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About Chris McBean

Strategist, polyamorist, ergodox, permaculture & agroforestry hobbyist, craft ale & cider enthusiast, white settler in Canada of British descent; a wanderer who isn’t lost.

The Double Standard: Blocking AI While Deploying AI

In an era when artificial intelligence threatens to displace traditional journalism, a glaring contradiction has emerged: news organizations that block AI crawlers from accessing their content are increasingly using AI to generate the very content they deny to AI. This move not only undermines the values of transparency and fairness, but also exposes a troubling hypocrisy in the media’s engagement with AI.

Fortifying the Gates Against AI
Many established news outlets have taken concrete steps to prevent AI from accessing their content. As of early 2024, over 88 percent of top news outlets, including The New York TimesThe Washington Post, and The Guardian, were blocking AI data-collection bots such as OpenAI’s GPTBot via their robots.txt files. Echoing these moves, a Reuters Institute report found that nearly 80 percent of prominent U.S. news organizations blocked OpenAI’s crawlers by the end of 2023, while roughly 36 percent blocked Google’s AI crawler.

These restrictions are not limited to voluntary technical guidelines. Cloudflare has gone further, blocking known AI crawlers by default and offering publishers a “Pay Per Crawl” model, allowing access to their content only under specific licensing terms. The intent is clear: content creators want to retain control, demand compensation, and prevent unlicensed harvesting of their journalism.

But Then They Use AI To Generate Their Own Content
While these publishers fortify their content against external AI exploitation, they increasingly turn to AI internally to produce articles, summaries, and other content. This shift has real consequences: jobs are being cut and AI-generated content is being used to replace human-created journalism.
Reach plc, publisher of MirrorExpress, and others, recently announced a restructuring that places 600 jobs at risk, including 321 editorial positions, as it pivots toward AI-driven formats like video and live content.
Business Insider CEO Barbara Peng confirmed that roughly 21 percent of the staff were laid off to offset declines in search traffic, while the company shifts resources toward AI-generated features such as automated audio briefings.
• CNET faced backlash after it published numerous AI-generated stories under staff bylines, some containing factual errors. The fallout led to corrections and a renewed pushback from newsroom employees.

The Hypocrisy Unfolds
This dissonance, blocking AI while deploying it, lies at the heart of the hypocrisy. On one hand, publishers argue for content sovereignty: preventing AI from freely ingesting and repurposing their work. On the other hand, they quietly harness AI for their own ends, often reducing staffing under the pretense of innovation or cost-cutting.

This creates a scenario in which:
AI is denied access to public content, while in-house AI is trusted with producing public-facing content.
Human labor is dismissed in the name of progress, even though AI is not prevented from tapping into the cultural and journalistic capital built over years.
Control and compensation arguments are asserted to keep AI out, yet the same AI is deployed strategically to reshape newsroom economics.

This approach fails to reconcile the ethical tensions it embodies. If publishers truly value journalistic integrity, transparency, and compensation, then applying those principles selectively, accepting them only when convenient, is disingenuous. The news media’s simultaneous rejection and embrace of AI reflect a transactional, rather than principled, stance.

A Path Forward – or a Mirage?
Some publishers are demanding fair licensing models, seeking to monetize AI access rather than simply deny it. The emergence of frameworks like the Really Simple Licensing (RSL) standard allows websites to specify terms, such as royalties or pay-per-inference charges, in their robots.txt, aiming for a more equitable exchange between AI firms and content creators.

Still, that measured approach contrasts sharply with using AI to cut costs internally, a strategy that further alienates journalists and erodes trust in media institutions.

Integrity or Expedience?
The juxtaposition of content protection and AI deployment in newsrooms lays bare a cynical calculus: AI is off-limits when others use it, but eminently acceptable when it serves internal profit goals. This selective embrace erodes the moral foundation of journalistic institutions and raises urgent questions:
• Can publishers reconcile the need for revenue with the ethical imperatives of transparency and fairness?
• Will the rapid rise of AI content displace more journalists than it empowers?
• And ultimately, can media institutions craft coherent policies that honor both their creators and the audience’s right to trustworthy news

Perhaps there is a path toward licensing frameworks and responsible AI use that aligns with journalistic values, but as long as the will to shift blame, “not us scraping, but us firing”, persists, the hypocrisy remains undeniable.

The Future of Museums, Part Two: Digitization, Repatriation, and the New Cultural Commons

If the first step in the ethical evolution of museums is reckoning with the origins of their collections, the second must be reimagining how cultural treasures can be shared, studied, and celebrated without being hoarded. Fortunately, the 21st century offers tools our forebears could only dream of. Digital technology, particularly high-resolution 3D scanning, modeling, and immersive virtual platforms, is rewriting the rules of preservation and access. When used with cultural sensitivity and ethical intention, these tools allow us to honour ownership, facilitate repatriation, and still nourish a global commons of cultural knowledge.

Take 3D scanning: what was once an expensive novelty is now a powerful instrument of restitution and democratization. Museums can now create hyper-detailed digital replicas of artifacts, capturing every chisel mark, brushstroke, or weave of fabric. These models can be studied, shared online, integrated into augmented or virtual reality tools, or even 3D printed, all without requiring the physical artifact to remain on display in a distant capital city. This changes the equation. The original object can go home, back to the community or country from which it was taken, while its likeness continues to serve educational and scientific purposes worldwide.

