anon

2052
Joined August 2021
Pinned Tweet
Yes.
We are told that technology is on the brink of ruining everything. But we are being lied to, and the truth is so much better. Today we present Marc Andreessen’s (@pmarca) vision for the future, one rooted in a profound techno-optimism. a16z.com/the-techno-optimist…
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How to fix the affordability crisis in 3 steps: 1. Forgive all student debt in return for abolishing the student loan program 2. Guarantee payment for 'life and limb-saving' care in return for repealing the ACA and privatizing the insurance market 3. Provide federal rent support conditioned on removal of rent controlled/stabilized housing programs and ratchetting minimum per capita new unit construction, plus a maximum bureaucracy standard
Peter Thiel today: “Boomers are strangely uncurious about how the world is not really working for their kids. It’s always hard to know how much bad faith there is or how bad the actors are. I think it’s odd that people thought it was odd that I was complaining about student debt in 2010, when even then the growth in student debt was an exponential process. The national student debt was $300 billion in 2000, and it’s now more than $2 trillion. At some point, that breaks… If all you can say is that Mamdani is a jihadist, communist, ridiculous young person, what that sounds like to me is that you still don’t have any idea what to do about housing or student debt. If that’s the best you can do, you are going to keep losing.”
Everything you need to know about immigration policy can be learned by playing Dominion
If you see there being a balance, you're probably doing the wrong thing
"'Work-life balance' will keep you mediocre," per WSJ opinion. Do you agree?
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You hear “screens” and think “cocomelon” or “TikTok”, I hear “screens” and think “sand and math wrought by man into relics that produce miracles, miracles to which adults are inured but upon which child might still gaze with awe and wonder”
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Better not! Hate speech is protected by the First Amendment!
Attorney General Pam Bondi: "There's free speech and then there's hate speech, and there is no place, especially now, especially after what happened to Charlie, in our society...We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech."
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Replying to @antoniogm
Truth as the ultimate disinfectant is terrifying if your ideas are the infection
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There’s a disturbance in the algo Did you change something @X; feels way sloppier and focusing same few accounts and posts on repeat
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Idea - could we set up superchargers/wireless chargers in our driveways purely for @robotaxi to use, then get a small fee each time used Would expand the network while also providing an incentive for demand-side solar beyond local net metering caps
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My politics is whatever the opposite of this is
If you need a little boost during the day, check out Tesla stock 📉
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You know it’s starting to feel like a bull market when you switch your @zapper_fi dashboards back to USD vs. ETH
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"You said tech has limits. Wrong." -Seto Kaiba, CEO of KaibaCorp
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Replying to @DavidSacks
Inside you there are two wolves
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RTFKT’s Problems: 1. A complex and increasingly fragmented ecosystem of disparate assets 2. No meaningful speculative reasons to hold these assets long-term 3. A jaded, demanding web3 consumer base + a skeptical, unengaged web2 consumer base 4. Compliance handcuffs as part of a US public company
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Replying to @zachweinberg
I’m here for the far left’s self-realization arc
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Replying to @zebulgar
@lindayaX in the corner like
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Today we are excited to announce our partnership with @illuviumio 🔥 We are excited to playtest their new competitive PvP autobattler, expand our brand into their game universe, and guide their esports strategy into 2024.
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Uncut full video: the call to arms we've been waiting for from @KTmBoyle at the Defense Ventures Summit
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Replying to @ctjlewis
Et tu Ilyae
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“You cannot sharpen your razor on velvet”
40 things Rockefeller wrote to his son: 1. I never thought I would lose. 2. I do not meet competition. I destroy competitors. 3. Our destiny is determined by our actions and not by our origins. 4. Visionary businessmen are always good at finding opportunities in every disaster. That is how I did it. 5. You cannot sharpen your razor on velvet. 6. Get rid of the habit of being distracted. 7. Look at those who fail and you will find that most people fail not because they make mistakes, but because they are not fully committed. The same goes for companies. 8. Retreat means surrender. Retreat will turn you into a slave. The war is inevitable. Let it come. 9. Match people by their enthusiasm. 10. Luck is the remnant of design. 11. Anything can happen in this world. 12. The important thing is that you firmly believe that you are your greatest capital. 13. Bring a steel like determination to all challenges. 14. Action solves everything. 15. When I was a poor boy I was confident that I would become the richest person in the world. Strong self confidence inspired me. 16. Everyone is a designer and architect of his own destiny. 17. We’d better push it. 18. Smart people make things happen. 19. If I say that I have the power of life and death over oil refiners that is not a lie. I can make them wealthy or I can make them worthless. 20. Do it now. Opportunity comes from opportunity. 21. I never believed that failure is the mother of success. I believe that faith is the father of success. 22. Victory is a habit. 23. The glory and success of the family cannot guarantee the future of children and grandchildren. 24. People of poor backgrounds will actively develop their abilities because they urgently need to rescue themselves. 25. No one in the world leads a smooth life. 26. People who climb up in any industry are fully committed to what they are doing. They sincerely love the work that they do. 27. If you sincerely love the work that you do you will naturally succeed. 28. Life is an opportunity at a time. 29. Too many people overestimate what they lack and underestimate what they have. 30. Believing that there will be great results is the driving force behind all great careers. 31. My nature never wears off. What I like is the feeling of victory. 32. Enthusiasm is a force multiplier to everything. 33. Faith in yourself is the force that drives you forward. 34. I think carefully prepared plans and actions are called luck. I never succumb to luck, I believe in cause and effect. 35. In the process of pursuing career success the most important step is to prevent yourself from making excuses. 36. The outcome of things is often proportional to our enthusiasm. 37. I told myself, I warned myself. You must hold on to this [his business] tightly. It can bring you to the realm of your dreams. 38. Of course I paid a high price, but what I won was freedom and a glorious future. I became my own master. 39. The person who can create value the most is the person who devotes himself completely to his favorite activities. 40. The people who can get ahead in the world are those who know how to find their ideal environment. If they cannot find it, they will create it themselves. The new episode of Founders is about the 38 Letters Rockefeller wrote to his son. Available in your podcast app now!
