DHS Can’t Decide If There’s a Hunger Strike Going on at a New Jersey Detention Center


Tom Homan and Markwayne Mullin | Gage Skidmore/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom/Samuel Corum-Pool via CNP/CNP/Polaris/Newscom

Federal officials can’t get their story straight on whether there is a hunger strike going on at an immigration detention center in New Jersey.

New Jersey activist groups say hundreds of detainees inside Delaney Hall, a privately operated Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Newark, launched a hunger strike over Memorial Day weekend to protest insufficient and spoiled food, medical neglect, poor living conditions, and abuse. The allegations have led to daily protests and violent skirmishes outside the detention center. The Guardian reported on Saturday that the hunger strike was entering its ninth day.

But the government’s position on the hunger strike has shifted between claiming it doesn’t exist, to threatening to force-feed the nonexistent strikers, to claiming there was only a handful of detainees on hunger strike.

Last Tuesday, an official Department of Homeland Security (DHS) social media account posted that there was “NO HUNGER STRIKE” at Delaney Hall. This response was not surprising. There have been multiple reports of hunger strikes at various DHS detention centers, but the DHS has denied all of them.

But White House border czar Tom Homan said in an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham that same day that strikers would be force-fed “if it gets bad enough.”

“And matter of fact, if it gets bad enough and the prisoners feel like they’re putting themselves in extreme danger, medical danger, then we’ll force-feed them,” Homan said. “We will get a court order and force-feed them.”

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin added to the confusion on Wednesday when he said during a meeting of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet that there were “only a handful of individuals” refusing to eat and that it was only because they wanted their “ethnic right food.”

“They can go back to their country and get whatever food they want,” Mullin continued.

The immigrant advocacy group Cosecha published a handwritten letter reportedly signed by nearly 300 Delaney detainees. The letter said that the signees have witnessed individuals with “illnesses such as HIV, cancer, diabetes, heart problems, among others, who are not receiving proper medical attention for the aforementioned conditions.”

“It is public knowledge that agents have arrested individuals with physical limitations such as deaf, mute, blind individuals, elderly persons, and even pregnant women,” the letter continued. “We see young people with approved juvenile status cases, with whom we are living in detention centers. There is also a high spread of COVID-19 in detention centers, and the flu is constant among detainees, which could lead to outbreaks of illnesses or epidemics.”

Lawyers for the detainees also pushed back against Mullin’s claim that their dispute was over food preference, rather than food edibility.

“Many detainees have been subjected to having worms in their food, and I wouldn’t say, as Mr. Mullin stated, that is an ‘ethnic’ choice of food,” Alex Minogue, an attorney at Nova Law Group who represents detainees being held at Delaney Hall, told CNN Saturday. “I think they just don’t want to eat worms.”

On Saturday, the DHS published a press release claiming to debunk “categorically false smears” about Delaney Hall being spread by “sanctuary politicians,” which presumably doesn’t include Homan and Mullin. The press release said there was no hunger strike at Delaney Hall, nor was there any medical neglect or lack of nutrition.

“No lawbreakers in the history of human civilization have been better treated than illegal aliens,” DHS Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis said in the statement. “They are provided 3 meals a day, medical care, and receive full due process.”

A medical examiner’s report recently concluded that an ICE detainee in Arizona died from complications from a severe tooth infection.

The DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this story.

The post DHS Can't Decide If There's a Hunger Strike Going on at a New Jersey Detention Center appeared first on Reason.com.

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U.S. Oil Reserves To Dry Up Before August?

U.S. Oil Reserves To Dry Up Before August?

As oilprice.com asked earlier this week, why hasn’t oil hit $150 (yet)?

Tonight at 7 PM ET, ZeroHedge will host two former Goldman heavyweights to answer the question: is the recent oil price surge merely a temporary geopolitical shock, or are we entering a period of structurally higher energy prices?

Joining the discussion are former colleagues Jeff Currie, now chief strategy officer for energy pathways at the Carlyle Group, and Arjun Murti, Partner at Veriten. The conversation will be hosted by Real Vision’s Ash Bennington.

After five potential deals to re-open the Strait of Hormuz and none resulting in a full resumption of traffic, Currie’s betting that it won’t be different this time:

Interesting highlight by Jim Bianco: “If you bought the crude oil collapse every time Trump said the war is over, you made $58, even though the price is only up $27 since the war started.“

Even if it is different this time, Currie has argued that global oil markets were already facing structural supply shortages before tensions with Iran escalated, with years of underinvestment leaving the system increasingly vulnerable to disruptions. In his view, the current conflict has simply accelerated a trend that was already underway, bringing forward a period of sustained higher oil prices that many investors have yet to fully appreciate.

Strait closure + baked in supply constraints, he says, could mean American storage tanks run dry as soon as July 4… just in time for the big 250 celebration.

Murti likewise remains bullish oil. Last October, he joined ZeroHedge for a debate on the price outlook and argued that crude prices were headed higher… a peaceful time when WTI crude sat at $60/barrell. The months that followed validated Murti so let’s see if that happens again.

Together, Currie and Murti will examine whether current oil prices fully reflect the underlying supply picture, how much of today’s rally is attributable to Iran, what role U.S. foreign policy may play going forward, and whether investors should prepare for a prolonged period of elevated energy prices.

See you tonight at 7pm ET, here on the ZH homepage, X feed, or YouTube channel.
 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/01/2026 – 12:00

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/mq5FwU8 Tyler Durden

Them’s Fightin’ Words

Them’s Fightin’ Words

By Benjamin Picton, Rabobank Senior Market Strategist

Resigned

Brent crude front-month futures are inching higher this morning after ending May down almost 20%. The May selloff has been courtesy of Mr Market’s Pavlovian response to fresh peace rumours, though it still remains the case that a deal has not been done and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed.

US equity indices closed higher across the board on Friday, but Asian stocks are mixed in early trade today. The S&P500 has now had nine-consecutive positive weekly closes and is sitting at a fresh all-time-high, with futures pointed at further gains when markets open later today.
While crude futures are lower, spot prices for Malaysian Tapis crude are proving a little more sticky and are still trading around the levels seen through late May and early April. Singapore gasoil (diesel) spot prices are testing support at $135/bbl, but even at those short-term lows prices are way above the $90.41/bbl recorded on February 26th (the last close before the war started) or the January prices in the high $70s, before the market started to price in what two carrier groups in the Middle East might mean.

