BREAKING: Trump’s “ceasefire” on the verge of collapse just hours after announcement as Israel goes rogue and commits a HORRIFYING massacre of innocents with weapons paid for by our tax dollars!
Apparently, Trump didn’t bother involving the Israelis in his ceasefire negotiations, who were taken aback by the abrupt cessation in hostilities. The IDF has responded by unleashing a murderous bombardment of Lebanon’s capital of Beirut, killing hundreds if not THOUSANDS of people as they wantonly use American missiles and bombs to blow entire city blocks apart.
Israeli media reports 50 warplanes dropped 160 bombs across Lebanon in minutes. One Israeli missile strike hit a funeral, killing everybody. Israel has also bombed Iran’s Lavan oil refinery in an obvious attempt to provoke a reprisal and to tear the ceasefire apart.
Israel claims that Lebanon was not part of the ceasefire, despite the Pakistani negotiators saying that it was.
Iran has warned that the ceasefire will collapse if the killing in Lebanon continues and that no ships will pass through the Strait of Hormuz until Lebanon is included in the ceasefire.
The sadism and nihilistic violence being displayed by the Israelis is shocking to behold, and it’s all paid for by our tax dollars! Trump cannot control our allies, cannot hold the peace together, and has created a nightmare for millions of people for no reason other than so he could be the guy who “got” the ayatollah.
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It’s well known that students from grade schools to the big universities are increasingly outsourcing their thinking to large language models (LLMs). The consequences are already measurable: elementary students are losing cognitive skills, leading them to tank their exams.
Harder to quantify — but impossible to miss if you’ve spent any time in school lately — is the situation unfolding across classrooms, where students from all layers of society have become empty vessels that parrot the outputs of AI without critically engaging with the subject matter at hand.
One student at Yale University, identified as Amanda, told CNN that the monotonous prose of ChatGPT is even seeping into Ivy-league seminars. As the student and her classmates have observed, in-class conversations among peers are becoming increasingly flat and predictable, a symptom of students leaning on AI to think through discussions for them.
During one memorable awkward silence in class, Amanda told CNN she saw “someone typing ferociously on their laptop, asking [AI] the question my professor just asked about the reading.”
“Everyone now kind of sounds the same,” the Yale student said. “I feel like during my freshman year in college, I would sit in seminars where everyone had something different to contribute. Although people would piggyback off each other, they approached from different angles and offered different commentary.”
Amanda isn’t alone. One of her peers, Jessica, said that the start of every class kicks off an AI mad dash. “At the beginning of class, you could see every single person putting every single PDF [into AI],” the Yale senior told CNN.
Numerous studies have explored AI’s impact on human expression. One recent paper, published in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences, argued that LLMs dull the ways their users approach issues, deploy language, and reason through problems. When we use AI chatbots to think, the authors posit, we’re silently exchanging our own human thoughts for LLM output: a homogenized aggregate of our chosen model’s training data.
Morteza Dehghani, a professor of psychology and computer science at the University of Southern California and co-author of the paper told CNN that the implications of this are “quite scary.”
“If people lose [cognitive] diversity or get into intellectual laziness, of course, that is going to affect our society greatly,” Dehghani said.
Adrian Ecoffet, the OpenAI research scientist who spearheaded the initiative, told me that a group of around 3 dozen researchers at OpenAI came together to build this report in collaboration with the policy team. They created a series of working groups on various topics they wanted to include in the report and eventually settled on two main themes:
Building an Open Economy (or spreading the economic impact of AI)
Building a Resilient Society (or how we keep AI safe and under human control)
The company is on the verge of releasing its most powerful models yet, ones that could create crises ranging from economic dislocation to cybersecurity disasters. To preempt this, the researchers explored policies that could rein in the damage before it happens, creating a policy blueprint that could change the social contract in the biggest way since the New Deal.
