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I believe the fed replaced the gold standard.

No it did not. I don't know why people repeat this so often but it is very frustrating. Nixon unilaterally ended the gold standard because the US was printing money to pay for Vietnam and the rest of the world called the US on its bullshit. The end of the gold standard is relatively recent in history and the verdict is still out on the impact.

The post-World War II Bretton Woods system was a limited form of the pre 1920s depression gold standard.

Both the silver standard and bimetallism have been more common than the gold standard.

Tying complex multi faceted economies to the physical abundance of specific raw materials fails to capture the full value of activities and assets.

The true gold standard was a blip from the 1870s to the early 1920s.


I think your observation assumes that inflating the value of gold relative to the rest of economy is a problem - if you do not care about that I'm not sure it matters.

In any case gold served as a strong check on monetary policy even if it had problems. Certainly it is possible to have a "sound" monetary policy without gold. I'm just not convinced in societies ability to affect sound governance of monetary policy without some "stronger" guard rails. Especially not in today's climate.


>I don't know why people repeat this so often but it is very frustrating.

The Ron Paul fandom spread this myth around incessantly during the late 2000s.


Monero up around 20% today.

Windows 11 and its roadmap are really bad.

I agree with this article in part but also wonder if this wouldn't be an issue if people had spent time training on kubernetes.

Why should they spend time on training on a solution that is overkill for their use case?

Can anyone more familiar with this speculate what the potential implications are?

“ The change means law school graduates who want to practice in Texas are no longer required to attend an ABA-accredited school. The power to approve those law schools now rests solely with the state's highest civil court.”

It’s for control, more precisely political control


Conversely, it's about the state of Texas asserting control over an unaccountable third party who does things that run counter to the interests of the State and people of Texas. If the state's highest civil court misbehaves, the people of Texas have recourse. If the ABA misbehaves, the people of Texas can do... nothing.

From my perspective, I'd rather have a body held accountable to the people over which they are wielding power. Sometimes government makes sense.


Texas is a state that do not pay their elected officials enough money to live off of. It is designed to support the wealth and not the poor. A wealth elected official does not need a second job but a poor one does.

This leads to disproportional balance in power between the working class and the wealth.

[0] https://salaries.texastribune.org/departments/house-of-repre...


> If the ABA misbehaves, the people of Texas can do... nothing.

That seems like a very interesting perspective to offer in response to an article about the government of Texas stripping the ABA of the ability to approve law schools.

While it's not obvious this action was in response to any particular misbehavior by the ABA, clearly the possibility of such action would serve as an accountability mechanism that offered recourse to the good people of Texas in the event of any misbehavior.


> If the ABA misbehaves, the people of Texas can do... nothing.

Nothing precludes suing the ABA, it's a professional association not magic pixie dust.


Struggling to understand here, what is this mystical malfeasance that the ABA has done?

All it does is set minimum standards for the state bar exams and publish best practices for state bar associations.


I want to agree with you, however, how do we guarantee that the people of Texas have recourse via their government? Didn't the Texas state government have national headlines recently to enact anti-democratic gerrymandering?

Correct, there is no recourse, they've used their 30 years of hard-core ideological Republican uni-party control to remove any possibility of opposition. Besides gerrymandering they're constantly attacking Houston's ability to self govern, kicking democrat voters off the rolls, making it harder for city residents to vote.

Does this mean a "No woke lawyers" rule in Texas? I'm asking in all seriousness, I could see such a rule happening.

Considering they explicitly cited DEI requirements as their impetus for change, this feels like a natural progression.

That’s exactly what the end goal is. It’ll only be a matter of time before Texas has schools that don’t even attempt to teach impartiality.

Correct it's part of a multi decade right wing effort to replace the ABA with the ideological Federalist Society. Trump's judges were the first that did not get ABA recommendations but were all Federalists. In Texas it seems more of a naked power grab. They want no ethics, no standards, no expertise, just raw political power.

“Replacing the ABA” implies that the ABA has some formal status to begin with. It doesn’t. The ABA is just a private organization.

The headline and the contents of the article make it quite clear that's not true.