Gold prices rose by 0.68% last week. This was the first positive weekly close since May 8th, and another example of markets respecting the $4,500/oz support level. Gold is now trading at levels similar to those seen in late December and early January as a number of central banks liquidated holdings in a scramble for Dollar liquidity earlier in the Hormuz crisis.

Sovereign yields are moving higher this morning after falling for much of last week. US 2-year yields are up 2bps to 4.04% in early trade, Aussie 2s are up 4bps to 4.56%, but New Zealand 2s are curiously flat after a hawkish RBNZ last week and a national budget that showed fiscal tightening will be delayed beyond the 2026/27 financial year. Moves at the longer end are even more pronounced, with 10-year Treasury yields up 3bps to 4.47%.

The shift higher in crude and yields could be a sign of markets beginning to resign themselves to the idea that a deal will remain elusive in the short term. The creep from “any minute now” this time last week to “maybe, or maybe not” is underway. Regular readers will know that RaboResearch updated our baseline view on the Hormuz crisis last week to suggest that the Strait is likely to remain mostly closed through to September as the parties to negotiations find that their red lines over Iran’s nuclear program are (still) incompatible, and the Iranians realise that giving up their oil market leverage would be a foolish thing to do.

A bad sign arrived this morning with the news that Iranian President Pezeshkian had offered his resignation to Supreme Leader Khamenei. Pezeshkian has reportedly claimed that he is unable to run the government and carry out his responsibilities, because the civilian government has been sidelined by the hardliners in the IRGC – the guys with the guns. This is a new angle on the view that various factions in Iran are competing with each other, and that there are large disagreements on how negotiations with the US should be handled, or if they should be happening at all.

Donald Trump raised some eyebrows yesterday when he said that the Iranian military (the Artesh) is ‘moderate’ and had been left alone during American strikes. This places Pezeshkian, foreign minister Araghchi, and possibly parliamentary speaker Ghalibaf (newly re-appointed) alongside the Artesh in the ‘moderate’ camp willing to do a deal, while the IRGC resists agreement with the US and insists on Iran’s rights over Hormuz and the progress of its nuclear program. We think that it will take longer yet before the IRGC sees eye-to-eye with the moderates, and that a continued closure with risks of further strikes is more likely than an agreement that is amenable to all and satisfies Donald Trump’s need to sign something that looks better than Barack Obama’s JCPOA. Of course, it may be the case that the much-maligned JCPOA was maligned for a reason. To paraphrase Solon of Athens, the JCPOA might not have contained the best terms, but it might have contained the best terms all parties could be induced to accept.

While the Hormuz issue drags on, the Ukraine war also continues to percolate and threatens to spread into Europe. Ukraine is deepening cooperation with EU states over drone technology, which has been used to great effect against Russian energy targets in recent months. Meanwhile, a Russian drone reportedly struck an apartment building in NATO member country Romania late last week. 

Former Russian President and close Putin ally Dmitry Medvedev took to X to warn “Citizens of EU countries, You should realize your authorities have unilaterally entered into a war with Russia. So be vigilant and don’t be surprised by anything. The peaceful sleep is over…” To quote Yosemite Sam: “them’s fightin’ words”.

Clearly the Kremlin is not happy that Europe is continuing to support Ukraine in a conflict that some analysts are now saying has turned in the latter’s favor.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/01/2026 – 11:30

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‘Los Gatos Party Mom’ Sentenced To 35 Years For Throwing Drunken Teen Parties

‘Los Gatos Party Mom’ Sentenced To 35 Years For Throwing Drunken Teen Parties

Authored by Dylan Morgan via The Epoch Times,

A Los Gatos, California, woman was sentenced on May 28 to 35 years and 10 months in prison, the maximum allowed, for hosting parties for young teenagers where she brought alcohol and egged on sex acts.

Shannon O’Connor, 52, threw these parties for two years and discouraged teens, who were mostly 14 and 15 years old, from telling their parents or police about the parties or calling for help when one of the victims passed out in their own vomit. 

“Many people call this defendant the ‘Los Gatos Party Mom.’ This isn’t some fun parent giving sips of wine spritzers to kids. She facilitated dangerous and drunken sex acts with these children. She risked their lives and damaged their psyches. She is not a party mom. Shannon O’Connor is a convicted felon. Shannon O’Connor is a registered sex offender,” Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen said.

O’Connor, also known as Shannon Burga, was convicted of 48 charges, including child abuse charges and two felony sex charges, in March.

Twenty young adults and 41 witnesses testified during the trial.

Thursday’s sentencing followed two days of testimony from the victims on O’Connor’s teen parties she hosted for two years, including one young woman who told the court she became suicidal from trauma induced by the parties.

At one party, O’Connor handed an underage teenager a condom and pushed him into a room with an intoxicated minor. 

At a separate New Year’s Eve party with about five 14-year-olds, O’Connor watched and laughed as a drunk teen sexually battered a young girl in bed.

In another incident, O’Connor brought a drunk teen into a bedroom where an intoxicated 14-year-old girl was lying in bed, according to prosecutors.

After the girl was assaulted, she said to O’Connor, “Why did you leave me in there with him? Like you knew, like what he was going to do to me.”

In another case, O’Connor let a minor drive her SUV in the Los Gatos High School parking lot while two other teens held onto the back, and one was knocked unconscious after falling off.

In some cases, she would text teens or message them on Snapchat to leave their homes in the middle of the night and drink at her house, where she would provide alcohol.

“[O’Connor] endangered their safety, coordinated their sexual assaults, and she tried to get them not to tell,” Rosen said. “These brave kids came forward to tell the truth about what happened and to put a stop to it.” 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/01/2026 – 11:15

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Israel Warns There’ll Be ‘No Calm In Beirut’ Until Hezbollah Ceases Attacks

Israel Warns There’ll Be ‘No Calm In Beirut’ Until Hezbollah Ceases Attacks

The US-Iran ceasefire is being tested on multiple fronts, with Tehran already having announced Monday the suspension of contact with Washington over the escalation of Israel’s ground war in Lebanon, where the IDF keeps pushing further north of the Litani River. Israel looks poised to resume major airstrikes on Beirut, despite that technically it has a US-mediated ceasefire in place with the government of Lebanon. Israeli leaders have vowed to halt Hezbollah’s persistent drone strikes on northern Israel, and to establish a security buffer zone.

