DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

Archive for December, 2025

Humans May Be Able to Grow New Teeth Within Just 4 Years

31st December 2025

Popular Mechanics.

The average adult human body contains 206 bones—the hardened mixtures of calcium, minerals, and collagen that provide the biological scaffolding that walks us through our day. While we may not think of them much, bones are incredibly resilient. But if they do break, they have this nifty trick of regrowing themselves.

Teeth, however, are not bones. Although they’re made of some of the same stuff and are the hardest material in the human body (thanks to its protective layer of enamel), they lack the crucial ability to heal and regrow themselves. But that may not always be the case. Japanese researchers are moving forward with an experimental drug that promises to regrow human teeth. Human trials began in September 2024.

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Meet the Sword-Wielding Man Hired to Kick Squatters Out of Empty Oakland Homes

31st December 2025

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Say a homeowner or bank or landlord discovers somebody occupying their property without authorization. They could call the police, though officers might not come. Police tend to shy away from tenancy disputes, leaving them to the civil courts. The property owner could go ahead and file an eviction lawsuit, but that can drag on for months.

Or they can call Jacobs.

For a fee, Jacobs will surveil the place and force out the people inside of it using a complex concoction of homespun arms and militarized tactics.

Jacobs’ team will often complete a job in a matter of days by boarding up the joint and moving in temporarily themselves, to make sure the squatters don’t return. But if they do, Jacobs is prepared for battle.

ASAP Squatter Removal is not alone. There’s a cottage industry in California that helps property owners force out squatters. There’s Squatter Squad, based in Southern California, and a handful of other companies, most established over the past couple of years.

In a properly-ordered society, the police would be doing this job. But—hey!—it’s California, so….

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Now That He Has No Power, Mitt Romney Says “Tax the Rich”

31st December 2025

Jacobin, a Voice of the Looney Left.

Mitt Romney recently published a New York Times op-ed arguing for higher taxes on the rich. When he was in a position to actually sculpt the GOP platform and the tax policy of the US, Romney was an ardent supporter of cutting taxes for the wealthy.

My, what a surprise. Why doesn’t he just write the government a check? Takes about two minutes.

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The Legacy of Undersea Cables

31st December 2025

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Wireless technology and data being stored in “The Cloud” may lead you to think information is pinged around the globe via satellites. Only a very small portion is. Instant communication, like texts, phone calls and websites, is made possible by copper and fibre-optic undersea cables which carry data between countries.

97% of the internet travels through these cables. All the undersea fibre-optic cables across the world span approximately 1.2 million km (750,000 miles): combined they could wrap around Earth 30 times!

Subsea fibre-optic cables are critical infrastructures that support our global networks. They are essential for our communication, commerce, government and military functions because they securely transport messages and information. The importance of undersea cables means control or disruption of them can have political and economic implications.

In peace, they are a prime target for espionage.

In war, they are a prime target for destruction.

Take whatever action you deem appropriate.

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Librarians Are Tired of Being Accused of Hiding Secret Books That Were Made Up by AI

31st December 2025

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Everyone knows that AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Grok, and Gemini can often hallucinate sources. But for the folks tasked with helping the public find books and journal articles, the fake AI bullshit is really taking its toll. Librarians sound absolutely exhausted by the requests for titles that don’t exist, according to a new post from Scientific American.

The magazine spoke with Sarah Falls, the chief of researcher engagement at the Library of Virginia, who estimates that about 15% of all emailed reference questions that they receive are generated by AI chatbots like ChatGPT. And the requests often include questions about fake citations.

What’s more, Falls suggests that people don’t seem to believe librarians when they explain that a given record doesn’t exist, a trend that’s been reported elsewhere like 404 Media. Many people really believe their stupid chatbot over a human who specializes in finding reliable information day in and day out.

Of course, they would say that….

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AI Employees Don’t Pay Taxes

31st December 2025

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I recently overheard a conversation in a River Falls, Wisconsin, coffee shop that has stayed with me.

A person was venting to a friend about being forced to use AI—likely Microsoft Copilot—within a work spreadsheet. After several rounds of frustrating trial and error, she eventually gave up and finished the task manually. In the end, the “shortcut” had cost her more time than if she’d just done the work herself from the start.

To many, this looks like failure, but I see it as a green flag. It is a sign that the system is working exactly as it should: by keeping a human in the loop, much like a pilot in a cockpit. Being frustrated is proof, to me, they’re effectively using this amazing tool in the real world.

But if we want to phase out human-in-the-loop systems for AGI, there is one critical problem we must solve first—at least, if we care about society. Beyond the technical hurdles, the real challenge is taxes.

Governments are funded by people, not software. Our schools, roads, and healthcare systems rely on the taxation of human income. When a worker is removed from the equation, that tax base vanishes with them. At scale, the “efficiency” of AI creates a massive shortfall in public revenue. The results are predictable: crumbling infrastructure, reduced services, and an even heavier tax burden on the few workers who remain.

