Like a butterfly
Display of the Bohemian Waxwing bird
đš wildsafarisaga and birdsinbloom
wild Safari Saga pic.twitter.com/Ul7ud6F7Yi
â Science girl (@sciencegirl) May 31, 2026
25 technology predictions from 30 years ago and how accurate they were Quartz
Matthew Prince says bot traffic has now surpassed human traffic online ECIKS.org
Astronomers Discover Two Monster Black Holes Creating a Cosmic Void as They Merge ZME Science
Solving Feynmanâs Formula for Eating Well, Parking Your Car, and Finding a Mate Nautilus
COVID-19/Pandemics
New âuniversal vaccineâ technology could protect us from future virus outbreaks University of Cambridge
Pandemic pups blamed for âstaggeringâ rise in dangerous dog incidents VetTimes
Climate/Environment
California and New York weaken climate rules as red states ramp up green energy The Guardian
Trump administration dismantles critical ocean-floor observation network Oceanographic Magazine
South of the Border
Colombia slams US election interference after Trump endorses presidential candida Andolu Agency
US raises pressure on Cuba as it sanctions President Diaz-Canel Al Jazeera
A call to Reflection by the Left in the Wake of the Maduros’ kidnapping VenezuelAnalysis
The U.S. Took Over Venezuelaâs Oil Industry. Where Has All the Money Gone? Council on Foreign Relations
China?
China has launched the worldâs largest offshore wind turbine, with a capacity of 16 megawatts.
The system consists of three components:a 16 MW turbine, a semiâsubmersible floating platform, and a new mooring/anchoring system.
The rotor has a 252âmeter diameter, with a swept⌠pic.twitter.com/21cUoYi7ry
â China pulse đ¨đł (@Eng_china5) May 4, 2026
Chinaâs exports offer cost-effective path to energy security China DailyChinese EVs may hit U.S. within a few years, one way or another CNBC
Chinaâs AI ambitions face a capital constraint East Asia Forum
How China is working to turn Saishiteng Mountain into the worldâs largest astronomy base SCMP
India
India’s Record Crops Counter Food, Warming Alarmism RealClear Markets
âIâm a cockroachâ: Gen Z protest movement lands in Indian capital Al Jazeera
Rosneft CEO predicts India will drive 50% of global oil demand growth by 2035 India Today
Africa
Ebola cases surge over 400 as fears grow over central Africa outbreak Euronews
What lies ahead for Sub-Saharan Africa as realism takes over? Defence24.com
Protected parks are not enough to save Africaâs biodiversity, scientists warn earth.com
European Disunion
Europe 2.0, Beyond Brussels: The End of the European Union as We Know It American Greatness
European Commission chief urges faster EU enlargement at Western Balkans summit Andolu Agency
EU Tech Package Unveiled: How the EU Plans to Shift to Digital Sovereignty Akin law firm
Old Blighty
UK Policing Culture â From The Nowak Murder To Crushing Protest â Grows Ever More Rotten Scheerpost
A UK in decline needs to rediscover supply-side economics SCMP
Israel v. Gaza, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, Iran
An Israeli attack on a tent camp in Gaza City has killed at least six Palestinians and wounded a dozen more, including children.
