Little Blue Dot

Out this week: Little Blue Dot: How the Global Positioning System Shaped the Modern World by Katherine Dunn. From the publishers’ descriptions (plural: it’s out from Bloomsbury in the U.S. and HarperCollins imprint Mudlark in… More

Week Three in 250 to 250

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

We designed the videos to emphasize the agency of Americans—mostly everyday Americans—to change the country. Each falls into a category that defines what it means to be an American, including community, democracy, innovation, mobility, civil rights, education, conservation, and creativity.

This week had some surprises—for me, anyway—which has been part of the fun of doing these. I knew who An Wang was, but not his story, and confess that while I had heard of the New Madrid earthquakes, I had no idea how important they were.

I hope you enjoy this week’s videos.

You can follow the project at the sites listed below, or under “videos” at my own YouTube page: Heather Cox Richardson. Or just wait until I send out the week’s roundup.

Follow Along | #WeAreAmerica250
Substack | YouTube | Facebook | Instagram | TikTok | Bluesky | Threads


Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, Narrated by Tom Perez

Tom Perez is a civil rights attorney, former Chair of the Democratic National Committee, and served as U.S. Labor Secretary under President Barack Obama. Perez tells us about the tragic 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and the workplace reforms that it inspired.



New Madrid Earthquakes, Narrated by Conevery Bolton Valencius

Dr. Conevery Bolton Valencius is a Professor of History at Boston College, and author of The Lost History of the New Madrid Earthquakes and The Health of the Country: How American Settlers Understood Themselves and Their Land. Dr. Valencius recounts the New Madrid earthquakes that reshaped the landscape, displaced Indigenous Americans, and prompted America's first disaster relief legislation.



Samuel Adams, Narrated by Stacy Schiff

Stacy Schiff is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer whose works include the New York Times bestsellers Cleopatra, The Witches: Salem, 1692, and The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams. Here, Schiff chronicles the life of Samuel Adams, the relentless agitator who shaped public opinion and pushed the colonies toward independence.

An Wang, Narrated by Representative Lori Trahan

United States Representative Lori Trahan of Massachusetts is the granddaughter of immigrants who became the first in her family to graduate from college before embarking on a distinguished career that culminated in her election to Congress in 2018. Representative Trahan recounts the life of An Wang, the Chinese American computer engineer who invented magnetic core memory and embraced an ethic of philanthropy.

Everglades, Narrated by Jack E. Davis

Pulitzer Prize-winner Jack E. Davis is a historian, longtime Florida resident, and Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Florida. In addition to other works, he is the author of An Everglades Providence: Marjory Stoneman Douglas and the American Environmental Century. Here Dr. Davis honors the Everglades, the Florida wetland known for its astounding beauty, and highlights the conservationism that ensured its protection.

Follow Along | #WeAreAmerica250
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June 13, 2026

Those of you celebrating the Knicks’ victory in the NBA Championship should enjoy yourselves and leave this one for later.

Before noon on Saturday, June 13, Charles M. Floca, whom Trump installed at the head of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, certified to the court that “the Center and its Board have complied with the Court’s order.” They had, he wrote, “[r]emoved all physical signage on the Kennedy Center building and grounds, including the front portico, that purports to rename the Kennedy Center after President Trump or any other individual besides President Kennedy,” updated the website, removed references to Trump from letterhead, promotional materials, and so on, and “[w]ithdrawn any trademark application officially referring to the Kennedy Center as the ‘Trump Kennedy Center’…or any similar formulation.”

What they did not do was take down the tarp workers installed last night around the scaffolding they erected yesterday, hiding the portico wall. Through a crack between the tarp and the wall, photographers caught a few images of letters coming down shortly after 3:00 AM—Cliff Owen of the Associated Press got an iconic shot of a worker loosening the P from the wall—but so far the public has not seen the restored facade. The portico remained shrouded all day.

In a statement, Kennedy Center spokesperson Roma Daravi said that the center was “fully compliant with the court’s directive” and that the board was evaluating “legal options.” Tonight workers were back at the Kennedy Center, where they created passageways in the tarp to make the center’s doors accessible while keeping the wall where Trump had put his name covered.

Last night, while workers were putting up scaffolding at the Kennedy Center, Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) fighters held a press conference at the Lincoln Memorial in advance of the UFC cage matches to be held at the White House on Trump’s 80th birthday on Sunday. Trump sent the United States Army Herald Trumpets, the U.S. Army ensemble chiefly responsible for playing the entrance and exit fanfares for the President of the United States, to open the event.

The fighters walked from Lincoln’s statue down the steps of the memorial through the Armed Forces Full Honor Cordon, a pathway formed between two groups made up of sixteen service members in dress uniforms. This is the U.S. military’s highest ceremonial formation, usually reserved for heads of state, foreign dignitaries, senior officials, and funerals for military heroes.

This morning the weigh-in for the UFC fights at the White House also took place at the Lincoln Memorial. Heavyweight fighter Josh Hokit seemed to pretend to throw up, dribbling colored liquid from his mouth. “So what? Maybe I was drinking last night,” Hokit told the media there. “Who wouldn’t be? I’ve got a giant man who wants to knock me out,” he said, referring to his scheduled opponent Derrick Lewis, whom Alex Pattle of Yahoo! Sports identifies as Trump’s favorite fighter. “He has the most knockouts in UFC history.”

Today stunt performer Travis Pastrana performed a backflip on his dirt bike over the UFC octagon fight arena on the South Lawn of the White House. Other riders performed stunts as well. They were filmed on their bikes, flying across the facade of the White House.

On the eve of his 80th birthday, the president posted an image of the Obama Presidential Center as a garbage can surrounded by a homeless encampment. Then he posted an image of himself leaving his trial in Manhattan Criminal Court in 2024, when a jury found him guilty of 34 felony counts, under the caption “Only Trump.” Then he posted an image from 2018 of himself walking with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un. Then he posted a picture of himself speaking at a lectern in front of Air Force One while he was campaigning for reelection in August 2020.

Then he posted an AI image of himself on a ship looking out at battleships from different eras, including a wooden sailing vessel, flying the American flag, with fighter jets in formation overhead; the back of his jacket is emblazoned with “COMMANDER IN CHIEF,” and the caption reads: “YOU’RE GETTING DISCOMBOBULATED.”

Then he posted an image of himself on the cover of Fortune magazine from December 8, 1986. And then he posted a black and white image of himself as a younger man in the same era, looking pensive, seated in a chair on an ice rink, with the caption: “Years ago after saving the Wollman Skating Rink in Central Park—Long before I fixed The Reflecting Pool, and everything else in Washington, D.C. including, most importantly, CRIME! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

Tomorrow night, the fighters will enter the ring from the Oval Office. The fight will be carried live on Paramount Plus, for a fee of $8.99 and up.

Notes:

https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/ufc-white-house-fighter-throws-201255308.html

https://thehill.com/homenews/5921974-motocross-athlete-travis-pastrana-says-hes-doing-stunt-on-white-house-lawn-ahead-of-ufc-fight/

https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/ufc-white-house-motocross-stunts-fights-b2994917.html

https://countryrebel.com/everything-to-know-about-ufc-fight-white-house/

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/13/us/politics/trump-kennedy-center-name.html

https://usarmyband.com/ensembles/the-u-s-army-herald-trumpets

https://cagesidepress.com/2026/06/13/ufc-freedom-250-white-sick-of-weather-talk-hokit-gets-topuria-heated/

Bluesky:

muellershewrote.com/post/3mo6js2mvak2u

lukerussert.bsky.social/post/3mo6c4eg7us2w

thejenniwren.teamlh.social/post/3mo7ox7sghk25

bjkeefe.bsky.social/post/3mo7s3fmxyk2r

Instagram:

reels/DZisjt6Ct7y/

Trumpstruth.org:

statuses/39238

statuses/39242

statuses/39241

statuses/39240

statuses/39246

statuses/39245

statuses/39244

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A Trump Stunt

Sunday 14 June 1663

(Lord’s day). Lay long in bed. So up and to church. Then to dinner, and Tom dined with me, who I think grows a very thriving man, as he himself tells me.

He tells me that his man John has got a wife, and for that he intends to part with him, which I am sorry for, and then that Mr. Armiger comes to be a constant lodger at his house, and he says has money in his purse and will be a good paymaster, but I do much doubt it.

He being gone, I up and sending my people to church, my wife and I did even our reckonings, and had a great deal of serious talk, wherein I took occasion to give her hints of the necessity of our saving all we can. I do see great cause every day to curse the time that ever I did give way to the taking of a woman for her, though I could never have had a better, and also the letting of her learn to dance, by both which her mind is so devilishly taken off her business and minding her occasions, and besides has got such an opinion in her of my being jealous, that it is never to be removed, I fear, nor hardly my trouble that attends it; but I must have patience.

I did give her 40s. to carry into the country tomorrow with her, whereof 15s. is to go for the coach-hire for her and Ashwell, there being 20s. paid here already in earnest.

In the evening our discourse turned to great content and love, and I hope that after a little forgetting our late differences, and being a while absent one from another, we shall come to agree as well as ever.

So to Sir W. Pen’s to visit him, and finding him alone, sent for my wife, who is in her riding-suit, to see him, which she hath not done these many months I think. By and by in comes Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten, and so we sat talking. Among other things, Sir J. Minnes brought many fine expressions of Chaucer, which he doats on mightily, and without doubt he is a very fine poet.1

Sir W. Pen continues lame of the gout, that he cannot rise from his chair. So after staying an hour with him, we went home and to supper, and so to prayers and bed.

Footnotes

Read the annotations

luau-wasm 0.1a0

Release: luau-wasm 0.1a0

See Publishing WASM wheels to PyPI for use with Pyodide for details.

Tags: lua, webassembly, pyodide

Mapping SQLite result columns back to their source `table.column`

Research: Mapping SQLite result columns back to their source `table.column`

It would be neat if arbitrary SQL queries in Datasette could be rendered with additional information based on which columns from which tables were included in the results.

To build that, we would need to be able to look at a SQL query like select users.name, orders.total from users join orders on orders.user_id = users.id and programmatically identify the table.column for each result - navigating not just joins but also more complex syntax like CTEs.

I decided to set Claude Code (Opus 4.8, since Fable is currently banned by the US government) on the problem. It found several promising solutions - one using apsw, another that uses ctypes to access the SQLite sqlite3_column_table_name() C function (which is not otherwise exposed to Python), and one using clever interrogation of the output of EXPLAIN.

Tags: python, sqlite, datasette

Technology and Social Change

Why Parents Really Need to Put Down Their Phones | Psychology Today

It’s sometimes hard to believe that ChatGPT was first released to the public less than four years ago. At this point AI is everywhere. This may be the most rapid adoption of a major new technology in history.

Despite AI’s ubiquity, its economic impact remains unclear. We don’t yet know what it will do to productivity, to employment, to wages or to income and wealth inequality. These are important issues, and I will be writing about them in the weeks ahead.

However, it’s important to realize that the ramifications of new technologies are much more than just productivity growth. They can indeed allow the economy to produce more goods with a given amount of resources. As I explained last week, “total factor productivity” is in fact the way economists measure the rate of technological progress. But new technologies also change society by altering the nature of work, where we live, how we interact with ourselves as well as others. Indeed, technological change can have profound social impacts even when its payoff in terms of higher GDP appears modest.

We know from history that the social changes caused by technological change aren’t always for the better. Sometimes technology makes society worse off in important ways. Sometimes it transforms society in ways some people find undesirable.

So this week I’m going to temporarily put the strictly economic impacts of technology aside and instead talk about technology and social change. As with last week’s primer, I will look at historical episodes as a way to gain insight into possible outcomes as AI diffuses through our society.

Beyond the paywall I will consider the following:

1. How mechanized agriculture made America less healthy

2. How modern manufacturing hollowed out cities

3. Contraception and women’s changing role

4. Smartphones and the rise of distraction

5. The social and psychological impacts of AI

Read more

Why AI hasn’t replaced software engineers, and won’t

Why AI hasn’t replaced software engineers, and won’t

Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kappor take on the question of AI job losses through the lens of a profession that is uniquely suited to AI disruption - software engineering.

In this essay, we argue that there is enough evidence to reject the narrative that once AI capabilities reach a certain threshold, it will cause mass layoffs. Given that this is true even in a sector with very few regulatory barriers, most other professions are likely to be even more cushioned.

The first good news is that the data still doesn't support the idea that AI is causing mass unemployment.

In March 2025, New York became the first U.S. state to add an AI disclosure checkbox to WARN Act filings. In the full first year, more than 160 companies filed WARN notices. Not a single one checked the AI box

AI speeds up the typing-code-into-a-computer phase, but it turns out software engineering is about a whole lot more than that:

If writing code isn’t the bottleneck, what is? The task-breakdown surveys point at things like meetings or debugging. This just leads to more questions: what are developers doing in those meetings and why can’t it be done by AI? Won’t debugging get automated as capabilities improve? To understand the real bottlenecks, we have to get qualitative, and dig into software engineers’ own understanding of what it is they do that resists automation.

When we did this analysis, it revealed three things as the real bottlenecks (1) deciding and specifying what to build, (2) verifying and being accountable for what is delivered, and (3) the deep human understanding — of the codebase, the business, and the environment — required to carry out both of these.

I'm finding AI assistance also helps me with the deciding and verifying steps, but it's the "deep human understanding" that remains key to the value I provide. Give me all of the AI assistance in the world and the value I produce will still be reliant on how deeply I understand both the problems and the solutions that the agents are building for them.

Tags: careers, ai, generative-ai, llms, arvind-narayanan, ai-ethics

Publishing WASM wheels to PyPI for use with Pyodide

The Pyodide 314.0 release announcement (via Hacker News) includes news I've been looking forward to for a long time:

You can now publish Python packages built for Pyodide (or any Python runtime compatible with the PyEmscripten platform defined in PEP 783) directly to PyPI and install them at runtime.

Previously, the Pyodide maintainers had to maintain, build, and host over 300 packages ourselves. This created a significant burden on our maintainers and became a major bottleneck for the community, as every new package required manual review.

Moving forward, package maintainers can simply build and publish Pyodide wheels to PyPI, just as they do for native wheels on Linux, macOS, or Windows.

Here's the PR to PyPI itself supporting this, which landed on April 21st.

I adore Pyodide, and have been frustrated in the past by this limitation. It's possible to compile C or Rust extensions to WASM in a wheel file, but before now there was no easy way to distribute them.

Thanks to the efforts of a whole lot of people, that's now been fixed!

Trying it out with luau-wasm

I decided to celebrate by finding something I could package. I have quite a few experimental Pyodide projects lying around, but the best fit for this looked to be my Luau WebAssembly research spike from 9th March.

Luau is a "small, fast, and embeddable programming language based on Lua with a gradual type system", developed by Roblox and released under an MIT license.

It's written in C++. I already knew it was possible to compile it to WebAssembly and get it running inside of Pyodide, so I set Codex + GPT-5.5 xhigh the task of packaging my experiment up and publishing it to PyPI using GitHub Actions.

It took some iteration, but here's the result: luau-wasm is a brand new PyPI package which publishes a 276KB luau_wasm-0.1a0-cp314-cp314-pyemscripten_2026_0_wasm32.whl file which can be used in Pyodide like this:

import micropip
await micropip.install("luau-wasm")
import luau_wasm
print(luau_wasm.execute(r'''
local animals = {"fox", "owl", "frog", "rabbit"}
table.sort(animals, function(a, b) return #a < #b end)
for i, name in animals do print(i .. ". " .. name .. " (" .. #name .. ")") end
'''))

You can run that code in the Pyodide REPL demo to see it in action.

