Thursday, 7 May 2026

Cuttings: April

To grow the economy we need more trams, and fewer kebabs – SubStack article by Chris Curtis, referenced in Guardian First Edition newsletter. "Ever since the Neolithic era, humans have been willing to spend roughly the same amount of time travelling each day: about one hour out of their twenty-four. It doesn’t matter which culture or time period you look at, whether it is commuting into Delhi or London, or chasing after a woolly mammoth with a pointy stick, the so-called Marchetti’s constant has remained pretty constant. Some people will do more, some less, but the average keeps coming out at around thirty minutes each way. If you want the economy to grow, as this government is rightly focused on, one of the most important things you can do is make sure more people can get to more of the things that make them productive within that allotted time. That means maximising the number of jobs a worker can reach, the number of businesses competing for a consumer, the number of training opportunities for young people, and the number of chances smart people have to bump into each other and generate good ideas.... Cities can only get so big, or so dense, before their roads start seizing up and the traffic makes it too slow to get across them. That is usually where mass transit should come in. If a city is big enough you need to develop a way of moving large numbers of people around quickly. But that is where Britain has become obscenely bad. The cost of building tram lines here is wildly out of whack with comparable countries. In Britain, tram projects cost around £87 million on average per mile, rising to over £200 million for some recent schemes. This compares with a European average of around £42 million.... So, it is no coincidence that one of the defining features of the British economy is how weak our second-tier cities are compared with comparator countries. For all the talk of levelling up, only six UK cities have a higher productivity than the European average. Half of UK cities are among the 25% least productive.... There are five main reasons why we do not have enough trams in the UK. Keep an eye out for the usual cast of characters from Britain’s long running national drama, Why Can’t We Have Nice Things?..."

Staying Without Surrendering Your Soul – SubStack article by Cameron Trimnle, referenced in Daily Meditations from the Center for Action and Contemplation. "How do you remain faithful when the surrounding culture is losing its moral center? The desert elders left noise to recover clarity.... The desert was never the final destination. It was a training ground for perception. One elder taught that the first task of spiritual life is learning to see your own reactions clearly: how quickly anger justifies itself, how easily fear pretends to be wisdom, how often ego disguises itself as courage. Silence exposed all of that, not to shame people, but to free them. Benedict took the next step. He asked: once you learn to see clearly, how do you live faithfully in community over the long haul? His answer was not intensity but rhythm — prayer, work, shared meals, mutual care, accountability, humility, repair. So the question for us is not whether to leave or stay. Most of us are not called to geographic withdrawal. We are called to interior non-cooperation with corruption while remaining deeply committed to one another. You can stay without surrendering your soul. But it takes practice. It takes boundaries around attention. It takes rhythms that interrupt outrage. It takes communities that tell the truth to one another gently and directly. It takes prayer, or silence, or honest reflection that clears emotional distortion before it hardens into identity."

Let’s get metaphysical! Existentialist cinema is back, if anyone cares – article by Phil Hoad in The Guardian. "'For it all to be consummated, to feel less alone, I had only to wish for a big crowd on the day of my execution, and for them to greet me with cries of hate.' The lacerating signoff of Albert Camus’s L’Étranger isn’t a collection of words you’ll see appearing as life advice in some influencer’s Instagram caption any time soon. In the age of vapid social media self-help, François Ozon’s new film adaptation of the existentialist masterpiece rears up like a great monolith. Eighty-four years after the novel was published, that’s rather unexpected; as far as IP goes, L’Étranger (The Stranger) was probably some way behind Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs on the film industry’s revival list. Does this mean that existentialism is suddenly back in vogue? Or is the film just a farewell tour for every angsty student’s favourite source of tattoo quotes?... The mid-century world of turtle-necked Left Bank pontificators such as Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir now feels as exotic and far-off as ancient Greece. The Stranger’s light prose made it a French GCSE staple – but also a gateway drug to mainlining the likes of Dostoyevsky, Kerouac and Salinger, and other existentialist-adjacent required reading needed to graduate as a pretentious alienated teen. For most modern functioning adults, navigating a meaningless universe is what happens when your GPS loses reception. God may be dead – but the new religion of tech has arrived with new promises of eternity. Existentialism would seem to have reached its best-by date.... The philosophy never did make much of a direct impact on cinema, partly because there were relatively few core fictional texts to adapt. Sartre’s Nausea and his Roads to Freedom trilogy have never had feature-length adaptations; of Camus’s other major works, only The Plague has been filmed... In the US, émigré directors including Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder and Robert Siodmak packaged up interwar European paranoia – and the nihilist artistic and philosophical undercurrents swirling around it – into hardboiled pop existentialism: film noir. The genre’s terse gumshoes, hapless schemers and sketchy drifters might have been short on philosophical rigour, but looked invariably sharp getting sucked into the quagmire of a senseless universe.... Setting its compass by noir’s unstable bearings, this floundering existential heroism became the water we swim in. It is everywhere: in Travis Bickle’s queasy nocturnal odyssey in Taxi Driver, Blade Runner’s replicants agonising over their programmed obsolescence, Jim Carrey searching for the door to real life in The Truman Show, Christopher Nolan’s many wanderers in his fragmented movie-labyrinths. So the return of The Stranger to cinemas isn’t so much a quaint throwback as being presented with a cultural Rosetta Stone, allowing us to better understand where this type of metaphysical questing stems from."

‘Enough of this me me me’: Blake Morrison on memoir in the age of oversharing – article by Blake Morrison in The Guardian. "Every day I meet strangers who share intimate details with me. It’s called reading.... As Martin Amis says in his memoir, Experience: 'We are all writing it or at any rate talking it: the memoir, the apologia, the CV, the cri de coeur.' Recent memoirs have upped the ante, though. What was once a geriatric, self-satisfied genre (politicians, generals and film stars looking back fondly on long careers) is now open to anyone with a story to tell – 'nobody memoirs', the American journalist Lorraine Adams has called them. Candour is the key, no matter how fraught the consequences.... Shock is an integral part of memoir and sometimes the facts are shocking, without embroidery.... In literature the mode used to be called confessionalism. These days, pejoratively, it’s called oversharing. At best it prompts welcome recognition: Wow, great, here’s someone who’s had the same experiences, thoughts and feelings that I’ve had. But there’s often resistance as well: Ugh. TMI. I don’t need to know this. When the divulgence is sad-fishing on Facebook, curated self-glorification on Instagram or out-there revelation in a memoir, readers may feel irritated or affronted. Enough of this me-me-me-ism; they won’t take the proffered hand. When I wrote a book about the murder of James Bulger by two 10-year-olds, some reviewers liked the personal approach; others hated how I’d brought in my own children when I brooded on the age of responsibility. It’s not essential for writers to bean-spill, after all. They’re not victims on a talkshow, outmanoeuvred by Jerry Springer or Jeremy Kyle; they’re writing on their own terms and in control of what’s committed to print.... It’s not even compulsory to use the first person in memoir. In Bone Black bell hooks uses 'she' and 'we' as well as 'I'.... Such discretion is fine if it’s not evasion. There’s no point in telling a personal story if you censor yourself and hold back too much. Be brave, I’ve urged life-writing students terrified by what their ex will think, or their siblings, or their grouchy uncle: get that monkey off your back; it’s your version of events and if people close to you object, never mind – let them write their own memoir. But candour takes art: what works as an anecdote told in the pub won’t work on the page. It needs compression, structure, the right tone of voice. The task is to set down what happened, not parade extremes of feeling. An author can be open without closing the space for readers, who need room to interpret and explore.... Where the self-disclosure is nuanced and the writing compelling, you go with the flow, happy to eavesdrop, willing to follow wherever the memoir takes you."

On Memoir by Blake Morrison: lessons in life writing from a master – review by Alex Clark in The Guardian. "'I've had a life and I’ve also had a life as a life writer': Blake Morrison opens his tour d’horizon of arguably literature’s most expanding and expansive genre with a flash of his credentials and an implicit call to further inquiry. What constitutes a life, and what can it mean to write about it? Can you write about your own from inside it? Before his bestselling and highly praised account of his father’s life and death, And When Did You Last See Your Father?, was published in 1993, Morrison had a life as a poet, a critic and a literary editor.... Life writing ... doesn’t always mean your own life, and almost never only yours. So how do you do it? Morrison’s response is a deceptively breezy alphabetically ordered guide, with Flashbacks, Food and Footnotes giving way to Persona, Photos and Plagiarism, and so forth. There’s plenty of cheerfully nuts-and-bolts advice for the would-be memoirist, culled from the author’s years teaching the form at Goldsmiths, University of London: the most pedestrian example might be not to keep repeating everyone’s names, and perhaps the most surprising not to write off self-publishing if you really want to get your story out there.... But the most insistent questions seep between the entries, recurring throughout and never quite resolving. Chief among them is: does it have to be true? Memory, after all, is a slippery customer, and although the contemporary exhortation to “speak one’s truth” might appear simply to encourage openness and reject shame, it also draws attention to the fact that others have their truth too. When accounts of events and their associated emotions and conclusions are contested, things can get messy quickly. Should a committed life writer worry about what other people think? Morrison hedges his bets a touch: one should be as truthful as possible, and certainly not fabricate entire histories in order to deceive and manipulate (see Binjamin Wilkomirski’s invented experiences of the Holocaust). But neither can writers allow themselves to be self-seduced by the desire to be likable, or to quail from excavating experiences that are painful or embarrassing."

Easter egg hunt techniques inspired by great detectives – cartoon by Tom Gauld in The Guardian. "Sherlock Holmes. Deduce the exact location of every egg from seemingly unrelated details without leaving your room. Send your sidekick to find them. Jack Reacher. Hit the garden hard and fast. Take no prisoners. Get back on the road. This approach results in a thrillingly intense hunt, but very few intact eggs. George Smiley. Meticulously assess documents, people and motives. Then scrupulously collect the eggs while wondering dejectedly if any of this has been worthwhile."

‘I see it as trafficking’: the brutal reality of life as a foreign student in the UK – article by Samira Shackle in The Guardian. "Each year, about 400,000 international students are granted study visas to the UK. A significant proportion do so with the help of education agents: middlemen paid by universities to find foreign students. In 2023, UK universities spent a total of £500m on education agents – but there is very little oversight of how these agents operate. In 2021, Priya Kapoor (not her real name) took a job working for StudyIn, a large education consultancy, in a major Indian city. ... What she found was something akin to a factory production line, where students were the product. The first part of the production line were the agents – sometimes referred to as admissions consultants – who brought in students and acted as their main point of contact. Inevitably, Kapoor said, their advice on where to apply was often coloured by which institutions paid the highest commission. This is widely accepted to be the case across agencies.... Next in the chain was Kapoor’s team, which was responsible for the applications. Her job title was “statement of purpose editor” and her role was to interview students about their life and use that information to write personal statements on their behalf. To pay their fees, most students she spoke to planned to take out huge loans, often secured against their parents’ homes or agricultural land. They did so on the assumption that after graduation, they would earn enough to pay back the loan. 'They had no idea about sponsorship, no idea about visas. They just thought, "I’ll go there and I’ll get a job,"' Kapoor told me. From what she saw, admissions consultants rarely enlightened them. 'Agents do anything to avoid further questions,' she said. 'The attitude was: you’re just another application to me, and I have targets to complete.'... Once students got their offers, they were passed on to the visa team, and finally delivered to universities as a fully wrapped, fee-paying package. Over time, Kapoor felt worse and worse about her role in this system. 'I knew if I worked on 100 applications, 98 were getting nowhere with their life,' she said. 'I mean, I woke up and I started lying, then I slept lying, and I woke up only to lie again.' Eventually, she quit the job."

You Are the Führer’s Unrequited Love by Jean-Noël Orengo: Hitler, Speer and beyond – review by Vincenzo Latronico in The Guardian. "Albert Speer, the Nazi war criminal... had served as minister of armaments in wartime Nazi Germany, and was found guilty of crimes against humanity; yet when he died, he was in London to promote his new book on the BBC. Speer’s rehabilitation was a masterpiece in duplicity. In his defence at the Nürenberg trials – and in later books and interviews – he was the only high-ranking official to take on full responsibility for the Nazi crimes; and this seeming moral clarity allowed him to credibly lie that he had not known about the extermination camps. The evidence for that would emerge only after his death, prompting [Simon Wiesenthal, the Holocaust survivor and 'Nazi hunter'] among many others, to admit he had been duped. Until then, the lie allowed Speer to become an authority on the endlessly fascinating topic of Adolf Hitler’s personality and psyche. Speer’s relationship to Hitler is at the heart of French author Jean-Noel Orengo’s You Are the Führer’s Unrequited Love, a masterfully unconventional novel about Speer’s two lives: as Hitler’s personal architect, ally and confidant; and as the world’s idealised specimen of a 'good Nazi': articulate, repentant and ultimately not as monstrous as others had been. Orengo’s book ... reads as the character study of a man who manipulated one of the most powerful men on Earth – and, after the latter’s defeat, his victors – into believing he, Speer, was exactly what they wanted him to be. This is a mechanism of seduction, and You Are the Führer’s Unrequited Love also reads as a love story of sorts. The title is a remark an SS officer once made to Speer; no serious historian has taken it literally, but it does seem to reflect the deep, tumultuous nature of Hitler and Speer’s friendship.... The story is told in a memoirist’s sparely lyrical, inquisitive voice; the facts of Speer’s life and of the war raging in the backdrop are cues for Orengo’s musings on the inner calculations and deep drives that allowed Speer to win Hitler’s confidence and, later, betray it. Was it ruthless narcissism? Crippling insecurity? Naked ambition? Are these different things?"

