Monday, July 6, 2026

Air Conditioning, Scourge of the French Left

Heat waves kill thousands in Europe, but politicians resist the relief Americans can take for granted

By Alexander Kustov. He is an associate professor of global affairs at the University of Notre Dame. Excerpts:

"The French left argues that air conditioning is a selfish indulgence and an ecological menace. Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the country’s most prominent left-wing leader, warned that cooling would mean “increasing the damage,” and says he wouldn’t expose his grandchildren to air conditioning because it “destroys your sinuses.”"

"The economist Alan Barreca and his colleagues found that the spread of home cooling explains most of the decline in “hot-day-related fatalities” in the U.S. since 1960."

"Air conditioning accounts for about 3% of global emissions today, and in France, where two-thirds of the power is nuclear and much of the rest is low-carbon, running a unit is close to carbon-free."

"a group of left-wing economists, among them Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Piketty and Kate Raworth, declared economic growth “a doomed strategy” and signed on in support of a road map, developed by United Nations Special Rapporteur Olivier De Schutter, for a new “degrowth economy.” Its policies aim to reduce material consumption, shorten the workweek, and impose caps on personal income. Underlying this road map is the idea that wanting to be comfortable is shameful."

"In France, a condominium owner generally needs the consent of the other owners to install air conditioning. In the country’s heritage zones, a state architect can veto any unit visible from the street. In England and Wales, an air conditioner that has no heating function requires permission. The canton of Geneva issues a permit for comfort cooling only to people who prove they need it. Spain forbids public and commercial buildings from cooling below 80 degrees."

"The left’s most respectable voices are telling grandmothers to draw down the shutters and wait it out." 

Tennessee students make gains with tutoring and a back-to-basics approach that emphasizes phonics

See National Test Scores Are Dropping. This State Is Fighting Back by Chao Deng of The WSJ. Excerpts:

"As schools across the nation search for remedies, one of the most closely watched efforts is playing out in Tennessee. The state’s schools—once among the U.S.’s worst-performing—have made gains with intensive tutoring, mandatory summer school for struggling pupils and a back-to-basics approach that emphasizes phonics."

"From 2022 to 2025, Tennessee ranked second out of 38 states in math improvement and fourth out of 35 states in reading gains"

"The state’s most recent scores on a key national test placed it 17th out of 50 states and Washington, D.C."

"up from near the bottom in 2009"

"Much of the work has revolved around early literacy and carefully tracking schools’ and students’ progress."

"American schools have wrestled with learning loss for the better part of a decade and no one has found a panacea. Stalling of student progress in K-12 math and reading coincided with less emphasis on standardized tests and a rise in social-media use."

"Researchers believe the secret lies in the components of a state’s plan and how they are implemented. Mississippi, which began emphasizing phonics-based literacy instruction over a decade ago, has since made major academic strides, for example. Researchers say the key ingredients likely included investing in literacy coaches, holding schools and districts accountable, and holding back struggling students at the end of third grade."

"Tennessee policymakers required districts to adopt high-quality instructional materials and trained teachers on how to implement evidence-based reading in classrooms. A 2021 state law required third-graders scoring just below reading proficiency to show “adequate growth” at the end of summer camps to advance to fourth grade." 

Sunday, July 5, 2026

As Europe Sweats, Some Politicians Talk of Air-Conditioning, Not Climate Action

Heat-related deaths and disruptions to daily life are forcing politicians to reckon, in different ways, with a rapidly warming planet

By Michael D. Shear and Jeanna Smialek of The NY Times. Excerpts:

"In the context of northern Europe’s traditionally mild, temperate climate, some left-wing and green parties opposed air-conditioning and have instead favored renovating buildings with architectural fixes to keep them cool when it gets hot. But the dangers to health posed by this week’s heat wave are piling pressure on that view — and changing minds.

In the Belgian city of Ghent, which is run mostly by left-of-center politicians, the municipal website this week discouraged citizens from using air-conditioners, saying that “the best air-conditioner is a tree” and advising they use fans and request a free tree to plant outside their houses.

Maurits Vande Reyde, a right-wing member of the Flemish Parliament, responded to Ghent’s recommendations on social media.

“It is absurd that all governments in our country, under pressure from left-green mumbo-jumbo, advise against the use of air-conditioning,” he wrote on Tuesday. “The most efficient and best solution. How many deaths would the government already have on its conscience with this kind of absurd advice?”

After The New York Times sent a request for comment, Ghent removed wording that read “avoid air-conditioners,” replacing it with the phrase “cool smartly.”

Thomas Dierckens, a spokesman for the mayor of Ghent, said in a written comment that the city was not against air-conditioning — noting that it had installed 30 portable air-conditioners into day care centers this week.

