Andrew Gutmann

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Andrew Gutmann

Andrew Gutmann

@AndrewGutmann

Fmr candidate FL-22. Classical liberal. Pro-American values. Author of Brearley letter. Host of @tbos_podcast on @ricochet. Words in @wsj, @nypost, @thefp

Palm Beach County, Florida เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2013
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@ianmSC According to an update a few minutes ago from the NY Times, in today’s batch of votes, Raman won 31% and Pratt won 21%. If that’s about the ratio for the remaining votes outstanding, she could finish ahead.
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@avidseries Likely, well more than half the country has no idea who either of those people are.
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JHZ
JHZ@Josernan·
@AndrewGutmann @christopherrufo So if the companies doing good aren't really good because there was favorable policy and they created job losses, what would be your view for "good progress"? We can only have good progress under unfavorable policy conditions and only if it leads to net growth in jobs?
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Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️
Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️@christopherrufo·
Completely backwards. Most billionaires are generative: Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, and other companies employ millions of people, have minted tens of thousands of millionaires, and provide products and services that billions of people use around the world. This is good.
Matt Stoller@matthewstoller

The elite rage at @AOC for saying something obviously true - billionaires are inherently extractive - is amazing. It’s the Epstein class at work. Snowflakes all of them.

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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@rkylesmith The 9th. It’s not just the greatest piece of music ever written but the greatest piece of art ever made. Otherwise, 8.
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Kyle Smith
Kyle Smith@rkylesmith·
What is the most underrated Beethoven symphony?
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@avidseries Blank slatism is the foundational principle of leftism. It cannot be abandoned.
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@karol Not without risking Brian Mast to the north.
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Karol Markowicz
Karol Markowicz@karol·
Honestly, that DeSantis map is almost too kind. That new 23rd could easily be carved as a red district too. #viewmap::560765fd-df34-4264-ab24-ad04eb7a850d" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">davesredistricting.org/maps#viewmap::…
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Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️
Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️@christopherrufo·
Here we can observe the very rare and very prized phenomenon known as the “self-debunking headline.” There is no principled “middle position” on anti-white ideology and racialist discrimination—to concede the premise is, by definition, to be “soft” on this problem.
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David Marcus
David Marcus@BlueBoxDave·
I’m not going to space until it has dive bars. Which, given the history of American expansion, might not take that long.
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@petersavodnik Exactly correct. You cannot separate antisemitism from progressive ideology.
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Peter Savodnik
Peter Savodnik@petersavodnik·
There was little, if anything, Israel could have done to resist the leftist, identitarian turn. Once you view the Jewish state as an outpost of settler-colonial white supremacist villainy, it really doesn’t matter whether it’s good at politics or diplomacy.
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@petersavodnik Also, those radicals took over our country's education system (both K-12 and universities), especially elite schools where most of the leadership class is "educated."
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Peter Savodnik
Peter Savodnik@petersavodnik·
Importantly, the radicals have been saying the same thing about Israel since at least the early 1970s -- since it became clear that the Arab states would not be able to erase it, and the energy shifted to the newly imagined Palestinian cause (brought to life in no small part by the KGB, even as pan-Arabists and other Arab nationalists were dismissing the idea of a Palestinian people). The only thing that has really changed since then is the radicals have moved from the periphery to the center. They are no longer radicals. They are influencing the thoughts, votes and messaging of senior Democrats, who, until not long ago, were made of stronger stuff.
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Peter Savodnik
Peter Savodnik@petersavodnik·
Israel hasn't lost the Democratic Party. Democrats are being co-opted by radicals convinced that the Jewish state is inherently evil, that its existence is an insult to humanity. It does not matter who the prime minister is, or whether he wages war, or whether that war is just.
Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib@afalkhatib

Israel's losing the Democratic Party. Whether it's Hasan Piker, college protesters, pro-Palestine activists, center-left / left-leaning American Jews, or a diverse segment of American voters, right or wrong, Netanyahu's leadership & Israel's actions have become a partisan issue.

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Bo Winegard
Bo Winegard@EPoe187·
@avidseries 😅 Some conservatives accuse me of centrism; some leftists accuse me of white nationalism. I call myself a pro-Enlightenment conservative.
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Bo Winegard
Bo Winegard@EPoe187·
At least part of the point of Trump's boorish and even blasphemous behavior is precisely to humiliate and degrade followers. It's like a painful initiation ritual that creates loyalty *and* leverage. Once you've covered yourself in filth, it's hard to come clean.
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Stevie
Stevie@SteveSNunya·
@AndrewGutmann @RonDeSantis So Trump, who's added more debt than any person in human history, is WRONG on his monetary policy he intends to force the Fed to pursue?
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Andrew Gutmann
Andrew Gutmann@AndrewGutmann·
@MarkDGibb @avidseries @Noahpinion I googled. 3.3% of college enrollees (~6% of college graduates) are engineering, of which I'd guess a small % of that, are the kind of "extremely technical" fields you mentioned in your earlier post.
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Mark Gibb
Mark Gibb@MarkDGibb·
@AndrewGutmann @avidseries @Noahpinion Well, that's my question. Is it really a very small number? There are thousands of engineering students at every large state engineering school. Like my alma mater, Iowa State. And Florida, and Texas A&M, Auburn, and Texas Tech, and Georgia Tech, and Purdue, and on and on
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Mark Gibb
Mark Gibb@MarkDGibb·
Apprenticing doesn't really work for the extremely technical nature of a lot of engineering: aerodynamics, orbital dynamics, structural loads, deformations, materials properties, large scale electricity generation, nano scale circuits, etc, and modeling of all that. Many engineering jobs don't need all of that hyper technical knowledge on a daily basis, but having it as a background is necessary.
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Super Khaz
Super Khaz@SupahKaz·
@AndrewGutmann @avidseries @Noahpinion I doubt it's anything near that high. When in doubt, use the Pareto Principle. 80% of the students are fine, it's the 20% that maybe shouldn't go. 80% of the colleges are probably fine, though could use retooling departments... the bottom 20%? Expect consolidation.
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Ross Douthat
Ross Douthat@DouthatNYT·
One problem is today's eccentric billionaires are trained to prioritize the digital empyrean over place and physical institutions. Another is that many of the campuses are in New England and the Northeast and the new billionaire class is very much not. x.com/Birdyword/stat…
Mike Bird@Birdyword

Crazy to me that we have a relative glut of small, often quite pretty college campuses for sale at the same time as we have a glut of billionaire eccentrics with their own unusual ideologies and communities, and we can't somehow make these things work together

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