Unqualified Advice

Prometheus Politicking

54 min · 20 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Prometheus Politicking

Descripción

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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episode The Canary in the Gig Mine artwork

The Canary in the Gig Mine

Three Weeks to Get Numb Hello dear show notes readers! This week Dan and I sit with a question that's been quietly bothering both of us: have we all just gotten numb? Dan says it only takes three weeks to get numb to anything. I had to agree. Once we saw two data points for the same trend, the rest of the conversation flowed. If the standard warning system has gone quiet, what canaries are still working? We began to build a bellwether basket. Not Netflix (too sticky), not Amazon Prime (it delivers the diapers — that's a bottoming signal, not a stress signal), but the second-tier streaming subs (Paramount, HBO) where the swing voter actually shows up. Dan offered the cleanest signal of the episode: at DoorDash, don't watch order count — watch the delta between pickups and deliveries. When pickups maintain while deliveries fall, that's the belt actually tightening. We talked through coupon-scan volume as a possible two-sided-marketplace business (somebody build this), median rent, dating-app subscriptions, home-security subs. I told Dan about my own confession — I hadn't watched grocery unit prices in twelve years and now I check them every trip. Dan said the same thing started for him about eighteen months ago. We are, apparently, our own data points. Dan plants a thesis for September. Strategic oil reserves are at or near zero in pretty much every country outside the US, the Northern Hemisphere heating season is about to kick on, and farmers in the Philippines and Thailand are under-fertilizing for the 2026 rice cycle. He called it a "triple quadruple whammy." Mark your calendars — that one's specific enough to be falsifiable, and it's going into the predictions file. Then we shifted to the macro question: US debt now exceeds GDP for the first time since 1946. Japan's been over 200% for a long time, so it's not unprecedented, but it does narrow the policy options. Dan and I came down hard on the same side: you don't coupon your way out of this — you grow your way out. Dan's working frame is that AI might be the productivity multiplier that makes that math work. "If the rare unicorn engineer in Silicon Valley was the 10x engineer," he asked, "what if everyone worth 50% IQ and up is now a 10x person?" That's the bet. Pair it with immigration and assimilation (which we still do better than anyone) and the path is at least findable, even if the politics around getting there are nuts. He closes us out by quoting Marco Rubio — yes, I know, that Marco Rubio (and yes, the Sad Marco meme remains my favorite of the year) — but his recent line on national exceptionalism is the kind of thing Dan wants to bottle up and give to everyone: we are exceptional, the color of your skin doesn't matter, your education doesn't matter, all you have to do is get after it. I won't argue with that. Thanks for sticking with us through a slightly more diagnostic episode than usual. The numbness is real, but the signals are still out there if you know where to look — and the cure for high prices, as Dan likes to say, is high price. Creation fills, consumption drains. Go build something everybody. — Sean Tools & Platforms Mentioned * FRED — St. Louis Federal Reserve Economic Database [https://fred.stlouisfed.org/] — the gas-prices-as-percent-of-take-home-pay data source. The series you want is Federal Debt: Total Public Debt as Percent of Gross Domestic Product (GFDEGDQ188S [https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GFDEGDQ188S]) for the chart we walked through. * SEC EDGAR [https://www.sec.gov/edgar.shtml] — the disclosure-data source I named for the bellwether-tracker project I keep promising to ship. * David Deutsch's Twitter (@DavidDeutschOxf [https://twitter.com/DavidDeutschOxf]) — Dan recommends turning notifications on; he's all over what's happening in the UK right now. Companies Discussed * Streaming / subscription: Netflix, Paramount, HBO, Amazon (Prime) * Food delivery: DoorDash, Uber Eats, McDonald's * Retail / consumer: H-E-B (Texas grocery), Walmart, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Heinz, Tide, Johnson & Johnson * Home security: ADT, SimpliSafe * Dating / social: Bumble, OkCupid (historical) * Luxury / event: LVMH (Hermès Birkin), Live Nation, Ticketmaster, Miami Grand Prix * Sports / live: NWSL — Houston Dash, Denver Summit Links & References * FRED chart: Federal Debt as % of GDP [https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GFDEGDQ188S] — the line we walked: 40% in 1942 → ~105% post-WWII → ~23% by 1974 → mid-90s peak around 90% → 2001 local bottom → 100.2% today. * IMF Japan debt-to-GDP historical [https://www.imf.org/en/Countries/JPN] — for the comparison-case figures Dan cited (232–260% range over recent years). * Trading Economics — Japan Government Debt to GDP [https://tradingeconomics.com/japan/government-debt-to-gdp] — Dan's specific source for the