Links 5/23/2025

A Snout of Significance Nautilus

Is Peace Possible The Marginalian

My Father Prosecuted History’s Crimes. Then He Died in One. New York Times Magazine

Climate/Environment

Global Forest Loss Shatters Records in 2024, Fueled by Massive Fires World Resources Institute

NOAA predicts above-normal 2025 Atlantic hurricane season National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Scientists Find DNA Proof of Swine Feces in North Carolina Homes Sentient Science

Pandemics

After hospitalization for pneumonia, COVID-19 patients report lasting symptoms CIDRAP

***

Deadly West Texas measles outbreak reaches San Antonio area San Antonio Report

More Texas children are getting vaccinated early against measles Texas Tribune

The Koreas

Aftermath Of Disastrous North Korean Frigate Launch Seen In Satellite Image The War Zone

U.S. Considers Withdrawing Thousands of Troops From South Korea WSJ

Japan

Japan and the Birth of Modern Shipbuilding Construction Physics

O Canada

‘Financial landlords’ driving up rent prices in Toronto faster than other types of landlords: study CP24

Old Blighty

Wild camping on Dartmoor is legal, supreme court rules The Guardian

UK agrees to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius in a deal it says protects a key US base AP

Africa

US Navy Super Hornets launched history’s ‘largest airstrike’ from an aircraft carrier — 125,000 pounds of munitions, admiral says Business Insider. On Somalia in February.

A US drone base in Côte d’Ivoire? The Pentagon in talks with Abidjan The Africa Report

Syraqistan

‘Another layer of cruelty’: Israeli forces bomb Prosthetic Limbs hospital in north Gaza New Arab

No aid entering Gaza has reached starving Palestinians: UN The Cradle

Moral Limits Dissent Magazine

How Microsoft Became A Hub For Israeli Intelligence ¡Do Not Panic!

Microsoft Bans the Word “Palestine” in Internal Emails Drop Site

Elbit Systems raises $512m on Nasdaq for production expansion Globes

Nvidia grows its Israel footprint with $27M office expansion in Tel Aviv Ctech

European Disunion

German troops start first permanent foreign deployment since second world war The Guardian

MEPs call on European Commission to cut Hungary off from EU funds Euronews

The fight for Hungary’s future: sovereignty or subjugation? Esha Krishnaswamy

EU imposes sanctions on two pro-Russian German bloggers DPA

The Black Chamber: Opening Europe’s Post History Today

New Not-So-Cold War

Russia set on creating ‘buffer zone’ in Ukraine – Putin RT

Kyiv proposes EU partners help directly fund Ukrainian military under new model Kyiv Independent

Negotiations Are A Bridge to Nowhere, But the Battlefield is the Highway to Victory The Real Politick with Mark Sleboda (Video)

Russian Iskander Missile Strike Destroys Patriot Air Defence System Guarding Dnepropetrovsk Military Watch

Arms Race in Ukraine The New York Review

Spook Country

Woman shot at CIA headquarters after crashing into gate CNBC

Mr. Market

Significant Headwinds to Consumer Spending Apollo Academy. Useful chart:

Trump 2.0

Trump’s crypto dinner cost over $1 million per seat on average NBC News

A Crypto Billionaire Who Feared Arrest in the U.S. Returns for Dinner With Trump WSJ

Chinese Firms’ Plan to Avoid Stock Delisting: Buy Trump’s Memecoin WSJ

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Trump Is Turning Our Consumer Watchdog Into a Corporate Protector Eric Halperin, director of enforcement at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from 2021 to 2025, New York Times

What’s in the House-passed ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Stephen Semler

‘Call This What It Is—Theft’: Republicans Approve Largest Medicaid, SNAP Cuts in US History Common Dreams. Likely worse than theft.

MAHA

RFK Jr. Releases Much-Anticipated MAHA Report MedPage Today

Democrats en Déshabillé

The Real Path to Abundance Sandeep Vaheesan, Boston Review

The Supremes

Why the Supreme Court decision on firing independent agency heads is a big deal Can We Still Govern?

Split Supreme Court blocks first religious charter school in Oklahoma SCOTUS Blog

Antitrust

FTC Abandons Price Discrimination Case Against PepsiCo, Tells Main Street Businesses: “You’re on Your Own” American Economic Liberties Project

Police State Watch

Mahmoud Khalil permitted to hold newborn son for the 1st time despite government objections AP

Our Famously Free Press

AI

US House Passes 10-Year Moratorium on State AI Laws Tech Policy Press

Behind Silicon Valley and the GOP’s campaign to ban state AI laws Blood in the Machine. From May 16, but some useful detail.

***

You See? Generative AI is Bad At Doing My Job Lit Hub

Talking To Machines, Learning To Be Human: AI As A Moral Feedback Loop 3 Quarks Daily

Groves of Academe

Trump Admin Revokes Harvard’s Authorization To Enroll International Students The Harvard Crimson

Imperial Collapse Watch

America Is In A Late Republic Stage Like Rome Niall Ferguson, Noema Mag

Sic Transit Gloria Mundi imetatronink

Zeitgeist Watch

The age of radical message-board utilitarian terrorism Read Max

Class Warfare

Can American Labor Law Be Renewed? Commonplace

Sanitizing the Psychedelic Revolution New Lines Magazine

On (the) Sublime Longreads

Antidote du jour (via):

See yesterday’s Links and Antidote du Jour here.

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84 comments

  1. Antifa

    Golden Dome
    (melody borrowed from Take The Long Way Home written by Richard Davies and Roger Hodgson, and performed by the band Supertramp in 1979)

    (Trump has given the OK to build a Golden Dome over America, a whole bunch of satellites ready to shoot down any missiles overhead. Except it won’t work, ever. The initial price tag is $500 Billion, but we all know that will go up and up forever.)

