Play Review: Logan’s “Red” Censures Rothko Identity to Vilify Him for Not Being Christian Enough

I sat down to watch a production of John Logan’s Red. The actors landed a distinct “Oy.” They invoked Rothko’s Russian roots and his abrupt landing as a Jewish boy in America. They channeled a cadence of immigrant memory with enough conviction that the audience nodded along, satisfied that this play knows whose story it is telling.

It does not.

As a disinformation historian, I was genuinely surprised to see the methods used in a play to undermine the protagonist. Exploring how and why is likely to expose deeply rooted prejudice in Christian narratives that have been designed for centuries to isolate and erase Judaism.

Poster advertising the famous, award-winning play “Red” about the artist Rothko.

First, it’s a fact that major books on Rothko exist and none of them center his Jewish intellectual tradition as the interpretive key. There is a known history of erasure within a biographical track. Cohen-Solal’s biography in the Yale Jewish Lives series comes closest, tracing his Orthodox upbringing, yet even she treats Judaism as biography rather than the interpretive framework for his artistic method. In other words, you can’t just pull up a biography to understand what the play delivers.

Second, this is something not many people are able to recognize, and that’s by design. Many years ago, when I ran a very large war-dialing security project in Milwaukee, I took my team out for Easter lunch. I’ll never forget when one said to me “I hope you don’t mind me saying that I was raised on horror films in Church that told me to believe Jews are my enemy because they won’t obey, and they killed Jesus. But to be honest the teachings don’t make sense now, talking to you”.

He wasn’t the first or the last American that I met who struggled to make sense of his operational context, which he had been raised from very young to believe, as latent antisemitic hatred and bias. He would easily watch a play or film destroying Rothko, yet he would be uncomfortable meeting Rothko in person.

Historians of Nazi Germany point this out repeatedly. Jews would have neighbors who would gladly say the Jews are the problem, cause of all their grief and need to be forced to change, while adding “but I don’t mean you”.

The impact of this play as disinformation matters a lot, when you consider how Red won six Tony Awards in 2010 and has become one of the most frequently staged plays in the American repertoire.

Allow me to explain.

The stage is set to Rothko’s Bowery studio in 1958, where the artist works on murals commissioned for the Four Seasons restaurant in the Seagram Building. He has a fictional assistant to mix paint, stretch canvas, and gradually find the nerve to challenge his employer’s convictions. The confrontation escalates until the young man rises up to liberate himself from Rothko’s demands. Audiences leave feeling they have watched a story about art.

They have watched a public trial.

The audience is set up as witness, the congregation. The young assistant, named Ken, is their proxy, sent in to extract a confession from an old Jew whose crime is trying to make a world on his own terms. How dare he exert confidence in his opinions and not bow down to the Christian system of modesty and shame?

Christian Control

Logan builds his depiction of Rothko around a single psychological engine: control. Control of the viewer’s distance. Control of the lighting. Control of the emotional conditions under which the paintings may be experienced.

The play incorrectly casts the Christian perception of control as Rothko being overprotective. We are meant to observe a tortured artist shielding sacred work from a profane commercial world, terrified that his paintings will become wallpaper for Manhattan’s wealthiest diners.

This is a tortured misreading so fundamentally wrong about Rothko, that Logan inverted the man’s entire practice.

Rothko was raised with an Orthodox Jewish education at cheder before immigrating to Portland at age ten. He brought his formal Jewish education to art as one of the major abstract expressionists. It isn’t a footnote, it’s the lens through which his entire practice becomes legible. In other words, to those who know a thing about Orthodox Judaism, his insistence on setting a viewing environment (lighting, proximity, enforced intimacy) does NOT map to a Christian framework of control. He was NOT an artist defending the sacred from the fallen world. He was doing the exact opposite.

Rothko was practicing tzimtzum.

In Lurianic Kabbalah, tzimtzum is the divine contraction: God withdraws in order to create the space in which creation becomes possible. The infinite possibility of light must be constrained or it destroys rather than illuminates. The dialogue in the play regularly returns to question Rothko for saying he doesn’t like the “outdoor” light rather than recognize he was invoking “infinite” light as interference with his ability to create. Lines in the play about color absolutism (black, white) are presented completely detached from the Kabbalistic context that gives them meaning. Chabad’s commentary on tzimtzum tells us:

Before the beginning, there was nothing but light. Infinite light. The notion of a world was absurd… So He hid the light. All of it. There was absolute darkness. And now there could be a world.

During the play I heard the audience all around me guffaw and chortle at “difficult” Rothko lowering the lights, while his assistant mocked him for it. I cringed. It felt incredibly awkward, as if I was seeing with two eyes in a production that was meant for the blind. How could people not see? Oh, right, they don’t know anything about Rothko’s faith or the Kabbalah.

