2026-06-11


etc

  • Why Excess Regulation?

    More recently, empires found that they could get stronger local support for wars by merging local cultures into national cultures, and this required them to get more involved in shaping and regulating culture. And then people in national cultures became much more interested in using government to regulate each others’ behaviors. Since forager times, that’s what people who strongly feel part of the same community tend to do to each other. And that’s my view of the status of regulation today. Government regulation is mostly justified in our world as fixing local problems, much like foragers who meddled in their local social worlds to fix what they saw as local problems. Debates about regulation almost never mention the harms of letting weak adaptive systems drive strong ones, and most specific regulations seems to me maladaptive, relative to the private alternatives that would likely arise in their absence. So regulation likely exists as a result of prior strong selection pressures to create central governments to prosecute big wars, and to create law and national cultures to support them. Excess regulation is a side effect of making such asymmetric powers.

    • Who cares about local elections now, vs national ones that make the news?

Horseshit

celebrity gossip


Electric / Self Driving cars

  • Mercedes‑Benz starts large‑scale production of electric axial flux motor

  • Donut Lab's 'solid-state' battery exposed as regular li-ion in damning investigation

    A comprehensive investigation by battery researcher Ziroth, involving over 20 independent battery experts, has produced what amounts to definitive proof that Donut Lab’s “miracle” solid-state battery is actually a lithium-ion cell. The company raised approximately $25 million from over 1,300 mostly small investors based on claims that now appear to be false. The investigation traces the battery technology back to a German company called CT Coatings, reveals a web of companies hiding behind aggressive NDAs, and presents electrochemical evidence — including voltage curves and cell expansion data — that conclusively identifies the tested cell as lithium-ion, not the revolutionary sodium-ion solid-state chemistry Donut Lab promised.

    A video published by YouTuber Ziroth concerning the Donut Battery has recently circulated in international media. The video and the related media coverage give the impression that the announcement brought something new to light. However, the material simply compiles previous claims that we have already addressed. It is worth noting that this content creator is publicly engaged in a commercial partnership with our Chinese competitor, the battery technology company CATL.

  • BYD to install 5-minute EV chargers across Europe

Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts

Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising

Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO

  • NASA Marches Toward Artemis III Mission in 2027, Names Crew Members

  • FCC lifts looming deadline for Amazon Leo satellite broadband constellation.

    Amazon won regulatory approval for the Amazon Leo network in July 2020. The FCC’s authorization came with two deadlines. First, Amazon had to launch half of its 3,232 satellites by July 30, 2026, in order to maintain authorization to launch the rest of the network. The regulator gave Amazon a deadline of July 30, 2029, to have all of its first-generation satellites in orbit. It has been apparent for some time that Amazon would not meet the FCC’s requirement to launch half of its satellites—1,616 spacecraft—by the end of next month. Amazon filed an application in January requesting the FCC extend the deadline to July 2028 or waive it altogether. The commission decided on the latter option, removing any time limit for the 50 percent deployment milestone, but keeping the July 2029 deadline in place for the entire constellation.

AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World

Neo Gambling / Crypto con games

Economicon / Business / Finance

Trump

  • Trump says he thinks AI companies will agree to 'giving back' to the public

  • Trump says 'I love the inflation' after CPI hits 3-year high

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday said, “I love the inflation” after being asked if he was concerned about new consumer price index data that showed the annual inflation rate at 4.2%, a three-year high. Trump, speaking with reporters in the Oval Office, also predicted that inflation is “going to come down like a rock” after the United States’ war against Iran is over. The president linked that prediction to a confusing statement about the U.S. “taking” oil and ships. “No, I love it, the numbers were great,” Trump said when a reporter asked him about the CPI number issued earlier in the morning by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. “You know what I really love? I love the inflation. You know why?” Trump said. “Because as soon as this war is over, you know I can say it now ... you know we’ve been taking out millions of barrels of oil.”

Democrats

  • Platner’s ‘living on the sea’ claim dismantled by critics as financial docs paint a different picture.