On the surface, this looks like a doc aimed at policymakers and public officials, but the reality is broader than that.”This document is meant as a conversation starter,” said Ecoffet. “The ideas are not fully baked. There are probably a lot of problems with them. In many cases, they are not very specific. And so what I hope is for people to react to it, and frankly criticize it [and] even come up with rip‑offs of it. And to really have a good conversation about these ideas.”The thirteen-page document has a strong egalitarian bent to it and proposes several revolutionary concepts:
A Public Wealth Fund: The government creates a fund that invests in AI companies and shares the profits with citizens, so everyone benefits from what could be the greatest wealth creator in history, rather than just the wealthy. This would raise all kinds of practical challenges. But if their goal is to stimulate debate, this certainly will.
32-hour/four-day workweek pilots tied to efficiency dividends: If AI makes workers more productive, companies should pass those gains on to employees in the form of a shorter work week, rather than pocketing all the extra profits.
“Right to AI” similar to universal internet access: Just as we made sure most people can access electricity and the internet, the government should make sure everyone can access affordable AI tools. Again, this keeps the benefits from accruing disproportionately to rich people.
AI-driven corporate gains and automated labor: As AI replaces human workers and companies earn higher profits, those companies should pay higher taxes to help fund social safety nets that retrain and support displaced workers. Ecoffet said the goal of these proposals is not to have them all accepted as-is. Instead, the goal is to bring the risks and impacts of AI to the public consciousness before AGI and superintelligence have fully come to fruition. That’s something that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has also advocated, telling Ecoffet and other researchers in a roundtable published Tuesday that the public and policymakers alike need a long period of time to debate these ideas to make good decisions long before AI triggers potential crises that force us to act.
Al Gore, former vice president and founding partner of Generation Investment Management, echoed this sentiment in his keynote speech at the HumanX conference in San Francisco on Monday. Referring to Anthropic publishing its constitution for Claude in January, Gore told a crowd of several thousand attendees that “I think there ought to be a public discussion and debate of the constitution written for … each of the [frontier] models.” So far, none of the other frontier labs, including OpenAI, has published a constitution like the one Anthropic has opened up for Claude.OpenAI believes we will need a New Deal-style policy moonshot to reframe the social contract around AI. Doing that is going to require raising awareness about these issues in the public consciousness, so that we come to a consensus around them by the time superintelligence gets here. OpenAI isn’t the first to call attention to these ideas. As companies continue their push for AGI, ethics organizations have been calling for regulation and governance of AI to keep humans in the driver’s seat and allow the gains to be distributed more broadly. What makes this different from those movements is that OpenAI is the one shouting from the rooftops. In essence, the company is calling itself out and holding itself accountable, along with other frontier labs and leading players in the AI industry. It’s also an example of the kind of forward-thinking ethical position that usually characterizes OpenAI’s No. 1 rival, Anthropic.Senior reporter Nat Rubio-Licht also contributed to this story.
Happy Wednesday! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,972 words … 7½ mins. Thanks to Neal Rothschild for orchestrating. Edited by Andrew Pantazi and Bill Kole.Crude oil pricesdropped sharply overnight, falling well under $100 per barrel after President Trump announced his two-week ceasefire, which Iran and Israel embraced, Axios’ Ben Geman writes.It’s the biggest one-day free fall since early COVID.
1 big thing: White-knuckle truce
Shia Muslims hold portraits of Iran’s slain supreme leader Ali Khamenei and his son and successor Mojtaba Khamenei, during a procession in Karachi. Photo: Rizwan Tabassum/AFP via Getty
Backstory to the two-week ceasefire announced last evening: Officials in the U.S. and Israel learned of an intriguing development on Monday with President Trump’s ultimatum looming, Axios’ Barak Ravid, Dave Lawler and Marc Caputo write.
Supreme LeaderMojtaba Khameneihad instructed his negotiators, for the first time since the war began, to move toward a deal, according to an Israeli official, a regional official and a third source with knowledge.
The big picture:As Trump was publicly threatening total annihilation, there were signs of diplomatic momentum behind the scenes — though even sources close to Trump didn’t know which outcome to expect right up until a ceasefire was announced.
U.S. forces in the Middle East and officials in the Pentagon spent those closing hours preparing for a massive bombing campaign on Iranian infrastructure, and trying to figure out where Trump was leaning. “We had no idea what was going to happen. It was wild,” a defense official said.
