why Trump, along with the enablement of a corrupt Supreme Court, can seemingly do anything he wants within the federal government but not in the state governments. He can’t fire governors, order town councilors or mayors to do this or that. That separate sovereignty, without the connecting devices allowing the power of the one to operate within the ligaments of the other, is the sheet anchor of civic democratic power in this critical moment of American history.
Obviously these various Trump stratagems will get litigated in the courts. And many or most of them will fail. That’s probably how all this will play out. But there’s a critical shift in basic assumptions and mentality that is necessary for every state official to make to prepare themselves for this moment. That is especially true when there is a rogue and criminal president occupying the White House. Defying a rogue president can seem like defying federal authority or even the constitutional structure of government itself. Nothing could be further from the truth. Refusing these illegal demands is defending the federal constitution and the integrity of the federal government itself against its current rogue occupants.
Most of us were raised with the assumption that there are political disagreements, courts settle those disagreements, and you move on from there. That’s a good set of assumptions for normal times. These are not normal times. We’re talking here about the most basic building blocks of governing power, ones that the federal constitution clearly and unconditionally grants to the states subject to congressional law. States run their elections and send their representatives to Washington. The president has no say in the matter.
It is incumbent on those state officials not simply to “resist” but to refuse, to lean into the full power of their state sovereignty under the federal constitution. States have just as much authority to defend the integrity of the federal constitution and obedience to it as the White House or, for that matter, the Supreme Court. Not every question of what the U.S. Constitution means is up for genuine debate. This one, for example, is not. States are not only entitled to insist on their constitutional authority to administer federal elections — they are obligated to do so. That’s critical in part because when courts limit executive action, they often do so well after the fact. Those delays aren’t acceptable in cases like this. What’s required is a contest of executive authorities. These are fundamental questions of the constitutional order that transcend the decisions of courts.
What does this mean in practice? It means that every illegal demand from the White House and Trump’s federal officers gets a flat no from state officials. If courts back Trump’s anti-constitutional demands, that doesn’t matter. If Trump and his appointees threaten illegal force against state officials, it’s incumbent on those state officials to refuse the threats and demands and accept the risks of illegal presidential violence. As I noted above, sovereignty and executive authority are a bit like possession being nine-tenths of the law. The states possess their sovereign authority and only they can really relinquish it. That is the deep well of state sovereignty and power state governments and state elected officials have at their disposal and need to lean into.
As I’ve mentioned numerous times, I am cautiously optimistic about the midterm elections. I don’t think Trump has the power (not the authority, that’s obvious, but the power) to significantly tamper with it. A majority of the country is already against him and that is a very weak position from which to mount an anti-constitutional coup. The forces of civic democracy are in the far stronger position. But the sovereign authority of the states is the key sheet anchor on which everything depends. So state officials must be ready to use it, to lean into it in every dimension.
This is the fourth part (I, IIa, IIb, III) of our honestly-who-knows-how-many part series laying out some general guidelines for how pre-modern armies are organized. We’ve talked about how armies are recruited, equipped and paid for. In particular, as we’ve seen so far, the structure of recruitment, organization and payment (such as it was) is heavily dependent on the underlying civilian structures, often mirroring them quite closely. Armies cannot help but recreate their civilian social structures on the battlefield.
The same is absolutely true for leadership and cohesion, essential for getting an army to fight effectively. Now we need to clear up some definitions here at the start between the three ideas we’re going to focus on here: we’re breaking up a multifaceted idea (‘combat motivation’) into component parts because, as we’ll see, effective combat motivation is something of a ‘three-legged stool’ that needs all three legs to stand effectively. Those three legs are leadership, morale and cohesion; the first of which will be our focus this week and the last of which will be our focus next week.
Leadership refers to the to the command structures of an army, which as we’ll see certainly do have a motivation component. This is a top-down sort of combat motivation: good leaders might cultivate the respect or admiration of their troops, might find ways to motivate them in difficult times, might lead by example or otherwise ‘perform’ generalship and so on. What we’re going to focus on here is where leaders come from because, as it turns out, most societies have pretty strong ideas about where military leaders are supposed to come from, what backgrounds they’re supposed to have and (no surprise) they tend to mirror civilian leadership structures.
Meanwhile morale refers to the bottom-up motivation of the combatants. Specifically, I tend to use this to mean their attachment to the cause, both their loyalty to it and also their belief that it can be achieved. We aren’t going to deal too much with morale here because it is often very conflict-specific: different causes come with different morale implications. However, I do want to stress an important idea here: morale is what gets soldiers to a battlefield, not what keeps them on it (generally).
Finally cohesion is a side-together sort of motivation: the ability of a unit to cohere under pressure, to ‘hold together’ rather than breaking up when things get difficult. In the terror of combat, the high sounding reasons for service (the foundations of morale) are hard to keep in mind and combatants need something a bit more primal to keep them in the ranks: that is cohesion and it is generally based in some kind of strong attachment to the other fellows in the ranks next to them. As we’ll see, just like leadership systems tend to mirror civilian leadership structures, the options for fostering strong cohesion among soldiers are heavily dependent on what a civilian society looks like. We’ll treat cohesion principles next week.
By way of clarifying contrast: a force with low morale might melt away from desertion even when there’s not fighting going on, because no one is invested in the cause. A force with low cohesion (but high morale) might panic and disperse in a battle but reform later to fight again: they remain committed to the cause, but unable to handle the terror of battle collectively. A force with bad morale but high cohesion is very dangerous to a general, because that is the raw material for mutinies: the men will hold together against you as quickly as for you.
Naturally, most military systems that have existed for more than a single campaign have some effective system for arranging leadership and ensuring cohesion on a repeat basis. And that is what we’ll be looking at this week: how the structures of societies shape and constrain leadership and cohesion of the armies they form.
But first, as always, recruiting and maintaining large pre-modern armies is expensive! Much like many of those pre-modern armies, this project is supported by devolving the costs of my ruinous book-buying habit on to recruits readers. You can help by spreading the word to new readers and by supporting this project over at Patreon. If you want updates whenever a new post appears or want to hear my more bite-sized musings on history, security affairs and current events, you can follow me on Bluesky (@bretdevereaux.bsky.social). I am also active on Threads (bretdevereaux) and maintain a de minimis presence on Twitter (@bretdevereaux).
Polities have a bewildering array of ways that they chose military leaders – some are determined by hereditary positions, others by professional career tracks, other elected and so on – but the general rule to understanding all of them is this: the same sort of people who exercise positions of authority to organize civil society also lead the armies and navies of that society. The biggest distinction between leadership system is often just the question of if the civil leader are the exact same people as the military leadership, or different fellows drawn from the same class. Those who lead in peace, almost always lead in war.
So from the worldbuilding perspective, before you can think about your ‘officer class,’ you need to think about the ruling class of your society. This isn’t quite the place to get into every possible permutation of ruling class a pre-modern society can have, but we can make do with a few examples to give a sense of how these notions connect. One thing I will note: in pre-modern societies, professional leadership classes are extremely rare – even as they are very common in modern societies. So while your instinct may be that ‘to be a general, someone just goes to ‘general school’ and then works up the career ladder’ that is almost never the career path for pre-modern military leadership. To the degree these societies have professional classes, they are usually politically marginal and politically marginal groups do not get to lead a society’s army.
Instead, as a rule, the aristocrats who organize large institutions and groups in peacetime assume, as a matter of course, that they have the necessary skills to organize the same large groups in war time. Coming from a modern viewpoint, with our emphasis on ‘scientific’ leadership approaches and specialist knowledge, the idea that experience at large-scale farming or Confucian philosophy fully qualified one to lead armies seems strange, but those historical aristocrats are generally untroubled by the idea that their training might not prepare them to lead. After all, the skills of the aristocrat – whatever they might be – are the large-scale leadership skills of the society and it usually takes quite a sharp and humiliating experience of defeat to cause any aristocracy to reconsider that (and often not even then).
So let’s look at some connected civilian-and-military leadership structures to get a sense of how they can work, keeping in mind that we’re not being exhaustive.
The most common system by far is some form of military-aristocracy: a hereditary or nearly hereditary class that wields military leadership as its prerogative. In complex, agrarian societies, these are almost always leisured large-landholders who live off of the rents of their lands. There is thus often an inherent tension in how a leisured class justifies its role of power and privilege in society by pointing to its military leadership role. One of the classic summations of this was the medieval European division of society into “those who work (the commons), those who pray (the clergy), and those who fight (the nobility)” – it is the role as ‘those who fight’ (or who lead the fight) which justifies aristocratic privilege and wealth.
Crucially, I want to stress: the aristocrat earns their position of command by wealth and birth, they do not earn wealth and birth by martial excellence. These aristocracies are ‘rich mens’ clubs’ not ‘good fighters’ clubs,’ and they are buttressed with ideologies that assume people born from the lower classes make poor soldiers and generals by their very nature. Pre-modern societies are, by modern standards, extremely low in social mobility and so they create cultures and customs which justify and normalize those systems.
But – as I’ve been alluded to this whole series – not all military aristocracies are the same. In particular, there is a marked difference between warrior-aristocracies and what I am going to call (very roughly) officer-aristocracies – the core difference is the precise martial skill that justifies aristocratic power, but that has all sorts of ramifications with how these fellows behave.
In a warrior-aristocracy, a core part of being an aristocrat is mastery of a specific style of personal combat, most frequently cavalry combat (or chariot combat, before the advent of true cavalry). Part of this is simply the expense of it – you have to be rich to have access to horses from a young age to learn to ride well – but there is also a heavy skill component, in that it is very hard to learn to be a truly excellent horseman if you do not start early. The thing to keep in mind is that because warrior-aristocrats’ social position is contingent on performing a specific kind of warfare, they are going to want to be visible performing that sort of warfare. As a result, these fellows are often socially constrained to lead from the front and to fight personally even when it might be wiser not to.

Warrior-aristocracies cover, as best I can tell, the great majority of complex, agrarian non-state societies and it isn’t hard to see how all of the systems fit together: the warrior-aristocrats, their retinues of lesser warrior-aristocrats and common-soldier retainers, the fragmentation of violence in the society and the leadership role of those warrior aristocrats. Naturally, the most senior (by wealth, generally, because this is about power within a society) warrior-aristocrats will lead the army in battle, with more junior warrior-aristocrats leading common soldiers in a retinue-of-retinues army structure: the biggest Big Man leads the army, with the retinues of his subordinate Big Men beneath him and so on, down to the common soldiers at the bottom of each of these retinues.

As a society gets more complex and a state emerges, the state often comes with new kinds of non-military, non-aristocratic civilian leadership roles (note that religious leadership roles invariably pre-date the state – but priests and the state is a topic (voted on by the Senate) for another day). That opens up new forms of military-aristocracy but also new forms of civil leadership – the interactions between them are complex.
On the one hand, the form of military leadership might change, from warrior-aristocrats to what I am calling officer-aristocrats. In this second form, military leadership remains largely hereditary, limited to large landholders, but they understand their military role not as personally fighting in a given way, but as leading or organizing. The Roman aristocracy functions this way: Roman generals are invariably aristocratic senators, but their model of leadership is not based on the demonstration of personal combat ability or even necessarily personal physical bravery. They are thus free, as a matter of social expectation, to ‘command from the rear’ – a Roman general can get ‘stuck in,’ but they do not have to and it is rarely the wise thing to do so they don’t do it often. Instead of performing personal fighting, these fellows are often expected to be performing organizational and logistical leadership. I cannot see any specific reason why this form of leadership couldn’t emerge in a non-state society, but I struggle to think of an example – even Chinggis Khan and his heirs had to demonstrate their martial bona fides in riding and hunting to maintain legitimacy within their aristocracies, in a way that no Greek strategos, Roman general or Chinese general seems to have had to.

The other quirk for increasingly complex aristocracies is the relationship between budding civil administrations and older military aristocracies. Often, even as the civilian administration is taken over by an educated sub-aristocratic class (professionals, burghers, etc.) the command of armies remains in the hands of the old aristocracy. The classic example of this was the distinction in Ancien Régime France between the noblesse d’épée (‘Nobility of the Sword’) – the old nobility, which still exercised most military command – and the noblesse de robe (‘Nobility of the Robe’), a newer nobility that generally held administrative or judicial positions, but not generally military ones. Likewise, the old Prussian aristocracy, die Junker, maintained a clear presence in military posts in the German army through the Second World War.
In other cases, the rising civil administrative class and the military aristocracy remain the same. The Greek polis and the Roman Republic both provide paradigmatic examples, where the assumption clearly was that the same sort of skills that prepared a man to lead in peace also prepared him to lead in war. To greatly simplify, in both Greece and Rome, there was generally a hereditary landed aristocracy of elite families in any given community and often the function of voting systems was to choose which of those hereditary elites would exercise power (by holding this or that office) at a given time.
The other major option for states are to forgo a military aristocracy more or less altogether and professionalize their officers. Because this is how most modern militaries work, I think it is what people reach to first, but I have put it last because it is so incredibly rare. Vocational leadership classes – our military aristocracies where men are born into command – are very common; professional leadership classes, where men are selected and trained for the task, are very rare. This runs counter to most folks’ expectations, but it remains broadly true: the enlisted ranks (the ‘common soldiers,’ though by the time we’re talking about them as ‘enlisted ranks,’ we’re obviously talking about quite well established states) are professionalized long before the leadership class is. The Roman army by the first century AD is fully professional in its ‘enlisted’ ranks (through the centurions), but retains its senatorial military-aristocrat command class. Likewise, European armies in the sixteenth and seventeenth century increasingly consist of professional soldiers, supported by an increasingly professional civil bureaucracy, lead by the same old military-aristocracy as the Late Middle Ages. Professional soldiers often come before – and often simply without – professional officers.
That said, the Chinese state bureaucracy, particularly as it comes to be dominated by the civil service examination system during the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and subsequently does represent a kind of professionalization of military leadership, albeit professionalized not around military skills but rather around skills in writing, literature and philosophy. If that seems shocking, remember that Roman aristocrats got formal training in philosophy and rhetoric, not command, as boys too. We’ll cover in a moment how military leadership skills were communicated. Nevertheless, these scholar-officials show up pretty often in military leadership roles.
Now briefly, we should also talk about how these leaders are selected. After all, a society has more potential generals than armies, so there must be some way to decide who gets command. In non-state societies, where the potential generals are also military-aristocrats with their own retinues, chieftains and kings often have very limited options on who to put in command: if the king is present, the expectation is that he leads the army (that’s what kings are for), but if he isn’t, then often there’s a strong impulse for the biggest of the magnates to do so. After all, if you snub Duke so-and-so for command despite his bringing the largest retinue, he might just leave and take his retinue with him.
Indeed, for many non-state polities where military power is highly fragmented and fluid, the answer to ‘who leads the army’ is often ‘whoever can.’ In pre-Roman Spain and Gaul, the pattern we see in our sources looks fairly fluid, with charismatic or capable warlords emerging – invariably out of the warrior-aristocracy, these men are not peasants – to knit together large coalitions and thus large armies through personal leadership and charisma.
By contrast, as the state grows stronger, it can exercise more choice on who gets command. For monarchies, that often means royal selection, which may be quite personal (if the aristocracy is small) or, in large bureaucratic states, institutionalized and impersonal. Often the lower ranks have an institutional system of advancement (as we’ll see below), but major commands need to be signed off on at the center of power, simply because generals and admirals represent substantial risks to central authority and must be vetted for loyalty even more than for ability.
Republics are comparatively rare, but they tend to elect their generals and often elect lower officers as well. For states which structure recruitment through contractors, those contractors generally become the officers who lead units, typically led by a general chosen by the king. But those colonels (the contractors) and the general are almost invariably drawn from the same military aristocracy that would have provided them in a vassalage-based system (though in some cases the captains beneath the colonels may come from lower social backgrounds, in which case their career path may be different and may reach its ceiling earlier).
Crucially, the ‘roster’ from which the state – be that a king personally or a bureaucracy generally – can select from tends to remain limited to the tradition, generally hereditary leadership class. After all, a king who tried to fill his posts with commoners would find all of his other key stakeholders – who are military aristocrats – swiftly moving against him. There are occasional exceptions, of course, but they remain occasional because the state, in whatever form it is, needs these magnates in order to function and so it cannot simply sideline them. Of course eventually the modern administrative state emerges which no longer needs these fellows and thus may dispense with them, but that is quite explicitly a modern creature and in any case it merely creates a new leadership class.
There is, after all, a reason that modern armies are led by college-educated officers, often with advanced degrees in the higher ranks, drawn from the same system of elite education that produces our presidents, prime ministers, senators and MPs. Because no army can help but recreate its civilian social structures on the battlefield, so a society where the divide is no longer aristocrat and peasant, but blue-collar and white-collar has blue-collar soldiers and white-collar officers.
Now generals, admirals and other officers are not, in fact, born ready to command, whatever the social mythology of a ruling class may think. Armies – even smaller units within armies – are complex creatures that require a fair bit of knowledge and skill to control properly. As important, leadership is a skill itself: it is a performance, the exact elements of which will vary from one culture to the next, but it has to be learned. So clearly there must be some way in each of these societies to teach the fellows who will lead.
Here is a spot where I see worldbuilders who aren’t necessarily familiar with historical systems err quite badly, because they import the assumptions of how individuals are prepared and selected for leadership from modern societies. Sometimes the assumption is that command preparation works more or less like an idealized becoming the manager of a small franchise: one starts as the cash register and works upwards. But that absolutely does not work: these societies have low social mobility and a military leadership class which is jealous of its privileges. Service ‘in the ranks’ may or may not be an expectation of command preparation for that military leadership class, but even for societies where it is, no one expects to simply ‘work their way up’ from the ranks. Instead, in pre-modern armies as in modern ones, there is generally a sharp and rarely bridged (in pre-modern armies, often flatly unbridgeable) divide between officers and senior enlisted personnel, because there is a class difference being expressed.
The alternative assumption is to assume that pre-modern command preparation must look rather a lot like modern command preparation or at least some version of modern education: there has to be a ‘generalship academy,’ with classes and competitive exams and so on. This tendency is, I think, heightened in a lot of fiction where the audience are young adults and so the core conceit is basically, “what if high school and college was all facets of life?” because high school and college is the social structure the reader knows and cares about. So you get the military academies of Fire Emblem: Three Houses or Trails of Cold Steel or Final Fantasy VIII (a trope that clearly started in Japan but feels like it has worked into English-language young adult fiction over time as well). Pre-modern societies functionally never have these formal institutions for officer training. The only major exception here is the aforementioned Chinese civil service system, but that didn’t train command or military skills, which were left to be acquired through experience and apprenticeships.
But of course leaders must be trained. These societies engage in quite a lot of warfare and they cannot afford to simply be bad at it, so leaders have to be prepared.
The most common answer by far is some form of apprenticeship system: young potential leaders (from the right social class) are trained with a mix of informal tutelage (at the hands of more senior leaders) and experience, often in a sequence of experiences and roles that is quite clearly and often rigidly defined. Not always so, mind you – the path by which became a general in ancient Greece was often a lot less predictable, for instance – but frequently so.
So, for instance, the Roman cursus honorum, the sequences of posts and offices a Roman aristocrat embarking on a political career might hold, has a pretty clear bent towards military preparation. A young man would first serve a few years ‘in the ranks’ (typically as a cavalryman, because he’s rich), before trying to obtain a post as a military tribune (essentially a staff officer), where the expectation was that the commanding general he served under (a consul or a praetor) would take his tribunes under his wing. Military tribunes also had some command duties, generally lower-stakes and usually accomplished in pairs. Then came the quaestorship, a financial and administrative office which often meant handling logistics for an army (or the finances of the whole state), again under the watchful eye of more senior magistrates. Then the praetorship represented the first independent opportunity for command, but generally with a small force in a largely pacified region. Only then might a Roman aristocrat, now approaching the eligibility age of 42, consider the consulship and real field command – which of course came with it an expectation of tutoring the next generation of military tribunes and quaestors and so the process repeated. In short, the career path is a series of ‘command apprenticeships.’

