01 June, 2026

Andrelton Simmons was the best defender in baseball. Then he suddenly walked away.

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/7322869/2026/06/01/andrelton-simmons-angels-braves-mexico-defense/

 When he’s done playing, that may be the last baseball fans see of him. It may take him a few more years, he said, but unlike several ex-big leaguers in this league, not past 40. He has no desire to coach, and if the last few years are any indication, no desire to stay in the game in any public way.

“I want to enjoy retirement for real after,” he said.

The next day, Simmons was back in the lineup. Back to being under the radar, out of the public view, but out on the field taking grounders. Enjoying that baseball, even in this different form, is finally coming easy to him again.

25 April, 2026

My year as a degenerate gambler

To humanity’s great thinkers and leaders, gambling was an impediment to an ethical life (Aristotle), an invention of the devil (Saint Augustine), and a tax on the ignorant (Warren Buffett). It fostered selfishness and a something-for-nothing ethos that was poisonous to the soul. George Washington went so far as to warn that “every possible evil” could be tied to gambling: “It is the child of avarice, the brother of inequity, and the father of mischief.”

How Russia’s War Machine Brutalizes and Exploits Its Own Soldiers

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/12/31/world/europe/russia-military-abuse-soldiers.html

In hundreds of official complaints, inadvertently posted online by the Russian government, soldiers and their loved ones describe a lawless and violent military apparatus that abuses its own troops to maintain its assault in Ukraine.


19 April, 2026

Britain Should Have Read the Tweets First

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2025/12/starmer-abd-el-fattah/685469/

Starmer—and his Conservative predecessors—were right to call for Abd el-Fattah’s release. What was absurd, however, was to frame his arrival on British soil as an unalloyed blessing. Starmer was thinking like the procedure-obsessed human-rights lawyer he used to be, not the political and moral leader that Britain needs right now.


17 April, 2026

500 mile email limit

https://web.mit.edu/jemorris/humor/500-miles

Here's a problem that *sounded* impossible...  I almost regret posting the story to a wide audience, because it makes a great tale over drinks at a conference. :-)  The story is slightly altered in order to protect the guilty, elide over irrelevant and boring details, and generally make the whole thing more entertaining.

I was working in a job running the campus email system some years ago when I got a call from the chairman of the statistics department.

"We're having a problem sending email out of the department."

"What's the problem?" I asked.

"We can't send mail more than 500 miles," the chairman explained.

I choked on my latte.  "Come again?"


07 April, 2026

We Haven’t Seen the Worst of What Gambling and Prediction Markets Will Do to America

https://www.derekthompson.org/p/we-havent-seen-the-worst-of-what

I often find myself thinking about the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre, who argued in the introduction of After Virtue that modernity had destroyed the shared moral language once supplied by traditions and religion, leaving us with only the language of individual preference. Virtue did not disappear, I think, so much as it died and was reincarnated as the market. It is now the market that tells us what things are worth, what events matter, whose predictions are correct, who is winning, who counts. Money has, in a strange way, become the last moral arbiter standing—the final universal language that a pluralistic, distrustful, post-institutional society can use to communicate with itself.


As this moral vocabulary scales across culture, it also corrodes culture. In sports, when you have money on a game, you’re not rooting for a team. You’re rooting for a proposition. The social function of fandom—shared identity, inherited loyalty, something larger than yourself—dissolves into individual risk. In politics, I fear the consequences will be worse. Prediction markets can be useful for those who want to know the future, but their utility recruits participants into a relationship with the news cycle that is adversarial, and even misanthropic. A young man betting on a terrorist attack or a famine is not acting as a mere concerned citizen whose participation improves the efficiency of global prediction markets. He’s just a dude, on his phone, alone in a room, choosing to root for death. 

06 April, 2026

How Do You Find an Illegal Image Without Looking at It?

https://mahmoud-salem.net/the-invisible-shield

This is where the engineering meets the ethics.

Every false positive means an innocent person's content was flagged — a family photo, a medical image, a piece of art. It means unnecessary investigation, potential harm to reputation, and erosion of trust in the system. At scale, even a 0.01% false positive rate means thousands of wrongful flags per day.

Every false negative means a child's abuse was missed. An image that should have been caught slipped through. That child continues to be victimized every time the image is viewed, shared, or traded. The distribution never ends.

There is no threshold that eliminates both. Setting the threshold is a moral decision, not just a technical one.

In practice, the industry errs heavily toward minimizing false negatives — catching every possible match — and then uses human review to resolve false positives. This means the system flags aggressively but confirms carefully. The cost of a false positive is an investigation. The cost of a false negative is a child.