An orchid by any other name…

… is still an Orchid. Seen on a windowsill in College.
Quote of the Day
”Most people would sooner die than think; in fact, they do so.”
- Bertrand Russell
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Keith Jarrett | My Wild Irish Rose
An unexpected find.
Long Read of the Day
Paul Krugman on Trump’s speech on Wednesday
I really enjoy Krugman’s Substack. It’s interesting to see how leaving the NYT (where he had a widely-read column for years) has energised him. Here’s Thursday’s edition:
I’m not going to do a regular post today — it’s Thursday morning — because I wanted to wait and see what was in the big speech from Donald Trump last night. And I thought I could just do a short video about it.
It turns out that the speech was sort of an anticlimax, although not in a good way. Many people expected Trump to pull the mother of all TACOs, to declare victory and surrender. He did not do that. He declared victory, of course, but he did not actually announce an end to hostilities. On the contrary, he said we’re going to bomb Iran into the Stone Age. So add massive war crimes to your schedule.
There is clearly no strategy here. There’s no endgame. There’s nothing. It’s hard to tell, as always, whether Trump is delusional or just completely unable to admit something that he actually knows.
One of the moments that really struck me in the speech was him declaring that the whole world was extremely impressed by what happened. He said,
“the whole world is watching and they can’t believe the power, strength and brilliance. They just can’t believe what they’re seeing. The world can’t believe what it’s seeing.”
What it’s seeing is that the world’s greatest military power took on a fourth-rate power. Again, as I said the other day, Iran’s military budget is a rounding error in our military budget. And we lost…
Books, etc.

Ever since ChatGPT launched I’ve been thinking about Joe Weizenbaum, the computer scientist who created the world’s first chatbot — ELIZA — in the 1960s. And so I dug out his book (which now seems to be out of print, sadly) to re-read it. It’s as good as I remembered. And it’s fascinating to read it with the 20/20 vision of hindsight. It’s an examination of what computers can and cannot do — and, more interesting in the present context — what they should not be used to do.
My commonplace booklet
The cost of Trump’s war to British households
Interesting numbers from the Financial Times
The International Energy Agency reports that the UK consumed 4.4mn terajoules of oil and gas products in 2024. Convert this into a rough barrels of oil equivalent and you get 720mn barrels of oil. These have gone up about $40 a barrel since the Iran war started leaving UK consumers $29bn worse off.
When converted into sterling, that is hit of about £22bn a year or roughly 0.7 per cent of national income.
Linkblog
Something I noticed, while drinking from the Internet firehose.
- The Beginning of Programming as We’ll Know It
Given all the nonsense that’s being written about “vibe coding”, I thought that this little essay by a real programmer was a delight.
In the wake of AI coding assistants like Claude and Codex, which can seemingly perform the equivalent of a day’s work in a matter of minutes, many of us are wondering if the human role of “computer programmer” is coming to an end. Will the AI bots one day do all the programming for us?
Maybe so, but not yet. At this particular moment, human developers are especially valuable, because of the transitional period we’re living through. Just a few years ago, AI essentially could not program at all. In the future, a given AI instance may “program better” than any single human in history. But for now, real programmers will always win. Why? Because we are uniquely positioned to harness most of the power of AI while augmenting it with human taste, wisdom, and caution, among other qualities that an AI is thus far incapable of possessing…
Worth a read, if you’re interested in this stuff.
Feedback
From Mark Allan on bombing as entertainment…
Re: Fintan O’Toole’s article that you reference, Adam Tooze’s work on the German economy during WWII suggests a more nuanced picture than Galbraith’s older work. Tooze is bilingual in English and German and used German sources to come to very different conclusions, in his book The Wages of Destruction.
The Allied bombing was horrific – but there is a strong argument that it did hasten the end of the war, crucially by enabling the Soviet Union to defeat Germany in the East. See this from the MoD – not an unbiased source but not necessarily wrong.
However, this argument about WWII bombing doesn’t change the fact that current Iran cannot be compared to Nazi Germany. Israel and the USA are clearly conducting an illegal war, and one with very bad consequences for the world as a whole.
I haven’t read Tooze’s book, so I went looking at reviews of it to get a feel for his arguments. James Buchan’s review in the Guardian provides a useful glimpse.
In his long new book, the Cambridge historian Adam Tooze presents the Third Reich as an engine doomed to smash itself to smithereens not, as for Speer, from bureaucratic turf wars and Hitler’s chaotic office habits, but from its own birth defects.
To sum up: Hitler’s Germany was always too hampered by shortages of raw materials, notably crude oil and rubber but also iron ore and coal, animal feed and fertiliser, foreign currency and even labour, to attempt an independent industrial and commercial existence in peace, let alone a campaign of European conquest. For all the ingenuity of cynical opportunists such as Hjalmar Schacht, at the Reichsbank until 1939, and Speer, at Armaments after 1942, Germany passed through a succession of hair-raising financial and resource crises that hampered its armies and helped to bring on the final collapse.
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