If you think that governments won’t figure out a way to tax them anyway, then you’re delusional.

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F-47: This Is Everything We Know

31st December 2025

Watch it.

Hint: Not much. Unfortunately, the people upon whom we are depending for information about this program are the same people who are responsible for the flying train wreck called F-35. So I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for the U.S. to actually produce a plane that will beat the Russians and Chinese.

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Why the Internet Is Bad for Democracy

31st December 2025

Communications of the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery).

Of course, the nternet makes some political activity easier and cheaper. But it does so for everyone. And if everybody speaks, who will be listened to?

And that underlines the chief problem with ‘democracy’ as a concept and especially with the way people (who ought to know better) deal with it.

The major premise of democracy is that every person’s vote is of the same value. There are various philosophical justifications for this, but the simple fact is that none of us is willing to concede that somebody else’s vote ought to be of more value than ours. The problem with that approach is that every one of us knows people whose vote, we are convinced, is in fact of less value than ours. This inherent contradiction between philosophical theory and actual reality is the root of every conflict over what ‘democracy really means’.

The cognitive dissonace between those two mental states is what causes most of the trouble in the modern world. It’s entertaining at times, but rarely useful.

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The Master Plan – Why Impulse Labs Built the Most Powerful and Precise Stove Ever Made

31st December 2025

Watch it.

An Impulse induction range runs about $7,000, and I really want one. But I can’t justify paying that much for a cooktop.

Maybe if I win the lottery….

As with most tech innovations, the market will initially be upper-income early adopters, but I’m hoping that it will eventually use economies of scale to reduce the price over time.

(CCOS: I was much saddened by the amount of vocal fry used by the people talking in the video. *sigh* California….)

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Congress Redrew Military, VA Benefits in 2025. The Changes Are Massive.

31st December 2025

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U.S. Congress quietly rewrote the rules for military service, veterans’ benefits and troop transitions in 2025, forcing legislative changes on everything from tuition bills, foreclosure protections and toxic exposure records.

Between January and late December, Congress passed 14 laws reshaping military and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) benefits in accordance to rising costs, ongoing deployments, and pressure from veterans’ groups. The laws take effect on staggered timelines into the new years, occurring with less fanfare and without the political theater that derailed previous bigger congressional battles over issues like immigration.

The lawful measures range from automatic increases for disability and survivor benefits; in-state tuition for Selected Reserve students to new foreclosure protections; repayment guarantees for stolen benefits; and required separation counseling for troops leaving the force. Several also fold in wildfire aircraft transfers, clinic construction, and major changes to tax and border spending.

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How Hungry Fat Cells Could Someday Starve Cancer to Death

31st December 2025

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Researchers at UC San Francisco used the gene editing technology CRISPR to turn ordinary white fat cells into “beige” fat cells, which voraciously consume calories to make heat. The work is funded by the National Institute of Health (NIH).

Then, they implanted them near tumors the way plastic surgeons inject fat from one part of the body to plump up another. The fat cells scarfed up all the nutrients, starving most of the tumor cells to death. The approach even worked when the fat cells were implanted in mice far from the sites of their tumors.

The approach’s reliance on a common procedure could speed its use as a new form of cellular therapy.

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Can You Lose Your Native Tongue?

31st December 2025

New York Times Magazine, a Voice of the Crust.

It happened the first time over dinner. I was saying something to my husband, who grew up in Paris where we live, and suddenly couldn’t get the word out. The culprit was the “r.” For the previous few months, I had been trying to perfect the French “r.” My failure to do so was the last marker of my Americanness, and I could only do it if I concentrated, moving the sound backward in my mouth and exhaling at the same time. Now I was saying something in English — “reheat” or “rehash” — and the “r” was refusing to come forward. The word felt like a piece of dough stuck in my throat.

Other changes began to push into my speech. I realized that when my husband spoke to me in English, I would answer him in French. My mother called, and I heard myself speaking with a French accent. Drafts of my articles were returned with an unusual number of comments from editors. Then I told a friend about a spill at the grocery store, which — the words “conveyor belt” vanishing midsentence — took place on a “supermarket treadmill.” Even back home in New York, I found my mouth puckered into the fish lips that allow for the particularly French sounds of “u,” rather than broadened into the long “ay” sounds that punctuate English.

My mother is American, and my father is French; they split up when I was about 3 months old. I grew up speaking one language exclusively with one half of my family in New York and the other language with the other in France. It’s a standard of academic literature on bilingual people that different languages bring out different aspects of the self. But these were not two different personalities but two separate lives. In one version, I was living with my mom on the Upper West Side and walking up Columbus Avenue to get to school. In the other, I was foraging for mushrooms in Alsatian forests or writing plays with my cousins and later three half-siblings, who at the time didn’t understand a word of English. The experience of either language was entirely distinct, as if I had been given two scripts with mirroring supportive casts. In each a parent, grandparents, aunts and uncles; in each, a language, a home, a Madeleine.

