Reddit Takes on PROBABILITY ZERO

There are flaws in PROBABILITY ZERO. There are mistakes. There aren’t very many, to be sure, but there are a few. That’s why I’m working on the second edition now, to address those little flaws and mistakes, and to bring the book up-to-date with the very latest scientific studies. At Reddit, a number of the regulars on the r/DebateEvolution have collectively assembled a 333-comment thread to refute a book that none of them have read. This is, of course, the safest way to refute a book if one is primarily concerned with convincing oneself instead of anyone who has actually read it. The critiques come in a recognizable pattern, as each objection sounds authoritative and self-assured, and each one collapses the moment it is checked against what the book actually says and the available scientific evidence.

Objection 1: “How does Day deal with multi-base-pair mutations? ERVs, gene duplications, LINEs, SINEs, indels — does he count those as single events or as hundreds of thousands of mutations each?”

This is the most substantive question in the thread, which is presumably why it’s the one that inspires the least engagement. The answer is that it doesn’t matter.

In Yoo et al. (2025) the complete telomere-to-telomere assemblies of all great ape genomes are published. The Yoo numbers give us approximately 35 million single-nucleotide variants on the human lineage, plus 1,140 interspecific inversions, plus ~187 Mb of structurally divergent sequence. Total: about 205 million genomic differences requiring explanation.

Now, the critic’s excuse is to say “but inversions and structural variants are single events, not millions of mutations.” Fine. Discount every structural variant in the Yoo data to zero. Count nothing but single-nucleotide variants. The shortfall on the SNV-only subset is still four to five orders of magnitude. Going the other direction — counting every base pair in every structural variant as a separate mutation — pushes the shortfall to six orders of magnitude. The conclusion holds either way. Counting structural variants as single events is the maximally generous treatment, and the model still fails.

  • Full Yoo et al. data: ~410 million total human-chimp differences → ~205 million apportioned to the human lineage → shortfall of ~1.1 × 10⁶, six orders of magnitude at 1/1,100,000.
  • SNV-only, most conservative: ~17.5 million SNVs on the human lineage → shortfall of ~9.4 × 10⁴, nearly five orders of magnitude at 1/94,000.

The shortfall got worse by an order of magnitude when complete telomere-to-telomere assemblies replaced the older Chimpanzee Genome Project numbers. That’s the opposite of what one would expect if my original argument were based on cherry-picked or out-of-date inputs.

The critic was essentially asking, “did you put your finger on the scale in favor of evolution or against it?” The answer is: I calculated it iin favor of evolution, and evolution loses anyway.

Objection 2: “Whole genome duplication! Teleosts! Goldfish! Vertebrates have at least two rounds of ancient WGD!”

This is one of those objections where someone reaches for the heaviest object on the shelf without checking what’s actually inside the book. Yes, whole genome duplications happen. Yes, they’re real evolutionary events. They are also, however, totally irrelevant to the throughput argument, for three reasons that the critic didn’t consider.

First, a WGD doesn’t escape the fixation problem, but it intensifies it. A polyploidy event is a massive structural disruption that creates immediate compatibility problems with the rest of the breeding population. The standard outcome is sterility or inviability, not a new species. When it does succeed (mostly in plants, sometimes in fish), it succeeds via reproductive isolation of a tiny founding population. This means it’s a bottleneck speciation event, not a gradualist one. Polyploidy speciation has been observed precisely because it doesn’t operate by gradual substitution. It’s the opposite of the very mechanism the critic is trying to defend.

Second, the duplicated genes don’t automatically neofunctionalize. They have to mutate, and one of the two copies has to be silenced or repurposed, while the other continues doing its original job. The book explains the methylation and chromosomal-inactivation machinery required to shut down duplicate genes, a process that is itself complex and that has to be coordinated. You don’t get free new genes by doubling the genome. You get redundant, overproducing copies that immediately need to be regulated or eliminated.

Third, and most importantly, the Teleost-specific WGD doesn’t address the human-chimpanzee divergence problem. The consensus CHLCA is 6.3 million years ago, not 350 million years ago. No one is claiming the human lineage underwent a whole-genome duplication since splitting from chimpanzees. Pointing at fish from 350 million years ago to explain why ape divergence math works is the evolutionary-biology equivalent of explaining your tax shortfall by mentioning that someone, somewhere, won the lottery back in 1987.

Objection 3: “Sixteen papers haven’t overturned population genetics. None have been adopted by evolutionary biology. None have forced a textbook revision.”

This isn’t an argument. It’s an appeal to institutional inertia dressed up as an argument. Translated: the gatekeepers haven’t waved the white flag yet, therefore the gatekeepers are right.

Anyone who has paid attention to academic biology in the last twenty years knows what the peer review system actually rewards and punishes. The reproducibility crisis is now openly acknowledged in the literature, including, in Nature itself. Writing PROBABILITY ZERO led directly to a subsequent book on the structural problems that produce garbage science; HARDCODED even provides estimates of how much of every given field is already garbage and how long it will be before the still-functioning fields degrade entirely.

So the relevant question is not “have the papers forced a textbook revision?” The relevant question is: can anyone show that the math is wrong? The papers report a calculation. The inputs are the empirically measured fastest fixation rate ever observed (1,401 generations per fixation, Good et al. 2017, confirmed at whole-genome resolution by Couce et al. 2024). The outputs are arithmetic. If the calculation is wrong, the critics need to show where. None of them does. None of them even tries. They just appeal to the erroneous institutional consensus and call it refutation.

Stanislaw Ulam raised this same objection at the 1966 Wistar symposium. Sixty years later, the biologists still haven’t produced an answer. They can’t, because the math proves them wrong.

Objection 4: “He models evolution as a one-step random assembly problem instead of a cumulative, path-dependent, selection-filtered process.”

This is a flat misrepresentation, and a particularly lazy one, because the book is explicitly about cumulative fixation events at the fastest empirically observed rate. We are not calculating the probability of assembling a human genome in one shot. That’s Hoyle’s tornado-in-a-junkyard argument, and it isn’t even one of the many arguments in the book.

The argument in the book is this: take the fastest fixation rate ever measured in any organism — 1,401 generations per beneficial fixation in the E. coli long-term evolution experiment — and divide the time available since the human-chimpanzee divergence by that rate. You get approximately 186 fixation events on the human lineage. Then count the fixations required to account for the observed divergence. You need somewhere between 17.5 million (SNVs only, most generous count) and 205 million (full Yoo et al. divergence). The ratio of required to achievable is somewhere between 94,000 and 1.1 million.

This is not a one-step random assembly calculation. It is a cumulative throughput calculation using empirical fixation rates published by mainstream researchers in mainstream journals. The critic has invented a strawman to attack because the actual argument is impossible to dismiss.

Objection 5: “The ‘no ecologist has refuted it’ line is fantasy. Scientists don’t refute every bad argument. Silence is triage, not concession.”

Convenient. Also testable. If the argument can be refuted, it can be refuted. The math is published, the inputs are sourced from mainstream papers, and the calculation is elementary. Anyone who could show that 1,401 generations per fixation is wrong, or that more generations are involved, or that the divergence count is wrong, or that the arithmetic is wrong, would have an easy career-defining publication.

If evolutionary biologists could prove the mathematical possibility of evolution by natural selection, or even by natural selection and neutral theory, they would. They haven’t, they don’t, they can’t, and they won’t.

What’s actually happens is that the few evolutionary biologists who don’t simply run away from the subject concede the relevant inputs and then retreat to mechanisms that either don’t exist or don’t apply, or are insufficient to make their case. Triage is what you do when a problem is unworthy of engagement. But the people who engage are forced to concede the inputs. That’s not triage. That’s silence in the face of defeat.

Objection 6: “AI models don’t ‘reluctantly admit’ anything. They pattern-match text. User-induced hallucination dressed up as validation.”

