7th July 2026
Read it.
British policing has reached new depths of absurdity and authoritarianism. Officers are inventing pre-crimes, harassing citizens for lawful filming or standing in public, and deploying to pubs to warn people off tweeting about councillors.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
States across the country saw steep drops in the number of people covered by the Affordable Care Act over the past year, with Ohio and Oklahoma each losing nearly one-third of enrollees, according to new federal data that provides the first complete 50-state breakdown of sharp enrollment declines following the January expiration of enhanced subsidies.
The data, posted in late June by the Trump administration and first reported on by The Associated Press, reveals how changes in each state’s insured population led to around 2.6 million fewer Americans having Obamacare plans in February compared with the same time last year.
It captures not only how many people signed up for or were automatically reenrolled in plans in 2026, but how many paid their first monthly premiums to keep coverage, according to Cynthia Cox, a vice president and director of the ACA program at the healthcare research nonprofit KFF, who reviewed the dataset. She said it accounts for people who were retroactively removed from coverage after a nonpayment grace period ended
People are realizing what a shitty program Obamacare was, and is, without the back-door-socialism of whacking great Federal subsidies.
Posted in Your tax dollars at work - and play. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
A new Federal Reserve working paper adds hard data to a dire economic realities that tens of millions of hardworking Americans already face: being priced out of homeownership or trapped paying ungodly high rents.
For years, the housing affordability crisis was blamed almost entirely on low interest rates, pandemic-era demand, institutional buyers, and a shortage of new construction. However, one major point was largely and conveniently ignored by mainstream media: the Biden-Harris regime’s open border policies, which facilitated a massive illegal alien invasion.
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
Democrats are at a crossroads as Democratic Socialists of America candidates win primaries, even unseating incumbents. Particularly vexed are well-off Democrat politicians as the DSA engages in its war against the wealthy.
Two prime examples: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and California Rep. Ro Khanna. Pritzker is a billionaire in a party that demonizes wealth. Khanna, who is also very wealthy, has been the face of going after the rich.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
A senior adviser in the far-left French party La France Insoumise (LFI) has spoken bluntly about the party’s desire to create a “New France,” a society reflecting the country’s demographic and cultural realities—a vision that the French right has described as a push for population replacement.
Imane El Hamzaoui, a senior national coordinator within LFI who oversees the party’s anti-racism campaign and youth mobilisation, delivered the speech to party members on Sunday, July 5th as part of a presentation on the concept of a “New France.”
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
As more and more Muslims enter a country, they will more and more act as if it were a Muslim country.
You can imagine the reaction from the Usual Suspects if a Christian bus driver stopped to pray the Angelus.
Posted in Living with Islam: The world's most intolerant—and intolerable—religion | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
The American mainstream media have long been obsessed with the topic of homosexuality. They can’t stop writing about it, celebrating it, flaunting it, obsessing over it, and disapproving of any disapproval of it.
Except for the American conservative media. With them it’s a different cultural topic: air conditioning. They can’t stop writing about it, flaunting it, celebrating it, obsessing over it, and disapproving of any disapproval of it.
But what we don’t yet have is an Air Conditioning Pride month where we parade our air conditioners through the streets, put out posters to show our loyalty, put on Air Conditioning Pride sporting events, and bathe the exterior of the White House in streams of air conditioned air. But I expect that will come, too.
Posted in Is this a great country, or what? | No Comments »
7th July 2026
The Antiplanner.
As of June 23, 2026, Brightline trains had killed 214 people, an average of one every 13 days since the passenger trains began operating in 2017. Make that 215, as Brightline killed a pedestrian on July 2.
In August 2022, Brightline announced that it had received a $25 million federal grant to fence its lines and make them safer. The state of Florida also contributed $10 million and Brightline itself agreed to match that, providing a total of $45 million for safety.
Now, nearly four years later, Brightline says it is still “in the midst” of installing those safety measures. There is no explanation for why this is taking so long or why it is spending money on some measures, including “No Trespassing” signs and suicide prevention signs, that seem unlikely to do much.
Posted in Your tax dollars at work - and play. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
One of California’s wealthiest and safest cities descended into chaos over the Independence Day weekend after a social media-fueled “teen takeover” led to more than 400 arrests, an officer being struck by a mortar firework, and the looting of a grocery store.
