2026-02-10
Horseshit
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San Francisco's billionaire bacchanal a big bust
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Had the cause been different the coverage would be talking about the "massive swell of citizen interest" and so on.
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It's not finance, it's your pensions
Sweden is a social-democratic beacon with one of the world's deepest stock markets. Contradiction? Martino Comelli argues that welfare states build financial markets through social policy design. Funded pensions and housing subsidies create investable assets; generous public pensions crowd finance out. The same welfare spending level can produce radically different capitalisms
- When pension "investments" can be stolen and the obligations shifted to taxpayers; it was always and only program designed to disguise theft.
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Study of 400 children in five societies finds culture shapes how kids cooperate
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Bitcoin investors helped draft law to enable libertarian Caribbean development
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More than one-third of American college students say they’ve scrolled on their phone during sex.
Epstein
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The Epstein class and collapse porn
The latest batch of Epstein emails includes a particularly ghoulish exchange between Epstein and his business partner, the anti-democracy activist and billionaire Peter Thiel:
return to tribalism . counter to globalization. amazing new alliances. you and I both agreed zero interest rates were too high, as i said in your office. finding things on their way to collapse , was much easier than finding the next bargain
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Epstein Files Reveal Scope of Ghislaine Maxwell’s Role in Clinton Circle - The New York Times
Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime companion, Ghislaine Maxwell, played a substantial role in supporting the creation of the Clinton Global Initiative, one of President Bill Clinton’s signature post-White House endeavors, new documents released by the Justice Department show. Ms. Maxwell took part in budget discussions related to the first Clinton Global Initiative conference; talked through challenges about it with both Clinton aides and Publicis Groupe, the company that produced the inaugural event; and arranged to wire $1 million to pay Publicis for its work on “the Clinton project,” according to emails in the massive cache of documents collected as part of the government’s investigations of Mr. Epstein. The source of the money is unclear, including whether Mr. Epstein provided the funds. However, the emails show that he was aware of the payment.
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Starmer Faces Pressure To Resign Over Mandelson-Epstein Scandal As Second Aide Quits | ZeroHedge
Starmer’s communications director, Tim Allan, said he was standing down to allow a “new team” to be built around the prime minister, Downing Street said, a day after Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, resigned in the escalating fallout from the Mandelson appointment.
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Massie Threatens to Reveal Epstein Client Names If Bondi Won't Unredact Them
In a Sunday appearance on CNN‘s “Inside Politics,” Massie accused the Trump administration of violating the law by failing to meet the deadline for the public release of information and by releasing the names of victims while covering up the names of alleged perpetrators. He said that of particular interest were the FBI’s 302 files, which contain information from official interviews with witnesses and victims of Epstein’s abuse, which he said the DOJ is still withholding. He also said the DOJ was “overredacting” documents related to “some really sketchy emails” between Epstein and associates, on which “we can’t see who the sender was.” Massie said that Attorney General Pam Bondi “will be in front of my committee,” referring to the House Judiciary Committee, on Wednesday to answer questions about the release of the files. Asked by anchor Manu Raju how he would respond if the DOJ continued to flout the law, Massie said he was prepared to begin reading off the names of Epstein’s clients on the House floor, provided the victims “believe that the best way to get justice is to force the DOJ to release these names.”
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Noam Chomsky, Jeffrey Epstein and the Politics of Betrayal
I know and have long admired Noam. He is, arguably, our greatest and most principled intellectual. I can assure you he is not as passive or gullible as his wife claims. He knew about Epstein’s abuse of children. They all knew. And like others in the Epstein orbit, he did not care. From the email correspondence between Epstein and Valéria it appears she particularly enjoyed the privileges that came with being in Epstein’s circle, but this does not absolve Noam’s acquiescence. Noam, of all people, knows the predatory nature of the ruling class and the cruelty of capitalists, where the vulnerable, especially girls and women, are commodified as objects to be used and exploited. He was not fooled by Epstein. He was seduced. His association with Epstein is a terrible and, to many, unforgivable stain. It irreparably tarnishes his legacy. If there is a lesson here, it is this. The ruling class offers nothing without expecting something in return. The closer you get to these vampires the more you become enslaved. Our role is not to socialize with them. It is to destroy them.
Musk
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SpaceX shifts priorities to Moon city instead of Mars colony
It is only possible to travel to Mars when the planets align every 26 months (six month trip time), whereas we can launch to the Moon every 10 days (2 day trip time). This means we can iterate much faster to complete a Moon city than a Mars city. That said, SpaceX will also strive to build a Mars city and begin doing so in about 5 to 7 years, but the overriding priority is securing the future of civilization and the Moon is faster.