The education of a medieval western European knight started even earlier, but was also structured effectively as a series of apprenticeships, although in this case focused as much on personal combat skills (because this is a warrior-aristocracy, unlike the Roman one) as leadership.1 High-born boys would be effectively apprenticed to another noble house as a page at age seven to serve and also be trained in the necessary skills of his rank, including combat and leadership. At fourteen, that boy would graduate into being a squire, a knight’s on-the-field shield-and-armor bearer, learning the skills of the warrior-aristocracy first hand, ideally becoming a knight himself in his early 20s. Even then, he is probably not going to be handed a large unit, but rather be expected to lead his own small unit, while the more senior (by both age and wealth) members of the nobility lead larger retinues.
As an aside, popular depictions of knights miss a component of this because they tend – the recent Knight of the Seven Kingdoms does this, albeit with a plot excuse that the main character is a very poor knight – to have a knight on his own with just a squire or a page. But in practice even a relatively humble knight was expected to lead a small unit (a ‘lance fournie‘) of at least a half-dozen men. Of course the kind of boy who might, by dint of birth, expect to end up commanding much larger retinues would probably squire for a lord who also commanded much larger retinues.
Alternately, we might even jump well into the early modern period and look at the career path for an officer in the French army of the 17th century.2 Aspiring officers, drawn from France’s old knightly and noble classes, first served a couple of years as a regular soldier (either as a cadet or as a volunteer serving with a relative), before being pulled into service as one of the very junior officers (ensigns and sous-lieutenants). Service at that level qualified a young man to seek to purchase a commission as a captain to lead a company, where he served under a colonel. In each step, a young men relied substantially on patronage and support from his superiors and so young officers were encouraged to attach themselves to more senior ones both to try to learn and to try to impress. Captains who came from wealth could eventually purchase a commission as a colonel, while those who lacked it might instead advance to the dead-end administrative post of major. The king then chose the officers above the post of colonel, but generally from men who had processed through this system. Lynn openly describes the system as one of “military apprenticeship.” The period’s navies worked much the same, except that the highly technical nature of naval warfare meant the apprenticeship was longer and involved more formal learning.3
In literate societies, these apprenticeships might be supplemented with written guidebooks, military manuals of various kinds. There is an odd tendency in modern fantasy fiction to pooh-pooh this sort of thing – Game of Thrones (the show, in particular) goes out of its way a few times to cast aspersions on the usefulness of such works – but the fact that societies with literate military aristocracies produce and preserve these kinds of works with regularity suggests that the fellows who would know best – the one’s actually leading armies – found them useful.
In the pre-modern era, however, such military manuals are rarely strictly technical in nature – they are not very much like a modern field manual. Instead, they tend to be framed more like a work of philosophy, laying out general principles for command, compiling lists of strategems or famous examples of tactics and so on. Often they extend beyond what we might consider strictly military matters, to include general advice on rulership, blending into a genre we call ‘mirrors for princes,’ guidebooks on how to rule well. The key thing to keep in mind is these manuals were not intended as textbooks for classics, but often works for reflection, intended to be read (and re-read) alongside a man’s trip through his military apprenticeships. Purely technical ‘reference’ books existed as well (Vitruvius’ De architectura is a paradigmatic example), but seem to have been more rare; they get a lot more common after gunpowder, when a command of engineering and mathematics (for ballistics) suddenly become a lot more important.
However, for someone looking to come to grips with the leadership culture of a pre-modern society, I would encourage you to see military manuals and mirrors for princes operating within a continuum of other literary works: histories, epics, religious texts and so on, all of which are telling aristocrats how to be aristocrats. These men, after all, are not generally professionals trained in a school, they are members of a permanent, hereditary (or semi-hereditary) military-leadership class and so excellence at command for them often consists of the refinement of the manners and habits of their class. That might include careful logistics or sound tactical planning, but equally it might include poetry, courtly manners, the habits of a good patron and so on. The delineation we expect between the professional skills of ‘military science’ and the social skills of the professional managerial class (to which most modern officers belong) simply does not exist for pre-modern societies where military leadership is not professionalized.
For the worldbuilder then, thinking about fictional armies (or the student of history thinking about real ones), be sure to think about the entire military-leadership life-cycle. After all, when the important council of war gathers, it isn’t just going to be the top generals involved: those generals have their own subordinates (who are also their apprentices), who may have their own subordinates (who are their apprentices) and so on. One thing that is often missing in these sorts of stories are the host of junior officers we know would normally be present, observing the decision-making process – even if, because they’re more junior in age or rank, they aren’t expected to say anything.
So the first question should be “where does the ‘officer class’ as it were, of this society come from?” Some kinds of armies can get away with fairly minimal numbers of officers and relatively amateurish ones, but most more sophisticated kinds of warfare demand a fair bit of organization. Keep in mind, when thinking about this question, the sharp limits on both information gathering and on issuing commands, which is going to mean that leaders even relatively small distances away from the ‘center’ (whoever is in overall command) are going to be exercising a lot of independent leadership. As a result, there are probably a fair number more fellows involved in leadership and decision-making than you might expect for even a very modest army.
Next, think about what kinds of peacetime life habits the officer class might have. Since they’re unlikely to be professionals, chances are they are large landholders, or (in a pastoral society), large herd owners. The war leader is more often the fellow who wields the most influence within a society – on account of wealth, charisma, family connections and so on – than the best fellow at commanding, so think about what kinds of power matter within the aristocracy and what latitude the social system has for advancement based on merit. But also think about how these fellows interact with subordinates in their peacetime role, because that is likely how they will default to acting in a military role – it is the ‘leadership skillset’ they are learning even when they are not in the saddle. Roman command behavior, I’d argue, flows very directly out of Roman patron-client relations and their habits. Likewise, it is hard not to see medieval leadership language conditioned both by the war aristocrats related to fellow aristocrats in their household (the knights in the retinue of a lord, for instance) and also the far more domineering way they interacted with their peasants (who might be their common soldiers).
Above all: these men are attempting to perform generalship. They are not so much moving pieces on a chessboard as they are playing on a stage, attempting to look the part of being a general because that is actually what often mattered the most.
Finally, think about how these men advance – not merely who decides who gets to be the general, but also who gets to decide who advances through more junior offices. Systems will, after all, select for the skills which ensure advancement and a system of elected generals is going to work quite differently from a system where advancement has more to do with patronage from senior officers to more junior ones, which in turn is also going to be very different from a system where state power is so weak that ‘advancement’ just means having the largest private army within a larger retinue-of-retinues force.
Next week, we’ll shift our focus from leadership back to the common soldiers to look at how to think about the cohesive principles of a given force, since different armies rely on different systems to generate that all important cohesion.
Across the country, founders like Ms. Winkler are powering an entrepreneurial renaissance.
Jump-started by the pandemic, when a confluence of factors including mass layoffs and remote work led to a flood of business creation, and supercharged by the rise of artificial intelligence, start-up activity is booming after a decades-long slump.
Americans filed 5.7 million applications last year to start new businesses, according to the Census Bureau, the most in the two decades the government has kept track. New business applications through the first half of this year continued to climb…
More recently, there are signals that A.I. is adding fuel.
A recent paper from economists at the University of British Columbia and the Stockholm School of Economics found that generative A.I. was “spurring entrepreneurial activity” in the United States, both by giving rise to new ventures built around the technology and by making it cheaper to start enterprises.
“A.I. tools can do very many different things very well,” said Jan Bena, an associate professor at the University of British Columbia and one of the study’s authors. “That’s the reason why you see so much entry.”
According to a recent report from Gusto, a small-business payroll and benefits service, nearly 60 percent of founders on its platform who started businesses last year said they used A.I., and half said the technology made it cheaper and faster.
Here is more from Sydney Ember at the NYT. Via Josef.
The post The small business boom appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
An exchange yesterday between Senator Jon Ossoff (D-GA) and Jay Clayton, Trump’s nominee to oversee the U.S. intelligence community as director of national intelligence, illustrated the dilemma of those trying to force Trump’s lies onto the American people when they are confronted with reality.
Ossoff asked Clayton: “Who won the 2020 election?”
Clayton responded: “Uh, you know, I’m not, I’m not gonna do this with you.
Ossoff: “This is a job interview. We’ve established that you have an obligation to be honest and forthright with the committee.”
Clayton agreed.
Ossoff: “Who won the 2020 election?”
Clayton: “Like I said, I’m not I’m not gonna get into that with you.”
Ossoff continued to ask, and Clayton continued to refuse to answer the question, saying: “We can keep doing this,” and saying he was not going to “engage in the theater.”
Ossoff said: “You’re here asking for the support of senators to lead America’s intelligence community. We’ve established that you have an obligation to be honest and forthright with this committee and with the American public, but you refuse to answer a simple matter of fact about the 2020 election. Is that right?”
Clayton: “No, that’s not right.”
Ossoff: “Then answer the question. Who won the 2020 election?”
Clayton: “I have answered the question.”
Ossoff: “Answer it. What is your answer?”
Clayton: “I’ve given you my answer.”
Ossoff: “What is your answer?”
Clayton sat in silence.
Ossoff: “You refuse to answer a basic question about who won a presidential election? But you ask to lead America’s intelligence community? Isn’t it humiliating to be unable to answer this question? To have to indulge the president’s delusions? We know, you know, everybody in this room knows the truthful answer to that question, why can you not give it?”
Clayton could not answer because, although all of the claims of Trump and his loyalists that he won the 2020 presidential election have collapsed in court, Trump requires his cronies to claim that the election was stolen in order to have justification for rigging future elections. They know the truth—that Trump lost the 2020 presidential election to Democrat Joe Biden by more than 7 million votes and by 51.3% to 46.8% in the Electoral College. But they refuse to say so because if they do, they will lose Trump’s favor.
Those loyalists are the people Trump is putting in control of the American government. In his own confirmation hearing today for elevation to the position of attorney general—the person at the head of the country’s legal system, representing the American people—Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche slipped. When asked if he and Trump were friends, Blanche answered, “I’m his lawyer,” before correcting himself to say: “was his lawyer.”
Blanche was Trump’s criminal defense attorney and has openly used the power of the Department of Justice to pursue Trump’s political opponents.
The editorial board of the New York Times called out another problem with Blanche. On Monday, U.S. District Court Judge for the Southern District of Florida Kathleen Williams questioned whether Blanche is fit to practice law at all. She found that the slush fund/immunity deal Blanche signed off on with Trump, the Trump family, the Trump Organization, and their associates had been manufactured to give cover to a deal they did not want reviewed by a judge.
Yesterday we saw in real time how, with Blanche’s support, Trump is stacking the courts with loyalists. In Seattle, Washington, a panel of federal judges appointed by five presidents unanimously appointed Roger Rogoff, a former judge and longtime state and federal prosecutor as U.S. attorney. The judges appointed Rogoff to replace the Trump appointee whose 120-day interim position ended in February. By law, an interim U.S. attorney can stay in office for no more than 120 days, but Trump has tried to get around that law by changing the title under which his appointees operate, turning the interim U.S. attorney into an assistant U.S. attorney while leaving the top position empty.
The judges, to whom replacing an interim U.S. attorney falls if there is no presidential appointment, unanimously agreed to Rogoff. He took the oath of office at 8:00 in the morning and, within the hour, received an email telling him he was fired.
“District court judges can appoint a temporary U.S. Attorney, and [the president] can fire them,” Blanche posted on social media Wednesday.
Trump’s styling of himself as an authoritarian ruler showed yesterday in the announcement from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that the Treasury will issue a new commemorative $1 coin with Trump’s likeness on it this fall as “a lasting symbol of patriotism.” It is unclear if the coin will circulate as currency.
While living monarchs who are heads of state appear on coins, living political leaders who appear on currency tend to be those trying to make themselves indistinguishable from the government. Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Idi Amin in Uganda, and Saddam Hussein in Iraq all put themselves on currency. The U.S. passed a law in 1866 barring living people from appearing on U.S. financial instruments.
According to Alice Gibbs of Newsweek, the Trump administration is getting around that law by relying on a law permitting the coining of collectible currency to mark the nation’s 250th anniversary, as the country did with its bicentennial quarters in 1976.
Luke Broadwater and Marco Hernandez of the New York Times today did a deep dive on the helipad Trump is building on the South Lawn of the White House. They note that it’s usually very hard to get permissions to build a helipad because of zoning laws, airspace regulations, and impact on the environment. Trump himself has said there is “no harder zoning thing to get.”
But Trump is pushing ahead with the one he wants without permission from Congress and without any review panel. Construction began last month on the site where Trump had ordered an Ultimate Fighting Championship stadium built for a cage match on his birthday. Trump says Lockheed Martin, which is a major defense contractor and which makes the new, powerful helicopters Trump uses, is donating the money to build the helipad.
A spokesperson for the White House told the reporters that “operational upgrades to the White House grounds, such as the helipad installation, do not require commission reviews.”
Trump did not get reviews or permissions to renovate the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool either, and when that went poorly he insisted that vandals had attacked it. His loyalists parrotted his claims, and the Department of Justice went so far as to arrest and charge 67-year-old cyclist David Hearn, who touched part of the pool’s detached lining, accusing him of vandalizing it.
Today Jarrett Ley, Meg Kelly, Klara Auerback, and Maura Judkis of the Washington Post reported that all of the peeling occurred at the seams of the lining and that experts said those failures were likely due to the way the lining was installed. They explained at length what those mistakes were.
White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers denied that this could be the case. “There were no missteps during the initial repairs to the pool,” Rogers said. “Unfortunately, deranged individuals made several gashes in the side of the pool and destroyed over 300 feet of the pool’s siding. Once the necessary repairs to fix the vandalism are complete, the Reflecting Pool will be restored to all its glory.”
Trump’s conviction that he and his cronies should run the United States without input or check from Congress or experts and without reference to reality has brought us to a perilous place.
Trump yesterday told the Fox News Channel that the U.S. is planning to attack Iran’s bridges and power plants. Today, Parisa Hafezi, Samia Nakhoul, and Jonathan Saul of Reuters reported that Iranian leaders have asked the Houthis they back in Yemen to close the Bab el-Mandeb strait that commands the opening between the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. The Strait of Hormuz and the Bab el-Mandeb are the two main routes for oil exports from the Middle East. The closure of the second strait would exacerbate energy shortages even as the U.S. oil reserve drops to its lowest level since 1983.
Despite the administration’s insistence that addressing climate change is a “scam,” the extreme weather caused by climate change has sparked more than 800 wildfires in Canada and at least a dozen in northern Minnesota. Smoke from the fires is exposing Americans from the Midwest to the Northeast to hazardous levels of air pollution.
CBS News reports that Detroit, Minneapolis, and Chicago today rank in the top five most polluted cities in the world, and that officials in New York City are distributing N95-type masks to commuters. Ben Noll of the Washington Post reported that more than 115 million people are in the plume of unhealthy to hazardous air quality and that conditions are expected to get worse.
At the same time, pouring rain in the Texas Hill Country is causing deadly floods. CNN reported that the Guadalupe River at Comfort, Texas, rose more than 25 feet in an hour as the heavens dropped about half a year’s worth of rain in southern Texas.
Meanwhile, there are now nearly 7,000 known cases of food-borne illness from a parasite that is causing “explosive diarrhea” in patients in more than 30 states across the U.S. Brian Beutler of Off Message commented: “I feel like if Biden or Obama had turned America into a diarrhea splatter film, Republicans would’ve made it into a political problem for them.”
A new Washington Post/Ipsos poll showed that Trump has lost even many Republicans. Only 37% of those polled approve of his job performance, while 61% disapprove. The percentage who “strongly” approve of Trump has dropped to a new low of 15%. Only 26% of Independents approve of his job performance, while 71% disapprove. Sixty-six percent of Americans say groceries are unaffordable.
And so, with Trump scheduled to give a prime-time address tonight, apparently to argue for voter restrictions, Senator Ossoff told reporters: “Here’s what’s going to happen tonight: the world’s most famous sore loser will deliver a prime-time presidential sour grapes address to pursue his 6-year-old grievances about the 2020 election, while his war in the Middle East spirals out of control and the cost of living continues to rise for Americans across the country.”
—
Notes:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/07/16/us/politics/white-house-helipad-trump.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/15/opinion/todd-blanche-attorney-general-senate-hearing.html
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-federal-prosecutor-seattle_n_6a584854e4b07a7875d1956c
https://www.axios.com/2026/07/15/trump-situation-room-iran-bombing
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Ending-the-Green-New-Scam-Fact-Sheet.pdf
https://natural-resources.canada.ca/forests-forestry/wildland-fires/climate-change-wildland-fire
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/wildfires-smoke-millions-exposed-midwest-northeast-us/
https://abcnews.com/US/dangerous-wildfire-smoke-continues-air-quality-alerts-17/story?id=134809268
https://www.cnn.com/2026/07/16/weather/live-news/texas-flash-flooding-camp-mystic-climate
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/28476291-hearn-motion/
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/15/opinion/blanche-confirmation-trump-attorney-general.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/07/16/trump-approval-stuck-30s-post-ipsos-poll-shows/
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0m7n427xd8o
Substack:
@brianbeutler/note/c-292693465
X:
DAGToddBlanche/status/2077501246294929627?s=20
Bluesky:
chadbourn.bsky.social/post/3mqqupeotzs2k
atrupar.com/post/3mqp24kjgcv2r
My elderly rabbit Giggles has unfortunately been quite sick the past two days (he’s recovering now), so I haven’t had as much time to write. Instead I thought I would repost a book review I did two years ago. I’ll be back with more original content tomorrow!
In my post yesterday about the “We Must Act Now” statement, I noted that Daron Acemoglu successfully got the writers to alter some key language in exchange for his signature — most likely, adding the “steering” idea that I took issue with. Technological “steering” is the central policy recommendation of Acemoglu’s 2023 book Power and Progress, with Simon Johnson.
As it happens, I wrote a review of Power and Progress, back in 2024. In fact, it was by far the longest book review I’ve ever written.1 I actually read the book cover to cover in detail, marking passages and looking up sources as I went; this took a very long time, and it was very frustrating, since I had serious objections to nearly every part of the book. I took out that frustration by writing a very long and highly critical review.2
So anyway, here’s that review for you to enjoy. Hopefully it gets a few people to think a little harder about the AI-related ideas that Acemoglu has been promoting throughout the econ world, and why it would be a big mistake to make those ideas the default position of the economics profession on the AI issue.
“Do not be fooled by the monumental technological achievements of humankind.” — Acemoglu and Johnson
It’s hardly surprising that Power and Progress made it onto practically every list of the most important business books of 2023. First, there’s the unrivaled pedigree of the authors themselves. To call Daron Acemoglu a powerhouse in the world of economics would be a ludicrous understatement:
Acemoglu is also the main proponent of the institutional explanation for national development, through his famous book Why Nations Fail and its sequel, The Narrow Corridor (both with James Robinson). If you hear me talk about “inclusive institutions” and “extractive institutions”, I’m channeling Acemoglu.
Simon Johnson, meanwhile, is the author of some of my favorite popular books about economic policy, especially Jump-Starting America (with Jonathan Gruber) and 13 Bankers (with James Kwak). When I write more about the need to spend more on science and to restrain the excesses of the finance industry, I’m channeling Johnson.
The second reason this book was destined to garner attention is that it brings together two extremely timely strains of thought: 1) the widespread distrust of tech companies that has grown in American society over the last few years, and 2) the wave of anxiety over AI-driven automation. Power and Progress weaves those two anxieties into a more-or-less coherent whole — a sum of all technological fears, if you will. And it seems to have been spectacularly well-timed, since its release coincided closely with the coming of ChatGPT and other generative AI.
But given all of those powerful tailwinds, I have to say I’m kind of surprised at how little of a splash Power and Progress seems to have made. This is anecdotal of course, but in the 9 months since it came out, I’m not sure I’ve once heard someone reference the book or any idea in it. The authors clearly intended it to be a handbook for people who are scared about AI putting humans out of a job, the way Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century became a handbook for people worried about inequality, or Robert Gordon’s The Rise and Fall of American Growth became a handbook for people concerned about technological stagnation. But I don’t think it did.
Why not? One reason might be that the timing wasn’t as favorable as it might appear. Contrary to Acemoglu and Johnson’s assertion (on p.24 of the hardcover edition) that we live in an age of “blind techno-optimism”, the internet is absolutely chock-full of arguments and warnings about the downsides of AI. Concerns over the risk of rogue Artificial General Intelligence resulted in a boardroom coup attempt that almost drove Sam Altman out of OpenAI. Worries that AI wouldn’t uphold diversity led Google to implement some pretty hilarious countermeasures. Fears of mass surveillance, deepfakes, etc. are widespread. And of course the idea that AI is going to lead to mass unemployment is absolutely ubiquitous — so much so that practically every San Francisco tech event I go to features discussions about exactly this subject. Yes, even dance parties.
In other words, Power and Progress may have come out a little too late to make a big splash, and instead ended up just being one more voice shouting in the chorus.
On top of that, though, I have to say that this book…well, I just don’t think it’s very good. I winced while I wrote that sentence, because Simon Johnson is a personal friend, and Acemoglu is a celebrated genius, and because both of them have written such good books in the past. This is the first broadly negative book review I’ve written since 2014, and I’m a lot less combative of a blogger than I was a decade ago. I did not want to pan this book, especially because I think the topic is a good and important one, and I think the authors are brilliant people whose hearts are in the right place.
But I just don’t think the way this book was written ends up supporting the conclusions it draws. The historical examples it cites simply don’t support a narrative of out-of-touch technologists inventing the wrong sorts of technologies and hurting workers in the process. The book embraces a highly questionable definition of “power” in which persuasion in an open democratic society is painted as a threat. It often seems to assume its conclusions about the impacts of specific technologies, and it tells a jumbled and confusing story about the role of productivity growth. And its central claim — that society can push entrepreneurs to steer innovation in a direction that augments humans instead of replacing them — is not well-supported.
All in all, Power and Progress just fails to convince.
Power and Progress is of the “magisterial sweeping tome” class of econ book, like Capital in the Twenty-First Century, The Rise and Fall of American Growth, or Brad DeLong’s Slouching Toward Utopia. Much of the book is a history of technological innovation in general. As such, it tends to ramble; the authors often seem to get so caught up in the telling of this history that they neglect to tie each event to their central theses. In fact, those are often the most fun and fascinating parts of the book. But if I were to boil down Power and Progress to a set of core ideas, it would be:
Technological innovation’s impact on human welfare depends crucially on social choices about how those innovations are used.
Those choices are determined by the relations of power in a society, and in recent decades our choices have been steered in a negative direction by the power of tech company founders and venture capitalists.
The type of technologies that society invents can be chosen so as to distribute benefits more widely, by avoiding technologies that replace workers and inventing technologies that complement workers.
It’s the last of these that the book is most known for, because it’s the boldest, the most original, and the most controversial. But first let’s talk a bit about the other two.
The idea that technology’s impact on society is not determined solely by the nature of the tech itself, but depends on how we choose to use it, is obvious enough to be a truism. Everyone knows how the industrial technologies that have created so much wealth are also put to destructive uses in wars. Everyone knows that the same camera technology that lets you talk to your friend in a different city can allow governments to spy on their citizens. Everyone knows that there is a vast system of laws, international agreements, and social norms whose purpose, at least in theory, is to ensure that technology is used for good and not for ill.
But even though “technology can be used for bad purposes” should be a simple truism, Acemoglu and Johnson pick some very odd examples to illustrate the principle. For example, in the prologue, they have a list of what they claim are “new inventions that brought nothing like shared prosperity”. Here’s the fifth item on their list:
At the end of the nineteenth century, German chemist Fritz Haber developed artificial fertilizers that boosted agricultural yields. Subsequently, Haber and other scientists used the same ideas to design chemical weapons that killed and maimed hundreds of thousands on World War I battlefields.
The idea that the Haber-Bosch process has “brought nothing like shared prosperity” is an absolutely wild claim. Nitrogen fertilizers are so important to human existence that by the most common estimates, about half of the entire population of Earth — 3.5 billion people — is only sustained thanks to this technology. But because that same chemical reaction was used to create one particular type of chemical weapon that was responsible for a tiny fraction of the deaths in one particular war, Acemoglu and Johnson feel comfortable saying that a technology that literally gives life to half of humanity “brought nothing like shared prosperity”. It is the kind of claim that is so obviously wrong as to leave the reader slack-jawed — and yet it is deployed in support of an overall thesis for which countless better examples exist.
Unfortunately, this kind of questionable selection of historical examples is a hallmark of Power and Progress all the way through. For example, in Chapter 6, the authors write:
[Belief in the power of productivity] suggests that as technology advanced rapidly during the early phases of the Industrial Revolution, wages should have risen. Instead, real incomes of the majority stagnated.
Acemoglu and Johnson conclude that because textile manufacturing technologies were biased toward automating workers, they immiserated the working class of 1700s Britain. But those same textile manufacturing technologies have been at the center of the early stage of every other country’s industrialization as well. China went through a period where it made most of the world’s clothes, with its share peaking in the late 2000s. In 1995, apparel was China’s biggest export category.
But during this time, when Chinese garment workers were getting the descendants of the original British industrial technologies of power looms, their wages were skyrocketing — as were wages in the economy as a whole. The same is now true of Bangladesh — the country focuses relentlessly on the garment industry, and has access to all of the old automation technologies, and yet incomes in the country have tripled since 1990.
(As a side note, it’s kind of funny that after we’ve used “Luddite” as a slur for technophobes for all these years, Acemoglu and Johnson explicitly try to rehabilitate the original Luddites, writing that they “were right to worry about knitting frames decimating their livelihoods”. For this reason, I considered subtitling this review “the Bible of the Luddites”, but decided that the negative connotation of the word was too strong and it would be rude.)
A third questionable example in the book is the story of the Panama Canal. Acemoglu and Johnson describe the brutal exploitation of the workers who built the canal, and declare the project a “colossal failure”. That brutality was certainly real. But the authors cite it as a reason that the technology of the canal itself failed to bring broad-based prosperity. In fact, the opposite seems true; thanks to the canal, the people of Panama today enjoy a standard of living much, much higher than that of their Central American neighbors. This is not to say those economic benefits were worth the human cost. But the canal’s problems clearly seem associated with its construction, rather than unfair distribution of the benefits from the technology itself. Could the same canal have been built using more humane labor standards? The authors decline to speculate, simply declaring the whole project a failure and not even mentioning Panama’s prosperity.
A fourth dodgy example is the story they tell about Japan. In Chapter 8, Acemoglu and Johnson praise Japanese companies for “combin[ing] automation with the creation of new tasks”, noting that Japanese automakers didn’t reduce their workforces like American automakers did. But Japan’s manufacturing sector wages, like wages throughout the rest of the country, have been falling since the early 1990s, while American wages have stagnated but not fallen. So this story doesn’t fit the data.
A fifth example is in Chapter 7, when Acemoglu and Johnson write that “Henry Ford was a pioneer” in developing “a more cooperative relationship” with his workforce. I’m just wondering how this “more cooperative relationship” involved hiring thugs to gun down union organizers. Ford did pay higher wages to increase efficiency, but his actual dealings with representatives of labor was brutal and intolerant.
I could go on citing these questionable examples — my copy of Power and Progress is stained blue with all the notes I made in the margins — but this review would run into the dozens of pages, and you would quit long before you finished. But because there are so many questionable examples, Power and Progress is the kind of book that must be read closely and with a critical eye.
Update: In the comments, Brian Potter adds:
Another strike against this book is its terrible scholarship: it frequently gets basic facts incorrect because the authors haven't bothered to actually research the topic. Example: it claims at several points that Eli Whitney was responsible for the development of interchangeable parts, a claim that has been widely and thoroughly debunked.
Another issue with the book’s examples is the lack of footnotes or endnotes. Instead of citing specific works in support of each specific claim — as most books do — Power and Progress has a bibliographic essay at the end. Many sources are mentioned in this essay, but it’s often difficult, and sometimes impossible, to match the sources to specific claims. As a result, you often end up having to choose between exhaustively searching multiple sources to figure out where the authors got a particular point, or simply giving up and trusting that the authors are accurately representing the data.
For example, in Chapter 1 the authors ask “What if…AI also impoverishes billions in the developing world?”, and asserts that “evidence is mounting” that this concern is “valid”. But where is the evidence that AI threatens to impoverish billions? That’s an astonishingly strong claim about a technology about which little is known, and I can’t find any source in the bibliographic essay. An empirical study I do know is Acemoglu, Autor, Hazell and Restrepo’s 2022 paper “AI and Jobs: Evidence from Online Vacancies”, whose abstract concludes:
We find no discernible relationship between AI exposure and employment or wage growth at the occupation or industry level, however, implying that AI is currently substituting for humans in a subset of tasks but it is not yet having detectable aggregate labor market consequences.
So that paper certainly doesn’t include mounting evidence that AI threatens to impoverish billions. But I can’t find which paper the authors relied on to make this claim.
In fact, because I’ve read many of the Acemoglu papers that undergird this book, I also know that there are instances where the data doesn’t quite say what the authors claim. For example, in Chapter 8, Acemoglu and Johnson argue that “digital technologies became the graveyard of shared prosperity” over the last few decades. In this chapter, they attribute some meaningful piece of the recent rise in inequality to the introduction of digital technologies to the workplace. But because I’ve read Acemoglu and Restrepo’s 2020 paper “Robots and Jobs: Evidence from U.S. Labor Markets”, as well as the working paper version from 2017, I know to be skeptical of this claim.
Acemoglu and Restrepo found that a narrow category of automation — industrial robots — was associated with decreased employment and wages. But as the Economic Policy Institute’s Larry Mishel and Josh Bivens noted, when Acemoglu and Restrepo measured the effect of workers’ “exposure to IT capital” in general — i.e., how much the employers invested in IT tech overall — they found either no effect or a positive effect on employment and wages. Here’s the relevant table from the 2020 version of the paper:

