Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Orwell on journalism

First, an example from the UK:

Translated from Spanish
Imagine this: — Your 12-year-old daughter was repeatedly raped by four Black men. — You take her to the police and file a report. — The officers refuse to accept the report. — Desperate, you describe what happened on social media. — Two days later, the police arrest you and throw you in jail. A judge sentences you to an unconditional prison term. — The attackers go unpunished. — In Parliament, this decision is approved by a wide majority because they don’t want to be labeled as Islamophobes. This has happened hundreds of times in Great Britain, and the House of Commons in London voted accordingly just a few days ago.

https://x.com/capTercio/status/2064212294695792722?s=20


Orwell the Fortune Teller

No 20th-century journalist was better at predicting trends in the 21st century.


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“The invasion of literature by politics was bound to happen,” wrote George Orwell in his 1948 essay, “Writers and Leviathan,” because “we have developed . . . an awareness of the enormous injustice and misery of the world, and a guilt-stricken feeling that one ought to be doing something about it, which makes a purely aesthetic attitude toward life impossible.”

Looking back at Orwell’s 1940s essays, one comes across a lot of insights that remain equally applicable today. What if Orwell the essayist was a more accurate prophet than Orwell the novelist? 

Today, popular entertainment is larded up with messages about the urgent truths of our time: yass-queen feminism, antiracism, anticapitalism. Orwell saw it all coming; or rather, he identified a trend that’s older than you think.

Orwell is one of the few political thought leaders claimed as an ally by both left and right, so it was fitting that he united both sides again this spring, this time in derision. Across the ideological spectrum, critics lambasted a new feature adaptation of “Animal Farm,” directed by Andy Serkis and reframed as an attack on an evil tech oligarch. (“Drowning in ideological confusion. . . . I don’t really know what’s going on here,” declared the New York Times review.)

But if Orwell is often cited as the secular prophet of the past 100 years, his fortunetelling was a bit shaky. I and others have noted that the jackbooted totalitarianism Orwell saw taking over Britain in 1949’s “1984” turned out not to be as correct as 1932’s “Brave New World,” in which Aldous Huxley (Orwell’s teacher at Eton) presaged today’s stupefying surfeit of frictionless, vacuous pleasures. 

Moreover, that Orwell cast the Bolshevik purist Leon Trotsky as the offstage hero in both “Animal Farm” (in which he is called Snowball) and “1984” (Emmanuel Goldstein) is such an absurd take that Orwell himself admitted as much, undercutting his fiction in the process. In the 1946 essay “Catastrophic Gradualism,” he said that one must admit, of the Stalinist nightmare in the USSR, “all the seeds of evil were there from the start and that things would not have been substantially different if Lenin or Trotsky had remained in control.”

Orwell was perhaps at his best in foretelling the future when he switched off Prophet Mode and simply observed. Being completely honest about what was going on around him in the 1940s enabled him to make one astute remark after another about the 2020s. In the entire history of writing, how many journalists have proven to be perspicacious about events that happened more than half a century after their deaths?

Nearly everything Orwell says about how “the party” has ruined writers, in “Writers and Leviathan,” is equally true today if for “party” you simply substitute what the French have dubbed “le wokisme.” Today’s scribes adhere feverishly to the new orthodoxy, from newspaper reporters all the way up to blockbuster screenwriters. Anyone who suspects that ideology has rendered useless most criticism of politically-oriented art: Orwell said it first. “The non-literary reaction is, ‘This book is on my side, and therefore I must discover merits in it,’ ” he wrote, adding, “it often happens that party solidarity demands a plain lie.” A glance at the reviews for the embarrassingly awful, cringe-inducingly stupid, candy-colored Marxist fantasy, “I Love Boosters,” which is currently in theaters, will suffice as evidence.

Orwell said that the political self must be kept apart from the writing self—“whatever else [a writer] does in service of his party, he should never write for it. He should make it clear that his writing is a thing apart”—because “to yield subjectively, not merely to a party machine, but even to a group ideology, is to destroy yourself as a writer.” The viewer of 1,000 action movies and television spy dramas in which 120-pound women kick the stuffing out of men trained to kill nods wearily; ideological conformity requires accepting ridiculous things as true.

