Wednesday, January 07, 2026

‘The Spy in the Archive’ Review: A Dossier on the KGB

 

After a stalled career in espionage, a Soviet spy was assigned to an archive. What he learned made him decide to smuggle its secrets out.



The Soviet Union was a land of shortages, but there was no shortage of acerbic sayings. One I heard while working as a journalist in Moscow in the early 1980s: “A pessimist is a well-informed optimist.” No one demonstrated the accuracy of that formulation better than Vasili Mitrokhin (1922-2004), the longtime KGB archivist who exposed more Kremlin secrets than any other onetime true believer.

Mitrokhin’s exploits and his defection to the United Kingdom in 1992 were kept largely under wraps until he and the British historian Christopher Andrew published the first installment of “The Mitrokhin Archive” in 1999. That volume, along with Mitrokhin’s subsequent books, drew upon the detailed notes about KGB operations he had carried to the West.

By contrast, Gordon Corera’s “The Spy in the Archive” focuses primarily on the life of the man who worked mostly in obscurity for nearly three decades before pulling off a coup that stunned his former masters and exposed numerous agents and operations in the West. More than most Cold War thrillers, this true story offers genuine suspense—and genuine insight into Mitrokhin’s complex motivations.

Mr. Corera is well-versed in the cloak-and-dagger world. He covered the intelligence and national-security beat for the BBC for 20 years, and his books about espionage in the modern era include “The Art of Betrayal” (2013) and “Russians Among Us” (2020). His experience with the material lends weight to a thoroughly engrossing tale.

Like many young Chekists—a term from the early Bolshevik era that lived on as a sobriquet for members of the Soviet secret services—Mitrokhin was eager to serve abroad, where spying offered what appeared to be a glamorous career path. But work in the field didn’t pan out: Posted to Israel in the early 1950s, Mitrokhin was part of a spy group that was tainted by accusations of sloppy tradecraft. Agents they were running were discovered. Besides, Mitrokhin possessed none of the attributes of his more polished colleagues. “He was quiet, insular and not exactly blessed with social skills,” Mr. Corera writes.

Afterward, Mitrokhin was sent abroad only on short-term assignments—and one of them ended disastrously. At the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, he was part of a team of KGB agents who were there to thwart defections. Since the games were taking place only weeks after Red Army tanks had crushed the Hungarian uprising, the tension at the water polo semifinal between Hungary and the Soviet Union was extreme. The athletes exchanged insults and then blows. A Soviet official urged his team to exercise restraint, but Mitrokhin was unapologetic when a Russian player smashed an opponent in the face in what became known as the “blood in the water” match. “You should have hit the Hungarian players harder,” he told the athletes.

This was too much for his superiors, who wanted to contain the fallout. “Not suitable for operational work” was written on his file. He was exiled to the archive in the bowels of the Lubyanka, Moscow’s infamous KGB headquarters. It was, Mr. Corera writes, a “dead-end job,” but it offered access to documents that revealed the organization’s dark secrets, such as its labyrinth of informers. Mitrokhin claimed the experience opened his eyes to the insidious nature of the entire system. “I could not believe such evil,” he later declared.


Dismissed by colleagues as a “clerical rat,” he assiduously studied the files whose handling was now his responsibility. They included documents that had been ordered for destruction by Stalin’s successors, who sought to erase the evidence of their complicity in his purges, as well as files that were transferred to a new KGB complex in another part of Moscow.

Mitrokhin could not risk taking the files, but he began writing notes in his own code, which he initially stuffed into his shoes and socks. More extensive versions were later typed up and buried in a milk churn near his dacha. To further avoid detection in a society where any purchase could give you away, he used concentrated fruit juice to extend the life of his typewriter ribbons.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in late 1991, Mitrokhin was determined that his efforts would not be wasted. Dressed like a poor Russian peasant, he approached the newly established U.S. embassies in the Baltics, only to be spurned by officials who feared he was a plant—or simply an opportunist. At the British embassy in Vilnius, Lithuania, he was taken seriously by MI6, which was astounded by the wealth of information the former archivist had to offer. With the encouragement of the British, he smuggled more out in subsequent trips.

Mitrokhin claimed his motivation was his profound disenchantment. But, as Mr. Corera suggests, he also wanted to prove his worth to his wife, Nina. She was an accomplished doctor who knew nothing of her husband’s double life until the eve of their departure. The couple had been seeking help for their adult son, who was confined to a wheelchair due to a mysterious illness. Their attempts at treatment in Russia, East Germany and even China had ended in failure. The West looked more promising.

