Rachel Chu [played by Constance Wu]: “I thought I was here to meet your family, go to your best friend's wedding, eat some good food. Instead, I feel like I'm a villain in a soap opera who's plotting to steal your family fortune.”— Crazy Rich Asians (2018), screenplay by Peter Chiarelli and Adele Lim, adapted from the novel by Kevin Kwan, directed by Jon M. Chu
Monday, June 15, 2026
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Spiritual Quote of the Day (Pope Leo XIV, on ‘Standards for Discernment’ in Evaluating AI)
“We cannot condone naive enthusiasms, nor fuel unfounded fears. Instead, let us establish standards for discernment — the dignity of the human person, the universal destination of goods, the preferential option for the poor, care for our common home and peace — and let us translate these standards into practices.”—Pope Leo XIV, Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”), https://www.vatican.va/, released May 15, 2026
In my post two weeks ago on Pope Leo’s apology for the Church’s stand on slavery over the centuries, I promised to discuss his much-anticipated encyclical, or
formal papal pastoral letter, on artificial intelligence. That time has
arrived.
When you
consider the upcoming stakes for AI (one analyst I heard this past said it had
greater potential to affect humanity than space exploration), there has been
precious little time devoted to how to ensure it serves rather than degrades
humanity.
By
reminding tech lords, legislators, and ordinary citizens of that basic
principle, Leo’s examination of this new force in our lives can potentially
kick-start and even frame the debates that should be taking place now in the
public square.
Fully
cognizant of AI’s potential benefits, Leo is anything but a technological
Cassandra. (Though predictably, the Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal
has turned up its nose at the pope’s urging to install brakes on the runaway
technology, with op-ed contributor Louise Perry snidely asking, “Does the Pope Use Air Conditioning”?)
At the
other end of the political spectrum, some have written that Leo has not gone
far enough in denouncing the ills now becoming apparent in AI.
But his
caution only enhances his case that this new technology cannot develop
without safeguards that rest on human morality, and in particular on the
Catholic Church’s notions on the market economy, technology, and social justice
dating back to the groundbreaking encyclical of his predecessor and namesake
Pope Leo XIII, Rerum Novarum (1891).
Leo XIV
has called for measures ensure the dignity of work in the face of
AI, including regulating private companies’ AI development and retraining
workers whose jobs are threatened. He has also advocated for critical thinking
education about the technology.
It’s not
just the danger to livelihoods that concerns the Vatican, however, but also
AI’s potential misuse for modern warfare:
“The
growing ease with which autonomous weapons systems can be deployed makes war
more ‘feasible’ and less subject to human control. This violates the principle
that armed force should be used only as a last resort in cases of legitimate
self-defense. For this reason, the development and use of AI in warfare must be
subject to the most rigorous ethical constraints, to guarantee respect for
human dignity and the sanctity of life and to avoid a race to develop such
arms.”
In
addition, the encyclical raises the alarm about transhumanism, or
enhancing human beings through technologies, and posthumanism, which,
imagines “a hybrid of human beings, machines and the environment.”
The
ultimate impact of these two forces, according to the encyclical, could be to
make it “easier to accept that some lives are less useful, less desirable or
less worthy…placing the burden on the most vulnerable in pursuit of a supposed
optimization of the species.”
As Fordham Univ. papal expert David
Gibson’s op-ed last month in The New York Times observed, Magnifica
Humanitas has arrived at a “propitious moment,” when “The
disruptions of the post-liberal world and the threats posed by A.I. have led
many cultural conservatives to make economic justice a priority.”
Even
President Trump, who early in his second term likened placing limits on high
tech to restricting the growth of a baby, felt compelled to sign an executive order early this month calling for AI companies to voluntarily provide the federal government access to “covered frontier models” for a cybersecurity review up to 30 days before their planned release to “other
trusted partners.” It came amid sudden alarm that some powerful AI models
autonomously identify and exploit hidden vulnerabilities in real-world
software.
It will be
up to the tech barons whether they will enter into dialogue with the pope and
other advocates for a more deliberate, regulated AI pace or if they will
continue to proceed with no guardrails. But Leo has spelled out the moral
stakes in no uncertain terms.
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Quote of the Day (Philip Roth, on Loneliness)
“There is no protest to be lodged against loneliness—not all the bombing campaigns in history have made a dent in it. The most lethal of manmade explosives can't touch it.”— Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist Philip Roth (1933-2018), American Pastoral (1997)
Friday, June 12, 2026
TV Quote of the Day (‘Bewitched,’ Milking the Mother-In-Law-As-Witch Bit for All It’s Worth)
Endora [played by Agnes Moorehead]: [casting a spell over humorless son-in-law Darrin Stephens]: “To avoid the shock of sudden wit,/ we'll start from scratch—bit by bit!/ A chime will cause your brain to whirl,/ your jokes will cause their hair to curl!”— Bewitched, Season 5, Episode 27, “Laugh, Clown, Laugh,” original air date Apr. 15, 1971, teleplay by Ed Jurist, directed by William Asher
It’s true that Bewitched got tons of comic mileage at out of recurring characters like Doctor Bombay, Uncle Arthur, Samantha’s father Maurice, Mrs. Kravitz, and Aunt Clara.
But the old reliable standby, as far as I’m concerned, was Samantha’s mom Endora.
The show’s writers (including future Same Time, Next Year playwright Bernard Slade) must have had a great deal of fun not only concocting her bon mots at the expense of what she regarded as her witless, antagonistic mortal son-in-law, but also rhyming spells like the above that she would continually use to torture him.
Agnes Moorehead received six Emmy nominations, along with a reliable paycheck for the eight seasons that Bewitched was on the air. She made no bones to interviewers that she had an accomplished career before she signed up for the sitcom, including Oscar nominations for The Magnificent Ambersons, Mrs. Parkington, Johnny Belinda, and Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte. The impression left was that this role as the acid-tongued witch mother was beneath her.
Was Bewitched
formulaic? You bet. But Ms. Moorehead furnished much joy over the years to its
fans. I wish she could have enjoyed that aspect of her job a bit more.
Thursday, June 11, 2026
This Day in Art History (John Constable, Masterful English Landscape Painter, Born)
June 11, 1776— John Constable, who labored for more than a quarter-century before the British art establishment and buyers recognized the uncommon sensitivity and beauty of his landscape paintings, was born at East Bergholt in Suffolk, England.
The contrast with the other great English landscape painter, J.M.W. Turner (only a year older), could hardly be starker:
* Constable, not elected to the Royal Academy till age 52, found considerable favor in his last decade; Turner, the youngest Academician when elected 25 years earlier, polarized the public with his late works.
*Constable was deeply devoted to his sickly wife Maria Bickness and their seven children; Turner was a perfectionist who often shunted aside those closest to him.
*Constable held traditional beliefs in the Anglican Church; Turner was a thoroughgoing iconoclast.
*Constable, according to art critic John Ruskin, was “an industrious and innocent amateur blundering his way to a superficial expression of one or two popular aspects of common nature,” while this influential Victorian not only bought works from Turner but watched him create in his studio.
(To understand how Constable and Turner became bitter rivals—including a pivotal 1831 incident involving placement of their paintings in the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition—see this fine 2018 blog post by art historian and an independent lecturer Cindy Polemis.)
For the longest time, though several documentaries were made about him, Constable didn’t possess the kind of cantankerous, eccentric personality that attracted feature film creators, as his contemporary and rival did when Mike Leigh made his 2014 biographical drama Mr. Turner. He still hasn’t had an extended cinema treatment.
But in 2024, “The Painters,” a segment of the regionally distributed movie Once Upon a Time in Suffolk, dealt with Constable’s friendship with John Dunthorne, with whom he competed to impress a young lady in need of a new portrait.
In one sense, the personalities of Constable and Turner were expressed through their subject matter. The turbulent Turner was fascinated by stormy weather, as in his 1824 watercolor Brighthelmston, Sussex. Constable looked to the tranquil, lush English countryside, reflecting his belief, as noted in Robert Cumming’s Art: A Visual History, that “nature, with its freshness, sunlight, trees, shadows, streams, and so forth, was full of moral and spiritual goodness.”
For
a nation plunging in earnest into the Industrial Revolution, such Constable
paintings as The Hay Wain and Study of the Trunk of an Elm Tree (1821),
as well as The Leaping Horse (1825) depicted an exquisite but fragile
natural landscape in danger of being lost.
Quote of the Day (Lord Bertrand Russell, on the Three Great Passions of His Life)
“Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind.” — British philosopher, mathematician, social critic, and Nobel Literature laureate Lord Bertrand Russell (1872-1970), Autobiography of Bertrand Russell (1956)
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
TV Quote of the Day (‘Yes, Prime Minister,’ on a Looming Financial Scandal)
[The investment bank Phillips Berenson has collapsed, and rumors circulate in “The City,” London’s central business district and financial center, that it’s due to financial chicanery. Another bank, the more venerable Bartlett's, is also in trouble, having lent it so much money. Its chair, Sir Desmond Glazebrook, confers with Prime Minister James Hacker about a government bailout for his institution.]
James
Hacker [played
by Paul Eddington]: “What do you know about Phillips Berenson?”
Sir
Desmond Glazebrook
[played by Richard Vernon]: “What do you know about Phillips
Berenson?”
Hacker: “Well, uh... only what I read in
the papers.”
Glazebrook: “Oh, good. Yes, well, they're in
a bit of trouble, that's all. They lent a bit of money to the wrong chaps.
Could happen to anyone.”
Dorothy
Wainwright [Hacker’s
political adviser] [[played by Deborah Norton]: “So you haven't
heard any rumors?”
Glazebrook: “Oh well, there are always
rumors.”
Dorothy: “Of bribery, embezzlement,
misappropriation, insider dealing?”
Glazebrook: “Oh, come, come, dear lady, those
are strong words.”
Dorothy: “So they're not true?”
Glazebrook: “Well, there's... there are
different uh, different ways of looking at things.”
Dorothy: “What's a different way of
looking at embezzlement?”
Glazebrook: “Oh, well, of course, if a chap
embezzles, you have to do something about it.”
Hacker: “Have a serious word with him?”
Glazebrook: “Absolutely. Usually it's just a
chap who's advanced himself a short-term, unauthorised, unsecured, temporary
loan from the company's account, and, uh, invested it unluckily. You know,
horse falls at the first fence, that sort of thing.”— Yes, Prime Minister,
Season 2, Episode 4, “A Conflict of Interest,” original air date Dec.
31, 1987, teleplay by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn, directed by Sydney Lotterby
You can
keep your Benny Hills. When it comes to British TV humor, Yes, Minister,
and its equally waggish follow-up, Yes, Prime Minister, are the shows
for me. These UK political satires aired in the Eighties, and the closest we’ve
had stateside has been the more potty-mouthed Veep. I wish they would be
broadcast as often this side of the Atlantic as The Honeymooners.
The
government bailouts of risk-happy financial institutions at the heart of the
above dialogue is something that has rightly enraged American taxpayers, with
the Bush I-era savings and loan scandal and the Global Financial Crisis of the
“oughts.” But something else intrigued me about this episode: that title, “A
Conflict of Interest.”
That
concept has been a part of American life since the founding of the republic,
including the establishment of the First National Bank and, more starkly,
slaveowning lawmakers who passed legislation benefiting themselves at the
expense of other human beings.
But these
ethically questionable interactions of government and business have ramped up,
to an unprecedented degree, under the current administration.
President
Trump, his family, and his Cabinet have profited so abundantly and shamelessly
from such transactions—and following their trail has been so complex—that many,
if not most, Americans have given up trying to keep track of it all. It’s much
easier to follow the Epstein files (though, truth be told, financial interests
are an often-overlooked part of this still unresolved scandal).