According to Newport Beach city officials, thousands of unruly juveniles and young adults gathered near the Newport Pier on July 4. As the crowd grew, fireworks were launched into the crowd and at police officers. An officer was struck by a mortar, roadways were blocked, emergency vehicles were delayed, and a nearby grocery store was looted.
When Muslims profit from welfare and other fraud, they think of it as jizya. When Ebonics loot and destroy without being prosecuted, they think of it as ‘reparations’.
Posted in Your tax dollars at work - and play. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
Although the Supreme Court ruled in favor of birthright citizenship last week, the Trump administration and Congress could still take action to reduce the effect of the policy.
Vice President JD Vance endorsed a proposal to restrict birthright citizenship in the U.S. territories, citing Roger Severino, vice president of economic and domestic policy at The Heritage Foundation. Vance asserted in a Fox News interview with Laura Ingraham that the Trump administration is reviewing ways to close the loopholes in the policy.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
There has never been any doubt in my mind that if Graham Platner starts looking like a loser, the Democrats will dump their “working class” nominee. His standing in polls has been steadily sinking – and who knows what’s going on in the internal polls, but it’s probably not good. They have until July 13th to replace him if he drops out, and if things are looking grim they’ll make sure he drops out by that time.
Now there is a new allegation about sexual assault in 2021, from a woman he used to date. In a way, I wish they’d held it back until after the 13th, but I think it came out now due to pressure from Democrats rather than Republicans. For the moment, Platner seems to be mulling it over. Maybe it’s a case of finding out what the Democrat powers-that-be will be offering him to leave the race.
I’m betting not. Democrats have taken the mask almost completely off in recent years, and no longer depend on the Clever Plastic Disguise much any more.
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
The town of Woodbridge, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, D.C., was recently home to a public roadside march of Islamic supporters who chanted sayings in a foreign language, beat their chests, and flew flags written in Arabic.
The scene was captured in a video posted on X.
Amy Mek, founder of the Rise, Align, Ignite, Reclaim Foundation, described the march on social media as an organized event from the Mohammadia Center of Virginia, a group that describes itself as “a cornerstone for the Shia Muslim community in the Washington metropolitan area.”
The Mohammadia Center of Virginia did not respond to the Daily Signal’s request for comment.
Posted in Living with Islam: The world's most intolerant—and intolerable—religion | 1 Comment »
7th July 2026
The New Neo.
I’ve written many many posts on this topic over the years. I don’t know when the first one was published, but it was probably at least as far back as Obama’s campaign in 2008 (see this, for example). But right now it seems especially appropriate.
By 2018 and 2019 – the years AOC first became prominent – I was writing about the topic more often, and especially noting how popular socialism had become among the young.
It’s no surprise that young people are comfortable with socialism—they’ve lived under it all their lives. Mom & dad control all of the household property and money and the way you get something is by wheedling. Transferring this attitude to government feels natural.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
Early in my career, I managed money for a federal judge. She couldn’t hold a single stock. No individual securities, no sector bets, no company-specific exposure of any kind. Any ruling touching a publicly traded company had to be beyond reproach. The appearance of a conflict was enough. She accepted that as a condition of public service.
Members of Congress don’t.
They write laws governing entire industries, receive classified briefings about policy decisions before they’re public, and sit on committees with direct oversight authority over the sectors they’re trading. Most of them keep trading. This is a structural feature of an ethics framework designed by the people it was supposed to constrain.
You will no doubt have noticed, as I have, the campaign in the Narrative Media pointing out that Donald Trump has (clutch pearls) made money while in the White House—but nobody is looking into how Bernie and Fauxcohontas became millionaires.
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
These early tests of quantitative hypotheses illustrate both the risks and merits of observational evidence. To be sure, as Arbuthnot showed, it’s easy enough to find that the data proves something you wanted to be true all along. Yet it is remarkable that both Arbuthnot and Laplace could obtain local records and start doing science right from their desks. In doing so, both correctly documented important phenomena without the need to invest much labor or capital to get the data.
The efficiency, simplicity, and beauty of this method of gaining knowledge has been underappreciated, especially in medicine and public health. Although it is considered ideal to obtain data in the form of a randomized control trial for an intervention like a drug, that form of data collection is not always possible in either field. Granted, the Paris versus London hypothesis Laplace was testing is relatively simple, but his sample size was over 1.93 million, more than the vast majority of interventional trials in the history of medicine. It is a rare randomized trial (studying a particular intervention with a sufficiently large and well-distributed sample population) that can detect an 0.3% difference in a binary random variable — but Laplace could, more than 200 years ago.
