The Long Sword: The Middle Ages of Wisdom
I am an amateur historian and I truly believe one of the best and most enjoyable ways is reading historical fiction. Christian Cameron is one of the best because he does extensive research on the time periods and regions he writes about whether it is about Alexander the Great, or the time period of war on the steppes in the post Alexander periods.
He is an incredible writer and comes into his own when it comes to the Middle Ages in his series of the medieval knight Sir William Gold as he fights his way around France, Italy, Greece, Germany, Prague and the Holy Lands during the Middle Ages.
Through his 6 book series we see Sir William Gold turn from a young boy, bandit/routier, mercenary, squire, then decorated knight and war hero. It’s a grand adventure filled with interesting characters found during those tumultuous times. It’s a fine story not just because of the fighting and descriptions of the amazing cities and culture of the times but watching William Gold evolve, grow and mature.
One of my favorite passages of one of his great moments of growth:
“There are moments in life that are as definite as battle. As stark. There are moments when you see things as if they are outlined in scarlet, when truth is illuminated, when a man’s character changes because he understands something heretofore hidden, for good or for ill.
We remember with pleasure the achievements of some goal: the wife, the treasure, the golden spur, the Emperor’s sword. But in our secret mind we know that some of the red letters that mark our days were not achievements but discoveries.”
Every moment of joy and happiness in my life was a learning experience. But the most impactful thing was when everything went to crap. Going through hell in 2001 during the dotcom bust. Getting Rekt financial and emotionally in 2020 and the scars of the pandemic lockdown which ruined my family. Horrific times that still stay with me.
A rough 2022 with the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Family issues, challenges in the business. But these challenging moments were also moments of tremendous growth and insight. I learned about myself, I learned about people and friends, I learned about how the world works. And I think I retained my optimism and enthusiasm for life, trying to squeeze in as many moments of joy. Just like William Gold, I am trying to get better and live better. And like William Gold, I never gave up and never will.
The Zen Diary
This excellent movie is about an older Japanese widower living in the mountains who writes and cooks seasonal vegetarian foods based on old monk recipes and his experience growing up in a zen monastery.
Surrounded by gorgeous mountains and natural landscapes, he eats what the season and the earth provides at the time. Nothing is wasted. Learning from his dad and his old monk masters he says: “food was more delicious, it was from the resourcefulness of a poor man.”
He lives in zen. “Life becomes complicated when you anticipate the upcoming days. I should be content to live each day.”
“Living in the hills, working in the fields and cleaning the house, I learned through my body that movement is life. With the changing season there’s more to do in the field. Daily life involves physical labor and that makes you hungry. Hunger improves the taste of food.”
This movie is another example of beautiful Japanese food porn. “The food we eat comes from the soul of the earth and over time, the earth and tastes intertwine.” The exquisite food shown. Wow.
Japanese food is the absolute best and I think this is the case because of the care put into them. It’s not just the technique and freshness of the ingredients, even though these are amazing. The difference is the love, intensity and care of the cook. He prepares the food according to the old traditional ways.
“As zen master Dogen instructed in his writings, the monk in charge of cooking should rinse rice and prepare vegetables with his own hands at all times. Give your full attention to the ingredients and treat them carefully. Not neglecting them for a moment.
Be consistent and Immerse yourself in every process. Don’t see the preparation as an ordinary function.
Changing your heart or words depending on the situation won’t lead to enlightenment.”
The attention to detail, the care, this is why most people I know love Japanese food and why it’s so hard to replicate in other places. That unique mix of fresh unique ingredients, the technique of masters and the deep attention to detail in making the food that only really exists in Japan.
This mentality also carries to almost everything else the Japanese dominate in: crafts, service & hospitality and of course manufacturing. If you have never experienced Japan, I highly recommend it.
Takano Tofu: A Family Business
I’m Taiwanese-Canadian/American with a deep love of Japan so of course I love tofu. I grew up with it. So of course, when I saw the description of “Takano Tofu” movie on the plane I had to watch it. It’s a story about an aging father and daughter who run an exquisite tofu making business in a small port town of Onomichi. A literal tofu craftsman, making perfect tofu with pure ingredients in the traditional Japanese way.
It’s a great and classical tale. The traditionalist, idiosyncratic father who doesn’t want to change anything and the younger daughter who wants to try some new innovative takes on the product or new sales channels like selling their tofu in Tokyo.
There was a time in the movie where he ends up fighting with his daughter and she leaves the home. An old man’s stubbornness and pride gets in the way of happiness. I recognize that in myself. I recognize that in my daughter as well. He realizes he is wrong and he apologizes. It was touching.
The story goes deep into the art of making delicious tofu. Watching the process makes you want to eat it and also drink the soy bean milk they make. It’s what we used to drink for breakfast in Taiwan. So much better than milk.
“The tofu you make, it’s got a fine texture yet it’s soft…..a little sweet. It melts in your mouth as the bean flavor spreads….leaving just a hint of the beans essential astringency. Only you can make it. It’s the flavor of who you are.”
And the joy on the faces of those who eat the tofu. It reminds me of the look I see on people’s faces when he in all the various Japanese food movies: steak, cake, ramen, sushi. Joy and happiness. That is what great food does, it brings joy and happiness. Maybe that is why I love going to food paradises like Japan, Taiwan and Italy, as well as great food cities like Montreal, Vancouver, New York, LA and others.
I’d love to run a business with my daughter. I spend so little time with her and seeing her grow up to be this fine young brilliant lady is one of the greatest joys of my life. How great it would be to work on the business together. One day perhaps.
There is a great quote in the movie when the father is talking about surviving the war, “that was certainly a terrible thing but it’s not an excuse to be unhappy. We live on so we can look back and laugh. That was a great time and I was damn happy.”
The point of the movie is that you are never too old to try to find happiness. It’s good to have someone to live for. It’s good to have something to live for. Having someone who cares for you. We should all realize how fortunate we are to have family & friends.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads May 25th, 2025
“Chaos, when left alone, tends to multiply”--Stephen Hawking
End of the age of debt and death of the global trading system we all know and love. Massive uncertainty and Global macro changes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c31cSvX_UG0
2. "Slightly more behind the scenes, another fundamental force is reshaping how technology scales in this new economic paradigm, putting pressure on the traditional venture capital model: debt.
From transport fleets (Zenobē) to digital infrastructure (CoreWeave) to energy storage (Base) to manufacturing (Hadrian) to clean fuels (Twelve) to aerospace (ISAR) – debt is playing an increasingly key role in the capital stacks of the most promising emerging companies. For companies deploying valuable hard assets – batteries, modular robotics, CNC machines – asset-based lending is emerging as the wedge to unlock scalable project and equipment-level finance, allowing these companies to grow at venture speed while consuming far less equity capital.
These hard asset businesses are increasingly built and valued on bundles of cash flows rather than revenue multiples, requiring an entirely different approach to capital formation across the company lifecycle. And while several early movers have begun to break through, the holistic financing models best suited to systematically support and scale this model remain fragmented and underdeveloped.
The even greater challenge comes in bridging these two worlds under one roof – the venture market dreamers and the credit market pragmatists – to create not just unique positioning but an integrated capacity to transform how emerging industrial technology scales.
The answer to Larry Fink's question of "who will own" the $68 trillion infrastructure boom will increasingly include Production Capitalists and the companies they finance and shape.
By removing transaction costs, unlocking information asymmetries, and reducing friction from the capital formation process, these firms will accelerate the deployment of critical technologies at precisely the moment when speed of implementation matters most, and where existing financiers will prove unable to cope in the face of increasing complexity.
The firms that successfully embrace this capital orchestration role will not only generate superior returns by manufacturing their own alpha, but they will also become critical enablers of the infrastructure revolution essential for driving the next era of economic growth and competitiveness in Western economies."
https://venturedesktop.substack.com/p/the-rise-of-production-capital
3. "Ghosts are popping up everywhere. The long-suffering workers of China who make those beautiful luxury handbags have been like ghostly apparitions, silently toiling away on perhaps not much more than slave wages. Now, thanks to Trump’s tariffs, we hear these ghosts rattling those heavy handbag chains on Tik Tok, crying out from their graveyard shifts for customers to know their true role value creation. We see the ghostly reminders of the World Wars as Germany and Japan re-arm, and the youth of Europe on Instagram telling us how excited they are about conscription and national military service.
We see mysterious spectres buzzing in our skies and over our most important military facilities and know, deep down, that everything is not fine. AI-driven stealth ghost ships without human pilots now silently ply the world’s waters, skies and airways.
Even the nation state’s spooky dark side, which usually lurks in the shadows, is increasingly visible, a living phantom that continues to practice its dark arts in the open, even though the President is revoking their security clearances as fast as he can (even revoking those of entire law firms). But, the corpses are piling up anyway."
https://drpippa.substack.com/p/american-ghost-stories
4. Instructive conversation from a GP at Benchmark. Very interesting convo.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHuAsfyHHD0&t=1666s
5. "How bad is this debt crisis? It’s too early to tell. But as former Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers explained, what has people most scared is the real-time erosion of the American-led economic order. Our reputation as a bastion of strength and stability, with our dollar and Treasuries representing safety, is in jeopardy. Increasingly, we resemble an emerging economy, where a crisis in confidence sends stocks, bonds, and currencies down and spikes interest rates.
“If the United States isn’t credible, that makes the whole financial system less stable,” Summers said, adding, “we are more vulnerable to bad surprises from here than to good surprises.” One potential bad outcome? A stagflation cocktail of high interest rates, low growth, and high unemployment. This week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned that Trump’s trade policy and the resulting uncertainty may put us in a “challenging scenario” in which the Fed’s dual-mandate goals of maximum employment and stable prices are “in tension.” That’s Fed-speak for: This could be a clusterfuck.
With 4% of the world’s population and 25% of global GDP, we have a debt to our allies, who’ve engaged in relationships that provide roughly 6x the prosperity relative to the rest of the world. However, that hasn’t been enough, and we’ve accrued unsustainable debt. From George Washington through George W. Bush, we borrowed $10t. During the first Trump administration, we borrowed $8t (Biden was $4t). We find ourselves ignorant of our debts and in a prison of our own making — a giant with feet of clay, ignorant to our vulnerabilities. In sum, we (America) are acting like assholes."
https://www.profgalloway.com/united-states-of-debt/
6. "Instead of expensive centralized systems, Europe should prioritize decentralization. Small, networked autonomous systems that can be quickly deployed and adapted to new threats should be the focus.
Cost asymmetry is one of the biggest issues in modern warfare. Drones are cheap to build but expensive to stop. Many air defence systems still use high-cost missiles to destroy low-cost targets. A Shahed-136 loitering munition—used by Russia and Iran—costs around $150K–$200K. A single Patriot missile to intercept it can cost $3–4 million. Meanwhile, Ukraine deploys thousands of FPV drones, often costing just a few hundred dollars, to disable multi-million-dollar systems.
This is where Europe has an opening. While the U.S. can afford high-cost tools, European countries must be more resourceful. We can skip over legacy systems and focus on cheaper, more relevant tech. Europe could spend $800 billion on traditional weapons or a fraction of that on modern systems and still achieve similar results.
Countries like Poland, Finland, and the Baltics are preparing for asymmetric warfare by investing in drones and mobile strike capabilities instead of relying only on heavy armor. Smart spending on drone interceptors, precision-guided munitions, and AI targeting can level the playing field without overspending."
https://www.resiliencemedia.co/p/europes-defense-needs-a-reboot-to
7. Best show in town on Silicon Valley news and trends.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esDwl-PRVgI
8. "Meanwhile, it is hard to see how anyone preoccupied with enhancing American global power — particularly, relative to China — could be pleased with Trump’s first three months. By violating the terms of America’s existing trade agreements — including some he personally negotiated — Trump undermined our nation’s diplomatic credibility. And by imposing across-the-board tariffs on core US allies, he led European and Asian powers to consider the possibility that China is the more stable and reliable global superpower.
In recent days, the Trump administration sought to rally America’s allies into a united front against Chinese trade abuses. But it is struggling to mount such an alliance, according to the Wall Street Journal, because “many European and Asian partners aren’t sure to what extent they are still allied with Washington.” Rather than becoming more adversarial to Beijing, some in the EU are calling for the bloc to end its cooperation with American efforts to starve China of cutting-edge technology.
Finally, the Trump administration is jeopardizing America’s access to the most fundamental economic resource: skilled labor.
Among the list of pro-growth policies that Andreessen and Horowitz endorsed in their “Little Tech Agenda” last year was an “Expansion of high-skilled immigration to encourage foreign graduates of American universities and others to build new companies and industries here.”
But Trump has done the very opposite, exiling foreign students and recent graduates from the United States, thereby discouraging others from immigrating to the country."
https://www.vox.com/technology/409256/trump-tariffs-student-visas-andreessen-horowitz
9. What a masterclass in venture investing. Neil Mehta of Greenoaks Capital. Legendary returns and approach. Learned a lot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=502sB_IbjpQ&t=3661s
10. "The 10X Operator will be someone who treats AI tools as extensions of their own capabilities. They’ll habitually use AI copilots and agents to enhance productivity, creativity, and decision-making, and their first instinct for any challenge will be to leverage AI.
Being “full stack” will no longer imply you know how to code, but that you know how to command an army of AI workflows.
As AI agents take over more executional work, the role of the human shifts.
You’re no longer the individual contributor, but instead the orchestrator, managing hundreds (or even thousands) of AI agents to bring ideas to life.
Taste → Knowing what great looks like.
Judgment → Evaluating AI outputs with nuance.
Decision-making → Choosing the right tools, workflows, and strategies to execute effectively.
But AI doesn’t understand cultural context, intuitive design, or the small emotional cues that build trust. That’s where humans come in.
In a world that will inevitably be overflowing with content, products, and data, the ability to curate and sift through the noise will be invaluable."
https://www.andrew.today/p/the-10x-operator-era
11. "By 2025, the situation has changed fundamentally. Ukraine now fields hundreds and even thousands of indigenous long-range strike capabilities. These systems are less sophisticated and less lethal that Storm Shadow/SCALP-EG and Taurus — particularly against hardened targets — but they are far cheaper. This changes the calculus. If Taurus is delivered, Ukraine would be able to reserve it for those targets where pinpoint precision and lethality truly matter, while saturating less complex targets with existing domestic systems.
As noted above, the precise impact of Taurus remains difficult to predict. Still, there is a strong case that the cumulative effects of delivering Taurus in 2025 could be greater than if deliveries had taken place in earlier years.
