Sunday, May 17, 2026

Jeder Bürger spürt es: Diesem Kanzler wird nichts mehr gelingen

Schlagzeile des Tages aus der Bananenrepublik D!

So ist das manchmal mit lebenslangen Berufspolitikern! Wer nichts wird, wird Politiker! Vielleicht täte eine grundgesetzliche Amtszeitbegrenzung für Politiker nicht schaden.

Werden vielleicht Keir Starmer und Friedrich Merz gemeinsam zurücktreten? Zu wünschen wäre das!

Wann wird der stetige Niedergang der EU aufgehalten! Wie lange sind  Kasper wie Ursula von der Leiden/Leyen oder Christine Lagarde immer noch im Amt!

"Jeder Bürger sieht und spürt es: Bundeskanzler Friedrich Merz ist ans Ende aller politischen Kraft gelangt. Seine Zustimmungswerte (Ablehnungswerte wäre das treffendere Wort) sind geradezu apokalyptisch.
Gewaltige Mehrheiten im Land halten Merz‘ Arbeit nicht nur für katastrophal schlecht, sie verlieren durch seine unberechenbare, irrlichternde und rundum unzuverlässige Amtsführung genau jene Zuversicht, die Merz nach eigener Aussage eigentlich ausstrahlen will. ...  kommentiert NIUS-Chef Julian Reichelt."

"... Merz gelingt es kaum, mal unfallfrei auf einer Bühne vor Teenagern zu sitzen, ohne massiven Schaden anzurichten. Entweder beleidigt er Millionen Brasilianer, Amerikaner oder, vor wenigen Tagen beim Katholischen Kirchentag, Millionen Deutsche im Ehrenamt, denen er abspricht, so gesellschaftlich wichtig zu sein wie die Parteien, die das Land an den wirtschaftlichen Abgrund geführt haben. Man muss diese Szene gesehen haben, wie verächtlich Merz seine Worte über ehrenamtliche Sporttrainer oder Umweltschützer geradezu ausspuckt, „nur mit punktuellem Engagement, so ehrenwert das alles ist, Musik, Sport, alles gut“, um das ganze Ausmaß seines debakelhaften Scheiterns zu erahnen. Kein Mensch in irgendeinem Amt käme auf die Idee, derart herablassend mit den Bürgern zu sprechen. Kein Mensch, außer Friedrich Merz. ..."

Jeder Bürger spürt es: Diesem Kanzler wird nichts mehr gelingen "Außerdem: Zwei Drittel aller gewalttätigen Angriffe auf Politiker treffen AfD-Repräsentanten"

Molecular quantum nanosensors can precisely measure the temperature inside of individual living cells

Amazing stuff! This could be breakthrough!

"A ‘thermometer’ made of quantum nanosensors can detect the temperature in individual cells. With it, researchers have found that temperature varies by as much as 1 ºC in different parts of a cancer cell.
The sensors could also detect signs of oxidative stress and the production of free radicals, reactive molecules that can damage DNA.
The crystal fragments that made up the tool didn’t seem to damage cancer cells when injected or absorbed, but the researchers want to make them even smaller so they can “spy on cellular activities” ... “It’s a fantastic milestone,” s... “It will be so useful for disease detection.”"

"... The MoQN is a technique utilizing a special kind of quantum crystal which is injected into a tissue to be monitored. The crystal reads the surrounding temperature, and this signal is read by an optical magnetic process called optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR). Conceptually, it has some things in common with the way MRI machines work ... 

The MoQN is nontoxic and can read temperatures within living cells. Also, by applying a quantum property known as molecular spin, MoQNs are fabricated with incredible precision, yielding great homogeneity leading to very high accuracy. ..."

From the abstract:
"Quantitatively mapping temperature within living cells is essential for understanding subcellular biophysical processes; however, existing intracellular quantum sensors such as nanodiamonds with nitrogen-vacancy centers, quantum dots, and fluorescent proteins face limitations in material heterogeneity, cytotoxicity, and thermometric specificity.
Here, we present molecular quantum nanosensors (MoQNs) as a next-generation platform for intracellular quantum sensing. MoQNs embed pentacene molecular spin qubits within para-terphenyl nanocrystals coated with Pluronic F-127, yielding a coherent spin system with molecular-level uniformity and long spin coherence times under physiological conditions.
By chemically suppressing hyperfine interactions, we enhance spectral resolution and demonstrate spatially resolved absolute temperature sensing inside the cytoplasm and nuclei of cancer cells.
MoQNs thus offer a chemically tunable, biologically compatible platform for quantum-level detection of thermal and biochemical states of intracellular environments."

Nature Briefing: Cancer

Quantum ‘thermometer’ takes temperatures inside living cancer cells "Nanosensors showed that different parts of the cell varied by as much as 1 ºC." (no public access)

Tiny molecular quantum thermometer can measure the insides of cells (original news release) "A new way to record temperatures at microscopic scales with incredibly high precision"



Intracellular quantum sensing. A diagram showing how MoQN can report the temperature from within cells. In this example, a cancer cell containing MoQN can be measured by an external ODMR when a small microwave signal is applied to activate the MoQN.


Fig. 1. Schematics of in-cell ODMR using MoQNs and CW-ODMR and pulsed-ODMR characterization.


Fig. 4. Absolute temperature measurement inside the nuclei of cancer cells.


China: Are the Chinese people abandoning the Chinese characters?

It will probably take several decades if not longer! Slowly, but surely?

When Chinese people type messages on their smartphone using e.g. the WeChat app they use a QWERTY keyboard to find Chinese characters. Just an observation!

