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Talk to Fa
I have done enough for you. Now, I am going to choose myself.
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Larry's 100
Slow Horses Season 5 Apple TV
Key Step: Use disruptive incidents, such as bombings and mass shootings, to create chaos and attract media attention. This and similar MI5 Country Destabilizations are played back to the British Empire by Libyan Freedom Fighters.
The Park needs Slough House to bumble their way to saving England. Pepper in Mundane White Man syndrome, Hoe stuck in a honeypot, and spy-craft.
Most fun season since debut. Lamb is at his meanest, funniest, and most vulnerable. Coe establishes himself as the third-best member of Slough House.
Watch it.

#100WordReviews #Drabble #TVReview #SlowHorses
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Human in the Loop

GitHub Copilot has crossed 20 million users. Developers are shipping code faster than ever. And somewhere in the midst of this AI-powered acceleration, something fundamental has shifted in how software gets built. We're calling it “vibe coding,” and it's exactly what it sounds like: developers describing what they want to an AI, watching code materialise on their screens, and deploying it without fully understanding what they've just created.
The numbers tell a story of explosive adoption. According to Stack Overflow's 2024 Developer Survey, 62% of professional developers currently use AI in their development process, up from 44% the previous year. Overall, 76% are either using or planning to use AI tools. The AI code generation market, valued at $4.91 billion in 2024, is projected to reach $30.1 billion by 2032. Five million new users tried GitHub Copilot in just three months of 2025, and 90% of Fortune 100 companies now use the platform.
But beneath these impressive adoption figures lurks a more troubling reality. In March 2025, security researchers discovered that 170 out of 1,645 web applications built with the AI coding tool Lovable had vulnerabilities allowing anyone to access personal information, including subscriptions, names, phone numbers, API keys, and payment details. Academic research reveals that over 40% of AI-generated code contains security flaws. Perhaps most alarmingly, research from Apiiro shows that AI-generated code introduced 322% more privilege escalation paths and 153% more design flaws compared to human-written code.
The fundamental tension is this: AI coding assistants democratise software development by lowering technical barriers, yet that very democratisation creates new risks when users lack the expertise to evaluate what they're deploying. A junior developer with Cursor or GitHub Copilot can generate database schemas, authentication systems, and deployment configurations that would have taken months to learn traditionally. But can they spot the SQL injection vulnerability lurking in that generated query? Do they understand why the AI hardcoded API keys into the repository, or recognise when generated authentication logic contains subtle timing attacks?
This raises a provocative question: should AI coding platforms themselves act as gatekeepers, dynamically adjusting what users can do based on their demonstrated competence? Could adaptive trust models, which analyse prompting patterns, behavioural signals, and interaction histories, distinguish between novice and expert developers and limit high-risk actions accordingly? And if implemented thoughtfully, might such systems inject much-needed discipline back into a culture increasingly defined by speed over safety?
“Vibe coding” emerged as a term in 2024, and whilst it started as somewhat tongue-in-cheek, it has come to represent a genuine shift in development culture. The Wikipedia definition captures the essence: a chatbot-based approach where developers describe projects to large language models, which generate code based on prompts, and developers do not review or edit the code but solely use tools and execution results to evaluate it. The critical element is that users accept AI-generated code without fully understanding it.
In September 2025, Fast Company reported senior software engineers citing “development hell” when working with AI-generated code. One Reddit developer's experience became emblematic: “Random things are happening, maxed out usage on API keys, people bypassing the subscription.” Eventually: “Cursor keeps breaking other parts of the code,” and the application was shut down permanently.
The security implications are stark. Research by Georgetown University's Centre for Security and Emerging Technology identified three broad risk categories: models generating insecure code, models themselves being vulnerable to attack and manipulation, and downstream cybersecurity impacts including feedback loops where insecure AI-generated code gets incorporated into training data for future models, perpetuating vulnerabilities.
Studies examining ChatGPT-generated code found that only five out of 21 programs were initially secure when tested across five programming languages. Missing input sanitisation emerged as the most common flaw, whilst Cross-Site Scripting failures occurred 86% of the time and Log Injection vulnerabilities appeared 88% of the time. These aren't obscure edge cases; they're fundamental security flaws that any competent developer should catch during code review.
Beyond security, vibe coding creates massive technical debt through inconsistent coding patterns. When AI generates solutions based on different prompts without a unified architectural vision, the result is a patchwork codebase where similar problems are solved in dissimilar ways. One function might use promises, another async/await, a third callbacks. Database queries might be parameterised in some places, concatenated in others. Error handling varies wildly from endpoint to endpoint. The code works, technically, but it's a maintainability nightmare.
Perhaps most concerning is the erosion of foundational developer skills. Over-reliance on AI creates what experts call a “comprehension gap” where teams can no longer effectively debug or respond to incidents in production. When something breaks at 3 a.m., and the code was generated by an AI six months ago, can the on-call engineer actually understand what's failing? Can they trace through the logic, identify the root cause, and implement a fix without simply asking the AI to “fix the bug” and hoping for the best?
This isn't just a theoretical concern. The developers reporting “development hell” aren't incompetent; they're experiencing the consequences of treating AI coding assistants as infallible oracles rather than powerful tools requiring human oversight.
Despite these concerns, AI coding assistants deliver genuine productivity gains when used appropriately. The challenge is understanding both the capabilities and limitations.
Research from IBM published in 2024 examined the watsonx Code Assistant through surveys of 669 users and usability testing with 15 participants. The study found that whilst the assistant increased net productivity, those gains were not evenly distributed across all users. Some developers saw dramatic improvements, completing tasks 50% faster. Others saw minimal benefit or even reduced productivity as they struggled to understand and debug AI-generated code. This variability is crucial: not everyone benefits equally from AI assistance, and some users may be particularly vulnerable to its pitfalls.
A study of 4,867 professional developers working on production code found that with access to AI coding tools, developers completed 26.08% more tasks on average compared to the control group. GitHub Copilot offers a 46% code completion rate, though only around 30% of that code gets accepted by developers. This acceptance rate is revealing. It suggests that even with AI assistance, developers are (or should be) carefully evaluating suggestions rather than blindly accepting them.
Quality perceptions vary significantly by region: 90% of US developers reported perceived increases in code quality when using AI tools, alongside 81% in India, 61% in Brazil, and 60% in Germany. Large enterprises report a 33-36% reduction in time spent on code-related development activities. These are impressive numbers, but they're based on perceived quality and time savings, not necessarily objective measures of security, maintainability, or long-term technical debt.
However, the Georgetown study on cybersecurity risks noted that whilst AI can accelerate development, it simultaneously introduces new vulnerability patterns. AI-generated code often fails to align with industry security best practices, particularly around authentication mechanisms, session management, input validation, and HTTP security headers. A systematic literature review found that AI models, trained on public code repositories, inevitably learn from flawed examples and replicate those flaws in their suggestions.
The “hallucinated dependencies” problem represents another novel risk. AI models sometimes suggest importing packages that don't actually exist, creating opportunities for attackers who can register those unused package names in public repositories and fill them with malicious code. This attack vector didn't exist before AI coding assistants; it's an emergent risk created by the technology itself.
Enterprise adoption continues despite these risks. By early 2024, over 1.3 million developers were paying for Copilot, and it was used in 50,000+ organisations. A 2025 Bain & Company survey found that 60% of chief technology officers and engineering managers were actively deploying AI coding assistants to streamline workflows. Nearly two-thirds indicated they were increasing AI investments in 2025, suggesting that despite known risks, organisations believe the benefits outweigh the dangers.
The technology has clearly proven its utility. The question is not whether AI coding assistants should exist, but rather how to harness their benefits whilst mitigating their risks, particularly for users who lack the expertise to evaluate generated code critically.
The concept of adaptive trust models is not new to computing, but applying them to AI coding platforms represents fresh territory. At their core, these models dynamically adjust system behaviour based on continuous assessment of user competence and behaviour.
Academic research defines adaptive trust calibration as a system's capability to assess whether the user is currently under- or over-relying on the system. When provided with information about users (such as experience level as a heuristic for likely over- or under-reliance), and when systems can adapt to this information, trust calibration becomes adaptive rather than static.
Research published in 2024 demonstrates that strategically providing supporting explanations when user trust is low reduces under-reliance and improves decision-making accuracy, whilst providing counter-explanations (highlighting potential issues or limitations) reduces over-reliance when trust is high. The goal is calibrated trust: users should trust the system to the extent that the system is actually trustworthy in a given context, neither more nor less.
Capability evaluation forms the foundation of these models. Users cognitively evaluate AI capabilities through dimensions such as reliability, accuracy, and functional efficiency. The Trust Calibration Maturity Model, proposed in recent research, characterises and communicates information about AI system trustworthiness across five dimensions: Performance Characterisation, Bias & Robustness Quantification, Transparency, Safety & Security, and Usability. Each dimension can be evaluated at different maturity levels, providing a structured framework for assessing system trustworthiness.
For user competence assessment, research identifies competence as the key factor influencing trust in automation. Interestingly, studies show that an individual's self-efficacy in using automation plays a crucial role in shaping trust. Higher self-efficacy correlates with greater trust and willingness to use automated systems, whilst lowering self-competence stimulates people's willingness to lean on AI recommendations, potentially leading to inappropriate over-reliance.