The GitHub repo for luau-wasm includes all of the build and deploy scripts (using the latest cibuildwheel) and also deploys an HTML demo page which loads Pyodide, installs luau-wasm and provides an interface for trying it out: https://simonw.github.io/luau-wasm/

Screenshot of a web app titled "Luau WASM" with subtitle "Run Luau in the browser through Pyodide after installing the luau-wasm WebAssembly wheel from PyPI." A green "Ready" status badge is at top right. Below are example buttons: "Hello World", "Variables", "Tables", "Fibonacci", "Runtime Error". A "LUAU SOURCE" code editor contains: local function fib(n: number): number / if n < 2 then return n end / return fib(n - 1) + fib(n - 2) / end / local out = {} / for i = 0, 12 do / table.insert(out, tostring(fib(i))) / end / print(table.concat(out, ", ")). On the right is an "OUTPUT" panel with a "Copy" button showing dark terminal output: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144. At the bottom left are a blue "Run" button, a "Clear" button, and the text "6.0 ms".

How many packages are using this so far?

I was curious to see how many packages are currently publishing wheels for this platform.

After some tinkering with ChatGPT I got to this BigQuery SQL which I ran against PyPI's public dataset on BigQuery. Here's the raw JSON of query results and here's a SQLite SQL query in Datasette Lite which dedupes packages by most recent upload date.

If the query is right, there are currently 28 PyPI packages publishing with the new pyemscripten_202*_wasm32 tags:

luau-wasm, uuid7-rs, cmm-16bit, pyOpenTTDAdmin, imgui-bundle, numbertoolkit, bashkit, geoarrow-rust-core, arro3-io, arro3-core, arro3-compute, onnx, powerfit-em, tcod, chonkie-core, tokie, robotraconteur, pydantic_core, yaml-rs, cadquery-ocp-novtk-OCP.wasm, uuid_utils, base64_utils, pycdfpp, lib3mf-OCP.wasm, typst, toml-rs, onnx-weekly, dummy-pyodide-ext-test

Here's hoping we see a whole lot more of those showing up over the coming months and years.

Tags: lua, pypi, python, sandboxing, webassembly, github-actions, pyodide

*The Pressure* (no spoilers)

A truly excellent movie, one of the best of the year.  Specifically, it concerns the meteorological forecasts (!) leading up to the D-Day invasion.  Thematically, it is about the differences between Americans and Brits, how bureaucracy operates, the nature of leadership, and the proper role of science in government.  It is like an old-style Hollywood movie.  Most of the action takes place in only a few rooms, and with superb dialogue and performances.  Although you all know how D-Day turns out, the movie still generates suspense on some of the major plot points.  Definitely recommended, here is the movie’s trailer.

The post *The Pressure* (no spoilers) appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Live coverage: SpaceX to launch its first Falcon 9 rocket since Nasdaq debut

File photo of a Falcon 9 fueled for launch at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Image: SpaceX.

SpaceX is preparing to launch its first Falcon 9 rocket since making its public trading debut on the Nasdaq on Friday.

The Starlink 17-54 mission, launching from Vandenberg Space Force Base on Monday morning, will add 24 broadband internet satellites to the company’s low Earth orbit constellation.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4 East is scheduled during a window that opens at 7 a.m. PDT (10 a.m. EDT / 1400 UTC). The rocket will fly on a south-southwesterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.

Spaceflight Now will have live coverage beginning about 30 minutes prior to liftoff.

SpaceX will launch the Starlink 17-54 mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number B1093. This will be its 14th flight after launching missions, Transporter-14, SDA T1TL-B, SDA T1TL-C, and ten batches of Starlink satellites. 

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1093 will target a landing on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love You’, positioned in the Pacific Ocean. If successful, this would be the 203rd landing on this vessel and the 624th booster landing for SpaceX. 

Upcoming Speaking Engagements

This is a current list of where and when I am scheduled to speak:

  • I’m giving a keynote at Cybernation 2026 in Berlin, Germany, on June 24, 2026.
  • I’m speaking at the Potsdam Conference on National Cybersecurity at the Hasso Plattner Institut in Potsdam, Germany. The event runs June 24–25, 2026, and my talk will be the evening of June 24.
  • I’m participating in a panel discussion at the Austrian Institute for International Affairs in Vienna on Thursday, June 25, 2026.
  • I’m speaking at the Digital Humanism Conference in Vienna, Austria, on Friday, June 26, 2026.
  • I’m giving a fireside chat for Epicenter Works, to be held at Kaffee Alt Wien in Vienna, Austria, on Friday, June 26, 2026.
  • I’m participating (via Zoom) in a panel discussion at Quantum.Tech World in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, on Friday, June 26, 2026. The topic is “Q-Day’s Shortening Deadline: Immediate Solutions.”
  • I’m speaking at Czech Technical University in Prague, Czechia, on Monday, June 29, 2026.
  • I’m speaking at the Nuremberg Digital Festival in Nuremburg, Germany, on Wednesday, July 1, 2026.
  • I’m speaking at CanSecWest 2026 in Vancouver, Canada. The conference runs September 30–October 1, 2026; the time of my talk is TBD.

The list is maintained on this page.

Does Donald Trump make Latin America a good bet?

Nowhere in the developing world has done so well out of the past year

Links 6/14/26

Links for you. Science:

First Case of New World Screwworm Confirmed in South Texas Cattle
Nearly 60 Idahoans sick after drinking raw milk in past two weeks, officials say
This is extremely chilling – virologists being targeted for what appears to be minor (if any) “offenses”.
NIH scientists plead not guilty to smuggling monkeypox viruses into U.S.
Police Tussle With Diabetes Experts at ADA Meeting. Researchers told they could no longer attend the annual scientific sessions
Inside the Ebola Epicenter, the Virus Rages With Little to Stop It
Inside the Quest to Mine the Bottom of the Sea

Other:

This new OMB Rule Is Bigger Than Science. Much Bigger.
Graham Platner and the Perils of Authenticity
A Shocking Betrayal of Black Americans
Graham Platner is a Type of Guy. And You Gotta Decide What That Means
John Roberts, Roger Taney, And The Unbearable Weight Of Desperation
Meta Silently Added Face-Recognition Code for Its Smart Glasses to Millions of Phones
Debbie Downer: The sleazy fintech bro Republican running in her home district is as beatable as they come. So why is former DNC chair Wasserman Schultz carpetbagging in a historically Black district?
As Ebola Outbreak Widens, Trump Has Yet to Outline a Plan
Samurai city
The World Cup For Nobody Is Almost Here
Northern Israelis are paying the price for their resilience
DoorDash Isn’t Why You’re Broke But It’s Probably Not Helping
Trump Makes It Official: The ‘Freedom 250’ Concerts Are Canceled — to Be Replaced With ‘the Greatest Rally EVER!,’ Starring Him and (Surprise) Lee Greenwood
George Santos reported to prosecutors over suspicious Kalshi trades, AP source says
ICE’s Plan to Let Cops Around the Country Scan Faces to Verify Immigration Status
The Trumpers Are Taking Over the Media: We Can Do Something Other than Whine
Why are US consumers so angry? It’s not just high prices
Donald Trump Is Bad At Lying (this is good, but it ignores that Trump is a narcissist, and narcissists lie, in part, to convince themselves)
How a Pro-Worker Bill May Advance in the House: Seven Republicans have joined every House Democrat to bring pro-union legislation to the floor next week.
RFK Jr. seeks to peek at Americans’ medical records for clues on autism and vaccines (not only is it a massive breach of privacy and a violation of how medical consent is supposed to work, I bet that dumbass Geier is going to be the one looking at the data)
Why Stone-Faced Fascists Keep Getting Antiquity Wrong
Rep. Vindman (D-VA) Posts Happy Pride After Voting To Defund Trans-Friendly Schools
Festering Infections to Untreated Cancer: ICE Detainees Describe Medical Neglect Across US
What does government oppression really look like?
John Fetterman Hands Trump a Huge Victory on Federal Judge
Trump’s Name Is Disappearing From More Than Just the Kennedy Center
The Jan. 6 Pardons: How Many Clemency Recipients Have Faced Other Charges?
Americans Have Grown Dramatically Anti-Data Center in Just Months, Survey Finds
Trump Mental State Exposed in Damning Video as Rubio Spins
Trump Is Eyeing Control of Smithsonian’s Budget. The administration is creating a conflict with how Congress intended its money be spent.

Missile production push runs into solid rocket motor bottleneck

A new CSIS report says planned 2027 interceptor buys will test a supply chain still recovering from years of consolidation

The post Missile production push runs into solid rocket motor bottleneck appeared first on SpaceNews.

Touching Time

I touched some literal grass today. I don’t think the phrase means what the young people think it does.

I was touching grass not because I particularly wanted to, but because my wife needed some help repotting her tomato plants. Neither of us is particularly interested in gardening. My wife is primarily on a mission to secure better tomatoes for the coming months than are generally available in Seattle. I’m free-riding on her efforts for a ready supply of fresh cilantro. Though to be honest, if she weren’t gardening, I’d just get my cilantro at the store like I used to. I’d probably just let the local forest take over our yard.


Little signal boost: I’m organizing the Protocol Symposium in September, on the theme of New Nature. One day left for talk and workshop proposals (deadline, Sunday 14th June, midnight).


I don’t mind light gardening chores like watering the lawn or a spot of digging around, but it’s not my idea of relaxing fun. The wife though, has been drawn into the ceaseless global war of backyard gardeners against weeds and various critters that try to eat your produce. In our case, local wild bunnies, which she initially thought were cute but has now declared her sworn enemies. She is wishing death-by-coyote on them, but the local coyotes have so far not obliged. It’s nature red green in tooth and root in our backyard.

This essay is not about whatever “touching grass” is a metaphor for. I don’t know, probably some touchingly vulnerable thing like curing loneliness and alienation by seeking more non-parasocial IRL friendships and romance, with maybe a bit of actual outdoor time to regulate sleep better and mitigate the fatigue of too much screen time. Worthwhile life-hygiene things perhaps, but not particularly interesting to me. These are not problems I personally suffer, though I sympathize with those who do.

This essay is a little bit about literally touching grass, but it’s mainly about a complementary activity I’ll call touching time.

***

To literally touch grass in most parts of the world, especially in the sort of somatic-meditative mode the meme-phrase suggests, somebody probably needs to be fighting a deadly war against not-grass. Grass in a pure, monocultural form is not a natural thing.

I grew up mostly in single-family homes with lawns-equipped gardens and regular gardeners. My mom was an avid gardener, and remains one in her 80s (though now limited to a bunch of balcony plants in my parents retirement apartment). I enjoyed helping out with the lawn watering mainly because you could have fun playing games with the water.

Grass anywhere, in the sense suburbanites everywhere encounter it, is an extraordinarily unnatural thing, but it is particularly so in India. The tropics are not a natural habitat of temperate European lawn grasses, and it’s an uphill struggle against blazing sun alternating with torrential rain to keep lawns going. Tropical monsoon ecologies alternate between dry and dusty and lush and overgrown. Neither mode is lawn-friendly. The natural sort of curated domestic plant ecology is a fruit orchard plus herb garden full of small gods.

Grass is not natural in the Seattle area either, where I live now. The latitude is right, but it’s too wet. The natural ecology here is dense temperate rainforest full of sparkly vampires and werewolves.

But even in the form you might typically encounter it in its native habitat, grass in the sense of a lawn monoculture is a highly unnatural, authoritarian high-modernist Veblen good. The stylized expression of Euro-heritage billionaire atavism, not starving poet soul-salve that heals through touch. What is natural is the meadow, a wild multi-species ecology. And meadows are not that fun to touch, as you’d know if you’ve tried. The one time I tried was when I misguidedly tried to do a spot of orienteering in 2005, with a survey map in hand, on the outskirts of Ithaca. It was not fun.

Meadows harbor many itchy-scratchy-sneezy-creepy-crawly things. Hostility animal, vegetable, and mineral. The mix of grasses and other plants typically grows taller than a lawn (between knee and waist-high). And much of it is not the soft kind.

Laying on your back on a well-manicured suburban lawn, running your fingers through the cool grass, is fun. On a wild meadow, not so much. You’ll probably touch something unpleasantly pokey or bitey.

Between the wild meadow and the authoritarian high-modernist lawn, we have the heavily grazed pasture. That probably has horse and cow manure all over it.

***

Here is a picture of the grass I touched this morning. We just reseeded it a few weeks ago, and it’s already enduring an assault from some sort of weed species, probably buttercup, according to ChatGPT.

The very idea of a weed, of course, is an authoritarian high-modernist one, but my wife, an authoritarian high-modernist to the core, is planning a battle against it. Our lawn is going to be monoculturally legibilized in war mode whether it likes it or not. Darwin’s tangled bank is not permitted to enter. Wildflower meadow patches are for the weak-minded.

See, that’s the thing about actually, literally touching grass. Unless it’s someone else’s grass you’re free-riding on, you’re actually signing up to participate in a silent, never-ending war against meadowfication or forestification. Tangled-bankification. It is ceaseless, tiring hard work; a specialized kind of farming. If you want five minutes of grass-touching a day, you’ll probably need to spend an hour a day fighting the war to keep it available (or paying someone to fight it for you).

People meditatively posting about “agency” aren’t well-suited to doing it. In the US, this war is mostly waged by immigrant Mexican workers on behalf of people posting online about touching grass.

Grass of the sort that shapes the Western narrative imagination, whether of the naturalistic English garden variety, the formal French garden variety, or the golf-course variety, is fragile monocultural life maintained with grim determination against the encroaching pressures of wilder, more pluralist ecologies.

Yes, it’s pleasant to touch. No, it’s no more a natural experience than touching astroturf. Which actually isn’t bad. I enjoy astroturfed outdoor malls.

Touching meadows would probably be a better prescription for the times, but I doubt it will catch on.

***

My prefered form of interaction with nature is not ceaseless war-mode agentic striving to maintain authoritarian high-modernist gardens but walking and mild hiking through mildly challenging wilderness areas. Well, “wilderness” in the sense of human-adjacent zones of preservation with some well-maintained easy hiking trails through them. Actual wilderness (as in the deep interiors of national parks, far from well-maintained trails and campsites), which I’ve experienced a few times when I was younger and actively “seeking meaning” myself, is stressful in a whole different you-could-die way. I exhausted what little desire I had to test my wilderness survival instincts by age 22.

The thing about both gardening/farming and being in extreme wilderness is that they’re necessarily zones of inescapable high-intensity agency that you either have to take on yourself or pay someone else to. They are not spectator sports. Light hiking trails, on the other hand, enable more passive experiences. Somebody (preferably not me) still has to labor a bit, but it’s not as intense as farming, gardening, or cutting your way through deep wildernesses with a machete, keeping an eye open for jaguars. It’s not a warzone. It’s a sort of neighborly detente zone of engagement with minimally domesticated wilderness.

Over the past few decades, I’ve been fortunate enough to have nearly always lived near pleasant light-hiking trails. The one exception was a year in Austin, 2000-01. There, I lived in an unpleasant neighborhood next to big-box stores and highways. I don’t know whether there are any areas in Texas I could enjoy living in.

My favorite lightly domesticated wilderness was Ithaca, where my commute from downtown to my office on the Cornell campus was a hike up a trail next to a cascading waterfall.