If true, then this would be one of the greatest achievements in human history. Let's get rid of the Tower of Babel!

P.S. I just blogged here about one of the major mistakes of Israel since 1948. They missed the opportunity to give up the traditional Hebrew written language right from the start.

The FCC has loosened rules that constrained the number of low-Earth-orbit internet satellites

Good news! However, how many are too many satellites in orbit? This discussion has been going on for several decades.

Will other countries follow? I bet Russia, India, and China will not hesitate.

"The FCC has loosened rules that constrained low-Earth-orbit internet satellites by limiting the strength of the signals they could send to customers on the ground. Under the new rules, satellite networks such as Starlink could use up to eight satellites to serve a given area and frequency band simultaneously, up from one under the old limits, allowing the networks to serve more users at once and potentially improve internet speeds."

"“The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted on Thursday [4/30/26] to modernize its satellite spectrum-sharing rules, which could increase capacity for space-based broadband services by up to sevenfold…

The recent announcement comes as a revamp of the Equivalent Power Flux Density (EPFD) framework, developed in the late 1990s. ..."

Doomslayer: Progress Roundup - by Malcolm Cochran

India to build a comprehensive catalogue of genetic variations and diversity of the entire population, so far uncovering 44 million new genetic variants from less then 10,000 healthy individuals

Good news! What a gigantic undertaking to the benefit of humanity!

Note the Nature journal could not resist to use the ideological term "Eurocentric"!

"GenomeIndia is a pioneering scientific project funded by the Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India. The project marks a landmark collaboration of 20 academic and research institutions to drive a genomics-based health revolution for India.

The primary objective of GenomeIndia is to build a comprehensive catalogue of genetic variations that reflect the unique diversity of the Indian population. ..."

"“A genetic atlas emerging from India’s most extensive genomic sequencing exercise has revealed vast diversity in the population, with nearly 130 million genetic variants, almost a third of which have not been reported previously.

The GenomeIndia project analysed the whole genomes of 9,768 healthy people from 83 populations, uncovering 44 million variants absent from global scientific databases, including gnomAD, 1000 Genomes Project and GenomeAsia. ..."

"... The atlas captures many rare variants from the DNA of specific communities, reflecting a long history of migration, isolation, and marriage within a group (endogamy) ..."

"... Some tribal groups show genetic homozygosity more than five times higher than Ashkenazi Jewish and Finnish populations, considered global benchmarks of genetic isolation. This elevates the risk of recessive genetic diseases — conditions requiring two defective copies of the same gene — which become far more likely when both parents trace back to the same small ancestral pool.
27 of 29 tribal populations carried at least one disease-causing variant at clinically meaningful frequencies.
In one tribal group from southern India, a harmful change in the HGD gene linked to alkaptonuria — a rare metabolic disease that can cause serious damage to joints and organs — was found in 12.5% of people. It was absent from widely used reference datasets, and standard genetic tests built on existing databases likely miss it. ...

The dataset flags other such loss-of-function (LoF) variants linked to metabolic disorders — genetic alterations that inactivate or reduce a gene's functional capacity — such as in LPA and CD36, both central to lipid metabolism and cardiovascular risk. In all, it reports 15,849 high-confidence LoF variants across more than 7,000 genes, some of which heighten disease risk, while others may be neutral or even protective. ...

Among the known variants, the BCHE rs104893684 — linked to anaesthesia-related complications — stands out as far more widespread than previously thought. Detected in 29 of the 83 populations studied, it appears at frequencies above 1% in three of those groups, a level not previously recognised. Earlier evidence tied this variant to just one Indian population, prompting targeted screening advice. ..."

From the abstract:
"India, the most populous country, remains significantly underrepresented in the global genomics landscape. Previous efforts to catalog Indian genetic diversity were limited in scale, scope, and representation.
Here, we present the GenomeIndia dataset, comprising whole genome sequences of 9,768 healthy individuals from 83 populations spanning the ethnolinguistic and biogeographic spectrum of India.
We identify 129.93 million high-confidence biallelic variants, 44.03 million of which are previously unreported in global databases.
In contrast to large populations that show steady population growth and internal homogeneity, we observe low effective population sizes, significant genetic drift, and profound homozygosity in small tribal groups, likely shaped by antiquity, isolation, and endogamy.
We report multiple population-specific pharmacogenomic and deleterious variants, necessitating the integration of local genetic architecture and the inclusion of underrepresented South Asian genomes in global reference resources. Finally, we highlight the limited transferability of Eurocentric polygenic scores to Indian populations, and present an imputation panel that outperforms existing resources for both rare and common variants.
Together, our work fills a significant gap in the equity of global human genomics, and paves way for precision medicine strategies that will benefit a quarter of the world population."

India’s DNA Map Uncovers Millions of Genetic Variants - Human Progress

GenomeIndia (project website)

India’s DNA map uncovers millions of missing genetic variants "A vast study reveals deep diversity, hidden disease risks and exposes the limits of Eurocentric medicine."







America Is Experiencing a Productivity Miracle in the 2020s, estimate of long-run GDP growth rate raised

Good news! The economic effects of AI are probably not yet included.

"America’s productivity growth is recovering after years of post-financial-crisis stagnation. The Economist reports that US productivity has grown by about 2 percent a year over the past five years, up from 1 percent in the 2010s.
Reflecting that welcome news, the Federal Reserve recently raised its median estimate of America’s long-run GDP growth rate from 1.8 percent to 2 percent."

