The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

Month: January 2025 Page 1 of 4

Musk’s In A Lot of Trouble And Won’t Be the World’s Richest Man Much Longer

I’ve discussed this before, so we’ll keep it brief. Much of Musk’s wealth is in Tesla stock. Tesla car sales are down, and getting hammered particularly, but not only, in China. The Chinese are producing better, cheaper electric vehicles with autonomous driving which actually works, because they use Lidar, which Musk personally decided not to use. Even Western carmakers are catching up to and exceeding Tesla vehicles.

Musk tried to get a fifty billion dollar payout from Telsa, which was spiked in the courts, because, I suspect, he knows Tesla’s going down. He’s been systematically selling Tesla stock, but he can’t sell too much at any given time. So right now he’s trying a parlay, he has to keep Tesla stock up for as long as possible to get as much money out. His strong support for Trump was almost certainly based on the need to keep Trump from ending electric vehicle subsidies, which, so far, Trump has done, even though he was very hostile to them for much of the campaign.

Now don’t feel bad for Musk, he’ll still be one of the richest men in the world, but for whatever reason: distraction, rumored drug use, health or something else, he’s not handling the day to day, month to month business of managing his corporations very well. X/Twitter has bled users, losing millions and while advertisers are coming back, that’s only to kiss up to him for as long as he has Trump’s ear, and Trump is fickle with who stays in the inner circle.

SpaceX is doing well, but SpaceX is still, mostly, a creature of the government, with the exception of its satellite internet. Its success was made possible by Obama policies intended to build a private space industry. It still requires government contracts and aid to do well.

If I had to make a bet, I’d bet on Blue Origin, Bezos’s space outfit. Yes, it’s far behind, but Bezos is an operator and still seems very skilled and focused, unlike Musk. And with him stepping away from day-to-day operations at Amazon, he’s got the attention to spare on what is a dream from him: he made the money at Amazon so he could do space.

The Chinese space program, as you’d expect, is doing very well, including putting up satellite internet which appears to outperform Musk’s, but America is never going to pay China to use its lift capacity so there’s a guaranteed moat.

Musk, in short, has almost certainly peaked. His political actions are, from a business perspective, necessary because he’s screwed up his core business and needs powerful government access. His competitors are chewing on his heels, he personally seems to be in some sort of decline, and his days as number one are drawing to a close.

 

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AI Will Degenerate In Much The Same Way Google Did

If you’re old enough to remember search before and after Google, you remember how good Google search was at the beginning.

Google used links to rank what to show to searchers. In the old web, before Google, every link was, in essence, an endorsement. We linked to what we thought was good, that other people should read.

It was a pristine “state of nature” system.

But the minute Google became dominant in search, everyone started manipulating links and metadata and everything else to get Google to send them more traffic. Links were no longer organic, no longer endorsements, but attempts to manipulate the algo. The more that was true, the more it became necessary to engage in “search engine optimization”, and the more algorithmic search engines sucked. Of course, Google also self-sabotaged, by trying to optimize search results so that Google would make the most money possible.

I recently read a regular traveler saying he never reads travel blogs and magazines any more, because AI is so much better. I’m sure he’s right.

But AI is better because it’s reading all the travel blogs and magazines, sorting and summarizing. AI being better, readership is cratering, and so the blogs and magazines will slowly die off. Travel’s one of those activities where you need relatively recent information, where was great to stay years ago isn’t very helpful. So, as the blogs and magazines die, the AI’s results will slowly get worse, until they’re crap scraped from official websites of hotels, museums and other travel destinations, since that’s all that will remain.

AI, in other words, in this and other ways, many of them similar, will destroy the ecosystem required for it to be good, same as Google did.

This is “eating the seedcorn/destroying the soil’s fertility” type of stupidity. If you destroy an ecosystem you’re dependent on (and we’re all dependent on some ecosystems) then whatever you’re doing is only short term viable.

So enjoy AI as an alternative to search for now (but always check its source, because it does hallucinate) but understand this is a moment in time, a moment which is destroying what makes it possible.

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Trump Has Caused A Constitutional Crisis

Stirling Newberry pointed this out, and I agree.

Some of Trump’s Executive Order are clearly illegal, unconstitutional, or both. Trump can’t get rid of Birthright Citizenship and his order goes clearly against the written text of the amendment:

All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

This isn’t open to interpretation. There is no wiggle room.

Trump’s freezing of grants is likewise straight up unconstitutional. Congress decides who gets how much money for what purpose. The President executes Congress’s orders. If Trump can decide who gets how much money for what purpose when Congress has not given him that permission, then there aren’t three branches, but two.

Stirling has a longer article making the case with reference to other executive orders, and it’s worth reading, but these two are clear cut. There is no wiggle room, though many people are trying to find some.

The play here is simple: what Trump’s doing is unconstitutional and illegal, but the Supremes are controlled by the Republican party, so they are expected to ignore the plain text of the constitution and the 14th amendment and find some torturous justification for Trump’s actions.

This is another step along the line to the Imperial Presidency.

You should also be very unhappy about the domestic use of troops for domestic law enforcement. That crosses a bright red line for obvious reasons. Likewise Trump is stepping all over State’s rights.

(Stirling also has a series of articles on the future of the Center Left. They’re worth reading. Remember that he has aphasia, and pay attention to the argument and the ideas, ignoring any awkwardness. Go to the article linked, click on the first article and work thru.)

Trump is also fundamentally changing the role of America in the world order. Rather than being the central hub of treaty network, the imperial core with vassals and subjects who are, mostly, treated well as long as they stay in their place and gave the US their resources, which the US paid for by printing currency. Trump has now decided to end that era, and to fully commit to cannibalizing America’s allies. Odds of NATO’s survival are bad, and it’s a dead letter when Trump can threaten war against Denmark, one of its members. Everyone sees this, but people are so aghast and taken back most aren’t calling it out yet.

There is also a changeover of oligarchic elites. Previously the financial elites ran government. The tech elites are now moving and taking over much of that role. They have different priorities than the old financial elites and instead of being neo-liberals, they are utopian technocratic neo-fascists. They are convinced that they are superior people, even more so than the old elites and that everyone should do as they say. Everyone else to them, is stupid and unfit for power. Government, to them, must be rid of what little remains of its regulatory powers so they can do what they want, unconstrained by legal burdens. “You can just do things” is prescriptive: there have been some limits, and they want as many of those limits removed as possible.

This is a constitutional crisis. If Trump succeeds, there’s a very different country afterwards, run in a very different way by very different people, creating a very different international order.

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Trump’s Doing Everyone A Favor With His Tariffs (Emphasis on Canada)

(Keyboard fixed, at least for now, so let’s get on with it.)

Trump has threatened blanket tariffs on multiple nations, including most of Europe, Canada and Mexico. This is an effective threat. The Bank of Canada estimated the effect of such tariffs on Canada at six percent of GDP, and I’ve seen an estimate for Germany of about one percent of GDP, after previous losses due to anti-Russia sanction effects on energy costs.

But what this tells us is that many nations are over-dependent on trade with America. Our economies are too intertwined with America’s economy, especially Canada’s. America’s massive and persistent trade deficits also indicate that America isn’t competitive. This isn’t a surprise, the American economy is controlled by oligopolies and monopolies with middlemen taking unearned profits and the overall cost structure, from housing to medical care to everything else is high, especially with respect to asset prices, which have been deliberately inflated since about 1979.

What we should do, all of us who are being threatened, is tell the US to fuck itself, slap retaliatory tariffs on the US, add in export tariffs so the US really hurts, and reorient trade towards each other—form a trade bloc without the US.

It’s worth pointing out that many of Trump’s tariffs are essentially illegal under various trade agreements the US has signed. Yet no one doubts that Trump can impose these tariffs despite their illegality. Remember that a signed treaty has the force of law in the US.

The US is, and has been a rogue nation for a long time and the rule of law means nothing in America.

I’m going to talk primarily about Canada because I know the situation here best. We’ll start with a little history.

For most of Canadian history, we exported mostly raw and refined resources to America. Minerals, oil, fish, lumber and so on. Often it was illegal to export them without doing at least primary processing: no raw logs, fish were canned in Canada and so on.

The original sin of over-integration with the US was the US-Canada auto-pact. We got a lot of jobs and factories out of it, but it was used as leverage over us. When Canada’s world-leading aviation industry of the 50s produced a jet, the Avro Arrow, which was much better than any American jet, the US threatened to take away the auto-pact unless we ended the program. And by end, I mean we disbanded Avro and we sunk the jets in a lake. Male engineers were hired by US firms, the female engineers got to be housewives, since the US in the 50s was 100% a patriarchal society. (As an aside, this was a post-war thing, the 30s were not as patriarchal.)

This story is so flaming hot in Canada that the original classification was renewed when it was due to end. Even now Canadians are angry about the Avro Arrow, something which happened 7 decades ago.