Ironies abound in Mitrokhin’s story. His exile to the archives provided him with the arsenal of ammunition he used against the system he came to detest. As for the Americans, they belatedly realized their misjudgment about the “walk-in” they had dismissed. Since MI6 was short on cash, the CIA funded Mitrokhin’s resettlement in Britain in exchange for access to his notes and transcriptions.

Ultimately, the archivist’s revelations did nothing to prevent another Chekist, Vladimir Putin, from ascending to power. By the time of his death, Mitrokhin had no remaining illusions that his actions had changed his country’s course. He warned that “the same people, the same organizations, the same aims” were still in charge. Everything that has happened since has proven him right.

Mr. Nagorski is the author of “Saving Freud: The Rescuers Who Brought Him to Freedom.”


Why smaller houses can lead to happier lives

 A Washington Post article suggests that, beyond a certain threshold, larger homes don't make people happier. Instead, well-being is correlated with affordable housing in walkable neighborhoods where they feel socially connected.


Why smaller houses can lead to happier lives

It turns out asking “Are you happy with your home?” yields a very different answer than “Are you happy with your life?”


Column by Michael J. Coren

My friend Jaye and her husband raised their two children in a 560-square-foot apartment in New York City. Most of their domestic life unfolded in a sprawling living room framed by two minimalist bedrooms. Loneliness was rarely an option. “We just embraced it,” she said.
So did their friends. Many nights, the family’s different social circles coalesced in the tiny apartment’s living room despite living in more spacious homes nearby. Jaye, who still lives there, recalls those years as among the best of her life.
And she might have been onto something. The American Dream is virtually synonymous with a larger, suburban house. But as the size of the average American home has nearly doubled, the people living in them aren’t any happier.
Space is only one of many variables in the equation of a happy life, says Mariano Rojas, an economist at the National Technological Institute of Mexico. It’s not the most important.
American homes have gotten bigger as households got smaller

Average home size in square feetAverage household size
U.S. homes have grown by 43% since the 1970s while households shrank by 13%.


Decadal averages. Data for the 1970s covers the years 1973 to 1979.
Source: The U.S. Census Bureau MICHAEL. J. COREN / THE WASHINGTON POST


The average newly built American home includes more than 940 square feet per person, up from about 550 square feet in 1973. That’s because even as the typical single-family home has grown to 2,400 square feet, the number of people living in them has fallen to a record low of 2.5, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But after meeting our basic need for shelter, square footage has, at best, a tenuous relationship with life satisfaction.
“What matters is not really the size of the house but what happens inside that house with relationships,” Rojas said. “If you move to a larger house, and you sacrifice that, then you have a problem.”
We may have the American Dream backward. Sizing up may be getting you down I grew up in a Florida suburb where the implicit message was clear: Bigger is better. Learning that big homes might undermine your happiness was like learning apple pie is a French dessert.
But the data lines up. After a brief initial burst of satisfaction with new homes, people typically report their life satisfaction returning to near its prior state. In many cases, it even declines. It turns out the question “Are you happy with your home?” yields a very different answer than “Are you happy with your life?” Humans aren’t very good at prioritizing what makes them happy, economists say, especially when it comes to living arrangements. We systematically overlook the costs (mortgages, commuting, maintenance) while dramatically undervaluing intangible benefits that actually dictate our happiness (seeing our kids at night, hanging with friends, knowing our neighbors and walking places). It’s not that big houses make us unhappy. It’s what we give up in pursuit of them. That’s why so many people can end up house-rich but relationship-poor, vaguely unsatisfied in their bigger homes. Jaye, it turns out, intuited something profound.


Happiness is other people
Social scientists call it the “inverted U” hypothesis: The relationship between happiness and the number of people in our household is not a straight line. It’s a parabola.
On one side, living alone or with one other person can promote isolation or loneliness. On the other, excessive crowding (about 140 square feet per person, one study in Asia suggests) leads to stress, anxiety and depression. Happiness peaks somewhere in the middle, said Gerardo Leyva, an economist and researcher at Iberoamerican University in Mexico City


Happiness peaks in households of four people in Europe

But the relationship to house size is very limited. Average reported life satisfaction by household s01
Number of people in household Source: European Social Survey (2020) MICHAEL J. COREN / THE WASHINGTON POST 

Leyva analyzed data from tens of thousands of households in Mexico and Europe. He found that people living alone report the most satisfaction with their financial lives. But when it comes to overall happiness, the happiest households had about four to six people in them, regardless of home size.

