Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Reading archive 2026-05-27

Everything that happened on Stephen Colbert’s last episode of ‘The Late Show’ The comedian wrapped up the CBS franchise with surprise celebrity guests, a visit from his fellow late-night hosts and multiple songs.

Hunter Biden faces right-wing podcaster who had attacked him for years: The son of former president Joe Biden sat for a wide-ranging interview with right-wing podcaster Candace Owens, discussing addiction, corruption allegations and conspiracy theories.

Did Trump pick the right blue for the Reflecting Pool? We asked a pool guy.: Old Glory Blue? American Flag Blue? Let’s reflect on all the shades, while a federal judge mulls “aesthetic injury” in the president’s latest decorating flourish.

Nantucket’s Oceanfront Homes Are Sliding Into the Sea. The Locals Don’t Care.: Homeowners spent millions trying to save bluff’s-edge properties. Their clash with other residents now includes alleged vandalism and a $10,000 reward.

Restoring Virginia’s lost longleaf pine trees, one seed at a time

Hit Them Where It Hurts: Asking Black athletes to sacrifice for the greater good could reshape college sports and national politics alike. But it won’t be so easy.

The Goodbye Stephen Colbert Wanted to Say: The late-night host ended his talk show the way he started it—with empathy, and an eye for entertainment.

What is really breaking America? Two drinking fountains for $375,000.: Stop the Machine. Measure success by results delivered, not tax dollars spent. - "The mainstream center-left — liberals, centrist wonks, heterodox independents — needs to be better at getting mad. They have every right to be as fed up with the status quo as the populists are. But their anger needs to be constructive, directed at what’s actually broken rather than convenient villains. The populist right and the populist left know how to name adversaries and tell compelling stories. However good the center-left may be at policy and analysis, it hasn’t learned to explain what went wrong and how to fix it in a way that resonates with the disenchanted voters who have every reason to be skeptical of establishment promises. 

"Here’s how I’d explain it: The thing breaking America isn’t a person, a party or a conspiracy. It’s a self-perpetuating system, built over decades by well-meaning people making individually rational decisions that added up to something no one would build on purpose. Call it the Machine. People may run its individual components, but no one operates or entirely understands its full scope."

A Sweeping Theory of Everything Is Revolutionizing the Democratic Party: Democrats are in thrall to the idea that corporate consolidation is America’s biggest, and maybe only, problem. - "Moss, a former head of the American Antitrust Institute, told me the neo-Brandeisians' error is to view antitrust policy 'not as law enforcement but as a broad policy tool for fixing a lot of problems-economic, political, and social.' Antitrust enforcement isn't that powerful, for the simple reason that corporate concentration is not the root cause of every problem.

...

"The reason their unimpressive record in power under Biden left the neo-Brandeisians' confidence utterly unshaken is that their belief system is more like a religion than an economic theory.

...

"Warren's position aligned with Lynn's neo-Brandeisian dogma, which maintains that bringing down the price of housing cannot be achieved by enabling the construction of more private homes, as most housing analysts believe. The solution, somehow, is instead to prevent private firms from entering the single-family market. Nearly any economist would say that if your goal is to make housing more affordable, banning firms from building rental houses makes no sense. But since neo-Brandeisian thought rejects economics as a pseudo-science that rationalizes the desires of capital owners, that objection carries little weight.

...

"The abundance agenda does not cover all issues, and it is perfectly compatible with stringent antitrust enforcement. (Part of the abundance housing agenda is to break open neighborhood cartels that prevent new entrants into the housing market, a very anti-monopolistic concept.) But since Lynn's theory purports to explain everything, it regards all other diagnoses of America's problems as challenges, and therefore, by definition, as corporate plots. This has seriously compromised the Democratic Party's ability to formulate creative and practical solutions to real-world problems, not all of which can be solved by attacking corporate power."

The Great Depopulation: Why is the birth rate declining in every country on Earth?

Putin Can No Longer Hide His Catastrophe: The Russian dictator has lost control of the narrative.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Reading archive 2026-05-21

Why Thomas Massie Thought He Was Different: He wrongly believed his popularity back home made him able to withstand a Trump-backed challenge.

The Real Reason Thomas Massie Lost: He broke the one rule of the MAGA Republican Party. - That the current Republican Party is defined by allegiance to a person rather than any principle is not a new development. 'America First' has always meant Trump first. 'All this time, I thought they were voting for libertarian Republicans," one astute Republican congressman mused to the Washington Examiner as far back as 2017, 'but after some soul searching I realized when they voted for Rand and Ron [Paul] and me in these primaries, they weren't voting for libertarian ideas-they were voting for the craziest son of a bitch in the race. And Donald Trump won best in class, as we had up until he came along.'

"The politician who said that was Thomas Massie."

Reading archive 2026-05-20

Driver was going 116 mph with unrestrained 2-year-old in backseat seconds before deadly crash, Fairfax Police say: An 8-year-old child was the only passenger wearing a seatbelt when the crash happened and is expected to survive.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Reading archive 2026-05-18

Disease, Drought, Climate Change — And the Joy of Fighting Back: On my Virginia farm, I have a front-row seat to the grim consequences of a warming planet. But I’m not surrendering.

So, you got bit by a tick. Here’s exactly what to do next.: Experts explained what to do if you find a tick attached to your skin, including how to remove it and document it, and when to seek medical advice.

6 tick-borne diseases that should be on your radar: With tick season in full force, here are the most common diseases they spread in the U.S., where they most commonly occur and the symptoms to watch for.

