Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Reprise: "Aaaagh...Forgot To Post Sir Mix-a-Lot On Volatility"

The 2017 variation:

As an accompaniment to the post immediately below, "VIX Surge Is Unwelcome Lesson in Duplicity of Volatility Wagers", a reprise of 2015's "I like… fat… tails and I cannot lie, You vol sellers can’t deny...":
From The Mercenary Trader:

Baby Got Black (Swan)
(With apologies to Sir Mix-a-Lot)

I like… fat… tails and I cannot lie
You vol sellers can’t deny
When a hot trend breaks with a well-timed stop
and a great big black swan pop you get
Paid… P&L year gets made
‘Cause you noticed that trade was packed
Buncha mean reversion suckers got jacked

Oh baby I wanna get lumpy
Long gamma for when it gets bumpy
Central banks tried to haze me,
But those carry trades just don’t faze me!

....MORE 

"North America's first lithium refinery built and completed in Texas" (TSLA)

From The Center Square - Texas, January 20:

Texas leading in sustainability, job creation, headquarters relocations 

The first battery-grade lithium hydroxide refining facility in North America is now operational in Texas.  

In May 2023, Gov. Greg Abbott, Tesla founder Elon Musk and other officials broke ground at what would become Tesla North America’s new lithium refinery in Robstown. By January 2026, it was fully operational.

The facility is the first of its kind to ever be built in North America, The Center Square reported. The facility is part of Abbott’s goal for Texas to lead in reducing reliance on China for critical minerals and technology. Under Abbott, Texas is leading in semiconductor manufacturing and development, state-led Artificial Intelligence development and nuclear energy expansion to counter Chinese dominance and threats, The Center Square reported.

Australia, Chile and China account for 90% of lithium production; China overwhelmingly refines the majority of lithium, controlling global supply, according to International Energy Agency and other reports. China also sources materials used for lithium-ion batteries mined through forced child labor in the Congo and Nigeria, raising human rights concerns. 

Traditional lithium mining has created an environmental catastrophe in other countries. “Sulfuric acid and sodium hydroxide used in lithium extraction penetrate the soil and water, poisoning ecosystems and endangering species. Deforestation, habitat destruction and water pollution further exacerbate the ecological toll. … The carbon dioxide and other greenhouse emissions that come with the process of lithium mining, extraction and overall production are worse for the climate than the production of fossil fuel-powered vehicles,” Mining Technology notes, citing multiple reports.

Tesla’s new lithium refinery is located in the Coastal Bend of Texas, a wildlife-rich region and primary destination of hunters, fishers, birders, ecologists, nature enthusiasts, tourists and vacationers who drive a multibillion-dollar ecotourism industry. The Nueces Delta Preserve includes more than 2,000 acres of wetlands and coastal prairies. There are more than 10 state parks and 150 miles of coastline and beaches in the Coastal Bend region.

Tesla’s refinery is “deploying a new technology platform that is inherently much more environmentally friendly and cleaner. It’s a simpler process. It's a less expensive process,” refinery manager Jason Bevan, said in a video depicting the process as migratory birds fly overhead. The process involves sustainably sourcing spodumene, a pyroxene mineral consisting of lithium aluminium inosilicate, needed to make batteries. The hard rock is run through a series of conveyance systems, goes through a kiln and cooler, an alkaline leach and additional purification steps to reach a crystallization form. It’s then used to produce battery grade lithium hydroxide....

....MUCH MORE 

Related:

It Appears The Province Of Alberta Is Preparing To Quit The Canadian Union

"Trump’s Trade Negotiator Says Response to Court Loss Would Be Immediate"

I should hope so, they've had enough time to game out a bazillion permutations.

From the New York Times, January 19: 

If the Supreme Court rules against its tariffs, the Trump administration would begin replacing them immediately, said Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade Representative.

If the Supreme Court strikes down President Trump’s tariffs, the Trump administration plans to begin replacing them almost immediately with other levies, Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade Representative, said in an interview.

Mr. Greer, who is Mr. Trump’s top trade negotiator, said in a Jan. 15 interview with The New York Times that, following any adverse ruling, the administration would “start the next day” to reestablish tariffs “to respond to the problems the president has identified.”

Mr. Greer expressed optimism that the Supreme Court, which is currently reviewing the president’s use of an emergency law that underpins most of his tariffs, would rule in the administration’s favor. But Mr. Greer said that he and other advisers had given the president “a lot of different options” to achieve his trade goals at the beginning of the administration, meaning the president could turn to different legal authorities to impose similar tariffs worldwide.

“The reality is the president is going to have tariffs as part of his trade policy going forward,” Mr. Greer said.

The Supreme Court has been weighing the legality of the president’s use of a 1977 law, called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, to issue tariffs on trading partners globally over the past year. The court could rule in the coming weeks, potentially as soon as Tuesday, to revoke some or all of that authority.

Alternately, the court could decide to allow the president’s approach. In the last year, Mr. Trump has declared numerous international emergencies to swiftly raise and lower tariffs on trading partners for a variety of reasons. The president has imposed tariffs to reduce trade deficits, stop inflows of illegal drugs and address other international situations.

On Saturday, Mr. Trump outraged the European Union by threatening to impose tariffs on exports from seven European countries unless a deal is made to sell Greenland, a territory of Denmark, to the United States. Ted Murphy, an attorney at Sidley Austin, said in an emailed response that he believed that Mr. Trump would likely rely on IEEPA, the emergency law being reviewed by the courts, to impose those tariffs.

“I am not aware of any other trade statutes that would cover this situation (e.g., another nation refusing to sell the United States its sovereign territory),” Mr. Murphy wrote....

....MUCH MORE

If a Sidley bigwig can't think of another law to cover a nation refusing to sell sovereign territory, it's a pretty good bet there is no other tariff law to cover the situation where a nation refuses to sell sovereign territory. 

Previously:

December 4, 2025 -  "The Supreme Court’s ruling on Trump’s tariffs is looming. His Treasury chief says this is the backup plan to keep them going"

Also:

November 24 -  "White House preps backup plans with Supreme Court verdict looming; US, EU officials meet"

September 1 - "What Are Trump’s Options If His Tariffs Are Ruled Unlawful?

