Monday, March 31, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-31

The Truth About Trump’s Greenland Campaign: When the president talks about security in the Arctic, he’s talking about climate change. - "As polar ice melts away, superpowers are vying for newly open shipping routes in the Arctic Ocean and largely unexplored mineral and fossil-fuel reserves. Arctic warming could pose a direct threat to America's security interests too: Alaska could have new vulnerabilities to both China and Russia; changes in ocean salinity and temperature might interfere with submarine detection systems; the extremes of climate change, including permafrost thaw in Russia, could drive economic instability, social unrest, and territorial claims."

Why DOGE Could Actually Increase the Deficit: Some of Musk’s haphazard cuts will produce tiny savings in terms of salary while forfeiting much larger ones down the road, costing the government money.

Pete Hegseth says U.S. is making Japan a 'war-fighting' base to deter China: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also stressed the need for the U.S. and Japan to accelerate the strengthening of their military capability as the region faces a more assertive Beijing.

Two Republican senators wrestle with how to handle DOGE cuts: Both of Alaska’s Republican senators have pushed to rescind cuts they argue would hurt the state. But they have split over how to persuade Trump to change his mind.

Something worse could be coming for the economy than a recession: Trump’s tariffs are making stagflation a real risk for the United States for the first time since the 1970s.

How to use your voice to reduce your stress and feel calmer: Vocal and breathing exercises can be powerful tools for soothing oneself or others

Trump’s threat of towering tariffs on European booze is sobering: Wine and spirits can be markers of national and regional identity — which could make a coming trade fight between the U.S. and Europe much more emotional.

Why I and thousands of my fellow Gazans say Hamas’s tyranny must end: We Gazans are risking our lives to rid ourselves of Hamas’s oppression. This may be our only chance.

AP photojournalist steals the show at court hearing on Trump exclusion: Staffer Evan Vucci put an exclamation point on the argument for access to the White House press pool.

ICE detains Harvard researcher from Russia who protested Ukraine war: Kseniia Petrova’s visa was revoked as she returned to Boston last month. She fears deportation to Russia because of her opposition to its invasion of Ukraine. - "According to a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, Petrova 'was lawfully detained after lying to federal officers about carrying biological substances into the country. A subsequent K-9 inspection uncovered undeclared petri dishes, containers of unknown substances, and loose vials of embryonic frog cells, all without proper permits. Messages found on her phone revealed she planned to smuggle the materials through customs.'"

What the science says about multivitamins, magnesium and 7 other supplements: Spoiler alert: Many claims about the benefits of supplements aren’t backed by strong data.

White House Weighs Helping Farmers as Trump Escalates Trade War: The Trump administration has discussed providing financial aid for farmers who may be subject to retaliation by America’s trading partners. - "The Commodity Credit Corporation is a key U.S.D.A funding vehicle: It supplies the money for federal programs to support farm incomes, stabilize commodity prices and respond to natural disasters. While its finances are complicated, the entity may borrow up to $30 billion from the Treasury Department."

Friday, March 28, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-28

Trump issues executive order to eliminate ‘anti-American ideology’ from Smithsonian: The executive order also calls for the replacement of memorials and monuments removed since 2020.





Justice Dept. describes man arrested on gun charges as top MS-13 leader: President Donald Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi hailed the arrest of the 24-year-old Salvadoran man as a major victory over gang activity. - "Attorney General Pam Bondi said that the suspect oversaw the gang’s East Coast operations. But court records unsealed later that day — which identified the man as Henrry Josue Villatoro Santos, 24 — made only scant reference to his alleged gang ties and did not accuse him of any specific gang-related activity. Instead, Villatoro Santos was charged with being in the country illegally while possessing a gun.

...

"Carlos Garcia, a journalist who is writing a book on the Salvadoran gangs, said after checking his database and talking to people familiar with MS-13 that he did not consider Villatoro Santos a particularly significant figure on an international level.

...

"Youngkin criticized the Biden administration for providing “little to no help” with immigration enforcement efforts in his state. But Prince William County Police Chief Peter Newsham, whose agency was involved in the investigation, said in an interview that it began before Trump returned to the White House."


Vaccine critic’s apparent selection to head HHS autism study shocks experts: Like RFK Jr., David Geier has long clung to debunked assertions, scientists say - "Geier and his father, a physician who lost his medical license in multiple states, have promoted claims that use of the preservative thimerosal in vaccines led to an increase in autism diagnoses. A raft of studies has refuted the allegation, and autism rates have not declined in the more than 20 years since thimerosal was phased out of most vaccines in the United States. For a time, the two treated autistic children with unproven therapies, including a drug licensed for prostate cancer that induces chemical castration."

75% of US scientists who answered Nature poll consider leaving: More than 1,600 readers answered our poll; many said they were looking for jobs in Europe and Canada. - "Institutions outside the United States are taking advantage of the Trump turmoil, the researcher says. 'From what I’m hearing from the places we’re talking to, and other people who are looking to take international jobs, a lot of universities in these countries are seeing this as a once-in-a-generation opportunity,' he says. “I think it has gone from 'Can we recruit a few people?’ to ‘How many people can we actually take?' — because the demand is there.'"


Trump promised scientific breakthroughs. Researchers say he’s breaking science.: NIH funding for biomedical research has abruptly fallen by billions of dollars, with many grant decisions on hold. Trump officials say they’re reviewing the agency. - "The model that underpins NIH and other federal agencies was conceived by Vannevar Bush, a scientist who helped oversee efforts to develop an atomic bomb during World War II. As he turned his gaze to a postwar environment in 1945, Bush urged President Harry S. Truman to spur innovation by funneling grants to universities and research institutions, calling for an 'endless frontier.'

"The strategy positioned the U.S. to achieve breakthroughs in drug development, computer technologies and numerous other fields; the nation’s ample resources also helped lure scientists from around the world to work in its laboratories. The approach also had staunch bipartisan support, with Republicans arguing that scientific innovation was an economic and national security imperative. A half-dozen buildings on the NIH campus bear the name of GOP lawmakers who helped secure federal funding for the research institutes, including former senator Roy Blunt of Missouri, who retired in 2022."




The Worst Thing a MAGA Warrior Can Do: The response to Signalgate reveals a disjuncture between the seriousness with which MAGA treats foreign enemies and perceived domestic ones. - "The Fox News host Jesse Watters appeared to have the same prioritization in mind when he shared the story with his audience. 'This wouldn't surprise me if Goldberg sneaked his way in,' he suggested, implausibly,. 'He's the lowest of the low.' From a national-security standpoint, this theory is the opposite of reassuring. If Goldberg could 'sneak his way in' to a highly sensitive discussion about a secret military operation, shouldn't we worry that Chinese or Russian or Iranian spies, who possess espionage capabilities perhaps even greater than those of a journalist, might also sneak their way in? But the fear of infiltration by foreign enemies pales beside the much deeper fear of a Trump adviser having spoken with a journalist."

 - "If Trump, as president, can violate the First Amendment's prohibition on viewpoint discrimination when it comes to foreign students, Americans lose that limit on state power too. Even the anti-immigrant firebrand Ann Coulter objected to the administration's actions. 'There's almost no one I don't want to deport,' she wrote on X, 'but, unless they've committed a crime, isn't this a violation of the first amendment?'

...