Rothko being framed with a restriction of light, his indoor control obsession, is not defense. It is method. Barnett Newman, Rothko’s close friend and fellow abstract expressionist, made this connection explicit. Newman’s Zim Zum I (at SFMOMA) proves the kabbalistic vocabulary was named and present in the artistic community. The Rothko Chapel itself, which Newman’s Broken Obelisk stands outside of, proves Rothko’s entire practice pointed toward sacred space. The Kabbalistic vocabulary was not hidden, it was not obscure, it was not inaccessible. It was sitting in the artistic community Rothko inhabited, named and present.

Logan ignored and then erased it, because it would not have allowed his trial of Rothko to continue.

Even Logan’s own script betrays what it is erasing. His Rothko says he wants to create “a place where the viewer could live in contemplation with the work.” His Rothko tells Philip Johnson he will make the restaurant “a temple.” These are lines Logan wrote — and they point directly toward the Kabbalistic framework the play refuses to engage with. The real Rothko wrote to the critic Katherine Kuh that he put his trust in the psyche of the sensitive viewer who is free from conventional patterns of thought. He was not building controls. He was performing the opposite, a Jewish philosophy of withdrawal that makes revelation structurally possible.

Logan did not see this, and went to great effort to misrepresent Rothko with control concepts that Christians easily could judge and condemn. The only version of artistic control his script allows the viewer to imagine is fear.

Bringing a Kabbalistic decoder to the play is a revelation, which exposes the audience gasping and laughing at a “difficult man who causes conflict” for all the wrong reasons.

Chavruta as Psychodrama

Logan didn’t just miss the foundation of Rothko. The distortion of him runs through every confrontation.

Logan writes exchanges as verbal assaults, trying to frame Rothko as “battering” his assistant with demands, provocations, and intellectual challenges that leave Ken shaken and defensive. The Logan story arc requires “battering” for a setup, like a nod to Greek mythology-telling traditions. Ken must accumulate enough wounds to justify his crusade of rebellion, his walk out the door and into his own life. Rothko is depicted as the one who says the son must overthrow the father, and then his apprentice overthrows him as consequence. The young replaces the old. The audience feels catharsis. The audience doesn’t ask itself why a Jew is being recast into Greek and Christian narratives, erasing his story.

This is Christian supersession as dramatic structure. The son surpasses and replaces the father, the new covenant fulfills and discards the old. It is a narrative shape so deeply embedded in Western theatrical convention that most audiences cannot see it operating as a template that disrespects the subject.

It is NOT a Jewish shape.

What Logan writes as domination is a mistake, when you understand Rothko practicing chavruta. The Talmudic study partnership makes argument the mechanism of shared discovery. It opposes authoritarian control, favoring a partnership. You push, I push back, and in the friction something emerges that neither participant owned before the encounter. That heat is NOT the abuse framing that Logan is so desperate to deliver audiences. It is how a Jewish intellectual growth tradition works. The intensity is NOT a flaw to be overcome, even the emotion is NOT a flaw. It is the LOVE of a teacher who refuses to let a student remain comfortable in an incomplete and dispassionate understanding.

Logan’s script acknowledges the possibility but it immediately forecloses it. Look at how he portrays Rothko when he tells Ken:

I am not your rabbi, I am not your father, I am not your shrink, I am not your friend, I am not your teacher — I am your employer.

The line gets a laugh. The audience hears the rabbi line, a series of diminishing steps (negating the actual role of the rabbi) and then the “I am your employer” cold landing.

Logan intentionally strips away every actual Jewish relational frame that would make Rothko’s intensity authentic and legible, leaving only a “coin-operated Jew” of commercial transaction.

The antisemitism latent to Logan’s perspective isn’t to be underestimated. Audiences raised with the same framing likely welcome the repetition and reinforcement of what they were already thinking. The coin-operated Jew, of course, that makes sense to the congregation judging Rothko. Once the relationship is distilled to the Jew employer and the mistreated employee, the demands become illegitimate. Rothko’s passion is inverted into derangement, pathology. His love and care become captured and redefined unfairly as control.

Decoration and Erasure

Every production of this play serves as anti-Jewish disinformation, erasing specific people in society. The script puts Rothko on trial, but anyone who knows the intellectual tradition it points toward can feel the much greater impact.

The Judaism is acted upon as decorative, like a prop. “Oy” landed so flat, like hanging a Santa on an oak tree in August and saying Merry Christmas, that I almost couldn’t sit through another minute. But I soon witnessed Judaism being invoked for a far more dangerous purpose, assigning blame for every “difficult man” problem being depicted.

