rue wealth
for - true wealth - wellth - Nate Hagens- Great Simplification - Kristine Tompkins - conservation
rue wealth
for - true wealth - wellth - Nate Hagens- Great Simplification - Kristine Tompkins - conservation
Nate Fischer is a venture capitalist in Dallas whose current projects include a rural real estate development in Tennessee and Kentucky that he has marketed to conservatives. (Mr. Isker has said he planned to move there.) Mr. Fischer has been reading Mr. Renn’s work since around 2019. He asked Mr. Renn to have a drink with him in Manhattan when Mr. Fischer was there taking a weeklong course in “real world risk” organized by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a thinker both he and Mr. Renn cite frequently.
Influence of Taleb on a certain flavor of white guy. in America.
for - podcast - great simplification - Nate Hagen - guest - Daniel Schmachtenberger - topic progress
for - Nate Hagens - The Great Simplification - toxic power - Ashley Hodgson
for - nature-based carbon sequestration - reestablish whale populations - Nate Hagen - The Great Simplification - David King - climate crisis - solutions - progress trap - overfishing - whales
Please welcome a return to this show my Australian colleague Simon Michaux. Simon currently works for the government of Finland in their mining geology division called GTK. Simon and I previously had a conversation called Minerals Blindness, which complimented the term often used on this podcast, energy blindness. 00:00:26 Simon Returns today to give an overview on given the biophysical constraints that we face, how do we think about solutions? And what would be a preliminary framework for research and societal interventions for what we face?
Simon Michaux on Mineral Blindness
Peter Whybrow: “When More is Not Enough”
Title: Demand, services and social aspects of mitigation Author: Nate Hagen Guest: Peter Whybrow, psychiatrist, neuroscientist, and author Date: 6 July, 2022
Nate Angell as our new Director of Communications and Community.
Congratulations Nate! I'm sure Hypothes.is will miss you desperately, but Creative Commons will be all the better for your work and contribution.
https://creativecommons.org/2022/05/03/cc-welcomes-nate-angell/
This was mentioned to me by Nate Maertens in our lunch discussion of edtech tools, spaced repetition, and Barbara Oakley from 2022-02-11.
Nice layout and bullet pointed reasons for using it on a slick website, but it looks awfully expensive in comparison to Anki and Mnemosyne (free). Looks like they've got pre-existing content, but a quick scan doesn't center the value of creating your own cards.
highlighted
And here we go down the rabbit hole....
The election ended a long time ago in one of the biggest Electoral College victories in history.
See Nate Silver's, War Is Peace. Freedom Is Slavery. Trump Won In A Landslide.
Democratic Caucuses: Live Cover
These blogs are so useful.