> The Texas Supreme Court decided which law schools would satisfy law licensure requirements until 1983, when the court gave that responsibility to the ABA.


That doesn’t change the fact that the ABA is a private organization. The court shouldn’t have delegated a government function to a private body in the first place.

No one is contesting the private organization part. Just the wrong part of your post.

Your original post is premised on the implication that the ABA has some sort of public status. Otherwise, it makes no sense. It's like saying "there's a right wing effort to replace Coke with Pepsi." Okay, so what?

You said the ABA had no "formal status". That bit was very clearly incorrect, as Texas's Supreme Court just revoked that formal status.

(Incidentally, the original post about replacing the ABA wasn't mine, either.)


My point above is that the ABA is the same kind of thing as the Federalist Society. They’re both private organizations. The ABA isn’t some sort of quasi-public body.

The fact that the Texas Supreme Court previously relied on the ABA’s list of accredited schools doesn’t change what kind of thing the ABA is. In CS terms, the Texas Supreme Court rules just had a pointer to the ABA list. That doesn’t change the nature of the object to which it points.


If the ABA had no formal status then we wouldn’t be having this discussion. In fact, the Department of Education formally recognizes the ABA as the accrediting body since 1923. In fairness, conservatives are trying to get rid of the Department of Education as well.

https://web.archive.org/web/20170427221010/https://www2.ed.g...

I notice the ed.gov page has gone missing. I wonder why.


As the article clearly explains, the ABA had the formal status that the Texas Supreme Curt granted them in 1983. What we have now is a change of that policy, giving that power to a political body (an elected Supreme Court) without providing a reason. Doesn't feel like "small government" to me.

> The all-Republican court hasn't given a reason for initiating the change, but it came after months of conflict between President Donald Trump, the ABA and the broader legal community.


> Doesn't feel like "small government" to me.

The "small government" GOP was a mistaken detour of the late 20th century that died precisely because it was susceptible to stupid ideas like outsourcing a core government function--accreditation in a profession deeply intertwined with government itself--to private parties. Lincoln's GOP was not a small government party, and neither is Trump's GOP.


Its fascinating to watch you twist yourself into knots justifying all types of contradictory actions after they have happened. You are certainly committed to the bit. This is another case where you failed to do any research and are provably false. The Republican Party of Texas wrote an actual party platform in 2024 and limited government is an explicitly stated part of that platform. [0]

Since you brought up Trump, even though he isn't involved in this action. Here is a video of him from February 2025 stating that he is making government smaller. [1]

I'm sure you will come back with some new red herring, but the evidence is here for others to view.

[0] https://texasgop.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/2024-RPT-Pla...

[1] https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ucen_wGy2mY


You’re playing word games. The 2024 Texas GOP platform says: “Limiting government power to those items enumerated in the United States and Texas Constitutions.”

Limiting government power to enumerated areas is different than “small government.” The Texas constitution grants the legislature and the supreme court with power over judicial administration. That includes governing the practice of law in the courts of the state. There’s no enumerated powers problem with the Texas Supreme Court Court deciding what law schools qualify to be admitted to its own bar.


If you keep reading to point #9 on Constitutional Issues, they say "Limiting Overreaching State Government: We recognize that the sovereignty of this State and its citizenry has been imperiled and threatened by the ongoing overreach of state elected officials and agencies."

It's pretty clear that they only mean "overreach" where they don't politically agree. They are perfectly fine when the Governor overrides local rules and ordinances [0] [1] [2], because it furthers their political goals of consolidating power with the Executive rather than the stated goal of limiting government. This action expands the scope and role of government in Texan's lives, that is a fact.

> There’s no enumerated powers problem with the Texas Supreme Court Court deciding what law schools qualify to be admitted to its own bar.

No, it's a political powers problem, which is one of the main things they claim to be against increasing.

[0] https://www.texastribune.org/2023/06/07/texas-republicans-ci...

[1] https://www.allensworthlaw.com/legal-updates/governor-overru...

[2] https://fedsoc.org/scdw/supreme-court-of-texas-holds-governo...


Lincoln’s gop was hated by conservatives and the south and loved by black people. The exact opposite of trump’s gop.