Here’s an old Jew you want to get to know because he’s famous, and here’s why you shouldn’t like him. Do you feel comforted by the shared exercise of misunderstanding him, “othering” him, and discrediting him? Is it just coincidence that it circles around him being a Jew? Rothko becomes a vessel to carry a message opposite of who he really was. By introducing him without connecting Judaism to anything structural in the play, every production is actively erasing him through targeted attacks on his identity.

The play does not explore Rothko. It prosecutes him.

The group I saw spent the time after the play discussing how they read a biography of the man, and they struggled to read more than a page or two of Nietzsche. Actors emphasized the routines to put on the play as a done deal, a matter of material being canon, without questioning anything in it.

The structure is settled, apparently, as a communal shaming ritual: actors seem to have no issue putting on a public humiliation of the one who won’t conform, the performative exposure of difference as arrogance, the insistence that confidence is sin. Rothko is on display, without his consent, for the audience to watch him be broken as an example for others to not be “like him”. His refusal to make himself small or legible on the dominant culture’s strict interpretation of him, that is the tension.

Being familiar with the Christian intellectual architecture makes the play resonate. Being familiar with Jewish intellectualism makes the play unbearable.

When it references Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy, Caravaggio’s Conversion of Saul, Michelangelo’s Laurentian Library, the pattern emerges. The Apollonian-Dionysian framework is dropped like a bomb on Rothko. The suffering artist is presented as sacrificing himself for the integrity of the work. One reviewer described Rothko as an artist “whose paintings were a dynamic battle between Apollo and Dionysus.” No one seemed to notice a Greek reading does not fit the Jewish painter who studied Talmud before he studied art.

Why? I’ll explain, because this play proves to me audiences have no idea just how much disinformation is being fed to them.

The Apollonian-Dionysian framework is a conflict model. It presupposes two irreconcilable forces with order against ecstasy, form against dissolution, and the artist is trapped between them. Nietzsche’s formulation was that tragedy is what happens when neither force can win. The hero is destroyed by the tension. This is the engine Logan installs in Rothko: a man torn between the sacred and the commercial, between control and surrender, between creation and self-destruction. It demands that he fall.

And it’s completely, utterly wrong.

Imagine two halves in balance the same way you ride a bicycle by riding with both left and right as oppositional forces working together to allow forward motion. It’s the same way a sailboat moves only when it is in opposition, wind against water, otherwise it is stuck. There are many religions like this, whereas the Greek stories of Apollo and Dionysus aren’t even close to relevant.

Jewish intellectual tradition has no such requirement for the conflict that Logan sets up with Greek framing to discredit the ideas of Rothko. The Talmudic method holds opposing positions in permanent productive tension (machloket l’shem shamayim, argument for the sake of heaven) where contradictions are not resolved but sustained as necessary for movement forward.

Hillel and Shammai do not destroy each other, because that would prevent good. They sit on the same page. In Kabbalistic thought, darkness and light are opposite of war, they are togetherness. The darkness is the vessel that makes light apprehensible. You can’t see stars without the beauty of the night. Rothko’s practice of layering, the darkness that contains color, the restriction that enables encounter is integrative, not tragic.

Logan’s imposition of a tone-deaf Greek binary onto it turns a Jewish artist’s coherent method into a bizarre European death wish, which conveniently produces the broken genius that the Christian-steeped audiences came to see broken.

Logan did not invent this problem, of course. He simply won wide recognition for perpetuating and expanding it among people eager to see. And that’s the actual problem.

As a scholar in the Journal of Modern Jewish Studies has observed, exhibition organizers and essayists have consistently steered clear of questions about Rothko’s Jewish identity and his notion of sacred experience. The assumption has been that Rothko’s universalism transcended his Judaism, which is a formulation that conveniently avoids asking whether the universalism itself was shaped by Jewish intellectual tradition. Rothko has to be understood as a Latvian Jewish immigrant who had attended cheder and yeshiva, who co-founded an artists’ group in which nine of ten members were Jewish, who spent his life applying Jewish intellectual traditions to the conditions under which his work could be encountered.

And yet, the dominant critical response has been to misread him through Nietzsche and Jung.

Logan’s play is the theatrical culmination of popular erasure of a Jew, vilifying along the way with tropes about “control” and “money” that don’t even fit the man.

The Inversion

The sinister operation of Red is that it is far more than either lazy or willful ignorance of Jewish traditions. The play does not merely fail to understand a Jewish man, let alone the foundational background of Rothko himself. It projects onto a Jewish identity the very pathology of the system that produced the play.

Christian domination doctrine is obedience-based.

