Brillaint piece on how grassroots determination can pass transformative policy even when elites sit on the sidelines. That paradox where Arkansas voters overwhelmingly supported $100 caps but courts later framed unlimited spending as "speech" really underscores how victories can be quietly reversed through legal channels. I've seen similar dynamics in local policy battles where community momentum gets stalled not by public oppisition but by procedural roadblocks. The parallel to AI ownership concentration feels spot-on too, especailly the part about defaults quietly pushing us toward dependence.
More people need to start participating in how they think our future should be designed. Leaving it to a few seems to have had bad consequences. I appreciate your comments.
Brillaint piece on how grassroots determination can pass transformative policy even when elites sit on the sidelines. That paradox where Arkansas voters overwhelmingly supported $100 caps but courts later framed unlimited spending as "speech" really underscores how victories can be quietly reversed through legal channels. I've seen similar dynamics in local policy battles where community momentum gets stalled not by public oppisition but by procedural roadblocks. The parallel to AI ownership concentration feels spot-on too, especailly the part about defaults quietly pushing us toward dependence.
More people need to start participating in how they think our future should be designed. Leaving it to a few seems to have had bad consequences. I appreciate your comments.