Wednesday, February 11, 2026

AI & Democracy

Nate Silver, who irritates as often as he illuminates, has in his latest post taken on the techno-elephant in the room — artificial intelligence and the future of our democracy.

That is my characterization, not his. He simply says, “If AI is even half as transformational as Silicon Valley assumes, politics will never be the same again.”

He makes the following points:

  • Silicon Valley is bad at politics. If nothing else during Trump 2.0, I think we’ve learned that Silicon Valley doesn’t exactly have its finger on the pulse of the American public. It’s insular, it’s very, very, very, very rich — Elon Musk is now nearly a trillionaire! — and it plausibly stands to benefit from changes that would be undesirable to a large and relatively bipartisan fraction of the public.

  • Cluelessness on the left about AI means the political blowback will be greater once it realizes the impact.

  • Disruption to the “creative classes” could produce an outsized political impact.

So he never gets around to mentioning democracy, although he does predict revolution (I think) and frankly his entire post could use a good edit.

But what I am saying here is that with the current administration in power, acquiring expertise in AI is a scary proposition. The White House is already fooling around with AI, and this is not a regime known for exercising ethical restraints nor observing norms.

We have important midterm elections this fall, which will be the first big test in the age of AI for our oh-so-wobbly democracy.

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Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Waiting

Out here on the coast, you can sense it when the rain is coming. There’s a slight change in the air, the light, the breeze.

They all converge and at some point will start squeezing moisture out of the heavy ocean atmosphere rolling in from the coast.

Until then we wait on what is to come.

Sort of like the midterm elections. We all know they will arrive as well, but what will they bring?

Is it to be a new season with fresh blooms, hope and renewal?

Or the continuation of the dark stormy seas of the past year, with all the hate, fear, destruction, and elimination of much of what is decent?

The midterms are as yet nine months off. The rains only a few hours away. We have time to prepare for both.

Call it a dress rehearsal. 

HEADLINES:

  • ‘Take the vaccine, please,’ a top US health official says in an appeal as measles cases rise (ABC)

  • How America Got So Sick (Atlantic)

  • 3 Policy Moves Likely to Change Health Care for Older People (NYT)

  • Legality of Trump’s $400M private funding for White House ballroom at issue (WP)

  • FBI launches missing-person billboards for Nancy Guthrie in Houston (Chron)

  • Maxwell refuses to answer questions about Epstein in congressional hearing (BBC)

  • Pressure grows on UK PM Starmer as Scottish Labour leader urges him to quit (Al Jazeera)

  • China critic and former media tycoon Jimmy Lai is sentenced to 20 years in a Hong Kong security case (AP)

  • ICE Has Been Detaining Irish Man With Valid Work Visa for Months (TNR)

  • Masks emerge as symbol of Trump’s ICE crackdown and a flashpoint in Congress (AP)

  • Trump plans to keep Democratic governors out of traditionally bipartisan meeting (WP)

  • The Mark Kelly Case Is Bigger Than It Seems (Atlantic)

  • GOP leaders fret as Trump sits out the party’s nastiest primary battles — with Senate control on the line (CNN)

  • Congress braces for DHS shutdown as funding bill negotiations stall – US politics live (Guardian)

  • A new kind of violent extremism is on the rise, rooted in 19th-century philosophy (WP

  • Oil, tariffs and farming: What we still don’t know about US-India trade deal (BBC)

  • As US Olympians call for tolerance and LGBTQ rights, some face Trump attacks and online hate (NPR)

  • Russia’s Federal Security Service said that the men suspected of shooting one of the country’s most senior military intelligence officers had confessed that they were carrying out orders from the Security Service of Ukraine.(Reuters)

  • In the Arctic, the major climate threat of black carbon is overshadowed by geopolitical tensions (AP)

  • San Francisco Teachers Walk Out for the First Time Since 1979 (NYT)

  • Grant Guidelines for Libraries and Museums Take “Chilling” Political Turn Under Trump (ProPublica)