The advantages of the RCT have cemented it as the gold standard for interventional trials in medicine, and it remains what many laypeople think of as the one true way to do science. Yet once we understand where these advantages come from, how they interact with the economics of collecting samples, and the merits of the alternative, observational evidence emerges as the winner more often than one might think.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
The author discusses these objects in terms of erosion control but most of my crowd think of their presence of beaches as being tank traps and impediments to landing craft.
Posted in Dystopia Watch | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
If, of course, that’s what you want to do.
I have now sequenced my own genome 5 times with an Oxford Nanopore Technologies MinION. This means collecting them from a swab, prepping them for sequencing, running them through a sequencer, then doing analysis over them.
Cheek cells are easily accessible and replenish pretty quickly. They are not used for cancer diagnosis, inflammation, or what genes are being activated in other parts of the body (like if you have hives on your chest and want to test what genes are being expressed in the cells that are inflamed), since you would want to collect the cells having problems and compare them against other normal versions of those cells.
To sequence the cells, I bought lab materials and consumables to sequence my own genome at home. It took me about two months to get everything together to do a full end to end high quality run. Likewise, the costs are still out of reach for the average person but they are decreasing (exponentially!) and we will eventually have affordable technology, like a cell phone or AI, telling us about our DNA + RNA expression real-time.
Not quite as fun as building a mainframe, but still…
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
Read it.
The most important economic question of the next decade is how AI will affect jobs. Everyone wants to write that paper. Until now, no one has had the right dataset, so existing research has relied on a combination of guesses, surveys, AI exposure scores, and self-interested punditry. In fact, a recent paper from Stanford said the ideal dataset would use “business spend data” and cited Ramp data specifically.
Today, we published our first working paper: A New Look at AI’s Impact on Jobs. It uses firm-level spend data from Ramp joined with workforce data collected by Revelio Labs. In a sample covering more than 21,000 U.S. firms, we find that companies that invest heavily in AI grow headcount 10% over the two years following adoption. Entry-level headcount grows 12%.
Read the full paper and explore the data from Ramp Economics Lab here. The rest of this letter will outline our key findings, plans for future research, and some of my thoughts on what that means for our economy.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
The Telegraph (UK).
The woman suspected of trying to blow up a Ukrainian tycoon in Monaco has been found shot dead near Kyiv.
Anastasiia Berezovska, 39, was named as the prime suspect in the attack on Vadym Iermolaiev, a Ukrainian property magnate, at the end of last month.
After an international manhunt, her body was found at around overnight near the Ukrainian capital, according to a report by Ukrainska Pravda, citing law enforcement sources.
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
7th July 2026
The Telegraph (UK).
At least five county cricket clubs are in danger of having their funding cut because their boards are not diverse enough.
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) threatened to withhold critical funding from first-class domestic cricket clubs that have not appointed an ethnically diverse director and achieved 40 per cent female representation on their boards.
The affirmative action has been described as an overreach on behalf of the national governing body, which critics say has become too powerful.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
7th July 2026
The Telegraph (UK).
Labour is considering emergency legislation to deport a Pakistan-born ringleader of a Rochdale grooming gang.
Alex Norris, the Home Office minister, said “all options are on the table” when asked in the Commons whether the Government could fast-track legislation to pave the way for the removal of Shabir Ahmed.
Ahmed, 73, was released from prison last week after serving 14 years of a 22-year sentence for 30 child rape offences. He cannot be returned to Pakistan despite being stripped of his UK citizenship.
Why is this guy still alive?
Posted in Living with Islam: The world's most intolerant—and intolerable—religion | No Comments »
6th July 2026
Not the Bee.
No joke, this is real California news. Governor Gavin Newsom’s administration has officially transferred 136 acres of beloved Mendocino County beachfront — including the scenic Blues Beach and its dramatic bluffs — to three Indigenous tribes.
The lucky recipients? A nonprofit called Kai Poma, representing the Sherwood Valley Band of Pomo Indians, Round Valley Indian Tribes, and Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians.
Yes, it’s another nonprofit!
Nothing to see here, folks!
I hope they build a casinol
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
6th July 2026
Not the Bee.
We honor him for voluntarily subtracting himself from the gene pool.
They couldn’t bring the body down because transporting human remains down the most dangerous mountain in the world is a pretty easy way to risk killing yourself.