There is a quiet but profound dignity in this digital compromise. It allows for the physical return of heritage to those to whom it belongs, not just legally, but spiritually and historically, while also supporting the broader mission of museums to educate and inspire. And in many cases, the digital version can do things the original never could. Scholars can examine its dimensions in microscopic detail. Teachers can beam it into classrooms. Visitors can manipulate it, interact with it, and even walk through the worlds from which it came.

Yet let’s not pretend digital tools are a panacea. A scan cannot replicate the scent of parchment, the weight of a carved idol, or the sacredness of a funerary mask imbued with ancestral memory. Creating these models demands money, time, and skilled technicians, resources that smaller institutions may lack. But for those who can muster them, the return is substantial: ethical legitimacy, global engagement, and future-proof access to cultural heritage.

Enter the virtual museum, a concept whose time has truly come. With internet access now ubiquitous in much of the world, online museum platforms are exploding. Whether it’s the British Museum’s virtual galleries or the immersive tours of the Louvre, these digital spaces offer a new kind of cultural experience: borderless, accessible, and unconstrained by bricks, mortar, or geopolitics. For those unable to travel, due to distance, disability, or cost, virtual museums are not just convenient; they are transformational.

These platforms do more than display scanned objects. They weave in video, sound, oral histories, and expert commentary. They let users “handle” objects virtually, walk through reconstructions of lost cities, or compare artworks from across time zones and traditions. And crucially, they offer a space where repatriated artifacts can remain visible to the world. A sculpture returned to Nigeria or a mask restored to a Pacific island doesn’t need to vanish from global consciousness. Its story, and its scanned image, can be co-curated with local voices, shared respectfully, and kept safe in the digital domain.

This co-curation is vital. A truly decolonized digital strategy doesn’t just upload images, it shares authority. It ensures that the descendants of artifact-makers help decide how those objects are described, displayed, and interpreted. Digital museums can become sites of collaboration, not appropriation; places where cultural equity is baked into the code.

And then there’s the sustainability argument. Virtual museums dramatically reduce the environmental costs of international exhibitions, staff travel, and artifact shipping. They offer resilience against disaster, a fire, flood, or war may destroy a gallery, but not its digital twin. In a world of increasing instability, that matters.

So where does this leave us? It leaves us at the edge of something hopeful. The combination of digital modeling and virtual museums does not replace the need for physical repatriation, it complements and strengthens it. It allows us to move beyond the binary of “ours” versus “theirs,” and into a more nuanced, shared stewardship of humanity’s treasures.

The museum of the future is not a fortress. It is a node in a network, a partner in a dialogue, and a bridge across histories. If museums can embrace this vision, ethical, inclusive, and digitally empowered, they can transform from institutions of possession to institutions of connection. And that, perhaps, is the most valuable exhibit of all.

A Dangerous Symbol: Why Alberta’s Citizenship Marker Is a Badge of Exclusion

A government that tattoos its citizens with a loyalty stamp is not protecting democracy. It is manufacturing division.

Alberta’s plan to add a visible Canadian citizenship marker to driver’s licences and provincial photo IDs is sold as a pragmatic fix for administrative headaches, and a modest boost to election integrity. In reality it is a blunt instrument that will stigmatize newcomers, invite profiling, escalate privacy risks, and do virtually nothing to solve the narrow problems the government points to. This policy is not about efficiency. It is about visibility, and visibility in this case is a tool for exclusion.

Start with the claim that this will protect elections. The province has pointed to a handful of isolated incidents to justify a universal treatment of every person who carries a licence in Alberta. The scale does not remotely justify the sweep. Elections Alberta has not identified a systemic problem that requires permanently marking who is a citizen on the everyday card that everyone carries. There are far less intrusive ways to strengthen the integrity of the ballot than turning driver’s licences into a public ledger of status. If the problem is rare, the solution should be targeted, not universal.

Now consider the everyday, lived consequences of adding a visible citizenship marker. A small tag on a card is not a neutral bureaucratic convenience. It is a social signal that will be read within seconds by a wide range of people who exercise power over daily life: police officers, service providers, employers, landlords, front-line staff in health clinics and banks. The absence of that tag is, in practice, the same as a visible mark. When a human scans an ID and sees no “CAN” or similar symbol, they will know the person is likely not a citizen. That knowledge will change behavior.

The harm here is predictable. Racialized and immigrant communities will carry this burden disproportionately. Citizenship status correlates strongly with place of birth, language, and race. Policies that place a visible marker on status therefore do discrimination by another name. The Alberta Human Rights Act protects characteristics such as race, colour, ancestry and place of origin. A policy that has the predictable effect of singling out people because of those characteristics should be treated with deep suspicion. The government’s design converts private legal status into a public marker that will be used, intentionally or not, to exclude, interrogate and penalize.

Privacy is another casualty. Adding more personal data to a card that lives in pockets and purses increases the risk of misuse and error. The same announcement that proposed the citizenship marker also proposed including health numbers on the same cards. Those are sensitive identifiers. Combining multiple markers and numbers into a single, widely used document creates a tempting target for fraud and function creep. Once institutions are accustomed to seeing citizenship on an ID, the line between appropriate use and mission creep becomes dangerously thin. History shows that extra data on everyday documents rarely stays limited to the original, narrow purpose.

There is also the basic problem of accuracy. Mistakes happen. Bureaucratic records are imperfect. Imagine being wrongly marked, or left unmarked, and then facing a delay in accessing health care, government supports, or a job because an overworked clerk or a skeptical stranger read your card and assumed something about your rights. Fixing those mistakes takes time, money and dignity that many people cannot spare. That risk is not hypothetical. Governments themselves admit to data mismatches and unexplained records when they discuss the systems they use. We should not make people pay for a government’s sloppy data by making their legal status visible on a daily basis.

Finally, consider the chilling effect. Communities that feel targeted withdraw. They stop reporting crime. They stop seeking services. They withdraw from civic life. That is a perverse outcome for a democratic society. If the government’s aim is social cohesion and civic participation, stamping people’s IDs with a citizenship marker pushes in precisely the opposite direction.

There are sensible alternatives that protect both security and dignity. Back-end verification systems allow agencies to check status when the law requires it without turning every encounter into a status interrogation. Voluntary proof-of-citizenship cards could be issued for the small number of people who want a single card for passport office interactions or specific benefits applications. Strengthening poll-worker training and refining procedures at the point of service can shore up election integrity without branding the population. A proper privacy impact assessment and an independent human-rights review should be prerequisites for any change that touches identity.

This is not merely a policy error. It is a marker of values. Do we want a province that solves narrow administrative problems by creating new, visible categories that will be used to sort people? Or do we want a province that insists on privacy, on minimizing state visibility into people’s legal status, and on solving problems with proportionate measures?

If Alberta proceeds, expect legal pushback. Policies with predictable discriminatory effects should, and will, be challenged. Human-rights law recognizes that discrimination can occur through effects rather than explicit language. A seemingly neutral policy that disproportionately burdens persons who belong to protected groups will not withstand careful legal scrutiny.

The loudest argument for the citizenship marker is convenience. Convenience is not a trump card when human dignity hangs in the balance. We can tidy up administrative processes without creating a social scoring system that singles people out in grocery stores, hospitals, and bus stations. We can secure ballots without making identity a visible badge of belonging.

The test for public policy is simple. Does it solve the problem at hand with the least intrusion necessary? Adding citizenship to everyone’s everyday ID fails that test. It substitutes spectacle for problem solving, visibility for nuance, and bluntness for proportionality.

Alberta should drop this plan, sit down with civil-society groups, privacy experts and human-rights lawyers, and design targeted, less intrusive solutions. Failing that, opponents should prepare for court, for public protest and for relentless political pressure. Democracies survive on inclusion, not on visible lists of who belongs. If we care about the health of our civic life we should resist anything that turns identity into a signal for exclusion.

Sources: 
Global News, “Alberta adding proof of Canadian citizenship to provincial driver’s licences”, Jack Farrell and Lisa Johnson, Sept 15, 2025.
CityNews Edmonton, “Immigration lawyer, critics raise concerns about citizenship marker on Alberta ID”, Sept 16, 2025.
Statement from Premier Danielle Smith, official announcement posts, Sept 2025.
Institute for Canadian Citizenship commentary, reaction coverage, Sept 2025.
Alberta Human Rights Act commentary and analysis, relevant legal background.

Jeff Beck: Redefining the Electric Guitar

“Performing This Week… Live at Ronnie Scott’s” by Jeff Beck is my absolute favourite live album, and there is rarely a month goes by without it being played or watched at home. While there are many outstanding modern guitarist, this is why Jeff Beck is top of my list. 

Jeff Beck’s claim to the title of the finest modern guitarist rests on four pillars. He altered the vocabulary of the electric guitar. He bridged genres without compromise. He proved, live and on record, that virtuosity can serve melody. He earned the reverence of institutions and peers who rarely agree. Few players changed how the instrument could sound and feel across so many eras, while refusing to be boxed in by fashion or formula.

The breakthrough arrived fast. With the Yardbirds in 1965 and 1966, Beck used the electric guitar as a sound design tool, not just a solo voice. On Heart Full of Soul he bypassed an actual sitar, and bent a fuzzed-out Stratocaster line into something convincingly raga-like, helping introduce Indian inflections to British rock radio. Shapes of Things pushed further, with controlled feedback and an Eastern scale that many historians now tag as a first true psychedelic rock single. Those records did not copy American blues forms. They mutated them, igniting a new language of sustain, noise and melody that others would chase for years.   

Beck’s solo debut Truth, cut in 1968 with Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood, turned that language into shock therapy. It was a heavy, spacious record that foreshadowed the architecture of Led Zeppelin, and the rise of hard rock on both sides of the Atlantic. Tracks such as Beck’s Bolero and the reimagined Shapes of Things pointed toward the sonic mass that would soon be called heavy metal, yet they kept dynamics and drama at the center. The result was less a genre template than a manifesto about force and finesse.    