Also on Monday Israel’s defense minister threatened there will be “no calm in Beirut” if Hezbollah’s rockets and drones continue raining down on Israeli communities and troop locations. This is a direct threat to resume airstrikes on the capital city. This has direct impact on the US-Iran ceasefire:

IRAN’S STATE TV SAYS PROBABILITY OF CEASEFIRE BETWEEN IRAN AND U.S. ENDING IS HIGH IF ATTACKS ON LEBANON DO NOT STOP

via EuroNews

The Dahiyeh in Beirut is no different from the communities in northern Israel – if there is no calm in the north, there will be no calm in Beirut,” Israel Katz said in a statement released by his office,

Dahiyeh a Hezbollah stronghold near the country’s main international airport, but is densely packed with civilians. Each wave of Israeli attacks has historically resulted in high civilian casualties.

“At the same time, the IDF continues to operate with fire and maneuver against Hezbollah terrorists and infrastructure in Lebanon … in order to push threats away from IDF forces and from the residents of the State of Israel, and to turn the Litani area into a zone under IDF security control, free of weapons and terrorists,” Katz added.

Some pundits have argued that the new Lebanon campaign is aimed at hindering Washington from making a ‘bad deal’ with Tehran (from Tel Aviv’s perspective). Others have said Netanyahu appears “stuck” and doesn’t have a clear mission in Lebanon:

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu is “stuck” in terms of military strategy in Lebanon, according to Jad Melki, professor of media studies at the Lebanese American University.

Melki told Al Jazeera that most of Israel’s escalation has been targeting civilian centres in the city of Tyre, villages in south Lebanon, and historical sites like Beaufort Castle.

“Most of these have been built by Netanyahu as major strategic accomplishments, but those have been mostly exaggerated. Even the Beaufort Castle – unless we’re living in the 12th century, it’s not a strategic military location anymore,” he said.

“The problem is that Netanyahu is stuck,” Melki told Al Jazeera. “He cannot advance very quickly, as he will break the Israeli army, and he cannot sit still in the occupied territories of South Lebanon right now because the resistance is basically hunting his soldiers like sitting ducks, so he’s stuck and can only bomb hospitals and kill civilians and medical workers.”

Opinions have remained varied as to what Israel hopes to gain by escalating things in Lebanon at this fragile point where Israeli is at war on multiple fronts (and might the Houthis join next?):

Local Israeli media outlets have also in some cases questioned the strategic utility of the entire operation in establishing a ‘buffer zone’, pointing out that Hezbollah’s tactical drone fleet is widely believed to possess an operational range in excess of 30 km.

Hezbollah has been having success especially with fiber-optic cable drones which are not to susceptible to jamming, hacking, or other electronic warfare interception measures. All of these developments mean that the Washington-mediated ceasefire is effectively dead, and as Hezbollah’s asymmetric warfare is likely to ramp up in response.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/01/2026 – 11:00

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/nKUSjEo Tyler Durden

How To Win a Trade War? Lose Less Than Your Opponents.


"How to Win a Trade War" book cover | Photo: Simon & Schuster

How To Win a Trade War: An Optimistic Guide to an Anxious Global Economy, by Soumaya Keynes and Chad Bown, Simon & Schuster, 288 pages, $30

The ancient Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu advised that “he who wishes to fight must first count the cost.” Joshua, the brilliant (for its time) computer in the 1983 film WarGames, did the counting and concluded that “the only winning move is not to play.”

Both lines find their way into How To Win a Trade War. This is no arid academic analysis, and it does not read like one. Instead, Soumaya Keynes, a journalist at the Financial Times, and Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, have crafted a witty, fast-paced analysis of how the global trading system has unraveled in the aftermath of COVID, Brexit, and (most importantly) President Donald Trump’s electoral successes.

The book’s greatest strength is its accessibility. Trade policy can be difficult to explain and boring to read. How To Win a Trade War is neither difficult nor boring, as Keynes and Bown use a plethora of analogies both to guide the reader and to insert their perspective. Trade is like dancing, trade deficits are like video game consoles, and tariffs are like marijuana. OK, libertarians might object to that last one, but their point is that even when tariffs feel good, they inevitably obscure reality, cost money, and make you (or your economy, at least) more lethargic.

Or take the populist obsession with the idea that global trade has hollowed out America’s economy. “When a country has an unemployment rate of only 4 percent,” as the U.S. does, complaining that trade is responsible for a massive economic displacement is “a bit like a toddler screaming that he wants an apple when he quite clearly already has one in his hand.” That’s not the only time the authors analogize Trump’s behavior to that of Keynes’ young children.

The book’s most useful analogy may be the recurring motif that imagines the major players in the global trade wars as vessels making their way across the oceans. America used to be a naval ship, offering security and stability for the global order. It’s now being sailed by pirates—untrustworthy, potentially dangerous to friend and foe alike, and guided solely by short-term self-interest. China, meanwhile, is a warship eagerly brandishing its big guns. Europe is a cobbled-together merchant ship with little muscle, trying its best to keep the pirates and warriors happy at a distance. India is a boat built from an old car. (That last one makes more sense in context.)

Despite all the talk of pirates and toddlers, Keynes and Bown have more sympathy for America’s role in the trade wars than you might expect. While many observers have written off Trump’s obsession with America’s trade deficit as just a character flaw or evidence of his economic illiteracy, the authors argue that the U.S.-China relationship has become dangerously unbalanced.

That’s partially because America’s government has borrowed too heavily. But Keynes and Bown largely blame China.

China’s authoritarian regime has broken many of the price signals that should regulate markets, they argue in the book’s most compelling chapter. Normally, overproduction of industrial goods would cause prices to fall, harming profits and driving less efficient producers out of business. “But in China’s case, this mechanism can malfunction. When demand weakens, its system is bad at letting businesses fail” because local and national officials have a strong incentive to prop up underperforming companies. That willingness to burn cash in order to overpower price signals, along with China’s increasing desire to dictate trading terms to its partners (see the warship analogy), have created the conditions for the current mess. America’s response has been haphazard and often confuses friends for foes, but China, they say, is still ultimately to blame.

In examining the tactics and strategies of a trade war, Keynes and Bown evaluate subsidies, tariffs, and stockpiles (including a lengthy analogy drawn from the lessons of doomsday preppers on Reddit), while weighing the pros and cons of each. 

