Links 10/30/2025


7 basic science discoveries that changed the world Nature

Philosophy of Absurdism 3 Quarks Daily

Google to bring shuttered nuclear power plant back from the dead TechCrunch

‘Germany Is Back’ – and That Should Scare Us All Zeteo

COVID-19/Pandemics

How the flu, COVID-19, and common viruses could raise your risk of heart attack and stroke Euronews

The bat paradox: what nature’s night flyers could teach us about pandemics – and ourselves VaccinesWork

Climate/Environment

Climate change is becoming an insurance crisis The Conversation

Climate change inaction being paid for in millions of lives every year, global findings suggest Phys.org

South of the Border

Jamaicans take stock after hurricane causes damage, flooding and power cuts BBC

Trump’s feud with Colombian leader threatens U.S. antidrug efforts WLRN South Florida

Mexico rescues lone survivor of US strikes on alleged drug boats that killed 14 Mexico News Daily

‘A colony of the US’: Argentinians contemplate future after Trump-backed Milei coasts to victory The Guardian

China?


China and ASEAN, hit by US tariffs, sign upgraded free trade pact Reuters

China deploys wind-powered underwater data center off Shanghai coast — $226 million project could top 24 megawatts, harnessing the cooling power of the sea Tom’s Hardware

Trump ‘losing’ trade war with China going in to Xi meeting, Senate Democrats say in report CNBC

Cheap Goods To Confidence Deficit: Inside China’s Economic Slowdown WORLDCRUNCH

India

India to dethrone US for dev numbers as AI reshapes coding, says GitHub The Register

India’s Major Cities Face Risks as Groundwater Depletion Leads to Land Subsidence Bioengineer.org

How India’s new gaming law is rewriting the rules of online play Tech Funding News

Africa

Is Africa the West’s ‘Human Dumping Ground’? Al Jazeera

Energy flows reveal declining ecosystem functions by animals across Africa Nature

Ethiopia cuts foreign debt by 80%, declares ‘growth without loans’ Business Insider Africa

European Disunion

Can Europe’s farmers save the water cycle? Euronews

Europe’s democratic strain is a crisis of governance, not borders European Council on Foreign Relations

Europe Is at Donald Trump’s Mercy. It Has Itself to Blame. The Nation

EU seeks to reduce dependencies amid US-China trade war DW

Old Blighty

Pound Slides Amid UK Fiscal Concerns RTT News

Government doubles down on green ambition as it unveils new UK climate plan The Independent

Israel v. Gaza, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, Iran


UN chief ‘strongly condemns’ recent deadly Israeli airstrikes in Gaza Andolu Agency

Israel resumes Gaza ceasefire after 104 Palestinians killed in airstrikes Axios

Revealed: Israel demanded Google and Amazon use secret ‘wink’ to sidestep legal orders The Guardian

Israel must not be Sparta JNS

New Not-So-Cold War

Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin tests nuclear submarine torpedo capable of causing ‘radioactive tsunami’ The Independent

Pentagon scales back troops from NATO eastern flank, denies American withdrawal from Europe Fox News

Russia Aims to Freeze Ukraine Into Submission Foreign Policy

Russian Forces Finally Break Through Into Key Eastern Ukrainian Stronghold The War Zone

Big Brother Is Watching You Watch

Are Americans privacy nihilists? Ipsos

Social media privacy in 2025: what you need to know Kaspersky Daily

Imperial Collapse Watch

For the Homeless, Finding a Place to Live Is Only Part of the Problem Racket

NYPD: Raid on Staten Island nets fentanyl, ‘MAGA’-stamped heroin; 4 arrested si live.com

When SNAP benefits run out, ‘people can die,’ say health experts STAT 10

Trump 2.0

Portland says ‘manufactured crisis’ spurred Trump’s National Guard bid as trial begins The Hill

The White House ballroom saga could be worse for Trump than he realizes CNN

Trump fires federal arts board in charge of reviewing White House ballroom and ‘Arc de Trump’ The Guardian

A new low for Trump approval, government spending, institutional trust, No Kings, and daylight time: October 24 – 27, 2025 Economist/YouGov Poll YouGov

Musk Matters

Why Elon Musk could leave Tesla, and why it might actually happen The Street

How Elon Musk and JD Vance plan to ‘save civilization’ with more babies NPR

Grokipedia vs. Wikipedia: See how Elon Musk’s encyclopedia describes 5 hot-button topics Business Insider

Democrat Death Watch

What Karine Jean-Pierre’s disastrous book tour exposes about Biden loyalism MSNBC

A lot of Americans think the Democratic Party is out of touch Tri-State Alert

Immigration

Did the U.S. Supreme Court lift restrictions on immigration stops based on race or ethnicity? El Paso Matters

DHS ends automatic extensions of immigrant work permits HR Dive

New Polling Memo: Five Key Points on Americans’ Current Immigration Views America’s Voice

Our No Longer Free Press

Press freedom debate intensifies after Pentagon and collegiate-level crackdowns FSU News

Younger Americans Less Concerned About Political Violence and Free Speech Threats: AP-NORC Poll First Amendment Watch

Mr. Market Is Moody

China Targets Iron Ore in Its Fight to Dethrone the Dollar Oil Price

Consumers Expect Inflation To Get Worse, Even As Fed Cuts Rates Investopedia

TREASURIES-US yields advance after Fed’s Powell pushes back on December rate cut Market Screener

AI

This ‘impressive’ AI model predicted Hurricane Melissa’s perilous growth Nature

Foxconn to put Nvidia’s humanoid robots to work at Texas factory Cryptopolitan

Nvidia hits record $5 trillion mark as CEO dismisses AI bubble concerns Ars Technica

Dame Emma Thompson gives the ‘AI revolution’ both barrels The Register

Grieving family uses AI chatbot to cut hospital bill from $195,000 to $33,000 — family says Claude highlighted duplicative charges, improper coding, and other violations Tom’s Hardware

The Bezzle

New report reveals “staggering and heartbreaking” trend among scam victims WRTV Indianapolis

Musk’s company just cut off internet to thousands of scammers who stole billions from Americans Mass Live

Guillotine Watch

Antidote du jour (via)

See yesterday’s Links and Antidote du Jour here

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126 comments

    1. Yves Smith

      This simply proves Lambert’s saying, “The optimists will kill us all.”