    We’ll be safe from a UFO
    Satellites zooming to and fro
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    Build a Golden Dome

    Chinese missiles are pretty good
    We’ll protect everyone we should
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    Build a Golden Dome

    It’s the art of the steal—we’ve got no machinery
    Cash for you and me Trumping down, Oy!
    We spend our lives on the brink of a war with a foreigner
    Sometimes we go too far, but we roll the dice

    We’ll place our bombs at amazing heights
    While we jack up the purchase price
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    Build a Golden Dome

    Nukes will orbit us endlessly
    Round and round up where we can’t see
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    Build a Golden Dome

    There’s just no way to gauge profits receivable
    It’s reprehensible, and there’s more, too
    There’s a few missing links, and the whole thing is vanity
    Oh, it’s a travesty—there can be no doubt

    (musical interlude)

    Donald Trump wants his Dome to prove that he’s royalty
    Wants it on TeeVee, he wants his Dome, boy
    We’ll need more engineers, so more foreign visas then,
    All speaking Mandarin, to prep us for wartime

    There’s enough cash to go around
    There’ll be more when we shut it down
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome
    We’ll build a Golden Dome

    Build a Golden Dome
    Golden Dome
    Golden Dome
    Golden Dome
    Golden Dome
    Golden Dome
    Golden Dome . . .

    Reply
    1. The Rev Kev

      Not bad, Not bad at all. How about this too-

      ‘In Normerica did Donald Trump, a stately golden dome decree’

      (with apologies to Samuel Taylor Coleridge)

      Reply
    2. ChrisFromGA

      It’s Breakfast in America, and those aren’t Cocoa Puffs in your cereal bowl. They’re rabbit pellets.

      Reply
  2. The Rev Kev

    “Delta flight engine lacked oil when making emergency landing”

    Yeah, that’s kind of a big deal. It’s a wonder that neither pilot did not notice the low oil pressure in the right engine. I suppose that the smoke coming into the cabin was the giveaway and it sounds like the flight attendants could not get through to them with their own warnings. I suppose that when the investigation is finished that they are going to have to completely rebuild that engine which itself is going to cost a mint. Hopefully somebody will remember to use the dipstick next time. :)

    Reply
    1. vao

      “It’s a wonder that neither pilot did not notice the low oil pressure in the right engine.”

      Don’t the pilots have to go through a checklist before taking off? Doesn’t that checklist include an item related to oil pressure?

      Somehow, this might be even worse than it looks.

      Reply
    2. MicaT

      A quick online search found the flight was delta 876 in February 2025.

      The NTSB report is out and the issue was an oiling system failure, not lack of oil added.
      The smoke in the cabin is a large indicator that oil was leaking into the compressor section of the engine where the bleed air is used for cabin heating and cooling.
      The lack of oil wouldn’t cause smoke like that.

      https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/ntsb-releases-report-delta-flight-smoke-incident-february.amp

      The exact failure or broken part might be found at the NTSB website/report.

      Seems rather unlikely that Covid had anything to do with this incident

      Reply
      1. The Rev Kev

        Thanks for that. That would certainly explain the smoke if it was an oil leak. Also explains why the pressure did not drop until it was already in flight. I still wonder if they will have to rebuild that engine though as it might have been starved of oil while working.

        Reply
  3. Wukchumni

    The assassination of the 2 Israeli embassy employees and the aftermath kind of reminds me of a Jewish fellow named Herschel Grynszpan, killing a German embassy member in Paris in 1938, the Nazis using his act as a pretext for Kristallnacht, which occurred a few days later.

    It’s all in reverse, of course.

    Reply
    1. pjay

      As usual, Caitlin Johnstone captures my utter disgust at the hypocrisy as I watched the long opening segment about this on NBC News last night:

      “So let’s get one thing clear from the beginning: two Israeli embassy staffers getting shot in Washington DC is less newsworthy than tens of thousands of Palestinians being killed in Israel’s genocidal land grab. It is less important. It deserves less attention. It is not the main story. Israel’s genocide in Gaza is the main story.”

      Except that it’s not, of course. Not in our media. Not even close.

      https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/05/23/thoughts-on-the-israeli-embassy-staff-killings/

      Reply
    2. hk

      I thought about the assassination of Wilhelm Gustloff, but your example is probably more applicable here…

      Reply
        1. Lovell

          Fair enough, but still..

          Would a signature campaign make the US and Israeli governments stop the slaughter in Gaza?

          Reply
          1. Wukchumni

            I was one of a quarter million on the streets of San Francisco (a Quinn Martin production) in what i’d call a signature move, a few weeks before we invaded Iraq in 2003, and all presstidigitation could talk about the next day was a large plate glass window of a store that some hooligan had thrown a brick threw, move along nothing to see here, folks.

            Reply
  4. Afro

    Trump Admin Revokes Harvard’s Authorization To Enroll International Students The Harvard Crimson

    ****”

    I’m amazed at the stupidity and short sightedness of removing Harvard’s access to international students. Having the world’s best universities is a privilege (not a right) of the United States, and the administration is squandering that.

    Having global elites at elite is also a mechanism to brainwash them into worshipping America. From a purely imperialistic perspective, it is advantageous for the US to educate global elites. Now I’m sure some of these will now just send their kids to Duke, Yale, etc, but this will likely encourage some of them to instead go to Nanjing or Heidelberg.

    This also applies to currently enrolled students, it’s cruel and will trash the reputation of the entire American university system. Students that are already here should be permitted to finish their degrees.

    I’ll state that I’m an academic with a poor impression of Harvard as an institution who in the abstract supports the federal government incentivizing reforms. But that’s not what this. I believe and assume that this is almost certainly due to pressure from Zionist mega donors. Bill Ackman for example has been regularly blasting Harvard and Columbia on his Twitter feed.

    Reply
    1. The Rev Kev

      That’s more of America’s reputation being thrown onto the MAGA bonfire. I heard on the news that those students are only being given thee days to leave the country so I guess that they can be arrested on the fourth day as “illegal immigrants” or something. But three days? To pack up and sort your gear, to make travel bookings, close down your uni accounts and never get to finish your course at Harvard after spending all that time, money and effort. Bonus points because your career has just been derailed. You can bet that there are a lot of families overseas that are seeing this and thinking that sending their kids to Europe or Canada or China would be better as that would never happen there. But then to have Homeland Security Barbie say that they did this because Harvard was ‘fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist party on its campus’ is just making up a line of bs. There are over a million foreign students in the US contributing about $43.8 billion to the economy and most of those students are now wondering if they will still be in the US by the end of next week or whether the Trump regime will throw them out as well. Trump seems determined into making MAGA America into an international backwater-

      https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/23/trump-harvard-international-students

      Reply
      1. Terry Flynn

        Not a single member of my immediate or extended family (known for making trips to USA) wants to visit in near future. They’ve all reconsidered holiday plans there or even thought a lot more about where a flight might be diverted to and think “hmmm, if anything went wrong might our route get us diverted to USA?”