"As the historian Timothy Snyder recently wrote, 'If you are a citizen and you are casting doubt on the importance of due process, remember this: you need due process in order to prove that you are a citizen.'"

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-27

What’s the Matter with Abundance?: The last thing society needs is more stuff - "Abundance is mostly hard to argue with, by design: Klein and Thompson have written a super-partisan sales pitch for a politics of new construction rather than a rigorous, methodical inquiry regarding the causes of national stagnation. The authors lament that America is “stuck between a progressive movement that is too afraid of growth and a conservative movement that is allergic to government intervention.” This third way is well trod, by everyone from Bill Clinton to Barack Obama to today’s Democratic Party insiders, and Klein and Thompson’s offering is among the most approachable attempts to map it of late. But their collation of columns is less than the sum of its parts, like a clip-show episode of a 1990s sitcom.

...

"But though they promise they’re more curious about what we can build than what we can buy, Klein and Thompson suffer from the telltale symptoms of commodity fetishism. To maintain an interest in production means investigating the conditions and relations of production—not just the policy mechanics. A turn-of-the-century New Yorker might be thrilled with his new rubber goods and the innovation embodied therein. But we can’t forget the enslaved rubber workers of the Belgian Congo from whom the industry tortured its material. Life did not simply get better and easier with innovation, not even for white people: the violence of the imperial scramble rebounded on the European Metropole and the continent’s scientists turned their attention from fun new electronic doohickeys to killing machines." [ed. note: this whole thing is fire]

Why Everyone Thinks Their Government Has Failed: People all over the world—with all kinds of leaders—seem to think their incumbent is the problem. - "Or maybe the expectations of the global public have ceased to track with any realistic idea of government capacity. Contemplating the recent anti-incumbent turn, I have found myself returning to a conversation I had a while back with Ricardo Lagos, who was the president of Chile from 2000 to 2006. He told me that while in office, he had wooed a dissatisfied constituency by channeling substantial resources to a poor neighborhood in the outskirts of Santiago, Chile's capital. "We built a housing complex and made sure that public services like water, electricity, and health were available and reliable," he told me. And yet, when election time rolled around, the voters of that neighborhood turned away from Lagos and supported the opposition. 

"'I was flabbergasted,' he told me, 'and decided to find out for myself what had happened. I met with a group of community leaders and was expressing my surprise and singling out the hundreds of houses we built when one of the neighbors told me, 'Yes, Mr. President, we know what you did, but this is all about parking spaces. The houses are nice, but we don't have any parking.''"

A populist uprising stirs among Democrats furious at their leaders: In dozens of interviews at recent Democratic events, voters said their party leaders need to show a much greater sense of urgency — and develop a plan to stop Trump and Musk.

The 41-page blueprint that may help explain Trump’s painful trade wars: An economic treatise by a top Trump adviser is being read as a road map of his tariff policy. But even he says it’s not what Trump is implementing.

‘Something was wrong with my brain’: How covid leaves its mark on cognition: Five years after the pandemic began, the neurocognitive effects of long covid are numerous and troubling. And some of these cognitive losses may extend to people who quickly recovered.

Can police search your phone? Here are your legal rights.: Police generally need a warrant to search your phone. The details, though, are a legal and practical minefield.

Butterflies are in trouble. Your garden can help.: What you plant and what you avoid can make a difference to your local butterfly population.

Trump officials working to strip FEMA’s role in disaster recovery by Oct. 1: Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem and others are weighing whether to strip FEMA of some of its key functions

Craft distillers hit hard as tariffs mix with 1930s rules for alcohol: Some small U.S. producers of alcohol had found it easier to expand north rather than navigate the fragmented U.S. distribution system.

The beginning of the end of the Trump era Trump is squandering his moment. Here’s a path forward for Democrats. [ed. note: Shadi Hamid, oy]

RFK Jr. announces big cuts to Department of Health and Human Services: In all, the agency will cut 20,000 positions, half of them through layoffs.

Meet the College Kids Making ‘Positive Masculinity’ TikToks to Counter the Manosphere: A group from Colby College, posting as Sex Ed for Guys, champions enthusiastic consent and female pleasure — without getting preachy

Teen member of Musk’s Doge staff provided tech support to cybercrime ring, records show: Edward Coristine, who is 19, is among members of Doge effort that has been given access to official networks

D.C. police investigating vandalism to Teslas as possible hate crimes: Authorities have pledged swift action in response to a string of attacks on Tesla dealerships, charging stations and vandalism to vehicles around the country.

I’ve Seen How ‘America First’ Ends: When the United States withdraws from the world, the world’s problems come knocking on its door.

RFK Jr. and the Pepperoni-Pizza Paradox: The case for a Department of Food - "Democrats, too, should want a Department of FOOD. In fact, Democratic lawmakers in Congress have introduced legislation proposing a single food agency at several points over the past 20 years. America's discombobulated approach to food is the by-product of a century's worth of bureaucracy. In 1906, Congress passed two separate laws setting different food-safety standards for meat and nonmeat products. At the time, both sets of rules were enforced by the USDA, until the FDA was carved out of it in 1940. Since then, the question of who is in charge of what has gotten only more complex. When the EPA was created during the Nixon administration, for example, regulating how much pesticide can be present on the food you buy was transferred to the new agency."

Why Right-Wing Influencers Keep Saying the Jews Killed JFK: Social media supercharges conspiracy theories. Anti-Semitism is one of the oldest. - "Last Tuesday, following an executive order from President Donald Trump, the documents became publicly available. By Wednesday, anti-establishment influencers had figured out who did the deed. 'So who killed JFK?' asked one user on X. 'The jews,' retorted Stew Peters, a far-right extremist and Holocaust denier with 808,000 followers, who has claimed that Jews sank the Titanic and that 'the Constitution is being replaced with the Talmud.' (He has also hosted now FBI Director Kash Patel six times on his online show.)"

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-26

The NFL plus lots of new housing at RFK? That’s 4th and very long.: In the battle to bring football back to D.C., football will probably win. But at what cost? - "Once built, stadiums provide mainly low-income, seasonal jobs, generate little revenue given the tax breaks that team owners demand, and have slim economic impact because fans just shift their entertainment spending from some other neighborhood, so there’s no net gain, economists argue."

The real scandal: Those chatty Trump officials’ loathing of U.S. allies: The Signal chat fiasco sends an alarming message about Trump officials’ stance toward Europe. - "The policymakers showed no awareness that European nations and other U.S. allies had already joined U.S. efforts to ensure freedom of navigation through the Red Sea. In December 2023 — a month after the start of Houthi attacks — the Defense Department announced a multinational effort known as Operation Prosperity Guardian to protect commercial shipping. This initiative was led by the United States and joined by Bahrain, Britain, Canada, France, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Seychelles and Spain.

...

"While Prosperity Guardian was (and is) a defensive operation, another group of U.S. allies joined in Operation Poseidon Archer, a series of airstrikes against Houthi positions in Yemen. The United States and Britain carried out the strikes, beginning in early January 2024, with reported support from Australia, Bahrain, Canada and the Netherlands.

"Some European nations were uncomfortable with accepting U.S. leadership, fearing that the American approach was overly aggressive and could spark a wider war. So, the European Union launched its own maritime security mission, known as Operation Aspides, which has sent warships to the Red Sea. That mission has reportedly included Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and Spain.

...