What was nice about it was not touching grass, but touching time. Deep time. The gorges of Ithaca (the town’s slogan is Ithaca is Gorges) were carved out in the last ice age. Hiking around near Ithaca, you hike through deep time. Tens of thousands of years evident in the landscape. Millennia visible to the literate eye in the strata exposed by the retreating glaciers.

Mine is not a literate eye. I’m no geologist. But I can feel it in my gut when there is in-your-face deep time geology stuff going on, and I like it.

***

As a kid, my fondest memories of our backyard lawn is not of touching the grass, but of looking up at the stars. In high school, I’d regularly lug my cheap telescope out to the lawn to do a spot of star-gazing.

Now there’s an activity that’s almost entirely about touching time. The skies above offer zero room for human agency. Even trillionaire Musk, with his dreams of Mars colonies, has agency that amounts to a rounding error past zero relative to the cosmos. There’s basically nothing you can do with the heavens besides photograph them.

Not only is it all impossibly far away in space, largely beyond any sort of touching, the vast majority of it is also impossibly far away in time. The nearest star you see is 4.2 years in the past. The Vogons could have demolished it yesterday and we wouldn’t know.

The heavens are a sort of asymptotic zone of non-agency. You have only two choices in relation to them — ignore them entirely and refuse to learn about them (as the very practical Sherlock Holmes did), or treat them as a spectator sport (a very slow one; slower than cricket).

The only available attitude to the heavens demands not agency, but presence.

To a certain contemporary type, mere presence in the cosmos is an anxiety-provoking, even alarming state of being to contemplate. If they’re not aggressively making grand plans to construct Dyson spheres and generation ships headed to Alpha Centauri, they find the spatio-temporally distant read-only universe too distressing to even attend to.

***

Presence without agency is also the only way we can relate to the past. We can be present in memories, individual and collective. But we cannot alter the phenomenology that induced them. We can endlessly spin revisionist narratives, but we can’t alter the past itself.

This too, is anxiety provoking for the agency-anxious, and so they turn to notions of progress and predestination, trying to go beyond mere revisionist history to what we might call proofs of history: Authoring hoped-for futures in part to “prove” preferred pasts.

When I was younger, I enjoyed reading “Big Histories.” Now I no longer do. They’re all anxiously motivated revisionisms, simply by virtue of being Big. No story at that sort of scale can be told except in the form of a self-soothing fantasy.

Instead, I enjoy reading about specific periods and episodes. Little histories. I like my sense of the Big to emerge not through epic grand narratives, but as a sort of collage of deeper temporal dynamics revealed through many fragments coalescing into a sort of atomized encyclopedia of moments.

Little histories allow you to touch time in ways big histories don’t. That is their main advantage.

This doesn’t mean you have to immerse yourself in the sort of joyless grind of uninspired documentation that is much of scholarly history. There is plenty of little history that combines scholarly attention to detail with a sense of the poetry of time. Our book club is mostly about reading that sort of romantic little history. And if you harbor psychohistorical conceits as my world machines buddies and I do, I think the trick is to get at your Seldon Vault prophecies by touching time through little histories. Not self-indulgence in anxiously revisionist Big Histories.

You do need a certain amount of Big History reading as preparatory orientation for understanding little histories. If you survive the many perils of that kind of reading — historicism, progressology, ideology, theology, exceptionalism — what you end up with is a rough map on which to start placing the little histories you can begin collecting. My idea of Big History now is like an empty stamp album. Stamps are actually ideal motifs of little history. Every stamp usually tells some specific story (though not always the one it is trying to tell). The Big History is implicit in the organization of the collection, rather than explicated in an epic grand narrative.

Touching stamps is a good example of touching time. Touching time is about the physics of stamp collecting.

What I mean by touching time is this: A cognitive-sensory experience that has temporal depth in the frequency domain, with time constants ranging from seconds to millennia available to the attuned awareness to attend to. “Infinity in an hour” as William Blake put it.

Many experiences are temporally shallow. A well-manicured lawn, for example, is largely a war of short time constants between fast-growing grasses and roughly equally fast-growing weeds. Deeper, slower dynamics, as well as faster, shallower ones are present, but harder to become aware of and attend to. Hiking through a gorge with exposed strata, on the other hand, the depth of time is in your face. Time is thick enough to cut with a knife.

***

I think one undertheorized reason people feel the urge to touch grass is a sense of helplessness in relation to events at larger scales, in an era which urges us to cultivate agency in relation to everything.

To be is to do apparently. The only way our age knows of to merely be is to be somebody, which is a degenerate sort of doing, in the form of personhood performance in theaters of agency.

To merely be, in the sense of existing anonymously and idly in a universe over much of which you have zero agency, without either studiously ignoring it, or striving intensely to try and make it take special notice of you, is widely regarded as a disease.

Touching time is about rejecting that pathologization of banal, non-special presence, and choosing to exist in the cosmos without being somebody or doing something. Not because it’s some enlightened state of being (it just takes some laziness and mediocrity of disposition), but because it’s actually a very pleasant way of being.

I came up with an allegory for this.

Imagine you’re on a vast spaceship traveling in hyperdimensional space. You’re a normal human, so you can only intelligibly sense the regular four: three spatial dimensions plus time. But the ship itself is weaving in and out of many more curled-up dungeon dimensions, as Terry Pratchett dubbed them. Sometimes maneuvering aggressively, at other times cruising along.

You do, however, unintelligibly sense the other dimensions, all of them, in your gut. You are present in all dimensions as a full-dimensioned dungeon-dimensions creature rather than a four-dimensional limited one.

Your experience of the dungeon dimensions of the spaceship’s journey is the familiar one of nausea.

And you can regulate this nausea. Turns out, if you let your mind wander to abstract thoughts and intangible ideas, graspable only through words, the nausea increases. But if you retreat from abstraction and intangibility, the nausea goes down.

So naturally, a division appears between two groups of people on the ship.

The first group, unable to tolerate the nausea, retreats from it. And is so successful at retreating, it begins to doubt that the spaceship is in fact maneuvering in hyperdimensional space. It begins to believe the dungeon dimensions do not exist at all. That the ship in fact merely exists in 4d space and chugging along placidly in it. That the sensible thing to do is to stay grounded in things you can see and touch, such as the astroturf (heh!) covering much of the ship’s built environment.

The second group, with greater tolerance for the nausea, heads deeper into it, to try and experience the dungeon dimensions as fully as possible. To get past mere visceral feelings and vibes to consciously regulated intelligible experience. This group immerses itself in abstractions and intangibles as far as it can tolerate, and begins to make for itself dungeon-dimensional maps, with the spaceship’s estimated trajectories marked on it. Slowly, it begins to convince itself that not only are the dungeon dimensions real, but that its maps are accurate, and that it can reliably orient in and navigate them.

And naturally, a war begins to unfold between the two groups.

The spaceship, of course, is just Buckminster Fuller’s Spaceship Earth. And the two groups of course, are the grass-touchers and the abstract map-makers.

Touching time is how you bridge the divide between the two.

We are living through times when Spaceship Earth is maneuvering extraordinarily aggressively through the dungeon dimensions of hyperdimensional spacetime, even though in the three dimensions we can see, it is continuing its age-old orbit around the Sun, marking time at one year per orbit.

We all feel it in our guts. To retreat to touching grass is to surrender to a sense of the maneuverings of history being unsteerable. To retreat in the other direction to make endless maps is to mistake your comforting fictions for vast and limitless steering authority.

But to touch time is to feel your way into whatever steering authority you do have, without needing to retreat from everywhere you have none.

w/e 2026-06-14

Some progress made this week.


§ For months, at least, I’ve been putting off updating my three Django websites to use uv to manage their versions of Python and third-party packages.

I’ve been using uv for development for ages, and like it a lot, but have never liked doing things on web servers because I don’t understand a lot of it and have no desire to learn more. Every time I thought, “OK, I’ll finally do this!” it was near the end of the day, or the end of the week, and I’d put it off in case I needed to call on Mythic Beasts’ support to rescue me. So I’d continue generating a requirements.txt every time I updated things with uv so that the live sites could continue using pip-tools.

But last week I updated this site, apparently successfully. It went too easily, with no errors at any point which always makes me uneasy. If a process I’m wary about generates no errors that’s usually a sign the change I was making hasn’t actually happened, and everything is quietly continuing to run as it did before.

So this week I changed the other two sites and, with the experience of the first site, they went even more smoothly. So that was either a fairly simple process I shouldn’t have put off for months or else it will all suddenly go wrong at some future point when a process realises everything has changed to a new, broken set-up.


§ In the garden I did another half hour of sledgehammering and crowbarring concrete from the old, broken pond. Not much left to go now in this initial exhausting stage of that big project.

Although I was relieved at the local builders’ merchant’s service last week, this week I went to collect my order and (a) they hadn’t sawn the timber by Tuesday as firmly promised, and (b) despite the helpful guy suggesting 300mm 2×2″ pegs for securing the timber edging, they don’t actually sell 300mm 2×2″ pegs so I ended up with 450mm 2×2″ pegs instead, which seem a bit over-the-top.

But over one morning and one afternoon I’ve made good progress on the edging, sawing the timber to correct lengths, hammering some of the pegs in, and screwing things together. I’m probably, vaguely, half-way through that part of the process now. I only cursed the extra length of those pegs for the final 50 or so extra whacks of the sledgehammer required to get them far enough in.


§ I had the lowest low point for a while on Friday, perhaps crashing after a couple of busy / slightly stressful days, and I gave up on thoughts of doing anything at all. It’s hard to know, on such a day, when I do nothing, whether I’m lazy, depressed, or “being kind to myself”. But it was the severest case of “what’s the point of doing anything?” I’ve had for a while, a high (or low?) bar to clear.


§ Some quick bits:

  • Cows are now in the field across the road, which we can see from the garden. Quite late compared to previous years, but always a nice site to occasionally see the black and white shapes move over the hill, and make quite a noise at breakfast and dinner times.

  • Although I am now retired I find it very hard to say this to strangers who ask what I do, continuing to say I’m a freelance web developer. It was all I could do not to put “retired” in quotes in that previous sentence, because it seems so ridiculous.

  • Related, this week I told my accountant I’d be going it alone from now on. Having closed my limited company a couple of years back, I figure it’ll now be simple enough for me to do tax returns myself.

  • Many years ago I made an RSS feed for Doonesbury. Eventually it stopped working and then so did the alternatives. Via Pete Ashton I recently discovered there’s now a working feed (repeats except for Sunday’s new strips) on ComicCaster.

  • Apart from when commenters are outraged that a cryptic crossword heavily features clues related to Taylor Swift or similar, I find it interesting when solvers haven’t heard of certain familiar-to-me words, while being happy with, say, obscure cricketing terms. So I was amused at Friday’s Cracking the Cryptic when he described “diptych” and “ha-ha” as terms he only knew from crosswords. The science/arts divide in action.

  • As well as Michael Barrymore my other favourite mature guy providing gentle uplifting TikTok content at the moment is Trevor Horn.

  • David Hockney passed away. I loved his photo montages when I came across them at university but the paintings never grabbed me until I went to the Tate Britain retrospective in 2017 (that long ago?!). So good. It’s like me not really getting Van Gogh’s work until going to the Van Gogh Museum and being blown away.

  • On Saturday I stubbed my toe on the bed leg so hard it was bent off to one side. Dislocated? I don’t know. After I’d finished swearing and moaning I clicked it back straight again, which is pretty much the same as a movie action hero re-setting their own broken arm. Today I am hobbling around gently. Idiot.

  • Years ago I liked taking photos of empty offices through their windows. While these are definitely out front, I guess they now qualify as “backrooms”?

A photo looking across an empty office. The floor is uncarpeted, shiny metal plates. The walls are plain white. The lights are dimly on. Windows in the distance show night outside.
Empty Milton Gate office - 5 (2008)

§ I forgot to say last week that I went to my second Weirdshire gig: Dave Nock & Mike Bethel, an improvisatory guitar duo supporting benjin who played the nyckelharpa alongside field recordings and samples. All interesting, and it was nice to listen to all that while looking out at the the summer evening colours fade over the 15th century Wye Bridge and young people sitting outside chatting.

Last night I took Mum to see Emily Portman playing solo. As with the above, I’d never heard of her, and it was nice enough but a bit too “folky” for me.


§ We started The Pitt this week, watching the first two episodes back-to-back. As the credits rolled after the second I had something like a mini panic attack: tears, hard to breathe. I guess it was the accumulated stress of the whole thing alongside the storyline about siblings seeing their elderly dad reach the end of his life. A couple of years on that’s still very tough to think about at times. It’s difficult to see a photo of my familiar smiling Dad and realise that he’s no longer in the present, only the past.


§ We also finished the fourth and final season of My Brilliant Friend. It’s been four years since we saw the previous one and coupled with the new, older, actors, we were always struggling to recall previous events which was a shame. Watching all four series in closer succession would make for a much better experience but it was still good.


§ That’s all. Hold on everyone.


Read comments or post one

In an interplanetary first, on July 19, 2013 In an interplanetary first, on July 19, 2013


Sunday assorted links

1. Chinese overtake Dominicans as NYC’s most numerous foreign-born group.

2. David Hockney embraced tech (NYT).  And do not forget his writings, not to mention his persona and also his role in gay history and liberation.  He was truly one of the great Englishmen, as he had been doing first-rate work since what, 1954?

3. Progress against lung cancer.

4. Average German date? And a six-minute video of a non-average German circus artist.  And an eleven-year-old German on the handpan, without training.

5. Measuring how New Yorkers responded to their game 4 playoff victory.  I have not seen data on game 5, though that was less of a surprise.

6. How The Bulwark is doing, and its economics (WSJ).

7. Become a telescope rancher those new service sector jobs (short video).

8. Bob Dylan (and others) on turning 80 (NYT).  Dylan’s answer is clearly the best.

9. Paul Graham on how to become a billionaire.

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Caged Heat

Grift is never far away for this White House.

No, I won’t be watching mixed martial arts on the White House lawn, the manmade spectacle ostensibly scheduled  to mark the nation’s 250th or Donald Trump’s 80th birthday.

There is nothing about this hyped “special event” to find attractive, despite the recognition that MMA has become the nation’s third most-followed “sport.”

So were the lions eating gladiators at the Coliseum.

But as a unique perversion of what we expect from government and from a White House that is meant to sustain community values, this staged extravaganza has an undeniable lure for understanding just how we have slipped in ethical principles, poor taste, and perhaps even legal violations.

Citing a lack of legal standing, a federal judge declined to hear a late citizen lawsuit filed to halt or limit the events to allow private takeover of the Lincoln Memorial and the While House itself from a branded, private promotion of bloodsport, but it helped detail the many unpleasant truths about where we find ourselves in the seemingly constant need to glorify Trump in our name – as well as provide the Trumps with new money-making opportunities.

The Cage Matches

For openers, calling this $60-million, partisan and personalized ego-trip a special 250th spectacle for American democracy seems a parody. The official Fourth of July holiday with celebrations, concerts and fireworks specified as nonpartisan, open to the public, and built around an existing holiday meant to honor the country’s independence, is only two weeks away. Why wouldn’t that be the central focus for a 250th celebration?

So, even the premise of a need for a separate White House event, even if largely underwritten by corporations seeking government contracts, is bogus.

Then there was the parade of third-tier performers deserting the effort when they learned that their would-be patriotic appearances for America would be turned into personal partisan hugs for Trump, prompting Trump to offer himself and a wandering campaign-style speech instead.

