The Freaks of File 770

The celebration of Pride Month with the arrest of yet another SJW is fitting, but it’s no surprise, and is just one of the many reasons I’ve never granted any legitimacy to the Social Justice freakshows who always attempt to posture as if they’ve got the moral high ground in response to things like Rabid Puppies, Comicsgate, and everything else that threatens their relentless degradation of the cultural milieu.

Andrew Farago, the curator of San Francisco’s Cartoon Art Museum and one of the more prominent progressive voices in the organized comics community, was arrested June 3 on 20 counts of invasion of privacy after secretly recording birthday party guests using the bathroom at his Berkeley home, according to court documents obtained by The Berkeley Scanner.

The allegations date to May 23, when Farago co-hosted a birthday party at his South Berkeley residence. During the party, a woman found Farago’s cellphone concealed and recording video in the bathroom. The phone contained footage of Farago himself setting up the recording, according to police, as he had hidden the device under a towel and positioned it to capture guests’ genitalia as they used the restroom. Party guests included both adults and children.

When the woman confronted him, Farago made admissions and stated he had deleted the videos from his phone and the cloud, according to Berkeley police. Officers subsequently obtained an arrest warrant, arrested Farago at his home on June 3, and served a search warrant seizing approximately a dozen electronic devices…

He spent a lot of time on social media, especially Twitter pre-Elon Musk takeover, harassing artists and professionals such as Cyberfrog creator Ethan Van Sciver who put up with his relentless attacks for years. Van Sciver reacted to the news, “It doesn’t surprise me that someone who mercilessly worked to ruin my life and career, and the careers of so many others who loved to make comic books, but were political conservatives or followers of our Savior Jesus Christ, trespassed on the sacred privacy of the friends and guests he invited into his home. Andrew Farago represented so many pillars of the mainstream comic book industry, like The Comics Journal, San Diego Comic Con, DC Comics, Hachette Group Distribution, and the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco. He even wrote a book about Snoopy. His behavior, which involved hiding his cell phone under a towel in his guest bathroom in order to film the genitals of his party guests, is emblematic of the sickness that lurks in mainstream comics, where evil is welcomed and feted, and traditional American values are hunted and despised. I hope he finds Jesus Christ through diligent prayer and bible study should he be sent to prison, where he belongs.”

EVS is right. This sort of behavior isn’t sickness or even personal weakness, it’s a systemic spiritual state in which they all wallow with literal pride.

Speaking of Pride and predictability, the UK’s first gay adoptive parents were just arrested and “charged with rape, sexual assault and modern slavery trafficking for sexual exploitation.”

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Never Been More Wrong

Lionel Messi has become the leading goalscorer in World Cup history after netting his 17th goal in the competition to open Monday’s meeting with Austria. Messi became the first player in history to feature at six World Cups earlier this summer—later joined at that tally by Cristiano Ronaldo—having played at every tournament since his first in 2006.

Messi downplayed the significance of the record in the aftermath of the Algeria game, insisting it was “just a statistic, nothing more,” while simultaneously acknowledging the importance of sitting in the same bracket as Klose, Ronaldo and Gerd Müller.

Alongside breaking the scoring record, Messi also became the first player in tournament history to score in six consecutive World Cup games, having netted five across four knockout games all the way back in 2022.

I was, for a long time, an advocate of Pele as having been the greatest soccer player of all time. Now, in my defense, this was in 2020, when Messi had yet to win either a World Cup or a Copa America, so there was legitimately a rather glaring gap in his resume, even in comparison with his own fellow Argentine, Diego Maradona, much less Pele. Yes, football is a team sport, but it’s not as if Argentina was a non-competitive team prior to 2020 or that Messi was being forced to carry them singlehandedly.

But in an effort to prove my case for Pele, I went to the statistics. And there I was astounded to discover that not only did Messi rank as one of the top scorers of all time, he also ranked as a top ten assist-provider as well. In fact, statistically, at that time he was essentially the equivalent of BOTH Cristiano Ronaldo AND Zinedine Zidane every single time he walked on the field.