"You know who isn’t contributing? Russia and China, even though both nations (and China in particular) also benefit from the flow of global commerce through the Bab-al-Mandab Strait. Both Beijing and Moscow are, in fact, essentially the Houthis’ allies. Russia has provided targeting assistance to the group, while China’s buying of 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports ultimately aids Tehran’s financing of the Houthis. Yet, when the Trump administration officials discuss making someone pay for the U.S. military operation, they focus on Egypt and Europe — not on China and Russia."

A person with measles traveled in D.C. while contagious, officials say: D.C. health officials reported Tuesday that a person with a confirmed case of measles recently traveled around the District while contagious after coming from Minnesota.

Here’s one federal building we could — and should — scrap: The Forrestal Building’s form is impeding its function as home of the Energy Department.

Two killer whales are hunting great white sharks — to eat their livers: The orcas known as Port and Starboard have killed dozens of sharks off the South African coast with such precision that one researcher marveled at “how Hannibal Lecter it is.”

This Michigan Democrat cruised to victory in a Trump district. Here’s how.: Meet Kristen McDonald Rivet.

“Be Careful How You Talk to Us”: Trump Appointee Gets an Earful in Anacostia: Cora Masters Barry laid into interim US Attorney Ed Martin at a meeting Tuesday. - "A few minutes later, Cora Masters Barry, Marion Barry’s widow, took issue, giving Martin the most severe dressing down of the day. 'You need to learn your politics,' she said. 'You need to learn geography, and world affairs. There’s a whole different pot of money that goes to Africa that stops diseases…. You don’t know what you talking about, so be careful about what you say when you go places, because you show that you’re not well read.'"

Sorry Nebraska Farmers, America Is Fresh Out of Sympathy: When you vote against your own livelihood, don’t be surprised when the check bounces.

Why Dads Take Their Gay Sons to Hooters

What’s the Matter with Abundance?: The last thing society needs is more stuff

How Trump’s policies have helped Russia and furthered Putin’s goals: Months into the new administration, a slew of policy changes have helped Russia, including defunding U.S. soft power, standing down cyber efforts and splitting with NATO allies.

Reading archive 2025-03-25 pt 2

Trump aides prep new tariffs on imports worth trillions for ‘Liberation Day’: The administration has already unnerved investors with duties on Canada, Mexico and China. Advisers are readying a bigger move. - "Trump’s reciprocal plan could return the average U.S. tariff to its early 1930s level of around 20 percent, said Edward Gresser, a former trade official who is now the vice president and director of trade and global markets for the Progressive Policy Institute."

Canada is so furious at the US right now: Vox’s correspondent in Canada reports on the reaction to Trump’s tariffs.

‘Rocky Horror’ doc underscores heightened relevancy of a cult classic: Many fans say the rock musical saved their lives. Now, a new documentary by creator Richard O’Brien’s son makes an urgent case for this “phenomenon of love.”

BofA Survey Shows Biggest-Ever Drop in US Stock Allocations

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-25 pt 1

D.C. lawmaker’s ‘peace plan’ would merge dual anti-violence programs: The plan comes as lawmakers push to increase oversight of anti-violence programs that each cost millions of dollars and have come under scrutiny in recent months.

He was a D.C. violence interrupter. Now he’s a homicide suspect.: A man who worked with the D.C. attorney general office’s Cure the Streets program has been arrested in the 2023 shooting of a former star Morgan State basketball player.

Waymo wants to put self-driving taxis in the District next year: City government would have to agree to allow autonomous cars on the road for the first time.

Long waits, waves of calls, website crashes: Social Security is breaking down: A flood of cuts led by Elon Musk has sent the agency into chaos as a new commissioner prepares to take charge.

15 Lessons Scientists Learned About Us When the World Stood Still: The pandemic gave researchers a rare opportunity to study human behavior. Their work offers lessons about loneliness, remote work, high heels and more.

Clock ticks on Trump and GOP’s ‘big, beautiful’ bill on taxes: Economic turmoil from tariffs could push Republicans to move faster on budget legislation.

Dominion to pause cuts after felling thousands of trees on W&OD Trail: The energy company says the cuts were necessary to prevent it from falling out of compliance with national standards and to prevent power outages.

America — and the media — needs a Covid reckoning: Our Covid mistakes did lasting damage. No one wants to talk about it. - "The initial justification for lockdowns was that we just needed a few weeks to slow the spread so our first responders weren’t overwhelmed; but then those lockdowns persisted, without clear acknowledgment that the plan had changed. On masks, the line went from 'masks don’t help much and should be reserved for first responders and doctors' (the contradiction here rarely acknowledged) to 'masks are crucial.'

"Outdoor gatherings were always much safer than indoor ones (and I said so here in Vox from early on), but a lot of public health officials criticized outdoor gatherings — up until the Black Lives Matter protests, at which point they largely said such events were fine."

Signal intelligence for dummies

Austria says it has uncovered a Russian-steered campaign to spread disinformation about Ukraine

How to prepare for a recession before it’s too late: Escalating trade wars, federal worker layoffs and market turmoil make for a gloomy economic future. But you can prepare.

Teen sentenced to a year in connection to fatal shooting ruled self defense: The 17-year-old was under court supervision by the city’s youth rehabilitation agency when police say someone opened fire on him, prompting the youth to fire indiscriminately into a D.C. carryout, killing Dale Henson. - "Prosecutors argued one of his bullets struck and killed Henson. Authorities initially charged the teen with second-degree murder, but at trial last year, Briggs agreed with the teen’s public defenders that the youth was acting in self-defense and dismissed the murder charge. She found him guilty of carrying a pistol without a license.

"The downshift troubled Henson’s loved ones, especially as more information surfaced in court about the teen’s past troubles. Briggs at the hearing Thursday said he had 10 prior arrests and was being supervised by the youth rehabilitation department for carrying a firearm at the time he shot into the carryout."

Here’s why Trump wants the economy in chaos: Looking to Argentina, the president is willing to risk a recession to see his vision come to pass.

Under Russia’s deepening shadow, Belarus tries to maintain its balancing act: Belarus’s Lukashenko calls Putin his “elder brother,” but over 30 years in office, he’s had to balance close ties to Moscow with keeping his country from being swallowed.

Read this before you shed a tear for Southwest: The airline could only run from market realities for so long.

Your grass-fed burger isn’t better for the planet, new study finds: Grass-fed beef has no climate benefit — even when taking into account that healthy pastureland can trap carbon, according to a new study. - "They found the emissions per kilogram of protein of even the most efficient grass-fed beef operations were 10 to 25 percent higher than those of grain-fed U.S. beef — and many times higher than those of plant and animal alternatives."

How to protect your Gmail, Outlook after FBI warning on Medusa ransomware: Faced with major ransomware attacks affecting critical industries, cybersecurity officials are asking companies and individuals to step up their safety practices.

Judge criticizes D.C. police chief for denying cover-up in deadly pursuit: The rare remarks from U.S. District Judge Paul L. Friedman came after D.C. Police Chief Pamela A. Smith said publicly that “there was no obstruction of justice” by the officers, despite their convictions. - "The internal findings appear to run counter to the jury’s verdict in the criminal case, the testimony of two of the officers’ colleagues and [Judge] Friedman, who while sentencing Sutton and Zabavsky to prison called their actions an 'intentional cover-up.'"