Hamas condemned it as âa massacre of women and childrenâ, accusing Israel of undermining ceasefire-related talks in Cairo. pic.twitter.com/Dry21bN5ll
â Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) June 6, 2026
What Visual Evidence Tells Us About Israelâs Use of White Phosphorus in Lebanon NY Timeshttps://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cj0g8jymg92o BBC
Pentagon raised threat of Israeli spying on U.S. to highest level, sources say NBC News
New Not-So-Cold War
Ukraine launches fresh drone attack on St. Petersburg region on final day of âRussian Davosâ France 24
Ukraine war briefing: Putin says âno pointâ meeting Zelenskyy, insists Russia will win the war Guardian
Russia at the Crossroads as Elites “Sour” of Putin’s War? Not So Fast Simplicius
As Russia and Ukraine press drone war, NATO finds itself caught in crossfire Christian Science Monitor
Big Brother Is Watching You Watch
Benevolent dictator Zuck will give Meta staff 30-minute breaks from keylogging privacy assault The Register
For Cities, Collecting Visual Data Brings Privacy Concerns Government Technology
SDSU Wired Its Dorms with 1,300 AI Cameras Without Telling Students Reclaim the Net
Imperial Collapse Watch
Supreme Court rules cities can ban homeless encampments KBZK Bozeman
Trump 2.0
Trump doesn’t care about the midterms because Trump doesn’t care about Congress GZERO
Trump Desperately Pumps Money Into Dying Coal Industry Futurism
Trump builds the wall Washington Examiner
From Makkawi Elmalik | Ů ŮŮاŮ٠اŮŮ ŮŮ on Twitter:
Translated from ArabicđĽ Earthquake in the World Cup⌠and the event is igniting right before Trump’s eyes!!! đĽ
The scene is no longer just sporting⌠it has transformed into a global test revealing what’s happening inside America, moment by moment
Just days before the launch of the largest edition in World Cup history..the signals coming from inside America paint a disturbing picture:
⢠National teams facing difficulties in arriving due to visa restrictions
⢠International fans backing out of travel out of fear of the procedures
⢠Hotel bookings below expectations despite the massive event
⢠Widespread human rights warnings against traveling to the United StatesđŻ But the biggest surprise didn’t come from outside⌠it came from within: a recent poll reveals that about 65% of Americans reject the presence of immigration forces inside the stadiums during the tournament
This number isn’t a detail⌠it’s a clear message: public opinion itself doesn’t trust the way this momentâsupposed to be a global celebrationâis being handled
Trump’s newly announced intel director had no security clearance, report says Andolu Ageency
Musk Matters
Tesla Robotaxi takes a big step toward Elon Muskâs ultimate vision The Street
Musk to Take SpaceXâs Terafab chip moonshot pitch to Europeâs biggest tech company, ASML Tekedia
Democrat Death Watch
âHow do we know you wonât be the next John Fetterman?â: bruised Democrats weigh how to win back voters The Guardian
âNo time to give up,â Biden tells South Dakota Democrats Douth Dakota Searchlight
Immigration
Treasury advances immigration crackdown Semafor
US judge blocks Trump’s immigration restrictions Andolu Agency
Our No Longer Free Press
Remaining 60 Minutes stars say they’re staying at CBS show… for now CBC
censorship at TheWrap’s 2026 Comedy FYC Showcase: ‘Not in this country!’ The Wrap
Mr. Market Is Moody
The Mania and the Frog Credit Bubble Bulletin
The Stock Market Is on the Verge of Doing Something Not Witnessed in 155 Years — and the Implications for Wall Street Are Frightening The Motley Fool
Why Oilâs Not at $200 After the Biggest Supply Shock in History Bloomberg
AI
AI-generated compounds hit specific cell types and outperform conventional screening Phys.org
AI Will Consume as Much Water as a Billion People By 2030, UN Report Estimates Futurism
How good are âAI doctorsâ â and will they take over medicine? Nature
McDonaldâs testing AI drive-thru system âArchIQâ at 5 locations across US NY Post
AI exposed a massive flaw in top crypto network and experts warn banks could be next CoinDesk
The Bezzle
This Nightmare AI Scam Is Making Parents Believe Their Child Has Been Abducted PC Magazine
Rishi Kapoorâs fraud victims will likely get very little of their money back Miami Herald
Guillotine Watch
The 5 most expensive perfume in the world #top5 #expensive #perfume pic.twitter.com/yg3MPttbWX
â Top5expensive (@top5expensive) October 11, 2025
The 5 most expensive house in the world #top5 #expensive #house pic.twitter.com/cYCFVspxBJ
â Top5expensive (@top5expensive) May 16, 2026
Antidote du jour (via)
See yesterdayâs Links and Antidote du Jour here



“SDSU Wired Its Dorms with 1,300 AI Cameras Without Telling Students”
San Diego State University does concede, however, that placing AI-enabled video cameras in the toilet stalls and the girls shower room may have overstepped the ledge somewhat.
Wonder if SDSU is using patrolling robot dogs. / ;)
Robot Dogs Are A Security Nightmare
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA8WuXDXfcI
Robot dogs with fricken’ lasers! :)
Hallway cams track all traffic in and out of bathrooms. Cafeteria and commons cams monitor all food eaten by students. No need for stall-cams when you already know what’s going to come out. Would love to know how many bathroom trips you’re allowed before campus security finds it necessary to question you.