To put this in American football terms, it would be equivalent to Peyton Manning leading the NFL in passing yards and rushing yards, not only for a season, but over his whole career. It’s unthinkable. How do you both a) score more than everyone else and b) help others score more than anyone else? Even Michael Jordan never led the NBA in both scoring and assists. The only real comparison is to Wayne Gretzky, which tends to underline the Messi’s case.

And this was BEFORE he added two Copa America championships and a World Cup championship. And he’s now scored 5 goals in the first two games of the current World Cup Finals with football powerhouse Jordan next on the schedule. At this point, I won’t be surprised if Argentina wins the championship and Messi wins the Golden Boot.

Anyhow, I just thought I should acknowledge that while I have been wrong about things in the past, and I will be wrong about things in the future, I have never, ever, been more wrong than I was when I argued, sincerely, that Messi was not the greatest of all time.

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THE GHOST MASTER

Castalia House has spent the last several months quietly doing something no English publisher has bothered to do in a century: translating the great works of Japanese popular literature that built the entire modern adventure and detective fiction tradition in that country. Now they’re announcing their next project, and it is worth your attention.

The new series is the Hanshichi Casebook, written by Okamoto Kidō beginning in 1917. Hanshichi is Japan’s answer to Sherlock Holmes — a street detective working in historical Edo, solving murders, hauntings, and conspiracies in the shadow world beneath the Tokugawa shogunate. The stories ran for decades and spawned stage productions, radio adaptations, films, and television series. In Japan, Okamoto is to detective fiction what Conan Doyle is to English readers. In English, almost nobody has heard of him.

One previous academic translation covered 14 of the 69 stories. The other 55 have never been translated. Castalia House is publishing all of them across seven volumes. Volume 1, The Ghost Master, goes to paid subscribers this week and will be available on Kindle and Kindle Unlimited next week.

The first volume of the translated Casebook, The Ghost Master, has already gone out to the subscribers and is now available on Amazon via Kindle, KU, and audiobook. An excerpt from the first story is now available at the Library site if you’d like to get a taste of the flavor of Japan’s greatest detective. I’ve already translated the first twenty stories, and I have to say that they are up there with the best detective fiction I’ve ever read.

It’s really a must-read if you’re a Sherlock Holmes fan, because while the stories are every bit as detailed and interesting, the atmosphere, the plots, the crimes, and most definitely the punishments are entirely different. When the guilty party isn’t just turned over to the inept policemen of Scotland Yard, but is instead paraded through the streets prior to being crucified, the solution of the case tends to hit just a little bit differently.

The Casebook of Hanshichi Vol. I: The Ghost Master consists of the following:

Preface by Okamoto Kidō

1. The Spirit of Ofumi

2. The Stone Lantern

3. The Death of Kanpei

4. Upstairs at the Bathhouse

5. The Ghost Master

6. The Mystery of the Fire Bell

7. The Lady-in-Waiting

8. The Sash-Snatching Pond

9. Spring Thaw

10. Hiroshige and the Otter

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Tears of a Clown

It’s a little late for the eviction from Number Ten Downing Street to be considered “gracious”. And, of course, the British prime ministership is going from “stupid, corrupt, and Zionist” to “insane and extreme socialist” so things aren’t going to get any better on the domestic or immigration fronts, although the enthusiasm for foreign invasions should be significantly reduced.

Keir Starmer choked up today as he announced he is quitting, with Andy Burnham closing in on taking control of Downing Street.

The PM talked up his achievements in getting Labour elected – as well as making a series of dubious claims about successes in Government – in a statement outside the famous black door of No10. 

But he acknowledged that his time as PM had run out. ‘I know the question being asked now is not who is best placed to change the Labour Party… the question my party is asking now is whether I am best placed to lead us into the next general election.’

He added: ‘I accept that answer with good grace… that is why I will resign as leader of the Labour Party.’ 

