Tuesday, January 14, 2025
14: Pete Hegseth
Slow strangulation by overregulation https://t.co/irvVhgu7TK
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 14, 2025
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 14, 2025
Of course that's your contention.
— Bill Clerico (@billclerico) January 13, 2025
You're a VC associate turned wildfire expert, just got done reading some American Dynamism, probably @pmarca?
Next, you'll be talking about the 2014 water bill, the smelt and blaming Newsom til you realize... pic.twitter.com/xje7eIpQo8
Slavery is still practiced in some parts of the world pic.twitter.com/9jWXiktrBV
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 12, 2025
Monday, January 13, 2025
13: Europe
Just wanted to express appreciation for President @realDonaldTrump and so many people, both inside & outside of government, supporting @DOGE.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 13, 2025
I am confident that the American people will be happy with the outcome.
A 2T Cut https://t.co/0dstvf4AMe @VivekGRamaswamy
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
I love it when people tell me about typos in a new essay. It means they've actually read the essay, which puts them in the top 5% of people commenting on it.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) January 13, 2025
A Next-Generation Tech Incubator https://t.co/5hlacTTQGe
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
Make
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 12, 2025
Europe
Great
Again
MEGA!!! https://t.co/P0anzzjbOc
I’m excited to introduce Collate and announce our $30M seed round.
— Surbhi Sarna (@SurbhiSarnaSF) January 13, 2025
We’re using AI to help solve one of the biggest problems for life sciences companies — the never-ending cycle of document creation and maintenance you need to do to stay compliant.
While running my first…
Congrats. That's large for a seed round.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
I really appreciate all of the kind messages and concern.
— Arnold (@Schwarzenegger) January 11, 2025
But don’t worry about me, or my animals, and certainly not my house. I would rather you focus all of your thoughts on these heroic firefighters and first responders who are fighting an impossible battle around the clock.
This will scale to enormous numbers, as California passed a bill providing free healthcare for illegals that just took effect last year.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 12, 2025
Essentially, anyone on Earth can come to California for free healthcare.
Earth has 8 billion people, but California has 40 million people.… https://t.co/k34z1Zj305
The most cryptic tweet ever.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
Bitcoin miners likely had no clue they would be in pole position to retrofit (still very hard but have the access to power) or be quickest to market to build new next-gen AI data centers to serve hyperscalers. The race is on.
— Nichole Wischoff (@NWischoff) January 13, 2025
Explain.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
I'm German.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
16 years ago, the EU and US economies were neck and neck.
Today, the US economy is 50% larger than the entire EU combined.
Here's the devastating truth behind Europe's ongoing economic suicide 🧵: pic.twitter.com/aVoshCbSKK
But it goes deeper than numbers...
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
European talent is fleeing en masse.
I see most European entrepreneurs choosing between two paths:
• The US for higher salaries ($350k+ tech jobs)
• Southeast Asia for lower cost of living to build startups
Why? pic.twitter.com/tPXnG8Olkx
Because Europe made it impossible to win at home.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
Take Berlin's startup scene (where I used to live):
Founders are often viewed with suspicion. "Entrepreneur" = exploiter
I witnessed tech founders being called "capitalist parasites" at local meetups. pic.twitter.com/SkcIw0IvZ4
Meanwhile in places like Silicon Valley and NYC:
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
Founders are celebrated. Risk-taking is rewarded.
Failure is seen as education, not embarrassment.
To make matters even worse... pic.twitter.com/F0CvjKAzcR
Europeans are drowning in red tape:
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
• Employment laws making hiring/firing impossible
• Tax rates crushing small businesses
• Compliance costs killing innovation
To start a company in France takes 84 days
In America? 4 days. pic.twitter.com/2R545Irnh7
Even French president Emmanuel Macron admits it.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
When comparing Europe to the American and Chinese markets, he said: pic.twitter.com/1QWKRapf5a
The anti-innovation mindset is killing Europe.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
For example, when Elon Musk built Giga Berlin, Germans protested:
"No techno-colonialism"
Tesla almost cancelled the project due to regulatory hurdles and community opposition.
This happens daily with smaller companies too. pic.twitter.com/kR9GrIAWDV
The numbers are brutal:
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
• 90% of EU tech talent would move to US for right offer
• European tech salaries: 50% lower than US
• Startup funding: 5x higher in US
And Europe's few tech successes?
Most of them move to America:
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
• Spotify (now NYC-based)
• Klarna (major US operations)
• ARM (being acquired by NVIDIA)
The theme here is obvious: pic.twitter.com/ByYPSC99PZ
While Europe debates the ethics of AI...