  • China’s ‘micro drama’ industry emerges as jobs lifeline in tough graduate labour market (SCMP)

  • Fed on Reams of Cell Data, AI Maps New Neighborhoods in the Brain (Quanta)

  • Trump wants AI everywhere in government. See the 1,300 new ways it’s used. (WP)

  • Study Finds 98% Recidivism Rate Among Americans Who Burn Mouths On Hot Food (Onion)

Monday, February 09, 2026

Missing Things

That Super Bowl was the most boring game in memory. I stopped watching it once it became clear that it couldn’t help itself.

Instead, having noticed that Netflix is featuring some old Rob Reiner movies in the wake of his tragic death, I revisited “The American President” (1995), starring Michael Douglas.

You know one of the things I miss? A political leader I could look up to, instead of down at. A person with flaws (like all of us) but able to rise above them in the name of the common good.

Not a pilfering, perfidious predator. whose comprehension of the common good begins and ends with the image in his mirror.

There are many other things I miss, of course, that are more personal. That movie includes a romance, which reminded me of what I miss most of all.

Love.

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Sunday, February 08, 2026

Sunday Mix

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Saturday, February 07, 2026

Weekend Reader

It’s the weekend and I hope everyone relaxes and finds antidotes to the news. As for entertainment media, there are movies and sports, so especially where the weather is bad, go ahead and binge!

(Encounter)

HEADLINES:

  • How Autocrats Meddle With Elections (Atlantic)

  • Democrats Need to Get Serious About Stopping Trump From Rigging the Midterms (The Nation)

  • Democracy Under Occupation (Atlantic)

  • School officials say missing Minneapolis girl seen in ICE detention in Texas (WP)

  • Iran Refuses to End Nuclear Enrichment in Talks With U.S. (WSJ)

  • Russian general shot several times in Moscow (BBC)

  • The Globalization of Canadian Rage (NYT)

  • Trump wanted Dulles Airport and Penn Station named after him as condition of releasing rail tunnel funds (Politico)

  • Trump’s quest to name things after himself takes an even more desperate turn (CNN)

  • Racist video of Obamas removed from Trump’s social account (Axios)

  • Is Samuel Alito Preparing to Disrobe? (The Nation)

  • Minneapolis now has daily deportation flights. One man has been documenting them (NPR)

  • Justice Department Casts Wide Net on Netflix’s Business Practices in Merger Probe (WSJ)

  • After Roe, Conservatives Launch Coordinated Push to Kill Marriage Equality (Daily Kos)

  • 4 times as many measles cases in a few weeks than US typically averages in a whole year: CDC (CBS)

  • Uber Found Liable in Rape by Driver, Setting Stage for Thousands of Cases (NYT)

  • Savannah Guthrie’s demand for mom’s ‘proof of life’ is complicated in this era of AI and deepfakes (AP)

  • A bonobo tea party: Study shows humans aren’t the only species that can pretend (NBC)

  • The Olympics Are a Show of Global Harmony. The World Is Anything But. (NYT)

  • Kid Rock’s MAGA Country Music Festival Loses Shinedown and More Artists: ‘We Don’t Want to Participate in Something We Believe Will Create Division’ (Variety)

  • Moltbook was peak AI theater (Technology Review)

  • I Infiltrated Moltbook, the AI-Only Social Network Where Humans Aren’t Allowed (Wired)

  • Young people in China have a new alternative to marriage and babies: AI pets (WP)

  • Amazon’s $200 Billion Spending Plan Raises Stakes in A.I. Race (NYT)

  • TrumpRx Unveils $1 Million Citizenship Pill (Onion)

Friday, February 06, 2026

Just Talking

When sociolinguist Deborah Tannen published her book “You Just Don’t Understand: Women and Men in Conversation” in 1990, it helped me understand a pattern I’d noticed during my years in journalism.

