from bios

Reactionary Reviews ​| Variasies Op ‘n Tema | Dir: Jason Jacobs & Devon Delmar

Variasies toes a line between elegiac and pretentious, and pulls off this high wire act by not resorting to hand-wringing, moving to a subtle, soul-shifting gestalt.

Does Variasies have flaws? Do the non-professional cast sometimes deliver a clunker? Does the script sometimes lack nuance? None of these so very few moments detract from the slow build toward an inevitable moment. There is no conclusion, merely acceptance. Variasies does not end, you carry it out of the cinema with you.

Revolving around the descendants of a WW2 soldier, paid only with a boots and a bicycle, who returned to tend his goats – the theme is simply the mirage of hope. Never mired in moralizing, it simply lays bare the daily rhythm of a small town in a sparse landscape.

As an ageing goat herd still tending her father’s flock, Hettie has grown accustomed to isolation, her family is coming to visit, the neighbours and town’s folk are expecting a pay out from the government for the sacrifices of their forebears. Nothing happens. Everything happens. A menacing foreboding signalling nothing.

Drawn from narrator and co-director Jason Jacobs’ family history and the current anxieties of the community, and starring members of that community, including his grandmother Hettie (her debut at age 80) as Hettie the daughter of the WW2 soldier – Variasies is a slow burn of naturalism in the most acute sense.

Soft spoken suiwer cadences from the edge of the Kharkams whisper the narrative along in observation. Rendered in a palette synchronic of the dry north, resplendent in slow detail, lyrical in it’s silences. Variasies is a beauty hard to look at, lush with minor heartbreak. Cinema of this delicate magnitude is a grief and a joy.

 
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from Faucet Repair

16 May 2026

Saw the Duchamp show at MoMA while I was in New York. Master puppeteer, seems like he operated with such an unfathomably wide top-down view of his context that he transcended it entirely. A pretty amazing feeling to walk chronologically through the unmatchably rigorous, curious, and poetic path he charted. I got the sense that his constant iterating on the forms he obsessed over was his way of rotating them around a kind of internalized examination axis to spatially project and then destabilize their measurable characteristics. Which generated a metaphysical language that allowed him to endlessly probe how objects relate to each other and to us as seeing and sensing bodies. In space, in time, in the imagination. And that language, seen in its entirety, felt surprisingly generous. I think because it was always pointed inward. Used to satisfy something that may have manifested as a disruption because of how original it was, but was meant to expand rather than sabotage. That's a long way of saying he was ahead of his time and was graceful in proving/sharing that.

Some personal favorite moments: one of his small Rotoreliefs—cerulean blue/white/a kind of tangerine orange, the central form a hook-shaped line-drawn half light bulb with dashes shooting off of it as implied light rays. Delicate, alive, absent of the thing it represents yet conjuring it all the same. And a 1956 small ink drawing of a jacket on two pieces of what looked like transparent tracing paper, his tiny handwritten name on the topmost piece floating over the space representing where the name tag would be on the bottom piece. The inner lining of the jacket represented by grids drawn on to that same bottom layer—simple suspension, non-duality in one choice. To say nothing of the Swift Nudes (escaping, illuminating, darting, receding). The dynamism exceeded my expectations, and they were lofty.

 
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from Faucet Repair

14 May 2026

Paul Thek @ Galerie Buchholz (NY): didn't get to make the big Pace show because it wasn't open on the one day I had free to walk around, but I'm guessing it had the lion's share of the good stuff. Even so, it was worth seeing for the new-to-me 1973 series of collaborative collages he made with Ann Wilson. I believe there were five of them, each organized around a central triangle shape. One filled with a cloudy blue sky that bled into a bird form, another filled with gold leaf, another framing a sea horizon. Diaristic in approach and feeling, lyrics (Beatles) and sections of religious texts scrawled along the edges of the triangles or floating around them, line drawings of animals cut out and dropped in here and there (a sheep with the words “kiss me” next to its face). Refreshing in its playfulness, a collaborative game. Felt like two friends trying to out-mantra each other. Perhaps they resonated with me because of the “inscrutable spiritual symbol” stuff I've been trying my hand at (as described by Jonathan). Also enjoyed the two 1975 “Untitled (Grapes)” newspaper paintings. Done seemingly so “correctly” (and directly), but handled with such an abundant and loose hand that they break down in the good way on close inspection. In one of them, a moment where the thick green vine squiggles part like curtains to reveal a shape that looks like a curling cartoon shrub underneath.

 
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from Rooted and Growing in the Ozarks

Ozark Heritage Botanicals is located in Ozark County and specializes in native, medicinal, herbal, and heirloom plants that grow in our bioregion. I offer a weekly pick-up in Ava on Wednesdays at Living Lands Collective on the town square, and we can be found at various fairs and markets around the Ozarks. Plants can also be picked up by appointment from our nursery or Flotsam Farm.

Natives ...

Elderberry, Mulberry cuttings, Witch hazel, Sassafras, Gooseberry, Dewberry, Pasture rose, Prickly Pear Cactus, Wild ginger, Sochan, Yarrow, Monarda, Jacob’s ladder, Birds foot violet, Blue violet, Virginia water leaf, Stonecrop, Ozark spiderwort, Green dragon, Passionflower

Herbs ...

Ginger, Chamomile, Culinary sage, Hyssop, Anise hyssop, Zaatar, Oregano, Marjoram, Thyme, Creeping thyme, Calendula, Dagga, Mugwort, Motherwort, Lemon bee balm, Lemon balm, Hops vine, Horseradish, Comfrey, Aloe vera, Walking onions, Catnip, Apple mint, Sunchoke

Other ...

European Elderberry, Red thornless raspberry, Fall gold raspberry, Kiowa blackberry, Triple crown blackberry, Goji, Ozark beauty strawberry, Peony, Hens n chicks, Alyssum, Trifoliate lime tree

 
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from Rooted and Growing in the Ozarks

Corn has long been an essential staple crop grown by tribes, settlers, and people in the Ozarks bioregion providing sustenance, nutrition, and building community. Last year at Flotsam Farm we grew about 1/8 acre of Ozark Gourdseed corn, alongside beans and squash in a 3 sisters patch. The corn and beans came from Richard of East Wind Community in Ozark county where it has been grown and saved for several years, and the squash is a grew variety that Wren Haffner has been working with in her Moschata breeding project.