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
America builds it.
While Europe regulates cryptocurrencies...
America innovates them.
While Europe protects old industries...
America creates new ones.
As a European, I unfortunately doubt it.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
The regulation addiction is too deep.
The anti-business culture too ingrained.
As one French friend/entrepreneur told me:
"I love Europe, but I can't build my future here. The system won't let me." pic.twitter.com/g2YaGnSQFr
This is why America keeps winning.
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
Not because Americans are smarter.
But because their system benefits those who build. pic.twitter.com/sVnk2XaQ5R
But beneath this beautiful diversity lies a common problem:
— Ole Lehmann (@itsolelehmann) January 13, 2025
Every European country shares the same anti-entrepreneurship mindset.
It doesn't matter if you're in Berlin, Paris, or Stockholm...
The system is designed to hold builders back. pic.twitter.com/L2DBLNUY8P
Brilliant thread @itsolelehmann.
— Thom Benny (@copyjitsu) January 13, 2025
The best wrap of the situation I've seen yet.
And @levelsio euacc merch the best expression of it. pic.twitter.com/3Fl2hBmpjd
There is a lot of exaggeration and half-truths in the post which overstate the difference between the EU and the US economies. For example, it fails to account for the significant impact of the UK leaving the EU since 2008, which automatically reduced the EU's GDP. In 2022, the…
— Stjepan (@sosojni) January 13, 2025
Paul Graham's Problem With Woke
I am so glad you wrote this because I needed to really, really reply to you on this one. Have an intelligent debate, sort of.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
The Origins Of Wokeness by Paul Graham .... you know, that Paul Graham The word "prig" ..... A self-righteously moralistic person who behaves as if superior to others. ......... In Victorian England it was Christian virtue. In Stalin's Russia it was orthodox Marxism-Leninism. For the woke, it's social justice. .......... why our prigs are priggish about these ideas, at this moment. And to answer that we have to ask when and where wokeness began. .......... Wokeness is a second, more aggressive wave of political correctness, which started in the late 1980s, died down in the late 1990s, and then returned with a vengeance in the early 2010s, finally peaking after the riots of 2020......... An aggressively performative focus on social justice. ........ And that's the real problem — the performativeness, not the social justice. ......... What happened in the humanities and social sciences in the 1980s? ........ The reason the student protests of the 1960s didn't lead to political correctness was precisely that — they were student movements. They didn't have any real power. The students may have been talking a lot about women's liberation and black power, but it was not what they were being taught in their classes. Not yet. ........ A 1960s radical who got a job as a physics professor could still attend protests, but his political beliefs wouldn't affect his work. Whereas research in sociology and modern literature can be made as political as you like. ......... When I started college in 1982 it was not yet a thing. Female students might object if someone said something they considered sexist, but no one was getting reported for it. It was still not a thing when I started grad school in 1986. It was definitely a thing in 1988 though, and by the early 1990s it seemed to pervade campus life. ............ the 1960s radicals got tenure. They became the Establishment they'd protested against two decades before. Now they were in a position not just to speak out about their ideas, but to enforce them. ........... It wasn't simply a grass-roots student movement. It was faculty members encouraging students to attack other faculty members. In that respect it was like the Cultural Revolution. ............ Imagine having to explain to a well-meaning visitor from another planet why using the phrase "people of color" is considered particularly enlightened, but saying "colored people" gets you fired. And why exactly one isn't supposed to use the word "negro" now, even though Martin Luther King used it constantly in his speeches. There are no underlying principles. You'd just have to give him a long list of rules to memorize. .............. their elaborateness made them an effective substitute for virtue. Whenever a society has a concept of heresy and orthodoxy, orthodoxy becomes a substitute for virtue. You can be the worst person in the world, but as long as you're orthodox you're better than everyone who isn't. This makes orthodoxy very attractive to bad people. ............. the result was a world in which good people who weren't up to date on current moral fashions were brought down by people whose characters would make you recoil in horror if you could see them. ............ Previous generations of prigs had been prigs mostly about religion and sex. But among the cultural elite these were the deadest of dead letters by the 1980s; if you were religious, or a virgin, this was something you tended to conceal rather than advertise. So the sort of people who enjoy being moral enforcers had become starved of things to enforce. A new set of rules was just what they'd been waiting for. .............. One thing I noticed at the time about the first phase of political correctness was that it was more popular with women than men. As many writers (perhaps most eloquently George Orwell) have observed, women seem more attracted than men to the idea of being moral enforcers. But there was another more specific reason women tended to be the enforcers of political correctness. There was at this time a great backlash against sexual harassment; the mid 1980s were the point when the definition of sexual harassment was expanded from explicit sexual advances to creating a "hostile environment." Within universities the classic form of accusation was for a (female) student to say that a professor made her "feel uncomfortable." But the vagueness of this accusation allowed the radius of forbidden behavior to expand to include talking about heterodox ideas. Those make people uncomfortable too. ............ Was it sexist to propose that Darwin's greater male variability hypothesis might explain some variation in human performance? Sexist enough to get Larry Summers pushed out as president of Harvard, apparently. ................. Humor is one of the most powerful weapons against priggishness of any sort, because prigs, being humorless, can't respond in kind. Humor was what defeated Victorian prudishness, and by 2000 it seemed to have done the same thing to political correctness............. And there had been an explosion in the number of university administrators, many of whose jobs involved enforcing various forms of political correctness. ........... In the first phase of political correctness there were really only three things people got accused of: sexism, racism, and homophobia (which at the time was a neologism invented for the purpose). But between then and 2010 a lot of people had spent a lot of time trying to invent new kinds of -isms and -phobias and seeing which could be made to stick. ............. My guess is that it was due to the rise of social media, particularly Tumblr and Twitter, because one of the most distinctive features of the second wave of political correctness was the cancel mob: a mob of angry people uniting on social media to get someone ostracized or fired. Indeed this second wave of political correctness was originally called "cancel culture"; it didn't start to be called "wokeness" till the 2020s. ............... One aspect of social media that surprised almost everyone at first was the popularity of outrage. Users seemed to like being outraged. We're so used to this idea now that we take it for granted, but really it's pretty strange. Being outraged is not a pleasant feeling. You wouldn't expect people to seek it out. But they do. ........... This tilt toward outrage wasn't due to wokeness. It's an inherent feature of social media, or at least this generation of it. But it did make social media the perfect mechanism for fanning the flames of wokeness. .......... Group chat apps were also critical, especially in the final step, cancellation. Imagine if a group of employees trying to get someone fired had to do it using only email. It would be hard to organize a mob. But
once you have group chat, mobs form naturally
. ............. When I grew up the papers of record seemed timeless, almost sacred institutions. Papers like the New York Times and Washington Post had immense prestige, partly because other sources of news were limited, but also because they did make some effort to be neutral. ............... Unfortunately it turned out that the paper of record was mostly an artifact of the constraints imposed by print. [8] When your market was determined by geography, you had to be neutral. But publishing online enabled — in fact probably forced — newspapers to switch to serving markets defined by ideology instead of geography. Most that remained in business fell in the direction they'd already been leaning: left. On October 11, 2020 the New York Times announced that "The paper is in the midst of an evolution from the stodgy paper of record into a juicy collection of great narratives." Meanwhile journalists, of a sort, had arisen to serve the right as well. And so journalism, which in the previous era had been one of the great centralizing forces, now became one of the great polarizing ones. ................... there arose a new variety of journalism involving a loop through social media. Someone would say something controversial on social media. Within hours it would become a news story. Outraged readers would then post links to the story on social media, driving further arguments online. It was the cheapest source of clicks imaginable. You didn't have to maintain overseas news bureaus or pay for month-long investigations. All you had to do was watch Twitter for controversial remarks and repost them on your site, with some additional comments to inflame readers further. ................. By 2010 a new class of administrators had arisen whose job was basically to enforce wokeness. They played a role similar to that of the political commissars who got attached to military and industrial organizations in the USSR: they weren't directly in the flow of the organization's work, but watched from the side to ensure that nothing improper happened in the doing of it. .............. This new class of bureaucrats pursued a woke agenda as if their jobs depended on it, because they did. If you hire people to keep watch for a particular type of problem, they're going to find it, because otherwise there's no justification for their existence. ............ the Black Lives Matter movement, which started in 2013 when a white man was acquitted after killing a black teenager in Florida. But this didn't launch wokeness; it was well underway by 2013. ............... the Me Too Movement, which took off in 2017 after the first news stories about Harvey Weinstein's history of raping women. It accelerated wokeness, but didn't play the same role in launching it that the 80s version did in launching political correctness. .............. The election of Donald Trump in 2016 also accelerated wokeness, particularly in the press, where outrage now meant traffic. Trump made the New York Times a lot of money: headlines during his first administration mentioned his name at about four times the rate of previous presidents. ...............In 2020 we saw the biggest accelerant of all, after a white police officer asphyxiated a black suspect on video. At this point the metaphorical fire became a literal one, as violent protests broke out across America. But in retrospect this turned out to be peak woke, or close to it. By every measure I've seen, wokeness peaked in 2020 or 2021.