Many of my male colleagues, including me, seemed to get ahead in media companies faster and win more awards than our female colleagues, despite the fact that we were not better reporters or writers.

If anything, when it came to interviewing sources, women seemed to be the better listeners, generally, so they sometimes got better and deeper information than we did.

Tannen’s book at least provided a context for all of this. She wrote:

“For most women, the language of conversation is primarily a language of rapport: a way of establishing connections and negotiating relationships ... For most men, talk is primarily a means to preserve independence and negotiate and maintain status in a hierarchical social order.”

Although she was talking mainly about personal rather than professional relationships, her book proved useful in my teaching jobs. I started pointing out to my women students that they might use their conversational preferences to their tactical advantage when interviewing men in positions of power.

Also, women journalists inside the company faced a similar challenge and therefore an opportunity. In that era, female colleagues tended to speak less in meetings, and when they did have something to say it more often was to raise a question, whereas the men favored making declarative statements and staking out a position.

The men also interrupted the women much more frequently than vice versa.

I’m not pretending that I was some sort of genius for noticing this stuff, because I wasn’t, but I could see that the whole situation was pretty unfair. And when around the same time the pay disparities between men and women surfaced, the whole thing started to really bother me.

I developed the kind of bad feeling I always get when confronted with injustice. All too easily, I knew, it could have been me on the outside, left out, feeling diminished. Despite whatever successes I had had, there were plenty of failures too, setbacks, betrayals and disappointments -- mainly but not exclusively dealt me by men.

And to be fair, there were some pretty mean moves put on by women colleagues as well, including behind-the-back betrayals that hurt a lot. In fact, they still hurt to this day. So I concluded neither sex had any claim to a higher degree of morality or decency in the media environment; it really boiled down to how each individual behaved in the moment.

Systemic discrimination existed, yes, but the impact of that reality varied widely person by person. Some turned out to be kind; some turned out to be mean.

Not to sound cynical, but I’m not sure all that much has changed to this day. At least at work, men and women still seem to misunderstand each other pretty much as ever. But least there is a much broader consciousness of the problem than in the past.

In any event, I haven’t met the person yet who couldn’t try just a little bit harder to understand the other. And that includes me. Maybe we just have to imagine that we are switching roles now and then. Isn’t that what the Golden Rule is all about?

(This is from five years ago.)

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Thursday, February 05, 2026

As Goes the Post...

What’s happening at the Washington Post isn’t because of Jeff Bezos, its billionaire owner. He may be an evil man who’s made some bad choices, but the massive cuts of 30 percent of the workforce announced Wednesday are less due to his venality than the economics of newspaper publishing.

The business model that financed newspapers in the distant past broke apart 30 years ago, and since then, one by one our newspapers have been failing all around us.

I’ve reported on this hundreds of times over the years at Bnet, 7x7 and Substack, among other channels. With the rise of the Internet, the revenue sources driving newspapers, which were subscriptions, classified advertising, local business ads and newsstand distribution, started to dry up.

Online replacements replaced all of those elements in ways that were not under the newspaper owners’ control. For example, a free service, Craigslist, dominated classified advertising, and online banners raised ad revenue for search engines like Google that grew far larger than any newspaper could ever hope to be.

This decline in newspapers has been spreading since the mid-1990s and has reached the point where it is threatening elite institutions like the Post. This is one more factor aiding the rise of authoritarianism, unfortunately, which thrives in places where a free press is weakened, reducing the accountability that checks power and helps keep democracy alive.

"This ranks among the darkest days in the history of one of the world's greatest news organizations," former Executive Editor Marty Baron said in a statement Wednesday. "The Washington Post's ambitions will be sharply diminished, its talented and brave staff will be further depleted, and the public will be denied the ground-level, fact-based reporting in our communities and around the world that is needed more than ever."

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MUSIC VIDEO:

Minnesota” - Marsh Family adaptation of “San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Some Flowers in Your Hair)”