It turns out that Trump, who invested in the parent company of the for-profit Ultimate Fighting Championship presentation just before announcement of the event, stands to gain personally from its promotion – a birthday present to himself delivered in our name. And the Trump family is issuing a series of commemorative coins with the heads of Trump and CEO Dana White of UFC for between $250 and $12,000 each. Grift is never far away for this White House.

Plus, paying for much, but not all, the costs are corporate donations with labeled banners from companies donating a million bucks a pop for what would pass as payoff tribute anywhere outside this White House. Along with million-dollar viewing packages for corporate buyers, the event has become a celebration of values antithetical to the purpose of government or our appropriate regulation of corporate power.

It’ll be televised only by subscription cable networks run by the same people who have taken over CBS and maybe CNN and have vowed to make editorial changes to satisfy the same Trump who controls whether they get federal approval for pending corporate mergers.

There is the unprecedented access that Trump is giving to the UFC entrepreneurs to run their promotional campaigns through the White House and Lincoln Memorial, and then to control tightly who can attend – including members of the military selected for their adherence to Trump’s idea of an acceptably fit physique, another crazy aspect of the Trump personal agenda that his own body certainly could not fit.

The Values Questions

At the center of all this – inside a giant, newly constructed octagonal caged ring – will be seven no-holds barred male fighting couples. What does this have to do with America and its 250 years of democracy? What does it have to do with Trump’s love for bloodsport, so long as someone else is bleeding? What does it say about what he values in America?

A Reuters/Ipsos poll says that only 16% of Americans approve of holding a cage match at the presidential residence. There have always been sporting and arts events at the White House, of course, but nearly all have been low-contact affairs from tennis and softball to Easter egg rolls, and mostly all for kids. In 1926, a prizefight was held to help revive the 150th national birthday between a boxing champion and U.S. Marine veteran — who won.

Young men seem to be drawn to MMA, a highly violent sport whose goal is to physically incapacitate an opponent with fairly broad rules. They say MMA it offers an outlet for stress, a path to physical and mental resilience, and a space for authentic achievement. Politically, it is this “manosphere” that helped fuel Trump’s election.

MMA also appeals to White supremacists and carries a tinge of racism lingering from days in which slaves were required to fight one another in gladiator style.

But beyond the violent aspect of this cage fight, 6 in 10 adults say the country’s best years are behind it, few believe it is exceptional, and the president’s disapproval rating is historically high. Promoter Trump has pitched these matches as a source of national pride, showing once again his detachment from a world much more worried about economics, identity and health care than he recognizes.


“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.

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In Case You Missed It…

…two weeks of Mad Biologist posts:

Sign of the Times

Nothing Good Happens Without Ending the Filibuster and Court Reform

What Has the Guard Surge Actually Done for D.C.?

Sign of the Times

Another Great Week for D.C. Crime Stats

It Always Has to Be About Trump

DOGE Screwed Us on Screwworm

The Political Press Corps Still Does Not Understand What the Epstein Files Mean for MAGA

A Bad Week for D.C. Crime Stats

Oil on Logan

European Workshop on Market Design #6, 17 — 18 June 2026, in Paris

 Coming up this week.

European Workshop on Market Design #6favicon


17 — 18 June 2026

The 6th edition of the European Workshop on Market Design (2026 EWMD) holds at

Université Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris 1)
12 Place du Panthéon
75005 Paris,



The 2026 Lecture in Memory of Nora Szech (1980-2023) will be given by Klaus Schmidt (Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich).

Speakers:

Nageeb Ali, Penn State University

Mira Frick, Princeton University

Guillaume Haeringer, Baruch College

Ilan Kremer, University of Warwick

Philippos Louis, University of Cyprus

Justus Preusser, Bocconi University

Agathe Pernoud, Chicago Booth

Cyril Rouault, GRANEM, University of Angers and Centre for Economics at Paris-Saclay

Anna Sanktjohanser, Toulouse School of Economics

Klaus Schmidt, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich

Nikhil Vellodi, Paris School of Economics

Maren Vairo, University of Pennsylvania

Organizing Committee

Nina Bobkova, Rice University

Olivier Bos, ENS Paris-Saclay, Centre for Economics at Paris-Saclay

Nicolas Fugger, University of Cologne & ZEW Mannheim

Daniil Larionov, University of Munster

Marion Ott, ZEW Mannheim

Xiangyu Qu, Unviersity Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne

 

The Cultural War is a Civil War

Kevin Bryan riffs on on my post The Nationalization of American Science. He is rightfully incensed:

AT is right this is a red tape-filled science policy of “losers”. If you think “cut funds from DEI-driven professors in the small departments no one cares about” is more important than “make sure the world’s strongest fundamental science continues”, you’re an idiot.

And yes, this is also the policy of “right-wing JD-brain” folks. They haven’t worked in a lab. They don’t know how we got AI, and recent cancer breakthroughs, and on and on. It’s all culture war, all the time – just the right-wing equivalent of the worst left-wing habits.

One last thing: I *hate* the term “administration priorities” or “President’s priorities”. Totally Unamerican! The President *executes* the law created by Congress, who represent the people, and who see turnover every two years. Period. “Oh, but Democrats do this too!” Grow up!

Owning the libs may feel good today but please look just one move ahead in the game tree. When AOC controls the executive branch, she will inherit every tool Trump normalized. Look a few moves further and see the damage to American institutions.

The culture war is a civil war. If we don’t end it, American science will be collateral damage.

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The bullish case for Brazil

From Drew Crawford:

Start with the most important number in economics, even though no one on Wall Street talks about it: calories per acre. Human civilization runs on food. Ten billion people will inhabit this planet by 2050. The amount of arable land is not growing. It is shrinking, every year, to urbanization, desertification, salinization, and topsoil erosion. The countries that can grow food at scale will be the most strategically valuable territories on earth. The countries with the best apps and the most PhDs will depend on the countries with the best dirt.

Brazil has more unused arable land than any country on earth. That sentence alone should stop every allocator in their tracks. It means that Brazil can approximately double its total cultivated area, without touching a single hectare of the Amazon, simply by converting degraded pasturelands in the Cerrado and other biomes into productive cropland using technology that already exists.

No other agricultural superpower has this headroom. The United States is fully utilized. China is losing farmland to urbanization at a rate that should terrify its central planners. India’s agricultural productivity gains are hitting diminishing returns against water stress and soil degradation. Europe is hemmed in by geography and regulation. Sub-Saharan Africa has theoretical potential, but lacks the roads, the ports, the legal frameworks, and the capital to exploit it within a generation.

Brazil is already the world’s largest net food exporter. It leads the world in soybeans, coffee, sugar, orange juice, beef, and poultry. It is the second-largest exporter of corn, pork, and ethanol, and recently surpassed the United States as the largest cotton exporter. Agribusiness generates approximately 25% of GDP and more than 40% of export revenue. And the agricultural sector has been growing productivity at 3-4% per year for two decades straight, driven by Embrapa’s tropical soil science, satellite-guided precision agriculture, and the industrialization of protein supply chains that stretch from feedlots in Mato Grosso to dinner tables in Shanghai.

A single farm in Mato Grosso can be more than twice the size of the state of Rhode Island. A literal fact. The Bom Futuro Group cultivates more than 700,000 hectares (roughly 2,700 square miles) of soybeans, corn, and cotton across 35 production units. This is farming at a scale that American and European investors cannot easily conceptualize, operating with GPS-guided machinery, drone monitoring, and soil analytics that rival anything in Iowa, but across an area that dwarfs it.

The post is interesting throughout and offers further points of interest.

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Degrowth would make Europeans into "Europoors"

About a month ago, I weighed in on an interesting debate over American vs. European living standards.

On one side, you have people who argue that Europe is much poorer than America, and is falling even further behind. Most of the people making this argument are Europeans themselves — especially economists like Mario Draghi, Philippe Aghion, Luis Garicano, and Antonin Bergeaud. They look with envy on the U.S. tech sector, which Europe has no real equivalent to, and they yearn for liberalizing reforms that would allow Europe to catch up.

On the other side, you have American liberals like Paul Krugman and Brad DeLong. They argue that Europe is not falling behind — that most of the gap in material living standards is due to Americans working more, and that America’s apparently faster productivity growth is an artifact of the way relative growth rates are measured.

This is an interesting debate, and in the end it comes down to some surprisingly technical measurement issues and data mysteries. I’ll have more to say on it in the future. But it’s really just the most recent exchange in a long-running debate over the “varieties of capitalism” — whether Europe’s stronger welfare and regulatory states deliver better outcomes for regular people, or whether America’s more free-market system is superior. I don’t think that debate is close to being settled — and may never be settled, since liberalizing reforms in Europe and expansions of welfare and regulation in America may shrink the differences between the two systems.

But there’s a second debate going on regarding Europe’s economy, with potentially far more devastating consequences. It’s the question of whether Europeans should be rich at all.

Instead of crowing about the superior performance of the European social model, leftist economists are increasingly arguing that Europeans are too rich, and ought to be poorer than they are. This was the upshot of a manifesto by Thomas Piketty and his World Inequality Lab, which I covered in my last roundup post. Piketty argued that “labour hour reductions, growth caps in rich countries, less material consumption, and changes in food habits” will be needed in order to beat climate change:

This is also the argument in a recent Guardian editorial by Piketty, Olivier De Schutter, Joseph Stiglitz, Jayati Ghosh, Kate Raworth, and Jason Hickel:

We live in an age of manufactured scarcity. In a world richer than ever before, roughly one 10th of the world’s population still lives in extreme destitution

For decades, the recipe was simple: grow the economy, and poverty would gradually disappear. But the promise that economic growth would “lift all boats” has not been kept. While national incomes expanded, wages stagnated, work became more precarious and public services were cut. At the top, fortunes ballooned; at the bottom, families turned to food banks. Growth has become decoupled from shared prosperity…It has also become ecologically unsustainable…That is why we have come together to develop and support the “roadmap for eradicating poverty beyond growth”.

The essay — which was immediately identified by Pangram as being 100% AI-generated — was extremely vague on its plans for transforming the global economy. It often reads like a mishmash of buzzwords and slogans. Here’s a taste:

The real question today is not whether growth continues, but what kind of economies we are building, who they serve and whether they allow everyone to live in dignity within planetary boundaries…[W]e are united in the conviction that our economies must be redesigned around the fulfilment of rights and collective wellbeing within planetary boundaries, rather than maximising output at any cost. Human rights here are not an afterthought; they are the organising principle for how we measure progress, set priorities and resolve trade‑offs…All too often, policies affecting people in poverty are designed without them – and sometimes against them. When welfare systems are built around suspicion, sanctions and humiliating conditions, they deepen stigma and deter people from claiming their entitlements.

…And so on. In fact, this is pretty typical of degrowther writing. If you read their “research” papers, it’s also a bunch of stuff like this. Consider this excerpt from “Exploring degrowth policy proposals: A systematic mapping with thematic synthesis”, by Fitzpatrick et al. (2022), published in the Journal of Cleaner Production:

Degrowth is a multi-layered concept…It combines critiques of capitalism…colonialism…patriarchy…productivism…and utilitarianism…whilst envisioning more caring…just…convivial…happy…and democratic societies…Capturing the essence of degrowth is difficult because it carries at least three denotations…degrowth as decline of environmental pressures…degrowth as emancipation from certain ideologies deemed undesirable, like extractivism, neoliberalism, and consumerism; and...degrowth as a utopian destination, a society grounded in autonomy, sufficiency, and care.

Honestly, whatever AI wrote the Guardian op-ed did a better job than Fitzpatrick et al.

In fact, there’s a reason degrowthers write like this. They see degrowth as a grand project to unify and reinvigorate the political left — a Big Idea to fill the hole left by the collapse of communism in the 20th century. Each buzzword or stock phrase is a shout-out to a particular faction of the European left — “decolonial” leftists angry about colonialism, climate activists, old-line socialists still angry about “neoclassical economics”, unionists who want job guarantees, social democrats who care about housing and education and welfare, and so on. Leftism is famous for factional infighting over differences in doctrine and focus; the degrowthers want everyone on the left to know that they’re building the biggest of big tents.

But in practice, what unites the degrowthers is their conviction that Europeans ought to be poorer. The Guardian op-ed makes it clear that the postwar European social model is not enough:

Social protection and public services are essential, but they cannot indefinitely compensate for economies that by design generate poverty wages, insecure jobs and unaffordable housing.

Why do I say “Europeans ought to be poorer”, instead of “Westerners ought to be poorer”? Obviously, the degrowthers would love it if America also degrew. But in practice, no one in the U.S. is signing on to this agenda. American leftists dream of Green New Deals and government-funded megaprojects like high-speed rail. Progressives are focused on breaking up big companies in order to ensure free-market competition. Liberals like Krugman value living standards intrinsically — they trumpet the European model precisely because they think it makes average Europeans rich.

Degrowth has also notably failed to win much traction in Canada or Australia. Nor have rich countries in Asia shown any interest. Developing countries ignore the idea as well, trusting more in their ability to grow their own economies than in the promise of massive transfers from the Global North.

This is why in practice, the only people who are interested in degrowth are Europeans. The idea’s main proponents — Piketty, Jason Hickel, Kate Raworth, Timothée Parrique, and so on — are all Europeans.1 The degrowth conferences are mostly in Europe. Degrowth literature reviews show that it’s a “predominantly European movement”. The EU is the only government that has shown much interest in degrowth.

In other words, when degrowthers call for the “Global North” to make itself poorer for the sake of the planet — or for the sake of any number of other causes — they’re functionally addressing their message to Europe. Degrowth is a movement for European impoverishment.

It’s important to note how astonishing of a shift this is from the pitch leftists made a hundred years ago. Communism was supposed to be about abundance — the idea that central planning could out-produce the capitalist system, ensuring not just military might, but better material living standards for regular people. In the 1950s, Western leftists praised the growth “miracle” of the Soviet Union (and, occasionally, North Korea). Even back in 2006, Joseph Stiglitz — one of the few American authors of the Guardian article — praised Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela for supposedly promoting “higher growth”.

That famously didn’t work out, of course. The Soviet Union, North Korea, and post-Chavez Venezuela are not exactly places that we associate with widespread material abundance and successful economic development. But in the wake of that colossal failure, the European left is switching its sales pitch. Yes, the new line goes, leftism will make you poorer — but that’s a good thing, because you deserve it for the sins of colonialism, because it’ll be good for the climate, and because you really don’t need all those consumer goods anyway.

Astonishing.

Of course, as anyone following the saga of the degrowth movement knows, it’s pure snake oil — a whirlwind of factual distortions and poor scholarship that would make any serious researcher blush. When economists have read through the degrowth literature, they have found it to mostly be repetitions of the same old buzzwords, empty rhetoric, and unsupported assertions. Savin and van den Bergh (2024) write:

In the last decade many publications have appeared on degrowth as a strategy to confront environmental and social problems. We undertake a systematic review of their content, data and methods…Based on a sample of 561 studies we conclude that: (1) content covers 11 main topics; (2) the large majority (almost 90%) of studies are opinions rather than analysis; (3) few studies use quantitative or qualitative data, and even fewer ones use formal modelling; (4) the first and second type tend to include small samples or focus on non-representative cases; (5) most studies offer ad hoc and subjective policy advice, lacking policy evaluation and integration with insights from the literature on environmental/climate policies; (6) of the few studies on public support, a majority concludes that degrowth strategies and policies are socially-politically infeasible; (7) various studies represent a “reverse causality” confusion, i.e. use the term degrowth not for a deliberate strategy but to denote economic decline (in GDP terms) resulting from exogenous factors or public policies; (8) few studies adopt a system-wide perspective – instead most focus on small, local cases without a clear implication for the economy as a whole. We illustrate each of these findings for concrete studies.

