eddie-soehnel-portable-iden.../data/insights-hub/hrecords/4646.json
2026-06-16 13:20:04 -06:00

15 lines
1.7 KiB
JSON

{
"HubID": "4646",
"Date": "8/12/2024",
"HubTags": [
"External Platform Posts",
"Future Map Forward Guidance",
"Future Map"
],
"Contacts": "",
"Companies": "",
"File": "",
"Image": "4646__Image_URL.jpg",
"Summary": "<p>An interesting look at unemployment and how it rises. This hockey stick rise we see here is dominant everywhere, in nature as well as in human nature. Consider:</p><p>* That of melting ice - no apparent change from 0 to 32 degrees, but at 32.6, it becomes water showing massive and transformative change.</p><p>* That of a sand pile - keep dropping grains of sand long enough and you will eventually trigger an avalanche showing massive and transformative change.</p><p>* That of politics - Vladimir Lenin said there are years in politics when nothing happens. And then there are weeks when years happen.</p><p>* That of personal finance - Ernest Hemingway is often quoted as saying, \"How did you go bankrupt? Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.\" This quote is from his novel \"The Sun Also Rises,\"<br /></p><p>* That is investing: meme investments that go parabolic.</p><p>It's all about tipping points, where conditions reach a critical state to take hold. There are many great works on this phenomena by Malcom Gladwell (culture), Seth Godin, (marketing) Geoffrey Moore (innovation), Elizer Yudkowsky (technology), Ray Kursweul (technology), Kevin Kelly (technology), Carolta Perz (technology), Amara's law (technology), Jonah Berger (culture).</p><p>We have to watch for tipping points across society, culture, economics, politics, environment and technology, which are exacerbated in our interconnected world, because things can change very quickly. </p>",
"Notes": ""
}