Scott Bessent. Magnus Lejhall/Getty Images
Wednesday, August 6
Scott Bessent. Magnus Lejhall/Getty Images
Robert Reich
And what do they provide him, in turn?
Friends,
I don’t believe in conspiracies, but I’ve heard a number of theories about whom Trump is really working for that seem reasonable to me. You don’t have to be a conspiracy theorist to believe at least one of them is sufficiently credible to merit more investigation. Trump fires the commissioner of labor statistics because the job news is bad, he says Obama ought to be convicted of treason, he’s obviously mixed up in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, he openly takes bribes, he imposes import taxes on Americans, and he cuts Medicaid in order to make room for a giant tax cut for the rich.
Why? For whom is Trump the pawn? Here are the leading theories:
At A Glance
What the "marshmallow test" got wrong about child psychology.
You don't need a credit card on Greece's bartering island.
Forget Elvis, Hellmann's Mayo officiated this Vegas wedding.
Threatened birds top the Mangrove Photography Awards.
Ranking America's most dangerous beaches.
Meet the World Surf League’s youngest contender.
Orca moms teach their babies how to drown prey. (w/video)
... and a Danish zoo seeks small pet donations—for feed.
Clickbait: Find love on Switzerland's "Mountain Tinder."
Historybook: Actress Lucille Ball born (1911); Pop artist Andy Warhol born (1928); "Little Boy" atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, killing more than 70,000 (1945); Actress Michelle Yeoh born (1962); Voting Rights Act signed (1965); Curiosity rover lands on Mars (2012).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> President Donald Trump to sign executive order today creating an intergovernmental task force related to 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles (More)
> The New York Post is set to launch new daily newspaper, The California Post, in early 2026 (More) | Sean "Diddy" Combs denied release on bail, will remain in jail ahead of Oct. 3 sentencing (More)
> South Korean star Son Heung-Min to join Los Angeles FC from the English Premier League's Tottenham Hotspur for an MLS record transfer fee of $26M (More) | Texas and Ohio State top preseason college football coaches poll (More)
Science & Technology
> AI startup Perplexity accused of using techniques similar to those of malicious hackers to evade instructions not to crawl and scrape webpages (More) | OpenAI's ChatGPT nears 700 million weekly users, up 400% from March (More)
> Paleontologists discover new species of long-necked plesiosaur dating to roughly 180 million years ago; creature lived during a mass extinction known as the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (More) | Climatology 101: Our next Science & Technology newsletter comes out at 8:30 am ET today (Sign up here)
> Researchers discover RNA virus responsible for a mass die-off of British Columbia oysters in 2020; strain is a "mega" virus, with one of the largest viral genomes on record (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +1.5%, Dow +1.3%, Nasdaq +2.0%) after losses Friday (More) | European Union delays countermeasures against US tariffs for six months as trade talks continue (More) | American Eagle shares surge 23.7% after President Donald Trump praises Sydney Sweeney ad campaign (More)
> Elon Musk conditionally awarded roughly $30B in Tesla shares by the company's board to keep him as CEO through 2030 as litigation continues over his 2018 compensation package (More)
> AI company Palantir tops $1B in second quarter earnings for first time and raises full-year revenue forecast after striking $10B, 10-year US Army deal last week (More) | About 3,200 Boeing defense workers in Missouri and Illinois strike after rejecting a contract offer; it's the aerospace company's second strike in less than a year (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Justice Department to launch grand jury probe into how Obama administration officials handled intelligence about Russian interference in 2016 election (More) | Rep. Nancy Mace (R, SC-1) launches campaign for South Carolina governor (More) | New Hampshire becomes first state in the Northeast to ban medical interventions for transgender minors; joins 27 other states (More)
> Israeli government votes to fire attorney general amid ongoing corruption trial against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; country's Supreme Court freezes the decision to consider legality (More)
> Canada wildfires prompt air quality alerts throughout the US Midwest and Northeast; see map of affected areas (More)
Discarding the Past
In 1967, I purchased a red convertible Barracuda for $2,500 as I recall maybe less because we (my dad and I) purchased two at the same time.
