4 Comments

Brother, I really enjoy your writing, but you've got to do something about your substack page. Without serifs the font is somewhat difficult to read at this size - you'd do better bumping it up a point or two, or simply changing to a serif font. There are odd empty spots and weird, pointless gifs in different places that make the reader wonder whether the essay is finished, only to find that it continues on, further down. There are weird links to other essays stuck in the middle (NY Mayor Race, eg) that make it look as if what follows beneath the titles are new essays... It's kind of a mess. I've admired your comments on Quillette for quite a while, and wish you had a bigger audience. Fix your substack page so that readers who stumble across it won't quickly stumble away out of confusion. As I've always told my students, a writer gets exactly one awkward sentence before the reader starts to drift away and lose focus, and on the second awkward sentence the reader is gone. Your page is a graphic representation of the same difficulty. So... you know... please do something about it.

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New to this show, thanks to Geary’s link at Quillette. Subscribed and looking forward to the offerings and discussion.

I am a bit puzzled by the apparent conflation of bias and data, however. If real data (I understand the corruptability of data) indicates an 80% default rate in a certain zip code would I be biased or informed if I chose not to loan money in that environ?

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Interesting takes as usual. A big issue is that the future seems to require less labor, as progress is all about reducing labor, in effort, injury, time and expense. How many people by labor-increasing tools and services? Yes, exercise equipment is one of the clear outliars among those who don't labor for a living!

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Not so fast. Here in Canada the building boom is creating quite the job market going into its 15th year (maybe more). over this time wages have increased for any sort of skilled trade (or unskilled labour) ... or telecom technician, electrician, brick layer, hvac tech, painter, carpenter -- trades of all kinds - all of these - demand high wages. Telecom technicians, the ones who attach your house to the internet? $120k a year here in Ontario. An electrical contractor with his own firm for 10 years and a bit of business sense is clearing $250 to 350k. So university can go fuck off, oversaturated as it is with overpaid, marxist administrators, if it's my child I'm advising. Because new CFAs get $45k, lawyers about the same. And work longer hours, unpaid. The only thing university is good for is a STEM education, but noteworthy is that medical residents make $60 to $75k per year for about 4 years after they graduate med school. If they aren't a surgeon, general practice doesn't pay like you'd think.

Anyway. Why aren't more people reading Geary? Best thing on the internet.

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