This creates a paradox: users who most need guardrails may be least likely to recognise that need. Novice developers often exhibit overconfidence in AI-generated code precisely because they lack the expertise to evaluate it critically. They assume that if the code runs without immediate errors, it must be correct. Adaptive trust models must account for this dynamic, potentially applying stronger restrictions precisely when users feel most confident.
Whilst adaptive trust models remain largely theoretical in AI coding contexts, related concepts have seen real-world implementation in other domains. Behaviour-Based Access Control (BBAC) offers instructive precedents.
BBAC is a security model that grants or denies access to resources based on observed behaviour of users or entities, dynamically adapting permissions according to real-time actions rather than relying solely on static policies. BBAC constantly monitors user behaviour for immediate adjustments and considers contextual information such as time of day, location, device characteristics, and user roles to make informed access decisions.
Research on cloud-user behaviour assessment proposed a dynamic access control model by introducing user behaviour risk value, user trust degree, and other factors into traditional Role-Based Access Control (RBAC). Dynamic authorisation was achieved by mapping trust level to permissions, creating a fluid system where access rights adjust based on observed behaviour patterns and assessed risk levels.
The core principle is that these models consider not only access policies but also dynamic and real-time features estimated at the time of access requests, including trust, risk, context, history, and operational need. Risk analysis involves measuring threats through various means such as analysing user behaviour patterns, evaluating historical trust levels, and reviewing compliance with security policies.
AI now enhances these systems by analysing user behaviour to determine appropriate access permissions, automatically restricting or revoking access when unusual or potentially dangerous behaviour is detected. For example, if a user suddenly attempts to access databases they've never touched before, at an unusual time of day, from an unfamiliar location, the system can require additional verification or escalate to human review before granting access.
These precedents demonstrate technical feasibility. The question for AI coding platforms is how to adapt these principles to software development, where the line between exploratory learning and risky behaviour is less clear-cut than in traditional access control scenarios. A developer trying something new might be learning a valuable skill or creating a dangerous vulnerability; the system must distinguish between productive experimentation and reckless deployment.
Implementing adaptive trust models in AI coding platforms requires careful consideration of what signals indicate competence, how to intervene proportionally, and how to maintain user agency whilst reducing risk.
Modern developer skill assessment has evolved considerably beyond traditional metrics. Research shows that 65% of developers prefer hands-on technical skills evaluation through take-home projects over traditional whiteboard interviews. Studies indicate that companies see 30% better hiring outcomes when assessment tools focus on measuring day-to-day problem-solving skills rather than generic programming concepts or algorithmic puzzles.
For adaptive systems in AI coding platforms, relevant competence signals might include:
Code Review Behaviour: Does the user carefully review AI-generated code before accepting it? Studies show that GitHub Copilot users accept only 30% of completions offered at a 46% completion rate, suggesting selective evaluation by experienced developers. Users who accept suggestions without modification at unusually high rates (say, above 60-70%) might warrant closer scrutiny, particularly if those suggestions involve security-sensitive operations or complex business logic.
Error Patterns: How does the user respond when generated code produces errors? Competent developers investigate error messages, consult documentation, understand root causes, and modify code systematically. They might search Stack Overflow, check official API documentation, or examine similar code in the codebase. Users who repeatedly prompt the AI for fixes without demonstrating learning (“fix this error”, “why isn't this working”, “make it work”) suggest lower technical proficiency and higher risk tolerance.
Prompting Sophistication: The specificity and technical accuracy of prompts correlates strongly with expertise. Experienced developers provide detailed context (“Create a React hook that manages WebSocket connections with automatic reconnection on network failures, using exponential backoff with a maximum of 5 attempts”), specify technical requirements, and reference specific libraries or design patterns. Vague prompts (“make a login page”, “fix the bug”, “add error handling”) suggest limited understanding of the problem domain.
Testing Behaviour: Does the user write tests, manually test functionality thoroughly, or simply deploy generated code and hope for the best? Competent developers write unit tests, integration tests, and manually verify edge cases. They think about failure modes, test boundary conditions, and validate assumptions. Absence of testing behaviour, particularly for critical paths like authentication, payment processing, or data validation, represents a red flag.
Response to Security Warnings: When static analysis tools flag potential vulnerabilities in generated code, how quickly and effectively does the user respond? Do they understand the vulnerability category (SQL injection, XSS, CSRF), research proper fixes, and implement comprehensive solutions? Or do they dismiss warnings, suppress them without investigation, or apply superficial fixes that don't address root causes? Ignoring security warnings represents a clear risk signal.
Architectural Coherence: Over time, does the codebase maintain consistent architectural patterns, or does it accumulate contradictory approaches suggesting uncritical acceptance of whatever the AI suggests? A well-maintained codebase shows consistent patterns: similar problems solved similarly, clear separation of concerns, coherent data flow. A codebase built through uncritical vibe coding shows chaos: five different ways to handle HTTP requests, inconsistent error handling, mixed paradigms without clear rationale.
Documentation Engagement: Competent developers frequently consult official documentation, verify AI suggestions against authoritative sources, and demonstrate understanding of APIs they're using. Tracking whether users verify AI suggestions, particularly for unfamiliar libraries or complex APIs, provides another competence indicator.
Version Control Practices: Meaningful commit messages (“Implement user authentication with JWT tokens and refresh token rotation”), appropriate branching strategies, and thoughtful code review comments all indicate higher competence levels. Poor practices (“updates”, “fix”, “wip”) suggest rushed development without proper consideration.
Platforms could analyse these behavioural signals using machine learning models trained to distinguish competence levels. Importantly, assessment should be continuous and contextual rather than one-time and static. A developer might be highly competent in one domain (for example, frontend React development) but novice in another (for example, database design or concurrent programming), requiring contextual adjustment of trust levels based on the current task.
Rather than binary access control (allowed or forbidden), adaptive systems should implement graduated permission models that scale intervention to risk and demonstrated user competence:
Level 1: Full Access For demonstrated experts (consistent code review, comprehensive testing, security awareness, architectural coherence), the platform operates with minimal restrictions, perhaps only flagging extreme risks like hardcoded credentials, unparameterised SQL queries accepting user input, or deployment to production without any tests.
Level 2: Soft Interventions For intermediate users showing generally good practices but occasional concerning patterns, the system requires explicit confirmation before high-risk operations. “This code will modify your production database schema, potentially affecting existing data. Please review carefully and confirm you've tested this change in a development environment.” Such prompts increase cognitive engagement without blocking action, making users think twice before proceeding.
Level 3: Review Requirements For users showing concerning patterns (accepting high percentages of suggestions uncritically, ignoring security warnings, minimal testing), the system might require peer review before certain operations. “Database modification requests require review from a teammate with database privileges. Would you like to request review from Sarah or Marcus?” This maintains development velocity whilst adding safety checks.
Level 4: Restricted Operations For novice users or particularly high-risk operations, certain capabilities might be temporarily restricted. “Deployment to production is currently restricted based on recent security vulnerabilities in your commits. Please complete the interactive security fundamentals tutorial, or request deployment assistance from a senior team member.” This prevents immediate harm whilst providing clear paths to restore access.
Level 5: Educational Mode For users showing significant comprehension gaps (repeatedly making the same mistakes, accepting fundamentally flawed code, lacking basic security awareness), the system might enter an educational mode where it explains what generated code does, why certain approaches are recommended, what risks exist, and what better alternatives might look like. This slows development velocity but builds competence over time, ultimately creating more capable developers.
The key is proportionality. Restrictions should match demonstrated risk, users should always understand why limitations exist, and the path to higher trust levels should be clear and achievable. The goal isn't punishing inexperience but preventing harm whilst enabling growth.
Any adaptive trust system must maintain transparency about how it evaluates competence and adjusts permissions. Hidden evaluation creates justified resentment and undermines user agency.
Users should be able to:
View Their Trust Profile: “Based on your recent activity, your platform trust level is 'Intermediate.' You have full access to frontend features, soft interventions for backend operations, and review requirements for database modifications. Your security awareness score is 85/100, and your testing coverage is 72%.”
Understand Assessments: “Your trust level was adjusted because recent deployments introduced three security vulnerabilities flagged by static analysis (SQL injection in user-search endpoint, XSS in comment rendering, hardcoded API key in authentication service). Completing the security fundamentals course or demonstrating improved security practices in your next five pull requests will restore full access.”
Challenge Assessments: If users believe restrictions are unjustified, they should be able to request human review, demonstrate competence through specific tests, or provide context the automated system missed. Perhaps the “vulnerability” was in experimental code never intended for production, or the unusual behaviour pattern reflected a legitimate emergency fix.
Control Learning: Users should control what behavioural data the system collects for assessment, opt in or out of specific monitoring types, and understand retention policies. Opt-in telemetry with clear explanations builds trust rather than eroding it. “We analyse code review patterns, testing behaviour, and security tool responses to assess competence. We do not store your actual code, only metrics. Data is retained for 90 days. You can opt out of behavioural monitoring, though this will result in default intermediate trust levels rather than personalised assessment.”
Transparency also requires organisational-level visibility. In enterprise contexts, engineering managers should see aggregated trust metrics for their teams, helping identify where additional training or mentorship is needed without creating surveillance systems that micromanage individual developers.
Behavioural analysis for competence assessment raises legitimate privacy concerns. Code written by developers may contain proprietary algorithms, business logic, or sensitive data. Recording prompts and code for analysis requires careful privacy protections.
Several approaches can mitigate privacy risks:
Local Processing: Competence signals like error patterns, testing behaviour, and code review habits can often be evaluated locally without sending code to external servers. Privacy-preserving metrics can be computed on-device (acceptance rates, testing frequency, security warning responses) and only aggregated statistics transmitted to inform trust levels.
Anonymisation: When server-side analysis is necessary, code can be anonymised by replacing identifiers, stripping comments, and removing business logic context whilst preserving structural patterns relevant for competence assessment. The system can evaluate whether queries are parameterised without knowing what data they retrieve.
Differential Privacy: Adding carefully calibrated noise to behavioural metrics can protect individual privacy whilst maintaining statistical utility for competence modelling. Individual measurements become less precise, but population-level patterns remain clear.
Federated Learning: Models can be trained across many users without centralising raw data, with only model updates shared rather than underlying code or prompts. This allows systems to learn from collective behaviour without compromising individual privacy.
Clear Consent: Users should explicitly consent to behavioural monitoring with full understanding of what data is collected, how it's used, how long it's retained, and who has access. Consent should be granular (opt in to testing metrics but not prompt analysis) and revocable.
The goal is gathering sufficient information for risk assessment whilst respecting developer privacy and maintaining trust in the platform itself. Systems that are perceived as invasive or exploitative will face resistance, whilst transparent, privacy-respecting implementations can build confidence.
Certain operations carry such high risk that adaptive trust models should apply scrutiny regardless of user competence level. Database modifications, production deployments, and privilege escalations represent operations where even experts benefit from additional safeguards.
Database security represents a particular concern in AI-assisted development. Research shows that 72% of cloud environments have publicly accessible platform-as-a-service databases lacking proper access controls. When developers clone databases into development environments, they often lack the access controls and hardening of production systems, creating exposure risks.
For database operations, adaptive trust models might implement:
Schema Change Reviews: All schema modifications require explicit review and approval. The system presents a clear diff of proposed changes (“Adding column 'email_verified' as NOT NULL to 'users' table with 2.3 million existing rows; this will require a default value or data migration”), explains potential impacts, and requires confirmation.
Query Analysis: Before executing queries, the system analyses them for common vulnerabilities. SQL injection patterns, missing parameterisation, queries retrieving excessive data, or operations that could lock tables during high-traffic periods trigger warnings proportional to risk.
Rollback Mechanisms: Database modifications should include automatic rollback capabilities. If a schema change causes application errors, connection failures, or performance degradation, the system facilitates quick reversion with minimal data loss.
Testing Requirements: Database changes must be tested in non-production environments before production application. The system enforces this workflow regardless of user competence level, requiring evidence of successful testing before allowing production deployment.
Access Logging: All database operations are logged with sufficient detail for security auditing and incident response, including query text, user identity, timestamp, affected tables, and row counts.
Research from 2024 emphasises that web application code generated by large language models requires security testing before deployment in real environments. Analysis reveals critical vulnerabilities in authentication mechanisms, session management, input validation, and HTTP security headers.
Adaptive trust systems should treat deployment as a critical control point:
Pre-Deployment Scanning: Automated security scanning identifies common vulnerabilities before deployment, blocking deployment if critical issues are found whilst providing clear explanations and remediation guidance.
Staged Rollouts: Rather than immediate full production deployment, the system enforces staged rollouts where changes are first deployed to small user percentages, allowing monitoring for errors, performance degradation, or security incidents before full deployment.
Automated Rollback: If deployment causes error rate increases above defined thresholds, performance degradation exceeding acceptable limits, or security incidents, automated rollback mechanisms activate immediately, preventing widespread user impact.
Deployment Checklists: The system presents contextually relevant checklists before deployment. Have tests been run? What's the test coverage? Has the code been reviewed? Are configuration secrets properly managed? Are database migrations tested? These checklists adapt based on the changes being deployed.
Rate Limiting: For users with lower trust levels, deployment frequency might be rate-limited to prevent rapid iteration that precludes thoughtful review. This encourages batching changes, comprehensive testing, and deliberate deployment rather than continuous “deploy and pray” cycles.
Given that AI-generated code introduces 322% more privilege escalation paths than human-written code according to Apiiro research, special scrutiny of privilege-related code is essential.
The system should flag any code that requests elevated privileges, modifies access controls, or changes authentication logic. It should explain what privileges are being requested and why excessive privileges create security risks, suggest alternative implementations using minimal necessary privileges (educating users about the principle of least privilege), and require documented justification with audit logs for security review.
Implementing adaptive trust models in AI coding platforms requires more than technical architecture. It demands cultural shifts in how organisations think about developer autonomy, learning, and risk.
Developer autonomy is highly valued in software engineering culture. Engineers are accustomed to wide-ranging freedom to make technical decisions, experiment with new approaches, and self-direct their work. Introducing systems that evaluate competence and restrict certain operations risks being perceived as micromanagement, infantilisation, or organisational distrust.
Organisations must carefully communicate the rationale for adaptive trust models. The goal is not controlling developers but rather creating safety nets that allow faster innovation with managed risk. When presented as guardrails that prevent accidental harm rather than surveillance systems that distrust developers, adaptive models are more likely to gain acceptance.
Importantly, restrictions should focus on objectively risky operations rather than stylistic preferences or architectural choices. Limiting who can modify production databases without review is defensible based on clear risk profiles. Restricting certain coding patterns because they're unconventional, or requiring specific frameworks based on organisational preference rather than security necessity, crosses the line from safety to overreach.
Adaptive trust models create opportunities for structured learning progression that mirrors traditional apprenticeship models. Rather than expecting developers to learn everything before gaining access to powerful tools, systems can gradually expand permissions as competence develops, creating clear learning pathways and achievement markers.
This model mirrors real-world apprenticeship: junior developers traditionally work under supervision, gradually taking on more responsibility as they demonstrate readiness. Adaptive trust models can formalise this progression in AI-assisted contexts, making expectations explicit and progress visible.
However, this requires thoughtful design of learning pathways. When the system identifies competence gaps, it should provide clear paths to improvement: interactive tutorials addressing specific weaknesses, documentation for unfamiliar concepts, mentorship connections with senior developers who can provide guidance, or specific challenges that build needed skills in safe environments.
The goal is growth, not gatekeeping. Users should feel that the system is supporting their development rather than arbitrarily restricting their capabilities.
In team contexts, adaptive trust models must account for collaborative development. Senior engineers often review and approve work by junior developers. The system should recognise and facilitate these relationships rather than replacing human judgment with algorithmic assessment.
One approach is role-based trust elevation: a junior developer with restricted permissions can request review from a senior team member. The senior developer sees the proposed changes, evaluates their safety and quality, and can approve operations that would otherwise be restricted. This maintains human judgment whilst adding systematic risk assessment, creating a hybrid model that combines automated flagging with human expertise.
Team-level metrics also provide valuable context. If multiple team members struggle with similar competence areas, that suggests a training need rather than individual deficiencies. Engineering managers can use aggregated trust data to identify where team capabilities need development, inform hiring decisions, and allocate mentorship resources effectively.
Competence-based systems must be carefully designed to avoid discriminatory outcomes. If certain demographic groups are systematically assigned lower trust levels due to biased training data, proxy variables for protected characteristics, or structural inequalities in opportunity, the system perpetuates bias rather than improving safety.
Essential safeguards include objective metrics based on observable behavioural signals rather than subjective judgments, regular auditing of trust level distributions across demographic groups with investigation of any significant disparities, appeal mechanisms with human review available to correct algorithmic errors or provide context, transparency in how competence is assessed to help users and organisations identify potential bias, and continuous validation of models against ground-truth measures of developer capability to ensure they're measuring genuine competence rather than correlated demographic factors.
Transitioning from theory to practice, adaptive trust models for AI coding platforms face several implementation challenges requiring both technical solutions and organisational change management.
Building systems that accurately assess developer competence from behavioural signals requires sophisticated machine learning infrastructure. The models must operate in real-time, process diverse signal types, account for contextual variation, and avoid false positives that frustrate users whilst catching genuine risks.
Several technical approaches can address this complexity:
Progressive Enhancement: Start with simple, rule-based assessments (flagging database operations, requiring confirmation for production deployments) before introducing complex behavioural modelling. This allows immediate risk reduction whilst more sophisticated systems are developed and validated.
Human-in-the-Loop: Initially, algorithmic assessments can feed human reviewers who make final decisions. Over time, as models improve and teams gain confidence, automation can increase whilst maintaining human oversight for edge cases and appeals.
Ensemble Approaches: Rather than relying on single models, combine multiple assessment methods. Weight behavioural signals, explicit testing, peer review feedback, and user self-assessment to produce robust competence estimates that are less vulnerable to gaming or edge cases.
Continuous Learning: Models should continuously learn from outcomes. When users with high trust levels introduce vulnerabilities, that feedback should inform model updates. When users with low trust levels consistently produce high-quality code, the model should adapt accordingly.
Even well-designed systems face user resistance if perceived as punitive or intrusive. Several strategies can improve acceptance:
Opt-in initial deployment allows early adopters to volunteer for adaptive trust systems, gathering feedback and demonstrating value before broader rollout. Visible benefits matter: when adaptive systems catch vulnerabilities before deployment, prevent security incidents, or provide helpful learning resources, users recognise value and become advocates. Positive framing presents trust levels as skill progression rather than restriction (“You've advanced to Intermediate level with expanded backend access”) rather than punitive limitation (“Your database access is restricted due to security violations”). Clear progression ensures users always know what they need to do to advance trust levels, with achievable goals and visible progress.
Enterprise adoption requires convincing individual developers, engineering leadership, security teams, and organisational decision-makers. Security professionals are natural allies for adaptive trust systems, as they align with existing security control objectives. Early engagement with security teams can build internal champions who advocate for adoption.
Rather than organisation-wide deployment, start with pilot teams who volunteer to test the system. Measure outcomes (vulnerability reduction, incident prevention, developer satisfaction, time-to-competence for junior developers) and use results to justify broader adoption. Frame adaptive trust models in terms executives understand: risk reduction, compliance facilitation, competitive advantage through safer innovation, reduced security incident costs, and accelerated developer onboarding.
Quantify the costs of security incidents, technical debt, and production issues that adaptive trust models can prevent. When the business case is clear, adoption becomes easier. Provide adequate training, support, and communication throughout implementation. Developers need time to adjust to new workflows and understand the rationale for changes.
As AI coding assistants become increasingly powerful and widely adopted, the imperative for adaptive trust models grows stronger. The alternative (unrestricted access to code generation and deployment capabilities regardless of user competence) has already demonstrated its risks through security breaches, technical debt accumulation, and erosion of fundamental developer skills.
Adaptive trust models offer a middle path between unrestricted AI access and return to pre-AI development practices. They acknowledge AI's transformative potential whilst recognising that not all users are equally prepared to wield that potential safely.
The technology for implementing such systems largely exists. Behavioural analysis, machine learning for competence assessment, dynamic access control, and graduated permission models have all been demonstrated in related domains. The primary challenges are organisational and cultural rather than purely technical. Success requires building systems that developers accept as helpful rather than oppressive, that organisations see as risk management rather than productivity impediments, and that genuinely improve both safety and learning outcomes.
Several trends will shape the evolution of adaptive trust in AI coding. Regulatory pressure will increase as AI-generated code causes more security incidents and data breaches, with regulatory bodies likely mandating stronger controls. Organisations that proactively implement adaptive trust models will be better positioned for compliance. Insurance requirements may follow, with cyber insurance providers requiring evidence of competence-based controls for AI-assisted development as a condition of coverage. Companies that successfully balance AI acceleration with safety will gain competitive advantage, outperforming those that prioritise pure speed or avoid AI entirely. Platform competition will drive adoption, as major AI coding platforms compete for enterprise customers by offering sophisticated trust and safety features. Standardisation efforts through organisations like the IEEE or ISO will likely codify best practices for adaptive trust implementation. Open source innovation will accelerate adoption as the community develops tools and frameworks for implementing adaptive trust.
The future of software development is inextricably linked with AI assistance. The question is not whether AI will be involved in coding, but rather how we structure that involvement to maximise benefits whilst managing risks. Adaptive trust models represent a promising approach: systems that recognise human variability in technical competence, adjust guardrails accordingly, and ultimately help developers grow whilst protecting organisations and users from preventable harm.
Vibe coding, in its current unstructured form, represents a transitional phase. As the industry matures in its use of AI coding tools, we'll likely see the emergence of more sophisticated frameworks for balancing automation and human judgment. Adaptive trust models can be a cornerstone of that evolution, introducing discipline not through rigid rules but through intelligent, contextual guidance calibrated to individual competence and risk.
The technology is ready. The need is clear. What remains is the organisational will to implement systems that prioritise long-term sustainability over short-term velocity, that value competence development alongside rapid output, and that recognise the responsibility that comes with democratising powerful development capabilities.
The guardrails we need are not just technical controls but cultural commitments: to continuous learning, to appropriate caution proportional to expertise, to transparency in automated assessment, and to maintaining human agency even as we embrace AI assistance. Adaptive trust models, thoughtfully designed and carefully implemented, can encode these commitments into the tools themselves, shaping developer behaviour not through restriction but through intelligent support calibrated to individual needs and organisational safety requirements.
As we navigate this transformation in how software gets built, we face a choice: allow the current trajectory of unrestricted AI code generation to continue until security incidents or regulatory intervention force corrective action, or proactively build systems that bring discipline, safety, and progressive learning into AI-assisted development. The evidence suggests that adaptive trust models are not just desirable but necessary for the sustainable evolution of software engineering in the age of AI.
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“AI is creating code faster – but this also means more potential security issues,” TechRadar, 2024. https://www.techradar.com/pro/ai-is-creating-code-faster-but-this-also-means-more-potential-security-issues
“Vibe coding,” Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibe_coding
“Cybersecurity Risks of AI-Generated Code,” Centre for Security and Emerging Technology, Georgetown University, November 2024. https://cset.georgetown.edu/publication/cybersecurity-risks-of-ai-generated-code/
“The Most Common Security Vulnerabilities in AI-Generated Code,” Endor Labs Blog. https://www.endorlabs.com/learn/the-most-common-security-vulnerabilities-in-ai-generated-code
“Examining the Use and Impact of an AI Code Assistant on Developer Productivity and Experience in the Enterprise,” arXiv:2412.06603, December 2024. https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.06603
“Developing trustworthy artificial intelligence: insights from research on interpersonal, human-automation, and human-AI trust,” Frontiers in Psychology, 2024. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1382693/full
“What is Behavior-Based Access Control (BBAC)?” StrongDM. https://www.strongdm.com/what-is/behavior-based-access-control-bbac
“A cloud-user behavior assessment based dynamic access control model,” International Journal of System Assurance Engineering and Management. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13198-015-0411-1
“Database Security: Concepts and Best Practices,” Rubrik. https://www.rubrik.com/insights/database-security
“7 Best Practices for Evaluating Developer Skills in 2025,” Index.dev. https://www.index.dev/blog/best-practices-for-evaluating-developer-skills-mastering-technical-assessments
“AI Copilot Code Quality: 2025 Data Suggests 4x Growth in Code Clones,” GitClear. https://www.gitclear.com/ai_assistant_code_quality_2025_research
“5 Vibe Coding Risks and Ways to Avoid Them in 2025,” Zencoder.ai. https://zencoder.ai/blog/vibe-coding-risks
“The impact of AI-assisted pair programming on student motivation,” International Journal of STEM Education, 2025. https://stemeducationjournal.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40594-025-00537-3

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Today was not what I'd hoped it would be. Still no word from the clinical trials I'm hoping to get into. /sigh. The time that I saved by doing my laundry yesterday was spent digging through my closet to find the box with my cold weather clothes, then hanging them up. 'Tis the season for that.
Prayers, etc.: * My daily prayers.
Health Metrics: * bw= 220.02 lbs. * bp= 138/84 (68)
Exercise: * kegel pelvic floor exercise, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 05:40 – 1 banana * 06:50 – toast and butter, 2 HEB Bakery cookies * 08:30 – 5 hot dogs * 10:35 – 2 more HEB Bakery cookies * 13:30 – mystery tacos from yesterday's misdelivery * 16:05 – 1 fresh apple
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 05:00 – listen to local news, talk radio * 06:00 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:30 – read, pray, listen to news reports from various sources * 13:00 to 14:15 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 14:15 to 15:45 – haul cold weather clothes out of closet * 15:45 – listen to The Jack Ricardi Show * 17:00 – listening to The Joe Pags Show * 20:00 – listening to The Lars Larson Show
Chess: * 11:10 – moved in all pending CC games
from
The Beacon Press
A Fault Line Investigation — Published by The Beacon Press
Published: November 11, 2025
https://thebeaconpress.org/the-trump-administrations-rif-notices-a-surgical-counterstrike-to-democratic
The issuance of 4,000+ reduction-in-force (RIF) notices on October 10, 2025, was not a reckless escalation. It was a surgical counterstrike — a deliberate, lawful, and highly effective maneuver by the Trump administration to dismantle the Democratic strategy that orchestrated and prolonged the longest government shutdown in U.S. history (40 days, October 1–November 10, 2025).
Democrats, leveraging Senate Rule XXII’s 60-vote threshold, refused 15 consecutive continuing resolutions (CRs) unless Republicans attached non-germane ACA subsidy extensions (expiring December 31, 2025) — a policy demand with zero connection to appropriations. This was not defense. This was strategic paralysis, knowingly risking:
– 42 million SNAP recipients (12.3% of U.S. population, USDA FY2024)
– 16 million children facing half-payments
– 650,000 federal workers unpaid
– 2,300+ flight cancellations
The RIF notices — a mirror to Democratic leverage — forced the minority to confront the real-world consequences of their filibuster. No appropriation = no legal duty to retain staff (5 U.S.C. § 7117). The notices were never executed (80% halted by TRO, October 15, 2025), but their intent rang with precision: “You wield the shutdown? Then feel its blade.”