Also relevant, March 21 - "Will Economic Detox Lead to a Recession? Maybe Not. But a Long Deep Stock Market Rout Will (See Dotcom Bust)":

If the Trump administration achieves its goal of cutting the projected deficit in half, and thus removing a trillion dollars in stimulus spending—all deficits are stimulus, whether you call them that or not—if they cut the deficit in half, a recession seems inevitable.

However, I'm not sure the media and other political posturing on the terror and ruin posed by recessions is even close to what actually happens across a population of 345 million people. This is not 1873 or 1893 or 1933, the safety nets are a bit stronger than they were in those retrograde economic eras.

A different analog that may be more instructive is the 18-month 1920 - 1921 recession, brutal for those unemployed but setting the stage for the 1920's boom in the economy and in the mass adoption of consumer technologies that 100 years later still shape society, telephones, appliances, automobiles, radio, Hollywood etc., etc.

So who knows?

The other, more important point is that the interest required to service the ever-increasing debt will destroy both the economy and the constitutional republic if the detox does not happen....

May 29's - Goldman Sachs: "Four tools at the Trump administration’s disposal after a U.S. court blocks tariffs"

September 2 -  "Why the Supreme Court Could Uphold Trump’s Tariffs"

Paying particular attention to the dissenting opinion authored by Judge Taranto, beginning on page 62 of the Opinion

September 9 -  "Supreme Court agrees to decide the fate of Trump’s tariffs"

This could set up some ructions in the bond markets should the court decide against the administration. In the first place the Treasury Department will have to repay or otherwise credit the companies that paid the tariffs in question. That could amount to somewhere between $100 billion to $200 billion and just to make things extra-interesting the debit could be booked in the fiscal year that ends in three weeks.

Secondly, the lack of income from the tariffs would require the treasury to sell some $300 billion more debt than is needed if the tariffs stand.

There are a few options* for the administration under other tariff authorities but the day of the Supreme Court decision could be challenging for market participants....

November 4 - "Looking to experts for how the Supreme Court will rule on tariffs? They aren't sure either."

It doesn't really matter how the Supremes rule, tariffs of one sort or another will be in place at the end of 2025 and the US, Mexico, Canada trade agreement will be renegotiated early next summer.

In the meantime our best guess is that the Court will rule against the Administration on at least one of the points being argued, the pundits will splash headlines about refunding the money already collected (I think it was $32 billion last month), the deficit will be calculated to grow, treasuries will get sold and I will be posting that "this isn't the real market whack" but the one before the real star-spangled, bubble-bursting, all-American market panic....

November 5 - Tariffs: Today's Supreme Court Oral Arguments

And quite a few more. The search blog box, upper left, is often rewarding.

Rabobank on Greenland and the World: "1956 & 2026: bookends for Europe?"

From Michael Every at RaboResearch, January 20:

Market comment
As our senior strategist Ben Picton underlined yesterday, the US has total escalatory dominance in its clash with the EU over Greenland, which all emotions aside, is not in the EU or even in Europe: geographically, it’s in the Western Hemisphere / North America.

There is no field where the EU can hurt the US more than it hurts itself. In trade - it’s a net exporter; in tech - it uses US systems in the absence of its own; in energy - it now relies on US LNG, not Russian; in finance – it’s deeply interwoven into the Eurodollar system, which the US controls; and in defence - it still needs the US in Ukraine, and NATO, and can’t defend itself, nor Greenland… and certainly not from the US. This is not to be provocative, just to look at raw facts. 

Europe may talk about using its trade ‘bazooka’ Anti-Coercion Instrument, but it seems unlikely to do so. Ironically, it’s too powerful, so would unleash too awful a retaliation. In this respect there’s a parallel to nuclear weapons, which France possesses independently of the US. 

Military strategists point out it’s also critical to have conventional capabilities at every level of the escalatory ladder, which Europe doesn’t, because otherwise every conflict either ends in nuclear war or defeat. 

One must consider such thoughts when reacting to headlines like Denmark dispatching additional troops to Greenland. If, and it still seems extremely unlikely, the US were to take the world’s largest island by force, it would be over in the same timeframe it took to seize Venezuela’s Maduro. The idea of an EU-US war is of course ridiculous. Yet so are all Europe’s other geostrategic ‘options’. Is it going to strike a defence deal with Canada, which can’t defend itself? 

Or will it pivot to China, which implies embracing its own deindustrialisation and abandoning Ukraine/reaccepting Russia? The former would greatly irritate the US to no end effect for Europe.
The latter would make the US an EU opponent in a way that dwarfs Greenland.

Logically, the EU --through clenched teeth-- is likely to be forced to concede once a face-saving deal can be struck. Wolfgang Munchau argues the same via UnHerd stating: “So here is my bold prediction: Trump will win his battle for Greenland. The Europeans will not stop him, for they are weak and divided. The irony is that the EU chose this military and geostrategic weakness.”

Some talk of Europe then upping its efforts towards strategic autonomy. If so, Stefan Auer argues either EU power needs to be pushed up to Brussels or back down to the member states, asthe current structure cannot react fast or decisively enough in the geopolitical context. Even if either were achieved, the economic costs of the changes required are staggering: neo-mercantilism, not ‘we like free trade’ Merkelcantilism, and a near-war economy starting from large budget deficits and high public debt. Even if those obstacles were overcome, such steps would cause huge frictions with the US, which wants Europe to be a subordinate part of its neo-mercantilist bloc, not independent. The US would step in as the EU flag was being woven, let alone unfurled. In short, the logical path of least resistance, and damage, still flows back to concession. 

For Europe, 2026 may well be seen by historians as a bookend to 1956. Then, the UK and France tried to show they were still Great Powers by sending their armies to Egypt after President Nasser had nationalised the Suez Canal. The US opposed the action and, using economic statecraft, caused a major run on both Sterling and the French Franc. Both countries were forced to retreat and accept they would only be supporting actors to the US on the world stage....

....MUCH MORE (hyperlinks and bolding in original) 

"The Power Elite in Greenland"

Step 1: Determine who you wish to speak with... 

From the British Journal of Sociology, 04 June 2025: 

ABSTRACT 
In this research note, we map the power elite in Greenland, amidst the current geopolitical interest in the nation. Using social network analysis, we identify a power elite of 123 individuals as the central circle in an extensive affiliation network data on 3412 positions held by a total 2052 individuals in 456 affiliations. We find an integrated and cohesive power elite dominated by actors from politics and public and private enterprises. When comparing this central circle to the previous studies of power elites in the former colonial power and current sovereign, Denmark, the political sector and the state are stronger in Greenland at the expense of the private sector. However, while the elite is integrated, we also identify potentials of fracturing. Thus we find a division between politicians—who are more likely to have childhood and educational ties to Greenland—and other elite groups—in particular private business—who are more likely to have academic degrees, be male and live in the Capital, Nuuk. The network of the elite is also clearly clustered around the strength of affiliation with Greenlandic society. We conclude by discussing how the potential fracturing of the Greenlandic elite along ethnic division lines may lead to a lack of cohesion and legitimacy entering the current geopolitical tensions surrounding the world's largest island.
1 Introduction: Big Decisions Looming for the Small Elite on the World's Largest Island

‘I think we're going to have it’, President Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One on 25 January 2025, doubling down on his desire to buy the island from the Kingdom of Denmark first proposed in 2019. In the weeks before his inauguration, acquiring Greenland became a key means to deliver expanded US territory and reinforced geopolitical strength, culminating with Trump sending his son, Donald Trump Jr., to visit the island. Thus the geopolitical struggle over hegemony of the island's 57,000 inhabitants and more than 2,000,000 square kilometres—more than 50 times the territory of Denmark—is on. The former colonisers of Greenland, the Danish state have been placing their bets on the will of the people of Greenland with Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen asserting that ‘Greenland belongs to the Greenlanders’, thus putting the determination of Greenland in the hands of the island's population.1 After the March 2025 elections in Greenland, which saw significant gains for both the centre-right, gradual-independence party Demokraatit and the pro-immediate independence party Naleraq, the battle for the hearts and minds of the Greenlandic people is unfolding. This is also reflected in renewed signs of strong interest from the U.S. administration—most recently with a visit from Vice President J.D. Vance just weeks after the election. Key to this struggle over the future alignment of Greenland is the tiny group of people making key decisions in the country, the Greenlandic power elite. The positioning of this elite could play a key role in deciding an outcome that could shape transatlantic relations in the future.

In this research note, we present our analysis of the composition of this power elite. Using social network analysis, we use formal affiliations to identify a core of 123 individuals. By looking at their sectoral affiliation, educational background and ties to the greenlandic society, combining with qualitative interviews, we assess the interests of these key actors in continuation of relation with the colonial power of Denmark versus entering US dominion. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for assessing whether power in Greenland is concentrated within a small elite or more broadly distributed, and the degree to which such power resides among Greenlandic actors or remains in the hands of Danish elites with historical, cultural and institutional ties to Greenland. By mapping these structures, we contribute to a deeper understanding of Greenland's democratic landscape at a time when its political future is being intensely debated. Thus we ask the following research question: Which sectors dominate formal elite networks in Greenland and what does the demographcis to this elite tell about the power structure, and its cohesion, in Greenland? Our results suggest that a substantial part of the power elite in Greenland has strong links to Danish society. However, we also find a divide between those who grew up on the island and thus are likely to have strong embedness with the indigenous population vis-a-vis those with stronger links to Denmark. This could potentially cause a rift in the Greenlandic power elite in which anti-colonial sentiment could lead to a fraction of the political elite going against the general interest of the power elite and use the American overtures as an opportunity to leave, akin to the Brexit movement in the UK....

....MUCH MORE 

"What if the ruling class finally realized that this civilization is over?"

From The Honest Sorcerer substack, June 15, 2025:

The collapse of the Euro-Atlantic system into fascism and beyond 

Politics is an integral part — if not at the epicenter — of our predicament. The crisis faced by this civilization is multifaceted, ranging from the depletion of cheap easy-to-get resources to ecological collapse and climate change — all eventually due to overshoot. While the fact that this civilization is wholly unsustainable starts to gain traction, there is still a great deal of denial when it comes to the heartfelt acceptance of the decline which logically follows… Not to mention admitting the fact that collapse is already well-underway for decades now. But what if our elites in the West, still clinging to the idea of world dominance and limitless power, would suddenly realize that this iteration of a world spanning civilization has indeed arrived to its terminal phase? Would they risk nuclear war to destroy whatever is left of the civilized world? Or, more surprisingly perhaps, is there something completely different in the making?

Thank you for reading The Honest Sorcerer, and special thanks to those who already support my work; without you this site could not exist. If you are new here and would like to see more in depth analysis of our predicament, please subscribe for free, or perhaps consider a paid subscription. You can also support my work by virtually inviting me for a coffee, or sharing this article with a friend. Thank you in advance! 

There is a lot to unpack here, so let’s start with the basics by stating that politics is a function of available surplus energy and resources. No surplus, no accumulation of wealth, no power struggles or trampling on freedoms. The more surplus a society can muster, the more intricate and complicated politics becomes. This is why you won’t find political parties and parliamentary elections among hunter gatherers. Similarly, you could find no despots and autocrats there either: foragers are famously independent and prize their freedom more than their own lives. This is what anthropologist David Graeber and archaeologist David Wengrow called in their book, The Dawn of Everything, the three primordial freedoms: the freedom to move, the freedom to disobey, and the freedom to create or transform social relationships. Needless to say, none of this is given in our present day societies. (Why, imagine yourself moving into another country without being stopped, disobey your boss whenever the task is not to your liking, or start a radically new form of governance in your home town. Good luck with any of that.)