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Riskophilia What if we’re thinking about risk backwards?  Over the weekend, a paper in The Journal of Pediatrics titled, Decline in Independent Activity as a Cause of Decline in Children’s Mental Well-being: Summary of the Evidence swept the internet.  The authors’ argue that “a primary cause of the rise in mental disorders is a decline over decades in opportunities for children and teens to play, roam, and engage in other activities independent of direct oversight and control by adults.”  Right on the first page, they write (emphasis mine):  Over time, however, beginning in the 1960s and accelerating in the 1980s, the implicit understanding shifted from that of children as competent, responsible, and resilient to the opposite, as advice focused increasingly on children’s needs for supervision and protection. Rutherford noted, as have other reviewers, that in some respects—such as freedom to choose what they wear or eat—children have gained autonomy over the decades. What has declined specifically is children’s freedom to engage in activities that involve some degree of risk and personal responsibility away from adults. My thesis is that it’s not just the kids.  Replace “children” with “people” and the paragraph works just as well!  Over the same time period, beginning in the 1960s and accelerating in the 1980s, the implicit understanding shifted from that of Americans as competent, responsible, and resilient to the opposite, as advice focused increasingly on Americans’ needs for supervision and protection. As a quick pulse check, I asked ChatGPT to give me a rough estimate of America’s attitude towards risk every decade since our founding:  ChatGPT This is an admittedly unscientific approach, but I found it interesting. ChatGPT has no horse in this race, and the dropoff from the 1960s to the 1970s lines up with the child-raising paper and the rise in regulation. Something changed in the 1970s (cue: wtfhappenedin1971?).  If you deconstruct the larger trendline into two – one from the 1770s - 1960s and the other from the 1960s - 2020s – that change jumps off the page.  We stopped embracing risk and started trying to eliminate it. We went from riskophilia to riskophobia.  The 1970s are a fascinating decade for people who think about progress. Tyler Cowen calls the period since 1971 The Great Stagnation, a half-century slowdown in productivity and innovation. In WTF Happened in 2023?!, I wrote that about that year, “You might have picked up a shift from optimism to pessimism, which trickled into policies, corporate decisions, and then, years later, into the data.” We can get more specific here. The 1970s saw the rise of safety culture with the creation of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OHSA), along with the passage of the Clean Air Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, and the Consumer Product Safety Act.  J. Storrs Hall, Where is My Flying Car? Inspired by the German environmental movement, which called it “Vorsorgeprinzip,” or foresight principle, the 1970s also birthed the precautionary principle. In simple terms, it means “better safe than sorry.” In less simple terms, the precautionary principle suggests that if an action or policy has the potential to cause harm, in the absence of scientific consensus, the burden of proof falls on those advocating for the action or policy, not those opposing it.  It’s guilty until proven innocent for new things, but worse, because it forestalls the opportunity for a trial in the first place.  The basic problem with the precautionary principle is that, in its strong form, it’s like running a cost-benefit analysis without the benefit column. A single “X” in the cost column is enough to generate a “no” decision.  More bluntly, it doesn’t work. In a 2005 paper, The Precautionary Principle as a Basis for Decision Making, Harvard legal scholar Cass Sunstein argues “that the precautionary principle does not help individuals or nations make difficult choices in a non-arbitrary way. Taken seriously, it can be paralyzing, providing no direction at all.”  Worse, attempting to eliminate legible risks just creates new ones. “It turns out,” he writes, “that the danger that regulation will create new or different risk profiles is the rule, not the exception.” The canonical example here is nuclear energy. The NRC literally uses a principle that demands that radiation be “As Low As Reasonably Achievable,” an asymptotically impossible goal. Make it safer, then safer, then safer, until you don’t make it at all. Regulation has contributed to making nuclear so expensive that we effectively don’t build it. By minimizing the 0.03 deaths per terawatt hour of electricity produced, we increase the risk of deaths from other fuel sources, the impacts of climate change, and dependence on foreign energy. And we forestall an energy abundant future and its untold benefits. We lower the ceiling, and the floor.  We trade freedom not for safety, but for the illusion of safety.  Illusion, because: you can’t eliminate risk.  Whether we’re talking about parenting or regulation, the idea that you can is comforting. It provides a sense of control. Everyone wants their kids to be safe. But risks don’t operate in a vacuum. By trying to limit known but potentially small risks, you open yourself up to bigger but less legible risks elsewhere.  It’s like squeezing a water balloon. Push on one side, the water moves to the other. Push too hard, and the balloon explodes.  Embracing risk can make you antifragile by building resilience and adaptability; running from it can make you fragile by removing opportunities to build the same.  That’s what the parenting paper argues, and I argue that the same thing is true for adults, companies, and even nations.  