If economics is really the study of the allocation of scarce resources it should be way more focused on time and attention— Tim Wu (@superwuster) June 2, 2017
Most valuable comments are those from people who know the issue, but they get buried in chaff from frequent commenters.— James Geluso (@atlemar) May 26, 2017
When one person doesn't understand economics, we call it ignorance. When millions don't, we call it a political movement.— Scott Adams (@ScottAdamsSays) April 3, 2016
The drought in Alabama makes me wish there were some kind of mechanism that would allocate resources to their highest-valued uses.— Art Carden (@artcarden) November 16, 2016
When this is the stuff you promote on Twitter, you degrade its quality.— Brad DeLong 🖖🏻 LLC (Expanded Feed) (@de1ong) January 20, 2018
Others make the points they make without the garbage. Promote the others, not them.
Please do better.
Please: pic.twitter.com/bV2vYs6jkw
It would be great for them to have more of a way for them to signal *which* content was most valuable to them.— Miles Kimball (@mileskimball) July 10, 2017
I felt compelled to tip! Have I been ‘nudged’ by Caffè Nero? #behavioralscience @rorysutherland pic.twitter.com/72Hy9IJJBc— Chris Thurling (@ChrisThurling) January 11, 2018
I don’t believe you really believe all the things you say. You found an opening in the racist, hateful marketplace and secured it. But when you’re old, you will not be proud of the life you lived. Of anger and hate. Pandering to the angry and hateful. It really is a shame. https://t.co/py7rt7qQRv— christine teigen (@chrissyteigen) January 12, 2018
(1b) The algorithm is a crucial change because it prioritizes some tweets over others, amplifying those it deems noteworthy. That’s an explicitly editorial function, even if it’s done by software. It changes the nature of the service.— Will Oremus (@WillOremus) December 15, 2017
The only way to solve them, at this point, is for Twitter to do what Facebook refuses to: admit that it’s a media company, and exercise explicit, human editorial judgments as to what sort of speech it will amplify, and what sort it will not tolerate.— Will Oremus (@WillOremus) December 15, 2017
Just saw "funderdome" on hospital TV. I wonder what the performance would be on a double blind trial of crowd funding vs VC funding.— Katherine Scott (@kscottz) June 10, 2017
"The perfect storm"https://t.co/WNBniXusHB pic.twitter.com/Vfqv5PY62C— The Poke (@ThePoke) August 9, 2017
Twitter, 2017 pic.twitter.com/N0hbNQCiPE— ian bremmer (@ianbremmer) May 4, 2017
Not that anybody asked, but the combined Federal budgets for the NEA & NEH equals what Americans spend annually on lip balm.— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) March 22, 2017
When a new topic arrives that "everyone" starts talking about, I think: they've got this one covered. Let me work on more neglected topics.— Robin Hanson (@robinhanson) August 8, 2017
Why water the green spots? Instead, maybe it's better to raise the influence of the currently less-influential, in order to even things out more!— Noah Smith (@Noahpinion) January 19, 2018
I may not live to finish my life projects. So I call younger others to adventure, to finish two grand projects. https://t.co/gsC7VCCE2W— Robin Hanson (@robinhanson) June 14, 2017
Makes sense. Most of the shouty stuff I see on social media heaps scorn on one’s opponents, not boosting those one agrees with.— TED (@EpicureanDeal) July 15, 2017
Like Friedman said: incentivize bad people to do good things— Peter Kay (@peterkay) August 2, 2017
Taking away poor workers' best options for employment without offering anything better makes them worse off. https://t.co/bXdxaqMMsh pic.twitter.com/I7VrboTcAi— Cato Institute (@CatoInstitute) July 10, 2017
From @KateRaworth's introduction (and why she is better than Yanis!) pic.twitter.com/HMEcPC5rzk— Leigh Caldwell (@leighblue) May 29, 2017
Why do we spend so much time in Development on getting aid interventions right, and so little time on getting ideas right? pic.twitter.com/TtPnDoNX38— William Easterly (@bill_easterly) August 3, 2017
If this was a metaphor, would it be scary or hopeful? https://t.co/vObqN58tou— William Easterly (@bill_easterly) May 28, 2017
It's amazing how many people think you should have the right to kill yourself, but no right to borrow money at high rates of interest.— tylercowen (@tylercowen) February 1, 2017
And my own thoughts pic.twitter.com/FbfnomI3pL— Joel Fine (@joelfine) October 7, 2016
Newspaper letter of the day. The muddle that is the sugar tax (sugar to be taxed and subsidised at the same time) pic.twitter.com/RCLgbMvUD8— Merryn Somerset Webb (@MerrynSW) March 23, 2016
Would you read what your students write if you weren’t paid to do so? https://t.co/qEwyN0lqdK pic.twitter.com/onom0RXc5o— George Couros (@gcouros) September 27, 2016
Teachers that stay comfortable don’t make many mistakes, but they usually don’t innovate either. To be awesome... you have to take risks.— Danny Steele (@SteeleThoughts) August 13, 2017
If you love a book, why would you REQUIRE every S read it? Yes, recommend it, promote it, but keep CHOICE in mind, too. #whodecides— Teri Lesesne (@ProfessorNana) August 6, 2017
Foucault: Schools serve the same social function as prisons and mental institutions— The English Major (@Audenary) June 19, 2017
Foucault's mum: You're still going
"Support public education"— The Suburbanist (@The_Suburbanist) March 18, 2017
As if there's somehow an option to not support it.
Horrifying. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot. https://t.co/rv9tawmy3g— Sam Bowman 🌐 (@s8mb) April 18, 2017
If this is #TheResistance, let's have more of it. https://t.co/7tjAwFRNMd— Clayton Thorpe (@agymd) April 19, 2018
China unveils plans for world's first pollution-eating 'Forest City' https://t.co/YUOzMLAnXA pic.twitter.com/Ra7JtNmKqw— Christopher Mims🤳 (@mims) July 3, 2017
Singapore's airport is getting its own jungle paradise pic.twitter.com/iNbWrsr3mk— Business Insider (@businessinsider) June 19, 2017
The subtleties of writing well HT @rshotton pic.twitter.com/j4Ws1pAVYK— William Easterly (@bill_easterly) July 31, 2017
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