Within 72 hours of the USDA “undo” memo (November 9), eight Democrats collapsed the filibuster, passing the CR 60–40.
The truth under scrutiny: Democrats did not break ranks out of moderation. They capitulated because their strategy failed. The RIF was the pivot. The 40-day closure? Democratic collateral.
| Tactic | Who | What | Legal Basis | Consequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR Filibuster | Senate Democrats (47) | Blocked 15 funding bills unless ACA rider attached | Senate Rule XXII (60-vote cloture) | No appropriations → Antideficiency Act triggered |
| Policy Rider | Schumer, Jeffries | Demanded ACA subsidies in appropriations bill | None — non-germane | Turned must-pass funding into policy hostage |
| Public Messaging | DCCC, Schumer | “Republican sabotage” | N/A | 75% saw “breach of trust” — but not Trump’s intent |
| Internal Collapse | Shaheen, Hassan, King | Broke ranks after SNAP chaos, RIF threat | Voter backlash (42% blamed Dems, DCCC leak Nov 6) | CR passed 60–40 (Nov 9) |
Key Fact: The ACA demand was never in any House-passed bill. It was a minority veto over majority will (GOP control: 53–47 Senate, House). This was not compromise. It was subversion.
| Element | Detail | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Announcement | DOJ filing, Oct 10: “Intent to RIF 4,000+ in absence of funding” | DOJ 10/10/2025 |
| Legal Basis | 5 U.S.C. § 7117 — RIF planning allowed during lapse | OPM Guidance 2025 |
| Execution Status | Zero severance paid; 80% halted by TRO (Illston, Oct 15) | GAO-25-108 |
| Scope | Snapshot of 10,000+ planned DOGE cuts (voter mandate: 51%, Pew 2025) | OMB Memo, Vought |
| Impact | Forced Democratic collapse within 72 hours of “undo” memo (Nov 9) | Senate Vote 60–40 |
The Mirror Principle:
> “No CR? Then no payroll. Here’s your shutdown — in writing.”
The RIF was never meant to fire. It was meant to force accountability. And it did.
Demand release of:
– DCCC internal polling (Nov 6, 2025)
– Full text of ACA rider demands
→ File FOIA Request
→ Reference: DCCC Leak 11/06/2025, Senate CR Votes 1–15
Light on the fracture. No paywall. No ads. Truth only.
The Beacon Press | thebeaconpress.org
from
The Beacon Press
A Fault Line Investigation — Published by The Beacon Press
Published: November 11, 2025
https://thebeaconpress.org/the-u-s-government-shutdown-ends-how-congress-brokered-the-deal-amid-partisan
The U.S. government shutdown – the longest in history at 40 days – ended on November 10, 2025, when the Senate voted 60-40 to advance a compromise funding bill, clearing the way for House passage and presidential signature by the end of the week. The agreement, finalized after weeks of closed-door talks, funds most agencies through January 30, 2026, restores full SNAP benefits for November (undoing the administration's partial payment plan), guarantees retroactive pay for 750,000 furloughed workers, and reverses the 4,000+ RIF notices issued during the lapse. It sidesteps Democrats' demand for ACA subsidy extensions (expiring December 31, 2025), deferring that to a mid-December vote – a concession that drew criticism from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer as a “surrender” to Republican “hostage-taking,” but praise from moderates as a “pragmatic” step to “stop the pain.”
The deal's passage hinged on eight Democrats and one independent (Sen. Angus King of Maine) breaking ranks to provide the 60 votes needed for a procedural hurdle, marking a turning point after 15 failed CR votes and 42 million SNAP recipients facing uncertainty. The breakthrough came after private negotiations involving GOP leaders, the White House, and a bipartisan group of moderates, driven by “the pain of the people” (Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-NH) and the “need to get back to work” (Sen. John Thune, R-SD).
The truth under scrutiny: While the deal ends the immediate crisis – with 42 million SNAP recipients receiving full November benefits and 650,000 federal workers back on payroll – it highlights a “pragmatic shift” from “leverage” to “compromise,” but leaves the “post-truth” gaslighting scar intact, where “alternative facts” (e.g., “no pain” vs. “sabotage”) fractured public trust for 40 days.
The deal's path was a “weekend miracle” (Politico, November 10, 2025), forged in closed-door sessions starting Friday, November 7, and culminating in a Senate vote on Sunday, November 9. The breakthrough was orchestrated by a bipartisan trio of moderates – Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), and Angus King (I-ME) – who “broke ranks” with 15 other Democrats to provide the 60 votes needed for the procedural hurdle. Their reasoning: “The pain of the people” (Hassan) outweighed “leverage” for ACA subsidies, with the “length of the shutdown” (King) and “need to get back to work” (Shaheen) tipping the scale. The trio's “pragmatic shift” – prioritizing “relief for families” (Hassan) over “surrender” (Schumer) – was “in the works for weeks” (Politico, November 10, 2025), involving GOP Majority Leader John Thune and White House talks. Thune's “pledge” for a December ACA vote – “in good faith” (Jeffries, November 10, 2025) – “moved” the holdouts, with King noting “fruitless attempts” (CNN, November 10, 2025) and Hassan citing “swept” Democratic elections (November 4, 2025) as “validation” but not “permission to hold the line” (CNN, November 10, 2025). The “mindset shift” – from “leverage” to “relief” – was “the pain of the people” (Hassan) and “fruitless” stalemate (King), with “serious bipartisan negotiations” promised post-reopening (Shaheen). Jeffries called it “good faith” (CNN, November 10, 2025), but progressives like Rep. Greg Casar decried it as “betrayal” (CNN, November 10, 2025), highlighting the “sensible agreement” as “marginal” (Casar).
Demand transparency on:
– Full list of 8 Democratic “yes” votes and their stated reasons
– Written commitments for December ACA vote
→ File FOIA Request
→ Reference: Senate Vote 60-40, November 9, 2025
Light on the fracture. No paywall. No ads. Truth only.
The Beacon Press | thebeaconpress.org
from Douglas Vandergraph
I remember leaving school that afternoon like it was yesterday. I was sixteen, hungry, and ready to grab a bite to eat with my best friend. The next thing anyone remembers is the sound of metal crushing and glass shattering. From that moment forward, everything I once knew—my body, my life, even my place in the world—was changed forever.
What happened next would defy every medical explanation and challenge everything I thought I understood about life and death.
The collision left me with catastrophic injuries, including a torn carotid artery that sent clots to my brain and caused a massive right-hemisphere stroke. Within hours, my body began to shut down. Doctors told my mother that my brain had stopped controlling even the most basic functions—breathing, swallowing, heartbeat.
And then, everything went still.
My EEG and EKG flatlined for 60 minutes. For all measurable purposes, I was gone.
I remember nothing of the crash itself—but I remember what came next. I found myself in a bright room. There was no pain, no fear, no sense of time—only peace. Before me stood a doorway, glowing but impenetrable.
Then, a familiar presence stepped through, my father. He had died years before in a construction accident. Yet here he was, smiling, calm, radiant.
He told me it wasn’t my time. He told me there was still a plan for me, one I needed to follow. We spoke briefly, but his words seemed to stretch into eternity. Then he let go. I fell backward—falling, falling, until I landed again in the world I had left behind.
I awoke to chaos: doctors, nurses, needles, alarms. Pain seared through me, but I was alive. Somehow, impossibly, life had returned.
(Watch my near-death experience story for the full testimony and spiritual reflection.)
For decades, medicine assumed that brain activity ended seconds after the heart stopped. But recent research is forcing scientists to reconsider.
Together, these findings reveal a truth that science is only beginning to grasp: death may not be an instant event but a process—and consciousness may transcend it.
When I woke, my right hand was shattered, my left side paralyzed. Doctors told my family I would never walk again, never use my hand again, and likely never regain full speech or cognition.
But something inside me had changed. The room I had seen, the peace I had felt, and my father’s words had left an imprint. I knew I hadn’t been sent back just to exist—I had been sent back to fight.
Rehabilitation was grueling. My right arm was locked in a cast, my left side dead weight. I spent months retraining my body—inch by inch, nerve by nerve.
One night, after a humiliating moment in my wheelchair when no one stopped to help, I broke down. That night I dreamed of my father again. He told me, “If you want to walk, ask God.”
The next morning, I did. I prayed like never before, drawing a line in my mind and promising myself that one day I would cross it unassisted.
And I did.
After weeks of relentless therapy, I stood on my own. Then, step by step, I walked—fifty-seven steps unassisted out of that hospital, defying every prognosis written about me.
After my revival, specialists repeated my brain scans. The original tests had shown catastrophic right-hemisphere damage. The new scans? Only a small, localized injury. One neurologist described it as though “someone had surgically removed” the region controlling movement on my left side—but the rest of the brain looked untouched.
They couldn’t explain it. They still can’t.
My survival, recovery, and intact cognition contradicted every medical prediction. Neuroscience offers theories about oxygen surges or neuroplastic adaptation, but even leading experts admit these cases remain mysteries.
For me, it’s simple: God wasn’t done with me.