Japanese numbers. * Wall Street Journal — US debt now exceeds the size of the economy [https://www.wsj.com/] — the chart Dan shared; sourced from White House OMB, Treasury, BEA. * Howard Marks memos at Oaktree [https://www.oaktreecapital.com/insights/memos] — referenced in spirit (cure-for-high-prices-is-high-price register). * Hilbert's hotel / "infinity hotel" [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert%27s_paradox_of_the_Grand_Hotel] — the David Deutsch concept that came up again in passing. Unqualified Fact-Check * 🟢 Sean (~03:16): "FRED, the St. Louis Federal Reserve Economic Database… you can go in and find these great data sets that go back 100 years in some cases." Correct. FRED is the canonical free macro-data archive; many series go back to the 1920s–1930s, and gas-price plus median-income data are both available there. The exact "gas price as percent of take-home pay" ratio Sean references isn't a packaged series, but it's straightforwardly computable from FRED inputs and is, directionally, at multi-decade lows. * 🟢 Sean (~33:30 → 37:00) US debt-to-GDP walk: "40% in 1942 → about 105% by 1950 → bottoms around 23% in 1974 → climbs to about 90% in early 1990s → local bottom 2001 → 100.2% today." Strong. All figures align with FRED's GFDEGDQ188S series (Federal Debt: Total Public Debt as Percent of Gross Domestic Product). The 23% trough in the mid-1970s and the 100%+ figure today are both correct to within a point. * 🟢 Dan (~37:17 → 37:51) Japan debt-to-GDP: "232 to 260% as of 2024 to 2025… high of 258 in 2020." Directionally accurate. IMF's general-government gross-debt-to-GDP for Japan was ~257% in 2020 and is currently estimated in the 234–250% range for 2025. Dan's numbers are within 2–3 points of consensus. * 🟡 Dan (~13:43): "Christmas isn't happening" / inflation prediction walk-back. This is an in-episode revision of a prior call from May 2025 (Calling All Mental Nomads, where Dan's "$1,600 Nintendo Switches" prediction was made). Dan revises in real-time: the prediction didn't come true the way he expected. Tracked in the Canon Predictions file as christmas-2025-supply-shock; this episode is the on-mic acknowledgment that the prediction came in softer than forecast. Yellow rather than red because the prediction was explicitly flagged as "exaggeration, directionally meant seriously" when made. * 🟢 Dan (~31:38): "You make a bad tweet [in the UK] and the police seem to be showing up your door." Real phenomenon. The UK's Communications Act 2003 §127 and Public Order Act 1986 have been used to prosecute social-media speech, including multiple high-profile cases in 2024–2025 (Allison Pearson, the Southport-riots prosecutions, the Bee on the Wall case). Directionally accurate. * 🟡 Sean (~10:43): "Caviar is on trend right now." Half-confirmed. There's been a real TikTok/Instagram-driven "caviar bump" in 2024–2025 (multiple trade-press pieces flagged it; Imperial Caviar and The Cure Company ran the social campaigns). Whether it qualifies as "on trend right now" depends on the recording date — the trend may have already peaked. * 🟢 Dan (~30:19): "Never bet against humanity / never doubt human ingenuity." This is a running theme of the show (Dan: "we've said that's been a running theme of ours"), and the inheritor of my Because Molecules closer "never bet against ingenuity." Promoting from UNSURE to Confirmed in the show's Canon RunningBits file. Final score: 5🟢 / 2🟡 / 0🔴. One-line summary: A diagnostic episode with no real errors — the macro figures are accurate, the directional claims hold up, and the only yellows are an in-show prediction revision and a "is this still hot?" trend question. Chapters * 0:00 — Cold open: three weeks to get numb * 0:17 — Sign-on / Houston heat / NWSL * 1:30 — Mud season in Crested Butte * 2:30 — Have we all gotten numb? (the body version) * 3:00 — Fuel prices vs. take-home pay (FRED) * 5:00 — Hardship vs. going backwards * 6:30 — Building the bellwether basket: streaming subs * 8:20 — DoorDash: pickup vs. delivery as the belt-tightening signal * 10:00 — Birkin bags, caviar, and signals from the rich * 14:15 — The cure for high prices is high price * 15:00 — The September thesis (oil + heat + crops) * 16:30 — "The Adams keep moving" — smuggler's paradise * 18:30 — Food inflation propagation, rice's reach * 20:00 — The hosts themselves as bellwethers: unit-price scanning * 21:30 — Coupon-scan volume as alt-data * 23:30 — Maslow's hierarchy: rent, safety, gym subscriptions * 25:30 — Dating apps and gamification fragility * 27:20 — The body could puke it up * 30:15 — Never bet against humanity / sex or drugs * 30:45 — AI safety, free expression, and oblique prompts * 31:35 — UK police and bad tweets * 33:30 — WSJ chart: US debt > GDP, 1942–today * 37:15 — Japan as the comparison case (232–260% of GDP) * 39:00 — Drive it down vs. expand out of it * 39:30 — The 10x-engineer-for-everyone thesis * 42:00 — Mind virus and the messaging problem * 42:30 — Hormuz callback / we got used to it * 43:30 — Birth rate, immigration, growth levers * 44:20 — 300k-from-side-hustles as the new normal * 46:10 — The Marco Rubio "bottle it up" line * 47:25 — Wrap: go build something