America Is Experiencing a Productivity Miracle - Human Progress

America is experiencing a productivity miracle (behind paywall) "AI hasn’t—yet—got much to do with it"


Surprising Capitalist Makeover Is Under Way in Sweden

Recommendable! To quote Ronald Reagan: "Government is not the solution to our problem government is the problem"

"Sweden, long treated as a model of democratic socialism, has spent the past three decades moving toward freer markets. Following a period of economic stagnation and a financial crisis in the early 1990s, the country cut taxes, restrained public spending, opened parts of education and healthcare to private providers, and generally liberalized the economy. ..."

"“For decades, Sweden was shorthand for the brand of high-tax, high-spend government that managed people’s lives from cradle to grave through state-run hospitals, schools and care homes.

No longer. With little fanfare, this Nordic country of 11 million has embraced capitalism. 

Today, nearly half of primary healthcare clinics are privately owned, many by private-equity firms. One in three public high schools is privately run, up from 20% in 2011. School operators are listed on the stock exchange.

Sweden’s experience has lessons—good and bad—for other rich countries ...

The capitalist makeover has allowed Sweden to do what few industrialized countries have managed in recent years: shrink the size of the state. That has enabled the government to sharply lower taxes and, economists say, sparked a surge in entrepreneurship and economic growth.

Its total public social spending bill—which includes healthcare, education and all welfare payments—has fallen to 24% of gross domestic product, similar to the U.S. and well below the over 30% for nations like France and Italy.

Sweden’s economy is expected to grow by around 2% a year through 2030, roughly the same pace as the U.S. and double the growth rates of France and Germany, according to an April forecast by the International Monetary Fund.”"


Surprising Capitalist Makeover Is Under Way in Sweden - Human Progress

The World’s Most Surprising Capitalist Makeover Is Under Way in Sweden "The shake-up of cradle-to-grave care is lowering government spending, spurring innovation and stirring fears about those left behind"

Iran or its proxies launched three drones targeting a Nuclear Power Plant in Abu Dhabi

Bad news! Attacking nuclear power plants is another very bad idea by the theocratic dictatorship of Iran!

"Likely Iranian or Iranian-backed forces launched three drones targeting the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), on May 17. Radiation levels at the plant remain normal. The drones approached the target from the west. Iran has previously used drones to approach a target from an unexpected direction to obscure its responsibility and create challenges for air defenses. IRGC-affiliated media used the attack to attempt to drive a wedge between the UAE and other Gulf States by blaming Saudi Arabia for the attack. ...

The Emirati Defense Ministry announced that its air defenses intercepted two drones while the other struck an electrical generator at the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in Abu Dhabi, causing a fire. ..."

Iran Update Evening Special Report, May 17, 2026 | Critical Threats

Deutsches Lasersystem schützt Ukraine vor russischen Drohnen

Gute Nachrichten! Eine neue deutsche Waffenschmiede?

Deutsches Lasersystem schützt Ukraine vor russischen Drohnen (behind paywall) "Drohnen sind oft so schnell, dass Soldaten kaum Zeit zur Abwehr bleibt. Ein Lasersystem des Start-ups Inleap Photonics aus Hannover soll bis zu 300 Angreifer pro Minute vom Himmel holen."






English for trippers: Having a cramp in a cram camp

Mentally or physically or both? Ramp it up or down!

The world is awash in American whiskey

Bad news! For whom?

"The world is awash in bourbon. That’s a problem for Big Booze.
Consumption of American whiskey—including bourbon, Tennessee whiskey, rye and single malts—has slowed. Distillers who added capacity during the pandemic are suffering a hangover as more Americans pinch pennies and join the ranks of the sober-curious. Kentucky, the birthplace of bourbon, is sitting on enough of the stuff to last as long as 10 years, according to industry estimates."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Too little and too much sleep associated with faster aging

Amazing stuff! The optimal sleep duration is reported between 6.4 and 7.8 hours. But what about sleep quality?

"An analysis of biological clocks throughout the human body suggests that too few hours of sleep—and too many—may speed aging in the brain, heart, lung, and immune system and is associated with a wide range of diseases. ..."

From the abstract:
"Optimal sleep has a vital role in promoting healthy ageing and enhancing longevity. Here we propose Sleep Chart to assess the relationship between self-reported sleep duration and 23 biological ageing clocks derived from in vivo imaging, plasma proteomics and metabolomics.
First, a systemic, U-shaped pattern emerges between sleep duration and biological age gaps across nine brain and body systems and three omics technologies.
The sample-specific lowest biological age gaps are achieved between 6.4 and 7.8 h of sleep duration, varying by organ and sex in the UK Biobank (aged 37–84 years).
Furthermore, short (<6 h) and long (>8 h) sleep duration, compared with a normal sleep duration (6–8 h), are associated with increased risk of systemic diseases beyond the brain and all-cause mortality, with evidence from genetic correlations and time-to-incident survival predictions, such as depression and diabetes.
Finally, the pathways by which long and short sleep duration are associated with late-life depression differ: ageing clocks may partially mediate the pathway for long sleep duration, while short sleep duration shows a more direct link. Although Mendelian randomization does not provide strong evidence that disease causally affects sleep, it cannot completely exclude such reverse causality. Our findings suggest a cross-organ, multi-omics U-shaped relationship between sleep duration and biological ageing clocks, highlighting the potential of sleep optimization to promote healthy ageing, lower disease risk and extend longevity."

Too little sleep—and too much—associated with faster aging



For many organs, sleep duration betwen 6.4 and 7.8 hours was associated with less aging as measured by organ-specific biological clocks. The clocks in this image are created from protein data specific to each organ. Blue lines represent males; red lines represent females.


Fig. 2: Genetic evidence for a systemic landscape of abnormal sleep duration patterns compared to normal sleep duration.