A few economists, like Vincent Geloso, have done yeoman’s work studying and rebutting the claims of Jason Hickel, Kate Raworth, and other degrowthers:

I myself, of course, have written about Hickel’s ideas and reviewed Raworth’s book, and I’ve come to the same conclusions that Geloso has.

This pattern of intellectual sloppiness and utter disregard for the data is evident in the Guardian op-ed. “We’ve done the maths”, the headline proclaims, but neither the article nor the “roadmap” it promotes contain any math. The statement that “growth has become decoupled from shared prosperity” is simply false; the evidence is unequivocal that growth is good for the poor. No matter how you measure poverty, there is no country that has escaped poverty without growth, and there is no country that has substantial amounts of poverty after growth has occurred:

This relationship works in reverse, too. If degrowth gets serious purchase in European policymaking, regular Europeans will suffer. In keeping with degrowth’s mission to unite the entire political left, the Guardian op-ed promises all kinds of middle-class goodies: “investing in children, housing, health, education and transport through universal public provisioning”. As the authors surely know — and as any cursory attempt at actual “maths” would have easily shown — this will be utterly impossible if European countries are forced to degrow.

In other words, even as American conservatives look down their noses at “Europoors”, and liberals try to debunk the “Europoor” notion, European leftists are hard at work trying to make “Europoors” a reality.

But that’s not the only reason the degrowth program is pernicious. Right now, with America having turned inward in a spasm of rightist isolationism, Europe is one of the few remaining champions of the ideals of universal human rights set forth in the post-WW2 global order — a lonely, beleagured bulwark against the likes of Russia and China.

Right now, Europe is facing a dire military threat. Although economically and demographically it overmatches Russia, its militaries do not yet know how to use drones — and Russia’s does. Furthermore, Europe’s supply chains are utterly dependent on Chinese parts and materials; if China decides to cut Europe off during a Russian attack, while continuing to furnish Russia with everything it needs, Russia would have a good chance of triumphing.

In addition, European industry is facing a dire economic threat. Its manufacturers are bearing the brunt of the Second China Shock — the wave of massively subsidized exports that China is using to try to prop up its slowing domestic economy. This comes on top of the cutoff of Russian energy and Trump’s tariffs.

To embrace the poisonous nonsense of degrowth now — to shut down nuclear power plants, to regulate the AI industry out of existence, to forcibly shorten working hours, to bar the construction of houses and factories, etc. — would be to cripple one of the last few remaining economic engines of the free world, at precisely the time when it’s under its greatest external challenge.2

In other words, there has never been a better time to ignore the pronouncements of Thomas Piketty, Joseph Stiglitz, and the other rogue economists who want to turn “Europoor” from a slur into a grim reality.


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1

I’m counting the UK as Europe. Sorry, Brexiteers.

2

One suspects that degrowthers know this, and that the anti-Westernism that has always animated far-left movements is an unspoken but important motivating force behind the movement.

Signs of Frustration

Unlawful Government Action

June 12, 2026

Today was the deadline set by Judge Christopher R. Cooper of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia for Donald Trump’s name to come off the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, more commonly known as the Kennedy Center.

In his ruling of May 29, Cooper noted that “Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it,” and Congress stipulated that “no additional memorials or plaques in the nature of memorials shall be designated or installed in the public areas” of the Kennedy Center.

As soon as he took office in early 2025, Trump replaced trustees on the Kennedy Center board and appointed himself a trustee as well. Now weighted with loyalists, the board elected Trump chair and then replaced the president of the Kennedy Center. Then the board voted to change the center’s bylaws to concentrate their own power. Then, in December, the board voted to rename the Kennedy Center the “Trump Kennedy Center,” and the name went up over the Kennedy Center portico the next day.

Representative Joyce Beatty (D-OH), who as an ex officio member of the center’s board had been sidelined, sued to stop the renaming and won. Cooper ordered Trump’s name to be taken off the building, all signage, stationery, merchandise, and so on, before midnight tonight.

At first, the Kennedy Center seemed willing to comply, removing Trump’s name from its website and YouTube page, but that cooperation changed yesterday, when the board voted to launch a last-minute appeal to the removal order. Hours later, the lawyers from the Justice Department filed a notice of appeal. They asked for a stay on the judge’s order to remove Trump’s name from the building, saying the board would be “forced to squander time and money” if the appeals court decides in its favor and that it “would be incredibly confusing for the public” if, in the end, Trump’s name went back up after coming down.

Cooper decided against them, saying they had not shown they would win their appeal on its merits. He said staying the order “would not be in the public interest, which is rarely served by the ‘perpetuation’ of ‘unlawful’ governmental action.”

Late this afternoon, the board of the Kennedy Center filed an emergency appeal to the D.C. Circuit Court, asking for a stay in the order to remove Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center. It was, perhaps, hasty work. Legal analyst Liz Dye called it “bonkity-bonkers, while lawyer Norm Eisen of The Contrarian went for “batsh** crazy” and noted that Trump “clearly wrote big pieces himself.”

For the first time, the board alleged that “The Bylaws of The Trump Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Foundation state, unequivocally,” that the board must strip all funding from the Kennedy Center unless Trump’s name stays on it. Dye notes: “If the bylaws were amended, they were amended since Judge Cooper issued his order—prob[ably] yesterday. This is the Board choking off funds and saying ‘you have to let us break the law, or we’ll lose all the funds.’”

According to a lawsuit filed yesterday by the Washington National Opera, about $17 million of the money Trump appears to be claiming from the Kennedy Center belongs to the Washington National Opera. For fifteen years, the suit says, the opera and the Kennedy Center had a contractual relationship, in which the center managed donations to the Washington National Opera for the opera’s benefit.

“By the second half of 2025, the Kennedy Center stopped performing many of its obligations under the governing affiliation agreement, including marketing, fundraising, and administrative support, as well as timely reporting on the growth of WNO’s funds,” the suit says. “Despite repeated requests from WNO, the Kennedy Center did not remedy its non-performance. Instead, it proposed that the parties end their long-standing affiliation. That affiliation came to an end in January 2026.”

And then the Kennedy Center refused to return the WNO’s money, instead using it as collateral for its own line of credit.

Yesterday Toni Aguilar Rosenthal of the Revolving Door Project and Alan Zibel of Public Citizen did a deep dive into Trump’s determination to turn other people’s money to his own service.

They note that Trump and his allies seized the funds Congress appropriated for celebrations to honor the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and have “awarded nearly $103 million in federal contracts and grants…to politicized entities under the control of Trump administration officials and political allies”—nearly 80% of the $126 million of funding for the semiquincentenary celebrations. Private funding, including from corporations with issues in front of the administration, have also poured money into Trump’s events.

Dan Diamond of the Washington Post reported on Wednesday that the administration is hoping to complete Trump’s 250-foot-tall triumphal arch before he leaves office. To do so, they are anticipating keeping work going 20 hours a day. They say they do not need congressional approval. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) has asked officials from the National Park Service to explain and to justify why they are ignoring normal rules for federal contracting and instead handing out no-bid contracts, saying the project is “urgent.”

Yesterday Ashleigh Fields of The Hill reported that federal agencies and Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) are putting at least $60 million toward the White House cage fight on Trump’s 80th birthday Sunday. That money has paid for the fighting arena on the South Lawn of the White House, as well as paying up to 900 workers since May 20.

A political activist and military veteran from Virginia tried to stop the event from proceeding, calling it a “deeply corrupt” event that uses national monuments to shill for private businesses, in at least one of which—UFC’s parent company TKO Holding Group—Trump owns significant amounts of stock. They noted that although Trump used the 250th anniversary to justify ignoring environmental review and congressional approval, the event is clearly designed not for the nation’s birthday, but for his own.

Today Judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia rejected the lawsuit, saying that the Virginians did not have standing to challenge the UFC fight and that the time and money invested in the event outweighed any temporary harm they suffered.

On social media today, Trump posted images of the horses statues behind the Lincoln Memorial being freshly gilded, and wrote: “Re-gilding of the massive Arts of War sculptures, located between The Lincoln Memorial and site of The Triumphal Arch, rapidly continues. The sculptures will be fully regilded by July 3. The photos were taken yesterday. The Gilders’ Studio has flown in Gilders from around the Country to perform this work!”

Yesterday Edwin Heathcote of the Financial Times reported on how former prime minister of Hungary Victor Orbán used architecture to reinforce the idea that his government was rebuilding former glories, while new prime minister, Péter Magyar is contrasting the palaces Orbán built to the crumbling hospitals and children’s homes around the country, where there was no money for toilet paper. The contrast between the gilded palaces of Orbán and his cronies and the poverty in which everyday Hungarians lived was key to the popular uprising that toppled Orbán’s government and put Magyar’s in place.

Today Elon Musk, who poured more than $290 million into the 2024 election to elect Trump and other Republicans, became the world’s first trillionaire—on paper, at least—when shares of his rocket company SpaceX were offered to the public.

Tonight the appeals court denied Trump’s emergency motion. Observers waiting at the Kennedy Center noted that a rainbow broke out over the building shortly after the decision. Although the letters for Trump’s name went up in hours, attached by workers on scissor lifts, taking them down involved so much scaffolding and so many hours that the United States government missed the court-imposed deadline.

The Department of Justice said the letters would come down “in the early hours of the morning of June 13,” presumably when there would not be the huge audience that has been watching the removal all day either in person or on livestream, and asked the court for twelve more hours to comply with the court order.

Notes:

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.287972/gov.uscourts.dcd.287972.50.0_1.pdf

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5921158-kennedy-center-appeals-trump-name-removal/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/2026/06/11/kennedy-center-board-fight-order-remove-trumps-name-deadline-looms/

https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5922184-judge-rejects-kennedy-center-trump-name-appeal/

https://www.ms.now/news/judge-denies-kennedy-center-boards-request-to-keep-trumps-name

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cadc.43300/gov.uscourts.cadc.43300.01208860277.0.pdf

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/uae-unlock-billions-dollars-iran-sources-say-2026-06-12/

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.uscfc.54456/gov.uscourts.uscfc.54456.1.0.pdf

https://www.citizen.org/article/maga-250-103m-in-federal-contracts-flow-to-trumpified-freedom-250-events/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/06/10/trump-officials-lay-out-aggressive-timeline-build-triumphal-arch/

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5919806-trump-administration-ufc-60-million-white-house-cage-fight/

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/kennedy-center-trump-name-judge/

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7319008/2026/05/29/trump-white-house-ufc-fight-stock/

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.293217/gov.uscourts.dcd.293217.11.0.pdf

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/12/judge-blocks-ufc-event-lawsuit-00960727

https://www.ft.com/content/5f7d1905-1907-4bf3-a45f-c45aa9618697?syn-25a6b1a6=1

https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/01/politics/elon-musk-2024-election-spending-millions

https://apnews.com/article/musk-spacex-tesla-ipo-trillionaire-billionaire-worth-rockets-7723f82b6063a9a17c194e25982cd66d

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https://www.npr.org/2025/12/18/nx-s1-5648519/kennedy-center-name-change-trump

Bluesky:

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Saturday 13 June 1663

Up and betimes to Thames Street among the tarr men, to look the price of tarr and so by water to Whitehall thinking to speak with Sir G. Carteret, but he lying in the city all night, and meeting with Mr. Cutler the merchant, I with him in his coach into the city to Sir G. Carteret, but missing him there, he and I walked to find him at Sir Tho. Allen’s in Bread Street, where not finding him he and I walked towards our office, he discoursing well of the business of the Navy, and particularly of the victualling, in which he was once I perceive concerned, and he and I parted and I to the office and there had a difference with Sir W. Batten about Mr. Bowyer’s tarr, which I am resolved to cross, though he sent me last night, as a bribe, a barrel of sturgeon, which, it may be, I shall send back, for I will not have the King abused so abominably in the price of what we buy, by Sir W. Batten’s corruption and underhand dealing. So from the office, Mr. Wayth with me, to the Parliament House, and there I spoke and told Sir G. Carteret all, with which he is well pleased, and do recall his willingness yesterday, it seems, to Sir W. Batten, that we should buy a great quantity of tarr, being abused by him.

Thence with Mr. Wayth after drinking a cupp of ale at the Swan, talking of the corruption of the Navy, by water. I landed him at Whitefriars, and I to the Exchange, and so home to dinner, where I found my wife’s brother, and thence after dinner by water to the Royall Theatre, where I resolved to bid farewell, as shall appear by my oaths tomorrow against all plays either at publique houses or Court till Christmas be over.

Here we saw “The Faithfull Sheepheardesse,” a most simple thing, and yet much thronged after, and often shown, but it is only for the scenes’ sake, which is very fine indeed and worth seeing; but I am quite out of opinion with any of their actings, but Lacy’s, compared with the other house.

Thence to see Mrs. Hunt, which we did and were much made of; and in our way saw my Lady Castlemaine, who, I fear, is not so handsome as I have taken her for, and now she begins to decay something. This is my wife’s opinion also, for which I am sorry. Thence by coach, with a mad coachman, that drove like mad, and down byeways, through Bucklersbury home, everybody through the street cursing him, being ready to run over them. So home, and after writing letters by the post, home to supper and bed.

Yesterday, upon conference with the King in the Banqueting House, the Parliament did agree with much ado, it being carried but by forty-two voices, that they would supply him with a sum of money; but what and how is not yet known, but expected to be done with great disputes the next week. But if done at all, it is well.

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Apple’s Private Cloud Compute Is Severely Limited for Third-Party Developers

From Apple’s Developer site:

To ensure getting started with a large cloud model is as accessible as possible, developers in the App Store Small Business Program with fewer than two million first time App Store downloads will be able to use Apple Foundation Models running on Private Cloud Compute (PCC) with no cloud API cost. The model provides access to frontier level intelligence with unparalleled privacy protections. This makes it easy for small developers to get started building intelligent app experiences without upfront infrastructure costs.

Eligibility requirements

Access to PCC is available to developers who meet the following criteria:

Where Apple Intelligence is available, eligible developers can use PCC in their apps distributed on the App Store, and test PCC features via TestFlight or ad hoc distribution. Installs during testing are not counted as first-time app downloads.

If any app subsequently exceeds the 2 million first-time downloads threshold, or the developer is no longer enrolled in the App Store Small Business Program, the developer will be notified and must migrate to an alternative solution within 6 months. Information about first-time downloads is available in Analytics in App Store Connect.

These strict limits don’t seem to be getting as much attention as they should. It’s nice that for small developers who meet the above criteria, access to PCC has no cost. But there’s no way (yet?) to buy your way out of these limits. There are no paid API tiers for larger developers who exceed the above limits, or for developers who qualify now but release a hit app that grows to exceed them. (Users who pay for iCloud+ don’t have any extra quotas for PCC usage in third-party apps either.)

The “fewer than 2 million first-time app downloads from any of their apps” restriction is particularly notable. It’s not 2 million installations for apps that are using PCC, but 2 million downloads for any app the developer has ever released. Developer Gui Rambo writes:

So uhhhh… Apple should really rethink the Private Cloud Compute developer access limitation. I do happen to have an app that’s had more than 2 million downloads. That app is ChibiStudio, an app that’s been in the App Store for over 10 years. It’s not like I’m getting a million new users every year nowadays. And I’m also not making any real money with it 🥲

The bottom line is that — for the OS 27 cycle at least — PCC is primarily a feature for Apple itself to use in Siri AI. Granting access to PCC to any third-party developers at all is better than nothing, but this 2-million-download cap cuts off many developers who are in the Small Business Program. Apple should reconsider that. And I know there are a lot of developers who exceed the eligibility for the Small Business Program who would love to have access to the PCC APIs, even if access was paid. The lack of paid tiers says to me that Apple is worried enough about meeting demand from Siri AI users alone.