We had the incredible opportunity to grind our corn at Topaz Mill, a local spring-powered grist mill in Douglas County. This mill is maintained and fully operational thanks to Joe Bob O’Neal and his wife Betsy, Joe Bob’s uncle Joe, and the folks who came before them. It is powered by a spring onsite that gushes out a million gallons of water a day and is channeled through a raceway which runs the mill when the channels are opened. We took almost one bushel, or 52 pounds of corn kernels, and we got about 41 pounds of cornmeal and 11 pounds of grits.

From growing the corn together, to harvesting, to shucking and shelling the corn off the cob s during a Sycamore Salon, and then ultimately grinding our homegrown corn into cornmeal, this was a truly epic community building experience.

Topaz Mill will be hosting a corn grinding event with us this year – , and there is still time to plant your corn and share in the fun and bounty with us!! If you are interested in growing Ozark Gourdseed corn, we can provide you with seeds. You are also welcome to grow another variety of flour corn and bring it to the event to get it ground, too! Email me at dezdino@protonmail.com for more info.

originally published in The Ozarks Agrarian News as Growing Corn in the Ozarks, #60 Winter Solstice 2025, with edits and additions

 
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from bios

9: Life On Life’s Terms


He leaves the rehab fat and full of confidence. He is afraid of disappointing his mother. Glowing complexion, new clothes from the outside, and a shrug, happy to be clean, out the rusty gate, under the wide sky. Three months later he returns unrecognisable. Thin, more teeth gone, and a homeless tan, dark burnt by the sun.

He leaves the rehab to return to one or two places, his mother’s – but she drinks. People, places, things. Or his brother’s – who smokes. The brother promises not to tempt him.

His brother’s place is Netflix and time, and egg sandwiches. Or scrambled egg on toast. Or fried eggs. He waits for his ID to get his driver’s so he can start to look for work. Sometimes just toast. It’s the boredom that gets him. The inability to imagine any sort of life within his grasp. An endless stream of Netflix and toast, an anomie of aspiration and not-having, the salve of opiates waits in the next room.

One week later they have sold their uncle’s flatscreen and are spinning for food, to trade for nyaope, outside the Spar in Melville. It’s when the Spar closes down that they start to run out of options.

And so they, the brothers, book back in, for another year. Into a place where the only future one is able to imagine rests in doing the right thing... everything will turn out. There is no skills training, no way to reach for actual purpose, no path to concretely doing the right thing.

Once a friend came to me after he had witnessed his first overdose, her slack body in his doorway, sat up still waiting. He had been out looking for her. She had been waiting. “People don't change”, he says, “unless they have to choose between staying the same, or death, and then they realise too late”.

Rat Park, an experiment in the late seventies. Kept In isolation, given a choice between morphine laced water and plain, rats mostly chose the morphine. Rats in a well stimulated social environment with other rats, enough food, space, play things, were given the same choice and by and large preferred the plain water. Rats, addicted, in isolation previously when moved into the socially functioning environment, mostly switched over slowly to plain water.

Nestled close to the train station bridge in Observatory, literal rainbows painted on the exterior of the house, met outside by the woman who ran the place, Rainbow House halfway house seemed a good alternative to the YMCA, where dealers roamed the street opposite the entrance.

There were signs. The meeting was outside on a bench, no tour. She asked for the money as a cash send and immediately dispatched someone with it to “go see Bennie”, she dropped the phrase “a wet house” casually into conversation.

The fading schedules on the common room walls, the occasional still stuck poster promoting the steps, were the only interior signs that Rainbow House had once been a halfway house, funded, with staff, counsellors, a cook, a manager, and a skills development program. Now all ripped wiring, stripped plumbing, and the smell of no laundry.

The funding gone, along with all signs of hope. There were no NA meetings, no-one came to discuss up-skilling or grants or… No-one came. Occasionally a woman claiming to the landlord tries to evict everyone – drug paraphernalia is hidden, everyone on their best behaviour.

It took three weeks after the funding evaporated for the staff to abandon the building. It took less before people started using to fill in the gaps left by meals, therapy sessions, meetings, classes, promise. A society disturbed by some painful crisis. First the stove and the fixtures went. But the addicts maintained a gas stove and meals were at least still served, frugal, desperate, but meals, maize and vegetable donations from the local shops.

The copper wiring started to go, the fridges long gone, the taps, the doors.

Wednesday was the mines, everyone out at 6am to scour the garbage bins left out in the suburban streets for anything of value. Every other day was plan making and petty theft of each other’s made plans.

Across the road there is an open space, some people living there off car guarding and minor dealing, the loss of daily structure and the proximity to access to meth, nyaope… it wasn’t ever going to take long.

There was a pit-bull, there is always a pit-bull, who would escape into the neighbour's garden, the ever complaining neighbour. He tries to keep the pit-bull, is visited by threats.

A family of four camps out in the backyard, in a broken tent.

Sheets and blankets are seldom washed.

Gavin smokes indanda and meth, hates the smell of nyaope, beats me if he catches me smoking in the room.

There is a deep presence of failure somewhere in my chest. I have attempted to move away from a place where I was in danger of relapsing and have moved into a place a relapsing. I do not know if I intentionally ignored the signs.

It is impossible for me to tell the people who are paying for me to be here, my food, my laundry, my medication, my airtime, the laptop stolen by Gavin… impossible to confess this failure for fear of the streets.

Gavin is too lazy for any aspirational sort of theft. He bullies things out of everyone. He rents space on his bed for people to smoke in peace, if they give him some. He gives them no peace.

Most of the residents of Rainbow House know each other. They were all living on Devil’s Peak, behind the houses in the bush. When Covid hit the department of health came to get them, put them in some sort of camp on a field somewhere. Rainbow House was the post Covid solution. Somewhere they were promised a payout that they never got. Gavin thinks about this payout a lot. What his life would have been. The loss of this hope is at the root of his daily anger. His larger deeper angers are rooted somewhere else.

Must a drowning person explain how they got in the river before they are thrown a rope.

Gavin often lets Mornay smoke meth on his bed. Mornay nurses a powerful paranoia when high, the people in the room he sleeps in, they do not tolerate it, they have their own drugs.

Mornay is sure, in depths of the night, that the neighbour is watching us and he peers out the window, and hears the voices, and the people in the tent below the window what are they doing?

For weeks this goes on, Gavin seldom has his own money, wants to use the laptop to watch TV, there is no peace in the room,, always Mornay at the window, always asking someone taking something, always another story, eventually the laptop goes. And he shares the drugs garnered from it with me, to spread the shame of being in this place.

An NGO is called in to negotiate between the residents and landlords. It is not a negotiation, it is an eviction. The house is stripped down to the bricks, a revenge on displacement. The former residents of Devil’s Peak, of Rainbow House, of Covid tent camps, move on, owning only the realisation of lack. Not even toast.

 
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from An Open Letter

I watched the movie and it brought me to the verge of tears several times, and at one point I finally shed a tear. One singular tear lol. I was really trying my best to cry but that was the most I was able to get out. I really loved the movie, not necessarily because it was written or anything like that but I think just because of the experience as a whole.

I will say however afterwards I kind of got hit by a combo attack of small little grief waves. Attack on Titan with something I started re-watching finally because I was watching it with E. And I thought about how cool of an experience it would’ve been for her to watch the movie. One of the things we talked about while breaking up was that she didn’t know what episode we were on and that was one of the things I told her over text. The movie theater we were at was also one in the same complex with the Barnes & Noble‘s that we had a date at, where she then had a scare about her vision and so I rushed her to her specialist doctor and waited with her for four hours keeping her spirits up and calming her down. throughout the whole process I kept her mom constantly updated, and wrote down notes that the doctors said. I remember a month or two after our break up in my phone I saw the contact saved for her specialist and I deleted it. While driving out of the complex I saw Pick Up Stix, which became her favorite food place according to her, and we would go there and get a big plate to share together. I remember one time after a fight we went there and she apologized after I had de-escalated everything. We got fortune cookies and the fortune that I got was you will find great success in romance, and I took a picture of her with that cookie. I remember sending that photo to her mom, and at Christmas time I got a custom ornament with that photo. She loved it so much and I loved it even more. I remember thinking about how every year we would be able to have a new ornament together. And finally while driving away I passed our food place, where we would go together get Chinese food and then watch a video together on my phone. That’s where we watched several attack on Titan episodes. And we would cuddle up together in the little booth. And I didn’t really have the heart to go back there since then.

It didn’t help that I was leaving the theater after having cried a little bit and trying to push myself to be in that headspace, but it didn’t actually hurt me that much. I still remember her face but I don’t really remember super well the other parts which does help. I don’t want to really remember either. And it does hurt, but like a dull aching pain that could quickly be ignored. And I hope that it’s been long enough that these grief progress bars have been mostly filled up already.

Honestly the biggest thing that I feel is guilt for thinking so much about wanting to date again, and being open to that – while I’m still getting some of the glitter out of my mind. But I try to be kind to myself and remind myself that little pieces of that glitter are always going to be there, and it’s not like I’m necessarily missing her or that I would want to reach back out or anything like that. But it’s more just acknowledging the lack of what was once good memories. And that’s completely OK that’s part of the process of grief.

 
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from Pierre-Emmanuel Weck

Il fut un temps où les réseaux sociaux étaient ouverts. Lorsque vous créiez un compte quelque part, il vous était proposé de le synchroniser avec tout un tas d'autres réseaux ailleurs.

Comme on pouvait publier par email, J'ai ouvert une adresse sur Gmail pour réaliser ces inscriptions, et activé sur tous ces comptes, les notifications.

Chaque réseaux envoyait un email pour dire que le post avait bien été publié, qu'il avait été repris sur une autre plateforme, les plateformes m'envoyaient un mail comme quoi elles avaient publié un nouveau post et tout ça étaient encore repostés par email sur les différents réseaux.

Je ne sais plus pourquoi mais Gmail, je ne pouvais pas republier sur les différents réseaux, j'ai donc ouvert un compte mail sur La Poste. Gmail redirigeait sur La Poste et La Poste publiait sur les plateformes.

Ainsi, par exemple, en publiant sur Facebook, ça pouvait republier les articles directement sur les autres plateformes ainsi que par email.

Il y avait aussi des services qui se chargeaient de centraliser les republications sur encore plus de plateformes.

Et ainsi de suite…

Par email, par post, par republication, par les notifications, par les services de centralisation… tout le monde publiait dans tous les sens.

On arrivait ainsi rapidement, en ne publiant qu'un seul message, à un retour de plus de 200.

Ça formait une espèce de nuage numérique, parfaitement inutile, qui ne cessait de grossir par lui-même.

Au début j'avais essayer de comprendre le cheminement de tout ça. En publiant par exemple sur Tumblr avec un titre identifiable pour voir comment et combien de fois il était repris, mais rapidement cela s'est avéré impossible à suivre.

J'ai pu ainsi faire fonctionner ce système pendant quelques semaines avant qu'être accusé de spam et d'être bloqué.

Déjà à l'époque, on voyait se dessiner une trajectoire négative de tous ces réseaux. Le but n'était plus ce qu'on publiait mais comme le message était diffuser, dupliqué, amplifié…

Une fois que chacun eu ouvert un compte quelque part, tout s'est refermé : fini de jouer, maintenant, il fallait être rentable.

Le brouillard numérique s'est alors abattu sur nous pour parasiter nos vies. Ainsi, nos âmes et nos corps ont été colonisés pour l'extension des profits des milliardaires.

 
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from DrFox

Une société peut être rassurée par la force d’un homme quand cette force tient debout toute seule.

Elle ne cherche pas forcément un homme lisse, doux partout, incapable de faire face au danger. Elle ne cherche pas non plus un homme instable, plein de feu mal tenu, qui transforme chaque blessure d’orgueil en menace. Ce qui peut toucher quelque chose de très ancien en elle, c’est la sensation qu’un homme peut devenir ferme devant le mal, sans devenir dur avec ce qu’il aime. Qu’il peut aller au front si le front arrive, puis revenir avec des mains capables de douceur.

Cette image me parle.

L’homme qui protège ne vit pas dans la violence. Il ne la cherche pas. Il ne la décore pas. Il ne la transforme pas en identité. Mais il sait qu’une vie réelle finit parfois par demander autre chose que des phrases. Une porte doit être tenue. Une injustice doit être arrêtée. Un enfant doit être défendu. Une vérité doit être protégée. Un mensonge doit être nommé, même quand tout le monde préfère garder le calme de surface.

La violence, dans ce sens là, n’a rien de sacré. Elle reste grave. Elle coûte quelque chose à celui qui l’utilise, même quand elle devient nécessaire. Un homme aligné ne jouit pas de sa capacité à faire mal. Il la garde comme on garde un outil dangereux, rangé, connu, éduqué. Il sait que certaines forces, si elles ne sont pas tenues, finissent par salir celui qui les porte.

Mais condamner toute dureté serait mentir sur le réel.

Le monde contient des moments où la douceur seule ne suffit plus. Des moments où reculer devient une manière de laisser faire. Des moments où la paix demande une colonne, une voix qui ne tremble pas, un corps qui se place devant ce qui menace. Le front n’est pas toujours une guerre lointaine. Le front peut être une table de famille où le mensonge s’assoit tranquillement. Une pièce où quelqu’un humilie un plus faible. Une relation où la peur se déguise en amour. Une maison où l’on demande à la vérité de se taire pour préserver l’ambiance.

Un homme doit parfois être dur pour rester vrai.

Dur avec le mensonge. Dur avec la lâcheté. Dur avec l’injustice. Dur avec cette petite voix intérieure qui propose d’arranger les faits pour avoir l’air innocent. Dur avec sa propre mauvaise foi. Dur avec sa jalousie, son besoin de contrôle, son envie de gagner, son orgueil blessé. S’il doit combattre le mal, il doit aussi le combattre quand ce mal passe par lui. Dehors et dedans. À l’étranger et dans la maison. Dans l’autre, et dans la part de soi qui préférerait dominer plutôt que se tenir droit.

Cette dureté là ne s’exerce pas contre la femme. Elle s’exerce pour garder intact en lui le lieu depuis lequel il aime.

Elle protège le socle avant de protéger la relation. Elle garde propre la parole, le regard, la maison intérieure. Elle empêche l’homme de déposer sur l’amour ce qu’il n’a pas encore réglé avec lui même. Elle l’oblige à ne pas faire payer à la femme et les enfants sa fatigue, sa peur, son humiliation, ses anciennes défaites. Elle lui rappelle qu’aimer demande aussi une discipline. Une façon de rentrer en soi avant de parler. Une façon de retenir la main, de retenir la phrase.

C’est là que l’orgueil retrouve une noblesse.

On parle souvent de l’orgueil comme d’un défaut. Il peut l’être. Il peut rendre sourd, fermé, arrogant, incapable de demander pardon. Mais un homme sans aucun orgueil finit parfois par accepter trop. Il avale trop. Il appelle paix ce qui ressemble surtout à un renoncement. Il laisse les autres déplacer la vérité, puis s’étonne de ne plus reconnaître sa propre maison.

Un orgueil sain protège le socle. Il dit : je ne vais pas faire semblant de ne pas voir. Je ne vais pas laisser le faux prendre la place du réel. Je peux perdre une discussion, une réputation, une place, une relation même, mais je ne veux pas perdre l’endroit en moi qui sait encore distinguer une parole droite d’un arrangement.

Cet orgueil là n’écrase pas. Il ne réclame pas la soumission. Il ne demande pas que l’amour s’agenouille devant lui. Il garde au contraire l’espace propre, respirable, vrai. Une femme peut sentir la différence entre un homme qui tient sa vérité et un homme qui utilise la vérité comme une arme. Elle peut sentir la différence entre une force qui protège et une force qui réclame le pouvoir. Entre un homme qui garde le seuil et un homme qui prend toute la maison.

Je crois que la société peut être profondément apaisée par cette force là. Une force qui ne s’excuse pas d’exister, mais qui ne se sert jamais de l’amour comme d’un territoire. Une force qui dit : je peux faire face, je peux tenir, je peux protéger, je peux combattre si la vie me le demande. Et je peux aussi revenir doux. Je peux revenir humain. Je peux revenir avec assez de silence dans les mains pour ne pas abîmer ce que je viens de défendre.

Alors je me demande :

Quelle force protège vraiment sans prendre la place de l’autre ?

Quel orgueil garde la vérité debout sans devenir aveugle ?

À quel moment la douceur devient elle une fuite devant ce qui doit être affronté ?

À quel moment la dureté devient elle une manière de ne plus sentir ?

Quel homme sait aller au front sans faire de sa maison un champ de bataille ?

 
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from sugarrush-77

Yena had her head clasped between her hands. Sighed, looked up at Janice.

“Janice.”

“What.”

“I’m so lucky to be chasing my dreams. So few people get to do this. But it’s also risky, y’know?”

Yena took another shot.

“Sometimes I don’t know what I’m doing with my life. Why I even try anymore. I know chasing your dreams is supposed to be hard, but I didn’t know it was this hard.”

Janice nodded.

“I feel like I’ve hit a wall. An insurmountable wall. And it feels… so hopeless, y’know?”

A tear dribbled down Yena’s cheek.

Janice sighed.

“Yena, no matter how much you bitch and cry, you’ll never be able to marry Kasane Teto. She doesn’t fucking exist.”

Yena screamed in lowercase.

“NO! YoU can’t sAY THAT! NONONONO”

Janice rolled her eyes. Yena was saying crazy shit again. But it was fine. It’s what made her so entertaining.

“Yena, even if Teto existed, she wouldn’t like anyone like you. You’re stinky, 3 foot 10, insecure, and clingy. When’s the last time you had a shower? I can smell your pits from HERE. I had to take a smoke break earlier just to escape the waft coming off of your jacket.”

Yena took heaving breaths, and braced herself.

“TETO. IS. MY. WIFEEEE!!!!!”

Everyone in the restaurant stared. Janice left for another smoke break. Yena took another shot and kept eating the raw tofu in her plate. Yena was fucking autistic. They were at a Korean tofu stew joint, and she had insisted to the waiter, despite being told no multiple times, that she deserved. Absolutely deserved. Being served the tofu stew deconstructed in its entirety. She was a regular here. The waiter ended up shrugging, and ferrying the request back to the restaurant. Five minutes later, he came back with a raw egg, tofu, hot water, kimchi, and tofu stew base. He whispered an expletive under his breath, and swore that if she didn’t tip, he would kick her through the window.

Janice came back. Nobody knew why Janice hung out with Yena. When asked, Janice never gave a straight answer. Sometimes, she said it was because she needed help with homework, but they were in completely different majors. Sometimes, she said it was because she was really poor, and Yena had helped out with money once. But Janice was loaded from various side hustles she’d spun up “for fun.” Sometimes, Janice just shrugged and looked up at the sky. Nobody really knew except her. Janice sat down in front of Yena and leaned in.

“Yena, what if I dressed up as Teto? How do you think that would make you feel?”

Yena frowned.

“I don’t know if you have the look for it.”

Janice, mildly annoyed, turned away.

“Actually? I think maybe you could pull it off.”

Looked back, with a faint smile.

“Give me a second.”

Janice left for the bathroom with her backpack in hand. Yena took the moment to slurp the raw egg directly from the shell. She had nearly finished her tofu when Janice returned in monochrome red, from head to toe.

“Tada!”

A blob of tofu dropped from Yena’s mouth.

“Fuck. Fuhhhhckkk.”

“You like what you see?”

“Yeth.”

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Midway through the 3rd Quarter, my Spurs are holding onto a small lead as they have through most of the game so far. Close game.

Glad I've worked through the night prayers already. I suspect that as soon as I turn off the game I'll put head to pillow and admit that I've already drifted off to sleep.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 233.80 lbs. * bp= 151/91 (70)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 06:25 – 1 banana * 07:00 – 1 seafood salad sandwich * 12:00 – lasagna, fried bananas, mashed potatoes, fried chicken * 18:45 – large chocolate milkshake

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listening to local news talk radio * 05:30 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 06:05 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, * 08:00 – start my weekly laundry * 10:00 – listening to Jack in 60 Minutes * 11:00 – listening to The Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show * 12:00 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 14:30 – folding laundry while listening to news-talk radio * 16:30 – follow news reports from various sources * 17:00 – listening to relaxing music as I prep paperwork for drs. apt. on Thurs. * 19:00 – listening to the Spurs pregame show ahead of tonight's game

Chess: * 15:55 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from SmarterArticles

In February 2026, Erin West walked through an empty scam compound in Sihanoukville. The lights, she would later tell the Stolen podcast audience, were off across most of the Cambodian coastal city that had, for the better part of a decade, served as the operational headquarters of the global romance-fraud industry. Walking the corridors of a half-abandoned dormitory building, she found the small evidence of recent occupation: bedding still bunched on the floor, foreign-language posters peeled from concrete walls, plastic wash basins stacked in the corners. She also found, scattered around the workstations, the script binders and conversation guides that the trafficked workers had been required to memorise. What she did not find, by and large, was the workers themselves. They had been moved.

West, a former Santa Clara County deputy district attorney who spent twenty-six years prosecuting tech crime before founding Operation Shamrock, has spent three years documenting an industry that, on any honest accounting, has surpassed in scale and harm the international drug trade. Pig-butchering operations alone, the long-con romance fraud that combines synthetic intimacy with sham crypto investment, generated an estimated forty-three point eight billion dollars in revenue across Burma, Cambodia and Laos in 2023, equivalent to roughly forty per cent of those countries' combined official gross domestic product, according to figures cited in testimony to the United States Congress. The industry has not been dismantled by the international crackdown of late 2025. It has migrated, restructured and, increasingly, automated.

That last word is the one this story turns on. The compounds West walked through were emptier than she expected because the work being done inside them is, slowly but visibly, being absorbed by software. The cost of buying a trafficked Vietnamese teenager, beating compliance into him with rebar, and chaining him to a workstation to run twenty-four parallel romance scripts across WhatsApp and Tinder turns out to be higher than the cost of a stack of GPUs running an open-weights large language model fine-tuned for emotional manipulation. The fraud has not gone away. It has, in the way of all industrial production, become more efficient.

And the bills have started arriving.

The Numbers That Made It a Public Crisis

In February 2026, an industry analysis circulated by Credit Union Today put the headline figure for American losses to AI-driven romance fraud at six hundred and seventy-two million dollars across the preceding year. The figure tracked closely with the FBI's own 2025 Internet Crime Complaint Center reporting, which recorded romance and confidence scams as among the highest-loss categories of cybercrime, and which for the first time in IC3's twenty-five-year history saw total internet-crime complaints crossing one million. Reported fraud losses across all categories climbed to twenty point nine billion dollars, a twenty-six per cent increase over 2024.

The British numbers tell a similar story at a smaller scale. UK Finance, the industry body that tracks payment-system fraud across British banks, reported that romance scams cost UK victims twenty point five million pounds in the first six months of 2025 alone, across nearly three thousand cases, a thirty-five per cent increase year on year. City of London Police, which leads the national police response on fraud, recorded more than one hundred and six million pounds lost to romance fraud over the 2024 to 2025 financial year. TSB Bank, in February 2026, warned that romance fraud was rising sharply across its customer base, with the average victim sending eleven separate payments, losing roughly seven and a half thousand pounds before the deception was discovered.

These numbers are, in every estimation produced by every researcher who has examined them, undercounts. AARP's Foresight 50+ Omnibus survey, conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago and published in February 2026, found that more than half of American adults who had lost money to a scam never reported it to anyone. Among those who did report, only twenty-six per cent went to law enforcement; only twenty-three per cent contacted their bank. The reason, AARP's research consistently finds, is shame. While sixty-two per cent of people view scam victims primarily as targets of a crime, sixty per cent simultaneously assume the victim was naïve or too trusting. Those two attitudes coexist in the same survey, often in the same respondent, and they are the social mechanism through which under-reporting becomes structural.

Professor Monica Whitty, head of department for software systems and cybersecurity at Monash University and the leading academic authority on romance-scam victimology, has been documenting this dynamic since the early 2010s. Her foundational research, conducted with Tom Buchanan at the University of Westminster, established what subsequent studies have only deepened: that for many romance-scam victims, the loss of the relationship is more upsetting than the financial loss, with some victims describing the experience as equivalent to bereavement. The double trauma of grief and humiliation creates a powerful reporting suppressor. The figures we have, in other words, are a fraction of the harm being done.