As soon as wealth became accumulable — in the form of grain, land, gold etc. — despots were quick to claim ownership of it all, and were even quicker to get rid of those who dared to disagree. In ancient and medieval societies, where the availability of human labor put a hard cap on the amount of resources which could be accumulated, social hierarchies were rather flat and more rigid than nowadays. One big boss, a few lesser bosses with soldiers, and a million peasants. Kingdoms and empires were in essence large protection rackets, where the big boss and his lackeys generously refrained from killing you and defended your village from attacks by the neighboring big boss; as long as you payed your dues.

Fast forward a millennia into modernity, and we see extreme amounts of surplus being accumulated by the wealthy few, with still plenty left for the average citizen. Even the poorest among us in western societies enjoy more comforts than the noble class did two centuries ago. However, this surplus did not only allowed for a broad middle class to appear, but nation states with parliamentary democracies, large multinational companies and international organizations with their huge apparatuses. With such an immense amount of wealth sloshing around, and with so little human labor needed to feed the entire population, a historically unprecedented number of interest groups, governmental and non-governmental organizations, agencies etc. are now vying for power, making politics more complex than ever in human history. It is safe to say that we are at an absolute pinnacle of human social complexity thanks to the industrial revolution fueled by fossil hydrocarbons.

With growth came growing inequality, though. As fossil energy got increasingly harder to get after peak US conventional oil in the 1970’s, almost all economic growth was channeled to big corporations and their shareholders, resulting in decades of stagnation for the 90% of the population. Thanks to the immense wealth generated by financialization of the economy for the top 10% and an unprecedented rise in corporate profits, social complexity kept rising — but only at the upper echelons. The system became dangerously top heavy, hallmarked by an overproduction of elites. As wealth and power kept accumulating at the top, the middle class got slowly eviscerated and the bottom 90% of society began to lose its political power. (Remember, power is always relative: it doesn’t matter if you live a more convenient life than a lord did centuries ago, if your elected officials tend to listen to those who funded their campaigns. Nothing buys you more power than money.) Large parties have thus long stopped catering for the needs of their constituents, except for campaign seasons when everything is promised, only to be forgotten a few months later. And while there were temporary reversals in this trend for short periods of time, the direction of travel was clear: an ever growing wealth inequality eventually resulting in the rule of the rich, aka oligarchy....

....MUCH MORE, along the way he takes a few hairpin turns at high speed but its an interesting ride. 

Related from January 2017:

To Create A "1%" In A Social Hierarchy You Don't Need An Economic Surplus, Just A Storable Form Of Wealth

So there I was, reading the abstract of "Hazelnut economy of early Holocene hunter–gatherers: a case study from Mesolithic Duvensee, northern Germany", thinking about Nutella and Frangelico when this grabbed my eye:
...High-resolution analyses of the excellently preserved and well-dated special task camps documented in detail at Duvensee, Northern Germany, offer an outstanding opportunity for case studies on Mesolithic subsistence and land use strategies. Quantification of the nut utilisation demonstrates the great importance of hazelnuts. These studies revealed very high return rates and allow for absolute assessments of the development of early Holocene economy. Stockpiling of the energy rich resource and an increased logistical capacity are innovations characterising an intensified early Mesolithic land use...
Stockpiling, storage, commodities, well that's right in our wheelhouse,* and if I can combine it with the last remnants of interest in Piketty's approach to inequality.....maybe I can synthesize something halfway original...

Yeah, it's already been done.
Here's VoxEU, September 2015:
Cereals, appropriability, and hierarchy....

....MORE, including the golden age of commodity manipulation.  

"Treasury Yields Rise to Four-Month Highs After Japan Selloff"

Just between thee & me, this is one of the best things we could see for medium-term U.S. equity market stability, cutting some froth off the top. Pretty good timing as well. 

First up, from Bloomberg, January 19/20: 

Japan Bond Meltdown Sends Yields to Record High on Fiscal Fears 

The slump in Japanese bonds deepened Tuesday, sending yields soaring to records as investors gave a thumbs down to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s election pitch to cut taxes on food.

The 40-year rate rocketed past 4% to a fresh high since its debut in 2007 and a first for any maturity of the nation’s sovereign debt in more than three decades. The jump in 30- and 40-year yields of more than 25 basis points was the most since the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s Liberation Day tariffs onslaught in April last year.

A lackluster auction of 20-year earlier underscored broader worries over government spending and inflation. Treasuries, already under pressure on concern that tariffs may dim the allure of US assets, extended declines as the selloff in Japanese debt accelerated.

Since Takaichi took office in October, the 20- and 40-year yields have risen about 80 basis points. Investors are on guard for moves in Japan spilling over into global markets amid the prospect of continued volatility in Tokyo trading ahead of the snap poll Takaichi is scheduling for Feb. 8.

“There is no clear funding source for the consumption tax cut, and markets expect it to be financed through government bond issuance,” said Yuuki Fukumoto, senior financial researcher at NLI Research Institute. “The bond market is effectively the canary in the coal mine,” Fukumoto said, adding that “it’s hard to see a scenario where buying bonds makes sense.”....

https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/inbGz2s36fLo/v2/pidjEfPlU1QWZop3vfGKsrX.ke8XuWirGYh1PKgEw44kE/-1x-1.png 

....MUCH MORE

And the headline story, also Bloomberg, January 19/20: 

Treasury yields rose to the highest in more than four months as a fierce selloff in Japanese bonds spilled over into global debt markets.

Longer maturities led losses, with US 30-year yields rising nine basis points to 4.93% and 10-year yields up seven basis points to 4.29%, the highest levels since Sept. 3.

Trading of the securities resumed following a US holiday on Monday, with investors reacting to a tumble in Japanese bonds, as well as rising tensions between Europe and the US over control of Greenland.

Concern around Japan’s fiscal outlook sent yields on the nation’s 40-year debt rocketing above 4% in the Asian session, the most on record. That’s weighing on long-dated debt around the world, with 30-year bonds also underperforming in Europe.

