May 11, 2026

Today's Rich

"... the diversity of unfounded opinion."

IOW:
"I've accomplished very little in terms of education or even plain ol' everyday schooling, but I need affirmation - I need to feel I'm up on things. So I adopt a contrarian view of just about everything, because if I understand and believe what actual well-educated people tell me, then I'm just another sheep. But if I go along with some nutball "theory" that the 5% of my fellow dullards are into, well now - that makes me smarter than the other 95%."



Another A.I. Thing

AI is being anthropomorphised - the way humans have done with a jillion things over a million or two million years of evolution.

It's like we need company - like we need someone to encourage our ambitions, telling us "Yeah, it's good - go for it".

Or we need someone to share the blame if our decisions make something blow up in our face, or cause some catastrophic failure in whole systems - Eco, Economic, Political, or whatever.

And the kicker - at least so far with AI - is that we're trying really hard to mask the total, cold amorality of a machine by making it sound like a person.

Claude does not feel, no matter what frilly comforting phrasing its programming tells it to use.

Here, Angel puts a good sharp point on it - it's not a "he". Claude is an "it".




You get into it a little too deep, and it's no different from getting trapped in a cult.

Because Of Course

Trump said it would be under $2 million, and that it had to be awarded as a no-bid contract to avoid harm to the government.
  1. When did Trump start caring about "harming the government"?
  2. When has he not lied about it?

Reflecting Pool Repairs to Cost $13.1 Million. Trump Had Promised $1.8 million.

A no-bid contract for repairs to the Lincoln Memorial pool now costs $13.1 million, far more than the $1.8 million Mr. Trump initially said it would.

President Trump said that his handpicked contractor would charge only $1.8 million to repair the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and paint it blue.

The actual cost is now more than seven times that, after the Interior Department nearly doubled the size of the contract late last week, federal records show.

On Friday, the Interior Department added $6.2 million to the contract’s previous cost, saying it now planned to pay $13.1 million to a Virginia firm called Atlantic Industrial Coatings. President Trump said he chose that company to repair the landmark because the firm had worked on the swimming pools at his golf club in Sterling, Va.

The government awarded that firm a no-bid contract last month, bypassing the requirement to seek competing offers by saying that the situation was so urgent that any delay would cause “serious injury” to the government. The government has not publicly said what that injury would have been.

Instead, it has cited Mr. Trump’s desire to get the work done before the country’s 250th birthday on July 4.

Public contracting records do not say why the contract’s value increased so sharply on Friday. Katie Martin, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, said that the higher price “reflects the effort necessary to expedite the timeline of completing the leak prevention coating project — more people, more materials, more equipment and longer hours ahead of our 250th.”

Atlantic Industrial Coatings did not respond to questions about the increase.

But government documents obtained by The New York Times show that the contract’s current value matches, down to the dollar, an offer submitted to the government by Atlantic Industrial Coatings in the middle of last month. That offer included a 20 percent profit margin, the documents show.

Competitive bidding laws aim to ensure that the government is getting a fair price from its vendors.

The contractor was hired to repair leaking joints between the pool’s concrete slabs, waterproof the pool’s bottom, and paint it a shade called “American flag blue.” The pool has been troubled for decades by leaks and algae blooms that turn its water green.

On Monday, a nonprofit dedicated to landscape architecture filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Washington seeking to halt the paint job. The Cultural Landscape Foundation said that the Trump administration had ignored a law requiring advance scrutiny of projects that alter historic landmarks.

The foundation, based in Washington, said in its lawsuit that “every day that the resurfacing continues, the historic character of the Reflecting Pool is being further and fundamentally altered.”

May 10, 2026

Scam Du Jour

And as usual, it's cratering.


Fail Trump


Trump Media posts $405 million loss driven by crypto holdings

The Trump family media group posted a net drop of $405.9 million in the first quarter, largely driven by unrealized losses in cryptocurrencies held by the company.

Trump Media & Technology Group Corp., which is the parent company of Truth Social, released its first-quarter 2026 results on Friday reporting a positive operating cash flow of $17.9 million and $2.1 billion in financial assets, which is triple the assets from the same period a year ago.

However, the company’s investment in cryptocurrencies at the peak of the market last summer drove hundreds of millions in losses this quarter. Close to $370 million of the company’s losses came from unrealized liabilities in digital assets and equities.

Trump Media currently has over 9,500 Bitcoin in its treasury and purchased the digital assets last July at an average cost of $108,519, per CoinGecko. The company sold 2,000 Bitcoin in late February, when the price of the digital currency was just under $70,000.

Currently, Bitcoin is valued at a little over $80,000, after a dramatic swing over the last year with the digital currency peaking at $126,000 in October before dropping dramatically to $60,000 in early February.

Trump Media’s CEO, Devin Nunes, a former Republican congressman from California, stepped down on April 22. The company’s stock has tumbled more than 90% since early 2022, when it rose as much as $97.54. The current stock price is $8.93.

Trump Media is the parent of the social-media network that President Trump launched after Twitter banned him following the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol.

Moscow's Parade



Putin health fears as despot mocked over 'haggard' Victory Day appearance

The Russian leader was branded a 'deeply frightened, aging dictator' and mocked over his tired and aged appearance at the Victory Day parade in Moscow


Vladimir Putin is facing a torrent of ridicule over his haggard and hollow appearance as concerns about the Russian dictator's health continue to mount.

Reportedly terrified of a coup or assassination at the hands of Ukraine, the despot was labelled a "deeply frightened, aging dictator" by Russian adversary Mikhail Khodorkovsky following his Victory Day appearance in Moscow.

Ukrainian commentator Anton Gerashchenko drew attention to an unflattering photograph of the 73-year-old former spy and his swollen cheeks, writing: "The face of a 'victor' and the leader of a 'superpower'. It seems sanctions have even reached Putin's Botox".

Observers noted a lopsided, pillow-like face, lumpy filler, mismatched cheeks, and a melting wax face. Monitoring group Crimean Wind stated: "History shows that many dictators visibly aged before the fall of their regime or their death. Scientists link this to chronic stress, paranoid fear of losing power, and isolation, which accelerate the body's aging."

Putin opponent Leonid Nevzlin viewed the "shrinking" parade — which featured no military hardware for the first time in almost two decades — as a telling symbol of Putin's loosening grip on power.

Scott Galloway

Leave enough people with nothing more to lose, and they will come for you.

And your stuff is not all they're going to take.