I have just learned that my teacher and mentor Cedric Robinson (pictured below) passed away last summer. (I was his student at UCSB and was awarded a scholarship named after him.) Dr Robinson was a student and critic of Marxist theory. Among other things, he wrote about “racial capitalism,” and his critique of traditional politics anticipated the organization of “horizontal movements” such as Black Lives Matter, a decentralized political movement without a single, unifying political leader. I will share some remembrances about my teacher, mentor, and friend in my next blog post.
Assorted links (daily routines edition)
- Introduction (Tyler Cowen): Do we undervalue routine?
- Mornings (Kristin Wong): Why your morning routine isn’t working
- Afternoons (Patrick Allan): You need an afternoon routine
- Evenings (Sam Thomas Davies): The evening routines of the most successful people
- Writing (Peg Boyle Single): A writing routine
- Against routine (Jessica Stillman): An argument against routine
Visualization of aliens (1947-1992)

Hat tip: The Amazing Cliff Pickover
What illegal immigration crisis?
Hat tip: Noah Smith, via Bloomberg View.

How to become a Bayesian in eight easy steps
That is the title of this paper (preprint via PsyArXiv) by Alexander Etz, et al. We plan on reading it in the next few days and will report back soon! (Hat tip: Brian D. Earp, via Twitter.)

Image credit: burrsettles
Visualization of retail creative destruction

Jeff Desjardins poses the following question in this report: “What has more value: all major publicly traded department stores in the United States, or Amazon?” The answer is Amazon. In the words of Mr Desjardins: “Add together the market caps of Walmart, Target, Best Buy, Nordstrom, Kohl’s, JCPenney, Sears, and Macy’s, and they amount to a significant $297.8 billion. However, it’s not enough to beat the Amazon machine. The online retailer alone is worth $356 billion, making it one of the largest companies by market capitalization in the world.”
Also, what a difference ten years make: “Ten years ago, the future of brick and mortar retail sill looked bright. The aforementioned retailers were worth a collective $400 billion, and Amazon was only valued at $17.5 billion.”
Visualization of an anomaly
Lego world map
Dirk B. created a scale map of the world out of LEGO bricks. You can read more about his project here and here.
The war against children
We’ve heard many fancy restaurants are starting to ban children, but did you know that Apple Park, Apple’s massive $5 billion spaceship campus (pictured below) consisting of 2,800,000 square feet, doesn’t have a single childcare facility. More here, via CNET. (Hat tip: Ryan Tate.)






