How To Be a REAL Man

Source: Roads Go Ever On
by Bekah Graham

“One morning last week, I got myself a coffee and turned on the newly released Netflix documentary Louis Theroux: Into the Manosphere. For those who aren’t already well aware of the manosphere or the red pill/MGTOW movements, Theroux provides an informative primer and helpful context, especially for parents who want to prevent their young boys (and, less likely though still possible, young girls) from falling into these dangerous communities. Yet for the more chronically online, the documentary doesn’t reveal much that is new.” (03/17/26)

https://bekahgwen.substack.com/p/how-to-be-a-real-man

States Substitute for Corrupt Feds on Antitrust

Source: The American Prospect
by David Dayen

“On Monday, the monopolization trial against Live Nation picked up where it left off a week earlier, with Jay Marciano, CEO of AEG Entertainment, the nation’s second-largest live concert promoter, under direct questioning. But there was a different lawyer in the lead plaintiff’s chair: Jeffrey Kessler, a superstar private litigator who successfully prosecuted cases against NASCAR and the NCAA, was seated in place of David Dahlquist, the Justice Department’s lead trial attorney. The reason for the swap is that DOJ settled their claims against Live Nation on March 9, and pressured many of the 39 states (and the District of Columbia) in the case, particularly the Republican ones, to go along with them. But in the end, only seven states did so …. The other 32 … failed to come to agreement after forced settlement talks from the judge.” (03/17/26)

https://prospect.org/2026/03/17/state-attorneys-general-feds-antitrust-live-nation-ticketmaster-warner-bros-paramount/

The Growing Problems of Operation Epic Fury

Source: CounterPunch
by Binoy Kampmark

“The big drain on military resources has begun. A war apparently already won (and not), against an adversary supposedly without means to fight back, its air force and navy destroyed, its missile capabilities blunted, is now drawing the clumsy colossus of American power into the Middle East with embarrassing effect. The Middle East, where US President Donald Trump promised the ‘forever wars’ would end, promises an end to his beginning.” (03/17/26)

https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/03/17/the-growing-problems-of-operation-epic-fury/

Can Immigration Address America’s Fiscal Nightmare? It Depends

Source: The Daily Economy
by John Phelan

“High-skilled workers tend to strengthen government budgets, while low-skilled immigration can add fiscal pressure. The composition of immigration matters as much as the number.” (03/17/26)

https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/can-immigration-address-americas-fiscal-nightmare-it-depends/

Yes, the First Amendment Protects Free Speech for Noncitizens

Source: Reason
by Damon Root

“The First Amendment states that the government ‘shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech.’ But one prominent conservative [sic] judge, whose name has been mentioned as a potential nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Donald Trump, thinks that protection against government censorship may not apply to noncitizens in the United States. Is the judge right?” (for publication 04/26)

https://reason.com/2026/03/17/yes-the-first-amendment-protects-noncitizens/

Entrepreneurial capitalism — the greatest deal in all of history

Source: Adam Smith Institute
by Tim Worstall

“Facebook, the online social network, has more than 2 billion global users. Because those users do not pay for the service, its benefits are hard to measure. We report the results of a series of three non-hypothetical auction experiments where winners are paid to deactivate their Facebook accounts for up to one year. Though the populations sampled and the auction design differ across the experiments, we consistently find the average Facebook user would require more than $1000 to deactivate their account for one year. OK, so the value users gain from Facebook is $1k a year, there are 2 billion of them, that’s two thousand billion, or $2 trillion in value a year. Of which Zucks has 10%, that $200 billion. Pretty good deal for us, really. But that’s not right, not at all. For Zucks’ money is a one off capital sum, the consumer benefit is an annual one.” (03/17/26)

https://www.adamsmith.org/blog/entrepreneurial-capitalism-the-greatest-deal-in-all-of-history

History, immigration and the blame game

Source: The Price of Liberty
by Nathan Barton

“Today, we are bombarded with claims that the lands of the Fifty States (i.e., the United States) are ‘stolen lands.’ And demands that the only option is to give the ‘LandBack.’ (An organization based in South Dakota, demanding that the Black Hills be returned to the ‘Great Sioux Nation’ (a/k/a the Seven Council Fires, consisting of the Dakota, Nakota, and Lakota people.) … Obviously, as lovers of liberty, we understand that going around stealing people’s land is a heinous act …. But we detect just a few problems with the proposed solution of returning hundreds of millions of acres of land to the descendants (and presumably heirs) of millions of people who owned that land from 400 to 150 or so years ago. And forcing more millions of people who live on that land (and think they own it) to go someplace else – where back where they came from or somewhere else.” (03/16/26)

https://thepriceofliberty.org/2026/03/16/history-immigration-and-the-blame-game/

Chuck Schumer’s shutdown gambit gets riskier by the day

Source: New York Post
by Daniel McCarthy

“Next time your flight’s delayed or canceled, or you’re stuck in an endless TSA line, thank a congressional Democrat. Senate Dems have decided to make a show of their support for lawless immigration by inflicting pain on American travelers. They’ve blocked funding for the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the Transportation Security Administration, even though their stunt doesn’t affect the budget of the agency Democrats really want to hurt, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. … It’s bad enough congressional Democrats are taking their anger at immigration enforcement out on American travelers. What’s yet worse is they’re doing it in a time of war. Do we want less secure airports — or unhappy, unpaid agents — at a moment when terrorist attacks are more likely?” [editor’s note: TSA should be abolished. The “you wouldn’t give us what we wanted, so we started a war, now you should because DANGER” con is old and tired – TLK] (03/16/26)

https://nypost.com/2026/03/16/opinion/chuck-schumers-shutdown-gambit-gets-riskier-by-the-day/

Shameless Guesses, Not Hallucinations

Source: Astral Codex Ten
by Scott Alexander

“I hate the term ‘hallucinations’ for when AIs say false things. It’s perfectly calculated to mislead the reader — to make them think AIs are crazy, or maybe just have incomprehensible failure modes. AIs say false things for the same reason you do. At least, I did. In school, I would take multiple choice tests. When I didn’t know the answer to a question, I would guess. Schoolchild urban legend said that ‘C’ was the best bet, so I would fill in bubble C. … So the interesting question isn’t why AIs hallucinate: during training, guessing correctly is rewarded, guessing incorrectly isn’t punished, so the rational strategy is to always guess (and increase your chance of being right from 0 to 0.001%). Since AIs in normal consumer use follow the strategies they learned during training, they guess there too.” (03/16/26)

https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/shameless-guesses-not-hallucinations

Hegseth is memeing us into a quagmire

Source: The Hill
by Jos Joseph

“Any historian will tell you that propaganda is part of warfare. One can see plenty of cartoons from World War II that made the Japanese look subhuman including Superman shorts. As a kid, I remember t-shirt makers using ‘The Simpsons’ to make light of Desert Storm and Saddam Hussein. As a young man after 9/11 I was convinced that the perpetrators were simpletons who lived in caves. Whether we have won the war, lost it, or finagled our way out of losing it, the same themes emerged. Our enemy is subhuman and brutal might is the way to beat them. Except they aren’t and it isn’t. And Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is playing into the same trap with potentially even worse consequences.” (03/16/26)

https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/5785246-hegseth-iran-war-strategy/