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Cake day: April 27th, 2026

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  • They are extremely overpopulated in much of the US, in part because most of the natural predators capable of keeping their numbers down have been killed off and there has been a huge artificial increase in field/forest interfaces where they thrive. Huge amounts of starving deer abound and descend on diminishing native vegetation with a voracious appetite while generally ignoring weird invasive foreign plants. Many native plant gardeners are vexed by their tendency to gnaw native plants, trees and shrubs to death unless those are caged in and some got a taste for venison out of revenge haha.

    Would be cool if we could re-introduce red wolves and the like to keep a lid on the deer without like half of the predators ending up shot or run over


  • People would love to live in a state with Mediterranean climate mostly year-round regardless of subsidence. You can say it would reduce agricultural jobs if charging for unsustainable water use put down farms dependent on it and that would make California less attractive economically. But even assuming the entire hulk of California agriculture was destroyed, that’s in the low single digit percentage of the state’s economic activity.

    It’s not just a matter of that the soil went down. The water was extracted from a matrix of soil and water, and the soil sinks because the matrix of soil and air no longer stands up to the weight above it and gets compacted down. Less voids in the soil means that when rain comes in, instead of seeping down and recharging aquifers it piles up on the surface in sheets that then race down to lower elevations in floods that sweep away whatever is in their path. And with enough extraction and lessened recharge eventually the wells stop working and force the issue. Everyone suffers from natural disasters for the benefit of a few who just so happened to get water rights from early settlement.


  • ~30 ft subsidence at a California farm from extraction of the groundwater. Agricultural use is immense and wipes out historic rivers, lakes, even seas and slowly replenished groundwater reserves and something like 40% of water used is wasted because the sun just evaporates it before it used by the crops.

    Everyone (agricultural or data center) would be far less wasteful if they had to at least pay for the true value of the water they’re extracting in their local area, i.e. a lot more if it’s scarcer/from slowly replenishing sources. Though that would probably result in a lot of economic relocation to wetter areas as many business models in dry areas become unviable.





  • Why do you expect it to fall? Amish and Haredi Jews intentionally stay at arms length from wider society. They maintain strict social pressures that encourage their members to focus on children and discourage the dizzying alternative uses for time socially available to Catholics and the wider US population. Certainly in Israel the Haredi growth rate is remaining stable and has taken them from a marginal groups of a few tens of thousands up to one and a half million, 14% of the population.

    Anyway say they do defy their customs and assimilate and follow suit, then other currently marginal groups that do find some way to keep birth rates propped up over time or raise them will eventually inherit the world. Not in our lifetime to be sure.




  • 12 inches isn’t that bad as far as subsidence issues can get. The ground below you is filled with very tiny holes and gaps that water seeps down into and fills and flows through, kind of like a sponge. While water fills those pores it’s difficult to squish down the soil.

    If a heavy weight is on them like a building, though, that can put on enough pressure to push the water out of those pores and flow down out and around. A mix of soil and voids/air give much less resistance to weight than a mix of soil and water filling the gaps so then the voids get compacted down and the ground sinks. Different soils in different conditions may not evenly subside and that can give you a situation like the Leaning Tower of Pisa where one side was subsiding faster than the other side. In modern construction people try to get the water out and compact the ground ahead of time so that it acts more consistently and doesn’t make big changes when a heavy object is placed on it.

    Here’s a picture from an agricultural area in California illustrating ~30 ft of subsidence that occurred in that area over a half century of pumping out the groundwater to water the crops.

    (This also makes flooding worse… ground that used to be filled with holes that could channel the water down and away into large aquifers is now compacted such that those holes are gone. So instead water piles up on the surface in huge sheets that flow and wipe out whatever is between them and a lower elevation.)








  • You know, I’ll take a stab and say Abiy Ahmed of Ethiopia! He came in on a reform slate but while they are experiencing quite rapid economic growth the country is boiling with ethnic tensions.

    The Tigray War a half decade ago saw Ethiopia’s military join with Eritrea and local militias such as Fano against the TPLF, once the former ruling party of Ethiopia but reduced to controlling the Tigray region. It was a rather nasty affair with a lot of death and displacement (and accusations of genocide), and it was concluded by the Pretoria Agreement between the TPLF and Ethiopia. Other parties got cut out of the peace, which created a rift with Eritrea and Fano militias. Since then the situation worsened. Ethiopia is often having speeches about bringing Eritrea to heel and gaining control of its ports (the deal with Djibouti is expensive) which obviously doesn’t help relations with that neighbor (also Eritrea is claimed to be arming Ethiopian rebels) and Fano has grown stronger and more organized and armed itself after taking much of the rural Amhara countryside. There is still an existing insurgency in the Oromo areas of the country and there were still clashes with the TPLF earlier this year.

    Ethiopia is friendly with Somaliland with which it publically wanted to get a port access for recognition deal but then backed down from in the face of international pressure and Turkish mediation with Somalia. The UAE has moved much of its equipment that was based in Yemen, Somaliland and Puntland over to Ethiopia after the debacle from the failure of the South Yemen separatists that also sent the UAE’s relations with Somalia to the dumpster when the separatist leadership was transported to the UAE via Somaliland.

    With respect to Sudan it was discovered a while back that Ethiopia has been recruiting and hosting RSF training camps on the UAE’s dime. Sudan is also very recently (Reuters reported it today) claiming it has evidence to prove that drone attacks on Sudan are being launched from an Ethiopian airport. For their part Ethiopia is now claiming that Sudan’s recognized government is supporting the TPLF and infringing on Ethiopia’s territory. (They have a disputed area called Al-Fashaga). I think there is some exile group of Tigray people fighting in Sudan for the SAF but I forget their name, I think it was Army 4-something but I can’t remember and I’m drawing a blank.

    So, aside from the ongoing Iran situation, that ring of Ethiopia, Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea and their internal messes are where I would say there is the least stability and most opportunity for friction between the blocks.


  • They are in competing blocks now so ties are becoming more frigid.

    Pakistan signed the SMDA with Saudi Arabia and is tightening connections with Turkey and Egypt, which is one of the emerging blocks in the region. The UAE is in another emerging block with Israel, India and Ethiopia which is increasingly at odds with the former block.

    As background the UAE determined that Islamists were the number one threat to the stability of their monarchies following the Arab Spring and have been supporting whatever coup or civil war faction seems most hostile to Islamists to limit their footholds in the region. So they backed the military coup in Egypt against Morsi, RSF in Sudan (RSF are Arab supremacists but not as Islamist as the SAF), southern separatists in Yemen, Somaliland in Somalia, Haftar in Libya, you get the picture. More secular leaning governments focused on small nationalisms or the like are an easier in for India and Israel to work with than big existing Islamic-leaning countries so they are natural friends as the UAE succeeding will make the environment easier for them; fragmenting Somalia and maybe flipping Sudan also makes Ethiopia more locally powerful and potentially able to access more ports so Ethiopia is on board too and has been helping the UAE in Africa. They are all announcing new deals with each other fairly regularly.

    However, the UAE made enemies with the former block this way. The former countries in the Turkey-Pakistan-Saudi Arabia-Egypt block would generally rather maintain and strengthen existing relationships they have invested into rather than see the governments they work with abruptly changed or their countries torn into fragments that then may prefer to work with India, Israel etc. So many of them are supporting groups like the Somalian government, SAF in Sudan, recognized government of Yemen and so on to keep those existing governments alive - Saudi Arabia intervened quite strongly when the southern separatists had basically wiped out the recognized government of Yemen and flipped it so that the southern separatists got extinguished instead. Egypt is a bit of an odd case because it is a secular military government that was originally buddy buddy with the UAE after the UAE helped out their coup, but fragmenting Somalia and the fighting in Sudan is very alarming to Egypt. Egypt wants for Ethiopia to have strong neighbors that Egypt can work with to check Ethiopia’s ambitions since Ethiopia controls most of the flow to the Nile River that Egypt very heavily depends on for life. If allowed to grow too strong, in theory Ethiopia could one day be powerful enough to issue ultimatums for Egypt to do whatever Ethiopia wants if Egypt wants to keep drinking water. So now they are also more down on the UAE and act accordingly, ex. Egypt and the UAE together supported Haftar in Libya against the recognized government Turkey supported but now Egypt is demanding that Haftar choke off the UAE’s Libyan supply routes to the RSF in Sudan if they want to keep Egypt’s support.

    They also have different approaches in dealing with Iran now. The UAE is suffering quite a lot from their Hormuz exports being blocked and getting disproportionately blasted by Iran (they are both a soft nearby target and one Iran will very gleefully let loose on with their affiliation with Israel), and the UAE want that to end ASAP with no specter of Hormuz tolling either so they want the US to go in and take out their government. Whereas in the other block although there are frictions (ex. Iran backed Ansar Allah being way stronger than Yemen’s recognized government, Iran backed former Syrian government against Turkish aligned rebels, etc.) neighbors Turkey and Pakistan don’t want instability at their borders that could cause a refugee crisis, damage their economies and encourage local separatists they are heavily moderating the sentiment of the block to trying to go for peace. Saudi Arabia is the most hawkish in that group but they have a large east-west pipeline that eases the pain more than the UAE’s smaller bypass, are a harder target and mostly further away so they can still afford to be way more patient than the UAE can.

    So through this move the UAE probably wants to cause Pakistan a lot of pain and avoid getting a bunch of remittances and savings sent over to a country it is increasingly regarding as an unfriendly one. Really awful for the workers caught up in this situation and the families who rely on them.