This is the funniest one, because it shows that critic doesn’t understand how I utilize AI even though I’ve published a book explaining precisely that. Athos is listed as co-author on most of the technical papers. The role isn’t peer review; it’s calculation, formalization, and literature retrieval. The math either works or it doesn’t, and if the critics think Athos has been manipulated into producing false arithmetic, they are welcome to find the arithmetic error. They haven’t, because the arithmetic is correct. Note also that this objection is essentially “your tools are unreliable, therefore your conclusions are wrong.” This is not how science works. Galileo’s telescope was a tool. The objection isn’t to the tool; it’s to the conclusion. If you can’t show the conclusion is wrong, complaining about the tool is just venting.

Objection 7: “We have never witnessed speciation is flatly false. Speciation has been observed in plants, insects, fish, microbes, and laboratory populations.”

This requires unpacking what the critic is actually claiming. The book addresses speciation in detail and distinguishes between the categories of events the critic is collapsing together.

  • Polyploidy in plants is genome duplication, not gradualist substitution. It is a single-event reproductive isolation mechanism that bypasses the Darwinian model. It is observed precisely because it doesn’t require millions of fixations. Citing polyploidy as an example of gradualist speciation is a category error.
  • Ring species document partial reproductive isolation in progress over geological timescales. They are not complete speciation events observed in real time.
  • Laboratory experiments in Drosophila and other organisms produce partial reproductive isolation under artificial selection. The isolation typically reverses when selection is relaxed. This is consistent with what the book predicts: micro-scale change within mathematical limits, full-scale speciation outside them.

The book’s quantitative claim, formalized in the Expected Speciation Frequency paper, is that if Darwinian gradualism worked as claimed, we should observe roughly 33 speciation events per year worldwide — one every eleven days. The observed rate of gradualist speciation in 3,000 years of recorded human observation is essentially zero. Polyploidy, ring species, and partial lab isolation don’t fill the gap. They are the rare exceptions the gradualist model cannot explain because they aren’t gradualist.

Objection 8: “Fruit flies and bacteria, evolution denial’s favorite props, have demonstrated novel traits, reproductive isolation, genomic divergence, and adaptive radiations.”

We agree they have demonstrated genomic divergence. So we ran the numbers on them. Drosophila melanogaster diverging from D. simulans, with the shortest generation time of any model animal: a shortfall factor of approximately 95. The fruit fly fails by two orders of magnitude.

Bacteria, on the other hand, pass the throughput test by a margin of more than a thousand. The book is explicit about this. Bacteria pass because they have no recombination delay, complete generational turnover (d ≈ 1.0), and astronomical generation counts in geological time. They are the only group that passes, and they pass because they lack the constraints that doom every sexual lineage.

Citing bacteria as evidence that the math works for sexual reproduction is like citing a fish as evidence that mammals can breathe underwater.

Objection 9: “Vox scales mutations per generation by generation time and stops there. He’s missing genome size and cell divisions per generation. He’s out by five orders of magnitude.”

This is the objection that initially sounds technical and substantive but turns out to be a confused conflation of two different quantities. The “5 orders of magnitude” math critique is confused in precisely the same way that Dennis McCarthy got it wrong, since it’s just another conflation of the mutation rate with fixation rate.

For some reason, many evolutionists somehow can’t understand the difference between one mutation occurring for the first time in a single individual and one mutation fixating across the billions of individuals that make up the species. But k does not equal u, fixation is a tiny subset of mutation, and it is a massive category error to confuse the two. The 100 mutations per individual per generation already incorporates genome size and germline cell divisions by definition. The bottleneck isn’t mutational occurrence, it’s mutational fixation.

Objection 10: “Mutations fix in parallel, not series. Each of those 20 million mutations could be fixing at the same time. Sixty mutations per generation × 450,000 generations = 21 million fixed mutations. Those are exceedingly reasonable numbers.”

This is the central rhetorical move that the entire chapter on parallel fixation in the book is designed to address.