Research into near-death experiences (NDEs) now spans decades and thousands of cases. Though mechanisms remain debated, recurring themes are strikingly consistent:
A sense of peace and detachment from the body
A tunnel or doorway of light
Encounters with deceased relatives or spiritual beings
Life reviews or divine messages
A reluctant return to life followed by transformation
Studies in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience and Resuscitation show that 10–20 % of people revived after cardiac arrest report NDEs with these same elements. Survivors often display lasting psychological and spiritual change, including reduced fear of death, increased compassion, and deeper faith.
When I read those studies, it felt like reading my own life on paper.
Coming back wasn’t just about physical survival—it was about transformation. I had to learn to live again, to find meaning in what had happened. Every limp I take today is a reminder of grace. Every scar is a sentence in a story that still matters.
Those fifty-seven steps taught me that faith is not about walking without pain—it’s about walking anyway.
Science may document the mechanisms of revival, but faith defines its purpose. The data proves that consciousness can flicker even after death; faith tells us why—so that souls like mine can return with a message of hope.
Since that day, I’ve shared my testimony not as proof of science or theology but as an invitation: to believe that miracles still happen, and that the boundary between life and death is thinner than we think.
Every time someone tells me my story gave them courage, I remember my father’s words—follow the plan.
That plan, I now understand, was to remind others that no matter how final a situation seems, God can rewrite the ending.
If you’re reading this, struggling to believe that your life still has purpose, let me tell you: it does. I’ve been where there was no heartbeat, no brainwave, no reason for hope—and yet here I am, alive, walking, writing, and testifying that life is stronger than death.
Scientists will continue to study the flickers of post-mortem consciousness, EEG bursts, and near-death phenomena. But no scan can measure peace. No monitor can chart love.
When my heart stopped, something greater began—a proof beyond instruments that there is more to us than neurons and blood flow.
The evidence now suggests that death is not the end. I am the evidence that life—true life—goes on.
My story bridges two worlds: the physical and the spiritual, the clinical and the miraculous. Medical research may someday explain how I survived sixty minutes without a pulse. But science will never fully define why.
I believe the “why” is the reason I’m still here—to share what I saw, what I felt, and what I’ve learned: That faith and science don’t compete—they complete each other.
As science inches closer to understanding what happens after the final heartbeat, I already know what waits beyond: love, light, and a Father who said, Not yet.
🎥 Watch the full near-death experience story on YouTube.
☕ Support this ministry: Buy Me a Coffee
Read additional information about my near-death experience here
© Douglas Vandergraph All rights reserved. Shared for faith, truth, and hope.
from
The Beacon Press
A Fault Line Investigation — Published by The Beacon Press
Published: November 11, 2025
https://thebeaconpress.org/hyfrz701a7fpc7c4
SNAP serves 12.3% of U.S. (41.7 million monthly, FY2024, USDA 2025), while seasonal catastrophes (e.g., hurricanes 2025: 15 million impacted, 37% of population in risk zones, NOAA 2025) could “drain” fund for 5–6 months (CBPP 2025), risking “catastrophic” gaps in food aid amid floods/tornadoes (30% SNAP overlap in disaster zones, FEMA 2025)
The U.S. government's 40-day shutdown, which ended on November 10, 2025, created uncertainty for 42 million SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) recipients, as the Trump administration's plan limited payments to about 50% using a $4.65 billion contingency fund. This approach, announced on November 3, 2025, followed court orders for some funding but rejected full payments, affecting 16 million children, 8 million seniors, and 2 million veterans. States handled distribution, resulting in varied timelines and confusion, with some issuing full benefits before a Supreme Court pause on November 7. The plan was reversed in the shutdown-ending bill, restoring full November benefits, but the delay highlighted a fracture in federal handling of essential services during lapses. SNAP, serving 12.3% of the U.S. population (41.7 million monthly in FY 2024, USDA 2025), relies on annual appropriations, and the “half-payment” decision – using only part of available reserves – postponed aid for weeks in some states, with 75% of Americans viewing it as a “breach of trust” (Quinnipiac, November 2025).
The truth under scrutiny: The contingency fund, designed for emergencies, was used for routine benefits but not fully, leaving 1 in 8 Americans (42 million, including 12.3% of the population) vulnerable during a time when other risks, like seasonal disasters, could drain resources.
SNAP is administered by states but funded federally through the USDA's Food and Nutrition Service (FNS). During the shutdown (October 1–November 10), handling shifted to emergency procedures under the Antideficiency Act (31 U.S.C. § 1341), barring spending without appropriations. The “half-payment” plan was a USDA directive using contingency funds, but it was challenged and paused by courts, leading to inconsistent state actions. Below is a plain-English breakdown of who did what and how, based on USDA guidance, court filings, and state reports (no conjecture – sourced facts only).
| Step | Who | What | How | Timeline/Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Funding Freeze | USDA (FNS) | Halted November benefit files to states (no payments processed). | Directed states to stop sending eligibility data to EBT vendors (debit-like cards). Funds “lapsed” October 31 (end of FY2025 carryover). | October 10, 2025 – No payments for 42 million (12.3% of U.S. population, USDA FY 2024). Impact: Immediate uncertainty; food banks saw 30% surge (Food Research & Action Center, 2025). |
| 2. Partial Funding Directive | USDA (Secretary Brooke Rollins, Deputy Patrick Penn) | Announced “half-payments” using $4.65 billion contingency fund (Section 16(a) reserve). | States recalculate benefits: ~50% of household allotment (e.g., $187/month max for 1 person → $93.50). Excludes new applicants; some states proposed “flat half” but USDA rejected for “equity.” | November 3, 2025 – After Rhode Island/Massachusetts judges ordered “some” funding (October 31–November 1). Impact: 5–10 weeks delay for states (e.g., Arizona, Arkansas vary by SSN/last name; 12% of Americans affected, USDA 2025). |
| 3. Court Challenges & Full Payment Orders | States (25+ e.g., California, Massachusetts) + Nonprofits (AFGE, AFSCME) | Sued for full funding; judges ordered USDA to use full reserves ($4.65B + $4B Section 32 funds for child nutrition). | Judges (McConnell in RI, Talwani in MA) ruled “unlawful” withholding; USDA to pay “full” by November 7 (RI) or “partial minimum” (MA). States like Wisconsin/Kansas issued full files ($32M+), but USDA called “unauthorized.” | November 6–7, 2025 – Full payments issued in 10+ states (e.g., MA, NY, CT, NJ, WI, KS). Impact: 42 million eligible, but 1M+ received partial/full early; food pantries overburdened (30% surge, FRAC 2025). |
| 4. Supreme Court Pause & USDA “Undo” Memo | USDA (Deputy Penn) + SCOTUS (Justice Jackson) | Paused full payments; USDA ordered “undo” full filings and shift to 65% (revised from 50%). | Jackson's emergency stay (November 7) allowed appeal; USDA memo (November 9) threatened “liability” for “overissuance” (e.g., cancel admin funds). States to claw back if full sent. | November 7–9, 2025 – SCOTUS pause; USDA memo to 50 states. Impact: Chaos – WI/Kansas “overpaid” $32M+; 12 states (e.g., MD) in “no clarity” (Gov. Moore, 2025). |
| 5. Shutdown Resolution | Congress (Senate 60-40, House concurrence) + President Trump | Ended shutdown with CR to January 30, 2026; restored full SNAP November benefits (undoing half-plan). | Bill includes $8B+ for SNAP (full funding + retroactive pay for 750K furloughed). USDA to process “as soon as possible.” | November 10, 2025 – Senate advance; full funding confirmed. Impact: 42 million receive full November (delayed 5–10 days in 10 states); $5B reserves replenished. |
SNAP's contingency fund (Section 16(a) of the Food and Nutrition Act, 7 U.S.C. § 2025(a)) is a multi-year reserve (~$3B/year, $6B available FY2025–2026) for “program operations as necessary.” It's triggered by USDA discretion during funding lapses, but with limits: no new obligations without appropriation (Antideficiency Act, 31 U.S.C. § 1341); “supplemental” for shortfalls, not routine (USDA 2025 memo).
The “half-payment” compromised on the criticality of the contingency fund as “supplemental” (50% via $4.65B), but courts ruled on a full obligatory (November 6–7, 2025), projecting “no funds for disasters” if drained (e.g., hurricanes affecting 10–20% population, 2025 FEMA). SNAP serves 12.3% of U.S. (41.7 million monthly, FY2024, USDA 2025), while seasonal catastrophes (e.g., hurricanes 2025: 15 million impacted, 37% of population in risk zones, NOAA 2025) could “drain” fund for 5–6 months (CBPP 2025), risking “catastrophic” gaps in food aid amid floods/tornadoes (30% SNAP overlap in disaster zones, FEMA 2025). Other risks: 90% of fund for “unforeseen” (e.g., $3B for 2025 wildfires, USDA 2025), leaving “no cushion” for “economic crises” (e.g., 20% SNAP surge in recessions, CBPP 2025), breaching “operations” intent (7 U.S.C. § 2025(a)).
Demand GAO audit of:
– USDA “undo” memo's legal basis
– State “overissuance” liability during lapses
→ File GAO Request
→ Reference: GAO-25-108, Rhode Island v. Trump (2025)
Light on the fracture. No paywall. No ads. Truth only.
