Saturday, June 13, 2026

Stanford, Malcom Harris, 2024

Query:

I'm now in chapter 4.2, Howard Malcolm's book on Palo Alto. It is amazing, the outsize influence Stanford University had on the country. Now, begins with Ronald Reagan, and again, the "Hooverites" come to the fore. Is this book as much about Hoover as Stanford in general?Yes, in a sense, Palo Alto is as much a book about the legacy of Hoover as it is about Stanford.

Reply:

Malcolm Harris’s central argument is not simply that Stanford was an influential university. Rather, he is tracing how a particular set of ideas, institutions, and elite networks that emerged in Palo Alto helped shape modern America. One of the most important figures in that story is Herbert Hoover.

Hoover appears repeatedly because he sits at the intersection of several themes Harris is pursuing:

* Stanford University was founded with an intensely entrepreneurial and anti-labor outlook.

* Hoover was one of Stanford’s earliest and most successful graduates.

* He embodied the belief that private enterprise, technical expertise, and elite management should guide society.

* After his presidency, he remained enormously influential through the Hoover Institution, which became a major center for conservative and free-market thought.

When Harris talks about the “Hooverites,” he is referring not just to Hoover himself but to an intellectual tradition associated with the Hoover Institution and Stanford’s political economy: skepticism of organized labor, faith in business leadership, anti-New Deal thinking, and later the rise of modern conservatism.

That is why, when you reach the Reagan chapters, Hoover’s shadow reappears. Harris sees a line running from:

Stanford → Hoover → Hoover Institution → postwar conservatism → Reagan → Silicon Valley’s modern ideology.

Whether that line is perfectly fair is another question. Critics of Harris argue that he sometimes overstates continuity and makes Stanford appear more unified and intentional than it really was. But as a narrative device, Hoover serves as one of the book’s principal connecting threads.

So I would say:

* The book is about Palo Alto and Stanford as a system.

* Hoover is one of the main recurring characters through whom Harris explains that system.

* As you move into the Reagan era, Hoover becomes even more important because Harris views Reaganism as reviving many ideas that Hoover had championed decades earlier.

By the time you finish the book, you’ll probably find that the real protagonist is not Stanford or Hoover individually, but what Harris sees as a distinctive Palo Alto worldview that both produced and was reinforced by figures like Hoover, Reagan, military planners, venture capitalists, and Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. The recurring return to Hoover is Harris’s way of showing the continuity of that worldview across the twentieth century.

Query:

Talk about a crazy situation. San Francisco liberalism with hard-core right wing beliefs (Stanford, Hoover) right in the middle. It's hard to believe after all these years, Stanford University didn't slowly fade away. Somewhere there has to be Big Money that explains everything.

Reply:

That’s one of the tensions that makes Palo Alto such a fascinating book. Harris is deliberately challenging the common picture of the Bay Area as uniformly liberal.

The reality is that the region has always contained several different political cultures simultaneously:

* San Francisco developed a reputation for labor activism, social liberalism, counterculture, and progressive politics.

* Stanford University was built with close ties to engineering, business, military research, and wealthy donors.

* The Hoover Institution became one of the most influential conservative think tanks in the United States.

* The defense industry, semiconductor firms, venture capital partnerships, and later Silicon Valley startups often had priorities that didn’t fit neatly into either traditional left- or right-wing categories.

One of Harris’s arguments is that money, technology, and institutional power often matter more than local voting patterns. Even if most residents of the Bay Area voted Democratic, Stanford’s influence came from different sources:

1. Land

Stanford possesses thousands of acres of valuable land in Silicon Valley. The original Stanford land grant became one of the university’s greatest assets. As the region grew, that land became extraordinarily valuable.

2. Federal money

A huge part of Stanford’s rise came from Washington rather than California. During and after World War II, military contracts and research funding poured into universities doing advanced science and engineering. Stanford benefited enormously from defense spending.

3. Corporate ties

The university helped create what became Silicon Valley. Companies such as Hewlett-Packard⁠, Intel⁠, and later generations of technology firms maintained close relationships with Stanford.

