Archive for 2025

I COULD HANDLE MORE WINNING: In Dealing With China, Trump May Have a Trick Up His Sleeve.

Unlike the late Soviet Union – sometimes referred to as “Haiti with missiles” – China is an economic powerhouse, one that puts is technological prowess in the service of its geostrategic aspirations. ”China has roughly nine times as many engineers as the U.S. and perhaps as many as 15 times as many science and technology graduates,” George Gilder recently noted in the Wall Street Journal. This gives China a decisive edge in a world where rapid advances in technology have far-reaching economic and military implications.

There are, however, things that Trump and his team can do, and in some cases are already doing, that can turn the tables on Beijing. With the departure of the geopolitically inept Biden administration, Washington can now harness its considerable geological assets to the disadvantage of its rival in the Far East.

Beijing was quick to realize the importance of gaining control of both the mining and processing of rare earths and other critical minerals, which it had largely done by the time the U.S. and other industrialized countries embarked on their climate-driven green energy transition. Beijing was not so foolish; to meet its own energy needs, it built hundreds of coal-fired power plants. Abandoning fossil fuels, which the United States has in abundance, and embracing green energy, the supply chain for which is largely controlled by China, could benefit only one country. And for a while, China’s bet looked to be paying off.

But China’s dominance of such sectors as electric vehicles, batteries that power EVs and serve to backup intermittent wind and solar energy, and the raw materials in wind turbines and solar panels makes the Middle Kingdom vulnerable to Trump’s renewed embrace of “American energy dominance.”

It’s refreshing having a president who plays to America’s strengths rather than forcing us to play to China’s.

CIVIL RIGHTS UPDATE: Court Strikes Down Illegal Firearms Mandate in Pima County, AZ.

In a victory for Arizona firearm owners, a state court judge today struck down an illegal law in Pima County that required residents to report lost and stolen firearms to the government within two days…or face $1,000 fines.

Goldwater had sued the county to stop the mandate on behalf of Air Force veteran Chris King and the Pima County-based Arizona Citizens Defense League. As Goldwater attorneys argued before the Pima County Superior Court today, state law prohibits local governments from regulating firearms or firearm-related conduct unless specifically authorized by the state legislature, and the county Board of Supervisors appeared to know as much when it brazenly passed the ordinance.

Via Stephen Kruiser, who adds, “The commies who run my county (Pima) are going to keep finding out that messing with gun owners doesn’t work in here the Grand Canyon State.”

ANALYSIS: TRUE.

Democrats can’t stay this desperate and dumb forever, but right now it certainly does feel that way.

KRUISER’S MORNING BRIEFING: Trump’s Labor Secretary Pick Is a Commie Fox in the MAGA Henhouse. “Apologists say that Chavez-DeRemer’s nomination is forgivable because Teamsters head Sean O’Brien ‘helped’ Trump during the campaign last year. Did the Teamsters endorse Trump? No, they merely didn’t endorse Joe Biden. That was only because internal Teamsters polling showed huge support for Trump. That means that O’Brien’s ‘help’ in declining to endorse Biden was almost negligible. A lot of Teamsters were already going to vote for him.”

AN AUDI FOX, A SKIPPING TIMING BELT AND THE ORIGIN OF THE UNIVERSE: So it’s 1975 and the wife and I are sailing East on I-20, having just departed family in Tyler, Texas, and heading to the nation’s capitol. We’re driving a brand new brown/creme colored 1976 Audi Fox, first new car I’d ever bought.

Loved that little Audi because it had a great power-to-weight ratio, a fine-handling suspension set up, and a comfortable, intuitive interior design. It also had an inline-four cylinder engine with an overhead camshaft attached to a timing belt that suddenly decided to slip ever so slightly. Our journey was delayed until the necessary repair was made. I learned a great deal more about such things years later when I started racing a Formula Ford in the SCCA!

