I wonder how many moderate voters actually know what Donald Trump's agenda is if he wins the presidency again. Here's a list of Trump proposals, some official and others just musings on the campaign trail. The question is, which ones should we take seriously?
Month: June 2024
Lock ’em up
There are an awful lot of people that Donald Trump and his MAGA allies want to send to prison:
- Joe Biden
- Hunter Biden
- Dr. Fauci
- Hillary Clinton
- Alvin Bragg
- Fani Willis
- Peter Strzok and Lisa Page
- Bill Barr
- Mark Milley
- John Kelly
Am I missing anyone? Probably. Gonna be busy times at the Department of Justice if Trump wins.
There are more undecided voters now than six months ago
Here's something a little odd. According to YouGov, Trump and Biden have been essentially tied in trial heat polling since the beginning of the year. With only a couple of exceptions in 25 weeks of polling, they've been within 1% of each other the entire time. However, the number of undecided voters suddenly jumped at the end of April:
Unfortunately, two things happened at the same time in late April. First, testimony began in Trump's hush money trial. Second, YouGov changed its question wording slightly, from "who would you vote for?" to "who do you plan to vote for?"
There's no way to tell for sure which of these caused the spike, but the upshot is that about 8-10% of the electorate is now up for grabs. My take is that this is probably good for Biden, because Trump (uniquely for a challenger) is the better known candidate. If you haven't decided to vote for him by now, you probably just aren't going to vote for him.
But who knows? This election is likely to break a bunch of old rules of thumb.
Friday Cat Blogging – 21 June 2024
Yes, AI will likely be selectively banned in the future
Tyler Cowen points today to an essay by Dean Ball about regulation of AI. Basically, Ball is afraid of endless upward ratcheting. A seemingly limited law—like California's, which proposes to regulate AI models that could produce WMDs and similar catastrophes—is likely to grow over time:
Let’s say that many parents start choosing to homeschool their children using AI, or send their kids to private schools that use AI to reduce the cost of education. Already, in some states, public school enrollment is declining, and some schools are even being closed. Some employees of the public school system will inevitably be let go. In most states, California included, public teachers’ unions are among the most powerful political actors, so we can reasonably assume that even the threat of this would be considered a five-alarm fire by many within the state’s political class.
....So perhaps you have an incentive, guided by legislators, the teachers’ unions, and other political actors, to take a look at this issue. They have many questions: are the models being used to educate children biased in some way? Do they comply with state curricular standards? What if a child asks the model how to make a bomb, or how to find adult content online?
Ball looks at this from a public choice framework: what are the regulators incentivized to do? Regulate! So they'll always be looking around for new stuff to tackle.
That's fine, but I don't think you need to bother with this framework. I know that most people still don't believe this, but AI is going to put lots of people out of work. Lots and lots. And when that happens, one of the responses is certain to be government bans on AIs performing certain tasks. After all, governments already do this, protecting favored industries with tariffs or licensing requirements or whatnot. How hard would it be to mandate the continued use of human doctors and human lawyers even if someday they aren't necessary? Those folks have more than enough political clout to get it done.
On the other hand, taxi drivers, say, don't have a lot of political clout. So driverless cars might well take over their jobs with no one willing to do anything about it. Sorry about that.
Any way you look at it, though, there's someday going to be lots of pressure to preserve jobs by regulating robots and AI. Maybe in ten years, maybe in five years, maybe tomorrow. But it's going to happen.
Trump stock has been tanking ever since his guilty verdict
Last night I did a quick check on how Donald Trump's Truth Social stock was doing. It was down but not worth a post. But it turns out I was just a day too early. DJT plummeted 15% today and has now declined by half since Trump's guilty verdict in the hush money trial:
Volume has been huge for the last two days, but who knows what's going on. Lots of people selling and not so many buying, right?
In any case, it still has a ways to go before it gets to its true underlying value of about $3. When will that happen? Beats me. As Keynes sort of said, people can stay stupid longer than you can imagine.
POSTSCRIPT: Considering how much Trump blathers about everything under the sun, it's a little odd that he almost never mentions his stock. Is it because he's afraid of the SEC? Because he figures that drawing attention to it will produce nothing but more bad reviews? Or that he doesn't want the suckers to catch on to the ruse and thinks it's better not to risk saying something that might alert them?
Anyway, it just goes to show that Trump can keep his mouth shut if he has sufficient motivation.
What’s going on with Benjamin Netanyahu?
Israeli TV says that Benjamin Netanyahu was off the reservation when he publicly accused the US of withholding weapons:
Channels 13 and 12 said a clandestine meeting held before Netanyahu’s Tuesday video statement — which accused Washington of withholding arms shipments to Israel, calling it “inconceivable” — included National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer and other officials, all of whom unequivocally objected to Netanyahu’s intention.
Though Dermer was in favor of a public confrontation after previously discussing the idea with Netanyahu, he asked the premier to wait with the criticism until he and Hanegbi meet US officials at the White House on Thursday, the network said.
Both Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi were reportedly opposed to airing the dispute publicly, instead preferring to handle matters behind closed doors over concerns a public rift with the US could benefit the Hamas and Hezbollah terror groups.
This is a very strange report. Dermer merely wanted to wait until after a meeting at the White House. Gallant and Halevi didn't want to provide aid and comfort to Hamas and Hezbollah.
But there's something obvious missing here. Did anyone object to Netanyahu's accusation on the grounds that it wasn't true? Everything I've read suggests Joe Biden was genuinely mystified by Netanyahu's outburst. Aside from a single shipment of heavy bombs withheld a month ago, it doesn't appear that the US has stopped or slow-walked any armaments at all.
So wtf is going on? Were a few shipments late for some reason, and Netanyahu believed the reasons were just excuses? Have there been threats of delays? Or what?
It continues to be remarkable the way Netanyahu treats Biden, an old friend and supporter who may occasionally counsel prudence but has also consistently made it clear that the US will provide Israel with anything it needs to prosecute the war. We've supplied billions of dollars in armaments. We helped shoot down Iran's drone/missile attack. We've provided massive amounts of intelligence assistance. We've taken the lead in protecting Red Sea shipping from Houthi attacks.
Needless to say, this compares to approximately zero military support from any other country besides Germany, and we're doing it at the same time that we're drawing down our own stockpiles of weaponry to supply Ukraine. I get that Netanyahu supports Trump, but this kind of behavior seems close to insane. What more could anyone in Israel want from us?
We have a new record holder for the fastest company to launch 50 rockets
SpaceX launched its first 50 Falcon 9 rockets in a little under seven years. Today we have a new record holder for the quickest to 50:
Until today I had never heard of Rocket Labs, the company that makes the Electron rocket. And in fairness, there's a big difference between Electron and SpaceX's Falcon 9: Electron can lift about 300 kilograms into low-earth orbit while Falcon 9 can lift about 23 tonnes. They're playing in different leagues.
But apparently there's a good market for small-payload launches and Rocket Labs is making the most of it.
Illegal border crossings down slightly in May
The Border Patrol chose today to randomly release numbers for May, and it turns out that.......nothing has changed:
CBP recorded 171,000 crossings in May, down a bit from April. Of those, 118,000 were illegal crossings and 53,000 were asylum requests, mostly scheduled via the CBP One app.
DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas says that illegal crossings have been down by about a third since President Biden announced his crackdown on asylum a couple of weeks ago. That would be nice, but since crossings are sometimes seasonal I wouldn't put too much stock in this until we have a few months of numbers.