X Discovers Clickbait Has a Payroll
X wants to sound like a serious media ecosystem now, which is adorable for a platform that spent years paying people to act like the loudest tab in the room. The ordinary-user result is predictable: if the payout machine rewards rage bait and aggregation, the feed fills up with it until everybody starts calling the sludge “content.”
Peace President, Fine Print
He promised peace like it was a campaign jingle and not a contract, which is always the first clue the fine print is carrying…
Public Risk, Private Reward
Elon’s favorite origin story is the rugged lone innovator routine: one man, one vision, one heroic grin, and somehow no one else involved except…
When Confidence Gets a Cabinet Pass
Nothing says “adult government” like handing the health file to a guy whose qualifications were assembled from a podcast, a thread, and the kind…
What Did We Give Them? Trump’s Iran Deal Looks Like a Victory Lap Before the Receipt Prints
Brother and sister, a handshake is not a receipt. If Washington wants credit for a ceasefire framework, it ought to show the math before…
Elon Musk Didn’t Invent the Future — He Monetized It
Elon Musk’s real innovation is not invention. It’s the American favorite: take the public runway, the public research, the public risk, then slap your…
Trump’s Big Win Still Leaves the Stove On
Well, bless the victory lap, but a ceasefire framework ain’t the same thing as putting the whole house back on its foundation. You can…
Eric Trump and the Family Business Model
Eric Trump is what happens when a brand stops being packaging and starts acting like the business plan. In this family, “access” isn’t a…
The $1.776 Billion Questions
I have seen less suspicious things in a paper bag at a county fair. A $1.776 billion settlement fund is the kind of number…
When the Towers Go Global
Mike Rotch here, and I’ve got a simple question for the America-first perfume bottle: when the tower goes global, why does the money suddenly…
Trump’s Foreign-Deals Problem
Trump-branded overseas deals are a neat little civics lesson in how money, branding, and influence can share a lobby and still pretend they arrived…