 ★ 

★ The Talk Show: Live From WWDC 2026

Recorded in front of a live audience at The California Theatre in San Jose on Tuesday 9 June 2026, special guests Joanna Stern and Nilay Patel join John Gruber to discuss Apple’s announcements at WWDC 2026.

Immersive 3D video with spatial audio: Coming soon, exclusively in Sandwich Vision’s Theater on Vision Pro, available on the App Store. The bandwidth-constrained immersive livestream Tuesday night looked cool; the on-demand version coming in a few days will look amazing.

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Watch on a big screen if you can (real, or virtual). All credit and thanks for the video production go to my friends at Sandwich, who, as ever, are nothing short of a joy to work with.

Trump’s Name (Set in the Wrong Font, of Course) Has Been Removed From the Kennedy Center

Jonathan Edwards reporting for The Washington Post:

President Donald Trump’s name is off the Kennedy Center.

Crews at the performing arts venue started removing it from the front of the building around 3 a.m., several hours after the center missed a federal judge’s two-week deadline to do so. The judge had ruled that the decision by the center’s board of trustees to rename it was illegal.

A perfect metaphor for the work ahead of us.

 ★ 

Talking With Azeem Azhar

I last spoke with Azeem, the proprietor of Exponential View, 18 months ago — ancient history on this subject. So we revisited the state of AI.

.

TRANSCRIPT:
Paul Krugman in Conversation with Azeem Azhar

(recorded 6/12/26)

Paul Krugman: Hi everyone. Paul Krugman back on my usual schedule of recording interviews. And today I’m talking with Azeem Azhar, who I spoke to in January 2025, basically centuries ago in AI time. And with AI on everybody’s mind, I thought it would be good to revisit. I should say Azeem is an independent researcher and founder of Exponential View, which is one of the top tech Substacks out there.

So hi, welcome to another conversation.

Azeem Azhar: Yeah, thank you, Paul. And it has been eighteen months, also known as one and a half centuries in AI time since we spoke.

Krugman: Yeah. Let me ask sort of the dumbest question: what is this thing called AI? How does it do what it does? I mean, even skeptics have to admit that it’s really impressive how it’s sort of leapt over all of the previous barriers. How is this happening?

Azhar: You know, I think we’re still figuring it out. I think of AI ultimately as a machine that does certain things, and it’s been built by passing first millions, then billions, then tens of billions, hundreds of billions of trillions of words of human output through a neural network to give it some sense of how humans have thought about the world. And because it operates at dimensions well beyond the form of space and time, it seems to be able to find relationships between quite complex concepts. And I think we’ve all had that experience, whether we’ve been using Chat GPT or Claude over the last two or three years, that it seems to be able to recognize things that are quite deeply related that don’t immediately spring to mind.

And in the last year and a half or so, the labs have started to train the AI models not just on words in books, but actually on tasks, like, “what is the set of things that you do to write a piece of code that does something?” “What is a set of things you do to use a piece of software in an enterprise?” And they’ve tried to train those models on those particular tasks. Essentially it’s aping what we do, and they use various mathematical tools like reinforcement learning where the model notionally gets a reward. Of course it’s not a reward the way you and I think of it because it’s a machine.

Paul Krugman: Right.

Azhar: And so that’s what it is. It’s sort of reflecting back, but also I think discovering some really deep relationships in the world that we might not spot, you know, prima facie as humans.

Paul Krugman: Brad Delong calls it “a vast stew of linear algebra,” which makes some sense to me because I think that Pagerank with Google was the last thing I actually understood. And that’s the eigenvector with the largest eigenvalue. Not that anybody needs to know that, but this is like a million times bigger, right?

Azhar: That’s basically it. Yeah.

Krugman: But it’s sort of not what artificial intelligence was supposed to be, right?

Azhar: No, not at all. I mean, I sometimes go back and look at the TV series of the seventies that I grew up with as a child, and they’ll always have an AI in the spaceship. Space 1999 had an AI you could talk to. And it was very precise, it was very clipped, and it did things and got things right. And there was a sense that you could trust it. But you’d never think to say, as I sometimes do now, you know, “Find me five analogies to help make this point.” I use it as a brainstorming partner, or I give it tracts of my book, the book that I’m writing, and say, you know, “How would Paul Krugman criticize this argument?” And I get suggestions that I then work through by hand? I don’t think we really imagined it would look like that.

Krugman: Yeah. In sci-fi it would talk in a monotone and would be relentlessly logical. And in fact these models are unpredictable, they’re sometimes temperamental, they’re not reliable. That’s probably one of the big problems. It’s not at all what we imagined.

Azhar: It’s not at all and this point about reliability is so complex. A couple of months back, one of the versions of Anthropic’s Claude came out and I found it so sycophantic that it became unhelpful because I like these things to help me on hard problems and to challenge me. So I switched back to Chat GPT, which has always been a little bit less friendly. And what’s going on there, Paul, is that because we don’t really have a good theory about how to build these. They are developed almost like in a petri dish and nudged in particular directions so they take the shape that we expect them to take. And to use an economist term, they improve non-monotonically with every release. So you’ll see the latest release of an Anthropic model, and there are maybe twenty or thirty public benchmarks that they’re measured against, like how well they summarize text and how well they write software code. And the next version of the model won’t necessarily be better at everything than the previous version, because you lose something in order to get it. And that’s the complexity that the labs are wrestling with.

Krugman: Wow. Okay. Second naive question. I don’t think I’m a Luddite. I’ve always been happy to adopt technologies, but maybe I’m incurious on some of these things. I tend to pick up things like mathematical techniques, as needed, because I see something that could be useful. Now, I’m using NotebookLM to extract tables from PDFs, that sort of thing. But what should I be doing? I have friends who are using Claude a lot, but I can’t quite figure out what particularly agentic AI should be doing for me.

Azhar: You know, I’m really sympathetic to that because I have the same issue. These tools have been developed by software developers in a really particular part of the world, which is Silicon Valley, where the culture really revolves around the art of the programmer. And so if you have a programmer’s day and you think in coding terms and you have programming workflows, it becomes really obvious what you do with a really advanced AI tool. I do a lot of research, some of it qualitative, some of it quantitative, and in such a world, those workflows don’t match the way that I think through problems. And so the way that I get around this is that I do look at things on Twitter or X as it’s called because people are sharing tips. And I often just ask the models, you know, “What could I do with you given that I’m trying to do this thing? I’m trying to solve this problem.” And it will come back and give me a suggestion.

And I have had some success with agents. So I have an agent called R. Mini Arnold. So R is a play Isaac Asimov’s robots. They’re all called R. Arnold is after the good Terminator in Terminator 2, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, who protects humanity. And R. Mini Arnold is available on my WhatsApp and it’s available on email.

Krugman: Okay.

Azhar: And it has access to a whole set of resources. It can browse the web, it can access LinkedIn, it can access Twitter, it can look at my library of PDFs of research that I’ve downloaded. And I can throw tasks to it a little bit like I would say a pretty decent but slightly temperamental graduate student. So sometimes it just disappears for six or seven hours at a time. And one of the differences between using an agent like that and using Claude is that R. Mini Arnold has a lot of my life’s context. It knows the music I like, it knows the book I’m working on, it knows the investments I’m making, it knows the essays I’m doing, it’s got the calendar of speeches that I’m about to give. And so when it goes off and does a task, it tries to figure out what in my world is this going to be relevant to and where can I draw threads from? And when it works, it is really sublime and it does feel a little bit like science fiction.

But I would say it’s incredibly brittle. I mean there’s breaks every four or five days.

A specific example was, I was thinking about the Paul David’s research about why electrification took the time it took. And I wanted to understand what were the determinations of determinants of that thirty-five year lag from Pearl Street generation to, you know, productivity growth. What could the levers be? And so I threw that into R. Mini Arnold and it set up a team of sub agents which had personalities of key economists and was able to go off and do research the way the AIs do, but also research on all the academic papers that I have downloaded in the past.

I have access to JSTOR, I’m allowed to download a hundred PDFs a month. It can look at all of those and start to compile an answer in a way that perhaps a Chat GPT can’t. And it knows the context of my book and it knows the context of the essay I wrote. So what then comes back is something a little bit more structured that I can then play with. It’s a marginal improvement on doing this on Chat GPT. I’m sure you could probably figure out how to do it. But it’s quick. I use it on my iPhone. I often do this when I’m walking through the airport and I want to solve this and have this result when I’m sitting on the plane. I’ll fire that query out and it goes back and goes out and sorts that out for me.

Krugman: Okay, I guess I’m getting it. But obviously you and I are not typical. The people who are using AI the most are going to be middle managers, business people, etc. And I find myself thinking about what I think of as the homemade pasta problem.

Azhar: Mm.

Krugman: You’re probably too young for this, but there was a time when I when young and we were using stone axes for computing, and there was a big fad of making your own pasta. Little pasta machines were everywhere. And then at a certain point there was kind of a collective, “What the hell are we doing? You know, store bought pasta is actually better. The Italians don’t do this.” And I have to think that for most tasks, the range of agents can’t be that wide. But why wouldn’t they sell that kind of thing off-the-shelf, as it were?

Azhar: Yeah, well I think it’s different for an independent person or a small business or a middle manager in a big company. I would imagine that you will start to see people selling specific agents that solve your marketing problem. If you have a barber’s shop and you’ve got four chairs and maybe 30 people a day coming through. Right now what you do is, you go to ChatGPT and you help it write your collateral for your website. That feels like it’s an interim step to somebody delivering the actual finished product. Why haven’t we seen it? I think we haven’t seen it yet because the terrain is still big enough.

Beyond Anthropic and OpenAI, there’s a lot of other companies building agents that are these end-to-end workflows for businesses. They still believe that the prize for them is to build the generic platform that is the tool for all tools. Because if you get that right, you have a much, much bigger business than if you’re just a vertical application. And I think we’re only a year or two into these entrepreneurs building such businesses. I think as some of them succeed and some fail, the ones that are not able to succeed in the general space will start to verticalize, which is what we saw in the advent of the internet. We saw it in software as well.

But I think within a big company it’s a different set of questions because you have far fewer degrees of freedom as a marketing manager in a large company than you do if you own your own barbershop. You have all these rules, you have all these other teams you have to interface with, you are held to the priorities and the plans of the company as a whole. And in that instance, I think, it’s much harder to see how you use AI to really change the way you work.

Krugman: Yeah, I mean, again we’re talking about ancient history here, but you know, everybody still uses Excel, even though it has always been horrible. But the constraints of corporate life mean that everybody has to use Excel. So that means maybe we’ll see quite a lot less coding a few years down the pike because the people will just be able to purchase whatever it is they need. I don’t know.

Azhar: I think there’s a balance. You hear people proselytizing heavily, saying, “I think this technology is going to be impressive and have a significant impact.” But when people pitch this, they forget that there are other actors in the market who might respond to what’s going on. Right now, if you’re a large company, you want to be building as much as you can because what you can buy isn’t right for the market. If you think about Henry Ford putting together the Highland Park plant, he couldn’t go to a supply chain and buy what he needed because nobody was thinking in those terms. I think we are slightly at that stage for large corporates now. Whether we’ll be there in five years, I don’t know.

The question we have to consider is where the value will reside: between having your own capabilities to design software for your processes, or handing that over to another company designing software for a hundred businesses like yours. Historically, it has made more sense to hand it over to another company, but the cost curves may have changed sufficiently that you’d rather have the nuance and control to do whatever ‘vibe coding’ becomes in 2030.

Krugman: I know with healthcare software, organizations like the VA that built their own have done much better than the ones who tried to buy it from Microsoft. So yeah, it might be a story that makes sense. And actually, since we’re talking about going for the models versus something much more specific, how do you think about the Chinese versus the big US AI firms?

Azhar: I’ve just spent eight days in China and I was really fortunate. I got to speak to developers and engineers and management from about a dozen of the Chinese labs. In many cases they hosted us in their offices. The main thing the Chinese companies say about the US firms, is that Claude code is brilliant and Claude is the best model that is out there and they really couldn’t get enough of it. The term is, they’re Claude-pilled. They talk about the constraints on getting access to computational power but just in a way that’s a fact of life. I mean there’s no sort of commentary on it other than it’s hard. They have to figure out how to get around that and how to build a culture of efficiency when you don’t have as much [computational power] and I think they have built a culture of efficiency really, really well. I think it’s going to help them over the longer term. They don’t really talk about competition with US labs the way the US talks about competition with China. But they do see themselves competing with each other.

And as you know, that’s what the Chinese economy is. It’s mayors in different cities who almost act as venture capitalists who compete tooth and nail with each other to become the electric vehicle hub or the solar hub or the AI hub of the nation. And what I would say is, the models are really, really capable. They’re very efficient, which is why they’re so cheap to run, which makes them very competitive for a whole range of tasks. But at the margin, it’s instructive to note that everyone was using Claude for coding as opposed to the cheaper Chinese version.

Krugman: That’s interesting. So you can imagine a future where a lot of businesses are actually using these less comprehensive but much cheaper models. I think what I’m gathering from you and from other people is that a lot of entrepreneurs in the US are still dreaming of the uber-model that solves all problems but that probably is not going the way it all goes. That in the end we’re gonna end up with a lot of specialized models, but also the uber-models will still have a role.

Azhar: Yeah, it never made sense to me that you’d have a single model that would do everything because if the single model is going to solve the Riemann hypothesis, it’s gonna require a lot of resources. And if all you need to do is get it to root a bill to the finance department, it seems a bit silly to ask Einstein to come and do that for you. We’ve had segmentation of markets for a long time and it’s like with airlines. There’s a reason why not every seat on an airline is first class. Some passengers don’t want it, don’t need it, won’t want to pay for it. So I do think that the ecology looks like a whole array of much, much cheaper models that are serving by volume lots of corporate needs, and then having more sophisticated, complex models for the more complex tasks. I think you’re already starting to see this.

I don’t see it, by the way, as a shock to the industry. I just think this is what happens as an industry matures. You know, you start with one size fits all, then you start to segment your customer needs and you start to serve them in the most profitable way you possibly can. And that just feels to me like the way that the markets have matured.

Krugman:

Okay. Let’s move to more macro considerations. People have been worrying about a bubble. A lot of us still remember the nineties quite vividly and think about all of that. But you just aren’t seeing the bubble. You wanna talk about that?

Azhar: I remember what it was like in the nineties. I lived through that one and also the housing bubble, which frankly was far, far worse and much more terrifying. I have a really simple mantra here, which is that honest customer revenues tend to be the engine that gets you through this, right? You know, what caused the problems with the US railroads in the 1870s and 1880s? It was that the revenues didn’t materialize because the tracks were being laid in places where there were no towns. That was a problem. The same was true in the dot-com era. My team and I realized last year that it’s very hard to get good quality data on how much was actually being spent by American businesses and consumers on AI. So we’ve spent several months building systems and gathering data to give a deduplicated view of what that number is. And just to give you a sneak preview, is $150 billion per annum, annualized at the end of May 2026, and about 90 billion dollars in the previous 12 months, from May ‘25 to May ‘26. So you can see it’s growing, and those are deduplicated numbers.