Then he changed course again. Blow by Blow in 1975 and Wired in 1976 reshaped the commercial prospects of instrumental music. Beck applied blues phrasing to jazz-rock structures with George Martin in the producer’s chair, landing a platinum instrumental LP and a No. 4 slot on the Billboard 200. Fusion could be lyrical rather than clinical, and the guitar could carry an entire album without a singer. Those records did not just broaden a fan base. They expanded the market for instrumental rock and set a standard that fusion and rock guitarists still measure against.    

Technique made those pivots possible. Beck abandoned the pick, playing with fingers that plucked and snapped strings while the right hand worked the Stratocaster’s vibrato arm and the volume knob in real time. He could swell a note into the mix like a violinist, then smear its pitch with a glissando that mimicked slide guitar, or tease harmonics into vocal shapes. This was not gear-driven flash. It was touch, control and micro-dynamics turned into grammar. Many great players mastered the how of speed and articulation. Beck mastered the why of phrasing, timbre and breath.    

The stage confirmed it. The 2007 Ronnie Scott’s residency in London remains a benchmark for modern guitar performance. Backed by Vinnie Colaiuta and Tal Wilkenfeld, Beck moved from lyrical balladry to feral fusion without breaking the spell of melody. The set list stretched across his career, yet everything sounded current because the tone lived at his fingertips, not in presets. It was a masterclass in restraint and risk, caught on a live album and film that have become essential study texts for working guitarists.   

Recognition followed the work, not the other way around. Beck is a two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, first with the Yardbirds in 1992 and again as a solo artist in 2009. He holds the record for the most wins in the Grammy category that best maps his lane, Best Rock Instrumental Performance, and earned eight Grammys in total. These honors matter here because they span decades and styles. Institutions often lag behind innovation. In Beck’s case they kept pace, acknowledging that his instrumental music moved listeners and players alike.     

Influence is the last measure. Beck shaped how guitarists think about feel. The modern vocabulary of fingerstyle electric lead, of singing vibrato-arm inflection, of volume-knob dynamics used as composition, owes him a debt. The tributes that poured in at his passing were notable less for celebrity and more for specificity. Players did not just say he was great. They cited the details of his touch and control that they had tried, and failed, to replicate. That is the quiet test of greatness. When the best explain what makes someone singular, and the explanation centers on the unteachable, the case is closed.   

Call it a contest on taste if necessary, but if the criteria are innovation, breadth, touch, live authority and a recorded legacy that keeps revealing new corners, the verdict is clear. Jeff Beck did not simply play the guitar. He reinvented it every decade he held one.

Sources:
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Jeff Beck inductee profile.
Grammy.com. Jeff Beck artist page.
Associated Press. Obituary and career overview.
Guitar Player. How to Play Guitar Like Jeff Beck.
Premier Guitar. Jeff Beck and the Magic Volume Knob.
Guitar World. Jeff Beck whammy bar and slide phrasing.
Wikipedia. Blow by Blow album page. Chart position and certification.
Ultimate Classic Rock. Yardbirds’ Shapes of Things.
Wikipedia. Heart Full of Soul. Raga influence and fuzz usage.
Guitar Player. Truth retrospective.
MusicRadar. Beck’s Bolero feature.
Live at Ronnie Scott’s album page.
A Green Man Review. Ronnie Scott’s live review.  

AI and the Future of Professional Writing: A Reframing

For centuries, every major technological shift has sparked fears about the death of the crafts it intersects. The printing press didn’t eliminate scribes, it transformed them. The rise of the internet and word processors didn’t end journalism, they redefined its forms. Now, artificial intelligence fronts the same familiar conversation: is AI killing professional writing, or is it once again reshaping it?

As a business consultant, I’ve immersed myself in digital tools: from CRMs to calendars, word processors to spreadsheets, not as existential threats, but as extensions of my capabilities. AI fits into that lineage. It doesn’t render me obsolete. It offers capacity, particularly, the capacity to offload mechanical work, and reclaim time for strategic, empathic, and creative labor.

The data shows this isn’t just a sentimental interpretation. Multiple studies document significant declines in demand for freelance writing roles. A Harvard Business Review–cited study that tracked 1.4 million freelance job listings found that, post-ChatGPT, demand for “automation-prone” jobs fell by 21%, with writing roles specifically dropping 30%  . Another analysis on Upwork revealed a 33% drop in writing postings between late 2022 and early 2024, while a separate study observed that, shortly after ChatGPT’s debut, freelance job hires declined by nearly 5% and monthly earnings by over 5% among writers.  These numbers are real. The shift has been painful for many in the profession.

Yet the picture isn’t uniform. Other data suggests that while routine or templated writing roles are indeed shrinking, strategic and creatively nuanced writing remains vibrant. Upwork reports that roles demanding human nuance: like copywriting, ghostwriting, and marketing content have actually surged, rising by 19–24% in mid-2023. Similarly, experts note that although basic web copy and boilerplate content are susceptible to automation, high-empathy, voice-driven writing continues to thrive.