Germany approves massive spending package to boost defense: The move comes as Europe scrambles to strengthen its security amid concerns over U.S. commitments under President Donald Trump.

China has a defense against Trump’s trade war: A great wall of pork: Beijing’s tariffs on U.S. farm goods will have little short-term impact on Chinese consumers — making it ideal for inflicting political pain on Trump, analysts say.

How to grow houseplants without ever having to buy one: Sharing plant cuttings is a free and environmentally friendly way to grow your plant collection. You just have to know where to cut.

This technology is becoming beloved by doctors and patients alike: How artificial intelligence is helping medical professionals save time and reduce burnout.

Seeing Things For What They Are: And not for what they used to be. - "It was possible to use a certain frame of reference that worked pretty well in the American political system for the past 40 years or so. But now that frame is out of date. It is worse than useless. It is misleading. It is detrimental, because the answers it spits out, the explanations it gives, the strategies it recommends for specific situations, are all based upon old data and old wisdom that no longer works. The frame of reference that guides many of the people who, unfortunately, dominate the Democratic Party in Washington is like a flood map that was drawn up before climate change. They keep using these same old formulas that worked back then, ignoring the rising water as it creeps up to their necks."

There's No Justice Without Power: A rich guy's lesson for the left. - "I am going to generalize a bit here, but in a way that I think is fair: The left tends to think a lot about justice, but less about power. We are adept at figuring out what is just and unjust, how and why the oppression happens, what a better world would look like. We are able to produce detailed policy prescriptions that would, if enacted, remedy many of the world’s wrongs. We raise our voices in the streets—or, hello, write brilliant essays—about why these things should happen. But they do not happen. All of the effort we expend on polishing and promoting a program of justice does not accomplish anything if that program is not accompanied by the power to make it a reality.

...

"Labor organizing that creates the ability of working people to strike is the only threat that the left can make that is on par with money and guns. It is our hammer. It is our most powerful tool. The power of the strike is not useful only in service of 'better labor rights.' It is a power that can be applied to any cause. If you can strike, you can stop the enterprises that do anything. You can strike to stop a polluting factory, you can strike to stop a weapons manufacturing factory, you can strike to stop a Silicon Valley privacy destruction company, you can strike to stop a bank. Furthermore, you can use a strike as leverage to make any sort of demands, and be assured that those demands are not simply a misbranded effort at persuasion, but rather a demand that is accompanied by a clear and meaningful consequence if it is not met. Money buys labor. Guns compel labor. The power of the strike stops labor. It is the only equal of the power of money and guns. It is the one form of hard power available to regular people who don’t own all of the money and guns. Our power is that the world can’t run without us."

Monday, March 24, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-24 pt 2

Why DOGE is struggling to find fraud in Social Security: Claims of massive problems by Elon Musk and President Trump are at odds with the agency’s audits and reports. - "Social Security is among the most scrutinized and audited agencies in government, with frequent probes by its 500-person Office of Inspector General. It pays outside auditors to examine its books. Congress grills agency officials. Last year, a major focus in congressional hearings led by the GOP wasn’t waste or fraud — it was about Social Security being too aggressive in clawing back accidental benefit overpayments."

Chuck Schumer Is Cautious for a Reason: Under fire from his own party, the Senate Democratic leader ponders the source of his core beliefs.

The Kennedy Center Performers Who Didn’t Cancel: When does quitting count as resistance, and when is it surrender?

Musk Comes for the ‘Third Rail of American Politics’: Donald Trump promised to protect Social Security. Elon Musk didn’t.

The Angry Canadian: How Doug Ford became Ontario’s chief enforcer - "Americans tend to think of Canadians as 'nice' and find the idea of angry Canadians funny. They are wrong on both counts. Americans are nicer than Canadians - warmer, friendlier, more gregarious. Canadians are polite. The difference is subtle but important. There is an unwritten civility contract girding every aspect of Canadian society. The Canadian equivalent of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" is 'peace, order, and good government,' so enshrined in the constitution since 1867. 

"Most Canadians want uncomplicated lives, a desire for calm that can be misinterpreted by louder people as meekness. This is also a mistake. The bedrock of Canada's collective tranquility is the knowledge that misbehavior will not be tolerated, and, as in hockey, violations of the code of conduct will be met with hair-trigger aggression. Try cutting a line and see what happens."

The Global Populist Right Has a MAGA Problem: In Europe, Trump looks too extreme even for many right-wing insurgents.

LeBron James and the Limits of Nepotism: It’s embarrassing for everyone involved. - "Now, by appearing to threaten Smith, LeBron has not only acted like a petty strongman; he has drawn new attention to his son's disappointing season, enlarging the very story that he sought to suppress. It's a rare misstep for someone so media-savvy, who has amassed an enormous personal fortune while staying almost entirely scandal-free across a long career that began when he was still a teenager. The mistake is, perhaps, understandable. The emotions of parenthood are gigantic. They can knock anyone off their game, even the great LeBron James."

A Battle for the Soul of the West: The assault on Enlightenment values is tearing both Europe and America apart.

The GOP’s Fears About Musk Are Growing: Some Republicans are starting to worry about what DOGE could mean for them and their constituents.

The Political Fight of the Century: For the first time in decades, America has a chance to define its next political order. Trump offers fear, retribution, and scarcity. Liberals can stand for abundance. - "As the cost of living rises in blue states, tens of thousands of families are leaving them. But the left isn't just losing people. It's losing an argument. It has become a coalition of Kindness Is Everything signs in front yards zoned for single-family homes. Liberals say they want to save the planet from climate change, but in practice, many liberal areas have shut down zero-carbon nuclear plants and protested solar-power projects, leaving it to red states such as Texas to lead the nation in renewable-energy generation. Democrats cannot afford to become the party of language over outcomes, of ever more lawn signs and ever fewer working-class families.

...

"Two political orders have defined the past 100 years. Each was forged by an internal crisis and external threat. From the 1930s until the 1960s, the New Deal reigned over American life. It enlarged the government in response to the Great Depression and provided an American reply to the global specter of communism. In the 1970s and '80s, stagflation converged with the gradual decline of the Soviet Union to make way for the rise of a second era: neoliberalism. For decades, conservatives fought to make government smaller, while progressives such as Ralph Nader found ways to make government weaker by submerging the state in lawsuits. If the New Deal birthed the age of bureaucracy, neoliberalism produced an age of vetocracy. Now we are living with the consequences of both. We have a government that is, oddly, both big and weak."

The Wild Trump Theory Making the Rounds on Wall Street: QAnon for tariffs - "To begin with, two of the principal goals are in direct conflict: Weakening the dollar would require foreign countries to sell off their large holdings of U.S. treasury bonds, but that sell-off would cause interest rates to rise, making the U.S. debt even more expensive to service. (This is where the magical 'century bonds' supposedly come in: foreign countries lining up to give America enormous heaps of free money.) Even the core premise underlying the theory—that a weaker dollar is the key to reviving American manufacturing—is shaky at best. Almost every rich country, not just America, has seen a sharp manufacturing decline in recent decades, suggesting that the trend is about much more than the relative strength or weakness of a single currency. 'It’s one thing if a plan makes sense in theory but not in practice,' Steven Kamin, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute and the former director of the Division of International Finance at the Federal Reserve, told me. 'This one doesn’t even add up in theory.'"

