greyenlightenment
investments: META/FBL, TSLA, TQQQ, TECL, MSFT ...
User ID: 68
or even better, companies should stop requiring degrees for everything unless the job necessitates it , like being a doctor
And I think that’s actually why the elites running the systems cannot fix things.
Fix what? Elites developed the policy that solved the 2008 mortgage crisis as the rest of the world struggled. The zero-interest rate policy and QE has since been copied by other central banks. It was not elites who were buying those mc mansions with 0-money down. Same for Covid vaccines.
Elon Musk is technically is an elite and has contributed greatly to society. Society is not going to solve difficult problems like space travel using only ordinary people. Difficult coordination problems require elites. Sometimes the public isn't always owed an explanation or it would be against the interests of national security, like the Manhattan Project.
What's interesting about Trump is that he can't turn this off either. He can't code switch between the two different ways of communicating, and it continually suprises him when he is misinterpreted.
I'm sure he's more articulate in business or private. also he's probably not as sharp as he was , so he's more forgetful and like Biden has trouble finding the right word or names. Being misinterpreted easily is not always a bad thing as a public figure when communicating to the public. It makes it harder to attacks to stick. With trump you never know if he's being serious or hyperbole, so it keeps everyone guessing. To his supporters, they decode his language. To everyone else they are either offended or confused, which was the point.
Gum seems to work for some people ,but one ought to always be skeptical due to placebo effect or other confounders
https://old.reddit.com/r/Nootropics/comments/yxwbhx/nicotine_gum_is_incredible/
I think he wants to pivot WaPo to something more like the WSJ, as there is more money and perhaps also clout in being seen as objective and not just a another political rag.
The NYTs and other mainstream media suffered from 2018-2022 by being perceived as too ideologically biased , such as During Covid or the riots. Blaming Trump for everything was not going to work if people had grown to distrust the media in general, as Bezos noted. This led, I believe, to coverage that portrayed democrats and Biden in a more negative light, such as endless headlines about inflation and shortages and other problems during the Biden administration, instead of the liberal media being water carriers for the Democrats, as During the entire Clinton-Trump era.
Yeah he lost subscribers but probably made up some of those. Only time will tell of this was truly an error on his part.
this is why the min. wage is harmful. there is a market for dumb workers; it's just not high enough to justify paying them
puts out a work that everybody—critics, the public, etc.—agrees is terrible, it's probably not terrible in any metaphysical sense, it's just that the artist's genius has advanced beyond our ability to understand it.
So there is hope for Freddie Got Fingered? Some thing are bad and irredeemable. Or relegated to cult status. Has there been a piece that was poorly received and then gained widespread popularity?
1959 was arguably the most important year in American musical history.
maybe Jazz history, but the genre is still so tiny. It's amazing how A Kind of Blue, the best-selling jazz album ever, sold only 5 million copies in over 60 years despite all its acclaim. Probably the invention of rock and roll was a bigger deal, but harder to pinpoint a year.
I think it's more like Trump is not a nazi, the argument is that he condones those around him who invoke fascism. It's like the dog whistle concept.
Labor rights (anti-monopoly)
Reduce everyday mortality: healthy lifestyle, healthy food, healthcare access, traffic safety, crime, etc.
The issue imho has been misallocation of public resources. For example, why is so much healthcare spending on people who are at the end-of-life for example who have no hope of living much longer. Or so much education spending to bring laggards up to speed, who should go into the trades or drop out of school. Or too much credentialism. Many of these proposals seem like an expansion of the government or vague that will necessitate higher taxes or more deficit spending. The minimum wage is an example of 'labor rights', yet creates a barrier to work.
This was an example of an unforced error, albeit a tiny one in the grand schemes of things. It makes me wonder why anyone would book a comedian at all. Politics is very much scripted; comedians by trade are not.
Agree. It's been this way since 2016: "OMG Trump did or said bad thing , I am going to vote for Hillary/Biden/Harris" said probably no one.
Judging by the massive surge in DJT stock this morning, or prediction markets, not at all.
unchanged:
https://polymarket.com/event/presidential-election-winner-2024?tid=1730135416810
People have fetishes for seemingly everything ,so this would not surprise me either.
It's hard to say because until recently they were borderline illegal and illiquid
Agree. What does this even mean. America has always been blamed on a lot of ill in the world . This didn't change under Trump. The fact so many people want to come to America, not just for benefits, but for jobs and to attend universities , shows it cannot be that bad. The leadership of Germany, UK, France, Japan, etc. may not have liked Trump or would preferred someone else, but they were more than willing to work with him and respected the office.
Regardless, it's a bad sign for our institutions that these are the choices we've been given.
Politicians have always been underwhelming though, and Trump IMHO at least is a departure from that.
I think Trump will be more damaging to the economy, and I think he will epically fuck up what's left of America's standing in the world. I think he will be an embarrassment who fails to accomplish any of the things his followers think he will (just like last time) and what he does accomplish he will fuck up.