Parallel mutation is real. Parallel fixation is not. The constraint is Haldane’s reproductive ceiling: the sum of selection coefficients across all simultaneously selected mutations cannot exceed what the population can bear in selective deaths per generation. Mathematically, Σsᵢ ≤ s_max. Try to select for one hundred beneficial mutations simultaneously, each with s = 0.01, and you’ve allocated a total selective load of 1.0 — meaning you’re killing the entire reproductive surplus of the population every generation. That’s extinction, not evolution.

Worse, Hill-Robertson interference makes parallel selection less efficient than serial selection. When multiple beneficial mutations segregate in the same population, they compete with each other for fixation. Ralph and Coop demonstrated in 2010 that this produces “soft sweeps” rather than the clean fixation events the standard model assumes.

The “60 mutations per generation × 450,000 generations = 21 million” calculation is what you get when you assume independent fixation of every mutation, with no reproductive constraint, no Hill-Robertson interference, no recombination limits, and no biological reality. It’s a back-of-the-envelope number that violates Haldane’s constraint by orders of magnitude. Reasonable, it is not.

This is also, incidentally, the same point to which JFG retreated to in our debate. He conceded the point about reproductive constraint only after I pressed him repeatedly. The defense doesn’t survive contact with the actual mathematics.

Objection 11: “A chromosome fusion: counted as a single mutation correctly, or wrongly as hundreds of thousands of individual mutations?”

Either way the model fails. Counted as a single event, you still need it to fix, and chromosome fusions create immediate meiotic incompatibility with the rest of the population, which makes fixation in a stable population effectively impossible. The human chromosome 2 fusion event is one of the standard cases the gradualist model has no good story for. Counted as many events, the throughput requirement explodes.

Structural variants and chromosomal rearrangements are worse for the gradualist model than point mutations, not better, because they break compatibility with non-carriers and therefore impede their own spread.

Objection 12: “Mutations fix faster during genetic bottlenecks. We know of at least a few extreme human ones.”

True, and the book uses the consensus effective population size of 10,000, which is already a bottleneck-adjusted figure; we’ve since calculated that the actual aDNA figure is 3,300. Going smaller helps fixation in two ways and hurts in three. It helps because drift-driven fixation is faster in smaller populations and because beneficial mutations have an easier time sweeping. It hurts because (a) smaller populations produce fewer novel mutations per generation, (b) smaller populations are subject to Muller’s ratchet — accumulating deleterious mutations faster than they can be purged — and (c) smaller populations are at higher risk of mutational meltdown and extinction.

The drift catastrophe is a serious problem, documented in the work of Kondrashov, Lynch, and Crow. Crow estimated that humans experience a 1-2 percent decline in genetic fitness per generation due to mutation accumulation. Bottleneck speciation gives you faster fixation at the cost of accelerated genetic decay. You can’t run that engine for 6.3 million years.

The Failure of the Redditors

Each individual objection sounds vaguely plausible if you don’t understand it. None of them survives even rudimentary examination. The pattern is consistent: the critics have constructed a version of the book they can refute, instead of engaging with the version that exists. They attack a one-step random assembly model the book doesn’t use. They cite parallel fixation calculations that violate Haldane’s constraint. They wave at speciation events that bypass the Darwinian mechanism. They invoke whole genome duplications that don’t apply to the ape lineage. They appeal to the institutional consensus and call it refutation.

The book’s central claim is arithmetic. Either the fastest empirically measured fixation rate, applied across the available time, can produce the observed divergence — or it can’t. The arithmetic says it can’t, by four to six orders of magnitude depending on how generously you count.

The Reddit critics haven’t shown the arithmetic of PROBABILITY ZERO is wrong. They’ve only shown they don’t want to do the math themselves.

DISCUSS ON SG


Replacement Migration is Real

The US government has formally admitted the existence of what was once deemed “conspiracy theory” by the media, and rejected it.