It’s astonishing how many people who write for publication these days are the children of divorce.

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Thought for the Day

31st December 2025

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Pathfinder 1: The Airship That Could Usher In a New Age

31st December 2025

BBC, a Voice of the Crust.

On 24 October 2024, a brief post was shared on the social media network LinkedIn. In it Google co-founder Sergey Brin’s airship company LTA Research finally announced Pathfinder 1’s first if brief untethered flight at Nasa’s Moffett Field in California, part of the space agency’s Ames Research Center. “This morning, Pathfinder 1 reached another milestone: untethered outdoor flight. This successful test marks another important step in our journey, and we are excited to build on this achievement through our rigorous testing program.”

Airships are hard to hide. Despite the secrecy, one YouTuber filmed it from the road and uploaded it to the video-sharing site.

“Pathfinder 1 is a pretty amazing vehicle,” says Alan Shrimpton, editor of the Airship Journal. “It is the first fully rigid airship, certainly of that size, for a very long time, and there was a great expectation that it would fly shortly after it began its outdoor testing programme.

“But Alan Weston [founder and former CEO of LTA Research] always said the biggest fault with rigid airships was that people in the past rushed their development and they were not going to make that same mistake. They were going to check it and check it again – and they did.”

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Complex Engineering of Human Cell Lines Reveals Genome’s Unexpected Resilience to Structural Changes

31st December 2025

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The most complex engineering of human cell lines ever has been achieved by scientists, revealing that our genomes are more resilient to significant structural changes than was previously thought.

Researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, Imperial College London, Harvard University in the US and their collaborators used CRISPR prime editing to create multiple versions of human genomes in cell lines, each with different structural changes. Using genome sequencing, they were able to analyze the genetic effects of these structural variations on cell survival.

The research, published in Science, shows that as long as essential genes remain intact, our genomes can tolerate significant structural changes, including large deletions of the genetic code. The work opens the door to studying and predicting the role of structural variation in disease.

 

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Texas Takes Giant Steps Toward Nuclear Energy Dominance

31st December 2025

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Texas A&M University System Chancellor John Sharp last week announced that his university has surpassed even the renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology and now has the nation’s largest nuclear engineering research department.

And just in time, because Sharp also announced that Texas A&M is offering land near its RELLIS Innovation and Technology campus, located on 2,400 acres in Bryan, Texas, to several nuclear reactor companies to build small modular reactors (SMRs).

“Plain and simple,” said Sharp, a former State Comptroller and former member of the Texas Railroad Commission, “the United States needs more power. And nowhere in the country, other than Texas, is anyone willing to step up and build the power plants we need.”

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How Postmodernism Killed Great Literature

31st December 2025

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Last week, I finished reading Ottessa Moshfegh’s bestselling 2018 novel My Year of Rest and Relaxation. While I usually do not read books from the “Millennial Sad Girl Navigates Modern Life” genre, I was compelled to see what all the fuss is about. Suffice it to say that I was not impressed. But I could not quite put my finger on the source of my disdain until, several days ago, it hit me: Moshfegh’s unnamed narrator walks away learning absolutely nothing.

The fault of this particular novel might be with Moshfegh’s nihilistic outlook on life, but the problem cuts even deeper. Today, the publishing industry as a whole turns its nose up to narratives that promote objective meaning.

There’s a lot to unpack in that claim, but it is no accident that the publishing industry shies away from books that illustrate “the good life” in the Aristotelian sense. Reared on the postmodern spirit that dominates colleges and universities, publishing professionals favor ambiguous, open-ended narratives to stories with clear redemption arcs. But, at its core, literature should not only teach us to think critically but also to live our best lives.

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Shamima Begum’s Ban From Britain Challenged by European Judges

31st December 2025

The Telegraph (UK).

Shamima Begum has had her bid to come back to Britain revived by a challenge from European judges.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has asked Britain to justify its decision to strip the 26-year-old of her citizenship in 2019 after she travelled to Syria to join Islamic State (IS).

The ECtHR intervention was hailed by Begum’s lawyers as an “unprecedented opportunity” that could pave the way for a fresh legal battle between the Strasbourg court and the Government.

The European judges have asked the Government whether it broke human rights and anti-trafficking laws by blocking her return to the UK – Begum’s key legal argument.

Begum was born and raised in Bethnal Green, east London, before travelling to Syria at the age of 15 with two other friends from school to join IS in 2015.

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Quotation of the Day

30th December 2025

Rory Sutherland: “Every politician knows what to do, they just don’t know how to be re-elected after they do it.”

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Thought for the Day

30th December 2025

I happen to love fruitcake, myself. Don’t dare eat it, of course….

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USPS Announces Changes to the Postmark Date System

30th December 2025

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The United States Postal Service (USPS) has adopted a final rule (FR Doc. 2025-20740) adding Section 608.11, “Postmarks and Postal Possession,” to the Domestic Mail Manual (DMM). The rule formally defines postmarks and identifies the types of markings that qualify as such. Its primary purpose is to improve public understanding that while a postmark confirms the USPS possessed a mail piece on the date inscribed, that date does not necessarily align with the date the USPS first accepted possession of the item. The rule clarifies that the USPS does not postmark all mail in the ordinary course of operations and that the absence of a postmark does not imply the USPS did not accept custody.

In many ways, the USPS illustrates everything deleterious about how the U.S. government currently operates. This ought to be the first thing mentioned whenever anybody wants the government to do something (as VA health care is the immediate counter-example to any government-provided health care system).

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Protests Calling for ‘Death to the Dictator’ Erupt Across Iran

30th December 2025

The Telegraph (UK).

Mass protests have erupted across Iran calling for “death to the dictator” over the regime’s economic crisis.

Tear gas was deployed to disperse protesters as shops shut across the republic, students chanted pro-women slogans in rooftops and the Iranian rial plummeted to record lows, while Iran still faces threats from Israel and the US.

On Monday, security forces fired tear gas to disperse protesters in Tehran while residents in Malard, 28 miles east of the capital, were faced with motorcycle-mounted armed security.

In several cities, people went on to their rooftops and chanted slogans against the Islamic Republic and Ali Khamenei, its supreme leader.

The protests have been cheered on by Israel, whose foreign ministry hoping for Mr Khameni’s overthrow welcomed the action with “open arms”.

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Today in Trump Derangement Syndrome

29th December 2025

Holy Hypocrisy! Orlando Sentinel Christmas Editorial Swaddles Illegals: MAGA Must Repent!

MS Now Guest Credits Trump’s Foreign Policy Approach

UGLY IN PINK: PBS Turns to Boston Globe Jerk to Accuse Trump of ‘Jim Crow’ Racism

Newsom Folds: California Ends Lawsuit Against Trump Admin Over High-Speed Rail Funding

NY Times, WashPost Alarmed Over Trump’s Christian Messages, But Were Fine With Biden’s

The most volatile group of voters is turning on Trump (Christian Paz/Vox)

What we learned about the state of the Trump coalition in conversations with 50 voters this year (Ben Kamisar/NBC News)

 

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Somali Scammers Allegedly Stole Almost as Much in Minnesota as Entire Somalia GDP

29th December 2025

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My, what a surprise.

The amount of fraudulent billing in Minnesota’s Medicaid programs could be as high as $9 billion, Assistant United States Attorney Joe Thompson said Dec. 18.

FBI Director Kash Patel announced the agency was already sending additional resources in an X post Sunday, saying the deployment occurred before a 42-minute video of independent journalist Nick Shirley visiting various day care centers went viral Friday.

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How Doctors Without Borders Became a Political Actor in Gaza

29th December 2025

Quillette

For decades, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, was regarded as one of the world’s most trusted humanitarian organisations. Its authority rested on a strict commitment to medical neutrality—the principle that humanitarian medicine must remain independent of political causes, even in war. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999, MSF became synonymous with ethical restraint and institutional credibility.

That reputation is now under serious strain.

This video examines how MSF’s response to the war in Gaza reflects a marked departure from its long-standing principles. It analyses the organisation’s adoption of activist language, including public accusations of genocide against Israel, while remaining conspicuously silent on Hamas’s documented war crimes, including the October 7 massacre and the systematic use of civilian infrastructure for military purposes.

Any group whose name incluldes “Without Borders” is implicitly gobalies (i.e. implicitly proglodyte),

“Amnesty International” suffers from the same flaw.

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NYC Slices Now Far More Expensive Than Subway Fare as ‘Pizza Principle’ Disappears

29th December 2025

Gothamist.

For decades, the subway fare and the pizza slice — two New York City commodities — cost almost exactly the same amount. But that “pizza principle” is rapidly disappearing.

As the MTA prepares to increase the transit fare to $3 on Jan. 4, pizza prices across town are substantially higher than the cost to ride the train. The typical price of a plain slice of pizza in New York City now approaches $4, according to a decadelong survey of hundreds of slice joints conducted by this reporter across the city. Pizzamakers and experts who have followed the rising prices point to the COVID-19 pandemic and rising inflation as the cause of the increasing disparity between the price of a subway ride and that of a regular slice of pizza.

When I worked in NYC in the late 70s, subway rise were 25 cents. So inflation has been 10x since that time.

Time to leave.

ATQUE: Subway surfing deaths persist despite efforts of MTA, NYPD  Think of it as evolution in action.

 

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Thought for the Day: US Winter Lows Compared to Canada’s Warmest City

29th December 2025

US Winter Lows Compared to Canada's Warmest City

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EX-MI6 Spy Sounds Alarm: Hundreds of Islamist Sleeper Agents in UK Poised for New 9/11

29th December 2025

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A chilling revelation from a former MI6 operative exposes the ticking time bomb of Islamist sleeper agents embedded across the UK, ready to unleash devastation rivaling 9/11 or 7/7—all fueled by disastrous open borders policies that prioritize radicals over citizens’ safety.