Marine Tondelier, the head of the Green Party in France, acknowledged that she was “breaking a taboo” when she said on Tuesday that “there are places where we can no longer do without air-conditioning.”

In London, Sadiq Khan, the center-left Labour Party mayor, said on Thursday that air-conditioning would need to be installed in the capital’s schools, offices and hospitals, as he warned that London needed to “act now” to strengthen its resilience ahead of worse heat waves to come. And at the European level, Terry Reintke, co-president of the European Parliament’s Green group, said in an interview that some air-conditioning was necessary, alongside longer-term solutions like planting more green spaces."

Competition intensifies in broadband and media markets

See Comcast Plans Company Split as Competition Escalates by Jessica Toonkel and Gareth Vipers of The WSJ. Excerpts:

"Comcast up pointing triangle plans to separate its media and connectivity businesses, dismantling an earlier bet on combined entertainment and distribution as it navigates intensifying competitive pressure."

"company leaders believe the media and connectivity businesses should stand alone as publicly traded companies, providing more opportunity to pursue deals and better compete."

"it became clear greater flexibility would help the company navigate the increasingly challenging broadband and media markets, people familiar with the matter said."

"Comcast has been working to stem broadband and cable TV subscriber losses"

"Broadband businesses have been challenged by cellphone carriers offering home internet service beamed over the air. Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite connectivity company has added further competition for providers." 

Record-breaking heat waves are challenging the Europe’s longstanding resistance to cooling technology, spawning new political battles

See Europe Is Hot as Hell. Why Doesn’t It Want Air Conditioning? by Matthew Dalton of The WSJ. Excerpts:

"European infrastructure was designed for a climate that was much cooler than today. Temperatures in the northern half of the continent rarely rose above 90 degrees Fahrenheit and temperatures over 100 were almost unheard of. 

Rail lines and electrical grids weren’t built to withstand extreme heat. Many of the continent’s buildings lack design features that would keep them cooler in the summer, such as shutters to block out the sun.

Most of the continent’s homes and institutions lack air conditioning. In Italy, around 56% of homes are equipped with the technology, a figure that falls to 25% in France and 5% in the U.K. Europe’s summer heat waves often claim tens of thousands of lives, far more than in the U.S., a difference that scientists say is partly due to the lack of air conditioning."

"Europe is the fastest warming continent, with temperatures that are already around 2.5 degrees Celsius warmer than in the preindustrial era, compared with around 1.4 degrees for the earth as a whole.

Last week, Paris topped 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) on Wednesday and Thursday. That has only happened on three other days since official records began in the 19th century: in 1947, 2019 and 2022."

"Authorities across Europe have tried to avoid air conditioning on a large scale. The side effects from a big increase in air conditioning are considered to be large: The devices are costly; they are energy hungry; and they eject hot air into the street, warming cities even more. Moreover, they are a nuisance in dense urban neighborhoods, afflicting residents with the omnipresent hum of compressors."

In London, city regulations require developers to adopt cooler design measures—natural ventilation, shutters on windows and better insulation—before installing air conditioning in new buildings. Paris and Berlin have plans to incorporate more plants into the city landscape, reducing the heat-magnifying effect of stone during a heat wave. Paris opened the Canal Saint-Martin for swimming during the latest heat wave.

The problem is such measures are considerably less effective than air conditioning at reducing the threat of extreme heat, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.N.’s official climate science body. In its latest report on adaptation in Europe, the IPCC rates air conditioning as a highly-effective response to heat waves, while mechanical ventilation was rated medium-effectiveness and urban greenery was given a low rating.

Measures such as mechanical ventilation or shading don’t work when the heat is relentless, experts say. During the latest heat wave, 85-degree Fahrenheit temperatures at night didn’t allow buildings to cool down before the sun rose to bake them again.

Radhika Khosla, a climate scientist at Oxford University, said countries should mix better building design with air conditioning to limit the devices’ energy consumption. “You want to use it for what it’s really needed as opposed to making it your go-to solution,” she said."

"In some European cities, installation of an air conditioner in an apartment requires approval from the entire building. Local officials also get a say, to make sure the system respects architectural norms, noise laws and the city’s energy goals. 

In Geneva, the installation of an air conditioner is subject to strict energy-usage rules. London officials have forced homeowners to remove air conditioning because they haven’t resorted to other cooling methods, such as ceiling fans."

"First, residents [in Paris] must gain approval from the neighbors. Then, if the system is visible from the street, local officials can refuse if it mars the iconic, limestone facades of the city’s Haussmannian buildings."

"Under French law, a building association can block the installation of a system if it produces more than five decibels during the day or three at night, roughly the noise of a light breeze." 

AI is making it easier for one worker to do tasks that once required a small team

See Me, Myself and AI by Liya Palagashvili of George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. Excerpts:

"AI is making it easier for one worker to do tasks that once required a small team."