  • The White House: Under President Trump, replacement migration will never be the standard. The United States objects to the Global Compact on Migration and UN efforts to facilitate replacement migration.
  • U.S. Department of State: Last week, the United States refused to participate in the UN’s review of the Global Compact on Migration. The United States objects to the Global Compact on Migration and UN efforts to facilitate replacement migration to the United States and our Western allies.

It’s good that the USA is finally rejecting Clown World’s attempt to subject the Christian West to invasion and its goal to repopulate the West with non-Western, non-Christian foreigners. But rejection replacement migration is no longer enough in light of decades of foreign invasion, remigration is now an absolute priority if America and the European nations are going to survive without resorting to Israeli levels of genocide.

Lest you object to that characterization of the Israeli actions in Gaza, consider how you would describe it if the USA subjected its foreign migrants to precisely the same treatment that the Israeli government has provided the people of Gaza: a proportional effort would require deporting 33 million migrants and killing 10.5 million of them.

Now, considering that the Israelis are already doing this without even being banned from Eurovision or suffering any other consequences, can we really doubt that other countries are, sooner or later, going to follow the Israeli example when they hold far greater claims to their own lands than the Israelis have ever had to Gaza?

DISCUSS ON SG


OOTS Now in Print

Count the fingers. That’s right, the cover of OUT OF THE SHADOWS now features the lovely Sophia with an appropriate number of fingers. More importantly, it’s the cover of the print edition of OUT OF THE SHADOWS, now in hardcover for the first time. We’re not planning to do a paperback; the signed first edition with original illustrations is being laid out now.

From the reviews:

  • It was interesting reading this right after finishing the original Dracula for the first time. I could not put this down and finished it in a single weekend. The characters were engaging and there were many points where you are sort of rooting for the vampires to succeed and have to remind yourself, wait they’re not the “good guys.” Added some interesting perspectives to the typical vampire mythology with some chilling modern parallels when you stop to think through the implications.
  • Thrilling and a bit scary. I really enjoyed this book. It was exciting, addictive, and incredibly hard to put down. Every time I finished a chapter, I wanted to keep going just to see what happens next. The story kept me engaged the entire time.
  • The quality of the text is amazing, with a tight plot that combines vivid details with lots of action in the surface, but it hides a story of a modern day Faust that so likely becomes a monster.
  • This was a fast paced tale of corporate research finding out something that draws the attention from those who have long hidden in the shadows. Vampires are real and they make an offer that can’t be refused. A tale that takes place on several levels from the board room to old Italian villas with enough easter eggs to keep any history buff happy. The most interesting part is the slow transformation from idealistic human to amoral monster. The effects of religious belief and practice on blood quality for vampire consumption purposes was both interesting and something I look forward to being developed in future novels. Worth the time for any reader who likes corporate thrillers with a twist.
  • I’m not a vampire afficionado, so I don’t know what the normal stories are like, but I remember the movie “Nosferatu”. Yeah, “Out of the Shadows” isn’t like that at all. No gloomy castles, no dark crypts, no gory, bloodsucking details. It’s more like the tale of a business venture, but involves serious moral as well as financial choices. I’m not a fan of the genre at all, yet I found this story compelling. Well-told, with hints of humour and touching on serious and challenging moral questions. I will probably never read another vampire story again, and I’m unlikely to read one that I enjoyed more than this.

I’m already working on the sequel, A Merciless Night.

DISCUSS ON SG


The Neocon’s Despair

Even one of the leading neocons and chief architects of the war in Ukraine doesn’t believe the US military can defeat Iran.

The risk calculus that forced Trump to back down a month ago still holds. Even if Trump were to carry out his threat to destroy Iran’s “civilization” through more bombing, Iran would still be able to launch many missiles and drones before its regime went down—assuming it did go down. Just a few successful strikes could cripple the region’s oil and gas infrastructure for years if not decades, throwing the world, and the United States, into a prolonged economic crisis. Even if Trump wanted to bomb Iran as part of an exit strategy—looking tough as a way of masking his retreat—he can’t do that without risking this catastrophe.