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SpaceX is exploring a "Starlink Phone" for direct-to-device internet services
Electric / Self Driving cars
Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers
Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts
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Why Unemployment Is Rising Among Young College Grads
- Kids have been taught that "silence is violence" and require ideological purity from prospective employers? Kids not taught about colonialist things like "math" and "work ethics?"
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What We Can Learn From Southern Red States About Education - The New York Times
hope emerges in the most unlikely of places: three states here in the Deep South that long represented America’s educational basement. These states — Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi — have histories of child poverty, racism and dismal educational outcomes, and they continue to spend less than most other states on public schools.
For many years, skeptics have offered dispiriting arguments about the prospects for educational gains: The way to improve literacy is to fix the family, fix addiction, fix the parents, for as long as the child’s environment is broken, there’s not much else that can be done. The gains in these states suggest that that critique is wrong. Mississippi and Alabama haven’t fixed child poverty, trauma and deeply troubled communities — but they have figured out how to get kids to read by the end of third grade.
Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising
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Journalism lost its culture of sharing. Here’s how we rebuild it
We crunched the numbers, and your hunch is right. In fact, it’s probably worse than you think. The data are clear: The open-source culture that defined an earlier era of online journalism has collapsed. Activity on GitHub has cratered. In 2016, news organizations posted more than 2,000 public projects to the code-sharing site. Last year, that number slumped below 400, an 80% decline.
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EU threatens temporary measures to stop Meta blocking AI rivals from WhatsApp
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LibreOffice blasts Microsoft for putting "commercial interests" over everything
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Xbox cancel French localizations as voice actors refuse AI training clauses
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The Original Power Rangers Is Officially Dead After 51 Years
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Atlanta Journal-Constitution to lay off about 50 employees as it restructures for growth.
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Child internet safety campaign accused of censoring teenagers' speeches
Childnet, a UK charity part-funded by companies including Snap, Roblox and Meta, edited out warnings from Lewis Swire and Saamya Ghai that social media addiction was an “imminent threat to our future” and obsessive scrolling was making people “sick”, according to a record of edits seen by the Guardian.
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Complaining about Windows 11 hasn't stopped it from hitting 1B users
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Ring Doorbell's 'dystopian' Super Bowl ad is sparking privacy concerns
TechSuck / Geek Bait
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Linux 7.0 Officially Concluding the Rust Experiment
The experiment is done, i.e. Rust is here to stay.
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Everything eventually sorta becomes mail
- almost as if the paradigm fits human needs.
Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO
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Many Americans may be surprised to learn that NASA has been trying to return to the moon for two decades now, but hasn’t been able to do so. Something has gone wrong with American state capacity. Getting to the moon in eight years under the Apollo program was perhaps the most vivid example of American government prowess. It came on the heels of other major accomplishments in the 20th century: big infrastructure projects like the Hoover Dam, the Golden Gate Bridge, and electrification of the upper South under the Tennessee Valley Authority; mobilization for the Second World War, and victory over Japan and Germany; and then, after the war, construction of the interstate highway system. The United States in this period was seen globally as the exemplar of modernity, a country able to master complex technology and use it for important public purposes. Since the 1960s, however, American state capacity has declined. This lack of capacity is evident in NASA itself. Why has it taken so long, and cost so much money, to repeat a feat that was accomplished 50 years ago?
Both Boeing and SpaceX were awarded contracts for Commercial Crew in 2014. Boeing received $4.2 billion while SpaceX received $2.6 billion. Since then, SpaceX’s Crew Dragon has flown almost 70 people in 18 manned missions, and 12 Dragon cargo International Space Station resupply missions. Boeing by contrast flew one unsuccessful flight in 2019. Starliner delivered two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, to the International Space Station in 2024, but experienced multiple failures and stranded them there for nine months. They had to be rescued by a reconfigured SpaceX Crew Dragon. Though Starliner was a bust, the idea of competition in fixed-price contracting proved its worth.
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To reuse or not reuse–the eternal debate of New Glenn's second stage reignites
AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World
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Big Tech groups race to fund unprecedented $660B AI spending spree
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AI companies spent big on Superb Owl ads, just like cryptocurrency startups in 2022.
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As AI enters the operating room, reports arise of botched surgeries
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A Critical AI Niche Is Dominated by One Little-Known Japanese Company
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Silicon Valley is driving users to ditch keyboards and spend hours talking
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The Only Thing Standing Between Humanity and AI Apocalypse Is Claude?