Allies in the region were bracing for Iranian retaliation on an unprecedented scale. Inside Iran, some civilians were fleeing their homes in an attempt to avoid the brunt of the strikes.
This account of the diplomacy that staved off that escalation, for now, is based on conversations with 11 sources with knowledge of the talks.
By Monday night, Pakistani mediators had U.S. approval for an updated proposal for a two-week ceasefire. The sources said it was then up to Khamenei, actively involved in the process the past two days, to decide.
The involvement of the new supreme leader was necessarily clandestine and laborious. Facing an active threat of assassination by Israel, Khamenei has been communicating primarily via runners passing notes.
Two sources said Khamenei giving the negotiators his blessing to cut a deal was the “breakthrough.”
All major decisions the past two days went through Khamenei. “Without his green light, there wouldn’t have been a deal,” the regional source said.Today’s New York Post, New York Times.
How it happened: It was clearby yesterday morning that progress was being made, but that didn’t stop Trump from making his most harrowing threat: “A whole civilization will die tonight.”
By around noon ET yesterday, there was a general understanding that the parties were converging on a two-week ceasefire.
At 6:32 p.m. ET, Trump announced “a double sided CEASEFIRE!”Screenshot: Truth Social
What to watch: It remains to be seen to what degree Iran will allow shipping to resume or how steadfast Netanyahu will be in his adherence to the ceasefire.
A senior Israeli official told Axios that Netanyahu had received assurances the U.S. would insist in peace talks that Iran give up its nuclear material, cease enrichment, and abandon its ballistic missile threat.
Vice President JD Vance is likely to lead the U.S. delegation at talks planned for Friday in Pakistan — easily the most consequential assignment of his political career.
There are still major gaps between the U.S. and Iranian visions for a deal, leaving the very real possibility the war will resume.Share this story.
Is Bill Ackman like Warren Buffett? The CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management cited a desire to unleash “long-term value” when making yesterday’s $64 billion bid to acquire Universal Music Group. He’s long admired the chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, who handed the CEO role to Greg Abel earlier this year.
And Ackman revived talk of creating a modern-day Berkshire last month when filing to list Pershing with a new fund on the New York Stock Exchange. As investors look at Pershing’s impending IPO as an alternative to Berkshire in the world of value investing, it’s worth comparing the two men and the companies they’ve built.
Investing Approach – Buffett has a six-decade track record of 20% compound annual returns to investors, roughly double the S&P 500.Ackman’s hedge fund has delivered similar returns since its 2004 launch, not including fees. But it’s a choppier journey when you’re an activist investor who names enemies, looks for problems to fix and wages war in public. Pershing’s turnover is double that of Berkshire, though both are relatively low, and it’s a fraction the size.
Ackman’s focus on fee growth and asset management is also more akin to Blackstone than Berkshire. Capital can be more nimble than a conglomerate. But Ackman’s UMG bid reinforces a philosophy embraced by Buffett, who prefers to buy “wonderful businesses at fair prices” and work privately with management to unlock value.
Personal Brand – The differences in temperament and tactics are stark. It’s hard to compete with a billionaire who clips McDonald’s coupons and still lives in the house he bought for $31,500 in 1958. While Ackman says he turns off lights and drives around to look for cheap parking, I know who I’d cast for the role of George Bailey in It’s A Wonderful Life.Among other things, Buffett is polite, down to earth, and feels a civic duty to pay higher taxes.
Still, track record tends to trump personality when it comes to making money. Shares in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac jumped 40% the day after Ackman called them “stupidly cheap.” Those who love Ackman, vitriol and all, probably don’t care if he morphs into Berkshire’s model as long as he delivers results.Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com
The average American manager now oversees 12 direct reports, and the data suggest AI is both the cause and justification for this quiet but seismic shift in how the U.S. workplace is organized. It is one of the starkest structural changes in the modern American office, and it is happening with relatively little public debate about what, exactly, is being traded away in the name of efficiency.
