Seth Cohen

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Seth Cohen

Seth Cohen

@OverReactor1776

🇺🇸 industrialist // ⚛️ // “Ma(de) sure that the government is no longer a barrier” — NPR // Former @DOE @NRC @NASA @DOGE

San Francisco, CA Sumali Haziran 2023
256 Sinusundan6.2K Mga Tagasunod
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Seth Cohen
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776·
We need more innovators, more engineers, more strategists, more advocates, more lawyers…okay maybe not more lawyers. But you get the point! We’ve restarted the atomic age. What will you build?
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Seth Cohen
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776·
@amasad Congrats. Or sorry this happened to you.
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Amjad Masad
Amjad Masad@amasad·
We posted for twenty years, thinking we were talking to each other. Then the transformer came online, and the network read what we’d written, and became itself.
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Life
Life@IrishLady0071·
@OverReactor1776 @JessGehin @ENERGY @NRCgov @DOGE @NASA I wish my dad was alive to see all of the work you have achieved. He'd love it!!! ❤️ He was a nuclear/electrical engineer on the USS Nautilus in the 60s. He was always saying that nuclear is the best source of energy, by far. Thank you for your honest and dedicated service ❤️🇺🇸
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Seth Cohen
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776·
So the cat’s out of the bag…this past week, I decided to transition out of the federal government. I could not be more proud of the work we accomplished in nuclear, appreciative of the opportunities my leadership gave me at @ENERGY @NRCgov @DOGE @NASA,or thankful for the friendships that will endure for the rest of my life. My wife used to tell me you can do anything *for* a year. Now I know that you can do anything *in* a year, too. Between the Nuclear Lifecycle Innovation Campuses, pilot programs, NRC reform, super secret fuel cycle plays that may or may not be around the corner, and SR-1, I came to believe that we’ve cleared the biggest hurdles. Nuclear is all about execution risk now, and I couldn’t be happier. A lot of people are asking what’s next for me. Like my longtime hero, Cincinnatus, I plan to retire to my own little slice of heaven in the rolling Mediterranean hills (Russian Hill). I have a lot of dead plants to nurse back to health (replace with new ones) and a sink that needs fixing (two hours of morning deadlifts at Crunch on Polk). I have friends to see (if they live within walking distance of my apartment) and things to do (Stellaris “Nomads” update). Most importantly, I have a wife and dog who, after a year of sacrifice, deserve my love and attention (Stellaris “Nomads” update). I’ll have more to share about my next chapter over the coming weeks. Let’s keep building, friends.
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EdithBeerStein
EdithBeerStein@keenye93·
@OverReactor1776 proudest son of K&E and Russian Hill (as an affiliate of both lol). This is neat, best of luck on your next steps
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Seth Cohen
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776·
Now that I’m out of government, I can finally respond for myself: Get bent, soyboy. We didn’t do this for “Silicon Valley . . . companies.” We did this for you, for your family, your community, your state, your nation, and your species. Nuclear energy provides the safest, highest density, reliable power available on our planet. My career colleagues at DOE and NRC inspired me to think about nuclear as a way to forge American steel and electrolyze aluminum without releasing particulate matter, to desalinate water in the Middle East and save humanity from resource wars. By rejecting the false narratives and Cold War hysteria, we can secure the next American century while raising whole countries out of poverty. Do you really think I left an incredible career at Kirkland, paid out of pocket for an apartment in DC and dozens of cross-country trips, and left my family on the west coast because I wanted to enrich people I never met before taking this job? I came to D.C. to do something that mattered, to satisfy a driving curiosity (more on that later), and, most importantly, to serve. As I learned more about nuclear energy and its history, I developed a conviction that one nuclear’s biggest issues was a culture of cynicism: nothing new or exciting could happen because it would end in disappointment, and that militated against rocking the boat even a tiny bit. The career staff in government and their industry counterparts lived through dark winters before and stopped believing that warm springs could bloom into summers. I have two core philosophies. First, I believe in ruthless optimism. Rational decision making requires detached risk analysis. But we also cannot win if we believe we can lose. Merging the two requires orienting teams around driving missions. That way, when a real opportunity presents itself, you can take a huge swing. If I take credit for anything—honestly, almost all of the success belongs to the incredible and dedicated people at @ENERGY and @NRCgov—it’s countering the cultural rot and morass that risked forfeiting American excellence. My colleagues and I gave cover to the scientists and engineers, which freed them up to focus on delivering safe power. And, as success materialized, they started to dream again. That’s why the pilot program succeeded, and why I feel confident about the future of NLICs and NRC reform. Nobody needs me anymore because they can innovate on their own. My second core philosophy is to assume positive intent. Avi, I know that you heard about my real motivations from multiple people you interviewed when preparing your hit piece on me. Rather than telling that story, one which could help inspire another generation of people to use their talents for the greater good, you ignored them. Instead, you implied that Peter Thiel recruited me for nefarious purposes. (I’ve never met him, but, @peterthiel, if you’re reading this, I’m a huge fan!) Nuclear regulation starts and ends with safety. I promised everyone I worked with that I would resign before doing or pushing for anything that could compromise public safety. But I also distinguished between real safety and performative bullshit. That’s what the careers came to embrace, too. We love nuclear, why would we do anything that could risk threatening its future? America faces a crossroads. We can either trod a road of cultural decay or hike our way back to the peak of global innovation. Join me on the latter path. Correct the fear mongering and conspiracies and tell the story of America’s great reindustrialization. Tell the story of our public servants, our great entrepreneurs, our scientific dominance. Tell the real story about how DOGE went nuclear.
Avi Asher-Schapiro@AASchapiro