Reading archive 2025-03-24 pt 1

How a Global Online Network of White Supremacists Groomed a Teen to Kill

Turkey lurches toward outright autocracy as Erdoğan’s main rival is jailed: Popular opposition leader Ekrem İmamoğlu calls for mass protests as he is thrown in jail and booted out as Istanbul mayor.

What Is the Endgame for Ukraine?: History offers a range of precedents for what an agreement with Russia could look like—and how bad the consequences might be.

How Berlin’s fiscal flip stunned Brussels and spooked its allies: The weeklong blitz on the EU’s fiscal rules generated more blowback than Germany ever expected.

Trump said he didn’t sign the Alien Enemies Act proclamation. So who — or what — did?: Did Trump misspeak? Is he trying to deflect a decision under heavy legal scrutiny onto Secretary of State Marco Rubio?

‘Very dangerous’: Japanese Americans warn of Trump’s use of Alien Enemies Act: Some fear Trump’s invocation of a 1798 wartime authority could lead to abuses similar to those that took place during one of the darkest chapters of U.S. history.

Trump wants to build more ships in the United States. It’s not so simple.: The administration aims to counter China’s dominance of commercial shipbuilding. - "'It appears to be written by people who have absolutely no idea how the maritime supply chain works,' said Lars Jensen, chief executive of Vespucci Maritime, a consultancy in Copenhagen. 'The container lines will adjust and cut out the smaller ports. The consequence is going to be massive port congestion in the larger ports.'

...

"If the new port fees are imposed, the three major ocean carrier alliances, which collaborate like airline industry partnerships, would probably try to avoid the extra costs by reassigning Chinese-made container ships from U.S. routes to serve Europe, analysts said. 

"Some vessels that would be subject to the fees could dock at Canadian or Mexican ports rather than unload at American wharves — costing American dockworkers and truck drivers.

...

"Fewer vessels docking at smaller ports such as Oakland, California, would make it harder and more expensive for major U.S. exporters to ship their goods to foreign customers, and it would affect imports as well. Farmers who rely on bulk carriers to move grain and other commodities would be hit especially hard, forced to send their crops hundreds of miles overland to Southern California."

Why Charles Schumer could be in trouble: Polling shows the Senate Democratic leader is in a historically bad position for a party leader, as some call to replace him.

‘Corner-crossing’ to reach public lands is legal, appeals court rules: The decision, in a case that pitted four Missouri hunters against a millionaire Wyoming landowner, protects public access to millions of acres across the West.

Trump says Boeing will develop the F-47, his namesake fighter jet: The president’s announcement marks a major milestone for the Air Force program that’s focused on ensuring the U.S. maintains a military edge over China.

Exploring the American frontier

Virginia man pleads guilty to removing top-secret documents from workplace: Gokhan Gun, a former electrical engineer for the Defense Department, admitted to taking classified records from the Joint Warfare Analysis Center.

Former Virginia sheriff sentenced in badges-for-dollars corruption case: Scott Jenkins, who was the sheriff of Culpeper County, had been convicted of federal bribery and fraud charges by a jury in December.

Your washing machine can clean a lot more than clothes: Here’s how to put this spring cleaning secret weapon to better use.

Sneeze smarter, not louder: The science of a quieter sneeze

Friday, March 21, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-21

D.C. announces plan for a wellness resort at Poplar Point: Therme plans to build $500 million, 500,000 square-foot facility over a three-year period that the company estimates will draw 2 million visitors each year

Democrats are angry, disillusioned over failure to stand up to Trump and Musk: Many came to a Nevada rally hosted by Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez looking for direction on how to take on Republicans.

Reading archive 2025-03-20

Trump ends program millions in China use for internet, worrying Congress: The demise of the Open Technology Fund could put millions at risk of being targeted by authoritarian governments for their internet activity. - "As of February, OTF funding provided tools to more than 6 million people in China and 18 million individuals in Iran, giving them the ability to circumvent government restrictions on the internet to access news sites, secure messaging services and social media platforms such as Reddit, the messaging app Telegram and X, according to private data reviewed by The Washington Post."

The electric-vehicle revolution may be on shakier ground than you think: Republican plans to end federal EV tax credits, weaken tailpipe pollution rules and slash funding for charging stations would boost emissions and shut down factories, experts say. - "These moves would delay, but not prevent, the gradual shift from gas-powered cars and trucks to EVs in the United States. Even without government support, analysts say, electric vehicles will continue to eat away at sales of gas-powered cars. But the tipping point when EVs break into the mainstream U.S. car market is moving further away, experts say, and could have far-reaching effects on the economy and environment."

Hungary bans LGBTQ+ Pride marches

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Thursday, March 13, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-13

Why Europe is going ‘car-free’: While New York City and the Trump administration battle over a congestion pricing program, vehicle restrictions in Europe are fast becoming the norm.

E.U., Canada retaliate against Trump’s tariffs as trade war escalates: As President Donald Trump’s global steel and aluminum tariffs took effect, the E.U. and Canada responded with their own levies, including on bourbon and motorcycles.

Elon Musk Looks Desperate How to lose $148 billion in less than two months

N.B.A. Stars Find a Shortcut to Success in China: Companies like East Goes Global serve as social media surrogates for players, expanding their reach, creating business opportunities and pushing for All-Star votes.

How BYD undercuts Tesla around the world, by the numbers: BYD is more affordable than Tesla in at least 10 places outside the West.

American brushes aside Navy, earns first NCAA berth since 2014: Matt Rogers scores 25 as the Eagles roll past Mids in the Patriot League championship game, 74-52, at Bender Arena.

American brushes aside Navy, earns first NCAA berth since 2014: Matt Rogers scores 25 as the Eagles roll past Mids in the Patriot League championship game, 74-52, at Bender Arena.

D.C.’s hopes lie in Senate as residents, officials push to avert $1B hit: A possible Democratic proposal boosted D.C.’s hopes of avoiding potential layoffs but also inched the nation closer to a potential government shutdown. - "The panic erupted in D.C. after House Republicans released a spending bill over the weekend that, without any advance notice, omitted a long-standing D.C. provision that historically has allowed the city to move forward with its active local budget. The provision has been a part of every continuing resolution for over 20 years, making its omission by House Republicans this time highly unexpected and perplexing for D.C. officials. 

"The omission would force D.C. to revert back to 2024 spending levels, effectively canceling the city’s active 2025 budget halfway through the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. Most astonishing for D.C. officials is that House Republicans decided to do this even though Congress, in its last two temporary spending bills, authorized D.C. to move forward with its 2025 budget — a sudden turnaround that House GOP leadership and top appropriators have not clearly explained."

How microplastics could be affecting our food supply: A first-of-its-kind study estimates how tiny plastic particles are cutting into crop yields. - "Small-scale studies have found that plants change when exposed to the tiny shards of plastic. In one of Kirkham’s studies, she compared wheat plants exposed to cadmium — a toxic heavy metal — and those exposed to both cadmium and microplastics. The plants exposed to microplastics took up 1.5 times the cadmium as those without, indicating that the microplastics were probably absorbing the cadmium and carrying it into the wheat."

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-12

Gold-bar scammer gets 6.5 years in ‘national epidemic’: Maryland woman lost more than $700,000 in ruse in which people posed as government agents.