The
outcome is what you might expect. None of the departments in the executive
branch make even a pretense now at the relatively gentle coaxing of the truth from
Sir Desmond employed by PM Hacker and his aide Dorothy. The regulatory agencies
that could have raised alarms were emasculated by Trump and Elon Musk’s
Orwellian-titled Department of Government Efficiency.
The path
was paved for this through three Supreme Court decisions that gave the Trump
Administration virtual carte blanche to transform the government into an
endless slot machine for themselves and their allies:
*In Trump
v. Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and Trump v.
District of Columbia) (2021), the justice vacated lower courts’ rulings involving allegations
that, as president, Trump benefited from the hotels and restaurants that he
owns, violating two anti-corruption provisions of the Constitution known as the
emoluments clauses.
* In
Trump v. United States (2024), the GOP-appointed majority ruled that former
presidents have absolute immunity from criminal prosecution for actions
within their core constitutional powers, and at least presumptive immunity for
all other official acts—a decision opening the door to Trump lawlessness in his
return to power.
* In
Murphy V. NCAA (2018), the court invalidated a federal ban on states legalizing sports gambling—opening the way to, as Drew Hutchinson’s May Bloomberg Law article noted, is opening companies to “questions about insider
trading, reputational and legal risk, and whether internal policies address
this new environment.” And what do you know—Donald Trump Jr. is an adviser to
Kalshi, one of the two major prediction market platforms, and a major investor
in another, Polymarket.
As Financial
Times columnist Gillian Tett noted, “If Trump dictates how prediction
markets develop, while his family profits, it will make Washington look (even
more) like a corrupt casino. So, too, if insider trading goes unchecked.”
Over the
last 560 days, the Trump family has taken in an estimated $2.7 billion,
according to “Trump’s Take,” a real-time financial tracker documenting
the cash and gifts that the President and his family have received by selling
the presidency.
All the
money-making schemes—ventures that would have been certainly regarded as
undignified under all his predecessors, and even unconstitutional—have just
kept coming: Trump Bibles, fragrances, gold cell phones; the $TRUMP Meme Coin; "America's
250th Anniversary" hats; and a luxury resort proposal by son-in-law Jared
Kushner in Albania that has drawn more than a week’s worth of protest in that
nation over the potential environmental damage it may cause.
Then there
is the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) scheduled for the White House South
Lawn on June 14—not so coincidentally, Trump’s birthday.
Leave
aside whether this tacky $60 million spectacle would have been better staged in
the Roman Coliseum under an ancient emperor’s gaze, or even whether the event
offers Trump ally and UFC chief executive Dana White direct access to the White
House for a prime marketing opportunity.
Lost in
all of this is that Trump bought between $15,000 and $50,000 of stock in the parent company of UFC, TKO Holding Group—a little more than two weeks after
he began promoting the event.
Conflict
of interest, anyone? Well, as Sir Desmond might say, there are “different ways
of looking at things.”
Though
they will never be able to overtake their lord and master when it comes to
quantity and audacity, the Trump Cabinet is doing its best to do well
financially at the country’s expense. This online resource from the Campaign Legal Center (CLC) itemizes all the ways that each Trump Cabinet member has
engaged in conflicts of interest. They are worth exploring in depth, but I’ll
just highlight some of the more egregious ones:
*Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick
(who, after his evasive talk about his connection to Jeffrey Epstein, should
change his surname to “No-Good-Nick”) is now coming under scrutiny for his
relationship with Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer.
* Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. earned around $2.5
million in referral fees from 2022 through September 2025 from Wisner Baum, a
law firm suing Merck, the maker of the HPV vaccine Gardasil—putting RFK Jr.’s
vaccine skepticism in an ever worse light, if that’s possible.
* Education Secretary Linda McMahon was required to divest from
financial holdings that posed possible conflicts of interest, but does not
appear to have done so as of July of last year, according to a complaint filed with
the Office of Government Ethics by the CLC.
In keeping
with PM Hacker’s question—“Have a serious word with him?”—if the “him” in question is
Trump, I say “Yes.” And let that word, as soon as mathematically and
electorally possible, be “impeachment.”