31 de may de 202648 min
episode Rules for Thee, Alpha for Me artwork

Rules for Thee, Alpha for Me

Two Hundred Bucks and a Stock Tip Hello dear show notes readers! This week Dan and I sit with a question that has been bothering me for a while and got sharper this week thanks to a perfect natural experiment: a US Army NCO got charged for making four hundred thousand dollars on Polymarket betting on the Maduro raid he was part of. Around the same time, Senator Markwayne Mullin bought stock in Chevron — the only US-listed company with Venezuelan oil operations — days before the same operation. The senator's position is up about twenty-two points over the S&P. The soldier is going to prison. The senator is going to a committee hearing. We get into why that gap exists, what the data on congressional trading actually shows (it's more nuanced than the headlines), why the STOCK Act has a two-hundred-dollar fine and zero prosecutions in roughly a decade, and whether the answer is more rules or more sunlight. Spoiler: I came in believing one thing and Dan talked me partway out of it. We also fall down a few side roads we couldn't resist — the French guy who spoofed a Polymarket weather contract by holding a hairdryer to the airport temperature sensor (still my favorite grift of 2026), the term-limits and lifetime-appointments question, and a riff about reading David Deutsch and Rory Sutherland in the same week. Dan plants a seed at the end about something we've both been wrestling with: what happens to investing when you bolt a probabilistic machine (LLMs) onto a deterministic one (the legacy quant playbook). That one's coming in a future episode. Thanks for sticking with us. We are, by Dan's accurate diagnosis, "the weird ones because this is what we choose to do with our weekend." Go build something. — Sean Books Discussed * The Beginning of Infinity [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beginning_of_Infinity] by David Deutsch [https://www.daviddeutsch.org.uk/] — Dan's "infinity hotel" reference is from this book. Dense but rewarding. * Alchemy: The Surprising Power of Ideas That Don't Make Sense [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alchemy_(book)] by Rory Sutherland [https://www.ogilvy.com/people/rory-sutherland] — I'd reread it tomorrow. Sutherland: please write another one. * Money Stuff (Bloomberg newsletter) by Matt Levine [https://www.bloomberg.com/authors/AS6n3pwU3Tw/matthew-s-levine] — Dan's source for the Tesla-SpaceX-merger reasoning. Subscribe. Tools & Platforms Mentioned * Polymarket [https://polymarket.com/] — prediction market; site of both the Maduro-raid bet and the hairdryer hack * Kalshi [https://kalshi.com/] — regulated prediction market * Capitol Trades [https://www.capitoltrades.com/] — primary public source for congressional trade disclosures * Quiver Quantitative [https://www.quiverquant.com/congresstrading/] — best aggregated data and portfolio-return modeling on Congress Companies Discussed * Chevron (CVX) — the Mullin trade * Tesla (TSLA), SpaceX, xAI, Cursor, US Steel — all in the Musk-merger riff * Renaissance Technologies, Citadel, Jane Street, AQR — the legacy-quant universe in the AI-investing plant * Google Cloud — financial-services partnerships (CME, Citadel) Links & References * NANC — Subversive Democratic Trading ETF [https://unusualwhales.com/etf/NANC] — tracks Democratic Congress trades; trailing 12-month return ~30%. * KRUZ — Subversive Republican Trading ETF [https://unusualwhales.com/etf/KRUZ] — tracks Republican Congress trades; trailing 12-month return ~18%. * Pelosi Tracker (pelositracker.app) [https://pelositracker.app/] — the dedicated single-name tracker. * STOCK Act (2012) — full text on Congress.gov [https://www.congress.gov/112/plaws/publ105/PLAW-112publ105.htm] * Hawley press release — PELOSI Act advances out of Senate committee, July 2025 [https://www.hawley.senate.gov/hawley-advances-pelosi-act-to-ban-congressional-stock-trading-out-of-committee/] * Ziobrowski et al. (2004) — Abnormal Returns from the Common Stock Investments of the U.S. Senate [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-financial-and-quantitative-analysis/article/abs/abnormal-returns-from-the-common-stock-investments-of-the-us-senate/A39406479940758D59E09FDCB8EE9BEC] — the original ~85 bps/month finding. * Belmont et al. (2022) — Capitol Losses [https://j-hai.github.io/assets/pdf/capitol.pdf] — the post-STOCK-Act revised verdict. * WSJ — Soldier charged with $400K Polymarket bet on Maduro capture [https://www.wsj.com/] (search "Polymarket Maduro soldier") * Hilbert's Hotel / "infinity hotel" [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert%27s_paradox_of_the_Grand_Hotel] — the concept Dan referenced from The Beginning of Infinity Unqualified Fact-Check * 🔴 Sean (~17:18): "Back before 2004 when they passed the Stock Act, I think it was 2004…" The STOCK Act was passed in April 2012, not 2004. The 2004 date is the Ziobrowski et al. study, which analyzed 1993–1998 Senate trading data and found ~85 basis points/month abnormal returns. Different document, ten years apart, both important — Sean conflated them. (The directional point — that congressional alpha looked larger before the legislation forced disclosure — is correct.) * 🟢 Sean (~09:43): "I'm sure that there's a system where if you're an NCO, you can only go to..." Correct. US Army NCOs run E-4 (Corporal) through E-9 (Sergeant Major of the Army). Above that are warrant officers (W-1 to W-5) and commissioned officers (O-1 to O-10). NCOs do max out at E-9 — Sean was right (and Sean explicitly asked us to fact-check this on-mic). * 🟢 Sean (~12:08–12:23): "NANC, plus about 30%... S&P plus 25%... Republicans... trailing the market by a good 8 percentage points." Approximately correct. Trailing-12-month: NANC ~28.78–31.54%; KRUZ ~18.14%; SPY ~25%. Sean was within a point on each. * 🟡 Sean (~17:55): "Top decile of Congress trades at about plus 30%, which is impressive that that's over every era." Directionally correct but slightly oversold. The Ziobrowski (1993–1998) and Belmont et al. (2022) papers find that the top decile of Congress members significantly outperforms the market, but +30% as a constant across all eras is a rough approximation. The actual top-decile alpha varies by year and era; +30% is roughly right for the most-active high-frequency traders in recent years. * 🟢 Sean (~20:07): "$200 fine... zero prosecutions on these 200-plus incidents since [2012]." Correct on both counts. STOCK Act late-filing fine is $200 (with a member-applied waiver path); per multiple Sludge / Business Insider audits, dozens of late-filing violations have been documented and zero criminal prosecutions have occurred. * 🟡 Sean (~19:42): "since 2014, [late reports have] been going up every year from single digits. Now we're seeing about 50 trades a year that aren't reported on time." The trend direction (rising late-filings) is correct. The specific year-over-year shape is approximate — different audits use different definitions of "late." 50/year is in the right neighborhood. * 🟢 Sean (~12:14): "Mark Wayne Mullen right there with his Mark Wayne Mullen trade wasn't in great size — only $50,000 when I saw reported." Correct. Mullin's Chevron disclosure was $15,001–$50,000 (Capitol Trades / Senate disclosure), purchased Dec 29, 2025; the position is up ~24% with SPY up ~3% over the same window. Final score: 1🔴 / 2🟡 / 4🟢. One-line summary: Strong on the data, sloppy on the date — the STOCK Act is a 2012 law, not a 2004 one, but the directional argument holds. Chapters * 0:00 — Cold open / cemetery bike ride * 2:24 — Sean's lawyer routine: setting up a non-US VPS * 3:48 — The rules don't apply to them: Senator vs. Soldier * 6:18 — The Charles de Gaulle hairdryer hack * 8:13 — Polymarket fraud cases and Special Forces NCO * 11:22 — NANC vs. KRUZ vs. SPY: the Congress-tracker ETFs * 13:35 — No incumbents: term limits across all three branches * 16:30 — The STOCK Act, $200 fines, and zero prosecutions * 21:00 — What would real reform look like? * 24:10 — Sunsets, DOGE, and reform-by-iteration * 26:55 — David Deutsch, Rory Sutherland, and the infinity hotel * 28:30 — The Tesla/SpaceX merger prediction * 36:30 — Plant: probabilistic vs. deterministic in AI-driven investing * 44:00 — Wrap and sign-off

