In 2022 as Substack was gaining popularity as the hottest new blogging platform, I had amassed of list over thirty blogs I was following. I would refresh the blogs daily, but this proved cumbersome and I would sometimes lose track of certain blogs if they hadn’t been updated in a while. I could use the… Continue reading Why Substack’s subscription model does Not scale well, and is losing ground to Twitter
Month: October 2023
The daily view: 10/27/2023: No Bitcoin ETF, Low-trust Societies, Meta/tech Earnings
Item 1: It looks like I was wrong about Bitcoin, with the price having surged to $34,000…or am i? It’s just a deadcat bounce, and I remain short. I am down on my latest short at $28.5k, but not a problem. Temporary losses are an inevitable part of trading. According to this excellent article, the… Continue reading The daily view: 10/27/2023: No Bitcoin ETF, Low-trust Societies, Meta/tech Earnings
Cognitive Screening is Legal, the last holdout of wokeness
From Richard Hanania’s post Against Idealism, this passage stood out: No one in the 1960s ever said “You know, I just read Marcuse and, given his influence in intellectual circles, I can predict that in future decades we’ll have a country where you can’t have standardized tests in hiring and corporations will praise dead black… Continue reading Cognitive Screening is Legal, the last holdout of wokeness
Food companies have little to fear from new weight loss drugs, and why I am NOT investing in Eli Lilly
Speculation that GLP-1 weight loss drugs will hurt food companies’ sales is way premature. I discuss this in an earlier blog post, but to expound: These drugs are expensive, can have bad side effects, and success is highly variable. Some people lose a lot of weight (like going from 270lbs to 170lbs), and others much… Continue reading Food companies have little to fear from new weight loss drugs, and why I am NOT investing in Eli Lilly
Looking for crisis in the wrong place
I think my Feb 2023 article America’s Threats are Always on the Horizon, Hypothetical aged well. In early to mid 2023 everyone assumed that the next crisis would involve at least one of the following: -Nuclear war or a world war involving Ukraine, Russia, and or neighboring countries -AI-apocalypse due to unstoppable GPU clusters -Trade… Continue reading Looking for crisis in the wrong place
The situation at Twitter isn’t as bad as the media hype would suggest
From Reuters, Elon Musk’s X is a black hole of value: Put it all together, and X isn’t just worth less than Musk paid for it, but likely less than its debt. Assume that the company’s revenue last year was $4.7 billion, based on results before it was taken private. If advertising has dropped by… Continue reading The situation at Twitter isn’t as bad as the media hype would suggest
The Daily View: 10/18/2023: Meta, Bitcoin, and more
Item #1: Bitcoin surged to $28,500 on Monday on hopes an ETF will be approved. Here we go again. If history is any guide, all Bitcoin ETFs will be rejected still. The SEC has until January 10, 2024 to decide on the Ark Bitcoin ETF, which it almost certainly will reject. Three months is an… Continue reading The Daily View: 10/18/2023: Meta, Bitcoin, and more
Ads are everything, not AI
I saw this going viral. The war on ad-blockers is in full-swing: Puts on Google? This makes me want to buy calls. AI is important, but as I said, the future is more advertising and increasingly pervasive advertising, not AI, VR, or blockchain. Most of FAANG-tech’s resources or priorities are about: -thwarting ad-blocking (detecting when… Continue reading Ads are everything, not AI
Middle East conflicts are good for unity
One would assume that the unfolding crisis in Gaza would engender more division in the US. But historically, crisis in the Middle East has tended to have a unifying effect, if presidential approval ratings are used as a proxy for unity. A higher approval rating generally means a more united nation. However this is only… Continue reading Middle East conflicts are good for unity
The appeal to authority: when it works and doesn’t
In a series of tweets over the past week, until the crisis in Gaza abruptly shifted priorities, Richard Hanania claims he could produce work of the same quality as Shakespeare, generating predicable rebuke from his followers. The appeal to authority fallacy is invoked: This seems like an appeal to authority. It’s superior based on it… Continue reading The appeal to authority: when it works and doesn’t