Unqualified Advice
Stealing Fire for the People Hello dear show notes readers! Dan's been thinking about Prometheus — not as a myth, but as a political archetype. The person who steals fire and hands it to the people is a very different animal than the one who steals it and keeps it for themselves. That framing runs underneath the whole hour. We start with Dan's top-down vs. bottoms-up read of American politics, wander through Christopher Alexander's A Pattern Language and what organic growth looks like (London streets vs. Manhattan grid, Dresden rebuilt block by block), and land on the labor market — where Dan drops the line that carries the rest of the episode: if people are in pain, they'll vote. The question is what they vote for. So we spent most of the hour sketching a reform menu — tax code, trade, safety net, government structure, civic fabric — and what candidate we'd actually want running on it. Burke shows up, as does the idea that representatives were supposed to be deliberators, not delegates. Somewhere around the 51-minute mark I asked Claude on-mic to stitch all of this into a candidate profile, which you'll find right below. Thanks for sticking with us. A little heavier than usual, and we think the weight is earned. Cheers, Sean "If people are in pain, they'll vote." The Promethean Candidate (v0.1) A first-pass profile of the candidate we'd actually want to vote for. Not a platform. A posture. Core disposition * Deliberator, not delegate — per Burke, willing to disagree with constituents when the evidence demands it, and willing to explain why. * Organic, not imposed — comes from the community they represent, not parachuted in. * Signals less, builds more — comfortable being boring on cable news. Trade * Regulatory parity on imports — foreign producers shouldn't enjoy lower compliance costs than domestic ones. * Strategic, not blanket, tariffs — targeted at genuine national-security or parity issues. * Honest about the losers of trade liberalization, and willing to fund real transition support rather than empty retraining rhetoric. Tax Code * Radical simplification — fewer brackets, fewer deductions, shorter forms. * Hostile to rent-seeking by tax-prep intermediaries (see: Intuit). * Willing to raise revenue where the math demands it, not just cut. Safety Net * A real floor, with fewer strings — simpler programs, less means-testing theater. * No benefit cliffs that punish the single mom for earning a raise. * Unemployment paid as a lump sum when it buys real mobility, not drip-fed weekly as a posture of distrust. * Housing supply taken seriously as a safety-net issue, not just a market one. Civic & Communal Fabric * A mandatory year of service out of high school — military, community, or public works — explicitly designed to mix people across geography and class. * Tax incentives for the physical places where people actually gather: pubs, pickleball courts, civic clubs, third places. * Civic education reform, taken personally. What the profile is not Not a platform of purity tests. Not a single-issue candidate. Not someone who thinks the answer is more viral moments. — v0.1. We'll steel-man it, stress-test it, and keep building. Proposed Constitutional Edits The structural changes the Promethean Candidate can't deliver alone — these sit above the candidate level and would need amendment, major statute, or a genuine constitutional moment. * One six-year presidential term, no reelection — space to plan without campaigning through the job. * Upper and lower age limits on office — not just a floor; the cognitive-decline ceiling is overdue. * Sunset clauses on every bill touching the power of the purse — nothing funded in perpetuity by default. * Gerrymandering gone — county lines or nothing. Districts should follow geography, not incumbents. * Campaign advertising gated to a short window before the vote — paid advertising limited in time; earned media and direct voter engagement are unaffected. Books Discussed * A Pattern Language [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Pattern_Language] by Christopher Alexander [https://www.patternlanguage.com/] Companies & Organizations Mentioned * Intuit / TurboTax [https://www.intuit.com/] — the tax-code-complexity lobby in residence * Bureau of Labor Statistics [https://www.bls.gov/] — the jobs data in question Links & References * BLS — Employment Situation [https://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.toc.htm] — the non-farm payroll data behind Sean's charts * Edmund Burke, Speech to the Electors of Bristol (1774) [https://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/v1ch13s7.html] — the "deliberator, not delegate" source * Ray Oldenburg — The Great Good Place (third places) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Good_Place_(book)] * Prof G Markets — Catherine Edwards interview [https://www.profgpod.com/] — the labor-market conversation Dan referenced Unqualified Fact-Check 🔍 We said some things. Here's how we did. 🟢 = Nailed it | 🟡 = Close enough | 🔴 = Whiffed it 🟢 Burke really did say that. Dan attributed to Edmund Burke the idea that a representative is a deliberator, not a delegate. Real — from Burke's 1774 Speech to the Electors of Bristol, where he argued his constituents owed him their trust to exercise independent judgment. Textbook-accurate. 🟢 BLS revisions are the real story. Sean's chart and Dan's read on it — the economy has been adding fewer jobs than originally reported and benchmark revisions have been consistently downward — is directionally accurate and matches multiple quarters of labor data. 🟢 Third places — Ray Oldenburg. Dan's attribution is correct. The Great Good Place (1989). Right concept, right source. 🔴 Intuit's market cap. Sean said Intuit was "10 to 20 billion." Off by roughly an order of magnitude — actual market cap is around $97–109B. The larger point about Intuit lobbying to keep tax prep complicated is accurate, but the number was way off. 🟡 Pattern Language as political metaphor. Using Christopher Alexander's A Pattern Language as a metaphor for organic political movement isn't something Alexander himself argues, but it's a fair extension of his framework. Partial credit. Final Score: 3 green, 1 yellow, 1 red. One order-of-magnitude miss, one stretched-but-earned metaphor, and Burke holding the scorecard together. We'll know Intuit's market cap next time. Chapters * 0:00 - Cold Open (Burke on Representatives) * 0:40 - Show Open & Welcome * 1:34 - Headlines, Reality, and the Photographer's Frame * 3:53 - Bottoms-Up vs. Top-Down: China and the US * 5:47 - A Pattern Language and Organic Cities * 10:19 - Dresden, Bauhaus, and Rebuilding * 13:35 - "History Rhymes" * 14:27 - Labor Market Warning Signs * 16:40 - The Generational Squeeze * 18:47 - Building an Ideal Candidate * 19:03 - Reform Menu: Tax Code (and the Intuit Problem) * 19:43 - "If People Are in Pain, They'll Vote" * 23:01 - Reform Menu: Trade and Import Parity * 24:03 - Reform Menu: The Safety Net * 28:33 - Sunset Clauses on Every Bill * 29:44 - Prometheus, Burke, and Deliberation * 31:30 - Reeducating on What Government Is For * 34:49 - The Performative Culture War * 35:26 - Reform Menu: Government Structure, Term Limits, Age Limits * 38:53 - Gerrymandering and Campaigns * 43:07 - Family Size and Communal Fabric * 46:34 - A Mandatory Service Year * 50:02 - The Lost Third Places * 51:29 - Host Note: Ideal Candidate Profile * 53:51 - Closing Thoughts & Sign-Off
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