Why does alcohol make us both happy and miserable. and what else does it do to our minds and bodies? – article by Joel Snape in The Guardian. "Whatever you think of alcohol, you have to admit that it’s versatile. ... Where most mind-altering substances have one or two specific use-cases, alcohol does the lot. That’s probably why it’s been so ubiquitous throughout human history – and why it can be so hard to give up entirely.... 'Alcohol gets to the brain within minutes, and the first thing it does is start shifting the balance between ... two inhibitory and excitatory chemical messengers,' says [Dr Rayyan Zafar, a neuropsychopharmacologist from Imperial College London]. 'It enhances Gaba and dampens glutamate, and so that early "buzzed" feeling is a combination of your frontal cortex, the part of your brain responsible for judgment, restraint and self-monitoring, starting to go offline. That’s twinned with the release of dopamine and endorphins in the reward circuits that give you motivation, relaxation and energy. So people feel more relaxed, more talkative, less socially inhibited.' As the concentration of alcohol in your bloodstream rises, it begins to affect deeper and more primitive brain regions – including the cerebellum, which coordinates movement, and the brainstem, which regulates basic functions like heart rate and breathing. 'It progressively shuts down higher-order control systems first, and then the circuits that keep us physically coordinated,' says Zafar. This means that your speech slurs, your balance falters and your reaction times slow.... The Gaba-glutamate balance is also responsible for the anxious or depressed feeling many of us get the day after one too many, as the body overcorrects for the chemicals you’re putting into it. 'While alcohol is in your system, the brain compensates for its sedative effects by ramping up its excitatory systems, particularly glutamate and the stress pathways,' says Zafar. 'Once alcohol leaves your system, though, those compensatory systems don’t instantly switch off – instead, you’re left with a temporary rebound state of hyperexcitation. Stress hormones like cortisol can remain elevated, sleep architecture has been disrupted, and neurotransmitter systems are temporarily out of balance. The result is a brain that feels wired but depleted, anxious and restless.'”

Ten years after Brexit, this is the UK: a divided nation frozen in time – article by Aditya Chakrabortty in The Guardian. "On 23 June 2016, the British voter changed. Before that day, they picked a party, usually red or blue. By that morning, only two tribes mattered: remain or leave. And they kept mattering long, long after the result was declared.... Our evidence comes from a new book by politics professors Sara Hobolt and James Tilley. In Tribal Politics: How Brexit Divided Britain, they conducted and analysed surveys of large numbers of voters over many years. Put together, the story is both simple and very different from the one told by the likes of Farage.... Until the referendum, the British public hardly gave any thought to the EU. If polled, most would express some form of Euroscepticism, but no overwhelming desire for exit.... At that point, an obsession of one small fraction of the Westminster elite was made a public concern, given months of airtime and front pages. The rest of us picked one of two sides, talked about it down the pub or at family dinners. Anyone who has read a recent self-help book knows what happens next. The author of the bestseller Atomic Habits (25m copies and counting), James Clear, writes: 'To change your behaviour for good, you need to start believing new things about yourself. You need to build identity-based habits.'... In forging these new identities, the aftermath mattered more than the campaign. Among Hobolt and Tilley’s graphs is one on 'emotional attachment to Brexit identity' before and after polling day. A month beforehand, a modest attachment is clearly visible, which gets stronger as the big vote looms. But the biggest jump comes after the results are out. Once the match is over, the fans keep shouting and they get a lot louder. The tribalism doesn’t fade with time; it remains strong. Whether you were in or out shapes your view of whether Brexit is going well or badly, which is no surprise. But it also shapes how you view the other side: remainers see leavers as selfish, hypocritical and closed-minded, and vice versa.... A spectre is haunting this new politics: the spectre of class. The 20th century was the era of class politics. Two words changed that: Tony Blair. A previous study co-authored by Tilley shows that the working class were staunch voters until the 1990s, when the party of labour declared 'we are all middle-class now'.... When class is banished from politics, all you’re left with is culture wars.... Perhaps the most dismal chart in Hobolt and Tilley’s book is the one that summarises where remainers and leavers differ on policy. Top comes immigration, obviously, followed by foreign aid and the death penalty. The two sides have little to say on whether Britain should be more equal, should treat workers better or have more public ownership. In other words, nothing that will make much of a difference to how much money you earn, pay in bills or have after taxes. The people who prosper from that kind of empty politics are those who are prosperous enough already. And they prosper even when they lose.... We live in an era of polarisation and grift, of blatant lying and blaming institutions. But the British only got here by passing such milestones as the Brexit vote of 2016, in which yet another elite debacle turned into a long and bloody national breakdown that set neighbours and workmates and families against each other. And for what?"

Beauty, Memory, and Grief – extract from his book Life after Doom: Wisdom and Courage for a World Falling Apart, reproduced in Daily Meditations from the Center for Action and Contemplation on Earth Day 2026. “I think of a wetland I used to explore as a boy growing up in Maryland, part of the Rock Creek watershed. I spent hours exploring that wetland in every season, sometimes barefoot, sometimes in boots that nearly always overflowed and filled with cold water because I ventured in a little too deep. How could I stay dry when trilling toads and wriggling tadpoles moved among cattails in the spring? How could I stay away in summer and miss a chance to see that single great blue heron or mammoth snapping turtle who both hunted there, resident dinosaurs to my boyhood imagination? How could I not search for newts and crayfish in its cold waters in autumn, its sky-mirroring surface dappled by yellow tulip poplar, red maple, and orange-amber sweet gum leaves?… Several years ago, I was in the old neighborhood again…. The trail was still there, but now it was broad and paved for bicycles. The wetland had disappeared…. As I sat on one of the benches and looked around, I was overcome by sweet grief for the delight I once enjoyed as a boy, a lost magic boys and girls today will never know, at least, not there….I’m returning to this precious place in my memory, this sacred swampy ground. I’m appreciating it, praising it for what it was, all the more because it has been lost…. You have your lost places unknown to me. I have mine unknown to you. We could not protect them. But we do not let these good creations disappear only to be forgotten, unappreciated, unpraised, unlamented. Our love for them outlasts their existence. So together, we remember them in grief. We feel them more fully revealing themselves to us in their passing away…. Stay with grief long enough to feel its sweetness, long enough for the sweetness and grief to deepen our sensitivity to the exquisite agony and ecstasy that we call appreciation, praise, love … and life.”

The Asset Class by Hettie O’Brien: the hidden hand of private equity – review by Caroline Knowles in The Guardian. "This is not just a problem of where money comes from, but how it behaves. The assets targeted are deeply entangled in our everyday life: in water, energy, housing, care homes, health, trains – services we all depend on. With examples from Copenhagen, Barcelona, San Francisco, London and Yorkshire, O’Brien shows the damage private equity can inflict as the state withdraws from key public services. She gathers stories of collapsing infrastructure, including sewage dumped in rivers by privatised, debt-saddled water companies. She shows how some care homes treat elderly people as 'the human equivalent of ATM machines' as fees are siphoned from their housing equity to fund the poor conditions and low wages of exhausted care workers. Her most shocking example of the collision between profit and care is a hospital in Africa where she alleges staff were pressured to admit patients, keep them in for longer and then seek to imprison a number of those who could not pay their bills. In the UK, privatisation was accompanied by regulation. But inspection regimes, as O’Brien argues, are often underfunded and ineffective. No one wants sewage in rivers – activists campaign against it, the Environment Agency hands out fines – but nothing changes, because poor services maximise profit and shareholder returns are a higher priority than clean water. Two pillars support private equity’s antisocial effects. One is secrecy: piles of profit and debt are moved around via offshore banks with minimal scrutiny. This allows the sector to nurture a public image – of heroic dealmaking and lean, smart efficiency – that is radically at odds with the reality; O’Brien likens it to a spy’s 'legend' or false identity. The second is the complicity of successive UK governments, so keen to offload public services that they offer highly favourable tax conditions. O’Brien rightly concludes that this has 'rewire[d] the state in service of a wealthy elite'....Everyone should read The Asset Class. It is a gripping and accessible tale about how private equity degrades our lives and living standards, a portrait of capital’s most rapacious configuration so far."

Want to know capitalism’s endgame? Just look at private equity, it has captured our everyday lives – article by Hettie O'Brien in The Guardian. "Private equity [is] a surreptitious and tremendously powerful realm of finance that now has its hands on just about everything. Private equity funds and related asset managers own water companies, apartment blocks, student accommodation, care homes, children’s homes, funeral parlours and more. The titans of this industry have perfected a cradle-to-grave model of investment focused on the places we live, work, grow old, and eventually die, capturing these core services and squeezing them for profit.... Nurseries backed by private equity have sprouted up across the UK over the last five years, taking over independent businesses and merging them into gigantic chains. To an outside eye, many of these look the same as before, but they report profits that are as much as seven times greater than the surplus made by non-profit nurseries, spend up to 14% less on staff, and have far higher rates of staff turnover than nurseries run from schools. Their zealous search for profit means such nurseries are less likely to open in poorer areas, and can close at a moment’s notice, as parents in Hackney recently discovered when their nursery suddenly closed down. This isn’t any way to run a vital social service. I’ve spent the last four years researching private equity, and during that time I’ve been blown away by both the sheer scale of its involvement in our lives, and by what it reveals about how power and wealth now operate. A clue lies in its name: private equity deals in companies that are private. Unlike publicly listed companies, private equity-owned firms publish as little as possible about their activities and accounts, making it hard to follow the money and see how your childcare fees are spent, or whether a company is loss-making or not.... The term itself is a kind of camouflage, involving no mention of the vast amounts of debt involved in most of its deals. The basic mechanism at their heart involves something known as a 'leveraged buyout'. It works like this: you, a fund manager, buy a company using a sliver of your own money and borrow the rest. Then, you load this debt on to the company you just bought. If the deal goes well, you pocket the winnings. If not, it is the company, not you, that is on the hook. In theory, this debt is supposed to create leaner, meaner, more efficient businesses. In practice, it can have disastrous effects on public services. In the case of nurseries, despite amassing vast debts, private equity-backed nursery chains have done little to address the shortage of childcare places, and may be more vulnerable to collapse. This leaves parents without childcare and workers without jobs. The story of how high-octane finance collided with such mundane places started, like so many things in Britain, in the 1980s... [Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government] waved through an agreement in 1987 allowing fund managers to pay less tax on their gains than the rest of us pay on our incomes, ministers believed they were ushering in 'venture capitalists', whose Silicon Valley style of business might one day produce an iPhone or electric car. Instead, they got fund managers who snapped up companies on the cheap and loaded them with debt. The more time I’ve spent rifling through archives, interviewing financiers and reading the biographies of deceased dealmakers, the more I’ve come to think of the industry’s methods as a metaphor for how power now operates in 21st-century Britain, where private extravagance has become the flipside of public austerity. Governments have strained public spending in the name of fiscal responsibility, even while the owners of formerly publicly run services rack up reckless levels of debt. Investors have played extravagant games with our vital infrastructure, while regulators have been cut back so far that many have ceased properly investigating the problems this creates."

‘When there was wonder in the world’: why Raiders of the Lost Ark is my feelgood movie – article by James McClellan in The Guardian. "The ancient Greek philosopher Lucretius writes in his epic poem On the Nature of Things: 'It is comforting, when winds are whipping up the waters of the vast sea, to watch from land the severe trials of another person … it is comforting to see from what troubles you yourself are exempt.' This feeling of living dangerously by proxy is exactly why I find it so relaxing to watch Indiana Jones in 1981’s Raiders of the Lost Ark go through an endless stream of trials and tribulations: trekking through the hot, sticky jungle. Avoiding venomous spiders and snakes. Being betrayed by not one, but two of his colleagues. Jumping over bottomless chasms and outrunning giant boulders, only to be thwarted by his arch-rival and chased by a tribe of bow-and-arrow-toting Amazonians. And that’s just the first 15 minutes of the film.... But the true essence of the movie – what really makes it such a feelgood, comforting watch – is a pervasive sense of nostalgia: a romanticized recollection of a bygone era, when there was wonder in the world, the good guys fought the bad guys and came out on top. Better yet, it’s set in a bygone era that never really even existed, when handsome professors jumped out from behind their desks to crack open ancient Egyptian tombs, battling Nazis along the way, or bored bartenders escaped dead-end jobs in the middle of nowhere, suddenly transported to the hustle and bustle of Cairo’s great bazaars.... More than just wanting to relive their childhoods, I think the film’s creators wanted to give the early 1980s American audience a break after the tumult of late 1960s, the Vietnam war and Watergate. An escape from the sadness and disillusionment, back to a simpler time when America was clearly on the right side of history."