Aimen Dean, who spent eight years infiltrating Al-Qaida for MI5 and MI6, knows the enemy inside out. As a former member of the terror group himself, he formed bonds with operatives and even served as a “kind of spiritual coach” to terrorists in London, gaining insider access to their plots.

His espionage thwarted attacks like a bid to bomb the New York Subway. But Dean pulls no punches on the current danger: there are “hundreds” of sleeper agents lurking in the shadows, primed to strike.

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MS NOW on Messaging for Dems: We Hate Billionaires, Slap a Ceiling on Their Success!

29th December 2025

Newsbusters.

Saturday’s edition of The Weekend on MS NOW ran a segment that began with clips of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries repeatedly saying that the Democrats’ philosophy is “strong floor, no ceiling.”

Turns out, Jeffries had cribbed that phrase from Oliver Libby, author of a book with that title. The show had Libby on as a guest, and though he is a center-left Democrat, both hosts pushed back against Libby’s belief that there should be no ceiling on the success of Americans.

Substitute host Molly Jong-Fast began the attack, skeptically asking, “is no ceiling really appropriate; is no ceiling really the play?” She finally worked up to suggesting, “Maybe there should be a ceiling!”

 

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Blue State Blues: McDonald’s Locks Dining Room Doors in Uptown Minneapolis Amid Rising Crime

29th December 2025

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Just another “normal” day in a Democratic paradise…

A viral photo of a notice posted at a McDonald’s in Uptown Minneapolis has renewed attention on rising crime in the area, Fox News pointed out this week.

The sign reads: “Attention guests, effective Friday, December 5th, our dining room doors will be locked and attended [to] during our normal business hours of 5am-10pm to ensure a safe environment.”

It adds: “We will deny access to any individual who we consider a risk to maintaining a safe environment for our guests.”

McDonald’s confirmed the notice. Local owner Mike Darula said the restaurant has “proudly been part of the Uptown community for more than 30 years” and explained, “At our Uptown restaurant, we’ve made some updates to our security measures to help ensure a safe and welcoming environment for both our crew and customers.”

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French Police Unions Block Crackdown on Channel Crossings

29th December 2025

The Times (UK).

Sir Keir Starmer’s plans to clamp down on migrants crossing the Channel appear to have stalled because French police refuse to intercept small boats.

Police unions are blocking an agreement to stop the dinghies, arguing that officers could be prosecuted if their interventions lead to the deaths of migrants.

After months of negotiations, President Macron agreed in July to allow French police to intervene to stop boats in shallow waters.

Look for … the Union label….

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Today in Trump Derangement Syndrome

28th December 2025

Watchdog Group Says Trump Is at Risk

Watchdog group demands answers after ‘unbelievable security lapse’ by Trump’s Secret Service team (Geoff Earle/New York Post)

Donald Trump’s top 25 lies of 2025 (Daniel Dale/CNN) It would be more difficult, of course, to assemble a list of CNN’s top 25 lies; difficult to choose, that is.

New Marching Orders? Code Pink Signals “Gaza-Style” Cuba Flotilla Aimed At Trump’s Gunboat Diplomacy  Meaning one that is solely for the purpose of virtue-signaling rather than actually having any effect or—God forbid!—helping the people who serve as the excuse for the exercise.

How Trump Became the Unlikely Champion of Easing Marijuana Restrictions (Josh Dawsey/Wall Street Journal)

Netanyahu’s New Slant To Lure Trump Into War With Iran  We have been at war with Iran since they seized our embassy in Tehran in 1979. The government just refused to do anything about it.

 

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Italy Arrests Nine Over Alleged Hamas Funding Through Charities

28th December 2025

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Italian prosecutors said on Saturday they had arrested nine people on suspicion of financing Hamas terrorists through charities based in Italy, in an operation coordinated by anti-mafia and anti-terrorism units.

The suspects are accused of “belonging to and having financed” the Palestinian terrorist group, which ?the European Union designates as a terrorist organization, prosecutors in ?the northern Italian city of Genoa said in a statement.

Those arrested allegedly diverted to Hamas-linked entities around 7 million euros ($8.2 ?million) raised over the last two years for ostensibly humanitarian purposes, prosecutors said. Police seized assets worth more than 8 million euros.

 

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When Everything Is Free, Nothing Is

28th December 2025

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A tragic story came about out of Canada. A 44 year old man died after waiting more than eight hours in an emergency room with chest pain, blurry vision, and a blood pressure of 210.

This story establishes the human cost of delayed care. No one involved acted maliciously. Not the doctors. Not the nurses. Not the triage staff. They were inundated, operating exactly as the system is designed to function under extreme load. This is also unfortunately not a unique experience, as over half a million Canadians leave the ER every year without being seen.

That leads us to some uncomfortable truths.