The Beacon Press | thebeaconpress.org
from Mitchell Report

A serious medical discussion about heart treatment options between a patient and his cardiologist.
This has taken me so long to post because I am still trying to process a lot of stuff and weighing a lot of pros and cons. I went to my HCM Cardiologist (Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Specialist) recently. I had an ECHO first then saw him. It was not good news from the ECHO. Even though I feel no symptoms with the Camzyos, I will need to take drastic measures in the future, though the timeline wasn't really given. But my gradients are not improving. Last time my gradient at Valsalva was significantly elevated with 100% obstruction. This time it was still elevated and still 100% obstruction at Valsalva.
You know that it's serious when the doctor comes in, gets close to you like he is a friend, softens their voice, and says while the medicine is keeping me symptom free, my pressures are too high and I need to start thinking of either a Septal Myectomy or an Alcohol Septal Ablation. If it was one of their family members, they would send them to a major center of excellence like Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic for the myectomy. They just started doing the Alcohol Septal Ablation at a local hospital and the doctor that does it was trained by a leading World Specialist. They could do the septal myectomy, but for this they are not a Center of Excellence, and having the procedure done at a Center of Excellence gives you less than 1% chance of death.
So I have choices to make. I don't even know if my insurance would pay for me to go to one of these major centers, and then you're without a family network being that far away. Then there is my workplace. They recently terminated a long-time employee over FMLA documentation issues. So I don't have confidence that if I have to go out for a long time with the myectomy, I would still have a job. I know that FMLA is supposed to protect you, but it is a fear with the current political climate and business-friendly state laws.
If I do the alcohol ablation, which I am leaning toward, I can get that done locally. This procedure is a controlled heart attack, and the scar tissue is supposed to shrink the muscle and lessen any obstruction so the heart can pump out more oxygenated blood. It has a much shorter recovery time: 3 days in the ICU and likely back to work in 2 weeks.
The same doctor who was trained to do the alcohol ablation is also going to do a heart catheterization in December. The specialist says they need all the details about my heart they can get before making final decisions. My recent cardiac MRI showed 3.5% diffuse LGE, which indicates some fibrosis in the heart muscle. They want the cath to get a complete picture of what's going on with blood flow and pressures throughout my heart.
Then there is going to be a new medicine, a second-generation med called Aficamten that should launch next year. It has a safer profile if the Government ever opens back up and gets approved by the FDA in December as scheduled. I could transition if my insurance approves it, and it has several advantages over Camzyos, but it still may just keep me asymptomatic.
I have been having issues with my insurance company, mostly due to the REMS program requirements, and I believe this has not helped. I went almost 2 weeks recently trying to get my Camzyos for one reason or the other. I know that Camzyos has a half-life of 6 to 9 days staying in the system, but I was starting to feel like I used to at about day 6. So with my insurance also giving me problems with out-of-pocket determinations (one moment I am, the other I am not because of copay accumulator rules).
So with all these issues, I just have been in a kind of haze. I am leaning toward the alcohol septal ablation, but with only a 70 percent success rate compared to over 90 percent with the more invasive myectomy, I am not sure. Because the doctor made it a point that with the alcohol ablation, I could have another obstruction, then the go-to will have to be a myectomy, which is now riskier and trickier. I don't want to go through something where in the future they find this or that shouldn't have been done, like with my Cryoablation in 2016 for AFib. But they didn't know that Cryo was not ideal for HCM patients. Only RF ablation at specific spots should have been done. [^1] But Alcohol ablation has been around for a while.
Why all the urgency? Because my chances of dropping over dead from sudden cardiac death (from arrhythmia) or acute heart-failure decompensation.
Just for context, here is a plain explanation for what Valsalva is:
What is Valsalva? The Valsalva maneuver is a breathing technique used during an echocardiogram to stress-test the heart. You're asked to take a deep breath and bear down (like you're straining or trying to blow up a stiff balloon) while holding your breath. This increases pressure in your chest and temporarily changes how blood flows through your heart. In people with HCM, this maneuver often makes the obstruction worse and causes the gradient (pressure difference) to increase dramatically. Doctors use it to see how severe the obstruction really is under stress, since many HCM patients have worse obstruction during physical exertion or strain. The gradient measurements “at rest” show how your heart is doing normally, while the “at Valsalva” measurements show how bad the obstruction gets when your heart is under stress.
My ECHO History
I've had multiple echocardiograms tracking my HCM progression. The pattern shows persistent severe septal hypertrophy with dynamic left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. My gradients at Valsalva have consistently been significantly elevated, ranging from moderate to severe obstruction. My left atrium has progressively dilated from normal to moderately-severely dilated over time, which is concerning for long-term outcomes. Despite Camzyos keeping me symptom-free, the structural changes and obstruction patterns remain significant. Before starting Camzyos, I was very symptomatic with systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve and resting gradients that were quite elevated. The medication has improved my quality of life dramatically, but the underlying obstruction during stress remains a concern that points toward needing a more definitive intervention.
[^1]: Nedios, S. et al. “Characteristics of left atrial remodeling in patients with atrial fibrillation and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in comparison to patients without hypertrophy.” Scientific Reports 11, 12411 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91892-y – This study found that radiofrequency ablation is preferred over cryoablation for HCM patients with atrial fibrillation due to more advanced atrial remodeling.
from POTUSRoaster
Hi there. Hope you had a great weekend and your football team won.
When POTUS was running for election he told people over and over that he would lower prices and help people with the cost of living. Nothing is apparently further from the truth. He has not been able to control the cost of almost anything. Everything is more expensive than when he was elected.
Worse yet, POTUS does not appear to care whether folks can afford food, clothing, shelter or utilities because he hasn’t done a thing to control these costs. In fact, his irrational tariffs are causing prices to rise rather than fall. He really doesn’t care. So why should you care about POTUS? I have no idea.
With the courts issuing conflicting orders to either pay or not pay SNAP benefits, the single biggest family meal of the year is now in danger of not occurring for more than 40 million who receive benefits. POTUS doesn’t really care about this either or he would do whatever is necessary to make sure people are fed. It’s more than obvious that POTUS is being fed, a lot. Sorry you aren’t.
POTUS Roaster
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from Faucet Repair
26 October 2025
On diversion completed today. Its conception was primarily spurred on by Merlin James's Oxbow (2023), which I've been studying for a while—the relationship of its marks and the unique character of its surface to the components of its landscape subject. My own painting is loosely based on miles upon miles of open road on Oregon Route 99W headed toward Dundee from Portland International Airport, the recall of which meshed nicely with a bit of Phoebe Helander's aforementioned talk in which she describes repeating a rose petal form over and over as she fails to capture it in shifting light, its glitching buildup becoming visual information that composes the image indirectly. I think I was also holding similar ideas about visually fading in and out, of constantly oscillating relationships between what has just been seen and what is anticipated to be seen. Of focusing, unfocusing, and optical warping through that process.
from cache
E-commerce is growing exponentially. I frequently see overnight successes of such companies through viral marketing; globalization and software have made it trivial for someone to open a store and saturate a product.
I spent about 1000 USD with 300 annual recurring costs (which I eventually stopped) selling on Shopify with ads on Facebook Ads, earning about 200 annually in revenue. I also had some other experiments with trying to move bulk on Amazon and trying to set up some ads on Tiktok. I lost money, and I consider this as just education fees.
I have another product on an unmentioned platform, with about 1000-3000 in annual revenue, netting half of that as profit (this online store is ongoing).
Here are some things learned:
It was kind of costly to run these experiments but it’s educational to see the systems that sellers use. What surprised me the most in all of this was that a disproportionate amount of money is spent on acquisition (and not on the actual product). A pair of shoes can cost $100 on a shelf but can only cost $10 to make. With future advances in automation, AI content, and consumer data collection, it can cost even less.
from
Kroeber
Não é que um artista tenha de ser miserável para produzir arte que valha a pena. Mas é a dor que assinala o lugar onde se abriu um fosso interior que a felicidade se encarrega de preencher. Dito de outra forma, a sombra assinala os contornos da luz. Ou ainda: a gratidão germina melhor na saciedade. E as flores mais resistentes são as do deserto.
from
Café histoire
La légende de la soul Mavis Staples continue d’enchanter le monde à 86 ans avec le poignant “Sad and Beautiful World”.
Instagram @mavisstaples et @antirecords
Everybody Needs Love
La légende de la musique Mavis Staples revient avec un nouvel album intitulé Sad and Beautiful World. Pour Citizenside
Avec cet album, Mavis Staples transcende les genres musicaux et revisite des classiques tout en incluant des œuvres moins connues. L’album présente des reprises allant de Frank Ocean au groupe Sparklehorse, tout en faisant référence à ses racines dans le gospel et son parcours impressionnant de 72 ans dans l’industrie musicale.
Tags : #AuCafé #SurMaPlatine #musique
from
💚
Our Father Who art in heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from Douglas Vandergraph
Parenting is never just about teaching kids—it’s about being taught, reshaped, and humbled every single day. That’s the heart of this incredible conversation between comedian Josh Blue and motivational host Douglas Vandergraph, a talk that blends humor, honesty, and hope into one unforgettable reflection on life and love.
