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androidsixteen
@androidsixteen.eth
As with all @july posts, I kept thinking about this one and had an insight — Silicon Valley self-sabotages by ascribing too much of its identity to “doing” Take the iconic comeback from Elon, “What did you get done this week?” Implicitly, doing reigns supreme in a culture that venerates high agency leaders And it’s understandable… when most other industries are in stasis, tech bears the flag of progress and holds onto the idea that American exceptionalism and manifest destiny are still alive But by over-fixating on “doing”, it ends up destroying the soul of all creativity, which comes from “being” If tech could become less insecure around not always doing and leave space for being, much of what it builds could become imbued with greater purpose, beauty, and creativity — and at little to no cost Doing isn’t impacted negatively by being. The reason for this is that intelligence is primary, and it manifests through being. Doing is 2nd order… can expound more on this later
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@proxystudio.eth
Tech is soooo insecure about this People find it cringe, they don’t experience the energy as sincere, it’s YouTube ad copy Such an unforced error too lol
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androidsixteen
@androidsixteen.eth
It is cringe It’s like a little boy insisting that his drawing of a lion is more magnificent than the lion itself At first it’s cute, and you appreciate the little boy’s confidence. But if he keeps up the act as an adult, it becomes a bit exhausting
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@proxystudio.eth
Amazing simile American’s already have the ‘Protestant Ethic’ we love a self-starter working hard, no need to jump up and down reminding us. My thesis is we’re entering the founder = creator era, where a more honest, open founder is kind of an antidote to that exhaustion
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