      The “we” he means is not the masses. More will die of heat exposure and floods, even before getting to climate effects on food supply and viablity of existing built environments, which will soon include large cities.

      Reply
      1. Kontrary Kansan

        What’s a billionaire got to be pessimistic about–except that debt-ridden masses won’t keep up interest payments?

        Reply
      2. Thasiet

        Exactly. As an ex-Taibbi reader from the eXile days until just a few months ago, I need to not click links like that, and try to remember the good times.

        This reminds me of that old joke from The Lone Ranger comic…

        “Hurricanes! Fires! Famine all around us! Well, Bill, ol’ kimosavee, it looks like we’re finished!”

        “What do you mean … WE, poor man?”

        Reply
    2. The Rev Kev

      I’m sure that what Bill Gates meant to say is that ‘He’ll Survive Climate Change’. It’s good to be a billionaire.

      Reply
      1. mrsyk

        Which leads to the last bit,
        The Microsoft titan will go down in history as God’s own proof that no amount of money can buy likeability:.

        Reply
        1. The Rev Kev

          These days I can never look at him without thinking that here is a man that ran after Jeffrey Epstein to be his best buddy and get in on the goodies that Jeff offered. That picture can never be wiped away.

          Reply
        2. flora

          He’s always talking his book. He needs large, gigantic, electricity-energy consuming data centers to be built for his AI projects. Suddenly, his prior climate talk is now a ‘never mind’. / ;)

          Reply
    3. AZ Maria

      I think Taibbi misspelled “Opportunist”. Nothing offends like an opportunist to me. Mr. Gates is kowtowing to Trump like all the oligarchs.

      In the SouthWest we are not coping. My family is complaining about this extended summer. The temperatures have been 10 to 15 degrees above normal for the last three weeks, which is new for me and it is costing us in electricity bills. I guess Mr. Gates can afford his electricity so the Climate Emergency is no big deal.

      My husbands question; When will we start a boycott of Big Tech?

      Reply
      1. lyman alpha blob

        He could start it today by taking a hammer to his cell phone. Stop ordering from Amazon. Stop using social media. Don’t wait around for someone else to tell you when the boycott starts, start it.

        Reply
      2. flora

        Oligarchs Contoligarchs. / ;)

        Controligarchs: Exposing the Billionaire Class, their Secret Deals, and the Globalist Plot to Dominate Your Life

        https://www.amazon.com/Controligarchs-Exposing-Billionaire-Globalist-Dominate/dp/0593541596

        adding: Gates is all in on digital ids. He’s one of the main proponents and software providers for digital ids.

        Digital IDs Are an Effective Tool Against Poverty.

        https://www.gatesfoundation.org/ideas/articles/mosip-digital-id-systems

        See. He claims digital ids will help eliminate poverty. (And I beleeve him. He’s very caring. Of course, digital ids will require enormous data centers. Just a coincidence. / ;)

        Can’t have digital CBDC without digital ids. Another coincidence. The man with a plan. /;)

        Reply
    4. urdsama

      I feel like whatever good Taibbi does now is overshadowed by dreck like this.

      I’d like to think the Taibbi of old wouldn’t have given something like this the time of day. It’s like asking Tom Brady the best way to perform open heart surgery in a war zone.

      Reply
  1. The Rev Kev

    “What Karine Jean-Pierre’s disastrous book tour exposes about Biden loyalism’

    I, for one, very much look forward to seeing White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt come out with her book after leaving the White House in several years time and, like Karine Jean-Pierre, trying to defend the indefensible. Can you imagine the treatment that she will receive from the press whom she presently insults and treats like dog food? It’s gunna be a blast.

    Reply
    1. Wukchumni

      She was more like a LBGQT queen from a woke scene
      Who said, “Don’t mind, but what do you mean, I am the one
      Who will dance on the press floor in the round?”
      She said I am the one
      Who will dance on the press floor in the round
      She told me her name was Karine Jean as she caused a scene
      Then every head turned with eyes that dreamed of asking of bein’ the one
      Who will dance on the press floor in the round

      People always told me, “Be careful of what you do
      Don’t go around breakin’ liberals hearts (hee-hee)
      And the DNC always told me, “Be careful of who you diss
      And be careful of what you do (oh-oh)
      ‘Cause the lie becomes the truth” (oh-oh), hey-ey

      Karine Jean is not coherent
      She’s just a girl who claims that Joe is still the one (oh, baby)
      But his kid is not my responsibility (hoo)
      She says Joe is the one (oh, baby)
      But his kid is not my responsibility (hee-hee-hee, no-no, hee-hee-hee, hoo)

      For 940 days and for 940 nights, Joe was on her side
      But who can stand when she’s in demand? Her schemes and plans
      ‘Cause she danced on the press floor in the round (hee)
      So take my strong advice
      Just remember before you misspeak to always think twice
      (Do think twice) do think twice (ah-hoo)
      She said oh whoopsie! then she looked at me
      Then showed a photo of Joe, ’80 is the new 40!’, his eyes were like mine (oh, no)
      Go and dance on the press floor in the round, baby (ooh, hee-hee-hee)

      Billie Jean, by Michael Jackson

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kr4EQDVETuA&list=RDKr4EQDVETuA

      Reply
    1. The Rev Kev

      Nothing like a wascally wabbit to set you up for the day. That white coat on him seems very thick so maybe going into or coming out of winter?

      Reply
      1. mrsyk

        When logic and proportion
        Have fallen sloppy dead
        And the White Knight is talking backwards
        And the Red Queen’s off with her head
        Remember what the dormouse said
        Feed your head
        Feed your head

        White Rabbit, Grace Slick

        Reply
          1. Wukchumni

            Hard to imagine the Maestro will be 100 in March…

            One bubble makes your assets larger
            And low interest rates makes your savings small
            And the ones that Greenspan gave us
            Don’t do anything at all
            Go ask Alan
            When the dominoes fall

            And if you go chasing bubbles
            And you know they’re going to blow
            Tell ’em a put stroking nonagenarian
            Has given you the dough
            Call Alan
            When the market goes into a flat-spin low

            When the men on the Fed board
            Get up in Jackson Hole
            And you’ve just had some kind of mushroom
            And your mind is moving low
            Go ask Alan
            I think he’ll know

            When logic and proportion
            Have fallen sloppy dead
            And the White Knight is talking backwardation
            And Dow Jonestown agrees “full speed ahead!”
            Remember what Ayn’s acolyte said:
            “Heed the Fed. Heed the Fed”

            White Rabbit, by Jefferson Airplane

            Reply
      1. Alice X

        Oh, the one set to perform at the Super Bowl, which ICE will probably want to deport (ah, but where to, he’s an American Citizen).