D.C. U.S. attorney targets Ukraine whistleblower Rep. Vindman: The lawyer for the twin brother of former Trump national security aide Alex Vindman blasts interim U.S. attorney Ed Martin for a “transparent” attempt at political retaliation against figures in Trump’s first impeachment.

Transition Traumas - "Perhaps driven by a fixation on achieving net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050 rather than more immediate goals within the terms of sitting politicians and corporate managers, the West has jumped ahead into technologies aimed at “hard-to-decarbonize” sectors. They did so without first coming to grips with the 70%-80% or more of the transition to renewable electricity and electrified transport that can be accomplished relatively quickly with simple Stage 1 technologies like solar, onshore wind, battery storage, proven forms of longer-term storage and EVs."

Two teens charged with murder in case of local DJ robbed and left for dead: D.C. police in November arrested two teens in connection with the death of Bryan Smith, a local DJ and hairstylist. Prosecutors upgraded their charges Monday. - "Judge James Crowell repeatedly told attorneys Monday that he would not order the release of either teen since each had prior charges at the time of the attack. The 16-year-old had at least six active cases that involved robbery or assault, a court officer said. The younger teen’s attorney pleaded not guilty to the new charges. A lawyer for the 17-year-old did not enter a plea, which is optional at this stage of the proceedings. The older teen also had a probation revocation charge filed against him, usually an indication that the teen was on probation for a previous conviction at the time of his most recent arrest.

"If found guilty, they could face a maximum sentence of commitment until the age of 21. The Washington Post typically does not identify youths charged in juvenile court."

D.C. crime scene techs covered up late arrivals nearly 700 times, report finds: Prosecutors overseeing violent crimes, including homicides, began to notify defense lawyers in D.C. Superior Court about the finding in recent weeks.

An HOA set lethal traps for Wally the beaver. Neighbors fought back.: A community in Fairfax County, Virginia, created a petition for Wally after its homeowners association said it would remove the beaver to protect a pond.

Document prepared for Kremlin outlines hard-line negotiating stance: The document, written in February by a Moscow-based think tank close to Russia’s Federal Security Service or FSB, lays out Russia’s maximalist demands

Investigation: We tried to buy American chips as a Russian defense manufacturer — and it worked: Russia’s state-owned defense holding gets American and European microchips through a vast network of Russian and Chinese suppliers.

Monday, March 10, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-10

Mitch McConnell and the President He Calls ‘Despicable’: An audience with the former Republican leader

The Real Cost of Backyard Eggs: Hens are wonderful to keep, but they lay the most expensive eggs you’ll ever buy.

Trump Is Nero While Washington Burns: ‘Trump’s message is that being his ally serves no purpose, because he will not defend you.’ - "Europe is at a crucial juncture of its history. The American shield is slipping away, Ukraine risks being abandoned, and Russia is being strengthened. Washington has become the court of Nero: an incendiary emperor, submissive courtiers, and a buffoon on ketamine tasked with purging the civil service.

...

"I have confidence in the solidity of American democracy, and the country is already protesting. But in one month, Trump has done more harm to America than in the four years of his last presidency. We were at war with a dictator; now we are fighting against a dictator supported by a traitor."

Rat poison is sickening and killing D.C. wildlife, study finds: Dead and dying animals brought to a rescue center were tested for rat poison — 85 percent were positive. - "'It’s happening in bald eagles from Boston and other wildlife all the way down to the Potomac River,' Corrigan said. Rodenticides 'have been found in songbirds because they feed on ants, and ants feed on the poison bait. It’s a bad, bad situation.'"

Trump’s Justice Dept. ousts national security officials in latest purge: The transferring of at least three national security officials amounts to a complete gutting of leadership in the highly sensitive National Security Division.

Md. confirms measles case; Dulles Airport travelers may have been exposed: A Howard County resident contracted the virus during international travel, public health officials said.

Chinese tariffs on U.S. farm products take effect as trade tensions mount: Canada and Mexico have held talks with the Trump administration to stave off tariffs, but China has embarked on a tit-for-tat approach. That could soon change.

A trade war could hit these communities hardest: Chinese and Canadian retaliatory tariffs are aimed at agricultural, manufacturing and energy sectors that employ millions of Americans.

Farmers are caught in a political brawl over climate and DEI language: Biden funded farm projects that mention climate change. Trump wants to cut them. Farmers say they just want the money they were promised to preserve their land.

Sunday, March 9, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-09

U.S. soldiers arrested in scheme to send classified data, missile documents to China: Two active-duty soldiers and one former service member were charged in plots that prosecutors say were linked to Beijing.

Zuckerberg’s Meta considered sharing user data with China, whistleblower alleges: Meta went to extreme lengths, including developing a censorship system, in a failed attempt to bring Facebook to millions of internet users in China, according to a whistleblower complaint.

Why some D.C. residents aren’t sad to see the end of BLM Plaza: D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser has signaled that the “Black Lives Matter” street mural will be painted over. Those who helped create and protect that space aren’t surprised. - "Since 2004, if Congress was behind schedule and needed to pass a short- or long-term stopgap funding bill, lawmakers have included language to make sure that D.C. can keep spending at its current budget levels without disruption, until Congress formally approves the budget. That language is what was omitted from this bill."

GOP spending bill would lead to $1 billion in D.C. cuts, city officials say: The bill aimed at preventing a government shutdown would make D.C. revert to its 2024 spending. City officials fear cuts to police, schools and other services.

Frat member faces manslaughter charge in hazing death of college student: Caleb Wilson died after collapsing from being punched in the chest multiple times while pledging a fraternity, police said.

Anger at Elon Musk turns violent with molotov cocktails and gunfire at Tesla lots: The string of violence against Tesla storefronts, charging stations and vehicles exacerbates the company’s woes, analysts said. - "Choi, the Tesla owner in Brookline whose car was vandalized, said he voted for Trump and is 'neutral' on Musk’s work at DOGE. While he understands the animus against Musk as he makes aggressive changes to the federal workforce, he said it was still “shocking and disturbing” to have his car vandalized outside his church." [ed. note: cry more lib]

Friday, March 7, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-07

She hoped Trump’s victory would change her life, but not like this: Ryleigh Cooper is normally more focused on motherhood than politics. Then came DOGE. - "Trump, at a campaign stop an hour and a half south of her, had promised to make IVF free. She knew that from a video clip she saw on TikTok. And she had believed him.

"She also believed him when he said that Project 2025, the conservative blueprint for the next Republican administration that suggested mass cuts to the federal workforce, was not his plan." [ed. note: lol ffs]

Young men in Africa's Sahel flock to Islamist jihad forces: As Africa’s Sahel region has replaced the Middle East as the epicenter of jihadism, young men are flocking to the cause. They don’t always like what they find.

Civilians in Africa’s Sahel join militias as Islamist extremism surges: The advancing tide of Islamist extremism has prompted the rise of pro-government militias. The result has been a vicious cycle of escalating violence.

How Russia's Wagner Group advances Putin's aim of influence in Africa: Soldiers from the Wagner Group have helped Vladimir Putin advance his aim of restoring Russian power in Africa. But on the ground, they’ve learned hard lessons.

US military presence withdraws from Africa as foreign threats rise: At a time when Africa is convulsed by various threats and American interests could be at risk, U.S. influence is in retreat.

