Hopefully…

Seen in Arles on a Summer evening
Quote of the Day
There are three ways to make a living:
Lie to people who want to be lied to, and you’ll get rich.
Tell the truth to those who want the truth, and you’ll make a living.
Tell the truth to those who want to be lied to, and you’ll go broke.
- Jason Zweig
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Mark Knopfler | If this goodbye
Long Read of the Day
The Five Books That Could Save America

Remarkable essay by Larry Lessig, someone I’ve known (and admired) for decades and who embodies my mantra (channelling my inner Gramsci) that what we need now is “realism of the intellect and optimism of the will”. The former starts with acknowledging that liberal democracy has failed to deliver for an awful lot of people.
Here’s how Larry sets out his stall.
I’ve long been skeptical that we, as a people, can recover from the catastrophe we now face. Most think that catastrophe is Donald Trump. I certainly believe Donald Trump is a catastrophe, but the catastrophe we face is deeper. And to cure it, if indeed it can be cured, we must work through its layers.
One layer is the corruption of money. A necessary but not sufficient condition for curing our deeper catastrophe is to end the corrupting influence of money in our politics. That’s possible, and we might be on the edge of a critical breakthrough, but even that breakthrough won’t be enough.
Because even deeper and profoundly more consequential is the corruption caused by engagement-based media. Cable news and social media render us inherently and unavoidably incoherent as a people. They profit by turning us into ignorant people who hate each other, and through this business model, they’ve earned endless profit. Solving the corruption of money won’t solve this. Given the extremism of the First Amendment, it’s not even clear we have the constitutional authority to solve this. But even if we did, there’s a third layer to our catastrophe that I’ve become convinced we must solve as well. And this layer, surprisingly (given my brand is pessimism), we could solve. At least, I think I’ve glimpsed a way.
This third layer was introduced most prominently by the first (and most famous) of the five books that could save America: Abundance, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson. Abundance describes powerfully and effectively the current incapacity of our system of governance. We’ve lost, as they evince and everyone notices, the ability, as a people, to do big things. The book maps a range of such failures. The common thread linking these cases is the emerging sclerosis of American governance. That, for Democrats especially, is existential, because Democrats especially proffer government to address the problems we all recognize as real.
This is a point I’ve long believed but never been able to articulate as powerfully or as effectively as Abundance does. It was the essence of my diagnosis after the last election: Democrats are obsessed with describing the 15 great geeky plans they’ve got for solving key problems in our society, never recognizing that the American public glazes over at the descriptions because the American public believes that government can’t do anything. We’ve been convinced by a line in Ronald Reagan’s first inaugural address: “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” Anyone trying to understand this layer must start with this book…
Read on. The strange thing is that most of what he says also applies to the UK in its current state of paralysis.
Books, etc.
See above!
My commonplace booklet
Quentin’s Law of Optimum Velocity
Nice blog post by my friend Quentin, who was musing on why he now likes to drive more slowly than he did twenty years ago.
He proposes a formula for calculating one’s optimum velocity:
Vmax = 120 – age
I daren’t tell you how low my optimum speed is. What’s yours?
Linkblog
Something I noticed, while drinking from the Internet firehose.
This made my day. A billionaire named Kevin O’Leary (Hmmm… sounds Irish) — who is the guy behind a new data centre in Utah which is twice the size of Manhattan — attacked two local girls who oppose it. Big mistake. Worth watching to see why.
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