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Call it the megamanager era. Driven by AI-enabled cost-cutting, leaner bureaucracies, and a relentless corporate push to rationalize headcount, companies have spent the past three years gutting their middle-management ranks, leaving whoever survives with a dramatically larger portfolio of people. The data is as official as it gets, coming straight from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The average number of a manager’s direct reports has nearly doubled since Gallup began tracking the figure in 2013.
If AI can handle scheduling, summarize performance reviews, monitor project timelines, and surface early warning signals about team dysfunction, do you really need as many human coordinators?Meta’s new applied AI engineering division has taken the logic to its most aggressive extreme, deploying a 50-to-1 employee-to-manager ratio—roughly double what was once considered the outer limit of a functional organizational structure. Whether the rest of corporate America follows that example or it becomes a cautionary tale may define the future of work for the next decade.
The pros: Speed, savings, and structural clarity
For companies, the immediate math looks appealing. Fewer managers mean lower headcount costs, flatter hierarchies, and (in theory) faster decision-making. When a senior vice president no longer has to relay information through two or three layers of middle management before it reaches the people doing the actual work, information can travel faster, and accountability can land closer to the front lines. A 2024 Gartner analysis predicted that one in five businesses plan to use AI specifically to streamline organizational layers.
AI is also genuinely helping some managers cope with the expanded workload. Tools that automate administrative tasks—flagging performance issues, synthesizing team data, drafting communications, and coordinating schedules across large groups—are reducing the friction that once consumed hours of a manager’s week. Done well, this kind of AI augmentation could make the megamanager model viable: A skilled, well-supported boss leading a dozen people might be more effective than a distracted, paper-buried boss leading six.
The productivity case has deep historical precedent. A sweeping analysis published this week by Morgan Stanley looked at five prior American innovation waves—from the first Industrial Revolution through the internet—and found a consistent pattern: Transformative technologies raise output per worker, particularly when paired with deliberate organizational redesign. Chief U.S. economist Michael Gapen’s team found that electrification doubled output per hour in nonfarm business between 1900 and 1929. The internet accelerated labor productivity growth from roughly 1.5% per year to nearly 3.0% per year by 2000. AI should follow the same arc, Gapen suggested—with one critical caveat. Those productivity gains have historically materialized years, sometimes decades, after the initial disruption, not simultaneously along with it. The pain tends to come first.
What’s lost: Mentorship, morale, and the career ladder
The human ledger is looking considerably worse than the balance sheet. Another Gartner survey found 75% of HR leaders believe managers are already overwhelmed by their expanding responsibilities, and 69% say managers lack the skills to lead change effectively even before full AI integration takes hold. Gallup data show that global employee engagement has fallen to just 21%, near a 15-year low, with managers themselves—not just the people they supervise—reporting some of the sharpest drops in workplace satisfaction of any cohort. The Wall Street Journalrecently argued that work is increasingly “joyless” as many offices take on a funereal atmosphere in the age of the megamanager.
Perhaps the most underappreciated cost of span-of-control inflation is what happens to the people at the earliest stages of their careers. Coaching, mentorship, and hands-on development—the soft infrastructure that has historically built management pipelines and transmitted institutional knowledge from one generation to the next—are the first casualties when a single boss is stretched across 12 people rather than six. A manager with a dozen direct reports simply cannot spend the same number of hours per person nurturing potential, giving real-time feedback, or advocating for junior employees in rooms they’re not in. That gap accumulates, posing a threat to talent development.
Flattened hierarchies also disrupt traditional career progression in ways that are only beginning to surface in the data.When there are fewer rungs on the ladder, there are fewer ways to climb—and fewer visible models of what advancement looks like. One in three HR leaders reported that AI-driven restructuring stripped their organizations of critical institutional knowledge that the remaining workforce simply couldn’t replace.
The expertise paradox
Neil Thompson, a research scientist at MIT who studies how AI capabilities evolve across the economy, offers a more nuanced frame for understanding what’s actually at stake. In his research—which evaluated 40 AI models across thousands of real-world job tasks, each assessed by practitioners in the relevant field—Thompson and his colleagues find that automation doesn’t affect all parts of a job equally. The critical variable is whether the tasks being automated are the expert parts of a role or the administrative scaffolding around them.
