Skip to content
By using Twitter’s services you agree to our Cookies Use. We and our partners operate globally and use cookies, including for analytics, personalisation, and ads.
  • Home Home Home, current page.
  • About

Saved searches

  • Remove
  • In this conversation
    Verified accountProtected Tweets @
Suggested users
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Language: English
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Català
    • Čeština
    • Dansk
    • Deutsch
    • English UK
    • Español
    • Filipino
    • Français
    • Hrvatski
    • Italiano
    • Magyar
    • Nederlands
    • Norsk
    • Polski
    • Português
    • Română
    • Slovenčina
    • Suomi
    • Svenska
    • Tiếng Việt
    • Türkçe
    • Ελληνικά
    • Български език
    • Русский
    • Српски
    • Українська мова
    • עִבְרִית
    • العربية
    • فارسی
    • मराठी
    • हिन्दी
    • বাংলা
    • ગુજરાતી
    • தமிழ்
    • ಕನ್ನಡ
    • ภาษาไทย
    • 한국어
    • 日本語
    • 简体中文
    • 繁體中文
  • Have an account? Log in
    Have an account?
    · Forgot password?

    New to Twitter?
    Sign up
vgr's profile
Venkatesh Rao
Venkatesh Rao
Venkatesh Rao
@vgr

Tweets

Venkatesh Rao

@vgr

Conversational account. For work follow @ribbonfarm, @breaking_smart, @artofgig. Tweets are 90% vacuous views, apathetically held. Mediocritopian. IKEA builder.

Los Angeles, CA
venkateshrao.com
Joined August 2007

Tweets

  • © 2020 Twitter
  • About
  • Help Center
  • Terms
  • Privacy policy
  • Imprint
  • Cookies
  • Ads info
Dismiss
Previous
Next

Go to a person's profile

Saved searches

  • Remove
  • In this conversation
    Verified accountProtected Tweets @
Suggested users
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @

Promote this Tweet

Block

  • Tweet with a location

    You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more

    Your lists

    Create a new list


    Under 100 characters, optional

    Privacy

    Copy link to Tweet

    Embed this Tweet

    Embed this Video

    Add this Tweet to your website by copying the code below. Learn more

    Add this video to your website by copying the code below. Learn more

    Hmm, there was a problem reaching the server.

    By embedding Twitter content in your website or app, you are agreeing to the Twitter Developer Agreement and Developer Policy.

    Preview

    Why you're seeing this ad

    Log in to Twitter

    · Forgot password?
    Don't have an account? Sign up »

    Sign up for Twitter

    Not on Twitter? Sign up, tune into the things you care about, and get updates as they happen.

    Sign up
    Have an account? Log in »

    Two-way (sending and receiving) short codes:

    Country Code For customers of
    United States 40404 (any)
    Canada 21212 (any)
    United Kingdom 86444 Vodafone, Orange, 3, O2
    Brazil 40404 Nextel, TIM
    Haiti 40404 Digicel, Voila
    Ireland 51210 Vodafone, O2
    India 53000 Bharti Airtel, Videocon, Reliance
    Indonesia 89887 AXIS, 3, Telkomsel, Indosat, XL Axiata
    Italy 4880804 Wind
    3424486444 Vodafone
    » See SMS short codes for other countries

    Confirmation

     

    Welcome home!

    This timeline is where you’ll spend most of your time, getting instant updates about what matters to you.

    Tweets not working for you?

    Hover over the profile pic and click the Following button to unfollow any account.

    Say a lot with a little

    When you see a Tweet you love, tap the heart — it lets the person who wrote it know you shared the love.

    Spread the word

    The fastest way to share someone else’s Tweet with your followers is with a Retweet. Tap the icon to send it instantly.

    Join the conversation

    Add your thoughts about any Tweet with a Reply. Find a topic you’re passionate about, and jump right in.

    Learn the latest

    Get instant insight into what people are talking about now.

    Get more of what you love

    Follow more accounts to get instant updates about topics you care about.

    Find what's happening

    See the latest conversations about any topic instantly.

    Never miss a Moment

    Catch up instantly on the best stories happening as they unfold.