Overall, the conclusion remains unchanged: Taurus should be delivered to Ukraine as quickly as possible. The case for delivery is arguably even stronger now than it was in 2023 — both militarily and politically. Moreover, if the delivery serves as the final trigger to restart cruise missile production in Germany to replenish transferred stocks, it would bring additional long-term benefits for European defense."
https://missilematters.substack.com/p/taurus-redux-the-return-of-the-zombie
12. "If one AI can develop an integration into another AI, well, then those two systems can talk together seamlessly irrespective of changes within API specification, network communication challenges, state management issues, historical problems that have plagued integration.
This sets the startups up well for the next generation of protocols, including model context protocol and agent2agent. AI generation of those interfaces further separates startups from incumbents.
With fast integrations, startups can shorten sales cycles and be among the first to build and deploy a complete AI architecture."
https://tomtunguz.com/integrations-as-advantage/
13. "My recommendation to entrepreneurs is to identify a vertical they or a colleague know intimately and consider building a comprehensive application that replaces multiple existing tools for that target customer. By leveraging AI, cloud infrastructure, and open-source technologies, they can deliver a fully integrated solution at a fraction of the cost."
https://davidcummings.org/2025/04/19/the-rise-of-ai-powered-vertical-saas/
14. "When we think about the worst-case scenario for Trump’s economy,1 we shouldn’t just think about the worst possible effects of his current policies; we need to think about how much damage he could plausibly do with additional bad moves. We need to skate to where the proverbial puck is headed.
Don’t get me wrong — Trump’s tariffs are already very bad, and will cause grinding deindustrialization, a macroeconomic slowdown, and possibly higher inflation. They may even cause continued capital flight, which would raise U.S. borrowing costs, hurt the economy even more, and make the national debt less sustainable. We’re already on the path to some bad economic outcomes, and it’s not clear how bad they’ll get, even if we don’t make any big additional mistakes.
But that’s a very big “if”. In my post about capital flight, I outlined two nightmare scenarios for the endgame of Trumpian economics: a sovereign default and spiraling inflation."
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/worst-case-scenarios-and-endgames
15. What an insightful and incisive conversation on YC with Garry Tan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4KcYTMC1lM&t=141s
16. Very important to understand the bond market and implications for America and the global economy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVk5Xpd9cvg
17. These two have long been part of the "America Bad" school of thought (I dislike them).
But they are not wrong this time about the end of American leadership in the world due to the badly thought out Tariff strategy and general capriciousness. American self own here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWvKs_XWZQs&list=PLgfli1PY64h3bpPsycG1E1PquoujN9wII
18. Some tinfoil hat Alt-Geopolitics here. But this definitely breaks the common narrative in the media. Helpful to understand the world we are in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjiZUkayyCY
19. How to build a long arc of an interesting career. How to be relevant for a long time. "Lifelong Doing." So many different paths to the top.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkwBD3ueOt4&t=362s
20. How to be "high agency". This is a must watch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVl5FLRuGXI
21. There is no financial risk, there is only ego risk.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXMTbeCM-9Y&t=1s
22. Lots of great investing wisdom from my friend Sven. Happy 50th!
"It's worth repeating this point over and over again, because it's so easy to speak about this yet so difficult to actually do it.
If placing a buy order doesn't make you break out in cold sweat, it's probably not a real contrarian investment.
Following, analysing, and capturing the zeitgeist, or "spirit of the age", should be one of the most important priorities for investors.
Once the zeitgeist changes, so do investment fads and valuations.
The combination of an investment theme getting back in fashion and its valuation multiples expanding can have a powerful double-effect on your investments (and the other way around). It's these major turning points in dominant narratives that can make for the biggest investment opportunities."
23. "One of Jordan Peterson's best ideas is that the human brain is not adapted for specific environments but for Order and Chaos. No matter where you are, there is stuff you understand (therefore control)—and stuff you don't. Climate changes, eras flip over, Order and Chaos remain.
This explains why all ancient cultures told stories around chaos: dragons, floods, supernatural beings intent on mischief. And similarly, all ancient cultures venerated heroes who would restore order in a troubled world."
https://oldbooksguy.substack.com/p/jordan-petersons-best-idea
24. "For example, a sci-fi magazine that accepts submissions is overwhelmed by AI generated stories. And some community colleges are overwhelmed by bot based submissions for admission.
My question today is - when this happens to every corner of the internet, and every type of content, what does it mean for investing in AI?"
https://investinginai.substack.com/p/investing-against-ai-multi-modal
25. "the truly proactive crawl all the internal info about the company and find ways to make it better. they manage their boss -- their boss never manages them.
they push initiatives forward without waiting for permission and own problems as if they were the CEO.
they think beyond their role and contribute to long-term company success.
they spot patterns in company operations and prevent issues before they arise.
they take responsibility for results, not just effort"
https://auren.substack.com/p/ultimate-employee-the-one-that-is
26. "There is a teaching here that transcends history. When faced with a task of enormous cost or a decision clouded by uncertainty, the best path forward may be to eliminate the possibility of turning back. Only then can one summon the clarity, resolve, and ferocity to see it through.
If we leave the door open—even slightly—to giving up, we risk sabotaging ourselves. This holds true for life’s most consequential choices, whether by nations, companies, or individuals. Even for something as trivial as a New Year’s resolution.
When we take a bold gamble, sometimes the best way to follow through is to create conditions where retreat is no longer an option. In that moment, the will to power thrives, and so does victory."
https://www.businessofpower.com/p/burn-the-ships
27. "The Internet has recently been flooded with content of a de-dollarisation of the world economy. Combined with the subject comes the usual plethora of reporting about the end of the US as a superpower, its coming bankruptcy on the back of spiralling debt, and similar predictions.
It reached a point where I asked myself: "Is being short the US dollar such a widely held view that it's worth heading the other way?"
If you have been around for a bit, you'll understand why despite all the well-deserved criticism and the need to be vigilant about a potential change to long-term trends, it's also worth spending a bit more time looking at the counter-arguments."
https://www.undervalued-shares.com/weekly-dispatches/usa-the-unstoppable-juggernaut/
28. "Given the fiscal and political mess that Trudeau has left behind and the resulting broad discontent in Canada one would expect that, like in any functioning democracy, the opposition would clean out the election and comfortably cruise to a win. Not so in Canada where fear mongering and obfuscating the truth is a time tested campaign tactic that has historically serviced the Liberals best. This was about to come to an end with an easy Conservative win - as per the polls - until Donald Trump unleashed his torrent of tariffs and accompanying rhetoric of making Canada the 51st state.
It was all the Liberal Party needed to scare the living daylights out of Canadians. And by putting forward the indeed seasoned Carney as the economic genius who would guide Canada to ride out the storm, it turned all polling data and electoral logic upside down. With one week to go to election day the race is now too close to call and the Liberals may eke out yet another win.
The fear apparently is so deep that, and I just have to scroll my social media pages, that the most hardcore left wingers are now arguing the merits of Carney’s bond trading strategies and economic smarts. This is a guy who made his bones at Goldman Sachs. It is unreal to see how to public mood has shifted from confidence to one of fear and that also tells us that a lot of Canadians are overreacting and looking away from what is really going on."
https://pieterdorsman.substack.com/p/canadas-choice
29. "The reality is that Taiwanese have been living with the threat for 75 years. The only difference now is that 1) the CCP has dramatically ramped up military spending, and 2) the United States has deserted its past ally, Ukraine. That has led some to question whether it would desert Taiwan in a time of crisis, too.
I came away from the trip thinking that I’ve probably overestimated the risk of a full-blown annexation of the island. Practically nobody in Taiwan is in favor of communist control. Taiwanese will certainly fight to avoid letting the island “becoming another Xinjiang”, in one person’s own words. I also believe that the Japanese are serious about intervening in any conflict, as it has a history with Taiwan being a former Japanese colony for 50 years. A slow takeover from the inside seems much more likely than an all-out war."
https://www.asiancenturystocks.com/p/travel-notes-taipei
30. "In Europe and beyond, many golden visa buyers have used their citizenship to escape tax burdens or move into countries with a lower cost of living. The countries have benefitted from injections of cold hard cash into moribund economies.
Locals, however, have also noticed the unfortunate side effects: rising prices and property values.
In Athens, fears of displacement and gentrification echo those seen in other global cities that embraced luxury developments and foreign investment programs.
While a flourishing golden visa program and developments like the Ellinikon promise jobs, tourism, and revitalization, Athenians are left wondering whether their country is reviving for average residents — or just for rich investors.
Golden visa programs, also known as immigrant investor programs, first gained traction in the 1980s when tax havens like St. Kitts and Nevis introduced them to attract wealthy individuals. Around the same time, Canada began offering visas to those who invested $150k in an investment fund.
Even the United States launched the EB-5 visa in 1990, granting green cards for people who invested in a business that employed at least 10 workers. These days, that investment must reach at least $800k.
But it wasn’t until the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis that golden visas became a widespread tool for economic recovery, particularly in European countries like Cyprus, Italy, Ireland, and Spain that used them to rebuild."
https://thehustle.co/originals/the-economics-of-golden-visas
31. Quite interesting. From vet to founder. How to transition to entrepreneurship in defense.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqf20n6q2vI
32. This was an incredible interview: Was both insightful, inspiring and eye-opening. Both on personal growth & how corrupt the American food system is at present. Much watch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAQhh7zyUuo
33. "Guess what. With the internet you can now join the “CEO” trajectory. All you have to do is build equity in your own ventures. While you’ll *Smile and Nod* at work to keep the prison guards happy, in reality you will stop playing the corporate game: LinkedIn gone. Happy Hour meet ups, gone. Never the #1 employee.
What are they actually doing? They are taking all their savings and they are: 1) building a basic online business targeting women, 2) they are taking calculated risks with real estate projects, 3) they are investing in asymmetric assets - crypto, tech stocks, bio tech and 4) they are eventually leaving to tax havens when they are truly “untouchable” rich.
Another good tell-tale sign is that they *don’t* complain about the compensation difference of CEOs. Instead they know that they are slowly becoming the CEO of their own smaller enterprise. Most just see a chart like the above and quit/complain about the system (good luck because AI doesn’t complain).
Typically, the guy who escapes will be in contact for a short period. Next thing you know they are in full disappear mode: tax haven (Dubai, Singapore, PR - Act 60, Panama etc.), spinning up another biz line and generally changing their entire rolodex.
Usually takes about 3 years (odd that everything comes in threes) and then *poof* never heard from again. The spread between the old working life and the life as an entrepreneur is just too big. Life paths fork when someone quits and they begin running 100mph in the opposite direction. After 3 years of that, no one can relate.
The General Premise: Here, the goal is self reliance to the best of your ability. Everyone starts somewhere. The goal is to build a life that no one can take from you and control your time (time rich = no boss).
Despite the near-term pain caused by politicians today? The future is still the same.
We’re of the belief that quite literally anyone can get into the low-mid 7-figures. This is significantly more than any career will get you (outside the rare exceptions to the rule). AI is taking over and companies are going through flattening/wage compression.
People who say “anyone can get to $10M+” are just full of it. To get to those numbers? Requires luck, insane talent or both. Even Elon Musk was miraculously saved from bankruptcy several times.
Therefore we can outline what you’ll need to do based on quality of life expectations. The vast majority are not going to be flying private or driving lambos. Instead we’d look at it in terms of quality of life benchmarks"
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/escaping-the-cube-the-smartest-people
Lisan Al Gaib: Believing In a Something Greater Than Yourself
I believe everyone has seen the Denis Villaneuve made Dune 1 & Dune 2 movies. Absolutely majestic and grand movie remakes of the classic sci-fi book by Frank Herbert. It’s moving. But there are several parts that jump out to me.
There is the scene when Paul Atreides speaks in front of the grand gathering of Southern fremen tribes. The power when they come to realize and believe he is the messiah, the Lisan Al Gaib, messenger from the outside. You see looks of pure rapture and joy. Even more so when he unleashes them on the universe.
I believe this is what happens when one discovers religion. To subsume their wants and needs in the effort of the greater good. To be part of a movement and community. Everyone wants to believe in something bigger than themselves. It used to be religion, then your country aka Nation-state. But with modern times, people find this in their sports team or the company they work for. It’s a pale semblance but it’s still something.
Ever since I became independent, it’s hard sometimes to keep going when the goal is just to enrich yourself. It was only when I thought of the bigger mission that keeps one focused and driven. My family’s security and happiness, ensuring that all the people in my various businesses are taken care of. That my investees are meeting their potential. That my investments are a net positive for the West and the world at large. That I serve the bigger mission.
Don’t underestimate the importance of having a big massive mission and goal. We all want to believe in something. Something amazing. Hopefully something positive. And if you are leader, give your team a massive goal and something to believe in.
As Paul Atreides says near the end when he starts the Holy War.
“Lead them to paradise.”
Baragaki: Unbroken Samurai
The Shinsengumi were a feared and elite samurai unit that fought on the side of the Shogun against the revolutionaries during the chaos of the fall of the shogunate. Baragaki is a fictionalized story of the start and rise of this unit through its founders and the bonds of brotherhood they found. Otherwise nicknamed the Mitu Wolves for their daring raids.
Especially Hijikata Toshizo who came from the countryside and vowed to obey the Shogun to the end. It’s filled with bloody fights and battles, it was a war after all. Spoiler alert, like all samurai movies, everyone dies violent deaths. But they are samurai so they die fighting.
Fighting to uphold their honor and code of Bushido. A rather strict version too: failure to cut down an enemy after showing a blade, Seppuku, ritual suicide where one cuts open their stomach with a blade. Fleeing a battle: seppuku. Leaving the unit: seppuku. Basically seppuku for everything. Why? “The shinsengumi is a motley crew, it falls apart if we relax the rules even a little.”
Hijitaka is told: “You are writing your only poem with your life.” And that is exemplified by their banner “True Heart.” So few of us live this way of giving your all in life and in a cause. I suspect that is why so many people feel so empty inside. The only places I see this contentment is in religious communities.
I think this is why so many of us love these old samurai movies. Yes, these men lived violent and chaotic lives. But they were governed by a code of conduct and honor. Bonded in brotherhood in a fight for a larger cause. They may have lived short lives but they lived full ones. I take this as a reminder to try to live a full and honorable life.
The Observer Affects the Observed: Power of the Beholder
Babylon 5 is one of the most underrated sci-fi series ever made. Great characters, interesting alien cultures, with action, drama and comedy with cutting edge effects for the time. It captured what good sci fi is, illuminating human struggles and courage. I was thrilled when I saw they had an animated version called Babylon 5: Way Home.
The main character John Sheridan gets caught in a time loop that pushes him through many different times in his history and through alternative universes.
One of them is when he makes it home and sees his father on Earth. He reminisces with him. Especially the time he gets lost in the corn fields, which discusses with his father.
“I started to panic. Which only made the situation worse. And then I thought, if panic doesn’t help, maybe being calm will do something. For a long while after that, I’d go in once a week to get lost on purpose. Just to prove to myself I could always find my way home.”
His dad asks: “why’d you stop?”
John answers: “I got tall enough to see past the corn.”
His dad responds: “Perspective changes everything, I guess.”
Perspective is important, you get it with age, experience throughout time. He slowly learns to find his way home with the right mindset and understanding. He jumps around aimlessly due to fear and anxiety. It is only once he discovers the right frame of mind.
He is guided by an old friend:
“In all realities, all universes, the everything of everything. There is no greater force than love.
Tearing apart is easy. Destruction and hate are easy. Which is why they do not endure. What love knits together can never be torn asunder. The universe itself and all things within it bend to that power. As you say “the observer affects the observed.”
When that eye sees through love anything is possible.”
How true. The love you have for your child, your spouse, your parents, your siblings and cousins, your friends, your community and your country. It’s so motivating and powerful. It’s also a much more positive way to look at the world.
I’ve long been driven by hate, anger, fear and love. Hate and anger tends to be my default. Fear embedded in my heart due to my scarcity-driven immigrant upbringing. But when I look at what I treasure and what has been most impactful, long lasting and sustainable, love has usually been the reason. My wonderful daughter, my marriage (at least the first 18 years of it), my friendships, my travel and my books.
In one of the final jumps: Sheridan says to his guide: “I have so many questions.”
The response: “And that is the glory and beauty of mortality.”
Knowing we only have so many years of life, we need to make sure we are living it to our full potential and filling it with as much experience, purpose, joy, and love. That’s what I am reminded of again by Babylon 5.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads May 18th, 2025
“Doing what you like is freedom. Liking what you do is happiness.” ― Frank Tyger
"Over the last few centuries, the cycle of great powers has corresponded almost exactly to the cycle of reserve currencies, with at most a lag of two or three decades. If America ever stops being the world’s leading power, then the dollar would also cease being the global reserve currency. Such a momentous reversal might take place after a world war or a catastrophic financial crisis. One might think, however, that a hegemonic power should be able to prevent those outcomes, if only to preserve the privilege of holding, in its printing presses, the key to something far better than the gold of the alchemists. But this is where things get both more interesting and more complicated.
The truth is that for a country to hold the global reserve currency is both a privilege and a curse. Remember the internet-meme aphorism: good times breed weak men. The dialectic was well explored by classical thinkers such as Polybius or Ibn Khaldun. It applies to money no less than people.
If a country can become prosperous just by printing money it will likely lose interest in producing actual goods. There could be a psychological dynamic at play here, but even in its absence there would always be a monetary mechanism. If the whole world wants to hold assets in the global reserve currency, in order to save or invest or speculate, then that currency will be grossly overvalued. It will no longer reflect demand and supply in global trade markets and will no longer allow for trade deficits to balance. The country with the global reserve currency will find it very hard to sell its artificially inflated goods in global markets and, as a result, manufacturing and agriculture and even many services will move elsewhere. It might end up specialising in financial services, the management of money, at the expense of almost everything else."
https://www.newstatesman.com/business/economics/2025/04/the-downfall-of-king-dollar
2. "Every island matters. That is why during the last great Pacific war so much blood and treasure was expended to hold and take them.
For far too long, this territory or that was either forgotten or dismissed as “not an atoll worth dying on” by people either ignorant of history, geography, or simply unserious people in serious jobs. The People’s Republic of China (PRC), especially when we were engaged in unwise imperial policing actions in Central and Southwest Asia, took advantage of the West’s neglect and moved it. A lot of work needs to be done to roll their advances back."
https://cdrsalamander.substack.com/p/brave-little-palau
3. Lots to learn as always. Life is about making bets and statistics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1pciCFUpQk
4. "The longer a war lasts, the more it is dominated by economic factors. This is just as true in Saladin’s quarter-century war with the Crusaders as in a massive industrial conflict like World War II.
The Red Sea, and the wide-ranging trade networks it enabled, was therefore foundational to Saladin’s grand strategy. Although Reynald’s adventure was ultimately far too small to seriously threaten this, the harsh reaction it provoked—above and beyond the obvious religious motivations—shows just how sensitive it was for any ruler of Egypt."
https://dispatch.bazaarofwar.com/p/red-sea-pirates-commerce-raiding
5. Incredibly rich dissection on the art and science of venture capital. Very helpful to anyone who wants to get good at this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVMnMlsVnCc
6. "We call them tetris business models because they are built in different configurations than we are used to. Common business sense, historically, says you expand in one of two directions. One is, you have a core customer, and you make a product offshoot of your core product to sell to that same customer. Two is, you have a core product, and you tweak it to take it into a different market.
But in this new world of AI tech, you get these weirder business models that still make sense, like being a vertically integrated tech convenience store but also selling your tech like a SaaS company. The way you build looks funny compared to previous waves of technology.
These tetris business models are arising because of the issues and opportunities of AI. One is that execution of almost everything is going to get easier because of AI. So, the parts of a business that AI can’t impact very much will get so much more valuable. Secondly, your assets in an AI business are often data and models and, those may give you an advantage in areas that are quite different than your core initial business model, at least from an investor perspective."
https://investinginai.substack.com/p/tetris-business-models-the-ai-opportunity
7. "From an investment perspective, memory challenges the frequently repeated Silicon Valley belief that AI lacks defensibility. Spend five minutes at a Bay Area investor dinner and you'll hear that take. That was lazy thinking.
Memory is a massive, defensible moat everyone, from startups to tech giants, will race to capture.
Memory, and the deeply personal context that comes with it, will make Facebook Connect’s 2008-era social graph look primitive.
If Facebook Connect was about who you knew and your surface-level likes, memory is about who you are and the deepest thoughts you carry every day.
Your work goals. Relationship doubts. Health concerns. All of it.
Once OpenAI amasses enough memory, expect them to roll out deep personalization APIs for third-party developers.
They'll effectively become the Memory Operating System (MOS?) for anyone building new products. No startup can realistically compete with that kind of context from scratch.
And of course, OpenAI will build many of these apps themselves. Given their current product velocity—arguably the fastest we’ve seen from any modern internet company—it’s hard to imagine otherwise.
Switching to a new assistant won’t just be inconvenient — it’ll be costly. An AI that knows your habits, preferences, and workflows over years is leagues more valuable than one starting from zero. Just ask anyone who's had a great Chief of Staff."
https://jeffmorrisjr.substack.com/p/the-new-moat-memory
8. "But “people” is much less valuable today because most firms will have way fewer employees in the future. almost every company, except for the startup, is at peak employee count today.
The revenue per employee will go up 3-10 times in the next decade.
in the future, the most valuable work thing will be to select and manage vendors — including software, APIs, tech contractors, AIs, and more.
there are ZERO good books (or even blog posts on this) on selecting and managing vendors — so if you can do this well, you will have a big advantage.
most people are really bad at selecting and managing vendors. Like grade F bad. So even if you get yourself to a grade C, you will be in the top 10%. the best people are the crazy founders that run $100 million companies by themselves … but you cannot hire those people to help."
https://auren.substack.com/p/vendor-management-is-the-most-important
9. "In general, with a real friend, you will have agreements AND disagreements. With fake friends, you will primarily have agreements.
You need to observe this over time and you will catch a lot of fake friends."
https://lifemathmoney.com/how-to-identify-fake-friends-from-real-friends/
10. Great conversation on Agentic AI in the Enterprise.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdLPl4WLOgQ&t=448s
11. Learning from the master of the entertainment world and Kaiser Soze of Silicon Valley: Michael Ovitz.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RHFu4N3fq4
12. How to win this new great powers competition & the future of war.
Net net: we are our own worst enemy in DoD: bureaucracy and central planning. by The CTO of Palantir. Worth watching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTG393KqOGc&t=4s
13. I try to understand the other side. But this sounds like a psy-op from CCP as she is a princeling even though she is based in Europe.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4oyfAH94TE
14. Understand thy enemy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idaSfpD1pBI
15. "Trump has stated, in his rather dysfunctional manner, that America will not be the sole consumption engine of the global economy—it will not be the place where others dump their excess production. From now on, the rest of the world can produce less, in which case we have a global depression. Or the rest of the world must find a way to consume more—in which case, we have a more balanced, and rapidly growing global economy.
This is a direct challenge to many global leaders, to large corporations, and to literally everyone else who’s about to have their lives upended. Many are upset, and many will push back—as their whole existence is based upon dumping product on the US. I don’t think there’s a going back now—the die has been cast, and Trump seems rather defiant that we’re not going backwards.
So, which will it be. Will we have a global depression?? Or will everyone else consume more?? I feel rather strongly that after a period of chaos and reflection, the world will choose to consume more, if only because the other option is so bleak.
Besides, it’s not that hard to consume more. If you lower taxes on the bottom half of income earners, their propensity to consume almost all of the tax savings is quite high. If you subsidize low interest loans for cars and homes, people will take them up and consume more. If you do direct payments, people will consume more, as we learned during Covid. If you do massive infrastructure programs, then the nation consumes more. Increasing consumption isn’t hard, however it’s a political decision. A decision to have the oligarch class share a bit more with the peasant class.
Naturally, these sorts of difficult decisions can only come about during a crisis. Trump has created the necessary crisis. Will global leaders take him up on their chance to push consumption and fix the global imbalances?? If not, do they just sort of shrug their collective shoulders, and accept a collapse?? One thing is for sure, the old model of stimulating production and then dumping it on the US is not going to work this time. Everyone needs domestic demand. They need to run it hot."
https://pracap.com/theyre-gonna-choose-to-run-it-hot/
16. "Practically everything that would impact the lower-end consumer is getting hit harder. While someone like Gucci could take a short term hit to profit *margins* without raising prices, the majority of lower end apparel, toys, hardware, furniture and even some basic home improvement items *cannot*. This means prices will be raised at the low-end of the spectrum relative to the luxury end (unless China’s marketing push really kills demand for Luxury products being secretly manufactured in China at scale).
Onto Some Optimism: Don’t think this is going to lead into any sort of 4-year recession. Perhaps part of the game is create a bunch of uncertainty to force the Fed’s hand. Again. No clue and gave up trying to figure it out since they flip flop every 24 hours.
Instead the more important part is that consumers are giving up. This is historically a *good* sign for future returns on stocks, crypto and any other asset.
Looking Good for Around Summer: If people need a timeline we’re hopeful that May/June is the time we get answers. We’ll have rules on DeFi, real expectations on tariffs and we’ll have a good idea on Q2 GDP + Fed positioning.
As you all know, in 10 years, 20 years etc prices will be disastrously higher. All of this volatility ends with money printing."
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/most-cooked-industries-post-tariffs
17. So much tinfoil hat geopolitics. But always an interesting lens to look at the world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZMiQ-vdfD4
18. Grim assessment of tariff mess. 2025 is gonna be pretty ugly.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHkg5o52XW8
19. "China's electricity comes mainly from coal and hydro. They've dammed most of their dammable rivers and they've created far more smog by burning coal than is healthy for their population. Their nuclear program is firmly 20th century in character and already has a way of doing business that will be difficult for them to adjust. The Chinese deserts that are best suited for large solar farms are far away from the coasts that consume most of the energy. They might be able to cut their energy prices in half, but I doubt they’d be able to do it quicker than America can, and I really doubt they’d be able to follow us even further if we were to shoot for an objective like $0.01/kWh.
It's crazy that a relatively energy-poor country operating under all these physical and organizational constraints manages to get cheaper electricity in its major economic centers than we do. Our government had a lot to do with the perverse financial incentive structures and stupid regulations that got us to this point, and only our government can undo it in timeframes that matter in the context of fierce global competition. We have to throw money at the problem at grand scale, but if we do we can expect to cover a lot of ground quickly, and in a way that China can't easily duplicate.
Scaling American energy generation by enough and in the right places might be a >$1t project, but we will reap far more than that sum if we pursue it aggressively, and we may even enable victory in the most consequential geopolitical confrontation of our times in the process. We have the means, now it is a question of will.
Economic prosperity is a function of energy availability to a great extent. We’re currently underperforming the Henry Adams curve by at least a factor of five. We must be competitive with Chinese industry in order to maintain our security and prosperity, but once we’ve accomplished that objective we must stretch our ambitions further. I’ll settle for doubling energy generation for now, but in the long run we should be discussing orders of magnitude, not factors of single digits."
https://mattparlmer.substack.com/p/america-can-beat-china-on-energy
20. Good summary of the disastrous last few weeks in America and the world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXETOHvRMj4
21. A master class on how to drive returns in a venture fund. Lots of interesting practices and ideas for VCs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=If0UxGxTuFg
22. "That’s the reality behind today’s ERP - the operating system of business encompassing financials, inventory management, supply chain, reporting & human resources.
The fundamental problem? By the time vendors finish modeling a company’s operations in software, the business has already evolved: grown into new markets, restructured teams, and shifted key metrics. The software becomes outdated before implementation completes.
AI disrupts this negative feedback loop with composable software. It enables organizations to model themselves in plain English, empowering teams to adapt their software systems at the same pace as business evolution - not months or years behind it."
23. George Friedman always has a pragmatic perspective and pro-US view. So this is his bias but it can help for trying to understand the Trump tariffs & present geopolitics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0YJSEMy0sc
24. "They want to hammer in a good vs evil framework into people’s heads by repeated exposure to their language manipulation.
And so far it works really well because unless you are actually affected by something, you don’t really think about it beyond PERCEIVED “good vs evil”.
This is how it is. It’s a way to rig the game. The media is a tool of psyops."
https://lifemathmoney.com/how-they-manipulate-you/
25. "Being TED, the idea that we might be living in a simulation naturally came up amongst the assembled technologists, philosophers, and scientists. But most concluded that no such exotic explanation was necessary to explain what we observe.
Individuals with high agency (such as Musk, Trump, Putin) have simply decided to ignore consensus reality and the laws and norms that previously shaped it. They are following their own agenda and we're all being dragged into a new reality, whether we like it or not.
In fighting it, we are lured into engaging with the old systems — wasting time spinning the knobs labeled checks and balances, finding they do nothing. What may happen next is anyone's guess. But we're running out of time."
https://america2.news/americas-meltdown-as-seen-from-ted-2025/
26. 4 years of NIA, this is as usual, a fun and informative episode.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xd-izEcoT50
27. "The inconvenient truth, for China, is that its scale relies upon American power and influence. The Chinese export machine, for instance, requires a relatively free world trading order. The recipe to date has been “mercantilism for us, free trade for everybody else.” Yet Trump threatens to smash that framework. If the world breaks down into bitterly selfish protectionist trading blocs, China will be one of the biggest losers. After all, where will the Chinese sell the rising output from their factories?
The Chinese growth and stability model also requires relatively secure energy supplies. For that it relies on the United States and its allies, as the Chinese programs for nuclear and solar power remain far from their final goals. If the Western alliance system collapses, who is to keep the Middle East relatively stable, at least stable from the point of view of procuring fossil fuels? China hardly seems up to that task, as the country has neither the means, the inclination, the experience, nor the allies to do the job.
Furthermore, China relies more on American hard and soft power more than it likes to let on. The leading role of America makes both Western Europe and also Latin America a bit “soft” when it comes to self-defense and martial spirit and also nationalistic pluck. After all, many countries are outsourcing their defense and also parts of their intelligence-gathering to the United States.
That makes them relatively easy pickings for Chinese infiltration, whether it be economic infiltration, pulling up alongside as an easy “extra friend” to boost bargaining power with America, or spying and surveillance. If Trump scuttles our current multilateral commitments and trust, China will find most other countries harder to penetrate, not easier."
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2025/04/is-china-the-ultimate-free-rider.html
28. "The overall dilapidated state and overcentralization on the East Coast of U.S. shipyards has proven to be a consistent problem. If we want to be able to quickly build and repair ships and relevant assets at both scale and a rapid pace, the U.S. must diversify our shipyards to focus on getting the right systems into the hands of the warfighter. Too much of our defense budget is being poured into ineffective programs and overcomplicated contracts that don't keep pace with evolving threats.
Eliminating unnecessary bureaucratic red tape is necessary here to unshackle our domestic defense industrial base. Incentivizing private companies to contribute to our defenses and infrastructure would help to streamline this process and allow for faster development and deployment of new technologies that can give us an edge over China in key areas.
If the U.S. is serious about deterring CCP aggression in the Indo-Pacific, we must give our navy the tools and resources to do so. This means embarking on a concerted effort to restore our domestic defense industrial base so as to prevent the projected 2027 scenario from happening in the first place."
29. Worthwhile conversation on global macro trends. How to play secondary effects for investing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JSFlAIvsdE
30. An absolute masterclass on the practice of venture capital investing right now. The game has changed & there will be blood.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JAY6q6LaHI
31. Russia is not as strong as people think from a true Russia expert. Valuable to understand what is going on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pz9xWglp6rY
32. Kind of depressing. Russia clearly has massive influence in present Trump admin.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoZq4sAE1YQ
33. One of the most original thinkers in America. Peter Thiel, love him or hate him, he has been more right than wrong about where the world is going.
Shogun: Master of Fates
I was so happy when I heard they were doing a remake of James Clavell’s masterpiece book that takes place in feudal Japan right before the rise of the Tokugawa shogunate. The plot of the miniseries by FX “follows "the collision of two ambitious men from different worlds, John Blackthorne, a risk-taking English sailor who ends up shipwrecked in Japan, a land whose unfamiliar culture will ultimately redefine him; Lord Toranaga, a shrewd, powerful daimyo, at odds with his own dangerous, political rivals; and Lady Mariko, a woman with invaluable skills but dishonorable family ties, who must prove her value and allegiance.”
And it did not disappoint. The acting was amazing but the story overall was spellbinding. More so as a self professed Japan-ophile and samurai movie guy.
It captures the beauty of Japan, the plots of great men of power for more power, and all the spectrums of humanity like ambition, love but also sacrifice, honor and duty.
I loved the scene that encapsulates Japanese samurai thinking: Lady Mariko is talking with her dear friend Lady Ochiba, who questions why she wants to commit suicide or at least die in duty.
She answers “Accepting death isn’t surrender. Flowers are only flowers because they fall.” It’s so profound but then it also describes life. Life is magical because it is finite. Cherry Blossoms are beautiful because they are only here for a short period of time. So life like cherry blossoms are better to be enjoyed while around.
There are also many great insights and nuggets of leadership and human psychology. Toranaga is the penultimate war leader, wise, crafty and understands people. Understanding people is the key to leadership and there is a scene when he abraids his reckless son.
“You so easily fell into their trap. Broken to another man's fist. Like a falcon, but without the beauty. All men are falcons. Some are flown straight from the fist, killing anything that moves. Others are lazy and tempted by the lure. But all men can be broken. Learn to fly them at the right game, and they will do your hunting for you.”
The lesson I get from this is that incentives matter. Know what your colleagues, partners and subordinates want. Make sure you want the same things so you are aligned and going after the same goals.
There are so many excellent scenes, there is one where the warlord Toranaga schools one of his retainers who asks him: “How does it feel to shape the wind to your will?” “I don’t control the wind,” replies Toranaga. “I only study it.”
There is another conversation between a samurai Omi and his courtesan Kiku. Omi asks: “Do you think loyalty could ever be a disservice? Or even a harm?
Kiku answers: “No”.
Omi: “I don’t know what I’m fighting for anymore.”
Kiku: “If you look and see nothing…..you must simply look harder.”
I feel this way sometimes, and wonder what the point is. This is why it’s important to have a clear mission in life. It’s why you need to have family, friends and goals. Something beyond yourself.
The whole point of life is winning, however you define it. Life is meant to be hard and difficult and full of challenges. He says to his retainer: “Do you remember what the Anjin said on the day we met when I told him his fight was pointless?” He responded: “Unless I win.” Toranaga then says “If you win, anything is possible.”
What I take from this: Go figure out what you want. Like what you really, really want and go for it. Win or lose, you will be ahead of most people.
So I end with some beautiful words from Lady Mariko:
“If I could use words like scattering flowers and falling leaves, what a bonfire my poems would make.”
Life is too short, just like that of cherry blossoms. Yet every life is a beacon. Make your life as bright as a bonfire, as bright and illuminating as possible.
Build Your Binge Bank: Shaan Puri’s Creator Tip
I listened to a great interview with David Perell (of Write of Passage fame) and Shaan Puri, investor, entrepreneur and co-host of the excellent “My First Million Podcast” and social media influencer as well. He introduced the great concept of the “Binge Bank”:
What’s a binge bank? A binge bank is when you basically stack material. I’m creating a bank so that if someone was curious about this guy, I want to learn more. What’s he all about? The next hour you would walk out with my reputation way higher with you.
You would like me, you would respect me. It changed the way I thought about it. I used to be very results driven. If it’s not immediately paying off, it’s hard for me to get excited about it.
But when I thought of the binge bank, I just thought I need to create this library that if anybody, if David wanted to do research and he was going to spend an hour or two hours going down the rabbit hole. I need to leave a little breadcrumb trail that by the end, he’s like ‘I love this guy, I’m all about this guy.’”
(Source: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/BVgkViWDCEU)
This is a great mental trick. Becoming a creative entrepreneur requires grit, longevity and constant production even in face of zero interest or engagement. This is why the rule of 2-3 exists in the creator media business, most people just quit after 2-3 blog posts, or 2-3 podcasts or 2-3 newsletters. It requires an extended period of time, sometimes, years of regular publishing before you get some growth and traction.
The mental trick is what helps you stay in the content game. Really powerful when you think about it. So if you are out to build a creator business, this is a must use tip. Keep on going, keep on creating, keep on publishing and be prepared to do it for a LONG time.
A Pep Talk from Gordon Gekko: Use It When You Are Down
We all have good days and we all have bad days. When I look back at my life, the highs are really high and the lows are really low. Just like startups. 2024 was shaping up to be a pretty crap year. Family issues, a massive tax bill, business issues and thus cash flow issues. And then to add insult to injury also got scammed by ID harvesters (and believe you me when I find them, there WILL be payback).
And all within a few weeks. It felt like blow after blow after blow. Plus it’s spring break/Ramadan so no one is around and you can’t do anything yet. You feel like the whole world is against you.
So what do I do? Besides going to the gym to work out my rage and frustration? I go listen to Gordon Gekko in “Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps”. In a famous scene where he makes his comeback, he gives advice to a friend/colleague:
“Hey hey, stay positive, pal. Most people they lose, they whine and they quit. But you gotta be there for the turns. Everybody’s got good luck, everybody’s got bad luck. Don’t run, when you lose. Don’t whine when it hurts. It’s like the first grade Jerry, nobody likes a crybaby.” (Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kO3Rd6U4CjE)
After listening to this, I remember that it’s a long game. I remember all the crap I went through to get here. I remember 2001 and 2020 and how I got through those hellish years and came through. I go to church and I also meditate to calm my mind. I do my gratitude exercise and thank God for my health, my books and all the experience I’ve had over the past decades.
I take responsibility, accept reality and adapt. Then I come up with a game plan and do what I do best: Take massive action, attack and conquer. If you are in this situation in life, I suggest you do the same. It bloody works.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads May 11th, 2025
“Busyness chokes deep thinking.”― Todd Stocker
"Many founders focus too narrowly on their current revenue or product features. However, talent, revenue, or product acquisitions are actually some of the less valuable M&A outcomes. The highest value comes from positioning the acquisition as a strategic threat or a defensive move."
https://1984.vc/docs/founders-handbook/mergers-and-acquisitions/how-to-sell/
2. "That instinct for spotting talent is central to Paradigm, which began in 2018 when Coinbase Co-founder, Fred Ehrsam, approached Huang at Sequoia Capital with a vision for a different kind of investment company. They started as equal partners, but Ehrsam has since stepped back to split his time between crypto and his new brain-computer interface startup, recognizing that Huang was, in his words, “born and bred to run Paradigm.”
The son of one of the world’s most accomplished financial theorists and a pioneering computer science professor, Huang grew up at the nexus of math, economics, and technology. In six years, his firm has grown from managing $400 million to over $12 billion by making early, concentrated bets on foundational crypto projects, while also building significant parts of crypto’s core infrastructure. Paradigm’s researchers—who double as investors—develop foundational innovations, then open-source them for the entire industry to use. It’s an unusual approach for a financial firm, but Paradigm isn’t a typical investment company. It’s more like a research lab crossed with an engineering outfit, wrapped in the sophistication of a West Coast Wall Street.
This combination of technical excellence and quiet integrity has helped establish Paradigm as one of crypto’s most important institutions. In an industry that’s grown from zero to $3 trillion through waves of speculation and collapse, the firm’s open-source tools now power 90% of smart contract development. Its innovations help hundreds of billions in digital dollars move more efficiently. And its investments have earned the trust of the world’s most sophisticated investors, including Harvard, Stanford, Sequoia and Yale."
https://joincolossus.com/article/paradigm-shifts-matt-huang/
3. "By 27 Mehta’s seen enough, and he’s left D.E. Shaw to start a firm with his friend Benny. On a whim he calls it Greenoaks, after the street in Atherton, California where he grew up. In the first deck for Greenoaks there’s a slide called ‘Finding Value in Unusual Places’, which at the time meant the internet. The idea was that these internet companies, these unbelievably cheap businesses, were going to replace a large percentage of the S&P 500. In 2012, he bets 40% of his first fund on Coupang, an ecommerce retailer in South Korea, led by a founder, Bom Kim, whom Mehta’s fallen head-over-heels in love with. Greenoaks soon owns upwards of 15% of the company, and eventually returns about $8 billion from that one investment.
Today Mehta is 40, and over its first 13 years, Greenoaks has played a legendary part in the rise of Coupang, Figma, Wiz, Carvana, Stripe, Discord, Rippling, Toast, Robinhood, and other unicorns led by N of 1 founders, generating over $13 billion in gross profits, a 33% total net internal rate of return, and only about a point of principal impairment. The firm is unusually small and concentrated: five funds of 55 core companies across nearly $15 billion of assets managed by nine investment professionals—with Mehta himself as one of the largest LPs in each fund. Henry Kravis, one of the first LPs, told me that at the top of the market between 2020–2022, Greenoaks probably returned more money to investors than anyone else. “Neil’s extremely disciplined, he’s gone against the tide many times, and he’s had exceptional timing,” Kravis said. “He’s the real deal.”
The firm has now achieved icon status among founders and investors—but casual observers more familiar with names like Sequoia and Andreessen Horowitz might have come across Greenoaks for the first time only recently.
“Nobody else wanted to do it, we were the only ones,” said Mehta. “All of our alpha comes from ignoring the memetic vibes of Silicon Valley and New York and focusing on the fundamentals of a business and the founder. That’s it.”"
https://joincolossus.com/article/the-visions-of-neil-mehta-greenoaks/
4. "As modern warfare becomes increasingly reliant on space-based networks, Russia and China are stepping up efforts to counter the dominance of commercial satellite constellations, particularly SpaceX’s Starlink. The Secure World Foundation (SWF), a nonpartisan policy think tank, detailed these developments in its latest annual report which assesses global counterspace capabilities."
https://spacenews.com/russia-china-target-spacexs-starlink-in-escalating-space-electronic-warfare/
5. Title says it all. Killer robots and drones in Ukraine. Pioneering the scary new world of war by necessity.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NLfLuqeA0Y
6. Important discussion that is topical: building defense startups that last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOIrMNFGHLM
7. "Play symmetric games for fun, not fortune. Don’t get addicted. You can’t win.
But asymmetric games? That’s where it gets interesting. That’s where you can win.
In a good asymmetric game, the upside is vastly greater than the downside. Asking someone out. Investing in a business. Moving to a new city. If it works, your life changes. If it doesn’t, you move on to the next bet.
The trick to winning asymmetric games is information. Not just more of it, but having ways to get better, earlier, and cheaper access to information."
https://newsletter.sanjaysays.co/p/win-at-life-by-understanding-asymmetric-risk-49265da43723cb69
8. "When you are thinking about market ending moves, be creative! You can brainstorm literally any scenario. Can you convince a large public company to spin out a key subsidiary to merge with you? Can you put aside ego with your main competitor to combine forces and stop competing for everything? Think broadly. Even if doesn’t happen, this often sparks key thinking on M&A, partnerships, and key hires that you may not have considered otherwise."
https://blog.eladgil.com/p/market-ending-moves
9. "This brings me to something I have noticed — the closer someone is to the finance industry, the more they are against the tariffs. The closer someone is to the industrial or manufacturing industry, the more they are supportive of the tariffs. Fascinating to watch.
Lastly, one aspect of these tariff deals that seems to be undiscussed is the likelihood that foreign countries will commit to making direct investments in the US. These countries will also look to buy products made in America too. As I wrote yesterday, Taiwan committed to buying industrial products, agricultural products, energy, and weaponry from us. I would expect many of the deals to include these concessions and commitments.
There is plenty of volatility left in these markets. Stocks are down. Bitcoin is down. Crypto is down. And no one knows where the bottom is. The undisciplined, over-levered, and short-term oriented panic, while the patient, un-levered, and long-term oriented feel nothing.
Make sure you are on the right side of that equation."
https://pomp.substack.com/p/tariffs-are-controversial-depending
10. The two critical years that we need to worry about from a National Secretary perspective. 2027 and 2049.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWP-6DcHN9Q
11. "Those who invest in Emerging Markets are familiar with the concept of Fiscal Dominance. Developed Market investors will soon learn this term as well. This is when the Central Bank loses control of its core mandate to tinker with inflation and employment. Instead, the Central Bank is forced to focus on the government’s fiscal needs—either through monetizing debt or stabilizing the bond market. This then starts a vicious feedback loop that is difficult to escape from. At some point, investors wake up and decide they’re not going to throw good money after bad.
Applying this thought progression to equities. When I look at equity valuations in Brazil, and then look at valuations here in America, I realize that the gap between the two is quite wide. In a higher interest rate regime, equities are often priced at single digit earnings multiples, as opposed to the crazy multiples that we’ve taken for granted in America. Now, I’m not calling for a crash. It took Brazil over a decade to deflate to where it is today. Then again, Brazil didn’t have anywhere near the level of financialization that we do—nor did it rely as highly on foreign flows to finance itself."
https://pracap.com/watch-bonds/
12. "The end of Bretton Woods was probably inescapable, but it’s worth pointing out that the Nixon Shock was an economic disaster: the country endured a decade of drastic inflation that was only cured with sky-high interest rates and a massive recession (the architect of that cure, Paul Volcker, was a part of the team that instituted the Nixon Shock in the first place; Volcker came to regret it). In other words, the reaction of the market and the press was totally wrong.
The question is if what happened this last week ought to be compared to the Nixon Shock, or contrasted? Certainly the reaction is a contrast: everyone hates the “Liberation Day” tariffs, including the market. Moreover, the Trump administration’s rollout has been the very opposite of a PR masterpiece: no one in the administration can seem to agree about what exactly the goal is, or what success looks like. I’m certainly not going to attempt to speak for an administration that can’t speak for itself, particularly given Trump’s on-again-off-again approach to tariffs over the last few months.
What I do come back to, however, is what I opened with: there is a scenario within the realm of possibilities that is far more painful than anything Trump proposed; is it better to try and force into place a new economic system that, at least in theory, reduces dependency on China and resuscitates U.S. manufacturing now, instead of waiting for the current system to collapse by literal force?
This does seem to be the administration’s goal: simply tariffing China is deadweight loss, leading to rerouting and the fundamental problem of the dollar as reserve currency unaddressed; blanket tariffs, on the other hand, are a valid, if extremely blunt and inefficient, way to meaningfully restructure incentives.
Make no mistake, the structural problems facing U.S. manufacturing in particular are very real, and the China-Taiwan systemic risk is only going to increase. Instead of changing the system to ameliorate the risk, however you could simply address the risk directly; I think the best way to do that is to undo the chip controls and tie China even more tightly into the current system generally, and to Taiwan specifically. Yes, this is kicking the can down the road, but path dependency is a far more powerful force than we often realize."
https://stratechery.com/2025/trade-tariffs-and-tech/
13. Topical conversation on tariffs. Jury is still out from my side as this is one man's view of the Tariffs and economy. Always interesting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmDt_zAlL8E&t=24s
14. "Tobi’s point was that working long, hard hours can itself be fun, if you enjoy the work and the people you’re working with.
But no matter how passionate about the work you are, and no matter how caring and brilliant the people you’re surrounded by are, it can still be exhausting. Which is where genuine fun comes in. The thing is, you don’t need to come up with grand plans to have fun. You just need to be open to taking things a bit less seriously. And the impact can be huge (both on you and on your team)."
https://chrisneumann.com/archives/life-is-short-have-fun
15. Always interesting views on geopolitics with Zeihan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9e0IZv31820
16. Great discussion on NIA episode on Liberation Day Tariffs Day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W6ZszzoWc0&t=1815s
17. "Broadly speaking, economic warfare is causing substantial uncertainty. How can businesses plan when they don’t know how input costs will change? How can countries plan when they’re questioning who their friends are?
This creates substantial volatility in asset prices, which turns those using too much leverage into forced sellers at any price. And this creates reflexivity in the market: selling begets selling. Time is compressing."
https://phronesisfund.substack.com/p/volatility
18. "One consequence of this maturation is that our industry has become very prescriptive regarding what works. Limited partners have developed relatively fixed views of portfolio constructions and investment strategies that will generate returns and primarily back VC firms that conform to those models. Increasingly, venture capitalists focus on algorithmic approaches for founder selection, emphasizing folks with low employee badge numbers at well-known companies, people in their social or professional networks, or people who have otherwise achieved some level of fame or notoriety online.
Maybe it’s just me, but it feels like our industry is trending in a direction where everything feels the same - firms feel the same, the founders we back feel the same, and certain parts of the business feel like they’ve devolved into a cookie-cutter approach to finding and funding businesses. This is not a good direction for an industry focused on finding and backing outlier businesses."
https://chudson.substack.com/p/what-does-it-mean-to-be-a-venture
19. "Unfortunately this is the state of growth marketing. A lot of channels are not working, or are slow, expensive, or one-time only. This is the natural end state for things, and maybe we’re in a bit of a lull due to the technology super cycle as we’re 15+ years into the mobile wave, we’ve had various kinds of paid ads for 20+ years, and so on. All of these aforementioned marketing channels are now fully mature."
https://andrewchen.substack.com/p/every-marketing-channel-sucks-right
20. "Clearly, the Scott Bessent + Elon Musk faction in the White House—which pitched the president on an approach involving rational and strategic statecraft—won over the “burn it all down” left-wing coalition led by protectionist ideologue Peter Navarro.
Before Wednesday, Mr. Musk and like-minded, powerful allies outside of the White House deployed significant political capital to convince the president of the merits of a more focused trade strategy, including lowering tariff barriers and providing much-needed relief to businesses of all sizes. These forces won the day over the “Wall Street is not Main Street” faction, which sought to advance class warfare and sow division between Americans."
https://www.dossier.today/p/trump-aligns-with-rational-white
21. The art and science of building a venture firm in this crazy competitive market.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUrgLyEioZ4
22. So much wisdom and a fun conversation with Tai Lopez. Stop being so fearful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHUXruWi6Es
23. This discussions shows that there are levels to levels in everything that you do. Also why Sequoia Capital is one of the best in the venture business for so long.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jcx3pKnvT8I
24. The Drone arms race.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9acvfAAQEA
25. Lasers in future wars.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7P5js8B32I
26. Maximum bullish on Ukraine.
"Researching investments in situ is always interesting, and my trip to Kyiv ranks among the most unique ones I've ever done.
Reality on the ground can be ever so different from the perception elsewhere."
https://www.undervalued-shares.com/weekly-dispatches/ukraine-research-excursion-what-did-i-find/
27. Important discussion on drone warfare and how America can position for the future.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZL-0yzCaSQ
28. "The US had been heading towards becoming the next Argentina. The tariff shock therapy firmly demonstrates that the bond market vigilantes are not just back. They are now in charge of policy. As The Secretary of the Treasury said, “I could have kept issuing bonds,” but it would have ended in a catastrophe. The snafu happened because of the religious zealots on trade. Peter Navarro and, to a lesser extent, Howard Lutnik hijacked the narrative from the calmer and more measured Secretary of The Treasury. This kind of interdepartmental mixed messaging is typical of new administrations.
What matters is that Bessent has reasserted control. Bessent understands that the markets are full of people whose whole professional life has been dominated by Alan Greenspan’s “Forward Guidance.” For decades, policymakers took risks out of the market and subdued volatility in order to remain popular and powerful. They spoon-fed the markets. They kept Greenspan’s put in place.
Bessent may take a gentler approach than Lutnick and Navarros, but make no mistake; he is also signaling that this is the end of the molly-coddling. If you want to get paid in markets, there must be risk, and you must take risk. He is restoring risk into the markets. There will be fewer warnings. No more bailouts. No more spoon-feeding. The investor’s job is to pay attention and get paid for managing the volatility.
Returns will go up for those who have the skill to ride both the Bull and the Bear. For the young who have no memory of the pre-Greenspan era, buckle up, take a deep breath, and enjoy the ride. This is when you learn. You don’t learn anything when markets smoothly and predictably rise. By the way, this kind of volatility used to be normal when I started working on a trading floor in 1991. You’ll get the hang of it.
It is easy to think about all this as a fight between the US and China. That’s the way it’s being framed. But, the tariff strategy also reflects a domestic fight between two distinct camps: The Corporatists and the Techno/Oligarchs. The latter is now in charge and signaling a serious change in the way capital will be allocated going forward. They want to disintermediate Wall Street and the handful of private equity firms that have decided who does and does not get capital. It was a small club. They only invested in potential unicorns. This left most of the entrepreneurs out in the cold.
With these announcements, the TechnoOligarchs aim to shift more money into the hands of small and medium-sized businesses that may not be unicorns but which are reliable workhorses. Banks and community lending institutions will be encouraged to lend. IPOs of unicorns led by investment banks are no longer the only game in town. The legalization of tokenization/crypto/Bitcoin/ & the creation of a US Sovereign Wealth Fund will open up new pathways for capital to bypass intermediaries and reach risk-takers more directly."
https://drpippa.substack.com/p/tariffs-the-american-mittelstand
29. "Outside of its dishonorable trade practices, the Chinese Communist Party is the world’s most malevolent force, and it threatens America’s founding principles and global sovereignty. Sure, the United States often finds itself trading with some unsavory partners, but China combines tyranny with bad faith, and it’s simply a bridge too far.
Wall Street may not like it, but America's complete decoupling from Chinese trade is both morally and economically sound in the long term. It will greatly benefit the United States to completely detach from China so that we can have reliable, good faith, and morally sound trade partners."
https://www.dossier.today/p/decoupling-from-china-is-worth-the
30. Satellites and drones: the future of war.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5rNOg3ZmmY
31. "Professional life gives you ready-made answers to the existential question: How do I matter? Your contributions are measured, evaluated, compensated, and—at least occasionally—recognized. Even when the system is flawed, it offers clear feedback. You know where you stand.
If you're anything like me, your entire world—dating back to elementary school—was shaped by external measures of success. First came grades, academic accolades, internships, job offers, promotions, and funding rounds. One milestone after another. Then suddenly… it’s gone. There’s no longer anyone around to tell you how valuable you are. And if you haven’t built a strong internal sense of worth, that silence can be deafening. You might look for comfort in friends, family, or a partner. But not everyone has those support systems in place—or can lean on them.
When those external scorecards disappear, you're left with the deeper, more difficult task: defining your worth on your terms. This isn’t a minor adjustment—it’s an existential unraveling. You begin to see how much of your identity was built around performance. Achievement-based cultures tend to reward what’s visible: outcomes, titles, impact metrics, and social proof. But the most meaningful human contributions—presence, wisdom, care, creativity— defy measurement.
This recalibration can stir up deep discomfort. You begin to notice the subtle ways you’ve internalized capitalism—the belief that your value is directly tied to your productivity. Even if you reject that idea intellectually, you might still feel the urge to produce, achieve, and prove your usefulness through output. Releasing that pattern takes time, practice, and a lot of self-compassion."
https://cluesdotlife.substack.com/p/what-happens-when-you-leave-your
32. "As I’ve written about in the past, it’s not entirely fair to say that the US does not manufacture things anymore. In fact, the US manufacturers more today than it ever did in the pre-globalization era. However, it is true that many fewer Americans today actually work in manufacturing, making it a much less visible industry to the average American. Further, manufacturing is a much smaller share of the US’s GDP today than in the past, and while the US is still the second largest manufacturer in the world, the US controls a much smaller share of overall manufacturing than it used to.
Regardless, there is no doubt that US supply chains are overly reliant on nations like the PRC. Many parts of the DIB rely on supply chains with key vulnerabilities in the PRC, posing a threat to US national security. A Govini report highlights that many US military systems rely on microelectronics from the PRC, and another report reveals, “China is the single or sole supplier for a number of specialty chemicals used in munitions and missiles. In many cases, there is no other source or drop-in replacement material and even in cases where that option exists, the time and cost to test and qualify the new material can be prohibitive – especially for larger systems (hundreds of millions of dollars each).”
Other startups looking to build hardware for DoD customers need to take the time to understand the supply chain constraints and system hardening required by their customers as early as possible. Of course, startups don’t need to meet all of the DoD’s stringent requirements when building initial prototypes, but they need to understand how the DoD’s unique supply chain and system hardening requirements will impact the cost, performance, and manufacturability of their systems, work those constraints into early product designs, and start the process of hardening systems and supply chains early on.
Additionally, it is critical that startups test their systems as often and as realistically as possible to ensure that the systems actually meet the needs of warfighters.
Building American-made defense hardware is hard, but it’s not impossible. As the US looks to reassert its manufacturing strength and reduce reliance on adversarial supply chains, companies like Neros show what’s possible with the right focus, urgency, and willingness to rethink old assumptions. There’s still a long road ahead, but the blueprint is finally starting to take shape."
https://maggiegray.us/p/manufacturing-for-the-mission-what
33. Global Fallout is right. Making sense of the Trump chaos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jr-nqA6hfco&t=9s
34. "If you’re under 45 or so you should be celebrating the declines. There is no way you are down a significant amount of money relative to your annual income. The only people who should be upset are retired because they rely on the market to live. Far too many people were sitting back hoping for double digit returns while they build no valuable skills at all (no biz, no nothing just ticker price go up).
Wealth Is Relative: This comment always makes people mad but wealth is relative. If you own $100K of a stock and it goes up 10% but all the rich people own $10M of it, you’re not gaining ground on the elite (not even close).
You’re actually better off if that stock goes down 50% (you have $50K, they have $5M each) and you can buy $50K more of it. Now as a ratio you own more on a weighted basis.
Why This Matters? This is important because its actually how the USA continues to retain global dominance. If US markets go down 10% but all other markets go down 30% who is the winner? The USA is. Don’t leave us any messages saying you’re going to invest in the Mexican Stock Market or the European Stock Market. We know you’re lying.
After all is said and done, the US market will be the best performer. Down less than everyone. Or up more than everyone. Been this way for a century now and be careful when someone says “the US is done”. What they are really saying? They are personally done.
They couldn’t even make it in the USA. The easiest place in the world to get rich."
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/downturn-recovers-faster-than-you
35. "I think there will be a small handful of AI-enabled law firms or accountants or architects with the best technology that will service 80% of the market in each jurisdiction at a very low cost. There will be a few holdouts providing "handcrafted legal advice", but I think they will be the minority share of the market. We've seen this pattern in technology over and over again. The benefits accrue to a small handful of dominant companies which have an advantage in product or technology or distribution.
I don't know for sure whether these dominant players will be incumbents or newcomers in each industry. My guess is mostly newcomers. The ability to iterate quickly is overwhelmingly the most important factor in growing a successful business today, and big companies are too burdened down with thousands of people.
In the short and medium-term, I think it's very likely we see an explosion of indie hackers making $1m/year from side projects, with perhaps less need to raise VC funding.
I think the real winners in the immediate future will be those high-agency people who are good at noticing problems that people or companies have and then obsessively building solutions using the latest tools. One of YC's mantras is "Make something people want." Figuring out what people want will be a much more valuable skill once the "making" bit is freely available to all."
https://tomblomfield.com/post/1743528547367/the-age-of-abundance
Rules for Life: Want Money, Ask for Advice; Want Advice, Ask for Money
Almost every founder has heard of that saying in the title. But it bears repeating. If you want money ask for advice, if you want advice, ask for money. This is not just a comment to slash on the weirdness and wishy-washiness of venture capitalists. It is. But the more I’ve thought about it, the more it is just a good rule for life.
For me when I’ve tried to optimize for money, it almost never works out. Maybe you come off desperate and needy. Maybe I self-sabotage because of a weird relationship I have with money.
But when I’ve chased curiosity and followed the rabbit hole of my interests, the money or opportunities just kind of showed up. It sounds a little bit esoteric. Yet it has worked for me.
My hypothesis is that when chasing knowledge & interest, you work at a very different frequency. You get into a zone or flow. Time passes quickly in a good way. You fall in love with the process. And as you share everything you learn publicly through conversations, through writing and on social media, the opportunities just inevitably appear. It’s almost like magic.
Earlier in my career this happened through going to many meetups, attending conferences, going to a lot of parties and having lots of coffees. Now when you add the magic of the Internet, newsletters, podcasts, blogs and social media you end up with what David Perell calls a “serendipity machine”.
So for anyone starting their career, I challenge you to pursue your interests and share what you learn. You never know what exciting place you will end up in your life. Net net: be in a learning mindset, not an earning one.
To the Extreme: Living a Precarious Life On Purpose
I did a panel talk with my friend Philipp at an investors event back in 2024, where we were explaining how we thought about investing. The conclusion was don’t do what we do. We both have most of our net worth in super risky and super illiquid assets like startups and LP investing in Venture capital funds.
Yes, venture capital and startups are sexy. But as I said before, they are super illiquid and the likelihood or returns are 12-14 years out. That means our cash is stuck for a long time. The big problem with this portfolio allocation is that there will always be cash flow issues no matter how well you budget or what your cash reserves are. I have different income streams but payments are almost always delayed for whatever reason. Or you get unexpected issues like a bigger than planned tax bill, rental properties repairs or larger expenses than normal, common if you have a family. Thus, it can be a precarious living and you are always worrying about money, when in theory you shouldn’t really at all at my stage of career and life.
I’m sure this will work out in the long run but there are many days I wonder why the heck I structured my life this way. I think this is partially due to bad planning, lack of creativity or plain ignorance/ arrogance on my side.
But from a more positive perspective maybe I did this subconsciously. Due to an internal realization that I will become lazy, if I don’t need to worry about money. That I will become inactive and thus irrelevant. That I’ll stop pushing myself and will stop learning. I’ve seen this with many of my peers in VC as well as others who have done very well. They just literally check out and mentally rot. They stop growing.
This isn’t very different from many of the startups that I see who raise way too much money at whatever stage they are at. They start to get complacent and at the same time, feel compelled to spend money on people and new initiatives. Everything slows down, the clock speed decreases and the complexity and bloat sets in.
It takes me to Vincent Hanna, played by Al Pacino in classic movie “Heat” where he says you gotta hold onto angst, fear & pain so you can stay “sharp, on the edge, where I gotta be.” This seems to be clearer and clearer to me every day. The edge is where all the growth happens.
Implications of the Change from Nation States to Network States: Why You Need a Private Military Company on Call
You have to be blind not to see the slow grinding and painful collapse of competence in almost every Nation-State around us. China, Russia, USA, Canada and pretty much most of the Western world looks like a complete mess. It’s almost inevitable as it has been over 200 years of this concept.
The only places that seem to be thriving or stable are small nationstates, almost city states like UAE, Singapore, Uruguay, even El Salvador. Every other place just seems like a growing disaster zone.
Hence we see people looking for new sanctuaries as the world goes from a centralized one to a more decentralized one. From unipolar to more multipolar world.
For those unfamiliar with the term Network State, this comes straight out of the book by Balaji Srinavasan.
“A network state is a highly aligned online community with a capacity for collective action that crowdfunds territory around the world and eventually gains diplomatic recognition from pre-existing states.
When we think of a nation state, we immediately think of the lands, but when we think of a network state, we should instantly think of the minds. That is, if the nation state system starts with the map of the globe and assigns each patch of land to a single state, the network state system starts with the 7+ billion humans of the world and attracts each mind to one or more networks.
A network state is a social network with a moral innovation, a sense of national consciousness, a recognized founder, a capacity for collective action, an in-person level of civility, an integrated cryptocurrency, a consensual government limited by a social smart contract, an archipelago of crowdfunded physical territories, a virtual capital, and an on-chain census that proves a large enough population, income, and real-estate footprint to attain a measure of diplomatic recognition.”
We are kind of living in this Network State right now. I live in San Francisco, run a small VC fund investing in immigrant and European founders targeting the American market. I also have a Holding Co based in the MENA region with my Saudi business partner and invest all over the world. My business interests are global.
I have much of my family in Taiwan, other parts of the USA and Canada. My extended friendships and tech family is also very global as well. We are starting to see more people live a Digital Slow-mad, where we live in different cities or countries during the year for extended periods of time. Starlink/Broadband, smartphones and the nature of advanced white collar work have made the world even more flat.
Whatever happens though, in this new decentralized world, there will be a continuing need for self defense & projecting force and violence, something Nation-states used to hold monopoly over. Enforcing law and order, something we take for granted in most of the West growing up but now seems to be decaying dramatically over the last half decade. Reasons range from stupid Leftist decriminalization policies and Defund the police garbage, to rampant uncontrolled immigration at the borders. And as we learned throughout human history, things can get ugly on the streets very quickly.
The brilliant Radigan Carter wrote about this during a stint in Haiti:
“This is what a lot of Americans don't get about Wagner: Talking with a waitress after the firefight subsided this morning, she's telling us how she lives in the suburbs and a year ago gangs came into her son's school looking for someone's kid to kidnap.
Gangs ran rampant, people that stayed in their houses slept on the floor to minimize being hit by stray rounds, a lot of people left the nicer neighborhoods since that is where the gangs came to loot and steal and moved away. The government and their politicians did nothing to protect them.
She then says how some of the wealthy in the community finally had enough, and they pooled together $3 million USD and hired a six-man team from Wagner to secure the neighborhood. She is now talking with relief and gratitude in her voice as she tells us how in four weeks her neighborhood went from totally unsafe to completely safe.
That these six white men, with ski masks rolled down who didn't speak any english and wagner patches on started "cleaning up the neighborhood" She said it was obvious they when they started, saying where gang members would empty mags terrorizing people, the first day Wagner started cleaning up, you would hear rapid fire from a gang member, followed by 1-2 shots.
She laughs in relief, saying it went like this for four weeks. Only on the first day did anyone in the neighborhood see the result of the clean up, with fifteen gang members piled in the back of a hilux with bullet holes in all their heads. You live by the sword and terrorize people, no one cares when you die by the sword, they just want to live someplace that is safe.
After the first day, she said no one in the neighborhood saw the result of the clean up, she laughs and says they all went to the train station (A Yellowstone reference, it turns out her father, a retired colonel loves Yellowstone)
She says the first week, you could hear Wagner working day and night, the second week, it was less, the third week even less, and the fourth week only a few shots, and then after that, the neighborhood was safe.
In total these six men cleaned up between 1,500-2,000 gang members in a month, paid for by the wealthy in the neighborhood.
Reminded me of Noblesse Oblige, or nobility obliges, the unwritten obligation of people from a noble ancestry (substitute people of means today) to act honorably and generously towards others. Nobility extends beyond mere entitlement, requiring people who hold such status to fulfill social responsibilities.
How do you think this mother, who now doesn't worry about her son being shot by gangs entering his school feels about those Wagner mercenaries? People who live in the land of wolves don't care about US bureaucracy, sanctions, aid, NGOs, or whatever the fuck our elite thinks they are doing to improve the world.
They care about their son not getting shot at school and talk almost in reverence about the six Wagner fighters with masked faces who cleaned up their neighborhood in a month.”
Source: https://twitter.com/radigancarter/status/1761013582022545593
The whole point of this story is that as we move into a new decentralized world, we cannot take law and order for granted. Of course, you absolutely should have financial resources, food & water supplies in general. But to protect this, you need to be in good shape, well armed and trained and be part of a larger community. In a world of growing Nation-state decay and movement to a new Network State world, it’s probably a VERY good idea to have a private security and private military company on speed dial as it’s gonna get ugly before it gets better.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads May 4th, 2025
“Enthusiasm is common. Endurance is rare.”― Angela Duckworth
"Everyone intends to do what they say they’ll do. But as you progress towards your goals, you hit friction — you get tired, you get distracted, you re-prioritize — and then the whole thing unravels. The key to success is what you do after you realize it might not happen.
And here’s the rule I’ve learned:
There are two ways to do what you say you’re going to do:
1. Do it, or
2. Don’t say it."
https://newsletter.sanjaysays.co/p/you-dont-have-to-be-amazing
2. "As in private equity, we should start to expect secondaries to become a permanent and significant part of venture capital liquidity for both employees of companies and also investors.
With the target ARR required to achieve an IPO growing from $80m in 2008 to approximately $250m today, secondaries will become a permanent fixture in venture capital markets.
It’s not just a temporary anomaly, but a structural evolution in how venture capital will function and ultimately evolve to look a bit more like private equity."
https://tomtunguz.com/the-exit-path-of-2024/
3. "Today, the stakes are also critical. The global security environment is undergoing seismic shifts, with threats evolving at a speed and scale unseen since the Cold War. Yet, unlike the industrial mobilization of the past, the modern battlefield is defined not only by hardware but also by the ability to leverage software–systems capable of adapting at speed and precision, processing vast amounts of data and enabling real-time decision-making."
4. "The future of Haiti is bleak. The Haitian police and the roughly 1,000 Kenyan policemen assisting them don’t seem to have the numbers or equipment to make a huge difference. For anything to change, Haiti and the international community are going to have to start looking at this as a military problem, not a police problem.
Nowhere in Haiti is safe; the citizens live in perpetual terror. The police and Kenyans have not established any sort of fortified perimeter in the capital where citizens can feel safe. They seem to be interested only in conducting limited operations with varying levels of success and acting mostly as a reactive force. This conflict is not going to end anytime soon if something major doesn’t change."
https://www.globalhitman.com/p/haitis-cartel-and-american-fueled
5. "With billionaires biohacking themselves amid an insurgent wellness boom, growing interest around exercises for longevity proves more and more of us are paying attention to our health than ever before.
You may not be motivated entirely by a desire to improve your lifespan, but there’s no denying that exercise is the key to remaining mobile, disease free, and independent for longer."
https://www.gq.com/story/exercises-for-longevity
6. "One of the biggest unlocks in my life has been recognizing that being a man means adding surplus value: creating more tax revenue than I absorb, listening to more complaints than I make, noticing people’s lives, providing more (net) care and love. I have run firms my whole life, and I’ve always aimed to provide the minimum compensation required such that employees won’t leave. No more.
BTW, this is how nearly all companies work, optimizing for profits. This is a result of the incentive system in a capitalist society, as it increases the enterprise value (profits) of the firm — and the likelihood the business survives. Our entire society now prays at the altar of shareholder value, prioritizing them over every other stakeholder … dramatically. If you are blessed with a company that’s doing well, why wouldn’t you pay more than you need to? Do you love your kids, community, and country just enough that they don’t abandon you?
One of the most rewarding things about running a firm is it mimics some of the m/paternal feelings of reward you get from protecting and providing for your offspring. I’ve worked hard, I’m talented, and I made the genius decision to be born in America. The result is I’ve got a firm that’s exceptionally profitable. One of the (many) rewards of that is I get to pay people more than I need to. It feels great."
https://www.profgalloway.com/project-2028-wages/
7. "Affleck first became widely known with 1997’s Good Will Hunting, which he wrote and starred in alongside his friend Matt Damon. He is nearing his 30th uninterrupted year in the spotlight, which has given him a career and two Academy Awards, and also a level of tabloid scrutiny that in its consistency and vehemence is almost unmatched. “Some people like to follow the soap opera,” Affleck says. “And that soap opera is actually independent of a movie you might make or be in. They’re interested in just the general soap opera and you became a character in that soap opera. You don’t write it, you don’t direct it, you don’t even know you’re in it, but you are.”
To this day, he still meets people who assume he is his dim, rock-breaking character from Good Will Hunting, a movie that cast Damon in the genius role (“Matt’s math skills, I am pretty sure, are very far from genius level”), or the attention-plagued playboy that was his public role in the first decade of this century.
