
Brett
9.2K posts



another data point here is that the union share of the workforce is near an all time low while approval for unions is really high


Japan's car giants are in trouble. They ignored / lobbied against electrification - and now it's come back to the bite them in the exhaust pipe @TheEconomist economist.com/business/2026/…?



Yea, I'm supportive of antitrust as a tool in the tool belt, but skeptical of it as a theory of everything. Small firms will always have a role, but I don't want to be a nation of small holder yeomen farmers. I'm a costco socialist: big firms, big unions, big government.




When the CEO of Ryanair wanted to charge passengers to use the toilet in flight.



LABOR SECRETARY CHAVEZ-DEREMER RESIGNS

Mission failure overshadows Blue Origin's rocket reuse milestone, with AST SpaceMobile's BlueBird 7 cellular broadband satellite declared a total loss after launching into the wrong orbit. arstechnica.com/space/2026/04/…





@realpeteyb123 Hey @nikitabier – is this against @X’s TOS?

Europe keeps trying offshore processing for asylum seekers. Britain attempted its Rwanda scheme; Italy is dispatching asylum seekers to Albania; Denmark has passed legislation to process claims abroad. They are trying because of Australia, where small boat crossing are widely thought to have been stopped by offshore processing. But they weren't. worksinprogress.co/issue/how-aust… Australia has used two policies to stop boat migration: offshore processing and naval turnbacks, where asylum seekers are transferred onto purpose-built lifeboats and towed back into Indonesian waters. It was turnbacks *alone* that stopped the boats: • In 2001, during the first wave of boat arrivals, the Australian government introduced both offshore processing and turnbacks. Arrivals fell from 5,516 in 2001 to just one person in 2002. • In 2008, both policies were abolished. Arrivals rose seventeen-fold the following year. • In 2012, the Gillard government reintroduced offshore processing, but without turnbacks. Arrivals did not fall. • In 2013, turnbacks were reintroduced alongside offshore processing and boat migration collapsed. • In 2014, offshore transfers were abandoned entirely, leaving turnbacks to do the work alone. Arrivals have remained at essentially zero ever since. Offshore processing is expensive and politically toxic. It is also unnecessary. Governments that want to reduce boat migration should learn from Australia and focus on turnbacks instead. New in Works in Progress by @AmeliaERWood. worksinprogress.co/issue/how-aust…



Actually the argument for the electoral college is that it puts a hard limit on the gains from election fraud. One state can pump their "popular vote" numbers way up with fraud, but can only affect their own electors.



The NYT reports British officials were "left stunned" by the State Dept when they raised concerns about free-speech and migrant crime. British diplomats' "jaws dropped" when confronted on these issues.