They are skeptical of sweeping conclusions, and they encourage prospective trade warriors to think carefully about the long-term and possibly unintended consequences of any major interventions, as well as to focus their energies on industries that truly matter for national security. “You might be able to control how an economic weapon is deployed, but certainly not how the target responds,” they warn. In the same vein, governments cannot always control how domestic businesses will react. Hence, “these economic tools can be unwieldy, blunt, and prone to abuse.”

That approach occasionally comes across as working too hard to balance differing viewpoints. For a book that promises a “how to,” this offers few definitive conclusions. The authors do promise that the book is not meant to be “an ideological defense of free trade,” and they are right to advise policymakers to have more humility about what can be accomplished with various blunt instruments. Even so, I would have preferred a more pointed take on how various economic interventions often harm the people they are meant to help.

The one verdict that Keynes and Bown do deliver, repeatedly, is that there will be no return to the world of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, when a (mostly) stable set of rules guided the global trading system. The two authors may wish that Trump and other world leaders were more willing to take Joshua’s advice about not starting wars, but they are resigned to the fact that “trade wars are the new normal.”

“We worry,” they write, “that China’s system is so different from those of its competitors that there isn’t space for a common rules-based system” in the model of the World Trade Organization, whose influence has waned considerably. Meanwhile, “another challenge is that to work well, the rules rely on trust,” they write. The unspoken addendum: It is hard to trust pirates or toddlers.

Indeed, the sunny and lighthearted tone of the writing only barely masks the authors’ rather pessimistic view of the current situation. Even when they engage in a few flights of fantasy in the book’s final chapter—which imagines how the global trading system might look in 2050—the options veer between a Chinese-dominated reality and one where the U.S. has integrated “economic and security statecraft.” It’s hardly a vision for freer markets, either way.

Still, the alternative might be worse. “If we manage to avoid World War III, we all deserve a pat on the back,” Keynes and Bown conclude. The “winner” of the trade war might simply be “the team that loses less than a rival, or simply the one most adept at minimizing its own wounds.”

The book captures the anxiety that seems to be the defining mood of the moment. Old assumptions about globalization are no longer secure, but there’s no clarity about what might replace that order. Keynes and Bown want their readers to understand that there is nothing to be gained by wishing for the past to return, and that we should cheerfully (if not eagerly) try to find the best path forward.

How To Win a Trade War is not really about winning at all. It is, per Sun Tzu, about understanding the cost of the fight.

The post <em>How To Win a Trade War</em>? Lose Less Than Your Opponents. appeared first on Reason.com.

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Indiana Police Misplace More Than $30,000 Seized in Massage Parlor Raids


Civil-Asset-Forfeiture-6-1 | Illustration: Adani Samat/Midjourney

More than $30,000 in cash seized from two Indiana massage parlors is missing.

Police seized the money in November 2023 as part of a joint state and local raid on two northern Indiana massage parlors—Jade Massage in Winfield and Relax Spa in Crown Point—and associated businesses and houses. Authorities began investigating the spas after allegedly receiving anonymous tips that prostitution took place there.

Four penis massages for an undercover detective later, authorities raided the businesses and seized more than $97,000 in cash, along with a car. Spa owners Guan Yu and Wujiao Liu, a married couple, were arrested. Their case is ongoing—and their cash is missing.

State police are now investigating what happened. Maybe there’s an innocent explanation for the missing cash; this could well come down to carelessness, not corruption. Regardless, this case represents yet another instance of police profiting off sex work criminalization.

The Search for the Missing Cash

Robert Byrd, who was sworn in as Winfield’s town marshal in April 2025, “assumed that the money had been placed in a secure account established through the Winfield Clerk-treasurer’s Office or a local bank,” reports the Post-Tribune.

It wasn’t.

Eventually, Byrd tracked some of the seized cash down to a rented storage locker, where bills and coins were stashed in plastic bins.

But Byrd could locate only $63,473.86 of the $97,014.37 that was taken. $33,540.51 was missing.

Lake County prosecutor Bernard A. Carter has now asked Indiana state police “to thoroughly investigate this matter and to make every effort to recover the missing funds.” The state police agreed.

The fact that it took some sleuthing for Byrd to discover where the money was stored is itself incredible. Evidence is supposed to be well-tracked and well-documented. And cash seized during an investigation could eventually need to be returned (remember, no one has yet been convicted in this case).

And if this turns out to be more than just sloppy police work? That wouldn’t exactly be surprising, given the perverse incentives and ample opportunities for corruption that massage parlor prostitution cases present.

The Massage Parlor Raid Racket  

Anonymous tips about sexual services being offered along with massages can be used to justify months of undercover visits from law enforcement agents seeking massages. (Later, they will say the masseuses could be trafficking victims—which, if true, would make their months of visits without intervention especially cruel.) And any offer of sex acts with massages can be used to justify raids.

Asian massage parlors tend to be cash-heavy businesses, so there’s often plenty of cash around to seize—and, unlike when you seize money from bank accounts, no definitive record trail. The workers and owners at these businesses are often immigrants, for whom language barriers and other considerations could make it harder to fight back. And if police throw a “human trafficking” allegation in there, no mater how unsubstantiated, everyone just shrugs at whatever happens to those arrested and pats police on the back for a job well done.

Missing money aside, the Winfield case is a fine indictment of how so many massage parlor raid cases operate.

The Search for Penis Masseuses

Months before the spa raid, Detective Benjamin Moyars, co-chair of the Indiana Protection for Abused and Trafficked Humans Law Enforcement Task Force, went to Jade Massage and got his butt and penis massaged using police funds, according to a probable cause affidavit. (“He did not ejaculate,” it says.) That was on March 3, 2023.

In April, he went back and got a penis massage from two women this time. One of them “appeared to not speak English,” the affidavit says.

In June, Moyars went back twice—once to Jade Massage and once to Relax Massage. Same thing.

Over the course of the four months, Moyars spent $385—and who knows how much in police time and expenses—on proving that three women would massage his genitals along with the rest of his body.

After that, authorities spent several more months surveilling the businesses. Nothing in the probable cause affidavit indicates that they observed signs of forced prostitution, a.k.a. sex trafficking, during this surveillance.

Nonetheless, police raided the businesses and Liu and Yu were charged with not just promoting prostitution but also promotion of human sexual trafficking, in addition to being charged for failing to remit sales tax. Liu was also charged with battery against a public safety official after allegedly spitting at an officer during the course of her arrest.

According to the probable cause affidavit, a sign glimpsed in Relax Massage during the raid stated: “Therapist should stick to the work principle. Don’t practice the therapy as porn or you will have the consequence.”