If this isn’t checkmate, it’s close. In recent days, Trump has reportedly asked the U.S. intelligence community to assess the consequences of simply declaring victory and walking away. You can’t blame him. Hoping for regime collapse is not much of a strategy, especially when the regime has already survived repeated military and economic pummeling. It could fall tomorrow, or six months from now, or not at all. Trump doesn’t have that much time to wait, as oil climbs toward $150 or even $200 a barrel, inflation rises, and global food and other commodity shortages kick in. He needs a faster resolution.
But any resolution other than America’s effective surrender holds enormous risks that Trump has not so far been willing to take. Those who glibly call on Trump to “finish the job” rarely acknowledge the costs.

Unless the U.S. is prepared to engage in a full-scale ground and naval war to remove the current Iranian regime, and then to occupy Iran until a new government can take hold; unless it is prepared to risk the loss of warships convoying tankers through a contested strait; unless it is prepared to accept the devastating long-term damage to the region’s productive capacities likely to result from Iranian retaliation—walking away now could seem like the least bad option. As a political matter, Trump may well feel he has a better chance of riding out defeat than of surviving a much larger, longer, and more expensive war that could still end in failure.

Defeat for the United States, therefore, is not only possible but likely…

The American defeat in the Gulf will have broader global ramifications as well. The whole world can see that just a few weeks of war with a second-rank power have reduced American weapons stocks to perilously low levels, with no quick remedy in sight. The questions this raises about America’s readiness for another major conflict may or may not prompt Xi Jinping to launch an attack on Taiwan, or Vladimir Putin to step up his aggression against Europe. But at the very least America’s allies in East Asia and Europe must wonder about American staying power in the event of future conflicts.

The global adjustment to a post-American world is accelerating. America’s once-dominant position in the Gulf is just the first of many casualties.

Considering how Robert Kagan has been a major advocate of US military action all around “the jungle” of the globe, this is a fascinating, if long overdue, recognition of the limits of US military power.

DISCUSS ON SG


Australia vs Torba

The Australian government has officially declared war on free speech, and they have threatened me with 12 months in prison for exposing their blueprints. I have been served with a production notice from their new Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion. They are using expert activists to weaponize the definition of antisemitism by broadening it to include any criticism of Israel or globalist power structures.

They want to label our speech a national security threat.

Their own documents express deep frustration that platforms like Gab have shifted toward true free expression, and they are now moving to force us back into their controlled and state monitored box. They demanded I hide this information and threatened 12 months of jail time if I speak.

Good luck enforcing that. I do not answer to Australian bureaucrats, and Gab does not answer to state sponsored censors. This is exactly why we built Gab. We are creating a parallel society that is independent of their captured institutions, their corrupt courts, and their laughable threats of imprisonment. You cannot cage the truth, and you cannot stop a people who have decided they will no longer be silenced.

We are staying the course.

DISCUSS ON SG


Confirmed

Fandom Pulse is extremely enthusiastic about the Library’s foray into Spanish literature. One wonders why…

Castalia Library built its reputation translating Japanese literature into English. Natsume Soseki’s SanshiroBotchan, and Kokoro. Six volumes of Eiji Yoshikawa’s secret scroll cycle. Nine translations into a catalog that has established Castalia as the most serious independent literary translation operation in the English-speaking world.

Their tenth translation is not Japanese. It is Spanish. And it is one of the most overdue introductions in the history of European literature reaching English readers. The expansion into Spanish literature signals something about what Castalia is building. Their translation subscription has run on Japanese literature since launch. A single pivot to Pérez Galdós announces that the project is broader than a specialty press, that the mission is recovery of major world literature that English publishing has ignored rather than Japanese literature specifically. Forty-five more volumes of the Episodios Nacionales exist. If Castalia follows through, they will have done something no major publisher has attempted in the history of English-language literary translation.

Fandom Pulse reached out to Vox Day asking if they would be translating the entire series, and he told us, “Yes, we are translating the entire 46-volume series.”

