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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @elvismercury 15h \ parent \ on: Hi, Terence Michael (@ProofOfMoney) Bitcoiner. Hollywood. Real Estate. Author. AMA
Wait, you're saying that people working in Hollywood having to hide that they were gay was a laudable state of affairs?
Advertising-based analogue of pay-to-post, with similar but unacknowledged virtues from the other side?
Thanks, will check this out. I like Hobart, he's a deep thinker. Useful to know how influential he is in Silicon Valley, whatever he says will get absorbed by the Lords of Creation and influence them in deep ways.
If you hit the "Read more" link at the bottom you get another chunk, but they're not very long, just a broad orientation to the topic. I found it most interesting for things I hadn't really thought much about.
Yeah. The question is, which of those actions is more entropic? After you shake the snow globe, where does the snow settle?
43 sats \ 0 replies \ @elvismercury OP 30 Jun \ parent \ on: Why the $25,000 car is going extinct econ
It's interesting to consider cars as a nice example given the role of tech and productivity gains in pushing prices DOWN; and yet it's the reverse. W debasement, and nothing else, I'd expect holding steady. Seems like there's scarcity / status effects at work - cars as baseball cards.
The symbolic is just as important as the technical. Slower for the effects to manifest in some cases, though.
This is the category of thing some of the proposed opcodes could really help with -- security even in the face of keys being possessed. Having complex spend conditions seems like a giant unlock. Hopefully we'll get there.
Also, periodic reminder that this is a social problem. But the more technical tools to deal w/ it the better, I guess.
Ha, at first I thought you were referring to this book which I wholeheartedly endorse, if you're a writer; and which packs a similar philosophical punch, although less directly.
All of this stuff, in the end, grounds out in what you think matters. There is no escaping the question, and if you don't explicitly answer it, you discover you've been performing an implicit answer. Safety, status, shits and giggles, domination. Something.
I'm sure of that. I'm unsure to what degree the answers we arrive at are a matter of choice.
This book made a big impression on me. I read it when I was a lot dumber, and wonder what I'd make of it now. Too many un-read books to re-read it, though.
I have found a lot of alpha in being good at recognizing quality people.
It seems simple, but this thread gives many examples of why it's not. Assuming that the hated tribe is composed entirely of idiots is the most trivial illustration, but there are others, most of them rooted in the almost overwhelming need to feel good about yourself, about the rightness of your own beliefs and to justify the things that you're doing and want to do.
Hard swim upstream of that, but worth it. You make better and more useful friends, if nothing else.
Yes. It takes a deeper interaction before the tyranny of small differences sets in. Bitcoiners mos def do not get along if you wait long enough, as the recent OP_RETURN thing amply demonstrates. Many such examples.
That's one of the flaws I mean. There is not just one class of "normies." There are many. Calling someone a "normie" is just another thing Bitcoiners do to simplify the world enough that it fits in their head.
You have my axe!