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Why Canada Gets to Dump Its Trash in Michigan Michigan is a cheap place to dump and Nafta made waste not subject to tariffs By Charlie LeDuff Charlie LeDuff It’s the Canadians, again. They’re literally dumping on us. Millions of tons of industrial waste pour into Michigan’s landfills every year from Canada. Enough to build two Empire State Buildings of garbage. We can’t stop it. And it’s all the fault of Nafta and the U.S. Constitution. That notorious trade deal provided the legal framework that prevents Michigan from stopping Toronto’s detritus from passing through Detroit. Under the compact, solid waste is legally classified as a “commodity.” And because that commodity—garbage—is entirely “manufactured” in North America, it avoids a tariff. Man in shirt points at Canadian garbage truck highlighting cross-border waste disposal issues Michigan’s dumping fees are cheap—about half the cost of Ontario’s. It’s so cheap neighboring states also dump on us. We’re surrounded by more garbage per person than any state in the Union. New York recently tried hauling in nuclear waste from the World War II-era Manhattan Project. Ohio attempted to truck in toxic phosgene dregs from the East Palestine train disaster. Phosgene is a substance so deadly that it’s banned by the Geneva Convention. Intense local opposition stopped both Ohio and New York’s poison from being buried here, but their highways, byways, and baby diapers still pour in every day and there’s not much we can do about it. But then there’s Canada: a nation of environmental moralizers who live in a vast expanse but can’t seem to find a place to put their garbage besides their neighbor’s lawn. Person waves at passing truck near stop sign as Canadian waste haulers transport garbage to Michigan landfills The Constitution’s commerce clause forbids Michigan from charging out-of-state and international garbage haulers a higher price than we pay ourselves. That can only be done by an act of Congress. And you know Michigan’s unserious Congressional delegation. So we in the Great Lakes State are stuck with mountains of foreign shit, the stench of methane and rot, and hundreds of Canadian trucks busting up our roads each day. There is too much division in Michigan between the red-hatters and the green-thumbers. But I’ve got an idea I think we can all agree upon. Tariff their garbage. Big beautiful tariffs. The best tariffs probably in the history of the world. The president has sweeping executive powers. Put a 100% tariff on Canadian garbage, and we can stop the flow altogether. And after that, maybe we can talk about opening the new bridge.

Michigan Enjoyer

47,792 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

All in a a few days of spare time. Custom alt momentum scanner tracking various metrics, tagging setups, break of key levels, collecting statistics in real-time. Sector flow monitor and correlation matrix. This is a hobby project which started off as building a custom funding rate arbitrage scanner to test out some new perps dex platforms. Took it a step further so I can exercise the process of creating tooling, improving on the art of providing specs and a framework to Claude, writing out to a database, tracking metrics etc. in real time. Going to continue to improve this for my own purpose but this has been the gateway to opening up the pathway of an entire world of ideas that I have been wanting to bring to life. If there is enough interest I will write an article and share my findings on the "vibe coding" process I used via Claude and what I learned through the exercise. I will say this still required a non-trivial amount of hand holding (you need to understand the problem you're looking to solve and what's going on under the hood otherwise garbage in = garbage out), providing the right framework, reassessing and debugging. The only experience I have is intermediate level python scripting in the framework of structural engineering. Much to learn still. I need to figure out how to implement unique design, improve UI/UX and figure out how to implement a more robust frontend (if you have any suggestions please feel free to comment). I have been using Claude for a year for simple tasks and scripting but this is the first time I took the time to explore further. Will document this journey as I continue to build or work on other hobby ideas. Perhaps it can inspire someone else who finds this intimidating to take the leap. Next stop - perhaps a prediction markets dashboard/tooling that ties in with Converge.

Stoic

12,137 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

Ken Griffin just asked the question everyone in AI is too scared to answer. Data center spending in the US this year alone is over $500 billion. Half a trillion dollars. To raise that kind of money, you have to make a promise. And the promise has to be big. "AI needs to be your savior almost. How else are you going to write $500 billion of checks in a single year?" He's not saying AI is fraud. He's saying the hype is structurally necessary. You can't fund a buildout at this scale without narrative that matches it. The real question is what AI actually delivers at the end. In some areas Griffin says it's going to be profound. Call centers. Software engineering productivity. Those are real, measurable, already happening. But in white collar work more broadly, he's more skeptical. A Harvard paper recently coined a term for it: AI Work Slop. Output that looks impressive on the surface. First few sentences read like genuine insight. Then you go deeper and it's all garbage. Griffin's colleague runs their commodities business. Got handed a report generated by an AI engine. First paragraph, genuinely good. The rest, useless. The model that can write a compelling opening can't yet think through the substance underneath it. This is the AI investing tension right now. The infrastructure spend is real. The hype is real. The productivity gains in specific verticals are real. But the blanket assumption that AI transforms every white collar job equally has not been proven yet.

Milk Road Macro

125,923 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten