Pluralistic: By all means, tread on those people (26 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Society
There’s Something Very Dark Happening to Millennials and Gen Z Adults
America is not a good place to be an early adult.
Opinion | Why We Are Feeling Less Hopeful, and What to Do About It
Readers react to a column by David Brooks analyzing the gloominess trend in the United States.
The Terminal Demise Of Consumer Electronics Through Subscription Services
Open any consumer electronics catalog from around the 1980s to the early 2000s and you are overwhelmed by a smörgåsbord of devices, covering any audio-visual and similar entertainment and hobby nee…
Porn censorship is going to destroy the entire internet
Age verification isn't just for adult websites.
AI Is a Mass-Delusion Event
Three years in, one of AI’s enduring impacts is to make people feel like they’re losing it.
Pluralistic: Zuckermuskian solipsism (18 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
What the Economy Really Looks Like
When you factor in all the data points, we have an anxious workforce, a business sector seeking opportunity in inflation, and an avalanche of bad policy bearing down on everyone.
DOJ Insider Blows the Whistle on Pay-to-Play Antitrust Corruption
Roger Alford, former number two at the Justice Department Antitrust Division, speaks out. Here’s what was important in what he said.
Toward a Shallower Future
A repost of one of my favorite essays that I've written.
Pluralistic: LLMs are slot-machines (16 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
Pluralistic: Bluesky creates the world’s weirdest, hardest-to-understand binding arbitration clause (15 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
Pluralistic: “Privacy preserving age verification” is bullshit (14 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
Introduction Part III
On Power, Radical Education and Automation.
"Competitive authoritarianism" and America's slide toward it
You can still vote. It just might not mean much.
The Logic of the ‘9 to 5’ Is Creeping Into the Rest of the Day
How free time gets conscripted into the service of work
Chatbots undermining the Enlightenment ⊗ Flounder mode ⊗ Learners will inherit the earth
No.366 — Interviews with Brian Eno ⊗ Future Imaginaries: Indigenous Art, Fashion, Technology ⊗ Transcribing eyeglasses put subtitles on the world ⊗ NASA satellite may be destroyed on purpose ⊗ Deep sea cables that power the world
Capitalism runs like a computer (and it's being hacked)
Like computer networks, market capitalism rewards actors that exploit gaps created by system and user behavior.
Back to Basics Series: The Velocity of Money (with Ann Pettifor)
If you’ve ever wondered why the economy feels stuck, even when it seems like there's a lot more money in the system, this episode will blow your mind.
Political economist Ann Pettifor joins Nick and Goldy to explain why money isn't flowing like it used to, and why that matters. Over the last century, the velocity of money (how quickly a dollar circulates) has plummeted. Today, each dollar in circulation generates up to 70% less economic activity than it did just ten years ago, so it's not being circulated through the local economies, growing wages and building small businesses with each transaction. Instead, new dollars are just frozen in place.
The culprit? Excess money sitting at the top—hoarded by the wealthy and corporations instead of getting spent.
Pettifor shows that taxing the rich isn’t just fair—it’s pro-growth. Redistribution accelerates the velocity of money, unleashing demand, expanding markets, creating jobs, and ultimately boosting prosperity for everyone. If you’re ready to reclaim the economy from its top-down chokehold, this back-to-basics episode isn’t optional—it’s essential.
Anarchist Calisthenics, by James C. Scott
[Outliers] Sol Price: The Godfather of Costco, Walmart, and Modern Retail
Sol Price is the most influential retailer you've never heard of. A man who never sought the spotlight, but whose legacy and lessons cover the entire landscape of modern retail.
Thomas Neuburger: Our Lawless Elites | naked capitalism
Tracing the increased concentration of power in our elites, and how Trump is in the process of consolidating it in his person.
Pluralistic: Maga’s boss class think they are immune to American carnage (13 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
Pluralistic: Goodhart’s Law (of AI) (11 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
A Cure for Corporate Addiction to Personal Data
I wrote the original version of this post for the March 2018 issue of Linux Journal. You can find it here. Since images from archival material in the magazine no longer load, and I want to update t…
Open Banking and payments competition
Why the banks really hate fintechs that allow businesses to learn your account number easily.
A Note on "Trump Derangement Syndrome"
A Brief Meditation of Moral Witness
The Faux Intellectuals of Silicon Valley
Oligarchs, Courtiers, and the Corruption of Thought
Misunderstanding “Infinite Growth”
At Foundation for Economic Education, Patrick Carroll (“Responding to Reich, Part 10: How to Have Infinite Growth on a Finite Planet,” Feb. 18) Patrick Carroll attempts to explain why critics of capitalism are wrong to say that infinite growth is impossible on a finite planet. As for the idea of infinite growth on a finite...
Dictators love a crisis. “For reasons of both personality an...
Dictators love a crisis. “For reasons of both personality and political ambition, Trump needs a crisis to govern — or rather, to rule. And if the actual conditions of reality will not give him a state of exception, he’ll create one himself.