Several new smart rings promise to break sign language barriers by turning hand movements into instant text

Good news!

"Researchers in South Korea have developed a new sign language translation system based on users wearing seven rings equipped with sensors. According to a new study  ... the technology can reliably recognize and translate both American and International sign language words with roughly 88% accuracy. ..."

From the abstract:
"Sign language translation systems have long aimed to bridge the communication between signers and nonsigners. However, preliminary systems rely on glove-type wearables or wired sensor arrays, which constrain hand movement, reduce comfort, and require nonpersonalized sensor positions that limit adaptability across users.
Here, we introduce a wirelessly connected, ring-type sign language translator (WRSLT) designed to overcome these limitations by enabling full finger mobility through independent sensor rings and multilink communication. The system supports static and dynamic gesture detection using selected fingers via quantitative relevance analysis and achieves robust user-independent performance without per-user calibration.
WRSLT demonstrated high recognition accuracy on large-scale datasets comprising 100 American Sign Language and 100 International Sign Language words, achieving 88.3 and 88.5% accuracy, respectively, under unseen-user conditions (i.e., test users not included in model training).
Furthermore, a custom sequential word detection framework enables sentence-level translation from continuous signing input without requiring separate training on entire sentence structures."

Seven smart rings promise to break sign language barriers by turning hand movements into instant text

Fig. 1. Overall concept and design of WRSLT.


Rape Dogs Claim Lands NYT in Defamation Lawsuit by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Good news! Bravo! Defeat junk journalism! This journalist is supposedly a "self-described progressive" and a member of the Dimocratic Party!

"Israel announced it will pursue a defamation lawsuit against The New York Times following the publication of an opinion piece by columnist Nicholas Kristof that alleged Israeli forces trained dogs to rape Palestinian women.

“Today I instructed my legal advisers to consider the harshest legal action against The New York Times and Nicholas Kristof,” Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wrote on X. “They defamed the soldiers of Israel and perpetuated a blood libel about rape, trying to create a false symmetry between the genocidal terrorists of Hamas and Israel’s valiant soldiers. Under my leadership, Israel will not be silent.” ..."

Rape Dogs Claim Lands NYT in Defamation Lawsuit - The Daily Signal


Nicholas Kristof (Source)


US Regulators are seeking information from prediction-market platforms over wagers tied to political events and military operations.

What do we bet on next? That the insider-trading laws will be amended soon!

I blogged here recently on the winners of these betting platforms.

"Suspicious wagers in Washington are on the rise, and authorities are playing catch-up.
Regulators are seeking information from prediction-market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket over wagers tied to political events and military operations. Such bets pose a challenge for authorities because insider-trading laws weren’t designed for people who wager on the outcome of legislation, political races and even U.S. military operations."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Disclaimer

Since end of February, I  am blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.

My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.

The US Senate voted unanimously to advance a resolution suspending senators’ pay during government shutdowns

Good news!

"The Senate voted unanimously to advance a resolution suspending senators’ pay during government shutdowns, in an effort to make shutdowns more expensive for lawmakers."

"... The Senate voted 99-0 on the motion to end debate on proceeding to the resolution, signaling that it will easily have enough support to pass the upper chamber. ..."

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Join The Flyover

New, potent peptides discovered in carpenter ant venom with antimicrobial and antifungal activity

Good news!

"At first, it was thought the sting of all hymenopterans—from bees to ants—came predominantly from formic acid, which was first identified in the venom of wood ants back in 1670. Since then, toxinologists have come to appreciate the diversity of toxins in this insect order, especially when it comes to peptides, including honeybees’ inflammatory melittin to bullet ants’ excruciating poneratoxin. But until now, the idea has persisted that ants in the subfamily Formicinae, which includes carpenter ants, rely almost solely on formic acid.

When researchers compared the genomes of eight carpenter ant species, they spotted almost three dozen venom peptides—a veritable “arsenal” thus far unique to this subfamily of ants. Broadening their genetic search still wider, the team found these peptides—dubbed formicitoxins— in at least 20 other formicine genera.

These small proteins do all sorts of helpful things. “Some of the peptides demonstrate remarkable antifungal properties ,” ... which may explain why the ants spray their venom on their young. “While concentrated formic acid has strong immediate antimicrobial effects, the formicitoxins may serve as a persistent antifungal protective cloak after formic acid has lost its potency due to evaporation, dilution, or neutralization,” the team explained in the paper. Some formicitoxins were potent antimicrobials, which is especially intriguing given that carpenter ants are known to consume their own venom to modulate their gut microbiome ..."

"In addition to serving as biochemical weapons for offense and defense, the venoms produced by ants in the subfamily Formicinae also fulfill additional roles. For example, the ants use it to protect their nests from pathogens. It has long been assumed that the primary constituent of these venoms, formic acid, was responsible for these functions. ... a team of researchers ... has now shown that these venoms also contain a complex mixture of peptidic compounds and other bioactive substances. The discovery of these substances opens up new possibilities in the field of medical research. It also has the potential to shed new light on immune defenses and how social insect communities deal with microbes.  ..."

From the abstract:
"Venom peptides are key to the evolutionary success of most venomous animals, including stinging ants. The stingless ant subfamily Formicinae is thought to rely solely on formic acid in their venoms, despite early, unsubstantiated hints of proteinaceous venom constituents.
Here, we show that carpenter ants, the largest formicine genus, produce a diverse venom peptide arsenal. Mass spectrometry and transcriptomics across eight geographically distant species uncovered 35 peptides, formicitoxins, belonging to two gene families.
Several formicitoxins display antifungal activity. Application to pupae delays fungal outgrowth, suggesting a role of the peptides in colony hygiene. Genome analyses revealed that formicitoxins are widespread but variable across the Formicinae. Our findings overturn the paradigm of formicine venoms as simple acid sprays and establish them as a source of bioactive peptides."