A new generation of military officers is seizing power: As many Africans sour on the West, a new generation of military officers is seizing power, vowing to build strong and sovereign nations. But at what cost?

Military juntas target critics and media, exiling democratic forces: Military strongmen have silenced their critics and muzzled the media, threatening, arresting and exiling those who speak out for democracy. A few still dare.

Post-election stock rally dissolves as trade policy bewilders investors: The Nasdaq composite index has fallen more than 10 percent from its December peak. The S&P 500 now sits below its level on Election Day.

Trump tells Cabinet that they, not Musk, should ‘go first’ in cutting workers: The meeting represented the outpouring of weeks of building tensions between the head of DOGE and President Trump’s top political officials.

Trump property purge to include national park visitor centers, museums: Those and other properties would close under budget cuts proposed by the administration.

At the National Arboretum, D.C.’s most famous eagle couple is expecting: The eaglet, or eaglets, could hatch in early April.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett ignites anger on the right after ruling against Trump: Conservative allies of President Donald Trump called Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett “evil,” a “closet Democrat” and a “DEI hire.”

Trump’s plan to downsize government could put downtown D.C. up for sale: As we await a revised list of properties the GSA deems “non-core,” a critic ponders the fate of Washington’s historic landscape. - "It is virtually impossible that America can recoup its investment in these properties if they are sold off rapidly and at this scale. Such a sale probably would turn the government into a renter rather than an owner, with rental rates set by anyone rich enough to buy the properties. The potential for corruption is unprecedented."

How To Build A Thousand-Year-Old Tree: A set of experimental techniques and technologies that might seem harmful to trees is actually helping ancient forests survive. - "Maintaining a supply of dying wood, and exploiting trees’ ability to exist in a state of spooky half-death, is critical for the unique communities of inhabitants that depend on it. Columns of dead and decaying tree matter called 'tree soil’ are the single most important nutrient resource for deadwood-loving insects and can remain supported in 'deadwood chimneys' by the rest of the living trunk, Harris explained. 'That’s where we get the beetles,' he said."

How a Trump effort to cut environmental red tape could backfire: The White House is revoking its own authority to oversee implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act — and leaving a bureaucratic mess in its wake. - "In an echo of the Trump administration’s refrain that extraordinary measures are required to curb government inefficiency, the unraveling of CEQ is intended to “expedite and simplify the permitting process” for important projects, according to Trump’s executive order. But experts who spoke to Grist anticipate that it will have the opposite effect."

Tesla’s Fortunes Fall as Musk Rises in Trump World: CEO’s politics erode brand’s appeal among some core buyers of electric vehicles; ‘I used to idolize the guy’

Butterflies in the U.S. are disappearing at a ‘catastrophic’ rate: The number of butterflies in the contiguous United States declined by 22 percent this century, a collapse with potentially dire implications. - "David Wagner, a University of Connecticut entomologist not involved in the study, said butterflies act as a 'yardstick for measuring what is happening' among insects broadly. He called the new findings 'catastrophic and saddening.'"

Inside U.S. spy agencies, workers fear a cataclysmic Trump cull: Firings and mass disruptions could harm intelligence collection on foreign threats and future recruiting, current and former officials say. - "The elimination of DEI programs is particularly painful to some intelligence officials, who see pragmatic virtue in a more diverse workforce. For years, spy chiefs have spoken of a lack of analysts with the necessary language skills and cultural backgrounds to understand foreign societies — and undercover operatives with the physical features to work clandestinely in Africa, Asia or the Middle East."

How New York drove a steak through the heart of Texas: A long-simmering regional beef over an iconic American food is heating up again. - "Simple justice demands giving credit where it’s due. The steaks aren’t 'Texas strips,' because they arrived from Texas about as chewy as a cowboy’s boot. And they shouldn’t be 'New York strips,' because New Yorkers contributed nothing to the process but their pieholes. They are 'Kansas City strips,' in honor of the city where the beef got its flavor and the men in bloody aprons who popularized the cut."

Which oil do you cook with? The answer can impact your health.: Extra-virgin olive oil has the most scientific evidence for its health benefits. But avocado and high-oleic vegetable oils are also good for your health.

How North Carolina football landed a coaching legend in Bill Belichick

Reading archive 2025-03-06

Neo-Nazis targeted a majority-Black town. Locals launched an armed watch.: Residents of Lincoln Heights, Ohio, are guarding their streets with rifles after criticizing the police response to a neo-Nazi rally.

Retinol: The Skin-Care Ingredient With a Horrifying History: The miraculous wrinkle-erasing, acne-fighting cream, is the result of decades of horrifying medical abuse.

What went wrong? Israel's spy agency lists failures in preventing Oct. 7 attack

Russia Is Chasing a Deal to Keep Its Military Bases in Syria: A lack of clarity from the Trump administration on Syria has left a void that Moscow is seeking to exploit - "The [Russian] cash injection came as Qatar and Saudi Arabia held off in providing the millions of dollars in budgetary assistance they had discussed providing to the new regime, these people said. They said those countries are awaiting clarity from Washington over whether U.S. sanctions against the former jihadists now in charge will be lifted."

Mike Johnson’s chief of staff charged with DUI shortly after Trump speech: Hayden Haynes backed into a parked car not long after speech ended, police allege.

Inside the scientific quest to reverse human aging: Can reprogramming our genes make us young again? A breakthrough in longevity research may be nearing its first human trials.

When you buy your childhood home, history conveys. Drama might, too.: Drawn by family lore (or hoping to avoid a bidding war), these people reclaimed the houses they grew up in.

Small federal agency blocks DOGE employees from entering its building: The U.S. African Development Foundation denied several DOGE employees access to its offices Wednesday, as DOGE makes sweeping eliminations across federal agencies.

What It Takes to Make Shane Gillis Funny: Sometimes, you need the SNL writers’ room.

The Man Who Would Remake Europe: Germany’s incoming leader is an unlikely force for change. - "Scholz once marketed himself as a 'peace chancellor,' to which Merz quipped: 'Peace you can find in any cemetery. It is our freedom that we must defend.'"

Russia Is Not Winning: At the current rate, Russia will control all of Ukraine in about 118 years.

What Ketamine Does to the Human Brain: Excessive use of the drug can make anyone feel like they rule the world. - "Even infrequent users those who used, on average, roughly three times a month scored higher on a delusional-thought scale than ex ketamine users, people who took other drugs, and people who didn't use drugs at all. Those who averaged 20 uses a month scored even higher. People believed that they were the sole recipients of secret messages, or that society and people around them were especially attuned to them. The psychological profile of a frequent ketamine user, Morgan and her team concluded, was someone who had 'profound' impairments in short- and long-term memory and was 'distinctly dissociated in their day-to-day existence.'"

The Simple Explanation for Why Trump Turned Against Ukraine: The president’s defenders ignore one possibility: He just likes Putin. - "A recent Politico story filled with inside-Trump-world reporting, for example, suggests that Trump was eager to cut a deal, if only Zelensky had flattered him sufficiently: The Ukrainian president 'infuriated Trump last week with his public suggestion he was swallowing Putin's disinformation a response to Trump's suggestion that Ukraine started the war.' Or perhaps the source of Trump's split with Ukraine is revealed by him regurgitating Russian propaganda blaming Ukraine for the war, rather than Zelensky correcting him."