The estimates of a positive impact of IT capital on employment and wages are in the original working paper version, in table A9.
Now, this doesn’t mean that computers and the internet weren’t a driver of mass unemployment or stagnant wages. Maybe they were! Acemoglu and Restrepo (2020) could simply be wrong; in fact, since their working paper first came out in 2018, many other studies have ended up contradicting their findings about the negative impacts of robots. And all of these papers look within specific industries or companies — as does Acemoglu and Restrepo’s 2022 follow-up paper about automation and inequality between demographic groups. The overall effect of automation on economic growth, absolute wages, and the composition of industries in the economy simply isn’t known.
In other words, it could be very well be that automation has been impoverishing people, or it could be that it has been enriching people overall. I’d simply like to know where the authors get the data to back up their claim about information technology, especially when one of the authors’ most famous papers appears to contradict that claim.
To sum up, footnotes and endnotes are a technology that has unambiguously benefitted the world, and even though they can be a bit of a pain the butt, authors should include them.
Anyway I digress; back to the book’s central theses.
Despite the questionable examples, it’s clearly true that technology can be used to benefit average people or to hurt them. But how does society choose how to use technologies? Acemoglu and Johnson’s answer is “power”, from which they get the title of their book. But what is power? Here, in Chapter 3, Acemoglu and Johnson deploy a definition that veers into the tautological:
Power is about the ability of an individual or group to achieve explicit or implicit objectives. If two people want the same loaf of bread, power determines who will get it.
Using this definition, how could we ever conclude that power wasn’t the reason for an observed outcome? Two people want a loaf of bread, and one of them gets it; we know this was due to “power”, because “power” is defined by who gets a loaf of bread. This kind of definition is semantically valid, but empirically useless; if you define “power” such that it simply means “whatever caused an outcome to happen”, you haven’t isolated causality, you have simply given it a new name.
Acemoglu and Johnson have a reason for employing a definition this infinitely broad; it allows them to include persuasion and compulsion in a single category of “power”.
The authors’ historical examples of when power determined the distribution of the benefits of technology include cases when laws and the threat of violence allowed some people to extract the benefits of technology for themselves — the cotton gin increasing slaveowners’ profits in the American South, or lords extracting agricultural surplus from peasants in medieval Britain. These are instances of compulsion, which certainly fit with our common, everyday, colloquial use of the word “power”.
But Acemoglu and Johnson also spend a lot of time arguing that persuasion is also a form of power. They cite instances in which techno-optimists and businesspeople in 18th century England and 21st century America persuaded the public to enact pro-business policies, through articles, speeches, conversations, and so on. Their explanation for why inequality has increased since the 1970s is, in effect, that silver-tongued technologists managed to persuade American society to weaken pro-worker institutions, and to allow the technologists to invent technologies that replaced human labor instead of complementing it.
The authors don’t venture to say exactly why these techno-optimists’ pro-business vision prevailed — they write that “an idea is more likely to spread if it is simple, is backed by a nice story, and has a ring of truth to it,” but they admit that “quite a bit of this process [of persuasion] is random,” and declare that “you are enormously lucky if you get the right idea, with just the right ring to it, at just the right time.”
I have to admit, this kind of surprised me. I expected to see some sort of pseudo-Gramscian theory of cultural hegemony (or at least some references to Gramsci or similar writers). Instead, the authors just sort of shrug and put it all down to luck. For some reason, the techbros just wrote really good posts, and by doing so they ruled the world — at least until their luck ran out and the world turned against them, I suppose.
In fact, I have to confess that the entire chapter on power and persuasion left me bewildered. I do not understand why we should put accidental success in a nonviolent marketplace of ideas in the same conceptual category as chattel slavery and feudalism. It seems to yield neither understanding nor solutions. Perhaps the historical example of the cotton gin might give us some insight about how to explain the spread of laissez-faire economics, but simply labeling both things as varieties of “power” does not yield that insight. And the idea that persuasion is power doesn’t seem to suggest any kind of systemic fix for the problem that sometimes society is persuaded to do things that increase inequality.
That doesn’t mean Acemoglu and Johnson have no solutions to recommend, though. They want to strengthen institutions like unions and labor laws, but their main idea is to redirect technological innovation toward technologies that complement workers instead of replacing them.
“With such persuasiveness, you tend to convince yourself that you are correct.” — Acemoglu and Johnson
Over the last six years, Acemoglu and Restrepo wrote a series of theoretical papers in which they lay out a number of different ways that new technology can affect workers’ jobs and wages. Basically, this ends up being a fancier version of a very old idea — capital can either substitute for labor or complement it. If capital substitutes for labor, then capitalists win, because they can replace people with machines, and pay people accordingly less. But if capital complements labor, then workers win, because capitalists have no choice but to hire them to work the new machines, and pay them good wages. Acemoglu and Restrepo make this theoretical breakdown a bit more nuanced, but in the end it really boils down to whether machines replace people or augment their abilities (either by making them more productive or by giving them new things to do).
Power and Progress attempts to analyze the history of technology through the lens of this theory. In eras where technology seemed to progress rapidly but workers’ wages didn’t grow much, like 18th century Britain, Acemoglu and Johnson argue that the main cause was technologists inventing machines that replaced human labor; in other eras where wages grew rapidly, like the late 19th century, they argue that technologists were inventing machines that created new tasks for humans to do.
At times this can begin to feel like a just-so story. For example, Acemoglu and Johnson cite electricity as a technology that was good for workers, because it created so many new industries for people to work in. But didn’t electrification also replace human labor in quite a large variety of ways? Electric lights save us the labor of making candles, electric dishwashers and washing machines and dryers automate our housework, and so on. How do we know this task automation outweighed by the new tasks electricity creates?
They also argue that wages in industrial Britain began to increase in the late 19th century because steamships and telegraphs — as opposed to looms — “expand[ed] the set of tasks and opportunities for workers”. As far as I can tell, this is a claim without evidence. Why was the telegraph’s automation of message couriers less significant than its creation of new jobs for telegraph operators? In Chapter 8, Acemoglu and Johnson blame communication technology for increasing inequality by enabling the offshoring of jobs to China and other countries. Why would modern communication technologies have exactly the opposite effect of the telegraph?
And in Chapter 6, Acemoglu and Johnson praise the early United States for its direction of innovation, writing that American businesses compensated for a lack of skilled labor by, in the words of engineer Joseph Whitworth, “call[ing] in the aid of machinery in almost every department of industry.” In Chapter 7 the authors write that the American use of interchangeable parts “was first and foremost an effort to simplify the production process so that workers lacking in artisanal skills could produce high-quality products.” But how is that any different from the British use of power tools to help unskilled make textiles in the 1700s? The difference is never explained.
On the other side of the coin, Acemoglu and Johnson cite most modern information technology as something that automates more tasks than it creates. But what about all the new tasks that IT creates — mobile developers, web designers, digital media marketers, content moderators, and so on and so forth? Why are these less economically important than the tasks that the internet automates away (encyclopedia salespeople, etc.)?
One answer is that if we assume that Acemoglu’s theory of automation is the main thing that’s going on, we can just infer the effects of particular technologies from macroeconomic outcomes — if we see wages stagnate, it must be because task automation outweighed task creation. But for anyone who suspects that Acemoglu’s theory might not actually be the main thing going on in the economy, just saying that the proof is in the pudding is a bit unsatisfying. It feels like a just-so story.
In fact, the historical examples in Power and Progress leave themselves open to alternate narratives. The main alternative narrative is about productivity.
Acemoglu and Johnson repeatedly argue that if productivity gains are produced by automation, workers don’t see the benefits. They cite the idea that productivity naturally uplifts workers — which they call the “productivity bandwagon” — as one of the main nefarious narratives that technologists use to persuade society to allow them to invent technologies that replace workers.
But what if the “productivity bandwagon” narrative is true?
There are two main historical periods the authors cite as examples of excessive automation leading to stagnant wages — the early Industrial Revolution in 18th century Britain, where textile machines like looms replaced human artisans, and America since the 1970s. (Note: they make an error when they say, in Chapter 8, that “declines in real wages…have been a major part of U.S. labor market trends.” In fact, when you include benefits, real hourly compensation has grown a bit more slowly since 1973, but has still consistently risen.)
But Acemoglu and Johnson also note that both of these eras had sluggish productivity growth. Perhaps wages were stagnant in those eras because productivity was also stagnant?
Regarding the early Industrial Revolution, some researchers argue that the labor share didn’t actually fall. For example, here’s Crafts (2020):
[R]eal wages grew more slowly than real GDP per worker during the industrial revolution. However, the discrepancy was much less than has been claimed such that in 1820 the former had risen by about 12 per cent since 1770 and the latter by about 16 per cent. Second, labour productivity grew quite slowly prior to 1830 averaging a little below 0.4 per cent per year in the 60 years after 1770. Nevertheless, in the context of demographic pressure this was a very good outcome by pre-industrial standards. Third, as relative prices changed and exportable manufactures became cheaper, over the long run real product wages grew somewhat faster than real consumption earnings. Fourth, the share of profits in GDP rose over time from 17.2 per cent in 1770 to 31.3 per cent in 1860 but this was associated with a decline in the share of land rents and the share of labour was little changed. Fifth, looked at through the lens of growth accounting the evidence is of total factor productivity (TFP) growth accelerating only gradually to 0.6-0.8 per cent per year during 1830 to 1860 with the steam age only materializing after 1830.
In sum, this looks more like a story of paradoxically slow productivity growth than of pro-rich growth. The story of the industrial revolution is definitely not one of a new general-purpose technology boosting productivity growth at the expense of a big shift in the distribution of income which is the current fear about AI.
As for the U.S. since the 1970s, inequality has definitely increased, but — contrary to what you may have heard — pay has largely kept pace with productivity. Automation may have made wages more unequal (this is the argument of Acemoglu and Restrepo’s 2022 paper), but the modest decline in labor’s share of the national pie was probably mostly about land values increasing. Which means that aggregate wage stagnation was largely due to slowing productivity growth in recent years as well.
In fact, Acemoglu and Johnson also blame automation for stagnating productivity! In Chapter 8, they write that “productivity gains from automation may always be somewhat limited.” They coin the term “so-so automation” to describe technologies that take humans out of the loop but fail to increase productivity much by doing so. They argue that technologies that make better use of human capabilities lead to faster productivity growth as well as higher wages and lower inequality.
OK so…why isn’t that the book’s central this? You could write a very interesting book about how technologies that complement humans are better for both productivity and broad-based prosperity than technologies that try to substitute for humans wholesale. I would definitely read that book! But Acemoglu and Johnson did not choose to write that book; instead, they warn against a focus on productivity, claiming that it’s a seductive but dangerous narrative used by the greedy, fast-talking techbros. In my mind, this weakens their overall narrative.
Throughout Power and Progress, the authors tell a story about a “menu of technologies” that entrepreneurs can choose from. On one hand, companies can choose to invest in automation, replacing workers, increasing inequality, causing slow wage growth, and maybe reducing productivity in the process. On the other hand, they can choose to invest in technologies that create new tasks for humans to do, thus increasing wages and decreasing inequality. Their story is that out of greed and/or elitism, entrepreneurs often choose the former, so it’s in the interests of society to push them toward choosing the latter.
But when the authors approvingly cite examples of new industries springing into being, they never give an explanation of why entrepreneurs and technologists chose to create these new industries, instead of trying to cut costs in existing industries. My default assumption would be that the people who invented and commercialized steamships, telegraphy, interchangeable parts, autos, electricity, and telephones were driven by the same sort of motivations that animated the people who invented and commercialized power looms, computers, and the internet. If not, why not? Was there ever a case when governments or unions pushed entrepreneurs to select Option A from the “menu of technologies” instead of Option B?
When Acemoglu and Johnson do discuss union power, it’s in the context of worker training. In Chapter 7, they write:
In fact, for unions [in the 1960s] the central issue was worker training. They insisted on training provisions to ensure that workers could be brought up to the necessary skill level to operate the new machinery and benefit from it.
This is very different from affecting the direction of innovation! This is a case of workers collectively pushing companies to invest in human capital, so that worker skills can catch up to the direction in which innovation was already going.
As far as I can tell, this book does not contain even one single example of when a union or government supposedly pushed an entrepreneur or company to choose a different path of technology in order to benefit workers. As far as I can tell, it does not even contain one single example of when an engineer, entrepreneur, company or investor chose to create a technology in order to benefit workers more.
In other words, there is no evidence here that the “menu of technologies” actually exists. It’s not clear that technologists and industrialists even know in advance whether the inventions they create and commercialize will create more new tasks than they automate. And this raises pointed and troubling questions for the authors’ preferred solution to the problems of inequality and wage stagnation.
In Chapter 11, Acemoglu and Johnson roll out their proposed solutions. Having concluded that inequality and wage stagnation are due to “tech billionaires and their agenda” choosing the wrong technologies from the “menu”, they call for democratic people-power to force the techbros back onto the labor-augmenting path.
What’s totally unclear is how to do this. Acemoglu and Johnson admit that “redirecting” the path of technological innovation is going to be an incredibly tall order:
Determining how different digital technologies are used and their impact on wages, inequality, and surveillance is much harder [than assessing their climate impacts]…Moreover, given the difficulty of distinguishing automation from other uses of digital technologies, automation taxes are currently not practical.
And yet the authors still claim that this can be done! Yet they’re maddeningly vague on the details:
There is a telltale sign of automation technologies: reducing the labor share of value added, meaning that once these technologies are introduced, how much of value added goes to capital increases and how much gets captured by labor decreases…On this basis, technologies that increase the labor share can be encouraged via subsidies for their use and their development.
But how do we know in advance, before a technology is invented, whether it will increase or decrease the labor share? This is just replacing one target of guesswork — new task creation vs. automation — with another target of guesswork.
Fundamentally, it still boils down to some sort of mandarins in a room somewhere — economists? government engineers? bloggers? — trying to assess the economic effects of a technology that doesn’t even exist yet.
As I wrote in a post last June, this is probably an impossible task. Some of the world’s top experts thought that AI would replace radiologists within a few years, but demand for radiologists boomed even as the new AI tools were coming online. The technologists got it wrong.
And the economists are just as likely to get it wrong. For example, industrial robots are the one technology that Acemoglu consistently rails against as an example of harmful automation. That’s based on his 2020 paper with Restrepo, where they found that companies that buy more robots employ fewer humans. But a whole bunch of other economists followed up on this research and found the exact opposite — robot adoption is correlated with more jobs at a company or in an industry. Here was a list I made back in 2022:
I’ll list a few of these studies:
1. Mann and Püttmann (2018) — Where Acemoglu and Restrepo…looked at correlation, this paper attempts to identify causation. They look at automation-related patents in an industry — a proxy for innovation in the automation space — and then look to see whether that industry gains or loses jobs. They find that “advances in national automation technology have a positive influence on employment in local labor markets”, though this isn’t true for every area.
2. Dixon, Hong and Wu (2021) — These authors looked at robot adoption in Canada, at the level of the individual company (or “firm”, as economists say). They found that companies that adopted more robots hired more people, while also improving the quality of their products and services.
3. Koch, Manuylov and Smolka (2019) — This paper looks at firm-level data for manufacturing companies in Spain. They find that robot adoption is associated with a substantial increase in employment as well as output.
4. Adachi, Kawaguchi and Saito (2020) — This paper finds the same thing as the previous one, but for Japanese companies over the course of a 40-year period.
5. Eggleston, Lee and Iizuka (2021) — These authors look at robot adoption by nursing homes in Japan, and find that it strongly increases employment, although it does result in existing nurses working fewer hours (and thus getting paid less).
6. Hirvonen, Stenhammar, and Tuhkuri (2022) — This paper looks at a technology subsidy program in Finland that increased adoption of a broad range of advanced technologies at Finnish firms. They find that this led to employment increases.
In fact, by this point the trend is clear. Essentially everyone is finding that, contra Acemoglu and Restrepo…robots are correlated with — and probably cause — higher employment in the companies and areas where they’re adopted.
What’s happening is that companies that use more robots hire more humans (and retain their existing humans) in jobs that complement the robots. That’s exactly what we saw with previous waves of automation — people find new roles, robots increase their productivity, and they get paid more. Looking at the countries that use the most robots in their manufacturing industry, it seems likely that this virtuous cycle is happening even at the level of whole nations.
Zooming out from just the manufacturing sector, Hötte, Somers, and Theodorakopoulos have a very interesting 2022 review paper in which they look at the literature on the entire range of automation technologies. Here’s an article in which they explain their results. Hötte et al. find that automation does replace jobs, but that this effect is outweighed by the “reinstatement” effect — in other words, people find new jobs to do. And their incomes generally rise as a result.
So no, there’s no possibility that a council of mandarins — engineers, economists, or whoever — can sit there evaluating every potential new technology that companies or inventors want to create, and deciding whether it will raise or lower the labor share. I mean, you could make a council of mandarins, and it could look at plans for new technologies, and it could issue decisions, but in practice it would be throwing darts at a dartboard. And it would be an incredibly costly tax on our companies, since it would introduce massive delays into their decision-making process. Their Chinese rivals, on the other hand, would suffer no such delays.
In other words, I see no hope for Acemoglu and Johnson’s preferred solution. The utter vagueness with which the idea is presented in Power and Progress doesn’t suggest that the authors have thought carefully about how this solution might work in practice.
In particular, these solutions seem inferior to something far simpler: policies to increase labor share ex post. Labor market institutions like co-determination and sectoral bargaining, and direct interventions like wage subsidies funded by taxes on capital income, can push up the labor share without requiring panels of experts to predict the unpredictable. And if entrepreneurs really do have any degree of foresight about whether their innovations will tend to push the labor share up or down, these policies will act like a Pigouvian tax on the kind of cost-cutting that Acemoglu and Johnson decry. With a wage subsidy, for example, the higher the market rate you can afford to pay your workers, the more of a rebate you can get from the government. So if there are technologies that augment your workers and let you hire new workers, a wage subsidy gives you an incentive to create them.
Anyway, I think simple policies like these should be economists’ first go-to solutions, rather than the creation of whole new social institutions.
At the start of this review, I talked about how Power and Progress may have missed its moment by getting lost in a flood of fears about AI. But there’s another way in which the book might be poorly timed. Wage inequality — the very thing that Acemoglu and Restrepo (2022) try to explain — has flatlined since the early 2010s.