In reality, Affleck is 52, a twice-divorced father of three who commutes to an office most days. “I’m a middle-aged guy,” he says, not unhappily. Despite the comeback narrative that journalists still reference, week to week and year to year, he has long been ensconced in the very top levels of Hollywood as a leading man (in the lobby of Artists Equity there is, among other things, Affleck’s old Batman suit) and, more recently, an executive. Affleck founded Artists Equity, which he runs with Damon and Gerry Cardinale, a little over two years ago, with the idea of wresting some control back from the notoriously opaque and complex studio financing system."
https://www.gq.com/story/inside-ben-afflecks-plan-to-remake-hollywood
8. Inspiring and fun interview with Palmer Luckey.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t-iUvZ-8Q3k
9. Fun discussion on sales. Lots of interesting thoughts on sales.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNfbomeXVtU&t=101s
10. Ian Bremmer is always direct & clear when discussing geopolitics. Important conversation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjquBYqYbcc
11. "Clausewitz’ exhortation to focus on the enemy’s destruction is therefore only half the formula for victory; the other is to exploit that destruction to prevent force regeneration. This cannot usually be done in a single battle as at Austerlitz, and there are rarely any shortcuts—more often, it entails the capture of political centers, occupation of territory, destruction of armaments, etc.
In Saladin’s case, it would have entailed reducing every port through which reinforcements arrived. The difference between attrition and other forms of warfare does not lie in total quantity of destruction, after all, but in the exploitation of those brief windows of opportunity."
https://dispatch.bazaarofwar.com/p/notes-on-annihilation
12. "The lesson of the Bellum Sociale is that successful peoples, companies, or individuals can reach a point where they transcend their original condition and become larger than themselves—at which point they must reinvent themselves to reach greater horizons or risk fading into irrelevance or persihing.
Since president Trump won his second term and talk of tariffs and the need for U.S. allies to take more responsibility for their own security began to get serious, the themes of the Bellum Sociale resonate with the present.
America now plays the role of Rome, exuding a sense of superiority, while its allies, while its vassals respond with contempt. Europeans and Canadians gesture and beat their chests, threatening to assert their sovereignty, while at the same time lamenting any barrier to access to the American market or any downgrading of protection under the American security umbrella.
In the end, the only durable solution was an unequal yet organic and mutually recognized hierarchy. Perhaps, someday, something similar will emerge between America and the rest of the West."
https://www.businessofpower.com/p/the-war-of-the-allies
13. Important life lessons for men. So very obvious. The world is cruel to poor, emotional and weak men + Location of where you live in your life matters.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0WhCAK-y90
14. Some snapshots of business insight from billionaires. Curiosity and Philosophy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQ-MuaD4txA
15. "Herein lies the crux of my argument.
It’s difficult to sell the idea to your people that they should become poorer and give up more of their autonomy and freedoms to create an army that has no purpose.
However, it’s much easier to get them to accept the creation of said army, if you make them live in fear of a threat you know will never come.
Frightened subjects are compliant subjects."
https://anticitizen.com/p/threats-lies-disinformation
16. Very clearly the USA does NOT have a strategy. The CCP definitely does and that is why they have an edge.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4COv3rcvJg
17. “Taiwan’s proximity to China gives the PRC the ability to apply serious mass in terms of firepower from both ballistic and cruise missiles, in addition to the cheaper drone systems that [can] be used to strike or saturate air defenses,” he wrote to Tectonic.
“Some war games the Marines ran showed beach defenders taking 30% casualties if swarming munitions were used against them,” he added.
To Phillips-Levine, this makes it pretty clear where the US should invest its budget in the next few years: in cheap, attritable drones and c-UAS systems that can take out their Chinese counterparts. It’s expensive—and also silly—to shoot down a drone with a multi-million dollar cruise missile, he said."
https://www.tectonicdefense.com/how-scary-is-chinas-military-really/
18. Lots of tips on building a personal brand and doing sales.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wllHVnBSG8M&t=1463s
19. "We cannot take for granted that America has the biggest economy, the strongest currency, the most robust alliances, and the best military in the world and will always be that way. It would be unwise to believe these achievements are now permanent or owed to us in perpetuity because we are the United States of America, and because of that, we deserve the best circumstances.
Our leaders cannot become complacent or reckless in the face of our many challenges in 2025.
Our alliances across continents are getting more complicated due to various factors. And yet, they must be maintained, because an America that goes at it alone cannot win in this world. After all, it’s better to have difficult friends than to have no friends at all. Our adversaries are relentlessly challenging our commitment to our allies, and they are constantly trying to position themselves as welcoming arms in the face of a scenario in which America employs retreat and isolationism.
Our country maintains itself as a unique economic power, one where innovation continues to thrive, but that competitive advantage can slip away if our leaders pursue destructive, hubris-fueled policies. Europe is witnessing a devastating brain drain because its leaders have pursued overregulation, restrictive economic policies, and plenty of additional catastrophic social policies. America needs to remain the country where anyone and everyone can carve out a successful life and business without the government making it impossible for citizens to thrive."
https://www.dossier.today/p/american-hegemony-if-you-can-keep
20. "Trump believes that by bringing these manufacturing jobs back to America, he can give good jobs to the roughly 65% of the population who have no University degree, become militarily stronger because weapons and such will be produced in the quantities needed to face off against a peer or near-peer rival, and grow the economy above trend, e.g. at 3% real GDP growth.
There are some apparent issues with this plan. Prices will fall if China and others do not have dollars to prop up the treasury and stock market. Scott Bessent, US Treasury Secretary, needs buyers for the gargantuan amount of debt that must be rolled over and for the persistent federal deficits out into the future. His plan is to lower the deficit to 3% from roughly 7% by 2028. The second issue is that capital gains taxes from a rising stock market are the marginal revenue driver for the government. When rich folks aren’t making money slinging stonks, the deficit grows.
Trump didn’t campaign on a platform to cease military spending or cut entitlement benefits like healthcare and social security. He campaigned on a platform of growth and elimination of fraudulent spending. Therefore, he needs capital gains tax revenue, even though it's rich people who own all the stocks, and on average, they didn’t vote for him in 2024.
Even if US stocks continue falling in reaction to tariffs, a collapse in earnings expectations, and or foreigner demand waning, I am confident that the odds favor Bitcoin continuing to climb higher.
Cognizant of the good and bad, Maelstrom is deploying capital cautiously. We use no leverage, and we buy in small clips relative to the size of our total portfolio. When the market goes up, I want to wish my size was bigger, but I'm thankful it's not when the market trades lower. We have been buying Bitcoin and shitcoins at all levels between $90,000 to $76,500. The pace of capital deployment will quicken or slacken depending on the accuracy of my predictions.
I still believe Bitcoin can hit $250,000 by year-end because now that the BBC has put Powell in his place, the Fed will flood the market with dollars. That allows Xi Jinping to instruct the PBOC to stop tightening monetary conditions onshore to defend the dollar-yuan exchange rate, which increases the net quantity of yuan. And finally, Germany decided to build an army again paid for with printed euros and every other European nation must respond by building their own army with printed euros because they are afraid of a 1939 Remix to Ignition."
https://cryptohayes.substack.com/p/the-bbc
21. "Job = exchange time for money with $/hour pay out. Career = performance based. Business = makes money in your sleep.
Now the majority here probably enter into a career. Based on the above you can see clearly that the best role is now Sales. Second best is Tech. Distant third is Wall St.
The only reason to choose Tech over Sales or Wall St over Sales is *if* you are certain you will be 100x better at that task. In that case you have to go to your talent/skillset.
Sales is Best: Sales is measurable. You will not have Robo calls for buying $100,000 items. No sales team in India is going to call up the CEO of F500 companies. Not happening. Not today, not any time soon in the future.
Also. Sales requires *less* hours. If you’re a handsome man or beautiful woman, sales will come easier and you’ll work 1/2 the hours of a banker. For the same pay and more time to build your own business (hilariously, you will need to learn online sales anyway so your job already partially prepares you for escaping the cube)"
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/ai-proofing-your-present-and-future
22. Fascinating conversation on China and its technological and economic rise.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnjnXPnbmkE&t=1423s
23. Live like a King in Ubud. Ubud was a magical experience for me back in 2019, look forward to going back.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsac3eaUXhc&t=3s
24. "America can no longer afford to fake resilience. Infrastructure not designed to operate during conflict is ultimately a threat to our national security. The hour is late—but it’s not too late to transform America's vulnerabilities into genuine resilience, safeguarding our prosperity, security, and freedom."
https://steinman.substack.com/p/americas-industrial-systems-are-sitting
25. "We are living through a dangerous return of the asshole strongman.
Across the globe, disenfranchised people—failed by democratic systems that didn’t deliver care or opportunity—are handing power to egomaniacs and fakers.
And it’s not just governments.
We’re doing it in the private sector too.
Too many investors are back to chasing the high-ego, low-empathy founder.
We’re throwing around phrases like founder-mode.
I keep hearing leaders wrestle with this false choice:
“Lead with heart” or “be in founder mode.”
Some in Silicon Valley are once gain glamorizing high-ego micromanagement as if it’s real founder work.
It’s not."
https://www.mattmunson.me/founder-mode/
26. The Philosopher king of Silicon Valley. Lots of thought provoking ideas and thoughts here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyfUysrNaco&t=5547s
27. The business of defense. This was an insight dense conversation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_NMYEvR6jI
28. BG2: Best show in tech. This week was great: Liberation Day, Tariffs, US v China Open Source, OpenAI, $CRWV, TikTok
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0DO0tP06eQ&t=1385s
29. "While new tariffs primarily threaten startup revenue through market uncertainty rather than direct costs, the drive for efficiency in response may accelerate AI adoption, aligning with optimistic long-term growth forecasts for the tech sector."
https://tomtunguz.com/tariffs-startups/
30. "Like it or not, Americans largely hold the current administration responsible for current economic conditions, and the economy is often the single most important item on the priorities list for Americans. This carries its own set of less-than-ideal incentives, given that it limits the demand to fix long-term problems. Nonetheless, it’s the political reality we face.
Given that Congress seems determined to have a limited impact on policy, the midterms will reflect almost solely on the Trump Administration."
https://www.dossier.today/p/the-tariff-debate-will-be-decided
31. The latest on what's up in Silicon Valley. Tesla, AI & the Deel spy games.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmuRI7Uhtmk
32. "My recommendation for entrepreneurs is to sign at least 10—if not more—unaffiliated customers and spend a tremendous amount of time with them, either in person or over a Zoom call. Talk to the customers and learn every minute detail possible about why they bought the product, how they use it, and what value they derive from it. Choosing a market, a vertical, or even criteria for the ideal customer is a critical step in an entrepreneur’s journey and should not be taken lightly."
https://davidcummings.org/2025/04/05/market-a-or-b-for-a-startup/
33. I detest Tucker Carlson but this is a great interview with Treasury Secretary Bessent.
Bessent is pretty smart & diplomatic. Good to understand his perspective & plans for the future.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLnX1SQfgJI&t=1897s
34. This is good fun and informative: David Senra. Great founders are in it forever and in the details. Hardcore.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ypkGwQbTho
35. "Drones have made the air littorals too lethal to ignore and the mission to gain and maintain air littoral superiority demands localized command and decentralized control that is intrinsically linked to the ground commander and their fielded forces.
The Army has work to do because the adversary gets a vote, and technology nor time stands still—especially below that coordination altitude."
SOS: Slower, Older, Smarter
I saw a very funny story being shared around social media. Here it goes:
“An Airbus 380 is on its way across the Atlantic. It flies consistently at 800 km/h at 30,000 feet, when suddenly a Eurofighter with a Tempo Mach 2 appears.
The pilot of the fighter jet slows down, flies alongside the Airbus and greets the pilot of the passenger plane by radio: "Airbus, boring flight isn’t it? Now have a look here!"
He rolls his jet on its back, accelerates, breaks through the sound barrier, rises rapidly to a dizzying height, and then swoops down almost to sea level in a breathtaking dive. He loops back next to the Airbus and asks: "Well, how was that?"
The Airbus pilot answers: "Very impressive, but watch this!"
The jet pilot watches the Airbus, but nothing happens. It continues to fly straight, at the same speed. After 15 minutes, the Airbus pilot radios, "Well, how was that?
Confused, the jet pilot asks, "What did you do?"
The AirBus pilot laughs and says: "I got up, stretched my legs, walked to the back of the aircraft to use the washroom, then got a cup of coffee and a chocolate fudge pastry."
The moral of the story is: When you’re young, speed and adrenaline seems to be great. But as you get older and wiser, you learn that comfort and peace are more important.
This is called S.O.S.: Slower, Older and Smarter”
It’s both a funny and instructive story. However, my take is why not both? Comfort is death. Having a big goal and some adventure in life is important, even at an older age. Pushing yourself is what keeps you young. And if you can balance this with wisdom and perspective, maybe you will also have some peace of mind as well.
Chase Your Dreams: Mastering the Game to Leave the Game
I heard a story recently of a guy who was at the top of his game in the Finance & investing world. But he ended up leaving the industry after making his number. He ended up moving to Japan to learn baking and study the art of Matcha tea for 3 years. He returned to Taiwan, importing the best matcha tea from Japan and opening a top rated Matcha Cafe in Taipei. Living his dreams. I love these kinds of stories.
How many of us are living zombie lives? Going through the motions, chasing the buck and burying our dreams. It’s so easy to say following your dreams is impractical. I get it.
I don’t think it’s a bad idea to take a bad job, service job, corporate job or finance job when you start off. In fact, all of those experiences are SUPER helpful. You can learn a lot of how the world works. You learn what you like and don’t like. And there is nothing wrong with earning money either. And if you happen to end up being great at it or fall in love with the work, that’s awesome. It’s really hard especially when you excel in an industry to then leave it behind. However, this will not be the experience for the majority of people. For most of them, like myself, this is just step one.
What you need to do is make sure you have a longer vision on where you want to go in life. I assume for most people it’s financial freedom, more time and having control of your life. And for this to happen, you must fight the hedonic treadmill and manage your cost structure carefully. Don’t let it get out of control like it did for me and pretty much 99.99% of people out there. Learn to differentiate between a need versus a want. Live with discipline or you will pay for it literally and figuratively. So you must learn to live a lean yet fulfilling life at least for a few years until your income streams and savings ramp up substantially. This is your margin of error.
Otherwise, this escalating cost structure becomes the number one trap keeping you from doing what you want to do. It forces you to stick with that crap job and crap boss you can’t stand but have to tolerate. Because you need the paycheck to survive. What a sad situation that’s really of your own making.
As the legendary Silicon Valley investor and philosopher Naval Ravikant has said: “The reason to win the game is so that you can leave the game.”
