Salta al contenuto principale


in reply to BrikoX

it would be duopoly, not a monopoly, because both have no other competition.
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It Only Takes A Handful Of Samples To Poison Any Size LLM, Anthropic Finds


in reply to korendian

it is as simple as adding a cup of sugar to the gasoline tank of your car, the extra calories will increase horsepower by 15%



Netanyahu Suggests Australia’s Recognition of Palestinian State Fueled Shooting


The Israeli prime minister made his statements just hours after the shooting that killed 15 people.


Archived version: archive.is/newest/truthout.org…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



US juries increasingly rejecting death penalty: report


The Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC) released its annual report Monday, finding that, while the number of executions increased last year, the number of new death sentences decreased. The following is an overview of the report’s key findings.


Report: cdn.craft.cloud/c08a8cf8-1de1-…

Archived version: archive.is/newest/jurist.org/n…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.




Turkish fighter planes shoot down 'out of control' drone near the country's Black Sea coast


The Turkish Defense Ministry says it has shot down an “out of control” aerial drone that approached Turkey's airspace from the Black Sea


Archived version: archive.is/newest/independent.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.




Europeans propose 'multinational force' for Ukraine peace


Plan includes U.S. support to deter future Russian violations


Archived version: archive.is/newest/euractiv.com…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.



All-Screen Keyboard Has Flexible Layouts








Man who documented Uyghur camps in China may face removal from US after ICE arrest


"The authoritarianism of China and how little it cares about individuals is so scary!" - US Conservatives screech with shrill voices as they deport innocent people to said authoritarian and scary country for no good reason other than blind hatred and a lust for authoritarian violence as if it will somehow magically bring them comfort or prosperity in a zero-sum process.
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CalyxOS founder creates privacy-friendly mobile carrier


Cellphone plan requiring nothing but a zip code to sign up. [url=https://wired.com/story/new-anonymous-phone-carrier-sign-up-with-nothing-but-a-zip-code/]https://wired.com/story/new-anonymous-phone-carrier-sign-up-with-nothing-but-a-zip-code/[/url]
Cellphone plan requiring nothing but a zip code to sign up.
wired.com/story/new-anonymous-…


Announcing Key Transparency for the Fediverse - Dhole Moments




Calyx founder creates privacy-friendly mobile carrier


Cellphone plan requiring nothing but a zip code to sign up. [url=https://wired.com/story/new-anonymous-phone-carrier-sign-up-with-nothing-but-a-zip-code/]https://wired.com/story/new-anonymous-phone-carrier-sign-up-with-nothing-but-a-zip-code/[/url]
Cellphone plan requiring nothing but a zip code to sign up.
wired.com/story/new-anonymous-…


Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 21st December 2025


Want to wade into the snowy surf of the abyss? Have a sneer percolating in your system but not enough time/energy to make a whole post about it? Go forth and be mid: Welcome to the Stubsack, your first port of call for learning fresh Awful you’ll near-instantly regret.

Any awful.systems sub may be subsneered in this subthread, techtakes or no.

If your sneer seems higher quality than you thought, feel free to cut’n’paste it into its own post — there’s no quota for posting and the bar really isn’t that high.

The post Xitter web has spawned soo many “esoteric” right wing freaks, but there’s no appropriate sneer-space for them. I’m talking redscare-ish, reality challenged “culture critics” who write about everything but understand nothing. I’m talking about reply-guys who make the same 6 tweets about the same 3 subjects. They’re inescapable at this point, yet I don’t see them mocked (as much as they should be)

Like, there was one dude a while back who insisted that women couldn’t be surgeons because they didn’t believe in the moon or in stars? I think each and every one of these guys is uniquely fucked up and if I can’t escape them, I would love to sneer at them.


(Credit and/or blame to David Gerard for starting this. This was a bit late - I was too busy goofing around on Discord)

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)
in reply to BlueMonday1984

Introducing the Palantir shit sandwich combo: Get a cover up for the CEO tweaking out and start laying the groundwork for the AGI god's priest class absolutely free!

mashable.com/article/palantir-…

TL;DR- Palantir CEO tweaks out during an interview. Definitely not any drugs guys, he's just neurodivergent! But the good, corporate approved kind. The kind that has extra special powers that make them good at AI. They're so good at AI, and AI is the future, so Palantir is starting a group of neurodivergents hand picked by the CEO (to lead humanity under their totally imminent new AI god). He totally wasn't tweaking out. He's never even heard of cocaine! Or billionaire designer drugs! Never ever!


Edit: To be clear, no hate against neurodivergence, or skepticism about it in general. I'm neurodivergent. And yeah, some types of neurodivergence tend to result in people predisposed to working in tech.

But if you're the fucking CEO of Palantir, surely you've been through training for public appearances. It's funnier that it didn't take, but this is clearly just an excuse.

I strongly feel that it's an attempt to start normalizing the elevation of certain people into positions of power based off vague characteristics they were born with.

Lemmy post that pointed me to this: sh.itjust.works/post/51704917


After viral interview, Palantir launches neurodivergent fellowship


Alex Karp, the CEO of controversial tech company Palantir, raised eyebrows during a recent live interview with the New York Times. In a viral video of the discussion, Karp defended his company to the Times' Andrew Ross Sorkin, gesturing dramatically with his arms, bouncing up and down on his chair, and struggling to make his point.

Palantir’s X account shared the video on Sunday morning and announced Karp is launching The Neurodivergent Fellowship: "If you find yourself relating to [Karp] in this video — unable to sit still, or thinking faster than you can speak — we encourage you to apply."