................ Wokeness is sometimes described as a mind-virus. ......... What's true of individuals is even more true of organizations. Especially organizations without a powerful leader. Such organizations do everything based on "best practices." There's no higher authority; if some new "best practice" achieves critical mass, they must adopt it. And in this case the organization can't do what it usually does when it's uncertain: delay. It might be committing improprieties right now! So it's surprisingly easy for a small group of zealots to capture this type of organization by describing new improprieties it might be guilty of. ............. How does this kind of cycle ever end? Eventually it leads to disaster, and people start to say enough is enough. The excesses of 2020 made a lot of people say that. ............ Corporate CEOs, starting with Brian Armstrong, have openly rejected it. Universities, led by the University of Chicago and MIT, have explicitly confirmed their commitment to free speech. Twitter, which was arguably the hub of wokeness, was bought by Elon Musk in order to neutralize it, and he seems to have succeeded ............. I'm not going to claim Trump's second victory in 2024 was a referendum on wokeness; I think he won, as presidential candidates always do, because he was more charismatic; but voters' disgust with wokeness must have helped. ................. And more importantly, how do we avoid a third outbreak? After all, it seemed to be dead once, but came back worse than ever. .......... Prigs are prigs by nature. They need rules to obey and enforce, and now that Darwin has cut off their traditional supply of rules, they're constantly hungry for new ones. All they need is someone to meet them halfway by defining a new way to be morally pure, and we'll see the same phenomenon again. ............. Wokeness is effectively a religion, just with God replaced by protected classes. It's not even the first religion of this kind; Marxism had a similar form, with God replaced by the masses. .......... And we already have well-established customs for dealing with religion within organizations. You can express your own religious identity and explain your beliefs, but you can't call your coworkers infidels if they disagree, or try to ban them from saying things that contradict its doctrines, or insist that the organization adopt yours as its official religion................. One shouldn't feel bad about not wanting to watch woke movies any more than one would feel bad about not wanting to listen to Christian rock. In my twenties I drove across America several times, listening to local radio stations. Occasionally I'd turn the dial and hear some new song. But the moment anyone mentioned Jesus I'd turn the dial again. Even the tiniest bit of being preached to was enough to make me lose interest. ............. I'm not a Christian, but I can see that many Christian principles are good ones. It would be a mistake to discard them all just because one didn't share the religion that espoused them. ............ Here we're up against human nature. There will always be prigs. And in particular there will always be the enforcers among them, the aggressively conventional-minded. These people are born that way. Every society has them. So the best we can do is to keep them bottled up. ........... Fortunately when the aggressively conventional-minded go on the rampage they always do one thing that gives them away: they define new heresies to punish people for. So the best way to protect ourselves from future outbreaks of things like wokeness is to have powerful antibodies against the concept of heresy. ........... The woke ideology's conspicuous lack of interest in the working class is the tell-tale sign. Such fragments as are, er, left of the old left are anti-woke, and meanwhile the actual working class shifted to the populist right and gave us Trump. Trump and wokeness are cousins. ................. The middle-class origins of wokeness smoothed its way through the institutions because it had no interest in "seizing the means of production" (how quaint such phrases seem now), which would quickly have run up against hard state and corporate power. The fact that wokeness only expressed interest in other kinds of class (race, sex, etc) signalled compromise with existing power: give us power within your system and we'll bestow the resource we control — moral rectitude — upon you. As an ideological stalking horse for gaining control over discourse and institutions, this succeeded where a more ambitious revolutionary program would not have. ................ If a political movement had to start with physics students, it could never get off the ground; there would be too few of them, and they wouldn't have the time to spare. ........... The woke sometimes claim that wokeness is simply treating people with respect. But if it were, that would be the only rule you'd have to remember, and this is comically far from being the case. My younger son likes to imitate voices, and at one point when he was about seven I had to explain which accents it was currently safe to imitate publicly and which not. It took about ten minutes, and I still hadn't covered all the cases. .............. In 1986 the Supreme Court ruled that creating a hostile work environment could constitute sex discrimination, which in turn affected universities via Title IX. The court specified that the test of a hostile environment was whether it would bother a reasonable person, but since for a professor merely being the subject of a sexual harassment complaint would be a disaster whether the complainant was reasonable or not, in practice any joke or remark remotely connected with sex was now effectively forbidden. Which meant we'd now come full circle to Victorian codes of behavior, when there was a large class of things that might not be said "with ladies present." ........................ I'm fairly confident that it would be possible to create new social media apps that were less driven by outrage, and an app of this type would have a good chance of stealing users from existing ones, because the smartest people would tend to migrate to it. .............. I have hopes that journalistic neutrality will return in some form. There is some market for unbiased news, and while it may be small, it's valuable. The rich and powerful want to know what's really going on; that's how they became rich and powerful. ............ As the acronym DEI goes out of fashion, many of these bureaucrats will try to go underground by changing their titles. It looks like "belonging" will be a popular option. .......... This is particularly annoying to me as a writer, because the new names are always worse. Any religious observance has to be inconvenient and slightly absurd; otherwise gentiles would do it too. So "slaves" becomes "enslaved individuals." But web search can show us the leading edge of moral growth in real time: if you search for "individuals experiencing slavery" you will as of this writing find five legit attempts to use the phrase, and you'll even find two for "individuals experiencing enslavement." .................. Organizations that do dubious things are particularly concerned with propriety, which is how you end up with absurdities like tobacco and oil companies having higher ESG ratings than Tesla. .................... Elon did something else that tilted Twitter rightward though: he gave more visibility to paying users. Paying users lean right on average, because people on the far left dislike Elon and don't want to give him money. Elon presumably knew this would happen. On the other hand, the people on the far left have only themselves to blame; they could tilt Twitter back to the left tomorrow if they wanted to. ............ a concept of original sin: privilege. Which means unlike Christianity's egalitarian version, people have varying degrees of it. An able-bodied straight white American male is born with such a load of sin that only by the most abject repentance can he be saved. .................. Wokeness also shares something rather funny with many actual versions of Christianity: like God, the people for whose sake wokeness purports to act are often revolted by the things done in their name. ......... I don't want to give the impression that it will be simple to roll back wokeness. There will be places where the fight inevitably gets messy — particularly within universities, which everyone has to share, yet which are are currently the most pervaded by wokeness of any institutions............. You can however get rid of aggressively conventional-minded people within an organization, and in many if not most organizations this would be an excellent idea. Even a handful of them can do a lot of damage. I bet you'd feel a noticeable improvement going from a handful to none.It feels to me like I might have managed to skip the whole debate. And it has been a raging debate, obviously.
This feels like what Marxists might call a counter-revolution to the Black Lives Matter movement. Except there was no revolution. And this is not exactly a counter-revolution. But that a guy like Paul Graham should be oh so primmed about it, that tells me this defensiveness is no small matter. For the longest time I have thought of Paul Graham as a genuine innovator. He has merit. He was a starving artist. Then he build the iconic tech incubator. Hats off. Except, it seems, it is really, really foundational to him that he is a white male. That collective identity is so, so important to him. He might even be a "liberal" on social values. I once watched a YouTube video of him giving a talk at Stanford, where he made a joke about Sam Altman, which was meant to prove the point that Graham is not homophobic, at all, at all, at all.
One class I took at college taught me about the structure of sexism. One example. The objective data is, men do much of the talking. They suck up the oxygen in the room. But the joke is, you can't get women to close their mouth. This is so pervasive. It is everywhere. It is like social gravity.
You thank gravity. You can walk, you can stand. It is still you walking. But gravity makes it possible. For a lot of white men, structural racism and sexism seems to be that gravity. They can't imagine life without it.
Social justice is not the problem. But you are being too aggressive about it. Women talk too much.
Paul Graham is part of the backlash.
I think Paul Graham wants many, many more people to drop out of college. It would help his business. That seems to be his hidden agenda.
Note: I have been looking for a "definitive" article on wokeness by someone offended by it. Thank you Paul Graham for sharing. And to think this might end up in the pantheons of the tech startup world like many of his other essays. Now THAT is woke. Woke is supposed to mean "enlightened," not in the spiritual sense, but enlighhtened still.
Paul Graham's Problem With Woke https://t.co/MfeUPuInDb
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 13, 2025
In hindsight, peak woke was when startups were renaming their monthly all hands meetings to all hearts because not everyone has hands. Good riddance.
— Nichole Wischoff (@NWischoff) January 13, 2025
Saturday, January 11, 2025
11: Paul Krugman
Why aren't there 100's of Helicopters & Aircraft doing water-drops in LA? Why isn't the Army and Airforce here supporting operations? This will impact 100,000+ people and cost multiple trillions of $ lost. The level of response local and national is massively inadequate.
