"Carpe diem," or
"Carpet demons."
And the question of which haunted them.
"Carpe diem," or
"Carpet demons."
- diet (less sugar, salt and calories than those of us in the West),
- exercise (among other things, a national radio program guiding the elderly through 3-minutes of daily exercise has a wide audience), and
- fraud (family not reporting on the death of a deceased relative in order to continue collecting pension money).
Yesterday, Larry Ellison's net worth rose more than $100 billion within the first 40 minutes of the market opening as Oracle stock surged.
Maybe now Oracle will finally promote the poor guy from CTO to CEO.
Utterly fascinating divide among gen z men who voted for Trump and gen z women who voted for Harris in an NBC poll.
On a list of 12 important measures of success,Incomes don’t just grow by percentages; they compound across generations. In the 20th century, wages in the United States grew nearly eightfold. But the real miracle wasn’t just bigger paychecks. It was what those paychecks allowed people to buy, do, and experience - things that their grandparents couldn’t even imagine.
Consider just a few of the products that were unavailable in
1900 but commonplace by 2000:
Transport & Communication
Consumer Goods & Daily Life
Entertainment & Media
Medicine & Biology
And since 2000, the list has only accelerated: CRISPR gene
editing, AI assistants, mRNA vaccines, reusable rockets, 3D printing, solar and
wind at scale, drone delivery, streaming media.
This is what progress feels like to the ordinary
person. It’s not an abstract rise in GDP. It’s the astonishment of standing in
a grocery aisle with choices your great-grandparents couldn’t have named, let
alone afforded.
“Mike’s rise to the number one or top-ranking position in the chimpanzee community was both interesting and spectacular. … At one time he even had appeared almost bald from losing so many handfuls of hair during aggressive incidents with his fellow apes. One day at camp, all at once Mike calmly walked over to our tent and took hold of an empty kerosene can by the handle. Then he picked up a second can and, walking upright, returned to the place where he had been sitting. Armed with his two cans Mike stared toward the other males… Gradually, he rocked more vigorously, his hair slowly began to stand erect, and then, softly at first, he started a series of pant-hoots… The cans… made the most appalling racket: no wonder the erstwhile peaceful males rushed out of the way… Mike’s use of the cans that made an unfamiliar and very loud, intimidating sound in his display was nothing short of brilliant.”