Healthcare is a scarce resource. If an emergency physician is seeing one patient, they cannot simultaneously see another. The same constraint applies to clinic appointments, operating rooms, imaging slots, lab capacity, ICU beds, and nursing attention. Scarcity is unavoidable.

And if a resource is scarce, it must be allocated.

A minor cough and a major heart attack are competing for the same finite pool of time, staff, and space. The only real question is how that allocation occurs.

In a modern society, there are only two ways to allocate scarce resources: price signals or central planning.

Canada has government-provided health-care that is even more broken than the UK system.

ATQUE: The UK Health Care Disaster Is A Cautionary Tale For America’s Rising Class Of Armchair Socialists

 

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When Girls Rule and Boys Drool

28th December 2025

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Over the last few decades, a societal war on men has been waged. Masculinity is now toxic. Recently, young while males were locked out of much of the white-collar job market. Boys are in an educational crisis. Marriage and fatherhood are being devalued. Noticing these trends is discouraged, and opposition is disparaged.

The Relentless War on Masculinity: Does it Ever End? by David Maywald documents what is happening and why. He shows the legacy modern misandry has created, the tools fourth-wave feminism uses to maintain a gynocentric culture, the struggles men and boys face today, and what solutions exist.

Maywald opens the book by showing that in Western cultures — Anglosphere and Nordic societies especially — gynocentrism is real. He documents how courts, politics, education and job markets are stacked against men and favor women, often unfairly. He uses hard facts and statistics to buttress his arguments.

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Scientists Discover Beer Bottle at the Deepest Point of the Ocean

28th December 2025

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In 2022, Dr Dawn Wright, a professor of geography and oceanography at Oregon State University, said humans are ‘irrevocably’ changing the planet.

When it comes to exploring the deep sea, unless you suffer from thalassophobia (the fear of large bodies of water), it can be quite fascinating.

But Dr Wright’s strange discovery proved we needed to understand our planet better to preserve it.

Enviro-Nazis won’t be happy until humans become extinct.

“Sitting in sediment at the bottom of the ocean at the Earth’s deepest point: a beer bottle. It had traveled more than 6.7 miles to the darkest depths of the Pacific, label still intact,” Dr Wright explained.

“This discarded trash had managed to reach an unsullied part of our world before we actually did – a symbol of how deeply and irrevocably humans are affecting the natural world.”

Taking to X, she also reinforced her belief that we need to protect the planet better.

I swear, she must think that humans are some alien species come here just to discard sandwich wrappers or something.

For what it’s worth, it looks like a Heineken.

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Thought for the Day

28th December 2025

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No, It’s Not

28th December 2025

Naval Gazing.

This week has seen the announcement by the Trump Administration that they are going to be building “battleships”, a subject that is well within my beat, so I figured I would take the time to start by saying that these are nothing of the sort. Defining the battleship is slightly tricky, but the best version I have is that it is a large, gun-armed armored warship. This proposal is certainly large, but it doesn’t really classify as gun-armed, in that the guns are clearly secondary weapons, and there’s been no discussion of armor at all. So whatever these are, they aren’t battleships. Their closest cousin in the Soviet Kirov class, which likewise are somewhat hard to classify, but in the finest tradition of the USN, I’m going to go with “Large Missile Cruiser” for these. But the fact that they’re being called by the wrong name, while personally extremely annoying, is just the tip of the iceberg.

First, a look at the announced specs, as given above. The dimensions are somewhat large given the displacement, as they’re a pretty close match for Iowa, which is 50%+ heavier at full load, although they’re also not too far from the Alaskas, of roughly the same displacement. The length might make sense if they were going for nuclear power, because a very long hull would minimize power requirements, but it seems that it’s IEP instead. But then we get to armament, and things get weird. It starts with the new ship-launched nuclear cruise missile that Trump has been pushing since his first term. This is basically a replacement for the nuclear Tomahawk, and whatever the logic for or against such a program might be, there’s the problem that I’m pretty sure there’s no need to have this new “battleship” to use the missile. Details on the missile are very sketchy, but given that the base program is targeted at submarines, it probably can just go in the VLS with everything else. If it can’t that’s a requirements problem, and we should change those instead of spending money on this thing. I’m sure the crews will love it, too, given the need to guard the VLS all the time to avoid letting anyone know if there are actually nukes aboard.

Second, there are cells for Conventional Prompt Strike, which is the current hypersonic weapon that they’re pushing. It’s not in service yet, and I’m skeptical how much real value it will deliver. I’m also not entirely sure how many missiles will actually be aboard. Zumwalt recently got four tubes in place of her forward gun, each of which carries three missiles, and I could see either four tubes/12 missiles or 12 tubes/36 missiles, with the latter maybe making more sense given the size of the ship. The graphic provided by the Navy (below) is curiously unhelpful about this, almost like it was put together by someone who doesn’t understand any of this stuff.

Such as the people currently in charge of our naval procurement.

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Let Americans Choose Their Cars – Not the Government

28th December 2025

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This headline is delightfully ambiguous.