The Dog Who Catches the Car: The Cosmic Joke of Life
We have all seen this in life wherever we are. Driving down the street and we see a bunch of dogs chasing the cars down the road. We laugh. But then the question is what happens if the dog ends up catching the car. What would they do?
This is almost a parable of life. I spent so much of my life chasing money, career and reputation because that was what I thought you were supposed to do. Especially when you are raised in a poor but driven Taiwanese immigrant and tiger mom who has HUGE expectations of you. And I think I delivered albeit not at the levels I personally thought I would be. But what an incredible price that I paid for this. I put my career ahead of everything. My family, my hobbies, my health, my mental health. All made worse during the pandemic lockdowns.
Yet I came out financially strong at the end of 2020, despite everything. I literally am the dog that caught the car. And what happened at that point? Did I go and at least try to fix all of the issues?
NOPE. I hid from the problems and double downed on what I was good at and was comfortable with. I drove forward with my business. Investing, public speaking and plenty of business travel. Consequently, my family life unravelled in 2023, and 2024 turned into a massive train wreck. This was all raised during family therapy where my pride, anger and ego just made things worse. My life just felt like a massive sized joke. Empty. This is everything that I worked and sacrificed for?
I used to scoff at those who committed suicide and believe that’s a cowards way out. But I now understand the amount of pain and anguish these poor people feel. When things feel so awful that you just want it to end. You start to feel the world and your family will be better off without you. Especially late at night. These are dark places.
This is where you need to just go to sleep. Or call a friend. Or find some small pleasure or joy to look forward to. For me it was my books. And I keep the hope that I can reconcile and watch my kid grow up to become the amazing human being that she is.
For anyone going through this hell. You aren’t alone. Call a friend. Or Call 988 (in America). Hang in there. This will pass. Things will get better. Don’t deprive the world of your talent, impact and spark.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads April 27th, 2025
"And in the end, it's not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years." —Abraham Lincoln
This is such a fun & wide discussion with marketing and ads genius Rory Sutherland.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaYTvwe0Wo0
2. "Microsoft’s Security Business generates $20b per year in revenue, so the market is large. A similarly sized business for Google, which trades at about 6x forward would create $120b in market cap.
According to press, Wiz is between $500-1b in ARR. Assume revenue is 2/3 of ARR & it’s growing about 70%, which would imply about $850m in forward revenues.
A premium 30x forward revenue multiple would suggest an acquisition price of about $25.5b.1 Google is paying a 25% premium for an extremely fast growing business in a core strategic cloud segment."
https://tomtunguz.com/wiz-acquisition/
3. Important discussion: how are the big countries repositioning in the new era.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtxH5-jI5dQ
4. "Awareness of technical trade winds. This is a new one for me, but I think the fact that we are now in the early innings of the AI era demands it. Just as with previous seismic shifts (client-server, the internet era, the SaaS era, the cloud-native era), it’s absolutely essential that founders have a thesis on how the prevailing technical trade winds will impact them.
“Not having a thesis on AI” in 2025 is as insane as “not having a thesis on the internet” in 2005.
Even more so — customers appear to be demanding this in an unprecedented way. Founders who are not deep in the details, leveraging all the modern tools, building with a modern stack, and aware of the technical zeitgeist will find themselves adrift."
https://medium.com/angularventures/seven-signals-ce8454b23661
5. Incredible lecture and then Q&A. To understand why Japan lost War War 2. Lots of interesting cultural insights too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Znk5QINe01A
6. Equal Ventures is one of the few firms that are thinking about venture in a differentiated approach. This was an instructive conversation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGqJCGEL_Es
7. "Actually the risks therein are not just moral but business related. In deciding to go back to business as usual with Russia these Western investors will have to make a call as to whether the direction of travel in terms of Russia - Western relations are improving, or not. If they decide to invest but we see an unravelling of the Trump peace effort, are they then risking again a situation where their assets in Russia will be stranded and subject to freezes and confiscation?
Are these Western investors good at predicting the state of geopolitical relations and risks? I would argue not given the number of Western businesses who continued investing in Russia right up to full scale invasion. Even more remarkable therein is that many of these same investors remained invested or continued to invest in Russia through 2021 and early 2022 when their own governments were warning of an imminent invasion and the threat of aggressive sanctions being rolled out.
Why would these same investors be better now at qualifying the risks of investing in Russia when frankly they completely cocked up with their decision in 2021-2022, and indeed long before then? Imagine the egg (blood actually) on their faces if they rush to put money back to work in Russia, against a long track record of bad behaviour by Russia, and end up on the wrong side of the trade again. Titans of finance and industry - not."
https://timothyash.substack.com/p/russia-blood-money
8. This is a super fun AMA episode. Good fun business and creator stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VeoQ06FEkSc&list=PLIBc05HkMJHFpVxxZTD-_MbTAYtwAOEg_
9. This video explains the reason for the bizarre support of the MAGA wing for Russia.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRyXhfu_ZUE
10. Not a fan of JD Vance (who is geopolitical naif) but I can get behind what he says here for America.
"So, deindustrialization poses risks both to our national security and our workforce. It’s important because it affects both. And the net result is dispossession, for many in this country, of any part of the productive process. And when our factories disappear and the jobs in those factories go overseas, American workers are faced not only with financial insecurity, they’re also faced with a profound loss of personal and communal identity.
And that’s what I really want to talk about today: why innovation is key to winning the worldwide manufacturing competition, to giving our workers a fair deal, and to reclaiming our heritage via America’s great industrial comeback. And I believe that’s what we’re on the cusp of, a great American industrial comeback. Because innovation is what increases wages. It’s what protects our homeland. It’s what saves troops’ lives on the battlefield."
https://commonplace.org/2025/03/20/our-great-american-industrial-comeback/
11. Really important interview and discussion on AI from one of the investing and operating maestros of Silicon Valley.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBxCrH_DCDA
12. Incredible and timely discussion this week. SO much good stuff.
"NVDA GTC, M&A Wiz / Goog $32 B Deal, April 2 Tariff Uncertainty; Huawei Belt & Road; ChatGPT"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymEtsnDif5M
13. Josh Wolfe at the Upfront Summit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ATz-qVlmaj8
14. Very interesting & timely company. Albedo satellites.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vX_VhcmAWGU
15. Solid discussion from OG of Seed Investing. Chad Byers of Susa Ventures.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xRpVl7t3s0&t=25s
16. Turkey is a key player in the Mediterranean region and the future at large. Helpful conversation to understand their role.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aw8Gn1HIGKE
17. Top notch show for commentary on Silicon Valley news. Good episode.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3dPNKZOyke4
18. "It’s also the hottest trend in software development. Vibe coding : dictating what you want to code with speech into an AI.
If even the most technical of us prefer voice, the next step is obvious : a laptop without a keyboard.
Soon that collection of QWERTY squares will look as archaic as Hemingway’s Underwood typewriter - a relic of a bygone era."
https://tomtunguz.com/no-keyboard-ui/
19. Quite a wide ranging conversation on politics, global macro and Silicon Valley ie. Wiz-Alphabet Deal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1MAA8y4CgU
20. "Humans came off the savanna hard-wired for addiction. The dopamine rush a hunter felt when taking down a mammoth is neurologically the same feeling a gambler gets when betting. Our instinct to gorge whenever we see food was honed during millenia of scarcity, and it’s that same instinct the food industrial complex leverages to keep people eating long past the point of being satiated.
Ours is an addiction economy: The most valuable companies arbitrage the disparity between our instincts and industrial production."
https://www.profgalloway.com/porn/
21. "The same is true for the Ukraine war. Each side wants to pay the lowest political price for anything more than it won. Russia wanted to regain Ukraine as a buffer against the West. The U.S. didn’t want Russia to border NATO. The war has been fought, and it looks as though Russia gained a buffer in east Ukraine, albeit a smaller one than it wanted. The U.S. wants to end the war and has to be satisfied with the outcome. Ukraine is now in the same position during the negotiations with Russia as the South Vietnamese were in the Vietnam War.
The end of the war is inevitable, and articles are now appearing in the media about the postwar reality. Some observers talk about how hedge funds are eager to invest in Russia. Others say Russia will have a high price to pay as it moves away from a wartime economy. Others still speculate about the geopolitical effect of the war on Europe and China."
https://geopoliticalfutures.com/engineering-an-end-to-the-ukraine-war/
22. "Entrepreneurs should always provide regular updates. The alternative—not doing any updates—is strongly discouraged. Rather, the big idea is that updates are one of the best ways to connect with all constituents, from employees to partners to mentors to investors. For some entrepreneurs, this can be a calling card that helps differentiate them from others in the market."
https://davidcummings.org/2025/03/22/entrepreneur-updates-as-leading-indicator-of-success/
23. Trying to understand who the players are in this new administration. Also want to hear from people first before you judge them. This was very interesting. The head of Commerce.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=182ckTL2KBA&t=1839s
24. Bessent is really sharp. Listening to our Head of Treasury to understand where America is going and the impact for the economy in America and globally (and our own personal investing)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSma9suyp24&t=10s
25. There is so much gold here. I appreciate every interview with Tai Lopez. So many insights & framework for making money. Worth listening to a few times.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8LE9en8k6c
26. Interesting take from Taiwanese military expert. Hope he is right that CCP will not be able to take Taiwan but much of this is cope. No good can come out of underestimating an adversary.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBpNbgXNcYE
27. I always learn from Tai Lopez. Wise beyond his years. How to be a Renaissance man.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUwYQxjCNfs
28. "One group will say that the world was designed around humans and thus if we can build humanoid robots, they are easier to deploy in the world. Then we don’t have to adapt factories or homes or other systems to the limitations of robots. Humanoids can climb stairs and play the piano and hold coffee mugs and all the things humans can do.
But there are problems. Battery life is limited. AI processing at the edge is still nascent.
The other group of roboticist I know will say that humanoid robots will be the worst at everything and lose the advantages of robotic specialization. Specialized robots will always be stronger, faster, and more economically efficient for a given task than a humanoid robot.
The truth is probably somewhere in between. My guess is there are markets for both, depending on the economics of the deployment opportunity."
https://investinginai.substack.com/p/investment-opportunities-humanoid
29. "Oil is a key driver of Arctic interests. Trump reversed President Biden’s ban on Arctic drilling with an Executive Order in January. Both the we and Saudi are now squeezing Russia. Russia has oil, but it can’t get it to market as cheaply as the US and Saudi countries can. They understand that Trump meant it when he pledged during the campaign to lower consumers’ energy costs by 50% within a year. Secretary of Energy Wright recently said that this “is still doable.” That is music to those Americans who are concerned about costs, but it is a real threat to Russia, especially now that Saudi has confirmed its intention to invest more than $600b in the US during Trump’s time in office. Arctic oil is expensive to bring to market. If Russia wants to survive the pressure from falling oil prices, it needs to play more nicely with the US and Saudi alike. So, some of the “that’s mine” approach to the Arctic is about divvying up territory.
The whole world map is in play, often in remote places that we are usually not thinking about. But the locals are thinking about it. Sweden is preparing for war and recruiting for its Arctic brigades. Finland and the Baltics are also preparing. But, in a welcome turn of events, the Europeans are now exploring what role they’ll play in Ukraine if the deal between the superpowers succeeds and peace breaks out. As the WSJ reports, “Britain, France, Sweden, Denmark and Australia have said they are considering putting boots on the ground” in the event of war continuing in Ukraine. The question is how many boots will be needed if there is peace. Europe will face having a North Korea in its midst, and there’s no plan for that."
https://drpippa.substack.com/p/valkyries-vallhala-and-vectoring
30. I recommend listening to Tai Lopez. So many useful tips and ideas for making your life richer, healthier and happier.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjU6ppsfpIo
31. "Ukraine’s independent long-range strike capability: Ukraine’s ability to strike Russian targets at operational and strategic depth gives it the capacity to impose significant costs on Russia for as long as the war continues. This capability operates outside the constraints of frontline dynamics and largely independently of its allies.
As we know, U.S. support either appears to be gone or, at best, highly uncertain for the coming years. Europe is attempting to step up, but cannot do so quickly enough—especially while also scrambling to rebuild its own defense posture. Meanwhile, Ukraine seems to have largely lost its positions in the Kursk region, even as it tries to hold ground there and push into other areas.
This suggests that Ukraine’s only remaining source of significant coercive leverage—one it maintains regardless of shifts among its allies or developments on the ground—is its ability to impose sustained costs on Russia for as long as the war continues."
https://missilematters.substack.com/p/drones-missiles-and-leverage-why
32. Tai Lopez wisdom. SO very good.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMNdWHoJcVk&t=151s
33. Super insightful episode today, lots of good stuff on personal growth & parenting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTX8JajsBxc
34. Tai Lopez is a wise man. Worth listening to this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KS4ZcZo2bwo
35. The world belongs to the risk takers. Tai Lopez.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEJdcXai_7w
36. "In fact, I’ve found myself using ideology as my explanation for much of what the Trump administration has done in the two months since it came to power. I explained Trump’s tariffs as an ideologically driven attempt to isolate America from foreign dependency and ape the country’s “glory days” of the pre-WW2 period. And I explained Elon Musk’s DOGE as an attempt to purge “woke” progressivism from the U.S. government and other institutions.
These aren’t all quite the same ideology. Vance, Trump, and Musk have worldviews that differ in important and consequential ways. Yet they’re all recognizably affiliated — subsets of one category that we might broadly call the New Right.
Understanding the New Right is sort of a gestalt exercise — you’re basically acting like an LLM. Listen to leaders like Vance, and mainstream media figures like Joe Rogan who have drifted to the right in recent years. Then read a bunch of people on the right and pattern-match to figure out which thought leaders folks like Vance and Rogan sound like. You’ll probably end up with influencers like Charlie Kirk and Jack Posobiecand Tucker Carlson and Auron MacIntyre, and blogs like Aporia and The Upheaval. Then try to isolate some common themes and big ideas, and see if you can use those to parsimoniously explain the attitudes and actions of leaders like Vance.
Once this basic understanding is in place, I think a lot of the Trump administration’s seemingly boneheaded, overly risky, or counterproductive actions become less mysterious. That doesn’t mean the Trump administration isn’t incompetent, or that everything is proceeding according to some grand plan. But I think it helps clarify some of the goals the MAGA folks are trying to accomplish with things like tariffs, abandoning Europe, embracing Russia, purging the government, amassing executive power, kicking out immigrants, and so on."
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/understanding-americas-new-right