2025-11-21


etc

  • How ASML Got EUV

    EUV lithography machines are famously made by just a single firm, ASML in the Netherlands, and determining who has access to the machines has become a major geopolitical concern. However, though they’re built by ASML, much of the research that made the machines possible was done in the US. Some of the most storied names in US research and development — DARPA, Bell Labs, IBM Research, Intel, the US National Laboratories — spent decades of research and hundreds of millions of dollars to make EUV possible. So why, after all that effort by the US, did EUV end up being commercialized by a single firm in the Netherlands?

    An important takeaway from the story of EUV is that developing a technology that works, and successfully competing with that technology in the marketplace, are two different things. Thanks to contributions from researchers around the world, including a who’s who of major US research organizations — DARPA, Bell Labs, the US National Labs, IBM Research — EUV went from unpromising speculation to the next generation of lithography technology. But by the time it was ready, US firms had been almost entirely forced out of the lithography tools market, leaving EUV in the hands of a single European firm to take it across the finish line and commercialize.

  • NTSB's preliminary report on the UPS crash

  • Nuremberg trial records made available online after painstaking 25-year project

Horseshit

Epstein


Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering

  • I Hate Journalism’s Culture Of Casual Calumny

    It was very silly for the organizers of this party to invite and then disinvite Lorenz; they’re basically asking for negative coverage, and Lorenz has every right to go public about this strange turn of events. What bothers me is the way Lorenz can’t just tell the story, but seems intent on inflicting maximum reputational damage on Yudkowsky, Soares, and other people in their orbit — she just takes every last possible swipe at this crew, many of them unfair. This is part of what I call the culture of casual calumny in journalism, and it really sucks. The CCC is a style of journalism and punditry (these days, the two bleed into one another more often than not, including in this newsletter) that is very attack-dog, very fuck these guys, very quick to render judgment and to privilege accusation over levelheaded attempts at understanding and explanation. It could be seen as a natural outgrowth of what I call rightside journalism, or journalism geared more at demonstrating one’s ideological bona fides than getting at the truth or explaining the world. It’s natural, if you write from the stance of needing to demonstrate that you are on the “right” side of various issues, that along the way you’re going to get in the habit of broadcasting your own righteousness, which inevitably entails accusing others of lacking in this department.

  • Overconfidence associated with anti-consensus views on scientific issues

  • How the Internet Made the Far-Right

    Gamergate was both a digital populist rebellion—a toxic one, to be sure—and a deluge of harassment and intimidation. I’ve even heard it likened, half-jokingly, to an “Arab Spring” for gamers—a too-flattering comparison, but one that reveals how many on the right still understand it. Those too young to witness Gamergate now treat it like others treat physical-world war stories: a mythic redpill origin tale about the moment the veil first lifted, and they understood how power really worked. By 2016, that sensibility had found its next form.

    The alt-right, for all the subsequent attempts to define it, was not a coherent ideological movement. It was a fragment—an expression—of a larger online ecosystem which included several discrete subcultures that eventually escaped containment. Taken together, the alt-right was characterized by a defiance aimed at both progressive culture and establishment conservatism. If it possessed any real throughline, it was the way it weaponized the language of the Internet: trolling and mockery. Early claims that “conservative is the new punk rock” were apt in at least one way. Much of the movement’s aesthetic—Nazi imagery included—was designed to shock rather than to persuade. Yet, as time went on, it became clear that many within the movement weren’t being “ironic.” They believed it. They really were antisemitic. They really were white nationalists. It wasn’t a joke. Irony gave them cover, at least for a time. If a joke landed, it worked as propaganda. If it failed, it was “just trolling.”

TechSuck / Geek Bait

  • Perl's decline was cultural

    Working hard to master system complexities was genuinely rewarding - you really were doing difficult things and doing them well. This is actually the same mechanism behind what eventually became known as 'meritocracy', but the core point is simpler - if difficulty itself becomes a badge of honour, you've created a trap: anything that makes the system more approachable starts to feel like it's cheapening what you achieved. You become invested in preserving the barriers you overcame.

    Perl had an, at best grudging, tolerance for 'difficult genius' types, alongside this baseline culture. Unfortunately, this kind of toxic personality tends to thrive in the type of culture I've described, and they do set to help the tone. I'm not here to call out people specifically, because I'm trying to make a point rather than feed a culture war, or dig up gossip, but there were several significant examples, you can probably find lore if you like. I think the kindest way I can describe the compounding effect of this is that there was a strong cultural norm along the lines of "It's OK to be rude, as long as it's for a good cause".

AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World

Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO

Democrats

  • Florida congresswoman Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick indicted on theft, tax charges | AP News

    Cherfilus-McCormick has denied the charges and has no plans to resign, according to a statement shared by her chief of staff.

    the Justice Department said that Cherfilus-McCormick, 46, and Edwin Cherfilus, 51, her brother, worked on a staffing contract funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency for Covid vaccinations tied to their family health care company in 2021 and that the company was overpaid by $5 million in relief funds. She and her brother are accused of conspiring to steal the overpayment and route it through various accounts to conceal its origins. Cherfilus-McCormick is alleged to have used the money for her own enrichment and to fund a significant part of her congressional campaign. The OCC, formerly the Office of Congressional Ethics, referred Cherfilus-McCormick to the bipartisan Ethics Committee in May 2024.

Left Angst

External Security / Militaria / Diplomania

  • The Pentagon Can't Trust GPS Anymore

  • Eastern Shipbuilding Suspends Work on Coast Guard's Offshore Patrol Cutters

    The company’s delivery of OPC 1 was initially scheduled for June 2023 but has been delayed until at least late 2026, while OPC 2 missed its April 2024 delivery date. In July 2025, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem announced the partial termination of Eastern Shipbuilding’s contract for OPCs 3 and 4, after the company reportedly informed the Coast Guard it could not fulfill its contractual obligations without incurring “unabsorbable loss.”

    In August, Eastern Shipbuilding Group received approval from Washington State Ferries to build two 160-vehicle hybrid-electric ferries, with an option for a third, marking a major milestone for the nation’s largest ferry system’s electrification. The $714.5 million contract follows the first competitive ferry construction bid in over 25 years.

  • South Korea to build nuclear-powered subs in U.S., Trump says

  • US troops invade Mexico in dramatic escalation

    American troops have pulled up on a Mexican beach in a dramatic escalation of tensions after Donald Trump threatened to bomb the country. US 'contractors' arrived by boat on Monday at Playa Bagdad, driving signs into the sand near where the Rio Grande empties into the Gulf of Mexico. Alarmed witnesses quickly alerted officials and heavily armed Mexican security personnel rushed to the scene on trucks mounted with machine guns in a terrifying standoff. The Pentagon, in a deeply embarrassing statement, admitted that its troops were mistaken when they landed on the beach. The Mexican personnel watched as the Americans drove six signs into the ground, which said: 'Warning: restricted area.' Mexico's foreign affairs ministry said its navy removed the signs from the sand, which it believed were on Mexican territory.

  • U.S. Banks Shelve $20B Bailout Plan for Argentina

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp