Thursday, October 9, 2025

Reading archive 2025-10-08

Why Democrats are slow-walking their 2024 autopsy until after the November elections: The party’s chairman has already said it would not include scrutiny of how Joe Biden’s late withdrawal from the race was handled.

Trump threatened shutdown layoffs. So far, he hasn’t followed through.: For the White House, the week-long shutdown is both an “opportunity” to MAGA-fy the federal government and an “unenviable choice” over how to cut costs.

Layoffs are traumatic. Here are some things you should never say.: Platitudes or jokes will only add to the hurt of unemployment. Offer real help instead.

How to stop the No. 1 killer of Americans long before any symptoms: Cardiovascular disease experts propose a new approach to treating heart disease, focusing on atherosclerosis prevention and early detection

What a gut microbiome scientist wants you to eat every day: Focus on eating fiber-rich foods, especially those high in a special type of fiber called resistant starch.

VA’s disability program is an ‘honor system.’ These veterans are defrauding it.

D.C. Council rejects — then revives and delays — youth curfew extension: A disagreement over a bill to extend a stricter curfew sends the D.C. Council behind closed doors. It was one of three bills that lawmakers punted on to resolve disagreements.

Why the White House might dial up the shutdown pain: Democratic leaders play a dangerous game as Trump threatens not to pay furloughed federal workers. - "The government is too big. There is plenty of fat to cut. If the last week has shown anything, it’s that the federal bureaucracy performs too many 'nonessential' tasks that do not have a direct bearing on the lives of most citizens." [edit: that should read immediate direct bearing]

Twenty Thoughts On Where We Stand: Taking stock of the weirdest shutdown I've observed - "The easiest way to succinctly untangle it to say this: Trump and the GOP are responsible for blowing up the longstanding norms and logic of the appropriations process, but the Democrats are the ones who caused the current shutdown, and are the ones preventing the government from reopening under a short-term CR."

What if a Russian victory in Ukraine were only the beginning?: This isn’t a Russian “gray zone” war with Europe. It’s a real war. And the West is dithering.

Scientists seek to turbocharge a natural process that cools the Earth: Terradot, a carbon removal company, is using “enhanced rock weathering” to sequester carbon by spreading crushed volcanic rock over farmland.

Russia escalates warning as Trump considers sale of Tomahawks to Ukraine: The warning is part of a concerted Russian effort to deter President Donald Trump from giving Ukraine access to the missiles, repeating a tactic Moscow has used throughout the war.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2025/10/04/hawaii-cultural-tourism-shift/

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Reading archive 2025-10-07

Tesla said it didn’t have key data in a fatal crash. Then a hacker found it.: The critical evidence was presented last month to a jury, which found the company partially liable for the 2019 crash in Key Largo, Florida.

The Taliban are reaching out — and some countries are responding: Anti-immigrant sentiment in Europe, concerns about militancy in Asia and acceptance that the Taliban regime is unlikely to collapse soon present a diplomatic opening.

His wife was dying, his federal job crumbling. It tested his faith — in God and Trump.: One federal worker was rejected three times from the administration’s early resignation offer. Would he blame the president he voted for? - "Brandon hit pause. Trump’s treatment of the federal workforce was clearly an error, he thought. The president had delegated authority to bad people, especially Musk and the young engineers running DOGE, who didn’t understand or care about the government and the people who made it function. But Trump had a lot to manage, Brandon thought. He probably didn’t know about everything Musk and DOGE were doing." [ed. note: "If the fuhrer knew!", or naive monarchism]

‘I escaped a Russian prison — only to end up in an American jail’: Dozens of Russian dissidents have been expelled from the US and forcibly returned to Russia with the co-operation of immigration authorities - "When the dissidents arrived in Russia, the Russian authorities were given documents relating to their asylum applications in the US. Those dossiers, outlining their political beliefs and criticisms of Putin, could be used to prosecute them back home, campaigners believe."

The Anti-Trump Strategy That’s Actually Working: Lawsuits, lawsuits, and more lawsuits

Ukraine’s Most Lethal Soldiers: From the front lines in Kherson, with a unit that kills Russians for points

Judge in Comey case is known for sparing but powerful remarks in court: U.S. District Judge Michael S. Nachmanoff, a former public defender nominated by President Joe Biden, has a reputation as a measured jurist.

To defeat the Texas gerrymander, Democrats need to go nuclear: It’s not enough for blue states to redraw their maps. Leaders need to hit the GOP where it hurts most.

