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“Although per capita income doubled during the half-century, not all sectors of society shared equally in this abundance. While both rich and poor enjoyed rising incomes, their inequality of wealth widened significantly. As the population began to move from farm to city, farmers increasingly specialized in the production of crops for the market rather than for home consumption. The manufacture of cloth, clothing, leather goods, tools, and other products shifted from home to shop and from shop to factory. In the process many women experienced a change in roles from producers to consumers with a consequent transition in status. Some craftsmen suffered debasement of their skills as the division of labor and power-driven machinery eroded the traditional handicraft methods of production and transformed them from self-employed artisans to wage laborers. The resulting potential for class conflict threatened the social fabric of this brave new republic.”
― Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era
― Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era

“All my life I’d heard people tell their black boys and black girls to “be twice as good,â€� which is to say “accept half as much.”
― Between the World and Me
― Between the World and Me

“A January 2020 Gallup survey on remote work found that people working off-site 60â€�80 percent of the time were more likely than other workers to feel engaged, and to feel that someone was watching out for their development.”
― The New Corner Office: How the Most Successful People Work from Home
― The New Corner Office: How the Most Successful People Work from Home

“ever since that time of unbound paranoia the one unbreakable law of the British secret services has been: Thou shalt not snoop on Number Ten. Because we are not in the business of generating policy—it’s not a task for which agencies like ours are suited, and in those countries where spooks set policy, it always ends in tears. We vet politicians on the way up—that’s an entirely different matter—but by the time they’re moving into Number Ten they should already be above suspicion; if they aren’t, we haven’t been doing our job properly. And”
― The Apocalypse Codex
― The Apocalypse Codex

“I have also learned—through hard experience—that there is no virtue in putting something on a to-do list and then not doing it. It’s just as not done as if it were never on the list in the first place, only now it’s sitting there, mocking me in its undoneness.”
― The New Corner Office: How the Most Successful People Work from Home
― The New Corner Office: How the Most Successful People Work from Home

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Mike’s 2024 Year in Books
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