ScienceAdviser

Ant Venom Serves Many Functions (original news release) "Groundbreaking discovery of antimicrobial peptides in ant venom has far-reaching implications"


Fig. 1 Fig. 1. Analysis of C. nicobarensis venom.
(A) C. nicobarensis major worker during acidopore grooming.
(B) Total ion current chromatogram of C. nicobarensis venom. Major peaks corresponding to venom peptides are labeled as formicitoxins FRTX1-Cnic1a (LDIKEIINKIISDIKEKIAKAL), FRTX2-Cnic1a (DIVSFLLELPKIIEEFFLKLINLFKLIF), and FRTX2-Cnic2a (NILSNIIDSIIHLLFEDFSRIFL). Signals corresponding to N-acylethanolamines (NAEs) are labeled as linoleoyl ethanolamide (LEA), oleoyl ethanolamide (OEA), linoleamidoethyl formate (LEA-f), and oleamidoethyl formate (OEA-f).
(C) Dissected venom apparatus of a C. nicobarensis major worker as used for extraction of venom and RNA.
(D) MALDI mass spectrum of C. nicobarensis venom showing molecular ions of FRTX2-Cnic1a and FRTX2-Cnic2a along with potassium adducts (+39 Da) and formyl esters (+28 Da). Inset: Magnified mass/charge ratio (m/z) range 3350 to 3550.
(E) Structures of LEA, OEA, LEA-f, and OEA-f.


Hungary Confronts Russia Over Ukraine Strikes, Signaling Break From Orbán’s Kremlin Line

Good news! Bravo! Make the megalomaniac and warmonger Putin the Terrible a pariah!

"Hungary has summoned Russia’s ambassador over strikes on Ukraine, marking a sharp shift from its long-standing pro-Kremlin stance under Viktor Orbán. The move comes as new Prime Minister Peter Magyar seeks to realign Budapest with the EU while balancing continued reliance on Russian energy. The decision signals a potential foreign policy reset, though major economic and political constraints remain. ...

According to a Bloomberg report, Hungarian Foreign Minister Anita Orbán met Russian Ambassador Evgeny Stanislavov in Budapest on Thursday, following condemnation from Prime Minister Peter Magyar over what he described as one of the most intense waves of drone strikes targeting western Ukraine – a region home to an ethnic Hungarian minority. ...
"

Hungary Confronts Russia Over Ukraine Strikes, Signaling Break From Orbán’s Kremlin Line

Was stört Friedrich Merz, den großen Kommunikator, genau an den USA?

Ist der Mann überhaupt noch tragbar als Bundeskanzler?

"Merz raunt beim Katholikentag, er würde seinen Kindern abraten, momentan in die USA zu gehen. Wegen „gesellschaftlichem Klima“ und auch so, wegen überhaupt. In Würzburg wurde sein anbiederndes Geraune teilweise dankbar aufgenommen.  ...

Friedrich Merz, mit einem bunten Schal um den Hals, der ihn wohl als Fan des 1. FC Katholikentag ausweisen sollte, sagte auf dem Katholikentag in Würzburg, er versuche Menschen ihre Zukunftsängste, die weit verbreitet seien, zu nehmen. „Ich weiß“, fügte er dann sofort hinzu, „dass ich in meiner Kommunikation etwas verbessern muss, damit diese Botschaft besser verstanden wird“. Und diese Aussage, dass er seine Kommunikation verbessern müsse, bestätigte er sofort. ..."

Was stört Friedrich Merz, den großen Kommunikator, genau an den USA?


Friedrich Merz


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Trump and Xi agree: Iran can never have a nuclear weapon and no control over the Strait of Hormuz

Good news! Bravo!

I don't think, the Chinese government/communist party likes suicidal, religious fanatics and a state sponsor of terrorism like Iran!

China has to make choices to become a responsible global power! Supporting a regime like in Iran can not be part of it. 

"President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping found rare common ground Thursday on Iran, with Beijing signaling support for two core U.S. demands: reopening the Strait of Hormuz and ensuring Tehran never obtains a nuclear weapon.

The agreement came during Trump’s high-stakes visit to Beijing, where the two leaders met for more than two hours at the Great Hall of the People and discussed a broad range of issues, including trade, fentanyl, Taiwan, energy and the war that has effectively shut down one of the world’s most important oil corridors.

Trump said Xi offered to help push Iran toward a deal, even as China continues to buy large amounts of Iranian oil. ..."

MxM News: Trump and Xi agree: Iran can never have a nuclear weapon

Die AfD bereitet detailliert die Machtübernahme vor. Wirklich!

Solche reißerischen, propagandistischen Schlagzeilen in deutschen Medien sind völlig grotesk und unangebracht! Eine übelste Verunglimpfung! Als ob die AfD der Nachfolger der NSDAP sei!

Auch z.B. der Begriff Brandmauer im Zusammenhang mit der AfD ist eine totale Entgleisung der deutschen Politik!

Macht nur weiter so in der Bananenrepublik D! 

Die AfD bereitet detailliert die Machtübernahme vor "In Sachsen-Anhalt liegt die AfD in aktuellen Umfragen bei mehr als 40 Prozent. Nach Recherchen der F.A.S. plant die Partei, wie sie die Landesverwaltung unter ihre Kontrolle bekommt."

The third major Linux kernel flaw in two weeks has been found - thanks to AI

Good news! I also noticed more than usual software update notifications lately with Fedora Linux on my laptop.