But—in a fine example of how police often twist language in order to turn ordinary prostitution cases into sex trafficking cases—the affidavit states that “Detective Moyars advised in his experience with human trafficking and prostitution investigations, owners pay the female employees so little that they are effectively forced to perform sexual services in the hopes of cash tips to support themselves.” Voila: Even if the owners did not condone the sex acts, let alone make anyone perform them, they are deemed guilty of “forcing” people into prostitution.

Interviews with four “victims”—two of them the same women who allegedly massaged Moyar’s penis—suggest that these women came to work at Jade and Relax spas voluntarily, were not confined there by the owners, were not subject to violence or threats, and were paid for their work.


In the News

Abortion advertising ban is unconstitutional, says Mayday Health. A New York–based nonprofit that provides information about accessing abortion pills is suing South Dakota over its ban on abortion-related advertising. Mayday Health “and a Democratic former South Dakota lawmaker, Nancy Turbak Berry, filed the lawsuit Friday in federal court against South Dakota’s Republican governor and attorney general,” South Dakota Searchlight reports:

The new law says no person may knowingly dispense, distribute, sell or advertise an article or thing designed, adapted or intended to produce an abortion. The ban also covers any article, instrument, substance, drug, medicine or thing that is “advertised or described in a manner calculated to lead another to use or apply it for producing an abortion.”

Violations are felonies punishable by up to two years in prison and a $4,000 fine. The law also gives the state attorney general authority to recover civil penalties of $10,000 per violation.

The lawsuit alleges it’s unconstitutional to prohibit advertising that’s protected by the free speech guarantees in the First Amendment.

Mayday was involved in a previous legal tussle with South Dakota (which this newsletter covered in January), after South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley went after Mayday over ads that it had taken out at gas stations.

The ads said: “Pregnant? Don’t want to be? Learn more at Mayday.Health.”

Jackley said this constituted deceptive advertising because the ads didn’t point out that abortion is illegal in South Dakota.

Mayday counter-sued Jackley, seeking to prevent him “from punishing Plaintiff Mayday Health for publishing truthful information about reproductive healthcare.”

South Dakota and Mayday ultimately settled those cases. The agreement involved Mayday yanking the gas station ads.


On Substack

Eminent domain for data centers? Bonnie Kristian reports on Georgia officials using eminent domain power to seize 20 to 30 homes so a private company called Georgia Power can build new power lines. A woman named Ansley Brown has been speaking out about this on TikTok, blaming artificial intelligence. The power lines are not set to serve only data centers, but “a local news story confirms that at least one data center is involved here, and it’s plausible that the data center(s) is the straw that broke the camel’s back, even if there’s a lot more straw,” Kristian writes.

“Now, there’s a sense in which the artificial intelligence piece of this story is a distraction,” she continues:

My point is not that it’s bad for Brown’s mom to lose her house because AI is bad and therefore there should be no data centers.

I’m very skeptical of many proposed uses for AI, but as I’ve argued here before, its utility costs are wholly relative to the value of its output. If AI is doing a lot of good, then probably we do want to use a lot of electricity for it, which may well mean building new data centers and power lines. And as skeptical as I am, I think the good it does is not zero, so I’m not categorically against this kind of construction.

The issue is that Georgia Power is a private company that appears to be using eminent domain to take people’s homes against their will to meet other private companies’ expansion plans.

As Kristian points out, it’s not entirely clear whether the new power lines would be needed even if a new data center wasn’t being constructed. But regardless of what sort of construction is primarily driving the Georgia Power situation, eminent domain issues may become a bigger issue as construction of data centers expands. It seems important for people who are not hyperbolic AI-doomers to be speaking out against this.


Read This Thread

Hard to express just how utterly divorced the political rhetoric around porn is from the reality. I've worked in the industry for more than 20 years. I see porn all day long. I have never once seen necrophilia or bestiality on an adult site.But that's what's being used to push antiporn laws.

Mike Stabile (@mikestabile.bsky.social) 2026-05-28T16:10:49.858Z


More Sex & Tech

• The Department of Homeland Security is ramping up spending on iris scanners.

• “Texas for now can require proof of age to download a smart phone app, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday, unpausing a trial court injunction that halted the law on First Amendment grounds,” Bloomberg Law reports.

• Lizzie Borden, director of the 1986 drama Working Girls, talks about the ways sex work has changed over the past 40 years and the ways it hasn’t. “There’s a lot of argument about whether prostitution be legalised or be the Scandinavian model,” said Borden. “Decriminalisation would be best because that’s the only way nobody gets punished, so sex workers still have customers.”

• “A federal judge had an extramarital affair with a high-ranking police officer—including having sex in the judge’s chambers that was overheard by staff—and initially lied about the actions but remains on the bench after receiving a ‘private reprimand,'” the Associated Press reports.

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The Art of the Deal cont’d, cont’d

[I am assuming that you all know the basic background of the Slush Fund “Settlement”; my earlier discussions are here and here.]

Things are definitely heating up on the Slush Fund front.

Even for a President for whom courtroom losses are a depressingly regular occurrence[1], and even putting aside the Order from D.D.C. requiring him to take his name off of the Kennedy Center, Friday was a tough day for our President.

First, in Floyd et al v. DOJ, the district court (ED VA, Judge Brinkema) enjoined the DOJ from “taking any further action pursuant to the creation or operation of the Anti-Weaponization Fund, including the transferring of money to the Fund; the consideration of any claims submitted to the Fund; and the disbursing of any funds from the Fund.”[2]

And then a second court (SD FL, Judge Williams), re-opened the Trump v. IRS case (in which Trump had agreed to a voluntary dismissal of his claims), based on …

“… grievous allegations that [Trump] voluntarily dismissed this litigation solely to avoid judicial scrutiny of a lawsuit that was collusive from the start and was only filed to provide the imprimatur of legality for an unlawful settlement.[3] The court further ordered Trump to file a response to those allegations by June 12, “detailing his “position on . . . (1) the charges of collusion and whether the Parties are truly adverse; (2) the assertion that the dismissal in this case was premised on deception by the Parties; and (3) the question of whether the case should be reopened because the Court was the victim of a fraud.” (Emphasis added)

Do stay tuned. This is getting very interesting and is, potentially, very important. Coming at a time when our President is already in a weakening political position – an unpopular war, inflation, etc. – this looks like it may generate some push-back from Republicans previously willing to toe the MAGA line. The decision of the Republican Senate leadership not to vote on Trump’s priority immigration budget before adjourning a couple of weeks ago was widely interpreted as a mini-revolt of sorts against the Fund, and Republican Senators have been unusually vocal in their condemnation of the Fund.*

*From Sen. McConnell (“Utterly stupid, morally wrong”) to Sen. Tillis (“stupid on stilts”) to Sen. Cruz (“a galactic blunder”) to Majority Leader Thune (“I’m not a big fan”).