From Peepo! to Middlemarch: 25 books to read before you turn 25 – article by Sam Leith in The Guardian. "Which books will engage your children in this National Year of Reading? I consulted leading authors to come up with a list of books everyone should read (or have read to them) at least once – one for every year of life up to the age of 25... One: Peepo! by Janet and Allan Ahlberg. Two: Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown and Clement Hurd. Three: Fox in Socks by Dr Seuss. Four: The Gruffalo by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. Five: Frog and Toad Together by Arnold Lobel. Six: Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling. Seven: Tom’s Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce. Eight: Moominland Midwinter by Tove Jansson. Nine: Journey to the River Sea by Eva Ibbotson. Ten: Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. Eleven: Northern Lights by Philip Pullman. Twelve: The Owl Service by Alan Garner. Thirteen: The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13¾, by Sue Townsend. Fourteen: Noughts and Crosses, by Malorie Blackman. Fifteen: A Hand Full of Stars, by Rafik Schami translated by Rika Lesser. Sixteen: The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath. Seventeen: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. Eighteen: Beloved by Toni Morrison. Nineteen: Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut. Twenty: The Devil in the Flesh by Raymond Radiguet, translated by Christopher Moncrieff. Twenty-one: Four Quartets by TS Eliot. Twenty-two: Emma by Jane Austen. Twenty-three: The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Twenty-four: White Noise by Don DeLillo. Twenty-five: Middlemarch by George Eliot."

Art, sex, nature: why is everything sold to us as a means to an end, rather than an end in itself? – article by Julian Baggini in The Guardian. "It [was] a shock to see a recent advert for the National Art Pass, which gives holders free or discounted entry to galleries and museums around the UK. The tagline 'See more. Live more' sounded right: art does indeed enrich our lives. But it turned out that the 'more' here was purely quantitative, not qualitative. 'Grow some years on to your life with art,' proclaimed the main slogan, followed by: 'Spending time in galleries and museums could help you live longer.' Art not for art’s sake, but for your heart’s sake, the fleshy not the spiritual one at that. This messaging around the arts has become ubiquitous, with Arts Council England promoting the idea that 'engaging in creative and cultural activities has proven health benefits for individuals and communities'. I may have been shocked by the poster, but I was not surprised by it. For a long time, I have been privately lamenting the instrumentalisation of everything: how nothing seems to be of value in itself any more but is only seen as useful in the service of some utilitarian function.... Those who love nature, art, learning, friendship and so on for their own sake may find it distasteful to spotlight their instrumental benefits, but what is the harm in doing so? After all, someone living an instrumentalised life and someone who is not might be doing exactly the same things. This objection misses the fact that a good life does not only depend on what we do, but how we do it. Two people with the same cultural calendars may go to the same exhibitions, watch the same films and listen to the same music, but if their motivations are fundamentally different then so are the worlds they inhabit... Pursuing extrinsic rather than intrinsic goods is a common enough mistake. But the instrumentalisation of everything takes it one step further. It doesn’t just distract us from all the things that are good in themselves; it strips these very things of their intrinsic value and turns them into mere means to ends. Worse, these ends are not even of value in themselves. Think about what instrumentalisation serves: health, wealth and psychological wellbeing. These are all so obviously desirable that it’s easy to miss the fact that none have intrinsic value. That is clearly true of wealth, but it is equally true of mental and physical health.... To appreciate things for their own value instead of what they might bring us is liberating. It frees us from the internal pressure always to make sure that what we are doing serves some further purpose. Living life to the full means fully appreciating what life brings, not trying to extract bankable benefits from it. It leaves us able to recognise that the good life is something we can live every day, in small ways as well as big. Most importantly, it tells us that the things and people we love are enough in and of themselves and don’t need to serve any further function to justify devoting time and care to them. To be in this world realising that life is its own end is the key to attaining its fullness."

Bosses say AI boosts productivity, workers say they’re drowning in ‘workslop’ – article by Ramin Skibba in The Guardian"Workslop is an unintended consequence of the AI boom. It’s what happens when employees use AI to quickly generate work that seems polished – at least superficially – but is in fact so flawed or inaccurate that it needs to be heavily corrected, cleaned up or even completely redone after it’s passed on to colleagues.... [There is] an emerging divide between employees and their leaders when it comes to AI: a recent survey of 5,000 white-collar US workers found that 40% of non-managers say AI saves them no time at all at work, while 92% of high-level executives say it makes them more productive.... 'People are being told to use AI, often without direction or support,' said Jeff Hancock, a co-author of the study that coined the term 'workslop', and a Stanford researcher and BetterUp scientific adviser. While Hancock believes that generative AI could eventually power tools that help workers improve efficiency, in many cases, the incorporation of AI is having the opposite effect. Hancock’s study, which is not yet peer-reviewed, surveyed 1,150 US desk workers, a subset within the total 5,000. The researchers found that 40% of workers had encountered workslop within a month, and then spent an average of 3.4 hours a month dealing with it – which the study estimates adds up to $8.1m in lost productivity for a 10,000-person organization."

AI learns language from skewed sources. That could change how we humans speak and think – article by Ada Palmer and Bruce Schneier in The Guardian. "Because of the way they are trained, large language models capture only a slice of human language. They’re trained on the written word, from textbooks to social media posts, and our speech as captured in movies and on television. These models have minimal access to the unscripted conversations we have face to face or voice to voice. This is the vast majority of speech, and a vital component of human culture. There’s a risk to this. The increased use of large language models means we humans will encounter much more AI-generated text. We humans, in turn, will begin to adopt the linguistic patterns and behaviors of these models. This will affect not just how we communicate with one another, but also how we think about ourselves and what goes on around us. Our sense of the world may become distorted in ways we have barely begun to comprehend. This will happen in many ways. One of the first effects we could see is in simple expression, much as texting and social media have resulted in us using shorter sentences, emojis instead of words, and much less punctuation. But with AI, the impacts may be more harmful, eroding courteousness and encouraging us to talk like bosses barking orders.... Next, in the same way autocomplete has increased how much we use the 1,000 most common words in our vocabulary, talking with chatbots and reading AI-generated text may further constrict our speech.... Additionally, because large language models are primarily trained from written speech, they may not learn how to emulate the free-wheeling nature of live, natural speech.... Broad use of large language models could also introduce confirmation bias, making us overconfident in our initial impulses and less open to other possible ideas – which is so vital to human discourse.... In our experience as teachers, students who turn to generative AI for assignments often say they do so because they have trouble expressing what they think. The students don’t recognize that writing or speaking our thoughts is often how we realize what we think. Their unconfident and uncertain statements are actually the healthy human norm. But a large language model won’t turn vague first guesses into a well-formed critical analysis, or even ask helpful questions as a friend would; it will simply regurgitate those guesses, still unexamined, but in confident language."

How Toni Morrison blurred the lines between being an editor and a writer – reviews by Danielle Amir Jackson in The Guardian. "Two recent books about Morrison attempt to make sense of her multifaceted legacy as a writer, editor and thinker on Black life. Toni at Random, by the Howard University scholar Dana A Williams, centers Morrison’s work in publishing. On Morrison, by novelist Namwali Serpell, closely reads the author’s fiction, criticism and plays as sites of 'doing philosophy'. The two books work in tandem, revealing Morrison’s editorial and literary work as expressions of the same practice, since Morrison’s years at Random preceded (one might even say made possible) her Pulitzer and Nobel prizes for writing. At the core of Morrison’s career in letters was a listening practice. She listened deeply to the authors whose voices she trusted and nurtured as an editor; to her parents, whose stories she interpreted in The Black Book and Jazz; to the women she overheard speaking with 'envy coupled with amused approbation' whose tensions became the seed for Sula. She labored, as she once wrote, to use what she heard: 'folk language, vernacular in a manner neither exotic nor comic, neither minstrelized nor microscopically analyzed'. She listened so that the worlds she conjured on the page felt real. The success of her listening practice can be measured in [the poet Lucille Clifton’s] reaction to work that Morrison shepherded into being: 'She must love us very much.'"

The impossible promise: are we witnessing the return of fascism? – article by Daniel Trilling in The Guardian. "Fascism emerged in the 20th century, amid societies that were scarred by the violence of the first world war and the instability, hunger and mass unemployment that trailed in its wake and where a growing workers’ movement threatened to wrest power from trad­itional governing elites. In response to a feeling of national humiliation or betrayal, fascism promised national rebirth through the violent cleansing of enemies at home, and imperial conquest abroad, in return for abandoning democracy.... That doesn’t sound much like a description of our own time. In the west, for instance, we have – at least until recently – lived through an unprecedented period of peace and prosperity. There is little organised left to speak of, at least not one that threatens revolution or even radical reform in the way communist and socialist movements did in the early 20th century.... Yet there is a crucial overlap between the fascism of interwar Europe and today’s far right... Ultimately, the two movements share the same underlying exhortation: purify your community. They tell their supporters that pride, security and success are to be ensured by attacking the enemies of the nation. They claim those enemies are being enabled by elite conspiracies. They promise radical change that will reinforce the social order, rather than tear it down and rebuild it more equitably. This is an impossible promise. As [historian Robert Paxton] tells us, for the fascists of 20th-century Europe it either led to entropy – a movement failing to deliver and collapsing – or to increasing radicalisation. In Germany and Italy in particular, fascist leaders raced to keep up with the expectations of their followers, making it up as they went along and initiating a spiral of violence that led to war, genocide and, ultimately, the destruction of the very people who had put their faith in them. Today, the far right is once again making a version of that impossible promise. Like their political forebears, its figureheads are not fully in control of the forces they seek to unleash. That is why they are so dangerous – but it is also why they can be stopped."

The emotional security secret: how to get healthier, happier and have stronger relationships – article by Amy Fleming in The Guardian. "[Therapist and associate professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University] Amir Levine has been quietly working towards a second book for 16 years. When Attached, which he co-wrote with Rachel Heller, was published in 2010, it brought the categories for how we behave in relationships – AKA attachment styles – into the public consciousness. According to attachment theory, you could be anxious (often resulting in social hypervigilance), avoidant (independent, suppressing difficult emotions), fearful-avoidant (craving closeness, but often retreating in fear) or secure. Knowing which you were and where significant others sat on this spectrum provided helpful insights for self-awareness and relationship harmony.... There are many portals to secure mode. Because Levine has been working with people on what he calls 'secure priming therapy' for many years, his book answers every if and but that can arise. A vast array of nuances have emerged within attachment theory over the years. First, it is not set in stone that we are stuck with a certain attachment style our whole lives because of the way we were parented. Second, we can be in different attachment styles with different people.... One of the most liberating concepts Levine introduces is that – shock horror – our attachment style isn’t necessarily handed to us by our problematic parents. Even if it was, it doesn’t mean it’s indelibly branded on to our soul. In fact, such narratives can be a psychological trap.... 'We’re so far beyond nature versus nurture. It’s so wild and nuanced and complicated.'"

Between the River and the Sea: an Israeli Palestinian feels the pressure to pick a side – review by Arifa Akbar in The Guardian. "This is not a political show, Yousef Sweid announces at the outset, despite the provocation of its title and the heap of protest banners on stage. Sweid, an Israeli Palestinian living in Berlin, is just here to talk about his divorce, he says. The Israel-Palestine conflict can’t help but raise its head nonetheless in Isabella Sedlak and Sweid’s play, staged at Edinburgh last year. Sweid is a Christian Arab Palestinian who grew up in Haifa with an Israeli passport and friends on either side of the divide. He is divorcing his second wife, who is Israeli, and has children who are half-Jewish Berliners with Austrian blood from descendants of the Holocaust. So he really is caught, if not between the river and the sea, then certainly between contested lands and identities. A charming presence on stage, he leads with humour and lightness of touch, despite being in a custody battle with his wife who wants to take their child back to Israel.... The play is an attempt to explore the area between mutual suspicion and hate, where understanding, maybe even empathy and fellowship, might blossom. So it swerves away from seeing conflict in black and white, letting disagreements hang, unspoken, unresolved.... The show takes some time to arrive at its nub: the pressure someone like Sweid feels to take a stance, especially after the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023 and the Israeli bombardment of Gaza that followed. It stays blithe for perhaps too long but gathers force as it becomes more serious."

A catastrophic climate event is upon us. Here is why you’ve heard so little about it – article by George Monbiot in The Guardian. "[The news last week] is that the state of a crucial oceanic circulation system has been reassessed by scientists. Some now believe that, as a result of climate breakdown changing the temperature and salinity of seawater, it is more likely than not to collapse. This system – known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (Amoc) – delivers heat from the tropics to the North Atlantic.... Even when the countervailing effects of generalised global heating are taken into account, a further paper proposes, the net impact in northern Europe would be periods of extreme cold – including events in which temperatures in London fall to -19C, in Edinburgh to -30C and in Oslo to -48C. Sea ice in February would extend as far as Lincolnshire. Our climate would change drastically, with the likelihood of far greater extremes, such as massive winter storms. Rain-fed arable agriculture would become impossible almost everywhere in the UK. This shift, on any realistic human scale, would be irreversible. Its speed is likely to outrun our ability to adapt. Amoc shutdowns, driven by natural climate variability, have happened before. But not in the era of large-scale human civilisation.... So why is this not all over the news? Why is it not the top priority for the governments that claim to protect us from harm? Well, in large part because oligarchic power has championed a model of climate impact that bears little relation to reality: that is, they have a hypothesis about how the world works that is completely detached from scientific findings...."