My daily experience aligns with that trend. I don’t surrender to AI. I integrate it. I rely on it to break the blank page, sketch a structure, suggest keywords, or clarify phrasing. Yet I still craft, steer, and embed meaning, because that human judgment, that voice, is irreplaceable.

Many professionals are responding similarly. A qualitative study exploring how writers engage with AI identified four adaptive strategies, from resisting to embracing AI tools, each aimed at preserving human identity, enhancing workflow, or reaffirming credibility. A 2025 survey of 301 professional writers across 25+ languages highlighted both ethical concerns, and a nuanced realignment of expectations around AI adoption.

This is not unprecedented in academia: AI is already assisting with readability, grammar, and accessibility, especially for non-native authors, but not at the expense of critical thinking or academic integrity.  In fact, when carefully integrated, AI shows promise as an aid, not a replacement.

In this light, AI should not be viewed as the death of professional writing, but as a test of its boundaries: Where does machine-assisted work end and human insight begin? The profession isn’t collapsing, it’s clarifying its value. The roles that survive will not be those that can be automated, but those that can’t.

In that regard, we as writers, consultants, and professionals must decide: will we retreat into obsolescence or evolve into roles centered on empathy, strategy, and authentic voice? I choose the latter, not because it’s easier, but because it’s more necessary.

Sources
• Analysis of 1.4 million freelance job listings showing a 30% decline in demand for writing positions post-ChatGPT release
• Upwork data indicating a 33% decrease in writing job postings from late 2022 to early 2024
• Study of 92,547 freelance writers revealing a 5.2% drop in earnings and reduced job flow following ChatGPT’s launch  ort showing growth in high-nuance writing roles (copywriting, ghostwriting, content creation) in Q3 2023
• Analysis noting decreased demand (20–50%) for basic writing and translation, while creative and high-empathy roles remain resilient
• Qualitative research on writing professionals’ adaptive strategies around generative AI
• Survey of professional writers on AI usage, adoption challenges, and ethical considerations
• Academic studies indicating that AI tools can enhance writing mechanics and accessibility if integrated thoughtfully

From Isak to Woltemade: Murphy’s Cross Keeps the Toon Dream Alive

By Big Mac, the OAP Blogger from Byker

Ey up! Big Mac from Byker here, sharpening me quill to spin a fresh yarn now that things’ve changed at St. James’ Park. The Magpies have lost Alexander Isak, and the Toon Army is keen to see how Jacob “Murph” Murphy fares without his partner in crime. But right out the gate, there’s signs Murph’s crossing ability still has that Geordie magic, he helped us get the win over Wolves yesterday. Let’s have a proper chat about it.

Isak’s Exit: A Legend in the Making Moving On
First off, let’s get the facts straight. Alexander Isak officially left Newcastle United for Liverpool on deadline day, 1st September 2025.  It was a British record transfer fee of £125 million, making him the most expensive British-club deal of the summer, and a landmark move in English football.  Isak had been one of our deadliest strikers: since signing in summer 2022, he scored 62 goals in 109 appearances for Newcastle in all competitions.  He was central to the 2024-25 season’s highs, not least the Carabao Cup win.  But the Sad Toon struggle is real when a talisman like him departs.

Enter Woltemade & Murphy Rising
Newcastle didn’t hang about replacing Isak. Nick Woltemade came in from Stuttgart for a club‐record fee, signed to fill the void left by Isak.  The immediate test was yesterday’s match vs Wolves at St James’ Park, a hard-fought 1-0 win. But the beauty of it was in how Murphy still showed he’s got the eye, the deliverer. 

Woltemade got the winner in his debut, heading in a cross from Murphy in the 29th minute.  That cross was right on the money – perfect delivery. It told us that even without Isak alongside him, Murphy can still pick out a header, find a forward, link up. That moment felt like a bridge between what was, and what could be with this new era.

Comparing to Legends: Shearer & Solano
Now, folks often talk about legends, and there’s no bigger in this town than Alan Shearer and Nolberto Solano. Shearer, of course, was clinical, ferocious, the kind of striker who could score with half-a-chance. And Solano, silky on the right, with whipped crosses, set-pieces, and those clever passes. Together, they were one of the best striker-provider pairs in Toon history.

Comparing Murph & Isak to Shearer & Solano ain’t sacrilege, because what we’re seeing with Murphy now is some of the same DNA: the ability to spot runs, to deliver quality service, to anticipate what the striker is gonna do. Isak and Murphy had chemistry; Isak knew where to be, Murphy knew where to aim. But with Isak gone, we’re yet to see if Murphy can build a new kind of connection, as dependable and electric as Shearer & Solano’s. Yesterday’s assist for Woltemade gives me hope.

The Magic of Murphy: Crossing, Timing, Vision
If there’s a reason Murphy remains so important, it’s this: his crossing ability, his timing, and his work ethic. Yesterday, aside from the cross that led to Woltemade’s goal, he had a few other chances: one disallowed, one fizzed just past.  Wolves weren’t pushovers. They threatened. But Murphy was steady, patient, looked for the chance, delivered. That’s what Solano used to do in his day, always eyeing the overlapping full-backs, always ready to whip in a cross that could split defences.