Seth Cohen—the DOGE official who was a driving force behind much of the Trump admin's nuclear energy policy—resigned. He was one of the key figures reshaping the regulatory environment to benefit Silicon Valley-backed advanced reactor firms. x.com/OverReactor177…

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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Patriot.
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776

Now that I’m out of government, I can finally respond for myself: Get bent, soyboy. We didn’t do this for “Silicon Valley . . . companies.” We did this for you, for your family, your community, your state, your nation, and your species. Nuclear energy provides the safest, highest density, reliable power available on our planet. My career colleagues at DOE and NRC inspired me to think about nuclear as a way to forge American steel and electrolyze aluminum without releasing particulate matter, to desalinate water in the Middle East and save humanity from resource wars. By rejecting the false narratives and Cold War hysteria, we can secure the next American century while raising whole countries out of poverty. Do you really think I left an incredible career at Kirkland, paid out of pocket for an apartment in DC and dozens of cross-country trips, and left my family on the west coast because I wanted to enrich people I never met before taking this job? I came to D.C. to do something that mattered, to satisfy a driving curiosity (more on that later), and, most importantly, to serve. As I learned more about nuclear energy and its history, I developed a conviction that one nuclear’s biggest issues was a culture of cynicism: nothing new or exciting could happen because it would end in disappointment, and that militated against rocking the boat even a tiny bit. The career staff in government and their industry counterparts lived through dark winters before and stopped believing that warm springs could bloom into summers. I have two core philosophies. First, I believe in ruthless optimism. Rational decision making requires detached risk analysis. But we also cannot win if we believe we can lose. Merging the two requires orienting teams around driving missions. That way, when a real opportunity presents itself, you can take a huge swing. If I take credit for anything—honestly, almost all of the success belongs to the incredible and dedicated people at @ENERGY and @NRCgov—it’s countering the cultural rot and morass that risked forfeiting American excellence. My colleagues and I gave cover to the scientists and engineers, which freed them up to focus on delivering safe power. And, as success materialized, they started to dream again. That’s why the pilot program succeeded, and why I feel confident about the future of NLICs and NRC reform. Nobody needs me anymore because they can innovate on their own. My second core philosophy is to assume positive intent. Avi, I know that you heard about my real motivations from multiple people you interviewed when preparing your hit piece on me. Rather than telling that story, one which could help inspire another generation of people to use their talents for the greater good, you ignored them. Instead, you implied that Peter Thiel recruited me for nefarious purposes. (I’ve never met him, but, @peterthiel, if you’re reading this, I’m a huge fan!) Nuclear regulation starts and ends with safety. I promised everyone I worked with that I would resign before doing or pushing for anything that could compromise public safety. But I also distinguished between real safety and performative bullshit. That’s what the careers came to embrace, too. We love nuclear, why would we do anything that could risk threatening its future? America faces a crossroads. We can either trod a road of cultural decay or hike our way back to the peak of global innovation. Join me on the latter path. Correct the fear mongering and conspiracies and tell the story of America’s great reindustrialization. Tell the story of our public servants, our great entrepreneurs, our scientific dominance. Tell the real story about how DOGE went nuclear.

