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At Ford, AI wasn’t ready for prime time

  Ford increasingly relied on AI-driven inspection systems to streamline production and address quality control issues. How’d that work out? “ Ford   has admitted to rehiring hundreds of human workers after its aggressive   AI   adoption strategy backfired.   “The US automaker hired over 350 veteran engineers, referred to internally as “gray beards”, over the past three years in order to address mistakes made by automated systems.   “The staff will lead quality reviews after the automation issues cost the company billions of dollars,   Bloomberg   reported, while some workers will also help improve and train the AI systems.” And how is *that* working out? “After rehiring experienced engineers, Ford experienced a marked improvement in its quality standards. “According to the latest J.D. Power Initial Quality Survey, an annual automotive benchmark that measures the quality of new vehicles, Ford ranked top among mainstream brands – the first time it ...

Quote of the day

Apparently, the Supreme Court has decided that what the Constitution *really meant* all along was “disclosure for thee, but not for the VIPs with checkbooks the size of small nations.” Because despite decades of rulings affirming that states can, in fact, require donor transparency to keep democracy from smelling like week‑old fish, the Court has now treated California’s disclosure law—originally enforced back when Kamala Harris was state attorney general—as though it were some kind of unconstitutional boogeyman hiding under a billionaire’s bed. Maybe I’m reading the Constitution wrong, but I’m fairly certain the “informational interest” the Court once praised didn’t mean “voters get information only when it’s convenient for wealthy donors,” yet here we are, pretending that sunlight is dangerous and secrecy is patriotic. ~Lenore Schille

Quote of the day

The question I get most often when speaking about Watergate is a version of “what would happen if Watergate happened today with Fox News?” And my answer is always very simple: Nixon would have survived. Not because he didn’t deserve to be forced from office, or because there was a Deep State campaign against him, but because today (a) the conservative noise machine would have defended Nixon and undermined the investigation and (b) because there’s no longer any Republicans left who act for the country over the party. ~Garrett M. Graff

Quote of the day

If you haven’t read hundreds of books, you are functionally illiterate, and you will be incompetent, because your personal experiences alone aren’t broad enough to sustain you.   ~General James N. Mattis

Whisky Pete FAFO

George Washington famously required his army to be inoculated against smallpox. Not because he was woke, but because he understood how devastating this viral infection could be and how protective immunity was. Whisky Pete, knowing more than our founding father and first president, made the flu vaccine optional. How’d that work out? “Last week,  news broke  that an influenza outbreak at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas had caused around 160 people to become sick.   “The timing was both bizarre and not. On one hand, the U.S. armed forces  ended its flu vaccine mandate  in April. On the other, a flu outbreak in June is unusual.   “Indeed, after Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced the policy, an influenza outbreak in military barracks seemed inevitable. But so soon? That may have surprised some. But, in retrospect, it shouldn't have.”   *snip* “. . . Hegseth did not break epidemiology. He merely stumbled into the mathematically inevitable "find out...

Austerity for thee but not for me

Republicans are blaming social programs for the ballooning deficits and national debt. Setting aside the fact that the US debt/GDP ratio was higher at the end of WWII and that Japan has a far higher debt/GDP ratio, what would a serious discussion about federal spending look like? Obviously, it would decry the squandering of tens of billions on an elective war with Iran that the US lost. Then there are the billions wasted on ICE, Trump’s gang of thugs rampaging and criming on US streets. There’s the money Trump spent demolishing the East Wing. And the ongoing defending retribution lawsuits filed by Trump’s DOJ that are ultimately thrown out of court. But perhaps most emblematic of the waste, fraud and abuse of this administration is the tragicomedy of the Reflecting Pool.  “This watery boondoggle is exactly the kind of thing they've criticized for years.   “ President Donald Trump’s unilateral decision to spend $14 million to fix up the Reflecting Pool on Washington’s National ...

Quote of the day

Trump will not be president forever. And when he goes, Democrats will face a defining choice: exploit the executive machinery he has exposed, or dismantle it. The temptation to exploit it will be enormous—and yielding to that temptation would be a historic mistake. If post-Trump America is to be a post-authoritarian one, it will have to embark on a Second Reconstruction, and Democrats will need to lead it.   In the first Reconstruction, the Union faced the challenge of reintegrating the South under a rule of law guaranteeing equal rights to all citizens. Republicans led the task then, with some support from loyal Democrats. They undertook not minor technocratic tinkering but major structural interventions—constitutional amendments and new institutions—that remade our governing framework and ensured democratic inclusion. Something similar is needed now.   ~ Shikha Dalmia and Andy Craig