        If answer is “yes” then that place is also blacklisted. Meanwhile I wonder how the major health outcomes conferences (ISPOR is the main one) are doing…..they have ancillary conferences elsewhere but the major one is always in USA and I’ll bet their sign-ups have cratered.

        Reply
      2. Emma

        The collapse of American higher ed has been predicted for a while now and seems very over determined (high cost structure, poor pedagogy, demographics, reliance on full tuition paying students, poor standards, ran like sketchy investment funds…). Still, I don’t think anybody outside of the Heritage Foundation could have predicted how it’s going down. Trump just turned a generation of would be gusanos into haters. MAGS(atan)A?

        Reply
        1. Terry Flynn

          Thanks. Around here there are some curious trends I perceive. I kinda thought the anti-EU thing might be strongest with food labelling but if anything, people I overhear are talking about “does it come from USA?”.

          We all know and see Starmer aping Reform to try to keep nationalist votes……this could easily spiral into supermarkets boasting “not USA” and with a big Union Flag on the packaging. The Union Flag, for those paying attention, is being flown probably hundreds of times more often than when I was growing up. All a bit 1984ish/V for Vendettaish.

          I don’t like the sentiment, but I see around here (in an area that tried to compromise with Thatcher, was dumped on the bonfire once it served its purpose in breaking the National Union of Mineworkers, and has since been ignored by everyone) a deep resentment and a desire to simply “stick it to the man”. Now we have BREXIT they’re looking for next target…..it’s the USA. I hear it at bus-stops and in shops that cater for the poorer people. People comparing notes, looking at labels on clothes, etc.

          Plus there are elements among the oldest generation that “you yanks usurped us in running the world”. It was never “a thing” for decades as we rode on US coat-tails of prosperity and got to punch above our weight but now we are “expendable”, comments about “late entrants to the war” are things I hear more often. It’s not pleasant in tone but it’s there and not yet being picked up by media. As recently as 1997 we had the National Front (blatantly and unabashedly UK fascist party) fight general elections around here. They haven’t gone away.

          Reply
        2. Anonted

          This trend aligns with many other acts of seeming abandon… it’s not that the mechanism to secure elite conformity (education) has merely degraded, it’s that there is high confidence in the mechanisms they have developed to replace it. Sort of like ‘The Constitution’, or ‘Privacy’.

          Reply
        3. Carolinian

          1960 brought us the “best and the brightest” and, ultimately, Vietnam. 2025 is giving us the dumb and the dumbest and ultimately ?????

          Noem don’t forget once boasted about shooting her own dog because it misbehaved. Now she seems to be in a competition with Bondi re who is the bigger bad ass. Trump of course is the one tolerating and encouraging this because every bully needs a gang.

          Not that we should feel too sorry for Harvard as others have pointed out. But while a large section of the public clearly wanted to stick it to the elites by electing Trump they surely didn’t want to then fall victim to even worse elites. The 60s showed that being educated doesn’t make you a good person. Seems being uneducated doesn’t work for that either.

          Reply
          1. Wukchumni

            ‘Galligula’ will be remembered for utterly dumb stuff, such as his Roman predecessor’s 4 year reign that went something like this…

            His reign, though initially popular, quickly devolved into a period of lavish spending, persecution, and public humiliation of senators.

            Caligula initially enjoyed popularity with the Roman people due to his lavish spending and games, as well as the abolition of the sales tax.

            Watch out for that Praetorian Guard!

            Reply
      3. Clwydshire

        And see the NYT article “The Group Behind Project 2025 Has a Plan to Crush the Pro-Palestinian Movement”, archived at https://archive.is/20250519004619/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/18/us/project-esther-heritage-foundation-palestine.html

        This article shows how much work was done previous to the election of Trump to prepare to bypass speech protections by insisting that everyone not conforming is a supporter of Hamas and should be treated as a terrorism supporter. “Project Esther” is a breathtaking attack on freedom of speech and on rational political discussion.

        Reply
    2. Unironic Pangloss

      not defending Trump…..

      but when Harvard is exporting the likes of Mark Carney, Boris Johnson, Trump is doing the world a favor, lol

      Reply
      1. Michaelmas

        not defending Harvard ….

        But a llittle more regard for the evidence of reality is probably in order.

        And it’s almost comically self-evident that Boris Johnson never went anywhere near Harvard, developed his upper-class British prat act exclusively at Eton and Balliol College, Oxford, where he studied Classics (!), and probably has some disdain for the place and for many Yanks privately, as you will increasingly notice many overseas do now the US empire is collapsing and they cease to find it expedient to be polite.

        Reply
    3. Christopher Smith

      It’s about one set of oligarchs smashing another set’s base of power. The concerns about the greatness of American universities does not even factor for the Trump side.

      Reply
      1. Afro

        I believe that it doesn’t factor, because I believe they’re not aware.

        All American oligarchs benefit from the Ivy League system, it’s the base of power to all of them, though I’m sure many of think they’d be oligarchs even if they had been born in a central American jungle.

        Lastly, this is almost certainly about vindictiveness from Zionist donors. I think that they want to take revenge against the student protests. In the short term it’s perfectly rational. But, they to ultimately derive their power from the American empire.

        Reply
        1. Christopher Smith

          Maybe. I speculate that what is probably going on is that the prestige of Harvard and the Amrican University system accrues to one set of oligarchs, but works the power of another set (the ones which Trump is part of). In other words, one set of oligarchs benefits at the expense of another. So not only does destryoing Harvard hurt the other side, it removes a threat from the Trump side.