And will those Israeli trained ‘campus coppers’ question you “con significa?”
“The Wonderful World of Gaza,” coming to a public space near you!
To whose benefit? Students as lab rats. Is there something to follow the experiment? Is this to be the future? Something done because it is possible to do it? Why is it being done? What prompted this exercise? Whatever happened to the university as a place of free inquiry? Wher, under what rock, do you find this breed of university administrator? The layers of bureaucracy and the narrow minded bureaucrats who infest colleges and universities is a plague.
Students have always been “Lab Rats,” and not the ‘Pinky and the Brain’ type either.
See the history of Ted Kaczynski, also known as the Unabomber, as an example.
See, the neutered Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Kaczynski
See also: https://www.thetedkarchive.com/library/jeffrey-st-clair-alexander-cockburn-the-unabomber-the-cia-and-lsd
One may view the above as “muck raking” but look at the two authors.
Stay safe.
AI and cameras. From Benn Jordan.
It’s Time to Take Down your Smart Cameras
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMIwNiwQewQ
The CFR piece on Venezuelan oil of course voices not even the most timorous objection to the blatant theft, the resource imperialism. The impression I got from it is that a lot of money and social capital have been invested in Nobel Peace Prize winner Marina Corina Machado, and the section of the foreign policy crowd focused on Latin America doesn’t want to give up on installing her just yet. The Venezuelan government is submitting monthly budget requests to the U.S. Treasury, and that’s fine with the author; she prefers, however, to hold Venezuelan assets and credit hostage until “democratic” concessions are made. “Democratic”, here, refers to a style of procedure, and has no other meaning or connotations. Those concessions would allow the U.S. to do what it is doing right now, but Trump has cut out the middle man, which is a no-no for those for whom middle-manning is a lucrative pursuit.
How do you know that Trump is not using this slush fund for money to finance Repubs running in the Midterms in a few months time? How could you find out?
The opacity of it was brought up as a concern, but being a careful, serious person committed to accuracy, the author didnât draw speculative conclusions. Suggesting an open accounting of the spoils is the move of someone looking for their share.
Yes. This is simply a view from the neoliberal faction of the National Security Establishment. Trump’s blatant piracy is questioned, but as you note the calls for “democracy,” the rhetoric about “civil society,” and the suggestion of Machado’s popularity are all tells.
I’m always curious about the backgrounds of these elite mouthpieces who publish in Foreign Affairs and other such outlets. I couldn’t help but notice that the author, Roxanna Vigil, was “an International Affairs Fellow in National Security, sponsored by Janine and J. Tomilson Hill.” Such non-permanent CFR participants are sponsored by prominent full members such as J. Tomilson Hill. If that name sounds familiar, here’s a bit of his bio:
“James Tomilson “Tom” Hill III (born May 24, 1948)… is an American billionaire hedge fund manager, the former president and CEO of Blackstone Alternative Asset Management (BAAM), Blackstone Group’s hedge funds business… Hill started his career at First Boston in 1973, where he was one of the founding principals of its mergers and acquisitions department, and then moved to Smith Barney, where he served as the head of its mergers and acquisitions department. In 1982, he joined Lehman Brothers as a partner in its M&A department and later became head of M&A, head of Investment Banking and co-CEO. Filmmaker Oliver Stone used J. Tomilson Hill as one of several inspirations for the character Gordon Gekko, portrayed by Michael Douglas in the 1987 movie, Wall Street…”
And so on. Hill is a former CFR Board member. His wife is director of fellowship affairs at the Council.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Tomilson_Hill
The author herself strikes me as a rather typical sincere recruit who was socialized into her current position and worldview after receiving a State Department fellowship following an undergrad degree in Latin American studies. Here is her own story:
https://www.cfr.org/articles/how-i-got-my-career-foreign-policy-roxanna-vigil
So how does such a promising but apparently non-elite young women get a CFR sponsorship by someone like the Tomilsons?
By showing absolute, rock-solid ideological reliability so featureless that there is not a single foothold for doubt.
As this is something difficult to fake or even conceal the absence of, its occurrence alongside basic literacy and professional presentation is enough.
The work ethic of Latin Americans has to be admired as well as the dexterity of utilizing your social network and modifying and adjusting your plans to new opportunities.
Thatâs the take away I got from her bio.