People said this in 2016 too. Not saying you are wrong, but it's ascribes too much power to him or the wrong motives. Trump was constantly tweeting about the stock market and the strength of the US economy during his first term ,so it's evident the economy is important to him and he's not going to fuck it up if he can prevent it. Also, I am skeptical at how can he simultaneously fail to accomplish anything but also fuck things up or irreparably ruin America' standing. Even during Covid, America led the world in developing a vaccine, and then Trump stimulus programs engendered a rapid economic recovery as other countries stalled out with endless lockdowns and relapses.
Given how well the stock market has done in recent months in light of the >50% prospect of a Trump victory, I think market participants are optimistic, as am I. He will pass stimulus, tax cuts...typical stuff. Inflation and debt will keep going but but it won't lead to crisis, just more of the same stuff we've become accustomed to over the past 12 years. The tariffs will not do much either, similar to his first term.
The election process sucks in that America will be more divided regardless of the outcome . Instead of elections being discreate events, they are merged into continuous events where the campaigning begins at the end of the present cycle. If it's close then there may be a repeat of 2020, but it will not lead to crisis, but it will be another slog. Elections have become too high stakes, and it would be nice to see a return to the 80s, 90s, or 2000s when there was not so much at stake or such a big deal.
So how are the betting markets taking it? Well, there were a couple more flash crashes in Trump shares on Polymarket. Around midnight, his odds briefly dipped under 60%. Was it manipulation? I don't think so. To paraphrase Stanley Druckenmiller, sometimes it's better to just buy the rumor and then ask questions later. Maybe it was worth a gamble to see if the attack stuck.
Prediction market are likely more accurate than polling. In addition to public information, prediction markets take into account variables that polls cannot readily account for, like electoral college lumpiness and turnout, as well as insider info. These tend to favor Trump, like in 2016. Or Bush in 2000. Both of whom won despite losing popular vote. So polling aggregators that give Kamala a 50% chance of winning or favorability, this translates into maybe only a 40% probability due to the aforementioned factors.
It really is too close to call at this point. Will we see a "real" October surprise against Trump? It feels unlikely. There just isn't any more unspent ammunition. Will the Trump campaign produce some valuable oppo research against Harris? Again, unlikely, since the media wouldn't report on it anyway.
I think the whole 'Trump admires dictators' story by John Kelly was the surprise, and likely a dud. It also shows how Trump cannot stop appointing people who later turn on him. Likening someone to Hitler is so unoriginal or played out it has lost any of its potency to change minds. People acknowledge that it's just hyperbole.
more like 50+ points above the mean , and IQ is necessary but not sufficient
agree, Among top chess plyers in general, a super-high IQ is not that important , but to be among the absolutely best in such a crowded, competitive field, then IQ matters a lot, i would assume. CHess is not as g-loaded as math, but still g loaded to some extent given you need to memorize moves and think fast enough or ahead .
it's not like he started at 10 or earlier like Erdos or Tao. age 14 is late compared to those child prodigies. another example is Maryam Mirzakhani, who took up math in her mid teens, and then also went from 0 to 100 seemingly instantly, winning contests and such.
he is an outlier and his dad probably helped in some way. But other examples are Peter Scholze and June Huh. The former only became interested in math at 14, and then, boom, best in the world by 2010.
Magnus Carlsen was a prodigy in almost every regard, not just a chess prodigy. His spatial recognition and fluid memory abilities were very advanced at a young age, suggesting a very high full-scale-IQ, not just being specialized at chess.
From wiki:
Carlsen showed an aptitude for intellectual challenges at a young age. At two years, he could solve 500-piece jigsaw puzzles; at four, he enjoyed assembling Lego sets with instructions intended for children aged 10–14.[12]
Kasparov's IQ is widely cited as 135, which is good, but not that impressive. I would bet it's a lot lower than that of Magnus Carlsen.
Magnus Carlsen at age 13 was substantially weaker than Kasparov;
They faced different competitors. Given how optimized chess has become, Magnus Carlsen faced harder opponents and a much deeper talent pool. In 2004, when he lost to Kasparov, Magnus was just 13. It would be another decade until he would become the world chess campion and hit the peak of his abilities. A more apt comparison would be adult Magnus vs Kasparov.
Trump is allowed to avail himself every permissible legal option to contest the results, but must vacate the office, which he did without incident. So the transfer of power was upheld. It does set a precedent for repeats of this though. Suggesting that the process was unfair, fraudulent, or rigged is also protected speech provided the transfer of power is not obstructed. The Constitution makes no mention of the process having to be fair or that the votes are properly counted, only that the transfer of power is upheld. Even if the dems transparently cheated, Trump must still leave if no recourse is possible.
Like everything, it's hit or miss. Elites being necessary doesn't imply all elites are good or competent.
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