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Unsinkable No More: The Real Causes of Loss of RMS Titanic

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Titanic: The 10 Fatal Mistakes That Doomed The Unsinkable Ship  Maritime Safety • Historical Analysis One hundred thirteen years of evidence, from the 1912 inquiries through the 2025 UCL supercomputer simulation, reveal that the disaster was not a single catastrophe but a cascade of compounding failures — and that the highest death toll resulted above all from a failure of imagination at every level of the enterprise.   March 2026 Based on official inquiries, peer-reviewed research, court filings, and the 2025 Magellan/UCL digital reconstruction  BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front The sinking of RMS Titanic on 15 April 1912, with the loss of more than 1,500 lives, resulted from at least ten discrete, independently survivable failures that converged into catastrophe. These failures spanned pre-departure material defects (a pre-existing coal bunker fire that likely weakened a critical watertight bulkhead and...

Reforming the Fiscal Architecture for an Automated World

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Taxing the Machine: What Must Change in the Tax Code to Fund Aging Societies When AI Does the Work Three-quarters of U.S. federal revenue comes from taxes on labor. AI doesn't pay payroll taxes. As automation transfers income from workers to capital owners, the fiscal foundations of every developed welfare state begin to crack. This is what a coherent solution actually requires — and why it is politically harder than it sounds. Analytical Report | The Epoch Times Research & Policy Desk | March 19, 2026 | Sources: Brookings, IMF, CEPR, OECD, Texas A&M, Senate Finance Committee ▶   Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF) The core structural problem is simple: About 75% of U.S. federal revenue and roughly 50% of OECD country revenue comes from taxes on labor — payroll taxes and income taxes on wages. AI and automation shift value creation from labor to capital. Capital income is taxed at lower rates, with more opportunities for deferral, avoidan...