
An Elegant Puzzle: Systems of Engineering Management
Will Larson
4.5 on Amazon
19 HN comments

Never: A Novel
Ken Follett
? on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Fifth Risk: Undoing Democracy
Michael Lewis
4.5 on Amazon
19 HN comments

The Red Book: A Reader's Edition (Philemon)
C. G. Jung , Sonu Shamdasani, et al.
4.8 on Amazon
19 HN comments

What Is Life?: Five Great Ideas in Biology
Paul Nurse
4.6 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Norwegian Wood: Chopping, Stacking, and Drying Wood the Scandinavian Way
Lars Mytting
4.8 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Poor Charlie's Almanack: The Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger, Expanded Third Edition
Peter D. Kaufman, Ed Wexler, et al.
4.8 on Amazon
18 HN comments

The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Eric Carle
4.9 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Home
Carson Ellis
4.7 on Amazon
18 HN comments

First: Sandra Day O'Connor
Evan Thomas
4.6 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Grokking Algorithms: An Illustrated Guide for Programmers and Other Curious People
Aditya Bhargava
4.6 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Project Hail Mary
Andy Weir, Ray Porter, et al.
4.7 on Amazon
18 HN comments

Business Adventures: Twelve Classic Tales from the World of Wall Street
John Brooks
4.3 on Amazon
18 HN comments

The Screwtape Letters
C. S. Lewis
4.7 on Amazon
18 HN comments

In: A Graphic Novel
Will McPhail
4 on Amazon
18 HN comments
zenpaulonOct 24, 2019
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fifth_Risk
arrosenbergonFeb 19, 2020
Michael Lewis' the Fifth Risk highlights this pretty well.
mi100haelonFeb 10, 2020
d_burfootonApr 30, 2019
I will add to this my observation from reading Michael Lewis' book The Fifth Risk: if you can tolerate the bureaucracy, it's often possible to get to work on hugely impactful and highly-resourced projects early in your career by going into government.
https://www.amazon.com/Fifth-Risk-Michael-Lewis/dp/132400264...
specialistonFeb 14, 2021
mikepurvisonApr 30, 2020
kwindlaonApr 9, 2019
https://www.amazon.com/Fifth-Risk-Michael-Lewis/dp/132400264...
From the NPR review of the book:
> Take Trump's choice to head National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Commerce Department agency that, among other responsibilities, oversees the National Weather Service. For that critical position, Trump has chosen Barry Myers, who is CEO of the private forecasting service AccuWeather. As Lewis points out, AccuWeather repackages the weather service's own data and sells it to private concerns for a profit. Myers at one time argued that "the government should get out of the forecasting business." In other words, you want to know if it's going to rain tomorrow? Or which way that hurricane is tracking? Well, buy our app, or subscribe to our forecasts. Myers has yet to be confirmed.
https://www.npr.org/2018/10/02/652563904/the-fifth-risk-pain...
Azerty9999onJune 14, 2019
P.S.: Anyone notice that monitoring "Climate" was absent in the government announcement?
[0] https://www.amazon.com/dp/1324002646
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Lewis
[2] https://oceanleadership.org/trump-taps-accuweather-ceo-head-...
asdf21onDec 17, 2019
I'm not sure I need to read a biased polemic about how big government is good and the Trump admin is bad.
>The US civil service is full of highly competent experts without whom we would all be exposed to grave risks every day.
I've worked for government agencies, and this is certainly not how I would describe the workers there. I'd say this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21805768 would more closely represent my typical experience with civil servants.. rampant incompetence.
chrisbennetonMar 15, 2019
The president hasn’t filled these position and the ones he has have been incompetent or against its mission.
The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis document this.
”Take Trump's choice to head National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Commerce Department agency that, among other responsibilities, oversees the National Weather Service. For that critical position, Trump has chosen Barry Myers, who is CEO of the private forecasting service AccuWeather. As Lewis points out, AccuWeather repackages the weather service's own data and sells it to private concerns for a profit. Myers at one time argued that "the government should get out of the forecasting business." In other words, you want to know if it's going to rain tomorrow? Or which way that hurricane is tracking? Well, buy our app, or subscribe to our forecasts. Myers has yet to be confirmed.”
MrMetlHedonFeb 4, 2020
jacobolusonDec 16, 2019
One big federal problem with antitrust and other corporate–related law is that we have now had an unbroken half century of “conservative” domination of the US Supreme Court. Over that time consumer, worker, citizen, and small-business friendly interpretations of a wide variety of laws have been steadily replaced by interpretations friendly to wealthy/corporate interests.
That control should have been broken after Scalia died but the GOP-controlled Senate broke with any pretense of good faith or respect for norms or precedent and refused to allow even a moderate compromise candidate to come to a Senate confirmation vote. After regaining control of the presidency the Senate then eliminated the filibuster so it could force radical GOP ideologues through onto the bench.
> I'm not sure it's even possible anymore for the government to be functional at any deeper level.
This is absurd. The US civil service is full of highly competent experts without whom we would all be exposed to grave risks every day. They do their work conscientiously and seriously, largely out of the spotlight.
Let me recommend you read Michael Lewis’s book The Fifth Risk, or at least listen to one of these interviews about it:
https://www.scpr.org/programs/fresh-air/2018/10/02/65410/
https://cafe.com/stay-tuned-what-is-the-fifth-risk-with-mich...
yingw787onJan 25, 2019
This may have been an issue with Reagan firing all members of PATCO: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_Air_Traffic_Contr...
Whereas before, sufficient military air traffic controllers were willing and able to take on the job, today there is no such reserve.
One book I read recently on the topic of arbitraging the social trust was "The Fifth Risk"; it's a good read. https://smile.amazon.com/Fifth-Risk-Michael-Lewis/dp/1324002...
onlyrealcuzzoonFeb 29, 2020
Because so many people are trying to conceal information to keep tourism going, stability, re-election, GDP and so on, we really don't know how bad it is.
But when's the last time a flu caused a 13% sell-off? It seems pretty serious.
After reading The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis, I'm really starting to be convinced our collective willful ignorance is becoming problematic.
zetazzedonDec 10, 2020
bingdigonJune 16, 2020
save_ferrisonJune 8, 2019
Indirectly related, but it’s worth reading up on some of the political battles being fought in the US meteorological world at the moment.
An Accuweather executive, Barry Myers, was nominated to head the NOAA, which he’s spent years lobbying against to cut off public access to government weather data[0]. This story was featured in Michael Lewis’ latest book, The Fifth Risk, which documented instances where private companies are trying to block public access to various types of government data.
Private interests are materially altering reporting systems that have worked for years, and many professional meteorologists are becoming more concerned about this influence.
0: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-06-14/trump-s-p...
troelsSteeginonMay 5, 2021
Personally, I like seeing deep (no pun intended) technology expertise at work in US government. The Michael Lewis book "The Fifth Risk" was hagiographic that way.
[0] https://www.whitehouse.gov/ostp/
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Technology_Assessmen...
[2] https://www.brookings.edu/research/it-is-time-to-restore-the...
pavedwaldenonDec 10, 2020