          To be a bit less abstract, consider the conflict between local/resional oligarchs (the gentry) and the internationalist oligarchs (like Elon and Gates) . I’ve seen discussion around here about Trump being the spokesperson for the Gentry. Think of Harvard as a prestige generator for the internationlists, even more to the point, think of it as securing and expanding the power of the internationalists by replicating their values. Now suppose the gentry see this as a threat, Harvard and the university system in general, as increasing power for the internationalists while dimiishing the power of the gentry. If the gentry are primarily concerned about their own power, and they are, then they have a strong interst in smashing Harvard and the university system in general. The gentry would thereby smash something beneficial to their competetors, as well as instituions that are dragging their power down.

          That is, this is not about making America great again or doing what’s most beneficial for the country, it’s about one group securing their power whatever the cost to everbody else. Better to rule the ash heap then serve in the utopia if you will.

          But I could be wrong.

          Reply
          1. Yves Smith

            I don’t think it is this at all. It is that being educated has become feminized. In 1995, the % of new college grads by gender as a percent of their pop was almost equal. This from Rajiv Sethi in a new post:

            …in 2024, Pew found that 47 percent of U.S. women between the ages of 25 and 34 held a bachelor’s. But only 37 percent of men did.

            Yet women still want to marry up and men are not happy being married to a woman who out-earns him (lotta studies confirm this as a general pattern). And studies find that higher earning men are more likely to get married, while high earning women less so.

            Education is not a perfect predictor of earnings but there is a decent correlation.

            Reply
        2. Ben Panga

          Thiel and his ilk have long (arguably since 1996 for Thiel and Sacks) been on a crusade to destroy the university system.

          Reply
  5. PlutoniumKun

    Japan and the Birth of Modern Shipbuilding Construction Physics

    Another fascinating essay from this site. One of the oddities about Japanese shipbuilding is how small some of the shipyards are in traditional ship building towns like Kure and Imabari. Some seem smaller than the ships they are building – tiny in comparison to the shipyards of Korea or China. A few years back I was cycling the Shimanami Kaido, a bike route that links together the many small islands of the Inland Sea via huge suspension bridges. From some of the bridges you can look down directly into the shipyards below – some yards snuggle comfortably beside tourist beaches. The secret seems to be the use of the inland sea as a convenient waterway for hauling pre-made sections of large ships from yard to yard before being finally assembled at one of the big drydocks in somewhere like Osaka.

    The article did indirectly answer a question I’d always wondered about. After the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 nearly all sides tried to find some way around the Treaty provisions except what seemed to me the obvious one – build new ships in chunks, ready to be slotted together as completed vessels in the event of war. But it seems the technology to do this simply wasn’t ready.

    Reply
    1. The Rev Kev

      In the US at least, there was a side effect with the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922. Up untill then ship designers were getting sloppy and if an engineering design solution meant several more tons added to the weight of a ship, who cared? Kinda like computer program designers these days. But when that Treaty came into effect they could no longer do that. Everything had to be designed with minimum weight which meant that ship designs became more efficient. The net effect was that the US battleships of WW2 were more efficient in design that if there had been no treaty at all.

      Reply
  6. upstater

    Union accuses eBay of closing TCGplayer office in Syracuse to keep the company ‘union free’ syracuse.com archive

    The first ever union at eBay blasted the company’s announcement Thursday that it plans to close its TCGplayer office in Syracuse this summer and move its operations to Louisville, Kentucky.
    The Communications Workers of America said it has filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board alleging eBay is terminating its union employees to “evade its bargaining obligations and to keep the company union-free.”…
    The company said the closing will eliminate 220 jobs at the South Warren Street office, where eBay workers process trading cards sold on TCGplayer’s online marketplace.

    Local Start-up in 2008, sold to eBay in 2022 for $295M, voted to unionize in 2023, no contract, now shuttered 2 years later. A rather common playbook.

    Reply
  7. Wukchumni

    Out in the West Texas town of El Paso
    Measles infected a never vaccinated girl
    Flat red spots would appear on her face, a patina
    Contagion was in play and a blotchy rash would unfurl

    Blacker than night were the aims of the preventable malady
    Wicked and evil while casting a spell
    Contagion was in deep for this Morbilli maiden
    Measles tried to infect the vaccinated, but in vain I could tell

    One night, a wild young cowboy came onto a plane
    Wild as the West Texas wind
    Dashing and daring, an airborne disease he was sharing
    With wicked infectiousness, this America that I loved
    So in anger

    Measles challenged his right for a rash decision
    Down went his hand for the seatbelt that he wore
    The infection challenge was answered in less than a heartbeat
    The handsome young stranger spread contagion on the floor

    Just for a moment, he stood there in silence
    Unaware of the foul evil deed he had done
    Many thoughts raced through my mind as I stood there
    I had but one chance and that was to run

    Out through the back door of the Boeing I ran
    Out where my parachute unfurled
    I caught a lucky break, Measles looked like it could run
    All over the cabin and away it did ride
    Just as fast as I

    Could after leaving the West Texas airport of El Paso
    Landing in the badlands of New Mexico

    El Paso, by Marty Robbins

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWm5WErkffQ

    Reply
  8. Unironic Pangloss

    >>>>The possibility of aviation mechanics with brain fog is another reason I avoid flying now.

    oh my, exhibit #39249 of folks with a UKR emoji having awful takes (and social media algos propagating fear-centric engagement)—–lots of reason not to fly, safety is not one of them—-as nothing is risk-less.

    100% guarantee that more people will die on their summer vacations anonymously on the road (with only a 4 paragraph reference in the local paper) than by flying—even with the Rube Goldberg pile of poop (compared to the ideal) that is the current aviation infrastructure.

    Reply
  9. Henry Moon Pie

    Langley and nervous security guards–

    Shooting a woman when she didn’t even breach the gate? Ashlee Babbit II.