Republicans have never been about small government, they just use that as a talking point against the government when it’s providing nice things that benefit everyone (including liberals, which they would happily shoot their own foot off if it meant some shrapnel hit a liberal), and their base is too ignorant or evil to care.

This is a better article on the topic explaining that the ABA's requirements for different forms of diversity oppose the administration's ban on DEI. It also points out that this could lower the cost of law school by reducing superfluous requirements for law school accreditation.

https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/texas-becomes-first...


Free slop!

The MBA curriculum is stunningly ridiculously easy.

The entire point of an MBA is networking for executive roles.


Funny story: I'm friends with a political scientist that sustained themselves through college by writing thesis papers for MBA students. They would research, then buy a two liter energy drink bottle and write it all in one go over the weekend.


It is easy, yes. About the equivalent of two or three A levels for anyone in the UK. However the point is not networking, but understanding large areas of business operation that you don't already know. For people like us, that's generally things like strategy, finance, marketing (which isn't the same thing as advertising), organisational behaviour (effectively applied sociology), HR (the weakest area of the course I took). It's not particularly useful for networking, since the people you meet are at your own level.


> understanding large areas of business operation that you don't already know

Library card, google search, LLM, Annas archive, not even joking. I've seen the curriculum, its the kind of stuff you read a book about on a weekend.

> not particularly useful for networking, since the people you meet are at your own level.

I think you may have missed the point of the MBA.


A library card etc. are useful, but a very long way from the usefulness of a planned and taught course. And no, I haven't missed the point - you most certainly have. There are useful methods of networking, and they are based on breadth (how many people you meet), depth (how specific your discussions can be) and length of engagement. People from completely different industries whom you meet over coffee in a group exercise are not that, and would not justify the cost of the course. What does justify it is what you learn.


I just find it odd that Mark Zuckerberg runs a multi-billion Dollar business without an MBA.

He just kind of taught himself that in his spare time.

I guess some people get alot of value out of the 'knowledge' you gain from an MBA..

I view it as a signal to other MBAs as to the type of manager you are.


Why cant Talent also do what it must?


We do what we must, because we can / For the good of all of us


I hate that people think this.

AI is a superfast internet search.

Imagine if you had that growing up. Instant access to any information with a professorial level of teaching and you could ask any question to clear up any confusion?

Our kids are going to be smarter than we could even imagine because getting access to any information they can imagine is instant taught by a perfect tutor.


It's not search.

When I (re)search a certain topic, I curate a list of books, I read the table of contents, I skim the pages, I compare the texts.

When I ask the AI about something, I get an answer.


There's still a place for books and learning a subject deeply imo

AI is amazing in that it can both teach you, give you examples, help you work on projects, etc etc c


I kind of both agree and disagree with this point.

Ive gotten into 3+ new engineering projects all because of AI. My entire life I only dreamed of the inventions I didnt have technical knowledge or time to complete. I would have never been able to do that 3-4 years ago.

I need an AI to dumb it down for me. It makes intimidating learning curves, do-able. Call me stupid, or smart, it doesnt really matter.

AI is not a substitute for books.. but it is a clear gift for humanity. Especially the lazy humans (Me.)


This is exactly how I feel.

It's giving me exactly what I've always wanted: the ability to acquire information as rapidly as I can think.

No more searching through stack overflow for an hour to find some esoteric semantics. The frustrating internet searches are few and far between now.


There's value in the struggle, learning what questions to ask, handling the questions following a question, articulating what it is that you want to know, learning how to have an exchange of information with another human being, and being civil about it. If you honestly think that replacing this growth with a paywalled, corporate chatbot that has been known to convince people to kill themselves will be a boon for society, I'm not sure what to tell you.


> handling the questions following a question, articulating what it is that you want to know

AI is amazing at exactly this.

It can answer any question, go into any level of detail, go as fast or slow as you want, or complicated or simple as you want, and present it to you how you best learn things.

Truly amazing for reducing the barriers to learning.

> how to have an exchange with other human beings and be civil about it

Seems like that's your parents job to teach you that. lol


Its straight up wire fraud.


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