No matter who wins in November, the digital-asset market could be on the brink of a deregulation-fueled bonanza.
His allies now claim that he wouldn’t really impose massive global tariffs if elected. But the uncertainty created by threats is bad enough.
Mike Solana, a Peter Thiel protégé, has made his Pirate Wires newsletter a must-read among the anti-woke investor class—and a window into what the most powerful people in tech really think.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/10/mike-solana-pirate-wires/680355/?utm_source=feed
In many domains, the conventional wisdom among progressives is mistaken, oversimplified, or based on wishful thinking. The economics of immigration is not one of them.
Many of America’s corporate executives have had enough of the remote-work experiment.
Eliminating degree requirements for jobs is very popular with voters but would do almost nothing to help workers who don’t have a college diploma.
If you wish grocery stores were more expensive and offered less variety, then you’ll love his tariff proposal.
America has officially defeated inflation without experiencing a recession—yet.
Silicon Valley billionaires claim that antitrust enforcement hurts the little guy. Do they have a point?
As weed has become easier to obtain, it has become harder to smoke.
The real culprit is the host of federal laws and regulations propping up prices to benefit corporate interests.
Just about every major development in the current presidential campaign started as a television event.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/08/tv-still-runs-politics/679550/?utm_source=feed
Kamala Harris’s proposed price-gouging ban might irritate academics, but it makes sense to everyone else.
Algorithmic collusion appears to be spreading to more and more industries. And existing laws may not be equipped to stop it.
Can machine-learning algorithms distinguish truth from falsehood? We’re about to find out.
City economies are booming, but the risk of a commercial-real-estate crash remains as real as ever.
The joint venture between a legacy giant and an EV start-up will be a fascinating test of the industry’s effort to embrace technological change.
After years of complications, Boeing has launched astronauts to space for the first time.
How helping the poor became big business
Corporations and private-equity funds have been rolling up smaller chains and previously independent practices.
Somewhere along the line, the plane maker lost interest in making its own planes. Can it rediscover its engineering soul?
The ubiquitous rise of add-on fees and personalized pricing has turned buying stuff into a game you can’t win.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/04/surge-pricing-fees-economy/678078/?utm_source=feed
The flow of traffic to Donald Trump’s most loyal digital-media boosters isn’t just slowing; it’s utterly collapsing.
Donald Trump gets into the meme-stock business.
America has a long history of shielding infrastructure and communication platforms from foreign control.