The father’s role is to produce compliance. The congregation’s role is to submit. Authority flows downward and is not to be challenged. When it is challenged, the challenger is the problem and not the structure. This is the alien model that Logan very intentionally imposes on Rothko’s studio. Rothko demands, Ken obeys or suffers. The audience watches a tyrant and his victim in the frame of Christian traditions.

However, Rothko was not the actual authoritarian in this story. The authoritarian was the system that he refused to serve. This cannot be overstated. The commercial art world that wanted his paintings as decoration for the rich, the cultural establishment that wanted his intensity made safe and consumable. Rothko’s entire career was a challenge to that system of authoritarianism that he balked at. His withdrawal from the Four Seasons commission was not him having a revelation inspired by Ken, nor was it a breakdown. It was the act of a Jewish man being principled in a most Jewish way, that he would not let his work be domesticated by power. The play takes the liberator, with his deeply-rooted philosophy since childhood of liberation, and recasts him as the despot.

This is projection by Logan.

The Christian institutional model shames dissent, punishes nonconformity, and treats the refusal to submit as moral failure. Logan takes this and accuses the Jew of the very thing the institution does. The mob that enforces obedience frames the man who refuses to bow as the bully.

Jewish tradition has a name for this pattern, in case you were wondering why it’s so easy for someone familiar with Judaism to see it even when others can not.

This is the story known as Book of Esther, which effectively teaches little Jewish girls they have women heroes to look up to who fought power and won.

In the story, the antisemitic Haman demands that everyone kneel to his authority. Mordecai will not on principle that he does not kneel to false authority. And Haman’s response is not to question his own authority but to mark Mordecai for destruction, which means not just Mordecai, but his entire people. The crime is not what Mordecai did. The crime is that he dared to insist on his own terms.

Sound familiar?

Logan’s Red runs the same inversion. It takes the artist who challenged the commodity system and makes him the oppressor. It takes the assistant who represents that system’s values of youth, accessibility, the rejection of difficulty and makes him into the hero.

Logan gives his audience shame directed at a Jewish man for ninety minutes, and wants it to be registered as art.

Who Gets to Define the Terms

Jewish intellectual confidence is rewritten as aggression. The Jewish protagonist says he knows when he knows, he doesn’t know when he doesn’t, and the Christian rewrites it as uncomfortable overconfidence and failure of modesty. How dare a man think for himself, to exert authority over his own destiny in a way Catholics are raised to believe is shameful. The play traps Rothko in a false binary: aspiring Christian authoritarian or broken failure. It never considers that he was neither. He was genuinely anti-authoritarian.

Logan takes nurturing intensity and rewrites it as manipulation. He takes a commanding presence rooted in a tradition where ferocious engagement is love, and presents it as a problem the young assistant must solve by abandonment. Catholic framing is unmistakable, where leaving and silencing are the preferred tools over the balance of an embraced, inherent conflict.

The play needs Rothko to break down at the end so the audience can leave feeling they witnessed something profound rather than something that they did to him.

The only resolution the script offers is the gentile’s liberation from the control and money-seeking Jew’s demands. Ken leaves to “belong” while Rothko is cast out to be alone. The audience is invited to feel that something has been set right. But the play never asks the question that would unmake its entire structure: What if the demands were not pathology but pedagogy? What if the intensity was not something to survive but something to join?

In a 2012 review for The Arts Fuse, the visual artist Franklin Einspruch asked what a “treyf, naive Iowan” was really meant to be doing in the studio of Mark Rothko, the artist “with commensurate aspirations to grasp the unnamable essence of being.” The imbalance was the sharpest observation I have found about Red, and apparently no one explored this any further.

Perhaps the Christian establishment has no interest in developing any critique of a play that trashes Jewish intellectualism. It was too busy handing out awards.

Not just six Tonys. The Drama Desk. The Olivier.

A playwright built a machine that chewed up a famous Jew and spit out his bones, and the industry gave it every prize available. A Catholic dramatic structure that shames Jewish difference, rewards conformity, and treats the insistence on one’s own terms as the gravest sin does not operate against the interests of a Christian cultural establishment. It operates as one. It’s an expression of how the establishment uses its dominance to control narratives that harm the minorities it claims to be “converting”.

I’m reminded of a recent court case where American Native people had their voice officially removed by an American court, which ruled that the Oil companies oppressing them should decide how to tell their story. In 2026. Logan isn’t the only one writing like this.

Fifteen years and hundreds of productions later, Red continues to tell audiences that Rothko’s Judaism was color and noise to a Greek tragedy rather than the operating system of his entire artistic practice.