    The story remind me of something that happened to me around CIA HQ in the late 70s. My spouse and I were living in DC but preparing to hit the road in our van to find a less crazy place to live. As part of that preparation, I bought a tarp and some clamps so we could rig an overhand off the van for some extra living space when camping in the rain or hot sun. Now I suppose I could have parked the van on the street outside the house, but it was a very buttoned-up neighborhood, and I didn’t want to upset the neighbors, so I stopped at a park I saw that was close to where I purchased the new rigging..

    I set to experimenting with various configurations when a half dozen black vehicles of various shapes and sizes pulled up and a bunch of guys in suits popped out. Here I was, in my state of complete alienation with long hair and a full beard, working on my van in a park that turned out to have a view of Langley. At least they were willing to converse before shuttling me off to some dungeon somewhere, and they realized I constituted no threat, so after telling to get the hell out of there, they let me go without putting any bullet holes in me. Things are worse now.

    Reply
    1. Wukchumni

      This tell of tale comes about 15 years ago en route to Mt Cook NP in NZ, when I spied an open gate for a NZ Army Camp near Lake Pukaki, and relying on my dumb American bona fides, figured I could talk my way out of any fix I might find myself in, and in we drove about 1/4 of a mile, when a not too worried about our existence there member of the NZ military in uniform, kindly told us we had to turn around, and that was that.

      Reply
      1. tegnost

        My big run in with the authoritarian state was back in 89 when moving to washington from boulder I got stopped in montana for going 80 in a 55 and as the gestapo waiked up alongside the car I had to prepare myself for incarceration, or worse…
        “Sir, you have exceeded the daytime speed limit in montana, you’ll need to pay me $5 now, or I’ll follow you to town so you can go to the bank?”
        Scarred me for life…(/s)

        Reply
        1. Wukchumni

          My favorite run in with the police came before the turn of the century in Glendale Ca. well known for driving infraction revenue, and I pulled a illegal U-turn on Central Ave and a motorcycle cop was on me like Evel Knievel over 30 busses and pulled me over pronto, and never was anybody so dead to rights as yours truly, hell I even looked guilty.

          ‘License and registration please’!’ he practically barked at me as I meekly handed them over, almost wanting to confess there and then!

          About a minute later he comes back and asks how long i’ve been living at the address on my driver’s license and I tell him 3 years, and he says, that’s the house I grew up in!

          So I play the nostalgia angle as much as I can and he lets me off scot-free, ahhhhh.

          Reply
    2. Harold

      I heard that they were breaking down the doors of congress and she was shouting “go go go!!” — military style.

      Reply
  10. The Rev Kev

    “EU imposes sanctions on two pro-Russian German bloggers”

    I thought that they all did this years ago. Alina Lipp’s name I recognize and her story was featured in NC during the early years of the war. She was at the front covering the war and was gutsy about it. The German government was up in arms back then and was threatening her with a cold, dank prison cell when she returned to Germany and all sort of other punishments. I think that they might of stolen any money that she had there and maybe leaned on her family. You know – all those European values that we keep on hearing about. But Wikipedia does the same and her entry begins saying-

    ‘Alina Lipp is a German social media influencer and self-described independent journalist. She is known for spreading pro-Russian disinformation about the Russian invasion of Ukraine online, including on YouTube and Telegram.’

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alina_Lipp

    Alina, your my kind of gal.

    Reply
      1. The Rev Kev

        That is disgusting that. Going after her mother and freezing her mother’s money. That is probably Robert Habeck’s doing. Twenty years ago the idea of Russia being a sort of bastion of freedom providing refuge to those fleeing persecution would have seemed bizarre. No longer. There is Edward Snowden. Vanessa Beeley. Tara Reade and the list is getting longer. What an age we live in.

        Reply
  11. DJG, Reality Czar

    German troops in first outta Germany deployment. The Guardian.

    The photo up top in the article doesn’t inspire confidence. The soldier in the foreground is overweight, and the three soldiers rightward in the photo are all, errr, rather plump indeed. I’m seeing some straining at their uniform blouses, and it isn’t their big pectoral muscles.

    These are the fierce fighters who are going to go to Moscow?

    And then what happens when they meet the famed Lithuanian mega-dumpling, the cepelinas? The name derives from zeppelin, so they may have some military uses — but I doubt it.

    Recipe in Lithuanian for those of you taking part in the ReArm EU program and increasing your calorie intake before the Russian invasions:

    https://derlingas.lt/receptai/cepelinai-neatsiejama-lietuviskos-virtuves-dalis-6-gardziausi-ir-laiko-patikrinti-receptai

    Tasty photos!

    A reminder: The G family is from Vištytis on scenic Lake Vištytis. I have checked the Wiki sites — when my grandfather was born (then it was the Russian Empire), the town had 4,500 inhabitants, a Catholic church, a Lutheran church, and a synagogue. The town now has some 600 inhabitants, and the Lutheran church and synagogue are gone. So I understand why the Lithuanians are jumpy — talk about bad neighbors.

    A reminder to the reminder: Arming a small, flat, defenseless country to the teeth is not the road to peace. As Barbara Spinelli pointed out recently in an essay: These armaments are Chekhov’s pistol, subject to the plots in a Chekhov play. The pistol will go off, inevitably.

    Reply
    1. upstater

      My grandfather was from Kazlų Rūda, just down the railroad line between Kaliningrad and Kaunas from Vištytis. A second cousin lives there with his family. Like most of rural Lithuania it is also depopulated. When I was there in 2018, the US Army was having major exercises there probably to practice cutting off Kaliningrad. I wonder if the cemetery of Red Army soldiers has been bulldozed; I estimated 320 dead, most in common graves,

      The rabid nature of the Baltics clamoring for war is disconcerting. My cousin’s sons were in a youth paramilitary group of the infamous Lithuanian Riflemans Union in the early 00s. One works for “the Lithuanian KGB”. The grandchildren are probably doing that now.

      One wonders in the revanchist Merz dreams of reclaiming East Prussia with his pudgy army.

      PS Cepelinai are great but certainly are belly bombs and very labor intensive.

      Reply
    2. Unironic Pangloss

      Paging George Washington, please appear on the Lincoln Memorial and opine about foreign entanglements.

