05 May 2026
Who Is Now Wearing the Crown Jewels Stolen from the Louvre?
Bedlam in Southern California
Today is both Cinco de Mayo and Taco Tuesday.
Madness in Southern California.
Venture Capital or Startup Funding This Century
Global Startup Funding continues to be a huge force for creating new jobs, technology, markets, businesses and wealth.
(ZIRP refers to zero interest rate policy, a time when money was so cheap that investments became even more alluring.)If You Think Trump is Too Old Today - Just Wait Until Tomorrow!
In 2024, Trump supporters incessantly claimed that Joe Biden was too old.
So they then elected a guy who broke Biden's record as oldest president on inauguration day.
Now most Americans believe that Trump is too old.
Maybe, before we get into policy discussions, we could simply walk people through addition.
Biden on inauguration day: 78 years, 2 months.
Trump on inauguration day: 78 years, 7 months.
Given it is a four year term and how math and calendars work, a man who breaks the record for oldest president on inauguration day will break the record for oldest president on every following day of his presidency. (Oldest president on day 100! Oldest president after one year in office! Oldest ....)
We are about 15 months into Trump's 48 month term. If you think that he's not mentally sharp now .... give him another 32 months.
The following poll numbers shared by Heather Cox Richardson
04 May 2026
Subcontracting Texting to an Unemployed Fortune Cookie Author
Reality as a Stage Set
As a child, J. G. Ballard lived in affluence in an enclave of ex-pats in Shanghai, a world of large villas, tennis courts and country clubs. When the Japanese invaded, all of that was disrupted and he eventually found himself in an interment camp, his life suddenly impoverished and his safety uncertain. (Among other traumas, he witnessed bored Japanese soldiers cruelly beat a Chinese rickshaw driver to death.)
J. G. Ballard said that one of the things that the end of his childhood taught him is that reality is a stage set that can be dismantled at any moment.
Technology and Problems
Kentucky Derby - Stretching the Limit of Attention Spans
He was a busy man, and he admired athletes who didn't drag out their performance.
03 May 2026
The Soviet Union on the Eve of the Nazi Invasion
"The Red Army in 1941 was the largest in the world. In tanks it outnumbered and in planes it equaled the the rest of the world's armies put together."
"For every 100 Russian prisoners, only 3 were to remain alive."
"In just the first 3 months of war with Germany, the Russians lost more than 3 million men."
The World at War Documentary (1973)
01 May 2026
The Moon Even Makes The Rocks Beneath Your Feet Rise and Fall
Happy Labor Day!
The typical workweek then was 60 to 84 hours. (Where did they find the time to strike, right?)
How much longer did it take to get to a 40-hour workweek? About half a century. The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 initially capped the workweek at 44 hours; an amendment two years later brought it down to 40.
So, be patient. Keep pushing for change. Your grandchildren will thank you. Or would, if they did not assume that what they experience as normal had always been the case.
30 April 2026
Would Your Grandma Call This Progress?
On the way out — it was another balmy day — we passed two men in their sixties walking in t-shirts and shorts, as if they had just come from the gym.
I love how much progress we have made over the generations. But I could easily imagine our grandmothers exclaiming over the prices, the music, and grown men dressed in public as if they were schoolboys.
"These prices are outrageous! This music is obnoxious! The way people dress! You poor things, you live in a hellscape."
It would be hard to convince them that this was progress. I am not sure I would even try.
Demis Hassabis on How Far Ahead You Want to Be
- Demis Hassabis,
winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on AlphaFold to predict protein structures and Co-Founder and CEO of Google DeepMind
29 April 2026
Fed Chair Powell's legacy may be calmly navigating crazy times
Today was Jerome Powell's last press conference as Fed Chair. He has a few more weeks to serve as chair, after which he'll step down to a place on the Fed committee. No previous Fed Chair has stayed on the committee but Powell feels that until the Trump administration's legal charges against him are completely removed, he is safer on the Federal Reserve Board. Powell - and every reasonable economist - is still arguing for Fed Independence, something Trump is eager to compromise for the sake of short-term economic stimulus (the cost of which would be long-term inflation).
Powell had some weird events to navigate. The most obvious being COVID and then Trump and his tariffs and then of course Trump's attacks on Powell in the form of criminal charges against Powell - another first for any president by Trump and his boys.
Powell's term coincided with the most tumultuous economy in modern times, largely thanks to COVID. The jump in unemployment from 3.5% in February 2020 to 14.7% in April 2020 was a 10.3 percentage point increase in two months, which has no precedent in the seventy-plus years of modern data collection. (The number of the unemployed surged to 23.1 million, a jump of 15.9 million in a month.)
Inflation, too, was wildly volatile - going from roughly 2% to nearly 0% before spiking to 9% during the peak of the COVID stimulus and supply chain shocks. It is still more than 3%. (Had Trump not imposed tariffs and then invaded Iran, inflation would have likely hit 2% or lower by now.)
Finally, here are two tables. One shows numbers at the start and end of his time as Fed Chair. The other shows the dramatic extremes during his time as Fed Chair. It was a crazy time for the economy and Powell likely navigated this as calmly as anyone might have. And that calming influence during serious stress tests might be his most important legacy.
28 April 2026
The World Belongs to Optimists
- The Economist, capturing the philosophy of recently deceased emerging markets investor Mark Mobius
We Stand United King Charles Claims
Commentary: To be fair, both countries do have the word in their names.
Roger Bacon and the Worst Kind of Ignorance
That is, men ignorant of how ignorant they are fight to protect that ignorance from any perceived attack or real change.
27 April 2026
From Impersonal Bureaucracy to the Politics of Theater
GoFundMe operates on a different theory of justice. You receive help if you can make the proper appeal, hold attention, move strangers. If you cannot perform — or will not — you do not get help. The illness is the same. The capacity to win an audience is what changes the outcome.
The Information Economy requires us to perform. To get attention. To provoke emotions. To compete on the stage of politics as theater.
FDR and LBJ's bureaucracies were impersonal but reliable. Those generations did not have to perform. They were citizens, and citizenship was enough. Now you have to be more than a citizen. You have to be a story worth telling.