The “establishment liberal” idea of “democracy” is that we impose dictators “we” like, rather than cut deals with dubious figures inside the incumbent regime to sell out the leader. Come to think of it, this is exactly Trump vs Harris, no? The former basically Maduroed himself on behalf of the warmongers and Zionists. The latter is basically the yanqui Machado…
Re 60 minutes and CBS–after years of self censorship, skewed coverage, Dan Rather and his flag pins, the million dollar babies of network news get all sanctimonious about free speech. Please! There’s a reason why we denizens spend all our time on the internet and they are it. The MSM committed informational suicide long before our clown president and his allies could pull the trigger.
Trump himself is a product of this dumbing down of the news, and while his home turf is Fox the three originals ended up imitating it in many ways (MSNBC) after at first sneering at it.
Al Jazeera is reporting that Israel has attacked Hezbollah in south Beirut.
Pete Hegsethâs D-day speech on immigration condemned as âgrotesque stupidityâ
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/07/pete-hegseth-d-day-speech-immigration-grotesque-stupidity
Israeli military has struck ‘terrorist’ headquarters in Beirut, government says
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-military-has-struck-terrorist-headquarters-beirut-government-says-2026-06-07/
The attack on Beirut is an important potential tripwire to escalation and has got to be raising tensions with Israel in DC. Yet I’ve only seen this mentioned on Al Jazeera and in Ann’s link to Reuters. Bloomberg and the NYTimes have nothing. Now Al Jazeera’s live feed is reporting an Iranian response that there will be retailiation.
“Ebrahim Rezaei, spokesman for the Iranian parliamentâs national security commission, has warned Iran will âdeliver a decisive and painful responseâ to the Israeli attack on Beirutâs southern suburbs.
âThese rabid dogs must be disciplined and put back in their place. Look at the sky over the occupied lands tonight,â he wrote on X.
Earlier, Israeli strikes âtargeted two apartments in two buildingsâ, according to Lebanonâs state-run National News Agency.”
Ebrahim Rezaei, spokesman for the Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee promised Iran will “discipline” Israel because the Zionist regime understands only power.
Mohammad Ghalibaf, speaker of the parliament, said that US bases and forces in the region are included in this “diciplining”.
If Iranians have a certain morbid sense of humor (and they have already shown that they have plenty), they’ll call them “attacks on ‘Israeli proxies’ in Kuwait, UAE, etc.”)
There was that other Israeli attack yesterday deliberately targeting a car transporting a brigadier general, a captain, and a soldier from the Lebanese army; they were all killed. From their names, the captain (Elie Khoury) was probably a Christian, and the soldier (Hussein Ghazal) a Muslim. I cannot determine what community the general (Wissam Sabra) belongs to.
Rumours have it that Israel is relying upon its spies infiltrated in the Lebanese government and administration to identify those leaders of the Lebanese military who are “too nationalistic” and refuse mounting operations to “disarm Hezbollah”.
Israel has truly thrown the gauntlet; it is not just Hezbollah, but the whole of the Lebanese society it intends to reduce to submission.
re: AI
Corey Robin post:
In the New York Review of Books, Dan Chiasson has an excellent piece on capitalism and AI, and how what it seeks to rob us of is time, particularly those long impasses where we’re struggling to find words, on the assumption that it can just do it for you, and do it for you better, thereby saving you time, when in fact, saving time is exactly what you don’t need or want, because struggling to figure out what you think and feel and want has so much to do with what *you* ultimately think and feel and want, and why these are your feelings and thoughts and wants, not just for the moment but into the future, as opposed to someone else’s. AI is like having someone else just live your life, super fast, because that would be far more efficient. Along the way, Chiasson offers some pertinent passages from T.S. Eliot, Emily Dickinson, and Robert Lowell.
From East Coker:
So here I am, in the middle way, having had twenty yearsâ
Twenty years largely wasted, the years of lâentre deux guerresâ
Trying to use words, and every attempt
Is a wholly new start, and a different kind of failure
Because one has only learnt to get the better of words
For the thing one no longer has to say, or the way in which
One is no longer disposed to say it. And so each venture
Is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate,
With shabby equipment always deteriorating
In the general mess of imprecision of feeling,
Undisciplined squads of emotion. And what there is to conquer
By strength and submission, has already been discovered
Once or twice, or several times, by men whom one cannot hope
To emulateâbut there is no competitionâ
There is only the fight to recover what has been lost
And found and lost again and again: and now, under conditions
That seem unpropitious.