I’m pleased to say that not only have more people joined to support Castalia’s translation efforts, but Trafalgar is already the #1 New Release in Spanish literature. One subscriber expressed his opinion after receiving this week’s book:

One of the best rewards on Substack is receiving copies of these historic treasures with new compelling translations, some never having been previously translated to English at all!

DISCUSS ON SG


The Eurovision Boycott

Israel is in the Middle East, so why are they in the Eurovision contest in the first place? That has never made any sense to me. But the 2026 boycott is understandable in light of how Russia has been excluded for its invasion of Ukraine while Israel hasn’t been excluded for a) invading Syria, b) invading Gaza, c) invading Lebanon, and d) attacking Iran.

Public broadcasters in Spain, Ireland and Slovenia have said they would not air the 70th anniversary Eurovision Song Contest, which begins on Tuesday in Austria and will culminate in Saturday’s grand finale, citing opposition to Israel’s participation. The three countries, along with the Netherlands and Iceland, withdrew on Monday from this year’s event in Vienna, leaving the contest facing the biggest boycott in its 70-year history…

The contest has faced accusations of double standards after banning Russia following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. Moscow in turn accused organizers of favoring Western participants and promoting anti-Russian sentiment.

Eurovision is a Clown World freakshow and it’s of less than zero interest to me, but it’s a little hard to pretend that there isn’t a ridiculous double standard being applied here. I’ve just never understood why Israel competes in UEFA competitions; they’d probably have a better chance in just about any of the other football associations except CONMEBOL anyhow.

DISCUSS ON SG


Iran to Trump: Surrender

Iran’s National Security Spokesman Ebrahim Rezaei to President Trump: As of today, our restraint is over. Any aggression against our vessels will be met with a heavy and decisive Iranian response against American vessels and bases. The clock is ticking against the Americans’ interests; it is to their benefit not to act foolishly and sink themselves deeper into the quagmire they have fallen into. The best course is to surrender and concede concessions. You must get used to the new regional order.

President Trump’s response: I have just read the response from Iran’s so-called “Representatives.” I don’t like it – TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!

Apparently a comprehensive failure to achieve any of his war goals in a reasonable timeframe is only going to make him double-down. Which means the USA is not only losing this war, but may risk losing it in an even more costly and humiliating manner if the legislative branch doesn’t impeach him and remove him from office. If we’re lucky, he’s just blustering and will soon do the smart thing and accept the military realities of the untenable situation in which he has put himself and the US military.

The dangerous thing here is that to date, Iran has been fighting a predominantly reactive and defensive war. But now that they’ve survived the initial Zerg rushes, its strategists have the time to figure out how to go on the offensive, both in the theater and beyond.

DISCUSS ON SG


Migrants for the Pro-Immigration Voters

The migrant camp policy of what is now the most powerful party in the UK is absolutely brilliant and its principle of calling the Left on its nonsensical and societally-destructive voting should be adopted by every nationalist party in the West across a wide range of policies:

We need to talk about Reform’s camp policy. I’m not talking about their policy of hiring lots of camp men. They do do that. I’m talking about their policy of putting migrant camps in Green Party areas. Lots of people on the left have said that this is appalling and disgusting. It’s punishing left-wing voters. It’s like, yeah, it is appalling and disgusting, but how can it be punishing left-wing voters? This is what you’ve been doing to other people for years, and you’ve always said that migrants are enriching. They’re our greatest strength! So, why aren’t you delighted that they’re being moved to your areas?

And lots of people in the right have criticized it as well. They’ve said, “Well, this is unfair on right-wing people who live in those areas, and this is just trollling and and this is doing something for attention.” But listen, the right-wing people were going to get those migrants anyway. It’s just now there’s a mechanism for stopping the flow. This is a way to change people’s minds and change people’s behaviors. Specifically, left-wing people who think that we should have open borders and who up until now have been completely insulated from the consequences of those open borders. Let’s have a look at the policy.