27 de abr de 202645 min
episode Prometheus Politicking artwork

Prometheus Politicking

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

20 de abr de 202654 min
episode Sold Down the River artwork

Sold Down the River

Hello dear show notes readers! This week on Unqualified Advice, we started looking at the phrase "Sold down the river." The phrase's dark history goes back to the cotton gin, 1793, and the horrific expansion of slavery that followed. It was an unfortunate example of Jevons Paradox in action, which brought us our thread for the episode: when technology makes something more efficient, demand doesn't shrink — it explodes. Sound familiar? From there we pulled the lens forward to AI. Dan shared a data center bans tracker and the map of which states are welcoming vs. blocking this infrastructure is illuminating — the industrial North might be flipping into the hollowed-out NIMBY North while the Deep South booms. Then we jumped overseas — the Strait of Hormuz, Citrini Research's on-the-ground reporting, and Singapore's foreign minister on why the Strait of Malacca matters more than people think. Go get your hands dirty this week. Cheers, Sean "The industrial North is flipped and it's going to be the industrial South and the hollowed out NIMBY North." Shows/Films Discussed * The Man in the High Castle — Amazon series reimagining a world where Germany and Japan won WWII * Breaking Bad — Referenced in passing (New Mexico) Tools & Platforms Mentioned * datacenterbans.com [https://www.datacenterbans.com/] — State-level tracker of data center bans, moratoriums, and incentives across the US * Riverside — Recording/editing platform (where the sausage gets made) Companies Discussed * OpenAI / Sam Altman * Nvidia * SpaceX / Starlink * BYD * Waymo * TSMC * Samsung * AMD * Amazon * Lime * Walmart * Citrini Research Links & References * datacenterbans.com [https://www.datacenterbans.com/] — Interactive US map tracking data center legislation by state * Citrini Research [https://citriniresearch.com/] — James Van Geelen's investment research firm; their Strait of Hormuz field report is now outside the paywall * Jevons Paradox (Wikipedia) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox] — The counterintuitive principle that efficiency gains increase total resource consumption * Cotton Gin and the Expansion of Slavery [https://dp.la/primary-source-sets/cotton-gin-and-the-expansion-of-slavery] — Digital Public Library of America resource on the cotton gin's impact * Dan's Prometheus Dispatch — "The Tab" [https://prometheusdispatch.substack.com/] — Dan's Substack essay on US global commitments and the Strait of Hormuz Unqualified Fact-Check 🔍 We said some things. Here's how we did. 🟢 = Nailed it | 🟡 = Close enough | 🔴 = Whiffed it 🟢 Cotton gin invented in 1793 We said Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in 1793. Correct — he built his first prototype in 1793 and received his patent on March 14, 1794. We got the year right. 🟡 What the cotton gin actually does We described it as mechanizing "the sorting or the picking of the cotton bowls from the seeds and the husks." Close but not quite — the cotton gin separates cotton fibers from seeds using rotating teeth pulled through narrow slots. No husks involved. The picking of cotton itself remained entirely manual. Half credit for getting the general idea right. 