Why the Real Estate Market will Definitely Collapse

America is on the precipice of an economic meltdown which is going to start with a collapse of the housing market. If we're lucky it will remain in that one sector. If we're even luckier that collapse will in reality be just a slow decline over a few years. If we're unlucky we will repeat the steep declines we saw in 2007, but lack the financial tools to dig ourselves out. I know that it's generally a bad idea for a journalist to make predictions. After all the future is, by definition, uncertain. But I feel that holding my tongue would be complacency.

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Who will win the world's first social media war?

If you were the type who puts faith in the wisdom of internet forums then there wouldn't be any question about it: Russia is on the brink of collapse as the out-gunned Ukrainian resistance destroys one tank column after another. But how do we really know that is what is happening when most of our information comes through the social media accounts of resistance fighters and Ukrainian intelligence?

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What is the placebo effect, really?

One day Mr A walked into the emergency room where he just barely was able to tell the nurse on duty that he’d taken all of his pills before he collapsed at her feet. In his pocket was a jar of pills from a local clinical trial—but with no information about what exactly they were. The medical team eventually figured out that he was in the control group. He’d taken a whole jar of placebos. . .

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Our Atomic Pickle

The other day Vladimir Putin's cronies said that they would consider starting World War 3 if they felt that Russia was under an "existential threat". While that might just be the usual chest thumping insanity of a nuclear-armed nation, I started to wonder what a nuclear war would really happen in the event that one nation or another decided to solve their military problems with the power of the atom.

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Why YouTube is the best social media platform

Remember when you could have a great idea that you wanted to share with the world and you could simply post it onto any one of a half-dozen social media platforms and expect some sort of conversation to organically sprout out into the world? Maybe there would be some likes. Maybe some comments and genuine conversation?

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Scott Carney
What do slime molds and COVID-19 have in common?

There’s a type of intelligence that doesn’t require a brain or any sort of central organizing principle. It’s a type of intelligence that only emerges when lots of individual organisms act together in ways that are far greater than any individual parts. It’s called a superorganism where lots of individual organisms work together to solve problems and make decisions that have almost nothing to do with the conditions that any one individual experiences. Instead, those individual actions add up to a collective intelligence. A hive mind, if you will. Take, for instance, the humble slime mold.

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Scott Carney
Hammers. Anvils. Heat. And the Wedge

Right now as riots crisscross the United States there is a tendency for some people to decry acts of looting and open expressions of anger as somehow illegitimate--or that they cannot possibly be part of a path that forges a better society. And, while I personally abhor violence, to say that there is no place for violence in social change ignores history.

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Scott Carney
ACX: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

I’m going to have to get into the weeds about audiobooks for a moment because they’re one of the most important tools that a writer has to make a steady living. And, unfortunately, in the last week some changes in the marketplace make it seem that some of the potential profits are going to get sucked away.

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