In the 80s, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney wanted a free trade pact with the US to ensure market access. Most Canadians were against it and the 88 election was fought about the FTA. Mulroney won because the anti-FTA vote was split between the Liberal and NDP parties. He rammed thru the FTA, which was later rolled into NAFTA and is now called the USMCA.

The deal included a lot more than just trade, it had IP laws and reduced the ability of Canada to use tariffs and subsidies itself and including nasty taking laws which made it nearly impossible to regulate foreign companies in Canada. Because our nation sells so many resources, the Canadian dollar tends to fluctuate a lot. When it’s high (it was higher than the US dollar for a couple years around 2015, for example) it’s devastating to our industry.

The old policy, which started around 1880 or so was called the Canadian mixed economy. When the dollar was high because of high resource prices, we’d subsidize manufacturing. When it was low, we’d subsidize resource producers and gave generous unemployment benefits to laid off resource workers.

That policy created one of the best and most prosperous economies in world history. But the condition which allowed it was that we had strong ties to both the British Empire/Commonwealth and to the US. In the 70s, the Brits, under intense US pressure since the end of WWII had their economy basically collapse. They had to go to the IMF for help and joined the EU, which bailed them out. The result of that was that their trade became very oriented towards the EU and the Commonwealth countries were left on their own.

Without a counterweight against the US, Canada felt weak. It didn’t stop Pierre Trudeau (the current PMs father) from telling the US to suck it when necessary, he even closed the border at one point, but Mulroney didn’t have the balls and he was right that our hand had become a lot weaker.

So Mulroney rammed thru the FTA. He was repaid by the Progressive Conservative party being essentially wiped out in the next election. Canadians really didn’t want the FTA/NAFTA. But once it was in, no successor government got rid of it.

The result was that Canada lost most of its industrial base. Ironically we even lost a lot of those auto-pact jobs, as American auto companies got their pants beaten off them by Japan and South Korea.

Pre-FTA about 30% of our exports to the US were autos and auto parts, 20% were petroleum, and miscellaneous machinery was about 15%.

Fast forward to today, 30% of our exports are petroleum, 13% are automobiles (the pact), and miscellaneous machinery is about 8%.

Can you say Dutch disease? Sure you can.

We’ve become a much more one note exporter, which is why Alberta and Saskatchewan are betraying our united front. They do most of the exporting, after all.

But the larger point is general de-industrialization and over-dependence on American markets. This has become enhanced over the last 8 years as our relations with China have degraded, due to Trudeau’s stupidity and pandering to America.

If this anti-China pandering worked, if it made it so America wouldn’t pull shit like tariffs, maybe it could be justified, but all its done is hurt our relationship with a potential trade partner and counter-weight to America’s influence on our economy.

So, what to do?

To start, leave the USMCA. The US has never obeyed NAFTA or the USMCA when it didn’t want to. Back in the 00s they slapped tariffs on timber, and ignored repeated rulings against them. We should have left then, but better later than never.

Second, start rebuilding our own industrial base. We still have plenty of scientists and engineers and vibrant universities. We can still bring in more scientists and engineers if we need to. This will require tariffs and subsidies, so institute them.

Third, bribe the resource workers who will be hurt. Just straight up find a way to give them a big chunk of change.

Fourth, re-institute Canadian ownership laws which require companies to be 51% Canadian owned, including foreign subsidiaries. Have the government take an additional 10%, and promise that all dividends from that 10% will be shared with Canadian citizens as direct deposits every year. Make it clear that we are willing to trade, but that trade no longer includes the right of foreigners to buy up our economy.

Fifth, form trade deals with countries other than the US. These should be bilateral or small multilateral in most cases with tariffs and subsidies allowed on both sides for key industries. We should pick a few industry sectors to concentrate on, and trade with other countries in the other sectors: that way they get something in exchange for the deal.

Sixth, go back to the old cyclical subsidization system: industry when our currency is high, resources when it’s low. Make it so that ordinary workers (and voters) are protected from the cyclical effects of a dual economy.

Seventh, put a lot of the resource profits into a sovereign wealth fund, to reduce the cyclical effects and provide the inevitable busts and for the inevitable and ongoing movement away from petrochemicals. Like it or not, alternative energy is coming on strong and the days of the petrol economy are drawing down. We’ve still got a couple decades to go, but the role of government is to make these long term plans. The fund should prioritize investments in petroleum regions, both to get them onside and to prepare them for the drawdown.