      (of course 1930’s-era German Mustache Man had to ruin American isolationism a/k/a keeping our literal bloody hands to ourselves)

      Reply
    3. Wukchumni

      If I ever go on Lithuanian Wheel of Fortune, gonna buy me a vowel, the ‘I’ please.

      Nearly 80 years to the day of the last Germans on deployment outside the fatherland, its that damned Fourth Turning thing once again.

      Next up on the agenda comes in the first 10 days of August…

      Reply
    4. Michaelmas

      DJG: The soldier in the foreground is overweight, and the three soldiers rightward in the photo are all, errr, rather plump indeed.

      Success is a poor teacher. The German “industrial miracle” is now receding into history and — as you likely know, but others won’t — Germans work the least hours of any European population, according to OECD data.

      Also contrary to stereotype, the poor Greeks and the Italians work the most. I’m in London currently and the latter are everywhere, and while it’d be a mistake to claim the place would break down without them — London would just import a different population — the Italians here are an asset and a big improvement on, say, the Poles, who they seem to have replaced since the last time I was in this city.

      It makes me a little sad that they have to come here, based on the conversations I have with them about the economy back in Italy and the fact that I always found Italy a great country on my visits there. Most of the ones I talk to seem to profoundly dislike Meloni, too

      Reply
      1. DJG, Reality Czar

        Michaelmas: Yep. The work ethic in the Undisclosed Region is phenomenal, and it’s considered a great compliment to call someone a “great worker.” The Piedmontese make jokes about nonna’s ability to produce thousands of ravioli al plin per hour.

        The first issue for most (younger) Italians is low Italian salaries. I find that Italian wages are appallingly low — and a friend of mine from the Netherlands commented on low wages recently.

        Thirty years of wage stagnation don’t help matters, either.

        The second issue for younger Italians is years of government neglect in job creation. The current regime of wage & hours laws is not good. There will be five referendums on 8 / 9 June — four about repealing the neoliberal “Jobs Act,” and one to ease the path to citizenship.

        Italians also believe that Italy is the most bureaucratic country in the world. My response is: Have you ever dealt with bureaucracy in the US of A, the very capolavoro of bureaucratic structures and thinking?

        I wonder if the current disaster of U.K. politics, the tariff wars, roundups in the U S of A, and the fact that Italy has escaped (at least for now) some of the dire new symptoms of climate change will send them back. The “fuga dei cervelli” is definitely an issue in Italy.

        Reply
        1. Michaelmas

          @ DJG –

          Yes, everything you list as an issue is exactly what Italians In London tell me.

          DJG: I wonder if the current disaster of U.K. politics … and the dire new symptoms of climate change will send them back.

          I’ve gotten around more than most people, including some commenters here from the UK, and I would note that: –

          [1] The city-state of London currently appears to be fine and in fact booming, though this is in contrast to many smaller UK cities and towns, which a half-century ago still had manufacturing to provide employment and now have nothing but a Lidl supermarket or an Amazon fulfillment center and, additionally, populations straight out of the Mahgreb and southwards dumped in them;

          [2] People everywhere are always inclined to ‘the grass is greener’ syndrome and in the UK there’s plenty of that, with the myth of the affluence of the imperial past or some other imagined time or place. In reality, I was surprised to discover when I actually looked at the UK’s figures recently, it’s the world’s fourth largest exporter when services exports are factored in, so maybe things aren’t as dire as is assumed;

          [3] As regards the disaster of UK politics, Starmer and Labour are doubtless a betrayal of the party’s history and if you believed Jeremy Corbyn and co. were astute enough to have a hope in hell of beating the UK establishment you’re particularly bitter. Likewise, if you’re an EU-loving Remainer still angry about Brexit.

          Nonetheless, awful and Tory-lite as Starmer and co. are, they are not the real Tories. So they’ve had room to move to make trade agreements with the EU, US, India, and China, not having the history of playing silly buggers with those entities that the Tories did. They also aren’t quite as moronically committed to market ideology, at least to the extent the Tories were, so they can do things — however unwillingly — like nationalize British Steel and the railways when this becomes the least-worst option.

          Starmer’s Labour also didn’t compete to fellate Donald Trump when he got elected in the US, as Farage (Reform) and Badenoch (Tory) initially did before they saw how much the UK public dislikes him. Or indeed as Meloni is still doing in Italy. So while I understand plenty of people like Terry Flynn here having complete contempt for today’s Labour — hard not to — when I look around the world, and especially the West, after 40-plus years of neoliberalism the politicians are robotic neoliberal scum everywhere. Granted: Tory-lite Starmer Labour are awful, too, but arguably not quite as awful as in most other places and certainly not as awful as the Tories have been (as yet, anyway).

          And as for the threat of Farage and Reform, when most of the country learns he wants to nationalize the NHS, the urge to burn the whole thing down by electing him in 2029 may be less of a threat than some think. It might be depressing — it is depressing, actually — but a couple of lines from Beckett may apply as regards Labour staying in power —

          ESTRAGON: I can’t go on like this.

          VLADIMIR: That’s what you think.

          Granted, too: in the long run, what can’t continue indefinitely, won’t continue. The world is a tinderbox and there’ll be a global crash soon. But, so to speak, London doesn’t have to run faster than the bear — I’m in London so speaking selfishly now — it just has to run faster than most other countries so that when the rich fleeing those countries park their money it’s in the City and the City’s outlying tax havens.

          Reply
    5. Krautsalat

      From what I can see of the epaulettes on that picture, that’s a couple of senior NCOs (~Stabsfeldwebel) and at least a Major in the foreground. Don’t know if they are meant to fight anything. I heard they had some trouble finding enough meat/fools to fill that tripwire brigade.

      The cepelinas are not looking like mega-dumplings though. From the picture it looks like the soldiers have already a lot of experience with the different german versions of dumplings. One of them is the sweet southern german version called Germknödel (steamed yeast dough with additions, for size comparison there is a glas of beer in one of the pictures).

      Reply
      1. tegnost

        oh yeah that germknodel looks really healthy…especially if you are trying to put on a couple of extra inches of fat to help protect yourself from the dreaded russian winter…

        Reply
    6. ilsm

      Some years ago waiting for a flight out of El Paso, a number of German soldiers were waiting in the area.

