An exchange: David Sanger: There's a lot we miss every day. I go to work every day convinced that I've got a handle on fully 3% of what's going on, okay? Stewart Baker: [laughing] The key is [that] you can persuade us it's the most important 3%. David Sanger: [laughing] That's right. [laughing] That's right.
Emerson Brooking, on "Ghost Fleet": Readers are spared the months of frustrated cabinet meetings, angry congressional hearings, and endless hand-wringing within the defense bureaucracy.
Dan Geer, on OPM: Even talking about whether to fire someone is a criminally profligate waste of the citizenry's attention span.
John Oliver: No one cares. [Americans] don't give a shit.
The Economist: When your most important ally is ringing alarm bells it is a good idea to listen.
Wendy Shanker: There's very little you can say in 10 minutes that you couldn't say better in five.
Kari Paul: A friend told me a girl he never actually hangs out with frequently sends him 15 minute voice memos talking about what she did that day, decidedly a breach of voice message etiquette. "I've never actually listened to anything she's sent me," he told me.
Anil Dash: Out of about 550,000 followers on Twitter, it's very common for fewer than 400 of them to click on a link I share.
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