In the script, Rothko says he wants to create “a place of communion.” It is the one moment where Logan almost lets him speak from his own tradition, where traditions of shared encounters nearly break through the Christian scaffolding of authoritarian rule. But the script cannot sustain it. Logan needs Rothko to fail in the way he expects, to collapse into the tortured isolation that will justify Ken’s “return” to society from the exclusion and independence of Jewish intellectualism.

The play tells you Rothko is Jewish, yet it spends the entire time punishing him for not being Christian enough to make sense to the audience misunderstanding him.

Angry Gait Detection: Surveillance Claims Receipts for Intent

A new study published in Royal Society Open Science proved that a single kinematic variable (amplitude of coordinated arm-and-leg swing during walking) causally determines whether observers perceive someone as angry, sad, or fearful.

This is a watershed moment for surveillance shifting gears from authentication to authorization, without any integrity controls.

What if you are falsely accused of being angry? What if you can trick the system into reading your anger as happiness?

Breaking AI

The researchers decomposed gait into principal components using motion capture, identified which component tracked perceived emotion, then manipulated that one component in a neutral walk and shifted observer judgments in the predicted direction. Increase the swing by 50%, observers say angry. Decrease it by half, they say sad or afraid.

This spells trouble because the paper by Wakabayashi et al. frames this as just cognitive neuroscience. The press coverage so far lands on video games and robot training.

Nobody mentions the word safety, let alone threat detection through surveillance.

Pipeline Built

Gait recognition for identity (authentication, who is this person) has been deployed at scale for years. China’s Watrix system analyzes body contour and arm movement from standard CCTV to identify individuals at 50 meters, face or no face. Police in Beijing, Shanghai, and Chongqing have been running it since at least 2019. Airports, bus stations, schools, nuclear facilities.

The identity pipeline is a solved engineering problem.

Gait recognition for emotion has its own engineering literature. Deep learning frameworks like “Walk-as-you-Feel” already classify emotional states from gait without facial cues. A 2024 review in PMC on gait analysis in criminal investigation describes systems designed to flag “aggressive body posture, abnormal motions, odd gait patterns” in real-time surveillance feeds.

Some vendors, for example, claim they can detect in surveillance video audio whether a person is about to fight (yelling in anger as opposed to joy).

What was missing was the causal proof. Correlational studies show that angry people tend to walk a certain way. That’s an association, and associations can be challenged. The Wakabayashi paper demonstrates that manipulating one movement component causes the emotion judgment. That’s the difference between a screening heuristic and an evidence base for deployment.

Emotion Scanning in Intent Detection

Gait-based identity recognition tells a system who is walking toward a building. That’s already a civil liberties problem, with many experts arguing about it.

Gait-based emotion recognition is going to report now what that person intends. It’s the Trump-on-Iran logic applied to individuals: they’re walking like they intend something, so start shooting before they get there and say that nobody can ask questions. That’s a categorically different kind of surveillance, and almost nobody is even talking about it.

When a camera flags someone as “30 year old drunk white male approaching in anger” based on their arm swing amplitude, that’s not biometric identification. It’s judgment of intent. It’s pre-crime. The system isn’t asking “is this a known suspect?” It’s asking “does this person’s body language indicate hostile emotion?” The Wakabayashi paper just provided the causal mechanism that says it makes an answer defensible.

The point-light display finding makes this worse, not better. The method works with degraded inputs — skeletal outlines, minimal resolution, no face required. Pose estimation from standard CCTV is trivial. PCA decomposition on joint trajectories is freshman linear algebra. The computational cost of extracting PC2 amplitude from a walking figure in real time is negligible.

Slipping Into the Void

The EU AI Act, effective February 2025, bans emotion recognition AI in workplaces and educational institutions. That sounds comprehensive until you read what it doesn’t cover. The European Commission’s own guidelines on prohibited practices cite as a permitted example: cameras in a supermarket or bank used to detect suspicious clients and conclude whether someone is about to commit a robbery. The prohibition does not cover emotion recognition in commercial contexts, public spaces, or security applications.

Read that again. The EU banned your employer from reading your face on a Zoom call. It explicitly left open the use of emotion detection to decide whether you look like you’re about to rob a bank. The regime protects you from HR and leaves you exposed to law enforcement, private security, and anyone operating a camera in a public space.

Gait-based identity recognition has at least drawn attention from Privacy International. But gait-based emotion detection slots into the gap the AI Act carved out on purpose. It’s not facial recognition because no face is required. It’s not workplace or educational use because it’s deployed in transit hubs and public infrastructure. It reads emotional states from skeletal movement at distance. It’s slipping into a technology regulation void that means it isn’t illegal.