What Changed When the Models Arrived

To understand why the AI inflection of this fraud matters, it helps to understand what it replaced. Romance scams in their pre-2023 form were a labour-intensive business. A scammer, working from a script, could maintain perhaps twenty active relationships at once, each requiring hours of attention, each calibrated to the specific emotional vulnerabilities the victim had revealed in earlier conversations, each constrained by the operator's stamina, language ability, time-zone alignment and capacity to remember which victim had told them what. The bottleneck was human cognition. The product was synthetic intimacy, and synthetic intimacy was, like every artisanal good, expensive to produce.

The bottleneck has now been removed. A study published in the Asian Journal of Criminology in 2025, examining how organised criminal groups in Myanmar were deploying machine learning across their operations, found that large language models were already being used for open-source intelligence gathering and victim-network construction, achieving estimated time and cost reductions of ninety-six point six per cent and ninety-nine point five per cent respectively compared with manual research methods. AI-enabled scams in the same study were found to be four and a half times more profitable than their manual counterparts. The authors anticipated that LLMs would, in the medium term, replace human operators in the conversational stages of pig butchering as well.

That medium term has arrived. Experian's 2026 fraud-trends report, cited approvingly by the American Bankers Association in January, named “machine-to-machine” romance scams, in which fully autonomous bots maintain hundreds of simultaneous personalised relationships, as one of the top five fraud trends to watch. The bots, the report noted, “respond convincingly, build trust over time, and manipulate victims with precision and emotion.” Norton's 2026 dating-scam research found that nearly half of US online daters reported having been targeted by a dating scam, with seventy-four per cent of those targeted falling for at least part of it. Fox Business reported in 2026 that Tinder had begun mandating facial verification and was working with World, the iris-scanning identity protocol formerly known as Worldcoin, to prove that users were human at the point of sign-up. Trustpilot user reviews now estimate that up to eighty per cent of profiles on some major dating sites are fake or AI-generated, up from ten to fifteen per cent before the generative-AI boom.

The technical capabilities being deployed are not science fiction. They are commodity. An off-the-shelf foundation model, fine-tuned on a few thousand transcripts of successful and failed romance-scam conversations, will reliably produce text that is grammatically perfect in dozens of languages, emotionally coherent across long conversational arcs, capable of remembering the victim's daughter's birthday and the name of her late husband and the specific complaint she made about her sister three weeks ago. Combine that text generation with voice cloning, with face-swapping live-video, with the ability to generate consistent images of the same fictitious “soldier deployed in Yemen” or “oil engineer working off the coast of Angola” in any pose holding any object, and the verification heuristics human beings have evolved over decades of online dating collapse simultaneously. The “send me a selfie holding today's newspaper” test, as one industry commentator told the security press in 2026, is dead.

The Architecture of Manufactured Attachment

The reason romance fraud is so devastating, and the reason its industrial scaling is so alarming, is that it does not exploit gullibility in the casual sense the public uses the word. It exploits the human attachment system, which is to say the same neural and behavioural machinery that makes long-term love possible in the first place. Whitty's persuasive-techniques model, derived from interviews with victims and from analysis of hundreds of scam conversations, identifies a sequence of stages. The scammer establishes presence and idealisation. The scammer engineers reciprocal self-disclosure. The scammer creates a private emotional world to which only they and the victim have access. The scammer, by this point typically referred to by the victim as a partner, then introduces a crisis whose resolution requires money.

What an LLM brings to this sequence is not a new technique but radically improved consistency at every stage. Human scammers, working long shifts in a Sihanoukville compound, forget details. They confuse one victim with another. They lapse out of character when tired. They misjudge tone. The model does not. It maintains a coherent persona across thousands of conversational turns, recalls every personal detail the victim has volunteered, mirrors the victim's emotional register with sub-clinical precision, and never, ever loses patience. Researchers at the University of New South Wales reported in February 2026 that participants in experimental studies of AI-generated romance content struggled to distinguish it from authentic human writing, even when explicitly told some samples were synthetic.

The harm profile that follows from this is, predictably, severe. A 2025 qualitative study published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior Reports, examining the emotional, physiological, financial and legal consequences of online romance scams in the United States, found four major themes of harm: mental-health consequences including suicidal ideation, physiological health consequences including stress-related conditions, financial consequences ranging from depleted retirement savings to bankruptcy, and legal consequences including, in some cases, prosecution of victims who had unwittingly become money mules in the laundering of other victims' funds. A separate 2025 paper in the journal Victims and Offenders, which interviewed victim-survivors and their family members about the lived experience of cyber-scam victimisation, recorded what one participant called “falling into a black hole,” a phrase that became the paper's title.

The interaction of grief and shame is the part most laypeople find hardest to model accurately. Victims are mourning the end of what felt to them like a real relationship, often the most emotionally intimate of their adult lives, and they are simultaneously being asked by the surrounding culture to feel embarrassed about the relationship having existed at all. NBC News, in its earlier reporting on victim self-harm, and the AARP's ongoing Perfect Scam podcast, which has documented multiple cases of suicide following romance fraud, have together built a body of journalism that establishes the connection beyond reasonable doubt: romance investment scams combine the two leading proximate causes of suicide identified in the public-health literature, namely the dissolution of an intimate relationship and the threat of imminent financial ruin. In a substantial minority of cases, both arrive in the same week.

The Liability Vacuum

If a foreign criminal network has stolen six hundred and seventy-two million dollars from American citizens by exploiting the infrastructure of American technology firms and American payment networks, the natural question is who, if anyone, is supposed to bear legal responsibility for what happened. The answer in 2026, as a matter of law in both the United States and the United Kingdom, is approximately nobody, distributed across a chain of approximately nobodies, each of whom can plausibly point to the next link as the appropriate defendant.

In the American framework, dating-app and social-media platforms remain heavily protected by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which immunises interactive computer services from liability for content posted by their users. In February 2025, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in an opinion that the Electronic Frontier Foundation argued was correctly decided, held that Grindr could not be held responsible under product-liability or negligence theories for matching a fifteen-year-old who had falsified his age with adult users who subsequently raped him. The Supreme Court declined to take up an appeal of a separate Grindr Section 230 case in 2024. The doctrinal direction of travel, despite years of political pressure from both major American parties, is that the platforms remain shielded from liability for the third-party content they host, including content generated by foreign scam operations.

