The Monarchical President

Source: CounterPunch
by Paul Donnelly

“The colonists despised monarchy, having risked their lives fighting for independence and autonomy. Consequently, when the newly independent states created their first constitution, the Articles of Confederation, there was no executive branch. The people feared that a strong central government would threaten citizens’ rights. That weak government failed, so a new framework of government was created that included a President. Under the Constitution, this executive would be constrained by Congress. Congress issues orders, and the President executes them. Two hundred and fifty years later, our country is facing a crisis. Donald J. Trump is acting more like a monarch than an elected executive.” (06/11/26)

https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/06/11/the-monarchical-president/

You Can’t Blame Netanyahu for Israel’s Militarism

Source: The American Conservative
by Anik Joshi

“Prime Minister Netanyahu has been the longest serving prime minister of Israel, having assumed the office in 1996 and served off and on for a total of almost two decades. His upcoming election looks to be a tossup, so there’s a fair chance voters will show him the door. Even if they do, analysts would be fools to write him off altogether, as they’ve tried to do many times before. And even if ‘Bibi,’ as he is known, doesn’t find a way back to power, the hardline militarism he represents will probably dominate Israeli politics for a long time. … for all the blame the man receives, he is doing what he was elected to do, and even his most hawkish supporters are far from the fringes of Israeli politics.” (06/11/26)

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/you-cant-blame-netanyahu-for-israels-militarism/

Trump’s Iran Flip-Flops: Bluff, Madness, or Just Chaos?

Source: Karl Dickey’s Freedom Vanguard
by Karl Dickey

“Trump threatens strikes on Iran, seizes oil islands, then cancels everything and claims a phantom peace deal. This erratic foreign policy spikes energy markets, expands government power …” (06/11/26)

https://palmbeachexaminer.substack.com/p/trumps-iran-flip-flops-bluff-madness

AI, Creative Destruction, and the Politicization of Economic Change

Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
by Joseph Solis-Mullen

“Throughout history, innovation has often provoked worry, and artificial intelligence has become the latest source of economic anxiety. Workers fear displacement, recent graduates worry that entry-level jobs may disappear, and politicians increasingly speak of the need to manage the transition. Across the world, governments are searching for ways to soften the disruptive effects of a technology that promises dramatic increases in productivity. The debate is often framed as a struggle between technological progress and employment. But that is not the real issue. The more important question is whether economic decisions will remain economic or become increasingly political. China’s response to artificial intelligence offers an early glimpse of this dilemma.” (06/10/26)

https://mises.org/mises-wire/ai-creative-destruction-and-politicization-economic-change

How to Raise Birth Rates

Source: David Friedman’s Substack
by David Friedman

“I had a post on the subject a few months ago; a recent online discussion started me thinking about it again and I have some new ideas. One was due to a poster whose list of ways government could reduce the birth rate included banning divorce. I suspected he had it backwards. The obvious reason to think that is that modern societies have both easy divorce and low birth rates. But correlation is not causation; there are other plausible reasons for low birth rates, some discussed in my earlier post. There are better reasons.” (06/10/26)

https://daviddfriedman.substack.com/p/how-to-raise-birth-rates

Pete Hegseth’s D-Day speech gave Europe a spot-on warning – be smart or be invaded

Source: New York Post
by Miranda Devine

“War Secretary Pete Hegseth gave a great speech on D-Day in Normandy. He told the Europeans they were committing civilizational suicide by allowing themselves to be ‘invaded’ by unassimilable migrants. It was the kind of warning you give to a friend who you see is making a terrible mistake. ‘Sadly, today different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies,’ he said in northwestern France during commemorations for the 82nd anniversary of the June 6, 1944, landings of American and other Allied troops on the beaches of Normandy to liberate Europe from Hitler’s dangerous ideology. … Naturally, he was pilloried by out-of-touch elitists on both sides of the Atlantic.” [editor’s note: When Devine refers to “out-of-touch elitists,” she means anyone who’s not batshit insane – TLK] (06/10/26)

https://nypost.com/2026/06/10/opinion/pete-hegseths-d-day-speech-highlights-the-ongoing-invasion-across-europe/

Anthropic has caught up to OpenAI in image understanding

Source: Understanding AI
by Timothy B Lee

“On Tuesday, Anthropic released two new models — Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5. Under the hood, the two models are very similar. Both are variants of Claude Mythos Preview, the model Anthropic announced — but didn’t release publicly — two months ago. What differentiates them is how they’re being released. The new version of Mythos, like the original, will only be available to handpicked organizations under Project Glasswing. These trusted partners will have relatively unfettered access. Fable, in contrast, is available to the general public. But it comes with some significant restrictions.” (06/10/26)

https://www.understandingai.org/p/anthropic-has-caught-up-to-openai

The FDA Finally Approved a New Sunscreen Ingredient. It Only Took Over 25 Years.

Source: Reason
by Meagan O’Rourke

“The U.S. has led the world in several innovations in recent decades: the iPhone, Facebook, and artificial intelligence. But when it comes to sunscreen, Americans have been living in the Dark Ages compared with Europe and Asia. That could be changing. This week, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) added bemotrizinol (BEMT) to its list of permitted active sunscreen ingredients, updating the list for the first time since 1999, according to National Geographic.” (06/10/26)

https://reason.com/2026/06/10/the-fda-finally-approved-a-new-sunscreen-ingredient-it-only-took-over-25-years/

Ukrainians Will Never Be the Same

Source: Persuasion
by Kateryna Kibarova

“What does a typical day look like? An air raid alert goes off while we’re at work. Just like in any office, we have one designated ‘alarmist’ who monitors all the Telegram channels to figure out exactly which direction the attack is coming from and when it’s expected to reach us. The moment we know a Shahed drone is approaching our office, everyone scrambles toward the exit. We head down to the shelter, wait for the drones to pass, and then we go right back to our workstations. In other words, we’ve adapted to living in absolute chaos. When a specific situation arises — say a café gets bombed or something similar — people help out.” (06/10/26)

https://www.persuasion.community/p/ukrainians-will-never-be-the-same