        Reply
  2. ChrisFromGA

    So Trump basically got skunked at the Korea summit by Xi.

    Soybeans have already been harvested and it’s too late for China to buy this season. Contracts to sell to other buyers are in place. Promises to buy next year are empty. As far as “rare erfs” the state of play is only back to what it was in August, before China threatened to cut them off. The sword of Damocles hangs over Trump as the can was kicked but next year it bounces into a sewer grate. In exchange Taco dropped the tariffs on China to a lower number.

    Of course the press will portray this as a glorious victory. I hate this timeline.

    Reply
    1. The Rev Kev

      I wouldn’t really worry about it if I were you. From what you say in your comment, Trump will run into the brick wall of reality next year and it will not matter what the stenographers, errr, members of the press will say, he will find himself more boxed in than ever. And of more serious concern to him, the midterms will be looming up when he has to deal with all this. Just don’t forget to lay in a box of popcorn at that time.

      Reply
      1. ChrisFromGA

        Apparently, the issue of Russian oil was never even mentioned.

        So much for Lindsey Graham’s “bone crushing sanctions.” Both India and China did the “Dikembe Mutombo” on Trump – a reference to the powerful NBA center who used to slap the ball away when shorter players tried to do a layup. Rejected! (Marv Alpert voice.)

        The stenographers bother me more than the spectacle of Trump’s flailing around.

        Reply
            1. ambrit

              NC! Your source for polyglot punz! Now available by the metric tun. Tunz of funz! Who needs prosaic foodstuffs when the Algonquin Round Table Online beckons?

              Reply
    2. restive

      Told my sister recently that I no longer watch US media whereupon her immediate response was to say “So that’s why you’re so cheerful.”

      I’m starting to think that even people who still watch the stuff know how toxic and false it is and only keep tuning in because they don’t know who else to trust.

      Reply
  3. Wukchumni

    Its been fascinating to watch the baseball card bubble going on, and much of it stems from the mania of grading-and the company that does it: PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator) which is owned by PCGS (Professional Coin Grading Service).

    PCGS (along with NGC) revolutionized the coin biz in the mid 80’s by offering 3rd party grading of coins for a fee-which were sealed in a tamper proof plastic holder, and quickly became the industry standard, whereas before… everybody graded their own coins, and typically not in a MS (Mint State) 1-70 scale, it was more wordy, such as choice uncirculated or gem uncirculated.

    Much of the value of rarer coins is the condition, and on a given coin the difference in value could be immense from MS 63 to MS 64, so it wasn’t uncommon to submit a coin that warranted it, maybe 5-10 times, hoping to get the higher grade, because when you got right down to it, grading was subjective-as are humans.

    PSA has done the same with baseball cards, for a $20 fee they’ll grade your card and seal in a tamper proof holder, and its a scale of 1-10, 10 being perfect.

    You can buy a PSA-7 of the Mickey Mantle card for $246k, that doesn’t look all that different from the $12.6 million PSA-10 on display for Guillotine Watch, that’s the nuttiness of it all.

    It wasn’t uncommon to have on the back of a baseball card circa 1969 (and hopefully not my nemesis in redundancy: Dick Dietz-who seemed to show up in every pack of cards I bought and opened up) what the player did for an occupation in the off-season.

    Our local hometown MLB player was Andy Etchebarren, who was the catcher for Baltimore in the 60’s and 70’s winning a couple World Series along with being the last batter to face Sandy Koufax, and he opened Etchebarren’s Liquor-and forget about buying booze from Andy if you were underage, everybody knew that Mickey’s on Valley Blvd would sell to anybody-I once scored a sixer while wearing roller skates @ 17.

    But I digress, everything was so innocent then, Dick Dietz ended up making clickity clackity sounds when fastened to the spokes of my bicycle wheels, and like every other boy who collects baseball cards for a few years and then lost interest, no doubt the cards ended up in a trash bin. At a Dime a pack, which included the world’s worst bubble gum-it wasn’t exactly heavy lifting.

    That liquor store had another twist to it too – it was owned by Andy Etchebarren, the catcher of the Baltimore Orioles. This was the early 1970s and the Orioles were big too – World Series Champs in 1970 and pennant winners from 69-71. It was cool that local boy Andy had a store within a block from my house.

    Then there was “The Event of the Century” in Hacienda Heights. During the spring of 1971, when the O’s came to town to play the Angels for a weekend series, Etchebarren arranged for 4 of his teammates to join him at the store for a promotional event on a Saturday morning. This was a big deal for my little town in the eastern outskirts of L.A. County as the Orioles were the defending World Champs. Jim Palmer, Dave Johnson, Brooks Robinson, Dave McNally and Etchebarren were to be there signing autographs and posing for pictures. Palmer had just won the Cy Young Award and Brooks was the World Series MVP from the previous Fall Classic. I’m telling you, kids were coming out of the woodwork for this event.

    I hate to harp on poor old Dick Dietz, but his ho hum card from 1971 in PSA-9 fetched $348 at auction recently, while a PSA-8 of the same card only made it to $30, and a PSA-7 was worth but $14.

    Reply
      1. Wukchumni

        Wow. the ‘film library’ my brother-in-law had that included around 462 VHS tapes, that was his pride and joy before the turn of the century, might be worth a little scratch…

        CGC is owned by NGC (Numismatic Guaranty Company) the other 3rd party coin grading service mentioned above. What an odd niche.

        Reply
        1. Irritable

          When do you think will ANACS join the “grading collectible crap” game?

          Maybe they’ll grade old Nat Geo mags…

          Reply
          1. Wukchumni

            Ah, the original grading & authentication service!

            Celebrity belly button lint would be hard to grade and certify, how would you tell Jennifer Lawrence’s from Stephen Miller’s

            Reply
            1. Irritable

              I think I still might have an ancient ANACS slab or two in the SDB. Haven’t looked in a long time.

              Belly button lint sounds ideal. Include a fingerprint of the celebrity for authentication. Someone needs to send a proposal to a Silicon Valley VC. They throw money at anything that breathes.

              Reply
    1. lyman alpha blob

      Describing a mass-printed photo on a rectangle of cheap cardboard as a “stunning piece” is a wee bit of a stretch. I like the Mick and all, but his baseball card isn’t exactly the David.

      I used to spend most of my lawnmowing money on baseball cards and amassed a collection of hundreds of thousands by opening one pack at a time. By the early 80s I was trying to take decent care of them because prices started skyrocketing, especially for older cards. Of course the older card prices spiked because people threw them out. That had stopped by the 80s. Just took a look at the price of Roger Clemens Topps rookie cards, and while I did see some highly graded cards for over $100, most were in the $20-30 range. Pretty sure you could get more than that back in 1989 – and they aren’t all that scarce. The prize of my collection was a Carl Yastrzemski rookie card, and its price hasn’t gone up that much either over the last few decades.

      Cards used to come with bubble gum which was pretty hard and crusty. I didn’t much care for it, but I collected it and sold it to my unsuspecting little sister and used the proceeds for more baseball cards. But the gum would stain one card in every pack, which reduced the value of any card it touched – the horror, the horror… – so they discontinued the gum. That’s about when I lost interest in the hobby. I still have my collection though, if the mice haven’t managed to chew through the plastic tubs in my parents’ attic yet.

      Reply
      1. Louis Fyne

        all about scarcity.

        40 years ago, seemingly every third respectable English household had a Ming vase or other form of porcelain, before the bottom fell out of that bubble in the early 90s credit crunch and change of generational tastes. (low-end Ming vases are relatively abundant).

        A genuine pencil sketch by Picasso is within reach for any motivated American in the top 20%.

        Which is why supply of all the high-end stuff is gate-kept by galleries or foundations (see Andy Warhol’s foundation), a bit like DeBeers, lmao.

        High-end collectibles is like a form of “egregore”—it’s worth something because everyone says it is—even if it has no/little functional value

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

        Reply
        1. lyman alpha blob

          Roommate skipped town on me one time while owing me some money, but he left behind some stuff – one was a signed Picasso sketch and I thought I might be able to recoup my losses with that. I took it to a downtown art dealer and was told it was relatively worthless and they had no interest in it. They said that even if it was genuine, which would be hard to prove, it was hardly unique. Picasso did not come to the rescue and eviction followed shortly after that.

          Reply
        2. FreeMarketApologist

          As an avid auction follower, I’m surprised at the quantities of ceramic ware (English, French, Chinese export, etc.) on regular offer (all those collectors are dying off), and the prices they’re fetching. Even for a traditionalist like me it looks rather dated and given what the decor and house magazines are pushing I don’t see how it fits in to a contemporary life, but the stuff is flying out of the auction houses for significant prices, even rather ho-hum pieces. Particularly amazing when the standard auction house commission adds 30% to the purchase price.

          Reply
  4. Wukchumni

    In The Innocents Abroad, Mark Twain reckoned he saw enough pieces of the true cross scattered around the churches he visited in Europe in the late 1860’s, to make up a few dozen crosses, religious relics being the bees knees.

    Now its all about reverential irreligious relics…

    Around the 15th inning of the 3rd World Series game, the announcer mentioned they had gone through 220 out of 290 official MLB baseballs prepared for the game-each of which look no different than the $4.39 million Ohtani 50/50 ball.

    And while i’m at it, what is this fetish by the umpires of 86’ing any baseball that deigns to get down & dirty?

    Reply
    1. Yalt

      Before 1920 the same baseball would be used until it was lost, no matter how brown it got. On average there were maybe ten balls used per game.

      During the 1919/1920 offseason the owners decided they wanted more offense in the game. (It may not be a coincidence that this happened in the immediate aftermath of the Black Sox world series, though the story hadn’t fully blown up in the press yet.) Criticism had also developed over time that pitchers had abandoned pitches like the change-of-pace and the curve ball in favor of “freak pitches”–spitting on the ball, filing it with an emery board, rubbing it with vaseline, etc. Freak pitches were banned for the 1920 season and the umpires were directed to remove any ball that was scuffed or dirty.

      Which latter part didn’t really happen, at first, because the owners didn’t like wasting all that money on baseballs. But then Ray Chapman (a big star at the time and likely hall-of-famer) was hit in the head by a pitch, frozen in the batters box like he’d never seen it according to an eyewitness, and died the next day of a broken skull.

      “We mean it” the umpires were then told.

      Over time the interpretation of “scuffed” became more and more strict and sometime in the last 25 years or so we reached the point where the ball was presumed scuffed if it had touched the ground.

      This all makes it sound like safety was the primary consideration, but if it were we probably wouldn’t have had to wait 30+ years for the batting helmet to be mandatory. It’s lot easier to a hit a ball you can see, and fans liked watching Babe Ruth hit 60 homers a lot more than they liked watching Home Run Baker hit 10. And owners liked what fans would pay for.

      Reply
      1. Wukchumni

        I cant be the only one thinking that the balls that get tossed are being recycled before our very eyes, that being my conspiracy theory.

        Potemkin Hardball

        Reply
  5. tegnost

    Israel/Sparta

    I stopped reading right about here…

    Dead Israelis rarely move the world; wounded Palestinians dominate its conscience. News coverage amplified Palestinian suffering, often without verification, feeding the now-familiar accusation of “genocide.” Media monitors helplessly whine about the coverage.

    Privacy nihilists?
    The tech bros “not breaking any laws” with nimbus took our privacy away, privacy the federalist society said you didnt have…well i did used to have it, you couldnt tap a land line without due process. Whats next?

    Reply
    1. ambrit

      What’s next? How about tying your access to your bank accounts to your Social Credit Score? It was beta tested during the Toronto Trucker’s Strike.