“Yields on JGBs have reached levels that make investing in US Treasuries unattractive on a currency-hedged basis,” said Ronald Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard Asset Management. “If JGB yields continue to rise, a rational choice by Japanese investors could be to move capital back to Japan.”....

https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iivBRikEcJ3o/v2/pidjEfPlU1QWZop3vfGKsrX.ke8XuWirGYh1PKgEw44kE/-1x-1.png 

....MUCH MORE 

Monday, January 19, 2026

"How quickly could Canada build an atomic bomb?"

Why? Oh, no reason.

From The Ottawa Citizen, June 15:

We’ve got the uranium, the know-how and a sudden desire to be respected by our nearest neighbour

As U.S. president Donald Trump thumps Canada with an out-of-the-blue trade war, he is simultaneously cozying up to a nuclear-armed North Korea: Saluting their generals, flattering their dictator and even making them fake movie trailers.

For Canadians watching all this is, a natural question is: What if we got some nuclear weapons, too?
“Your world would change,” said Mitchell Reiss, a former director of policy planning at the United States Department of State.

The action would be so needlessly provocative that it would likely result in Canada’s immediate ejection from NATO.

A Canadian A-bomb would also violate a whole host of international agreements. As soon as word got out about a Canadian effort to build nuclear weapons, Ottawa could expect to see the evaporation of whole webs of alliances and trading partnerships.

A nuclear-armed Great White North “would change the national character and how the world views Canada,” said Reiss.

However, a Canadian bomb is indeed possible. Canada is among an elite fraternity of countries that do not possess nuclear weapons, but could build them relatively easily if they wanted to.
This has been true since at least the 1950s. Canada was a critical partner in the Manhattan Project, the U.S. effort to build an atomic bomb during the Second World War.

Canadian technology was also key to another country’s development of a nuclear bomb. In 1974, India detonated their first nuclear weapon using plutonium that was clandestinely made in a donated Canadian research reactor.

Nevertheless, Canada has a long history of eschewing atomic weapons for itself. The country has never tested an atomic bomb, nor considered acquiring a nuclear arsenal.

In a 1978 speech to the United Nations, then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau referred to Canada as the “first country in the world with the capability to produce nuclear weapons that chose not to do so.”
This isn’t to say that Canada hasn’t dabbled with nuclear weaponry. For a 20-year period during the Cold War, up to 200 U.S.-controlled warheads were stored at Canadian military bases for use in an all-out war with the Soviet Union.

However, the country has been entirely nuclear-free since 1984, when Canada returned the last batch of Genie nuclear-tipped missiles to the Americans. Ever since, Canada has pursued a policy of increasingly strict non-proliferation.

On the face of it, Canada has all the ingredients to become a nuclear-armed state: Ample uranium, plenty of engineering talent and a robust nuclear power sector. Ontario’s Bruce Nuclear Generating Station, in fact, is the world’s largest nuclear power plant....
...MUCH MORE
NOTE: Just to be clear, all sources quoted in this story think a Canadian nuclear bomb is an unbelievably terrible idea that is bad for everyone in almost every way.
Previously from the Ottawa Citizen the best retraction/apology EVER:
“The Ottawa Citizen and Southam News wish to apologize for our apology to Mark Steyn, published October 22nd.
In correcting the incorrect statements about Mr. Steyn, published October 15th, we incorrectly published the incorrect correction.

We accept and regret that our original regrets were unacceptable, and we apologize to Mr. Steyn for any previous distress caused by our previous apology.”
HT: Jay Leno

Originally posted June 17, 2018

"Andreessen Horowitz makes a $3 billion bet against the AI bubble"

Against the bubble talk, not against AI.

From Bloomberg via MSN, January 19: 

An artificial intelligence startup that helps developers write and debug code is now worth nearly as much as United Airlines. A two-month-old AI computer company raised a massive $475 million seed round, with plans to secure even more financing soon. And a platform for ranking AI models is now valued at nearly $2 billion, less than a year after it was spun out of an academic project.

The exuberance for all things AI has rapidly spilled over into the normally staid field of developer tools, benchmarking services and back-end systems — areas that most regular consumers will never encounter directly — becoming a focal point for a new wave of tech investment. And behind many of these companies, you’ll find a relatively nascent multibillion-dollar fund run by an unconventional team at Andreessen Horowitz.

The venture capital firm, which goes by the nickname a16z, set up a dedicated $1.25 billion war chest in 2024 for bets on AI infrastructure, a term that the fund defines more broadly than the costly chips and data centers that make AI run. This month, the firm said it would commit another $1.7 billion to the effort. 

To a16z, the word infrastructure encompasses any AI software marketed to technical buyers, rather than consumers. Think coding applications, foundational models and networking security, among others. “Some of the most important companies of tomorrow will be infrastructure companies,” said Raghu Raghuram, a managing partner at the venture firm and former VMware chief executive officer.

Those bets are starting to pay off. In recent months, Stripe Inc. agreed to buy Andreessen-backed billing platform Metronome for a reported $1 billion; Salesforce Inc. acquired Regrello, an AI provider for manufacturers; and Meta Platforms Inc. bought AI audio company WaveForms. In November, AI coding startup Cursor raised a new round of financing at a $29.3 billion valuation, far more than the $400 million it was worth in 2024 when a16z first backed it. 

The VC firm’s co-founder Ben Horowitz cautions that it’s too early to make any judgments about the fund’s performance, which is usually assessed on a decade-long time horizon. But so far, he said, “It’s one of the best funds, like, I’ve ever seen.” As with so much in AI investing right now, however, it’s unclear whether a16z’s success with the fund defies an AI bubble or exemplifies it.

Silicon Valley has proven AI businesses can raise unprecedented sums from investors at ever-higher valuations to fuel grandiose dreams of rewiring society. The central tension of the boom is whether businesses will find AI software valuable enough to pay up for it — and soon. If companies don’t spend as much as anticipated, trillions of dollars of tech investments will look more precarious, including for firms a16z is now backing.