It’s Time for Soft Secession: How blue states can use their economic clout to stand up to Trump’s agenda—starting with California. - "As my colleague Ari Berman has noted: 'In 1790, the country’s most populous state, Virginia, had 12 times as many people as its least populous, Delaware. Today, California has 67 times the population of Wyoming. Fifteen small states with 41 million people combined now routinely elect 30 GOP senators; California, with 39 million residents, is represented by only two Democrats.'

...

"Blue states could lure away techies, doctors, nurses, and electricians with relocation bonuses. We could institute tax and other incentives to pull new factories and data centers away from red states. We could selectively terminate professional licensing reciprocity. We could ease commerce between friendly states and make it difficult for unfriendly ones."

Eventually You're Going to Have to Stand for Something: On accepting the fascist offer and being better than Ezra. - "Klein has demonstrated his commitment to open discourse and public debate; first by having prominent hatemonger Ben Shapiro (friendship status uncertain) on to his podcast to chat for a couple hours about the need for unity; next, by having on his friend Ta-Nehisi Coates—who has written an excellent piece criticizing Ezra's Kirk piece—so Klein could talk at Coates for an hour about how we need to be practical to regain power, and how those practicalities are going to have to come at the expense of the humanity of some of our neighbors, and how having historical conversations about who in fact has been killing who is all a little too much of a downer. The fact of interview with Shapiro and the content of the interview with Coates exposed Klein's moral emptiness in ways that he should find deeply embarrassing.

...

"This is the grain of sand at the center of the pearl of my ire, because 'we are going to have to live here with each other' is the exact premise that Republicans do not agree with any of us about, and while Klein in his remarks pays lip service to some of the recent proofs of this clear fact, his analysis of what to do about it he excises this reality entirely. In his mind, he and Kirk were just two guys, both trying to change the country for what they thought was good. It's a bond. Never mind that what Kirk thought was good was the American military in the streets of Chicago, and mass kidnapping in service of a white ethnostate, and the end of bodily autonomy for women and queer people, and so forth. In the Klein world, moral clarity about abuse is polarizing, and polarization, not abuse, is the problem to solve.

Should you brush your teeth before or after breakfast? What experts say.: There are pros and cons for both.

Three people found fatally shot in D.C. in three days: Three youths, one with a gun, took a moped in broad daylight on Capitol Hill.

Federal workers not entitled to back pay after shutdown, budget office claims: The government shutdown entered its seventh day Wednesday with no end in sight. The White House says a 2019 law doesn’t guarantee retroactive pay.

D.C. teacher aide on leave after allegedly putting hot sauce in autistic boy’s mouth: A D.C. teacher aide has been placed on leave after allegedly putting hot sauce in the mouth of a nonverbal autistic student.

Country singer Zach Bryan warns ICE will ‘bust down your door’ in new song: Bryan, a Grammy winner, upset some right-wing fans when he appeared to criticize U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in a teaser of a new song.

Reading archive 2025-10-06

How Big Agriculture got its way in the latest MAHA report: Alarmed by the first MAHA commission report, the agriculture industry mobilized to shape the next installment. Those efforts seemingly paid off.

Government shutdowns have become normal. This one is not.: Many of the administration’s actions have no precedent, which makes it a harder test of both sides.

Riders on the storm: The birds that fly into hurricanes

How I grew a prairie on my balcony—and how you can, too

The most miraculous animal migration is happening in the middle of New York City: If we can help these creatures flourish in NYC, we can help them anywhere.

The AI bubble is 17 times the size of the dot-com frenzy - and four times subprime, this analyst argues - "'So, in summary; you can't create an app with commercial value as it is either generic (games etc), which won't sell, or it is regurgitated public domain (homework), or it is subject to copyright. It's hard to advertise effectively, LLMs cost an exponentially larger amount to train each generation, with a rapidly diminishing gain in accuracy. There's no moat on a model, so there's little pricing power. And the people who use LLMs the most are using them to access compute that costs the developer more to provide than their monthly subscriptions,' he says."

Friday, October 3, 2025

Reading archive 2025-10-02

Trump Isn’t Interested in Competing With China: To see how the president is losing ground to Beijing, consider his disastrous relationship with India. - "India is not the only Asian partner the Trump administration has alienated. ICE agents arrested more than 300 South Koreans who had entered the United States legally and were building a Hyundai battery plant in Georgia. The move generated outrage in Seoul. On the same day, Trump imposed a punitive investment deal on Japan that drew the ire of Japanese officials and business leaders."