🟢 Jevons Paradox applied to the cotton gin We called the cotton gin story "the Jevons Paradox of the whole thing." Textbook application. William Stanley Jevons observed in 1865 that more efficient steam engines led to more coal consumption, not less — exactly what happened with cotton and enslaved labor after the gin. Well played. 🟡 Mississippi is "state number 11" in reading after implementing phonics Dan said Mississippi "instituted phonics" and became "state number 11" in reading. The phonics story is real — Mississippi's Literacy-Based Promotion Act (2013) produced dramatic improvements. Their exact national ranking varies by source and metric: somewhere between 9th and 21st depending on the year and assessment. Close enough for a podcast, but the #11 claim is hard to pin down precisely. 🟡 Oregon spent "$11 billion extra dollars on education" with declining scores Dan said Oregon spent $11 billion extra on education and saw reading scores decline. The direction is absolutely correct — Oregon dramatically increased education spending (including $1.62 billion in federal pandemic relief) while posting some of the lowest fourth-grade reading scores in the nation. The $11 billion figure appears overstated, but the point stands: dollars didn't equal outcomes. 🟢 Strait of Hormuz narrowest point is 21 miles We said the nearest point at the Strait of Hormuz is 21 miles. Confirmed — it's 21 nautical miles at its narrowest. The shipping lanes are even tighter: two 2-mile-wide channels separated by a 2-mile buffer zone. 🟡 Strait of Malacca narrowest point is 2 miles We said the Strait of Malacca narrows to 2 miles based on Singapore's foreign minister's comments. It's actually about 1.5 miles (2.8 km) at the Phillips Channel near Singapore. Close — and the broader point about it being dramatically tighter than Hormuz is correct. 🟢 SpaceX wants to build data centers in space Dan said SpaceX is pitching data centers in space as part of their IPO valuation story. Confirmed — SpaceX filed FCC plans in January 2026 for satellites that would serve as orbital data centers. Still highly speculative but definitely being discussed. 🟢 BONUS: Shad is indeed a fish Sean blurted out "shad" instead of "shall" and then claimed shad is a fish. He's right! Shad are saltwater fish of the herring family (Alosa genus), with about 30 species worldwide. The American shad is the largest herring species. Sean, take a victory lap on this one. Final Score: 5 green, 4 yellow, 0 red Strong showing this week. The Jevons Paradox callout was chef's kiss, and even the ad-lib fish taxonomy was on point. We'll take it. Chapters * 0:00 - Introduction * 0:55 - "Sold Down the River": The Dark History Behind the Phrase * 6:36 - The Jevons Paradox of AI * 9:30 - Who Should Lead the AI Revolution? * 19:07 - Data Center Bans: A Map of America's Future * 22:36 - Mississippi's Phonics Miracle vs. Oregon's Billions * 28:03 - The Indiana Brain Drain * 31:05 - NIMBYism and the New Rust Belt * 36:34 - Incentive Design: Tax Breaks, Power Plants, and EVs * 43:02 - The Midwest Flip: Vacation Cottages and Office Space * 51:08 - Strait of Hormuz: Who's in Control? * 54:31 - The Strait of Malacca and Singapore's Fundamentals * 59:29 - Kamala Harris and the Pendulum * 1:02:06 - Have We Graduated from COVID?