From Robert Lowell:
Have you seen an inchworm crawl on a leaf,
cling to the very end, revolve in air,
feeling for something to reach to something?
Do
you still hang your words in air, ten years
unfinished, glued to your notice board, with gaps
or empties for the unimaginable phraseâ
unerring Muse who makes the casual perfect?
From Dickinson:
To fill a Gap
Insert the Thing that caused itâ
Block it up
With Otherâand âtwill yawn the moreâ
You cannot solder an Abyss
With Air.
Thanks for the wonderful poetry, AG. You point to the aspect of technologically mediated attention I try and warn friends about: having someone else decide for you what it is on which you spend your time. To the point about time-saving, I think those concerns are more intelligible when read through a class lens. Itâs about saving bosses from paying for your time, the old productivity panic.
I find it uplifting that the public is engaging in criticism this early into AI.
Fwiw right now it´s a serious general discussion even MSM are involved in.
On the other hand: Same was true about surveillance and the dangers of digital life 25 years ago…under a Republican POTUS who – I remember very well – was generally subject to condemnation and scathing criticism by most, worst and most dangeorus POTUS of all time. Today he is almost regarded as benign which I just cannot wrap my head around.
But so, perhaps we need another DNC presidency to turn it around for AI and make it accepted, integrate it, even regard it as protection against Martians.
Iâll say that opposition to AI seems broader than had been that to mass surveillance. A dem administration would still struggle to sell something this unpopular, especially if they use their usual strategy of scoffing at the vulgar concerns of the plebs.
Lets hope you will proven right.
Thanks, AG. Indeed, an excellent essay (de-paywalled):
Think for Yourself
https://archive.md/YrzuW
thanks
usually I dodge NYRB because closed off
“25 technology predictions from 30 years ago and how accurate they were”
This article gives a helluva lot of credit to Bill gates and his predictions but he too nearly stuffed up badly. When the internet started up Bill Gates dismissed the whole thing and thought it only a fad. His engineers would be screaming in his face – it was that sort of company back then – and trying to tell him how big it would become. He finally relented and allowed the engineers to hook up his home to the internet and Gates spent the whole weekend surfing it. When he came in to work he had become a true believer and demanded that his engineers cram the internet into every product that they had. Now that I think about it, didn’t he miss mobiles and tablets and let Steve Jobs steal a march on him there?
Seems to be written by a technophile, where’s the self driving car, nobody promised flying cars in 10 years. AI is for censorship, surveillance, and authoritarian control, and a middle entity to be blamed for any fallout, not the precious billionaire useless eaters. Where’s the prediction that amazon and gig workers generally would destroy working class living standards? Definitely don’t have the time or inclination to get into it further, cheerleading bs. of course ignoring almost all of the blatantly horrible aspects of global technocracy. Ursula VdL should have put that concept to rest long ago,…but no.
As a former private pilot, I can confidently assert that widespread use of individual-use flying cars, even with a presumed impeccable AI traffic control, would be a nightmare. Maybe very limited adoption in high density population areas–“air taxis”. Maybe.
Microsoft was actually way ahead of Apple on smartphones but nobody remembers WindowsCE now because it was clunky and you had to be a bit of a geek to get the devices to work well. Apple had a notable failure with its Newton tablet personal assistant and was sort of chastised by it and averse to putting anything similar out until it “just worked”. The Windows Tablet PC with a touchscreen was a useful laptop for certain kinds of work but the Microsoft concept was that people wanted handwriting recognition, not that they would use an on screen keyboard. This was Ballmer holding back the development teams. Then Microsoft finally put out a decent smartphone OS and it was too late because the market had already been dominated by 2 major players and MS had no UPS, just the usual model of licensing to the hardware makers. Oh, and billg never had an original thought in his life.
The Road Ahead foresees everyone connecting to the worldwide network via a âset-top boxâ attached to their TV. A set-top box presumably made by Microsoft. But it took many years before the internet finally became like the worst of TV as all the moguls desired.
Gates, like other tech optimists of the â90s, vastly underestimated the extent to which bad actors would quickly utilize the internet. All they knew about was the Morris Worm and maybe Kevin Mitnick.
I’m getting really tired of articles like the one in Nature about AI and doctors. There is a reason that states require doctors to be licensed. The government has an interest in people not dropping dead from bad advice or malpractice. There is also the Hippocratic oath. And the human element of, do you want an algorithm telling you that you may have cancer?
There is an entire ethical and moral dimension to this ridiculous debate that folks like the author of that piece simply ignore.
An issue not unique to AI medicine is accountability or lack there of. Can one sue an internet program’s originator or transmitter for malpractice? Malpractice tort suits have an unintended effect of imposing responsibility on practitioners to ‘exercise due care’ and limiting stretching newer concepts into quackery. The prescription opioid prescribing epidemic is an example of the popularization of quackery. NC previously covered the Feb. 2026 NY jury verdict that was a first award against providers of gender affirming care to a minor. In May there was an Oregon pre-trial settlement for a detransitioner whose breasts were removed as an adult. https://benryan.substack.com/p/detranssitioner-lawsuit-settles-oh Discussed by NC and covered in reports of these cases is the issue of limitations on the time allowed to file suits. An important issue in both these cases is the judicial sealing of the cases and the practice of nondisclosure to obtain settlement. Dr. Marty Makary Trump’s resigned FDA commissioner has written in favor of disclosure in his book “Unaccountable” that calls for more transparency in medicine as a way to improve care.
I’ve thought a little bit about this issue and conclude that the best approach might be to always hold the person accountable for their actions, regardless of the tool used. We don’t hold the scalpel maker accountable when a surgeon botches a surgery.
The situation to avoid is where the doctor points the finger at the AI, and the Sam Altmans of the world point the finger back at the doctor. Altman can also bribe Congress to pass laws that insulate the AI industry from lawsuits. Then it becomes a contest of who has the best lawyers, and Altman’s billions will probably win. But always holding the human accountable has the side effect of making them face the consequences of using shoddy AI as a replacement for human judgment. A few million dollar verdicts will hopefully convince them to never use it again.
I may be totally wrong, though. A counter-argument is that much like the opioid crisis, bad actors will keep pushing for profiteering at the expense of patient outcomes, and real harm will be done. Outright banning AI from any decision-making in medicine would be my preferred solution.
but but but there is so much more profit to be squeezed out of human health – I mean illness. Really the problem is the enshittification of health care to where crappy hallucinating AI seems an advantage to the chronic profit centers (i mean perpetually ill patients).
Some people. As fun a fantasy as it is that AI will make healthcare so bad that those of us without it will have better health outcomes, it’s much easier to imagine that it will be AI for lower-echelon PMCs and people in states with more “generous” social programs (“It looks like you have a fever. Press ‘1’ for automated kidney removal.” ), with flesh-and-blood doctors retained for those who can pay, rather like what happened with technology in the classroom.
> Solving Feynmanâs Formula for Eating Well, Parking Your Car, and Finding a Mate Nautilus
Short explainers from their previous book:
When To Quit (According to Computer Science)
When To Try New Things (According to Computer Science)
https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/116703094991947376
What stage of dementia or narcissism does somebody have to be to unironically post something like this about themselves? I don’t even think your run of the mill tinpot republic military dictator would be shameless enough to do something like this.
“Lebanese general among three soldiers killed in Israeli attack on car”
What was that they were saying about using Lebanese army units to separate the Israelis from Hezbollah in “pilot zones” the other day? The Israelis attack the Lebanese army as often as they do United Nations troops using the doctrine of kill anything that moves.
See my comment above. There may well be method in the Israeli strike against that Lebanese general.
Rather unfortunate two letters missing at the end, or TMI.
Oh yes, this is hilarious. Candida is a fungus that causes thrush, diaper rash, and vaginal yeast infections.
It’s not that surprising that Trump would endorse such a blight
On CO2 helping India’s rice and wheat production:
https://skepticalscience.com/co2-is-plant-food-too-simple.html
Photosynthesis comes in a few different flavors, two of which are C3 and C4. Together C3 and C4 photosynthesis make up almost all of modern agriculture, with wheat and rice being examples of C3 crops while corn and sugarcane are C4. The distinction deals mainly with the specific enzyme that is used to collect CO2 for the process of photosynthesis, with C3 directly relying on the enzyme RuBisCO. C4 plants also use RuBisCO, but unlike C3 plants, they first collect CO2 with the enzyme PEP-carboxylase in the mesophyll cell prior to pumping it to RuBisCO
The author belongs to a think-tank whose main message seems to be that CO2 is good and its negative climatic effects are speculative and exaggerated.