The Running Mate Kamala Harris Didn’t Dare Choose: “I love Pete,” she writes in her new book. But picking a gay man would have been too risky.

It’s Fun to Be a Board-Game Sociopath: What can I say? I love to betray my friends. - "For example, if I were to offer aspiring Werewolf champions one piece of advice: When caught in a lie, do not admit to it. Rather, you must double down and commit to your lie even harder, so that the other players are forced to choose sides between you and your accuser."

Trump’s Campaign of Vengeance Is Already Backfiring As the president knows too well, efforts to censor or convict foes can often make them more popular.

Moscow Can’t Stop the Music: The Kremlin is trying to suppress songs that defy Putin’s rule. It isn’t working.

The 4th Amendment will no longer protect you - "Earlier this month, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the 4th Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police. When the court stayed the district court’s decision in Noem vs. Vasquez Perdomo, it green-lighted an era of policing in which people can be stopped and seized for little more than how they look, the job they work or the language they speak."

Charlie Kirk, Redeemed: A Political Class Finds Its Lost Cause :By ignoring the rhetoric and actions of the Turning Point USA founder, pundits and politicians are sanitizing his legacy.

Charlie Kirk, Ezra Klein, and the Cost of Civility-Theater Liberalism: “Talking across divides” is laudable—until it becomes a license to launder antidemocratic and dehumanizing ideas. - "This outrage-packaged-for-attention market that incentivizes mockery and monetizes contempt is the roadshow that made Charlie Kirk famous—an old playbook Dinesh D’Souza and David Horowitz ran before him, now optimized for an algorithmic age: a ritualized antagonism, audience participation as culture-war cosplay, the triumphant edit pushed out to millions before the house lights are up. Strip away the self-flattery of a university crowd congratulating itself on its open-mindedness, and the illusion that a staged confrontation with a celebrity provocateur constitutes pedagogy, and what remains is a reel factory masquerading as a public forum."

Ophelia Disappeared: A Wall Street Analyst and a Deadly Shootout: The group was passionately vegan, mostly transgender and highly educated. Seven of them are now in jail. This is the story of one who did not survive.

Russian gasoline production buckles under Ukrainian drone strikes: In annexed Crimea, drivers are limited to five gallons of gas at the pump, and all Russians face higher taxes and less social spending as the war drags on.

Senior government officials privately warn against firings during shutdown: The Trump administration has telegraphed that mass firings are coming, but officials have cautioned that such moves could violate appropriations law.

How Trump’s 2020 election falsehoods are shaping a marquee Georgia race: Warring factions at odds over his failed effort to overturn the outcome are renewing their rivalries in a major midterm contest.

Why do women outlive men? A study of 1,176 species points to an answer.: Let’s talk about sex chromosomes, baby. - "The 'heterogametic sex hypothesis' holds that if something goes haywire with a gene on one of a woman’s X chromosomes, her cells have a spare to rely on. But men, with only a single X chromosome, have no such reinforcements. The same sort of problem may happen with a male’s unpaired Y chromosome."

Democrats are putting money into solidly red Mississippi. Here’s why.: The DNC is investing in low-profile state races there as the South is on track to wield more power in future elections. Will it work?

Thursday, October 2, 2025

Reading archive 2025-10-01

Congressional Democrats embrace government shutdown, a risky move: House Democrats gave Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries a standing ovation in a caucus meeting Monday evening, praising his feisty posture toward Donald Trump.

Trump administration seeks to exert control over government shutdown: Officials canceled projects in Democratic states, posted partisan messages on government websites and warned that federal layoffs will begin soon.

My Thoughts on the Riyadh Comedy Festival - "Clearly you guys don’t give a shit about what the rest of us think, but how can any of us take any of you seriously ever again? All of your bitching about 'cancel culture' and “freedom of speech” and all that shit? Done. You don’t get to talk about it ever again. By now we’ve all seen the contract you had to sign."

‘Veep’ Creator Armando Iannucci Struggling To Fund Trump Project Amid MAGA Retribution Fears

Hegseth wants to return the military to 1990 — a dark time in its history: The early 1990s saw the U.S. Navy rocked by the Tailhook sexual assault scandal, exposing a dark underside of military culture.

Flooded outfield results in criminal charges for two Maryland firefighters: The Montgomery County incident was apparently sparked by baseballs flying over protective netting and into a fire station parking lot.

Legalized blackjack and poker among D.C. mayor’s proposals to boost economy: Bowser is also putting forward measures related to street vending, zoning and taxation — ideas the D.C. Council had removed from this year’s budget proposal.

