lelandfe 18 hours ago

Sites like this are proof of why future research is going to be so damn hard. This site presents as unvarnished truth that PIZZINT was a thing in the Cold War – even giving fake quotes and a date range – but there's no evidence to support it[0]. It's just a story. I'm guessing some AI hit a few sources like Fast Company, read words like "allegedly," and decided that was just semantics.

[0] https://www.washingtonpost.com/food/2025/07/01/pentagon-pizz...

  • maxbond 17 hours ago

    Don't historians already contend with a bunch of lies and misunderstandings people wrote down in the past? Eg, it's my understanding that the Salem Witch Trials were driven by property disputes and petty grievances, but presumably that's a product of historians reading critically and between the lines, and no one wrote down "it would be really convenient if Goody So-and-So died, because I want a bigger farm?"

    • treetalker 14 hours ago

      Don't worry: I just saw a list claiming that historians are among the top 40 jobs that "AI" is ready to take over.

      • ElevenLathe 7 hours ago

        The History profession was already on the outs well before anyone had heard of ChatGPT. Continued education inflation and the US assault on the academy generally aren't going to make it better.

  • rocky_raccoon 18 hours ago

    The AI-generated images don't do anything to help the case either...

    • xorbax 18 hours ago

      There will now be a CEO (Chief Executive Orderer) who will statistically balance fastfood orders during times requiring late nights to maintain normal public-facing order activity.

      Or their boss will tell them to order "anything but a pizza . . . You all saw the website!", so it becomes an inverse indicator.

Jimmc414 20 hours ago

Interesting thought experiment: Would it be considered market manipulation to order and pay for 1000 pizzas to be delivered to the Pentagon while holding crude oil futures expiring the next day?

  • bawolff 18 hours ago

    Maybe if this was the 70s. In modern times the oil market isn't quite as twitchy, and you can't tell just from the pizza index which country is about to be blowed up

    • jojobas 17 hours ago

      Oil futures swing by 15% in a day easily. Not knowing which country only adds to the uncertainty.

      • bawolff 11 hours ago

        I mean, you dont know if the country about to be blown up is an oil exporter.

        • hashed01 7 hours ago

          Nah… you know

          • bawolff 4 hours ago

            That's kind of silly as one if the next major expected conflicts is taiwan.

    • anon191928 8 hours ago

      oil went negative few years ago, lol

LorenDB 20 hours ago

This is a great website, but it'd be better without the AI-generated images (notice one of them mentions "Irak" instead of Iraq) and the Polymarket cards at the bottom. I don't understand why we've suddenly decided to normalize betting on anything and everything under the guise of "prediction markets."

general1726 20 hours ago

So Pizza Index is up because that 8.8 earthquake in Kamchatka has been right next to strategic Russian naval base, where nuclear submarines and nuclear warheads are stationed?

Earthquake to tsunami hitting that base is around 10 minutes, so essentially Russians would have no time to get out.

I don't think that tsunami would destroy that base, but let's say if submarine or some lighter ship has been moored on a pier it could very well damage it, maybe beyond repair considering current Russian situation.

https://www.twz.com/sea/questions-swirl-around-status-of-rus...

  • xorbax 18 hours ago

    Lame that you can't obviously choose to show the last two weeks of the total.

  • ashoeafoot 10 hours ago

    The only strategic nuclear submarine base of russia. Which already lost most of their ts strategic bomber fleet.

eurleif 20 hours ago

Has anyone actually done the work of checking how well this correlates with world events? It gets attention when it has an apparent hit, which makes it appear predictive; but you could make a random noise generator appear predictive in the same manner.

  • Vilian 19 hours ago

    It's a joke

    • eurleif 18 hours ago

      It's widely reputed to have genuine predictive power.

kjellsbells 21 hours ago

Fun site, but the Defense apparatus isn't centered solely on the Pentagon, so the pizza signal is muddy at best. Now, if the pizzerias of Arlington suddenly get busy at the same time as the ones in Langley and Chantilly, well, maybe...

stygiansonic 20 hours ago

Wonder why they haven’t gotten an in house pizzeria yet to reduce the signal on this side channel leak

  • theturtle 20 hours ago

    I have actually had pizza at the Pentagon. True, it was almost 30 years ago, and it tasted like federal-cafeteria pizza, but it was edible and I'm still alive.

    • dylan604 17 hours ago

      I had that pizza every Friday throughout elementary school

  • raincole 20 hours ago

    I think the signal itself is pretty much just noise. If you're scheming against Pentagon you'd assume they're always working hard anyway.

  • rl3 20 hours ago

    Because with their budget they can afford to induce artificial demand and thus exert control over the signal, fooling adversaries in the process.

    • AlotOfReading 20 hours ago

      I doubt that's it. Artificial demand just adds noise to the signal, it doesn't eliminate it. It seems more likely that they've just decided that knowing the Pentagon is working on something without additional details isn't a very useful signal for adversaries.

      • VoidWhisperer 18 hours ago

        I was about to make this same comment - this data might've been more useful for say, the soviets, when they were the only major threat that the US was actively dealing with, so they could have some guarantee that if they spotted a ton of pizzas being ordered to the pentagon, they could be fairly sure it would be something to relevant to them.

        • dylan604 17 hours ago

          One of the examples was the night before the '91 Desert Storm started. For those that weren't around, there was a huge build up operation called Desert Shield and only became Desert Storm when they started shooting. It's not like that was a secret, and the Iraqis could have seen this data and not be surprised when the bombs start falling immediately after the pizza surge.

          If you were bin Laden, maybe you might not have been caught unawares helicopters were about to crash in your garden. It's not like you didn't know they were looking for you.

          I can't think of someone that the Pentagon or other agencies that this applies to that their adversaries would not know they were the adversary. This might be more relevant than you might think

      • yardstick 18 hours ago

        Sounds about right.

        Plus when it’s time to go Mutually Assured Destruction, ie to those capable of attacking the US mainland, I’m going to assume they would be doing all this from whatever the successor to Mt Weather is.

    • MangoToupe 20 hours ago

      You have an awful lot of faith in an institution that seems to put its ass out in the wind on a regular basis

j_timberlake 17 hours ago

Would they be ordering pizzas during a real emergency though? Sounds like a code-yellow kind of thing.

  • addandsubtract 10 hours ago

    The idea is, that they're spending overtime at the Pentagon and need fast food (pizza) delivered to keep working.

noworld 9 hours ago

just fyi, Your RSS.app Trial has Expired.

vivzkestrel 17 hours ago

stupid question: what happens if they all switch to eating tacos instead overnight because of a new policy at pentagon following this website s launch

  • BaseBaal 8 hours ago

    Stupid answer: methane levels would suddenly spike inside the pentagon early the next morning, perhaps giving the GasInt division just enough warning.

theyknowitsxmas 19 hours ago

@sentdefender 5m ago [Action required] Your RSS.app Trial has Expired. LIVE

IAmGraydon 20 hours ago

Nice…I’m greeted with uncloseable ads and popups on mobile that make the site unusable. This is not deserving of the front page.

energy123 18 hours ago

Since Hegseth's tenure started, a different consumable might have more predictive utility.

  • OccamsMirror 18 hours ago

    My favorite nickname for him is what people in the military apparently call him: Kegsbreath.

unstatusthequo 20 hours ago

“[Action required] Your RSS.app Trial has Expired.”

  • VoidWhisperer 20 hours ago

    Don't you know, that trial expiring is reason for war and why we are at pizza defcon 3!