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The Cost of the Melt

       
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The Perils of Inherited Wealth

Outside his window, cargo cranes continued moving through the darkness of Osaka Bay, endlessly transferring the weight of one generation into the next. … The old man lived in a narrow wooden house overlooking the industrial coastline of Osaka, where container cranes moved day and night like giant mechanical insects under the sodium lights. His name was Sakamoto Jirō. At seventy-eight, he still woke before sunrise. Every morning, he boiled cheap coffee in a dented aluminum kettle, opened the market terminals on his aging tablet, and checked freight rates, copper futures, and rare-earth prices before the younger traders in Tokyo had even entered their offices. People who met him assumed he had inherited wealth. He had the calmness of old money. The patience. The refusal to impress anyone. But Jirō had been born in 1948, in the shadow of postwar hunger. His father had unloaded coal by hand at Kobe Port. His mother repaired torn s...

The Rise of the AI Super-Majors

All names of people and organizations appearing in this story are pseudonyms… The first warning came not from a missile launch or a naval clash, but from a procurement delay. In February 2027, executives inside NVIDIA received notice that shipments of dysprosium and terbium magnets for next-generation AI server cooling systems would be delayed indefinitely. The minerals themselves were not rare in the earth’s crust. What was rare was the ability to refine them at industrial scale. China controlled nearly all of that. For years, American strategists had assumed software would determine the future balance of power. Silicon Valley produced frontier AI models that could autonomously write software, design molecular compounds, coordinate drone swarms, and optimize entire logistics systems. American firms dominated foundation models, hyperscale cloud infrastructure, and semiconductor architecture. OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google had become...

The Malacca Dilemma: Strategy, Exhaustion, and the Future of Alliances

It might simply be the nation that stayed awake longer.… By 2028, the maps in the Pentagon no longer centered on Europe. They centered on water. The Indian Ocean glowed across wall-sized displays inside the underground briefing room at United States Indo-Pacific Command headquarters in Hawaii. Thin red lines traced oil tanker routes from the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Malacca toward East Asia. Blue icons represented submarines. Yellow dots represented commercial satellites. Every moving ship larger than fifty meters was tagged by machine-learning systems connected to maritime surveillance constellations, underwater acoustic arrays, and long-endurance drones. The Americans called it maritime denial architecture. The Chinese called it strangulation. For twenty years, Chinese strategists had quietly referred to the vulnerability as the “Malacca Dilemma” — the fear that hostile naval forces could cut China’s access to im...