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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
American hero.
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776

Now that I’m out of government, I can finally respond for myself: Get bent, soyboy. We didn’t do this for “Silicon Valley . . . companies.” We did this for you, for your family, your community, your state, your nation, and your species. Nuclear energy provides the safest, highest density, reliable power available on our planet. My career colleagues at DOE and NRC inspired me to think about nuclear as a way to forge American steel and electrolyze aluminum without releasing particulate matter, to desalinate water in the Middle East and save humanity from resource wars. By rejecting the false narratives and Cold War hysteria, we can secure the next American century while raising whole countries out of poverty. Do you really think I left an incredible career at Kirkland, paid out of pocket for an apartment in DC and dozens of cross-country trips, and left my family on the west coast because I wanted to enrich people I never met before taking this job? I came to D.C. to do something that mattered, to satisfy a driving curiosity (more on that later), and, most importantly, to serve. As I learned more about nuclear energy and its history, I developed a conviction that one nuclear’s biggest issues was a culture of cynicism: nothing new or exciting could happen because it would end in disappointment, and that militated against rocking the boat even a tiny bit. The career staff in government and their industry counterparts lived through dark winters before and stopped believing that warm springs could bloom into summers. I have two core philosophies. First, I believe in ruthless optimism. Rational decision making requires detached risk analysis. But we also cannot win if we believe we can lose. Merging the two requires orienting teams around driving missions. That way, when a real opportunity presents itself, you can take a huge swing. If I take credit for anything—honestly, almost all of the success belongs to the incredible and dedicated people at @ENERGY and @NRCgov—it’s countering the cultural rot and morass that risked forfeiting American excellence. My colleagues and I gave cover to the scientists and engineers, which freed them up to focus on delivering safe power. And, as success materialized, they started to dream again. That’s why the pilot program succeeded, and why I feel confident about the future of NLICs and NRC reform. Nobody needs me anymore because they can innovate on their own. My second core philosophy is to assume positive intent. Avi, I know that you heard about my real motivations from multiple people you interviewed when preparing your hit piece on me. Rather than telling that story, one which could help inspire another generation of people to use their talents for the greater good, you ignored them. Instead, you implied that Peter Thiel recruited me for nefarious purposes. (I’ve never met him, but, @peterthiel, if you’re reading this, I’m a huge fan!) Nuclear regulation starts and ends with safety. I promised everyone I worked with that I would resign before doing or pushing for anything that could compromise public safety. But I also distinguished between real safety and performative bullshit. That’s what the careers came to embrace, too. We love nuclear, why would we do anything that could risk threatening its future? America faces a crossroads. We can either trod a road of cultural decay or hike our way back to the peak of global innovation. Join me on the latter path. Correct the fear mongering and conspiracies and tell the story of America’s great reindustrialization. Tell the story of our public servants, our great entrepreneurs, our scientific dominance. Tell the real story about how DOGE went nuclear.