I put 100,000 miles on that car in five years, and after 200,000 miles, I had the engine rebuilt, repainted using 1967 paint pigment, and replaced the top that included a glass window. The interior was still in excellent condition.
All of that cost me another $2,500 and I was willing to invest that money because I was never planning to sell the car. After 25 years, I purchased antique license plates and was told that an antique car was worth $1,000 for every year of age, if in pristine condition.
In 1997, I found myself in financial straits and was forced to sell the Barracuda. Needless to say, I made quite a profit, and mourned being forced into that situation for several years before I simply stopped thinking about it and began looking forward instead of backward.
In 2015, my wife and I retired; she was 62, I was 67. My first task to me being retired, was trashing all the remnants of my 45-year career. I made 15 trips to the landfill with my 2015 Venza loaded even with the back seat down and boxes in the passenger front seat.
I had no remorse at all over discarding my previous life.
Eight years later, my wife and I downsized our home and what we gave to Habitat for Humanity filled three of their large trucks, leaving us with plenty of items for a yard sale. Several more trips to the landfill even after the yard sale to get down to the size we needed to be.
Two years later (10 years of retirement) we have missed nothing.
Famous double-slit experiment holds up when stripped to its quantum essentials
CaptionSchematic of the MIT experiment: Two single atoms floating in a vacuum chamber are illuminated by a laser beam and act as the two slits. The interference of the scattered light is recorded with a highly sensitive camera depicted as a screen. Incoherent light appears as background and implies that the photon has acted as a particle passing only through one slit. Credits:Credit: Courtesy of the researchers
MIT physicists have performed an idealized version of one of the most famous experiments in quantum physics. Their findings demonstrate, with atomic-level precision, the dual yet evasive nature of light. They also happen to confirm that Albert Einstein was wrong about this particular quantum scenario.
The experiment in question is the double-slit experiment, which was first performed in 1801 by the British scholar Thomas Young to show how light behaves as a wave. Today, with the formulation of quantum mechanics, the double-slit experiment is now known for its surprisingly simple demonstration of a head-scratching reality: that light exists as both a particle and a wave. Stranger still, this duality cannot be simultaneously observed. Seeing light in the form of particles instantly obscures its wave-like nature, and vice versa.
Tuesday, August 5
Headlines
Chesnot/Getty Images
Robert Reich
Friends,
I’m in New York today, peddling my new book. It’s officially out today.
I loathe book tours.
The first book tour I ever went on, in the early 1980s, brought me to a bookstore in Madison, Wisconsin, where they sat me in the window under a spotlight next to a sign “Come In and Have Your Book Signed By Robert Reich.”
No one came in. For two hours, people passed on the street, a few gazing at the pathetic author in the window. I felt like a piece of merchandise, which I was.
That’s what you are when you go on a book tour: merchandise. A traveling salesperson selling a book. But not just any book — it’s your book. It’s something you’ve worked on and sweated over for several years. It’s your baby. And now you have to flog it like a can of dog food.
At A Glance
The wild origins of the word "dude."
Inside North Korea's new beach resort.
What's the difference between hot sweat and cold sweat?
How a coding flaw led to a billion-dollar crypto heist. (via 1440 Topics)
What to know about flesh-eating bacteria and brain-eating amoebas.
Classify clouds with AI—or draw and find shapes in the clouds.
See lifelike reconstructions of two Stone Age sisters.
Miniature therapy horses play keyboards in hospitals.
The drink of the summer: a "billion-dollar smoothie."
Clickbait: Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson are wolves’ nightmare fuel.
Historybook: Space pioneer Neil Armstrong born (1930); Marilyn Monroe found dead in her Los Angeles home (1962); The US, the UK, and the Soviet Union sign Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963); Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison dies (2019).