This aligns with previous research: After crossing a minimum threshold of space for safety and comfort, every new bedroom or second floor yields less and less benefit. A brief spike in housing satisfaction from moving into “larger accommodations” produces no durable effects on overall life satisfaction. It may even erode it.

Leyva analyzed data from tens of thousands of households in Mexico and Europe. He found that people living alone report the most satisfaction with their financial lives. But when it comes to overall happiness, the happiest households had about four to six people in them, regardless of home size.

This aligns with previous research: After crossing a minimum threshold of space for safety and comfort, every new bedroom or second floor yields less and less benefit. A brief spike in housing satisfaction from moving into “larger accommodations” produces no durable effects on overall life satisfaction. It may even erode it. A bustling household, Leyva theorizes, strengthens the emotional bonds between family members, creating a loving, resilient shock absorber for life’s challenges. This even compensates for smaller homes. In Latin America, people are far happier than per capita gross domestic product alone would predict, most likely because of positive interactions among larger households (despite smaller homes). Of course, it matters whom you are living with, and whether it’s by choice or necessity.
But the American aspiration for ever larger homes — especially if it comes at the expense of relationships — may end up being a recipe for ennui.

How McMansions lured us into an unhappiness trap
A simple equation can sum up the post-World War II housing market: More room equals more freedom equals more happiness. But they may “tax” your happiness at higher rates than the satisfaction extra space returns.
Take features like home theaters, formal dining rooms and game rooms. These often turn into expensive dead zones — pricey square footage that is very rarely used. Rather than social hubs, they serve as glorified storage for our stuff. Clutter is clearly equated with unhappiness. Then there’s the tax of moving to distant, affordable suburbs or taking out big mortgages: More debt, longer commutes, more maintenance and less time for socializing and exercise, among other trade-offs. We can end up, Rojas said, overworked and under-relating. Finally, there’s the coup de grâce of contentment: keeping up with the Joneses. “Comparison is the thief of joy,” a wise person once said, anticipating one of the strongest findings in modern social science. Humans tend to care less about what they have and more about what they have relative to others.

A neighborhood with large houses being constructed. (Gerville/iStock)
While many people might say they want a bigger house (in absolute terms), people will still opt for a smaller home — as long as it’s bigger than their neighbors’. Our individual life satisfaction, one study found, is negatively correlated to our neighbors’ income.
That’s what behavioral economist Clément Bellet calls the “McMansion effect.” In his 2024 peer-reviewed study in the Journal of Public Economics, the assistant professor at Erasmus University Rotterdam in the Netherlands found that just the presence of bulky domiciles down the street virtually erased any satisfaction people gained from moving into their own bigger homes. “Larger homes do not increase well-being per se,” Bellet wrote me. “What matters most is how close [the size of one’s house] is to the largest houses in the neighborhood.”
No one can win this game. Consider watching a sports game in a stadium. If one person stands up, the person behind them can’t see. So they stand up. Then another. Soon, no one is left sitting because everyone is trying to see over the person in front of them. No one is better off, and the experience of watching the game is ruined. That’s life in many American communities today, Rojas says. “You will never have enough,” he said. “When you live in a castle, you will say, well, it’s not Windsor Castle.”
How do we fix this?

I don’t live in Windsor Castle (although I’m considering renaming my 978-square-foot condo on the windblown edge of San Francisco). Nor am I here to convince you a tiny home is the secret to happiness. Truthfully, my own flat feels a bit cramped at times with two rambunctious toddlers and a mad husky zooming around. Are there mornings I covet a second bathroom? You bet. Would it make me any happier? I’m not so sure anymore.
What is clear is that many of us are asking the wrong questions. Rather than, “How big a house can I afford?” (a depressing question for many), Rojas says we should ask, “What kind of home will sustain the kind of life I want?”
Everyone’s answer will be different. You can’t even measure it with a ruler. But the optimal number of square feet in your life may be smaller than you think — potentially much smaller. Here is how social scientists say you should really calculate the value of your next dream home.
Prioritize your neighborhood Neighborhoods drive our happiness (or unhappiness) more than we think.
When Lina Martinez, director of POLIS, the Center for Wellbeing Studies at Universidad Icesi in Colombia, studied the happiness of households in the city of Cali, she couldn’t find much difference between poorer and richer areas. “Their happiness is pretty much the same,” she said. But that changed when she isolated neighborhood conditions, such as access to transit, health care and parks. “The conditions of the neighborhood affect happiness,” she said. “I can’t link that to the space where [people] live.”
That aligns with findings from a 2023 study of the Vancouver metro area: Researchers found no significant differences in well-being between people living in single detached homes, duplexes, townhouses, laneway houses and apartment buildings (basement units smaller than 300 square feet were the only negative exception). What did people say they missed most in their neighborhood? Affordability, proximity to family and friends, and a sense of community. Home design was eighth on the list.
Prioritize quality space over quantity How you use the space is more important than how much you have. If you have many unused rooms but ignore shared common spaces to eat and socialize, you’re sitting on an untapped gold mine of contentment. A 2012 study by UCLA researchers found up to 60 percent of homes sit largely unused. Position-tracking data reveals that families — even in large homes — cluster in a few small high-traffic rooms, usually the dining, kitchen and family rooms. That means a 1,200-square-foot home with a central hub may outperform (from a happiness perspective) a 3,000-square-foot home with a fragmented layout. The key is fostering social connection, the currency of happiness.

Optimize for relationships
I call this the “Jaye Test.” Does your home (and neighborhood) act as a center of gravity for your friends and family or does it isolate you in favor of status and storage?
This difference helps explain why Europeans report higher well-being than their American counterparts, despite having smaller homes and smaller households. Daily life in Europe relies less on the home itself, Bellet said, because walkable neighborhoods, accessible public spaces and dense social networks take pressure off the home as the primary living space.
“The American ideal home often emphasizes comfort, privacy and status,” Bellet said. “Europeans tend to place more weight on whether their home is connected to existing social and public infrastructure.”
When Jaye was considering a larger home, she toured other neighborhoods. Buying a few hundred extra square feet, she found, couldn’t compensate for what she’d lose: friends next door, a neighborhood she adored and less financial stress. She ended up back where she started. “When I remember all those things,” she said, “it was great.”

A company is trying to unlock a key to aging, in a long-overlooked body part

 FASTER, PLEASE:  A company is trying to unlock a key to aging, in a long-overlooked body part


Anti-Aging Injection Regrows Knee Cartilage and Prevents Arthritis SciTech Daily


How to clear your iPhone cache And 10 iPhone Privacy Hacks Everyone Should Know

ZDNET: “I’m guessing your iPhone has dozens of apps running and maybe a couple of browsers, each with way too many tabs open at all times. I know mine does. The thing is, all that activity causes cached data to build up over time. 

Every time you use apps or browsers on your phone, they locally store bits of information such as images, scripts, and logins to make your iPhone perform faster. Websites load quicker, and apps feel snappier. 

At least that’s how it’s supposed to work in theory. But like a junk drawer that starts out as a handy place to keep odds and ends — like a screwdriver, sticky notes, or a spare battery — so you can grab them and get things done fast, cached data eventually overflows and makes it impossible to work quickly. Clearing your cache is like cleaning out that drawer. Suddenly everything works the way it should. Your phone feels lighter and runs smoother. So let’s walk through every way to clear the cache on an iPhone running iOS 26, and why you should make it a habit…”

See also Life Hacker 10 iPhone Privacy Hacks Everyone Should Know “…Everyone should be using Safety Check on iPhone. This feature immediately lets you identify who you’re sharing what with, including passwords, fitness activity, your current location, calendars, notes, and other data. To check on it, head to Settings > Privacy & Security > Safety Check > Manage Sharing & Access. You can go through the prompts to review app permissions, and set up an emergency contact, which ensures that your data (and you) are safe. While you can manually access all these options in the Settings app, the Safety Check prompt lets you find all features without combing through multiple pages, which will save you a lot of time…”



The text file that runs the internet

The Verge: “For three decades, a tiny text file has kept the internet from chaos. This text file has no particular legal or technical authority, and it’s not even particularly complicated. It represents a handshake deal between some of the earliest pioneers of the internet to respect each other’s wishes and build the internet in a way that benefitted everybody. It’s a mini constitution for the internet, written in code. 