13 de abr de 202657 min
episode Because Molecules artwork

Because Molecules

Hello dear show notes readers! This week on Unqualified Advice, Dan and I dove headfirst into the Hormuz Strait crisis — and what started as a conversation about oil prices turned into something much bigger. The strait went from 120 ships a day to about 5. The cascade from that single chokepoint touches everything from the gas in your car to the chips in your phone to whether your local hospital can run an MRI. We brought charts this week (you know it's serious when the charts come out), and we walked through the shale revolution numbers that honestly blew my mind. We're producing three times the oil we were in 2000 with 37% fewer rigs — the productivity story of American energy is wild when you see it laid out. Then we got into helium, and that's where things got uncomfortable. Qatar produces a third of the world's helium, the Ras Laffan facility got hit by missiles, and guess what helium is used for? Semiconductors, MRI machines, rockets, quantum computing. Oh, and the US used to have a strategic helium reserve. We sold it off. Right before we started building chip fabs. We game out scenarios — from the "toll booth" regime Iran is already running (charging $2 million per ship, some payments in yuan) to China's potential power play where they let the chaos build for a few weeks and then swoop in as the rescuer. I introduced what I'm calling "risk washing" — the idea that the market correction isn't purely about Iran; it's people using geopolitics as a socially acceptable excuse to de-risk positions they already wanted to exit. Dan had a great riff on anti-supply politics and why windfall taxes on energy companies are the exact wrong move during a shortage. We closed on something I've been thinking about all week: Trump's approach isn't grand strategy — it's an orientation. Black and white, transactional, applied consistently to everything from personal relationships to geopolitics. Once you see it as orientation rather than strategy, a lot of the noise starts making sense. Despite all the chaos, we keep coming back to the same thing: never bet against ingenuity. The shale revolution proved we don't have to stay stuck. The only way out is through. Cheers, Sean Links & References * Gavekal Research: "Shattered Assumptions and the Energy Quandary" [https://research.gavekal.com/article/shattered-assumptions-and-the-energy-quandary/] — The article that kicked off our pre-show prep; argues energy is structurally underweighted in portfolios * Odd Lots: "Now There's a Helium Shortage and It Affects More Than Balloons" [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1308-odd-lots-30972803/episode/now-theres-a-helium-shortage-and-it-affects-more-than-balloons-328227009/] — Nick Snyder of North American Helium on why helium scarcity matters for semiconductors and beyond * Odd Lots: "The Petrochemicals Shock That's Already Rippling Through Plastics" [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1308-odd-lots-30972803/episode/the-petrochemicals-shock-thats-already-rippling-through-plastics-327997117/] — Philip Geurts of BloombergNEF on the naphtha cracker crisis * Brookings: "Why Iran's disruption of the Strait of Hormuz matters" [https://www.brookings.edu/articles/why-irans-disruption-of-the-strait-of-hormuz-matters/] — Comprehensive overview of what flows through the Strait * Fortune: Larry Fink's "$40 or $150 oil" interview [https://fortune.com/2026/03/25/larry-fink-iran-war-oil-prices-two-extremes-recession-growth/] — The binary framing we referenced Unqualified Fact-Check 🔍 We said some things. Here's how we did. 