With Isak gone, we’re seeing Murphy change gear. Not just being the assist man for a known finisher, but spotting new runs, new patterns, and making those crosses count for others. Woltemade rose well. That’s not just his header, that’s Murphy’s accuracy and vision. The way he picks out the far post cross, knowing someone will be there, that kind of thing Shearer used to feed off, with Solano or others.

Challenges Ahead & Hope for the New Era
Of course, it’ll be tricky. Isak was more than a finisher; he had movement, clever link-ups, pace, vision, and knew how to press. Wolves’ game showed that Newcastle is adjusting. We’ll see good crosses, and sometimes they won’t be met. Woltemade got cramp and had to come off; there’s going to be trial and error. But Murphy is looking like the kind of lad who can lead the front-line service, even without Isak.

Filling the shoes of a legend isn’t easy, and Shearer’s boots are massive, but if Murphy keeps delivering crosses like that, and if Woltemade or others keep the runs that Murphy can feed, we might be building something new, something special. The crowd yesterday were singing for Murphy after the game; you could feel the faith was shifting slightly, from, “What will we do without Isak?” to, “Alright, we’ve still got survivors.”

Final Thought from Big Mac
So, here’s what I reckon: Isak has moved on, and yes, it hurts a bit, seeing one of our best high up at another club. But football moves ever onward, and from yesterday’s cross for Woltemade’s debut goal, I saw a glimpse of that old magic. Not exactly Shearer & Solano, not yet, but the seeds are planted.

Murphy, with his vision and crosses, is stepping up. Woltemade’s debut gave us a moment of hope. The Toon Army will be behind them, and if they keep weaving this kind of understanding, maybe the next legendary partnership is forming before we know it.

Howay the lads – the pitch still got room for new legends.

Polyamory: The Questions That Never Go Away

The other day, I found myself having a familiar conversation with a friend, the kind I’ve had countless times with people curious about my relationship orientation and wondering if it might be a fit for them. It struck me that I’ve been here before, walking through the same starting points, answering the same questions. So I decided to put my thoughts into a reference piece. That way, when the topic comes up again, we can skip the “Polyamory 101” stage and dive straight into the richer, deeper conversations that matter most. With that all said, here’s how I think about the moral, ethical, and societal questions people often ask me about polyamory.

I’ve been openly polyamorous for decades now. Long enough to have seen the word move from whispered corners of niche communities into mainstream conversations, long enough to have been called both a dangerous libertine and a brave pioneer. And no matter how many workshops, blog posts, and late-night kitchen-table talks we have, the same core questions always seem to come back: Is this right? Is this fair? And what does it mean for the world we live in?

These are the moral, ethical, and societal questions about polyamory. I’ve lived with them, wrestled with them, and come to see them not as irritants, but as invitations to think more deeply about love, freedom, and responsibility.

The Moral Questions: Is It Right?
The first challenge people throw at polyamory is moral. We’ve been raised in a culture that equates “true love” with exclusive love. From fairy tales to wedding vows, monogamy is painted as the gold standard of moral romance. So when I say I love more than one person, and mean it, some people hear betrayal or moral failure.

But morality isn’t just about what’s familiar. It’s about how we treat people. I’ve always believed that love is not a finite resource; my love for one person doesn’t diminish my love for another any more than loving one child means I love the others less. In my experience, the moral litmus test for polyamory isn’t “one or many”, it’s whether everyone involved is respected, valued, and cared for.

Jealousy often gets cast as a moral signpost too. In monogamous thinking, if you’re jealous, it must mean something wrong is happening, or that love is being stolen away. In poly life, jealousy is a signal, not a verdict. It asks: What do I need? What am I afraid of? Can we talk about this? It’s uncomfortable work, but it’s moral work, the kind that builds rather than breaks trust.

The Ethical Questions: Is It Fair?
Even when people accept that polyamory can be moral, they ask about ethics, the fairness and integrity of the thing. And here, I’ll be the first to admit: it’s easy to get this wrong.

Polyamory rests on the foundation of informed consent. That’s not just a buzzword. It means that every partner knows the full truth of the relationship structure and has genuinely chosen it without manipulation or coercion. If someone’s “agreeing” because they fear losing their partner, that’s not consent, that’s survival.

It also means telling the truth even when it’s messy. Ethical polyamory is radical honesty in action: “Yes, I have feelings for someone else.” “Yes, I’m sleeping with them.” “Yes, I want to go deeper with them.” That kind of disclosure can sting, but it’s the only way this works without slipping into betrayal.

Then there’s the question of power. In polyamory, mismatched emotional maturity, financial independence, or social status can easily tilt the playing field. I’ve seen relationships where one partner held the “permission card”, and the other lived in quiet resentment. I’ve also seen polycules where new partners were treated like secondary accessories rather than full human beings. Ethical polyamory demands constant checking of those dynamics, because it’s all too easy for someone to feel trapped in what was meant to be a consensual, liberating arrangement.

The Societal Questions: What Does It Mean for the World?
Even if you sort out the personal morality and the interpersonal ethics, polyamory still sparks societal questions. Should we, as a culture, recognise polyamorous families in law? What would that mean for marriage, for inheritance, for child custody? These aren’t abstract questions when you’re raising kids with multiple committed partners, or when a hospital only recognises one “next of kin.”