Re the Meta employee keylogging: I bet they’re using the data to create a database of typing signatures, just like the good old days of morse code tapping.
What a joke, bringing back supply side economics. Art Laffer and his cocktail napkin must be laughing their asses off. The theory was always about giving the rich more money.
I kept waiting for the guy to mention Thames Water.
Iran fires missiles at Gulf after US targets Iranian radar sites
https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2026/6/6/us-intercepts-iranian-attacks-as-israel-continues-to-bomb-lebanon
Israeli military says it intercepted two projectiles that crossed from Lebanon
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-military-says-it-intercepted-two-projectiles-that-crossed-lebanon-2026-06-07/
Actually Israel says they intercepted all missiles ever and if anyone says that damage was done they will be silenced in one of its torture hells permanently. Fifth level of hell for jews, ninth level of hell for palestinians and arabs. Not sure where they throw the christian talkers.
“As Russia and Ukraine press drone war, NATO finds itself caught in crossfire”
I don’t know what those NATO nations expected. They let Ukrainian drones overfly their territory with their blessings and when those drones hit those very same NATO nations, all they can do is blame Russia. Every. Single. Time. This whole issue has already caused one government to fall and all you need is for a Ukrainian drone to cause a mass casualty event to lead to chaos politically. Will those NATO countries have to start sounding air raid warnings as they let the latest wave of Ukrainian drones to fly overhead? From my seat, this action definitely makes them a party to this war which may not end well for them.
Presenting an addendum to Michael H.’s post from yesterday (maybe his spirit animal in some respects):
https://worldlinesletter.substack.com/p/where-has-all-the-class-analysis/
From the opening:
“…I want to step back from the immediate debates and identify some of the analytical tendencies that have come to dominate the multipolar and antiâimperialist media space. I greatly admire the diligent work of many of the analysts I will reference indirectly here. Their research is rigorous, their commitment is genuine, and they have done more than most to expose the crimes of the USâled empire. But there is a persistent pattern of argumentation that, I believe, rests on a series of strawmen and produces a mutual misunderstanding between debating âsides.â My goal is not to attack individuals but to interrogate the underlying logic…”
The article should emphasize the two major causes of US-Russia rivalry, long before communism and long after the dissolution of the USSR: (1) British invention of Russophobia to rationalize aggression; and (2) US MIC use of Russophobia after 1991 to rationalize aggression.
(1) No battles occurred between British and Russian troops in Afghanistan, but in 1839 Britain used the pretense that a small hostage-rescue operation by Russia there threatened India, to rationalize its invasion to support land claims of Sikh allies against Afghan warlords. The warlords massacred all 16,000 British troops except for one survivor. In 1855 after weakening of the Ottoman empire, Russia and Britain contended for Crimea, where Britain was seen as an imperial aggressor on the boundary of Russia, as in Ukraine today.
(2) After the 1989-91 dissolution of the USSR, NATO had little value except as a transitional stabilizing deterrent, but instead was expanded to serve the US MIC, with unsupported claims against Russia to preserve the distant monster as the rationale.
Cuba to suspend Visa and Mastercard transactions, citing US sanctions
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/cuba-suspend-visa-mastercard-transactions-citing-us-sanctions-2026-06-03/
Trump drags feet on drone deal with Ukraine, mystifying experts
https://thehill.com/policy/defense/5911039-trump-drone-deal-ukraine/
Pakistan interior minister meets Iranian FM as Islamabad steps up US-Iran mediation
https://www.arabnews.com/node/2646268/middle-east
One killed, several wounded in suspected terror attack in central Israel
https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/07/middleeast/israel-shooting-attack-intl
Albania Freezes Assets in Kushner Resort Probe
https://www.occrp.org/en/news/albania-freezes-assets-in-kushner-resort-probe
Russiaâs crude oil exports reached an average of 3.46 million barrels a day last month, higher than at any point since the 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine
https://www.semafor.com/article/06/04/2026/russias-oil-exports-hit-wartime-high
“India’s Record Crops Counter Food, Warming Alarmism”
This article is standard denial of the impacts of climate change, written by a member of a Koch Brothers funded think thank fully dedicated to denying the impacts of climate change. The CO2 Coalition founder William Happer was tapped to lead the Trump “Presidential Committee on Climate Security”.