    1. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      If that’s what you want, go for it. May good win over the evil. But if that’s not the outcome you want, reconsider your tactics. If cancel culture is seen to dominate an institution, it will attract conformist bureaucrats, turn off creative thinkers, drain vitality, cause death.

      2 replies 5 retweets 21 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      What happens once a major institution is on its deathbed? Two possibilities: 1) Fallow cycle is the default. Nothing growing for a while. 2) Non-default outcome is a “trust-fixing” cycle, by analogy to nitrogen-fixing legumes that are often rotated with grains.

      1 reply 0 retweets 10 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      The “legumes” among institutional types are ones with such extraordinarily high trust and investment in mutuality, they are immune to cancel/call-out culture. By which I mean “family” as the archetype. So, small family-style orgs replacing large impersonal/due-process orgs.

      1 reply 0 retweets 10 likes
      Show this thread
    4. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      This isn’t a deep point. Due process (Gesellschaft) is only as good as the organic trust (Gemeinschaft) underwriting it. It only works to the extent everybody agrees it does. Undermine it with a cancel-culture pathway may be quicker justice in the short term but atrophy long-term

      1 reply 2 retweets 19 likes
      Show this thread
    5. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      Again — and I keep repeating myself because it is both true and tempting to ignore — no moral judgment here. This is just how the lifecycle of organizations works. Particular institutional deaths may or may not represent net loss of societal wealth.

      1 reply 0 retweets 12 likes
      Show this thread
    6. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      To go macro, I’m not even asserting particular broad outcomes as desirable or not. Perhaps the whole industrial institutional landscape needs burning to the ground, perhaps only 5% of the worst rot needs cutting out. There’s probably an upper burn limit for successful recovery.

      1 reply 0 retweets 9 likes
      Show this thread
    7. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      All this of course assumes there is some degree of governance and restraint possible on the cancel side; that it is a true public capable of some deliberation and conscious choices; that it is not always a zombie mob of true believers led by psycho authoritarians.

      1 reply 2 retweets 9 likes
      Show this thread
    8. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      If it is, then this is all moot. It’s a zombie apocalypse, and the vampire elites have to go into hiding while the humans band into family-structured units for everything.

      2 replies 4 retweets 11 likes
      Show this thread
    9. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      To complete the analogy, the libertarian werewolf packs think they’ll inherit the world after the vampires and zombies destroy each other and they eat the humans on the way to their Galtian fortresses, but they’re mostly weresheep in practice and can be safely ignored as NPCs.

      1 reply 4 retweets 22 likes
      Show this thread
    10. Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      Final point: I haven’t said much about the target class of cancel culture, unaccountable institutional elites of some sort. The ones analogous to extractive vampire-farmers in this convoluted mixed metaphor. They are harder to generalize about since they are more varied.

      2 replies 0 retweets 9 likes
      Show this thread
      Venkatesh Rao‏ @vgr 2 Apr 2019
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      Raging zombies are all alike, every predatory vampire is predatory in its own way. Universities, Hollywood, gaming communities, legislative bodies, corporations, courts, each is extractively destroyed in its own way.

      8:50 PM - 2 Apr 2019
      • 2 Retweets
      • 13 Likes
      • Rahul Ramchandani portalnyc visa is working on his ebook Dan listens to the last days of the first days Eli Sennesh Ramakrishna Pedro Electrico Get that done... Buster Friendly
      1 reply 2 retweets 13 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. hotcocoakovsky‏ @dschorno 2 Apr 2019
          • Report Tweet
          • Report NetzDG Violation
          Replying to @vgr

          vampires and zombies are what the upper and lower class look like from a middle-class perspective (people who can't be held accountable to middle-class social norms). Werewolfs/shapeshifters/body snatchers are people who appear to be bound by those rules but are not

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        3. hotcocoakovsky‏ @dschorno 2 Apr 2019
          • Report Tweet
          • Report NetzDG Violation
          Replying to @dschorno @vgr

          anyone can become a zombie by deciding overtly not to play by the rules anymore. Anyone can become a werewolf by doing the same thing but stealthily

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        4. Show replies

      Loading seems to be taking a while.

      Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.

        Promoted Tweet

        false

        • © 2020 Twitter
        • About
        • Help Center
        • Terms
        • Privacy policy
        • Imprint
        • Cookies
        • Ads info