Category Archives: Food

Why Ritter Sport Won’t Quit Supplying Russians at War

Ritter Sport announced it had two reasons for staying in Russia. Jobs and children.

Jobs first.

The CEO in 2024 said leaving Russia would cancel two hundred posts at their Waldenbuch location, and a family firm stands by its workers. Then in April 2026 the company ousted him and cut nearly two hundred posts anyway, its first layoffs in over a hundred and ten years. Their reason wasn’t Russia. They blamed the price of cocoa. The Russian sales continue, their second-largest market held flat by the company’s own account. The jobs it was meant to protect are gone, while it remains.

Then children. Ritter Sport said this:

Russian children also like chocolate.

An appeal to our emotion. Meanwhile their Russian website appeals to the opposite customer. A limited collection and a new biscuit and coffee bar. Scarcity marketing of coffee. Children who merely like chocolate require no limited edition, and no coffee.

Russian soldiers do.

The remark also dates to 2024, after the March 2023 International Criminal Court arrest warrants issued for Vladimir Putin and his children’s commissioner over the unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia. For a year the standing legal question had been how some Russian children came to be Russian. Ritter Sport was practically saying Russia can abduct with chocolate.

It’s a family company, claiming to be mindful of the next generation. Theirs and Russia, in the main.

That cup of coffee says a lot.

Perhaps it’s a good reminder Ritter Sport is from 1932. The Münchener Post newspaper had exposed the Nazis since the early 1920s, and in December 1931 it exposed the idea of a Final Solution (genocide) to the Jewish question. The Ritter family then introduced the “Muntermacher” (stimulant) of chocolate shaped to fit in the “Sport” pocket.

Essence from the Duck

Prussia wasn’t a state with an army, it was an army with a state. And when Frederick demanded French replace German cuisine, the essence replaced the duck.

I’m starving, where’s the duck?

It is in the essence, now get back in line.

Are you sure this is duck? Looks like tap water.

Eat or don’t eat the noumenal duck remains forever beyond the spoon. You can’t afford the certainty.

The Pizza Hut AI Disaster

Pizza Hut in 2024 deployed something called Dragontail. It was billed as AI, meant to give DoorDash drivers real-time visibility into kitchen workflow, oven timing, tip amounts, and cash status on every order.

Unfortunately, it lacked sufficient intelligence to be made artificial.

Here’s the simple math. Drivers work for DoorDash. They are paid per delivery (although some still expect the slavery-era concept of tipping). Pizza Hut wants pizza to go immediately out the door hot, while Drivers want maximum deliveries per trip. Before the rollout, drivers had no way to game the ordering system. After the rollout, they had full visibility into variables that they could selfishly optimize.

So they heavily optimized towards themselves at direct cost to Pizza Hut.

A new lawsuit documents that drivers started waiting up to fifteen minutes inside stores, to batch multiple orders that came out of the oven. Seems logical. They studied who would pay high slavery-era tips and oriented wait-times around these slavery-era inequality markers. The kitchen became an interface for driver market manipulations, driven by slavery-era tipping culture, rather than a production line for equitable customer delivery.

The “tipping” point was Pizza Hut delivery collapse. Chaac Pizza Northeast went from over ninety percent of deliveries under thirty minutes to alleging they suffered a hundred-million-dollar disaster across 111 stores. New York year-over-year sales swung from positive 10.19 percent to negative 9.78 percent. Pizza Hut watched all these metrics, adhering to a futuristic belief in the AI, and kept the toxic “tipping” driven system in place.

This is textbook design failure, perhaps even a 101 for future political science and economics students. Hand someone with misaligned incentives the data they can use to game you, hook it up to an inequality engine like tipping, and don’t act surprised when it collapses the market. Claims about the data pipe being AI are somewhat important. While information sharing is indeed the underlying issue, AI was the power move.

It’s like shifting from bolt-action to repeating rifle, you can’t just talk about gunpowder. The NRA runs this narrative constantly. They say the gun is incidental because the person aiming into public places is the cause. They won’t let the mechanism be the mechanism. We saw this clearly in Washington recently. An officer at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner fired at least four rounds toward his own colleagues at a checkpoint that was already dismantled, while a man sprinted through it. The administration converted their man’s failure into claims of an assassination attempt and demanded a billion dollars for ballroom security infrastructure. The biggest threat was their own officer, their own design failures. The shots came from inside the perimeter the new spending was supposed to harden.

The Pizza Hut AI infrastructure expense was supposed to improve delivery, when instead it turned into a threat to delivery.

Ravens Can Predict Wolf Kills

Scientists say they are surprised, while also saying it’s simply logical that ravens remember where to find food.

Researchers found that wolf kills often clustered in certain parts of the landscape, especially flat valley bottoms where wolves hunt more successfully. Ravens visited these areas much more often than places where kills rarely happened. This suggests the birds learn and remember long-term feeding patterns across the environment.

“We already knew that ravens can remember stable food sources, like landfills,” says Loretto. “What surprised us is that they also seem to learn in which areas wolf kills are more common. A single kill is unpredictable, but over time some parts of the landscape are more productive than others — and ravens appear to use that pattern to their advantage.”