Foundation-model providers occupy a different but comparable redoubt. The major American AI companies, OpenAI and Anthropic prominent among them, have invested heavily in safety training designed to refuse explicit requests to generate scam content. OpenAI's December 2025 Model Spec explicitly prohibits using the company's models for “targeted or scaled exclusion” or “manipulation” of human autonomy, and the joint OpenAI-Anthropic safety evaluation published in 2025 demonstrated that both providers' models are reasonably resistant to direct jailbreaks. The problem is that romance fraud does not require the model to produce overtly malicious content. It requires the model to produce loving content, persistently, in response to victim messages that do not in themselves trigger any safety classifier. The fine-tuning required to weaponise a model for fraud is generally trivial. Open-weights models, which can be modified offline and deployed without provider oversight, foreclose the safety-training argument entirely.

The dating platforms themselves operate in a marketing environment that requires them to insist they are doing everything possible against scammers, while a business environment that rewards reduced friction at sign-up. Tinder's introduction of facial verification and World iris-scan integration in 2025 represented the most aggressive position in the industry, but Bumble, Hinge and the rest of the Match Group portfolio have moved in the same direction more slowly. None of these platforms is currently obliged, under American law, to reimburse victims of fraud that began on their service.

The British position is, on paper, modestly stronger. The Online Safety Act 2023, fully in force across 2025 and into 2026, designates fraud as a “relevant offence” for which platforms must take proactive risk-reduction measures, with Ofcom empowered to fine non-compliant providers up to eighteen million pounds or ten per cent of qualifying global revenue, whichever is higher. Ofcom's enforcement guidance, published in late 2025, explicitly identifies romance scams as in scope. The legislation does not, however, create a private right of action for individual victims to sue the platforms directly, and as of April 2026 the regulator had not initiated headline enforcement against any major dating service for romance-scam failures.

Where the British regime materially diverges from the American one is in the payment rails. From October 2024, the UK Payment Systems Regulator's mandatory reimbursement scheme for authorised push-payment fraud requires all in-scope payment-service providers to reimburse victims of APP fraud up to eighty-five thousand pounds per claim, with the cost shared fifty-fifty between the sending and receiving banks. The PSR's first-year data, published in early 2026, indicated that eighty-eight per cent of money lost to APP scams in the first twelve months of the scheme had been reimbursed, with eighty-two per cent of claims closed within five business days. Vulnerable customers are exempt from the standard one-hundred-pound excess. For all the scheme's limitations, including a fifty-thousand-pound cap initially proposed and then raised to eighty-five thousand after lobbying from consumer groups, it represents the most substantial liability shift any major economy has imposed on the financial sector for the cost of fraud committed against ordinary citizens.

The United States has nothing comparable. American banks, under Regulation E and the broader patchwork of consumer-protection law, are generally not required to reimburse customers who authorised the transfer themselves, even if they were tricked into doing so. The cryptocurrency leg of pig-butchering fraud, which is the most common modality, is even less regulated. Tether, the issuer of the USDT stablecoin that is the rail of choice for Southeast Asian scam compounds, has frozen more than three hundred and forty-four million dollars in suspect funds in cooperation with the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control and other law-enforcement bodies, but the freezes are discretionary and post-hoc, and the funds, once moved through enough cycles, are practically irrecoverable.

The criminal-law track has, to be clear, not been entirely toothless. In October 2025, the United States Treasury and His Majesty's Treasury jointly imposed what officials described as the largest coordinated sanctions package ever directed at Southeast Asian cyber-scam networks, designating one hundred and forty-six individuals and entities tied to Cambodia's Prince Holding Group as a transnational criminal organisation. Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York unsealed a twenty-six-page indictment against the group's chairman, Chen Zhi, and a separate court filing revealed the seizure of fifteen billion dollars in cryptocurrency identified as proceeds of crime. South Korea, Singapore and other jurisdictions added their own designations through November and December. Chen was arrested in Cambodia and extradited to China in early January 2026. The international press, briefly, described the action as a turning point. Erin West, a few weeks later, was watching new compounds being constructed deeper inside Cambodia, staffed by the same trafficked workers who had been moved out of the sanctioned facilities. The criminal-law approach is necessary. It is not, on the available evidence, sufficient.

What Proportionate Response Actually Looks Like

The temptation, when an industry has scaled at the speed and scope of AI-enabled romance fraud, is to reach for a single-bullet solution: ban the model, regulate the platform, prosecute the kingpin. None of these has, on its own, the dimensions of the problem. The proportionate response, if such a thing is constructible, has to operate at every layer of the stack at once, on the principle that any one defensive measure can be circumvented but enough of them in combination create friction sufficient to make the unit economics of fraud worse than the unit economics of legitimate business.

The first layer is liability allocation. Romance fraud is currently a negative externality of three industries: dating platforms, AI model providers and payment processors. None of those industries pays the cost. The victims pay the cost. Standard externality economics tells us what to do in this situation: tax the externality back onto the producers, either through direct civil liability or through mandatory insurance schemes. The British APP-reimbursement model, applied to the AI inflection of fraud, is a credible starting point. The American conversation, dominated by Section 230 absolutism on one side and reactive criminalisation on the other, has not yet caught up with the proposition that platforms hosting industrial-scale fraud should pay a proportional share of the bill.

The second layer is technical. Provenance and content-credential standards, including the C2PA work led by Adobe, Microsoft and the BBC, offer a partial defence against synthetic media in the dating context, though they require widespread adoption to matter. Real-time scam-pattern detection, of the sort already deployed by some major banks against APP fraud, can be extended to dating platforms with the cooperation of the major providers. Crucially, the friction-budget conversation needs to be reopened: dating apps that allow free-tier sign-up with minimal verification have made an explicit choice to externalise risk onto the user base, and that choice can be unwound. Tinder's iris-scan experiment is awkward and intrusive and probably necessary. The privacy trade-offs are real and demand serious public scrutiny. They do not, on the current evidence, weigh more heavily than the harm being done.