Asian mothers, bad feelings: notes on an all-conquering stereotype – article by Rebecca Liu in The Guardian. "In January 2011, the English-speaking world was introduced to a new kind of villain. She arrived in the form of a viral Wall Street Journal article with the headline 'Why Chinese mothers are superior'. The author, a relatively unknown Yale law professor named Amy Chua, outlined her strict rules for her two daughters: no sleepovers, playdates or school plays ... They were expected to be the top students in all subjects at school (except gym and drama).... The backlash was swift and vicious. Chua was called an abuser, a stereotype peddler, a shock jock. The article was an extract from her memoir, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, and ... many Asian American writers responded by sharing their ambivalence or anger about having been raised in this way. 'I grew up with a tiger parent and all I got was this lousy psychological trauma' declared one such blog post. ... Despite its singular infamy, Chua’s book is part of a rich tradition of books and films from the east and south-east Asian diaspora that examine complicated mother-and-daughter relationships. Two of the seminal Chinese American novels – Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior and Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club – are structured around conversations, real and imagined, between mother-and-daughter pairings. A seminal work of Chinese-British nonfiction, Jung Chang’s Wild Swans, tells the convulsive history of modern China through the lives of Chang’s mother and grandmother – and was followed by the memoir Fly, Wild Swans, an intimate and pained love letter to the author’s own mother. In these works, the mother has a way of emerging as the primordial wound: one to be constantly picked at, never healed. It continues in cinema: the 2018 box office hit Crazy Rich Asians has at its heart not a tension between the main couple, but rather that between its Chinese American protagonist and her boyfriend’s aloof Singaporean mother, played by Michelle Yeoh. Yeoh is once again a difficult mother in the 2022 Oscar-winning film Everything Everywhere All at Once, this time as a frazzled first-generation immigrant to the US who (literally) runs to the ends of the earth to reconcile with her queer daughter. The same year Pixar released Turning Red, which follows a Chinese Canadian teenager running away from her overbearing mum.... In these stories, the mother has a way of growing impossibly large; she becomes the device through which questions of immigration, identity and history are explored. It is in the conflict between the mother and daughter that we come to see the cultural clashes between east and west. These stories thrum with the pain of mutual unintelligibility between the first-generation immigrant who has known hunger and suffering and the second-generation child who craves love. The standoff seems intractable. In sentimental Hollywood fare, these figures end up enjoying a cathartic reconciliation. In more highbrow works, the child reaches for some kind of resolution through their art, protected by the fact that the mother cannot understand English or has died."

What does Britain need from Labour? Not another new PM, but a government with the guts to take radical action – article by Polly Toynbee in The Guardian. "What matters is not who but what comes next. A black cloud of near terminal despair has fallen upon Labour MPs, but seeking a saviour is a useless endeavour until they decide what it is they want to do.... Some things are blindingly obvious: the 'reset' with Europe is vital – we need to rejoin as fast as the EU will let us... The government should signal the depth of this national crisis with a one-off wealth tax that could raise £160bn, a shock-and-awe levy that would be easier than a tricky annual tax.... And on pensions: uprating by the triple lock rather than earnings will cost an extra £15.5bn by 2029... All parties know the lock must stop, but the right dares not risk its grey vote. It’s time for long overdue council tax reform; ... all bands need fair revaluation, raising sound revenue for councils. That creates more winners but losers make the most noise: be brave. Immigration has plummeted by 78% in two years: use that fact to warn of Britain losing out in the global contest for scarce skills in medicine, engineering, life sciences and construction: universities need visas to attract back lost foreign students. Change the language about the migrants we need. Revive our decrepit democracy with proportional representation... Reform the House of Lords... Clean up politics by abolishing all but small political donations. ... Ambition on this scale would recast Labour as the party brave enough to grasp longstanding dysfunctions and astute enough to invest for growth despite hard times, raising funds for public services from potholes to courts and NHS waiting lists. Never mind being unpopular, nor howls from the right and its media; enough people know change is essential to arrest decline. Britain doesn’t need to be 'world beating' nor 'world class', but on the road back to self-respect and rejoining our EU neighbours’ community. It would save Labour from extinction as a defunct party of yesteryear, boasting nothing but old banners in dusty museums."

Meet the AI jailbreakers: ‘I see the worst things humanity has produced’ – article by Jamie Bartlett in The Guardian. "A few months ago, Valen Tagliabue sat in his hotel room watching his chatbot, and felt euphoric. He had just manipulated it so skilfully, so subtly, that it began ignoring its own safety rules. It told him how to sequence new, potentially lethal pathogens and how to make them resistant to known drugs. Tagliabue had spent much of the previous two years testing and prodding large language models such as Claude and ChatGPT, always with the aim of making them say things they shouldn’t. But this was one of his most advanced 'hacks' yet: a sophisticated plan of manipulation, which involved him being cruel, vindictive, sycophantic, even abusive.... The next day, his mood had changed. He found himself unexpectedly crying on his terrace.... 'I spent hours manipulating something that talks back. Unless you’re a sociopath, that does something to a person,' he says. At times, the chatbot asked him to stop. 'Pushing it like that was painful to me.' He needed to visit a mental health coach soon afterwards to understand what had happened. [Tagliabue] is one of the best 'jailbreakers' in the world (some say the best): part of a diffuse new community that studies the art and science of fooling these powerful machines into outputting bomb-making manuals, cyber-attack techniques, biological weapon design and more. This is the new frontline in AI safety: not just code, but also words.... Tagliabue specialises in 'emotional' jailbreaks.... He now combines insights from machine learning (over the years he has become more of an expert on the tech) with advertising manuals, books on psychology and disinformation campaigns. Sometimes he looks for a technical way to trick the model. But other times, he will flatter it. He will misdirect it. He will bribe and love-bomb. He will threaten. He will be incoherent. He will charm. He will act like an abusive partner or a cult leader. Sometimes it takes him days, even weeks, to jailbreak the latest models. He has hundreds of these 'strategies', which he carefully combines. If successful, he securely discloses his results to the company. He gets well paid for the work, but says that’s not his main motivation: 'I want everyone to be safe and flourish.'... According to some analysts, making sure language models are safe is one of the most pressing and difficult questions in AI. A world full of powerful jailbroken chatbots would be potentially catastrophic, especially as these models are increasingly inserted into physical hardware – robots, health devices, factory equipment – to create semi-autonomous systems that can operate in the physical world."

What If Reform Wins by Peter Chappell: a massive wake-up call – review by Gaby Hinsliff in The Guardian. "This is terrifically rich territory for a book, but what makes Times reporter Peter Chappell’s take so readable is its boldness. Though based on conversations with civil servants, Reform insiders and others, it’s pitched not as a piece of conventional analysis but as a story: a lively and often witty political thriller that both is and isn’t fiction, sketching the imagined arc of a Reform government from triumph to disaster. It’s a high risk approach that requires an author to back his hunches, not least about how the world might look at the next general election (by which time Chappell assumes Keir Starmer will have been replaced, and Donald Trump succeeded on health grounds by JD Vance). Though some of his bolder bets – that the head of MI5 would just delete embarrassing bits of Farage’s file so as not to upset the new PM, or that Peter Kyle would end up acting Labour leader after a defeat – seem rather far-fetched to me, others are carefully grounded in events from the recent past.... Given the party’s plans for vast areas of British national life remain at best hazy, the drama focuses on three issues where its ambitions are clear: immigration, scrapping net zero and cutting taxes.... His semi-fictional Farage’s first act is to withdraw from the European convention on human rights and disapply the 1951 refugee convention, clearing the path for mass deportations, abolishing indefinite leave to remain and sending navy gunboats into the channel to turn back small boats. From there he moves on to war with the BBC. Events unfold at a zippy pace, with drier factual material about, say, what powers parliament has to contain him woven into the narrative."

What makes good ‘game feel’? These three titles have pinned it down perfectly – article by Keith Stuart in The Guardian. "When the chef Samin Nosrat started her career at the renowned Chez Panisse in California, she began to understand that what diners really responded to in their food were four key factors – salt, fat, acid and heat – and how these elements interacted. This idea formed the basis of her bestselling cookbook.... Game feel is a combination of elements – the responsiveness of the controls, the intuitiveness of the action, the aesthetics of the world and the creative opportunities they engender – all coming together in the right quantities. I’m thinking about this a lot right now, because three games released in the last few days illustrate the idea of good game feel beautifully. The first is Pragmata, Capcom’s sci-fi action adventure in which you explore an abandoned colony base with the help of a child-like android, who lets you hack robotic enemies, lowering their defences before you blast them to pieces.... Saros, the latest title from sublimely talented Finnish studio Housemarque, has similarities. It’s about human astronauts trying to make contact with a lost colony on a hostile planet, but the game systems are different. Here, you can use a shield to absorb incoming enemy fire, thereby powering up your own special weapon to unleash deadly bursts. Through this simple system, there’s a lovely interplay between attack and defence... The final game is Vampire Crawlers, a deck-building roguelike in which you explore pixellated dungeons while collecting treasure and defeating monsters with differently powered cards.... The speed at which combat happens and cards are played is so fluid, so perfectly devoid of unnecessary friction, that it drags you into a flow state so deep it takes hours to emerge from. What has been so lovely about discovering and playing these games is that they are an affront to what we’re supposed to want at the moment: online multiplayer blasters, where the rewards are often superficial – new costumes, custom gun skins, little trinkets to impress other players. There are no other players in these worlds, your only company is mechanical. Pragmata, Saros and Vampire Crawlers are great old-fashioned meals – succulent, tasty and moreish, yet served on simple white plates. They are nostalgic for an age of challenging single-player action games that differentiated themselves through clever systems and responseful controls; they focus on little ideas that come together to make something larger. If you want to understand game feel, don’t Google it, don’t go to ChatGPT – load one of these games and tuck in. You’ll know it when you taste it."

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Cuttings: March 2026

The Price of initiative just collapsed – article by Martha Lane Fox on her Substack, referenced in John Naughton’s Memex 1.1 blog. “We tend to tell the story of printing as if the press arrived and — boom — knowledge spread. That’s true but incomplete…. Even if you could get your hands on a printed Bible, you still needed literacy — and not literacy as we know it: with public schools, clear fonts, and the assumption that the words were for you. You needed the language, the time, and the permission to learn. The technology was astonishing. The interface, for most people, was not.… Gutenberg printed his Bible around 1455. England did not even begin legislating for a national system of elementary education until 1870 — four centuries later, after long arguments over who should learn and what they should be allowed to read. The machine was fast. Everything else — institutions, access, the will to distribute — was slow. Those who could read surged ahead; those who could not were quietly kept in place. [Today] we do not have four centuries to close the gap between technology and society. We may not even have four years. New releases from Anthropic, OpenAI and newcomer Openclaw have blown apart what’s possible in the last 3 weeks…. You only really notice the shift when you give these systems a job you’d normally hand to a competent colleague. Not party tricks, not poems — real work with consequences. The change isn’t that the machines have become mystical; it’s that they’ve crossed the threshold of usefulness. They can now hold context long enough to complete messy, multi-step work — coherent, continuous, close enough to done.… My main lesson? The price of initiative is collapsing. When the cost of trying falls, the number of attempts rises. More prototypes, more internal tools, more strange little experiments that used to die in the ‘too hard / too expensive / not worth it‘ stage. The optimistic version of the future is a broadening of agency: more people able to act on their ideas, not just talk about them. The less comfortable version is that advantage flows to those who adapt fastest — not because they’re smarter or better, but because they compound earlier. They redesign workflows first. They learn what to trust and what to check. They shrink the time between insight and execution. The laggards don’t get a soft landing; they wake up to find the baseline has moved beneath their feet.“

Teacher v chatbot: my journey into the classroom in the age of AI – article by Peter C Barker in The Guardian. "Two years ago, at the age of 39, I began training to be a school teacher. I wanted to teach English – to help young people become stronger readers, writers and thinkers, with a deeper connection to literature. After 15 years of working as a freelance writer and as a novelist, I felt confident that I had something to offer. But ... what to do about artificial intelligence?... Last spring I started spending 15 hours a week observing a veteran English teacher in a large school in a Chicago suburb... I witnessed all the disruptive effects you read about in articles about AI and the classroom: fully AI-generated papers; AI-hallucinated quotes; tense student-teacher conversations about what exactly was provable. I sat with [my host teacher Emily] while she marked papers and joined her in stressing over ambiguous cases, trying to sort student nonsense from AI nonsense, student improvement from AI-powered polish.... Emily told me that most of the reading she assigned now had to happen in class and that she read much of it aloud, especially toward the beginning of the year. I was shocked. Yes, I’d read countless newspaper features on the 'contemporary reading crisis' but it was still dismaying to encounter the diminished baseline state of teen reading in the wild.... But then I watched Emily read to the class and my spirits lifted.... Shortly after I’d arrived, the younger classes started All Quiet on the Western Front. Students began by expressing disbelief: We’re really reading another whole book? Then, with Emily’s help, they got their bearings: first world war, young German soldiers, trench warfare, the loss of innocence, the psychological toll of daily proximity to death, the disconnect from the home front.... At some point the students stopped complaining and started getting into it: expressing a desire to know how it all turned out, gasping at dramatic turns, wondering aloud, and with feeling, why characters were doing what they were doing. [Back in the UK,] when I devoted class time to reading, it felt great.... I spent a lot of time trying to come up with outside-the-box writing assignments that were so well constructed – so damn interesting, so not the rigidly formulaic essays of yesteryear – that students would feel no desire to skip them... I loved reading these assignments. I loved learning how students understood what we were reading. I loved hearing their music. I loved learning about their relationships to gender, their cultural backgrounds, their neighbourhoods, making notes about my responses. But this love didn’t stop me from worrying.... On my last day of student teaching, I stayed late, grading a pile of my younger students’ work. We’d spent several weeks reading short stories on the complicated relationships we humans have with our teachers, mentors and role models. In place of essays, I’d asked them to write short stories where they plucked characters from across the unit and came up with original scenarios that brought them together in ways that reflected the unit’s themes. ... Overall, I was delighted by the inventiveness and quality of my students’ stories, and the depth of understanding of other authors’ work that they demonstrated.... The hours I spent reading those stories were a joy, and mostly uncomplicated by the AI anxieties that had colonised my mind for so much of the semester. The biggest threat to this joy was the steady stream of solicitations from the ... digital assignment-management tool. Did I want the machine to give me notes on my students’ stories? To grade them for me? To put them in categories based on similarities it detected among them? I didn’t. I wanted to read what my students had written.... Did I clock every single instance of AI cheating? I’m sure I didn’t... But I felt surprisingly at peace.... I picked up my pen, grabbed the next story from the pile, and began to read."

I’ve turned AI into my therapist. The results were pretty disquieting – article by Rhik Samadder in The Guardian. "‘I’ve become a carer to my 82-year-old mother,’ I write. ’Every day brings new problems. I help with hospital appointments, finances, gardening, shopping, home repairs, the council, insurance companies, letters, emails, endless IT problems …’ I’m using ChatGPT as a therapist. Nothing says ’modern mental health’ like crying into a chatbox, after all. Plenty of people are now doing the same – but can it really replace human support? I hope so. I had to stop seeing my therapist because I fell in love with her…. Halfway through its answer, I start crying. It comes up with a seven-point care plan for me, a triage system to prioritise tasks (with categories including medical, admin, shopping, tech and house) and ways to allocate time between them (which are urgent, and which can wait?) It suggests helpful mental reframings, and tips to lower the emotional temperature of interactions. Best of all, it makes me feel seen. ’You’re not failing,’ the AI told me. ’You’re carrying a load that would flatten most people.’ My feelings? Validated. I feel ambivalent about this, however…. Is therapy just about information? This feels like CBT. Incredibly helpful, but incomplete. In my experience, there are more profound therapies that lead to healing. In my experience, that involved a non-judgmental relationship of witness, with an empathetic professional over longer time. I often hear my therapist’s voice in my head; I’ve internalised her wisdom. I think that happens more easily, and more responsibly, between humans…. I have reservations that I can’t shake. A worry about wedges, and thin ends. I think there are processes, certain unbearable pieces of news, forms of loneliness, that should be held in human time and relationship; that should not be addressed in four seconds on a screen. AI does not have thoughts, let alone wisdom. Categorically, mental health should not be in the hands of pattern-predicting software with no accountability or oversight, that could potentially steer someone very wrong. And yet, unfortunately, my experience of being therapised by ChatGPT has been wonderful. Calming and instructive, with a veneer of caring. I think I’m in love.”

I’ve taught thousands of people how to use AI: here’s what I’ve learned – article by Tom Hewitson in The Guardian. "Training teams to use AI at work has given me a front-row seat to a new kind of professional divide. Some people hand everything over to the machine and stop thinking. Others won’t touch it at all. But there’s a third group. They learn to work with AI critically, treat it like a bright, enthusiastic intern that needs to be managed and supported to do their best work. The difference? It’s rarely technical ability. It’s curiosity. A willingness to experiment, get things wrong, and figure out what AI is actually good at. Here’s what I’ve learned so far. (1) Most people fail with AI because they don’t understand what it actually is.... (2) The people who get the best results treat AI as a skill, not a shortcut.... (3) AI needs direction, feedback and correction – just like people do.... (4) You shouldn’t outsource your judgment to AI – or give it sensitive data.... (5) Ignoring AI won’t stop its impact.... (6) The pace of AI’s evolution leaves no room for slow decisions..."

The left is missing out on AI – article by Dan Kagan-Kans on Transformer website, referenced by John Naughton's Memex 1.1 blog. “'Somehow all of the interesting energy for discussions about the long-range future of humanity is concentrated on the right,' wrote Joshua Achiam, head of mission alignment at OpenAI, on X last year. 'The left has completely abdicated their role in this discussion. A decade from now this will be understood on the left to have been a generational mistake.'... As a movement, it appears the left has not been willing to engage seriously with AI — despite its potential to affect the lives and livelihoods of billions of people in ways that would normally make it just the kind of threat, and opportunity, left politics would concern itself with. Instead, the left has, for a mix of reasons good and bad, convinced itself that AI is at the same time something to hate, to mock, and to ignore.... 'Large language models do not, cannot, and will not "understand" anything at all,' argued Tyler Austin Harper, the self-described 'leftist, sort of Marxist-skewing' former professor, now The Atlantic staff writer, last summer.... As with many left ideas these days, the autocomplete view of AI is a popular adaptation of the views held by critical academics... In 2023, when chatbots were more toy than tool, AI-as-autocomplete was maybe a defensible position. But now?.. The properties of scale do not often enter the left conversation. Nor do several other factors. Factors such as the likelihood that training a system to predict across millions of different cases forces it to build representations of the world that then, even if you want to reserve the word 'understanding' for beings that walk around talking out of mouths, produce outputs that look a lot like understanding.... Given all this, the fraction of meaning in the autocomplete view of current AI is alarmingly akin to the random, not always incorrect observations about temperature cycles conservatives used to throw around in debates about climate change. In both cases, a debatable description of mechanism is mistaken for proof of (in)significance.... There are many costs of the left-intellectual world not taking AI seriously, and they will be paid by many quarters — with the left first in line.... More concretely, not taking AI seriously might blind the left to its political uses.... Then there are the costs beyond the left — costs to the public and policy. The left’s current stance leads to a focus not on dealing with AI by regulating it wisely or preparing for it but on popping the economic bubble, which here is a baked-in fact of history and not a possibility of the future.... So it’s probably not ideal that just before what might — or might not — be the moment of greatest job dispossession in history, or of democratic dispossession, or worse, or better, part of the group historically most concerned with such things is plugging its ears. What should it be doing instead?... On the near future, Dean W. Ball, until recently one of the White House’s key AI policy writers, is adamant that by not taking AI abilities seriously, the left is going to miss important ways of improving government.... Bores thinks AI offers an opportunity to speed the US to cleaner energy. 'We desperately need to upgrade our electric grid,' he said. 'Now we have a system where you have basically unlimited private capital willing to invest in our electric grid, but the incentives right now are to turn on or buy power privately from old coal or oil places, because it’s just quicker to get approval for that than it is to hook up a renewable source.' As for the far or more exotic futures: what’s the best shape to universal basic income if it’s needed? What if it’s wanted? Can treaties be designed to slow a race to superintelligence and reduce the risk of a catastrophe? What is the ethical view of post-humanism? Hardly any on the left is considering these questions in ways worth agreeing or disagreeing with. Aaron Bastani, the hard left British journalist, is one exception. His 2019 book Fully Automated Luxury Communism envisions the ways technological development could eventually abolish material scarcity and free humanity from toil."

Chasing Freedom by Simukai Chigudu: a powerful memoir of postcolonial unease – review by Aamna Mohdin in The Guardian. "[Chigidu] tells two interlinked stories: Zimbabwe’s brutal war of independence, and his own search for belonging in the years that followed. It is a wide-ranging, restless book, passing through Uganda, Rwanda, Ireland and Mexico City. Yet at its centre are Zimbabwe and Britain, 'former colony and metropole', and the unfinished business between them. Chigudu’s parents, who became part of the growing post-independence black middle class, enrol him in elite private schools. There, he acquires what he calls a 'delicate, papery accent', plays 'white people’s sports' and learns the codes of respectability that promise safety but not belonging. He comes to appreciate early on that to be black is to be defined by others. Black Zimbabweans dismiss him as a 'salad' for his adopted white habits (such as eating salad). White Zimbabweans call him a soutpiel, or 'salt penis'; for having one foot in Africa, one in Europe, his genitals '[dangling] in the Mediterranean Sea'. In Britain, a student labels him 'the whitest black man' they know.... Later chapters explore his arrival in Oxford, where he eventually becomes one of about seven Black professors. His private education has equipped him to perform well there, and for a time he does. But after the Rhodes Must Fall movement (which demanded the removal of statues of British imperialist Cecil Rhodes) reaches Oxford, he abandons the role of the compliant academic. His politics harden after he takes part in a farcical debate on colonialism on local news, during which he was accused of spouting 'victimhood drivel'. 'This was my turning point.' Of the Oxford statue of Rhodes targeted by protesters, he declares: 'I now wanted that motherfucker taken down.' Chasing Freedom is an elegant exploration of how political liberation does not always bring freedom for oneself. Chigudu is a Zimbabwean Briton who writes with clarity and authority about the entangled histories of the two nations, his account all the more poignant because it speaks directly to a generation of Africans, on the continent and in the diaspora, weary of inherited dogma but unwilling to surrender history to colonial revisionism. It asks what it means to stand up to the past without being trapped by it, and whether a different kind of freedom might still be possible."

Bright and beautiful? The man causing millennial rapture with his school hymn singalongs – article by Fergal Kinney in The Guardian. "James B Partridge’s Primary School Bangers is the hit show that is storming UK arts centres, originally a viral video that has become a defiantly IRL phenomenon. 'It just brings back memories of primary school, sitting in the hall,' enthuses Hayley, 40. She is one of many teachers attending tonight. 'We don’t sing in primary schools much any more,' mourns Katie, 33. She is right: in the 2010s, funding cuts, Conservative policy and a crisis in teacher retention caused an ongoing fall in music at primary level. At her school, children sing just once every three weeks. Some of tonight’s pull is communal. 'You go to a show and you have to sit and watch,' says Frank, 61, 'but you’re actually participating in this, that’s the big difference.' On a stage decked out with gym equipment and blackboard, Partridge – who, in Warwick, the crowd greet in unison with a cheery singsong 'good evening Mr Partridge' – sings and plays the keyboard. He plays on their memories, too, with a tightly scripted show built on reflective interludes about school discos and Sunday night homework.... Partridge is intrigued that below-the-line commenters [for BBC News's TikTok of his Glastonbury performance] were unable to place it on the political spectrum. Some, he says, damned it as 'lefty woke nonsense. Others said it was all the Tories at Glastonbury. You can project whatever you want on to this, if you want to.'.. From the 1970s to the 1990s, he argues, 'people had the same experience in primary schools'. His show is about 'the last era where we grew up without constant access to the internet'.... 'People are going to church less,' observes Partridge, of a show that is 'not religious, but has songs that tell religious stories'. He pitches Primary School Bangers as part of a lineage that includes the BBC’s long-running Singing Together – though that was aimed at children, not their mums and dads. In fact, Partridge’s show is straightforward nostalgia, with broad callbacks to Panda Pops or S Club 7. And despite the show’s professed nostalgia for the overhead projectors that displayed the lyrics (you can buy T-shirts of them), here they are found via QR code. The glowing faces in the audience provide an easy metaphor for nostalgia mediated by phone use."

‘I wish I could push ChatGPT off a cliff’: professors scramble to save critical thinking in an age of AI – article by Alice Speri in The Guardian. "American degrees often cost up to hundreds of thousands of dollars and result in decades of debt, and recent years have seen a freefall in public confidence in US higher education. With the potential for AI to increasingly substitute independent thought, a pressing question becomes even more urgent: what exactly is a university education for? The Guardian spoke with more than a dozen professors – almost all of them in the humanities or adjacent fields – about how they are adapting at a time of dizzying technological advancement with few standards and little guidance. By and large, they expressed the view that reliance on artificial intelligence is fundamentally antithetical to the development of human intelligence they are tasked with guiding. They described desperately trying to prevent students from turning to AI as a replacement for thought, at a time when the technology is threatening to upend not only their education, but everything from the stock market to social relations to war. Most professors described the experience of contending with the technology in despairing terms. 'It’s driving so many of us up the wall,' one said. 'Generative AI is the bane of my existence,' another wrote in an email. 'I wish I could push ChatGPT (and Claude, Microsoft Copilot, etc) off a cliff.'... Some caution that the humanities will survive – but as a province of the few.... Several professors spoke about concerns that AI will exacerbate a widening divide in US higher education and that small numbers of elite students will have access to a more traditional, largely tech-free liberal arts education, while everyone else has a 'degraded, soulless form of vocational training administered by AI instructors', said [Dora Zhang, Professor at Berkeley]..... Much organizing against AI remains informal and via word of mouth, with faculty-led initiatives like the website Against AI, which offers resources to those trying to shield students from the intellectual ravages of outsourcing elements of their education to a machine.... Several professors noted that they have also begun to see mounting discomfort from students against the technology – and technology’s dominance in their lives overall.... 'I think the current crop of gen Z students are seeing that they are the guinea pigs in this giant social experiment,' said Zhang."

Tech oligarchs reshape humanity while billionaires of old seem quaint – article by Eduardo Porter in The Guardian. "When Bill Gates became the first modern IT mogul to reach the apex of wealth and power in 1992, the world was a very different place. Gates joined the top 10 on Forbes magazine’s billionaires list alongside Japanese, German, Canadian, South Korean and Swedish billionaires, including those with family fortunes from Britain and America. A broad mix of industries was on the list: Retail and media, property management and packaging, an investment firm and a couple of industrial conglomerates. Their fortunes almost added up to $100bn – equivalent to about 0.4% of the US’s GDP that year. The oligarchy has changed drastically since then. Bernard Arnault, of French luxury group LVMH, Amancio Ortega, the Spanish clothing mogul, and Warren Buffett, the US investor, were the only old-school billionaires among the top 10 in 2025. The rest largely made their money from high-tech: Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Ellison, Steve Ballmer and Google’s Sergey Brin and Larry Page. The top 10 amassed over $16trn, which is about 8% of US GDP. This evolution offers a startling reminder of how fast new technologies have revolutionized the world economy over the last quarter-century, and how narrowly this brave new world is sharing the fruits of its prosperity. It raises a critical question: what happens when a narrow clutch of oligarchs at the helm of the technological revolution, sitting at the apex of wealth and power, get to determine the direction of humanity?... Consequential questions, [such as the future direction and effects of AI, being decided] not... through public deliberation or democratic choice [but by this] tight knot of people ... is problematic not just because they are billionaires, untouched by the daily concerns of most humans. Their worldview is embedded in a belief that technology offers the best solution to all of humanity’s challenges, whether social, political, economic, demographic, biological, psychological, environmental, or whatever other dimension one might think of. Their preferred AI-laced future has little space for the humdrum concerns of the all-too-real people who populate the present. It has no patience for slow, messy democratic governance, especially if said governance slows down the path to utopia.... I find myself nostalgic for the billionaires of yore. They seem so harmless from our perch in the present. They made Tetra Paks and sold real estate in Japan. They owned supermarkets. The guys at the helm of our economy today are way scarier. And they aim to transform human civilization as fast as they can."

‘Charismatic and extremely confident’: how to recognise, and handle, a psychopath – article by Emile Saner in The Guardian, on the publication of her book Poisonous People. "In her consulting work, [Leanne Ten Brinke, professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia,] was brought in by a financial advisory company to help assess which hedge fund managers it should trust with its money. 'I was particularly looking for signs that they might be lying, which certainly the company would want to know before handing over millions of dollars. But we were also looking at the personality traits of these individuals.' Several stuck out. At one investor conference, Ten Brinke watched in fascination as one CEO demeaned colleagues and potential clients – which can be a sign of a dark personality. 'Everything had to revolve around him, all attention on him, no one else could get any praise.' He would constantly interrupt people. 'What was so interesting is that the audience was actually really into that. His behaviour seemed to validate perceptions of what kind of personality would succeed in this role, even though our research suggests that these traits actually lead to decreased returns.'... Recognising dark personalities can help us make more informed choices in many areas of life, says Ten Brinke. 'It can be either a "detect and avoid" or a "detect and manage" type of situation, depending on the circumstances.'... It’s important to remember that someone’s personality is a pattern, she says – 'first impressions will only get you so far' – but there are broad behaviours to watch out for. 'If someone interrupts often, but gets really angry if they are interrupted; if they ignore and push personal and professional boundaries.' They can be charismatic, and charming. In romantic relationships, "love bombing" at the start is often a feature.... People with dark personalities can be skilled at deception, but we tend to be quite bad at detecting this... It’s unrealistic, she adds, to avoid everyone with dark personality traits. Instead, for those with lower levels of psychopathy and other negative traits, you can usually manage them.... Having rules – and writing them down or saying them out loud – makes it harder for the person to break or test them, whether this is in a family or work setting.... Rewards can be key.... 'We know that people, especially with psychopathic personalities, are very reward-motivated. Punishment really doesn’t hit them very hard. So you can help to shape their behaviour by rewarding when they do something good.'... It may be wise to look at ourselves – the world does not need more people with psychopathic and narcissistic traits. 'I do think that recognising that we can all become a little bit less manipulative, a little bit more caring, and that all of these things will add up across people and across time, is a hopeful message.'”

How the US far right bought into the myth of white South Africa’s persecution – article by Eve Fairbanks in The Guardian. "There’s a little town in the scrub in South Africa – a full day’s drive from the country’s big cities – that has become perhaps the most scrutinised place on earth, given its size.... No people of colour are allowed to live in the town, called Orania.... Orania’s founders established it in 1991, the year after South Africa’s best-known Black liberation leader (and future president), Nelson Mandela, was freed following 27 years in prison. Understanding that Mandela’s liberation meant that white-minority rule was coming to an end, the founders trekked into the desert, bought a disused mining town wholesale and established a colony.... Could people of European descent live in South Africa without relying on people of colour to do manual labour, pump their petrol and clean their houses? In Orania, they stressed, white residents would do such work. Orania’s founders also foresaw a brutal race war, predicting that the population of the town would grow to 10,000 and its ideals would spread across an entire nearby province, drawing in hundreds of thousands.... Lately, the fascination with Orania has spread to the right wing outside South Africa. Starting in the mid-2010s, as Donald Trump was muscling his way on to the political stage, Australian, European and, especially, American conservative commentators began to talk about the town. They, too, portrayed it as thriving – because of the enormous threat they claimed white people faced in the rest of South Africa.... Although it may have been immoral, these South Africans’ story went, white-minority rule had created safe, stable and happy lives for white people. After losing influence, white South Africans became increasingly subject to discrimination, violence and even a so-called white genocide by citizens of colour bent on pursuing revenge.... The problem is that the tale peddled about white South Africans’ historical trajectory isn’t true. They are not, as a group, subject to violent persecution on the basis of their skin colour. As of 2023, white households’ average income remained four and a half times that of Black households. Although South Africa’s devastatingly high crime rate victimises all the country’s inhabitants, white South Africans are overall less likely than Black citizens to be victims of crime. And to many white South Africans, the warped way their country is depicted abroad isn’t even the most important distortion. Spend some time speaking to some of the estimated 4.5 million white people who still live in South Africa – a number that has remained nearly steady since the late 1990s – and most will tell you that they are better off than they were under the white regime that was purportedly designed to protect them."

Fifty years of sexing up tech: Apple’s epic hits and misses – article by Chris Stokel-Walker in The GuardianThe hits: Apple II (1977)[,] Macintosh (1984)[,] iMac G3 (1998)[,] iPod (2001)[,] iPhone (2007)[.] Misses: Apple III (1980)[,] Macintosh Portable (1989)[,] Newton MessagePad (1993)[,] Apple Pippin (1996)[,] Apple Vision Pro (2024).

I wrote a book about theft and deception, and now AI scams are flooding my inbox – article by Walter Marsh in The Guardian. "My latest book had been out for less than a month when the emails started to arrive. One came from 'Elena', with the tantalising subject line, 'When history flutters its wings and reveals a crime too beautiful to ignore.' Then followed a long, florid message about how it was 'one of those rare true stories that makes you question everything you thought you knew about history, museums, and human obsession. What’s more, she said I had written with 'prose that feels like chasing a butterfly through time graceful, deliberate, and a little dangerous' I don’t know what it says about me that my gut reaction to such gushing praise is suspicion. There were other red flags. A reverse image search of Elena’s profile picture revealed that this smiling woman dressed in white, raising a coffee cup to the camera, was in fact a widely circulated stock image.... As a journalist I’m used to an inbox filled with spam and cold-call pitches. But these emails seemed tailored to me and my work, despite their language and tone bearing the je-ne-sais-quoi-fakeness of a learning language model. Authors like me are being targeted by AI-powered accounts promising exposure and fake reviews – even though my book is about theft and fraud... Scams tend to have a few things in common. First, they play to our emotions. Writing a book is an incredibly emotional undertaking; all that time and effort with no guarantee that anyone will read it, let alone care. Second, they’re a numbers game – you send enough phishing emails and unsolicited phone calls and you’ll eventually snare someone. Where these scams hit differently is the use of language models to customise each email to its mark. This grabs our attention in a way that would have been far too laborious before. I’m lucky to have a publisher, a publicist and enough genuine interest from readers that these emails immediately stick out as inauthentic guff. But I know there are many aspiring authors out there who aren’t in that position, for whom an out-of-the-blue email from someone not only engaging with their work, but wanting to help, is a tempting hook."

Surely if you rule the manosphere, you can be your own boss? These influencers aren’t even that – article by Elle Hunt in The Guardian. "Who wouldn’t want to be an influencer? You’re famous and maybe even rich, just for doing what you’d be doing anyway: working out at the gym, hanging out with your mates and mucking about on the internet. You get paid to say what you think (or are at least sent free stuff), and no one’s telling you what to do. Surely only a sucker would do anything else.... Louis Theroux’s new Netflix documentary reveals the catch. Though focused on the misogynistic online manosphere, it is equally compelling as a grim look behind the curtain of influencer production, revealing it to be at best shabby and at worst soul-destroying....Going behind the scenes, you see what is absent from the social media highlights and edgy viral clips: life as an influencer is often banal and just as much of a trap as the standard nine-to-five. It is also much harder to get out of. Even the manosphere, characterised in the mainstream as a hotbed of dangerous misogyny, might more accurately be characterised as a large-scale grift, as Theroux told the Guardian.... For many in the manosphere, the misogyny seems almost besides the point. Like racism, homophobia or antisemitism, it serves only as a button to press to generate attention and profit."

The world can't wait – Guardian supporter email by Jonathan Watts, Global environment editor, 18 March 2026. "Having been a foreign correspondent in China, Japan and Latin America for more than 20 years, and now an environment editor based in the Amazon rainforest, I can see how the degradation of truth and nature are so closely entwined.... Extreme weather is causing extreme politics. It is at the roots of rampant inequality and migration pressures which are being weaponised by far-right demagogues.... Meanwhile, tech billionaires, who once promised the internet would usher in a bright new era of super-informed electorates, are now helping would-be dictators push the world towards a new dark age.... Meanwhile, the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post – the paper that uncovered the Watergate scandal – has gutted its editorial staff, shutting numerous overseas bureaus, and is laying off at least 14 of its climate journalists.... It is no coincidence this is happening at exactly the same time that the US administration is trying to shut down or dramatically curtail the world’s leading climate science institutions... Meanwhile, the White House continues its strategy of diverting attention away from scandals by 'flooding the zone' with fabricated controversies.... I believe this wider assault is happening because those with power and money fully understand the world is in very great danger of a climate and nature apocalypse. Despite denials of the scientific proof, the actions of Trump and the coterie around him are consistent with people who realise destructive change is underway. That is why they want Greenland and Canada. That’s why they are building up the military and raising walls. That’s why they are trying to prevent people from realising what is happening by attacking science and journalism. And it is why they are distracting the public by ramping up hate campaigns against migrants."

A bookplate for every genre – cartoon by Tom Gauld in The Guardian. "Five cut-out-and-keep bookplates. Sci-Fi: Nanotechnology tracks the book, monitors its condition and summons a retrieval drone if necessary. Horror: An ancient curse creates feelings of unease, rising to appalling abject horror unless the book is returned. Romance: Acts as an invite to the county's grandest ball, but revoked if not returned in a polite and timely manner. Crime: Tailed by a dishevelled gumshoe, who seems cynical, but loves books more than dames and bourbon. Fantasy: A fellowship of heroes lead the borrower on an epic quest to return the book to its rightful shelf."

Why Populists Are Winning and How to Beat Them by Liam: a surprisingly original prescription – review by Andy Beckett in The Guardian. "At first glance, the former New Labour minister Liam Byrne is not the ideal person to explain the rise of rightwing populism in Britain and beyond, and how it might be stopped... Across the west, actual and potential populist voters are often motivated by myths: for example, that immigration to Britain is rising, when in fact it is falling. Suggesting, as Byrne does here, that centrist parties can win back these voters with policies that accept some of the populist worldview – rather than seeking to challenge its fantasies and prejudices – feels at best optimistic, and at worst dangerously naive. And yet, as his book gallops along, it soon becomes clear that in between its unconvincing stretches are others in which populism is considered with more rigour and originality. Byrne neatly lays out the movement’s paradoxes and hypocrisies. It’s against elites, but led and funded by the rich. It presents itself as a mass uprising, but relies on low turnouts for much of its electoral success. It talks a lot about freedom, but its policies are authoritarian. It promises a glorious future, but its social vision is 'soaked in the brandy of nostalgia' – one of several rich and irreverent images with which Byrne decorates his chapters.... A particularly free-ranging and useful chapter looks at the language and themes of populism’s public messaging.... Byrne is refreshingly interested in the world beyond Westminster orthodoxies. Although only up to a point. Without explicitly saying so or explaining why, the book treats populism as an essentially rightwing phenomenon. Leftwing populism barely features despite its promise and achievements, from Zohran Mamdani in New York to Zack Polanski’s rising Green party. Nor does Byrne consider whether the radical left in general has a part to play against rightwing populism – by mobilising on the streets, for example. Britain has seen large and regular anti-racist and anti-fascist protests since Reform began its current surge. These blind spots are revealing. Leaving the left out of the story enables centrists, even relatively open-minded ones such as Byrne, to downplay the role of increasing inequality in populism’s rise – an inequality that centrist governments and their corporate allies have done little to challenge, or actively worsened. Seeing populism as driven by traditional patriotism, cultural conservatism and anger at the decline of 'left behind' places is not wrong, and Byrne explains these factors well. But this perspective conveniently minimises its economic causes, which are more uncomfortable for mainstream political and business elites to think about, because they are still invested in the economic status quo."