🟢 = Nailed it | 🟡 = Close enough | 🔴 = Whiffed it 🟢 Strait of Hormuz traffic collapse Sean said ship traffic dropped from "about 120 a day" to "about 5 a day." Maritime intelligence firm Windward confirms ~120 daily transits pre-conflict, and tracking data shows as few as 5 per day by late March. Nailed it. 🟢 Brent crude 2008 peak Dan said Brent peaked at "148-149" in 2008. The actual peak was ~$145-148 per barrel in July 2008, depending on the exchange. Close enough to round up. Green light. 🟡 US oil production: 14.5 million barrels per day Dan said US production was "about 14.5 million barrels a day at end of 2025." The EIA reports the actual record was 13.6 million bpd in 2025. He's about 900K barrels high — that's a noticeable gap but the directional story (massive growth from ~5.8M in 2000) is completely right. 🟡 Drilling laterals: 2,500 feet in 2000 to 11,000 today Dan said average lateral length went from 2,500 ft in 2000 to 11,000 ft today. Current Permian averages are ~10,500+ ft, so 11K is close. The 2,500 ft figure for 2000 is plausible for early horizontal wells. We'll give partial credit — the trajectory is right even if the starting point is hard to pin down exactly. 🟡 $2 million toll per ship Sean reported Iran is charging "$2 million" per vessel to transit Hormuz. This figure has been widely reported but not independently verified. Sean gets credit for flagging his own uncertainty: "I don't know if that's accurate." Self-awareness earns you a yellow. 🟢 3x production with fewer rigs Dan said we're producing "three times the amount we were in 2000 with 20-30% fewer rigs." Production went from ~5.8M bpd to ~13.6M bpd (about 2.3x, close to 3x with NGLs included), and rig counts have declined significantly from early-2000s peaks. The productivity story is real. 🟡 Helium reserve sold for $1.4 billion Dan said the helium reserve "cost $1.4 billion over 30 years, sold for $1.4 billion over 30 years." The reality: the reserve had accumulated $1.4B in debt by 1995, and Congress directed the sell-off to repay it under the Helium Privatization Act of 1996. The dollar amounts are roughly right but the framing of "cost vs. sold for" oversimplifies the accounting. Final Score: 3 green, 4 yellow, 0 red Solid outing. The energy numbers held up well, the macro story is right, not a bad outing. Chapters * 00:00 - Introduction & Weekend Check-In * 02:09 - The Hormuz Crisis: A Monster With No Head * 05:11 - Market Corrections & What They're Really Saying * 08:33 - Risk Washing: The New AI Washing * 09:23 - "Because Molecules": Energy Is Prosperity * 10:04 - Ship Traffic Collapse: 120 Per Day to 5 * 14:03 - Germany's Nuclear Failure & Ideological Energy Policy * 16:50 - Make America Poland Again (MAPA) * 20:38 - The Helium Crisis Nobody's Talking About * 28:39 - Charts: The Shale Revolution in Numbers * 35:00 - The Drilling Productivity Miracle * 38:50 - Anti-Supply Politics & Windfall Taxes * 40:58 - Investment Thesis: Buy Canadian Oil * 44:29 - Scenarios: From Muddle-Through to Tsunami * 47:19 - China's Four-Week Power Play * 50:34 - Data Centers as Strategic Targets * 55:06 - Cuba: The Next Distraction? * 57:50 - Trump's Orientation: Black, White, and Transactional * 01:02:22 - Code Pink, Claude, and Understanding Opposing Worldviews * 01:05:02 - The Leopard: Change to Stay the Same * 01:08:18 - What to Watch This Week * 01:10:26 - Bond Markets, Housing, and the Rate Squeeze * 01:12:44 - Closing: Never Bet Against Ingenuity

2 de abr de 20261 h 2 min