The third layer is the financial chokepoint. Stablecoin issuers, cryptocurrency exchanges and remittance corridors that process pig-butchering proceeds are the single most leveraged point in the system, because the criminal enterprise cannot survive without them. Tether's discretionary freezes are an admission that the issuer can act when it wants to. The policy question is whether we want a global stablecoin network whose anti-fraud actions depend on the goodwill of a private issuer in the British Virgin Islands, or whether we want enforceable standards. The same question applies, with greater obvious leverage, to the major centralised exchanges. Coinbase, Kraken and Binance know which wallet clusters are receiving pig-butchering proceeds. The friction-imposition tools are already built. They are not yet mandatory.

The fourth layer is shame reduction. This is the layer journalists tend to skip, because it is the least technical and the least amenable to the policy-speak the trade prefers, and it is also the layer on which everything else turns. As long as romance-scam victims feel too humiliated to report, the entire enforcement apparatus is operating on a fraction of the available signal. AARP's research finding that sixty per cent of survey respondents simultaneously regard victims as crime targets and as personally naïve is the public-attitudes equivalent of a software bug, and like a software bug it is fixable. Public-information campaigns that explicitly de-stigmatise victimhood, similar in their emphasis to the long-running campaigns around domestic violence and sexual assault, are the work of years rather than months, but they pay back at compound interest. Police forces that train officers to treat romance-scam reports as serious crime rather than personal embarrassment do better at recovery. Banks that deploy specialist fraud teams trained in conversational intervention, of the sort TSB has begun piloting in the UK, recover more money and rupture fewer relationships in the process.

The Position

The position this article arrives at is simple enough to state and difficult enough to enact. If artificial intelligence has industrialised what was once a manual fraud, then the regulatory and civil-liability response must be industrial in proportion. The decade since Section 230 was last seriously contested in Congress is the decade across which the model providers, the platform owners and the payment processors have built a fraud-vulnerable infrastructure whose marginal costs are borne entirely by people who did not consent to the trade-off. That arrangement is not, on any defensible reading of consumer-protection law or basic distributive ethics, sustainable.

The British APP-reimbursement scheme is the most concrete signal in the global regulatory landscape that another arrangement is possible. It is imperfect. It has been gamed at the margins. It has shifted some risk from victims to banks, where lobbyists are already pushing back. But it has also, in its first year of operation, returned eighty-eight pence on the pound of stolen money to ordinary people who would otherwise have lost it. That is the kind of measurable, replicable outcome that should be the baseline expectation of any modern fraud-response regime. The American conversation, which currently treats the platforms and model providers as effectively immune from civil liability for the harms that flow through their services, has not yet caught up.

What the AI-fuelled romance fraud crisis tells us, more clearly than any other AI-policy story of the last five years, is that the question of who pays is not separable from the question of who builds. The companies whose models can sustain hundreds of simultaneous synthetic intimacies have built a capability that, in the absence of corresponding obligations, will be used by whoever has the lowest scruples and the cheapest GPUs. The dating platforms whose business model depends on frictionless sign-up have built an attack surface that, in the absence of mandatory verification, will continue to be exploited by foreign criminal syndicates. The payment processors whose systems clear billions in cross-border transfers within seconds have built an exfiltration channel that, in the absence of mandatory holds and reimbursement, will continue to be the last leg of every successful scam.

There are real trade-offs in every direction. Mandatory verification at dating-app sign-up imposes real privacy costs and may foreclose use by people with good reasons to remain pseudonymous. Liability shifts to model providers risk slowing the deployment of useful AI capabilities into other domains. Bank-level holds on cross-border transfers will frustrate legitimate users with foreign relationships. None of these trade-offs is trivial. None of them is anywhere near as severe as the harm currently being externalised onto romance-scam victims, whose lives are being ended, financially and sometimes literally, in their tens of thousands every year.

Back to Sihanoukville

Walking through the abandoned compound in February 2026, Erin West observed something that has stayed with the people who watched her video diaries on the Operation Shamrock site. The compound was not closed in any meaningful sense. The workers had been moved further inland, away from the coastal compounds that had drawn the attention of Western investigators, into newer facilities in the Cambodian interior, where the construction was active and the access roads were difficult and the international press had not yet arrived. The infrastructure of synthetic intimacy was, like every infrastructure that has ever been targeted by international enforcement, relocating.

The point of the relocation, from the operators' perspective, is that the work has become much easier to relocate. A workforce of trafficked humans is heavy, slow, expensive to move and dangerous to move because moved humans speak to journalists. A workforce of language models is none of those things. It can be replicated across server farms in jurisdictions with weak enforcement, fed translated scripts in any of fifty languages, and pointed at victims selected from leaked dating-site databases or social-media data brokers. The compound in Sihanoukville with its bunched bedding and abandoned wash basins is, in retrospect, an artefact of the human-labour era of romance fraud. The coming era will leave fewer artefacts, because there will be fewer humans to leave them.

What that era requires of the rest of us is the construction of a regulatory and legal infrastructure that does not depend on the existence of a physically locatable compound full of trafficking victims. The compounds were politically galvanising, but they were also a crutch. They allowed Western policymakers to treat romance fraud as an offshore problem that would yield to offshore enforcement. The model-driven version of the same fraud will yield only to onshore measures: civil liability for the platforms and the payment rails, mandatory provenance and verification standards for the dating services, reimbursement schemes for the victims, public-information campaigns that strip the shame off reporting. None of those measures is novel. All of them are tractable. The reason they have not been built yet is not technical and not even economic. It is that the people whose retirement savings are being extracted, conversation by tender conversation, by language models running in unmarked data centres, do not yet have lobbyists who can match the influence of the companies whose infrastructure is being used against them.

That, in the end, is the actual story of the six hundred and seventy-two million dollars and the twenty point five million pounds and the unknowably larger sums that will never be reported. It is not a story about AI alignment, or about jailbreaks, or even about the trafficking compounds, which are themselves only the most visible symptom of the deeper architecture of harm. It is a story about who pays, and the answer the current system gives is the wrong one. The bills are arriving in the post, in the bank statements, in the unanswered phone calls from a partner who does not exist, and the response so far, from the institutions whose infrastructure made the fraud possible, has been a press release. It is not enough. It will not be enough until the cost of building these systems carelessly is finally borne, in cash and in court, by the people who built them.

The compound lights are off in Sihanoukville. The models are warming up everywhere else.


References

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Tim Green

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

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