So if you spend a dollar with OpenAI, and they have to pay Microsoft 60 cents to run the servers, we only count that as a dollar. We don’t count it as, you know, $1.60. It’s a much faster revenue growth rate than mobile or the internet. It’s also a small number because the US is a $32 trillion economy. And I think the thing is that at that level of spend, you are able to roughly cover the depreciation on the enormous capital expenditures that have gone into AI just this past year. But next year or the year after, you have to double your revenues again and again in order to cover these increasing commitments.

The thing that often pricks a bubble is when financing starts to get a bit smelly. That was clearly the case in the global financial crisis, where synthetic collateralized obligations were magnifying the risk on subprime mortgages—it was all “smelly finance.” In the dot-com bubble, the dot-coms themselves didn’t really have much smell about them. There was a lot of disbelief, but the telecoms clearly had issues with their internal revenue generation.

So the other thing that we look at is how bad, poor, or strong or robust is the funding quality. And that funding quality measure is definitely getting worse. It’s worse now than it was nine months ago. But it doesn’t seem from the numbers to be at the level that it has been historically when these things have imploded. Nor does it seem to be the type of exposure that is really systemic, which is what we saw in the global financial crisis. There are companies like Oracle and Coreweave whose debt looks very risky, and it’s harder and harder for them perhaps to raise money, although Oracle just did. But it doesn’t feel like it’s systemic.

You know, when the the global financial crisis popped, no one knew who was in trouble, whereas now you’d be able to isolate it with a single company or a single firm. So at the moment we feel that this is still a demand-led boom, that funding quality has definitely gotten worse, but not so bad that I would say that there is an imminent problem on the horizon.

Krugman: So at this point, you’re saying that roughly speaking, final demand for this is about half a percent of GDP. What share are AI-related stocks in market value? It has to be substantially larger than that.

Azhar: They’re about forty percent of the S&P 500 right now.

Krugman: That’s a huge mismatch. Revenues are not the same as profits, but you’re talking about what is still a relatively small business relative to this immense economy, yet it dominates the financial markets. That would be at least a possible source of alarm.

Azhar: Let’s dig into that, because a stock price is a reflection of the expected future value aggregated across the market. Forty percent feels high, but if you look at the measure of earnings, these companies actually have a much higher proportion of earnings and earnings growth.

If you look at the US stock market in 1900, after the railway calamities of the mid-to-late 19th century, railroad stocks were sixty percent of the capitalization of the US market. We had worked our way through the busts by that point. There’s a fantastic piece of academic work by an American finance professor named Bessenbinder. He looked at the stock returns of 23,000 US stocks from the 1900s through 2022. Those returns are highly concentrated. About two-thirds are concentrated in roughly 30 companies. Those companies are oil, electricity, or car companies—the general-purpose technologies at the start of the 20th century—or they are the IT companies like Apple and Nvidia. The only exceptions were Walmart, a couple of healthcare businesses like Pfizer, and JP Morgan.

Historically, you get this concentration of a number of winners when you have a new general-purpose technology, and that is showing up today. I don’t feel we’re overly concentrated from the perspective of risk, and the price does not feel totally out of whack compared to where we were during the dot-com era.

Krugman: One last devil’s advocate question. I keep thinking of the California gold rush. If you had looked at the revenue and spending on gold-rush-related businesses as a whole, it probably looked solid. But the trouble is it wasn’t the gold; it was the picks, shovels, blue jeans, women and whiskey that were the revenue streams. Is that a fair question to ask about AI right now?

Azhar: It’s a great question to ask. The question is what determines that $150 billion annualized demand? We see that just under 30% of the S&P 500 have pointed to a generative AI project with a quantifiable result in their earnings calls. They are under pressure to say they do this, so maybe that’s what’s going on. But when I talk to executives, like 30 finance businesses in New York, they all plan to spend more next year, even though not a single one could point to even a 10 basis point improvement in their business from the investments made so far.

Krugman: Right.

Azhar: When we break out that $90 billion, $60 billion of it is in the US. That’s a lot of money for a single company, but spread across thousands of firms, it’s still at the experimental stage. We should consider whether these executives are learning by doing. The messages I get vary from those having success in the tens of millions who want to reach hundreds of millions, to those finding it harder but persisting. We’re slightly beyond pure picks and shovels, but in Paul David’s work, it took 50% of American companies getting electrified before the productivity rise. We’re a long way from that.

Krugman: Headlines flashed about a KPMG study with case studies on the usefulness of AI that turned out to be AI hallucinations. It’s a wonderful thing.

Azhar: It is brilliant. One thing that is quite challenging is that the market has talked a lot about bottlenecks. We saw this with railroads when the US couldn’t make enough steel. There are these bottlenecks, and there’s a lot of emphasis on power and getting electricity to the system.

There’s more demand than supply capacity for AI right now, but there’s a question of whether there’s enough capital. We may see another few trillion dollars of intention from tech companies to build infrastructure to 2030, which starts to rival the new issuance of the US Treasury at $2 trillion a year. I’m wondering if this capital constraint is going to be an issue or if the market knows how to clear it.

Krugman: Ordinarily, we’d expect to see that in prices. Real interest rates are well off their pre-COVID lows. They are higher now, but still substantially lower than at the peak of the nineties tech boom, when they were around four percent. They’re more like two now.

It’s surprising, given the AI boom and massive budget deficits, that rates aren’t even higher. Whether this is an actual constraint, Nvidia is not the US Treasury. They need risk-tolerant capital. The possibility that these firms may not be able to raise enough money is something we need to think about.

Azhar: Yeah. On that Nvidia point, I saw that credit default swaps on five-year Nvidia bonds—the cost of insurance against default—are currently lower than US Treasuries.

Krugman: I saw that, and it strikes me as completely crazy. If you think the US government is not reliable, you shouldn’t be investing in chip stocks; you should be investing in canned goods for your bomb shelter. But anyway.

Azhar: Are you telling me that markets aren’t perfectly rational, Paul?

Krugman: Good heavens, I can’t say that; they’d take away my economist card. We’re recording this on SpaceX Day, and I’ve been wondering if there are limited pools of capital for cutting-edge investments. I wonder whether Elon Musk is diverting capital that AI might need. A whole lot of meme money is pouring into SpaceX right now. Is that something I should be thinking about? I mean, he’s got what everybody tells me is a crud AI product in Grok, and yet…

Azeem: Musk showed his willingness to adapt; his AI product is now being subsidiarized using his capacity to serve customers like Anthropic. He has an incredible following, but people who have worked with him say his ability to relentlessly focus and optimize sets him apart. His first-principles thinking has brought down the cost of space launches faster than anyone in history. He pushes the rate of learning aggressively. For all the challenges and his mercurial behavior elsewhere, that’s generally a good thing because technology has brought down the cost of inputs significantly.

We’re going to be much further ahead in space than we would have been if SpaceX had not been successful. It raises questions about how to govern what used to be a commons, but there is a definite benefit from coming down that learning curve so quickly.

Krugman: That’s fair. The one time I looked at Musk’s activities and thought he was really onto something was when I realized he diagnosed that the cost of space launches is really the rocket, not the fuel, and recovering it makes all the difference. Being able to make it happen is a real productivity thing.

This is all moving so fast that we don’t have time for the technical productivity issues we had in the past. It’s feeling like a Solow moment where people say, “I see the technology everywhere but in the productivity statistics.” Do you want to talk about that?

Azhar: It comes up all the time. I wonder if we need things to happen more quickly than we used to. We aren’t seeing it in the numbers yet. Erik Brynjolfsson at Stanford says he thinks it is showing up in the aggregate numbers. How quickly should we expect a technology like this to show up? At $90 billion a year, that’s not much of US GDP. These are early stages where companies are learning. The first $100 million you might spend on AI is about learning, and we’re in that mistake-making phase.

The model Paul David and William Devine talked about in electricity is helpful. In the first phases, you’re retrofitting your capital stock and processes with the new technology. It’s not until you depreciate existing capital and change processes—like Ford did at Highland Park—that you see productivity benefits. To put numbers to that, what would we expect to see in the Ford equivalent of Highland Park in terms of output?

Krugman: Yeah.

Azhar: I thought we might see what happens to revenues per employee in an AI-native firm. Across high-end companies like McKinsey, it’s about $400,000. For Meta or Google, it’s about two to two and a half million dollars. In AI-native firms like Mercor, that number is closer to seven million dollars per employee. For Anthropic, it’s close to ten million. You can measure the enormous commercial productivity of a single employee if a firm is AI-native. We’re talking about a handful of firms, but we can pick up the shape of what’s possible for the productivity of a single employee. It may be hard, it may take time, but it’s possible.

Krugman: What would those numbers look like per dollar of invested capital? One worry is that this is an enormously capital-intensive business that replaces labor. The oil refineries of New Jersey have enormous revenue per employee because there are no workers, just monstrous capital installations. Is that a factor?

Azhar: Anthropic has raised in the tens of billions rather than hundreds of billions and had a profitable quarter ahead of schedule. What we don’t know is how much of that capital goes into developing the next model versus monetizing previous generations. Their IPO in the next six to nine months will tell us.

Chinese companies are using much less capital to build models that are nearly as good. So I think the harder part of your question is that if every model that OpenAI or Anthropic costs ten times as much to deploy and develop, but lasts only a couple of years before it’s defunct because of competition, what needs to be true for that to be sustainable for more than a year or two? To me, that is a really tricky question as well.

Krugman: You’ve cited intermediate measures. Rather than revenue, we look at generated lines of code, which has exploded, versus actual usable applications, which hasn’t. Does that tell us anything?

Azhar: Lines of code is an odd measure. We’ve made it much cheaper to write code, so less determined people are writing it now. It’s unsurprising the increase hasn’t been met by proportional productivity. Data suggests we’re getting more high-quality code, but also a lot of useless waste. This isn’t the first time a useful input in the economy generated waste. Think of a barrel of oil: we count the whole value in GDP, but two-thirds is thrown away as waste heat. Only one-third is useful energy. Sloppy lines of code are a similar form of waste we’ve been happy to tolerate in other sectors for a century.

Krugman: A weird analogy is when widespread word processing came in. Books started getting longer. It was so easy for authors to turn out hundreds of pages. What might have been a two-volume series became five.

Azhar: On that front, we’re at an enlightenment moment. In 18th-century France, the battle was over who gets to write and express their story. Men and women produced remarkable works with quill pens that encapsulated a world.

Krugman: Right.

Azhar: Is it worse that we allow for more expression? We are worse off when that connects to an algorithmic recommendation system that drives constant slop at us. But we aren’t inevitably worse off because we’re giving access to many more people.

In reducing costs of access, we might find amazing people. In breaking down silos of knowledge, we might find connections—perhaps something in battery chemistry that is useful in cardiology. We don’t know because we’ve never been able to get those experts to talk. I look at each opportunity discreetly.

Krugman: There is a potential book here: The Upside of Slop. This is an unrecognizable scene from eighteen months ago. Wow.

Azhar: We could get ChatGPT to write it.

Krugman: I started my career writing papers longhand on yellow legal pads. Amazing change.

Azhar: I still write everything with a fountain pen. I’m writing my new book longhand and most of my research is too. The computer is turned off because AI does all the boring stuff like PowerPoint and emails, giving me time to apply my brain to things I want to think about.

I’d be happy to continue this conversation in a few months. Thank you for inviting me.

Krugman: Thanks so much. Take care.

Statement on the US government directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5

Statement on the US government directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5

Well this is nuts:

The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected.

We received the directive from the government today at 5:21pm (ET). The letter did not provide specific details of its national security concern. Our understanding is that the government believes it has become aware of a method of bypassing, or "jailbreaking" Fable 5. We reviewed a demonstration of this specific technique being used to identify a small number of previously known, minor vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities all appear relatively simple, and we have found that other publicly-available models are able to discover them as well without requiring a bypass. [...]

To date, the government has only given us verbal evidence of a potential narrow, non-universal jailbreak, which essentially consists of asking the model to read a specific codebase and fix any software flaws. Our understanding is that one potential jailbreak was shared with the government. We have reviewed the report and validated that the level of capability displayed there is widely available from other models (including OpenAI's GPT-5.5), and is used every day by the defenders who keep systems safe. We will share more details over the next 24 hours.

I still have access to Fable via claude.ai and Claude Code now, at 9:01pm ET.

Update: I ran this script against the Anthropic API to spot when claude-fable-5 would stop working. My access was cut off at 6:59pm Pacific (9:59pm ET):

[2026-06-12T18:56:50-07:00] attempt 35: running uv run llm -m claude-fable-5 hi
[2026-06-12T18:56:55-07:00] success: Hi there! How can I help you today?
[2026-06-12T18:57:55-07:00] attempt 36: running uv run llm -m claude-fable-5 hi
[2026-06-12T18:57:59-07:00] success: Hi! How can I help you today?
[2026-06-12T18:58:59-07:00] attempt 37: running uv run llm -m claude-fable-5 hi
[2026-06-12T18:59:00-07:00] FAILED after attempt 37 with exit code 1

stderr:
Error: Error code: 404 - {'type': 'error', 'error': {'type': 'not_found_error', 'message': 'Claude Fable 5 is not available. Please use Opus 4.8. Learn more: https://www.anthropic.com/news/fable-mythos-access'}, 'request_id': 'req_011CbzRyirV7KZLHYYdBM9od'}

Via @AnthropicAI

Tags: jailbreaking, ai, generative-ai, llms, anthropic, claude, ai-ethics, claude-mythos

OpenAI WebRTC Audio Session, now with document context

OpenAI WebRTC Audio Session, now with document context

I built the first version of this tool in December 2024 to try out the then-new OpenAI WebRTC API for interacting with their realtime audio models.

Last month OpenAI introduced a brand new model to that API called GPT‑Realtime‑2, which they promoted as "our first voice model with GPT‑5‑class reasoning" - with a Sep 30, 2024 knowledge cut-off.

I've been waiting for that model to show up in the ChatGPT iPhone app but it still hasn't, so I revisited my old playground.

You can now pick the better model, and you can also paste in a big chunk of document context so you can have as audio conversation in your browser about whatever information you think would be useful to explore in a conversational way.

Screenshot of a web interface titled "OpenAI WebRTC Audio Session" with a gray status dot. Form fields: "OpenAI API Token" showing a masked password of dots, "Voice" dropdown set to "Coral", "Model" dropdown set to "gpt-realtime-2". A collapsible section labeled "▼ Document context (optional — paste text to talk about)" with bold instruction "Paste a document here before starting the session and the model will be able to discuss it with you" above a textarea containing a pasted Markdown document about whether DuckDB can run untrusted SQL as safely as Datasette runs SQLite. Below are a blue "Start Session" button and a gray disabled "Mute Mic" button, then a green success message "Session established successfully!" At the bottom, a dark panel headed "Last transcript" reads: "DuckDB can be made about as safe as SQLite for running untrusted SELECT queries, but only if you lock it down properly. Using read only true by itself is not enough, because SQL can still" (text cut off).