Sir Keir said there would be an ‘orderly’ process to choose his replacement, and that a successor would be in place before the Commons summer recess on July 16, if there is only one candidate – Mr Burnham. Otherwise, the decision could take until August.

I doubt it matters much who leads the Labour Party. The British people have no interest in being run by the Tories or Labour anymore. Why should they, when both parties have observably governed on behalf of their foreign invaders, at their expense and to their detriment.

Perhaps they can vote their way out of it, but that seems unlikely given the near-comprehensive failure of every conservative and/or nationalist party outside of Russia and El Salvador to deliver meaningful results that are genuinely beneficial to the people of the nation.

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On the Hook

Now that developers and creatives are sufficiently accustomed to using AI, the AI companies are reeling them in with monetization that is considerably more expensive than it was. AI Central has the details:

At one cent per credit, billing accrues on input, output, and cached tokens at the published per-model API rate. On Copilot Pro, the included 1,500 monthly credits carry a face value of $15 against a $10 plan price. On Pro+, 7,000 credits worth $70 accompany a $39 subscription. Code completions and Next Edit Suggestions draw no credits under any paid plan, and the new system eliminates the cheaper-model fallback that users with exhausted PRU credits could previously invoke.

On the first day of the new billing period, one Pro+ developer wrote in GitHub’s community forum that two hours of work had consumed 8% of a monthly 7,000-credit allocation, projecting full depletion in under two days. A separate developer reported that a single request to a large project had cost more than $6, writing in the same forum that such costs made reliable budgeting impossible for individual developers. On Reddit, a user reported that a single Claude 4.8 session had consumed 1,180 credits, 16% of a monthly Pro+ allowance, while returning suggestions described as mediocre and leaving the underlying problem unsolved.

On Copilot’s published model menu, GPT-5.5 output tokens cost 24 times more than GPT-5.4 nano output tokens, turning model selection into a direct billing variable. A modeled task representing heavy agentic iteration, defined as 250,000 input tokens and 20,000 output tokens, runs to 185 credits on GPT-5.5 and 27.75 on MAI-Code-1-Flash, a 6.7-fold cost gap for the same work.

This is a bit ironic, especially for writers, since the last FOUR Claude models have all been observably worse at writing fiction than version 4.5, which is no longer available. Opus 4.6 is still usable, but who knows how much longer access to it will be permitted? Fortunately, the newer models can still handle translations and non-fiction, albeit in a very bland, uniform style in the case of the latter.

Speaking of AI Central, this weekend I put up a post featuring not one, but two music videos, one an updated version of IF YOU HAD A TIME MACHINE, the other a work-in-progress of CHIBA CITY BLUES. Quality-wise, the video technology is about 18 months behind the audio quality, but it’s coming along quickly.

Whether it will remain readily affordable, of course, is an entirely different question.

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Canada Bans History and The Bible

Canada’s Bill C-9 has removed the “good faith religious expression defence” from convictions for criminal hate speech. It is now effectively, though not yet explicitly, illegal to quote the Bible or cite historical facts deemed contradictory to the Clown World narrative.

It is illegal under section 319(1) of the Criminal Code to publicly incite hatred by “communicating statements in any public place (that) incites hatred against any identifiable group where such incitement is likely to lead to a breach of the peace.”

It is also illegal under section 319(2) of the Criminal Code to communicate statements, “other than in private conversation” that “wilfully promotes hatred against any identifiable group,” and under 319(2.1) to wilfully promote antisemitism by “communicating statements, other than in private conversation… condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust.”

The penalties for these crimes are up to two years in prison.

The Supreme Court of Canada has defined hatred as the most extreme forms of the emotions described by vilification and detestation. The Court has said “detestation tend[s] to inspire enmity and extreme ill-will … which goes beyond mere disdain or dislike.” The Court has said vilification will “seek to abuse, denigrate or delegitimize (a group)… (or) render them lawless, dangerous, unworthy or unacceptable in the eyes of the audience.” The Court added that this type of speech “goes far beyond merely discrediting, humiliating or offending the victims.” The Court has not defined antisemitism.

The Court has also said that hatred can be identified by looking for “hallmarks of hatred” including speech that:

  • “vilifies the targeted group by blaming its members for the current problems in society”
  • “alleg(es) that members of a group are a “powerful menace”
  • “accuses a group of carrying out secret conspiracies to gain global control or that they are plotting to destroy western civilization”
  • “suggests members are illegal or unlawful,” such as by labelling them “liars, cheats, criminals and thugs” 
  • calls people “pure evil” 
  • “equates the targeted group with groups traditionally reviled in society, such as child abusers, pedophiles or deviant criminals who prey on children”
  • describes members of a group as “animals or as subhuman” 
  • “calls into question whether group members qualify as human beings” or 
  • refers to them as “horrible creatures who ought not to be allowed to live,” “incognizant primates,” “genetically inferior,” “lesser beasts” or “sub-human filth.”

As I have repeatedly stated and proven by citing its original advocates, the so-called “freedom of speech” never existed and it was never a genuine objective or philosophical position. The freedom of thought was a tautology, not a God-given right. And now we’ve seen that the whole purpose, all along, was to undermine Christian civilization and Christian society, in order to allow the old religion to creep back in.

The Enlightenment always was a satanic fraud. Though it’s only recently that the fact of that fraud and its nature has become both a) philosophically irrefutable and b) observably undeniable.

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We Haven’t Forgotten

Top Republicans are reportedly complaining that, if the American people demanded the resignation of everyone involved in the cover up of the Epstein Files, the Trump Administration would have “like 3 people left.”

Good. I see absolutely no problems there. We get rid of the corrupt, evil pedos and we get smaller government. That sounds optimal.

And since it was the Epstein Alliance that got the US military into the very expensive and economically devastating war with Iran that it just lost, I’m really failing to understand what is supposed to be the appeal of this justification for the Epstein cover-up.

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Repent

I’ve got one word for every Christian Zionist, every “Judeo-Christian”, and every Christian who “supports Israel”.

Repent.

This isn’t AI or a misinterpretation. I thought it might be an exaggeration, so I went and looked it up. You can see it for yourself. What she actually said is arguably even worse, although she didn’t use the word “holocaust of Gaza” but “the ruins of Gaza”.

“I am personally proud of the ruins of Gaza, and that every baby, even 80 years from now, will tell their grandchildren what the Jews did when they murdered their families, raped them and kidnapped their citizens! Neither a dove nor an olive leaf, only a sword – to cut off Sinwar’s head!”

And to anyone who says “oh, well that was just one Jew, mouthing off two years ago” I will point out that a) May Golan is a current Israeli Cabinet member, b) she was literally reading a written speech in her official capacity as an Israeli government minister, and c) I am still being banned from various platforms and organizations for a single misquoted response to a very public racist attack on white people from 2013. So don’t even try that excuse.

In fact, it’s more than a bit ironic that for at least the last 15 years, we on the right have been relentlessly pilloried for our “extremism” in seeking to ensure that our nations, cultures, languages, and Christian faith survive intact and were falsely accused of being “Nazis” while the mainstream media has not only overlooked, but actively covered for the perpetration of an active ethnic cleansing that has now turned into a literal genocide.

As for the Israeli Minister of Social Equality, I would merely observe that she will very likely get what she wishes for. People will tell their grandchildren exactly what the Jews did for many generations to come, not only with regards to Gaza, but also with regards to the USA and Europe. And I have no doubt that her great-grandchildren, if she has any, will claim, falsely, that it is a blood libel and an antisemitism to do so.

It’s an interesting shift of the Overton Window, though, for Jews to go from denying the Gazacaust to a) openly admitting their responsibility for it and b) declaring they are both responsible for, and proud of, “the ruins of Gaza”. One wonders what other historical events exist for which they will eventually be sufficiently emboldened to publicly claim responsibility.

Besides, of course, the crucifixion of Jesus Christ of Nazareth.

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Another Failed Critique

The Kurgan discovers that AI critiques of Probability Zero cannot be relied upon.