— Peter H. Diamandis, MD (@PeterDiamandis) January 11, 2025
Too many people talking about LLMs replacing software engineers, not enough people talking about LLMs replacing Deloitte analysts
— Ishan (@radshaan) January 10, 2025
What are Republicans going to do to lower costs, raise wages, and provide for American families? Nothing.
— Rep. Pramila Jayapal (@RepJayapal) January 11, 2025
They’re too busy focusing on lowering taxes on the rich, cruel mass deportations, and cutting Social Security and Medicare. pic.twitter.com/B6RkLbmk9c
Just checking in: has Elon Musk said anything critical about the government in China?
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 11, 2025
No?
Men fighting on Twitter will never not be funny to me
— Hailey Lennon (@HaileyLennonBTC) January 11, 2025
Unhealthy relationships are marked by one-sided sacrifice. The more cooperative person repeatedly gives in to the more stubborn one, and resentment builds.
— Adam Grant (@AdamMGrant) January 11, 2025
Healthy relationships involve balanced compromise. Both people make a consistent effort to cooperate, and respect grows.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 10, 2025
ChatGPT is already better than any doctor I know. It takes more time, doesn't make quick considerations and decisions, listens carefully, gives good answers to queries and is available 24 hours a day and isn't annoyed if I have to ask five times.
— Chubby♨️ (@kimmonismus) January 11, 2025
ChatGPT is getting better and…
dude chat gpt gave me a better skincare routine than any dermatologist ever has
— claude shannon (@catpoopburglar) January 11, 2025
Yeah..Did you know it can also be your Psychotherapist? Yes, your emotional doctor as well Kim! Can't wait to see the o3 capabilities!
— Essere.ai Agency (@EssereAI) January 11, 2025
This is an office. It's deliberately spartan. The rest of the house looks very, very different.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) January 11, 2025
(And incidentally, I deliberately use different color lights. Why is it good for all the light in a room to be the same? How *can* it be if the room has windows?)
zuck is right — AI will replace mid-level engineers this year
— Haider. (@slow_developer) January 11, 2025
as a programmer with over 8 years of experience, i believe these two models, claude 3.5 sonnet and openAI o1, are already capable of that.
the only thing they lack is agency and the ability to test their work.
2 billion people trust Google Maps.
— Atul Kumar (@atulkumarzz) January 11, 2025
But most people still don't know its full potential.
Here are 15 amazing things Google Maps can do: pic.twitter.com/NoaxNsV27x
The insurance industry's biggest fear just came true:
— Marc Gravely (@MarcGravely) January 10, 2025
A company big enough to fight back.
Samsung filed a $400M lawsuit that's exposing everything.
The playbook they never wanted you to see: pic.twitter.com/iaxswTi1JZ
I’m in Dubai & it makes paying taxes in the U.K. feel like a scam:⁰⁰No income tax. No capital gains tax, yet the city thrives: clean. Safe.
— Rob Moore (@robprogressive) January 11, 2025
World-class infrastructure. Wealth. Opportunity everywhere.
Yet the U.K. burdens with record levels of tax, a broken public service &…
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 11, 2025
Only one country was represented at Kim Jong Un's New Year's Eve party. Can you guess which one?
— Baptiste Robert (@fs0c131y) January 10, 2025
At the Rungrado Stadium, Kim hosted a grand celebration. Before the fireworks, officials enjoyed a private party near the stadium
One attendee's face stood out 🕵️♂️
It’s OSINT time! pic.twitter.com/RJcUjcpb5C
Nothing disgusts 12 yo more than when I mix up his various fictional worlds (there are about 7 or 8 he writes stories about). It's as if I had presented him with a bowl of beef-flavored ice cream.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) January 11, 2025
Every man's worse nightmare came true for me today.
— Russell (@theramblingfool) January 10, 2025
For years I've accumulated all the cables I've ever had into a drawer-- you know the drawer. After years of collecting dust, I finally convinced myself I could throw away my VGA cables.
A few months later, I need a VGA cable.
As I’ve gotten older, I’ve had to acknowledge the sad fact that in this world of ours, bullies often prosper. But my loathing of bullies has also intensified over the years. And as bullies are ultimately weak, I do think the Putins, Trumps, & Musks, if resisted, can be defeated.
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) January 11, 2025
Elon Musk has declared Hitler a communist.
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 11, 2025
And yet so many people who should know better continue to insist on calling him a "genius."
