"We can take them at their word."
@jonfasman
Senior culture correspondent, The Economist. Podcaster: "The Intelligence", "Checks and Balance". Ex-DC, Singapore, Atlanta, London, Moscow, Providence. Author: "The Geographer's Library," "The Unpossessed City," "We See It All".
"We can take them at their word."
I have enormous respect for FIRE but I think this First Amendment argument for Anthropic is a mistake and a very dangerous positionโwe don't want everything an AI does to be covered by the First Amendment. www.fire.org/research-lea...
Who is demanding this?
www.nytimes.com/2026/03/09/n... A truly bizarre article. Mamdani called the attack "reprehensible", "heinous" and said "we won't tolerate terrorism". The implication that he's equivocating is simply false.
According to DOGE flunky, a documentary about the experiences of Jewish women's slave labor during the Holocaust is "inherently discriminatory." Come ON.
This disgusting shit doesnโt belong in American society.
And Republicans who support it donโt belong in Congress.
Spot on from the Economist.
What a second week of war will bring
economist.com/middle-east-...
Rabobank on the unfolding worst case scenario:
(Plenty of American fathers are also nervous about this prospect.)
Something to ponder.
Earlier today Trumpโs Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked whether America's mothers should be nervous about their kids getting drafted.
She replied: "It's not
part of the current plan right now, but the president wisely keeps his options on the table."
These six books help explain Iranโs story to date. No doubt many new histories will be forthcoming
Tweet from Daniel Pipes: "The uprising in Iran in early January suggested an even greater insurgency would then follow on the U.S.-Israeli campaign to erode regime power. Yet, the populace now appears cowed into near-silence. This ranks as the most surprising and disappointing development of the past week. Without a new uprising, the regime will likely remain in power, less powerful but more awful than ever. (The picture below is from Jan. 10 in Tehran.)"
Amazing how quickly "We're fighting this war for freedom of the Iranian people" becomes "The Iranian people are at fault for not rising up."
The US Administration has embarked on a large, unprecedented program of excluding lawful, highly-skilled workers and students from the United States.
I talked with the brilliant @gracesegers.bsky.social at @newrepublic.com about the broad economic ripple effects.
newrepublic.com/article/2073...
And Arkady Ostrovsky's take on Russia's relationship with Iran: a bargaining chip, not worth offending Trump over. ~"For years officials have hailed Iran as a role model: a nation isolated by sanctions and dependent on oil that has survived by repressing dissent." www.economist.com/europe/2026/...
It is a struggle for us every week to avoid making the entire paper consist of "How country X reacted to Trump's latest thing." This is a genuine problem that has no easy solution. Anyway, here's our briefing www.economist.com/briefing/202...
I analysed data on 788 distinct attacks, 1,860 missile and drone launches, and abnormal โhigh-temperature eventsโ, such as fires, at 208 strategic sites. It suggested the war has entered a new phase. www.economist.com/interactive/...
๐ฎ๐ท๐ข๏ธ CNNโs Frederik Pleitgen says black, oil-contaminated rain is falling over Tehran after strikes on oil facilities by U.S. / Israeli airstrikes.
Happy to know that our Mayor and First Lady are safe, but horrified that there was such a disturbing threat of violence outside their residence.
Vile displays of Islamophobia will never be tolerated in our city.
THREAD: I got laid off from NYMag/Vulture after 14 years. The family lost 75% of income + medical. Now mzs.press bookstore, once a side project. is do-or-die for Judith & I. I feel weird telling you this because others are doing much worse. But if you could like or share this, we'd be so grateful!
In the third chapter of our project marking Americaโs semiquincentennial, we trace the turbulent turn of the 20th centuryโfrom the Gilded Ageโs robber barons to Theodore Rooseveltโs muscular presidency
I don't think American Jewish institutions like the ADL and the AJC have fully reckoned with how their behavior during the Zohran Mamdani mayoral election is going to prove to be the kind of generational mistake that will place American Jews in greater danger for years to come.
Ollie Carrol, Anshel Pfeffer & I wrote last night on the challenge of intercepting Iranian Shaheds. More than 2,000 fired, some hitting important targets, including radars. This is a problem that Ukraine understands well. Understandably, it wants something in return www.economist.com/internationa...
Seconded - this is terrific work -
Israeli attacks on UNIFIL peace keepers tonight. Irish service men were not directly hit, but they aided their counterparts from Ghana. This will further deteriorate Irish Israel relations.
โNo one knowsโ if the war will lead to the fall of Iranโs hardline regime, writes Pedro Sรกnchez. โWhat we do know is that its costs will be huge, and that they will not be borne by the ayatollahs aloneโ econ.st/40grw0M
Illustration: Dan Williams
My bet is they donโt actually believe this crap, itโs just something they say for hype purposes because it makes for a clickbaity headline. Still, โmaybe weโve enslaved a conscious mind which is sufferingโ is a pretty weird flex.
That Iranian Navy ship we torpedoed had no ammunition on board because that was a requirement to participate in the MILAN 2026 exercise (organized by the Indian Navy).
The US Navy knew this because IT ALSO PARTICIPATED IN THE EXERCISE. What a national embarrassment.
newrepublic.com/post/207429/...
Why didn't the US consult Ukraine, the one country that knows how to country attacks from thousands of cheap drones?
www.theatlantic.com/national-sec...