Who will win the shutdown fight? Neither side will like the answer.: Washington’s obsession with claiming victory in the shutdown cycle is pointless. - "Kamala Harris offers a hard lesson in how short-lived a good news cycle can be when it comes to the make-or-break skill of winning national elections. Harris had a good rollout in her opening weeks, a sterling Democratic convention in Chicago and a strong debate. In the end, how much good did all that do her?"

Maryland speeders to pay more, D.C. changes health care under new laws: Laws going into effect Oct. 1 will also bring about changes to late fees on past-due rent, driver’s license emblems and violence interruption programs.

WorldPride festival’s predicted economic boon fell short, D.C. says :Trump administration actions seen as targeting the LGBTQ+ community caused some visitors to stay away.

Threatened with jail, CEO agrees to shut down ride-hailing app in D.C.: Empower’s CEO agreed in court Tuesday to a two-week deadline to stop operating in the city, but the company said afterward it would continue to fight.

D.C. police sergeant arrested by city and federal task force: Montez Clark, 27, has been charged with nine crimes, including assaulting a federal police officer. He has worked at the police department since July 2019.

Saudi comedy festival draws big names and backlash Human rights advocates and some comics say the festival, at which Bill Burr, Louis C.K., Dave Chappelle and Kevin Hart are performing, whitewashes abuses. - "'A lot of the 'you can’t say anything anymore!' Comedians are doing the festival,' Okatsuka said, appending a laughing-crying emoji."

Fight gearing up over D.C. bill to recycle bottles and cans for cash: The D.C. Council is holding a hearing Wednesday on a proposal to add a 10-cent fee to bottle and can purchases that would be refunded if people recycle.

Hegseth wants to return the military to 1990 — a dark time in its history: The early 1990s saw the U.S. Navy rocked by the Tailhook sexual assault scandal, exposing a dark underside of military culture.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-30

The Gaza Left and the Gender Left: Can groups with different values work together against Britain’s far right?

Ukraine’s Plan to Starve the Russian War Machine: Negotiations have stalled. Trump keeps changing his policies. Ukrainians, backed by Europeans, are taking matters into their own hands. ​​​

He was 12 when he committed murder. At 17, his sentence is served.: A judge ended the teen’s indefinite probation in the killing of 13-year-old King Edward Douglas in 2021.

Battleground lawmaker’s bid for Arizona governor could affect control of Congress next year: The decision by David Schweikert creates a vacancy in one of the most competitive House districts in the country.

Comey and the lessons of pre-capitulation: He tried to palliate bad faith Republicans. Now we're all paying the price. - "We need to stand with Comey now against Trump’s ugly authoritarian abuses. But we also need to recognize that Comey’s strategy of pre-capitulation got him, and all of us, into this mess in the first place. Other institutionalists, pragmatists, and would-be non-partisans are going to face the kinds of choices and incentives that Comey did. Hopefully they will look at the sad, gutted remnants of his beloved Justice Department and choose a different path."

‘Good luck to all!’ What are U.S. allies supposed to do with that?: On NATO and Russia, Trump’s actions don’t match his words. - "Trump is pledging to stand by NATO, but his Defense Department is cutting all security assistance funding for European countries — including the embattled Baltic republics. Trump is criticizing Putin, but he still hasn’t imposed any new sanctions on Russia after letting one deadline after another slip by. He even excluded Russia from the 'reciprocal' tariffs that he imposed on almost every other country in the world."

The real problem with Tylenol (it’s not autism): Here’s why people need to be cautious about acetaminophen. - "Acetaminophen, commonly referred to by the brand name Tylenol, carries very real risks when taken in higher-than-recommended doses. It is the leading cause of acute liver failure in the United States and is responsible for 1 in 5 liver transplants. Public health efforts should be targeting these dangers rather than stoking unfounded fears of neurological harm."

Trump tells a roomful of silent generals to join a ‘war from within’: The president delivered an unusually meandering speech to an unprecedented gathering of the nation’s top military leaders

Trump, Hegseth lecture military leaders in rare, politically charged summit: The unusual, hastily organized event became a forum for the president and his defense secretary to tout their partisan agenda.

Why Bad Bunny’s selection as the Super Bowl halftime headliner is sparking MAGA fury: The Puerto Rican recording artist opposed Trump in 2024 and is not offering tour dates in the U.S. mainland to avoid exposing his fans to ICE raids.