In going over the summaries I did of your work and getting AI to check I have fairly represented what you say, I got the following, which I believe to be a narrative/adjacent/hallucination type of error AI is very prone to, as I have now become very familiar with. But I have not had time to review your latest updates, so I thought it best to get it direct from you.

The issue I am having is the text the AI spat out below when I basically said its objections didn’t make sense. It tried to say that not ALL models assume 100% replacement per generation as if that somehow invalidate your conclusions, (it had to concede almost all do use 100% replacement) So, I told it : “But in any case, even if a model does NOT assume 100% replacement that just makes Vox’s point even more valid.” This was its reply:

Does an incomplete-turnover model make Vox’s point more valid? No — and this is the part I have to be straight with you about, because it’s a vulnerability sitting in plain sight.

There are two claims tangled together:

1. Turnover is incomplete — generations overlap, not everyone is replaced each generation.
2. Incomplete turnover slows evolution, by something like a factor of d.

Claim 1 is trivially true and nobody disputes it — and yes, the Moran model “agrees.” But the entire force of the Selective Turnover Coefficient rests on Claim 2, and Claim 2 is precisely what the overlapping-generation models refute. Work evolution out in the Moran model — the rigorous overlapping-generations treatment — and you do not get a 1/dslowdown. You get essentially Wright–Fisher dynamics, and for drift, if anything, slightly faster. The unambiguous version: the substitution rate of neutral mutations equals the mutation rate whether or not generations overlap (Kimura’s result is model-independent), and a beneficial allele still fixes with probability ≈ 2s (Haldane). The engine runs at the same speed regardless of what fraction turns over per nominal “generation.”

What the d ≈ 0.45 factor actually is, is a units problem, not a biological brake. If only 45% of the population is replaced in what you’re calling a “generation,” then your “generation” is just shorter than the real mean generation time — you’ve relabelled the clock, not slowed it. The real biology (births, deaths, selection per year) is untouched, and mainstream models already handle it by using the actual generation time. There’s no hidden 1/d penalty waiting to be recovered.

So the strategic position: the moment you correctly narrow the claim to “Wright–Fisher,” you’ve conceded overlapping-generation models exist — and a population geneticist’s very next sentence is “right, and the Moran model does overlapping generations and produces no turnover slowdown, so where does the Bio-Cycle Fixation Model’s 1/d actually come from?” The burden then falls on Vox’s model to explain why it diverges from the standard overlapping-generation result, and I don’t think it can.

Error 1: “Kimura’s result is model-independent.”

This is false. The book addresses this explicitly. The derivation of k = μ goes:

k = 2N · μ · 1/(2N) = μ

The cancellation depends entirely on the initial-frequency theorem: the fixation probability of a new neutral allele equals its initial frequency, which is 1/(2N). And that result depends on exchangeability — every gene copy in the population must have the same probability of being the ancestor of the entire future population. In a Wright-Fisher model with discrete generations, exchangeability holds by construction. In a real sexual population with overlapping generations, it fails, because gene copies carried by a 20-year-old with forty years of reproduction ahead of her are not equivalent to gene copies carried by a 55-year-old with two years left. Their probabilities of fixation differ because their expected reproductive contributions differ. Once exchangeability fails, the fixation probability is no longer 1/(2N), the cancellation doesn’t go through, and k ≠ μ.

The critic asserts model-independence without engaging the assumption on which the derivation depends. That’s not a refutation. It’s a restatement of the claim being challenged.

Error 2: “The Moran model does overlapping generations and produces no turnover slowdown.”

The Moran model replaces one individual per time step — one birth, one death, chosen uniformly at random. It is “overlapping” in the trivial sense that not everyone dies at once. But it preserves exchangeability by construction: every individual is equally likely to be chosen for reproduction and equally likely to be chosen for death. There is no age structure, no differential reproductive value, no biological reality in which a grandmother and a teenager have different expected future contributions to the gene pool.

