>
Donald Trump's Flagrant War Of Aggression Against Iran Is An Impeachable Offense
Iranian Cyberattack - Insiders Warn of "Cyber 9/11"
A new player in the technology world is making waves by offering computer memory...
AI Shock Troops at Trillion Dollar Scale
US particle accelerators turn nuclear waste into electricity, cut radioactive life by 99.7%
Blast Them: A Rutgers Scientist Uses Lasers to Kill Weeds
H100 GPUs that cost $40,000 new are now selling for around $6,000 on eBay, an 85% drop.
We finally know exactly why spider silk is stronger than steel.
She ran out of options at 12. Then her own cells came back to save her.
A cardiovascular revolution is silently unfolding in cardiac intervention labs.
DARPA chooses two to develop insect-size robots for complex jobs like disaster relief...
Multimaterial 3D printer builds fully functional electric motor from scratch in hours
WindRunner: The largest cargo aircraft ever to be built, capable of carrying six Chinooks

California is one of the richest places on earth—so why does it feel like so many things aren't working?
I welcome Will Swaim, CEO of the California Policy Center, back on my podcast to talk about what's driving the state's biggest headaches—from the cost of living and energy policy to homelessness spending, regulation, and the ripple effects of decisions made decades ago.
We all want the same basic things—safe communities, affordable energy, decent schools, and a fair shot at building a life. The trouble starts when the policies designed to deliver those things wind up doing the opposite. California is one of the wealthiest states in the country. It's also a place where the cost of living keeps rising, businesses keep leaving, and the gap between intention and outcome seems to get wider every year. How did we get here, and why is persuasion harder than ever?
Along the way, Will and I chat about a few of the policies shaping life in the Golden State, the unintended consequences that followed, and what the rest of the country might want to pay attention to before adopting the same ideas. If you live in California—or if you're wondering whether what's happening there might show up where you live next—this one's worth a listen.