Why am I sharing this memory with you? Because it’s a great illustration of “Irreducible Complexity,” which just happens to be the point of biochemist Michael Behe’s Secrets of the Cell, Part 2, on HillFaith. Therein you will find the connection suggested in this post’s heading above. I don’t know if Behe ever owned an Audi Fox.

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Thanks to Occasional Reader for pointing out my reversible mis-type, i.e. Irreversible-which-should-be-Irreducible Complexity. A diplomat OR isn’t but he was right-on on the mistake.

MY MEAN-SPIRITED POST OF THE DAY: I think it should be a matter of course than when mentioning CNN’s Jake Tapper, he be henceforth referred to as: Jake “Convicted Liar” Tapper in light of this.

Now I know, it’s not a criminal judgment, and people aren’t really “convicted” of torts, but the Substantial Truth and Incremental Damage doctrines in libel law allow it. According to Adweek:

“Marquardt, Tapper, and senior CNN executives took the stand during the two-week trial, providing a window into its rarely-seen newsgathering process courtesy of e-mails and internal messaging systems. In one of Marquardt’s messages presented during the trial, the reporter wrote that he was “going to nail that Zachary Young mf-er.”

 

I FIND YOUR IDEAS INTRIGUING, AND WOULD LIKE TO SUBSCRIBE TO YOUR NEWSLETTER:

BOB GRABOYES: Prometheus and the Worried Well. As my doctor buddies say, if you think you’re healthy it just means you haven’t had enough tests.

WOEING: Boeing’s Air Force One program could be delayed until 2029, or later, senior official says.

The delays are frustrating, but not much can be done to speed delivery, the official told Reuters, noting that Boeing faced problems getting components since some manufacturers had gone out of business. Some requirements for the aircraft had also changed, given evolving potential threats, the official said.

Boeing had no immediate comment on the program, known as VC-25B. The first aircraft was slated for delivery in December 2024, but Boeing has pushed its delivery off until at least 2027 or 2028 – towards the end of Trump’s second term in office.

Breaking Defense in December reported that the presidential aircraft program faced new delays that could push delivery of the first jet to 2029 or later.

Asked about the report, the administration official acknowledged the fresh delays and the delay could stretch “years beyond” 2029. U.S. President Donald Trump has been deeply engaged with the program since his 2016 presidential campaign, extracting a promise from then-Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg to cap the program’s cost at $4 billion. Those fixed-price contract terms, questioned by analysts at the time and finalized in 2018, have cost Boeing over $2 billion so far.

The company seems to be snakebit.

NAVAL NEGLECT:

SELL YOUR TESLA NOW! As soon as I heard Sheryl Crow was dumping her Tesla to protest Elon Musk, I knew the rapier wits at Issues & Insights would have something devastatingly entertaining to say about such nonsense. Sure enough, here it is.

ASSUME THAT ALL SOFTWARE AND SERVICES FROM COMMUNIST CHINA ARE SPYWARE AND YOU WON’T OFTEN BE WRONG: DeepSeek ‘shared user data’ with TikTok owner ByteDance.

South Korea has accused Chinese AI startup DeepSeek of sharing user data with the owner of TikTok in China.

“We confirmed DeepSeek communicating with ByteDance,” the South Korean data protection regulator told Yonhap News Agency.

The country had already removed DeepSeek from app stores over the weekend over data protection concerns.

The Chinese app caused shockwaves in the AI world in January, wiping billions off global stock markets over claims its new model was trained at a much lower cost than US rivals such as ChatGPT.

Since then, multiple countries have warned that user data may not be properly protected, and in February a US cybersecurity company alleged potential data sharing between DeepSeek and ByteDance.

DeepSeek’s apparent overnight impact saw it shoot to the top of App Store charts in the UK, US and many other countries around the world – although it now sits far below ChatGPT in UK rankings.

In South Korea, it had been downloaded over a million times before being pulled from Apple and Google’s App Stores on Saturday evening.

If you downloaded DeepSeek (or TikTok, for that matter), you might want to delete it.