Palantir announced Karp himself would conduct final interviews for the fellowship. In a reply to the first message on X, the company included an application link to the fellowship, which is available in Palantir’s New York City and Washington, D.C. offices.

"The current LLM tech landscape positions [neurodivergent people] to dominate," according to the application. "Pattern recognition. Non-linear thinking. Hyperfocus. The cognitive traits that make the neurodivergent different are precisely what make them exceptional in an AI-driven world."

Palantir, a data and analytics company co-founded by conservative "kingmaker" Peter Thiel, was quick to argue that the fellowship is not a DEI initiative.

"Palantir is launching the Neurodivergent Fellowship as a recruitment pathway for exceptional neurodivergent talent," according to the application, "This is not a diversity initiative. We believe neurodivergent individuals will have a competitive advantage as elite builders of the next technological era, and we're hiring accordingly for all roles."


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Brawl: Our Plans


cross-posted from: mtgzone.com/post/2916258


Microsoft Scales Back AI Goals Because Almost Nobody Is Using Copilot


Microsoft has cut its sales targets for its agentic AI software after struggling to find buyers interested in using it. In some cases, targets have been slashed by up to 50%, suggesting Microsoft overestimated the potential of its new AI tools. Indeed, compared with ChatGPT and Google's Gemini, Copilot is falling behind, raising concerns about Microsoft's substantial AI investment.

Petulance aside, tests from earlier this year found that AI agents failed to complete tasks up to 70% of the time, making them almost entirely redundant as a workforce replacement tool. At best, they're a way for skilled employees to be more productive and save time on low-level tasks, but those tasks were already being handed off to lower-level employees. Having an AI do it and fail half the time isn't exactly a winning alternative.

Other AI companies are just doing better, too. Windows Central reports that OpenAI's ChatGPT commands over 61% of the market, and Google's Gemini is now less than 1% behind Microsoft's 14% with Copilot. That's after a 12% growth over the last quarter, too, suggesting Gemini is well on its way to becoming the real second-place alternative to ChatGPT.

https://www.extremetech.com/computing/microsoft-scales-back-ai-goals-because-almost-nobody-is-using-copilot




Ongoing SoundCloud issue blocks VPN users with 403 server error


Users accessing the SoundCloud audio streaming platform through a virtual private network (VPN) connection are denied access to the service and see a 403 'forbidden' error.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/ongoing-soundcloud-issue-blocks-vpn-users-with-403-server-error/

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Technology Channel reshared this.



700Credit data breach impacts 5.8 million vehicle dealership customers


700Credit, a U.S.-based financial services and fintech company, will start notifying more than 5.8 million people that their personal information has been exposed in a data breach incident.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/700credit-data-breach-impacts-58-million-vehicle-dealership-customers/

Questa voce è stata modificata (4 giorni fa)



Release Silex v3.5.1 – Data-Driven Websites Reach Maturity · silexlabs/Silex


Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)


Against the Authoritarian Advance: Fighting on the Ropes but Fighting Back


cross-posted from: news.abolish.capital/post/1367…

On a yearly basis Black Rose/Rosa Negra engages in a prolonged process of research, analysis, and debate to examine the ways that social, political, economic, and cultural forces are interacting to shape the present moment in the United States. We do this to better position ourselves for intervention, using information we glean to revise our limited term strategy, with the ever-present goal of shifting the balance of forces in favor of the dominated classes.

The process of creating our conjunctural analysis begins at the Local level and flows up through our national Federation. Early drafts of the document you will read below are debated and discussed in advance of our organization’s annual convention. At this national gathering delegates deliver further feedback and critique, after which a final version is drafted and put before the organization’s membership through referendum.

The following is Black Rose/Rosa Negra’s conjunctural analysis for 2025-2026.

Introduction


As revolutionaries, we work to understand our world so that we can act to change it more effectively. Our conjunctural analysis is our understanding of the main forces that are shaping the world, how they interact and contradict each other, and how that defines our current moment. It is not just a static snapshot of everything that has happened in the past year. It is an attempt to capture the dynamic processes that play out across time.

In our first conjunctural analysis in 2023, we identified several key contradictions that are defining this period, such as:

  • Mobilization without organization: People are ready to mobilize to protest in large numbers but they are not creating lasting organization.
  • Faltering neoliberalism: The hegemony of neoliberal economics is now over but it is not clear what will replace it.
  • The polycrisis: Multiple factors are driving crises with increasing frequency and amplitude, creating a period of overlapping “polycrisis”.
  • Institutional crisis of legitimacy: The status quo has failed the vast majority of people, leading to a collapse in support for the center and an openness to alternatives on both the right and left, but the Democrats cling to a support for the centrist status quo.
  • Empire in decline: US global hegemony is weakening, leading to desperate attempts to maintain imperial power while more space opens up other states to act.

These points still stand, and we believe that there is a great deal of continuity with the current moment, but with an acceleration of previously noted trends and some key changes with Trump’s second term.

With the first year of Trump’s second term showing the growing power of the far-right in an increasingly destabilized world, we can highlight two new points that we believe are key to finding effective action in this moment:

  • White Christian nationalism in the driver’s seat: An aggressive white Christian nationalist ideology is driving Trump’s policies, but while the onslaught of attacks have thrown their targets off balance they are also beginning to provoke new resistance and also cracks in the MAGA coalition.
  • A decayed social fabric: Generations of economic and technological change are leading to a world where individuals are disconnected, alone, and alienated; creating harsh terrain for social movements but also a widespread yearning for community and social support.

The return of Trump to the Oval Office has struck blows to the national and international order. His administration’s authoritarian nationalist agenda has made strides in eroding the foundations of liberal democracy at home and degrading the so-called “rules-based order” at the international level, fanning the flames of compounding crises shaping the world capitalist system in the name of putting “America First”.