"Since early 2024, solo business applications have risen nearly 27% in professional services, information, education, finance and insurance—sectors the that have among the highest AI-adoption rates. In construction and wholesale trade, where AI is less likely to enable independent work, solo business applications have been essentially flat."

"In 2022 and 2023, solo applications moved similarly in sectors with both high and low AI exposure. The divergence emerged after 2024 and then took off."

"Business applications with payroll intent fell by 6.4% in AI-exposed sectors, while applications unlikely to hire employees rose by 26.8%."

"Among occupations most exposed to AI, solo self-employment rose about 20% from 2022 to 2025. In the least AI-exposed occupations, it barely moved."

"it’s becoming cheaper to operate as a one-person business" 

Friday, July 3, 2026

The New Transportation Bill Puts Special Interests Above Safety

Some safety recommendations are treated as essential—while others become negotiable once influential people object

By Veronique de Rugy

"Congress loves to wrap legislation in the language of the public interest. This year's surface transportation reauthorization bill is no exception. Supporters describe the House Transportation Committee–passed package as a major safety bill designed to make America's transportation system more secure and efficient.

Beneath their rhetoric lies the familiar Washington story of a bill shaped less by evidence than by the demands of organized interests.

Perhaps the clearest example comes from the rail provisions. If the bill is being driven by a coherent safety philosophy, why would legislators soften rules requiring the faster replacement of old hazardous-materials tank cars, despite repeated recommendations from the independent National Transportation Safety Board? Some safety recommendations are treated as essential, while others become negotiable once influential people object.

The reason, of course, is politics, which come with clientelism.

Much of the debate over freight car inspections didn't center on the frequency, timing, or type of inspections required—things the conversation would focus on if safety was the overriding goal. Instead, most of the argument centered on who would perform inspections.

Labor organizations pushed provisions that would narrow who counts as qualified to inspect freight cars, thereby reserving those jobs for organized carmen. They opposed railroads' de facto practice of routing inspection volume to non-carmen staff (conductors) as a cost saver that didn't affect safety. Legislators ultimately crafted a compromise that reflects the competing interests of these two powerful stakeholders more than measurable safety outcomes. This is regulatory capture in action.

The role of organized labor is especially revealing. At a recent Senate hearing, Teamsters union officials openly acknowledged that autonomous trucking is going to happen and that workers have historically adapted to technological changes. Rather than trying to prevent deployment of the technology altogether, they argued that policymakers should proactively focus on worker transition issues. This is sensible enough. Yet many of the same labor groups strongly oppose automation and technology deployment in freight rail, including with systems believed to improve safety and detect defects far earlier than traditional inspection methods.

Why is automation acceptable in trucking but unacceptable in rail? The distinction, once again, is less about safety than politics. Where technological change threatens existing, strongly pro-labor work rules, opposition is intense. Where resisting new tech is less practical, the conversation shifts to something else. That may be understandable from a labor relations perspective, but legislators should not treat it as a sound basis for national transportation policy.

The broader bill suffers from a litany of problems. Together, they point toward the same influence issues.

Fiscal conservatives, assuming there are still enough of them to be heard in Congress, should be particularly concerned about a package that authorizes roughly $580 billion in spending while doing little to address the long-term insolvency of the Highway Trust Fund. Legislators are instead choosing to promise more spending while avoiding the structural reforms necessary to put transportation funding on sustainable footing.

Meanwhile, they inserted a controversial new federal registration fee structure for electric and hybrid vehicles. Progressives oppose it because they believe it discourages E.V. adoption. Many conservatives oppose it because it expands federal fee collection and further entangles state governments in administering federal policy.

The growing coalition of critics extends well beyond those issues. Transit advocates argue the bill underfunds transit and passenger rail. Environmental groups oppose permitting and climate-related provisions. Labor unions object to autonomous-vehicle language. Federalism-minded Republicans question federal preemption provisions.

When a bill generates opposition from nearly every direction, it is worth asking whether legislators are solving problems or trying to accommodate too many competing interests.

That's the deeper lesson here. Congress increasingly treats transportation policy as an exercise in stakeholder management. Instead of establishing clear goals and allowing innovation and competition to deliver results, legislators pile on mandates, carve-outs, protections, and special-interest provisions designed to satisfy whichever constituency has secured a seat at the table.

The result is predictable: Every organized interest receives something of value. Taxpayers inherit the costs.

The Senate will have an opportunity to reject this approach. Senators should evaluate every one of the House's mandates and favors using a simple test: Does it produce a measurable public benefit that likely exceeds its cost? If the answer is no, it should be removed.

Transportation policy should be guided by safety outcomes, economic efficiency, and fiscal discipline—not by whichever stakeholders have the strongest lobbying operations. Unfortunately, Washington still struggles to distinguish between the public interest and the interests of those who are in the room."