Tags: audio, tools, ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, multi-modal-output, webrtc

Links 6/13/26

Links for you. Science:

A Response to The National Academies’ Vision for Science: Averting a Path Towards Mediocrity
Flesh-eating screwworm returns to U.S. after 60 years, threatening cattle herd
Meet the ‘superdodgers’: The few who never had COVID
Michigan found a way to reduce school vaccine waivers. until it backfired.
First U.S. screwworm case confirmed in South Texas
Fabricated Citations Found In Over 2,800 Biomedical Journal Articles
Debugging California: Fighting mosquitoes with mosquitoes

Other:

No, Artificial Intelligence Is Not Conscious
The District’s twin housing investment crises
Impeach Bill Pulte. If we saw a scheme like this playing out in any other context, we’d use every tool available to try and stop it.
How Did This Happen
Republicans’ Talarico Trans Taunt Is A Witch Hunt In The Classic Sense
Eric’s Law is vital protection for D.C. residents with disabilities
Hell is other people – so billionaires are using AI to replace them
National Abortion Hotline workers fight against implementing AI
National Guard has done little to reduce violent crime in D.C., a new study finds (my better take here)
US Attorney Corruption — Let’s Take It National!!
Companies Are Using Reddit to Manipulate ChatGPT and Google AI Search
Greg Bovino’s Retirement Plan? Go Full Fascist
Trump’s Chief Nevada Prosecutor Shirks DOJ Orders, Boosts Allies
Sam Altman says OpenAI’s top token spender uses 100 billion tokens a month — and they’re not even the world leader
Autonomous vehicles were supposed to cut traffic—what if they don’t?
Trump’s Corrupt IRS Shakedown Backfires Badly as GOPers Turn on Him
DOJ is investigating former congressman George Santos for insider trading on Kalshi
Why do young US Americans avoid cross-partisan dating? A closer look at mediators and variation by gender and party (I think the strength of the effects should be ignored given how the questions could affect the answers, but each of the effects themselves, and that none of them are extremely dominant is interesting)
Ballroom donors won $50B in contracts after giving to Trump project, watchdog group finds
The Musk SpaceX IPO Scam: How You’re Going to Be Investing in SpaceX Whether You Want To or Not
SpaceX blocked from early U.S. benchmark index entry as S&P reaffirms existing rules
Focus Groups
Millions of Trips, “Waymo” Empty Miles: California’s First Thousand Days of Commercial Robotaxi Service
Senior U.S. Officials Eye Government Shares in AI Giants
My SSN was exposed in a breach at Columbia—a school I have no connection with
The 311 app has been broken for ages. What gives?
The rise of the managed city. Tokyo’s newest megadevelopments aim to redesign urban life for an aging, increasingly diverse society
‘We were attacked as bad Jews’: Columbia faculty who supported Gaza protests file claims with Trump’s antisemitism fund
What Trump Delivered for Amazon
From Bad Brains to Bratmobile: What’s Your Favorite D.C. Punk Album?

Who’s afraid of a little inflation?

Inflation. It’s been in the news a lot for some years now,  in the couple of years after the pandemic, when it was especially high, in the relief of dropping after, and now rising again with the US/Israel/Iran/Lebanon, and everyone else in the Middle East, conflict. But inflation is about much more than business, politics, … Continue reading Who’s afraid of a little inflation?

U.S. Government Directs Anthropic to Shut Down Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Models on National Security Grounds

Anthropic:

The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected.

We received the directive from the government today at 5:21pm (ET). The letter did not provide specific details of its national security concern. Our understanding is that the government believes it has become aware of a method of bypassing, or “jailbreaking” Fable 5. We reviewed a demonstration of this specific technique being used to identify a small number of previously known, minor vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities all appear relatively simple, and we have found that other publicly-available models are able to discover them as well without requiring a bypass.

Fable 5 and Mythos 5 were announced on Tuesday — that post has detailed comparisons, from Anthropic, on the models’ capabilities.

Having the access ban extend all the way to “foreign national Anthropic employees” is, to say the least, aggressive. Whether that degree of restriction is truly warranted, I don’t think we, on the outside, can say. The Trump administration lacks credibility, to say the least, when it comes to foreign nationals. But it’s Anthropic itself that repeatedly compares the power of frontier models to nuclear weapons. Here’s CEO Dario Amodei, in an essay published just this month:

There may come a time, perhaps relatively soon, when we need to go beyond this, when the most powerful AI systems look less like airplanes or automobiles and more like weaponizable nuclear materials — a threat to humanity rather than “just” a threat to public safety. If that occurs, we may need more aggressive regulatory measures than those I have laid out.

If that occurs — or if it already has occurred — it’s obviously not the place of Anthropic (or OpenAI or Google) to render that judgment. Ben Thompson wrote about this presciently back in March, and linking to his post, I wrote:

Nilay Patel, quoting the same section of Thompson’s column I quoted above, sees it as “Ben Thompson making a full-throated case for fascism”. I see it as the case against corporatocracy. Who sets our defense policies? Our democratically elected leaders, or the CEOs of corporate defense contractors?

 ★ 

Saturday assorted links

1. Soccer and economic growth.

2. The AI scenario for Europe?

3. The smart version of the AI is a bubble argument.

4. Ken Opalo reviews Studwell on Africa.

5. The influence of AI on non-fiction books?

6. The economics behind the San Antonio Spurs.

7. On the new Macca album.

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Revised Artemis lunar lander plans take shape

Blue Moon Artemis 3

NASA has provided more details about the revised approaches that Blue Origin and SpaceX are taking to accelerate work on Artemis lunar landers.

The post Revised Artemis lunar lander plans take shape appeared first on SpaceNews.

Reading List 06/13/2026

“The Campo di SS. Giovanni e Paolo, Venice,” by Bernardo Bellotto, via the National Gallery of Art.

Welcome to the reading list, a weekly roundup of news and links related to buildings, infrastructure and industrial technology. This week we look at homes being built on top of libraries, Patriot missile manufacturing, an effort to construct new US coal plants, a tunnel between the US and Russia, and more. Roughly 2/3rds of the reading list is paywalled, so for full access become a paid subscriber.

Housing

Apparently the hot new trend is to combine housing developments with libraries, either by building housing on the site of an existing library, or building a new library as part of a larger development project. “The projects would be part of a nationwide trend, joining similar efforts in the suburbs of Washington and the cities of Boston, Cleveland and Milwaukee. An October 2025 report from the Urban Institute, a nonprofit research group, found that more than 1,800 apartments had been built across the United States as part of developments combining libraries and housing. A number of such projects have moved forward in New York City, including at the Sunset Park Library in Brooklyn, the Inwood Library in Manhattan and the Grand Concourse Library in the Bronx.” [NYT]

Claims about housing construction in Taiwan. [X]

Manufacturing

It apparently takes more than two years(!) to build a Patriot missile. The article is thin on details, but this mostly seems to be due to the time suppliers need to make individual parts and subcomponents. [WSJ]

Claims that on the order of 90% all the semiconductor lithography equipment that’s ever been made is still in use. [X]

Chinese car manufacturer BYD wants to unseat Toyota as the world’s biggest carmaker in five years. [The Guardian] And in spite of the sky-high tariffs on Chinese vehicles, some Chinese car manufacturers have apparently established a small presence in the US in anticipation of future US sales. [Jalopnik]

The US adds a bunch of major Chinese manufacturers, including car manufacturer BYD, robot manufacturer Unitree, and battery manufacturer CALB to its list of “Chinese military suppliers,” which can make it more complicated for US companies to do business with them. [CarNewsChina]

Ford is trying to get more people into the skilled trades. [WSJ]

Google orders 3 million TPUs from Intel. [Tom’s Hardware] And SemiAnalysis thinks that things for Intel are looking up, and the company should raise capital. [SemiAnalysis]

Energy

Solar energy supplies more electricity than coal in the US for the first time. “Solar supplied 12.8% of US electricity last month while coal accounted for 12.2%, according to a report Wednesday from the clean energy think tank Ember, which analyzed monthly and hourly data from the US Energy Information Administration.” [Bloomberg] At its peak in the 1980s, coal supplied roughly 55% of US electricity.

But even though coal is in long-term decline, it’s not going down without a fight. The data center boom is keeping coal plants that were slated for closure operating longer. [The Register] And the Trump administration wants to use the Defense Production Act to build two new coal plants in Alaska and West Virginia. [Bloomberg] There hasn’t been a utility-scale coal plant built in the US since 2013.

Read more

Oil on Logan

Observed on Logan Circle, NW, D.C.:

Untitled

Organ Allocation and Transplantation, by Ashlagi and Roth, forthcoming in Annual Review of Economics 2026

 Here's a  forthcoming review paper on organ allocation and transplantation that focuses on the allocation of deceased-donor organs, particularly kidneys, and goes through the whole supply chain, from donor registration and family consent after death, to patient prioritization, and organ allocation. We also discuss the regulatory and political practices and ethical concerns that keep the availability of transplants far short of their need.

Organ Allocation and Transplantation
by Itai Ashlagi and Alvin E. Roth, 
Annual Review of Economics   
Vol. 18 https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-economics-092425-123425
Review in Advance first posted online on June 08, 2026. (Changes may still occur before final publication.)
 
Abstract: There is a large shortage of solid organs for transplants. This survey reviews the allocation of organs (particularly kidneys), with an emphasis on how deceased donor organs are obtained and allocated in the United States but with pointers to related issues involving living donors and transplantation around the world. We review some of the key institutional details and theoretical and empirical studies and describe some open questions that we hope will continue to attract attention from researchers interested in the economic and operational aspects of organ allocation. 

 

The paper ends with a set of open questions and research directions, followed by these concluding paragraphs about the future:

 "THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW


"Efforts to quickly improve the availability of transplants include recovering more transplantable organs from deceased donors, successfully transplanting more of those recovered organs, and facilitating more living donor organ transplants of kidneys and livers. In the longer term, efforts are under way to reduce the need for human organ transplants by reducing the need for re-transplantation (after graft failure) and by preventing organ failure or curing it by other means. 

"It is common to hear that xenotransplantation is tomorrow’s cure for organ failure, and always will be. However, recent developments in transplanting organs from genetically modified pigs into primates and humans suggest that the future possibilities are real, even though (as of this writing) no pig organ transplant to a human has yet survived for as much as a year (although there have now been some pig kidney and heart transplants that worked for months; Tector 2025). Another somewhat related approach involves trying to bioengineer an artificial kidney by removing from a pig kidney the pig cells that would be attacked by the human immune system, leaving a scaffold that could be populated with human kidney cells (Lo et al. 2024). Less developed so far is the hope of regrowing kidneys through some kind of stem cell manipulation, although some kidney cell growth in mice has been achieved (Araoka et al. 2025).
 

"Each of these lines of research offers the possibility of reducing or ending the need for, and hence the scarcity of, human organs for transplantation. That scarcity would also be reduced by medical progress in reducing the incidence and progression of kidney disease and its precursors and of other kinds of organ failure that now require transplantation.  Yet it remains likely that almost everyone whose life could be extended by a human organ transplant today will die without one, and so our attention to the shortage of transplants is still needed.

Sometimes it is hard to solve for the equilibrium

Probably you all know about this:

The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance.

According to not yet confirmed but likely true reports, it was shown that model could be jailbroken.  The released Mythos already restricted bio and “AI improvement” queries, rather strictly in fact, so now we are back to the model not being available.

Here are a few of the constraints on the U.S. government, not the only ones I might add:

1. It needs for the main companies to stay in business.  On top of that, it wants their IPOs to go reasonably well.  And it is now much harder for the top companies to recruit foreigners, which is a significant share of their highest quality workforce (Demis, Ilya, Andrej for a start).  It is also much harder for the main companies to drum up foreign business in a credible and sustainble manner.

1b. How are American multinationals operating abroad supposed to use top systems, moving forward?

2. It wants to use model access as a tool of both hard and soft power, so model access has to be possible at some level.  But it is very hard to control what foreign agents will do with their partial model access, when they get it in the ffuture.

3. The U.S. needs to stay ahead of China in the AI race.

4. The U.S. needs to issue restrictions that are actually enforceable, and “U.S. citizens only” does not fit that bill.  Furthermore (markets in everything!) it is easy enough to hire a traitorous American to access tools of wrongdoing, or for matter it is not difficult to fake citizenship in various ways.

5. USG cannot nationalize these companies and then proceed to run them effectively.

6. Chinese and other open source models do in fact improve at some reasonable pace, even if they are right now considerably behind the best proprietary models.

Is the most likely scenario that the government hardens some of its own systems and takes some further precautions, and then allows Mythos to be rereleased?  Perhaps with some additional safeguards?

Is there such a thing as a model that cannot be jailbroken at all?  I doubt that.

So basically we will be replaying this scenario periodically over time, but with each time the companies and also the government in a weaker and more precarious position.

I am willing to reject the philosophy of “safetyism” and bite various associated bullets.  As it stands, these actions will not succeed in making us safer, including for the reasons mentioned above.  Our regulatory institutions, attitudes, and approaches simply are not well suited to an era of radical innovation.

In any case these events do not surprise me (they do surprise me in their immediate suddenness however), as this kind of approach is what governments have been about for a long time now, USG included or perhaps USG especially.

Rising in status: Leopold, Aesop, and also Mistral.  AI nationalism.  Proponents of slow take-off as the likely scenario.  Reticent, quiet CEOs.  As for China, will they rush into this opportunity, or are they at least as scared as we are?

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How did Stanislaw Lem imagine advanced computer intelligence?

…GOLEM’s behavior is unpredictable.  Sometimes it converses courteously with people, whereas on other occasions any attempt at contact misfires.  GOLEM sometimes cracks jokes, too, though its sense of humor is fundamentally different from man’s.  Much depends on its interlocutors.  In exceptional casese GOLEM will show a certain interest in people who are talented in a particular way; it is intrigued, so to speak, not by mathematical aptitude — not even the greatest — but rather by interdisciplinary forms of talent; on several occasions it has predicted with uncanny accuracy achievements by young, as yet unknown, scientists in a field which it has it self indicated.  (After a brief exchange it informed T. Vroedel, age twenty-two and then only a doctoral candidate, “You will become a computer,” which was supposed to mean, more o less, “You will become somebody.”)

That is from Lem’s Imaginary Magnitude, an extraordinary book in parts, most of all see his Golem IV section on how n AGI (our term, not his) is likely to behave.

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Why is America less of a 24/7 society?

It’s deeply odd to me that America is a far less 24/7 hour society today than it was 10, 20, or even 30 years ago. I vividly remember friends from the UK back in 1996 marveling at the fact that in the mid-sized Indiana town where I went college it was possible to buy groceries, clothing, a lawn mower, a snow blower, Lego sets, and bow hunting gear at 3 AM on any given Tuesday of the year. That was peak American Empire, and it’s long gone.

That is from Christopher Kratovil.  What are some hypotheses here?  I see a few:

1. America is older.  True, but this is hardly the main explanation for anything.

2. Due to increasing leisure time, fewer people want to work weird and long hours?  Tighter labor markets and the Great Moderation contributed to this.

3. It is stores that are in decline.  24/7 activity has moved into the warehouse, the fulfillment center, the server farm, the delivery network, and the home.

3b. When you can do Doordash at 10:30 p.m., you do not need to go out for snacks at 3 a.m.

4. Shoplifting has become more common?  If the drug stores have to lock up their wares in NYC, why should stores try to be open at 3 a.m., when presumably shoplifting risk is higher and the quantity of monitoring labor is lower?

5. Online entertainment is much better, so why go out late at night?

6. More work from home means people are not returning from their jobs at late hours and then wanting to buy things.

I would put most of my money on #3 and #5 — what do you think?

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Areas of Severe Thunderstorms and Excessive Rainfall Today


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






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






Atlantic 2-Day Graphical Outlook Image
Atlantic 7-Day Graphical Outlook Image