AI may not only find security vulnerabilities or software flaws much faster, but also may provide usable information how to fix them without breaking the operation system or causing a bug.

"... According to Linus's law, "Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow," is fundamental to open source. ...

thanks to AI bug-finding tools, such as Claude Mythos and OpenAI Daybreak, behind most of those eyeballs are AI engines, and they're proving to be much faster at finding security problems than human ones. ..."

The third major Linux kernel flaw in two weeks has been found - thanks to AI | ZDNET "AI is exposing Linux security holes faster than developers can patch them. Fragnesia is the latest. Here's what we know about it."

What happens when AI starts building itself?

Good news! The next iteration of the ongoing AI revolution! 

I have been following Richard Socher's work for several years when he was still at Stanford University.

"Richard Socher has been a major figure in AI for some time, best known for founding the early chatbot startup You.com and, before that, his work on ImageNet. Now he’s joining the current generation of research-focused AI startups with Recursive Superintelligence, a San Francisco-based startup that came out of stealth on Wednesday with $650 million in funding. ..."

What happens when AI starts building itself? | TechCrunch

Recursive Superintelligence "Recursive self-improving superintelligence to automate knowledge discovery."


Richard Socher


Identical errors in more than 200 research papers raise red flags

Possibly bad news! The spelling of Russian names or terms can be tricky.

How widespread is this issue? How extensively are reputable journals affected?

"all the papers shared some odd typos, spelling mistakes, and phrases, such as “Kolmogorovor information complexity,” which misspells the last name of mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov. ...

found about 200 more papers that shared multiple features with the original 12 he analyzed. That’s statistically improbable, unless they all have the same source ... they’re all variants of the same paper, churned out and sold by a paper mill—an organization that produces fabricated papers and sells them to scientists eager to boost their publication record. Further investigation is required to determine whether the “accidental watermarks,” ... represent intentional misconduct, as the errors could also arise through legitimate use of the same translation software or editorial service. ..."

ScienceAdviser


Andrey Kolmogorov (1903-1987) (Source)


Scientists developed a soft wireless polygraph device for stress test, it is lightweight and can be attached to the chest like a patch

Good news!

"Traditional systems require a spaghetti pile of wires strapped across the body, which makes them awkward for routine use in hospitals and sleep studies. To untangle this problem, researchers built a lightweight, wearable polygraph patch that sticks to the chest and monitors the body’s signs of stress in real time.

The soft wireless device packs in sensors for heart activity, breathing, sweat response, skin temperature, and heat flow linked to blood circulation. Together, those signals help reflect the “multidimensional” nature of stress... the team “crammed as many sensors of physiological processes into this device platform as we could.” The system, which weighs less than 8 grams, runs for over a day while sending data to a smartphone or tablet; machine learning algorithms continuously look for stress signatures. ..."

ScienceAdviser

Wearable polygraph detects hidden stress (original news release) "The body can notice stress before the conscious brain — and that’s no lie"




Annoyances: Greetings from the AAAS

As of today, the American Association for the Advancement of Science has blocked my current IP address for some unknown reason!

What doe they mean by "Advancement"?

This will certainly affect my work as blogger since I frequently select and comment on their research publications.

I believe, this is the first time ever that AAAS has blocked me like that from accessing a research paper.



Territorial conflict with rival groups over food and mates may explain male primates’ large size, some male primates are up to twice the size of females

Amazing stuff!

"... Many species in the primate order — which includes monkeys, apes and lemurs — have sexual size dimorphism, meaning an average size difference between the sexes. While some primates like gibbons show barely any size disparity, others such as baboons and gorillas can have males that are twice as massive as the females. ...

“But primate groups are rarely isolated,” ... Neighboring groups commonly interact. They overlap in territory and compete for resources such as food and mates. ..."

"Sexual selection acting on males through intrasexual competition for mates is a well-established driver of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in primates. However, studies typically focus on within-group competition, overlooking the potential significance of competition arising from interactions between neighbouring social groups, particularly when home ranges overlap.
Here, we analysed the relationships between SSD, mating system and different proxies of range use across up to 143 species of anthropoid and strepsirrhine primates.
Contrary to expectations, mating system—a commonly used proxy for male competition—did not significantly predict SSD.
Instead, male-biased SSD increased with home range overlap and encounter rate between social groups, even after accounting for mating system and body size allometry.
This suggests that spatial pressures, such as the latent threat of competition from rival groups, impose stronger selection on male compared with female size.
Home range overlap may select for larger males to deter rivals, defend resources or monopolize females across shared territories, potentially without frequent physical contests.
Our work calls for renewed attention to how spatial competition, including resource defence and mate guarding across overlapping territories, influences trait evolution in primates and other social vertebrates and to re-evaluate proxies of sexual selection."

Territorial conflict may explain male primates’ large size



Fig. 1 In contrast, there was mixed evidence for evolutionary covariation between SSD and the proportion of encounters reported to be agonistic.


Astronomer, analyzing old satellite date with the help of AI may have just discovered over 10,000 more explanet candidates than previously known

Good news! We are not alone!

"Astronomers using AI found more than 10,000 possible new planets beyond our solar system in old NASA satellite data, a haul that could double the known exoplanet count if confirmed."