👉 Watch Josh Blue’s powerful interview on YouTube — the full conversation that inspired this article.
In this video, Josh opens up about the joys and challenges of raising children while balancing the unpredictable life of a touring comedian. He shares stories that will make you laugh out loud, moments that will move you to tears, and truths that speak directly to every dreamer trying to do life with purpose.
This isn’t just an interview. It’s a window into how fatherhood shapes us—how love matures us—and how vulnerability becomes our greatest strength.
Josh Blue burst onto the national scene after winning Last Comic Standing Season 4, instantly winning hearts with his sharp wit and fearless self-deprecating humour. Living with cerebral palsy, he’s spent years transforming personal adversity into art, laughter, and connection.
What makes Josh unique isn’t just his comedy—it’s his authenticity. He never hides behind the stage persona. He laughs about his physical limitations, but he also redefines what limitation even means. His message? That we all have something that makes us different, but those differences can become the very tools that connect us.
In conversation with Douglas Vandergraph, he takes that philosophy one step further—into the realm of parenting. He explains how fatherhood forced him to slow down, listen, and learn patience from the small voices in his life. He shares that the role of “Dad” has stretched him more than any career challenge ever could.
When Josh describes the moment he first held his child, you can sense the seismic shift that happens inside every new parent. “Nothing prepares you for that,” he says, smiling through the memory. “It’s like your heart is walking around outside your body.”
Parenthood reframes success. Suddenly, fame, money, and applause matter less than bedtime stories and scraped knees. Josh admits that being a comedian gave him control over his own story—but being a father forced him to surrender that control.
This surrender, he says, is the beginning of real growth. Douglas Vandergraph guides him deeper, asking what lessons he’s learned through the messiness of parenting. Josh’s answer is universal:
“You can’t fake being present. Your kids know when you’re really there—and when you’re not.”
In a world obsessed with getting everything “right,” Josh reminds us that presence always outweighs perfection. Children don’t remember the perfect vacation or the polished speech—they remember your eyes when you listen, your laughter when they tell a silly story, and your arms when life feels too heavy.
Psychologists back this up. Studies show that emotional presence—attunement, empathy, and eye contact—builds secure attachment and lifelong confidence (Harvard Center on the Developing Child, 2022). Josh lives that truth daily, choosing connection over image.
He recalls making breakfast in the chaos of spilled cereal and mismatched socks. “Those moments,” he laughs, “are where love hides—in the mess.”
For parents reading this: don’t chase perfection. Chase moments. Your children will never need a flawless parent. They need a faithful one.
Josh’s comedy has always been a tool for healing. Through laughter, he transforms pain into perspective. In fatherhood, that gift becomes even more vital.
He jokes about parenting “fails”—like realizing your child has outsmarted you, or that bedtime negotiations feel like hostage situations. But beneath the humour is profound wisdom: laughter creates connection.
According to the American Psychological Association, humour strengthens relationships, reduces stress, and increases resilience in families (APA Monitor, 2021). Josh lives by this. When a day goes wrong, he doesn’t hide it; he reframes it with humour so his kids learn joy in imperfection.
Douglas Vandergraph calls this “holy laughter”—the sacred ability to find grace in chaos. Their conversation reminds us that laughter is not denial—it’s defiance. It’s hope wearing a smile.
Josh admits that, for years, he equated strength with independence. But fatherhood taught him the opposite. “My kids don’t need a superhero,” he says. “They need a dad who says, ‘I’m scared too—but I’m here.’”
This mirrors what Brené Brown calls “courage through vulnerability.” Research shows that when parents express authentic emotions, children learn empathy and emotional regulation (Brown, 2012, Daring Greatly).
In the interview, Josh opens up about teaching his children to face challenges head-on. Whether it’s explaining his cerebral palsy or answering tough questions about why people stare, he chooses honesty over avoidance.
That’s the mark of a true leader: someone who transforms weakness into wisdom.
Douglas Vandergraph asks Josh what “leading with love” means to him. The question lands deeply.
Josh reflects: “Love means showing up even when it’s inconvenient. It means forgiving faster than you want to. It means making room for the mess—and still smiling through it.”
That philosophy resonates with faith traditions worldwide. In Christianity, love is the greatest commandment (Matthew 22:37-39). In psychology, it’s the highest motivator for behaviour change (Maslow Hierarchy, 1943). For Josh, it’s both theology and therapy.
Love, he says, redefines purpose. Once you become a parent, every dream expands beyond self. Success isn’t measured by applause but by the echoes of laughter in the next room.
One of the most relatable parts of the interview is when Josh discusses the tension between creative ambition and family responsibility. Touring, writing, performing—it’s a demanding life. “But you can’t let your dreams die,” he insists. “You just learn to dream differently.”
He explains that fatherhood didn’t shrink his ambition; it focused it. Instead of chasing every gig, he began choosing opportunities that aligned with his values. The result? Less burnout, more joy.
Douglas connects this to his own mission of purpose-driven living—reminding viewers that success is hollow if it costs you your family.
This is a wake-up call to modern parents hustling nonstop: Achievement that isolates isn’t success—it’s surrender.
Throughout the interview, Josh returns to one recurring theme: children are our teachers.
When his kids forgive him quickly after he loses patience, it reminds him of divine grace. When they laugh at mistakes, he remembers humility. When they ask impossible questions, he’s reminded that curiosity is sacred.
This mirrors research by Dr. Carol Dweck on the growth mindset—the belief that abilities grow through effort and openness (Dweck, Stanford University, 2015). Kids embody that mindset naturally. Josh’s role as a father is to nurture it—not crush it.
Douglas Vandergraph often says: “Children aren’t interruptions to greatness—they’re invitations to it.” This conversation brings that truth to life.
Beyond the home, the lessons of fatherhood ripple outward. Compassion learned in the living room becomes kindness in public. Patience learned during homework becomes empathy for strangers.
Sociologists note that involved fathers improve child outcomes across education, behaviour, and mental health (U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, 2020). But Josh Blue’s take is more poetic:
“If every dad just loved his kids well, we’d fix half the world’s problems overnight.”
It’s funny because it’s true. Parenting, at its best, is activism in its most intimate form.
Although the conversation is rooted in everyday life, faith flows quietly underneath it. Douglas Vandergraph guides Josh into exploring gratitude, prayer, and surrender—not in a preachy way, but through lived experience.
Josh admits that fatherhood has deepened his spirituality. “You realize how small you are and how big love really is,” he says. “That’s faith to me—believing that love will cover the gaps.”
For many viewers, this is the heart of the interview: faith isn’t about rules; it’s about relationship—between parent and child, creator and creation, human and divine.
Every parent fails. Every comedian bombs. Every human stumbles. But what keeps Josh grounded is forgiveness—both giving it and receiving it.
He laughs, “My kids forgive me faster than I forgive myself.”
Psychologists describe this as self-compassion, a core factor in resilience (Neff, University of Texas, 2011). Without it, shame grows. With it, families heal.
Douglas adds that forgiveness isn’t weakness—it’s strength disguised as humility. Together, they remind us that families aren’t perfect; they’re practice grounds for grace.
As the interview closes, Josh speaks about legacy. “I don’t want my kids to remember me as the guy who was always gone. I want them to remember me as the guy who showed up, who listened, who made them laugh.”
Douglas nods. “That’s the real definition of purpose.”
It’s a reminder that calling isn’t static. It changes with seasons. What was once about personal success becomes about impact. And when love drives that transition, everything aligns.
We live in an era of disconnected families and digital distractions. Studies show that American parents spend less quality time with their children than previous generations (Pew Research Center, 2023). Burnout is common. Anxiety is rising.
This interview arrives as a cultural antidote. It’s a reminder that laughter, love, and presence are still the most powerful medicines we have.
Whether you’re a parent, mentor, leader, or believer, you’ll walk away feeling both lighter and braver. Because Josh and Douglas don’t just talk about growth—they model it.
Watch Intentionally — Don’t multitask. Sit down, play the interview, and let it speak.
Reflect Personally — What moment resonated most? Journal it.
Reconnect Relationally — Call someone you love and tell them you appreciate them.
Respond Practically — Make one change: more listening, less judging.
Repeat Consistently — Transformation happens one day at a time.
The interview leaves you smiling, but also reflecting. Maybe that’s the secret of Josh Blue’s gift: he sneaks truth in through laughter.
Parenthood, like stand-up, is unscripted. You’ll bomb. You’ll forget lines. But if you stay on stage—if you stay present—you’ll discover that grace is the best punchline of all.
Douglas Vandergraph sums it up perfectly near the end:
“Every laugh, every mistake, every hug—it’s all sacred ground.”
When the video fades to black, you realize: fatherhood isn’t just about raising children. It’s about raising yourself—into a fuller, more loving, more authentic human being.
If you need a shot of laughter, truth, and hope, start here: 👉 Watch the full Josh Blue interview on YouTube
And if it moves you, share it. Tell a parent who needs encouragement. Post it in a group chat. Start a conversation about what real love looks like in a modern world.
Because the more we talk about presence, vulnerability, and love—the more the world changes.
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube.
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Warmly, Douglas Vandergraph