Similarly, in 1945’s essay “Antisemitism in Britain,” which begins with the assertion that there are about 400,000 Jews in Britain (same ballpark as today), Orwell’s words are as depressingly accurate as ever. “What vitiates nearly all that is written about antisemitism is the assumption in the writer’s mind that he himself is immune to it. . . . He thus fails to start his investigation in the one place where he could get hold of some reliable evidence—that is, in his own mind.” The way many Britons seemed to think that, at some level, Jews deserved to be subjected to the horrors of the 1940s anticipated Oct. 7, 2023. He quotes the remarks of ordinary people he has conversed with, one of whom says, on being offered a book showing atrocities against Jews, “Please don’t show it to me. It’ll only make me hate the Jews more than ever.” Orwell noted that dislike of Jews “does not at present lead to open persecution, but it has the effect of making people callous to the sufferings of Jews in other countries. It is at bottom quite irrational and will not yield to argument.” Again: just as true today.

“Politics and the English Language,” from 1946, is perhaps Orwell’s most famous essay, and should be studied intently by anyone who wants to be a writer. But take a look at the same year’s “The Prevention of Literature,” in which he describes an anticensorship conference in which the participants defend the suppression of disfavored texts. Step on any nominally “freethinking” campus today and you’ll find bookstores jauntily if nonsensically promoting “censored” or “banned” books that haven’t been censored or banned. Nearby, speeches promoting disfavored viewpoints continue to be canceled because of credible threats of violence, research is threatened for being culturally inappropriate and students want bans on speech that could upset “marginalized peoples.” “In its net effect,” writes Orwell of the event he attended, “the meeting was a demonstration in favor of censorship.”

“In England,” he wrote, “the immediate enemies of truthfulness, and hence of freedom of thought, are the press lords, the film magnates, and the bureaucrats.” But over time, “the weakening of the desire for liberty among the intellectuals themselves is the most serious symptom of all.” 

There’s no exact analogue for Big Brother in America today. But that’s because there doesn’t have to be.

Mr. Smith is a Free Expression columnist at WSJ Opinion.


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

AI compute in space

Okay this is genuinely insane. SpaceX just unveiled a satellite whose only job is to run AI. Not internet. Not GPS. Just compute, floating in orbit. It's called AI1, and the reason behind it breaks your brain. AI data centers on Earth are hitting a wall, not a chip wall, a physics wall. They need staggering amounts of power and water just to stay cool, and we're running out of grid and land to build them. So Musk's answer is: stop building them on Earth. In orbit, the sun never sets. Free power, 24/7. No water for cooling, you just radiate heat into the vacuum of space. The two things choking AI on the ground barely exist up there. And here's the wild part: Musk says it's easier to build than a Starlink satellite. Strip out the complex antennas and it's "a lot of solar cells, a radiator, and some laser links." One AI1 carries the compute of an Nvidia GB300 rack, the same hardware data centers fight over down here. AI1 is just the first one. The plan is a constellation of up to a million of them. And the timing isn't an accident, SpaceX goes public this week at a ~$1.75 trillion target. This isn't a rocket company anymore. It's positioning itself as the power grid for AI, in space.  

The race for AI compute just left the planet. Literally. 



Monday, June 8, 2026

why the media hates Musk

 

Larry Ellison asked the one question no journalist on Earth can answer. A Wall Street Journal writer told Ellison to his face that Elon Musk doesn’t know what he’s doing. Ellison didn’t argue. Didn’t get emotional. He just asked a question. Ellison: “This guy is landing rockets on robot drone rafts in the ocean, and you’re saying he doesn’t know what he’s doing. You ever land a rocket?” One question. No recovery. Ellison: “Who are you? Why should I believe you as opposed to my friend Elon?” This is the question the entire media class has been dodging for a decade. Who are you to judge? What have you built? What have you shipped? What problem have you solved that didn’t involve a keyboard and a deadline? Ellison: “You’re there in front of your Apple Macintosh typing up an article saying Elon’s an idiot.” They sit behind a laptop they did not engineer. Using a network they did not build. Running on silicon they cannot explain. To tell the world that the man sending humans to space doesn’t know what he’s doing. They have never built anything heavier than a Word document. And they publish it with absolute certainty. That’s the part that should disturb you. Not the criticism. The confidence behind it. The total absence of self-awareness it takes to judge disciplines you wouldn’t last a single semester in. Musk does not operate in opinion. He operates in the physical layer of the universe where the math closes or the rocket does not come home. His critics operate in a text editor. He built the vehicle that carries NASA astronauts to the International Space Station. The satellite constellation delivering internet to active war zones. The EV that forced every automaker on Earth to abandon their combustion roadmap. His loudest critics built a byline. So why the coordinated hatred? Because they lost the leash. The attacks didn’t escalate because Musk got worse at engineering. They escalated because he bought X. He cracked open the algorithm. He handed the public square back to the people. And he shattered their ability to control what you’re allowed to think. They don’t hate the engineer. They hate that the engineer took their monopoly. You cannot cancel a rocket. You cannot publish a hit piece on gravity. You cannot edit the laws of physics. They own the syntax. He owns the physics. One of them is going to Mars.