My crystal ball is no clearer than anyone else’s, but here are my predictions:

(1) The Anti-Weaponization Fund will never pay a nickel to anyone.

(2) Todd Blanche’s days as Attorney General are numbered. This was all a pretty clever scheme to set up a Trump-controlled slush fund plus an immunity from any and all claims the IRS might be able to bring against our President and his family.

That immunity is a nice little bonus that was somehow omitted from the original “Settlement Agreement,” an omission Blanche corrected in an “Addendum” dated just one day after the “Settlement Agreement” was executed.  As alert readers may have noticed, the immunity has absolutely nothing to do with the “case” that Trump and the IRS were supposedly “settling”.

And Trump would get all of this without anyone other than Donald Trump and Todd Blanche doing anything!  No silly congressional “authorization” or “appropriation” needed!

It has Blanche’s fingerprints all over it, and it looks like he may have been too clever by half. He has, rather than enriching Donald Trump, gotten him into some pretty hot water, and at the moment, at least, it doesn’t seem as though the money spigot will ever turn on. If Blanche were hoping that this bit of legal legerdemain would help convince our President to remove the “Acting” from his title, I think he will be disappointed.

Memo to Republican senators: This really is a good issue to take a stand on. He’ll primary you anyway, whether you lick his boots or not; just ask John Cornyn. Seems like a good time to stand up for the simple principle that even a President can’t just take tax money for his own personal purposes.


[1] As I have said many times – because it bears repeating: Trump has lost orders of magnitude more cases in court in a year-and-a-half than any of his predecessors in their complete terms. Indeed, though I doubt that there’s sufficient data to test this hypothesis, I wouldn’t be at all surprised if he has already lost a greater number of cases than all of his predecessors combined. Ask your AI agent to list all of his losses if you think I’m exaggerating.

[2] Plaintiffs in this case are “former career Assistant U.S. Attorney and January 6th prosecutor Andrew Floyd, Professor John Caravello, City of New Haven, the National Abortion Federation [and] Common Cause,” according to plaintiffs’ counsel’s website (Democracy Now).  Their claim is that “the creation of the [Anti-Weaponization] Fund violates the U.S. Constitution, exceeds executive authority, unlawfully bypasses Congress’s exclusive authority over federal spending and appropriations, and violates the Administrative Procedure Act.”

One difficult issue in this case, and one that will surely be raised by the DOJ in its responses, is whether plaintiffs have standing to object to the creation of the Fund. I’m no standing expert, but it looks like a tough hill to climb, and I’m curious to see how the plaintiffs frame their argument that they have standing to bring these claims.

Interestingly, Public Citizen has filed a suit containing similar substantive claims in SD CA, on behalf of Allison Gill. Gill, according to the Complaint, was a vocal Trump critic who was targeted by the government and improperly subjected to a criminal investigation in 2019. The Complaint continues:

Plaintiff has been the subject of actions taken by the federal government that could constitute “Lawfare” or “Weaponization” and may be entitled to compensation and an apology from the Fund. Plaintiff thus has an interest in the Fund’s establishment and operation, including an interest in ensuring that the Fund is legally sound, that Lawfare and Weaponization are appropriately defined to cover Plaintiff’s claims, and that the procedures and standards through which claims are considered are fair and equitable.

It’s a nice bit of legal jiu-jitsu – people subject to Trump’s “weaponization” can sue and assert standing based upon their interest in being compensated by Trump’s Fund!

[3] The allegations are contained in a Motion submitted to the court last week by 35 retired federal judges. [See here, and my discussion here]. According to the court’s Order re-opening the case, among the allegations contained therein are

“. . . the fact that the settlement in question includes a ‘three-paragraph addendum’ . . . [that] purports to ‘forever bar and preclude’ the United States from pursuing claims that could have been [otherwise] asserted [against] Plaintiffs,’), and the fact that Defendants did not ‘even try[] to defend against Plaintiffs’ claims’ despite their active opposition to nearly identical claims in other litigation. Finally, the non-party movants assert that Plaintiffs’ claims were “clearly untimely” and therefore untenable.”

 

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How To Win a Trade War? Lose Less Than Your Opponents.


"How to Win a Trade War" book cover | Photo: Simon & Schuster

How To Win a Trade War: An Optimistic Guide to an Anxious Global Economy, by Soumaya Keynes and Chad Bown, Simon & Schuster, 288 pages, $30

The ancient Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu advised that “he who wishes to fight must first count the cost.” Joshua, the brilliant (for its time) computer in the 1983 film WarGames, did the counting and concluded that “the only winning move is not to play.”

Both lines find their way into How To Win a Trade War. This is no arid academic analysis, and it does not read like one. Instead, Soumaya Keynes, a journalist at the Financial Times, and Chad Bown, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, have crafted a witty, fast-paced analysis of how the global trading system has unraveled in the aftermath of COVID, Brexit, and (most importantly) President Donald Trump’s electoral successes.

The book’s greatest strength is its accessibility. Trade policy can be difficult to explain and boring to read. How To Win a Trade War is neither difficult nor boring, as Keynes and Bown use a plethora of analogies both to guide the reader and to insert their perspective. Trade is like dancing, trade deficits are like video game consoles, and tariffs are like marijuana. OK, libertarians might object to that last one, but their point is that even when tariffs feel good, they inevitably obscure reality, cost money, and make you (or your economy, at least) more lethargic.

Or take the populist obsession with the idea that global trade has hollowed out America’s economy. “When a country has an unemployment rate of only 4 percent,” as the U.S. does, complaining that trade is responsible for a massive economic displacement is “a bit like a toddler screaming that he wants an apple when he quite clearly already has one in his hand.” That’s not the only time the authors analogize Trump’s behavior to that of Keynes’ young children.