There’s plenty more details, of course, but these are the fundamentals. We’ll talk more, soon, about how trade should actually work if it’s to be for the benefit of all countries. Needless to say, such a regime would have princicples almost directly in opposition to those that have existed under GATT and its successor, the WTO.

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Slight Posting Delay

My keyboard appears to have a short and is spamming keys making typing anything long near impossible. So, probably nothing more till tomorrow when I should have it replaced. Hope all are well and having a less frustrating day than I am.

Feel free to use as an open thread.

Small Chinese Company Hilariously Crushes American AI

So, a Chinese financial firm (not even a software or computer company) has put out an open source AI model which is 50 times more efficient than Chat-GPT or any other American AI. It’s so simple you can run it on some phones, it doesn’t have to call home.

The sound you hear is Sam Altman screaming at the Devil as he realizes he sold his soul to become the world’s richest man, and it ain’t gonna happen.

(Faintly, in the background, the devil laughing his ass off.)

Absolutely hilarious. Oh, and they did it with a tiny team for hardly any money. Didn’t take billions. Doesn’t require massive amounts of energy.

And that whole open source thing matters: everyone else can build off their model. Deepseek, being Chinese, has some censorship in it (type Xi Jingping’s name to see it in action), but you can build your own without the censorship.

One of the interesting things is that it was built by a team of quants. Seems that the Chinese have been crushing the finance industry lately, since they saw what it has done to the West, so the Quants decided to try their hand at a bit of optimized AI code.

This chart is one of the most illustrative of Xi’s policy over the last six years or so:

Seems Xi has also figured out (as I’ve noted in the past) that billionaires suck. They form a power center outside the party and they act against the best interests of everyone in society but themselves.

Turns out that having lots of billionaire is a policy choice. The West made that choice and so did China, for a while, but when they saw how dangerous and harmful billionaires are, they reversed themselves and changed policy to crush them. They’ve even thrown them in prison. (Vietnam recently executed a mogul, though she wasn’t quite a billionaire.)

China’s CCP wants prosperity for everyone in the country. It’s the best way for them to stay in power, and hell, there’s every indication they really believe it’s the right thing to do. They’ve deliberately crushed their housing bubble and the state is moving heavily into building housing, they cracked down on exam-prep tutors, because that’s a red-Queen’s race which favors the rich and hurts everyone else, including kids. They built recreation centers just for delivery workers and forced companies to treat them better.

And they have the tech lead in about 80% of fields, plus, it appears, one more now. Just as Trump announces his five hundred billion dollar AI fund, launches his own shitcoin so people can bribe him without having to stay at one of his hotels and juices crypto, a fraudulent field which caters to the Western desire to get rich without actually doing anything useful for society.

America’s flailing around. Their only real plans is “let’s loot our vassals and satrapies”, and they’ll manage to do more of that. But it isn’t going to change America’s trajectory. It’s a failing Empire, it’s swirling the drain and nothing is going to stop that, since the actual necessary steps require policies like, y’know, slashing home prices, gutting billionaires, raising taxes on the rich, taking utilities and other public goods back into public control and so on: all the stuff no one, Trump included, wants to do.

Empires die hard, and a lot of suffering goes with that. But die the American Empire is, and will. China has already won, and they deserve to.

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Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – January 26, 2025

Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – January 26, 2025

By Tony Wikrent

 

The Trump “Litmus Test” 

Scott Ritter [via Naked Capitalism 01-25-2025]

…I’ll take this moment to remind President Trump that one of the “crimes” I was accused of committing by the Ukrainian government which put me on their State Department-funded death lists, was to claim that the Russian-Ukrainian conflict was a direct result of NATO expansion.

Which is, of course, the same assessment put forward by President Trump.

If you were an average American citizen, Mr. President, your name would be on that list.

Now is your chance to stand up in defense of the average American citizen and shut these lists down while terminating all connectivity between the US and Ukrainian governments which target US citizens for speaking out against Ukrainian propaganda talking points.

“The First Amendment to the United States Constitution,” you wrote, “an amendment essential to the success of our Republic, enshrines the right of the American people to speak freely in the public square without Government interference.”

You promised to defend this right.

Prove it with action, not just words.

 

Strategic Political Economy

”a way for those who want something from Trump to transfer money directly to him”

Heather Cox Richardson, January 20, 2025 [Letters from an American]

The tone for the inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the 47th president of the United States at noon today was set on Friday, when Trump, who once trashed cryptocurrency as “based on thin air,” launched his own cryptocurrency. By Sunday morning it had made more than $50 billion on paper. Felix Salmon of Axios reported that “a financial asset that didn’t exist on Friday afternoon—now accounts for about 89% of Donald Trump’s net worth.”

