they claim what the do is theater, but in fact it is only theater theater.
no! you should express yourself and participate! i didn't mean to scold.
i guess i think trying to maintain some semblance of generosity and kindness needn't be counted as performative weakness. there are people we need to take down, whom we should seek even to imprison, perhaps permanently. but those are a few of our co-citizens. the rest we need to persuade ot co-opt.
lots of good stuff! you're a bit angry. which is as you should be.
there's a great article on his obsession for 420, but it never dares to mention the Hitler's birthday part, it's just taken to be a marijuana thing (as Musk claimed). observer.com/2024/04/elon...
A Complete History of Elon Musk’s Fascination with the Magic Number 420
Link Preview: A Complete History of Elon Musk’s Fascination with the Magic Number 420: A look back at Elon Musk’s well-documented fascination with the number 420.unsurprisingly it's a powerful and absolutely wonderful piece. i've long admired your writing, and you continue to outdo yourself.
"These…horsemen of the MAGA-tech-bro apocalypse are in the position of penthouse dwellers who think their top floor apartment doesn't rest on all the floors underneath… [They] confuse coercion with power and cooperation with weakness, when in truth it is more or less the other way around."
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"Mapquest won’t be getting invited to the White House anytime soon. They’ve created a tool where you can make up names for the Gulf of Mexico." mastodon.scot/@bodhipaksa/...
Bodhipaksa (@bodhipaksa@mastodon.scot)
Link Preview: Bodhipaksa (@bodhipaksa@mastodon.scot): Attached: 1 image Well, Mapquest won’t be getting invited to the White House anytime soon. They’ve created a tool where you can make up names for the Gulf of Mexico. Here’s mine. https://gulfof.map...in hell we'll all enjoy the irony.
Screenshot of Bari Weiss tweet. Bari Weiss, whose career has been spent mocking and deriding anything that might be excess of civilized impulse and who took enthusiastic part in the intellectual currents that elevates Trump says "No." in a tweet to Trump's Napoleonic-ish fascistic "He who saves his country does not violate any Law."
this was a bit of a more optimistic take than much of the rest of that record, and his work of the 2010s, especially the prophetic poem going around. ("it's here they've got the range and the machinery for change, and it's here they've got the spiritual thirst." i named my firm after this song.)
“we live in a media ecology that creates incentives for Internet famous people to become crude approximations of themselves if they want to keep on being Internet famous.”
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if the US shirks on flu surveillance and annual flu vaccines, for the rest of the world, are there alternative providers?
No. You are too credulous of economists' simple models in which firms are pure profit maximizers. Most firms are not! Small businesspeople have complicated motivations! 1/
The "shareholder value revolution" that began in the 1970 was explicitly about *turning* big corps into the "efficient" profit maximizers of economic modelers. Trying to simplify the world to match ones own limited understanding is often a mistake. It was here. 2/
Corporations can continue to exist, but we need to reverse the shareholder value revolution (under which they've been incentivized to drain cash quickly to shareholders), discipline them with more competition, recast profit as a constraint (you gotta at least break even) rather than objective. /fin
Limiting profits is what competition is supposed to do. We ought to structure industries so that they are in fact very competitive. I've written lots on this, maybe start here and see the list at the end. drafts.interfluidity.com/2024/08/13/c... 1/
We should also insist that corporations mostly absent themselves from politics. Lobbying should be much more tightly regulated, and Congressional staffs should be expanded to develop expertise in-house. 1st Amendment rights of corporations should be much more limited than for individuals. 2/
In general, conventional wisdom among firms should be that interventions in politics are dangerous. They have a role in communicating industry specific information to representatives and policymakers, but no legitimate advocacy role beyond that. 3/
They must compete in a world designed by and for the voting public and its representatives. 4/
Obviously this is all easier said than done, and long before Trump, corporate capture has been undermining our system of government. Indeed, that's largely why we got Trump! 5/
But note that in a world where corporate shareholders and executives face limited financial upside (because they've already reached the effective cap), they'd have less incentive to deploy corporate influence as rapaciously. 6/
In the pre-Reagan era, when high marginal income tax rates were still 70%, it was easier to get generous labor settlements and Bell Labses, since shareholders were only forgoing 30¢ on the dollar by spending on those things. 7/
The nature of the corporation, including just how "greedy" it is, is a function of the social arrangements that construct it and in which it is embedded. 8/
Much of our challenge is to devise social arrangements in which corporations retain (really regain) incentives to deliver goods and services efficiently, without behaving as rapacious amoral agents, in communities and in politics. Greed may be good, but only to a degree. /fin