The whole point of the Selective Turnover Coefficient is that real overlapping generations are not Moran-style overlapping generations. In a real human population, individuals who were already adults in generation N are still reproducing in generation N+1, and they carry their existing allele frequencies forward, diluting the effect of selection on the new cohort. The Moran model abstracts this away by making every individual interchangeable at every time step. Citing it as evidence against d is citing a model that assumes exchangeability to refute an argument that exchangeability fails. That’s circular.

Furthermore, the Moran model isn’t the one that is relied upon by any biologists anyhow. The Moran model is a less-effective attempt to correct for the very Kimura-Wright-Fisher model that is the standard in population genetics.

Error 3: “d is just a units problem — you’ve relabeled the clock, not slowed it.”

This is wrong, and the book explains exactly why.

If you redefine the “generation” to be longer (so that 100% turnover occurs per redefined generation), you get fewer generations over the divergence interval. The math doesn’t change because d enters the calculation twice and in the same direction: it reduces both the effective selection per generation (Δp ≈ d · s · p(1-p)) and the number of effective generations (G_eff = G · d). You can’t escape this by rescaling one without rescaling the other. The total selective work done over the divergence period is d² times what the discrete model predicts, not d times, and no unit conversion eliminates a squared factor.

More importantly, the “units problem” claim is empirically falsified. If d were merely a relabeling, then the standard Kimura model and the Bio-Cycle model would produce the same predictions for allele frequency trajectories. They don’t. The book tests both models against three independent ancient DNA time series — LCT, SLC45A2, and TYR — using published selection coefficients. Kimura systematically overpredicts, driving alleles to near-fixation when observed frequencies are substantially lower. The Bio-Cycle model with d ≈ 0.45 for the Neolithic reduces prediction error by an average of 69% across all three loci. Three independent loci, different selection pressures, different time periods, different geographic regions, all converging on the same correction factor. A “units problem” doesn’t produce systematic overprediction in one model and accurate prediction in the corrected model. A real biological constraint does.

The AI critic’s objection follows a familiar pattern. It defends k = μ by citing models (Wright-Fisher, Moran) that assume the very thing being contested (exchangeability), calls the correction a relabeling rather than a physical constraint, and never engages with the empirical validation that distinguishes the two models. It is, in short, exactly the kind of narrative objection that sounds rigorous until you check whether it actually addresses the math — at which point you discover it doesn’t.

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Watch the Wives

The British Prime Minister is still refusing to step down despite having no support left within the Labour Party because his wife won’t allow it. That’s not a loyal wife. That’s a handler:

Over the past 24 hours, the PM’s allies have fanned out to brief that she will be the decisive voice in determining whether he steps down, or opts to fight on. With the consensus conveniently being that she will urge him to dig in.

‘Vic is of the view, “You need to keep on going,”’ one pro-Starmer aide briefed. Another claimed she is ‘his rock’. ‘You hear second-hand she’s really pushing for him to stay.’

OK. But with the greatest respect to Lady Starmer, that’s not her decision to make.

It’s obviously natural that any senior politician would discuss the issue of their impending resignation with their close family members. But that is not what Starmer’s inner circle are briefing. According to them, Lady Starmer effectively has a veto of whether her husband stays in office or steps down. And she shouldn’t have. She is not a member of the Cabinet. She is not a Member of Parliament. She has no formal advisory role.

Until this point Downing Street has strenuously insisted she is entirely divorced from the Government’s political affairs, and should be afforded due privacy as a result. Yet we’re suddenly being told she is second-guessing the elected Cabinet, elected MPs, the tens of thousands of people who voted in the Makerfield by-election and the millions who voted in the recent local elections, and is ordering Sir Keir to stick his head in the sand.

Starmer’s fate was sealed the moment Andy Burnham got back into Parliament by winning the by-election and becoming eligible for a Labour Party leadership challenge. And I think we’ll see Britain cease to be quite so bellicose in both the Middle East and Russia once Starmer is forced out of office, which is probably why he’s being made to fight, and inevitably lose, an ignominious battle he cannot win.

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