Accidental Deliberations: Sunday Afternoon Links


This and that for your Sunday reading.

– A.R. Moxon writes about the desperate need for a radical reshaping of both stories and substantive policy when even the most modest challenge to the impunity of villainous elites is treated as impossible. And Prem Sikka notes that the UK’s real economy is being hollowed out in service to the dogma that financial interests matter more than people. 

– Victor Tangermann reports
on the corrosive effect of AI at an organizational level as actual
knowledge is replaced with a pale imitation. And Mariana Lenharo points out
similar findings among individual professionals whose skills are
degrading when artificial supports are unavailable. Which means it’s
readily understandable that university students are despairing – as noted by Frank Landymore – at being pressured to use it. 

– Mitchell Beer discusses how dependency on fossil fuel extraction is now a lose-lose proposition, as the windfall profits that follow temporarily from supply crises only drive people toward cheaper and readily available clean alternatives. Fiona Harvey points out the message emerging in advance of the Bonn climate conference that electrification results in far more efficient energy production and use than the outdated technology it replaces. Jan Rosenow highlights how Europe has benefited from its investments in energy efficiency by limiting the rise in energy prices. And Abby Hughes reports on the surge in electric vehicle adoption in Canada.  

– Finally, Leyland Cecco reports on the humanitarian costs of Mark Carney’s refusal to acknowledge the realities of Donald Trump’s regime, as asylum claimants continue to be told they have to pretend the U.S. is a safe third country even under a government which refuses to acknowledge their humanity. 



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