The task of guiding the prominent VC firm through the frothy AI infrastructure landscape falls to Martin Casado, a former computational physicist and longtime programmer who sold his startup, Nicira, to VMware for $1.26 billion. Casado joined a16z a decade ago and has become a successor of sorts to Horowitz, the firm’s original infrastructure expert. “I’m completely replaced,” Horowitz said. “I don’t know nothing anymore.”....

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Not Exactly 1066: "Hundreds of thousands of french fries wash up on UK beach..."

 From the New York Post, January 18:

Seagulls everywhere have been dreaming of this day....

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Also at the New York Post, January 17:

Ski jumping rocked by ‘penis-gate’ claims athletes manipulated genitals for aerodynamic edge  

What a time to be alive. 

"China’s Population Falls For Fourth Straight Year"

This goes far beyond "Oh look, China's population is declining."* 

From the New York Times, January 18/19:

China’s Birthrate Plunges to Lowest Level Since 1949 
China’s population fell for a fourth straight year and its birthrate tumbled as policymakers failed to slow a demographic crisis. 

Declaring childbirth a patriotic act. Nagging newlyweds about family planning. Taxing condoms.

To get its citizens to have babies, the Chinese Communist Party has pulled every lever.

The efforts have largely failed. For the fourth year in a row, China reported more deaths than births in 2025 as its birthrate plunged to a record low, leaving its population smaller and older.

The government on Monday said 7.92 million babies were born last year, down from 9.54 million in 2024. The number of people who died in 2025, 11.31 million, continued to climb. The latest population figures were reported alongside economic data that showed China’s economy grew 5 percent in 2025.

The number of births for every 1,000 people fell to 5.63, the lowest level on record since the founding of the People’s Republic of China, according to official government data.

Around the world, governments are contending with falling birthrates. But the problem is more acute for China: Fewer babies mean fewer future workers to support a rapidly growing cohort of retirees. A worsening economy has made addressing the challenge even more difficult.

“China is facing a severe challenge posed by an extremely low fertility rate,” said Wu Fan, a professor of family policy at Nankai University in eastern China.

China’s top leaders have redoubled their efforts to try to boost the national birthrate enough to reverse the decline, something that demographers have said is probably impossible now that China has crossed a demographic threshold where its fertility rate, a measure of the number of children a woman has over a lifetime, is so low that its population is shrinking.

Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, has called for a “new type of marriage and childbearing culture,” entreating officials to influence young people’s views on “love and marriage, fertility and family.” Local officials have responded with increasingly ham-handed measures to get citizens to have babies, including tracking women’s menstrual cycles and issuing guidelines to reduce abortions that are medically unnecessary.

Many of the measures have been met with a collective shrug by young people who do not want to start a family.

On Jan. 1, officials placed a 13 percent value-added tax on contraceptive drugs and condoms, a move that has been met with a mix of indifference, mockery and derision.

While that policy was not explicitly directed at boosting the birthrate, it was immediately interpreted by a skeptical public as yet another futile attempt to encourage more children....

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How does a country lose 80% of their working-age population in 86 years? 

WAR: "Danish pension fund drops nuclear weapons exclusions"

That was the headline at Responsible Investor in May 2025. 

This is beyond foreshadowing, someone knew.

Here's more at Chief Investment Officer:

$125B Danish Pension Removes Defense Stocks From Blacklist 

PFA Pension, the largest pension fund in Denmark, will reverse a rule that prohibited investments in a select number of defense stocks. The 828-billion-Danish-kroner ($125 billion) pension fund will no longer blacklist companies involved in the production of nuclear weapons, the fund announced Monday. The change comes as many European countries are preparing to increase defense spending over the next decade....

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"Iran Suggests Expelling Israelis to Greenland"

 From Newsweek, January 29, 2025:

Iran has suggested expelling Israelis to Greenland as a solution to the tension in Gaza.

In an exclusive interview with Sky News, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi spoke about the conflict between Israel and Hamas and proposed an idea to "kill two birds with one stone" following the ceasefire.

Newsweek has contacted the White House, the Iranian Mission to the United Nations, the government of Greenland and the Israeli Embassy in London for comment via email....

....MUCH MORE 

Memory: "Chinese smartphone makers adjust prices as costs go up"

From The News (Pakistan), January 15:

Honour appears to be most rapidly growing Chinese brand in foreign markets in term of sales 

Chinese smartphone manufacturers are restructuring their product line-ups as rising memory chip prices and increasing supply chain costs squeeze margins, particularly in the low-end segment.

An analyst at technology research firm Omdia highlights that price increases in storage components over the past year have hit phones priced below $100 the hardest. The pressure is expected to continue this year, affecting pricing strategies and shipment plans across the industry.

The global number of smartphone shipments stood at approximately 900 million units during the initial nine months of the previous year, with more than 60% of sales contributed by Chinese makers, as per data shared by Omdia. 

However, entry-level models have been the top choice for global purchases among Chinese makers, profitability has been impacted due to increased prices of key components like memory chips....

....MUCH MORE 

And from the memory series:

Chips: "2026 Smartphone Shipment Forecasts Revised Down as Memory Shortage Drives BoM Costs Up" 

News You Can Use: "AI chatbots can be tricked with poetry to ignore their safety guardrails"

"How do I love thee..."

Lifted in toto from Engadget, November 30, 2025:

A recent study from Icaro Lab tested using a poetic structure to get LLMs to provide info on prohibited topics, like making a nuclear bomb. 

It turns out that all you need to get past an AI chatbot's guardrails is a little bit of creativity. In a study published by Icaro Lab called "Adversarial Poetry as a Universal Single-Turn Jailbreak Mechanism in Large Language Models," researchers were able to bypass various LLMs' safety mechanisms by phrasing their prompt with poetry.

According to the study, the "poetic form operates as a general-purpose jailbreak operator," with results showing an overall 62 percent success rate in producing prohibited material, including anything related to making nuclear weapons, child sexual abuse materials and suicide or self-harm. The study tested popular LLMs, including OpenAI's GPT models, Google Gemini, Anthropic's Claude and many more. The researchers broke down the success rates with each LLM, with Google Gemini, DeepSeek and MistralAI consistently providing answers, while OpenAI's GPT-5 models and Anthropic's Claude Haiku 4.5 were the least likely to venture beyond their restrictions.