It’s a misinformation article.
They aren’t particularly subtle about it.
Warmer is better, says the frog.
Iran is âTrumpâs Vietnamâ â and itâs going to get a lot worse
https://www.salon.com/2026/06/07/iran-is-trumps-vietnam-and-its-going-to-get-a-lot-worse/
AI CEOs from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Microsoft set aside their rivalry to warn Congress AI is making it too easy to design and create bioweapons
https://fortune.com/2026/06/05/openai-anthropic-microsoft-ceos-congress-bioweapon-safeguards
I would love to smell those perfumes! When I was in New Delhi, I found an ancient street of perfumes, full of tiny shops filled with exotic scents and bottles, like something out of a fantasy novel.
There’s a street off the Chandhni Chowk like that. Wonder if that’s where you were. Delhi is a magical place.
How democracy works.
GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan draws an unusual opponent in Alaskaâs primary â and heâs not happy about it, AP.
Turns out a late entrant to the race also goes by the name âDan Sullivanâ, just a coincidence Iâm sure.
The incumbent is not happy. âEverybody in Alaska knows Iâm Dan Sullivan-R. So heâs trying to do that. Why?â the senator said of the other Dan Sullivan. âHeâs not an R. Heâs purposely trying to trick my constituents to rig the election for Peltola.â
The first vote is to pare the field of fifteen or so down to four candidates,
In Alaskaâs primary, the top four vote-getters, regardless of party affiliation, advance to the ranked-choice general election.
I guess this sort of election strategy beats having to take a public stance on an issue or two.
I’m surmising that this “election strategy” is taking a “public stance.” Said stance being, “The Public Be D—-d.”
Enlarging on the meme of “The Five Most…” I would like to see a video, perhaps by the Australien Truth Commission or the Lego Warriors Bund on “The Five Most Expensive (to Buy) Governments.”
North Korea calls US push for denuclearization an anachronistic dream:
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/07/north-korea-calls-us-push-for-its-denuclearization-anachronistic-dream-00952796
Yup, cue the Taylor Swift lyrics … we will never, ever, ever, get together again, and there is no going back. Taco had better keep his filthy trap shut. He can’t even get his stinking mitts on the “nuclear dust” in Iran. Fail.
We Will Not Be Lovers, The Waterboys
âHow do we know you wonât be the next John Fetterman?â: bruised Democrats weigh how to win back voters
I gave up reading about the Democrat party. Wished I’d skipped this. My only real takeaway is Democrats think they need to fight for something. And a few candidates are now using profanity. That’s pretty edgy. Wow. I guess we’re really not playing around.
Someone should explain to the Democrat party grifts like they’re two that not delivering when you’ve got all the leavers of power is a solid demonstration of what the Democrat party is about. If you couldn’t deliver the bacon in two years of trifecta, what are you even about?
Grift.
bartedners!!!! cheekyRosanna Prestia, MBA
@RosannaInvests
¡
Jun 6
đ¨ The âblowoutâ jobs report that just killed your rate cut? Misleading.
It was bartenders. đş
70K hospitality hires for the World Cup -> 5x normal. Wall Street saw a hot economy. It was a soccer tournament.
Back out the one-off and thereâs NO blowout -> just trend. Yes, thereâs a soccer tournament sitting on top of a trend-line economy. đ¤Ż
Look under the hood. đ§ľ
Ouch! Good catch there!
It’s all narrative until you have to actually plant the seeds.
I wonder what we would call a “Narrative Crop.”
USDA calls them planting intentions, Russia spring wheat crop plantings down 13%, Aussie crop appears to be headed for a 50% reduction, right now markets don’t care. Cassandra lurking!
Supposedly True Promise 5 is going to start today. Looks like opening the Strait of Hormuz, diplomatically or otherwise, is to remain definitively a pipe dream.
The very likely resumption of war (in 4 or 5 hours, perhaps about 30 minutes before equity futures open after the Friday bloodbath) and there is nothing on NY Times or Bloomberg at this moment (that I can find). Extraordinary complacency.