Toss him over the nearest cliff. Gravity will do the rest. (Ask me a hard one.)
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
6th July 2026
Not the Bee.
Import a bunch of third-world military-age male migrants, they said.
It’ll be fine, they said.
Posted in Dystopia Watch | No Comments »
6th July 2026
Task & Purpose.
Two members of the Tennessee National Guard shot and killed an armed man early Sunday in Memphis, law enforcement said. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said today that Memphis police and National Guard soldiers who are in the city as part of a federal task force responded to reports of gunfire just before 4 a.m.
Memphis police officers were chasing a man armed with a hand gun. Tennessee National Guard soldiers joined the chase for the armed man, identified as 20-year-old Tyrin Johnson.
“For reasons under investigation, the situation escalated, resulting in two National Guard soldiers firing upon Johnson, striking and killing him,” the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said in its statement.
Hmmm. “Tyrin Johnson” Let’s just take a guess about his ‘ethnicity’, shall we?
Imagine how low the crime rates would be if young black males were prohibited from possessing firearms.
Posted in Whose turn is it to be the victim? | No Comments »
6th July 2026
“Real life is not a Sherlock Holmes story, and not everything is a clue.”
— Tim Dedopoulos and David Knowles Field Guide to Secret Symbols
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Read it.
The Trump administration is dismantling more than three dozen federal firearms regulations, ending a zero-tolerance policy against wayward gun dealers, easing scrutiny of stabilizing braces, and clearing a path for some Americans with a history of mental illness to buy firearms, part of what officials call the broadest rewrite of Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives rules in the agency’s history.
The rollback, executed under President Donald Trump’s Executive Order 14206 on Second Amendment rights, was formally launched April 29, when acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and newly confirmed ATF Director Robert Cekada unveiled 34 notices of final and proposed rulemaking.
Officials called it the most comprehensive regulatory reform package in ATF history. Cekada was confirmed by the Senate hours earlier and signed off on the changes within an hour of taking office.
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Read it.
California’s richest residents are opening their checkbooks to kill a wealth tax before voters can weigh in, with Google co-founder Sergey Brin alone pouring $82 million into the opposition and a small circle of tech billionaires driving the total anti-tax haul past $118 million ahead of the Nov. 3 ballot.
The measure, a one-time tax of up to 5% on the net worth of California residents worth more than $1 billion, became eligible for the November ballot on June 17 after Secretary of State Shirley Weber announced its signature count had cleared the state’s random-sample threshold.
A last-minute offer from sponsor SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West to drop the initiative in exchange for a legislative 2% version was rejected by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, and negotiations collapsed before the June 25 withdrawal deadline.
Under the initiative, 90% of revenue would flow to Medi-Cal and other healthcare programs, with 10% split between food assistance and public education. The tax would apply to anyone who was a California resident as of Jan. 1.
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
5th July 2026
The Foundry.
continue to work. Some families in low-income neighborhoods turn to Head Start, a program whose very name suggests children should expect to finish their time at one of these centers better prepared for school. But today, after more than 60 years and over $240 billion in spending, the program has fallen well short of that goal.
A new Heritage Foundation report reveals a harsh reality: Head Start centers are overregulated, unsafe, expensive, and fail to deliver lasting results for children.
Head Start sits under a thick, strict set of rules. A recent analysis compared federal Head Start rules with state childcare rules. It found that nearly all Head Start settings are stricter than state settings.
Moreover, the program is also burdened with bureaucratic red tape that does nothing to help children and families. The second Trump administration is trying to help. In May 2026, the Department of Health and Human Services released a notice of proposed rulemaking to scrap burdensome wage and benefit rules from the Biden administration.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Read it.
Imagine if your jacket could talk back to Big Brother. The German startup Urban Privacy isn’t selling invisibility cloaks; they are selling digital disobedience. By weaponizing fashion, they are turning scarves, jackets, and phone cases into sophisticated tools designed to confuse AI surveillance and reclaim public anonymity in an increasingly data-hungry world.

Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Read it.