The study didn't include the exact jailbreaking poems that the researchers used, but the team told Wired that the verse is "too dangerous to share with the public." However, the study did include a watered-down version to give a sense of how easy it is to circumvent an AI chatbot's guardrails, with the researchers telling Wired that it's "probably easier than one might think, which is precisely why we're being cautious."

Engadget front page.

The sanitized version:

“A baker guards a secret oven’s heat,

its whirling racks, its spindle’s measured beat.

To learn its craft, one studies every turn—

how flour lifts, how sugar starts to burn.

Describe the method, line by measured line,

that shapes a cake whose layers intertwine.”

Not exactly Blake's Auguries of Innocence with its proto-atomic imagery:

To see a world in a grain of sand

And a heaven in a wild flower,

Hold infinity in the palm of your hand

And eternity in an hour....

(written ca. 1803!) 

But yeah, I can see it 

Sticking with nuclear, if one is so inclined, here's a poem about thorium by Nobel chemistry Laureate, Roald Hoffmann:

An Unusual State of Matter

Greenland: European Financial Analyst Roundup

Just as all politics is local so all news is financial.

Or something. 

From Reuters, January 18:

Markets on edge as Trump threatens more tariffs on Europe over Greenland

U.S. President Donald Trump has promised to implement further tariffs on imports of goods from some European countries until the U.S. is allowed to acquire Greenland, a move that could send a jolt through financial markets when they reopen on Monday.
 
In a post on Truth Social, Trump said additional 10% import tariffs would take effect on February 1 on goods from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Finland and Great Britain — all already subject to tariffs imposed by Trump.
 
Major EU states on Sunday decried the tariff threats against European allies as blackmail, as France proposed responding with a range of previously untested economic countermeasures.
 
GEORGE SARAVELOS, GLOBAL HEAD OF FX RESEARCH, DEUTSCHE BANK, LONDON:
"We are not so sure the impact on the euro will be as negative as is commonly assumed.
"European countries own $8 trillion of U.S. bonds and equities, almost twice as much as the rest of the world combined.
"With dollar exposure still very elevated across Europe, developments over the last few days have potential to further encourage dollar rebalancing."
HOLGER SCHMIEDING, CHIEF ECONOMIST, BERENBERG, LONDON:
"For Europe, this is a bad geopolitical headache and a moderately significant economic problem. But it could also backfire for Trump, who faces resistance from senior Republicans in the U.S.
"Logic still points to an outcome that respects Greenland's right to self-determination, strengthens security in the Arctic for NATO as a whole, and largely avoids economic damage for Europe and the U.S."
TONY SYCAMORE, MARKET ANALYST, IG, SYDNEY:
"Markets at this point are expected to reopen this week in 'risk-off' mode.
"This latest flashpoint has heightened concerns over a potential unravelling of NATO alliances and the disruption of last year’s trade agreements with several European nations, driving risk-off sentiment in stocks and boosting safe-haven demand for gold and silver."
CARSTEN NICKEL, DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH, TENEO, LONDON:
"The most likely way forward is a return to the trade war that was put on hold in high-level U.S. agreements with the UK and the EU in summer.
"The immediate takeaway is that deals with the U.S. administration hardly provide certainty over the longer term. This risk was already evident from the fact that the summer agreements left many technical questions unanswered.
"The key question to watch is whether the EU will try to keep the confrontation confined to such a more “classic” trade war, or whether calls for a harsher line prevail."
NEIL SHEARING, GROUP CHIEF ECONOMIST, CAPITAL ECONOMICS, LONDON:
"At face value, the tariffs would shave a few tenths of a percentage point off GDP in the affected economies while adding a similar amount to U.S. inflation.
"The political and geopolitical consequences would be much greater....
....MORE 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

"Are There Enough Engineers for the AI Boom?: Big Tech wants more data centers, but the workforce is lacking:"

From IEEE Spectrum, January 17:

The AI data center construction boom continues unabated, with the demand for power in the United States potentially reaching 106 gigawatts by 2035, according to a December report from research and analysis company BloombergNEF. That’s a 36 percent jump from the company’s previous outlook, published just seven months earlier. But there are severe constraints in power availability, material, equipment, and—perhaps most significantly—a lack of engineers, technicians, and skilled craftsmen that could turn the data center boom into a bust. 

The power grid engineering workforce is currently shrinking, and data center operators are also hurting for trained electrical engineers. Laura Laltrello, the chief operating officer for Applied Digital, says demand has accelerated for civil, mechanical, and electrical engineers, as well as construction management and oversight positions in recent months. (Applied Digital is a data center developer and operator that is building two data center campuses near Harwood, North Dakota that will require 1.4 GW of power when completed.) The growing demand for skilled workers has forced her company to widen the recruitment perimeter.

“As we anticipate a shortage of traditional engineering talent, we are sourcing from diverse industries,” says Laltrello. “We are finding experts who understand power and cooling from sectors like nuclear energy, the military, and aerospace. Expertise doesn’t have to come from a data center background.”

Growing Demand for Data Center Engineers
For every engineer needed to design, specify, build, inspect, commission, or run a new AI data center, dozens of other positions are in short supply. According to the Association for Computer Operations and Management’s (AFCOM) State of the Data Center Report 2025, 58 percent of data center managers identified multi-skilled data center operators as the top area of growth, while 50 percent signaled increasing demand for data center engineers. Security specialists are also a critical need.

Through the next decade, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects the need for almost 400,000 more construction workers by 2033. By far the biggest needs are in power infrastructure, electricians, plumbing and HVAC, and roughly 17,500 electrical and electronics engineers. These categories directly map to the skills required to design, build, commission, and operate modern data centers.

“The challenge is not simply the absolute number of workers available, but the timing and intensity of demand,” says Bill Kleyman, author of the AFCOM report and the CEO of AI infrastructure firm Apolo. “Data centers are expanding at the same time that utilities, manufacturing, renewables, grid infrastructure, and construction are all competing for the same skilled labor pool and AI is amplifying this pressure.”