It’s called robots.txt and is usually located at yourwebsite.com/robots.txt. That file allows anyone who runs a website — big or small, cooking blog or multinational corporation — to tell the web who’s allowed in and who isn’t. Which search engines can index your site? What archival projects can grab a version of your page and save it? Can competitors keep tabs on your pages for their own files? You get to decide and declare that to the web. It’s not a perfect system, but it works. Used to, anyway. For decades, the main focus of robots.txt was on search engines; you’d let them scrape your site and in exchange they’d promise to send people back to you. Now AI has changed the equation: companies around the web are using your site and its data to build massive sets of training data, in order to build models and products that may not acknowledge your existence at all. 

The robots.txt file governs a give and take; AI feels to many like all take and no give. But there’s now so much money in AI, and the technological state of the art is changing so fast that many site owners can’t keep up. And the fundamental agreement behind robots.txt, and the web as a whole — which for so long amounted to “everybody just be cool” — may not be able to keep up either…”



  1. In defense of “mere civility” as a governing strategy for campus conflict — because, says Marie Newhouse, “No set of shared values specific enough to be action-guiding will be endorsed by all students, faculty, and staff, no matter how carefully those values are selected”
  2. Would an AI have moral status if it were conscious? Only if it was also sentient. — so agnosticism about AI consciousness shouldn’t get in the way of developing AI, argues Tom McClelland; just make sure it’s not sentient
  3. “‘I think, therefore I am’ isn’t the best translation of Descartes’s famous pronouncement ‘cogito, ergo sum’” — Galen Strawson on misunderstanding Descartes
  4. “A night at the Museum of Philosophy” — a World Philosophy Day event at Université Laval might be a preview of a more permanent institution in Quebec
  5. We still don’t know why ice is slippery, people — there are some theories, but no consensus
  6. “Elite distortion dramatically affects what those in political power are likely to know, what they care about, what problems they will be attentive to…” — with the random selection of legislators, says Alex Guerrero, those in power “would be a genuine microcosm of the broader community”
  7. “Chuck Norris knows how many grains of sand make a heap” — philosophy-themed Chuck Norris jokes from Avram Hiller

Mini-Heap posts usually appear when several new items accumulate in the Heap of Links, a collection of items from around the web that may be of interest to philosophers. The Heap of Links consists partly of suggestions from readers; if you find something online that you think would be of interest to the philosophical community, please send it in for consideration for the Heap. Thank you.
Previous edition.

Delta force

“I am very poorly today & very stupid & I hate everybody & everything. One lives only to make blunders.”

[Charles Darwin: From a letter to biologist Charles Lyell, dated October 1st, 1861.]


Patrizia Cavalli
“When, thanks to the virtues of wine …”

When, thanks to the virtues of wine,
I let go of solid memory and a certain pleasure
seems almost real to me
having secretly picked up a scent
in the john of a friend who uses that scent
and I’m about to park,
and I say to myself: “Go on, move, drive around the city,
you won’t find anything, but maybe
you’ll see a light on. You’re in love, aren’t you?
So act like someone in love! Don’t people in love
drive up and down streets like crazy?”
But then, because I found easy parking,
I stop, and while I’m stopped, comfortably stopped,
I imagine you, in the helpless delay of my love, as mine.
 
—Translated from the Italian by Mark Strand with Gini Alhadeff



Trump’s Trojan Horse in Europe

The confusion over what happened in Venezuela on Saturday and what happens next will not go away. Comments from Maroc Rubio yesterday only made the situation more opaque. The New York Times, scratching its head on the issue, noted:

It's not an occupation. Pentagon officials said yesterday that there were no U.S. military personnel in the country. (Though U.S. troops will remain in the Caribbean Sea to exert “leverage” on the new leadership, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said.)

 

Trump’s Battle With Big Law Firms Heads Into 2026: What to Know

Bloomberg Law: “There was perhaps no bigger story last year in the world of Big Law than President Donald Trump’s attacks on several of the nation’s largest law firms through punitive executive orders due to political affiliations and adversarial hires. Perkins Coie, Jenner & Block, Susman Godfrey, WilmerHale, and Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison were hit with executive orders that sought to cut security clearances for the firms’ lawyers and directed federal agencies to review contracts with the firms’ clients.

 The first four firms sued the administration over the EOs, while the last—Paul Weiss—struck a deal with the White House to rescind the EO by promising millions of dollars’ worth of free legal services. That deal became the framework for eight subsequent arrangements with other top law firms to avoid retribution from the administration. 