Meanwhile, real wages have been rising strongly for years now, interrupted only by the post-pandemic inflation. And wages for production and nonsupervisory workers have risen more robustly than those for managerial workers:

Meanwhile, employment for prime-age Americans is near all-time highs, and unemployment is at record lows; everyone who wants a job in America has one.
All this has happened in exactly the time frame during which AI has exploded. Predictive AI burst onto the national scene in 2012 with the ImageNet paper, the basic technology for generative AI was created in 2017 with the transformer paper, and generative AI became really widespread in 2022-23 with LLMs and AI art programs. To reiterate: essentially all of the commercialization and implementation of artificial intelligence has happened during a time in which wages have been rising, inequality has been flat or falling, and employment has been high.
Maybe AI just isn’t big enough to kill all the jobs yet; maybe we just have to wait a few years and we’ll all be unemployed or working for pennies. Or maybe AI is actually the kind of technology that improves task productivity and creates new tasks instead of automating old tasks away. Or maybe Acemoglu has something wrong in his models, and further theoretical and empirical explorations will overturn his conclusions about the key role of automation in fostering inequality. I’m not sure.
Whatever is going on, though, I think it should give the AI worriers pause. This was not on the menu. If you went back to 2012, and asked people to predict the impact of a new machine that could recognize objects and imitate speech and create beautiful art, they probably would have assumed that the rising inequality that they had experienced for the last 30 years would now be turbocharged. And — at least so far — they’d have been completely wrong.
To me, that thought experiment illustrates the folly of trying to predict the economic effects of new technology. It also suggests another reason why Power and Progress didn’t make the same kind of splash it might have made in 2018. Obviously, our economic problems haven’t all been solved. But perhaps, underneath all of the anger and pessimism, Americans realize that something has shifted in their economy, for the better. And perhaps that’s making them a bit less interested in the kind of pessimistic economic narratives that flew off the shelves in the 2010s.
It was about 7000 words, which is 2000 words longer than the review of The Courage to Act that I wrote for International Finance.
I also paywalled it, which was probably a stupid decision. Book reviews, especially highly critical ones, shouldn’t be paywalled; they should be disseminated as widely as possible, in order to reach as many of the book’s readers as possible.
The Space Development Agency was established in 2019 to help speed up the deployment of US military space systems by sidestepping the Pentagon's traditional sluggish bureaucracy.
Seven years later, SDA is finally launching its first batches of operational satellites, just as the Pentagon plans to shutter the semi-autonomous agency and fold it back into the Space Force's procurement pipeline, newly reorganized under several program acquisition executives in a bid to streamline weapons buying.
SDA's fate is not a surprise, and lawmakers in both houses of Congress have backed the agency's closure in drafts of this year's National Defense Authorization Act.
So there is a woman named Florice Hoffman, who serves as the chair of the Democratic Party of Orange County. She is liberal and devoted and profoundly anti-MAGA and pro-98 percent of the things this website stands for.
She also can be quite the jerk.
In case you missed this, in May Kaitlyn Schallhorn of the Orange County Register wrote a piece headlined, IN AN ORANGE COUNTY ASSEMBLY RACE, A FIGHT BREWS OVER WHO CAN ENDORSE THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES. The story delves into our 68th Assembly District, where four candidates are running for the slot. Officially, the Democratic Party (as headed by Hoffman) has endorsed Santa Ana Mayor Pro Tem David Penaloza, a dude with a high-level beard-stache combo.
Another person in the race is Jessie Lopez, a member of the Santa Ana City Council. Recently, on her website Lopez cited endorsements from “Anaheim Democrats” and “Santa Ana Democratic Club.” Which was 100 percent correct—both groups threw their backing behind Lopez.
Only … eh … according to Hoffman (who really needs to change her name to Florence, just because it’s an easier spell) and the DPOC, that shit couldn’t be listed, because neither group is “chartered with the official state or county party,” according to Schallhorn’s work.
So what did Florence Florice Hoffman do? Did she send cookies and a kind request? No. Did she ask Jo Adell to speak on her behalf? No. Did she go hug a cow? No.
From the article …
And I’m sorry, but … what? Like, what the actual flippity fuck? Lopez wound up removing the endorsements from her website, but I sure as hell wouldn’t have. This is, more than anything, a freedom of speech and expression issue, and if someone running for office is endorsed by local groups that use the word “Democrat” or “Democratic” in the titles—hey, mazel and tov.
The letter sent by the DPOC cited bylaws of the state and county parties—which means (wait for it) nothing when it comes to expression. Seriously, nothing at all. When the Register called ol’ Vern Nelson, who runs the Anaheim club, he rightly noted: “We never told everybody we were chartered. No one asks about or knows what charters are. We’re a club of Democrats in Anaheim. They don’t own any of those words.”
Being serious—this really pissed me off. Hoffman told the Register that only the California Democratic Party can endorse candidates. Which, again, is nonsense, garbage, ludicrous and un-American.
So, in that spirit: We, The (Democratic) Truth OC, officially endorse Jessie Lopez in the 68th Assembly District race. We support her democratically. Double democratically. Triple democratically. She’s the Democrat who this democratic site believes can best represent the Democratic Party when it comes to democracy in Orange County—where this Democratic site exists and thrives. Democratically.
Sue me, Florice.
I watched Ferris Bueller’s Day Off which was as great as I remember.
It has an age rating of PG-13 in the US and 15 in the UK for bad language and some kissing. (There is also lying to parents but apparently that doesn’t count.)
This seems absurd.
I have way less problem with some light cursing/petting than films that are ostensibly for kids like cartoons and superhero movies that treat mass existential threat as an incident plot point in the hero’s journey.
Like:
Superman is rated PG-13 in the US, 12A in the UK. There’s off-screen loss of life but on-screen is widespread in movies: death with barely any emotional weight.
(a) I’m sure this lack of emotional weight in existential jeopardy is harmful to us.
(b) I’m sure that existential jeopardy in movies is getting more frequent; jeopardy inflation if you like.
(c) It is SO LAZY.
Look at Ferris Bueller: the jeopardy is a car with too many miles on the clock, and Ferris running to get home in time. My kid was on the edge of her seat.
But it takes effort and careful storytelling to set up jeopardy like this. We have to understand Cameron and his relationships and the car’s place in those, and we have to care about Cameron, and we have to feel the stakes, and the ominous arrival of the knowledge… If you were dropped into the movie 20 minutes from the end, you wouldn’t have that setup, it wouldn’t matter.
WHEREAS: death is death, its weight is universal.
So I can see how it flies through production meetings of hurried people. It’s an easy yes.
I am aware this smacks a bit of “oh films were different in my day, you didn’t need all this cursing and violence”…
So I checked.
(This is the joy of AI, you can cross-check your whims.)
I got ChatGPT to develop a jeopardy scoring methodology and here’s what it came up with, from low to high:
1 – Personal or social: embarrassment, exposure, rejection, career failure, losing a competition
2 – Family or bounded community: custody, home, livelihood, family separation, collapse of a small group
3 – Mortal but local: custody, home, livelihood, family separation, collapse of a small group
4 – Collective catastrophe: mass death; destruction or subjugation of a city, nation, population or people
5 – Existential catastrophe: extinction, civilisation, planet, universe, timeline or reality
So Ferris Bueller would be a “1” whereas Frozen 2 would be a “4.”
Then I got it to look up the top 10 films at the box office in north American each year for the last 50 years.
Then score all 500 films according to the main narrative jeopardy. (I assumed that knowledge would be in the training data seeing as these are popular movies.)
If you’re interested, [download the movie jeopardy spreadsheet here(/more/2026/07/film_jeopardy_1976_2025-by-chatgpt.xlsx)] (xlsx).
Finally I got ChatGPT to calculate the average per decade.
Here’s the results in the format:
Period: average jeopardy score (% low jeopardy movies – % high jeopardy movies)
i.e. I am not imagining this.
There has been considerable jeopardy inflation in movies between the 1980s and today.
So I think this is harmful to us all.
Death, as it is used in these movies, is not jeopardy but a symbol of jeopardy. That’s part of it being used lazily.
But we should put MASSIVE weight on death and calamity!
Because it’s a big deal! Especially violent death and collective danger.
And when we don’t give it weight, it gets assumed as part of the normal order of things. Which it is not.
One argument is: look Matt, these are cartoon deaths. It’s a superhero movie, it’s fantasy, it doesn’t matter, we know how to look past the lack of weight.
But all video are merely patterns of light on the screen; I don’t think we get to say that one matters more than another; they all occupy the exact same level of “remove” in our minds, and it all matters the same.
If something deserves weight when we see it on the TV news, it deserves weight when we see it in a movie.
Or else we carry the lack of weight when we see it in movies over to the TV news, and then it carries over to the real people depicted.
I always wonder what creates the consensus cosmogony for an era – our collective understanding of how the world works and in particular where we are going.
It was sci-fi in the 1950s (that’s the argument in the link above).
Now I would argue that we have identified at least a tributary of the 2020s consensus:
When we are all exposed to media that normalises death and mass threat, there is something in the psyche that kicks in…
When something built into your sense of reality isn’t happening, you work to make it happen.
Am I saying that we are deliberately, collectively creating situations of mass threat and emotionless jeopardy, because we see it in the movies and it isn’t happening in real life?
Yes. Unconsciously but yes.
So we need to find new collective futures, I’ve talked about that before. That’s a big lift.
But I would start by giving the events in movies the weight they deserve, so they don’t get normalised. We’d all be happier for it.
And that means I would start with the ratings systems.
Ferris Bueller, for all the cursing and kissing, is a movie for kids, give it a G.
Frozen 2 should be rated R.
More posts tagged: inner-and-outer-realities (7).
I can’t say I loved it. The Circe scene was excellent, Cyclops was good, and the battles in Troy were well done. But most of the roles were miscast. I like Matt Damon, but he is too “Good Will Hunting” to play Odysseus. The character did not cohere. (Compare to Ralph Fiennes in the superior The Return.) Zendaya’s role was superfluous. Worst of all was Calypso, who reminded me of the kind of chick you might meet at a Tupperware party in the Hamptons. At least half of the dialogue was lame and contrary to the spirit of the Mycenaean world. Some of the sea and boat footage was good. I strongly disliked the changes made to the ending.
There is enough energy, effort, and money put into the thing to make it eminently watchable on the big screen. And if this were a new director, you would think he had great promise. But relative to both the reviews and where most expectations were placed, this has to count as a disappointment.
The post *The Odyssey*, the movie (no real spoilers) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Up, and after doing some business at my office, Creed came to me, and I took him to my viall maker’s, and there I heard the famous Mr. Stefkins play admirably well, and yet I found it as it is always, I over expected. I took him to the tavern and found him a temperate sober man, at least he seems so to me. I commit the direction of my viall to him.
Thence to the Change, and so home, Creed and I to dinner, and after dinner Sir W. Warren came to me, and he and I in my closet about his last night’s contract, and from thence to discourse of measuring of timber, wherein I made him see that I could understand the matter well, and did both learn of and teach him something. Creed being gone through my staying talking to him so long, I went alone by water down to Redriffe, and so to sit and talk with Sir W. Pen, where I did speak very plainly concerning my thoughts of Sir G. Carteret and Sir J. Minnes. So as it may cost me some trouble if he should tell them again, but he said as much or more to me concerning them both, which I may remember if ever it should come forth, and nothing but what is true and my real opinion of them, that they neither do understand to this day Creed’s accounts, nor do deserve to be employed in their places without better care, but that the King had better give them greater salaries to stand still and do nothing.
Thence coming home I was saluted by Bagwell and his wife (the woman I have a kindness for), and they would have me into their little house, which I was willing enough to, and did salute his wife. They had got wine for me, and I perceive live prettily, and I believe the woman a virtuous modest woman.
Her husband walked through to Redriffe with me, telling me things that I asked of in the yard, and so by water home, it being likely to rain again to-night, which God forbid. To supper and to bed.
Tropical storm Helene spared no demographic as it tore through Western North Carolina, but the recovery in greater Asheville had not been as equally distributed.
The Latino community in particular faced a different and, in some ways, more difficult path post-storm. And while many were able to seek help after this traumatic disaster, Latinos faced many systemic and language limitations that disrupted the way help was found and used.
As one of the few bilingual Latino journalists in Asheville, Jose Sandoval found himself immersed in seeing how language barriers, limited access to aid and immigration-related fears shaped how Latinos recovered. His reporting highlights how in the days and weeks after the storm, Latinos struggled to navigate the systems meant to help them.
“Recovery is going to take years. Here in the city, the debris is gone, but the financial impact still lingers,” said Sandoval, a reporter for Blue Ridge Public Radio, the National Public Radio station in Asheville. “A lot of these effects are still around. I do think Helene exposed a lot of language barriers, especially in how to better reach the [Latino] community.”
While barriers slowed recovery, the Latino community remained resilient, even when governmental systems fell short. Caught in the Current sat down with Sandoval to talk about what happened and what was learned. What follows is an edited and condensed version of that conversation.
Q: Take me back to a few days before Helene hit. What were you hearing from Latino and Spanish-speaking families about the storm, especially as a bilingual reporter?
I think there were preparations from the county, but nobody knew how bad the storm was going to be. People were kind of prepared, but also at the same time not taking it super seriously, because nothing of that magnitude had ever happened here. People were being prepared, but not to the fullest extent possible.
The county was doing a lot of stuff because they have bilingual communication staff. They were going out to different communities telling them, “Hey, just be prepared,” because we got warnings ahead of time from the National Weather Service, but the extent of the damage and the storm; nobody had any clue. It was mostly, people were prepared, but also like, “it may not be that bad,” “maybe they are exaggerating,” and it ended up not being that case.
Q: Did warnings reach Spanish-speaking residents at the same time as English-speaking residents?
I think it probably didn’t reach them the same because people didn’t take some of the warnings seriously. The National Weather Service will translate some of their stuff into Spanish, but besides that, I don’t think it really fully reached people. People who also speak English weren’t taking those warnings seriously. It wasn’t a lack of trying to reach them, it was more like folks were not fully prepared and didn’t take the warning seriously.
Q: What about post-storm and the effort to rebuild and seek aid? Did language create a barrier?

I think so for sure. It’s also status, too, that created another barrier. Most people didn’t know where to go to get water or very simple essential things that they needed, especially during the storm. We were one of the few radio stations that were still up, but we got lucky because we were close to downtown, so the power came back on within a few days. There definitely was a barrier with trying to figure out where to go to get basic stuff like food and water. You had these nonprofits that were on the go immediately after Helene happened, like Poder Emma, True Ridge, We Need x WNC, but there definitely was a barrier because you can’t access your phone, you can’t access the internet, where are you supposed to get this information from?
And for some of these groups, they weren’t going to get their supplies from county staff either, because of that mistrust between the community and government officials. So a lot of the time, folks were going out to these nonprofits for basic supplies, but they had to take whatever information they could find in English, translate it, write it down and pass it by word of mouth to other folks in the community.
Q: Did immigration fears discourage people from going to shelters or applying for FEMA relief?
Families here are of mixed status, so it is very difficult for folks to get FEMA help or SBA loans. What I’m hearing from case managers is that they can’t qualify — they don’t qualify for FEMA or SBA loans because of their immigration status. So it’s been very difficult for some of these folks to get any type of help, and a lot of the help has been coming from nonprofits, like Beloved Asheville and Samaritan’s Purse, or churches.
I interviewed a family out in Swannanoa, a mixed-status family. The mom has residency, but she was hesitant to apply for FEMA, so her son, who was born here, applied for it. Even then they didn’t get that much money after losing a car, their home and having other damage. They just didn’t get that much money, and Beloved came in and rebuilt the homes for them.
There was definitely that type of barrier for aid. You see specific instances of Latinos that might have citizenship or residency but don’t speak English, and they had trouble getting through to FEMA and government agencies because of their inability to speak English. Folks would not apply because they didn’t know whether they qualified or not.

It’s a very tight-knit community, for sure. The majority of Latinos that live out here, specifically in the city, are Mexican. A lot of them work in agriculture or hospitality because Asheville is such a touristy town, but it’s a very tight-knit community. People know each other. The majority of them live in West Asheville and in the Emma community.
Q: Did the concentrated Latino population face a lot of destruction? Did it affect financial disparity?
Oh, for sure. A lot of the Latinos that live here work in hospitality, agriculture or manual labor, and all that stopped. They were not making money at all, and we didn’t have water or power. Families were reaching out saying, “I don’t know how I’m going to be able to pay rent” because they lost about a month of work. That’s a lot of money, and the financial aspect is 100% — they couldn’t get back to work the same way other people could right away.

Q: Did you notice a visible disparity between how non-Latinos bounce back versus Latinos?
If folks couldn’t qualify for SBA loans, they couldn’t afford to take another loan, and they were taking money out of their own pockets to pay their employees for weeks, and you can tell that the disparity is still there. It’s 100% still there. Is it going to show up in the data? No. There are studies on inequity and disaster recovery, but you’re not going to see the data, because some of these nonprofits are very wary about putting that data out there.
Q: Have you noticed any psychological or social effects among the Latino community in Asheville?
We had immigration agents here, and people were seeing folks in ICE gear, in their car. Nonprofits asked local officials to have them wear different clothing because that was preventing people from going to get the help that they need, like food, water and rental assistance. We also had some ICE operations that began in Charlotte a few months ago, and that played a part too, where people were afraid to go out of their house, and even families kept their kids at home.
Q: How did members of the Latino community support one another during the disaster, beyond the work of nonprofits?
You saw people really pulling together, bringing resources together, trying to figure out what was going on. If somebody had a chainsaw, they were bringing it out, chopping down trees so people could get through and get help. People really came together at that time, every single person was looking out for each other.
“Hey, you need more water? You need food? I got you.” “There are trees blocking the way? OK, we’ve got a couple people with chainsaws, we’ll chop it down.” Everybody was very together at that time, because we had no idea what was going on.
Q: Did tropical storm Helene expose issues in how bilingual disaster recovery operates, and are there efforts to improve those systems?
The county had a bilingual communication specialist with strong relationships with nonprofits, but it still showed gaps. From talking to emergency communications staff, everyone agrees they know how to do things better, but there are still major barriers to providing language access. Staffing is a huge issue, and a lot of the time people want to expand outreach, but they don’t have the funding, so it becomes a one-person operation.
Counties are trying to improve, but there are still barriers like staffing and funding, and it’s hard to retain bilingual workers. The county was sharing information in Spanish on social media and doing daily briefings, but if people didn’t know where to access that information, it didn’t help. A lot of communication still came down to word of mouth. There’s still a long way to go, and there’s no perfect system yet.
Q: As one of the few Spanish-speaking journalists in the area, how did you approach outreach to Spanish-speaking residents?
The challenge was getting information out effectively. I was pulling updates from nonprofits and local towns about resource distribution centers, but if people aren’t listening, you’re essentially speaking to nobody. The briefings kept getting pushed back and were airing at random times, sometimes overnight. If people didn’t have a hand-crank radio or weren’t in their car, they weren’t going to hear it.
I brought in Theresa Serrano and a FEMA bilingual communication specialist and interviewed nonprofits in Spanish whenever I could. But it still came back to: Who was actually listening?
I was trying to take a broader look at language access across counties. Most did the best they could with the resources they had, but there’s a big difference between Asheville and more rural areas. In some places, they had Spanish-speaking officers going door to door, warning communities through word of mouth.
Q: Did the language barrier look different in rural areas compared to Asheville?
I think so, for sure. You have a lot of bilingual communication staff in Asheville, but in more rural counties, you’re lucky if you have one, and it’s hard to keep that person around. In those areas, you’re asking one communications person to handle everything in Spanish by themselves, even while going through the disaster too. Here, you have multiple people working in communications, so there’s definitely a difference.
We need a better system. The Spanish-speaking population is the fastest-growing in the region, but the language barrier is still there. Local governments want to improve their relationship with these communities, but language access isn’t required by law, so a lot of the time they’re meeting the bare minimum. It’s a very complicated issue.
Q: In a broader sense, what do you wish readers better understood about language barriers?
I think there still is a language barrier, and it’s complicated. Local governments want to do a better job, but it’s not as simple as hiring one bilingual person and expecting them to handle everything. That puts a huge burden on one person.
With natural disasters becoming more frequent, language access is something we really need to take seriously. It comes down to how we provide information to different communities and whether we’re doing it in the best way possible. How do we improve, how do we prepare people ahead of time, and how do we make sure the message actually reaches them and is taken seriously?
This article is part of Caught in the Current: Helene Recovery in Asheville and Beyond a project that we have partnered on with the School of Journalism at Northeastern University. Their enterprising students took on the story of Asheville, North Carolina, a community still dealing with the devastation of Hurricane Helene, 18 months later. As part of our mentoring program, we’re amplifying their efforts by sharing the amazing work produced by their students. Visit the official interactive magazine for the project HERE.
“FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IS NOT JUST IMPORTANT TO DEMOCRACY, IT IS DEMOCRACY.” – Walter Cronkite. CLICK HERE to donate in support of our free and independent voice.
The post When Disaster Strikes In English, Spanish Speakers Struggle On the Margins appeared first on DCReport.org.

This composite of images taken by NASA’s Psyche mission shows the crescent of Mars grow as the spacecraft approached the planet for a gravity assist from May 2 to May 15, 2026. The series begins with the smallest crescent at the center of the of the image as Mars is farthest from the spacecraft, and progressively grows as the spacecraft gets closer. After these views were captured by the spacecraft’s multispectral imager instrument, Mars began to overfill the field of view as Psyche made close approach with the planet and captured a series of high-resolution images of the surface.
Because Psyche approached Mars from a high phase angle, the planet appeared as a thin crescent in the days running up to the close approach, lit by sunlight reflecting off its surface. Using these views of the approach, close approach, and departure from Mars, the Psyche team compiled a stunning time-lapse of its entire Mars encounter.
For more information about NASA’s Psyche mission, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/psyche/
The post The Growing Crescent of Mars as NASA’s Psyche Mission Approaches appeared first on NASA Science.
Here's my blog, running in Firefox, running in WebAssembly, running in Chrome:

They chose Firefox/Gecko because it has strong single-process support. The project used an estimated $25,000 worth of Claude Opus and Fable tokens, but took advantage of a Claude Max subscription plan so cost much less in actual dollars.
The demo funnels all traffic over a WebSocket protocol (using the Wisp protocol) through Puter's server - a requirement to get this kind of thing to work because code running in browsers can't open arbitrary network connections.
(That proxying sounds expensive! The team had to scale the servers up to handle the traffic during the Hacker News conversation about the project.)
Puter claim this supports end-to-end encryption and that looks to be true - I inspected the WebSocket messages and traffic to my own HTTPS site was encrypted whereas requests and responses to http://www.example.com/ were in cleartext.
Here's the repo for firefox-wasm. theogbob/WebkitWasm is a similar project that compiles WebKit to WASM, but that one doesn't currently have an accessible online demo.
Via Hacker News
Tags: browsers, firefox, ai, webassembly, generative-ai, llms, ai-assisted-programming, claude, claude-mythos-fable
Source: Pew
Donald Trump surprised me last night. I expected to hear lurid lies about the 2020 election. What he offered instead was mostly dreary innuendo that convinced nobody.
Which is not to say that his speech was free of lies. Indeed, more or less every word he spoke was a lie, including “a,” “and,” and “the.” But the most spectacular lies weren’t about U.S. elections. They were at the beginning, when Trump boasted about America’s place in the world.
Here’s the part that caught my eye:
We had transgender for everybody, men in women’s sports, crime ravaging our cities, and the whole world was laughing at us as a nation, but not anymore. Two years ago, our country was dead. Now, we are the hottest country anywhere in the world. America is respected like we have never been respected before.
In reality, one of the most spectacular consequences of Trump’s return to power and the mess he has made since has been a collapse of global respect for America. The chart at the top of this post is from Pew’s Global Attitudes Survey, but you don’t need a formal survey to know that the world increasingly despises the U.S. Just travel overseas and talk to people.
And it’s not just public opinion. Governments around the world, very much including nations that used to be our most loyal allies, are scrambling to reduce their dependence, economic and military, on an America that can’t be trusted and has also proved itself far weaker than anyone imagined.
Why do global attitudes toward the U.S. matter? For one thing, they obviously matter enormously to Trump. Claims that America was a laughingstock under Biden but that everyone now admires him are near the top of many of his speeches. Trump is not, to say the least, a man with great inner strength. He lives for external validation, or the appearance of external validation. Clearly, the delusion that the world is in awe of his prowess is key to his fragile sense of self-worth.
More important, Trump’s boasts about America’s international reputation are part of the case he is building for disrupting and/or rejecting the results of the midterm elections. Trump isn’t just insisting that everything is rigged against him. He’s also insisting that since he’s doing such an incredible job — presidenting like nobody has ever presidented before — nobody should get in his way or place any limits on his power.
It’s safe to say that at this point nobody who wasn’t already completely in the Trump tank is being persuaded by all this strutting, or indeed by anything Trump said in last night’s low-energy, boring rant. But remember: At this point, none of what Trump says is really about persuasion. It’s all about laying the groundwork for his attempt to destroy democracy.
MUSICAL CODA
Is there something I can actually help you with today?
— Kimi K3, after refusing to leak its system prompt
Tags: kimi, ai-personality, generative-ai, ai, llms
Tool: LLM cliché highlighter
I got frustrated reading yet another article that was crammed with the clichés of LLM-generated writing - "no fluff, no filler, no jargon" type stuff - so I had Fable 5 vibe code up this app for highlighting ten common patterns that show up in that sort of writing.