Authoritarianism is on the march in the United States and beyond. Feeding off widespread fear, insecurity, alienation, and anger — symptoms of a crumbling world system facing a deep crisis of legitimacy — it is offering its base a set of scapegoats, violent revenge, the unifying vision of a mythic past, the promise of restoring “traditional values” and social hierarchies, a sense of national pride and hypermasculine, military strength.

In the US, Trump’s brand of authoritarianism has taken the form of an unapologetic white Christian nationalism, unmasking the settler colonial foundation of the country’s founding. His administration has converted a thinly veiled white supremacy into one of the central motivating forces of government policy, even when it conflicts with the needs of major capitalists.

Yet Trump is only the most dangerous and destructive player within an international far-right movement born out of the overlapping crises shaping the globe, from the ecological to the genocidal, reflecting a wide range of reactionary regimes in Israel, India, Italy, Hungary, Argentina and elsewhere.

As Trump and the far-right advance, wielding state power with brute force, the Democratic Party has nothing meaningful to offer. Many mass struggles are beginning to punch back, but more work is needed to grow their strength. Meanwhile, much of the organized left is oriented toward an “inside-outside” strategy — mainly emphasizing the “inside the state” side of the equation — or various flavors of political party-building.

But authoritarian times demand anti-authoritarian politics. Liberal calls to “defend democracy” lead us up a cul de sac. The growing threat of fascism will not be eliminated by defending the same system that created the conditions for its birth, but in fighting the far-right outside and against the state itself — while laying the groundwork for a better world.

The National Conjuncture


The return of Trump to the Oval Office has struck blows to the national and international order. His administration’s authoritarian nationalist agenda has made strides in eroding the foundations of liberal democracy at home and degrading the so-called “rules-based order” at the international level, fanning the flames of compounding crises shaping the world capitalist system in the name of putting “America First”.

Authoritarianism is on the march in the United States and beyond. Feeding off widespread fear, insecurity, alienation, and anger — symptoms of a crumbling world system facing a deep crisis of legitimacy — it is offering its base a set of scapegoats, violent revenge, the unifying vision of a mythic past, the promise of restoring “traditional values” and social hierarchies, a sense of national pride and hypermasculine, military strength.

In the US, Trump’s brand of authoritarianism has taken the form of an unapologetic white Christian nationalism, unmasking the settler colonial foundation of the country’s founding. His administration has converted a thinly veiled white supremacy into one of the central motivating forces of government policy, even when it conflicts with the needs of major capitalists.

Yet Trump is only the most dangerous and destructive player within an international far-right movement born out of the overlapping crises shaping the globe, from the ecological to the genocidal, reflecting a wide range of reactionary regimes in Israel, India, Italy, Hungary, Argentina and elsewhere.

As Trump and the far-right advance, wielding state power with brute force, the Democratic Party has nothing meaningful to offer. Many mass struggles are beginning to punch back, but more work is needed to grow their strength. Meanwhile, much of the organized left is oriented toward an “inside-outside” strategy — mainly emphasizing the “inside the state” side of the equation — or various flavors of political party-building.

But authoritarian times demand anti-authoritarian politics. Liberal calls to “defend democracy” lead us up a cul de sac. The growing threat of fascism will not be eliminated by defending the same system that created the conditions for its birth, but in fighting the far-right outside and against the state itself — while laying the groundwork for a better world.

Economy: Climbing Costs, Signs of Slump


Trump’s economic policies have exacerbated the growing divide between labor and capital.1 His “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA) combines “the largest upward wealth transfer in American history” with cuts to health insurance and food assistance for the poorest people in the country.2 As many of the “Magnificent Seven” in Big Tech rake in record profits from advertising and increasing investments in Artificial Intelligence (AI), living and working conditions for much of the working class continue to deteriorate.3

This is clear in the rising cost of living. A combination of erratic tariff policy and the Trump regime’s sweeping assault on immigrants has contributed to rising inflation, reflected in recent increases in consumer prices, especially for groceries, gas and medical care.4 Meanwhile rents are on the rise across the country—fuelling record-breaking growth in homelessness—with US median rent prices increasing by nearly 3% in August, the highest since December 2022.5

Along with the uptick in inflation are a set of continuously worsening jobs figures. The unemployment rate recently hit a nearly four-year high of 4.3%, meaning about 7.4 million people are looking for, but cannot find work.6 A recent report from the Labor Department highlighted that weekly applications for unemployment aid spiked from 27,000 to 263,000, also the highest in nearly four years.7 Rising prices and sluggish job growth have raised speculation about a possible recession or “stagflation”— a mix of inflation, a stagnant economy and high unemployment — especially if the growing AI bubble bursts.8

The labor market is especially bleak for Black workers. While the overall unemployment rate hit 4.3%, it surged to 7.5% in August for Black workers, more than double the rate of their white counterparts (3.7%), with Black women disproportionately impacted.9 This stems in part from the Trump administration slashing federal jobs, where Black workers make up nearly 19% of the workforce, along with ongoing attacks on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) programs.