I lead a Jewish school. Mamdani’s first veto is astonishing.: Amid rising antisemitism, New York's mayor stopped a safeguarding move for schools. [vetoed a bill banning protests near schools, the case this guy is mad about was a real-estate sale for settlement land in the West Bank]

Georgia’s top Republican fears a repeat of the GOP’s 2022 Senate blunder: Gov. Brian Kemp (R), the popular Georgia governor, has endorsed a Senate candidate he believes has broad appeal. But his more MAGA rival is gaining steam.

Trump has no good military option to ‘finish the job’ in Iran: Trump would be wise to ignore hawkish advice and try to forge a deal with Tehran.

ICE agent charged in shooting of immigrant during Minneapolis crackdown: County prosecutors issued a warrant for the arrest of the agent, who faces felony assault charges. The victim was one of three people shot during January’s crackdown.

A European rule could devastate American farmers: Lawmakers should stand up to this attempt to regulate American business. - "The increased costs would be felt throughout the supply chain. Farm profits would be squeezed, grocery bills would increase, and rural communities would be hit first and hardest. When a small farm goes under, it doesn’t just hurt one family; it hurts local businesses that buy from that farm and the equipment dealers that sell to it." [ed. note: shouldn't have pissed off Europe then]

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Reading archive 2026-05-16

The Most Surprising Part of Stephen Colbert’s Late-Night Run: The Late Show host has been a calming counterbalance to his peers.

A Checkers Player Meets a Three-Dimensional-Chess Master: Trump’s summit with Xi Jinping demonstrated the perils of shortsightedness when playing a long game. - "Xi, however, has great ambitions. Trump may now see China as a mutually beneficial economic partner, but Xi's policies are designed to change the world order at America's expense. Beijing is working to engineer China's technological and industrial dominance, backing Russia in a destabilizing war in Europe, and generally setting the stage to achieve global supremacy when the United States flames out. Trump, with his disdain for global alliances and liberal values, doesn't seem interested in contesting Xi on these fronts. 'Xi Jinping has the long plan, about dominating the world and putting the United States in its right place,' Joerg Wuttke, a partner at the consulting firm Albright Stonebridge Group, told me. 'Donald Trump doesn't look that far.'"

The Protein Shortage Is Coming: Making all that whey is complicated.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Reading archive 2026-05-15

Metro lost $50M in bus fare evasion alone in just 9 months Nearly 70% of bus riders don't pay, Metro said.

Metro wants to double Stadium-Armory station's capacity for new RFK site: WMATA's board met Thursday about improvements to the Stadium-Armory Metro station they say are necessary before the new Washington Commanders stadium opens in 2030 at the old RFK site.

Emails show FBI Director Kash Patel’s Hawaii trip included ‘VIP snorkel’ at a Pearl Harbor memorial

Trump administration aims to roll back limits on toxic wastewater from coal-fired power plants - "In 2024, the EPA strengthened wastewater rules over coal-fired power plants that keep coal ash — a byproduct of burning coal — in unlined, uncovered dumps that leach toxic heavy metals such as mercury, arsenic and selenium into groundwater. 

"In the rule, the EPA required plant owners to report whether the groundwater was contaminated and, if so, pump and treat the contaminated groundwater before discharging it into streams and rivers, Thom Cmar, an attorney for environmental advocacy group Earthjustice, said."

Serious. Has a spine. No wonder he’s leaving Congress.: Rep. Don Bacon (R-Nebraska) isn't seeking reelection. That’s a loss for the country.

The Smithsonian’s most contested exhibition is back on view, mostly intact: National Portrait Gallery curators have found a way to counter the Trump administration: with facts.

In northern Ukraine, it was boy vs. Russian drone. The boy won.: A soldier taught a 12-year-old how to disable the fiber-optic drones that Russia has been using to hunt Ukrainian civilians in a campaign the U.N. has labeled a war crime.

Tumultuous, bloody week unfolds in Ukraine and Russia after brief ceasefire: A Russian airstrike on a Kyiv apartment complex that killed at least 24 people and a Ukrainian strike on residential buildings and an oil refinery in Ryazan, Russia, suggested no end is in sight to the war.

Parents of teens who break curfew in D.C. will be prosecuted, DOJ says: The Justice Department’s crackdown on crime comes ahead of 250th anniversary events in the nation’s capital.

A golden statue of Trump draws mixed reactions at his golf course: Online, the glittering statue has become a flash point. In real life, golfers seem less excited.

Reality check: AI-generated images have left us questioning what is real. But the godfather of digital forensics, Hany Farid, is not giving up - "Of course, even the most thorough and well-reasoned investigation may not always persuade doubters. Farid learnt this the hard way in 2009, when he analyzed a 1963 photo of Lee Harvey Oswald holding the rifle he would later use to kill President John F. Kennedy. Conspiracy theorists—and Oswald himself—had long claimed the photo was faked, pointing to unusual features like the shadows on Oswald’s face. But Farid’s analysis found nothing wrong. 'I wrote this little paper, and I thought, all right, this will be the end of this,' he says. Instead, people invested in the conspiracy theory turned on Farid, suspecting he was part of the cover-up. They claimed that his father’s job at Eastman Kodak—which had made the film on which Kennedy’s assassination was captured—somehow implicated him, and even wrote to Dartmouth asking for him to be fired. 'This is how batshit crazy it was,' he says."

The Election Deniers Are Winning: The universe of people pressing debunked theories is so broad that it’s a feature of the system.

Too Much Is Happening Too Fast: The AI boom is meant to overwhelm you.