There’s a lot of crowing in certain quarters about the 2% decline in U.S. electric vehicle sales in 2025 compared to the year before. Francis Menton, the lawyer who writes the Manhattan Contrarian blog, for instance, claims vindication for his prediction in February 2023 that electric vehicles would not “sweep the country and become the dominant form of transportation.”

The reasoning behind his forecast: “It is always wise to bet against central planning of the economy.” In this case, central planning amounted to state CO2 emissions goals, CAFE mileage requirements and federal and state tax subsidies. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act ended the $7,500 tax credit for EV purchases, and President Trump on Dec. 3 issued an order to roll back CAFE standards “to levels at which combustion vehicles can comply.”

Like Menton, I don’t like central planning. Nor do I support mileage standards or subsidies. Americans have proven in the past that the best route to prosperity and health is free competition without government meddling. Unfortunately, that is not what we have anymore.

Our own government is denying Americans the opportunity to buy the cars of their choice by imposing huge tariffs on low-priced electric vehicles, which are pouring into the rest of the world.

It’s what governments do.

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Mamdani-Backed Socialist Candidate Rejects Key American Holidays

28th December 2025

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A state Assembly campaign in Queens is attracting controversy after public statements from a candidate supported by Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani raised questions about her views on American national holidays and broader U.S. traditions.

Aber Kawas, a longtime activist and member of the Democratic Socialists of America, is running for the Assembly seat representing New York’s 34th District. She has drawn support from Mamdani and the Democratic Socialists of America’s Electoral Working Group in a contest to succeed Assemblymember Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas, who is not seeking reelection.

Writings attributed to Kawas from 2015, first widely circulated this month, say she does not celebrate major federal holidays such as July 4th, Labor Day, or Veterans Day because she believes they “represent the silencing & destruction of our movements.”

In a journal entry from September 2015, Kawas wrote, “Today I do not celebrate a day off, I only recommit myself to a global movement that fights against the death, displacement, and exploitation of people for capital,” according to the New York Post.

Kawas added, “For this movement, a day off is not a victory. A day off means nothing, because liberation means everything.”

I think we can safely assume that this person is not registered as a Republican.

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10 Major Incidents of Left-Wing Violence and Threats in 2025

28th December 2025

The Foundry.

This past year, the Left crossed a Rubicon in normalizing political violence.

The year opened with many on the Left praising a man who allegedly murdered a health care CEO, and it ended with Virginia Democrats overwhelmingly voting for a man who fantasized about shooting his political opponent and wished death on his opponent’s children.

Jay Jones, now Virginia’s attorney general-elect, made the most bloodcurdling endorsement of political violence I have ever seen from an elected official, and he justified it with this sentence: “Only when people feel pain personally do they move on policy.”

Jones apologized for the remarks, but he remained in the race, and he even shared a stage with none other than former President Barack Obama. I had hoped my fellow Virginians would reject this message in November, but Jones won the election—setting a horrifying precedent for American politics.

Jones’ election victory highlights the negative partisanship in America, and it comes at the end of a truly horrifying year of left-wing violence. Here are 10 incidents of threats or violence aligning with the Left’s attacks on Trump and his party.

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“Brussels doesn’t believe its policies have failed: it believes you are the problem”—Sociologist Ashley Frawley

28th December 2025

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Education has become one of the main ideological battlegrounds across the Western world and particularly within the European Union. Although the EU treaties recognise education as a national competence, in recent years Brussels has developed an increasingly sophisticated architecture of programmes, funding streams and partnerships with NGOs aimed at exerting direct influence over what happens in classrooms—especially in areas related to identity, gender and sexuality.

It is in this context that the report Indoctrinating Children: How Brussels Embeds Gender Identity in the Classroom, published by MCC Brussels and authored by sociologist Ashley Frawley, must be understood. The study documents how millions of euros from programmes such as Erasmus+, CERV, and Horizon are channelled into activist-designed educational projects, which are then promoted as ‘best practice’ at the European level—even in countries where such policies have been explicitly rejected by national parliaments or parents.

Frawley, a researcher and author specialising in the analysis of contemporary social problems and the growing use of ‘behaviour change’ as a political tool, warns that these are neither isolated nor benign initiatives. Rather, she argues, they form a coherent project of social engineering. In an interview with europeanconservative.com, she unpacks Brussels’ underlying motivations, the mechanisms used to circumvent subsidiarity, and the democratic consequences of a strategy that, in her view, seeks to “reform the citizen” from childhood.

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“Foreigners Should Not Vote in Swedish Elections”

28th December 2025

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Sweden is one of a number of Western European countries (including Belgium, The Netherlands, Germany, Spain, and Portugal) that allow non-citizens to vote in local municipal elections. Sverigedemokraterna (the Sweden Democrats party) intends to change all that, and wants to restrict voting in all elections to Swedish citizens.

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New Year Eve Events Cancelled as Terror Threats Force Major Cities to Reconsider Plans

28th December 2025

Daily Record (UK).