      Reply
  6. upstater

    In this instance getting covid was a good thing. Can you imagine?

    I was prescribed trazodone for sleep perhaps 5 years ago… insomnia became a thing after we lost our daughter to a drunk driver, 5 years of grueling IP litigation (we won, but the business was trashed), my wife’s breat cancer, ad infinitum.

    Slowly I began having atrial fibrillations. Gradually they became more frequent. This summer it was nearly disabling. I’m 71, had been running 5k most days, XC in winter, etc. So in December I got a Holter and it showed afib the GP scoffed at my home device). Then I got a cardiologist and electrophysiologist referral. Got scheduled for an ablation on November 13 to “fix” the problem. .

    We escaped COVID for 5.5 years, mainly with masking in crowds. While visiting my brother in Fairbanks, we went to a museum, but forgot our masks! 2 days later positive test. So I got a paxlovid prescription. Trazodone is contraindicated. The AFIB stopped the next day! That was 8 weeks ago.

    So i got the another Holter in October. Results yesterday. Not a single episode of AFIB, which was expected. Obviously I cancel the November 13 ablation. I’ll have to consult with the cardiologist for interpretation (assuming they even give me an appointment). WTF. I have had this problem for YEARS. The GP, cardiologist and 2 electrophysiologists all knew I was on trazodone (prescribed for sleep). Afib has been a documented side effect of trazodone at least since 1983. Not a single provider suggested I stop trazodone.

    If I hadn’t gotten COVID and requested paxlovid AND trazodone was contraindicated, I’d have never known! I called multiple times in July and August to get on cancelation list. I have learned an important lesson.

    Reply
    1. marcyincny

      And I thought my recent bad experiences with medical care were unique! Is it Syracuse or everywhere nowadays?

      But what a relief to be without Afib…

      Reply
    2. Alice X

      I have learned an important lesson.

      Oh brother, Patient, do your own research ’cause the HC providers are 1) over worked, 2) indifferent, 3) oblivious, 4) of elite parentage but under-performing. I have no idea about the ordering, or what else I have missed, but I am glad for you in the end (and sad for the along the way).

      Reply
  7. The Rev Kev

    “Dame Emma Thompson gives the ‘AI revolution’ both barrels”

    Can you imagine if there was Copilot years ago as George R.R. Martin was finishing his first novel “A Song of Ice and Fire” and just after he finished, Copilot asked ‘Would you like me to rewrite that for you?’ – and a very tired Martin accidentally agreed?

    Reply
    1. Maia the Illusionist

      Can you imagine if George RR Martin used deepseek and actually finished Winds of Winter in less time than it took a newborn to reach the stage of getting a driver’s license?

      Reply
  8. Wukchumni

    ‘A colony of the US’: Argentinians contemplate future after Trump-backed Milei coasts to victory The Guardian
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    We’ve been there before, the Argentine Peso was linked on a 1–1 basis with the almighty buck, which lasted from 1992 to 2002, and then things went awry in hyperinflationary tango, now @ 1,437 Pesos to the $.

    Reply
    1. JMH

      Seems to me Argentina has been in one crisis after another since the days of Juan Peron in the 1940s or is my memory showing its age?

      Reply
      1. Wukchumni

        Argentina has been a financial sinkhole since the late 70’s.

        I never did biz in South America in the early 80’s, as although opportunities were ripe with eager sellers wanting Yanqui $, getting anything through customs was problematic, whereas it was never an issue in Europe, Asia & Australasia going back and forth with aged discs.

        I knew a numismatist who circa 1982 would go to Argentina and book a hotel room in a nice place in Buenos Aries at a set rate, and stay there 30-45 days, and by the end of his stay the rate in $ was 1/3rd to 1/2 of what it was when he booked the room!

        They changed the name of their national currency 3 or 4 times in the 1980’s, with each new currency being worth 1,000 or 10,000 of the prior currency.

        Its a different basket case than Venezuela, but they’ve endured the unendurable for over 4 decades now.

        Reply
  9. The Rev Kev

    “How Elon Musk and JD Vance plan to ‘save civilization’ with more babies”

    When you are a billionaire or a powerful person, finding willing partners to have your babies is not so hard. But it is what come afterwards that matters. I do not know about Vance as a father but I know that Musk’s kids only find out that they have another sibling by reading social media. Definitely not Father of the Year material but if you are going to be a father, you have to be there for your kids – all of them.

    Reply
    1. Wukchumni

      It peeves me that an average healthy male has upwards of 100 million spermatozoa and so many go to waste, in baby batter bingo.

      Reply
    2. fjallstrom

      What do conservatives like JD Vance and tech executives like Elon Musk have in common? They, like other pronatalists, want to “save civilization” by having more American babies. But it wasn’t that long ago that some people wanted to save the world by limiting the number of kids being born. This week on the pod, we explore the surprising way eugenics plays a role in these two seemingly opposite fears.

      How very surprising! It can’t be that the people that they are concerned about having to many / to few kids have certain skin colors, and this can’t be rather obvious when it comes from the heiling billionaire!

      By the way globally we, as in humanity, isn’t decreasing in numbers.

      In 2022, the global TFR was 2.3.[32] Because the global fertility replacement rate for 2010–2015 was estimated to be 2.3, humanity has achieved or is approaching a significant milestone where the global fertility rate is equal to the global replacement rate.[6]

      Wikipedia

      Which means the population is still growing as larger younger generations replace smaller older generations. It just means that todays women has about as many children as their generation. But the average hue is not pale enough for the heiling billionaire. And yeah, Father of the Year, he isn’t.

      Reply
  10. Carolinian

    Re YouGov on Trump’s sinking approvals–perhaps this is the reason that during his current tour he told reporters he was just kidding about another term. Here’s suggesting that Trump is afraid of low approval ratings. After all the objecting public might elect a Dem Congress that would investigate all the dirty deals enriching his family. Then there’s that Epstein thing still waiting to be fully explored.

    Reply
  11. t

    Humanoid robots? What is the point? Why do this? I am entirely unable to explain this except as a performance to make people look bad.

    We have machines that assemble, sort, and move things, for instance. Used to be the promise was machines were task built and therefore better than humans, who are wobbling around on two legs and have only two puny arms.

    Other problems, explained well.

