
IridentDefender
3.3K posts


@TheStalwart It's showcasing the fact that American is a doomed country at this point and becoming permanently uninvestable. China is the only country with a meaningful future now
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@Merridew__ It's over for American workers I think is a fair assessment in both cases
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@EpsilonTheory The US is doomed, the market is starting acknowledge that the American experiment is over and the future belongs to China. There's a reason the Chinese stock market is holding up better
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LOL. Oil is higher after this, not lower.
Imagine taking the team owner saying he has no “immediate plans” to fire the coach as a vote of confidence.
zerohedge@zerohedge
*US SIGNALS TO ALLIES NO IMMEDIATE PLANS FOR IRAN INVASION oil lower
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@mattyglesias I think there's a decent chance a notable amount of people will end up with a degree that is functionally useless if/when AI replaces the career path they were originally aiming for. "Learn to code" seems to be losing its merit
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There’s more to life than getting a bachelor’s degree but honestly this seems like pretty good life advice especially if you’re smart enough to get good scores on AP tests.

Noam Scheiber@noamscheiber
A generation of people in their 20s and 30s was told that if they do all this homework and take these AP classes and run up this debt and get their degree, their place in the upper-middle class would be secure. And suffice it to say it hasn’t worked out that way for a lot of them
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@howardlindzon The US is a doomed country and everyone needs to reconcile with this fact. It's weird that people like you won't admit there is no positive future for anyone in this country at this point and everyone should be leaving while they still can
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@buccocapital This is why the US is a doomed country and is becoming permanently uninvestable. Everyone should get out while they still can
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@EpsilonTheory It's because the US is a doomed country populated by the dumbest and most evil people on the planet. It is now permanently uninvestable and everyone should be getting out while they still can
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Why are we winning the battles but losing the war?
Because US foreign policy is driven by Trump solipsism, a pathological self-centeredness that treats other people and nations as pawns and idiots.
"But I Did Have Breakfast"
No paywall on this one.
panoptica.com/but-i-did-have…

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@RampCapitalLLC The US is doomed and permanently uninvestable so yes
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@NickWoolos They don’t realize the US is a doomed and permanently univestable country yet
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@DannyDayan5 The US is doomed and is a permanently uninvestable country
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@jdcmedlock Isn’t one of the easiest way for poorer states to compete for business is by lowering taxes? Setting a kind of federal floor would essentially be hurting those states to benefit the richer ones, no?
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@RampCapitalLLC Can you zoom out a little further? I think I can still see the dip
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@buccocapital I’m still surprised how you see this kind of outcome but are against the narrative it would move the needle on unemployment at all
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People asked why I was so blown away by Claude Cowork, so I thought I’d puke some quick thoughts out
The true promise of Claude Cowork, and ultimately any sort of agentic, AI powered workflow tool is to realize the perfect embodiment of the organization as described by Peter Drucker, who famously said:
“Because the purpose of business is to create a customer, the business enterprise has two--and only two--basic functions: marketing and innovation. Marketing and innovation produce results; all the rest are costs”
Build the product and generate demand. That’s what drives value. Everything else is a cost
If you’ve never worked in a large organization, it’s hard to truly explain how many “costs” there truly are, and how many of those costs are just a coordination tax.
Take the launch of a new software product: The business needs to document how the product works, where it breaks and has errors. The support reps need to know how the support it. The onboarding and implementation team need to learn how to set it up. The Account Management team needs to learn how to upsell it and drive value through adoption. The sales team needs to learn how to sell it. The marketing team needs to position it in the marketplace and run campaigns about it. The partner network needs to learn it
The amount of coordination, repackaging, enablement, internal distribution etc is. Absolutely. Staggeringly. Enormous. Hundreds of people involved. Thousands at larger businesses.
Every one of these businesses have created convoluted templates and processes to document, enable, support, service, and sell
Now imagine taking all the market research, customer feedback, data, decisions, positioning, and yes, code, and cascading that automatically through the organization, repackaged using the templates that have already painstakingly been created and refined and honed through hundreds of launches, to the relevant team with the correct context and packaging, directly into the hands of actual internal or external end user
That’s the world that just got way, way, way closer to reality. In fact, the main reason it won’t happen any time soon are the people, many of whom will fight tooth and nail against this automation because they will fight like crazy to protect the status quo
This is why you are already seeing AI-native startups move so quickly. Because product launches are cascaded through the organization and out to the customer with way less friction than incumbents can ever dream of
Incumbents are going to have to whip their companies into the AI era. Their employees will not go willingly. But the future is here, and the startups are moving way, way faster
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@hopes_revenge @cremieuxrecueil It would likely require an involuntary medical model though right? I know from an acquaintance’s experience that most systems let people leave a program whenever they want which can make it hard for people with very deep addictions to get clean
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@cremieuxrecueil we don’t have to “give it to the libs” but this does feel like a point for people who advocate a more medical rather than carceral model . obviously what we are doing now isn’t working at all .
very sad situation
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Stats on the homeless population are awful.
1-in-2 has a disability and/or a traumatic brain injury. 1-in-5 has psychosis. 1-in-10 is schizophrenic. 1-in-4 is mentally retarded.
These sorts of facts explain a lot!

Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil
The return of asylums can't come soon enough. Violent, insane, and at-risk homeless people should not be loitering, littering, and overdosing on the streets of America's cities.
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@mattyglesias What efficiency measures have you implemented to maintain margins in such inflationary times?
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Slow Boring subscriptions are still available for the same low price as we launched with in 2020 — beat inflation by signing up today.
slowboring.com/subscribe

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@Mike10947310 What's the bull case? Collapsing US world order, US dollar losing power, military getting stuck in another quagmire, our allies hate us, China is rapidly surpassing us - where are the positives?
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Houthis haven’t even done anything yet. It’s cash and PnL preservation time baby.
Mike@Mike10947310
Silence
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@aarmlovi I've seen anti-zoning reform champions like Mike Fellman continue to be baffled why Austin permit levels are still elevated even with drastically falling real rents. Seems to prefer his ideological priors over what the data is showing
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I don't get this anti-Austin discourse?
Even with *crashing* rents, now below the nominal 2019 rents and far below real 2019 rents...
Permits in 2025 still came in at the long-term average for Austin...and above pre-2019 permit levels

advait@advaitarun_
many people are saying!!!
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@JerusalemDemsas The one thing to note is that homes in the best school districts are generally *not* what's targeted by institutional buyers. Those homes are too expensive relative to the rents they can get. They target middle class and lower class neighborhood for better cap rates
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I just want progressives who believe this to take this to its logical extension:
1. People who cannot afford to buy are barred from living in single family homes
2. Neighborhoods with good schools are disproportionately made up of single family homes
...where does this end?
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias
Moreno accurately characterizes this as an anti-renter measure, still not clear to me why the anti-liberal horseshoe thinks that’s a good idea.
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