How close is the proposed Lordstown LDC and proposed SoftBank power station to Evanston, IL?
MDW Backstory
Friday, February 20, 2026
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Stargate, Ohio, Softbank, LDCs, Powerplants -- February 19, 2026
Background:
Not only the largest natural gas power plant but the largest power plant, of any sort -- nuclear, coal, natural gas -- in the entire United States.
Wiki: list of largest US power plants.
- Grand Coulee, hydro, 6,809 MW
- Alvin W Vogtle, nuclear, 4,536 MW,
- Palo Verde, nuclear, 3,942 MW,
- Browns Ferry, nuclear, 3,775 MW,
- West County (Florida), natural gas, 3,750 MW,
- W. A. Parish (Texas), natural gas / coal, 3,653 MW
SoftBank proposal:
The Brilliance Of Trump -- February 19, 2026
Harvard is in severe financial distress.
- Trump's brilliance: how he "read" Harvard's Achille's heel;
- the union killing the Golden Goose; no sympathy
Monday, February 16, 2026
Vannevar Bush -- February 16, 2026
AI prompt:
Alan Turing. Development of computers. Things don't happen in a vacuum (no pun intended). Things don't happen overnight. Specifically, 1937 was a pivotal year and not just with Turing. From 1843 (Ada) to 1931, Vannevar Bush, almost a 100 years -- not much happening in those 100 years. Then Tommy Flowers in 1935 -- valves / vacuum tubes. So you look back five to six years before that pivotal year. What was happening -- or better, perhaps -- what major geo-political-economic event happened five to six years earlier. In fact, it was about eight years but one gets the point: the market crash of 1929. I'm sure there are some observations / thoughts about those years ... 1929 to 1937 that brought us to that point. Thoughts?
Google Gemini:
Friday, February 13, 2026
Norway's Wealth Tax -- February 13, 2026
Even without the wealth tax, I would prefer to live in Switzerland rather than in Norway.
The big problem is that the 1.1% wealth tax on net assets over $US 2 million is just part of the overall tax these two-million-dollar (US dollars) millionaires are paying.
Even worse, $US 1 million is no longer all that much wealth in the big scheme of things.
The big question is whether Norway has either a debt problem or a deficit problem:
Norway's wealth tax:
Norwegian wealth tax. Story reported in The Guardian. AI prompt and reply:
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Wealth Tax
If the wealth tax is a detriment to the economy in a country like Norway, one can only imagine how bad the wealth tax would be to a state like California who is at risk of a major deficit in any given year.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Fourth Industrial Revolution -- ChatGPT -- February 11, 2026
My thesis: for the mom-and-pop retail investor, the tipping point for investing "within the fourth industrial revolution" was in 2021 - 2022 -- a year or so after then "end" of the Covid-19 anxiety even though technically the fourth industrial revolution was identified in 2015 - 2016.
ChatGPT:
Yeah—that intuition tracks. The conceptual “Fourth Industrial Revolution” (AI, automation, digital platforms) went mainstream around 2015–2016, but the retail-investor tipping point didn’t really hit until 2021–2022. Different clocks were ticking for institutions vs. everyday investors. A few reasons why your timing feels right:
⸻
Why 2016 ≠ the retail tipping point
2016 was narrative-level adoption.
That’s when AI became a serious boardroom topic (DeepMind/AlphaGo, early cloud AI services, etc.). But for mom-and-pop investors, the story was still abstract: “Cool tech, not sure how to play it.” Public-market exposure was limited to broad tech names and semis.
Retail tends to move when:
• products become visible in daily life, and
• returns become obvious in stock charts.
Neither was true yet in 2016.
⸻
Why 2021–2022 was the tipping point
1. COVID changed investor behavior, not just tech adoption
Lockdowns did three huge things at once:
• Time: people had more time to learn markets
• Access: Robinhood/zero-commission trading went mainstream
• Psychology: markets felt “democratized” (GameStop, AMC, crypto)
This created a brand-new retail cohort that:
• was younger,
• more speculative,
• and much more willing to chase narratives (AI, EVs, space, quantum, etc.).
AI benefited from that same narrative trading energy that fueled meme stocks.
⸻
2. The tech finally crossed from “infrastructure” to “products people could feel”
Before 2021, AI mostly lived behind the scenes:
• ad targeting
• search ranking
• fraud detection
• logistics optimization
After COVID:
• recommendation engines, automation, and bots were suddenly everywhere
• then ChatGPT (late 2022) made AI personally tangible
That’s when retail investors went from:
“AI is a thing companies use”
to
“Oh wow, this changes everything.”
That emotional shift matters a lot in retail flows.
⸻
3. NVIDIA as the retail “AI thermometer”
Retail investors don’t invest in systems—they invest in symbols.
NVIDIA became the symbol:
• clean story
• obvious revenue growth
• simple narrative: “AI runs on GPUs”
Once NVDA started ripping in 2023, it functioned like:
“Proof that AI isn’t just hype—this is how you get paid.”
That feedback loop (price → attention → more retail inflows → price) is classic retail tipping-point behavior.
⸻
4. Post-COVID narrative hunger
After:
• meme stocks cooled,
• crypto crashed,
• EV hype got messy,
retail investors were hungry for a new mega-theme that felt:
• transformative
• understandable
• not already “over” (psychologically)
AI checked all three boxes.
⸻
Why institutions moved earlier than retail (and always will)
Big money started positioning in:
• cloud,
• data centers,
• semis,
• ML tooling
years earlier—quietly. Retail tends to arrive when:
• revenue curves bend upward, and
• products enter culture.
That’s not stupidity—it’s just different incentives:
• institutions invest in capability
• retail invests in visibility
All four together created what feels like an overnight AI boom—but it was actually a slow fuse with a loud detonation.
⸻
Big-picture take (your instinct is strong here)
What you’re really noticing isn’t just “AI became a thing” — it’s:
When the story became tradable for regular people.
That’s the true retail tipping point.
Not when the tech exists.
Not when it’s useful.
But when it becomes:
• narratively simple,
• culturally visible, and
• attached to stocks that go straight up.
If you want, next time we can map this exact same pattern onto:
• the internet (late 90s),
• smartphones (2010–2012),
• cloud computing (2014–2016),
• crypto (2017 / 2021).
The cycles rhyme a lot.


