    Saw a video not to long ago promoting humanoid robots to sort mail by using their robot legs to walk from one place to another carring small bundles of mail in their robot arms. Insanity. We already automated sorting systems that are vastly more efficient, and probably cheaper and easier to maintain, than humanoid robots.

    Reply
    1. cfraenkel

      It rhymes with the LLM -> AGI bs. A large enough fraction of the investing / ‘decider’ class grew up reading ’50s ~ ’60s sci-fi, and only comprehended the surface of the stories. Robots! AI! Spaceships! Aliens! (hmm, that last one is still mia.)

      This Why today’s humanoids won’t learn dexterity is a longish, thorough debunking of the humanoid robot mania from Rodney Brooks, one of the pioneers in the field. Among other reasons, he points out that the prior two successful ‘AI’ paradigms (LLMs and generative images) started from a base ‘knowledge’ of how humans preprocess the raw real-world inputs into machine understandable data. For LLMs, it’s trivial, computers have been processing words for decades. For images, cameras have also been converting the optical field into RGB and then running it through the FFT into jpegs. Touch, proprioperception and dexterity are fundamentally different. We’re still trying to figure out the details of how humans do those. So the computers have nothing to ‘learn’ from. Well worth the time.

      Reply
      1. cfraenkel

        Brooks also explains the rational behind the interest in humanoid robots. Basically, task specific robots have to be designed / engineered / built for each use case, *and* the operating environment has to also be built so the robots can operate safely. Both are expensive. The thinking behind humanoid robots is you build the robot once, and they can just ‘walk into’ the existing working spaces designed for human use. No new buildings, no new production lines needed.

        Wishful thinking, but you asked what the point was.

        Reply
  12. Carla

    Re: the source for “A lot of Americans think the Democratic Party is out of touch”

    I wanted to confirm the three states in the source “Tri-State Alert” but the web site has no “About” section. Since I have relatives who live in the panhandle of Maryland, I’m familiar with Maryland, Pennsylvania and W Virginia being a “tri-state” area. But then so do parts of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York constitute another tri-state region, as do sections of PA, OH and WV.

    I did find the following, which not only did NOT identify the three states in question, but also failed to inspire confidence in the site:

    “The Tri-State Alert is a News Talk 103.7 FM publication. Any views or opinions expressed in this publication are of the host, guest, author or group and not the publication, owner(s), its advertisers, or affiliates.

    AI technology assists in content creation on this site; verify independently for accuracy.”

    Indeed.

    Now, having failed in confirming the three states and but having actually read the linked story, I will assiduously avoid the Tri-State Alert from now on.

    I am in 100% agreement that the “Democratic Party is out of touch” but that “news story” is a POS.

    Reply
      1. Hepativore

        This assumes that the Democratic Party is even a viable political party anymore instead of a fundraising platform masquerading as a political organization at this point.

        As long as the donor money flows, the DNC doesn’t really care if they win electorally or not, and this is part of the problem with them, as voters cannot really punish a political institution that simply shrugs its shoulders in the face of losing elections now that its entire purpose seems to be enriching itself from wealthy patrons.

        Reply
        1. Carla

          Re: “Tri-State” — my concern was what seems to pass as a “news” web site and can’t even be bothered to specify which three state area it’s purporting to cover. Every minute of every day, we sink deeper into the rot.

          Reply
  13. The Rev Kev

    ‘Chay Bowes
    @BowesChay
    Like or not, China has lifted more than 100 million people out of poverty in the past 12 years.
    They did it by building vast infrastructure, affordable homes, and access to education and equality of opportunity Not through War, hegemony and division.’

    If you look through the comments, you will find a lot of sour grapes-

    https://xcancel.com/BowesChay/status/1983207809131983252

    And this is the same nation that a century ago would have carts go through the big cities after dawn to pick up the bodies of the dead paupers. Imagine if these Chinese priorities were Western priorities too. Yeah, I know. Dream on McDuff!

    Reply
  14. lyman alpha blob

    RE: Israel resumes Gaza ceasefire after 104 Palestinians killed in airstrikes

    What a piece of garbage propaganda that Axios headline that is. Those 104 Palestinians are killed in the passive sense, leaving a flicker of doubt as to who might have done it. And no, you don’t “resume ceasefires” after murdering 100 people. There is no longer a ceasefire at that point. It’s like someone trying to claim they quit smoking in the hour between cigarettes.

    Just disgusting they way our entire corporate media twists itself into knots trying to put lipstick on these genocidal pigs.

    Reply
    1. ChrisFromGA

      We need comedian Jeff Foxworthy to mock this sort of propaganda.

      You might not be in a ceasefire if … your enemy reserves the right to attack and kill you any time they want and then claim it is still in a ceasefire as soon the gunsmoke dissipates.

      You might not be in a ceasefire if … the other party is named “Israel” or “USA.”

      Reply
  15. The Rev Kev

    “China and ASEAN, hit by US tariffs, sign upgraded free trade pact”

    Apparently Trump blew off the significance of the ASEAN meeting as he did not consider it important for him or maybe he did not understand what it was. Nobody has ever accused Donald J. Trump of having too much curiosity. He showed up, had a formal dinner, met a few people but what was really on his mind was his meeting with Xi in South Korea. Meanwhile China just signed this trade deal with the ASEAN nations and thus increased their resiliency to a Trump attack down the track along with those ASEAN nations.

    Reply
  16. tagio

    Question:

    NC is my go-to “news and opinion aggregator.” it’s so good. You daily lead with climate change but I am wondering why resource depletion never (almost never?) appears here.

    If we’re thinking about things that will radically and adversely affect our lives and the current world system, the likely order in terms of timing seems to be (i) financial collapse, (ii) resource depletion and (iii) climate change. The last is surely horrendous, and there is a lot of hopium that there’s still time to change the outcome (not sure about that, I suspect some tipping points have already been crossed given the accelerating pace of changes), but the devastating effects of the other two are going to hit us first.