4. Endowment growth

Successful alumni became wealthy and donated back to the university. Wealth compounds. Once a university reaches a certain scale, its endowment and reputation reinforce each other.

What’s interesting is that Stanford never really had to “win” local political arguments to remain influential. A university with billions of dollars in assets, world-class faculty, federal research grants, and powerful alumni networks can persist through enormous cultural changes.

There is also a historical irony here. Many people imagine Silicon Valley as the product of 1960s counterculture. Harris argues that its roots are at least as much in Cold War military spending, corporate management, and elite institutions. The famous hippies of San Francisco Bay Area are part of the story, but so are defense contractors, engineers, venture capitalists, and Hoover conservatives.

As for “Big Money explains everything,” Harris would probably say that concentrated wealth explains a great deal, but not everything. One reason Stanford remained central is that it sat at the intersection of money, knowledge, government funding, and technology. Any one of those alone might not have been enough. Together, they created a self-reinforcing system that has lasted for more than a century.

In fact, from the perspective of someone reading the Reagan chapters, it can start to look less like Stanford survived despite political changes and more like Stanford became one of the institutions that helped shape those changes. That’s a stronger claim—and one Harris spends the rest of the book trying to support.

Query

The Stanford University Story as told by Malcolm Harris fascinating. How would you rate UC-Berkeley in its influence in America / California as compared to Stanford. It appears that Stanford's stature has significantly grown in the past forty years (engineering, banking, AI) even as UC-Berkeley has become less influential since the heydays of the 1960s. How would you compare the development of UC-Berkeley and Stanford since the 1960s?


Reply:

This is a wonderful question because it gets at something deeper than university rankings. If you were writing the history of California and America since 1960, you could plausibly tell it through the rivalry—and divergence—of Stanford University and University of California, Berkeley.

My short answer is:

Berkeley probably had greater cultural and intellectual influence from roughly 1945–1975. Stanford probably has had greater economic, technological, and elite-network influence from roughly 1980 to the present.

That’s a simplification, but not a bad one.

Berkeley’s Peak: 1945–1975

If you had asked an informed American in 1965 which California university mattered most, many would have said Berkeley.

Berkeley was:

* A premier research university.

* Central to the development of modern physics after World War II.

* Home to Nobel Prize winners.

* The birthplace of the Free Speech Movement.

* A symbol of the New Left, anti-war activism, and student political engagement.

When Americans thought about higher education and social change in the 1960s, Berkeley was often the first place they thought of.

Culturally, Berkeley punched far above its weight.

Stanford’s Transformation

Stanford in 1960 was respected, but it was not yet the global powerhouse we know today.

The crucial figure was Frederick Terman, who encouraged faculty and students to start companies and remain near campus.

That helped create:

* Hewlett-Packard⁠

* Intel⁠

* The venture-capital ecosystem on Sand Hill Road

* The modern Silicon Valley startup culture

By the 1980s and 1990s, Stanford was no longer merely a university. It had become the central node in a technology-and-capital network.

Why Stanford Pulled Ahead

I think there are four major reasons.

1. Silicon Valley became the commanding sector

In the twentieth century, universities gained prestige through science.

In the twenty-first century, enormous wealth has been created through technology companies.

Stanford sat directly in the middle of that process.

Think of the number of transformative firms associated with Stanford:

* Google⁠

* NVIDIA⁠

* Cisco Systems⁠

* Yahoo!⁠

* Sun Microsystems⁠

Berkeley produced outstanding scientists and entrepreneurs too, but Stanford became more deeply integrated with venture capital and startup formation.

2. Private versus public

Stanford is private.

Berkeley is public.

That distinction became increasingly important after the 1970s.

As California’s population exploded and state budgets became constrained, Berkeley faced political and financial pressures that Stanford largely avoided.

Stanford could move faster, raise money more aggressively, and operate with fewer political constraints.

3. The rise of venture capital

The venture-capital industry essentially grew up next door to Stanford.

The university became a gathering point for entrepreneurs, investors, and engineers.

Berkeley generated talent.