Tags: tools, ai, generative-ai, llms
Suggestion for hyperscalers feeling pressure over data center water use:
Buy up a few exclusive country clubs, convert the golf courses into public parks, pay for guides and binoculars to get the previous members into birdwatching - help them embrace a more sustainable hobby!
Google used 10.9 billion gallons in 2025, so about 30 million gallons per day.
The Coachella Valley has 120 golf courses each using ~800 acre-feet per year, which is ~750,000 gallons per day.
So Google buying up 40 of those courses (1/3) should do the trick.
Tags: ai-energy-usage, ai
It’s almost like deploying police to protect Trump’s stupid fair on the Mall pulls them out of the neighborhoods they need to be in or something. As of 9am today, D.C. had reported four homicides this week, bringing the total for the year to 52*. Last year, during the same time period, we had 90 homicides, and in the surge year of 2023, there were 133 homicides.
Virtually every other crime category increased this week, though, as has been the case throughout the year, car-related crimes are much lower than in the previous year, and robberies are still lower than last year (though that ground is being made up, unfortunately).
However, we are still well on pace for another 33 percent drop in homicides for the third straight year.
Hopefully, next week will be better regarding, well, everything.
*Three of the 55 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).
1. David Wallace-Wells on the status of reading (NYT).
2. Very good, very positive Kimi ad.
3. Balaji update.
4. An eighth-century Mayan mathematician.
6. Nearby planet with helium-rich atmosphere (NYT).
7. Henry Oliver did not like The Movie.
The post Friday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
Unlike her late brother Lindsey, whose political career spanned 33 years, Darline Graham has never run for or held elected office — until she was appointed to serve the remainder of the U.S. senator’s term this week. Instead, she has worked in vocational rehabilitation, publicly funded programs that help people with disabilities overcome barriers to employment.
Due to her lack of political experience, it is difficult to know what her priorities will be between now and January 2027, when Lindsey Graham’s term ends. But to former colleagues and the disability advocates who have worked with her, there is little doubt in Darline Graham’s capabilities. They describe the 62-year-old as a dedicated civil servant who is uninterested in the spotlight and deeply knowledgeable about issues facing the disability community. And they are optimistic she will bring that experience to Capitol Hill.
“She loved her brother. He raised her,” said Kimberly Tissot, president of Able South Carolina, the state’s Center for Independent Living, or CIL, a federally funded center that provides peer support and services for people with disabilities.
“Family is what defines her, but she’s not her brother. That’s what I’ve been telling people [in disability advocacy],” said Tissot, a cancer survivor and amputee who has known and worked alongside Graham for over a decade. “She is a leader, but she’s not the kind of leader to ever brag about what she’s done.”
Tissot was careful to note that she doesn’t think Graham is some kind of secret liberal nor a disability rights activist. In fact, Tissot said, Graham has never seemed particularly political; her dedication has been to her family and to employment for people with disabilities, which has long been a bipartisan issue.
That has certainly been the case in South Carolina. In 2022, the state passed a law ending subminimum wage for people with disabilities. The bill received a unanimous vote in the state Senate and a nearly unanimous vote in the state House. Both were majority Republican at the time. According to Tissot, she and Graham were present at the bill signing.
“But if you know Darline, she’s always in the back,” Tissot said. “For as long as I’ve known her, she just never wanted that recognition.”
Following the law’s passage, Graham was involved in the process of unwinding the state’s remaining subminimum wage. She served on key committees with Tissot, alongside other civil servants and disability advocates.
One of the bill’s main supporters and original sponsors was former Republican state Sen. Katrina Shealy, a longtime friend of Darline Graham’s and a supporter of disability rights legislation during her time in office. They live close to each other and Graham will sometimes come over and drink wine with Shealy on her back porch and “talk to the donkeys” that the former legislator keeps as pets, she said.
Shealy first met Graham through state Republican Party politics, but not because of any strong interest in politics on Graham’s part.
“She’s just been there for Lindsey always, but I don’t think she’s really that political,” Shealy said.
This is a very political moment for disability rights advocates. Massive cuts to Medicaid from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which Lindsey Graham supported, threaten disability services in many states. The Trump administration has also moved to dismantle the Department of Education and transfer oversight of special education services to the Department of Health and Human Services, a shift that many experts believe will put students with disabilities at risk. Lindsey Graham did not comment on these actions publicly, but he was a vocal ally of the president and his administration.
On Tuesday, Darline Graham said: “I promise to work hard over the next several months to support the president and carry forward the efforts of my brother on behalf of the citizens of South Carolina and the United States.”
According to Open Secrets’ database of political donations, Darline Graham has made one political donation since 1990, when the nonpartisan nonprofit organization began tracking: $100 to Shealy’s state Senate re-election campaign during the 2020 election cycle.
When Shealy was first elected in 2012, she was the only woman in the South Carolina Senate. She is best known as one of the “sister senators,” a group of five South Carolina lawmakers — three Republicans, one Democrat and one independent — who stood their ground to block a near-total abortion ban in the state. She and the two other Republican “sisters” lost to primary challengers in 2024.
Shealy is no longer working in politics. She is currently a community outreach coordinator for the Brain Health Center at University of South Carolina, one of 33 centers in the United States dedicated to studying Alzheimer’s. She became involved in Alzheimer’s advocacy after her husband Jimmy was diagnosed.
Since 2019, Graham has served as the head of South Carolina’s Commission for the Blind, which focuses on employment and training for people who are blind or have low vision.
David Houck, the executive director of the Federation Center of the Blind, a peer-led organization that trains blind and low vision people to use technology, has worked closely with the commission. Houck, who is blind himself, said he has met Graham on various occasions, although he more often works with her staff.
He has nothing but praise for Graham’s career, which, from Houck’s perspective, gives her knowledge and connections that will serve his community well. He even hopes that she will consider running for office once her time as an interim lawmaker is up.
“She has a great deal of experience from her background and I know the blind in South Carolina support her,” Houck said.
“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 Darline Graham’s career centered on disability. Now she could help shape national policy. appeared first on DCReport.org.
Hello! I’ve been working on a Django site recently, and I decided to use SQLite as the database. When I was getting started with using SQLite as database for a website I read a bunch of blog posts about how it is totally fine to use SQLite in production for a small site and I think it is totally fine, but what I did not fully appreciate is that SQLite is still a database, databases are complicated, and I do not know a lot about operating databases.
So here are a couple of small things I’ve been learning about running SQLite. This is the 4th website I’ve used SQLite for, and I think this one is harder because with the power of the Django ORM I’ve been making the database do more work than I was previously without Django.
I started by turning on WAL mode like all the blog posts said to do and hoping for the best.
ANALYZE is apparently importantToday I was running a query (using SQLite’s FTS5 for full-text search) on a table with 4000 rows and it took 5 seconds. That seemed wrong to me: computers are fast!
It turned out that what I needed to do was to run ANALYZE!
Immediately the problem query went from taking 5 seconds to like 0.05 seconds
(or some other number small enough that I didn’t care to investigate further).
I still don’t know exactly what went wrong in the query plan,
but my best guess is that it was some sort of accidentally quadratic thing.
ANALYZE generates “statistics” (I guess about the number of rows in each table? and presumably other things?)
so that the query planner can make better choices.
Maybe one day I’ll learn to read a query plan.
Occasionally I’ve run into situations where I accidentally put a bunch of rows in my database that I don’t want to be there (for example completed tasks from django-tasks-db), and I want to clean them up.
What’s happened to me a few times in this case is:
My approach so far has been to just do these cleanup operations in small batches so that I don’t need to do database queries that take more than 5 seconds to run. This whole experience has given me more of an appreciation for why someone might want to use a “real” database like Postgres which can have more than one writer at the same time though.
Maybe in the future I’ll just take the site down for scheduled maintenance instead when I need to do this kind of thing, but I haven’t figured out a workflow for that yet.
So far I’ve been using Django’s ORM to make any query I want without paying any
attention at all to query performance and it’s mostly been going okay other
than the ANALYZE thing. The database is pretty small (maybe 10000 rows?) and
I expect it to stay pretty small forever, so I’m hoping that that plan will
keep working.
I’ve done SQLite backups a couple of ways. I don’t think I’ve actually tested restoring from my backups but I do usually try to monitor them with a dead man’s switch.
way 1: restic
sqlite3 /data/calendar.db "VACUUM INTO '/tmp/calendar.sqlite'"
gzip /tmp/calendar.sqlite
# Upload backup to S3
# Sometimes the backup gets OOM killed and so it stays locked, do an unlock
restic -r s3://s3.amazonaws.com/some_bucket/ unlock
# Do the backup & prune old backups
restic -r s3://s3.amazonaws.com/some_bucket/ backup /tmp/calendar.sqlite.gz
restic -r s3://s3.amazonaws.com/some_bucket/ snapshots
restic -r s3://s3.amazonaws.com/some_bucket/ forget -l 1 -H 6 -d 2 -w 2 -m 2 -y 2
restic -r s3://s3.amazonaws.com/some_bucket/ prune
way 2: litestream
I started trying out Litestream recently because I felt like doing incremental backups might be more efficient: my restic backups were sometimes getting OOM killed, and I was a bit tired of it. Basically I just write a config file and run:
litestream replicate -config litestream.yml
I set retention: 400h in my config file in an attempt to
retain some amount of history of the database but I have no idea if it works.
I’ve been backing up to AWS, which is always a pain because it’s annoying to navigate the AWS console to generate credentials. Maybe one day I’ll move away to some other S3-compatible alternative.
My current project only has one database, but one trick I used with Mess with DNS was to split the tables into three separate database files because I didn’t actually need my tables to be in the same db. I think it was helpful.
Mess with DNS has been running on SQLite for 4 years now (since 2022) and it’s been great, I think the move from Postgres was a great choice for that project.
It’s always kind of fun to see how long it takes me to learn sort of basic
things about the technologies I’m using. I think I used SQLite for a web project
for the first time in 2022 and I only learned that ANALYZE existed today!
I imagine in a year or two I’ll be learning about some other very basic feature.
Some blog posts I’ve looked at, other than the official docs:

Captured by the multispectral imager instrument on NASA’s Psyche mission, this is an enhanced-color mosaic created from four individual images acquired on May 15, 2026, during the spacecraft’s flyby of Mars.
Psyche was traveling from right to left (northeast to southwest on Mars) during the six minutes that it took to acquire the images for this mosaic, and the pixel scale resolution varies from 381 meters per pixel on the right to 440 meters per pixel on the left. The imager used its near-infrared, green, and blue filters, which helped to reveal highly contrasting craters, ridges, wind streaks, and volcanic plains materials on the surface.
The mosaic covers part of the Iapygia region of the rugged southern highlands of Mars, from approximately 62 degrees east to 78 degrees east longitude and 4 degrees north to 14 degrees south latitude. The largest crater, just below center, is called Fournier and is about 71 miles (114 kilometers) in diameter. The linear feature running from top to bottom of the mosaic just left of center is part of a long irregular cliff (or scarp) system called Oenotria Scopuli, which is part of the circular structure of the large Isidis impact basin to the northeast of this area.
For more information about NASA’s Psyche mission, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/psyche/
The post NASA’s Psyche Mission Images Details of Martian Surface During Flyby appeared first on NASA Science.
From Verónica Bäcker-Peral and Benjamin Wittenbrink of MIT:
Measuring real GDP growth requires distinguishing changes in prices from changes in product quality and composition, yet systematic quality adjustment of price indexes is unavailable for much of the twentieth century. We construct a new quality-adjusted price index for U.S. consumer goods using 5.1 million product listings from Sears catalogs, 1900–1990. We use large language models to extract product information and estimate hedonic price schedules from high-dimensional text embeddings, allowing us to infer annual changes in the cost of living. The resulting cost-of-living index implies substantially lower goods inflation than conventional deflators, and consequently implies much faster real economic growth: between 1900 and 1990, real goods consumption grew by a factor of 39 using our index, compared with a factor of 10.3 using standard goods deflators. The gap between our index and canonical ones is largest before World War II, reversing the conventional view that goods consumption growth was slower before 1945 than in the post-war decades.
Here is a useful tweet storm on the paper, important work.
The post Cataloging Growth: A Re-Evaluation of 1900–1990 appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

SpaceX’s IPO marks the moment the space dream became a mainstream capital markets story. For decades, it has sold a vision of interplanetary civilization on behalf of the wider space […]
The post SpaceX’s only problem is finding more space to work with appeared first on SpaceNews.

Serbia is the latest nation to sign the Artemis Accords, joining the U.S.-led effort more than two years after signing on to China’s lunar base project.
The post Serbia signs the Artemis Accords appeared first on SpaceNews.