Hanging out with strangers

 

Elon Musk told a story that should terrify every AI company on Earth. His son Saxon is autistic. Saxon couldn’t understand why the family went to restaurants. You can get the same food delivered. You can call your friends over. You can eat better at home for half the price. So why go? Musk: “He had an epiphany and said, ‘Oh, the reason people go to restaurants is to hang out with strangers.’” A kid who takes the world literally just decoded something the rest of us never thought to question. We like being around people we’ll never know. Look at what we already built. Delivery apps so you never wait in line. Remote work so you never share an office. Self-checkout so you never talk to a cashier. Every innovation of the last 20 years was a bet against human proximity. Every one paid off. Until it didn’t. Loneliness is now a public health emergency. Depression has doubled since the smartphone. The average American has fewer close friends than any generation in history. We didn’t remove friction. We removed the thing friction was hiding. Now look at what’s coming. AI agents that handle your emails. AI companions that replace your conversations. AI assistants that make every human interaction optional. Same playbook. Same bet. Except this time we’re not engineering out strangers. We’re engineering out humans entirely. The coffee shop where nobody knows your name. The subway where no one speaks. The restaurant where you’ll never see that couple again. Those aren’t failed connections. They’re the background radiation of belonging. We don’t just need people who know us. We need to exist in rooms full of people who don’t. That’s what a kid understood at a dinner table that billion-dollar companies still can’t grasp in a boardroom. We spent 20 years building a world you never have to show up to. AI is about to finish the job. And nothing it builds will ever replicate sitting in a room full of strangers and not feeling alone.


Parental rights in schools

 

SCOTUS JUST PUBLISHED THE EXACT LIST OF RIGHTS PARENTS NOW HAVE IF A SCHOOL TRIES TO BLOCK THEM OUT Not vague victories. Not "parents win somehow." NAMED PROTECTIONS. SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS. School by school. ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Advance notice — schools must tell parents BEFORE exposing children to the challenged books ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Opt-out right — parents can excuse their children from that specific instruction ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Free Exercise protection — forcing children into lessons that "pose a very real threat of undermining" religious beliefs is unconstitutional ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Preliminary injunction — this is ACTIVE NOW, not pending a future ruling ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Montgomery County, MD — the specific district that started this must comply immediately ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ 4th Circuit overruled — the lower court that sided with the school board was reversed ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Elementary grades targeted — the ruling applies to the LGBTQ+-inclusive storybooks in elementary English classes ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Nationwide signal — any district with a no-opt-out policy on religious-conflict content now faces the same legal exposure ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Administrative burden — schools must build notification and opt-out systems before the 2025-2026 year begins ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ Case continues — the injunction holds while the full lawsuit plays out in lower courts ๐Ÿ’€ 6-3 vote ๐Ÿ’€ Majority: Roberts, Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Barrett ๐Ÿ’€ ZERO deference to the school board's "no opt-out" policy ๐Ÿ’€ 100% parental religious exercise — that is what the court protected Every protection on this list belongs to parents. Not administrators. PARENTS. Justice Sotomayor warned this "will be chaos for this Nation's public schools." These are the rights that caused that chaos.

https://x.com/USronaldcarter/status/2063503086497239110?s=20


Orwell on journalism

First, an example from the UK: Capitรกn General de los Tercios @capTercio Translated from Spanish Imagine this: — Your 12-year-old daughter w...