An interesting essay by Noah Smith.
Category Archives: Business
The Democrats
This seems to me to be related to Haidt’s discovery that conservatives can predict leftist behavior/beliefs much better than vice versa.
Mandates
“Ve haff vays uff getting you vaxed.”
Humanity’s Second Parting
Thoughts from Wretchard on the coming end of instantaneous communications.
The New Space Race
Glenn Reynolds says that we have to watch out for China.
A Space Station Gap?
I haven’t read the OIG report on commercial space stations yet, but Jeff Foust has.
I’m not as pessimistic. If Starship works as planned, it will completely change the way we’d build space facilities, and make them cheaper and faster.
The War On Tesla
First the administration pretended that the company doesn’t exist, and now it’s going to provide a bigger tax credit to manufacturers who aren’t Tesla. It’s all about the unions.
The Raptor Crisis
This isn’t good news, but it’s probably not as bad as Elon makes it out to be. He’s got to motivate the team to fix it. At least the design seems to be sound. The issue seems to be production rate.
The Rise And Fall
Adding more money will not fix the problem; it may even make it worse because things have just gone over their heads. The expansion of private activity into outer space will create a still bigger challenge for the 20th-century state. Latencies in communication imposed by the limited speed of light mean that real-time control from the center will become impossible in principle. Even the Mars copter is largely autonomous.
Taken together, these developments suggest that the collapse we may be feeling — if one is in fact occurring — is not the fall of a hegemon but the crumbling of hegemony itself. It is probably driven by the drastic increase of complexity in the 21st century, represented by an ever-lengthening flood of bits which, if not understood, is psychologically indistinguishable from entropy. The world, like a team of wild horses, may have gotten away from the UN, Xi, Vladimir, and Joe because it’s gotten too dang complicated to control. Going back to historical metaphors, humanity may be reliving, not the fall of Rome but the fall of Babel.
Vernor Vinge, Neil Stephenson, and others saw this coming.
More Fodder For The Defamation Suits
The mob has apparently disenrolled Rittenhouse from ASU.