The book’s most useful analogy may be the recurring motif that imagines the major players in the global trade wars as vessels making their way across the oceans. America used to be a naval ship, offering security and stability for the global order. It’s now being sailed by pirates—untrustworthy, potentially dangerous to friend and foe alike, and guided solely by short-term self-interest. China, meanwhile, is a warship eagerly brandishing its big guns. Europe is a cobbled-together merchant ship with little muscle, trying its best to keep the pirates and warriors happy at a distance. India is a boat built from an old car. (That last one makes more sense in context.)

Despite all the talk of pirates and toddlers, Keynes and Bown have more sympathy for America’s role in the trade wars than you might expect. While many observers have written off Trump’s obsession with America’s trade deficit as just a character flaw or evidence of his economic illiteracy, the authors argue that the U.S.-China relationship has become dangerously unbalanced.

That’s partially because America’s government has borrowed too heavily. But Keynes and Bown largely blame China.

China’s authoritarian regime has broken many of the price signals that should regulate markets, they argue in the book’s most compelling chapter. Normally, overproduction of industrial goods would cause prices to fall, harming profits and driving less efficient producers out of business. “But in China’s case, this mechanism can malfunction. When demand weakens, its system is bad at letting businesses fail” because local and national officials have a strong incentive to prop up underperforming companies. That willingness to burn cash in order to overpower price signals, along with China’s increasing desire to dictate trading terms to its partners (see the warship analogy), have created the conditions for the current mess. America’s response has been haphazard and often confuses friends for foes, but China, they say, is still ultimately to blame.

In examining the tactics and strategies of a trade war, Keynes and Bown evaluate subsidies, tariffs, and stockpiles (including a lengthy analogy drawn from the lessons of doomsday preppers on Reddit), while weighing the pros and cons of each. 

They are skeptical of sweeping conclusions, and they encourage prospective trade warriors to think carefully about the long-term and possibly unintended consequences of any major interventions, as well as to focus their energies on industries that truly matter for national security. “You might be able to control how an economic weapon is deployed, but certainly not how the target responds,” they warn. In the same vein, governments cannot always control how domestic businesses will react. Hence, “these economic tools can be unwieldy, blunt, and prone to abuse.”

That approach occasionally comes across as working too hard to balance differing viewpoints. For a book that promises a “how to,” this offers few definitive conclusions. The authors do promise that the book is not meant to be “an ideological defense of free trade,” and they are right to advise policymakers to have more humility about what can be accomplished with various blunt instruments. Even so, I would have preferred a more pointed take on how various economic interventions often harm the people they are meant to help.

The one verdict that Keynes and Bown do deliver, repeatedly, is that there will be no return to the world of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, when a (mostly) stable set of rules guided the global trading system. The two authors may wish that Trump and other world leaders were more willing to take Joshua’s advice about not starting wars, but they are resigned to the fact that “trade wars are the new normal.”

“We worry,” they write, “that China’s system is so different from those of its competitors that there isn’t space for a common rules-based system” in the model of the World Trade Organization, whose influence has waned considerably. Meanwhile, “another challenge is that to work well, the rules rely on trust,” they write. The unspoken addendum: It is hard to trust pirates or toddlers.

Indeed, the sunny and lighthearted tone of the writing only barely masks the authors’ rather pessimistic view of the current situation. Even when they engage in a few flights of fantasy in the book’s final chapter—which imagines how the global trading system might look in 2050—the options veer between a Chinese-dominated reality and one where the U.S. has integrated “economic and security statecraft.” It’s hardly a vision for freer markets, either way.

Still, the alternative might be worse. “If we manage to avoid World War III, we all deserve a pat on the back,” Keynes and Bown conclude. The “winner” of the trade war might simply be “the team that loses less than a rival, or simply the one most adept at minimizing its own wounds.”

The book captures the anxiety that seems to be the defining mood of the moment. Old assumptions about globalization are no longer secure, but there’s no clarity about what might replace that order. Keynes and Bown want their readers to understand that there is nothing to be gained by wishing for the past to return, and that we should cheerfully (if not eagerly) try to find the best path forward.

How To Win a Trade War is not really about winning at all. It is, per Sun Tzu, about understanding the cost of the fight.

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Indiana Police Misplace More Than $30,000 Seized in Massage Parlor Raids


Civil-Asset-Forfeiture-6-1 | Illustration: Adani Samat/Midjourney

More than $30,000 in cash seized from two Indiana massage parlors is missing.

Police seized the money in November 2023 as part of a joint state and local raid on two northern Indiana massage parlors—Jade Massage in Winfield and Relax Spa in Crown Point—and associated businesses and houses. Authorities began investigating the spas after allegedly receiving anonymous tips that prostitution took place there.

Four penis massages for an undercover detective later, authorities raided the businesses and seized more than $97,000 in cash, along with a car. Spa owners Guan Yu and Wujiao Liu, a married couple, were arrested. Their case is ongoing—and their cash is missing.

State police are now investigating what happened. Maybe there’s an innocent explanation for the missing cash; this could well come down to carelessness, not corruption. Regardless, this case represents yet another instance of police profiting off sex work criminalization.

The Search for the Missing Cash

Robert Byrd, who was sworn in as Winfield’s town marshal in April 2025, “assumed that the money had been placed in a secure account established through the Winfield Clerk-treasurer’s Office or a local bank,” reports the Post-Tribune.

It wasn’t.

Eventually, Byrd tracked some of the seized cash down to a rented storage locker, where bills and coins were stashed in plastic bins.

But Byrd could locate only $63,473.86 of the $97,014.37 that was taken. $33,540.51 was missing.

Lake County prosecutor Bernard A. Carter has now asked Indiana state police “to thoroughly investigate this matter and to make every effort to recover the missing funds.” The state police agreed.

The fact that it took some sleuthing for Byrd to discover where the money was stored is itself incredible. Evidence is supposed to be well-tracked and well-documented. And cash seized during an investigation could eventually need to be returned (remember, no one has yet been convicted in this case).

And if this turns out to be more than just sloppy police work? That wouldn’t exactly be surprising, given the perverse incentives and ample opportunities for corruption that massage parlor prostitution cases present.

The Massage Parlor Raid Racket  

Anonymous tips about sexual services being offered along with massages can be used to justify months of undercover visits from law enforcement agents seeking massages. (Later, they will say the masseuses could be trafficking victims—which, if true, would make their months of visits without intervention especially cruel.) And any offer of sex acts with massages can be used to justify raids.

