The World Gets Better…

Just listened to a story. It had the following lines:

His daughter had once asked him why people should clean up messes they did not make.
He told her, “Because the world gets better when someone chooses to.”

(I usually pick up a dozen or more pieces of rubbish to and from the park when I do my endurance workouts so this really struck home with me as it perfectly mirrors my take on the subject.)

And if you want the basic philosophical principle, check out www.bringorder.info )

George Ayittey on Socialism In Africa

George Ayittey

The reasoning in 1960 looked airtight. Colonialism had been run by Western capitalists. So capitalism was a tool of oppression. Socialism, its opposite, would be the path to liberation.

Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana, Julius Nyerere in Tanzania, Sékou Touré in Guinea, Mengistu Haile Mariam in Ethiopia, and Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe all reached the same conclusion through the same logic.

The logic was tidy. The results were catastrophic.

In Ghana, Nkrumah’s government built 64 state enterprises before his overthrow in February 1966. Only three or four were profitable.

By 1970, the Ghanaian state was setting prices on nearly 6,000 items across more than 700 product groups.

In Tanzania, Julius Nyerere called the program ujamaa, a Swahili word for familyhood.
By 1976, the state had relocated more than 11 million peasants into roughly 8,000 collective villages. Much of the relocation was done at gunpoint. Government bulldozers flattened old houses so families could not return.

Tanzania exported 540,000 tons of maize in 1970. By 1974 it was importing 300,000 tons.
Within a few years a country that had been able to feed itself was depending on Western grain shipments to survive.

Ayittey then asked the question he considered most important: how do the rich get rich in the United States compared to Africa?

In the United States, the wealthiest people are builders.

Elon Musk built Tesla and SpaceX. Jeff Bezos built Amazon. Roughly two thirds of American billionaires founded the company that made them rich.

In socialist-era Africa, the wealthiest people were heads of state and their ministers.
– Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo): estimates of stolen wealth ranged from 1 to 5 billion dollars.
– Sani Abacha of Nigeria: around 5 billion.
– Ibrahim Babangida of Nigeria: roughly 12 billion.
– Hosni Mubarak of Egypt: estimates ran as high
as 40 billion.
– Muammar Gaddafi of Libya: estimates reached 200 billion.

Ayittey put it plainly. The combined net worth of every American president from George Washington through Barack Obama, all 43 of them, was about 2.7 billion dollars in 2010 figures.

Sani Abacha alone stole more than that in five years in office. African socialism built a ruling class that created nothing and extracted everything.

The argument Ayittey most wanted Africans to hear, and the one almost nobody quotes, is that socialism was never African. Pre-colonial Africa had open markets, long-distance trade, and private enterprise. Cloth-weaving, iron and gold smelting, regional commerce. Property was held by extended families and clans, not by the state. Nyerere and his peers took kinship-based property and relabeled it communism. They confused village solidarity with state ownership. They imported a nineteenth-century European industrial ideology and applied it to agricultural societies that already had functioning markets older than the modern European state. Shortages, political prisons, and a parasitic ruling class followed.

South Africa in 2026 is preparing the same policies. The Expropriation Act was signed in January 2025. The MK Party introduced a constitutional amendment bill this April to push land restitution claims back to 1652 and remove compensation from the property clause.

Zimbabwe ran this experiment in 2000. Tobacco export earnings fell from 600 million dollars to 175 million by 2009. Maize production did not return to pre-seizure levels until 2017.

Ayittey warned about this for thirty years. He died in January 2022. South Africa is doing it anyway.

Ossip Bernstein

Ossip Bernstein

He was standing against a wall in Odessa, in the terror of 1918, with a firing squad lined up in front of him and rifles already raised. His only crime was his profession. And then a Bolshevik officer walked over, looked at the list of names, stopped at one — and asked him a single, strange question that would save his life. It had nothing to do with banking, or politics, or the revolution. It was about a game…

His name was Ossip Bernstein.

He was born on September 20, 1882, in Zhytomyr, in the Russian Empire, into a well-off Jewish family. He was the kind of man who could command any room he entered — not with force, but with the sheer power of his mind. As a young man studying in Germany, he earned a doctorate in law by his mid-twenties, and became a successful financial lawyer, advising banks and businesses. He married, raised a family, and built real wealth.

But alongside the law, Ossip had another gift that would define his life. He was a brilliant chess player.

By the early 1900s, he was one of the finest players in all of Europe — ranked among the top handful in the world, trading victories with legends of the game, tying for first at major international tournaments. He had one of those rare minds that could see ten moves ahead, hold a whole battlefield of possibilities in his head at once, and stay ice-cold under pressure. He was, in every sense, a man of standing.

And that, in 1918, was enough to nearly get him killed.

The Russian Revolution had torn through the empire. The old order was being dismantled overnight — the banks seized, the wealthy hunted, and anyone tied to the old financial world branded an enemy of the new state. Ossip was working in Odessa as a legal adviser to bankers. That was his entire crime. Not violence. Not sabotage. Just his job.

The Cheka — the Bolshevik secret police, feared across Russia during the bloody period known as the Red Terror — arrested him. There was no trial. No courtroom. No lawyer, no appeal. A minor official simply ordered him shot, and had Bernstein and a group of other prisoners lined up against a wall to be executed.

And here is the moment that has echoed through chess history ever since.

As the firing squad stood ready, a superior officer arrived and asked to see the list of prisoners’ names. He ran his eye down the page — and stopped. One name jumped out at him. He knew it. Not from any government file or banking ledger, but from the newspapers, from the tournament results he’d followed for years. He was a chess enthusiast. And the name in front of him belonged to one of the most famous chess masters in Europe.

He looked up. “Are you the chess master? The famous Bernstein?”

Ossip — thirty-six years old, his back to the wall, rifles pointed at his chest — said that he was.

But the officer wasn’t satisfied with a simple yes. Anyone could claim a name to save his skin. If this man truly was the great Bernstein, he would have to prove it — over the board. So the officer sat him down and made him play a game of chess, right then and there, with his life hanging on the result.

Imagine it. After hours of waiting to die, the terror still coursing through him, Ossip Bernstein had to summon the finest chess of his life — on command, with everything he had left riding on every move.

He won. In short order.

There was no longer any doubt who this man was. Convinced, the officer had Bernstein taken back to prison rather than shot — and from there, Ossip managed to escape the country entirely, fleeing to France. A game he’d first learned as a boy had just bought him his life.

But here is what makes his story almost beyond belief. Surviving that wall was only the first catastrophe he would overcome.

In France, he rebuilt everything from scratch — a new career, a new fortune. And then, in the Great Depression around 1929, it was all wiped out again. So he started over a second time, in his late forties.

Then, in 1940, Nazi Germany invaded France. Bernstein was Jewish, and he could not stay. So the family fled once more, this time toward Spain — reportedly hiding in caves by day to avoid the border patrols, Ossip suffering a heart attack from the strain of the escape. He lost his fortune a third time, and settled, with nothing but his name and his mind, in Barcelona.

Three times, life stripped him of everything he had. Three times, he built it all back.

And through all of it — the firing squad, two world wars, three ruined fortunes — the chess never stopped.

In 1950, when the world chess federation created its official titles, Ossip Bernstein was named one of the very first International Grandmasters in history.

And then came his most delicious triumph of all. In 1954, at the age of seventy-two, he traveled to a major tournament in Montevideo. One of his opponents was a much younger grandmaster named Miguel Najdorf, who was so insulted at having to play a man in his seventies — and so certain he’d crush the old man easily — that he actually persuaded the organizers to double the first-place prize money, confident he’d be the one to pocket it.

Bernstein sat down across the board from him and dismantled him in thirty-seven moves. The game was so beautiful it won the tournament’s Brilliancy Prize.

The young man had laughed. The old man had simply played.

On November 30, 1962, Ossip Bernstein died at the age of eighty, in the quiet of the French Pyrenees. And there is one final, fitting detail: he had been on his way back toward Russia to play in a chess tournament — returning, after all those decades of exile, toward the country that had once stood him against a wall — when his heart gave out. Chess was with him, quite literally, to the very end.

He had survived a firing squad, two world wars, and three lost fortunes. He had been branded an enemy, hunted, exiled, and ruined, again and again — and he had refused, every single time, to be erased.

What saved him in that Odessa yard was not luck, and it was not mercy. It was a lifetime of sitting across the board from opponents who wanted to break him — and never, ever letting them.

Christopher Havens

Christopher Havens

Locked alone in a solitary confinement cell, a man serving a long sentence for murder passed the endless hours with sudoku puzzles — until the day he noticed another inmate handing out little envelopes full of math problems. He asked for one. He solved it. He asked for another. And what happened next, from inside a prison cell with nothing but a pencil and paper, would astonish mathematicians on the other side of the world…

His name is Christopher Havens.

Let's be honest about how his story begins, because it matters. In 2010, Havens took a man's life in a drug-related shooting. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to 25 years in a Washington state prison. He was in his late twenties, his life in ruins, and he struggled badly in his early days behind bars. After an altercation with another inmate, he was thrown into solitary confinement for about a year.

And it was there, in that isolation, that something completely unexpected happened.

To pass the crushing hours, Havens started doing sudoku. Then he noticed a fellow inmate passing around small envelopes stuffed with math problems, and asked if he could have one. He worked it out. Then he asked for another. And another.

Something about mathematics — its logic, its order, its quiet, unshakable truth — connected with Christopher Havens in a way that nothing in his life ever had before. He hadn't been a math student. He'd never chased the subject. But now, alone in a cell, it found him. And he threw himself into it completely, studying, by his own account, as much as ten hours a day.

He devoured every math book the prison library had — and then he ran out. So in 2013, Havens did something audacious. He sat down and wrote a letter to an academic mathematics publisher, asking how he might subscribe to a research journal, and whether any mathematician in the world would be willing to correspond with a prisoner about advanced mathematics.

Most letters like that go straight into the wastebasket. But this one found its way to a number theorist named Umberto Cerruti, a professor at the University of Torino in Italy.

Professor Cerruti was skeptical, to put it mildly. He assumed Havens was probably a “crank” — one of the many amateurs who fall in love with numbers and convince themselves they've discovered something. So, to test him, Cerruti mailed him a difficult problem to solve.

What came back in the mail stopped him cold.

Havens mailed back a strip of paper nearly four feet long — about 120 centimeters — covered in one single, enormous, handwritten formula. Cerruti, half-expecting nonsense, carefully typed the whole thing into his computer to check it. And to his astonishment, it was correct. Completely correct.

This was no crank. This was a genuine mathematical mind — one that had taught itself, alone, in a prison cell.

From that moment, a remarkable transatlantic collaboration was born, conducted entirely through handwritten letters crossing the ocean. Cerruti began sending Havens real material in number theory — one of the oldest branches of mathematics, with roots going back more than two thousand years to the ancient Greek Euclid. And here is the part that makes it truly extraordinary: the work was never dumbed down for him. Havens was handed genuine, unsolved research problems — the kind that challenge trained, professional mathematicians — and he worked through them with nothing but a pencil, paper, and the prison mail. No computer. No classroom. No professor down the hall.

The obstacles were constant. When Cerruti tried to send him math books, the prison blocked them, until Havens negotiated with the administration to let them through. With no computer to typeset his work, he taught himself LaTeX — the intricate coding language mathematicians use to format equations — entirely by hand, visualizing every symbol in his head and mailing pages of handwritten code to his collaborators.

And then, in January 2020, it happened. Christopher Havens published his first paper in a real, peer-reviewed academic journal, Research in Number Theory, as a co-author alongside professional mathematicians. His work revealed, for the first time, certain hidden regularities in the way a vast class of numbers can be approximated — a genuine, original contribution to human knowledge, produced from a prison cell.

And he didn't stop. More publications followed — work tied to a conference in Slovakia, several more academic papers, and even a 2025 textbook on continued fractions from a respected academic publisher. Havens has never set foot in Italy or Slovakia, the countries his collaborators call home. All of it was done by mail, by hand, from inside.

But here is the part that may matter most of all.

Christopher Havens didn't keep his second chance to himself. Realizing what mathematics had done for him, he began — informally, in 2016 — offering to teach math to his fellow inmates, in exchange for a little library access and meeting space. That small effort grew into something real: the Prison Mathematics Project, which he co-founded and which became an official nonprofit in 2020.

Today, that project connects incarcerated students all across the country with volunteer mathematicians and educators who mentor them by mail. In 2025 alone, it reported more than 350 active mentorship pairings nationwide. It runs “Math Circles” — group problem-solving sessions — inside correctional facilities in several states. Havens has even held a part-time university research position, working on problems connected to cryptography.

He has described his own goal for his years in prison simply: that he wants to come out the other side as a functioning, contributing member of society. And he has thrown himself into mentoring other incarcerated students, calling that work central to their rehabilitation — and to his own.

None of this erases what Christopher Havens did. A man died, and that fact remains. But his story is a powerful reminder of something we too easily forget: that a human being is never only the worst thing they've ever done. That the mind is capable of astonishing things, in the most unlikely of places. And that even in a locked cell, with nothing but a pencil and the will to try, a person can begin to rebuild — and even give something back to the world.

Some prisons hold the body. But it turns out there are some things — curiosity, discipline, the hunger to become better — that no wall can ever quite contain.

Bastian Obermayer – Interested In Data?

Bastian Obermayer

It began with four words from a stranger. John Doe.

No name. No face. Just a message on an encrypted screen in the middle of the night. “Hello. Interested in data?” Then a warning that would have made most people close the laptop and walk away. “My life is in danger. We can never meet.”

The reporter said yes. And a ghost handed him the biggest secret in the world.

Bastian Obermayer was a journalist in Germany. He chased the stories nobody else would touch. That night, the files started to arrive. First a trickle. Then a flood.

They came from a law firm in Panama. Mossack Fonseca. Most people had never heard of it. But it was one of the most powerful secret-keepers on Earth.

The firm built shell companies. Empty shells on paper, designed to hide who really owned the money. If you were rich and wanted a fortune to disappear, this is where you went. No questions asked.

And John Doe was handing all of it to a reporter.

11.5 million documents. Emails. Passports. Bank records. Forty years of buried secrets. It was the biggest leak in the history of journalism. Nothing had ever come close.

Obermayer showed his colleague, Frederik Obermaier. The two of them stared at the screen. And they understood something immediately.

This was too big. Too big for two men. Too big for one newspaper. Too big for one country.

So they did something almost no journalist ever does. They gave it away.

They took it to the ICIJ, a global network of investigative reporters. And together they built the impossible — the largest reporting team in history.

Around 400 journalists. Over 100 news outlets. Nearly 80 countries. 25 languages. All working the same secret, at the same time, for more than a year.

And not one of them leaked it.

Stop and think about that. Four hundred journalists. A year of silence. The story of a lifetime sitting in their hands. And they waited. Because if a single word slipped out early, the powerful would bury it under lawyers, threats — maybe worse.

Then they dug in. And what they found was staggering.

The secret money of the most powerful people alive. 140 politicians. World leaders. Kings. Billionaires. Drug dealers. Arms dealers.

A $2 billion trail leading to the inner circle of Vladimir Putin. The cousin of a brutal dictator. The families of sitting prime ministers.

And here is the detail that tells you how untouchable they felt. They hid their fortunes in shell companies with childish code names. One was called Harry Potter. One was called Winnie the Pooh.

The entire hidden world of the ultra-rich. Mapped out. In black and white.

And here is why it should make your blood boil. That money didn't vanish into thin air. It was tax that never got paid. The money that should have built your schools, your hospitals, your roads — quietly funneled offshore by the richest people on the planet, while you paid every cent of yours.

April 3, 2016. The day arrived. Around the world, at the very same moment, the stories went live.

The Panama Papers.

The earth shook.

Within days, the Prime Minister of Iceland resigned. Crowds had flooded the streets. He was finished. Pakistan's Prime Minister was thrown out of office too. The leak chased leaders across the planet.

Police raided offices. Governments opened more than 150 investigations across 79 countries. Over a billion dollars in hidden taxes was clawed back, country after country. New laws were written. The secret world was dragged into the daylight.

And the firm at the center of it all, Mossack Fonseca, collapsed. It shut its doors forever. Its founders were arrested.

But there was a cost. A terrible one.

A journalist in Malta named Daphne Caruana Galizia chased the offshore secrets in her own country. She would not stop. In 2017, a bomb was planted in her car. She was killed. Murdered for the truth.

The reporters carried that with them. They always knew the danger was real.

And the ghost? John Doe? The one who started it all?

He was never found.

He stayed hidden — even from the reporters he handed everything to. They never learned his name. They never saw his face. He gave the world its biggest secret, and asked for nothing in return.

Think about what they all did.

Two reporters got the call of a lifetime. They could have kept it — the glory, the prizes, all for themselves. Instead they shared it with 400 strangers and trusted the whole world to carry it together.

They took on presidents, kings, criminals, and the richest people on Earth. With nothing but documents and nerve.

And they won. They won the Pulitzer Prize — the highest honor in journalism. They even made a film about it. Meryl Streep starred in it.

The shell companies are harder to hide behind now. The laws are stronger. The powerful are a little more afraid. All because of one leak from one stranger who refused to give their name.

And John Doe is still out there somewhere. Still hidden. Still safe, the reporters hope.

Somewhere in the world is a person who gambled their life to hand humanity the truth — and never once asked for thanks. The only reward they'll ever receive is being remembered.

So don't let this one scroll quietly past. Some secrets were bled for.

Tag someone who still thinks the rich play by the same rules you do.

Quote of the Day

“Honesty is the first chapter in the book of wisdom.”
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) Principal author of the Declaration of Independence, 3rd President of the United States (from 1801 to 1809)