There’s also the matter of public perception. Polyamory still carries stigma, enough that people can lose jobs, face custody challenges, or be ostracised from their communities if they’re open about it. That stigma bleeds into how we’re portrayed in media: either as exotic free-love rebels or as moral cautionary tales. Rarely as ordinary, loving, responsible adults living in families that just happen to be larger than average.

Public health debates make an appearance here too. Some assume that more partners mean more risk, full stop. The truth is more nuanced. In my experience, poly people, because we have to talk about sexual health with multiple partners, are often more rigorous about testing, safer sex practices, and ongoing health conversations than many monogamous folks.

And then there’s the question of the next generation. What does it mean for kids to grow up in polyamorous households? I can only speak from my own circle, but the kids I’ve seen raised in poly families tend to understand diversity in relationships from a young age. They learn that love can take many forms, that honesty matters, and that family is defined by care and commitment rather than a strict headcount.

Living the Questions
I don’t pretend polyamory is for everyone. It’s not morally superior to monogamy; it’s simply another valid form of relationship, one that requires its own skills, boundaries, and resilience. But I’ve learned that these moral, ethical, and societal questions are not hurdles to clear once and forget. They’re a constant part of the landscape.

Every time I commit to someone new, I’m asking myself: Is this right? Is this fair? What will this mean for the web of relationships I’m part of? Those questions don’t weaken my relationships, they strengthen them. They keep me honest. They keep me accountable.

Polyamory, at its best, isn’t just about loving more than one person. It’s about loving with more integrity, more awareness, and more intention. And in that sense, the questions aren’t a problem to solve. They’re the very thing that keeps the love alive.

The Future of Museums, Part One: Reckoning with the Past

Museums occupy a cherished yet complicated place in our cultural landscape. They are, at their best, sanctuaries of human achievement and memory; places where we marvel, learn, and connect. They are guardians of our collective stories, offering glimpses into lives, ideas, and aesthetics across time and geography. Yet increasingly, those guardianship roles are being scrutinized. In this post, the first of a two-part reflection, I want to explore how museums must reckon with their past in order to remain relevant, ethical, and inspirational institutions in a post-colonial world.

Modern museums serve multiple purposes. They are educators, preserving and interpreting both natural and human histories. Through exhibitions, talks, and online media, they help us understand not only what came before us, but also how those pasts continue to shape the present. They are also preservers of culture, entrusted with tangible and intangible heritage, from tools and textiles to oral traditions and sacred rites. Increasingly, they are also spaces of community engagement and social inclusion. The best of today’s museums are no longer content to speak about people; they strive to speak with them, creating room for conversations around identity, migration, environment, and justice. And let’s not forget their economic impact: museums draw visitors, support local artisans, and boost cultural tourism. Their value is not only educational, but civic and economic.

And yet, many of the very objects that give museums their gravitas are also at the heart of a profound ethical challenge. Too many were acquired in contexts of coercion, extraction, or outright theft during the height of imperial expansion. The British Museum’s possession of the Elgin Marbles or the Rosetta Stone, icons of antiquity mired in controversy, is not exceptional; it is emblematic. These artifacts, however artfully displayed, carry the invisible weight of colonial conquest. For many communities of origin, their removal constitutes not just a historical grievance, but an ongoing erasure of identity.

Western museums often point to their capacity to conserve, study, and exhibit these artifacts responsibly. They argue, sometimes sincerely, that global access to human history is a noble goal. But this defense rings hollow in a world where digital preservation is commonplace and where the moral imperative to return stolen cultural property grows louder each year. The question isn’t simply who can care for these artefacts, it’s who should.

Repatriation, the return of cultural property to its place of origin, has shifted from a theoretical debate to a global movement. France’s pledge to return looted artifacts to Benin, Germany’s restitution of the Benin Bronzes, and the Smithsonian’s newly developed ethical return policies are not fringe gestures. They are signals of a deeper cultural shift. Repatriation, after all, is not just about boxes being shipped back across oceans. It’s about truth-telling. It’s about nations acknowledging histories of violence and dispossession, and about institutions committing to restorative justice.

This new ethical landscape demands changes in practice. Provenance research, once an obscure archival task, must now be a public commitment. Shared custodianship models, where institutions collaborate with origin communities to co-curate, rotate, or jointly own artifacts, offer ways forward that don’t sacrifice conservation. And above all, museums must embrace the decolonization of their own internal cultures: rethinking who gets to tell the stories, who sits on the boards, and whose voices shape the narrative.

Museums can still be temples of learning and wonder. But for them to truly serve society in the 21st century, they must relinquish their roles as colonial trophy cases. The future lies in humility, transparency, and cooperation. In part two of this series, I’ll look at how new technologies and evolving curatorial philosophies are helping museums reinvent themselves for the world to come.

Five Things We Learned This Week

Week of September 6 – 12, 2025

A busy seven days brought hard headlines and surprising turns across geopolitics, markets, tech, and finance. Here are five things worth bookmarking from the week that just passed.


