Sean (parody)
@slinkyvillain.bsky.social
930 followers 1K following 380 posts
Renewables guy reading and posting about energy, housing, transportation, gay people, being a gyroscope. Brooklyn. 📸 @ twosetsoflegs
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slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Thrilled that bsky now has video so I can thirst trap (post cyr wheel)
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I also think mentioning large scale carbon capture and “green” air travel as possible scientific breakthroughs that might significantly impact humanity in time to be relevant to climate change conveys a significant ignorance to physics, economics, or both.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I want to touch on a few points that made me bristle in this chapter- I think talking about allowing immigration as solely an economic engine, and not as a moral imperative, is pretty tough to swallow…
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I think there’s a hand waviness here that’s unnecessary. The authors cite our lack of information about the science happening. During trump cuts to NIH grants, there were loads of quantitative analyses of economic impacts of the funding, which could’ve been cited and expanded upon here.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
For me, this is where Abundance creates its distinction from YIMBY, by expanding its scope from housing and infrastructure into science and research. Ultimately I think the connection is apt. The authors make the case well that bureaucracy and regulation have choked research and housing alike.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Ch 4: invent

I took some time away from this book and I’m back. This chapter covers research and invention in the US, framing around examples of Karikó’s mRNA research which facilitated the COVID vaccine, the NIH, Bell Labs, and DARPA.
Photo of the start of Abundance’s fourth chapter, Invent
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Man on the late A train with a Sniffies sticker on his bike
Reposted by Sean (parody)
mnolangray.bsky.social
Ladies and gentlemen, we did it. SB 79 has been signed.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
My best Halloween costume idea so far is Robyn on the cover of Body Talk but I’m concerned that I’ll just look like a weird ass ghost
Album cover of Body Talk by Robyn Photo from photoshoot for Robyn’s album Body Talk. She’s standing behind a hanging group of evenly spaced ~1.5 inch squares that together make the vague shape of a dress.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
and you know what, god bless
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I posted one and I think every man I’ve ever met got a push notification
bussyrizzler.nyc
does anyone wanna fall in love via Scruff Stories
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
happy friday gay guys 😌
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
[REDACTED] eliminated on project runway… yeah that was nine eleven
Reposted by Sean (parody)
walkerbragman.bsky.social
Charlie Kirk was a fascist and paid agitator for powerful interests who gleefully spread dangerous misinformation, targeted vulnerable groups and academics for harassment, glorified the violent, helped fuel the Jan 6 insurrection, and ultimately contributed the impoverishment of our discourse.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I felt a blindness in the continuation of the “Texas is building and we (California) aren’t” stuff. There’s a sense that, a unit of housing is a unit of housing- we should laud Texas housing for its wins, but sprawl is bad. These people have not exorcised their car brains!
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I think the strongest parts of the chapter were discussions with people from homeless agencies talking about how they have to quilt together bits of funding with individual, disparate, contradictory conditions to make anything happen- many well intentioned actors create an unnavigable space.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
3 uses examples of a supportive housing development in SF and Gov. Shapiro’s emergency rebuilding of the 95 bridge to make the point that the projects people like and respect, that happen well and on time, pull major levers to get around government/regulatory processes.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
I started chapter 3- govern overlooking the block island wind farm, and finished it riding another of my pet favorite pieces of infrastructure, the MTA C train. I mostly liked this chapter.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Remainder of chapter two includes some more false equivalency (Nader & co to “small govt” R’s), but otherwise gets into lawyer brain and its govt impact pretty well. Glad to see Procedure Fetish invoked.
Reposted by Sean (parody)
resnikoff.bsky.social
I've been a pretty consistent proponent of a progressive abundance agenda, so it's pretty dismaying to see the Abundance Conference bending over backwards to try and bring outright racists and fascists into the tent.
sjshancoxli.liberalcurrents.com
abundance con. where you can hear radical pro-abundance moves like "we should deport more immigrants" and "what if we had more tariffs"
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Section on unexplained construction inefficiency omits construction unions’ enshrining of make-work and its dampening effect on efficiency gains from innovation- see elevators, NG hookup in all electric buildings, plumbing to waterless urinals- unclear if this is relevant in intl comparison.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Halfway through chapter 2 and I just wish the prose flowed better? We’ve got lots of choppy, short sentences going on and frankly it’s not giving.
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
The chapter covers CA HSR, my big takeaway here is I didn’t realize how big a proponent Obama was of the project (I was 11 and wasn’t paying much attention sorry)
slinkyvillain.bsky.social
Electrification section does accurately name local control/permitting and transmission capacity as huge hangups for the needed explosion of renewable generation. I would’ve liked to see transformer manufacturing and fickle trade relationships for solar modules in here too.