Monday, September 15, 2025

Projects 25/26 : Mapped: How 6 Billionaire Family Fortunes Fund Project 2025

"When the rich rob the poor, the rich call it 'business'. When the poor fight back, the rich call it 'violence'.” ~ Mark Twain

Mapped: How 6 Billionaire Family Fortunes Fund Project 2025

DeSmog –

 “As scrutiny of Project 2025continues to grow, defenders of the Heritage Foundation-led initiative, which would reshape federal governance and give the next Republican president unprecedented new powers, say it’s the criticism — not the 922-page plan itself — that’s too extreme. In a piece published last month, Fox News cited prominent conservatives who feel there’s “nothing radical” about the endeavor. 


ABC Program: What is Project 2025

The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board has accused detractors of “panic-mongering” and tried to reframe Project 2025’s sprawling “Mandate for Leadership” blueprint as more boring than scary — a milquetoast white paper that simply “melds the work of some 400 scholars and analysts from an eclectic mix of center-right groups.” This echoes Heritage’s insistence that Project 2025, while conservative, is anything but fringe.

  • But the findings from DeSmog’s recent investigation into Project 2025’s funding sources tell a very different story. Our wide-ranging analysis of public financial disclosure forms found that the groups on Project 2025’s advisory board — whose experts largely helped to draft the plan — are heavily funded by just six family fortunes. Since 2020, foundations linked to these billionaire families have contributed over $122 million to Project 2025 groups, including at least 290 individual donations to 49 nonprofits that contributed to the Mandate for Leadership documents or are on the initiative’s advisory board. We’ve mapped the funding ties between the billionaire families and the Project 2025 individuals and organizations in an interactive graphic, below.
  • Groups that received funds from the six family fortunes are far from the political mainstream, according to DeSmog’s analysis, including entities that actively deny the science of anthropogenic climate change — as well as organizations that have been classified as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center. DeSmog’s review also uncovered additional ties between the six families and the Trump/Vance ticket, though both candidates have tried to distance themselves from the initiative in recent months. Indeed, Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein — the billionaire founders of the Uline packaging company, whose charitable donations tie them closely to Project 2025 — are among the former president’s biggest donors.
  • Project 2025 styles itself as populist, moderate, and far from the politics of Washington. Heritage Foundation President Kevin D. Roberts hails it as a plan for the perennially downtrodden, hard-laboring folks “who shower after work instead of before.” Its funding sources — elite, extreme, and closely tied to the Trump campaign — suggest exactly the opposite…

…The six family dynasties providing significant support to Project 2025 — Bradley, Coors, Koch, Scaife, Seid, and Uihlein — all have long histories of fighting for financial and environmental deregulation. Three of the six families have promoted climate denial consistently enough to appear in DeSmog’s Climate Disinformation Database, which tracks the people and organizations doing the most to undermine decarbonization efforts. They include oil and gas magnate Charles G. Koch and his Koch Family Foundations; the Scaife Family Foundations, which tap vast wealth from the Mellon aluminum, oil, and banking fortune; and chemicals-and-electronics industrialist Barre Seid, whose recent, record-setting $1.6 billion gift to a nonprofit controlled by Federalist Society co-chair Leonard A. Leo has been a major source of Project 2025 money.

Related: See DeSmog’s coverage of Trump Megadonor Tim Dunn’s Plan That’s More Extreme Than Project 2025




Project 2026: Trump’s Plan to Rig the Next Election

Mother Jones – “From nationalizing voter suppression to flooding the streets with federal agents, the president and his allies are using all the tricks in the authoritarian playbook to tilt the midterms in their favor. The scale of Trump’s interference in the midterms has become crystal clear in recent weeks. 

The president pressured Texas to pass a mid-decade redistricting plan last month that would add five more Republican seats in the US House. Shortly thereafter, he vowed to “get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS” and “Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES,” through an executive order. 

“If we do these TWO things,” he wrote on Truth Social, “we will pick up 100 more seats.” The stakes for the midterms are incredibly high. It’s the last chance for Democrats to hold Trump accountable at the national level before he leaves office (unless he attempts to follow through on his musings to seek an unconstitutional third term). 

At the same time, nearly 100 state-level races for offices like governor, secretary of state, and attorney general are on the ballot, which will determine who’s in charge of supervising elections in 2028. But unlike 2018, when Trump was still a political novice, or 2022, when Democrats controlled the presidency and Congress, the 2026 midterms will take place under a radicalized Trump administration that appears hellbent on crushing its opposition.


 “Our elections have faced an elevated level of risk for some time and now there’s one additional factor that’s going to exacerbate all the other risks, which is a weaponized federal government that might be deployed in ways that can disrupt or interfere in free and fair elections,” says Wendy Weiser of the Brennan Center for Justice. “That’s a dramatic new factor this year.” Here are 10 ways Trump and his allies are tilting the midterms in their favor before anyone has cast a vote…

  • Nationalizing Voter Suppression
  • Silencing His Enemies
  • Dismantling Efforts to Prevent Election Interference
  • Targeting Democratic Officials
  • Weaponizing the Justice Department
  • The North Carolina Model for Overturning Elections
  • State-Level Voter Suppression and Election Subversion
  • Trump-Dominated Courts Gutting Voting Rights
  • Re-Gerrymandering the States
  • Blocking Election Certification…”

Epstein Files Are Out. The Coverup is Worse Than You Think.

See also Greg Olear – The Real Epstein List – A survey of the rich & powerful individuals who elevated Jeffrey Epstein, hired him, funded him, enabled him, befriended him, and/or partook of his services. Includes name and bios and information about each person’s relationship with Epstein.

Dean Blundell – “The House Oversight just published Epstein estate records—including the 2003 “birthday book.” Trump/MAGA cried “fake,” “forgery,” and “hoax.” The receipts say otherwise. I spent the last 9 hours scouring documents handed over to the House Oversight Committee via the Lawyers for Jeffrey Epstein’s Estate. Not a news story from MSM. Not social media posts. Hard evidence that has been sealed by the DOJ and kept hidden by the Epstein Estate until now. For transparency, we’re including the following links so you can do your own research:

I’ll summarize the worst of the worst here for anyone who doesn’t have the stomach for it:

  • The “Birthday Book.” Compiled for Epstein’s 50th, it’s a who-knew-whom snapshot from the era when proximity, favors, and introductions were currency. Whatever one thinks of the now-public page bearing Trump’s name, it’s now in Congress’s custody. That alone blows up years of “it doesn’t exist” denials.
  • The 2007 Non-Prosecution Agreement. The sweetheart deal that let Epstein skate remains the hinge of the whole scandal. Set it against the money flows and contact logs from the same period and you get cause, effect, and possible cover.
  • Address/Contact Books (1990–2019).Think of them as a network map across decades. Frequency. Seasons. Patterns. Introductions. Which dinners preceded which payments. That’s not a “client list.” It’s better.
  • Bank Information. Even high-level account data can surface Suspicious Activity Reports, correspondent banks, and compliance escalations. Follow the money, and you often find the truth.

Put simply: you don’t need a single silver-bullet “list” when you have time series, cross-references, and money trails. Prosecutors and congressional investigators build cases from exactly this kind of mosaic…”

Radical Neighbouring

153 tons – that’s how big the garbage pile at Tesla became after the blockade Dagensarbette via machine translation.

“How Tesla-employees turned into garbage men.”


The great Ray Hudson is retiring from broadcasting. “His commentary was a gift from the gods, a shooting star from the furthest reaches of the brightest galaxy, that was only meant to rest on planet earth for a short period of time…”


 Defector is celebrating its fifth anniversary. “This is a website run by people who want to speak — plainly, honestly, passionately — to an audience that we acknowledge as people rather than metrics.” 


Radical Neighbouring. “The food from this place has been offered as a gift to the neighbours and strangers who find their way here. Welcome to the farm where nothing is for sale.”

Lesson From The Tax Court: Grab That Apple!

 Revealed: the huge growth of Myanmar scam centres that may hold 100,000 trafficked people Guardian


ATO investigation as taxpayers rage over 'inconsistent' tactics to collect $50 billion debt: 'Financial stress'


Former health minister Greg Hunt an adviser to Exclusive Brethren-linked firm


Former minister Greg Hunt works for Brethren company whose owners made millions on COVID contracts


The Treasury Department is rolling back efforts to shut down aggressive strategies used by America’s biggest multinational companies and wealthiest people.


Trump administration loosens corporate taxes after pulling out of global deal


Court Order Temporarily Restricts IRS From Sharing Confidential Taxpayer Information with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)




The Hidden Tax Game


Lesson From The Tax Court: Grab That Apple!


How Changing Narratives Around Corporate Tax Policy Have Undermined Child And Family Well-Being


Eyal Reviews Corporate Tax Shaming By Hanlon, Hoopes & Shackelford


Camp: Taxation Of Gambling After The OBBBA


Endean: Tariffs As Taxes — A Framework For Understanding Delegation Of The Taxing Power

While perhaps not obvious to the casual observer, tariffs are taxes, and, as such, they fall within the Constitution’s Article I enumerated powers, raising important questions regarding delegations of that power to the executive. This Article seeks to answer provide a framework for one such question: Did Congress delegate the taxing power?


Sunday, September 14, 2025

Why do we collect things? Cazadora


Why I blog: Hundreds of pages could be filled or just a sentence might capture some of the depth behind blogging. Blogging is interactive and in many ways inclusive. Anyone anywhere can shed a light on this strange cosmos of ours.

The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity. 

- Dorothy Parker

 Why - we Royal Malski - blog


This week the MEdia Dragon recorded 5 Million views … Blogs provide a space to share thoughts, experiences, and passions without the constraints of other platforms.


Why do we collect things? Cazadora






The Other Mark Zuckerberg Has Had Enough: Bankruptcy Lawyer Sues Meta Over Identity Mix-Upstechnobez


 Sweeteners can harm cognitive health equivalent to 1.6 years of ageing, study finds The Guardian


Great Lakes have entered era of extreme temps, study finds Bridge Michigan


Why Blue Eyes Aren’t Really Blue (And What Makes Green So Rare)  ScienceAlert


Do Indian authors need to be social media influencers to sell books? Vogue India


A monster seaweed bloom is taking over the Atlantic Science Daily



Sophisticated nations support literary culture

 Do Indian authors need to be social media influencers to sell books? Vogue India


49 Literary Movies and TV Shows to Watch This Fall. That seems like a lot! Includes Frankenstein, The Twits (Roald Dahl), various Seuss stories, The Running Man, Train Dreams, Hamnet, etc.

Sophisticated nations support literary culture 



September 8, 2025 

Karl Quinn writing on the end of literary journal Meanjinhighlights the poor state of our literary culture and the low regard increasingly given to it by successive state and federal governments (“Hardly anyone reads Meanjin any more. So why does its end even matter? 7/9). Many sophisticated countries actively support and encourage their literary culture. In France the VAT on books is 5.5 per cent (compared with 20 per cent on other goods) and in the UK it is zero. France has numerous measures to support bookshops, with the result that Paris has about 800 bookshops serving a population of 10.5 million. Melbourne by contrast has about 100 bookshops for its population of 5.5 million.
The best way to support authors is by buying their books, which gives them royalties, but as our booksellers shrink and the opportunities to discover our writers also shrink, the task is left to the few surviving bookshops. According to Nielsen Bookscan, Meanjin’s Winter Edition has sold 169 copies and Readings sold 61 of those. If you add on a few hundred copies sold to subscribers, it’s apparent that nobody appreciates Meanjin enough to support it. The federal government’s new initiative Writers Australia has a hazy brief and a meagre budget. I fear it will only give grants to writers to write books that won’t sell because there won’t be enough bookshops that care.
Mark Rubbo, chairman, Readings

Friday, September 12, 2025

The Good Soldier Švejk manuscript

     The Good Soldier Švejk manuscript


       At Radio Prague International Ruth Fraňková and Kateřina Svobodová report that Lost manuscripts of The Good Soldier Švejk found after 90 years in Prague archive.