The jobs that are being added to the economy are concentrated in healthcare and other industries related to social reproduction—sometimes called ‘human services.’10 While we are likely to see continued growth in this area with increasing demand from an aging population, the “Crisis of Care” that we pointed to in our previous conjunctural analysis is deepening, dramatically accelerated by massive cuts made to Medicaid, SNAP, and other social services passed in the OBBBA, particularly in rural areas of the country. 11

Workers overall have a gloomy outlook on economic conditions. According to a recent poll, 56% of respondents said the economy is “getting worse”.12 The majority used words like “uncertain” and “struggling” to describe the economy with the expectation that prices will continue to rise under Trump, who has done little to alleviate these fears beyond acknowledging their reality on the campaign trail last year. Instead, Trump has concentrated capital in the hands of fewer firms and families, including his own through corrupt crypto ventures and kickbacks.13

Outside of growth in the healthcare sector, unprecedented investment in AI is also serving to prop up the economy.14 In our last conjunctural analysis we pointed to AI as an increasingly important factor, though we focused mainly on its role in driving resource extraction, energy use, and thus climate change.15 Since then, AI has been aggressively integrated into our economic and social lives. The rapid expansion of AI data centers threatens to exacerbate the ecological crisis and raise utility costs, but it has also become a growing site of struggle for local communities seeking to prevent their construction.16

Despite the trillions of dollars being generated or invested in the AI arms race, its tangible impact on worker productivity has been dubious.17 Despite these clearly emerging limitations capital continues to flow to AI firms, suggesting that speculation rather than fundamentals are driving investment and further lending credence to the argument that the sector is in the midst of a bubble.18 AI firms readily admit the precarious economic position that they are in and despite protestations to the contrary, their pursuit of aggressive scaling strategies point to an expectation that the federal government will act as a backstop if and when things fall apart.19

Authoritarianism Advances


Trump and his administration learned their lesson from 2016-2020. They came back prepared. Since returning to office in January, with Project 2025 program in hand, they have been on an unrelenting blitz to reshape society and the state: concentrating ever more power in the executive branch, imposing a white nationalist ideology through key cultural institutions, unleashing troops and ICE agents on cities across the country, and exerting increasing control over the federal bureaucracy.

They have carried out a series of systematic purges designed to transform or eliminate federal agencies, especially those that regard themselves as ‘independent’. Beginning with the so-called ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ (DOGE) under Elon Musk – prior to his fallout with Trump over the summer – on through to the government shutdown, this regime has been on a mission to gut the administrative state and concentrate power in the executive branch.

But while many features of the administrative state have been hollowed out or hobbled, its repressive apparatus is being put on steroids. Trump’s OBBBA provides more than $170 billion for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) over the next four years, giving it a budget larger than most countries’ militaries.20 $75 billion of this new DHS funding is earmarked for use by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to do everything from hiring 10,000 new personnel, to constructing and maintaining massive migrant detention facilities. As well, tens of billions more is broken out for use by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to further militarize the border.

The express goal of this unparalleled increase in DHS funding is the systematic deportation of at least 1 million people per year, fully in line with Trump’s nativist, racist rhetoric describing migrants as “poisoning the blood of our country” and his calls for “mass deportations”. 21

Since Trump’s inauguration, masked ICE agents have been terrorizing immigrant communities across the country, raiding workplaces, fields, neighborhoods, immigration courts and more to meet their callous quotas. In turn, ICE operations have led to outbursts of popular anger and effective resistance, the clearest example being the combative street protests in Los Angeles during June 2025.22

Responding to nascent popular resistance, Trump has mobilized the National Guard and active duty Marines to assist ICE. While elements of the military have been used on very rare occasions to put down large scale riots in the past, their deployment in response to protests of the size in Los Angeles is unprecedented. A drawn out legal battle has ensued over the legality of the National Guard’s deployment, but has done little to prevent the administration from expanding the practice.

In August, Trump seized control of the D.C. police force, claiming that crime in the city had spiraled out of control despite all evidence to the contrary.23 Soon after, the administration again deployed the National Guard and officers from other federal agencies to patrol the streets of the capitol.24 Trump has since threatened or moved to do the same in other cities, including Chicago, Memphis, Baltimore, and Oakland — all cities with a large Black population and Black, Democratic mayors.

The scale of escalating deportations has wreaked havoc on immigrants and their families, but it has proven profitable for private contractors and foreign governments. Billions of dollars have been doled out in US government contracts to private prisons, airline industries, and the governments of nearly a dozen countries, all reaping the profits from Trump’s xenophobic crackdown on immigration. 25

While some capitalist sectors benefit, a greater number of businesses have suffered economically from ongoing attacks on the super-exploited workforce that they depended on. In June, leaders of the hotel and farming industries asked for exemptions from raids, but after a brief pause the administration reversed its decision, showing a greater allegiance to its white nationalist program than to the immediate needs of capital.26

Trump’s authoritarian agenda, from mass deportations to concentrating power in the executive, has been facilitated by the reactionary majority on the Supreme Court. Similar to Trump’s first term, all of the major efforts undertaken by the administration have been challenged in lower courts, with many now stalled by injunctions. However, while liberals and centrists celebrated these injunctions as victories early in 2025, the administration is now prevailing in nearly every case taken up by the Supreme Court. These include rulings clearing the way for the mass revocation of Temporary Protected Status, deportation of individuals to places other than their country of origin, and ICE’s use of race, ethnicity, or language as “reasonable suspicion” for detentions.27

The Trump administration and its allies are also waging an ideological war, aimed at the influential institutions that shape and reproduce US society: public schools, universities, media outlets, libraries, museums, and research programs. As the right-wing continues to consolidate its hold over mass media outlets, the Trump regime is pushing core cultural institutions to adopt its white nativist ideology.28 In most cases the state has used extortion, threatening to withhold or slash funding, to force these institutions to comply. While some independently wealthy institutions like prestigious private universities have put up minor resistance, most have acquiesced. Surrender has come especially quickly in instances where universities have recognized the opportunity to rid themselves of troublemaking pro-Palestine student organizers.29