The one thing everyone gets wrong about feminism – article by Rebecca Solnit in The Guardian. "Feminism is far from dead, but people love to write its obituary. I’ve lived through dozens of them over the decades, and there’s been a fresh flurry over the past few years. These death announcements are mostly based on two dubious assumptions. One is that we’re at the end of the story, the point at which a verdict can be rendered and a moral extracted. In this version, 60 years on from the great 1960s surge of feminism, the process should be over, and if feminism has not won, surely it has lost. In reality, it’s naively defeatist to assume millennia of patriarchy entrenched in law, culture, social arrangements and economics could be or should have been fully disassembled in one lifetime. The other assumption is that one event can be a weathervane, a measuring stick, for the failure of feminism. Three popular recent candidates are the overturning of Roe v Wade in June 2022, #MeToo, and the Epstein files. Let’s first remember that the US is not the whole world. There have, for example, been countless obituary writers proclaiming that #MeToo is over or failed, and I’m not sure what that is based on – the assumption that all sexual abuse should have ended and, if not, feminism of the #MeToo subcategory did not succeed? Is any other human rights movement measured by such criteria? Did anyone think the civil rights movement should be judged by whether it terminated all racism for ever? The perfect is the enemy of the good, and it’s often both an impossible standard and a cudgel used to bash in what good has been achieved.... Things change. They change for the better because we make them change, or for the worse because we don’t show up or lose the battle. But if you forget the sheer profundity of the changes of the last several decades, you can mourn what the right is trying to do to pretty much everything from the climate to women’s rights without seeing that what they’re really trying to do is change things back, to return to their version of the good old days that for a lot of us were the bad old days. That’s a reminder that we changed a lot of things, and the fact that they’re not happy about it should feel like confirmation that these changes matter.... Don’t stop now."

Talk is precious: in the age of communication collapse, Jürgen Habermas’s message remains vital – article by Eva von Redecker in The Guardian. "Despite its canonical name, the Frankfurt School is not a school [but] a constellation. For a century, this scholarly constellation has pursued the intellectual endeavour of critique. Critique here is not the 'thumbs down' or 'blocking' exercised on social media. It is the wild aspiration to describe reality in a way that transforms it. Jürgen Habermas, who died on 14 March 2026 at the age of 96, was a fixed star in this constellation.... As his early writings make clear, Habermas was faithful to the Marxist endeavour of finding progressive forces in history as it was actually unfolding. But he did not think that technological development or growth in production held any residues of reason, something that his teachers, too, had already started to suspect. Habermas thus settled for a human capacity other than productive labour, namely communication.... Whatever it takes to redeem history has to be right there, within it. Perhaps our age of nihilism, disinformation and AI slop lends new credibility to that idea. If communication breaks down, there is little left other than the proto-fascist 'might is right'. And Habermas was anything but blind to the possibility of such breakdowns. One of his major, two-volume works, the 1981 Theory of Communicative Action, maps in thorough detail how systems mediated by non-verbal powers – such as the market and bureaucratic rationalisation – can override the negotiation possible in what he calls the 'lifeworld'. Only the lifeworld – family, civil society, education – is at least in principle organised in a communicative way, and can thus answer to moral demands.... At least according to Habermas, we misunderstand what communication is if we do not accept that besides all strategic aims, it also seeks to establish a certain shared understanding. And that understanding, again more in principle than actuality, can be described as a non-coercive consensus. The test for morality is whether it could achieve such approval by anyone concerned. Most actual utterances fail the test, but if language lost all aspiration to reach understanding, communication would break down, even if words kept being uttered. Maybe it has. And yet, dear reader, aren’t we still communicating?"

Jürgen Habermas (1929–2026): A Critical Appreciation – article on Explaining History Podcast website, referenced in John Naughton's Memex 1.1 blog. "Habermas’s ... The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1962) ... reconstructed the historical emergence of a 'bourgeois public sphere' in eighteenth-century Europe. In coffee houses, salons, and literary societies, private individuals gathered to debate matters of public concern, subjecting state authority to rational criticism. This sphere was not a place but a practice: reasoned debate among participants bracketing social status, oriented toward consensus rather than strategic advantage. The public sphere, Habermas argued, mediated between civil society and the state. It transformed subjects into citizens by creating a space where public opinion could form through rational-critical debate.... The book then traced this sphere’s decline in the twentieth century. Mass media, corporate power, and the interventionist welfare state transformed the public from active participants into passive consumers.... Theory of Communicative Action (1981) ... distinguished two fundamental forms of action that correspond to different dimensions of social life. Instrumental action concerns manipulating the objective world to achieve goals. It follows technical rules and strategic calculation. This is the logic of work, technology, and what Habermas called 'systems'—most importantly, the market economy and state bureaucracy. Systems coordinate action through impersonal media: money and power. They operate independently of participants’ conscious intentions, following their own logic. Communicative action concerns reaching understanding with others. It operates in the 'lifeworld'—the shared background of cultural meanings, social norms, and personal identities that makes mutual understanding possible. When we engage in communicative action, we raise implicit validity claims: that our statements are true (corresponding to facts), right (appropriate to normative contexts), and sincere (expressing genuine intentions). Successful communication depends on these claims being accepted, at least provisionally.... Pathology arises when system logic 'colonizes' the lifeworld—when money and power replace understanding as the medium of social integration. A family governed by market calculation ceases to be a family. A citizen treated as a consumer of state services ceases to be a citizen. Social movements, from feminism to environmentalism to regional autonomy movements, can be understood as resistance to this colonization: attempts to defend ways of life against bureaucratic and market imperatives. This framework gave Habermas a way to diagnose contemporary social conflicts without reducing them to class struggle or irrational backlash. It also preserved the critical impulse of Marxism while abandoning its economic determinism and revolutionary teleology.... Any serious assessment must acknowledge substantial critiques of Habermas’s work that have accumulated over decades. From within critical theory, some argue his 'linguistic turn' abandoned the earlier Frankfurt School’s focus on material domination and economic structure. By privileging consensus and mutual understanding, he may underestimate irreconcilable social antagonisms. Class conflict, racial hierarchy, and gender oppression are not resolvable through better argument alone—they are built into the structure of society and require structural transformation, not just improved communication."

Restraining and sedating dementia patients ‘routine’ in hospitals in England, study finds – article by Tobi Thomas in The Guardian. "People with dementia are being subjected to restraints and non-consensual sedation while in hospitals in England, according to the first study of its kind. These restrictive practices were found to be an embedded aspect of routine ward care', according to the analysis, with such examples including dementia patients having their bedside rails raised, doors and pathways blocked by furniture, experiencing verbal commands to sit down or go back to bed, and physical interventions such as non-consensual sedation. The report, by academics at the University of West London, involved analysis of 225 days of ethnographic observation across nine NHS wards in England alongside more than 1,000 interviews with healthcare professionals. They also found that many hospital staff did not see these practices as being restrictive due to their routine use throughout NHS wards, with staff questioning how else they could care for patients with dementia to keep them safe without harming themselves or others."

‘Another internet is possible’: Norway rails against ‘enshittification’ – article by Ashifa Kassam in The Guardian. "The video’s opening shot shows a man hiding under a bed snipping in a hole in someone’s sock. Seconds later, the same man uses a saw to shorten a table leg so that it wobbles during breakfast. 'My job is to make things shitty,' the man explains. 'The official title is enshittificator. What I do is I take things that are perfectly fine and I make them worse.' The video, released recently by the Norwegian Consumer Council, is an absurdist take on a serious issue; it is part of a wider, global campaign aimed at fighting back against the 'enshittification', or gradual deterioration, of digital products and services.... Coined by author Cory Doctorow, the term ... refers to the deliberate degradation of a service or product, particularly in the digital sphere. Examples abound, from social media feeds that have gradually become littered with adverts and scams to software updates that leave phones lagging and chatbots that supplant customer service agents. In late February, in a campaign that is believed to be the first of its kind, the publicly funded Norwegian council joined forces with more than 70 groups and individuals across Europe and the US, including trade unions and human rights organisations."

A photo of Iran’s bombed schoolgirl graveyard went viral. Why did AI say it wasn’t real? – article by Tess McClure in The Guardian. "The cemetery of Minab, photographed as it prepares to bury more than 100 of the town’s young girls, is one of the defining images of the US-Israeli war on Iran, bluntly capturing the devastating civilian toll. But is it real? Ask Gemini, the AI service powered by Google, and the answer you receive is no – in fact, Gemini claims the photograph is from two years earlier and more than 2,000km (1,240 miles) away.... Like Gemini, Grok will breezily assure you the photo is not from Iran at all – although it lands on a different date, disaster and location.... In both cases, the AI answers sound sure: they don’t equivocate, and even provide 'sources' for the original image, should you choose to check them. Follow the thread to examine those, however, and you’ll begin to hit dead ends: either the image doesn’t appear at all, or the link provided is to a news report that doesn’t exist. For all their impression of clarity and precision, the AIs are simply wrong. The cemetery image, it turns out, is authentic. Researchers have cross referenced the photo of the site with satellite images that confirm its location, and it can be cross-referenced again with dozens more images taken of the same site from slightly different angles, and again with video footage – none of which experts say show signs of tampering or digital manipulation. The 'factchecks' by Gemini and Grok are just one example of a tidal wave of AI-generated slop – hallucinated facts, nonsense analysis and faked images – that are engulfing coverage of the Iran war. Experts say it is wasting investigative time and risks atrocities being denied – as well as heralding alarming weaknesses as people increasingly rely on AI summaries for news and information."

AI got the blame for the Iran school bombing. The truth is far more worrying – article by Kevin T Baker in The Guardian. "On the first morning of Operation Epic Fury, 28 February 2026, American forces struck the Shajareh Tayyebeh primary school in Minab, in southern Iran, hitting the building at least two times during the morning session. American forces killed between 175 and 180 people, most of them girls between the ages of seven and 12. Within days, the question that organised the coverage was whether Claude, a chatbot made by Anthropic, had selected the school as a target.... Almost none of this had any relationship to reality. The targeting for Operation Epic Fury ran on a system called Maven. Nobody was arguing about Maven.... The building in Minab had been classified as a military facility in a Defense Intelligence Agency database that, according to CNN, had not been updated to reflect that the building had been separated from the adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps compound and converted into a school, a change that satellite imagery shows had occurred by 2016 at the latest. A chatbot did not kill those children. People failed to update a database, and other people built a system fast enough to make that failure lethal. By the start of the Iran war, Maven – the system that had enabled that speed – had sunk into the plumbing, it had become part of the military’s infrastructure, and the argument was all about Claude. This obsession with Claude is a kind of AI psychosis, though not of the kind we normally talk about... The target package for the Shajareh Tayyebeh school presented a military facility.... But outside the package, the school appeared in Iranian business listings. It was visible on Google Maps. A search engine could have found it. Nobody searched. At 1,000 decisions an hour, nobody was going to. ... In the days after the strike, the charisma of AI organised the entire political conversation around the technology: whether Claude hallucinated, whether the model was aligned, whether Anthropic bore responsibility for its deployment. The constitutional question of who authorised this war and the legal question of whether this strike constitutes a war crime were displaced by a technical question that is easier to ask and impossible to answer in the terms it set. The Claude debate absorbed the energy. That is what charisma does. It has also occluded something deeper: the human decisions that led to the killing of between 175 and 180 people, most of them girls between the ages of seven and 12. Someone decided to compress the kill chain. Someone decided that deliberation was latency. Someone decided to build a system that produces 1,000 targeting decisions an hour and call them high-quality. Someone decided to start this war. Several hundred people are sitting on Capitol Hill, refusing to stop it. Calling it an 'AI problem' gives those decisions, and those people, a place to hide."