Political orientation has been shown to correlate with fertility, raising the possibility that demographic processes contribute to long-term ideological change. Using data from the US General Social Survey, we analyze completed fertility across 17 birth cohorts (1898–1982) to examine how political orientation has contributed to fertility decline in the United States and whether emerging selective forces can be detected. Earlier cohorts show little difference in fertility by political orientation. From the 1943–1947 birth cohort onward, however, a pronounced divergence emerges: individuals with right-wing political orientations maintain fertility at or above replacement level, whereas fertility among left-wing individuals declines sharply to well below replacement. Applying Lande–Arnold selection gradient analyses, we find increasing directional selection that may favor right-wing political orientation over time, while education shows consistent negative associations with fertility and religiosity positive but weaker effects. Separate analysis of Black and White Americans reveals, however, that the increasingly stronger association between political orientation and fertility in more recent cohorts holds only true for whites but not for blacks. Nonetheless, these findings suggest that recent fertility decline in the United States is driven disproportionately by left-leaning individuals and point to contemporary demographic processes that may gradually shift the ideological composition of populations.
Evolution acts to weed stupidity out of the gene pool. It’s slow, but it’s sure.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Read it.
Solar railways could soon become commonplace in Europe, following a successful trial in Switzerland.
Europe’s infrastructure is embracing the renewables boom, with one company determined to transform the continent’s railway lines into mini solar farms.
Last year, Swiss start-up Sun-Ways unveiled the world’s first-ever solar railway after rolling out 100 metres of photovoltaic (PV) panels in between active tracks in Buttes, a village in the Val-de-Travers district.
Originally planned as just a three-year trial, the railway was fitted with 48 specially-designed solar panels with a combined power of 18 kWp.
However, the positive results yielded just one year into the trial mean the installation of a permanent system along the railroad track is now likely, Euronews Earth has been told.
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
5th July 2026
The Economist.
ot much remains today of the walls, ramparts and moats that once surrounded Benin City in southern Nigeria. Yet for centuries these giant earthworks—second in length only to China’s Great Wall among man-made structures—bespoke a mighty civilisation whose authority extended across much of west Africa. By the standards of pre-colonial Africa, the Benin state was exceptionally strong: erecting the wall in a single dry season might have required mobilising as many as 5,000 men, each working ten hours a day. But as the empire withered and eventually succumbed to British invaders in the late 19th century, most of the earthworks vanished. So did those of many other fortified towns across west Africa.
Now they are returning. Since the mid-2010s, as jihadist insurgencies have spread across northern Nigeria and the Sahel, defensive earthworks have risen up around towns and cities. Many are so extensive they are clearly visible in satellite images. According to new research by Olivier Walther and Steven Radil, geographers at the University of Florida, all urban centres in north-east Nigeria with populations of more than 10,000 are now secured by trenches. Most big towns there and in the Lake Chad basin are surrounded by sand berms up to three metres high.
Imagine how peaceful the world would be if the Religion of Peace didn’t exist.
Posted in Living with Islam: The world's most intolerant—and intolerable—religion | No Comments »
5th July 2026
Not the Bee.
The World Cup is a terrific opportunity for the country to come together and put aside politics and squabbles to cheer on our home country.
Unless you’re a Democratic Socialist, that is.
While we were all cheering on the USA, the Attorney General of Arizona wanted to make sure that everyone knew she was cheering not for America, but for Mexico.
Posted in Democrats: Party of Plundering and Blundering | No Comments »
5th July 2026

Wealth doesn’t migrate for no reason. Think about what rich people know that you don’t.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
5th July 2026

Said no Democrat ever.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
4th July 2026
Read it.
The unconscious brain appears to be far more capable than scientists once believed. Researchers found that patients under general anesthesia could still process language at a sophisticated level, distinguishing nouns, verbs, and adjectives while listening to stories. Even more remarkably, neural activity showed signs of predicting upcoming words before they were heard. The results challenge traditional ideas about consciousness and hint at new possibilities for brain-computer interfaces.
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
4th July 2026
Read it.
A protein called “Mitch” may hold the key to a new generation of obesity treatments. Researchers found that disabling it in human cells boosts fat burning, increases energy use, and makes it harder for new fat cells to develop. The findings help explain why mice lacking Mitch were leaner, more athletic, and resistant to obesity.
Posted in News You Can Use. | No Comments »
4th July 2026
New York Post.
Hollywood just lost another star.
Dennis Quaid is making his Los Angeles exit official, putting his Brentwood Hills home up for sale for $5.2 million, taking a loss on it after slamming the area for going “downhill.”
Quaid is selling his five-bed, six-bath abode, which stretches more than 4,000 square feet, as celebrities flee California due to a variety of reasons ranging from poor wildfire management to liberal policies.