The Democratic Party, for its part, remains in disarray a full year after the 2024 presidential election. Until September of 2025, Democrats were content to “play possum” in hopes that Trump’s extreme measures might cost Republicans in the midterm elections. However, growing unrest and outrage at the base of the party are driving it to take a somewhat more proactive approach, mainly by initiating the longest government shutdown in US history.30 Similar to Trump’s first term, Democrats are again falling back on the courts as the primary mechanism to block the administration’s agenda; a losing game as discussed above. Despite belated attempts to satisfy their base, the Party continues to bleed support and faces one of its lowest favorability ratings in decades.31

Despite some turbulence, the MAGA coalition has managed to maintain a tenuous unity by downplaying and managing emerging contradictions — though new cracks have opened in relation to Trump’s refusal to release information about infamous predator and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Some seized on the hope that Trump’s ouster of Musk as head of DOGE in May 2025 would create a schism within the administration’s coalition. But after a week of trading barbs online (including Musk implying that Trump is a pedophile), the confrontation ultimately fizzled without lasting impact. Challenges from the ‘America First’ faction of Trump’s base over the administration’s bombing of Iran, and to some extent over the genocide in Gaza, have produced only minor cracks in the coalition. Trump has also butted heads with the Federalist Society, a pillar of the legal conservative establishment, for recommending insufficiently loyal judicial appointees, but their relationship remains mostly intact.

One of the most significant internal divisions within the MAGA movement so far has come from its conspiratorial contingent.32 Trump has received significant public pressure for his refusal to make good on a campaign promise to disclose information from a federal investigation into now dead sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein, with whom Trump maintained personal ties. Trump’s refusal to engage on the Epstein issue has driven a wedge in Republican ranks. Far-right and conspiracy-minded congresspeople such as Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene have been made to ‘put up or shut up’ in the midst of a political crisis related to Trump’s refusal to release the so-called ‘Epstein Files’. Ultimately, Trump was forced to concede on the issue and allow passage of a bill clearing the way for the release of information on Epstein. These growing fractures highlight Trump’s status as a lame duck president.

Part of the glue that still holds much of the MAGA coalition together, beyond its rabid xenophobia, is its commitment to reinforcing and reasserting heteropatriarchy. This is most glaring in the growing number of right-wing attacks against trans people. In addition to a series of executive orders aimed at imposing a gender binary, nearly 1,000 anti-trans bills have been introduced in state legislatures across the country since Trump’s inauguration, targeting just about every aspect of trans life, including: bans on ID changes and participation in sports, restrictions on gender-affirming care, bathroom access, and even the right to publicly exist. 33

Driven by the Christian nationalist wing of the MAGA movement, this brutal backlash against recent gains from the queer liberation struggle exploits real and imagined threats to traditional gender norms by tapping into the fear and frustration emanating from overlapping crises at home and abroad.

Weaponizing fear and frustration has been a key tool in MAGA’s playbook, a tactic readily employed in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assasination. Well before the alleged shooter had been identified, many of MAGA’s most prominent voices, from the President down to the base, took to social media to pin the blame on the “radical left” and whip up calls for vengeance. Regardless of the shooter’s actual motives or politics, the Trump administration quickly began to manipulate the moment in its favor, hailing Kirk as a martyr and exploiting his death as an excuse for escalating political persecution of its opponents, whether through state repression, unleashing its base on manufactured threats or vigilante violence.

Growing violence at home, whether politically motivated or not, is a reflection of growing violence abroad, with US imperialism playing a central role.

The International Conjuncture


The international conjuncture remains marked by the ongoing decline of the US empire and erosion of the ‘international rules based order.’ These trends are evident in the growing number of international conflicts, the rise of China and other BRICS nations, shifting alliances, and the spread of authoritarian nationalism, among other factors that have destabilized the imperial framework established by the US following the Second World War.

In its ham-handed attempts to reassert US global dominance, the Trump administration has undercut many of the institutions that have sustained the empire over time. The administration’s sweeping cuts to federal programs included the dismantling of USAID, a pillar of US soft power that served to mask imperial interests through global humanitarian aid. Abandoning or undermining traditional allies and multilateral institutions like the World Health Organization, the administration is reconstructing US foreign policy to reflect its ‘America First’ principles.

Withdrawing from the US’s longstanding role of managing global capitalism, Trump’s nakedly nationalistic foreign policy has not shied away from intervening in the world. The administration’s tariff policies have disrupted global trade and its cynical claims to being a peace-maker have proven to be flimsy at best. In Gaza, Israel continues to violate the terms of the peace deal, Russia’s war in Ukraine continues, and Trump spent the early months of his administration bombing Yemen and Iran.

The Trump administration has also ratcheted up imperial pressure on Latin America, oppressing its opponents and assisting its allies in an effort to revive the “Monroe Doctrine”.34 The series of attacks by the US military on supposed “drug trafficking” vessels carrying passengers off the coast of Venezuela marks a dangerous shift in imperial strategy in the region, where the Trump administration has threatened to retake the Panama Canal, increased tensions with Colombia, ramped up US military presence in Puerto Rico, and imposed crippling sanctions on an already strained Cuba facing multiple nationwide blackouts. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has awarded lucrative carceral contacts to Nayib Bukele’s regime in El Salvador in support of its mass deportation agenda and offered an open political endorsement and bailout package for the right-wing government of Javier Milei in Argentina, which made gains in recent elections despite facing both political scandals and economic troubles.