The Rise of the Brutal American: This is how the bad guys act. - "Quite apart from their politics, Trump and Vance are rude. They are cruel. They berated and mistreated a guest on camera, and then boasted about it afterward, as if their ugly behavior achieved some kind of macho 'win.' They announced that they would halt transfers of military equipment to Ukraine, and hinted at ending sanctions on Russia, the aggressor state. In his speech to Congress last night, Trump once again declared that America would 'get' Greenland, which is a part of Denmark a sign that he intends to run roughshod over other allies too.

...

"But what was ominous in 2016 is dangerous in 2025, especially in Europe. Russian military aggression is more damaging, Russian sabotage across Europe more frequent, and Russian cyberattacks almost constant. In truth, it is Putin, not Zelensky, who started this conflict, Putin who has brought North Korean troops and Iranian drones to Europe, Putin who instructs his propagandists to talk about nuking London, Putin who keeps raising the stakes and scope of the war. Most Europeans live in this reality, not in the fictional world inhabited by Trump, and the contrast is making them think differently about Americans. According to pollsters, nearly three-quarters of French people now think that the U.S. is not an ally of France. A majority in Britain and a very large majority in Denmark, both historically pro-American countries, now have unfavorable views of the U.S. as well."

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Reading archive 2025-03-05

We Have to Stop Underwriting People Who Move to Climate Danger Zones - "The voices loudly criticizing California for its rigid control of insurance pricing are ignoring numerous similar examples from the rest of the country. In 2023, after the federal flood insurance program began to adjust its premiums to better reflect climate realities, 10 states across the political spectrum — including reliably red Louisiana, Florida and Texas and moderate blue Virginia — sued the program. And California isn’t the only state that failed to raise premiums to properly fund its FAIR plan, the state-sponsored insurer of last resort often relied on by those living in climate-vulnerable areas; Florida did as well."

These buildings use batteries made of ice to stay cool and save money: Ice batteries help office towers, warehouses and stores shrink their power bills and carbon footprint. Soon, they’re coming to houses.

The LA Times’ Political Rating “AI” Is A Silly Joke Aimed At Validating Wealthy Media Ownership’s Inherent Bias

Is ‘Dark Woke’ the Answer to Trumpism—or Just Liberal Cringe?: Welcome to the new hashtag-resistance, where viral clips of men defacing Cybertucks are channeling the frustrated energy of the online left. The writer Kieran Press-Reynolds asks whether it’s a promising beginning or a dead end.

Is Social Security a Ponzi Scheme?

Why these states are helping people pay for stronger roofs: As disasters multiply and insurers flee risky areas, grant programs to help residents protect their homes are expanding across the nation. March 3, 2025 - "The surge of interest in shoring up homes reflects the growing pressure states feel to respond to the financial toll of extreme weather, experts said. In many of these states, Republican governors and lawmakers have discounted climate change. But as disasters multiply and insurance companies raise rates and stop selling policies, the economic consequences have become more difficult to ignore."

How China came to dominate the world in renewable energy: China now eclipses every other country in the world — including the United States — in the green technologies of the future. Here’s how it achieved this lead. - "That gap is likely to widen under President Donald Trump, analysts say. As Trump focuses on boosting fossil fuel production and cutting funding for clean energy projects, China is further increasing investment in renewable energy technologies."

NIH reels with fear, uncertainty about future of scientific research: The Trump administration’s orders have created more turmoil and damage at the National Institutes of Health than was previously known.

D.C. man convicted of murder and freed early found guilty of second killing: Police say Darrell Moore fatally shot Julius Hayes after Hayes allegedly spread rumors that Moore was “dealing with a gay guy.”

D.C. police arrest suspect in fatal shooting of 14-year-old: Police said it appeared the victim was armed and may have returned fire in the Aug. 1 incident at Lamond Recreation Center. - "In 2023, the Office of the Attorney General in D.C. declined to pursue charges in at least four cases against [the victim], which included unauthorized use of a vehicle and armed robbery, according to three officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a juvenile record."

Reading archive 2025-03-04

Transgender troops will be removed from U.S. military, Pentagon says: The previous Trump administration effectively banned transgender people from joining, but the new memo says currently serving transgender troops will be discharged.

Maryland revives years-long debate over whether to charge kids as adults: Efforts to end the practice of criminally charging juveniles as adults have failed for more than a decade. Now, the General Assembly is considering a compromise bill. - "Black Maryland voters were more likely to say teens accused of assault should be treated as adults than White Maryland voters (65 percent vs. 56 percent), while similar majorities of both supported charging teens as adults for the other crimes, the poll found."

‘You are not alone’: U.S. Forest Service chief’s blunt goodbye message to workers: Forest Service Chief Randy Moore wrote the email after thousands of agency employees were fired amid President Donald Trump’s effort to downsize the government.

How to Win a War Against Reality - A review of Steve Benen, “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past” - "How is it possible to gaslight at least half the nation? Benen concludes the Republican tactic has four components. First, the Republicans simply don’t care about reality. Second, they have absolutely no shame about lying and sticking to their lie. Third, the most egregious liars are surrounded by those who aid and abet them in their mendacity. At best they shrug off the lies; at worst they repeat them. And finally, Republicans repeat their lies ad nauseum and at the top of their lungs, believing that if something is repeated often enough, loudly enough, it will stick. 'Taken together, a picture emerges of a Republican Party that’s grown reliant on a brute-force rhetorical strategy, taking developments that unfolded in recent memory and replacing them with a politically advantageous alternate reality.'"

‘US sided with Russia, North Korea & Iran’ – Ukraine reacts to Trump's military aid freeze

China, Mexico and Canada to retaliate after Trump imposes new tariffs: The nation’s top three trading partners are rolling out levies on a wide range of products – including soybeans, meat and grains – in the escalating trade war.

James Carville: It’s Time for a Daring Political Maneuver, Democrats

HOW MY DAD RECONCILED HIS GOD AND HIS GAY SON

Trump’s speech to Congress has the ingredients for a blistering event: The president addresses restless lawmakers Tuesday after six weeks of working aggressively to slash their power.

How to lose the 21st century, in three easy steps: Trump is throwing away what could have been the next great American century. - "More than anything else, President Donald Trump loves winning. Yet he has already positioned America to lose the 21st century, in three simple steps: 

1. Alienate your friends. 

2. Destroy your business environment. 

3. Slaughter your golden goose (i.e., science and research)."

Trump official floats new approach on GDP, as economy poised to slow sharply: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick says government spending should be separate from economic growth, echoing comments from Elon Musk days earlier.

H5N1 is spreading. America is not ready.: New infections in animals should heighten concern of human H5N1.

A European army is no longer optional: As Trump turns from Europe toward Russia, European leaders need to bolster defenses, quickly. - "Bergmann argues that creating a European army would not require changing the E.U. treaty, but it would definitely require changing the European mindset. It was once considered unthinkable that European countries would merge their militaries. But it was also considered unthinkable that the United States might abandon Europe in the face of Russian aggression. Given that the latter contingency now appears distressingly likely, it’s high time for Europeans to put aside concerns about national pride and work together to save their continent from the looming menace of Russian aggression."

With his nation at war, Winston Churchill dressed in a wartime onesie: Churchill wore his “siren suit” to state dinners and news conferences, and the world delighted in his political and sartorial statement.