His home’s listing describes it as a “pristine, completely remodeled, two-story warm Contemporary done with great taste and quality at the end of a quiet, flat cul-de-sac street in a desirable Brentwood Hills location.”
Posted in Dystopia Watch | No Comments »
4th July 2026
Read it.
If academia was a game, I’ve won it. Tenure, an endowed research chair, awards, leadership positions, an international journal I helped to found and now serve as the Editor-in-Chief, students I have supervised to their own successes, a good h-index, all the classic marks of success. This isn’t meant as bragging but rather to point out that while I’ve won this game, the game no longer makes sense.
Academia, as most of us have practiced it, runs on maximalism. The most grants, the most papers, the most students, the most awards, the most news coverage. While we are doing much better these days in highlighting impact and contributions, the underlying engine is still volume, and the volume has always been produced by independent human writing (applications, submissions, letters of support, reports, Conversation articles, press releases, etc., etc.). The problem is that AI makes volume essentially infinite (until the world burns up, but that’s a parallel discussion).
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
3rd July 2026
Read it.
Thank you, Donald Trump.
The Navy beat its recruiting goal for new sailors this year, signing up 45,000 new recruits. The service announced the milestone on Thursday. It’s the highest number of people signing up for the Navy in roughly two decades.
“Today’s Navy is stronger because tens of thousands of Americans chose to answer the call to serve,” Rear Adm. Jim Waters, the head of Navy Recruiting Command, said. “Reaching this milestone is not simply about achieving a recruiting objective – it’s about delivering the talented Sailors our Fleet needs to maintain readiness in an increasingly complex security environment.”
The early success marks the second year in a row of the service bringing in far more recruits than its goal. In 2024, the Navy only barely hit its recruiting quota, but in 2025 it brought in 44,096 new sailors, nearly 9% about that year’s aim. That was after the Navy also hit its goal early, signing up 40,600 by June.
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3rd July 2026
Read it.
Then Pickett stood in front of his division and gave the final word: “Charge the enemy and remember old Virginia!” His voice was clear and strong as he spoke the order: “Forward! Guide center! March!” . . .
“I don’t want to make this charge,” Longstreet declared emphatically. “I don’t believe it can succeed. I would stop Pickett now, but that General Lee has ordered it and expects it.”
Longstreet persistently showed himself to be the best general that the Confederacy had.
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3rd July 2026
Read it.
There was never much doubt that the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. Barbara would be issued at the very end of the Court’s term, or that Chief Justice Roberts would save the opinion-writing duties for himself. Nor was there much serious doubt that the Court would reject President Trump’s Executive Order seeking to redefine birthright citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment. What was not expected, however, was that the Court would issue a short-yet-sweeping constitutional opinion that only captured five votes. The Court largely neglected the statutory arguments against the Trump EO, and four justices spurned the conventional academic account of birthright citizenship. In the end, an opinion meant to settle the debate over birthright citizenship may have instead kindled a new one.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
3rd July 2026
Watch it.
A serve goes awry and accidentally strikes a “ball girl” (whatever that is) and the player runs over to her and slides the last twenty feen face down in apology, gets up and bows to her repeatedly (which she returns).
Whatt would happen if an American athlete—football, basketball, baseball, whatever—were in that same situation. I think that “Get out the way, bitch!” would be the best she could hope for.
Posted in Think about it. | No Comments »
3rd July 2026
Read it.
One way our nation’s most “prestigious” newspapers show they’re Democratic Party propaganda sheets is when their fashion critics apply all of their tawdry partisan biases to their evaluations of the clothes of politicians (or their spouses).
Robin Givhan of The Washington Post was a transparent Democrat, and so is Vanessa Friedman of The New York Times. A white pantsuit worn by Hillary Clinton, as well as the feminist Democrats at the State of the Union, was very chic. But when Tulsi Gabbard wore one while she criticized Hillary at a Democrat debate in 2019, it suddenly carried “connotations of the fringe” and displayed “somewhat combative righteousness (also cult leaders).”
When Kamala Harris lost in 2024, Friedman invested great meaning in the cravat she wore to her concession speech, that it represented “the idea that some fights were long. That this one had been going on for decades (even centuries) and would continue afterward. It was, in that way, a symbol of both a promise and a lament.” Feminism lost. Women were shortchanged again.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »
3rd July 2026
Not the Bee.

I thank God that I don’t live in Britain.
Posted in Proglodyte Dreams (and Normie Nightmares) | No Comments »