Several cities across the world are calling off their New Year’s Eve festivities due to credible threats of terrorist attacks. This follows the FBI’s thwarting of an alleged planned bombing attack in Los Angeles set for Hogmany.

The four suspects were nabbed earlier this month in the Mojave Desert, east of Los Angeles, while rehearsing their plot, according to First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli at a press conference. The Mirror reports officials presented surveillance aerial footage that captured the suspects moving a large black object onto a table in the desert.

They managed to arrest the suspects before they could assemble a functional explosive device, officials said. The criminal complaint identifies the four as Audrey Illeene Carroll, 30; Zachary Aaron Page, 32; Dante Gaffield, 24; and Tina Lai, 41.

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January 1, 2026 is Public Domain Day: Works From 1930 Are Open to All, as Are Sound Recordings From 1925!

28th December 2025

Check it out.

On January 1, 2026, thousands of copyrighted works from 1930 enter the US public domain, along with sound recordings from 1925. They will be free for all to copy, share, and build upon. The literary highlights range from William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying to Agatha Christie’s The Murder at the Vicarage and the first four Nancy Drew novels. From cartoons and comic strips, the characters Betty Boop, Pluto (originally named Rover), and Blondie and Dagwood made their first appearances. Films from the year featured Marlene Dietrich, Greta Garbo, the Marx Brothers, and John Wayne in his first leading role. Among the public domain compositions are I Got Rhythm, Georgia on My Mind, and Dream a Little Dream of Me. We are also celebrating paintings from Piet Mondrian and Paul Klee. Below you can find lists of some of the most notable books, characters, comics, and cartoons, films, songs, sound recordings, and art entering the public domain. After each of them, we have provided an analysis of their significance.

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How Dad’s Fitness May Be Packaged and Passed Down in Sperm RNA

27th December 2025

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So hit the gym! Your kids will thank you later.

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Travel Agents Took 10 Years to Collapse. Developers Are 3 Years In.

27th December 2025

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Travel agents are the go-to example of an industry killed by the internet. And the numbers are brutal: US agents peaked at around 124,000 in 2000 and collapsed to under 40,000 by 2020 – a 70% drop. Retail locations fell from 34,000 to 13,000[1]. But that collapse took a decade. The ones who survived did it by going upmarket. I keep thinking about this when I look at what’s coming for software engineering – except this time, I don’t think we get ten years.

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Minnesota Fraud — A Young Independent Journalist Performs Some Journalism

27th December 2025

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Consider this post a place to discuss the Minnesota food program fraud, the Minnesota child care fraud, the Minnesota health care fraud, the involvement of Minnesota Governor and Vice Presidential Candidate Tim Walz, the relationship to the assassination of the Hortmans, the lack of coverage by the Minneapolis Times Tribune, the larger problem of fraud in government programs, fraud as an intrinsic component of the business model of the Democrat Party, or anything else for that matter.

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Today in Trump Derangement Syndrome

27th December 2025

The judiciary’s Christmas gift to Trump (Brian Karem/Salon)

New York Magazine Desperately Clings to Hope Epstein Letter is Real

Prominent Leaders Amplify Disinformation About Brown University Shooting (Steven Lee Myers/New York Times)  Whatever happens/We are taught/That it’s Trump’s fault/And never not.

Chinese Military Simulates Caribbean War Scenario Amid Trump’s Gunboat Diplomacy

I Was the President’s Pardon Attorney. He’s Making a Mockery of the Pardon Process. (Liz Oyer/New York Times)  New cazareer path: Work for somebody who worked for somebody who worked for Trump, then cash in on bashing Trump. Ka-ching!

Trump calls for release of any Epstein files naming Democrats: “Embarrass them” (Joe Walsh/CBS News)

NPR Fails to Credit Trump as Crime Plummets: Prez Spouting ‘Rhetoric vs. Reality’

25 Worst Villains of the Trump Admin (Ron Filipkowski/Meidas+)

Dragged down by an unpopular president, Republicans are bracing for a midterm trouncing (David Smith/The Guardian)  They hope, they hope, they hope.

AZ Lawmaker Wants Trump Derangement Syndrome Analyzed

‘It’s frightening’: How far right is infiltrating everyday culture (Ashifa Kassam/The Guardian)

Trump’s Cabinet of main characters (Axios)

 

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ICE Arrests Disrupt Texas Construction Industry

27th December 2025

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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions are disrupting the construction industry in South Texas.

Builders attribute it to a previous period of large-scale deportations as a warning of pending economic consequences.

Industry leaders say arrests at or near construction sites have caused many workers to stay home, slowing projects and tightening labor availability across the Rio Grande Valley.

ICE has arrested more than 9,100 people in South Texas since President Donald Trump took office, nearly one-fifth of related arrests statewide during that period, according to ICE data obtained through a public records request and analyzed by the Texas Tribune.

Gee,  I guess they’ll just have to hire Americans. What a hardship.

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