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AI chatbots pose 'dangerous' risk when giving medical advice, study suggests
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Anthropic hired philosopher Amanda Askell to give its chatbot Claude morals
Neo Gambling / Crypto con games
Economicon / Business / Finance
Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making
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Pages of Nixon Grand Jury Testimony Reveal the Real Threat of the Deep State
an Navy enlisted man, Yeoman Charles Radford, who worked in the White House, was a mole. No, not for the Soviets, but for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He would routinely make copies of documents from Nixon administration officials and share them with people in the Pentagon. Radford would pilfer documents from Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig and make copies of them. The purpose of this espionage was to check the incumbent president from taking actions that the deep state opposed.
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Matt Stoller: A web tool that shows how Federal bills change existing U.S. Code
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It's Time for America to Admit That It Has a Marijuana Problem
Left Angst
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Anti-ICE movement an insurgency, not a protest
These operations are designed physically to obstruct Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents while producing emotionally charged agitprop to be weaponized across social media and sympathetic newsrooms. They seek to manufacture outrage, delegitimize deportations and demoralize federal law enforcement. One familiar tactic is the strategic placement of women at the front of confrontations. When these activists block agents on foot or with vehicles, cameras start recording. Clips of screaming women being arrested are quickly circulated with false narratives claiming innocent women are being “snatched” off the streets arbitrarily.
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The Washington Post is retreating from Silicon Valley when it matters most
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ICE knocks on ad tech's data door to see what it knows about you
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Irish man with valid US work permit held in ICE detention for five months
World
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Taiwan says 40% shift of chip capacity to US is 'impossible'
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Cuba warns airlines that it will run out of fuel for planes within 24 hours
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Is India about to make Ozempic-like weight-loss drugs a whole lot cheaper?
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Alienated by Trump, Europeans Take Responsibility for Defense
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Spain’s Prime Minister Tries to Cover up Corruption with Censorship
the evidence shows that beneath the supposedly “noble” goal of protecting minors, there is an agenda that includes the introduction of digital identities, biometric control for all, and prior censorship accompanied by state surveillance.
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Somalia welcomes its first bowling alley
The Feynuus Bowling Center opened last year and draws many locals and Somalis returning from the diaspora, who bring investment and business ideas after years of sending billions of dollars in remittances from abroad. On a recent evening, young Somalis gathered in groups, laughing and filming each other on their phones while music played. Many from the diaspora are visiting Mogadishu for the first time in years, or the first time ever.
Entrepreneurs Abdinasir Dahir Diiriye and his associates are taking advantage of the city's transformation by starting large-scale projects like the first bowling club in Somalia. Located in the heart of Mogadishu, the million-dollar Feynuus Bowling Club has swiftly emerged as the city's most popular nightlife venue. After months of detailed planning, sourcing equipment from China, and transforming an abandoned garage—complete with landscaping—Feynuus Bowling Club opened in June. Despite not yet having an official launch, the venue fills up on weekends, with an opening ceremony planned soon, where a prominent public figure is expected to officiate.
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Dutch parties strike minority coalition after D66 election upset
The new coalition shuts out the far-right Freedom party (PVV), led by the anti-Islam firebrand Geert Wilders, which D66 narrowly defeated in the tight October election. Both parties won 26 seats, although seven PVV MPs have since broken away.
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After 6 decades, Steve's Music to close most locations in Ontario, Quebec
Russia Bad / Ukraine War
China
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I Test Drove a Chinese EV. Now I Don't Want to Buy American Cars Anymore
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Why China is still building coal power plants in the middle of a wind-and-solar boom.
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With Purge, Xi’s Military Control Rises—and so Do the Region’s Risks.
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China critic Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in jail after landmark Hong Kong trial.
Health / Medicine
Environment / Climate / Green Propaganda
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Sensing methane emissions from African livestock by drone, tower, and satellite
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From Fishing Nets to Furniture: Turning Ocean Plastic into Usable Products
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Half of CO2 emissions come from just 32 fossil fuel firms, study shows
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Americans want heat pumps – but high electricity prices may get in the way
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Danish Red Street Lighting Solves a Problem Every City Has
Specifically, the red street lighting is a balancing act. While the red light still lights the way for cyclists and pedestrians, there is minimized disturbance to wildlife, especially nearby roosting and foraging bats.
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Economic growth is still heating the planet. Is there any way out?
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Global warming is speeding breakdown of major greenhouse gas, research shows
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'Homes may have to be abandoned': climate crisis has shaped Britain's flood risk