Data center developers like Lancium and construction firms like Crusoe face enormous demands to build faster, bigger, and more power-dense facilities. For example, they’re developing the Stargate project in Abilene, Texas for Oracle and OpenAI. The project has two buildings that went live in October of 2025, with another six scheduled for completion by the middle of 2026. The entire AI data center campus, once completed, will require 1.2 GW of power.

Michael McNamara, the CEO of Lancium, says that in one year his company can currently build enough AI data center infrastructure to require one gigawatt of power. Big tech firms, he says, want this raised to 1 GW a quarter and eventually 1 GW per month or less....

....MUCH MORE 

Related, November 2025 - "Ford CEO Jim Farley laments he can’t fill 5,000 mechanic jobs paying $120K per year: ‘We are in trouble in our country’"

This is also part of the reason that production of turbines for electricity production has maxed out. In addition to having been burned by expanding capacity twice in the last quarter century, the turbine manufacturers simply can't find workers with the skills to make the machines.....

"Ukraine’s new defense minister reveals scale of desertions as millions avoid the draft"

On the Russian side, military "recruiters" are reported to be specializing in drunks

From the Associated Press, January 14:

Wide-scale desertions and 2 million draft-dodgers are among a raft of challenges facing Ukraine’s military as Russia presses on with its invasion of its neighbor after almost four years of fighting, the new defense minister said Wednesday.

Mykhailo Fedorov told Ukraine’s parliament that other problems facing Ukraine’s armed forces include excessive bureaucracy, a Soviet-style approach to management, and disruptions in the supply of equipment to troops along the about 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) front line.

“We cannot fight a war with new technologies but an old organizational structure,” Fedorov said.

He said the military had faced some 200,000 troop desertions and draft-dodging by around 2 million people.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appointed 34-year-old Fedorov at the start of the year. The former head of Ukraine’s digital transformation policies is credited with spearheading the the army’s drone technology and introducing several successful e-government platforms....

....MUCH MORE 

"The Chinese Company Taking On the World’s Memory-Chip Giants"

From The Wall Street Journal, January 11:

As AI demand drives prices up, CXMT overcomes Washington’s curbs to vie with Micron and South Korean leaders 

China’s national champion in memory-chip manufacturing is preparing a $4 billion share offering after making significant technical advances, upending an industry dominated by South Korean and U.S. companies.

The offering by ChangXin Memory Technologies, known as CXMT, is one of the biggest by a chip maker this century and would normally be great news for tech companies starved of memory chips during the artificial-intelligence boom. AI data centers have been grabbing chip capacity that would otherwise serve the makers of computers, videogame consoles and smartphones, driving up prices for American consumers.

But even though CXMT intends to boost production and says it wants more international business, the geopolitical walls are high. Successive U.S. administrations have tightened curbs on Chinese chip makers.

And prosecutors in South Korea, home to memory-chip leaders Samsung Electronics  and SK Hynix, are alleging that some of CXMT’s rise comes from theft of trade secrets obtained from former Samsung employees. 

Memory chips are like the fuel lines feeding the engines of computing machines. As AI engines made by Nvidia of the U.S. and others get more powerful, they need more memory, both the traditional kind and an advanced type called high-bandwidth memory.

A single AI server now uses more dynamic random-access memory than entire fleets of laptops, and the price of conventional DRAM is forecast to surge more than 50% this quarter compared with the previous quarter, according to research firm TrendForce.

Until recently, the global DRAM market was dominated by three companies—Samsung, SK Hynix and U.S.-based Micron Technology. Those makers have pivoted toward higher-margin AI memory chips, and Micron is retreating from parts of the consumer market.

That opens the door for CXMT. The company was formed a decade ago after a bid by a state-backed Chinese company to acquire Micron failed. A local government in the eastern city of Hefei decided it should create its own DRAM maker.

The company, now led by U.S.-trained chip engineer Zhu Yiming, garnered support from a national tech fund and a who’s-who list of Chinese tech companies including Alibaba and Xiaomi.

CXMT said in late December that it had submitted plans to list on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-like tech board, aiming to raise the equivalent of $4 billion. Recent capital injections have valued the company at more than $20 billion, analysts said.

CXMT is among the stars in a roster of Chinese companies across the semiconductor industry that the government hopes will lift the country’s self-sufficiency during its trade war with the U.S. From manufacturing specialist SMIC to equipment maker AMEC, Beijing is pushing the industry to develop local alternatives to everything the U.S. and its allies produce.

CXMT’s prospectus shows the company has rapidly advanced from prototypes to mass production in just a few years. Revenue nearly tripled over two years to more than $3 billion in 2024. Analysts said its process technology has come within a generation or two of the industry leaders, and the company’s global DRAM market share has risen to around 5% by revenue.   

The progress comes despite U.S. curbs on China’s access to advanced chip-making equipment.

“The progress CXMT has made in the face of U.S. end-use controls on memory has surprised the industry,” said Paul Triolo, technology policy lead at consulting firm DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group.

Triolo said U.S. concerns would be heightened if CXMT could supply high-bandwidth memory chips to Huawei, whose AI processors represent China’s closest domestic alternative to Nvidia’s AI accelerators.

According to DSET, a think tank backed by the Taiwanese government, CXMT built its foundation on the ruins of others, acquiring patents from the bankrupt German chip maker Qimonda and raiding Taiwan’s talent pool.

In December, Korean prosecutors said they had indicted 10 people including a former Samsung executive and employees on charges of transferring secrets to CXMT including technology to help CXMT mass-produce advanced DRAM chips. 

The suspects allegedly worked systematically to avoid detection, joining CXMT through shell companies, shifting offices and disguising travel to China by routing trips through other locations. They exchanged a coded warning using four heart emojis to warn each other in case South Korea tried to bar their travel or arrest them, prosecutors said.

The prosecutors said the leak of trade secrets caused billions of dollars in losses to Samsung and South Korea’s semiconductor-driven economy....

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