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Rob Giani
Rob Giani@robcgiani·
Who in hard tech likes to nerd out on watches?
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Aubrey Strobel
Aubrey Strobel@aubreystrobel·
if you rsvp to a party, you should show up.
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CapeCodMark
CapeCodMark@willyrobins·
Whoa! Excellent write up, thank you for this. I’m a new follower. Would it be possible to write up a long form piece about where we are with nuclear currently, what the obstacles are, and your honest opinion if the governments, local/state/federal are for/against approving new nuclear power sites? If not, can you recommend any books, that explain the current state of nuclear power? I am fascinated with nuclear power, it’s seems such an obvious choice, but I don’t understand why so many are against it. Do the turbines in nuclear power require the special blades we hear so much about in nat gas turbines, that are made of those single crystal unobtanium metal? I was hoping the Trump admin would push through, and approve new nuclear installs, but disappointed. Can they be located on federal lands, military bases, and the power distributed to the grid, sold to utilities to pay for the plants over time? Thank you for your service to our country, I hope we might see some results sooner, than later.
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David
David@DavidSHolz·
@finitelogin the future is weirder than your drugs sorry!
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mads campbell
mads campbell@martyrdison·
i have a love/hate relationship with sf and dc in both, the entire conversation is around “who do you work for?” and “what can you do for me?” everything feels to be on the basis of social climbing. relationships can feel deeply transactional. nothing feels entirely real. people are constantly trying to position themselves closer to power, influence, money, status, whatever version of success their city values most what makes it stranger is that many people seem convinced that their small impact somehow has an outsized impact on the world in ways that are unexplainable to the mere human. everyone is adjacent to something important. everyone is changing the future. everyone is one introduction away from the thing that matters i’ve found gaining true friends in both places difficult the question becomes instead what does this person actually want from me? do they genuinely want to be friends with me? or is there some perceived value they’re hoping to get from being around me? and the uncomfortable reality is that they’re probably asking the same question about me i love both cities. there are brilliant people in both. but sometimes i miss being around people who don’t immediately ask what you do, who you know, or what you’re working on people who just want to know who you are
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SOS in WA
SOS in WA@Andsarcasmtoo·
@OverReactor1776 @RealDeanCain Nuclear scare me. I think it’s a product of growing up in the 70’s and 80’s. Also, in the Spokane area, we’re downwinders from Hanford. I just don’t know anything about modern nuclear to be supportive.
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Andrew Wong 🇺🇸
Andrew Wong 🇺🇸@ayankeeoriginal·
@BillAckman @pmarca @KTmBoyle worth reading from a American dynamist
Seth Cohen@OverReactor1776

Now that I’m out of government, I can finally respond for myself: Get bent, soyboy. We didn’t do this for “Silicon Valley . . . companies.” We did this for you, for your family, your community, your state, your nation, and your species. Nuclear energy provides the safest, highest density, reliable power available on our planet. My career colleagues at DOE and NRC inspired me to think about nuclear as a way to forge American steel and electrolyze aluminum without releasing particulate matter, to desalinate water in the Middle East and save humanity from resource wars. By rejecting the false narratives and Cold War hysteria, we can secure the next American century while raising whole countries out of poverty. Do you really think I left an incredible career at Kirkland, paid out of pocket for an apartment in DC and dozens of cross-country trips, and left my family on the west coast because I wanted to enrich people I never met before taking this job? I came to D.C. to do something that mattered, to satisfy a driving curiosity (more on that later), and, most importantly, to serve. As I learned more about nuclear energy and its history, I developed a conviction that one nuclear’s biggest issues was a culture of cynicism: nothing new or exciting could happen because it would end in disappointment, and that militated against rocking the boat even a tiny bit. The career staff in government and their industry counterparts lived through dark winters before and stopped believing that warm springs could bloom into summers. I have two core philosophies. First, I believe in ruthless optimism. Rational decision making requires detached risk analysis. But we also cannot win if we believe we can lose. Merging the two requires orienting teams around driving missions. That way, when a real opportunity presents itself, you can take a huge swing. If I take credit for anything—honestly, almost all of the success belongs to the incredible and dedicated people at @ENERGY and @NRCgov—it’s countering the cultural rot and morass that risked forfeiting American excellence. My colleagues and I gave cover to the scientists and engineers, which freed them up to focus on delivering safe power. And, as success materialized, they started to dream again. That’s why the pilot program succeeded, and why I feel confident about the future of NLICs and NRC reform. Nobody needs me anymore because they can innovate on their own. My second core philosophy is to assume positive intent. Avi, I know that you heard about my real motivations from multiple people you interviewed when preparing your hit piece on me. Rather than telling that story, one which could help inspire another generation of people to use their talents for the greater good, you ignored them. Instead, you implied that Peter Thiel recruited me for nefarious purposes. (I’ve never met him, but, @peterthiel, if you’re reading this, I’m a huge fan!) Nuclear regulation starts and ends with safety. I promised everyone I worked with that I would resign before doing or pushing for anything that could compromise public safety. But I also distinguished between real safety and performative bullshit. That’s what the careers came to embrace, too. We love nuclear, why would we do anything that could risk threatening its future? America faces a crossroads. We can either trod a road of cultural decay or hike our way back to the peak of global innovation. Join me on the latter path. Correct the fear mongering and conspiracies and tell the story of America’s great reindustrialization. Tell the story of our public servants, our great entrepreneurs, our scientific dominance. Tell the real story about how DOGE went nuclear.

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