From the abstract:
"The T16 project has produced a uniformly detrended and systematics-corrected set of 83,717,159 TESS Cycle 1 full-frame image (FFI) light curves for stars observed by TESS in its primary mission down to T = 16 mag, enabling sensitive transit searches beyond the official TESS pipelines.
While most existing TESS planet searches focus on relatively bright targets, planet occurrence rates suggest that a substantial number of planets should exist around fainter stars. We therefore use the T16 light curves to conduct a semiautomated search for transiting exoplanets across the full Cycle 1 FFI sample, resulting in 11,554 planet candidates orbiting stars down to the 16th magnitude in the TESS band, with orbital periods between 0.5 and 27 days.
Of these, 10,091 are new planet candidates, and 411 are single-transit events, for which we do not attempt to determine orbital parameters. The remaining 1052 candidates are previously known TESS candidates.
We validate our pipeline through Magellan/Planet Finder Spectrograph radial-velocity follow-up measurements on one of our candidate hosts, TIC 183374187, a metal-poor thick-disk star, confirming the signal as a newly identified hot Jupiter, which we call TIC 183374187 b.
This detection demonstrates our pipeline’s ability to identify real, previously undiscovered, transiting planets.
Overall, this work shows that large-scale, machine learning–assisted transit searches of TESS FFIs can significantly expand the census of transiting planet candidates, in particular around faint stars, providing a rich target set for future validation and follow-up efforts. Our findings more than double the number of known TESS exoplanet candidates."

Thursday, May 14, 2026 - Join The Flyover





Figure 3. Left: example of automated off-center source detection. This example shows an off-center residual, indicating a blend as the source of the measured variability. The checkered pattern at the source position is consistent with Poisson noise or imperfect image subtraction due to the brightness of the source. Right: localized, on-center residual, indicating that the variability is due to the target.


English for trippers: When cute is cutaneous

Only skin deep, but acute!

Survey: Americans increasingly Avoid Their Neighbors

Signs of our times! People are staring too much at their device screens!

How much can online contacts, social media etc. substitute for direct human to human contact?

"Americans have all but stopped chatting with their neighbors, according to a report from the American Enterprise Institute.

In 2012, 59% of Americans talked to a neighbor at least a few times a week. That’s now 41%, with young adults driving the drop. Regular chats among 18-to-29-year-olds fell from 51% to 25%, while seniors dropped only 7 points to 56%.

A separate recent survey found one in three Americans now actively avoid their neighbors, citing feuds, awkwardness, or simple disinterest in small talk.

Researchers blame the convenience of streaming and on-demand services for turning homes into “entertainment bunkers.” ..."

"Key Points
  • Since 2012, the percentage of young adults who talk to their neighbors at least a few times per week dropped from 51 percent to 25 percent. Among seniors, the decline was only seven points (63 percent to 56 percent).
  • Compared with Americans without a degree, college-educated Americans are more likely to have worked with their neighbors to improve a condition in their community (46 percent vs. 34 percent), spent a social evening with a neighbor (58 percent vs. 46 percent), and exchanged texts or emails with a neighbor (65 percent vs. 45 percent).
  • Forty-nine percent of Americans who attend religious services weekly talk to their neighbors regularly, compared with only 31 percent of Americans who never attend religious services.
..."

Thursday, May 14, 2026 - Join The Flyover

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Announcement

I will be visiting Beijing on Fri. 5/15 and Sat. 5/16. 

I expect to resume blogging on Sunday 5/17.

Do scientists hit their creative peak at a relatively young age in their careers?

Food for thought!

"Can old scientists learn new tricks?

Famed polymath Sir Isaac Newton did much of his work developing calculus in the mid-1660s, when he had not yet celebrated his 25th birthday.

Albert Einstein’s “annus mirabilis,” during which he published the revolutionary papers that would become the foundation of modern physics, occurred when he was only 26 years old.
And Maria Skłodowska-Curie was just 31 when she discovered radium and polonium.

These anecdotes give the impression that scientists hit their creative peak relatively early in their careers, an idea that has been supported by some studies. Other research, however, has found no such relationship between age and declining creativity, while one theory holds that more experienced researchers are better poised to generate new ideas. According to a Policy Article published yesterday in Science, the relationship between age and innovation may be more complicated than that.

The authors of the new study analyzed a dataset of more than 12.5 million scientists who published between 1960 and 2020.
They found that, as the years since initial publication increased, scientists became more adept at forging links between previously unconnected ideas.
At the same time, however, their capacity for truly disruptive innovation—work that overturns established paradigms with transformative breakthroughs—sharply declined.
This cycle held true across disciplines, from computer science to biology.
The study authors also note the existence of a “nostalgia effect,” in which scientists increasingly cite older papers as their career progresses. “These findings highlight a universal tension between science’s forward momentum and aging scientists’ growing attachment to the intellectual past,” the team writes.

The researchers also found that nations with younger scientific workforces, such as China and India, tend to produce a larger share of disruptive papers.
The United States, which has a comparatively older workforce (in part thanks to a 1994 Supreme Court decision that removed mandatory university retirement), has lower rates of disruption. “Together with the nostalgia effect, these results suggest that familiarity with established ideas narrows the scope of creative search,” the study authors write. “Aging scientists grow more adept at recombining what they know but become less inclined (or able) to abandon old concepts and replace them with new ones.”

Of course, referencing foundational papers and building on existing knowledge remains an integral part of the scientific enterprise. “Aging people are not less creative, they are just creative differently ,” ... 
find ways to balance novelty with disruption, he argues, potentially by encouraging more collaborations across generations and welcoming young scientists from other nations. ...

Even the greatest minds, the study authors note in their paper, risk becoming set in their ways as they age.
In his later years, for example, Einstein struggled to develop a unified field theory and refused to accept the rise of quantum mechanics.
Speaking of quantum theory, physicist Werner Heisenberg published his pioneering work on the subject in 1925, when he was just 23 years old."

From the abstract:
"Scientific careers today are marked by growing polarization:
A small number of scientists now remain active and influential for longer than ever , whereas many others pass through research as temporary workers. 
Lengthened training periods, the elimination of mandatory retirement, and funding systems that reward experience have concentrated resources among senior scientists
As science becomes increasingly dependent on its aging core, a central question arises: How does academic age influence creativity?
The answer has long divided scholars. Analyzing more than 12.5 million scientists who published between 1960 and 2020,
we find that novelty—the linking of previously unconnected ideas—increases with academic age,
whereas disruption—the replacement of established ideas with new ones—declines.
These and other findings invite reflection on potential implications for policy, such as funding, tenure, and promotion systems; immigration and mobility; workforce development; and incentives for (and barriers to) collaboration and innovation."

ScienceAdviser


Aging and the narrowing of scientific innovation (no public access) "Aging researchers and the removal of retirement policies yield decreased disruptive innovation in science"

Neanderthal used stone drills to treat tooth cavities nearly 60,000 years ago, ancient molar suggests

Amazing stuff!

"Neanderthals had the know-how to identify a tooth infection and the motor skills to drill out the damage, according to a study published May 13, 2026, in the open-access journal PLOS One by Alisa Zubova of Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, Russian Academy of Sciences ..."

From the abstract:
"Neanderthal medical knowledge has long attracted scholarly interest. Evidence suggests they cared for sick, injured, and elderly group members, with possible use of medicinal plants.
However, it remains uncertain whether such practices reflect deliberate medical strategies or instinctive self-medication akin to that observed in non-human primates.
Here, we analyze and interpret traces of deliberate artificial manipulation of Chagyrskaya 64, a Neanderthal lower left second molar found in Chagyrskaya Cave (Altai Krai, Russia).
The tooth exhibits a large human-generated concavity on the occlusal surface, created during the lifetime of the individual.
Traceological and microtomographic analyses of the observed modifications, combined with experimental verification, reveal that the concavity in Chagyrskaya 64 is indicative of the earliest documented instance of caries treatment involving the drilling/rotating with a lithic perforator, ca. 59 ka.
Evidence of two distinct types of manipulations requiring different tools, in addition to the drilling/rotating technique, necessitating complex finger movements, indicates that the Chagyrskaya Cave Neanderthals possessed the cognitive capacity to intuit the source of pain, comprehend the feasibility of its elimination, and deliberately select the most efficacious dental intervention.
These patterns bring Neanderthal behavior closer to modern humans and differentiate that behavior from the instinctive actions of other primates."

Neanderthal dentists used stone drills to treat cavities nearly 60,000 years ago, ancient molar suggests



Fig 2. Chagyrskaya 64 molar tooth and its macro-features.


Fig 4. Retouched points (1, 4) and perforators (2, 3, 5) from Layer 6c/2 in Chagyrskaya Cave.


Your brain on anesthesia, a special state of neural activity with distinct patterns unique to anesthesia

Amazing stuff!

"... anesthesia. It’s great for eliminating the perception of pain—but with brain activity significantly suppressed ... Scientists wanted to better understand what the anesthetized brain is actually doing—and whether it more closely mimics sleeping or a coma.

Researchers recorded whole-head electroencephalograms (EEGs) for 28 patients under anesthesia, 14 patients who were resting but awake, 20 patients in REM sleep, and 40 comatose patients.
They found that, at different frequencies, the brain waves of anesthetized patients shared properties of both sleep and comas. Brains in REM sleep, in particular, overlapped heavily with those under anesthesia. But there were brain waves unique to anesthesia, too, leading the authors to conclude it is indeed its own state of neural activity. ..."

From the significance and abstract:
"Significance
Every day, thousands of patients undergo general anesthesia, a safe and reversible medically induced state of unconsciousness often likened to sleep or coma.
Despite profoundly altering brain function, most procedures are carried out without monitoring the brain due to limited understanding of optimal tracking methods.
Here, we demonstrate that whole-head scalp electroencephalography can precisely map brain states during anesthesia showing both elements of sleep- and coma-like states. We identify distinct neural activity patterns unique to anesthesia that could enhance intraoperative neuromonitoring. Moreover, our findings open up future avenues of investigating neural activity during anesthesia, potentially steering it closer toward sleep instead of coma thus promoting better cognitive outcomes and postoperative recovery.

Abstract
General anesthesia is often compared to sleep but may more closely resemble a medically induced coma. While all three states involve a loss of awareness, the extent of their neural similarity remains unclear.
Electrophysiological markers, such as delta activity (< 4 Hz), are present in slow wave sleep, disorders of consciousness (DoC, including coma), and propofol anesthesia but are absent during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Frontal alpha oscillations are a key feature of propofol anesthesia and detectable via intraoperative EEG.
However, it remains unclear whether alpha and delta activity fully define the brain state.
Using whole-head EEG, we analyzed brain activity in individuals under propofol anesthesia, during sleep, or in DoC in the intensive care unit.
Our spectral parameterization and similarity analyses revealed that propofol anesthesia exhibits spatiotemporal patterns resembling both coma and sleep. We introduced a spectral orthogonalization approach, identifying unique signatures of propofol anesthesia, including posterior slow waves, frontocentral delta, and reduced aperiodic activity.
Critically, the reduction in aperiodic activity partially overlaps with REM sleep and may reflect decreased cortical excitability, contributing to reduced arousal, muscle atonia, and immobility common to both states.
These results imply that propofol anesthesia creates a brain state where some features resemble sleep while others are more similar to coma.
Embracing its full spatiotemporal complexity could improve titration of sedation, thus minimizing excessive suppression and the risk of postoperative cognitive deficits."

ScienceAdviser