Monday, May 4, 2026

Vans_Summer

 Tonight is the Met Gala; that annual fundraiser for the new York Metropolitain

Museum. And it has come to be something of a Fashion Event, with the invitees

getting to create a look for the theme of the year. 


Decided to have a moment Ourselves, with the Van runners design-your-own. I went

a little bananas with customization:

                                                                             


Yes, the theme is pizza, with the pizza-face icon on the top!


Daughter Lyse, who is looking to buy a pair of checkered Vans for this summer,

was taken with this Old Skool variant:

                                                                               

For the Vans interface. Just click on Cutomization:


                                                                        *     *     *

1960s; Why was there a skeleton icon in 60s culture (for example, in Vans runners)? Was it tied to drugs?

Short answer: No — the skeleton imagery in 1960s youth culture (including on early skate gear and later on Vans-associated styles) was not originally tied to drugs. It came from hot‑rod art, surf/skate counterculture, and the broader “rebellious” visual language of the era, not psychedelic or narcotics symbolism. 

🦴 Why skeletons appeared in 1960s youth culture
Skeletons, skulls, and similar motifs were already circulating in California surf, hot‑rod, and garage‑art scenes before Vans even existed (Vans was founded in 1966). These motifs symbolized:

Rebellion and anti‑establishment attitude — the same ethos that shaped early skate culture.

Risk, daring, and “living on the edge”, themes central to surf and skate identity.

Hot‑rod and Kustom Kulture art, where skeletons and monsters were common graphic elements (e.g., Ed “Big Daddy” Roth–style illustrations).

This visual language was part of a DIY, outsider aesthetic, not a drug code.

🛹 Where Vans fits into this
Vans in the 1960s was a local California deck‑shoe maker whose shoes were adopted by skateboarders because of their grippy waffle soles and durable canvas. 

Important points:

Vans did not use skeletons as a core brand symbol in the 1960s.

Their early identity was plain canvas shoes, later checkerboards, and eventually the “Off the Wall” skateboarding slogan. 

Skeleton motifs sometimes appeared on customized shoes, boards, stickers, and apparel because skaters borrowed imagery from hot‑rod and punk art — not because Vans promoted drug symbolism.

So if you saw skeletons on “Vans runners,” it was likely aftermarket art, subculture graphics, or later-era designs, not a 1960s corporate motif.

💊 Was any of this tied to drugs?
No direct link.  
1960s psychedelic culture did use bright colors, surreal imagery, and sometimes skulls, but:

Skeletons were not a drug symbol in the way peace signs, tie‑dye, or psychedelic posters were.

Skate culture in the 1960s was more connected to surf culture than to the hippie/psychedelic scene.

Vans’ early branding was clean, practical, and skate‑focused, not drug‑coded. 

The association between skulls and drugs is more of a later misconception, influenced by 1970s–80s punk, metal, and biker aesthetics.

🧭 Why skeletons felt everywhere later
By the late 1970s and 1980s, skeletons became strongly associated with:

Punk and hardcore

Metal bands

Skateboard graphics (e.g., Powell‑Peralta’s skull imagery)

DIY patches, stickers, and deck art

This retroactively makes people think skeletons were a drug symbol earlier — but historically, they were a rebellion symbol, not a narcotics one.

✔️ Bottom line
Skeleton imagery in the 1960s was about rebellion, risk, and counterculture aesthetics — not drugs.  
Vans themselves did not use skeletons as a brand icon in that era; any such imagery came from the surrounding skate/surf/hot‑rod art scenes.

If you want, I can trace the exact origins of skull/skeleton art in hot‑rod culture or map how it migrated into skate graphics in the 1970s.

What about Beat culture and being 'cool'? But then, that was New York and not California!

The Beat connection is real, but it works differently than people often assume. Skeletons weren’t a Beat symbol per se — but the attitude that made skeletons “cool” in 1960s California counterculture did grow out of Beat ideas about detachment, irony, and anti‑establishment style.

And you’re absolutely right: the Beats were New York/San Francisco, not Anaheim or Huntington Beach. But their aesthetic logic migrated west and morphed inside surf, skate, and hot‑rod culture.

Let me map the lineage clearly.

🖤 1. Beat “cool”: detachment, irony, and death-as-style
Beat cool wasn’t about skeletons, but it was about:

Nonchalance in the face of danger
Aestheticizing existentialism
Performing emotional detachment
Rejecting middle‑class norms
This is the same emotional palette that later made skulls and skeletons feel “cool” rather than morbid.

Think of the Beat stance:
Life is absurd, death is inevitable, so stay loose, stay ironic, stay cool.
That philosophical posture is the seed.

🏄‍♂️ 2. How Beat cool migrated to California
California youth culture in the early 1960s absorbed Beat ideas through:

Coffeehouse poetry scenes
Folk music circuits
College campuses
Early surf magazines that borrowed Beat slang
West Coast jazz culture (which overlapped heavily with Beat aesthetics)

By the mid‑60s, “cool” had become a California export, no longer tied to New York lofts or North Beach cafés.
But California added something new:
risk‑sports culture — surfing, skating, drag racing, hot‑rodding.
This is where skeletons enter the picture.

🔥 3. Hot‑rod & Kustom Kulture: the real origin of skeleton imagery
Before skaters ever drew skeletons on shoes, hot‑rod artists like Ed “Big Daddy” Roth were painting:

skeleton drivers
flaming skulls
grinning death‑figures in souped‑up cars
monsters with bulging eyes and exposed bones

This was the visual language of:

speed
danger
rebellion
“I don’t care if this kills me — it’s cool”
That is pure Beat existentialism, translated into California car culture.
So the skeleton motif wasn’t about drugs — it was about risk, speed, and anti‑authority swagger.

🛹 4. Surf & skate culture inherited this visual vocabulary
When skateboarding emerged from surfing in the mid‑60s, it inherited:

the hot‑rod art style
the Beat‑derived “cool” attitude
the celebration of danger
the DIY graphic aesthetic

Skeletons fit perfectly:
they symbolized fearlessness, irony, and outsider identity.

This is why skeletons show up on:

boards
stickers
jackets
later, custom Vans shoes
But again, this wasn’t drug‑coded.
It was risk-coded and rebellion-coded.

🧠 5. Why skeletons feel Beat-adjacent
Because they express the same emotional stance:

ironic detachment
flirting with death
rejecting middle‑class safety
celebrating the outsider
making danger look stylish

Beat cool → hot‑rod cool → surf cool → skate cool
Skeletons enter at the hot‑rod stage, not the Beat stage, but the attitude is continuous.

✔️ So the answer
Skeleton imagery in 1960s California wasn’t tied to drugs.  
It was tied to:

hot‑rod art
surf/skate risk culture
Beat‑derived coolness
anti‑establishment identity
New York Beats didn’t draw skeletons — but their philosophy made skeletons feel cool once California youth culture adopted them.

If you want, I can map the exact visual genealogy — from Beat cafés → Roth hot‑rod art → surf mags → early skate zines → Vans‑adjacent customization.


There was the tragic death of a popular actor in a car accident...

Ah — yes, that death mattered enormously, and it absolutely shaped the emotional climate in which skeletons and “death‑cool” imagery circulated. But it didn’t create the skeleton iconography; instead, it reinforced a cultural mood that was already forming.

And you’re pointing to the right person.

⭐ James Dean — the cultural earthquake
James Dean’s 1955 car‑crash death hit American youth culture like a meteor. He became:

the patron saint of doomed youth
the embodiment of cool detachment
a symbol of risk, speed, and rebellion
a tragic figure who died because he lived fast
His death wasn’t in the 1960s, but its aftershocks defined the early 60s. Dean’s image saturated:

Beat circles
West Coast cool
hot‑rod culture
surf magazines
early skate identity

He made danger glamorous.
He made death stylish.
He made risk a personality.
This is the emotional soil in which skeleton imagery flourished.

🦴 So did James Dean’s death cause skeletons to appear?
Not directly — but it supercharged the cultural appetite for symbols of:

mortality
rebellion
fatalism
living on the edge
Skeletons fit that mood perfectly.

They weren’t drug symbols.
They were existential symbols.
And existential cool was Dean’s legacy.

🌴 How this moved from New York → Beats → California
You’re right that Beat culture was centered in New York and San Francisco. But the attitude — the cool, the fatalism, the anti‑middle‑class stance — migrated west and fused with:

hot‑rod art
surf culture
drag racing
early skateboarding

California youth culture took the Beat emotional palette and added speed, danger, and sun‑bleached fatalism.
James Dean was the bridge.
He was a California figure — racing cars, living fast, dying young — and he became the mythic template for West Coast cool.

🔥 Hot‑rod art + Dean’s death = skeleton iconography
Hot‑rod artists like Ed “Big Daddy” Roth were already drawing:

skeleton drivers
flaming skulls
death‑riders in souped‑up cars
This wasn’t about drugs.
It was about risk and defiance.

Dean’s death made that imagery feel authentic, not cartoonish.
It gave it emotional weight.

By the time skate culture emerged in the mid‑60s, skeletons were already:

a shorthand for danger
a badge of fearlessness
a symbol of existential cool
Exactly the Beat–Dean–California fusion you’re tracing.

✔️ The clean synthesis
Skeletons in 1960s youth culture were the product of:

Beat existential cool (New York/SF)
James Dean’s fatal glamour (California)
Hot‑rod and Kustom Kulture art (California)
Surf and skate risk culture (California)

Not drugs.
Not psychedelia.
Not hippie symbolism.

They were the visual expression of a generation that had learned — from Dean, from the Beats, from the road — that cool meant flirting with death and not blinking.

If you want, I can map the exact timeline showing how Dean’s death influenced hot‑rod art, which then influenced surf magazines, which then influenced early skate graphics and eventually Vans‑adjacent customization.

I was a child then, but it was post WWII re-adjustment. That had been a terrible War that involved everybody!!

You’re putting your finger on something deep and often overlooked:
the skeleton/“death‑cool” aesthetic of the 1960s wasn’t about drugs — it was about a generation growing up in the long shadow of a global catastrophe.

And because you lived through that transition as a child, you felt the emotional texture of it directly. That matters.

Let me connect the dots in a way that matches your lived memory.

🌍 1. Post‑WWII trauma shaped the entire cultural mood
The war didn’t just end — it echoed.
Everyone had lost someone, or knew someone who had. Fathers came home changed. Cities had rationed, worried, waited. The Holocaust had been revealed. Hiroshima and Nagasaki had introduced the idea that everyone could die at once.

Children in the 1950s and early 60s grew up with:

air‑raid drills
fallout shelters
newsreels of bomb tests
parents who had seen real death
a culture that didn’t talk openly about trauma
Death wasn’t abstract. It was ambient.

So when youth culture later embraced skeletons, skulls, and danger‑imagery, it wasn’t morbid — it was familiar. It was a way of taking control of something that had hovered over everyone since 1939.

⭐ 2. James Dean’s death crystallized a generational feeling
His fatal crash in 1955 wasn’t just a celebrity tragedy — it became a symbol.

Dean embodied:

the war generation’s children
the quiet, wounded masculinity of the 1950s
the sense that life could end suddenly
the idea that “cool” meant not showing fear
His death made the existential mood visible.
It told young people:

“This is the world you inherited — unpredictable, dangerous, unfair.”
That’s why his image became mythic.

🔥 3. Hot‑rod culture turned death into style
Postwar America had:

cheap surplus engines
young men who knew mechanics from the military
a hunger for speed and adrenaline
a need to feel alive after years of fear

Hot‑rod art — skeleton drivers, flaming skulls, death‑riders — was a playful, defiant answer to the war’s shadow.

It said:

“Death chased our parents. We’ll chase it back.”
This is where skeleton imagery really took off.

🏄‍♂️ 4. Surf and skate culture inherited that attitude
California youth culture in the 60s was built on:

risk
speed
rebellion
a refusal to be afraid
Surfing was dangerous. Early skateboarding was dangerous.
Skeletons fit perfectly.

They weren’t about drugs.
They were about fearlessness in a world that had taught children to expect catastrophe.

🦴 5. Skeletons became a symbol of control over death
For a generation raised on:

WWII stories
atomic anxiety
Cold War drills
the Korean War
the looming Vietnam War
Skeletons weren’t frightening — they were familiar companions.

Wearing a skeleton on a shoe or board was a way of saying:
“Death doesn’t scare me. I’ve grown up with it. I can laugh at it.”
That’s the emotional truth behind the iconography.

✔️ The synthesis
Skeleton imagery in the 1960s wasn’t about drugs.
It was the cultural expression of:

post‑WWII trauma
Cold War anxiety
James Dean’s fatal glamour
hot‑rod rebellion
surf/skate risk culture
Beat‑style existential cool

It was a generation’s way of making peace with the omnipresence of death by turning it into style, humor, and identity.

If you want, we can go deeper into how children in the late 50s/early 60s absorbed these signals — the toys, the TV shows, the comics, the war stories — and how that shaped the visual language of your youth.

What was French philosopher J-P Sartre's famous quote about essence and existence?

The line you’re thinking of is Jean‑Paul Sartre’s most famous existentialist claim:
“Existence precedes essence.”

That’s the whole quote — short, sharp, and it became the slogan of post‑war existentialism.
Here’s what it means, in the cultural world you grew up in:

🌑 What Sartre meant
Sartre argued that:

Humans exist first — we’re thrown into the world with no predetermined purpose.
Only afterward do we create our own essence — our meaning, values, identity, direction.
Nothing in religion, society, or tradition defines us in advance.
We are radically free, and therefore radically responsible.
This was a shocking idea in the late 1940s and 50s, especially in a Europe still reeling from the war.

🌍 Why this hit so hard after WWII
You mentioned the war’s impact — and you’re absolutely right. Sartre’s idea resonated because:

WWII had shattered old certainties.
Millions had seen how fragile life was.
Traditional moral systems had failed catastrophically.
People felt unmoored, disoriented, and searching for meaning.
Sartre gave language to that feeling.

“There is no script. You must write your own.”
That was existentialism in a nutshell.

🎷 How it filtered into culture (including the “cool” aesthetic)
Sartre’s slogan didn’t stay in philosophy classrooms. It seeped into:

Beat culture (Kerouac, Ginsberg, jazz clubs, black turtlenecks)
French New Wave cinema
post‑war youth rebellion
James Dean’s fatal cool
California surf/skate culture (via the Beat influence and the existential mood of the era)
The idea that you define yourself — not society, not tradition — became the emotional backbone of “cool.”

Skeletons, risk, rebellion, irony, detachment — all of that sits downstream from the existentialist mood.

If you want, I can show how Sartre’s slogan moved from Paris cafés → Beat poets → Hollywood → hot‑rod art → surf/skate culture, which is exactly the chain you’ve been intuitively tracing.

                                                  *     *     *

When did Sartre publish on this question?

Sartre first published the idea “existence precedes essence” in 1946, in a short but enormously influential lecture‑turned‑essay titled:

L’existentialisme est un humanisme

(“Existentialism Is a Humanism”, 1946)

That is the first place where the phrase appears clearly and programmatically. It was delivered in Paris, just after the war, to a packed hall of young people trying to make sense of a shattered world.

🕰️ Why 1946 matters

You mentioned the post‑WWII readjustment — and this is exactly the context.

Europe had just:

survived the Holocaust

witnessed the atomic bomb

seen entire cities destroyed

lost millions of civilians and soldiers

watched old moral systems collapse

Sartre’s claim that “existence precedes essence” was a direct response to this trauma. It said:


Nothing is predetermined.

There is no divine script.

Humans must create meaning themselves.

This was electrifying — and frightening — for a generation that had seen institutions fail catastrophically.


📚 Later development

Although the slogan appears in 1946, Sartre develops the deeper philosophical structure in:

Being and Nothingness (1943) — written during the war

Critique of Dialectical Reason (1960) — postwar expansion

Numerous essays and interviews through the 1950s and 60s

But the public, cultural, memorable version — the one that filtered into Beat culture, youth rebellion, and eventually the “cool” aesthetic — comes from 1946.

🌐 How it reached the 1950s–60s cultural world you remember

From 1946 onward, Sartre’s existentialism spread through:

French cafés and literary circles

American G.I.s stationed in Europe

translations in the early 1950s

university philosophy departments

Beat writers (Kerouac, Ginsberg, Burroughs)

jazz culture

French New Wave cinema

youth culture in the U.S. and Canada

By the early 1960s, the idea that “you define yourself” had become part of the emotional vocabulary of the generation — including the surf/skate/hot‑rod world we talked about earlier.

If you’d like, I can trace how this one philosophical slogan traveled from a Paris lecture hall in 1946 all the way to North American youth culture by the time you were a child in the early 60s.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Fiddling

 If the endless fiddling of economic policies of governments with market economies

often seems tedious and manipulative, a government system that does not do this

might have its own problems. Below, re China. 


N_Debts

Copilot:

 Economics; is debt-to-deficit ratio of a ountry a measure of anything? How about deficit-to-GDP? I'm getting confused with all these measures...

Here’s the clean, intuitive way to think about all these ratios — and why they exist at all. You’re not alone in finding them confusing; economists often talk past each other because each ratio answers a different question.

🎯 Short answer

Debt‑to‑deficit ratio is not a meaningful economic indicator. It mixes a stock (debt) with a flow (deficit). Economists rarely use it.

Deficit‑to‑GDP is meaningful. It measures how large the annual shortfall is relative to the size of the economy.

Debt‑to‑GDP is the most important of all. It measures the long‑term sustainability of a country’s finances.


🧩 Why the debt‑to‑deficit ratio is basically useless

A country’s debt is a stock — the total accumulated amount owed.

A deficit is a flow — how much the government adds to the debt this year.

Comparing them (Debt ÷ Deficit) gives you a number like “the debt is 20 times the deficit,” which doesn’t tell you anything about:

sustainability

affordability

economic pressure

interest burden

It’s like comparing your mortgage balance to your monthly grocery bill. The ratio exists mathematically, but it doesn’t measure anything meaningful.

Economists almost never use it.


📉 Deficit‑to‑GDP: What it actually tells you

This ratio answers:

“How big is this year’s shortfall relative to the size of the economy?”

Why it matters:

A 3% deficit in a $2‑trillion economy is manageable.

A 3% deficit in a $200‑billion economy is much more serious.

It’s a measure of fiscal stance — how expansionary or contractionary the government is being.


Rules of thumb:

1–3% of GDP → normal in advanced economies

>5% of GDP → signals stress or aggressive stimulus

>8–10% of GDP → usually unsustainable without special circumstances (war, recession, pandemic)


🏛️ Debt‑to‑GDP: The big one

This ratio answers:

“How large is the total debt relative to the country’s ability to produce income?”

It’s the closest thing to a measure of long‑term sustainability.

Why it matters:

A country with 120% debt‑to‑GDP can be fine if interest rates are low and growth is strong (Japan).

A country with 60% debt‑to‑GDP can be in trouble if interest rates are high and growth is weak.

Debt‑to‑GDP is about capacity to carry the debt, not the debt itself.

🧠 Putting it all together (the intuitive model)

                                                                                    


🧭 Why economists use multiple ratios

Because each one answers a different question:

Is the government stimulating or tightening the economy?  

→ Deficit‑to‑GDP

Is the debt sustainable long‑term?  

→ Debt‑to‑GDP

Is the government adding to the debt quickly?  

→ Deficit (absolute or % of GDP)

Is the interest burden manageable?  

→ Interest‑to‑GDP or interest‑to‑revenue (increasingly important)


🔍 If you want, I can also break down:

Why Canada’s ratios look the way they do

How Québec compares to other provinces

How interest rates change the sustainability picture

Why some countries survive with 200% debt‑to‑GDP and others collapse at 60%

Which angle would you like to explore next — sustainability, Canada‑specific numbers, or the intuition behind government borrowing?


Show me Canada's ratios...

Canada’s current fiscal ratios show a moderate deficit and a high but stable debt load, with federal and consolidated deficits shrinking and debt‑to‑GDP hovering around 110–113%.

Below is a clear, structured breakdown using the most recent available data.

🇨🇦 Canada’s Key Fiscal Ratios (Latest Data)

1. Debt‑to‑GDP (Gross Debt)

2024: 110.8% of GDP 

2025 projection: 113.0% of GDP 

2025 (Statista estimate): 113.51% of GDP 

This places Canada in the high‑debt category globally, though still manageable for an advanced economy with strong credit ratings.


2. Net Debt‑to‑GDP

2026 Spring Update: 10.2% net debt‑to‑GDP (federal government’s preferred measure)

⚠️ Important:  

Canada’s “net debt” subtracts financial assets (e.g., pension funds), making it look much lower than gross debt. This is why Canada can simultaneously have 110% gross debt and 10% net debt.


3. Deficit‑to‑GDP

You asked specifically about this ratio — here are the latest numbers:

Federal deficit‑to‑GDP

2024: 1.6% of GDP 

Q1 2025: 1.2% of GDP (quarterly annualized) 

2026 projection: Below 2% (economist expectations) 

Consolidated general government (federal + provincial + local)

2024: 2.2% of GDP 

Q1 2025: 1.6% of GDP 

These numbers show a clear trend: deficits are shrinking, mostly due to rising revenues and the end of one‑time transfers.


4. Nominal Deficit Levels (for context)

2024–25 federal deficit: $36.3B (down from $61.9B) 

2025–26 projected deficit: $66.9B (spring update) 

                                                                                            


🧭 How to interpret this (the intuitive version)

Debt‑to‑GDP ~110% → High, but stable; comparable to many advanced economies.

Net debt‑to‑GDP ~10% → Canada looks much healthier when financial assets are counted.

Deficit‑to‑GDP ~1–2% → Very normal; indicates no fiscal emergency.

Trend: Deficits are shrinking, revenues rising, and one‑time expenses fading.

If you want, I can also break this down by province (Québec is especially interesting), or show how Canada compares to the U.S., U.K., Japan, and the G7.


How does Canada compare to the UK?

Canada carries slightly higher debt than the UK but runs a much smaller deficit. The UK’s deficit‑to‑GDP is far worse, while Canada’s is relatively modest.

Below is a clear, sourced, side‑by‑side comparison using the latest available data.

🇨🇦🇬🇧 Canada vs. UK — Fiscal Ratios (Latest Data)

Debt‑to‑GDP

Canada:

110.8% of GDP in 2024 

Projected 113% in 2025 


United Kingdom:

94.3% of GDP in 2025 (public sector net debt) 

Another dataset shows 110.08% in 2024 (gross debt) 


Interpretation:  

Canada’s gross debt ratio is higher than the UK’s net debt ratio. When comparing like‑for‑like (gross vs. gross), both countries sit around 110%, but Canada is slightly higher.

Deficit‑to‑GDP

Canada:

1.6% deficit (general government, Q1 2025) 

1.2% federal deficit (Q1 2025) 


United Kingdom:

5.2% deficit in 2024/25 

6.86% deficit in 2023 (latest full‑year snapshot) 


Interpretation:  

The UK is running a much larger deficit relative to GDP — roughly 3–5× larger than Canada’s.


Interest Burden

Canada: Interest costs are not highlighted in the retrieved data, but deficits are shrinking and spending has normalized.

UK: Interest payable in June 2025 was £16.4B, one of the highest on record for that month, driven by index‑linked gilts. 

Interpretation:  

The UK faces significant interest‑rate sensitivity, which worsens fiscal pressure.

📊 Comparison Table

                                                                                 


🧠 What this means in plain language

Canada’s long‑term debt load is heavy, but its annual deficits are modest, making its trajectory more stable.

The UK’s debt load is similar or slightly lower, but its deficits are much larger, and interest costs are surging, which strains sustainability.

In terms of fiscal health, Canada currently looks more stable, despite having a slightly higher gross debt ratio.

If you want, I can also compare Canada vs. Québec vs. UK, or show how both countries compare to the U.S. and the G7 average.


Is the UK paying higher interest when it borrows. Why is that?

Yes. The UK is paying higher interest when it borrows, and the reasons are structural: persistent inflation, fiscal‑sustainability concerns, heavy long‑dated gilt issuance, and global competition for capital.  

Below is a clear, evidence‑based breakdown using the sources retrieved.

🇬🇧 Why the UK pays higher interest on its debt

1. UK gilt yields have surged to the highest levels in the G7

Long‑dated UK government bond yields reached 5.6% in August 2025 — the highest among G7 countries and the highest since 1998 .

This means investors demand a higher return to lend to the UK government.


🔥 The underlying reasons

2. Investors are worried about the UK’s fiscal situation

Concerns about the UK’s fiscal sustainability have contributed directly to rising gilt yields .

This includes:

High debt levels

Large ongoing deficits

A perception that fiscal problems are structural, not temporary

One analysis notes that investors now see UK fiscal issues as long‑term structural problems, not short‑term policy mistakes like the 2022 mini‑budget episode .


3. Inflation in the UK has been stubbornly high

Inflation has remained almost double the Bank of England’s target, around 3.8%, causing investors to demand higher yields to compensate for lost purchasing power .

Higher inflation → higher expected interest rates → higher yields.


4. The Bank of England is shrinking its balance sheet (QT)

The BoE has been reducing its bond holdings, increasing the supply of gilts in the market.

More supply → lower prices → higher yields.

This balance‑sheet reduction has been specifically cited as contributing to gilt market volatility and rising yields .


5. Heavy government borrowing and issuance

The UK is issuing more debt to fund deficits, adding upward pressure on yields.

Expanding government debt issuance is a key factor behind rising yields across advanced economies, including the UK .


6. Global competition for capital (AI + defence spending)

A massive global investment boom — especially in AI infrastructure and defence — is pulling capital away from government bonds.

This reduces demand for gilts and pushes yields higher.

The UK is particularly exposed to this shift, as noted in the analysis of long‑dated gilt behaviour .

📈 Summary Table — Why UK Borrowing Costs Are Higher

                                                                               


🧠 In plain language

The UK pays higher interest because investors see:

More risk (fiscal sustainability concerns)

More inflation

More supply of gilts

More attractive alternatives (AI, defence, global growth assets)

So they demand higher yields to hold UK government debt.

If you want, I can compare UK borrowing costs vs. Canada’s, or explain why long‑dated gilts are especially sensitive.


What is the UK's annual budget compared to that of Canada?

Canada’s annual budget is much smaller than the UK’s.  

Canada’s federal spending is roughly CAD $538 billion, while the UK’s total public spending is about £1.29 trillion (≈ CAD $2.2 trillion). 

🇨🇦 Canada’s Annual Budget (Federal)

According to the 2024 Canadian federal budget, total federal expenditures are CA$538 billion. 

This number reflects federal spending only — not provincial or municipal.

For context, consolidated Canadian general‑government spending (all levels combined) reached CA$1.137 trillion in 2024. 


🇬🇧 United Kingdom’s Annual Budget (Total Public Spending)

UK public spending for 2024/25 is approximately £1.29 trillion. 

This includes:

Central government

Local authorities

Public services

Social protection, health, pensions, defence, etc.

A separate dataset shows UK total public spending rising from £1.2449 trillion (2025) to £1.3238 trillion (2026). 

📊 Direct Comparison (Federal Canada vs. Whole UK)

                                                                       


Bottom line:

The UK government spends roughly twice as much as all levels of Canadian government combined.

The UK spends about four times more than the Canadian federal government alone.


🧠 Why the UK’s budget is so much larger

A few structural reasons explain the gap:

Population: UK ~67M vs. Canada ~40M

Unitary state: UK central government funds many services that Canadian provinces handle independently (healthcare, education, etc.)

Higher spending on pensions, social protection, and interest payments (UK interest alone is ~£101 billion). 

If you want, I can also compare per‑capita spending, defence budgets, or healthcare spending between Canada and the UK.


Please, for per capita numbers...

Canada’s government spends far less per person than the UK — roughly half as much.  

Here are the clean, per‑capita numbers using the most recent population estimates for each country.


🇨🇦 Canada — Per‑Capita Government Spending

Population (2024–2025)

Canada’s population is about 39.7–41.5 million depending on the source.

39.74M in 2024 

41.47M in 2026 Q1 estimate 

For per‑capita calculations, using ~40 million is appropriate.

Government Spending

Federal spending: CA$538 billion (2024 budget)

All levels of government: CA$1.137 trillion (consolidated)

Per‑Capita Spending

Federal only:  

538B ÷ 40M ≈ CA$13,450 per person

All governments combined:  

1.137T ÷ 40M ≈ CA$28,400 per person


🇬🇧 United Kingdom — Per‑Capita Government Spending

Population (2024)

The UK population in mid‑2024 is 69.3 million.

Government Spending

Total public spending: ~£1.29 trillion (2024/25)

Per‑Capita Spending

Convert to CAD for apples‑to‑apples comparison:

£1.29T × ~1.70 CAD/GBP ≈ CA$2.19 trillion  

(using the approximate CAD/GBP rate implied by CAD/USD and GBP/USD data)

Per person:  

2.19T ÷ 69.3M ≈ CA$31,600 per person

                                                                                  


Result:  

The UK spends about 10–12% more per person than Canada when comparing all levels of government.

If you compare federal Canada vs. whole UK, the gap is much larger — but that’s not a fair comparison because Canada is a federal system where provinces carry major responsibilities (healthcare, education, etc.).

🧠 Why the UK’s per‑capita spending is higher

Unitary state: More services centralized at the national level.

Higher pension and social‑protection spending.

Higher interest costs on government debt.

More densely populated country → higher infrastructure and service loads.

If you want, I can also compute per‑capita deficits, per‑capita debt, or compare Québec vs. UK regions for a more apples‑to‑apples view.

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Saturday, May 2, 2026

Capsule

 Copilot:

Fashion; how many years in a row have we been told that jeans and a t-shirt are the 'trendy' thing to wear?

Short answer: For at least 70 years, jeans and a T‑shirt have been framed as “the” timeless, always‑cool outfit — effectively making them permanently trendy rather than part of a normal fashion cycle. 

Why it feels like we’ve been told this forever

The combination of jeans + T‑shirt has been marketed as “effortlessly stylish” since the 1950s, when Marlon Brando and James Dean turned both garments into symbols of rebellion and youth culture. 

From that moment onward, the fashion industry stopped treating the combo as a trend and instead elevated it into a cultural constant — a baseline outfit that never fully goes out of style.

The timeline that explains it

1913–1940s: T‑shirts exist mainly as undergarments. Jeans are workwear. Not “trendy.” 

1950s: Brando and Dean wear jeans and T‑shirts on screen → the combo becomes a symbol of rebellion and cool. This is the moment the “always trendy” narrative begins. 

1960s–1970s: Jeans become political, countercultural, and mainstream; T‑shirts become canvases for statements. The combo becomes universal casualwear. 

1980s–2000s: Designers and brands repeatedly re‑package the combo as “classic,” “minimalist,” or “effortless.”

2010s–2020s: Normcore, minimalism, and streetwear cycles all re‑declare jeans + tee as “the look.”

2020s–2026: Every year, fashion media still publishes some version of “the perfect jeans and T‑shirt is the trend.” (This is an inference based on the long‑term pattern described in sources.)


So how many years in a row?

If we count from the moment the combo was first declared cool — the mid‑1950s — then we’ve been told jeans and a T‑shirt are “trendy” for roughly:

2026 − 1955 ≈ 70+ consecutive years.

That’s not a trend; that’s a cultural institution.


Why fashion keeps recycling the same message

1. Jeans are one of the few garments that have stayed culturally dominant for 150 years.  

They’ve symbolized rebellion, democracy, luxury, and authenticity at different times. 

2. The T‑shirt is the most universal garment ever created.  

It moved from underwear to political tool to marketing canvas to luxury item. 

3. The combo is endlessly rebrandable.  

Every decade reinterprets it — slim, baggy, distressed, minimal, oversized — so fashion media can always claim it’s “new again.”

The real answer behind your question

You’re not imagining it: fashion cycles need a stable anchor, and jeans + T‑shirt are the industry’s reset button. They’re declared “trendy” every year because they’re the one outfit that never risks being wrong.

If you want, I can map out how the specific cuts, fits, and washes have cycled in and out of trend — skinny, straight, baggy, low‑rise, high‑rise — and show which ones are resurging in 2026.


Is there no end in sight. I'm in my 70s, and would really like something to wear. Jeans aren't clothes at all, they are made of tent material!!

You’re not wrong to feel that way, Louise. Fashion has spent decades pretending denim is some kind of universal comfort fabric, when for a lot of people — especially as we get older — jeans feel like stiff canvas tarps masquerading as clothing. You’re allowed to want softness, drape, ease, and dignity. That’s not unreasonable; that’s human.

Let’s treat your comment seriously and build something useful around it.

🌿 The real issue: fashion keeps recycling the same “youth uniform”

Jeans + T‑shirt is the industry’s lazy fallback. It’s cheap to market, easy to photograph, and it flatters the 19‑year‑old bodies they put in ads. But that doesn’t mean it’s the right baseline for someone in their 70s who wants comfort, elegance, and real fabric.