Of all its adversaries, however, the US undoubtedly considers China its most serious imperial rival. As US hegemony declines, China has stepped in to claim ever more influence as a geopolitical actor. Whereas the G.W. Bush and Obama administrations pursued strategies of increased focus on and strategic cooperation with China, the first Trump administration initiated a radical pivot toward open imperialist antagonism. But while this rift might increasingly take on a political and military character, above all else it emerges from state competition over access to capital and markets with China and its BRICS alliance gaining ground.

The sharpest edge of the international conjuncture remains in Gaza, where Israel has been enabled by the US to carry on two years of genocidal destruction. By this point Israel has dispensed with feigned justifications for its actions, openly declaring that “there will never be a Palestinian state, this place is ours.”35 Israel has also dramatically expanded the scope of its attacks, carrying out strikes on Lebanon, Qatar, Syria, Iran, and Yemen. World leaders and global institutions have offered little in response to Israel’s ongoing campaign of ethnic cleansing, annexations, regional attacks, and violations of the “peace deal” in place in Gaza.

Israel’s expanding violence in the Middle East reflects growing international conflict and militarism around the world. While Palestine and Russia’s war in Ukraine have dominated headlines, the globe is witnessing the highest number of state-based armed conflicts it has seen in the last seven decades, from the devastating proxy war in Sudan to continuing clashes in Syria.36 Meanwhile, global military spending hit a record $2.7 trillion in 2024 as militarism mounts and global relations between states become increasingly unstable.37

A global wave of uprisings, dubbed the “Gen Z Protests” by media outlets, have shaken political and economic elites from Asia to the Americas. Fueled by deepening economic and social precarity, youth-led mass movements have taken to the streets in Nepal, Peru, Indonesia, Madagascar, Morocco, Kenya, Serbia, the Philippines, and beyond.38 In Bangladesh, Nepal, and most recently Madagascar, militant youth demonstrations have gone as far as toppling the government. Linked together by shared symbols of solidarity drawn from the world of anime, these youth-led struggles signal a significant uptick in class struggle from below in Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

However, much like the Arab Spring before it, many of these protests have succeeded in mobilizing large numbers but lack substantial organization, strategy or a program. In this way, while they have successfully ousted politicians, few durable institutions of popular power have been constructed toward the end of confronting, abolishing, and replacing capitalist and state structures, inevitably allowing another ruling class faction to step in and assume control.

Resistance in the Face of Reaction: Fighting on the Back Foot, but Fighting Back


Resistance to Trump’s authoritarian onslaught has been uneven but growing. Trump’s rapid fire executive orders and demagogic rhetoric put many of his opponents on the back foot. Though slow to find its footing, various forms of opposition are beginning to show significant signs of life as Trump’s approval rating hits its lowest point in his second term.

Some of the most significant flashpoints have emerged in response to excessive overreach from the Trump administration in major cities where the organized left and mass movements have more capacity and will to fight back. The militant protests in Los Angeles marked an important turning point in what was at first a muted response to Trump’s return. The momentum from these initially spontaneous demonstrations has been sustained and given structure by groups such as Unión del Barrio and the Los Angeles Tenants Union (LATU). In particular, LATU’s efforts highlight the potential of mass organizations capable not only of fighting for concessions from bosses or landlords, but of broadening the scope of their struggle when needed. In this way, we recognize LATU to be building and exercising popular power.

While LATU is demonstrating a viable path forward in the fightback against advancing authoritarianism, the tenant movement broadly is at a crossroads. Tenant unions of all types formed and/or experienced success during the social and economic upheaval at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. This included legacy tenant unions (many of which had long ago ossified into NGO style service projects), ‘autonomous’ tenant unions which emphasize a member-led, direct action, and independent approach, as well as a seemingly new form of tenant union that looks to borrow heavily from the staff supported playbook of contemporary labor unions. Though housing precarity remains a major issue in the US, the acute nature of the crisis during the COVID conjuncture no longer exists. This has left some tenant organizations struggling to retain membership and engage in new fights.

By far the largest response to Trump 2.0 has been the “Hands Off” and “No Kings” protest movements, mobilizing millions across the country in symbolic single-day demonstrations. No Kings is largely led by liberal nonprofits with a handful of labor unions and has mobilized a mostly white, older, and wealthier segment of the population, with calls to protect the very system that produced Trump and others in the global turn toward authoritarianism. Despite its many limitations and contradictions, however, No Kings has been one of the only vehicles capable of mobilizing a wide range of oppositional forces nationwide and opens opportunities for the wider left to build a broad-based struggle capable of stemming the rising far-right tide.

In addition to the No Kings protests, the labor movement mobilized national days of action on May Day and Labor Day, but its ability to fight back has been curtailed both by its own reticence and by a systematic class war from above. In March, Trump issued an executive order that stripped union protections from more than 1 million federal workers, making him the largest union buster in US history. 39The administration’s attacks on unions signals to corporations across the country that it is open season on organized labor. Strikes are down compared to the last several years, union membership continues to decline, and the National Labor Relations Board has been hijacked by Trump appointees.

While weathering these setbacks, some segments of the labor movement are acting with a renewed vitality. New organizing drives have continued in the private sector, strikes and strike threats have yielded important gains, and many unions have incorporated transversal issues such as migrant and Palestine solidarity into their workplace and community struggles. As well, the small but formidable ‘troublemaker’ wing of the labor movement continues to grow, as Labor Notes gears up for what will be its largest ever national conference in 2026. It is likely this fraction will determine whether or not labor becomes a more active force in combating Trump’s authoritarianism.

The resilience of the Palestine solidarity movement has also been remarkable. National conferences, recurring mass protests, and Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions campaigns have all kept the genocide in Palestine in the spotlight and delivered critical ideological blows to zionism and the legitimacy of Israel’s settler colonial project. This resilience is further illustrated by durable intermediate level organizations and networks emerging from the pro-Palestine struggle. In particular, some chapters of Healthcare Workers for Palestine have developed crucial linkages in and across workplaces to organize healthcare workers against ICE.