      I was impressed with their appearance! All tall and lean, apparently infantry.

      Ft Bliss is near ElPaso.

      Reply
  12. Mass Driver

    US Navy Super Hornets launched history’s ‘largest airstrike’ from an aircraft carrier — 125,000 pounds of munitions, admiral says Business Insider. On Somalia in February.

    The key to getting a Guinness World Record is comming up with an achivement that no one normal would even think of trying. There were more competitors for making the World’s smallest bicycle than for bombing-innocent-people-into-oblivion-from-an-aircraft-carrier niche.

    Reply
    1. JMH

      Did I miss the declaration of war of Somalia? Was this bomb dump for demonstration purposes only? On the other hand, must have been quite a collection of malefactors to warrant such an extravagant use of ordnance? What did it cost the American taxpayer or is that an impertinent question? And for the rest of it, I paraphrase the immortal Bugs Bunny: What a bunch of moro(o)ns.

      Reply
    2. ilsm

      An Air National Guard F-16 squadron operating from a well organized pre-flight/combat turn section of taxiway can generate close to one hundred sorties in a daylight period.

      USS Truman getting 16 sorties off in a day is routine training Saturday for a national guard drill weekend.

      The specified number of attack sorties per daylight cycle from a carrier is closely held secret.

      Reply
  13. DJG, Reality Czar

    The esteemed Jen C. Pan, who I know mainly as a journalist at Jacobin engages in an interesting interview with Joshua Citarella, who is a smart guy and artist.

    Both of them are real leftists — and leftists do in fact exist, as she points out.

    She is great with facts and stats, and he’s good on history. Both are witty.

    Worth your while:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BitMUHgyJEI

    Some of the information on DEI turned my head: It is a thoroughly private program — the “human resources” department on stilts — and serves mainly to shore up the business class and its goals. Note the quote about union busters who also do DEI consulting…

    Reply
  14. Wukchumni

    Wondered what the antidote was named, and of course Unicorn Lizard was what I was thinking, but alas no, a Pinocchio Lizard!

    Drop down and give me 20, mister!

    Reply
  15. The Rev Kev

    “Sic Transit Gloria Mundi”

    The times they are a changing. Can’t attack Russia. Can’t attack China. Can’t even attack Iran. They shoot back and as always, incoming has right of way. Attacking Yemen was simply embarrassing as they did not quit so the US agreed to call it a draw. can the US even mount large scale invasions like they did twenty years ago? Maybe that is why they have not invaded Venezuela. Anybody remember what Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute once said?

    ‘Every ten years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business.’

    So maybe those days are gone and probably just as well. In passing, the title of this article is incomplete so here is the full one-

    ‘Sic Transit Gloria Mundi. Tuesday’s Usually Worse.’

    Reply
    1. ilsm

      When US invaded Iraq in 2003 it had been softened up in 1991, had endured years of sanction, and blockade and had its skies patrolled by US.

      US took the cities and lost the war. Now Iraq is closer to Iran while its Sunni minority are recruited to AQ.

      Shock and awe is a media program.

      Expensive terrorist activity.

      Reply
  16. Quintian and Lucius

    Re: “The age of radical message-board utilitarian terrorism”

    I was an avowed “anti-natalist” or “efilist” (didn’t know either word, doubt the latter existed then) when I was a few years younger than the kid who blew himself up in a fertility clinic. That philosophy in me didn’t have the genealogy that Max describes in this piece (only Benatar I’m familiar with is Pat) and instead just came from a heady mix of Buddha, clinical depression and puberty. I couldn’t have even named a utilitarian philosopher at the time even though I knew something like utilitarianism is what I was thinking. I differ with Max in that I think classifying this particular form of terror – far more than the others lumped in – as essentially proceeding from a nihilistic worldview is fairly reasonable. It results from a fundamentally negative state of mind (such as that brought about by depression), a grasping for something ideologically coherent in a deeply incoherent world, and the inability to avoid following an idea to its first (or last, if you like) principles. What it can’t be understood as is a movement. Taxonomically, describing it as “radical utilitarianism” is fine, but I don’t believe that should suggest a real continuity of thought let alone unity of ideological purpose among its adherents; its only axiomatic dogma is that to exist is to suffer, which isn’t exactly an uncommon or peculiar observation (see, again, Buddha). It must instead be understood as nihilism because the kind of mind it arises in is almost an ideological blank slate, absent of or lapsed from religion, and rendered malignant by sheer chemistry; it’s the ad absurdum of “life sucks and there’s no meaning” with a liiiittle droplet of (strangely enough) fellow feeling to expand the idea such that it’s now rendered “life sucks for everyone forever“. It’s the ideology of a nihilist suffering from pathologized empathy. If America’s spookverse wants to keep an eye on young people suffering this peculiar condition, I suspect it will be rather more difficult than keeping track of the viewers of a few obscure youtube channels.

    Reply
    1. Lieaibolmmai

      > came from a heady mix of Buddha, clinical depression and puberty.

      Buddhism in the West now is all about nihilism and escape and soicopaths are using it as a means to stuff down compassion and empathy so you can meditate your way though coding 18 hours a day at google.

      Enlightenment is only supposed to get rid of our clinging to the self, you cannot annihilate the self since there is no self and no not-self. Enlightened, there is still pain, but no suffering, this is a great liberation. It is not pain we want to avoid, but the suffering, and all of our suffering arises from the ripping away of what we are holding too tightly.

      These anti-natalists are being driven by the same thing that is driving the internet; sociopathy. AI is sociopathic. Billionaires are sociopaths.

      These kids are looking for religion and spirituality and they are being fed a brand of religion that is socioptahic.

      Time to rebuild the Church.

      Reply
      1. Quintian and Lucius

        I wasn’t exactly consuming the procapital watered down Buddhism at the time, I was really just spending every day at the library and reading anything about old religions I could get my hands on, but I’m not going to pretend that as a teenager I was correctly interpreting or pursuing anything resembling enlightenment, and more generally I think you’re right about the function of Buddhism in the west, as everything is in the service of the great linegoupmachine, c’est la vie.

