“Economic termites are everywhere” – Big

“Economic termites describes where these same forces get into the mostly unseen business foundations of our society and profiteer.

These termites are in the infrastructure or guts of business, like recruiting services, construction equipment or software, the industrial gasses that go into chemicals and electronics, and so forth. It’s the stuff you don’t see that makes our world turn, there’s fortunes to be made, and bottlenecks to foster.

They also explain a dynamic we all face, a profound wariness in our society, a sense that stuff just costs more and is more difficult, for no discernible reason. Added up, these end up sapping our faith in the American system, because they make what seem like simple problems become not just unsolvable, but not even capable of being diagnosed”

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/economic-termites-are-everywhere

“Congestion Pricing, A Good Idea, Died Because Our Government Doesn’t Deserve the Money” – Very Serious

“But then, who’s counting? New York mega-projects always take way too long and cost way too much. At least, now that it’s open, commuters from Long Island must be really happy with their shorter commutes? Right?

Unfortunately not.

Here’s the thing: the MTA, the parent agency of the LIRR, built this very expensive new terminal. But they didn’t buy new trains, which were needed to adequately service the terminal.”

https://www.joshbarro.com/p/congestion-pricing-a-good-idea-died

“I Think Ibram Kendi is Just… an Academic” – Freddie deBoer

“The thing is… this is kind of how the ideas industry functions in general, these days. Many, many arguments that find their way into the public consciousness have this general two-faced nature, a more incendiary side to generate publicity and a more equivocal side to evade criticism. I don’t exonerate Kendi for the deficiencies of his thinking, at all, but I do think that advancing a more provocative version of academic ideas as a way to garner attention and then retreating to a more limited and qualified version of those ideas when challenged is just how it works. (I will leave it to you to determine if things have always been this way or if this is a new development.) And yeah, I mean… alas. This stuff isn’t good. But it’s how things work”

https://freddiedeboer.substack.com/p/i-think-ibram-kendi-is-just-an-academic

“A new A.I. influencer is producing some of the most criminal charts I’ve ever seen” – Max Read

“It seems too cheap and on-the-nose to point out that in their unwavering confidence and abstract relationship to the truth, large language models like GPT-4o project a kind of intelligence that most closely resembles the intelligence projected by the founders and investors and ambitious little freaks behind this generation of generative A.I. applications. But, you know, if Leopold Aschenbrenner impresses you I can see why “the talking computer that confidently bullshits in order to tell you what you want to hear” would also impress you”

https://maxread.substack.com/p/who-is-leopold-aschenbrenner

“Voice, taste, trust and scarcity” – Kyle Chayka (One Thing)

“In the social-media era, websites and article formats became more generic in order to fit in the templates of feeds and search results. I think in the near future we’ll see more differentiated websites and presentations, not in a scroll-y HTML5 way but the sense of new interactions and bespoke interfaces. My experience of the NYT should be very different than the Washington Post, and not just in the sense of two different iPhone apps. Scarcity is value that someone — consumers and / or advertisers — will pay for”

https://onethingnewsletter.substack.com/p/voice-taste-trust-scarcity

“Welcome to the twilight of Big Tax” – Boondoggle

“So a little public money on the front end could save a lot of money and eliminate a lot of corporate extraction on the back end. Tax prep is one of those areas in which the long, neoliberal push away from public goods really hurt society, on both fairness and cost; what should be a niche industry catering to people with truly complicated tax situations instead became a functional extension of the government, with a complicated and easily abused qualifying process leading to heaps of waste”

https://boondoggle.substack.com/p/welcome-to-the-twilight-of-big-tax

“Where the f— is this supposed to be” – Robin Sloan

“As a reader, I can get over this. I have done so many times — easily, eagerly. Prydain, Krynn, whatever The Wheel of Time’s world is called … I’m game. I’ll admit, I appreciate it when writers knit their creations into the skein of reality — I’m thinking of Philip Pullman, his matrix of worlds — but if a nonsensical premise opens the door to something fun and interesting, well, great.

It turns out my charity does not extend to myself. As a writer, I cannot, in fact, get over it. This was a surprising discovery, and a vexing one, because I have long coveted the pleasures and possibilities of the fantasy mode.

Many times I sat and schemed, sketched and dreamed, and every time I hit the same wall. The same question. Where the f —  is this supposed to be?”

https://www.robinsloan.com/moonbound/where-the-f/

“The Rot-com Bubble” – Ed Zitron

“The tech industry can no longer rely on the idea that every year (or couple of years) somebody will find an idea that will create 200 more startups or trillions of dollars in market capitalization. It must reconfigure both venture capital investment and public tech companies to a more sustainable, profitable and useful model where — get this — existing products are made better and more profitable with the understanding that we’re approaching Max Internet, and that products cannot be built with the assumption that more and more users will always exist”

https://www.wheresyoured.at/rotcombubble/

“The Complex Problem of Lying for Jobs” – Ludicity

“You meditate, reflect, do self-work, speak to professionals and the like because you don’t want to be a monkey that treats the people closest to you based on whatever the monkey-brain decides its immediate ego needs are, and then you realize that most people are fully in the grips of monkey-brain. You just throw a banana in the cage and slam the door shut behind them”

https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/the-complex-problem-of-lying-for-jobs/

“The ‘24 Election and Institutional Change” – Matt Glassman

“But make no mistake, the current filibuster practices in the Senate—in which the minority filibusters literally everything—are not a stable equilibrium. And honestly, they’ve only been around since 2010. I expect them to fall sooner or later. Now, the Senate can stay irrational perhaps longer than you can stay sane. But the rise of the hot-blooded social issues may just be the key ingredient to push a unified government to take the plunge”

https://mattglassman.substack.com/p/the-24-election-and-institutional