Just recorded an interview with Marc Andreessen, legendary venture capitalist--and, for the last few weeks, an "unpaid intern" (his term) for Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy at Doge. The news from Mar-a-Lago? Just you wait. The show will go live on Tuesday. @pmarca pic.twitter.com/YqWFcsiTZU
— Peter Robinson (@p_m_robinson) January 10, 2025
A 2T Cut https://t.co/0dstvf42WG #passiton
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 11, 2025
अर्थतन्त्र धानेको नेपाली श्रमीकले जावो राहदानी र विमान स्थल प्रयोग गर्थे, नागरीक उड्यानको प्रायोजिनमा यो पनि नसीव नहुने भयो,भारतको रुट भएर विदेश जाने अवस्था वन्यो, विमान स्थल निर्माणको नाउँमा टिकटमा कालो वजारीलाई संस्थागत गरियो।अस्सी हजारको टिकट दुईलाख सम्म, कारवाही गर्नुस!
— Dipendra Jha (@dipjha) January 11, 2025
I cannot over-emphasize how much you are seeing a distorted version of reality in which the world is ruled by incompetence and evil if you see everything through the lens of Elon tweets rather than actually engaging with your community.
— Hank Green (@hankgreen) January 11, 2025
“Capitalism works because it makes you fire your best friend.” https://t.co/4DmuP1z4Ta
— Naval (@naval) January 11, 2025
I continue to think this is one of the most important cartoons of recent years. @marketoonist pic.twitter.com/HSILx7tcr0
— nxthompson (@nxthompson) January 10, 2025
Can confirm. I learned Python back in 2014 and 2015 but as soon as ChatGPT came out, I started learning stuff I hadn't even encountered. The model knows not just more about your favorite language, it knows literally every programming language better than you ever could. https://t.co/JYx82LVxpA
— David Shapiro ⏩ (@DaveShapi) January 10, 2025
California is preventing insurance companies from canceling home coverage for LA wildfire victims in impacted zip codes over the next year.
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) January 11, 2025
The folks in these communities have suffered enough. They should not have to deal with the stress of home insurance on top of it all.
Hey Canada, let’s unite, work together on getting our energy to global markets, stop selling to the U.S. unless we get better pricing. Let @realDonaldTrump get his 4.5 million barrels a day from Iran, Venezuela etc. instead of us.
— Martin Pelletier (@MPelletierCIO) January 10, 2025
People seem to be surprised that wokeness is collapsing so fast. But what grows exponentially shrinks exponentially too.
— Paul Graham (@paulg) January 11, 2025
Elon made a moral decision. Zuck made a business decision.
— Thibault (@Thib_DP) January 11, 2025
Mark Zuckerberg just declared war on Apple.
— Tim Carden (@timjcarden) January 11, 2025
In a shocking 3-hour conversation with Joe Rogan, he tore apart Apple's strategy:
"They haven't invented anything great in a while... they're just squeezing everyone."
Here's what Zuck had to say about Apple's strategy on JRE 🧵 pic.twitter.com/HLNeTTJaeP
China’s “ghost cities” are a modern mystery:
— Finance Nerd (@Finance_Nerd_) January 11, 2025
• Entire cities built with no residents
• Billions spent on empty skyscrapers and malls
Why did this happen—and what does it reveal about the dangers of speculative growth?
Here’s the story behind China’s economic bubbles: pic.twitter.com/XwmRgWSQ8u
It's not a miracle. It's called "concrete." pic.twitter.com/7nXHlSkGBV
— Saul Sadka (@Saul_Sadka) January 11, 2025
A ridiculous lie. We have doubled the size of our firefighting army, built the world’s largest aerial firefighting fleet, and increased the forest management ten-fold since taking office.
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) January 11, 2025
Time to serve these folks the facts. https://t.co/qITPcQDTKk
meta, on the other hand, has a long list of inventions:
— ben (@benhylak) January 11, 2025
1. Instagram (oh wait that was an acquisition)
1. Oculus (oh. uh.)
1. Whatsapp (wait, no)
1. Messenger (even that was mostly an acquisition of a company called Beluga) https://t.co/ic3EH4vZ50
The GOP Tax Scam championed by House Republicans destroyed the State and Local Tax deduction in 2017.
— Hakeem Jeffries (@hakeemjeffries) January 11, 2025
Millions of middle class Americans were hurt in order to cut taxes for billionaires and wealthy corporations.
These people aren’t serious about full restoration. pic.twitter.com/bQZNT7BhGg
This week brought a significant sanctions strike, and I am grateful to our partners for this.