SpaceX aborted the launch of its latest Starship test flight July 16 when some of the vehicle’s engines failed to ignite.
The post SpaceX aborts Starship Flight 13 launch attempt appeared first on SpaceNews.
Welcome to Edition 9.03 of the Rocket Report! SpaceX counted down all the way to T-0 on Thursday evening in South Texas before a handful of Raptor engines decided not to light at ignition of the rocket. It is not clear whether the vehicle can be worked on at the pad, or whether Starship will need to be de-stacked before this can occur. In any case, a few days delay beats a significant issue in flight.
As always, we welcome reader submissions, and 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.
Vikram-1 rocket gets a launch date. The debut launch attempt by Skyroot Aerospace of its Vikram-1 rocket is now set for July 18, at 11:30 am local time in India. This will be the first time a commercial rocket developed in India attempts to reach orbit. Designed to carry small satellites weighing up to 350 kg to low-Earth orbit, Vikram-1 is targeting a 450 km orbit at a 60-degree inclination.
Really interesting piece of cryptographic history:
In November 2023, a large cache of his wartime papers—nicknamed the “Bayley papers”—was auctioned in London for almost half a million U.S. dollars. The previously unknown cache contains many sheets in Turing’s own handwriting, telling of his top-secret “Delilah” engineering project from 1943 to 1945. Delilah was Turing’s portable voice-encryption system, named after the biblical deceiver of men. There is also material written by Bayley, often in the form of notes he took while Turing was speaking. It is thanks to Bayley that the papers survived: He kept them until he died in 2020, 66 years after Turing passed away.
53 min 35 sec
Episode Description
What does a morally defensible, healthy, legal, commercial marketplace look like, and how can we design one for healthcare? Nobel laureate Alvin Roth, Professor of Economics at Stanford University and the George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration Emeritus at Harvard University, joins us to about his new book, Moral Economics: From Prostitution to Organ Sales, What Controversial Transactions Reveal About How Markets Work.
And here's a largely A.I. generated transcript (which I've edited very lightly and reproduce here with permission):
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:00:00] This is a moral matters podcast. Good human healing. Well, I was a science kid in college, but I do remember taking econ 101, and I loved it because it made so much sense. But I was also really stubborn and I was not going into the family. Well, shall we say the business of business, so to speak. What about you, Matt?
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:00:32] Well, I loved economics 101. Economics 201 was my downfall. Uh, I got in way over my head in economics way too early. And that was the end of that. So beyond supply and demand, beyond macroeconomics, that was the end for me. And I too was a science kid. And, you know, economics is somewhat science based and can make sense mathematically, but there was a lot of soft, gushy stuff in economics that I couldn't really get my arms around. So it was like, I'm out. Let's get me back to the chemistry lab, please.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:01:19] Yeah. Well, I mean, today we're getting a master class in market design from a Nobel Prize winner.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:01:25] So yeah. So buckle up. Um, this is a rare privilege. Um, you know, it's I don't know that I've talked to many Nobel Prize winners in my life, and I probably would be safe to say probably it's a one and done for me. So I'm going to really relish, uh, this conversation we have tonight.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:01:47] Yeah. Well, our guest today is Alvin Roth. He's the Craig and Susan McCaw professor of economics at Stanford University and the George Gund Professor of Economics and Business Administration emeritus at Harvard University, a pioneering expert in the field of market design. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2012. His latest book is Moral Economics, and in it he asks what a morally defensible, healthy, legal commercial marketplace might look like in controversial markets such as organ sales or prostitution. But we'd like to ask, what does a morally defensible, healthy, legal commercial marketplace look like in health care? And how can we design it?
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:02:27] That is a great question. I'm Matt Ramsey.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:02:32] And I'm Wendy Dean, and this is the 43 CC podcast. Welcome to the show.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:02:41] Thank you. Happy to be here.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:02:45] All right. Can we just start with the very basics. What does moral economics mean.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:02:52] So moral economics is, I guess, an economics that tries to understand where moral questions are important and critical and unavoidable, and where what sometimes appear to be moral questions are really just questions about what trade offs we can and must make and how we should make them.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:03:11] So how does the average Joe know when they encounter a morally healthy market? Or in a broader sense, I guess, a morally healthy economy?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:03:23] Well, I think our intuitions about moral decisions of all sorts come to us fairly quickly. I think it's now a commonplace observation that we quickly decide what we think is right and wrong, and then we look for reasons to explain why we feel that way. So I think that's as true in economic environments as it is in other environments.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:03:46] So you write that stories about market design often begin with failure. Failure to provide what you describe as thickness, which I love that term, by the way, to ease congestion or to make participation safe and simple. that sounds very much like health care today. can you talk to us a little bit about what a failing or unraveling market, as you describe it looks like, and what happens when those on the receiving end, specifically patients are unable to exercise their control in that market?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:04:25] Okay. So that's a good question. Unraveling and control. let me spend a moment talking about how those play out in non-health care markets. when I speak about unraveling, I'm often talking about decisions unraveling in time, becoming earlier and earlier than would be a really timely time to make the decisions. Because decisions take time or because some decisions have to be planned in advance. And, and therefore, people can't wait to take care of all the decisions that they have to, which will be time consuming at a time when they would like to. So just incidentally, American doctors get their first jobs through a centralized clearinghouse that I've had a hand in helping design. And that's because before there was such a clearinghouse, doctors often were asked to say yes or no to job offers years before they graduated from medical school, before they could properly plan. And this was a burden also on the employers. They had to hire doctors before they knew what kind of doctors they would become. That's called unraveling in time.It’s one of the places where you see worries about the timeliness of decision.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:05:36] One controversial medical market right now is the controversy over medical aid in dying. So there are now a dozen jurisdictions in the United States, and there'll be a few more come the fall that have legal medical aid in dying. And there are a number of countries that allow medical aid in dying, Canada being one of them. And the Canadian Supreme Court had a very interesting decision, explanation of its decision to legalize medical aid in dying in Canada. What they said is Canadians are entitled to security in their lives, and if there's no medical aid in dying, then there may be people with terrible diseases who feel compelled to take their own life while they still can, because they won't be able to get aid if their illness becomes unbearable. And so to prevent that, to prevent that unraveling in time, that might force people to take their own life, the Canadian Supreme Court said, we're going to authorize Canadian doctors, under some circumstances, to give aid to people who are dying so that they don't have long, lingering, painful deaths.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:06:44] That is such a fascinating topic. Medical assistance in dying is such a timely topic right now.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:06:54] Where are you located?
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:06:55] I'm in Pennsylvania. Well, we're both in Pennsylvania. Jill is in Boston.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:07:00] Okay. Well, so I'm not sure what the Pennsylvania story is, but New York will have medical aid in dying in the fall. And I think so will Illinois. They're the latest two states. And there are some states that don't have residency requirements. And of course, there are countries that you can go to, to, to access medical aid in dying. So one of the things about bans, of course, is they they put up barriers, but they don't necessarily stop people from accessing things that they want to access.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:07:32] Yeah, exactly.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:07:33] So true. And, you know, just this is just a question that I'm going to throw out there. But, um, on the back end of it, we're offering medical assistance in dying while people are still struggling to get access to the full range of health care.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:07:50] Yes. And of course, one of the controversies about medical aid in dying is, people who are opposed to medical aid in dying laws say, some people just want to access medical aid in dying because they don't have access to medicine, to medical care. And we'd be better off working as hard as we can to give everyone good access so that they don't think of medical aid in dying as an attractive alternative. And of course, there's an association of palliative care doctors in the United States who deal with hospices, and their position is interesting. They have a policy statement that says they are studiously neutral on the question of whether medical aid in dying should be legal, but they worry about the slippery slope that might come with legal medical aid in dying. But they also acknowledge that there's covert medical aid in dying. That is, even in places where it's not legal, there is medical aid in dying because the same pharmaceuticals, the same drugs that can ease pain can shorten life. And so they know, and the doctors I talked to know of cases where someone in great pain is given enough morphine so that they won't wake up in the morning.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:09:03] Yeah. Yeah. There's no easy answer there, which is probably why you're studying it.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:09:12] Oh, yeah. I don't propose answers. I mean, the answers to many of these questions are above my pay grade.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:09:19] You know.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:09:20] I know you've looked at my earlier book called Who Gets What and Why, and that was sort of an optimistic book about market design. It was a book that says sometimes markets are broken and we can fix them. It was a good feeling book for an economist. And this is a less optimistic book, Moral Economics. This says there are markets that aren't working very well at all. They're broken, but it's going to be hard to fix them because we don't necessarily agree on what we want them to do. And that coming to agreement is going to be an important part of, of trying to improve the function of these markets. And it may not be easy to do.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:09:53] Yeah. Well, one of the things that you write about is that the importance of reputation and trustworthiness in health, health care markets, like in healthy markets as a whole. What happens when those elements aren't viewed as priorities, when trustworthiness and reputation take a back seat to something else?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:10:13] Well, so one of the big points in my book that I look at in a lot of controversial markets is that markets need social support to work well, and so do bans on markets. But medical care sometimes suffers from lack of social support that it needs to work well. I have a colleague here at Stanford named Marcella Alsan, who studied the perception of American medical care among black Americans. And one of the things she finds is that everyone she talks to, whether or not they're highly educated, know about the Tuskegee experiments. They know that there were unethical experiments in which black men were left untreated for syphilis, and that that gives them some distrust of the American medical system. And she ran an experiment in a black barbershop in Oakland. Apparently, hypertension, high blood pressure is quite common among black men. And so she had an experiment in which she came armed with a leaflet that said, if you want, I can put you in an Uber right now and take you to a nearby clinic. Where this doctor (and there would be a picture of the doctor on the leaflet) will take your blood pressure and talk to you about it and what you might do about it. And the experimental control was either the leaflet had a white doctor or a black doctor, and she followed not just how many people went to see the doctor, but often they had high blood pressure and the doctor would recommend that they do something about it. She tracked how often they took the advice of the doctor, and it turned out that black doctors were more effective at getting young black men who had apparently very high blood pressure to do something about it. So this question of trust doesn't isn't just a hypothetical question. It's a question of compliance. You know, someone who's giving you advice and is it advice that's good for you or good for them? And believing that it's advice that's good for you makes it more likely that that you'll follow it.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:12:16] Yeah.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:12:18] So I'm, I'm fascinated. I'm fascinated in both of your books, but about the whole concept of market design, you know, that, you know, my economics 101 in college, where it was a supply and demand was. So, you know, that was so kind of superficial. And the fact that you can actually design markets. Um, and have them work effectively is fascinating to me. Um, you know, one, one concern that you talk about in market design is objectification, you know, the fear that the act of putting a price on certain things and then buying or selling them might move them into a class of impersonal object to which they should not belong. That is, they risk losing their moral value. Uh, I guess a question very specific to health care is how can we maintain a moral value in health care in, in a, in a market that demonstrates some elements of objectification?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:13:21] Okay, that's a complicated question, for which I bet we'd have different discussions on different parts of health care. But one place it's come up a lot for me is in organ transplantation and donation. And so, in particular, I've been involved with kidney transplantation and how it's organized, and it's against the law almost everywhere in the world to pay a kidney donor, a living kidney donor, or the family of a deceased donor for their donation. So, kidneys are a little special when it comes to organs because healthy people have two and can remain healthy with one. And so healthy people can donate a kidney to someone who's dying of kidney failure. but we have 130 000 new cases of kidney failure in the United States each year. And we do fewer than 30,000 transplants each year. So most people who might be able to profit from a transplant will die without receiving one, because there's a big shortage of kidneys, we get about 27,000. About 22,000 deceased donor kidney transplants a year in the United States, and not quite 7000 living donor transplants. So a lot of the work I've been involved with has involved kidney exchange, ways to increase the chance that someone can get a compatible kidney from a living donor without involving any payment to the donor, so that just circumvents that problem. and we've made a lot of success: on a different kind of podcast, I could tell you about victory after victory and how we've increased the number of transplants, but it's in a war that we're losing. The incidence of kidney failure has risen faster than the number of kidney transplants.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:15:05] But so, so one thing that comes up when economists see there are not quite 100,000 people waiting for a deceased donor kidney in the United States now, and they would be more on that waiting list if, if it were more possible to, to survive the waiting list and get a kidney. when economists see a long line of people waiting for a scarce resource, we know that prices aren't being allowed to increase the supply of the scarce resource. And indeed, That's true around the world. It's against the law to pay a donor for a kidney. Everywhere in the world for it's against the law to pay a living donor for a kidney. Everywhere in the world except in the Islamic Republic of Iran. And I've read some of the Shia fatwas on that. And they're interesting to read. But the concern that you raised that by allowing people to be paid for kidneys, we might be treating people more as means than as ends, we might be commodifying them, treating them as a carrier of a kidney rather than as a person, that plays a significant role in the distaste, the repugnance of, not allowing kidney sales. Now, it's not just kidneys that people feel that way and legislators have legislated that way. There are other substances of human origin that play important roles in medicine, and one of them is blood and blood plasma. So ever since World War One, when we started to have blood banks and blood transfusions, blood has played an important role in medicine.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:16:43] And increasingly now, plasma plays a very important role. The World Health Organization has a list of essential medicines. If you want to start a hospital anywhere in the world, they have a list of things that you have to have in your pharmacy. And on that list are many plasma pharmaceuticals, pharmaceuticals made from human plasma, which so far still has to be donated by a person, by a living, healthy person. But many countries in the world, including a lot of the countries in Western Europe, not all of them, have laws against paying plasma donors. And so they would have great shortages of plasma. None of the countries that that have laws against paying plasma donors are able to collect as much plasma as they need from unpaid domestic donors. But it turns out there isn't this great shortage of plasma in Europe, Because you can buy the plasma you need from the United States. In the United States, we allow plasma donors to be paid, and we export tens of billions of dollars a year of plasma pharmaceuticals to save lives around the world. And indeed, many of the biopharma companies that collect plasma from paid donors in the United States are subsidiaries of biopharma companies in countries like Spain, where it's illegal to pay plasma donors. But I guess their feeling is it's immoral to pay for plasma. It commodifies the donor. And besides, you can buy all you need from the United States. So.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:18:12] Exactly.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:18:13] So, you know, so out of sight, out of mind is one of the ways of dealing with moral complexities.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:18:21] I could have had 1 or 2 fellow medical students who were supplementing their income in medical school with plasma donation.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:18:29] Count a third.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:18:33] There's a recent paper by two economists about another controversial market I talk about. They're not all medical markets. Another controversial market I talk about is payday loans. People who live paycheck to paycheck have more trouble getting loans than you and I do. And they pay higher interest rates. But if they have regular paychecks, they can get a loan secured by their next paycheck at high interest rates. It's not a great part of the financial system at all. But someone did a study, two economists did a study that looks at the opening of plasma donation facilities, where plasma donors are paid. And they find that in regions where plasma donation becomes available, payday lending goes down. In other words the same urge, the same need that says, you know, I, I need my car to get to work and it's just broke down and it's going to cost something to fix it. That same need could cause you to go to a payday lender and have a loan at a higher annual interest rate than your credit cards have, because these guys don't have credit cards. Instead, you could donate plasma and save lives. So, so you know, there's something. The world is a complicated place. We might want to live in a world where no one felt a need to donate plasma for money. But, uh, just passing a law against it doesn't make the need go away. And it's, it's a pretty good thing to do. I sort of hope that people who sell their plasma are proud of it. I was a very early adopter of Covid, and when I started to get well, the local Stanford blood bank, which doesn't pay for plasma, wanted my plasma as convalescent plasma. And so I donated plasma after I recovered for a couple of months, unpaid, until they fired me when my antibody titer got too low.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:20:27] You're of no use to us anymore.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:20:29] Yeah, exactly. But I no longer donate plasma, although I still donate whole blood because in the United States we get our whole blood from unpaid donors. And so it's a good thing to do, but I don't feel any urge to donate plasma. There's plenty of plasma. I don't want to take jobs away from people.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:20:46] Who need it.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:20:47] Right. So a lot of the argument about not paying for substances of human origin, I think, is, is based on bad economics. It's that people won't want to do it anymore if, if other people are paid for it. And there's some truth in that: I don't want to donate plasma anymore, but there's no shortage of plasma because people are paid for doing it. So, I think that carefully regulated markets in which people can be paid for plasma are a good thing, because plasma saves millions of lives every year around the world.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:21:18] Yeah. So you've mentioned the term the phrase repugnant transaction a couple of times. Could you just define it for the listeners?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:21:28] Okay, so I use that as a technical term. Repugnance, of course, is a word that has existed in English for a long time. And I started using it when I was writing about the repugnance of paying donors for kidneys, but in general, and I've now started to see it all over. There are many causes of controversy, moral controversy, moral contests that I talk about in my book, but one kind that's really interesting to me involves what I call repugnant transactions, which are transactions that some people want to engage in and other people think shouldn't be allowed, and particularly the other people who think it shouldn't be allowed feel that way because of moral or religious arguments, not because they're personally harmed by the transaction. And indeed to make it clear, I say it might even be that they can't even tell if the transaction has happened unless someone tells them. By this definition, same sex marriage is a repugnant transaction. And when I say that, I don't mean that I disapprove of it or that you should, but that some people want to marry each other and other people don't think they should be allowed. And you can't tell whether someone is married unless they tell you which they might do by wearing a wedding ring. So it's not because of the direct personal harm the people who object to same sex marriage suffer when someone gets married. but of course it was a giant political issue for the first part of this century.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:22:54] It became legal in the United States and maybe anywhere for the first time, in 2004 in Massachusetts from a court decision. And it became legal in every state in the United States in 2015 with a Supreme Court decision about equal protection under the law. but it was a tough fight for, for a long time. You know, the idea of same sex marriage had been around for decades before without making any progress. And of course, there are other controversies, many, many controversial markets in the United States get adjudicated by the Supreme Court, and some of them are medical in nature, like abortion. And so what we've seen recently is those can go both ways. Roe v Wade had established a personal right to abortion under some circumstances for Americans that stood for 50 years. And then the Dobbs decision sent it back to the States. And in his concurring opinion to the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v Wade, Justice Thomas had said that there were other judicial decisions that he thinks are mistakes that we should reconsider, including banning. There were laws that banned selling contraceptives, for instance. and of course, similar to the abortion laws, we've now had controversies about, uh, aid in, in reproduction, like in vitro fertilization. So there are a number of medically adjacent markets that, that are contested in this way.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:24:36] Yeah. Well, I'm, I'm going to ask you to, to come up, you know, to 50, zero zero zero feet and think about health care as a whole. Um, so for decades, healthcare has been treated like almost any other market yet it is a little bit different in some ways. It is. And I think there are some people who would argue that it is repugnant. It has repugnancy at its core, meaning that we're profiting in some places from other people's misfortune. Right. So how do we square health care decisions driven by money rather than morals? Especially when the AMA code of ethics says the practice of medicine is fundamentally a moral activity And so we're asking clinicians to behave in ways that will benefit the system, but might work against the clinicians oaths, for example. So the administrators want them to act in one way. They don't want to act in that other way. The patients don't know the difference. Maybe who's being who's being asked to work in what way would you define that as a repugnant system? And if so, how do we mitigate it?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:25:52] Okay. So when you talk about medicine as a whole, you're talking about lots of different kinds of transactions. And as a market designer, I find myself forced to get down in the weeds and deal with details. So, so I can tell you a little bit about, you know, artificial reproductive technologies. I can tell you a little bit about abortion. I can tell you a little bit about transplantation. When you say health care as a whole, I get a little nervous because that's a big bundle of things. But let me start by saying that I don't think there's much traction in the idea that medicine as a whole might be repugnant because doctors profit from people's illness any more than farmers profit from people's hunger or roofers profit from people's desire not to be rained on. Uh, on the contrary, I think of all those people as, as helping people meet their needs, right? Doctors help you when you're not feeling well, or maybe they ideally, maybe they help you to avoid not feeling well by, by practicing preventive medicine. You know, farmers grow food, so we're not hungry. And so we don't have to grow our own food. We can be doctors. I mean, there was a lot less, uh, medical care provided for people before the invention of agriculture. Uh, so filling needs is not a wrong thing, and filling needs as a way to earn your living is often the way we fill our most basic needs. Because if you couldn't make a living as a farmer, there'd be a lot fewer farmers. If you couldn't make your living as a doctor, there'd be a lot fewer doctors. If people who wanted to do health care, if physicians had to make their living some other way, they'd be a lot less experienced in health care.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:27:40] They'd spend their days, you know, doing, doing lawn care or whatever we made doctors do instead of being paid for health care. And they'd have a lot less experience doing knee surgeries or, diagnosing unusual illnesses. So. So I'm very glad that my medical care is provided by professionals who can devote themselves full time to medical care and who can, you know, get educated in medicine. That being said, you know, we're a rich country that doesn't have universal health insurance. So there's lots of things to worry about. And market designers worry about these things. There'd be a lot less repugnance in the world, There'd be a lot less moral contest about markets if there wasn't so much income inequality and wealth inequality. If we were all roughly as rich as each other, then the differences in what we consumed would be just a matter of taste as opposed to what we could afford. So that's a giant problem, not just of medicine, but of global economics, right? we're doing better and better at providing resources and making resources less scarce. And a sign of that is people are living longer than they used to and living longer, healthier lives. That's a good sign of human progress over the last 200 years and over the last hundred years, too. So some of that is medicine, some of that is public health. Some of that is good nutrition. I mean, a lot of things go into helping people live longer, healthier lives. But medicine is a significant part of it. So. So I don't think you have to feel bad about being a physician.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:29:19] Uh, yeah. Um, so I spent an awful lot of time when I was reading your two books, thinking about just that, just that question of would this, would this largely not be an issue if there were more income equality? And it was so I'm so grateful to hear you say that.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:29:40] So, um, in, in, uh, the book Moral Economics, you write about how we should think about building societies that support human welfare, balancing the rights of people to pursue their individual and mutual goals with the need to protect society's most vulnerable members from harms that may arise from markets, including black markets growing without boundaries. So let's talk a little bit about boundaries. Um, you know, what does the point of no return look like in a poorly regulated market. And you know, how soon do new markets need regulation? And who is it? You know, you've just said that regulation can occur on multiple levels from multiple entities. Like who? Who is it who decides when and how regulation happens?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:30:34] Okay, so let's talk about the American experience with alcohol.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:30:39] Okay. So let's.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:30:42] Yeah, we can meet and have a drink later. But in the 1920s through the early 30s, we passed a constitutional amendment that made it illegal to produce or sell most alcoholic beverages, didn't make it illegal to drink them, but it made it illegal to to produce or sell them. Nevertheless, the consumption of alcohol didn't drop to nothing. On the contrary, it stayed pretty much as it had at pre-prohibition levels after an initial dip, and it gave rise to serious organised crime. People who competed for market share with machine guns. The Saint Valentine's Day massacre is a famous example. Al Capone's gang was the victim of that, incidentally, not the perpetrator, But he was a famous alcohol prohibition era gangster. Um, so in the early 1930s, we amended the Constitution again to repeal the amendment that banned the production and sale of alcohol. And so today we have legal regulated markets for alcohol. And they're regulated in lots of ways. Not every restaurant gets a liquor license. Uh, children can't buy alcohol. People under 21, not just children can't buy alcohol legally. Uh, there are different state rules in different places. I lived in a county in Illinois when I lived in Farmer City, Illinois, where, alcohol wasn't sold on Sundays, for instance. so there are regulations. The problems of alcohol have not gone away with the legalization of alcohol.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:32:23] There's still alcoholism and there's drunk driving. There are organizations like Alcoholics Anonymous that help people try to deal with alcohol addiction. So the problems of alcohol didn't go away, but the gangsters did. You can't buy moonshine whiskey from gangsters anymore. On the contrary, you buy it from fancy Scottish, producers who age their whiskey in American oak. And, you know, it's a sign of great prosperity to to be a judge of fine whisky. Uh, so, but the problems of alcohol didn't go away. But we're trying to manage them and we've been trying to manage them now for decades, and we like that better than we like the Wild West criminal market for alcohol. Now, that's the kind of market we have for opioids these days, right? There's great violence associated with the supply of, of heroin, for instance, heroin, fentanyl, I mean, all sorts of things. Fentanyl is funny, of course, because it's a prescription drug as well. I've had fentanyl, I've had too many surgeries and I've had fentanyl in many of them. Uh, you know, it comes and goes quickly. It's a good hospital kind of pharmaceutical, but it can also be mixed with heroin and, and cause people to have to be uncertain about what doses they're taking.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:33:50] so getting your opioids from criminals on the street is much more dangerous than getting them from pharmacists, who would be responsible for what you're getting. So I think we're at a point where we have to rethink the market for heroin. and again, it's because not just that markets need social support, but bans on markets need social support. So one of the things I talk about in the in the moral economics book is why is it so easy to buy drugs but so hard to hire a hitman? you know, we have very little commercial murder in the United States. It doesn't even make it into the national crime statistics. And part of the reason is, if I suggested to you that I was looking for a hitman, you'd be surprised and horrified. And later you might decide to call the police. You know, if I pressed you to tell me where I could find a hitman in Pennsylvania, and the police, when you call them, they would be interested. They would say, you know, when he comes to Philadelphia, tell them to go to this bar and bring $5,000 in 20s and ask for for Sam and Sam will take care of him. And indeed, the way we catch most of the people who try to hire hitmen as they end up trying to hire a policeman.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:35:06] Undercover policeman. But if I said to you, I'm coming to Pennsylvania, and I wondered if you would know where I could buy some heroin in Pennsylvania, you'd also be very surprised. But you wouldn't call the police. And you may even know where heroin is sold in Pennsylvania. Um, so we just react, you know, the ban on hitmen has much more social support from from you, from the police, from, everyone than the ban on heroin, because there are people who live in neighborhoods where heroin is sold and, and, you know, you can learn to live with it. So, coming back to heroin and to other kinds of drugs, we can't even in the US, we can't even keep drugs out of our prisons. And prisons are the places where there's the most possibility of using police and armed methods for keeping control. So the chance that we can use police and military methods to keep drugs off the street, we've pretty much convinced ourselves we can't do that. And so it might be time to start thinking, as we did at the end of prohibition, of how are we going to reduce the harm that this criminal market. We so much don't like heroin.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:36:16] We made drugs of that sort illegal to sell. And as a result, we have a market for just those drugs run by criminals. And are we happy with that? Maybe we should think about legalizing and then regulating. You know, I say in the book that having a legal market for heroin doesn't mean there'd be vending machines in elementary schools for heroin. You know, it would presumably be something more like the prescription drug market. And it might come together with diagnoses that in order to be prescribed heroin also required other kinds of treatment for your disease of addiction to heroin. And maybe we could do a better job because the violence we saw of prohibition era gangs In the 1920s, and 30s is not on a bigger scale than the violence we're seeing around the world associated with drug cartels today. So so we have a lot of trouble in the United States as a consumer of heroin and other kinds of drugs. But there's countries where drugs are produced, where the drug cartels are alternate governments. I mean, they're in military conflict with the authorities. So so there's lots of harm coming. It might be time to think about harm reduction and and at least in some dimensions, treating opioid addiction more like a medical problem than a crime.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:37:40] That drives us right back to the repugnancy discussion, though. So it's not often that we get to speak with the architects of health care's infrastructure. So as a person who directed the redesign of the national Resident Matching program's matchmaking algorithm, we have to ask you about the match program. As a practicing physician, one of the most memorable days in my life was the day I matched in orthopedics. And it is a very.
Speaker 4: [00:38:10] What year was that?
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:38:11] Oh, that was 1990. 1990. Okay.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:38:16] And you're talking about your residency or did you do a specialty?
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:38:19] I did both actually. And I, I can tell you the story about markets unraveling because we didn't have a match for fellowships for many years. And it was a complete circus.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:38:32] I remember I actually helped that organization to get some fellowship matches.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:38:37] Yeah. So, so. You know, one of the, when we talk to folks about the residency match, we have, I mean, one, one of the things that the residency residency match has is an antitrust exemption. Um, and Until recently it's been unchallenged. And I guess a question, and because I have some very strong thoughts about this, can can something like a residency match exist without the exemption or regulation?
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:39:14] So, so I remember the circumstances in which that exemption came. It came in reconciliation, in a pension bill.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:39:26] Of course, buried deep in some other legislation.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:39:30] Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Uh, and before that, the match had operated for many years without an antitrust exemption. What now? Now, I've talked to lawyers about this, and they say it's a real antitrust exemption, but it does have an exception. What it says, well, this is not the legal reading,it says running a match is not itself a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. Well, maybe maybe the Clayton Antitrust Act, I forget. But but if you can show harm to to doctors or to residents or to hospitals, you can still sue under the antitrust laws. But you have to show harm. You can't just say that it's a per se violation. Now, that's not the plain language of the of the legislation. It's my interpretation. but the reason it came about was there had been a class action, a double class action lawsuit against the match and all the medical associations, associated with it and all the hospitals that involved themselves in resident training. And when I say double class action, a class action lawsuit has a class of, of plaintiffs. And this was a class action lawsuit on behalf of all doctors who had had residencies, which is to say all doctors, but it was suing the class of all hospitals that employed residents And what that meant was the legal defense bills for the hospitals. Every hospital had to have its own law firm. And I would meet with some of these guys in those days. And their tickers were running. I was at Harvard and I didn't like to travel for this. So they would come to me and they would be these big groups of, of, of lawyers with their, with their meters ticking.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:41:17] So there was a lot of pressure to try to settle. And the, the class action lawsuit, which was brought by 16 law firms on behalf of, I think half a dozen named residents, they appeared to be interested in a settlement. That was what they were shooting for. And the reason they were suing a whole class of hospitals was to make it easier to to get a settlement, to extract a settlement because the the defense costs were so high. But at the same time, that was sort of a strategic error because every senator has hospitals. So the AMA and some of the related organizations, were able to get legislative relief that said, you'd have to prove harm. You can't just say what the antitrust laws do, among other things, is they forbid conspiracies in restraint of trade. And the main object of the suit was that the match itself was a conspiracy. They say, what could be more conspiratorial than than a centralized clearinghouse that, uh, you know, that tells every doctor where to go. And one of the arguments against that was what could be more conspiratorial than the New York Stock Exchange, which at every moment in the day determines the prices of all the commodities, all the all the securities that are being sold on the stock exchange. So the argument in defense was, this is a marketplace. That doesn't mean that it violates the antitrust law. But the exemption cut off this source of contention through class action lawsuits. So it's true that that one of the House committees is now thinking that that they should repeal that exemption, and maybe they will. I don't think that will necessarily interfere with the match if it doesn't lead to more extensive litigation.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:43:07] Well, I can just tell you personally, unraveling of that market will be a wild experience because I've lived through an unmatched fellowship kind of, and it was no fun. I mean, I can tell you that once the match happened, it was a big sigh of relief that we could.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:43:26] Well, so let me tell you a story about the organization of the fellowship Orthopedic surgery matches of which there are many, because orthopedic surgeons divide up the parts of the body. You know, there's hand and wrist and shoulder and elbow. And, you know, it's sort of like going into an old timey butcher and seeing the cow.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:43:48] Give me some shoulder.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:43:49] With better tools, though.
Speaker 4: [00:43:50] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:43:52] so that was a market that had unraveled and people were getting exploding offers as early as the second year of their five year general surgery residency. So I started to talk to orthopedic surgeons when I heard about these problems. And I would say to them, gee, can you really tell who's going to be an orthopedic surgeon at the second year of their general surgery residency? And the first reactions I got said, well, you know, that's not a problem. I mean, we can tell who's going to be a good surgeon. And then sometime later, they came back to me and they said, you know, actually there is a problem. The problem is not who's going to be a good surgeon. It's that sometimes we've hired people who, when they arrive three years later to be orthopedic surgery fellows, turn out to be assholes.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:44:43] And what they meant By that is they're disruptive in the O.R.. They're not nice to the nurses, things like that. And you couldn't detect that when they were second year surgical residents because as second year surgical residents, they were still polite to everyone, but that if you could have delayed hiring them until they had time to blossom, then you could have avoided some problems.
Speaker 4: [00:45:01] In the Or.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:45:02] Oh, the stereotype of orthopedic surgeons, my lord.
Speaker 4: [00:45:08] These were.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:45:08] Orthopedic surgeons telling.
Speaker 4: [00:45:09] Me this. Yeah, of.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:45:10] Course, of course.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:45:13] Yeah.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:45:14] So there's a problem on both sides of hiring people well before you have enough information. And that's of course each year there are more fellowship matches as, subspecialties that don't have matches run into the same problems that the market ran into in the 1950s and the 1980s and the 1990s.
Matt Ramsey, MD: [00:45:39] Yeah. For sure. Well, al, thanks so much for being here. This was a wonderful conversation. Um, you know, obviously we're talking big issues and, um, you've solved a lot of issues in health care with.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:46:03] Very good. Well, I had a lot of fun writing the book. I learned a lot, and I'm glad to have had the opportunity to talk to you about it.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:46:09] Yeah. Thank you so much. I really loved reading both of the books. Not not just not just the optimistic one, but moral economics was great too.
Speaker 4: [00:46:17] Well, I'm.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:46:17] Still optimistic about market design.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:46:20] But, you know, nobody said it was going to be easy.
Speaker 4: [00:46:23] Right.
Wendy Dean, MD: [00:46:25] Right. Well thank you.
Alvin Roth, PhD: [00:46:26] Thank you.
Philip Auerswald’s A Phone is a Cow is three books in one, it’s a history of the mobile phone, it’s a business biography of Iqbal Quadir, who brought the cell phone to Bangladesh at at time when that seemed quixotic and doomed to fail, and it’s a theory of economic growth. It succeeds on all three levels.
…relatively few technologies have managed to reach the majority of the world’s people. Fire. Writing. The cookpot. The portable radio. These all succeeded. Yet most people in the world have never flown in an airplane. Most do not own a car or a bicycle. And, until recently, most still did not have access to a safe, sanitary toilet in their home. The list goes on.
The mobile phone reached the global majority more rapidly than any technology that had come before. How did this happen?
The title, by the way, comes from Quadir’s insight that just as Grameen Bank lent to villagers so they could purchase productive assets like a cow, Grameenphone could lend villagers the money to buy a phone—which then became a revenue-generating asset in its own right.
Addendum: Auerswald on Econ Talk with Russ Roberts.
The post A Phone is a Cow appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Every 122 years, Venus crosses the Sun as a black and fleeting teardrop, kindling the awe of all those who dare to know
- by Ananya Palivela
The system, introduced in 2024, uses facial recognition to spot people wanted by police on São Paulo’s streets. It issues alerts and officers are dispatched to pick them up. The system can also locate people who have been reported missing, identify stolen vehicles and provide footage to police investigations. Streamed to its control room in the city centre, information flows not just from lenses on street corners but in health centres, on buses and mounted on police motorbikes. By 2028 the number of cameras in the network is supposed to double, to 100,000.
São Paulo is one of many Brazilian cities spending big on crime-fighting technology. As in other countries, police are investing in body-worn cameras and networks of microphones that detect the sound of gunshots. What sets Brazil apart from many democracies is its enthusiasm for face-spotting tech. Researchers for O Panóptico, a watchdog, count 560 active facial-recognition projects in more than 20 Brazilian states. These include police-run initiatives but also experiments in schools, for example, where cameras are increasingly being used to take attendance. They gaze upon some 99m people, more than 47% of Brazil’s population.
Here is more from The Economist.
The post Why crime will decline in (most of) Brazil appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
That is the theme of my latest Free Press column, excerpt:
An AI maniac is someone who is obsessed with working with the latest AI models. They try out new models as soon as they can, they spend hours and hours trying to master them, and they use them to regulate both their workflows and their personal lives. I know one person who has his AI agent text him if he is not drinking enough water, for which he’s placed cameras around his house. One online anecdote tells of a man who canceled a date to spend more time playing around with Claude Fable 5 after Anthropic (where I am a member of the economic advisory board) extended the model’s availability for a few days.
Many AI maniacs are using AI tools to start companies of smaller size, and thus of smaller expense, than ever before. For those companies, the humans must set in motion and then monitor a large number of AI tools and agents. Those individuals then stand to reap outsize profits as their companies grow and succeed. Stripe, the payments company, recently issued customer data showing that the number of single-person companies earning $10 million or more has doubled in the past two years. There is no firm estimate how much of that improvement is due to AI, but it stands to reason that AI is a main driver of the trend…
Anecdotally, I observe that AI maniacs tend to be young, as with participants in so many other cultural trends. They tend to lack standard manners and graces, as they just want to “get right to it.” They are able to imagine a future that is very different from our present. Many of them also are kind, as they see the potential for new AI services, in areas such as biomedicine, to help other people. Their obsessiveness is a small price to pay for all of those virtues, and it is usually part of their charm and vibe.
The AI maniacs also are skeptical of credentials, as they should be. If you wish to learn how to manipulate AI tools, Harvard and Yale are not the places to go. You need to teach yourself, with assistance from other AI maniacs and also with help from the AI tools themselves. There are some AI maniacs in the Ivy League, but too often those individuals have invested their energies into other, more established ways to succeed.
I also believe that immigrants are especially likely to be AI maniacs. Immigrants have fewer channels to rise through credentials, family connections, and establishment modes of thinking and doing. They are more willing to try something new, they tend to be younger than average, and, because they were willing to switch countries, they tend to have higher levels of energy, courage, and ambition.
Worth a ponder.
The post The future belongs to AI maniacs appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.
The European Commission:
The European Commission adopted a delegated act today (14 July) introducing new rules that exempt additional products from EU requirements on the removability and replaceability of portable batteries.
Under the EU’s Batteries Regulation, portable batteries in products sold in the EU must generally be removable and replaceable by consumers. This helps extend products’ lifetime by allowing battery replacements and supports recycling by making it easier to collect used batteries. [...]
The Commission is now adding six new product categories to the existing list of exemptions. This includes wearable devices such as smartwatches and fitness trackers, electric toys, and products within the scope of the ATEX Directive (equipment used in explosive atmospheres such as explosion-proof motors, sensors, pumps or forklift trucks).
See, exemptions aren’t hard, especially to stupid regulations.
Quiche Industries (Greg de J.):
Starting today, Quiche Browser disables AI overviews in search results by default, out of the box.
Compare how much space and time they waste. I love the web too much to let that nonsense bury links to real websites made by humans.
This is my modest contribution to the fight against the dead internet theory. Why no other browser does that is beyond me.
To elaborate a bit:
• It simply opens search results in the AI-free versions of Google, DuckDuckGo, Bing, and Brave, whenever they’re selected as the default search engine. • No content blocker involved. Search results are served as-is. • AI features can be turned back on in Settings → Search.
I wrote about Quiche Browser a few months ago, praising it for, amongst numerous other features and aspects, its built-in JavaScript toggle. This is another killer feature. Traditional no-AI web search is a splendid default. Making it an option to enable if that’s what you want is the right way to do this.
Tuesday’s episode of Dithering was a good one, especially for the DF audience, so we’ve moved it outside the paywall and made it free-to-listen on the web. (We don’t (yet?) have an RSS feed that you can put in your podcast player for these occasional free episodes, alas.) I have a slightly different take on Apple’s lawsuit against OpenAI than I’ve seen expressed elsewhere.
If you don’t subscribe to Dithering, you probably should. Two episodes per week, 15 minutes per episode. Not a minute less, not a minute more. $7/month or $70/year — or, get it included with the Stratechery Plus bundle.

The AP has just posted a detailed investigation into the background of David Brouillette, the recently hired ICE agent who shot and killed Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero in Maine. It’s genuinely horrifying on more levels than are easy to describe. Brouillette was hired during ICE’s recent hiring spree, as the agency attempted to rapidly staff up to manage a program of mass deportation. Brouillette has a long history of severe mental illness, a lengthy history of violence against at least two wives as well as his children, stalking, a seemingly endless list of restraining orders, violent threats against other family members and more.
According to one relative, Brouillette was diagnosed with severe bipolar disorder as a child as well as attention deficit disorder, twice tried to commit suicide at age 12 and was hospitalized multiple times. These early issues appear to have been compounded by service in the military and deployments to Afghanistan which left him with an increased propensity to violence as well as PTSD. A relative told the AP, “They took someone who was extremely mentally ill and turned him into a killing machine.” (An additional, horrifying detail: Brouillette was initially rejected by the military because of his mental health history. “But recruiters encouraged him to go off his medications for a year and reapply, which he did,” and he was then enlisted.) If all this weren’t enough, in 2021 he was broke and in some kind of firefighter training program when he was hit in the head by a steal beam and suffered a serious concussion and some sort of permanent brain damage, “with symptoms including impaired memory, cognitive deficits, headaches, vertigo and light sensitivity.”
Crazy as it may sound, this is only some of what is revealed in this article. Brouillette sounds like a deeply disturbed and dangerous person. The one part of the story that paints Brouillette in a slightly sympathetic light is that he’s clearly been afflicted with serious mental illness from a young age. Some of the mental instability and propensity to violence are due to organic conditions he is afflicted with and for which he is in some sense not at fault. Obviously that gets into very basic conditions about free will, moral responsibility and all the rest. And for the purposes of this discussion, these are reasons he never should have been hired for any law enforcement role, never should have been allowed to own firearms and really never should have been allowed to enter the military. It certainly isn’t an excuse for chronic violence against family members. That detail that he was rejected by the military but then told — someone with severe bipolar disorder with a lengthy history of hospitalizations — to go off his medications and try again in a year just took my breath away.
We knew it would be bad when an agency already known as being the repository of people who couldn’t make the cut in other federal law enforcement agencies went on a breakneck hiring spree in what is basically a near full-employment economy. It was apparently even worse than we could have imagined.
The big announcement of a “prime-time,” “Oval Office” “address” was typical Trump, encouraging Americans to live in his world. In the end, none of what he said was new. He did make the ill-founded claims about non-citizens on voter rolls, described in that “draft press release” which was covered by Politico and which Josh noted below. He also said some stuff about China acquiring voter files that we’ve known for years. He did not even go so far as to baselessly allege votes were changed, or that the election was otherwise stolen, as so many predicted he would. He of course concluded with a demand that the Senate pass the SAVE America Act.
We’ll look through the documents his government released and share any interesting or amusing details. More soon.

Voting rights, voter intimidation and the politics of voting have been central themes of TPM reporting going back more than 25 years. Over a quarter century you develop a lot of institutional knowledge. Today we’re seeing some of the most egregious journalistic negligence, sloppiness and ignorance helping propel forward the Trump White House’s assault on the integrity of the 2026 midterms. The piece I want to point you to this evening is Politico’s claim that DHS found “thousands of non-citizens on voter rolls in California and three other states.”
This claim is almost certainly false for reasons I’ll explain. I want to briefly summarize the multiple levels of journalistic negligence in Politico’s reporting.
Versions of this claim have been made repeatedly by various right-wing groups and sometimes government agencies. In every case the original claims fall apart on closer scrutiny. In most cases they involve crudely cross-referenced databases in which similar names lead to misidentified individuals, or former non-citizens are listed on old databases who have subsequently been naturalized. In some cases, it’s sloppiness. In other cases, it’s malicious disregard designed to generate false claims.
The key point is that there’s a long history of these claims and an equally long history of these claims falling apart in the face of the most basic scrutiny. Indeed, there have been repeated instances of detailed audits in red states, run by marquee Republican elected officials, who haven’t been able to come up with more than a handful of non-citizens on voting rolls. It’s even more rare that any of them actually vote. (That’s important because there are various ways non-citizens can end up on voter rolls through things like motor voter auto-enrollment. And being on a voter roll doesn’t mean anyone actually voted.) If you know anything about this topic you know these claims always fall apart.
The Politico article notes that this is what DHS says. They don’t independently vouch for the claim. But I was surprised that they made no note of the history I explain above. Indeed, they don’t make the most cursory effort to examine the evidence. Indeed, the DHS claim of hundreds of thousands of non-citizens on voter rolls is based on the claim being made in “a draft press release viewed Thursday by POLITICO.”
In other words, DHS managed to get these headlines simply by stating the claim in a press release they didn’t even release! A press non-release, you might say.
In addition to all of this it’s fair to say that the Trump DHS and the Trump White House has a record of false claims on this topic. So on top of all I’ve noted above it’s not like you have a source that has credibility on this question.
This seems sloppy, negligent and more than a little sleazy, even for Politico. So I checked out the bios of the two bylined reporters, John Sakellariadis and Maggie Miller. Based on their bios, neither has any reporting background in voting rights, voting security or any of the complicated and fetid politics of voting mechanics. They both specialize in cybersecurity reporting and secondarily intelligence reporting. Those are important topics of course. But having zero background on the issue in question is how you end up with this kind of egregiously negligent reporting.

Twice each day, tides ebb and flow through a maze of sandy channels, mudflats, and mangrove forests that flank the 88 islands and islets of Guinea-Bissau’s Bijagós Archipelago (Arquipélago dos Bijagós in Portuguese). Seen from above, the process leads to stark changes to the landscape: around low tide, intertidal mudflats and sandflats emerge from the sea, causing islands to grow significantly before shrinking again hours later.
The perpetual rhythm of the tides sustains outpourings of marine life in an archipelago that, as of 2025, was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site. The site protects the only active deltaic archipelago on Africa’s Atlantic coast, a place where tides, river sediments, coastal upwelling, and coastal currents come together to shape unusually productive and biodiverse island ecosystems.
UNESCO estimates that the islands support some 870,000 migratory shorebirds, making this one of the most important feeding areas for birds in West Africa along the East Atlantic Flyway. Hundreds of species of birds dine on a potpourri of marine worms, crustaceans, mollusks, and small fish found on mudflats exposed by low tides. During high tides, manatees, dolphins, and schools of fish move closer to the islands, pushing deeper into the mangrove forests that ring them, and tens of thousands of sea turtles swim inland to sandy beaches as they hunt for nesting sites.
A huge population of green sea turtles nests on the tiny island of Poilão, part of the João Vieira and Poilão Marine National Park. After hatching, young turtles make perilous nighttime dashes to the water, often pursued by crabs, lizards, and birds. Once they reach the water, baby sea turtles face an array of predators, including jacks, barracudas, groupers, and snappers that patrol shallow waters as well as tuna, mackerel, sharks, and rays in deeper waters. According to some estimates, less than 1 percent of green sea turtle hatchlings survive to adulthood.
A 2025 analysis of the region’s tides explored why the archipelago has some of the largest tidal ranges in West Africa. The researchers concluded that the region’s wide, shallow shelf and the estuary’s geometry combine to create a tidal range of up to 7 meters (23 feet), compared to about 1 meter (3 feet) in many other parts of the West African coast. The scientists used altimetry data from the NASA/CNES TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1, and Jason-2 satellites to help validate their findings.
NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.
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Buoyant volcanic rock fragments from an underwater eruption drifted across the Bismarck Sea and choked island coasts.

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

Beaver Island is one in a string of verdant and scenic jewels in a northern Lake Michigan archipelago.
The post A Tide-Fueled Trove of Biodiversity in Guinea-Bissau appeared first on NASA Science.
SpaceX called off a test flight of its powerful Starship rocket and Super Heavy booster as the countdown clock reached zero Thursday at the company's spaceport in South Texas.
The launch team at Starbase, Texas, just north of the US-Mexico border, aimed to launch the more than 400-foot-tall rocket at 5:45 pm local time (6:45 pm EDT; 22:45 UTC). The countdown proceeded smoothly throughout the day, culminating in the loading of more than 11.5 million pounds of liquid methane and liquid oxygen into the two-stage rocket.
But the computers controlling the countdown called an abort during the Super Heavy booster's engine startup sequence. SpaceX scrubbed the launch attempt, and engineers began preparations to drain the rocket's propellant tanks. Officials did not immediately announce when they plan to try to launch again.