When World War II struck, America sprung to action, transforming itself into the factory that won the war. Today, as Noah Smith writes, “We’re not ready for the big one.” Our shell-making capacity is about 3% what it was thirty years ago, and China has a 200:1 shipbuilding advantage over the US.  I hope to god we avoid World War III, but the fact that it’s even on the table – that war is happening around the world as we speak – should serve as a wake-up call that the world is full of risk, and that by trying to avoid it, we allow it to bloom. There were a million different reasons that 1971 was a turning point from growth to stagnation: oil shocks, the shift from manufacturing to services, declining energy usage, the abandonment of the gold standard, increased regulation. But I think it runs deeper than that, to the cultural core of the country, which is why the same pattern shows up in the economy and in the way parents raise their kids.  The shift from optimism to pessimism, from growth to degrowth, from hope to doom, and from riskophilia to riskophobia was the result of a cultural movement, and we need a cultural movement in the other direction to get our swagger back.  That might seem naive. There are those who believe that our decline is a fait accompli. I’m not one of those people. It’s why I have been banging the drum on optimism and telling the stories of the people and companies that do embrace risk to try to fix the biggest problems they can tackle. A movement got us into this mess, and a movement can get us out of it.  I’ve been wanting to write a piece on America’s attitude towards risk for a while. The good news is, the tide seems to be shifting already.  A couple of weeks ago, the All-In podcast’s David Friedberg, who’s had to fight through the precautionary principle as an entrepreneur, went in on the “total lack of assumption of risk generally in the US which limits progress in meaningful ways”: Watch it.  And yesterday, a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen wrote The Techno-Optimist Manifesto, offering an aggressively optimistic perspective and going to town on the precautionary principle:  Our enemy is the Precautionary Principle, which would have prevented virtually all progress since man first harnessed fire. The Precautionary Principle was invented to prevent the large-scale deployment of civilian nuclear power, perhaps the most catastrophic mistake in Western society in my lifetime. The Precautionary Principle continues to inflict enormous unnecessary suffering on our world today. It is deeply immoral, and we must jettison it with extreme prejudice. Read the whole thing if you haven’t.  I don’t need to re-litigate the points Friedberg and Marc made. I agree with them. And if they sound a bit extreme, it’s because movements aren’t started by tepidly considering every point and counterpoint. The culture shifts through a great Overton Window tug-of-war.  If the precautionary principle that has underpinned the last half-century of riskophoboa in America has pushed safety by erasing the benefits column, then the appropriate counterbalance is to make a case for erasing the cost column.  If that case lands, we’ll pull hard enough that we end up somewhere in the middle, taking Cass Sunstein’s recommendation that we throw out the precautionary principle in favor of a radical new framework: cost-benefit analysis.  Kids should ride bikes with their friends, but they should wear a helmet. They should roam freely, but they shouldn’t go to bars. We should embrace nuclear energy, but we should build containment domes. We should protect the environment, but we shouldn’t let every bobwhite quail egg stand in the way of a better future for humans. Every decision has costs, and benefits.  The movement underfoot isn’t against each other or against the government. America has worked best when its government and people were pulling in the same direction: forward.  The movement is against the idea of risk minimization as a goal. It’s against the culture of safetyism that we’ve all allowed to seep into every corner of our lives. It’s for the more vibrant, alive, and vigorous world we can build when we embrace risk with eyes wide open.  This movement is about much more than tech. The parenting paper helped me realize that the issue runs deeper, and that the solutions must too. From our homes to our startups to our government, we need to take responsibility for our actions and outcomes.  I have good news and bad news: we are not children.  There is no parent to protect us, and even if there were, it might do more harm than good. So drop the illusion. Embrace risk. Roam free. Live vigorously.  The reason we’ve made so much progress over the past half-century despite our decelerating risk appetite is that a brave few have chosen to take risk on and win. I write about the entrepreneurs among them, but they’re everywhere. Someone probably pops to mind for you.  Imagine what the world could be if more of us joined them. We are competent, responsible, and resilient. We have the freedom to engage in activities that involve some degree of risk and personal responsibility. Embrace it. Join the movement.  My hunch is that the government will follow. They’re just been giving us the sense of protection we’ve demanded. Let’s demand something better. Vox populi, vox Dei.  I refuse to believe that America’s best days are behind it. Decline is not inevitable. But it takes more than tech. It’s up to all of us to cut through the cruft, get back to the sense of freedom and adventure that make the country great, and build from there.  Go do that risky thing you’ve been putting off. Now. Build the muscle. Spread the word: we’re going risk-on. The only way out is up, even if it’s a little risky up there.