A black sea bass caught with rod and reel by Mrs. A. W. Barret. The fish weighed 416 pounds (188 kg) and had a length of 7 feet 10 inches (2.3 m) Santa Catalina Island, California, USA. 1901. pic.twitter.com/6ydaKULMGj
— Historic Vids (@historyinmemes) May 7, 2023
Author: tkcollier
Chinese Urban Renewal
Knock Knock…
Musk’s Missile Mistake
Everyone was cheering the Space X launch after it cleared the tower, because there hadn’t been an explosion thereby damaging the launch pad and delaying the next mission. Musk believes in move fast and learn from your failures.
His engineers wanted to install blast shields. He overruled them. This was the result

Even though there are Space X rockets waiting in the wings, they first have to rebuild the Launchpad, which is not a quick task. The power of those engines may have also thrown up debris into them from the disintegrating launch pad. You can see in this picture 8 of the engines not firing. This probably caused the tumbling when they tried to separate the first and second stage. At which point there was no choice but to blow up the mission- literally.

And now the FAA has put an indefinite hold on any more launches.

Plans are afoot to reinforce the launch pad with steel. Musk also agrees with a Chinses assessment that even with the failed engines, the rocket wouldn’t have lost control if the onboard software, which was supposed to use steering engines to compensate for the malfunctioning rockets hadn’t also failed. Read about it on the South China Post, which is owned by Jack Ma’s company.
Developmental USA Industrial Policy
The Economist’s argument reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of US history. The American economic tradition is rooted in the ideas of Alexander Hamilton, Abraham Lincoln, Teddy and Franklin Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, who recognized the need for a developmental state and the dangers of rent-seeking.
Neoliberalism’s Final Stronghold
Apr 27, 2023 J. Bradford DeLong

A recent essay celebrating America’s “astonishing economic record” is a case in point. After urging despondent Americans to be happy about their country’s “stunning success story,” the authors double down on condescension: “The more that Americans think their economy is a problem in need of fixing, the more likely their politicians are to mess up the next 30 years.” While acknowledging that “America’s openness” brought prosperity to firms and consumers, the authors also note that former President Donald Trump and current President Joe Biden “have turned to protectionism.” Subsidies, they warn, could boost investment in the short term but “entrench wasteful and distorting lobbying.” In order to address challenges like the rise of China and climate change, the US must “remember what has powered its long and successful run.”
As usual, the Economist delivers its reverence for neoliberal dogma with all the sanctimony and certitude of a true believer. Americans must sit down, shut up, and recite the catechism: “The market giveth, the market taketh away: blessed be the name of the market.” To doubt that the US economy’s current problems are caused by anything other than an interventionist, overbearing government is apostasy. But, as an economic historian, what took my breath away was the essay’s conclusion, which attributes America’s postwar prosperity to its worship of the Mammon of Unrighteousness (more commonly known as laissez-faire capitalism).
The essay cites three “fresh challenges” facing the US: the security threat posed by China, the need to rejigger the global division of labor due to China’s growing economic clout, and the fight against climate change. The climate challenge, of course, is hardly “fresh,” given that the world is at least three generations late in addressing it. Moreover, our failure to act promptly means that the economic impact of global warming will likely consume most, if not all, of the world’s anticipated technological dividends over the next two generations.
Recognizing the scale and urgency of global challenges such as climate change and then denying, as the Economist does, that only governments can effectively address them amounts to something resembling intellectual malpractice. Adam Smith himself supported the Navigation Acts – which regulated trade and shipping between England, its colonies, and other countries – despite the fact that they mandated that goods be transported on British ships even if other options were cheaper. “Defense,” he wrote in The Wealth of Nations, “is of much more importance than opulence.” Denouncing desirable security policies as “protectionist” was beside the point then and now.
The Economist’s argument reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of US history. The American economic tradition is rooted in the ideas of Alexander Hamilton, Abraham Lincoln, Teddy and Franklin Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, who recognized the need for a developmental state and the dangers of rent-seeking.
To be sure, it has been 70 years since Eisenhower’s presidency, and much of America’s state capacity has been hollowed out during the long neoliberal era that began with the election of Ronald Reagan. But the laissez-faire policies that were woefully inadequate for the mass-production economy of the 1950s are an even worse fit for the biotech and IT-based economy of the future. Rather than reject Biden’s industrial policies, Americans should embrace them. To quote Margaret Thatcher, there is no alternative.
Bad Cop, Good Cop, Better Cop
Millionaire migrations

In 2019, the USA had a net migration of 10,800 millionaires.
In 2022, this dropped to 1,500 millionaires.
That’s an 85% drop in 3 years!
Juggling with all Four Limbs
Roxana Küwen, born in 1989 in Northern Germany, of Iranian descent. She graduated in 2013 at Fontys Academy for Circus and Performance Art in Tilburg, Netherlands.
Who ya’ gonna believe?


