“They hate London because it’s beautiful” – Ian Dunt

“The research itself is preposterous, of course. His definition of ‘white British’ is so narrow that it excludes anyone with an immigrant parent. This will be news to the king, who is now apparently an ethnic minority. As Georgina Sturge, a former statistician at the House of Commons Library and the author of Bad Data, pointed out, the report assumes that we will have one hundred years of migration flows which happen to be identical to the ones we’ve had since 2021”

https://iandunt.substack.com/p/they-hate-london-because-it-is-beautiful

“The magic button” – Dan Davies

“Denying that you said something, when you did, is a sin as old as management itself; it is a core function of being a boss. Lots of leadership styles rely on projecting a level of certainty and commitment which really isn’t consistent with the tendency of the world to change.

I don’t think anyone necessarily paid attention to the possible consequence of making this kind of normal management behaviour so much more difficult, when we moved to a world of largely text-based communication”

https://backofmind.substack.com/p/the-magic-button

“The Best and the Brightest Under Pressure” – Matt Stoller

“Over the course of the next four years, I was shaken, many times, by a realization that most people already knew, and that David Halberstam wrote in The Best and the Brightest in 1971 on the war in Vietnam. And that realization is that the story that elites tell one another, and believe, well, it’s just not true. We don’t believe in merit. It’s easy enough to understand, but it’s very hard to really accept. If your identity is constructed around the idea that you are where you are because you deserve it, it’s rough to learn this truth”

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/monopoly-round-up-the-best-and-the

“What is Centrism” – Hamilton Nolan

“What mattered was not “Is this candidate a fucking sellout?” but rather, “How statistically red of a district is it possible for anyone with a ‘D’ next to their name to win?”

Interspersed with all of this data were exhortations to Be Normal. Democrats need to “run people who know how to talk to ordinary people… soccer moms,” Jain said. If you ask anyone in the political world to define “ordinary people” and they answer “soccer moms,” it is a dead giveaway that they never interact with any ordinary people and think purely in branded demographic abstractions. The entire United States land mass would have to be covered with soccer fields and minivan parking to account for the number of soccer moms that exist in the minds of political consultants”

https://www.hamiltonnolan.com/p/what-is-centrism

“we wanted human capital, we got human beings” – Dan Davies

“The issue here is not really one that can be solved by planning law, because it’s fundamentally a problem of political economy. Whatever powers you give to accelerate and streamline the objection process, if there is any local democracy at all, it is just simply very difficult to do something which is opposed by a large group of energetic and well-connected middle class people. The only currently available strategy for dealing with this political problem – calling them selfish middle class bastards on podcasts – doesn’t really work”

https://backofmind.substack.com/p/we-wanted-human-capital-we-got-human

“S.E.Z. Noir” – Max Read

“Pursed by government agencies, criminal syndicates, or corporate interests–though in these movies the boundaries between those three groups is never clear–our characters most often end up dropping off (or being forced from) the grid entirely, not necessarily as free people but as stateless, paperless ghosts, drifting ambivalently through globalization’s wreckage”

https://maxread.substack.com/p/sez-noir

“Messing With Texas: How Big Homebuilders and Private Equity Made American Cities Unaffordable” – Matt Stoller (Big)

“We understood that owning something meant caring for it and stewarding it, so we expected ownership to be an extension of people’s vocations. Hospitals were to be run by doctors, industrial firms by engineers; homes were to be owned by homeowners, and building was to be organized by builders; and the financing for all of them was to be provided by local bankers and credit unions and saving associations — themselves outgrowths of local business and local thrift and local wealth. There were problems and exceptions, of course, but this was the basic philosophy underlying our political order and our policy apparatus”

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/messing-with-texas-how-big-homebuilders

“Why Can’t You Just Deal with It?” – Joshua Rothman (New Yorker)

“A version of this dynamic may explain why we can’t deal with our biggest problems. Hamlet, famously, vows revenge on his uncle, Claudius, for the murder of his father—but then he dithers, delays, and generally goes crazy, only killing Claudius at the very end of Shakespeare’s longest play. Literary scholars have written essay after essay remarking on Hamlet’s delay, and he has been widely understood as a flawed person, too melancholy and intellectual to do what he’s decided to do. Yet, arguably, this is a bizarre view. Yes, in a narrow sense, Hamlet has concluded that he needs to kill his uncle—but in a broader, “all things considered” sense he’s reluctant to become a killer himself. This is an entirely sane way of behaving; it’s how we ourselves would hope to behave. It’s only within the confines of a revenge thriller that Hamlet’s actions seem odd”

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/open-questions/why-cant-you-just-deal-with-it