Watrix’s own CEO has said the company expects gait recognition to survive even if facial recognition gets banned, because it’s perceived as “less intrusive.” That framing collapses the moment the system stops asking who you are and starts asking how you feel. Reading someone’s internal emotional state from their walk, without their knowledge or consent, at distance, is not less intrusive than photographing their face.

It is more intrusive than anything in the current biometric toolkit, because it claims access to mental states.

The EU’s regulatory framework fails to address this, and appears designed to actually accommodate it.

Proof is in the Paper

The study used actors walking while recalling emotional episodes, recorded with motion capture, rendered as point-light displays (white dots on black background, no body shape, no face, no clothing). Observers classified the emotion. PCA decomposed the movement into independent components. The second principal component (coordinated arm-and-leg swing) showed systematic amplitude differences across all five emotions.

In the causal test, the researchers took a neutral walk, scaled PC2 up by 50% or down by 50%, and showed the manipulated versions to new observers. The 1.5x version was judged angry. The 0.5x version was judged sad or fearful. Neutral judgments dropped in both conditions. One number, extracted from limb swing, changed what people thought the walker was feeling.

This is what the authors based their suggestions on: dance analysis, aesthetic evaluation, animation.

But to me the obvious, and far more easily funded, application will be automated threat assessment at distance using existing camera infrastructure.

Israel maybe already has this technology deployed? Consider their system codenamed “Where’s Daddy”, which frames the Israeli military tracking a man to his home to kill him in front of his family in the language of a toddler looking for a parent. The people who named that system understand emotional manipulation and abuse perfectly well. Israel had a hard time explaining why their drones chase children to shoot them in the head. Now they could pop out a cooked emotive gait report.

Let’s Be Honest

A research team has established a causal link between a single, computationally trivial kinematic feature and perceived emotional intent. The feature can be extracted from low-resolution skeletal data at distance. The engineering pipeline for such a real-time gait emotion classification already exists. The surveillance infrastructure is widely deployed. The regulatory framework permits emotion monitoring everywhere except for the places you are the least vulnerable.

The paper’s title is “Identifying and Manipulating Gait Patterns That Influence Emotion Recognition.” The word manipulating is right there. The authors probably intended the experimental sense, as they manipulated the variable to test causality. But in any deployment context, the manipulation runs the other way. The system manipulates the judgment. It decides what your walk means, and it decides before you arrive… before you can say don’t shoot.

Every security paper that cites this work will call it “behavioral analytics.” The honest term is intent judgment if not monitoring. The distance between behavioral analytics and pre-crime extrajudicial assassination needs to be far more than exactly zero.

Silicon Valley Renamed “Soviet Volley” to Represent AI Token Fraud Economics

The most consequential fraud in modern technology is not happening in the code. It is happening in the units.

If you ever studied the collapse of Soviet economics, you know exactly what I’m about to explain.

AI companies have built a billing infrastructure in which the seller defines the unit of measurement, counts the units, and invoices the buyer. All with no independent verification at any point in the transaction. All without any enforcement mechanism.

If you prompt AI to build something and it launches a dozen agents and burns an entire day worth of credits in an hour, that’s business as usual, especially if they delete their own work and complain they have nothing to show you for it.

The unit of fraud is called a “token.” It has no fixed definition. It varies by model, by provider, and by tokenizer version. It can be changed at any time, by the vendor, without notice. There is no regulatory body certifying token measurement. There is no weights-and-measures regime. There is no audit trail the customer can independently verify.

This is not a new problem, as I already hinted.

It is one of the oldest problems in commercial history, and every previous instance ended the same way. It won’t be different this time. It’s logic any five-year-old should be able to figure out.

In the book, every single thing the peddler does, the monkeys imitate. He shakes his fist, they shake their fists. He stomps his foot, they stomp their feet. That’s OpenAI, Google, Anthropic all copying each other’s opaque token pricing structures, each imitating the other’s billing model, because there’s no independent standard to do anything else. Monkey see, monkey do.

Caps for Sale

Let’s start with clause 35 of the Magna Carta, 1215:

Let there be one measure of wine throughout our whole realm; and one measure of ale; and one measure of corn.

This was the language of liberty from oppression. It was a response to documented, systematic fraud by royal merchants who controlled their own measures. A bushel in London was not a bushel in York, and the difference was profit.

It took England six centuries to arrive at a proper Weights and Measures Act. Every iteration addressed the same structural deficiency: when the entity selling the goods also controls the unit of measurement, the unit will be corrupted. The entire history of metrology from the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures to NIST to the EU’s Measuring Instruments Directive, is the history of forcibly separating the measurer from the seller.

It’s fundamental to the rise of industrialization that the clocks had to run on universal time, even with time zones, such that trains could have externally judged arrival and departure times. The British and Dutch factories that invented assembly lines to defeat Napoleon (infamously copied by Ford) couldn’t work without shared units of measure.

Given this context it appears now that AI companies are the most historically illiterate and economically unsound ever.

Their “token billing” has undone a fundamental tenet against trivial fraud. We are back to the royal merchant having their thumb on the scale for every transaction, except the thumb is an algorithm and the scale is proprietary.

How dumb does the intelligent machine business think we are, seriously?

LIBOR for Compute

Let’s review, for example, the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) that underpinned roughly $350 trillion in financial instruments worldwide. LIBOR was calculated from self-reported borrowing rates submitted daily by the banks that profited from the number. No independent verification. No transaction-based measurement.

Just trust.

And it failed. Banks manipulated it for years. Of course they did. The entity producing the number was also the entity whose trading positions depended on the number. When the fraud was finally exposed, the fix was to replace LIBOR with SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) which is derived from actual observed transactions rather than self-reported claims.

Now consider the AI jar of pickles we are being told to get in.

OpenAI reports that average reasoning token consumption per organization has increased approximately 320 times in the past twelve months. This number was produced by OpenAI, about OpenAI’s product, using OpenAI’s proprietary tokenizer, and reported to the press as evidence of adoption. It is Barclays submitting its own LIBOR rate as if nobody knows why we stopped them from doing this.

The difference is that LIBOR at least had the pretense of multiple submitters. Token counts have one source: the vendor.

Intelligence machine vendors have truly produced their most cynical moment.

Gosplan of Sand Hill Road

Soviet central planning failed not because the planners were being stupid. Many were brilliant, which probably made everything worse. It failed because the information system was structurally corrupt, and compliant agents corrupted it further. Every layer of the reporting chain had an incentive to inflate their output numbers, and there was no independent verification mechanism capable of correcting the distortion.

The famous case study is the Soviet nail factory. Measured by weight, the factory produced fewer, heavier nails that nobody needed. Measured by quantity, it produced millions of tiny nails nobody could use. The metric became the product. Actual utility was irrelevant because utility was not being measured, only the unit was.

Here’s another token output example of fraud I was taught in college. Soviet window manufacturers measured weight and nobody could install the heavy, thick glass. They measured by size, and all the very large, thin glass broke before it even could be loaded for delivery. Actual utility was irrelevant because utility was not being measured, only the unit was.

Every day that I use AI it wastes unbelievable amounts of money and time, measured in units of tokens, as it tells me if I don’t like it there’s nothing I can do.

Jensen Huang’s proposal at GTC this month is the Soviet nail or glass factory at much larger Silicon Valley scale.

He suggested that every engineer should have an annual token budget, where these allocations could reach half of base salary in value. Consider what this fraud means structurally. You are telling workers they have an annual allocation of a unit that measures interaction volume, not outcome quality.

Record scratch.

So a notoriously wasteful industry already in trouble for water and air pollution will optimize entirely for high consumption. An engineer who solves a problem by thinking for ten minutes and never touching the AI has, under this framework, underperformed relative to one who burned through a million tokens generating refuse. Yet the engineer who still thinks, and conserves tokens, is undeniably the superior engineer to the ones that do not!

Pray and spray, running out of ammunition and begging for $200 billion to keep firing at ghosts, is so inversely proportional to the efficiency of Delta operators I can’t even….

Tokens are not a productivity metric, like ammunition is not even a kill rate, because Nvidia is incentivized inversely to what customers actually need. It is Gosplan announcing the Five-Year Plan for compute consumption, and every factory manager is about to start filing reports showing they exceeded their quota of tokens, meaning… nothing.

“In 20 years the USSR will produce nearly twice as much industrial output as all non-socialist countries produced in 1961.” This is like AI companies saying tokens up 320x. Just volume, presented as progress, approved by the 22nd Congress of the CPSU, a template for how Silicon Valley wants us to cheer their charts.

Shovel Seller Tithe

Huang’s position is particularly elegant because Nvidia does not sell tokens. They sell the GPUs that generate them. Every token consumed requires silicon to produce. If token budgets become a standard corporate expenditure pegged to payroll, Huang has created a permanent demand floor for his hardware.

Gross. Literally gross product.

He does not need to manipulate the token count himself. He just needs the token to become the unit that corporations manage against, and every dollar allocated to token budgets flows upstream to GPU purchases.

He skips actual measurement. He proposes that companies commit, in advance, to spending a fixed percentage of their payroll on his product for compute.

That is not a metric. It is a tithe.

