LinkSwarm For November 29, 2025

Greetings, and welcome to a rare Saturday LinkSwarm! This week: The Supreme Court stays the injunction against the Texas redistricting map, a bunch of Twitter fakes exposed, Trump drops the boom on Somali illegal alien scumbags,

  • “U.S. Supreme Court Temporarily Stays Ruling Against Texas’ New Congressional Map.”

    U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito issued an administrative stay of Tuesday’s ruling by an El Paso panel of federal judges that rendered the new congressional map passed by Texas Republicans this summer unusable for the 2026 midterm election.

    The order restored the new map, pending consideration of the appeal by the State of Texas, and directed the Democratic-aligned parties to submit their response by Monday.

    Snip.

    The ruling drew a particularly pointed dissent from Judge Jerry Smith, the lone dissenter on the panel, who asserted that the motivation behind the redraw was clearly partisan gain — a position that sits outside the jurisdiction of the court.

    Following that ruling, Attorney General Ken Paxton appealed the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday, asking for an administrative stay — which Alito granted.

    “Compounding the harm, the district court entered its sweeping injunction far too late in the day — ten days after Texas’s candidate filing period had already opened. The injunction changes the boundaries of all but one of the State’s 38 congressional districts, enjoining Texas from using its duly enacted 2025 map and resurrecting the repealed 2021 map,” Texas wrote in its appeal.

    “The chaos caused by such an injunction is obvious: campaigning had already begun, candidates had already gathered signatures and filed applications to appear on the ballot under the 2025 map, and early voting for the March 3, 2026, primary was only 91 days away. The lateness of the district court’s injunction (issued 38 days after the hearing) alone warrants a stay.”

    As things stand, Texas Republicans’ map is back in effect while the U.S. Supreme Court considers the case in expedited fashion.

    Texas’ candidate filing deadline is December 8, 2025.

  • Twitter/X turns on locations and it turns out a lot of “American” account pushing that “GOP civil war”` nonsense were foreign psyops.

    There are thousands of accounts like this. Many of them explicitly claim to be American or Western, but are run by random people in Asia and Africa to sow chaos and get clicks.

    And a whole lot of “besieged Gazans” turn out to be posting from Europe…

  • The State Department drops some truth bombs about mass, unassimilated illegal immigration.
  • “Trump revokes protected status for Somalis in Minnesota after new terrorist fraud scheme is exposed: ‘Send them back.'”

    Temporary Protected Status (TPS) is supposed to be used in extreme cases of humanitarian need for short terms (usually for 6, 12, or 18 months), allowing foreign refugees a safe haven in America.

    As deportation efforts have ramped up, however, the American public has learned that some foreigners have remained in the country on TPS for decades. Some politicians and businesses have purposely imported large numbers of foreigners into small American towns, such as Haitians in Ohio and Pennsylvania, as cheap labor to replace Americans.

    Faster, please.

  • Hmmm.

    President Donald Trump’s initiative to eliminate government waste and fraud through a Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has quietly disbanded with a full 8 months still left on its charter.

    Earlier this month when Reuters asked Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor about the status of DOGE, Kupor replied, “That doesn’t exist.”

    Representative Tim Burchett (R-TN) said that Elon Musk, who headed up the DOGE effort, was pushed out Washington D.C. because he was getting too close to exposing corrupt officials who are enriching themselves through dark money non-governmental organizations (NGOs).

    Burchett told Benny Johnson, “NGO money pours into Washington and ends up in politicians’ pockets as dark money.”

    DOGE had made dramatic impact on the federal government during the early months of Trump’s second term, shrinking the size of federal agencies and cutting their budgets or revealing astonishing amounts of questionable money flowing through NGO coffers.

    Sound like a good reason to continue the work, not abandon it…

  • Speaking of defunding the left: “The Planned Parenthood Closures Keep Coming: 45th Center to Close Friday.” (Hat tip: Stephen Green at Instapundit.)
  • Clintons ordered to appear at Epstein deposition next month.”

  • All that “don’t obey illegal orders” nonsense Democrats are regurgitating? Yeah, it’s Soros-funded, “Sponsored by Win Without War, a progressive advocacy group,” which in turn is funded by Soros’ Open Society Foundations.
  • Ukrainian drones hit the Syzran oil refinery some 900km from the border.
  • They also hit the Saratov oil refinery for the fifth time.
  • Drones hit the Shatura power station and nearby oil storage facilities. Shatura is east of Moscow in the Moscow oblast.
  • Ukraine damages an Alligator-class landing ship at Novorossiysk.
  • Russia Loses Ability for Manned Space Missions After Collapse of Launchpad at Baikonur Cosmodrome” after a blast shield failed to deploy during a launch.
  • Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned from congress. As in the NFL, there’s always someone that has to “set the edge,” and MTG was the person who did that in the Trump era.
  • What the hell? Is China committing war crimes in Philippines coastal waters?

  • House passes resolution to condemn socialism, and House Democrats split pretty close down the middle whether they’re socialist or not.

  • Why Russia’s T-14 Armata failed.

    The apparent reason Armata failed is this: sanctions.

    But there’s more to the story, too. In fact, several interlocking factors account for the T-14’s failure to materialize as intended.

    Let’s first look at costs and priorities: the unit cost of the T-14 was estimated at several million dollars – far higher than Russia had budgeted for.

    The increase in cost meant that it couldn’t actually be sustained at scale. And, faced with heavy losses in Ukraine and urgent demands to ramp up numbers, Moscow opted to modernize its legacy platforms, such as the T-90, rather than invest in an expensive and unproven system. A tough choice, but a logical one.

    The domestic production line for the T-14 never actually achieved accurate serial output, in large part thanks to sanctions and industrial bottlenecks.

    There was no assembly line. Yes, really: every vehicle was hand-built like a luxury car. Sanctions and supply-chain constraints further hindered the manufacture of key components and high-end electronics required for the platform.

    But even if Russia had been able to assemble more of the tanks before the sanctions really kicked in, it might not have changed the reality on the battlefield. Even when the war in Ukraine created a burning need for armored vehicles, Russia hesitated to commit T-14 units to the frontline for one worrying reason: they were vulnerable.

    With the rise of automated systems, drone warfare, and long-range combat, those tanks may have proven as vulnerable as older units – and losing tanks built pre-sanctions would mean replacing them with older tanks.

    That wouldn’t have made sense.

    For more than a decade, the T-14 Armata has embodied Russia’s ambition to leap ahead of the West in tank design and warfare.

    But it failed.

  • The usual lefty sorts are trying to raise Maryland’s minimum wage to $25. Virginia’s minimum wage will be $12.77 in 2026. Which state will businesses choose?
  • “Uvalde Judge Suspended After Indictment for Official Oppression. Judge [William R.] Mitchell allegedly had a UPS delivery driver handcuffed for disorderly conduct after he refused to deliver up multiple flights of stairs.” Does sound like a clear abuse of power…
  • Speaking of judges behaving badly:

    Brown County Judge Shane Britton was suspended from office without pay on Tuesday, one day after he was arrested on multiple charges that included allegations he assaulted a female prosecutor and interfered with the prosecution of a family violence case.

    According to indictments handed down by a grand jury last week, Britton has been charged with three felonies: tampering with a witness in a family violence case, assault of a public servant, and tampering with a government document.

    Britton is a Republican.

  • Soros-backed Dallas DA John Creuzot evidently feels that an illegal alien beheading a man in front of his wife and kids isn’t sufficient reason to seek the death penalty.
  • “Modular Reactor Tide Rising: Nano Nuclear To Study Siting Multiple MMRs To Generate 1GW Energy In Texas.” Those AI data centers are chugging down massive amounts of power.
  • Recently released footage from San Antonio shows another Sig Sauer P320 discharging in a security guard’s holster.
  • An interesting deep dive into how Google’s Tensor Processing Unit works.

    To understand the difference, it helps to look at what each chip was originally built to do. A GPU is a “general-purpose” parallel processor, while a TPU is a “domain-specific” architecture.

    The GPUs were designed for graphics. They excel at parallel processing (doing many things at once), which is great for AI. However, because they are designed to handle everything from video game textures to scientific simulations, they carry “architectural baggage.” They spend significant energy and chip area on complex tasks like caching, branch prediction, and managing independent threads.

    A TPU, on the other hand, strips away all that baggage. It has no hardware for rasterization or texture mapping. Instead, it uses a unique architecture called a Systolic Array.

    The “Systolic Array” is the key differentiator. In a standard CPU or GPU, the chip moves data back and forth between the memory and the computing units for every calculation. This constant shuffling creates a bottleneck (the Von Neumann bottleneck).

    In a TPU’s systolic array, data flows through the chip like blood through a heart (hence “systolic”).

    • It loads data (weights) once.
    • It passes inputs through a massive grid of multipliers.
    • The data is passed directly to the next unit in the array without writing back to memory.

    What this means, in essence, is that a TPU, because of its systolic array, drastically reduces the number of memory reads and writes required from HBM. As a result, the TPU can spend its cycles computing rather than waiting for data.

    Google’s new TPU design, also called Ironwood also addressed some of the key areas where a TPU was lacking:

    • They enhanced the SparseCore for efficiently handling large embeddings (good for recommendation systems and LLMs)
    • It increased HBM capacity and bandwidth (up to 192 GB per chip). For a better understanding, Nvidia’s Blackwell B200 has 192GB per chip, while Blackwell Ultra, also known as the B300, has 288 GB per chip.
    • Improved the Inter-Chip Interconnect (ICI) for linking thousands of chips into massive clusters, also called TPU Pods (needed for AI training as well as some time test compute inference workloads). When it comes to ICI, it is important to note that it is very performant with a Peak Bandwidth of 1.2 TB/s vs Blackwell NVLink 5 at 1.8 TB/s. But Google’s ICI, together with its specialized compiler and software stack, still delivers superior performance on some specific AI tasks.

    The key thing to understand is that because the TPU doesn’t need to decode complex instructions or constantly access memory, it can deliver significantly higher Operations Per Joule.

    “TPU v6 is 60-65% more efficient than GPUs.”

  • Austin’s APL bookstore Recycled Reads will be closing in January and the stock distributed to individual library sales shelves. I doubt I’ll be visiting various library branches to book scout. Maybe they should go back to the book sale events they used to hold.
  • WhistlinDiesel arrested on dubious tax evasion charge over a car registered in another state.
  • Gustav Klimt painting sells for a record $236.4 for a modern art piece. And it’s not even a top Klimt…
  • You know who else liked bowling?
  • “Iranian Tech Expo Features ‘Robots’ That Are Just Humans In Costumes.”
  • I missed that they’re now selling William F. Buckley, Jr. stamps until Dwight pointed it out to me.
  • Glorious turkey disaster montage:

    (Hat tip: Ace of Spades HQ.)

  • Colorized video footage of flying over World War I battlefields in 1919.
  • A modular synth version of Philip Glass’ “Opening.”
  • “Breaking: Hamas Breaches White House Perimeter.” And now the pic:

  • “Microsoft Introduces Convenient New 47-Factor Authentication.” And your Windows machine will still get hacked…
  • “Man Torn Between Learning New Board Game And Getting PhD In Quantum Physics.”
  • “Jesus Heals Demon-Possessed Man By Taking Away His Smartphone.”
  • “‘So, What’s For Dinner?’ Asks Teen Boy Immediately After Eating 50,000-Calorie Thanksgiving Meal At 3 PM.”
  • “Mom Continues Longstanding Tradition Of Making Cranberry Sauce For No One.”
  • “Family Holding Out Hope This Will Finally Be Thanksgiving Where Turkey Explodes In Epic Fireball.”
  • “Suspicions Raised As Wormtongue’s X Account Reveals He’s Based In Isengard.”
  • Instead of a separate dog post, here’s this week’s Daily Dose of Pets compilation:

  • I’m still between jobs. Feel free to hit the tip jar if you’re so inclined.





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    10 Responses to “LinkSwarm For November 29, 2025”

    1. 10x25mm says:

      Jack Buckby, the author of your linked T-14 piece, is a sheep-dipped British Nazi who has never stepped foot in a tank plant. NSJ is a propaganda rag set up by Droolin’ Joe’s half wit brain trust. It is even based in Delaware.

      Tanks cannot be built on assembly lines due to the almost universal use of arc welding to assemble components. The fume from arc welding contaminates everything in the vicinity, regardless of air handling. So tank components are welded, machined, and painted in separate structures and then these components are brought together for assembly with purchased components. There are usually two assembly processes; one for the turret and one for the hull. The turrets are universally assembled on bucks. The hulls can be assembled in bays (Rheinmetall, GIAT) or linear pathways (Lima, UVZ). Neither method constitutes an assembly line in the Harper’s Ferry Arsenal context.

      Tank costs have exploded in recent years and many – not just the Russians – are questioning their cost benefit ratio. The M1A2 SEPv3, our current model, has a bare bones cost of around $24 million. The M1E3 will exceed $ 50 million. For this kind of money, the Russians can build 150 Iskander-M missiles, or 2,500 Lancet drones.

      The difference between the Russians and us is that the Russians are deadly serious about maximizing the lethality of their armed forces at the lowest possible cost. We, on the other hand, are maximizing defense contractor profits and consequently Congresscritter stock portfolios. Which strategy do you think will win wars?

    2. Blackwing1 says:

      With regard to Trump ending the TPS of Somalis in MN this has been vastly overblown by the Dem-wing and their lame-stream and on-line media. Probably no more than a couple of hundred people, possibly (by a stretch of the imagination) as many as a thousand will be affected by it.

      Given that even the Biden-cabal era of ICE acknowledges that “an estimated 100,000” Somalis are now living in MN, there is literally NO WAY to fully assess exactly how many have come in. Multiple people for every single individual have made the trip to MN either on short-stay or tourist visas, and then simply disappeared into the Somali enclaves in the state. While the largest is known as Little Mogadishu (the police no-go zone in SE Minneapolis) the state, supported for some bizarre reason by the Lutheran churches, have flooded hundreds of small towns with tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of Somalis.

      I would guess that there are probably AT A MINIMUM 400,000 Somalis now living in MN, both legally and illegally. Since MN passed the absurd “motor-voter” law which automatically signs you up for voting when you pass the driver’s license test, probably any Somali able to do so can now vote.

      It is my belief that this was their plan all along.

    3. 10x25mm says:

      “Since MN passed the absurd “motor-voter” law which automatically signs you up for voting when you pass the driver’s license test, probably any Somali able to do so can now vote.”

      Minnesota is exempt from the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) because they have long offered election day registration (EDR) for federal general elections.

      EDR is an even more egregious facilitation of vote fraud than Motor Voter.

    4. 10x25mm says:

      “Recently released footage from San Antonio shows another Sig Sauer P320 discharging in a security guard’s holster.”

      It seems to have escaped everyone’s attention that the P.320 bullet discharged in this video hit the ground well in front of the security guard, not behind him. These duty rigs typically carry the pistol with a +15°, butt forward – muzzle back positive cant (rake) to facilitate the draw. Often called the FBI cant.

      This guard was pressing down with sufficient force on the butt of his pistol to create at least a -15°, butt rearward – muzzle forward cant. A 30° sweep from normal. The only way the bullet would have hit the ground in front of him. This force on the pistol butt had to distort the cheapo kydex holster and probably resulted in trigger movement. Assuming this wasn’t another deliberate jackpot justice fraud where a hook or loop is used to pull the trigger of the pistol in the holster. Like the 31 July 2024 Michigan State Police fraud.

    5. John Fisher says:

      Which state will businesses pick? Neither. With a Democratic legislature and governor, the Commonwealth is poised to give MD a run to ruin. On their agenda is a large minimum wage hike, repeal of right to work, massive tax increases, green energy boondoggles, and unconstitutional gun control

    6. tim maguire says:

      I don’t know Alex Cole’s story, but I am an American citizen who legally votes in Federal elections, but X shows my account as based in Canada because, like millions of Americans, I live in Canada.

    7. Malthus says:

      “It seems to have escaped everyone’s attention that the P.320 bullet discharged in this video hit the ground well in front of the security guard, not behind him.”

      No, It is evident that the guard placed his palm on the pistol just prior to discharge, as if he perceived a life-threatening event in his immediate vicinity.

      This hand pressure may have caused the trigger to drag against the inside of the holster, which resulted in an uncommanded fire.

      I have been a licensed handgun carrier for a quarter century. During that tine I have used
      almost daily, at different times, two “snub-nose” revolvers, a 1911 and a S&W Shield, none of which have fired inside the holster.

      I have participated in IPSC matches and bowling pin shoots without ever having seen guns “go off” in their holsters.

      Funny, ain’t it, how uncommanded discharges continue to affect the P320?

    8. 10x25mm says:

      “Funny, ain’t it, how uncommanded discharges continue to affect the P320?”

      They don’t. Three different laboratories found this particular SIG P.320 pistol would only fire when its trigger was pulled. This wasn’t an uncommanded discharge.

      You are shilling for the jackpot justice liability attorneys and, if you succeed, you will spend the next 25 years packing a knife or club, not a pistol. Your efforts will have rewarded the opportunists who will have economically disarmed you. You won’t be able to afford a pistol after its is surcharged with a product liability insurance policy.

      Put on a properly fitted duty rig and try to force the pistol – any pistol – cant to swing 30°, to butt rearward – muzzle forward. You will discover it takes far more force than a gentle palming of the pistol butt. This had to warp the el cheapo kydex holster in this case.

    9. 10x25mm says:

      Reuters has a headline story on the fate of some fresh Ukrainian soldiers which is worth a read:

      ‘Band of brothers: how the war crushed a cohort of young Ukrainians’
      By Anastasia Malenko – December 1, 2025

      Story follows 11 soldiers who volunteered early this year. None are still in combat units. Dead, wounded, deserted, and one committed suicide. Not a statistically representative sample, but still an educational report.

    10. 10x25mm says:

      “Recently released footage from San Antonio shows another Sig Sauer P320 discharging in a security guard’s holster.”

      This video has been withdrawn. Care to speculate on why?

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