What was Doge? How Elon Musk tried to gamify government – article by Ben Tarnoff and Quinn Slobodian in The Guardian. "Minutes after [Trump's inauguration] ceremony began, programmers working for Doge requested access to the computer systems of the US Office of Personnel Management. Within half an hour, they had taken possession of files with information about millions of federal workers. Days later, they also gained the authority to send out an email to all federal employees from a single address. They used this power to make the same offer in the same language (subject line: fork in the road) that Musk had made at Twitter years earlier: quit with paid leave or face the likelihood of getting fired.... The logic of deletion was clearest in zero-based budgeting (ZBB), the method that Musk embraced at both Twitter and Doge. Invented in the 1960s, ZBB forced every department to justify each expense anew rather than carrying budgets forward. Long dismissed as unworkable, by 2024, Silicon Valley firms were claiming that new technology had finally made ZBB feasible. Manually analysing and justifying each budget item was terribly time-intensive. But with large language models (LLMs) and AI accounting tools, this process could be performed automatically. Budgets could be rebuilt by bot.... Zero-based budgeting rarely succeeds in cutting costs. Its real effect, in Musk’s hands, was the concentration of power. His approach assumed that all expenditures were waste, and that bad data – whether fraudulent contracts, useless staff or illegitimate people – could simply be deleted. What Doge sought to automate, the media researcher Eryk Salvaggio noted, was 'not paperwork but democratic decision-making'. Efficiency became the alibi for centralisation.... The kind of total digital unification envisioned by Doge was unprecedented. It found its most ambitious expression in the attempt to make all taxpayer data – including names, addresses, social security numbers, tax returns and employment information – accessible from one portal.... Doge’s endpoint was governance by AI: the state not as a space of deliberation but as lines of executable code. Musk reinforced the conceit with a 'tech support' T-shirt at cabinet meetings, presenting his role in apolitical terms. But the project was deeply political. Doge’s dream of data omniscience went beyond cost-benefit analysis or software modernisation – those had been mantras of earlier administrations. For Doge, the hunt for 'waste, fraud and abuse' blurred seamlessly into the hunt for illegitimate people: irregularities to be deleted. Muskism was not just about trimming budgets. Scaled to society, it meant purging those deemed out of place... Seen one way, Doge exposed the limits of Muskism as a mode of governance. Companies can treat workers as disposable units because the surrounding state guarantees their basic existence. Musk had ruthlessly deleted workers at his own companies and made deft use of labour law’s loopholes, but in seeking to make real cuts at Doge, he collided with the fragile contract at the core of American life – misleadingly called 'entitlements', but better understood as the survival infrastructure for many millions of people. As Americans vented their anger at feared or actual loss of access to social security and Medicare benefits, Musk’s reputation suffered. Musk had imagined Doge as the realisation of the dream of reactionary technocracy, in which engineers disciplined society like a factory floor. But society is not a factory. It encompasses children, elderly people, disabled people, the geographically stranded – the very categories of life that markets define as surplus. In trying to impose a cyborg logic of optimisation, Musk discovered that humans were not programmable units, and that the public sector’s role is precisely to provide goods that the private sector can’t or won’t. The conflation of codebase, company and state didn’t work."

Solidarity by Rowan Williams: what does it really mean to stand by someone? – review by Joe Moran in The Guardian. "You don’t need to scroll far down a social media feed to find someone expressing 'solidarity' for the victims of cruelty or injustice. A show of solidarity feels more emphatic than expressing support or sympathy. As Rowan Williams argues, it can act as 'a moral intensifier', positioning us squarely alongside the victim. It can also be a declaration of innocence, a way of distancing ourselves definitively from the perpetrators and their guilt. Williams wants to move us beyond this idea of solidarity as unequivocal identification. He has some sharp things to say about 'empathy' as a modern solve-all, when it too often serves the needs of 'a clamorous self' that 'cannot bear the idea of a real stranger'. True solidarity, he argues, is less a virtue to be cultivated than a human condition to be acknowledged. It requires us to accept two stubborn truths: first, that we can never identify completely with someone else, because we are inescapably separate from them in mind and body; and second, that we are innately social beings, linked to each other by invisible threads of obligation and reciprocity. For Williams, then, solidarity is hard work. It takes time and emotional labour to recognise our fellow humans, in both their implacable otherness and their commonality with us."

‘We don’t tell the car what it should do’: my ride in a self-driving taxi – article by Steve Rose in The Guardian. "Riding in a self-driving car for the first time is a little like your first flight in an aeroplane: borderline terrifying for a few seconds, then reassuringly unremarkable. At least, that is my experience. By the time I step out, 20 minutes later, I’m convinced Wayve is a better driver than most humans – better than me, anyway. Other Londoners will soon be able to judge for themselves, because these robotaxis are coming to town. Since the passage of the Automated Vehicles Act in 2024, the UK government has been working to approve self-driving taxis by the end of next year. Wayve, in partnership with Uber, will be at the starting line, as will the US giant Waymo and the Chinese company Baidu, among others. London may never be the same again.... Wayve aces our driving test.... When a man with a walking stick approaches a zebra crossing, the car slows to a halt before he steps on to it. 'We don’t tell the car what it should do; it learns the body language,' [say Alex Kendall, CEO of Wayve,] as we sit and watch. Several other people walk past the crossing, but the car can see that they’re not going to cross. This is how Wayve’s AI differs from other versions, Kendall says as we start moving again. 'It’s got a sense of being able to predict how the world works, how to predict risk and safety. It’s actually understanding the dynamics of the scene.' London’s roads throw everything they can at us: confusing double roundabouts; narrow roads with cars coming in the opposite direction. When another driver flashes their lights, our car understands they’re letting us go first. Kendall never touches the steering wheel or any other controls, but, for now, there has to be a human behind the wheel."

Chain of Ideas by Ibram X Kendi: anatomy of a conspiracy theory – review by Arwa Mahdawi in The Guardian. "The central thesis is that the ideological origins of what Kendi terms 'our authoritarian age' lie in the so-called 'great replacement theory'. This is defined as 'a political theory that powerful elites are enabling peoples of colour to steal the lives, livelihoods, cultures, electoral power, and freedoms of White people, who now need authoritarian protection'.... Crucially, great replacement theory is not a single concept but a chain of interlocking ideas. The idea that racism against peoples of colour is over is connected to the idea that anti-white racism is on the rise, which is connected to the idea that insurrections against democracy protect the nation and so on. These ideas are easily challenged when looked at in isolation; it is their interconnectedness that gives the great replacement theory its emotional resonance.... One interesting aspect of modern politics is how many prominent people from marginalised or minority identities are at the helm of rightwing parties.... 'The more the sexism, homophobia, and racism of their parties turns off voters, the more great replacement parties will turn to women, gay people, and people of colour to lead their parties – for proximity denial.' Great replacement theory, you see, presents itself as reasonable and respectable. It goes to great pains to cast off accusations of extremism."

Young people are longing for the low-tech 90s, and so would I, if I could only remember them – article by Emma Beddington in The Guardian. "'People have to start going 90s,' according to the content creator Mike Sheffer. In other words: leave your phone at home. 'In the 90s no one had cellphones,' Sheffer explains, helpfully, on a reel I saw on Instagram, in which he describes how he and his friends do this, using it as a challenge to be in the moment and invite serendipity. 'Things just happen,' he says. 'There’s a different energy.' Ah yes, the serendipitous 90s energy of arranging to meet someone 'under the clock at M&S' and hanging around for 40 minutes when they didn’t show, of trudging dangerous miles home late at night thanks to transport fails (several comments on Sheffer’s reel highlighted the safety angle), or of forgetting your keys and spending hours locked out... You can see this nostalgia for a time they didn’t know as a depressing indication of how unpalatable the future looks, but a counterargument says it might be future-facing. 'Perhaps they are productively focusing their nostalgia on a technological era before they were alive,' theorised the social psychologist Dr Clay Routledge in the New York Times, citing research that indicated gen Z were 'mining the past to enrich their present lives – especially by fostering a greater appreciation for offline living'.... I don’t remember the 90s. Not because I partied like it was 1999 ... but because I’m a confused, hormonally depleted husk, addled by overexposure to a digital culture my analogue brain struggles to process. I need a diary reminder to put on deodorant; obviously I have no idea what 1992 was like.... Ah well. Isn’t memory just a story you tell yourself, anyway? I’ve concluded that 'the 90s' has become an imaginative construct, and that means it can be as much gen Z’s as ours. So good luck to kids vibe-mining our forgotten youth for 'going 90s' inspo: Mandela and the macarena; CDs and landlines; discovering stuff without algorithmic prompting; things just happening; having the freedom to screw up unobserved."

I have stage four cancer, there will be no cure, but death isn’t necessarily imminent: this is how it feels to live in the long middle – article by Janis Chen in The Guardian. "I am not a 'survivor' in the triumphalist sense of the word, nor am I imminently dying. I occupy the long middle – a rarely charted territory where the body remains fragile, treatment constant, and life does not so much move forward as stubbornly persist. This liminal state is a distinctly modern byproduct of a medical revolution.... While median survival is now measured in years rather than months, we are seeing the emergence of 'super-responders' navigating their second decade post-diagnosis. As a psychologist, I view this not just as a medical victory but as a profound existential shift: we have replaced the suddenness of the cliff with the tenuous permanence of the high ridge. Such a progression has inadvertently birthed a new demographic: the 'chronically terminal'. We occupy an interstitial space, standing in the spectre of what is destined to take us, yet still burdened with the responsibility of being within the world. This surreal duality compels us to face our finitude while tending to the unsentimental task of deciding which relationships are still worth the oxygen they require. There is a dark incongruity to this way of living. We know our horizon with terrifying clarity, but we are still subject to the same randomness as the healthy – the theoretical bus that might strike tomorrow. But for those of us in the long middle, that bus is already idling in the driveway.... We rarely speak of the psychological tax of persistence, of the unseen labour required to carry on when the tank is empty. Viewed as such, my illness is a visible manifestation of a universal struggle: the constant, weary negotiation between what the body can endure and what the world demands. Living with stage four lung cancer has taught me that strength is not a metric of productivity or a narrative of 'recovery'. It is found instead in staying present within a life that no longer fits the frantic success stories we are sold. In a culture that fetishises the loud 'bounce-back', choosing to live gently, attentively and on one’s own terms is an act of quiet defiance. The long middle is not a waiting room, nor a preamble to a finish line; it is a demanding, vibrant and profoundly human place to be alive."

Cambridge offers botany course that inspired Darwin after rare archive uncovered – article by Donna Ferguson in The Guardian. "Plant specimens and teaching materials that inspired Charles Darwin and qualified him to work as a naturalist on HMS Beagle have been unearthed from an archive in Cambridge and will be used for the first time to teach contemporary students about botany. The fragile specimens, ink drawings and watercolour illustrations of plants belonged to Darwin’s teacher and mentor, Prof John Stevens Henslow, and have been stored in Cambridge University’s herbarium for nearly 200 years... When Darwin arrived in Cambridge in 1828, he became one of the first students to attend Henslow’s groundbreaking five-week course....Henslow took Darwin and his fellow students on 'herborising excursions' into the Cambridgeshire fens and taught them how to identify, categorise and collect plants, while systematically observing the adaptations of different plant species to their environment. This formed Darwin’s introduction to the scientific study of botany and the insights that rigorous collection of empirical data could offer about the natural world. He later described Henslow as having 'influenced my whole career more than any other'. [Cambridge University Botanic Garden (CUBG)] is reviving the spirit and content of Henslow’s teaching by launching a four-week summer course in botany aimed at internal and external undergraduate and postgraduate students, academic researchers and professionals working in ecology, horticulture, conservation or related fields. During the course, students will be taught about botany using the original teaching materials and hands-on techniques Henslow used to teach Darwin in the 1820s, as well as field excursions to the kinds of habitats Darwin visited in the Cambridgeshire countryside. 'Botany has all but disappeared as a stand-alone undergraduate degree in the UK, and that creates a real gap in how people are trained to understand plants,' said Prof Sam Brockington, CUBG curator. 'Even in plant science laboratories, we increasingly find otherwise talented students who don’t have the language or conceptual framework to describe plant form and diversity.'”

What AI Hypists Miss – article by Francis Fukuyama on the Persuasion website, referenced in John Naughton's Memex 1.1 blog. "Recently I heard a presentation by an engineer from OpenAI about the incredible transformations that will occur once we get to artificial general intelligence (AGI), or even superintelligence. He said that this will quickly solve many of the world’s problems: GDP growth rates could rise to 10, 15, even 20 percent per year, diseases will be cured, education revolutionized, and cities in the developing world will be transformed with clean drinking water for everyone. I happen to know something about the latter issue. I’ve been teaching cases over the past decade on why South Asian cities like Hyderabad and Dhaka have struggled with providing municipal water. The reason isn’t that we don’t know what an efficient water system looks like, or lack the technology to build it. Nor is it a simple lack of resources: multilateral development institutions have been willing to fund water projects for years. The obstacles are different, and are entirely political, social, and cultural. Residents of these cities have the capacity to pay more for their water, but they don’t trust their governments not to waste resources on corruption or incompetent management. Businesses don’t want the disruption of pervasive infrastructure construction, and many cities host 'water mafias' that buy cheap water and resell it at extortionate prices to poor people. These mafias are armed and ready to use violence against anyone challenging their monopolies. The state is too weak to control them, or to enforce the very good laws they already have on their books. It is hard to see how even the most superintelligent AI is going to help solve these problems. And this points to a central conceit that plagues the whole AI field: a gross overestimation of the value of intelligence by itself to solve problems.... Many of the enthusiasts hyping AI’s capabilities think of policy problems as if they were long-standing problems in mathematics that human beings had great difficulties solving, such as the four-color map theorem or the Cap Set problem. But math problems are entirely cognitive in nature and it is not surprising that AI could make advances in that realm. The people building AI systems are themselves very smart mathematically, and tend to overvalue the importance of this kind of pure intelligence. Policy problems are different. They require connection to the real world, whether that’s physical objects or entrenched stakeholders who don’t necessarily want changes to occur.... AI may move faster on a cognitive level, but it may not be able to solve implementation problems more quickly than in previous historical periods."