Four judges ruled in separate cases that the administration’s actions targeting the law firms were unconstitutional. The administration appealed the decisions last summer. The cases are now in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which directed the four litigating firms to file motions addressing the duplicative nature of the cases with a move toward consolidating them.

  • Given the government shutdown and other extensions granted by the court, the firms now have until Jan. 26 to file their motions. The DOJ has also introduced new lawyers to argue its side, including the former Kansas attorney general and current Deputy Associate Attorney General Abhishek Kambli. Here’s a snapshot of where the four litigating firms and the nine dealmaking firms are at as the new year begins…”


U.S. Delta Force Captures Venezuelan President Maduro During Major Assault on Caracas: Defence Minister Vows Continued Fight Military Watch Magazine


Man who failed to remove backyard cheese facility told to pay $120,000


 HE’S CERTAINLY EARNED HIS RETIREMENT: A 5 million percent return in 60 years leaves Warren Buffett’s legacy unmatched. “From 1964 — the year before Buffett took control of Berkshire — to 2024, the one-of-a-kind conglomerate delivered a compounded annual gain of 19.9%, nearly double the S&P 500′s 10.4%, resulting in an overall return of more than 5.5 million percent, according to the company’s latest annual report. The shares added another 10% to that return in 2025.”


The Department of Justice May Not Survive Pam Bondi

The New Republic: “At her confirmation hearing in January, Attorney General Pam Bondi tried to reassure senators about the job she would do as the nation’s top federal law-enforcement officer. Her “overriding objective,” Bondi said, would be to “return the Department of Justice to its core mission of keeping Americans safe and vigorously enforcing the law.” 

Her stated priorities were standard fare: stopping violent criminals, gangs, child predators, drug traffickers, and “terrorists and other foreign threats.” Bondi also pledged to return the Justice Department to defend the “foundational rights of all Americans” and to “make America safe again.” 

“Lastly, and most importantly, if confirmed, I will work to restore confidence and integrity to the Department of Justice—and each of its components,” Bondi said. “Under my watch, the partisan weaponization of the Department of Justice will end. America must have one tier of justice for all.” 

By any reasonable standard, including her own, Bondi’s tenure has been a cataclysmic failure. Her first year as attorney general has seen the Justice Department hollowed out by waves of firings and resignations

Her political appointees have misled federal judges, botched high-profile criminal cases, and embarrassed the Trump administration on multiple occasions. Whatever reputation the department once had for competence and integrity is now in tatters…

Under Bondi’s watch, Justice Department officials have sought to coerce the nation’s top universities into submitting to legally binding “compacts.” These mafia-like offers run afoul of First Amendment protections by threatening trumped-up civil-rights investigations or the withholding of federal funds unless universities bow to Trump’s demands. This campaign mirrored other administration efforts to unconstitutionally bully law firms and media conglomerates into ideological compliance…”

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Never Forget The Facts About Jan 6 – Trump DOJ Scrubbed American History

"Though, what haunts me most is not the memory of rioters screaming for blood, but the audacity of some recalling those insurrectionists as heroes."

Harry Dunn and MeidasTouch Network

History Bends Toward Distortion When Accountability is Denied

NPR videos


January 6, five years on: sustained effort by Trump to rewrite history

On 5th anniversary of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, Trump looks to recast history

Trump said that the media hadn’t accurately reported statements he made to a crowd that would later orchestrate the break-in on Jan. 6, 2021.


NPR investigation shows how the government tried to erase information about January 6


Never Forget The Facts About Jan 6 – Trump DOJ Scrubbed American History

NPR – Jan 6 database scrubbed. The Capitol Charges ‘This is not a peaceful protest!’ – A visual archive of Jan. 6, 2021, through the lenses of those who were there. In the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, American political leaders almost universally condemned the riot as an act of domestic terrorism that threatened democracy. Now, President Trump calls Jan. 6 a “day of love” and the rioters “great patriots.” And since he issued mass pardons to the rioters, his administration has been trying to rewrite history. NPR has tracked every Jan. 6 prosecution in a public database, and, drawing on thousands of hours of footage and years of reporting, created a front-line account of the riot. The evidence vividly shows the planning for “revolution” and the brutality of violence on a day that continues to shape American politics. Warning: These videos contain profanity and violence. Explore the databaseand coverage, or scroll to read the full narrative.  [h/t Barclay Walsh]