    Here are two recent good articles on resource depletion, and the probable coming shift to a “war economy” to support wars over remaining resources. In Spanish, but use the Google Translate option

    “A dose of reality. How is it possible that nobody is saying anything about the future?”
    https://futurocienciaficcionymatrix.blogspot.com/2025/10/un-bano-de-realidad-como-es-posible-que.html

    “Target 2030-2035. Symbiosis between the war economy and the digitalization of the economy.”
    https://futurocienciaficcionymatrix.blogspot.com/2025/10/objetivo-2035-simbiosis-entre-la.html

    Reply
  17. The Rev Kev

    “Trump fires federal arts board in charge of reviewing White House ballroom and ‘Arc de Trump’”

    Same old Trump methodology. If people disagree with you, fire them and replace them with Yes men/woman. I suspect that nobody wants to be the person that brings Trump bad news as it would be very much a case of shoot the messenger. Trouble is, you wonder how much Trump is living in his own personal bubble because of this and only listens to what people tell him – or those people tell him stuff that they think that he wants to hear. Maybe that is why he sometimes says stuff that makes him sound outstandingly stupid.

    Reply
    1. Irritable

      He sounds outstandingly stupid because 99.9% of his grey matter is devoted to “what can I say to brag about myself?”

      Reply
    2. MichaelC

      Since it’s really an upgrade of the bunker underneath ( even a Mara Lago Ballroom wouldn’t cost more than 10 or dozens of millions) the 300 million price estimate, proclaims it’s not ( just) a vanity project, but something more sinister.
      Like everything in Trump 2.0 ,nothing is as it seems and everything they say is a lie.

      Reply
    3. Kouros

      How did Trump even know about the Federal Arts Board? The army of cronies and sycophants and people with an agenda is just at work, probably with a long list of people to be replaced with people they have on the waiting list.

      But the worst news I got, via a former colleague and friend that teaches in the faculty of forestry in Oregon, that there is intensifyed rumblings about the privitizing of the national forests of the west…

      Reply
  18. Glen

    What to make of this?

    Trump directs Pentagon to start testing nuclear weapons
    https://thehill.com/policy/defense/5580424-trump-directs-pentagon-to-start-testing-nuclear-weapons/

    Is it a modern Sputnik moment for American elites?

    Putin brandishes a new nuclear-powered missile as he digs in over Russia’s demands on Ukraine
    https://apnews.com/article/russia-putin-ukraine-nuclear-missile-trump-ukraine-1bde7246084003a9a20c873360ebeed5

    Nuclear powered missiles and underwater drones with miniaturized nuclear reactors which provide power in seconds? That’s, ummm, pretty impressive.

    The West is still stuck working on hypersonic missiles and re-learning how to make 155 rounds, and it’s preeminent weapon system, oligarchic billionaires wielding neoliberalism, is still fully deployed wrecking it’s middle class so what to do?

    Reply
    1. Alice X

      I’m glad you posted this, I was going to but I had to go food shopping with what’s left of my EBT.

      Does anyone know what Hair Furor has in mind with nuclear testing? I doubt that he does. The US hasn’t done a test since 1992. Except for N. Korea in 2017, no one else has either in a long time. This is very dangerous talk, doubly so with his restaffed Pentagon yes men.

      Reply
      1. Glen

        Ouch, hang in there Alice!

        I can tell you what happen in the past, but have no idea what we’re looking at going forward.

        Tests were done here:

        Nevada Test Site https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nevada_Test_Site

        And were designed/tested by people from here:

        Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Livermore_National_Laboratory

        With what I would rather broadly term as support (material, people expertise, etc) from many other organizations typically under the DOE (or contractors to the DOE):

        U.S. Department of Energy https://www.energy.gov/

        I would be shocked if there is anybody still working at those agencies that had actually been around in the 1990’s for the last tests. Hopefully some of these people are around, and get called in to, in some capacity, oversee any new tests.

        Reply
        1. Alice X

          I hope that there are no new tests (why would we? we know the damn things work way better than life on earth can withstand). Get rid of them!

          Reply
          1. Glen

            There was some questions about whether old nukes still worked concerning the age of the plutonium pits, but new ones have been made:

            Behind the Scenes at a U.S. Factory Building New Nuclear Bombs
            https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/behind-the-scenes-at-a-u-s-factory-building-new-nuclear-bombs/

            We are in an almost completely unreported nuclear arms race mostly with China (I think, it’s very under reported so mostly speculation here). This is extremely expense, and I think, mostly being driven by a very hawkish America trying to hold onto it’s world empire.

            But the lapsing, or out right renunciation of the arms treaties is disconcerting. Remember that those treaties were set up by world leaders that had directly experienced the horrors of world war, but our current crop of elites have never experienced that, and have a track record of being very good at destroying the legacy given to them by those now gone leaders.

            Reply
            1. Alice X

              Thank you, I did speculate that the old nukes might no longer work (good, let them all rot), but the Obama man set about a trillion dollar update, so there is that. We are led by monsters.

              Reply
      2. ambrit

        I fear that, like the good neoliberal that he is, he will outsource the job to Netanyahu Industries who will perform the test over Teheran.

        Reply
  19. Ignacio

    Russian Forces Finally Break Through Into Key Eastern Ukrainian Stronghold The War Zone

    The same old tired narrative all over again. The Russians advancing “at a high cost in troops and equipment”. No mention of Ukrainian losses in troops, equipment, territory etc except may be some “problems holding territory and supply disruptions”. Tactical problems only? This indicates how little the media worries about Ukraine except as a tool against Russia while insisting on the heavy toll Russia has to pay more than once in the text. One day the Ukrainians will open their eyes and see. The Russians are indeed paying a toll but they are becoming more resolute every passing year. The narrative won’t stop them.

    Reply
  20. lyman alpha blob

    RE: New Polling Memo: Five Key Points on Americans’ Current Immigration Views

    As with any polls, watch out for weasely worded questions. This question leaves out something very important –

    “3. Americans strongly prefer legal status for undocumented immigrants over mass deportation and remain supportive of a balanced approach prioritizing both “order and humanity.” By a 72-24% margin, Americans supported legal status for undocumented immigrants over mass deportation in the new 2025 edition of PRRI’s massive sample (5,000+ respondent) American Values Survey. When asked a three-part question about preferred policy for undocumented immigrants, 60% preferred, “allow them a way to become citizens provided they meet certain requirements” and 12% preferred, “allow them to become permanent legal residents, but not citizens” versus 24% who preferred, “identify and deport them.” ”

    They fail to note exactly where immigrants should be while that way for them to become citizens is worked out. My guess is that 60% are not saying “come on in any time you want and we’ll figure out the legality of it later”. There is already a process for people to come into the country and become legal citizens, and I suspect that process is what poll respondents would like new immigrants to follow. Because there are tens or hundreds of millions of US citizens who are descendants of people who at one time or another did follow that process.

