It is Friday, so it is time to drop some George Friedman insights on you.
Here is a link to his latest ruminations.
https://geopoliticalfutures.com/reflections-on-our-past-and-future/
These are mostly small snippets of how he got to where he is at GPF, but I really like his clarity of thought. There are a couple of phrases there worth extracting and emphasizing. They are also a crystallization of what I am trying to do mostly in my very narrow corner of human knowledge: sporting optics.
The lesson I’ve learned from my companies is that people will pay to read important things. The struggle, of course, is to find and explain important things. More than anything, that is the crux of our work here: filtering out the unimportant and focusing on the essential. Sometimes our readers learn something, and sometimes they read something they already know about, but the goal is always the same.
This short paragraph above is, I think, the crux of the new internet. The internet switly transitioned human existence from data scarcity to data overflow. It used to be hard to find data because there were very few sources, most of them not very accessible. Subject matter experts existed as a conduit between you and the difficult to access information.
Now, we have information up the wazoo. Except most of it is bullshit.