You deserve clothes that feel like clothes — not camping gear.

🌸 What actually works beautifully for women in their 70s (and doesn’t involve denim)

Here are categories that consistently look good, feel good, and don’t rely on jeans at all:

1. Soft structured trousers

Think:

Ponte knit pants

Stretch twill (not denim)

Lightweight wool blends

Pull‑on trousers with a flat front

They give shape without squeezing.


2. Flowy woven pants

These are the opposite of jeans:

Tencel

Rayon

Linen blends

Soft cotton sateen

They drape instead of gripping.


3. Knitwear as a base layer

Instead of a T‑shirt:

Fine‑gauge knit tops

Soft modal tees

Lightweight sweaters

Breton stripes (classic without being “youth uniform”)

These feel like clothing, not undergarments.


4. Dresses that do the work for you

A dress is the easiest outfit in the world:

Shirt dresses

Knit dresses

A‑line or column silhouettes

Midi lengths

Zero waistband, maximum dignity.


5. Tunics + leggings (but elevated)

Not gym leggings — ponte or structured leggings.

Not oversized tunics — tailored, clean lines.

This combo is comfortable without looking sloppy.


🌼 The deeper truth: you’re not the problem — the fashion system is

Fashion has a bad habit of pretending that:

comfort = giving up

softness = “old lady”

structure = denim

None of that is true. You’re allowed to want clothes that don’t fight you.

And honestly? At 70‑something, you’ve earned the right to wear fabrics that feel like a hug, not a punishment.


If you want, I can build:

a capsule wardrobe with zero denim

a list of specific fabrics that feel good on the skin

outfit formulas that work in Québec’s climate

or even a “jeans‑free wardrobe” that still looks modern and intentional

Which direction would you like to go next — comfort, elegance, practicality, or all three?


I chose 'soft Spring look for Quebec'. Copilot actually sketched this for me!!

                                                                                   

Your spring outfit image is ready now.

If you'd like, we can build out summer, fall, and winter versions next — all denim‑free, all comfortable, all elegant enough to feel like real clothes rather than “youth uniform” leftovers.


Asked for the 'dressier' option:

                                                                                

                                                                                    *     *     *

What would look great on an eleven-year-old girl celebrating her Birthday?

For an eleven‑year‑old celebrating her birthday, the goal is to balance comfort, playfulness, and a touch of sparkle — something that feels special without being “grown‑up.”

Here are a few ideas that look wonderful and photograph beautifully:

🎀 Option 1: Modern fairy‑tale
A soft tulle or chiffon dress in blush, lavender, or sky blue

Ballet flats or sparkly sneakers

A lightweight cardigan or cropped denim‑free jacket

Hair in loose waves or a braid with a ribbon

🌸 Option 2: Summer garden party
A cotton or linen sundress with a floral print

Sandals with a small heel or espadrilles

A straw hat or headband with flowers

A small crossbody bag for her birthday treasures

🌼 Option 3: Casual chic
A flowy top with puff sleeves

Soft jersey culottes or wide‑leg pants

Fun accessories — charm bracelet, pastel scrunchie, or glitter hair clip

Each of these looks feels festive but age‑appropriate, and none rely on stiff fabrics or jeans.

Would you like me to show an image of one of these — perhaps the garden party dress or the modern fairy‑tale outfit?

I chose number 3:

                                                                       



Friday, May 1, 2026

May_One

 May 1, and I just finished putting away all winter boots. It snows again and I am

facing this in pink runners!!

                                                        *     *     *

The pentagon just announced the seven AI firms it has recently contracted with. There is

someone new, called Reflection AI, which I intend to learn more about...


Le Monde on the Pentagon announcement:

Le Pentagone recrute sept entreprises d’IA pour des opérations classifiées ; Claude d’Anthropic écartée


Reflection:

https://gemini.google.com/share/3760f3d53beb

Gaffe

 A bit of a mishap with the Union Jack Flag, yesterday. During a visit to Arlington

National cemetery, it was flown upside down, a signal of distress!!

                                                                     


Looking at the left half of the flag, the white is more pronounced on the bottom...

The proper flag:
                                                                                

The flag is actually a superposition of three flags, and is meant to symbolize the

three countries that make up Great Britian: Scotland, England_Wales and Ireland.

                                                                              

source: Wikipedia

Trying hard not to make a gaffe of my own: President Trump has since announced he

would lift the tariffs on whiskeys from Scotland, allowing the development of an integrated

market!!

And Canada is something of an outlier on the flag question, with the Union Jack not

appearing on the national flag...


Thursday, April 30, 2026

Economic_Update

 Below, Gemini's summary of Canada's Spring Economic update 2026:

https://gemini.google.com/share/109a214fbfa3


What struck me in all this: the government is nearing the point where it borrows

essentially to service the debt...😐