Asian massage parlors tend to be cash-heavy businesses, so there’s often plenty of cash around to seize—and, unlike when you seize money from bank accounts, no definitive record trail. The workers and owners at these businesses are often immigrants, for whom language barriers and other considerations could make it harder to fight back. And if police throw a “human trafficking” allegation in there, no mater how unsubstantiated, everyone just shrugs at whatever happens to those arrested and pats police on the back for a job well done.

Missing money aside, the Winfield case is a fine indictment of how so many massage parlor raid cases operate.

The Search for Penis Masseuses

Months before the spa raid, Detective Benjamin Moyars, co-chair of the Indiana Protection for Abused and Trafficked Humans Law Enforcement Task Force, went to Jade Massage and got his butt and penis massaged using police funds, according to a probable cause affidavit. (“He did not ejaculate,” it says.) That was on March 3, 2023.

In April, he went back and got a penis massage from two women this time. One of them “appeared to not speak English,” the affidavit says.

In June, Moyars went back twice—once to Jade Massage and once to Relax Massage. Same thing.

Over the course of the four months, Moyars spent $385—and who knows how much in police time and expenses—on proving that three women would massage his genitals along with the rest of his body.

After that, authorities spent several more months surveilling the businesses. Nothing in the probable cause affidavit indicates that they observed signs of forced prostitution, a.k.a. sex trafficking, during this surveillance.

Nonetheless, police raided the businesses and Liu and Yu were charged with not just promoting prostitution but also promotion of human sexual trafficking, in addition to being charged for failing to remit sales tax. Liu was also charged with battery against a public safety official after allegedly spitting at an officer during the course of her arrest.

According to the probable cause affidavit, a sign glimpsed in Relax Massage during the raid stated: “Therapist should stick to the work principle. Don’t practice the therapy as porn or you will have the consequence.”

But—in a fine example of how police often twist language in order to turn ordinary prostitution cases into sex trafficking cases—the affidavit states that “Detective Moyars advised in his experience with human trafficking and prostitution investigations, owners pay the female employees so little that they are effectively forced to perform sexual services in the hopes of cash tips to support themselves.” Voila: Even if the owners did not condone the sex acts, let alone make anyone perform them, they are deemed guilty of “forcing” people into prostitution.

Interviews with four “victims”—two of them the same women who allegedly massaged Moyar’s penis—suggest that these women came to work at Jade and Relax spas voluntarily, were not confined there by the owners, were not subject to violence or threats, and were paid for their work.


In the News

Abortion advertising ban is unconstitutional, says Mayday Health. A New York–based nonprofit that provides information about accessing abortion pills is suing South Dakota over its ban on abortion-related advertising. Mayday Health “and a Democratic former South Dakota lawmaker, Nancy Turbak Berry, filed the lawsuit Friday in federal court against South Dakota’s Republican governor and attorney general,” South Dakota Searchlight reports:

The new law says no person may knowingly dispense, distribute, sell or advertise an article or thing designed, adapted or intended to produce an abortion. The ban also covers any article, instrument, substance, drug, medicine or thing that is “advertised or described in a manner calculated to lead another to use or apply it for producing an abortion.”

Violations are felonies punishable by up to two years in prison and a $4,000 fine. The law also gives the state attorney general authority to recover civil penalties of $10,000 per violation.

The lawsuit alleges it’s unconstitutional to prohibit advertising that’s protected by the free speech guarantees in the First Amendment.

Mayday was involved in a previous legal tussle with South Dakota (which this newsletter covered in January), after South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley went after Mayday over ads that it had taken out at gas stations.

The ads said: “Pregnant? Don’t want to be? Learn more at Mayday.Health.”

Jackley said this constituted deceptive advertising because the ads didn’t point out that abortion is illegal in South Dakota.

Mayday counter-sued Jackley, seeking to prevent him “from punishing Plaintiff Mayday Health for publishing truthful information about reproductive healthcare.”

South Dakota and Mayday ultimately settled those cases. The agreement involved Mayday yanking the gas station ads.


On Substack

Eminent domain for data centers? Bonnie Kristian reports on Georgia officials using eminent domain power to seize 20 to 30 homes so a private company called Georgia Power can build new power lines. A woman named Ansley Brown has been speaking out about this on TikTok, blaming artificial intelligence. The power lines are not set to serve only data centers, but “a local news story confirms that at least one data center is involved here, and it’s plausible that the data center(s) is the straw that broke the camel’s back, even if there’s a lot more straw,” Kristian writes.

“Now, there’s a sense in which the artificial intelligence piece of this story is a distraction,” she continues:

My point is not that it’s bad for Brown’s mom to lose her house because AI is bad and therefore there should be no data centers.

I’m very skeptical of many proposed uses for AI, but as I’ve argued here before, its utility costs are wholly relative to the value of its output. If AI is doing a lot of good, then probably we do want to use a lot of electricity for it, which may well mean building new data centers and power lines. And as skeptical as I am, I think the good it does is not zero, so I’m not categorically against this kind of construction.

The issue is that Georgia Power is a private company that appears to be using eminent domain to take people’s homes against their will to meet other private companies’ expansion plans.

As Kristian points out, it’s not entirely clear whether the new power lines would be needed even if a new data center wasn’t being constructed. But regardless of what sort of construction is primarily driving the Georgia Power situation, eminent domain issues may become a bigger issue as construction of data centers expands. It seems important for people who are not hyperbolic AI-doomers to be speaking out against this.


Read This Thread

Hard to express just how utterly divorced the political rhetoric around porn is from the reality. I've worked in the industry for more than 20 years. I see porn all day long. I have never once seen necrophilia or bestiality on an adult site.But that's what's being used to push antiporn laws.

Mike Stabile (@mikestabile.bsky.social) 2026-05-28T16:10:49.858Z


More Sex & Tech

• The Department of Homeland Security is ramping up spending on iris scanners.

• “Texas for now can require proof of age to download a smart phone app, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday, unpausing a trial court injunction that halted the law on First Amendment grounds,” Bloomberg Law reports.

• Lizzie Borden, director of the 1986 drama Working Girls, talks about the ways sex work has changed over the past 40 years and the ways it hasn’t. “There’s a lot of argument about whether prostitution be legalised or be the Scandinavian model,” said Borden. “Decriminalisation would be best because that’s the only way nobody gets punished, so sex workers still have customers.”

• “A federal judge had an extramarital affair with a high-ranking police officer—including having sex in the judge’s chambers that was overheard by staff—and initially lied about the actions but remains on the bench after receiving a ‘private reprimand,'” the Associated Press reports.

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