Now, it’s clear that the failed Uni Party era is over. And there is a battle for the soul of our country between Reform and the Greens. That’s why today we announce an important new policy. In order to deport all illegal migrants in Britain, we’re going to need to detain tens of thousands at a time. Migrants will not be able to leave these detention centers and each will be held there for a couple of weeks before being deported.

So here’s our promise. A reform government will not put any migrant detention centers in any constituency with a Reform MP. We will not put them where Reform controls the council. And of the remaining areas, we will prioritize Green parliamentary constituencies and Green-controlled councils to put those migrant detention centers. That means areas like right here in Brighton.

Put simply, if you vote in a Reform council or a Reform MP, we guarantee you will not have a migrant detention center near you. However, if you vote Green, there’s a very good chance that you will. This way, everyone gets what they vote for.

Let them complain all they like. If you vote for open borders, then you get all the immigrants. No more sending them off to small towns in Iowa or Idaho. If you vote for data centers, then you get one built in your town. If you vote for windmills, they get built near your house. If you vote to release the crazies from the asylums, you get the homeless shelters in your neighborhoods. If you vote for the early release of violent offenders, then they are released in your town.

The principle is not even remotely unfair. To the contrary, it’s the most fair and democratic outcome possible. We know that pro-military voters have no problem with military bases in their areas; Congressmen even compete with each other to get military bases built in their districts. It’s long past time to call out the moronic Left on their actions and force them to live with the consequences of their wicked idiocy.

DISCUSS ON SG


TRAFALGAR

TRAFALGAR is the first volume of the Episodios Nacionales — the great historical novel cycle of Spain

October 1805. Off the coast of Cádiz, the combined fleets of Spain and France sail out to meet the British under Nelson. By nightfall, the Spanish navy will have ceased to exist as a fighting force, and an empire that has ruled the seas for three centuries will have lost them forever.

Gabriel Araceli is fourteen years old. An orphan from the slums of Cádiz, he has been taken into the household of Don Alonso Gutiérrez de Cisniega, a retired naval officer who cannot bear to miss the coming battle. When Don Alonso slips away from his furious wife to join the fleet, Gabriel goes with him, and eventually finds himself aboard the Santísima Trinidad, the largest warship in the world, on the morning of the most catastrophic day in Spanish naval history.

What follows is one of the great battle sequences in European literature: the four-decker as living giant, the sand spread on the planks for the blood, the smoke that swallows the line, the slow agony of a ship that will not surrender and cannot be saved. Pérez Galdós, writing seventy years after the event with the aid of the testimony from the survivors of the battle, gives us a view of Trafalgar from the losing side, not as a British triumph but as a Spanish tragedy, narrated by an old man who was a boy in the rigging and has carried the day with him for the rest of his life.

Trafalgar is the first of forty-six novels in the Episodios Nacionales, Pérez Galdós’s vast fictional history of nineteenth-century Spain, a literary project on the scale of Balzac’s Comédie humaine, and one of the supreme achievements of European realism. Published in 1873, it has remained continuously in print in Spanish for over 150 years. Trafalgar is for readers of Patrick O’Brian, C.S. Forester, and Bernard Cornwell who are interested in seeing war in the age of sail from the other side of the line, and for readers of Tolstoy, Stendhal, and Hugo to encounter one of Spain’s greatest novelists for the first time.

Available for Kindle, KU, and audiobook on Amazon. The ebooks have already been sent out to the paid subscribers. The book is already #1 in the Spanish Literature category.

About the author. Benito Pérez Galdós (1843–1920) is regarded as the greatest Spanish novelist since Cervantes. Over four decades, he produced the Episodios Nacionales, one of the most incredible accomplishments of world literature ever written; only 8 of the 46 volumes have been translated into English. Pérez Galdós was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature five times but never won.

About the translation: This is the second English translation of Trafalgar. The first one was in 1884, by Clara Bell, and it is both outdated and a significant departure from Pérez Galdós’s literary style. For an excerpt, please visit Castalia Library. One reader notes: “These translated books have been absolutely amazing, some of the best work that has come out of Castalia House.”

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