And the structure insulates him perfectly. The AI providers already grossly inflate the token counts. The customers overpay the AI providers, given that most of the token count is for fixing things the tokens were spent on to begin with, like a protection racket. The AI providers buy Nvidia’s GPUs to service the consumption they have encouraged and caused without any accountability for outcomes. Nvidia never touches the books. They sell shovels to the people salting the mine.

The Arc

Every instance of self-reported commercial measurement in recorded history has followed the same progression: self-reported measurement, then market adoption of the metric, then discovery of systematic manipulation, then regulatory intervention mandating independent measurement.

Medieval grain measures. LIBOR. Credit ratings. Remember Facebook’s video metrics? The company admitted in 2016 to inflating view times by 60 to 80 percent, having defined the view, counted the view, and sold the view. The pattern is not debatable. It is one of the most thoroughly documented dynamics in economic history.

Token billing is currently at stage two: market adoption. Enterprises are building budgets around it. Analysts are publishing reports denominated in it. A CEO is proposing tying it to compensation.

Nobody is asking who audits the count.

Auditors are completely absent.

The harsh reality for every major AI provider on earth, like royalty before the Magna Carta, is that nobody has the independent authority needed to vouch for them. The merchant is being made the king who declares their own scale valid no matter what. And this time the scale is processing trillions of transactions per day, denominated in a unit that has no legal definition, no regulatory oversight, and no independent verification mechanism.

No kings.

We have eight hundred years of evidence for this bullshit. The only variable today is how much it costs before someone reads basic history of economics and enforces an honest measure.

The AI industry pretends to be terrified about regulation, but really they are in danger of transparency. Because the moment an independent third party can compare token billing against actual computational work performed, or the moment someone builds a SOFR for inference, every provider’s margins become visible. And if those margins look anything like LIBOR spreads or Facebook’s video metrics, the correction won’t be gradual.

I’m telling you, even the best of the best agents are a tragedy of token inflation and massive waste.

Nobody inside the Soviet system volunteered for glasnost. It was forced by the fact that the gap between the reports and reality had become so grotesque that the system could no longer function even on its own terms.

Token economics in Silicon Valley is rapidly approaching that threshold. Engineers know. We watch agents burn through whole budgets producing garbage, watch our token counts spike on failed reasoning chains we are billed for anyway, watch “reasoning tokens” appear on invoices for computation we never requested and cannot inspect.

The bigger the tool failure and productivity suck, the more the AI companies try to report a Soviet-sounding productivity “gain”. The more energy they burn, the more they claim to have a “big engine”, which means literally nothing useful.

Gorbachev didn’t reform Soviet economics. He revealed that it was dead inside.

The production numbers had been fraudulent for decades. Everyone inside the system knew. The factories knew. The ministries knew. Gosplan knew. But the reporting structure made it impossible to say so, because every career in the chain depended on the numbers going up. Glasnost (openness) didn’t fix fraud any more than exposure of Enron balanced its sheets. It made it permissible to say out loud the numbers meant nothing. The gap between reported output and actual value had grown so large that the moment anyone was allowed to measure honestly, the entire structure lost legitimacy overnight.

That’s the truth of the AI bubble. Token output is the absolute wrong measure and will only bring pain to those who adopt it without audit.

Silicon Valley is now all about doing without thinking, like the monkeys sitting in a tree, unaware they are about to throw all their hats on the ground the moment the truth is spoken.

Trump Operation Bone Spurs Has Troops Leaving Iran by Going to Iran

Fake injury President is framing a fake withdrawal from a non-war-war.

The same Trump derangement syndrome we saw in NATO/Ukraine is showing up in Iran: berate allies for not doing enough, then announce there is nothing to do and you will be doing even less.

President Donald Trump freaked out at U.S. allies on Friday as “cowards” after begging for help in securing the Strait of Hormuz as energy prices skyrocket. Trump, 79, also declared a victory in the war against Iran by claiming the U.S. had already won “militarily”…

Already won, he’s leaving. But go fight or you are the “coward”.

Trump calling everyone else the “coward” while he withdraws, preemptively reframes his own failures as their fault. He wants everyone to believe when Hormuz stays closed and oil stays above $100, it wasn’t because he started the war without a clue, and still can’t find one. He says blame NATO, because they act like he did all this on his own.

And the troop deployments make Trump derangement into pure theater. The Boxer group from the Pacific won’t arrive for three weeks. You don’t claim you are winding down and then send an expensive MEU on a three-week sail to wind down. You send it to have options that you’re publicly denying you want.

When asked Thursday if troops were being sent, Trump said:

I’m not putting troops anywhere. If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you, but I’m not putting troops.

Then the Marines in California were ordered to sail for Iran.

The Onion couldn’t write this.