Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Musk: “Happiness is reality minus expectations.”

 

Elon Musk said five words on Joe Rogan that explain everything wrong with your life right now. Musk: “Happiness is reality minus expectations.” Five words. And it explains why the most comfortable generation in human history can’t stop feeling empty. Musk: “If you just go try living in the woods by yourself for a while, you’ll learn that civilization is quite great.” He’s right. On Naked and Afraid, people tap out in days. Sometimes hours. They crawl back to the same civilization they spent years resenting. Because comfort is invisible until you’re sleeping in the dirt. But the formula has a second variable. It’s the one destroying you. Reality didn’t get worse. By every measure, it’s the best it’s ever been. Expectations did. Your grandparents compared themselves to their neighbor. Maybe a cousin. That was the whole universe. You compare yourself to 10,000 strangers before your first cup of coffee. Curated. Filtered. Showing you a life that doesn’t exist. Theodore Roosevelt said it a century before any of this was built. Roosevelt: “Comparison is the thief of joy.” No Instagram. No TikTok. No algorithm designed by the smartest engineers on the planet to show you precisely what you don’t have. And he still called it. Now run the equation. Reality holds steady. Expectations spike every time you unlock your phone. The distance between them stretches. And happiness doesn’t fade. It collapses. Not because your life got worse. Because your reference point moved. We built the greatest civilization in human history. Then we built the perfect machine to make sure nobody enjoys it. Every scroll. Every notification. Every “suggested for you.” None of it connects you. It’s recalibrating what you think you need. Upward. Constantly. Without your consent. And you wonder why you feel behind. You’re not behind. You’re running toward a finish line that moves every time you look up. The most dangerous lie of this generation isn’t that life is hard. It’s that everyone else figured it out. And you’re the only one who didn’t. Nobody figured it out. The formula doesn’t negotiate. It just runs. Raise expectations faster than reality improves and you will be miserable inside a paradise you built with your own hands. That’s not philosophy. That’s arithmetic. And the calculator is in your pocket right now.






Teaspoons - how government works and why

 

Elon Musk just described how the entire government operates in a single sentence. Musk: “Paying people to do nothing doesn’t make sense.” Then he told a Milton Friedman story that should terrify every bureaucrat on the payroll. Friedman watched workers digging ditches with shovels. He suggested they use excavators instead. Someone pushed back. “But then we’re going to lose a lot of jobs.” Musk: “Friedman says, well, in that case, why don’t you have them use teaspoons?” One sentence. That’s all it took to gut the entire logic of modern government. The teaspoon is not a punchline. It is the actual policy. Every agency that would cease to exist if it actually solved the problem it was created for. Every department that measures success by headcount instead of output. Every approval that routes through nine desks before someone can say yes. Teaspoons. The system doesn’t want excavators. Excavators finish the job. And a finished job is the one thing the system can’t afford. So it hands you a teaspoon. Calls it a career. Gives you a pension for never asking why the ditch took forty years. But this isn’t about laziness. It’s about control. A person digging with a teaspoon doesn’t have time to build something better. Doesn’t have the energy to question the plan. Doesn’t have a thought left to ask if the ditch even needed digging. Busy people don’t ask dangerous questions. That’s the point. The economy doesn’t run on productivity. It runs on the appearance of productivity. Millions of people sit at desks right now doing work a single script could replace by morning. They know it. Their managers know it. The people who sign their budgets know it. But the teaspoon stays in their hand. Because the moment you hand someone an excavator, they finish by noon. And a person with a free afternoon starts thinking. Starts building. Starts wondering why they needed permission to dig in the first place. That’s the thing the system can’t survive. Not unemployment. Free time. Musk didn’t tell a joke on Rogan. He described the longest con in modern governance. Keep them digging. Keep them busy. Keep the teaspoon in their hand so they never look up long enough to see the ditch was pointless from the start. Friedman told that story sixty years ago. He meant it as a warning. The system heard every word. It just made sure everyone kept calling it a joke so no one would recognize it as a confession.

https://x.com/r0ck3t23/status/2056530692893299067?s=20

The textbook case is the Department of Agriculture. You would not believe the numbers and sizes of the buildings that are associated with that department of something like 100,000 to 150,000 people. You could scale that back to 10,000 or less and get exactly the same value (which I use value loosely in this case). Nothing but overlapping roles that work at a pace rivaling that of a turtle . .





Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Approving Tesla FSD

 

People completely miss the most important thing about Tesla FSD It’s not just about convenience. It’s not a "cool self-parking trick." It’s about the fact that car crashes are the #1 killer of healthy people aged 5-29 globally and one company has gathered over 10 billion miles of real-world data to actually solve it Look at the recent data: Tesla just became the FIRST vehicle to pass NHTSA's new ADAS safety tests. Not the first EV. The first vehicle. Period. The reality is harsh but simple. Countries that approve FSD get safer roads overnight. Countries that delay will literally watch their citizens die in preventable crashes while bureaucrats sit in meeting rooms debating "safety." The "safety" argument against FSD is officially dead




I am a car salesman. I've been at the same dealership for 15 years. I always made fun of people who bought Teslas. A coworker bought one. I thought he was nuts. He raved about FSD. We got a used 2019 Model 3 at the dealership last year. I bought it on a whim just because my wife hates driving and thought FSD might be cool for her. After 1 day of driving it (or it driving me), I was sold. I now own 2 Model Ys, both with Hardware 4. I’ll never not own a Tesla.

pathology of the contemporary French intellectual

 

Translated from French
Sartre supported Stalin during the Gulag. Sartre supported Mao during the Cultural Revolution. Sartre prefaced Fanon by transforming anti-colonial violence into mental hygiene ("killing a European is killing two birds with one stone"). Sartre went to visit Andreas Baader in his Stammheim prison in 1974 and came out defending the terrorist. Sartre signed, in 1977, with Beauvoir, Foucault, Derrida, Barthes, the petition for the decriminalization of sexual relations between adults and minors aged 13. We need to pause for a second on this list. Because it has no equivalent in the intellectual history of the 20th century. There is not a single great totalitarian or criminal shift of the last century that Sartre did not, at some point, justify, excuse, or refuse to condemn. When the century manufactured a nightmare, Sartre held the door open. And yet, he is on the curriculum. For the baccalaureate. For the agrégation. In the textbooks. In the theses. His street in Paris. His ashes in the Montparnasse cemetery, on pilgrimage. His intellectual statue intact. L'Existentialisme est un humanisme is taught to high school sophomores as if it were a sermon by Bossuet. It is not Sartre who is the scandal. Sartre is just a man (with his cowardices, his fanaticisms, his intimate theater of radicality). The scandal is us. The scandal is that an entire civilization decided, collectively and silently, that being systematically on the side of the executioners was not disqualifying for becoming a nation's great intellectual. Compare with Raymond Aron. Aron was right about everything. About Stalin, about Mao, about the gulags, about totalitarianism, about decolonization, about the Cold War, about the market economy, about Europe. Everything. He wrote L'Opium des intellectuels in 1955, thirty years before the French left, embarrassed, discovered that Solzhenitsyn was indeed not lying. Aron had the lucidity of an entire century, condensed into a limpid body of work, written in French of surgical precision. Aron is not on the curriculum. Aron has no street. Aron has no Panthéon. When one speaks of Aron, it is with that little shrug that means "yes, interesting, a bit cold, a bit right-wing, you know." Sartre, on the other hand, is incandescence, engagement, youth, flame. Merleau-Ponty's phrase has remained famous: "better to be wrong with Sartre than right with Aron." It is not trivial. It is the decisive admission. It explicitly states what cultivated France has tacitly decided for seventy years. That being right is less important than being on the right side. That truth is a bourgeois detail. That what matters is not the accuracy of the analysis but the purity of the posture. What it reveals is terrible. A civilization chooses its prophets, and that choice defines it for a hundred years. France chose the brilliant flatterer of executioners over the sober analyst of reality. And it paid dearly for that choice. An entire intellectual class, trained in Sartrian reverence, learned that engagement matters more than accuracy, that surface generosity matters more than real consequences, that loving "the people" in theory authorizes contempt for people in practice. The entire pathology of the contemporary French intellectual is already there.




Musk: “Happiness is reality minus expectations.”

  Dustin @r0ck3t23 Elon Musk said five words on Joe Rogan that explain everything wrong with your life right now. Musk: “Happiness is reali...