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) January 11, 2025
The United States has imposed new sanctions on Russia’s oil sector, targeting the shadow tanker fleet and companies like Surgutneftegaz, which serves as Putin’s personal wallet. I’m… pic.twitter.com/xza0Ygxbwu
We live in a world where most Americans don’t know this, don’t believe this and/or don’t appreciate the magnitude of this.
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 11, 2025
Dems losing in November is one thing; Dems losing because of *the economy* remains insane. https://t.co/SlTdV0zQG4
Whatever marketing genius switched “bots” to “AI agents”” pic.twitter.com/nOhsTolliX
— Jason Levin (@iamjasonlevin) January 10, 2025
Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 just dropped another masterpiece… on cancer cells.
— Barbara Oneill (@BarbaraOneillAU) January 10, 2025
Scientists at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro found that exposing cancer cells to the symphony destroyed 20% of them in just a few days—without harming healthy cells. Similar effects were… pic.twitter.com/vwK88Bct4f
The scary part about social media is that you can spend hours thinking that you are learning something new, when you are actually just watching other people live their lives and just getting old without getting closer to any of your goals.
— Orange Book 🍊📖 (@orangebook_) January 11, 2025
The societal pressure put on women to stay home, raise children AND enjoy it is completely dated. For those women who want to do it, please do. For those of us who enjoy building companies, making money and having children, let us. Let us have our nannies. Let us be present each…
— Nichole Wischoff (@NWischoff) January 11, 2025
AI is creating intelligence on a path to AGI and ASI.
— Michael Dell (@MichaelDell) January 11, 2025
This is one of the most important things happening in 2025.
Jensen Huang on AI scaling:
1. Pre-training is like college
2. Fine-tuning is like a PhD
3. Compute at test-time is like deep thinking and reasoning pic.twitter.com/OFYiEts86m
I do feel like we forget that a mere 100 years ago 20% of children in America just fucking died.
— Hank Green (@hankgreen) January 11, 2025
विभागीय मन्त्री को हो थाह भएन, तर नियणत्रन गर्न नसक्नेलाई तत्काल फायर गर्दा कुनै पाप लाग्दैन, हैन क्षमता र जवाफदेहीता छ की छैन यो देशमा ? गाँउवाट टिकट काट्न अप्ठायरो भयो भनी फोन आएको आए भयो लौ न नियणत्रन गर्न केही गर्न सकिन्छ की ? https://t.co/8mKw6DFRfl
— Dipendra Jha (@dipjha) January 11, 2025
They do https://t.co/bqcBuVnf8c
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 10, 2025
To me the really important thing here is creating funding structures that durably incentivize open source, open standards and security, disincentivize walled-garden mentality and extractiveness, and generally promote being a positive-sum participant toward your wider ecosystem. https://t.co/viCAYeXMhS
— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) January 11, 2025
To understand how cynical Zuck is: he's accusing Biden of targeting Meta for political reasons, which he knows is exactly what *Trump* has publicly done.
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) January 10, 2025
Trump threatened to *imprison* Zuckerberg. But he goes on Rogan to complain about Biden, not Trump, to his new MAGA fans. https://t.co/sGOlk93jga
What happened to Vivek Ramaswamy? He’s been MIA since he called white people lazy lol
— B L A K E L E Y™℠©® LLC (@_iamblakeley) January 9, 2025
My friends and I are meeting at the local pub at 3pm to drink beer for a few hours.
— Nick Huber (@sweatystartup) January 11, 2025
No agenda.
Will be home early and will get a great night sleep.
Highly recommended activity most people don’t do anymore.
Bring me back to simpler times!
Trump picked Pete Hegseth to be his Secretary of Defense - a guy with a track record of being so drunk at work events that he needed to be carried out on multiple occasions.
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) January 11, 2025
Can we really count on calling Hegseth at 2AM to make life and death national security decisions? Nope. pic.twitter.com/8mRfihevcN
We will soon find it crazy that developers would sit down and hand-type lines of structured code all day.
— Alex Albert (@alexalbert__) January 10, 2025
Each day it makes more and more sense for machines to handle that part for us.
THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING: a thread
— ClownBasket 🙂 (@ClownBasket) January 10, 2025
Let me try to lay out what the next three months will look like for the homeowners in LA who have lost everything in the fires. https://t.co/dmuP3pvsSg
Prithvi Narayan Shah's bed/resting place at Gorkha Museum. ❤️🇳🇵
— Routine of Nepal banda (@RONBupdates) January 11, 2025
Pic. Yadhab Paudel pic.twitter.com/PEPm88ADBC