        Where I disagree with you is on the sociopathy bit. I truly, deeply disagree with that. My anti-natalism as an idiot youth arose because I was perpetually heartbroken about the suffering in the world. Again, this was a depressive symptom; it’s not as though I’m less aware of it now, I just have better coping mechanisms and a healthier neurochemical stew – but if I’d been sociopathic I would’ve just been garden variety suicidal, I suspect. I cared about everyone and everything all the time unto misery. That’s what birthed the ideology.

        Reply
        1. Lieaibolmmai

          I made a comment that was lost.

          Briefly, I was not saying you were a sociopath. Empathic Disequilibrium favoring emotional empathy, can lead to states like ours. Cognitive empathy favors the outcome of sociopathy.

          Reply
          1. Quintian and Lucius

            Oh I see the distinction you intended to make, I understand it now and actually perfectly agree with you.

            Reply
      2. Lee

        I recall an exchange I had with a Buddhist teacher from Tibet. I raised the concern that the Buddhist teaching of non-ego could be and probably was being misunderstood in the West in a way that reinforced self loathing, what to my mind is a rather widespread phenomenon in Western culture. He seemed genuinely puzzled by my proposition and asked something to the effect as to how a person could come to hate himself. Something along the way has become lost in translation.

        Reply
    2. Lee

      I’m currently reading a book on Zen Buddhism by French psychiatrist, Hubert Benoit, published in 1950. He likens humans to centaurs, the horse representing the body, and the human portion the mind. A nihilistic world view, toward which admittedly I have often gravitated, that finds final expression in self destruction is to show gross disrespect for the horse you rode in on.

      Reply
      1. Quintian and Lucius

        Pithy indeed – but if you see the final centaur as a syncretic construct of its environment, then the horse in your example is a sickly, nasty old nag who’s as liable to bite as lick the hand holding out a sugar cube. I believe this is something along the lines of what Lieaibolmmai was suggesting with the received sociopathy of a spiritually derelict world.

        Reply
  17. Lieaibolmmai

    I just caught COVID living in this tourist town. Started with a night sweat which I never get. Felt fine for a day, then my upper nasal passage was very raw. My signal to start pounding zinc and menthol lozenges. Next day, some fatigues and aches, no fever. Only a sore throat when I wake up in the middle of the night and my mental; illness ticks up a bit (more closed eye visions).. Seems like three days later it is in its way out.

    What clade happens to be going around? Anyone know?

    Also, I did not know there was some research on menthol shortening the COVID experience.

    Reply
  18. Jabura Basadai

    i’m so humbled and enlightened by the commentariat it’s impossible to thank you all enough – an oasis of understanding in world of environmental and political degradation – you’ve taught me the importance of the little things and to appreciate a laugh at the irony of it all – and one question i have for AliceX is, what is your musical instrument?

    Reply
  19. Wukchumni

    Drove up to my cabin in Mineral King and was pleasantly surprised to see an approx 120 year old apple tree along the road in quite the bloom on branches I don’t remember being so prominent in floral display, looks like the wedding veil on a blushing bride.

    The leader which previously was the main source of fruit was cut off during one of the National Park’s efforts at keeping limbs away from the road 5 years ago, the cutters oblivious to what they wrought.

    Reply
  20. flora

    re: AI

    If you remember the yellow covers of the For Dummies books – Windows 95 For Dummies, Linux For Dummies, etc – you’ll understand my analogy.

    AI is the digital version of Topic For Dummies. The difference between the printed Dummies books and AI is that the Dummies books instructions and explanations were correct. There was a table of contents, notes to the text, and a reference index. The person reading had cross-referencing material.

    None of that is true with AI. With AI one is told over and over the AI output is correct, but often it is not. (I really, really don’t want my lawyer or doctor or dentist educated to rely on the digital For Dummies AI as a good reference source. It makes up nonexistent books, nonexistent court cases, nonexistent things of all kinds.)

    AI is a clever mimicry using cut-and-paste and fill in the gaps with something or other. It’s useful in some tasks, not so much in other tasks. / my 2 cents

    Reply
  21. Judith

    Thanks for the essay on Kathleen Lonsdale. It is good to be reminded of someone “speaking truth to power”.

    Reply
  22. Wukchumni

    Global Forest Loss Shatters Records in 2024, Fueled by Massive Fires World Resources Institute
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Another fire in a locale you’d never think would burn like the dickens in May under the old auspices of the climate we once knew, this one on the east side of the Sierra on the shores of Mono Lake on Highway 395, not far from where High Plains Drifter was filmed, for those of you playing along at home.

    https://www.fire.ca.gov/incidents/2025/5/22/inn-fire

    Reply
  23. Tom Stone

    The Depravity, brazen corruption and stupidity of the American political class and the elites they serve is astounding.
    How much longer before things come completely apart?
    The AI bubble looks ready to pop and Covid is continuing to mutate and continuing to damage the population at an increasing rate.
    My guess?
    Within 2 years.

    Reply
  24. heresey101

    RT has history and details of the shenanigans going on in Chagos.
    https://www.rt.com/africa/617999-uk-not-return-chagos-archipelago-mauritius/

    Given the current situation in the Middle East, there is speculation that the US might utilize the aircraft stationed at Diego Garcia for a potential nuclear strike on Iran. National Interest noted that by December 2024, the US had successfully completed a significant upgrade of the B61-12 nuclear warhead, which cost $9 billion.

    Whether the B61-12 would specifically target alleged Iranian nuclear facilities remains uncertain. However, it is known that “support for nuclear-capable military platforms is a key function of Diego Garcia,” according to a report from the Lowy Institute.

    The situation with the Chagos Islands demonstrates the reluctance of Western powers to relinquish their colonial past, which allows them to maintain control over formerly dependent but currently sovereign nations. Losing control of the Chagos Islands would be too painful for the geostrategic ambitions of the UK and the US, which seek to uphold global hegemony at the expense of the interests of the native inhabitants of the formerly colonized states. Diego Garcia is a clear example of post-colonialism which is pulling the world back into an era of oppression, subjugation, and international inequality.

    Reply

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