From latex puppets of Bob Hawke and Robert Holmes à Court to wooden tribal masks and fetish figures from West Africa, a Melbourne auction on Monday will disperse two collections of remarkably diverse cultural artefacts. 

The sale is Gibson’s live and online auction, Interiors | Art & Origins, presenting almost 450 lots drawn from the Bryan Collie Collection and the Hugh Jenkinson Collection. Bryan Collie is a former art gallery owner from Melbourne. Hugh Jenkinson is a Melbourne engineer whose work, mainly with BP Australia, took him to remote tribal locations around the world.


New Study: How Often Do AI Assistants Hallucinate Links? (16 Million URLs Studied)

ahrefsblog: “AI assistants like ChatGPT and Claude can hallucinate URLs and direct visitors to non-existent pages on your website. But how often does it happen? To find out, we looked at the http status of 16 million unique URLs cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, Copilot, Gemini, Claude, and Mistral. 

We found that AI assistants send visitors to 404 pages 2.87x more often than Google Search. ChatGPT is the greatest offender, with 1.01% of clicked URLs and 2.38% of all cited URLs returning a 404 status (compared to baseline 404 rates of 0.15% and 0.84% respectively). Here’s what we found:


Are Businesses Scaling Back Hiring Due to AI?

Liberty Street Economics, Federal Reserve Bank of New York: “The swift advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) has sparked significant concern that this new technology will replace jobs and stifle hiring

Ikigai: Okinawan island & Ikaria Island

Japan sets record of nearly 100,000 people aged over 100 - via Little Bay 


A man with terminal cancer was told he only had a few months to live. He returned to his homeland of Ikaria, Greece — a Blue Zone — and lived for 3 more decades


The Island Where People Forget to Die


Remembering Stamatis Moraitis: The Man Who (Almost) Forgot to Die

Prior to his death, he had become an international media darling. The New York Times featured him in a story called “The Island Where People Forget to Die.

Moraitis also featured in other interviews including one with BBC reporter Andrew Bomford.

Renowned celebrity chef and Diane Kochilas’ wrote a cookbook which dives into the Ikarian “food-as-life” philosophy and includes dozens of recipes, photographs and stories from locals. 



.Ikigai (Japanese, 生き甲斐) originates from the words iki meaning “life” and kai meaning “reason; worth; use”. “Ikigai can be something small or something big. Ikigai is a spectrum. The complexity of ikigai actually reflects the complexity of life itself.” 


The internationally best-selling book Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life highlights one of the key principles called “hara hachi bu” that almost every Japanese person follows. This principle means eating until you're 80% full.



 Ikigai (pronounced "eye-ka-guy") is a Japanese concept that means having a reason to live or "a reason to jump out of bed in the morning". It represents the convergence of what you love, what you are good at, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for, leading to a life of purpose, joy, and balance. Finding your ikigai is a personal journey to discover your own unique reason for being, often linked to long-term happiness and well-being.  



The term ikigai gained significant attention in the West due to books and research about the long-lived senior citizens of Okinawa.
 
  • A Little Bay Is Becoming The Blue Zone: 
    Okinawa is a Japanese "Blue Zone," a region with a high concentration of people living to old age, which is attributed to a combination of factors including a plant-based diet, regular activity, and strong community bonds. 
  • Purposeful Living: 
    The concept of ikigai in Okinawan culture is seen as a life purpose that can foster contentment and a positive mindset, contributing to a balanced lifestyle and a sense of fulfillment, according to The Government of Japan and Phlebotomy Training Specialists.