In The News
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> US track and field star Sha'Carri Richardson arrested for allegedly assaulting boyfriend and fellow Olympian Christian Coleman (More) | USA Track and Field Championships wrap up; see full results (More)
> Flaco Jiménez, six-time Grammy-winning Tejano music legend, dies at age 86 (More) | Jeannie Seely, Grammy-winning country musician, dies at age 85 (More)
> The 2025 World Swimming Championships wrap with Team USA leading all countries with 29 medals (More) | WNBA's Connecticut Sun reportedly to be sold for $325M; would be highest price ever for a professional women's sports franchise (More)
Science & Technology
> Google unveils Gemini Deep Think AI, a reasoning platform the company says can process multiple ideas at once (More) | Anthropic revokes OpenAI's license to the Claude large language model, claiming OpenAI engineers were using its coding tools to develop its next product (More)
> Sugar molecules used by cancer cells to evade the immune system may provide new treatment for type 1 diabetes; coating helps insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells evade autoimmune responses (More) | Type 1 diabetes explained (1440 Topics)
> Scientists build digital library of pollen from more than 18,000 plant species; archive will allow quick identification of pollen species, a task that typically takes hundreds of hours (More) | The evolution of flowers and bees (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower Friday (S&P 500 -1.6%, Dow -1.2%, Nasdaq -2.2%) amid weaker-than-expected jobs report and downward revisions to past months' data, new tariff announcements (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> OPEC+ countries agree to raise oil production by over 547,000 barrels per day next month (More) | Berkshire Hathaway's operating earnings drop 4% in Q2 to $11.2B; holds $344B in cash (More) | Warren Buffett 101 (More)
> Delta tells lawmakers it will not use AI and customers' personalized data to set custom airfare (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Special counsel's office launches investigation into former special counsel Jack Smith over alleged violations of the Hatch Act, which restricts federal employees' political activity; Smith led investigations into President Donald Trump's handling of the 2020 election, classified documents (More) | Hatch Act 101 (More, w/video)
> Dozens of Texas Democrats leave the state to block Republican-led redistricting effort (More) | Search continues for 45-year-old suspected gunman who killed four people at The Owl Bar in Anaconda, Montana, Friday (More)
> Israel's national security minister prays on Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, on Jewish holiday of Tisha B'Av, violating decades-old arrangement with Jordanian religious foundation (More) | Hamas releases video of hostage Evyatar David saying he is digging his own grave (More)
Adjusting to Life
Seeing the positive side is not as easy as it sounds, especially when it involves finances and/or one's health, and maybe one's relationships although that is not a critical aspect of one's life.
I remember someone telling me: HOPE FOR THE BEST, EXPECT THE WORST AND YOU ARE NEVER DISAPPOINTED... because it is always going to be one of those two. I suppose this is the humorous side of life to think like this.
When I get bad news, I immediately start to think how is this going to impact my life and what do I need to do to counter that impact. I suppose that is a good approach to take because you are not looking at it positively or negatively, just dealing with it as it happens.
When I was told I had cancer and then five years later when I was told I had contracted a second cancer, I had no positive or negative feelings; I just lived my life as if nothing was wrong. For six months, I got treatments on back-to-back days and then two days after that, I vomited so much my wife had to take me to the ER.
While throwing up that much is not very much fun and after the first time, I knew to expect it and could not stop it, I never felt MY LIFE IS OVER - THE END IS NEAR. I just dealt with it and went about living my life once it was behind me.
I don't know if the way I deal with life is the right way; I just know that the way I deal with life is the right way for me.
Moon's first-ever radio telescope ready for the dark side
Radio astronomers like a bit of peace and quiet, so they're sending an historic first radio telescope to the Moon. To block out Earthside radio signals, the Lunar Surface Electromagnetics Experiment (LuSEE-Night) will set up shop on the far side of the Moon.
Radio astronomy has revolutionized our understanding of the universe by opening up the vast electromagnetic spectrum that is invisible to the human eye. With giant radio telescopes to help, we have discovered pulsars, quasars, radio galaxies, interstellar molecules, supermassive black holes, and the microwave echoes of the Big Bang.
Unfortunately, listening to the music of the spheres is a frustrating task because Earth isn't exactly a quiet neighborhood when it comes to radio waves. Never mind terrestrial radio and television broadcasts, or even satellite signals or the ubiquitous presence of cell phones. There are also sparking car engines, microwave ovens, lightning strikes, GPS signals, reflections off the ionosphere, and even bird poop on the antenna to muck things up.





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