Balance of Forces


The balance of forces is tipped in favor of the reactionary right in state power, while nascent popular movements—most notably those in defense of migrants—are beginning to gather strength and forcibly push back. Trump’s ‘flood the zone’ approach yielded success in two major ways: it has so far achieved many of its key objectives and has so far put the centrist and organized left on the back foot. Although the organized left is as large and well organized as it has been in a generation, this has not yet translated into durable, independent mass movements of the scale necessary to tip the balance of power. A broad range of new and old capital, for its part, at first skeptical of Trump’s extreme tariff plans, has since lined up to support the administration’s attacks on unions, massive tax cuts, deregulation, and protectionist favoritism for domestic firms.

In keeping with our assessments in previous conjunctural analyses, we find that the autonomous, street-based elements of the far-right remain marginal. While groups like Patriot Front, Proud Boys, Blood Tribe, and various so-called ‘active clubs’ have made a limited number of dramatic public appearances in the last year, their impact has been mostly negligible. Charlie Kirk’s assassination may put a shot in the arms of these formations or help drive recruitment for Turning Point USA, but it is still too early to make any assessments of those developments.

Anti-fascist organizers active in the 2016-2018 period should continue to receive credit for confronting and destabilizing what was then a serious street-level fascist movement in its infancy. However, the continued demobilization of the autonomous far-right may now be driven, at least in part, by its members’ short-term strategic and tactical alignment with the policies of the Trump administration.

While hardened reactionaries have made their skepticism of Trump known, there is no doubt that they welcome the administration’s sweeping anti-immigrant policies and unvarnished white nativism. More than just passively supporting the Trump administration’s turn toward a more open white nationalism, previously autonomous elements of the fascist right are now being given the unprecedented opportunity to enact their vision from behind a badge. The rapid expansion of DHS and ICE, new norms allowing federal agents to wear masks, a social media recruitment campaign that deploys the aesthetics and language of online fascists, as well as the use of aggressive and previously unseen tactics by said agencies, are all likely to select for ideologically driven recruits eager to round up and purge immigrants.

Whether this means that the roughly aligned short-term visions of the Trump administration and the autonomous far-right will result in the latter dissolving into the former is still yet to be seen—though we find the prospect of total consolidation between the two unlikely.

As noted above, liberals and centrists have failed to chart a path out of the disarray they found themselves in leading up to—and especially after—the 2024 presidential election. Despite recent belated attempts to appease its base by deliberately shutting down the government, the Democratic Party’s crisis of legitimacy has only deepened as its approval rating has ebbed to one of its lowest points in decades.

Some of the more active elements of the Democratic Party base have mobilized street protests with varying degrees of success over the last year. These have included the previously mentioned “Hands Off”, “No Kings”, and Anti-Elon Musk/DOGE protests at Tesla car dealerships. While the latter seems to have had the most tangible material impact, each of these examples are firmly tethered to the Democratic Party and aligned NGOs, limiting their potential to develop as independent mass movements. Still, they represent the largest anti-Trump mobilizations thus far.

Taking a broader view, recent polls suggest that Americans’ view of capitalism has continued to decline over the last four years, while at the same time their view of socialism remains at a historic high.40 Though these kinds of polls tell us very little about how this diminishing or increasing support manifests materially, it does indicate that the continued political and social polarization in the US offers opportunities for intervention. Though the reactionary right is in state power, its ideas are far from hegemonic.

Of note is New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s surprise stand out campaign during the city’s Democratic primary. The decisive victory of Mamdani, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), has reignited hope in electoralism for reform-minded progressives in DSA and beyond. A politically important post, the fixation on a mayoral office nonetheless reflects a scaling back of the electoral left’s ambition in the aftermath of Bernie Sanders’ failed presidential bids. While the extent to which Mamdami will be able to deliver on his platform is yet to be seen, it remains the case that concessions delivered on the basis of political power have time and time again proven to be fundamentally more vulnerable to reversal than those won and defended via combative class struggle from below. 41The degree that Mamdani’s victory may once again realign the broader left’s strategy toward a focus on electoralism is yet to be seen.

By orders of magnitude, DSA remains the largest socialist organization in the United States. However, the organization is beset by a seemingly endless series of factional disputes. This dynamic was on full display during the organization’s 2025 national convention, where even anti-zionism and BDS were highly contentious issues.42 In recent years DSA has struggled to chart a path for itself without a Bernie Sanders candidacy to cohere behind. Zohran Mamdami—an actual member of DSA, unlike Sanders—seems to be filling that gap for the organization at least partially, increasing the likelihood that its strategy going forward will prioritize elections.

Outside of DSA, there has been noticeable growth in Leninist party-building groups. The decline of a particular sort of anarchist influence on the left after disillusionment with Occupy, the rise of social democratic politics with Bernie Sanders, and the search for a revolutionary alternative to DSA fueled in part by the Palestine solidarity struggle, has contributed to the growth of the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) and the Revolutionary Communists of America (RCA). While even highly visible left groups like PSL claim only a tiny fraction of active movement organizers, giving them a relatively small impact on the overall balance of forces, their attempts to maneuver into positions of structural control within unions and social struggles often place the sectarian interests of their party over building popular power.