  • See also January 6 data The Program on Extremism at George Washington University meticulously tracked every federal January 6 defendant by leveraging publicly available federal court records and open-source reporting. Researchers systematically compiled and verified case details, ensuring accuracy and comprehensiveness in their dataset. By cross-referencing legal documents, indictments, and media reports, the program provided a reliable resource for understanding the scope of prosecutions and trends among those charged in connection with the Capitol attack. For inquiries pertaining to more detailed datasets…”
  • See also Just Security – January 6 Clearinghouse: “Welcome to this all-source, repository of information for analysts, researchers, investigators, journalists, educators, and the public at large. Launched on June 29, and updated as of Dec. 3, 2021.”
  • See also Andy Revkin – January 6, 2021, will always be a day that lives in infamy. This snippet from video released by the House committee that examined the insurrection shows how Trump’s social media signals inspired some of the worst that day (full video).
  • See also Zeteo – “Five years ago today, on Jan. 6, 2021, President Donald J. Trump incited a crowd of violent insurrectionists who went on to storm the US Capitol, resulting in the deaths of at least seven people, in an effort to help him steal the election he had lost. It was a day that many hoped would mark the end of Trump’s political career, as Republicans loudly condemned the president’s actions and social media sites quickly suspended his accounts. Trump was even federally indicted for his actions leading up to and on Jan. 6, as a part of special counsel Jack Smith’s election subversion case. Yet, here we are half a decade later, and it appears that Trump has successfully taken advantage of Americans’ collective political amnesia. Not only has he found his way back into the White House, but he has used his renewed powers to rewrite Jan. 6 as a “day of love,” pardoning over 1,500 Jan. 6 rioters and suspendingprosecutors for referring to those people as a “mob of rioters.”

Computer scientist Yann LeCun: ‘Intelligence really is about learning’

Computer scientist Yann LeCun: ‘Intelligence really is about learning’

The AI pioneer on stepping down from Meta, the limits of large language models — and the launch of his new start-up


A Political Atlas of the World

1st Experiments with WebMapperGPT. Steven Feldman reports on his experiments with mapping LLMs. The result is available here

Pic Detective – Reverse Image Search – Upload any photo to find its original source, discover who else is using it, or locate higher resolution versions. 

Free, fast, and no account needed. Pic Detective is powered by advanced visual recognition technology that goes beyond simple pixel matching. When you upload an image, our system analyzes it using sophisticated lens-based recognition—the same type of technology that powers modern visual search across the web. 

This approach means we can understand what’s actually in your image, not just compare it byte-by-byte against a database. The result? We find matches that simpler tools miss entirely. Here’s what our technology catches:

  • Cropped versions – Someone crops your photo to dodge detection? We’ll likely still find it
  • Color-adjusted copies – Filters, saturation tweaks, color grading—our algorithms see through them
  • Watermarked or edited versions – Text overlays and minor edits get detected
  • Different resolutions – Thumbnails to high-res, we index across the spectrum
  • Flipped or rotated images – Mirror images and rotations match correctly

Eduardo Mendieta (1963-2025)

Eduardo Mendieta, professor of philosophy at Penn State University, has died.


  1. “Some objects and properties that make up a body are too specific or small—too deep—to properly count as parts of the body in a morally significant sense” — Christopher Register on the ontological “depth” of bodies, and why it is important
  2. “Why shouldn’t we think of men as characterized by the gentleness they seek, and women by the brutality they demand, rather than vice versa?” — Oliver Traldi goes meta-monster
  3. A collection of posts about the philosophy job market — at The Philosophers’ Cocoon
  4. What can psychoanalysis do “as political theory rather than praxis”? — says Amia Srinivasan, “it can help us better understand how the world… what wishes we might have for collective life, and which of these… reality… demands we set aside” (video) (text version here)
  5. What happened in physics, math, computer science, and biology this year? — check out Quanta’s annual roundups of recent scientific developments
  6. “I doubt even the beginning of real mutual learning can occur in an atmosphere of mistrust” — says Eric Schliesser, though the example of Socrates gives him some reason to doubt that, too
  7. “In each issue, we will share a curated overview of key research papers, organizational updates, funding calls, public debates, media coverage, and events related to digital minds” — a new newsletter from philosopher Bradford Saad and others; send them relevant material, and subscribe