No post acessível no link supra, reproduzi as palavras indignadas de um feroz magistrado aposentado que criticou os políticos que gastam verbas públicas em refeições de luxo, assim traduzindo aquilo que é o sentimento de muitos Portugueses. Volto agora a citá-lo a propósito de um artigo publicado na última edição da revista Sábado, no qual se divulga o facto da Presidente da Câmara de Matosinhos obrigar a contabilidade dessa Câmara a pagar almoços com "consumo massivo de marisco", que nalguns casos chegam a 2 mil euros. Num dos muitos almoços descritos em pormenor pela revista, apenas quatro pessoas gastaram mais de 400 euros em mariscos vários, abundantemente regados com três garrafas de Quinta do Crasto, o que adquire uma ironia particular numa altura em que o Governo fala da necessidade de agravar as coimas pela condução sob o efeito do álcool.
F. Pacheco-Torgal
domingo, 12 de abril de 2026
Um feroz magistrado aposentado e uns cabrões e filhos da puta esfomeados
sábado, 11 de abril de 2026
The Paradox of Humility: Europe's Proudest Values May Be Its Deepest Startup Failure
There is, however, a fact the study does not advertise: France is not Silicon Valley. It is a market where startup exits are rarer, unicorns thinner on the ground, and venture capital a fraction of what flows through the American ecosystem. Which raises an uncomfortable question: what if the investor behaviour this study measures is itself part of the problem? If French investors reward humility and American investors reward audacity — and American startups consistently and dramatically outperform European ones — then Europe may not simply be playing the game differently. It may be losing it, partly by design, rewarding precisely the founder signals least associated with breakout success.
This connects to a broader mechanism: entrepreneurial evaluation operates through competing prototypes of what a "successful founder" looks like, and those prototypes are not culturally neutral. Against the backdrop of my earlier post on immigrant and minority entrepreneurship — where evidence from The Economist and MIT studies shows that immigrants and ethnic minorities disproportionately drive startup creation — the pattern sharpens further. People shaped by adversity, displacement, and systemic exclusion appear to develop precisely the adaptive capacity that conventional evaluation systems struggle to recognise, and often penalise. The startup paradox, then, is not merely that the traits most useful under uncertainty are undervalued. It is that the evaluation systems themselves may be selecting for comfort over capability, for legibility over potential.
quarta-feira, 8 de abril de 2026
Two Love Letters to a Science Struggling to Remember What Really Matters and the Unexpected Gift of the 2026 Hormuz Crisis
The second letter responds to Haunschild and Bornmann’s article in the Journal of Informetrics, which proposes a bibliometric method to identify “bright young scientists” based largely on publication counts in high-impact journals. This approach is not only flawed but likely to exacerbate existing distortions in science. Journal impact factors are aggregate metrics that cannot capture the quality, originality, or intellectual risk of individual work; using them as proxies for talent is a textbook ecological fallacy. More importantly, institutionalizing such criteria would intensify perverse incentives already at play. This proposal would accelerate hyperauthorship, strategic publishing, and superficial output. Far from identifying genuine talent, the proposed method risks systematically amplifying the very behaviors that undermine it. https://zenodo.org/records/19001905
PS - The 2026 Strait of Hormuz energy crisis did what years of sustainability advocacy could not: it made Europe's dependence on fossil-based construction materials impossible to ignore. The paradox is almost elegant: it took a fossil fuel crisis to make the case for leaving fossil fuels behind, and in its wake, bio-based construction materials finally emerged from niche experiments to serious contenders, offering a tangible path toward a more resilient and low-carbon built environment. https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202604.0356