    Platner’s 2025 financial disclosures show that he listed “other $5,001” as his annual income from farming oysters. The candidate’s entire business is only worth between $50,000 and $100,000, which accounts for his boat, lines, anchors and other farming equipment, per the disclosure. He earned an additional $3,000 serving as the harbor master for Sullivan, Maine, — a role the Washington Free Beacon reported was largely clerical and where he was responsible for overseeing the 17 boat moorings on the small town’s coast. Taken together, these sums are dwarfed by the $4,800 Platner says he receives through monthly disability payments. Platner is legally entitled to such a sum owing to injuries he suffered while serving in the armed forces.

    "We are now witnessing the post-cancellation, post-purity style of politics that the Republican Party has ushered in," he claimed. "I'm not going to sit here and defend things Graham Platner did in his past. Not even Graham Platner defends these things that he did in his past. But we have watched for a decade as Republicans have repeatedly lowered the threshold, lowered the standards for their candidates, and now Democrats are going to keep holding our candidates to an infinitely higher standard while we have Ken Paxton in Texas, while we have Donald Trump sitting in the Oval Office right now," Mockler said.

  • LA Skid Row homeless claim they've been paid to vote in LA mayor's election

    A series of shocking videos show homeless residents on Los Angeles’ Skid Row claiming they were paid to vote for Mayor Karen Bass and councilwoman Nithya Raman. “They gave you an optional choice,” Shepherd claimed, alleging the was offered $2 but negotiated for a higher payment and ultimately received $4. Shepherd further claimed he completed a mail-in ballot for Bass and deposited it in a ballot box. Skid Row resident, Rene Johnson, 39, also claimed she received $5 after being told to vote for Bass. Johnson said she supported Bass, but told the creator she was still unclear about some of the forms she had completed. Another woman, who said she was living on the street, also claimed she accepted money to vote for Mayor Bass. “It was like two bucks,” the unidentified woman said, adding that “yeah they come out here all the time.”

    • this is not actually illegal in California.

Left Angst

  • European sentiments towards the US hit an all-time low

  • How Silicon Valley Misreads the Lord of the Rings

    The post and the flood of Tolkien-themed anti-immigration memes that followed are symptomatic of a larger trend: the use of Tolkien, especially his heroic good-versus-evil imagery, in the rhetoric of the New Right.

  • The DOGE Bros Want Another Shot

  • The Cost of Killing 'Silly Science'

    A stupid person is someone who causes problems for others without any clear benefit for himself, possibly incurring losses. Firing the NSB struck me as a textbook case of that kind of stupidity in action. But while it’s easy (and fair) to blame Trump, I wanted to better understand how people like Sen. Proxmire helped create a narrative context that enables that kind of stupidity. It strikes me as a grave threat to our nation, and our planet.

  • It's not enough to have better ideals.

    Although pro-social values are important, it’s never enough to build something that is ideologically better. We need to build tools that are practically better for people today, based on people’s actual needs. “Twitter but decentralized” is not a particularly useful idea. You need to figure out who you’re going to help first, get to know them, understand what is painful for them, and solve that pain. Extractive networks have literally brought down democracies and enabled genocides, so we know we need software that encodes better ideals

  • ICE denies having a protester database. A letter to Congress sheds more light

  • Postal Service won’t deliver mail ballots for states that don’t hand over voter lists, under plan for Trump directive

    State election officials could soon face a stark choice: Hand over voter lists to the Trump administration or risk losing Postal Service delivery for mail-in ballots. So far, 23 Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia are suing, as are Democratic Party leaders and non-partisan voter advocacy groups, setting up a potentially active summer of high-stakes judicial rulings. The Trump administration cleared an initial legal hurdle last month, when a federal judge in Washington, DC, who is overseeing one set of the cases, declined to block Trump's executive order, allowing the Postal Service to begin implementing it.

Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security

World

Russia Bad / Ukraine War

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp