The Yacht Club – Part 2: Ice Class

In Part 1, we mapped a market that had quietly stopped behaving like a leisure market. The volume curve flattened. The size curve climbed. Fraser’s order book filled with custom 60–80-meter projects, average buyer ages dropped a decade, and Dutch yards became the single most important node in the global supply chain. We ended with … Read more

The Unsustainable State of Hypocrisy

Selective Justice, American Power, and the Erosion of the Rule of Law The issue is not whether Raúl Castro is innocent. It is not whether Nicolás Maduro deserves sympathy. It is not whether hostile foreign leaders should be shielded from accountability because they hold power, command armies, or wrap themselves in sovereignty. The issue is … Read more

The Yacht Club –  Part 1: The Boom

Welcome aboard. We’ve got a long, strange trip ahead. We’ll be diving deep into the realm of the superyachts, but before we set sail, we need to familiarize ourselves with the vessel and the conditions. What is a “yacht” in 2026? And why has the industry exploded? From Yacht to Gigayacht A yacht is traditionally … Read more

The Wizards of Cause

Acknowledging the people behind the AI curtain Artificial intelligence is usually sold as a miracle of software. It is cleaner than that, shinier than that, and more comfortable than that. But behind the polished interface is a global workforce of people who label, rank, sort, filter, clean, moderate, and evaluate the material that makes modern … Read more

The Pandemic Made AI Legible

COVID, Algorithmic Intimacy, and the New Infrastructure of Dependence COVID did not invent the AI era. That is worth saying plainly, because the timeline matters. Neural networks, cloud platforms, recommender systems, voice assistants, logistics algorithms, medical models, surveillance tools, and automated decision systems were already here before the virus arrived. The machinery had been built. … Read more