    Reply
  21. Wukchumni

    Google to bring shuttered nuclear power plant back from the dead TechCrunch
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    I see they are bringing 3 Mile Island back to life, too.

    My dad got creamed on it, he owned a bunch of stock of some NJ utility that ran the place when it nearly melted down. I think it was down 85% within days.

    San Onofre nuclear generation station got closed down in a hurry about a dozen years ago, wonder if Big Power Need has designs on that too?

    Reply
    1. ambrit

      Reopening San Onofre would require no fault insurance. I’ve always said that American atomic power is a critical resource.

      Reply
  22. Tom Stone

    There was some speculation here that Trump might be addicted to Rage a few days ago, and to me that makes sense.
    Trump’s recent video showing him crapping on NYC from a great height illustrates the point quite well.
    Trying to discern a rational explanation for Trump’s behavior has been, for me,futile.
    Incoherent Rage, encouraged by the sychophants and crazies (Laura Loomer comes to mind) he has surrounded himself with seems more convincing as an explanation for his actions.
    As inflation increases and his “Plans” continue to fail it seems likely that his behavior will become more extreme, which is not a happy thought.

    Reply
  23. Mikel

    Dame Emma Thompson gives the ‘AI revolution’ both barrels -The Register

    Using that “rewrite” and see somebody else make money from the work. I wonder if that was also in the back of her mind.

    Reply
      1. Mikel

        I was noticing the advice in article about saying how to turn off Copilot.
        Noticed they didn’t say go to Apps and uninstall.

        Reply
  24. ChrisFromGA

    It’s sad to see Fed Chairman Jerome Powell going out like a punk.

    First, he caved to Taco’s threats and cut interest rates for no good reason. Now, he’s gone “bubble denial” mode on AI. It reminds me of Ben Bernanke’s infamous statement that sub-prime was “contained” in the winter of 2008.

    I had thought that Powell was a decent guy, even though he set the confetti money cannons to “eleven” back in March 2020 and mistakenly claimed that inflation was “transitory” until March 2022.

    Looks like he’s just running for the bus and the gold retirement watch, sheesh.

    Reply
      1. lyman alpha blob

        Getting some interest on savings was nice while it lasted. Just bought a shorter term T-bill and should have sprung for the 52 week.

        It’s almost as if they don’t want regular people to get ahead.

        Reply
        1. Screwball

          Interest on savings? Surely you jest. :-)

          I’m with you. My bank, and it looks like quite a few others give us a whopping .01 percent on our account. Yipee! Which forces us to look elsewhere. For me it’s Treasury Direct. I have watched the rates eat away at my profits for months now.

          Yea, thanks much.

          Reply
          1. lyman alpha blob

            When I first discovered Treasury Direct a couple years ago (and it might have been you who pointed me to it, if so, thank you) I felt like I was finally getting some benefit from the government for once, since despite rising interest rates, banks and credit unions still weren’t paying much.

            But I guess the grifters weren’t making enough on the crypto scams or something, so now it’s time to rev up the margin borrowing again. Wheeeeeeeeee!!!!

            Reply
            1. ChrisFromGA

              I checked my Treasury Direct account, and some I-bonds that were yielding 8% back in 2022 are now yielding a paltry 2.8%. Not even keeping up with inflation.

              It was fun while it lasted.

              Reply
    1. nyleta

      It’s called financial repression for a reason. This is only mild stagflation but if they don’t stop force feeding the economies of the world it won’t stay mild. It may become systemic this time because of physical resource constraints, not political resource constraints.
      While the economy is about to fall in a hole, the real danger remains the totally out of control debt war that is going on everywhere.

      Reply
  25. AG

    re: Ukrainian male refugees

    Bavaria´s governor demands change of Ukrainian regulations.

    Interesting that nobody among legacy BS media has a problem with a German politician making demands to a foreign country concerning its own laws.

    German NACHDENKSEITEN

    use google-translate

    Sending them to their deaths in war? Söder demands that Ukraine change the relaxed exit regulations for young men.

    “Söder demands pressure on Ukraine due to rising refugee numbers” – that’s a recent media headline. What this pressure should look like quickly becomes clear: Ukraine should reverse its relaxed exit restrictions for young men between the ages of 18 and 22. In other words: These young people, some of whom are still teenagers, should simply stay in their country and risk being sent to the front lines. Currently, the recruitment age for the war is 25, but will that remain the case? There are no guarantees. The Bavarian Minister-President must also be aware of the implications of this. That’s what makes Söder’s stance so outrageous.

    by Marcus Klöckner
    https://www.nachdenkseiten.de/?p=141280

    Reply
    1. Ignacio

      Oh! Come on! Their obligation, as Ukrainians, is to fight and “protect” the rest of Europe from invading Russians! It makes sense! After all they are being paid for it! Our money for their lives. Reasonable. Isn’t it?

      Reply
  26. Alice X

    Prince Andrew has been stripped of his royal title, now he is to be known only as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor (did Virginia Giuffre’s Nobody’s Girl play?). Good, pink slip the whole lot of them.

    Reply
  27. Offtrail

    The JNS article “Israel must not be Sparta” presents an enormous distortion of reality. “Dead Israelis rarely move the world … News coverage amplified Palestinian suffering”. The author must not have been watching PBS News Hour since October 8. As Palestinian deaths rose to the tens of thousands, coverage would regularly pause to harken back to Israeli suffering during the original attack. PBS regularly mention “the 1200 killed”, never mentioning the likelihood that many if not most likely were killed by the IDF putting the Hannibal Directive into effect.

    The self pity and inversion of the truth that permeate the article are something to behold. I would be hard put even to approach someone who holds that worldview. This is where many of Israel’s supporters are coming from, unfortunately. It explains the savagery of some of their behavior.

    Reply

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