As Salmon noted, “The emoluments clause of the Constitution,” which prohibits any person holding a government office from accepting any gift or title from a foreign leader or government, “written in 1787, hardly envisaged a world where a president could conjure billions of dollars of wealth out of nowhere just by endorsing a meme.” Salmon also pointed out that there is no way to track the purchases of this coin, meaning it will be a way for those who want something from Trump to transfer money directly to him.

Former Trump official Anthony Scaramucci posted that “anyone in the world can essentially deposit money” into the bank account of the president of the United States….

Walter Schaub, former head of the Office of Government Ethics under Trump in his first administration, who left after criticizing Trump’s unwillingness to divest himself of his businesses, wrote to CNN: “America voted for corruption, and that’s what Trump is delivering…. Trump’s corruption and naked profiteering is so open, extreme and pervasive this time around that to comment on any one aspect of it would be to lose the forest for the trees. The very idea of government ethics is now a smoldering crater.”

 

The Land of Greater Fools: America as a big con.

Hamilton Nolan, January 21, 2025 [How Things Work]

Watching Trump launch a crypto coin days before his own inauguration that instantly made him billions of dollars richer is kind of impressive, in the way that you might be impressed by watching the planes strike the twin towers on 9/11. People said this was bad, yes. But do you understand the level of corruption that is on full display here? This is—I don’t want to be hyperbolic here—a level of public corruption that is, let’s conservatively say, one thousand times worse than the Watergate scandal. That was just an instance of a paranoid president trying to steal secrets from his political opponents and then covering it up. This, on the other hand, is the president-elect of the United States of America putting out a big bucket that says “BRIBE ME” right before he takes office. Anyone can now buy an imaginary “coin” and the money will go directly into the pockets of the Trump family, as they run the United States government. That is what happened here. Donald Trump’s net worth went up by tens of billions of dollars in one day. In one day! The day before his inauguration! Out of thin air! And then his fucking wife made a coin, too! This is not even the same as the Trump family launching a business, building hotels that wealthy interests might stay in to try to curry favor. There is no business here. This is just saying, “Give the president money and we’ll give you this token we made up.” It is a tip jar that sits on the desk of the Oval Office. You almost have to laugh. The way that I know that people have not quite internalized how outrageous this is is that everyone is not still talking about it, right this minute.

Imagine a grainy undercover FBI sting video of a crooked politician being handed a paper bag full of money. Now imagine that the bag contains ten billion dollars. Now imagine the camera pulling back and the guy taking the bag also controls the FBI. That’s what is happening, my friends. It is not hidden. It is the opposite of hidden. Boldness is the way of the wise crook. Hiding things implies that you think that they are wrong.

Trump’s Laughable Sanction Threats Against Russia

The US thru a kitchen sink of sanctions at Russia after the start of the Ukraine war, including freezing their foreign assets. The result?

The number is exaggerated, given Russian inflation, but even inflation adjusted, Russia’s doing fine.

It is impossible to choke out Russia with sanctions if China isn’t willing to go a long. (India not cooperating is the cherry on top.) Cannot be done. Impossible.

In fact, sanctions against Russia have been a huge favor to it, forcing a vast surge in import substitution, improving its industry, creating a booming economy whose only real problem is inflation. Russian oligarchs have been forced to spend their money and effort in Russia instead of wasting their money in the West. Meanwhile the sanctions have damaged Europe massively, though somewhat to the benefit of America, since much energy-intensive industry in Europe is shutting down and moving to the US.

If Trump wants peace for Ukraine with Russia he’s going to have to offer a good deal. Threats won’t cut it. Or just wait for the Russians to win and impose a peace.

Since Trump appears to be reducing aid to Ukraine, that will happen sooner than otherwise. Perhaps it’s his real strategy, or more likely, he’s simply incoherent. Russia halting along the current lines would be stupid of them, since they’re advancing inexorably and all reports are of significant Ukrainian manpower shortages.

Trump’s always been a bully, but Russia isn’t one of America’s vassals or satrapies. It’s a junior ally in the Chinese sphere, and Trump doesn’t have the economic or military leverage to make it do anything. The only country in the world which can force Russia is China, and China isn’t going to help America v.s. Russia under any likely Trump policy regime.

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