⚔️ Russia’s biggest air attack of the war pummels Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv

On September 8 Russia carried out its most intense air assault of the conflict to date, using a large barrage of missiles and drones that struck Kyiv and other population centres, set a government building ablaze, damaged infrastructure, and caused civilian casualties.
Why it matters: The scale of the strike shows an escalation in Russia’s long-range campaign and increases pressure on Ukraine’s air defences and humanitarian response.

⚖️ U.S. Supreme Court clears the way for broader immigration raids

On September 9 the Supreme Court allowed aggressive federal immigration operations to proceed, backing the administration’s approach to broad enforcement actions in several states.
Why it matters: The decision reshapes enforcement practice nationwide and will affect communities, labor markets, and legal challenges over civil rights and federal power.

📱 Apple unveiled its iPhone 17 lineup and a slimmer “iPhone 17 Air” at its September event

On September 9 Apple introduced the iPhone 17 family along with refreshed AirPods and Watch models, emphasizing a thinner design for the new iPhone Air and modest camera and battery upgrades across the range.
Why it matters: New hardware shapes holiday-season demand, supplier orders, and the consumer tech earnings cycle that drives parts of global markets.

📈 U.S. and global markets rally on growing bets that the Fed will cut rates soon

Through September 11 and 12 stocks posted weekly gains and several U.S. indexes reached fresh highs as traders priced a high probability of an imminent Fed rate cut after softer economic indicators. The rally was led by tech and AI-related names but was broad enough to lift major indices.
Why it matters: Shifting expectations about interest-rate policy change borrowing costs, asset valuations, and capital flows for businesses and households worldwide.

₿ Tether announces plans for a U.S.-facing stablecoin called USAT

On September 12 Tether confirmed plans to launch a new U.S. stablecoin, USAT, aimed specifically at U.S. residents and designed to comply with new domestic rules and banking arrangements.
Why it matters: A regulated U.S. stablecoin from a market leader could reshape crypto onramps, institutional adoption, and how regulators oversee digital dollars.


Closing thoughts: From geopolitical escalations to courtroom rulings, from flashy tech launches to market shifts and digital currency experiments, this week underscored how interconnected our world has become. The threads of war, law, innovation, and finance don’t just make headlines – they ripple into daily life. As we head into the next week, these five stories remind us to keep one eye on the big picture and another on the details shaping tomorrow.

Building Home and Sovereignty: Indigenous-Led Modular Housing Across Canada

Indigenous-led housing initiatives across Canada are demonstrating how culturally rooted design, workforce development and modular building technology can be combined to produce durable, energy-efficient homes while returning economic agency to Indigenous communities. A clear example is the Keepers of the Circle project in Kirkland Lake, a women-led social enterprise building a 24,000 square foot modular factory to produce prefabricated panels and whole homes for northern communities. The project positions the facility as a year-round training centre focused on Indigenous women and 2SLGBTQQIA+ people and aims to deliver passive, off-grid capable homes that reduce mould, overcrowding and winter construction constraints.  

Modular construction matters in the North because it shifts much of the work indoors, shortens on-site assembly time and allows for higher quality control and better insulation choices than conventional stick-built homes. Projects that couple those technical advantages with local control multiply the social return. For example, NUQO and other Indigenous-owned modular firms emphasize culturally informed design and female leadership in construction, showing that modularity can be adapted to Indigenous aesthetics and community needs rather than imposed as a one-size-fits-all solution.  

At a larger urban scale, the Squamish Nation’s Sen̓áḵw development shows another side of Indigenous-led housing. Sen̓áḵw is an unprecedented City-building project on reserve land in Vancouver that will deliver thousands of rental units while generating long-term revenue for the Nation and reserving units for community members. It signals how Indigenous land stewardship paired with contemporary development can both address housing supply and shift municipal relationships with Nations.

Innovation is not limited to factory scale or towers. Community-driven designs such as Skeetchestn Dodeca-Homes merge Secwepemc cultural principles with modular technology to create homes tailored for rural and on-reserve realities. These initiatives highlight the importance of design sovereignty, where communities set performance, materials and spatial priorities that reflect family structures and cultural practice.  

Practical collaborations are emerging to accelerate delivery. Rapid-response modular programs and partnerships with existing manufacturers have been used to deploy units quickly to remote communities, showing a template for scale if funding, transportation and on-reserve financing barriers are addressed. Yet systemic obstacles remain, including the complex financing rules for on-reserve mortgages, patchwork funding across provinces and the logistics of shipping large components into remote regions.  

Taken together, the landscape suggests a pragmatic pathway: support Indigenous-led factories and design teams to ensure cultural fit and local jobs, expand funding mechanisms and credit products tailored to on-reserve realities, and prioritize modular, high-performance assemblies that cut costs over a building’s life. When Indigenous governance, training and technical innovation work in tandem the result is not just more housing but a model of reconciliation that builds capacity, preserves culture and produces homes that last.

Sources
Keepers of the Circle modular factory page.
NUQO modular housing company.
Squamish Nation Sen̓áḵw project page.
Skeetchestn Dodeca-Homes project page.
ROC Modular rapid-response and modular housing examples.