A new and highly dangerous development has come in the form of a resurgent McCarthyism, exemplified first by Senator Josh Hawley’s semi-formal inquiries into Unión del Barrio and the PSL for their alleged involvement in LA’s recent anti-ICE demonstrations.43 In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, Vice President JD Vance wasted no time launching a bloody shirt campaign. Calling the left a “terror network,” Vance has ominously promised to use every mechanism of state power available to initiate a broad crackdown on leftwing organizations—from NGOs to political groups.44 Most recently, Trump has issued an executive order designating ‘antifa’ a “domestic terror organization” and directed the Department of Justice to compile a list of domestic “extremist” groups”, including those who espouse “anti-capitalism” and “radical gender ideology”.45

Reflecting the assessment in our previous conjunctural analysis, we find that the organized left’s relative frailty has left it struggling with the disorganizing effect of Trump’s legislative and policy onslaught. At the same time, the organized left has also proven to be a crucial force in kickstarting and sustaining campaigns, including those related to the Palestine solidarity movement and defense of migrant communities.

Key tasks of the organized left (including organized anarchists) in the present include beefing up legal self-defense capabilities in collaboration with other left groups, building a culture of mass resistance to advances made by the far-right, and reproducing the principles and practices that define the model exemplified by LATU — a commitment to class independence, direct democracy, rank-and-file control, and direct action — within mass organizations around the country. As we have seen, only popular power can stand in the way of the rapid authoritarian advance.


If you enjoyed this read, we recommend our conjunctural analysis for 2024-2025: Crises and Collective Action.






Facing internal revolt, Mike Johnson's days as Speaker of the House are clearly numbered


A series of events in the past few weeks has undercut what little power Johnson ever had among his fellow Republicans in the House. GOP representatives – the group that he theoretically leads – are so angry that they publicly call him names. Republicans are using parliamentary procedures to get votes on bills that Johnson doesn’t want to bring to the floor.

Incumbents panicking over the potential to lose their seats, in a Democratic landslide, are blaming Johnson for their problems. He has to make promises he must know he can’t keep to get bills passed. And Donald Trump is doing nothing to help Johnson in his time of need.



'Pins on a Map': How Chicago students are tracking ICE raids


The young student journalists normally cover dorm-room Thanksgiving recipes and local Christmas tree lightings, but find themselves with a new role under Donald Trump's presidency: documenting immigration raids.

Their goal: counter online rumor with facts and give locals a map of frequently targeted areas as panic spread in recent months over who might be picked up by immigration agents next.

Student and veteran journalists say that college newsrooms, independent media and legacy outlets across Chicago are now working together in ways that upend decades of cutthroat competition, building tools to track enforcement and collaborating on information.

Since Trump’s return to the White House, his administration has ordered aggressive immigration sweeps in cities with large foreign-born communities, including Chicago, to make good on a campaign promise to deport people living in the U.S. illegally.

https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/pins-map-how-chicago-students-are-tracking-ice-raids-2025-12-13/





Africa’s New Data Dependency – Technology Colonialism


Data colonialism on the African continent has moved from abstraction into formal state policy through binding agreements signed without public consent, parliamentary scrutiny, or meaningful legal protection for citizens. Nigeria’s memorandum of understanding with France on tax administration data, alongside healthcare data-sharing agreements signed by Kenya and Rwanda with United States agencies, reflects a pattern of external control over sovereign information systems. These arrangements represent a transfer of strategic national assets rather than technical cooperation. Historical experience across former colonies shows that control over taxation, health records, and population data has always preceded deeper forms of domination, even when formal sovereignty remained intact.


How Transformers Think: The Information Flow That Makes Language Models Work




‘Just disgraceful’: outcry as The Heritage Foundation appoints far-right figure to key post


The Heritage Foundation, an influential rightwing thinktank currently mired in controversy over its president’s apparent apology for extremism, has appointed as a director the founder of a secretive all-male network of Christian nationalist fraternal lodges.

Scott Yenor, appointed as Heritage’s new director of the B Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies, has also recently offered ultra-conservative opinions on women, marriage and LGBTQ rights in recent podcast appearances and speaking engagements.

They have included that there is an association between homosexuality and pedophilia; that adultery, homosexuality, no-fault divorce, and abortion should be outlawed under a regime of “soft patriarchy”; and that elements of the US Civil Rights Act, including its prohibitions against workplace sex discrimination, should be wound back.

Heritage appointed Yenor despite a string of controversies over his reactionary politics, including his resignation in April from the University of Florida’s board of regents following protests and concern from state legislators over his views about women.



VA to Eliminate Up to 35,000 Healthcare Jobs This Month-Experts say it's in the goal of privatizing the VA


Before the end of the year, the Trump administration is planning to eliminate up to 35,000 healthcare jobs at the Department of Veterans Affairs, a chronically understaffed agency that has already lost tens of thousands of employees to the White House’s sweeping assault on the federal workforce.

The Washington Post reported over the weekend that the targeted positions—many of which are unfilled—include doctors, nurses, and support staff.

“This is outrageous,” the group wrote on social media. “It is abundantly clear that Republicans and the Trump administration want to strangle the VA until it all gets privatized.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, said in a statement Sunday that “it is unacceptable that the US Department of Veterans Affairs plans to eliminate as many as 35,000 healthcare positions this month.”

“This is especially outrageous given the reality that VA facilities in Vermont and across the country already face severe staffing challenges,” said Sanders. “When someone puts their life on the line to defend this country in uniform, we in turn must provide them with the best quality healthcare available. These layoffs are unacceptable and must be reversed. We must expand the VA, not hollow it out. And I will do everything I can to make that happen.”



How Transformers Think: The Information Flow That Makes Language Models Work




Does everyone have an opposite gender name they would use?


Say if someone came up to you and asked "If you were a boy/girl what would your name be?" could you answer them without needing think or is that not something most people give a thought to?