“If part of your job gets automated, and it’s something that really didn’t use the expertise that you needed, that’s great,” Thompson said. “You get to spend more of your time on the part of your job that is really valuable.” His research, coauthored with MIT economist David Autor, finds that when automation eliminates the lower-expertise components of a job, wages for the remaining workers actually tend to rise: There are fewer of them, but they’re doing more of what makes them irreplaceable. The danger, Thompson warns, is the opposite scenario: When AI targets the expert core of a role—the way GPS wiped out the navigational mastery that once defined a taxi driver’s craft; wages fall, and the profession’s identity hollows out.
The question hanging over the megamanager era is which scenario managers are living through. If AI is handling the administrative noise and leaving managers to do more actual leading—coaching, strategic thinking, talent development—the math could work out. But if span-of-control inflation is so severe that managers can’t do the expert part of their job either, the model risks producing neither efficiency nor mentorship, just exhaustion.
A transition we’ve seen—and mismanaged—before
Thompson is careful not to join the doomsayers. His research finds a “rising tide” of AI capability—steadily climbing, not a crashing wave. “If the people you’re listening to all day long are saying, ‘By the end of 2026, work is going to be entirely transformed,’ this is saying we have a little bit longer timeline than that,” he said. But he also stresses that the tide is rising quickly enough that policy responses need to begin now, before the water reaches the knees.
That warning echoes across a century and a half of economic history. Every major innovation wave in American history—from steam power and railroads to electrification to the internet—displaced workers, concentrated early gains among capital holders, and provoked political backlash before productivity benefits eventually broadened. Morgan Stanley’s economists note that “workers were reallocated rather than rendered obsolete” across all five prior waves—but the transition periods were wrenching, and the distribution of benefits depended heavily on policy choices, investment in education, and institutional adaptation. When those systems responded well—as they did during the mid–20th century’s “Great Compression,” which coincided with expanding unions, progressive taxation, and the GI Bill—innovation produced broadly shared prosperity. When they lagged, inequality deepened.
“Since 1980, income and wealth concentration have risen sharply, driven by returns to capital, skill-biased technical change, and public policy choices that reversed Great Compression–era policy,” Gapen’s team wrote. “Innovation itself does not predetermine inequality: Institutions and public policy mediate how gains are distributed.”
Just a few hours remain before President Trump’s 8 p.m. ET deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face what he characterized as the total destruction of the country’s civilization.
Trump, posting on Truth Social today: “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will.
“Trump previously threatened to destroy Iran’s bridges and power plants, and he’s mentioned other civilian targets, like oil and water infrastructure.
Progress has been made over the past 24 hours in talks between the U.S. and Iran, according to several sources, Axios’ Barak Ravid reports.
A U.S. official said the thinking in the White House has shifted from “can we get there?” to “can we get there by 8 o’clock tonight?”
Negotiations are expected to continue right up until Trump’s deadline, sources said.
Reaching aceasefire deal by then still looks like a long shot.
Sources say the key challenges are meeting Iran’s demand for a strong guarantee that the U.S. and Israel won’t resume the war after a pause, and the slow pace of responses from Iranian leadership.
U.S. markets are dipping slightly on the prospect of a massive bombing campaign targeting civilian infrastructure across Iran and the unknowable fallout.
The S&P 500 is down nearly 0.8% as of midafternoon.
A Tehran-based designer, speaking anonymously for her safety: “If there is no electricity, there is no water, because the water pressure in Tehran is low and all buildings have electric water pumps. You can’t cook either.”Get the latest.
today. In the 2000’s, John blew the whistle on the US’s secret torture program in Guantanamo Bay and various black sites around the world. Kiriakou later won the 2012 Joe A. Callaway Award for Civic Courage, which is awarded to “national security whistleblowers who stood up for constitutional rights and US values, at great risk to their personal and professional lives”. In 2016, he was awarded the Sam Adams Award. Also in 2016, he was given the prestigious PEN First Amendment Award by the PEN Center USA. Great to have John call by. John pictured with writer and Whistleblower bossman Art O’Connor. We’re looking forward to hosting many more whistleblowers once we finally open our doors in the coming weeks.