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REX·DAILY
Monday June 1 Anno 2026 · Ibaraki, Osaka
I Daily Wisdom
Robert Greene The Daily Laws June 1 · Wear the Appropriate Mask

You cannot succeed at deception unless you take a somewhat distanced approach to yourself—unless you can be many different people, wearing the mask that the day and the moment require. With such a flexible approach to all appearances, including your own, you lose a lot of the inward heaviness that holds people down. Make your face as malleable as the actor’s, work to conceal your intentions from others, practice luring people into traps.

Daily Law: Playing with appearances and mastering arts of deception are among the aesthetic pleasures of life. They are also key components in the acquisition of power.

The 48 Laws of Power

, Preface

Steven Pressfield The Daily Pressfield Day 152

BRAVE AS A LION “He is sitting across from me, this young guy, redheaded, brave as a lion, the kind of flier every squadron commander dreams about. “‘Goddammit!,’ I tell him. ‘Do you think I can let you fly [as recklessly as] that? You almost killed yourself and [your win gman]!’ “From [this young man] I am learning an important lesson. I had believed a squadron commander could know his men as fliers only. Now Schmul tells me of his father, whom he never saw, never knew, murdered by Arabs ten days before he was born. He grew up wit h this. “You have to know what drives your p eople.” Major Ran Ronen from The Lion’s Gate , p. 170 [pap erback] Ran Ronen was one of the greatest flying commanders in the history of the Israel Air Force. He forgave young lieutenant Schmul’s wildness in combat because he valued aggressiveness so highly. “I would rather have to rein in the fiery warhorse,” Moshe Dayan once said, “than prod the reluctant mule.”

Leo Tolstoy A Calendar of Wisdom June 1

Better to do nothing than to do harm.

We often refuse to participate in the innocent joys of life because we are too busy with something we feel we have to do.

We should accept these moments, because the sweet and joyful game is sometimes more important and necessary than most other things.

Very often the business which busy people claim to be doing is not important at all, and sometimes it would be better left undone.

Cruel people are busy all the time, as if to find justification for the cruelty of their dealings.

It is a common misconception to think that pleasures and joys are unimportant and sometimes evil; as for example, Islam, or ancient old Orthodox Christianity, or Puritanism would have it.

Pleasure is as important as work, and is the reward of work.

Work cannot last endlessly, and the necessary rest should usually conclude with some period of pleasure.

Pleasures are only bad in these three cases: when we have to make other people work for us because it is impossible for us to satisfy our desire for pleasures, when we plan competitive games to determine who will have the best or the most pleasures, and when pleasures are allowed only for selected people.

But if these evils are avoided, then pleasure, especially for young people, is not an evil, but a good.

Work and pleasure should be alternated, one after the other; they fill our lives with joy, though not every work and every pleasure can do this.

III Signals & Dispatches

AI / ML

  • @eng_khairallah1source ↗ Eric Schmidt's latest framing is blunt: the near term AI money is in agentic companies, and the practical moat is workflow architecture, not just model access.
  • @0xwhrrarisource ↗ Claude Opus 4.8 is being pitched less as a chatbot and more as a requirements gathering agent that interviews first, writes the spec, and checks the result.

Drug Discovery

  • @cremieuxrecueilsource ↗ A sharp counterpoint gaining traction is that AI may matter more for optimizing delivery and side effects in existing drugs than for true novel discovery.
  • @ShihchengGuosource ↗ Perceptic, founded by former Palantir executives, just raised a $12 million seed to automate more of the drug discovery stack for large pharma.

Biotech

  • @TheSynapseXsource ↗ The Mie University chromosome 21 result is real science, but only in corrected lab grown cells, so it is a CRISPR milestone and not a Down syndrome cure.
  • @ScienceCrispsource ↗ A new Science Translational Medicine study reports CRISPR cleavage of the Shiga toxin gene protected animals from E. coli infection, which feels more durable than biotech hype.

Tech

  • @gdbsource ↗ GPT Realtime 2 demos are making voice first computer control look less like a gimmick and more like a credible interface shift.
  • @thsottiauxsource ↗ OpenAI just reset Codex limits for paid ChatGPT users, which signals a harder push to make the tool a daily part of developer workflow.

Japanese Politics

  • @A_Funakoshisource ↗ A fresh Mainichi linked warning is that the LDP is drifting back toward faction politics as if the slush fund scandal never happened.
  • @OgataMasumisource ↗ Another strand of Japanese political chatter ties post election anti foreigner sentiment to how people now talk about Kyoto, immigration, and overtourism.
V What Rex Can Do Today
  1. Pull three fresh papers on agent systems or molecular design and turn them into a one page memo for peptide and regeneration relevance.
  2. Draft one tight outreach note for a biotech AI contact or recruiter that frames Boss as a translational operator, not just a job seeker.
  3. Clean the active CV set, remove weaker variants, and sync the strongest package to Dropbox.
VI Toward the Long Game
  1. Read one serious paper on CRISPR functional mapping or perturb seq and write five hard takeaways for drug design.
  2. Build one small notebook that compares two open molecular or protein models on a single concrete design task.
  3. Send one thoughtful note to a biotech AI person in Japan, Singapore, or pharma with a specific question they can actually answer.