Species-Specific Environmental Protein Reactivity in Poultry and Select Mammals: Biochemical Basis of the Zenkha Phenomenon

This proposal investigates zenkha, a culturally defined olfactory and gustatory experience common in Arabic-speaking regions, characterized by a pungent, aldehyde-like sensation arising from specific animal proteins under environmental exposure. The phenomenon is consistently reported in poultry, game birds, lamb, camel, and eggs, but absent in beef, pork, and fish. Unlike spoilage, zenkha appears immediately upon… Continue reading Species-Specific Environmental Protein Reactivity in Poultry and Select Mammals: Biochemical Basis of the Zenkha Phenomenon

The War Correspondent on Holiday

Imran Khan sent us a thousand words from his holiday in Greece. They describe a man camouflaged in a pale pink suit and white polo that dissolve into the golden hour’s lavender-tipped amber light washing over the Aegean, the whitewashed walls, even the tablecloths of the repurposed fortification where he stands. For someone who has… Continue reading The War Correspondent on Holiday

AI Hallucinates a Case – Humans Hallucinate a History

The real danger isn’t AI’s fabrications. It’s the ones we institutionalized. Two articles caught my attention this week—not because of what they said about AI, but because of what they revealed about us. The first was the familiar panic: AI is hallucinating and we can’t stop it. Lawyers are citing phantom precedent, researchers are footnoting fiction, and… Continue reading AI Hallucinates a Case – Humans Hallucinate a History

By the People v. United States

No. 24–1209 SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES October Term, 2024 By the People v. United States No. 24–1209 Opinion of the Court Justice H. S. Shaaban delivered the opinion of the Court. Petitioners, self-styled as representatives of a philosophical movement rooted in individual sovereignty, seek to establish that broad swaths of the modern administrative… Continue reading By the People v. United States

Boards, Brands, and the Blind Spot for the Broader Context

Why every organization needs a resident historian—not just a marketing department I’ve been thinking a lot about organizational effectiveness lately. I’m working on a primer for innocent bystanders thrust into high-stakes managerial roles, as a prelude to something even more ambitious—one that concerns a titan of industry—and since then, everything around me seems to be… Continue reading Boards, Brands, and the Blind Spot for the Broader Context