Stanford generated talent and connected it directly to capital.

Those are not the same thing.

4. Elite networks

Today Stanford may be the single most influential university in the world when measured by influence over technology entrepreneurship.

Its alumni and faculty occupy leadership positions across Silicon Valley, venture capital, AI labs, and technology companies.

That network effect compounds over time.

Has Berkeley Become Less Influential?

Yes and no.

Berkeley remains one of the world’s greatest public universities.

It is still:

* A scientific powerhouse.

* A leading producer of PhDs.

* Exceptionally strong in computer science, economics, mathematics, chemistry, and physics.

But Berkeley’s influence often looks different.

Stanford influences America through:

* startups,

* venture capital,

* corporate leadership,

* technology platforms.

Berkeley influences America through:

* research,

* public institutions,

* academia,

* government,

* science.

Those are harder to see because they don’t create billionaires every week.

A Thought Harris Might Appreciate

One reason Palo Alto feels so surprising is that Harris is asking readers to look away from Berkeley.

For decades, the national story about Northern California was:

Berkeley → student radicals → counterculture → progressive politics.

Harris says that another story was unfolding simultaneously:

Stanford → engineers → military contracts → venture capital → Silicon Valley.

The second story ended up having extraordinary influence over how Americans work, communicate, invest, shop, and increasingly how AI is developed.

If you were ranking influence over the last sixty years, I’d put it this way:

Era: More Influential Institution

1945–1975: Berkeley

1975–2000: Roughly even

2000–2026: Stanford

And if the specific measure is influence over the modern technology economy, AI, venture capital, and global innovation networks, Stanford’s lead today is substantial. Berkeley remains one of America’s great universities, but Stanford has become something rarer: a university that functions simultaneously as a research institution, a talent pipeline, a venture-capital hub, and a generator of immense private wealth. That combination is what gives Stanford such an outsized role in Harris’s narrative.

Query:

Wow, that's an incredible summary. Thank you so much. Yes, Malcolm Harris moved the attention from UC- Berkeley just across the bay to Stanford. The fact that you highlight Frederick Terman suggests the matter of appointment of presidents had a huge play in continuing success. We're seeing this in Vanderbilt, also. And, in the other direction than Vanderbilt and MIT, is Harvard. 


Reply:

You’re touching on something historians of universities often emphasize: institutions matter, but leadership at key moments can redirect an institution’s trajectory for decades.

In Stanford’s case, Frederick Terman may have been as consequential as many university presidents. He wasn’t simply administering an engineering school; he was creating an ecosystem. His insight was that Stanford should not merely educate engineers and then watch them leave for the East Coast. Instead, he encouraged them to stay, start companies, collaborate with faculty, and build industry adjacent to the university.

That seems obvious today. In the 1940s and 1950s, it was not.

One reason Harris keeps returning to Stanford is that its leadership repeatedly made decisions that reinforced the same direction:

* close ties to industry,

* close ties to government research funding,

* encouragement of entrepreneurship,

* willingness to commercialize research,

* cultivation of wealthy alumni networks.

Each generation inherited the advantages created by the previous one.

By contrast, Berkeley’s mission as a public university was necessarily broader. It had obligations to the State of California that Stanford did not. Berkeley could not simply optimize for venture capital, patent generation, or entrepreneurial networks. Its responsibilities included mass education, public service, and statewide access.

Your Vanderbilt comparison is interesting. Many observers would point to Nicholas S. Zeppos and Daniel Diermeier as examples of leadership that helped transform Vanderbilt from a strong regional institution into a university with much greater national stature. The university became more selective, invested heavily in research, and improved its national reputation.

Then there is Harvard.

Harvard University is fascinating because it starts from such an enormous position of strength that “decline” is often relative rather than absolute. Harvard remains one of the world’s most powerful universities. Yet many critics argue that in the past decade or two it has become less focused on institutional excellence and more consumed by internal political and cultural conflicts.

What’s striking is that when people discuss Stanford, MIT, or Vanderbilt today, they often talk about:

* research output,

* engineering,

* entrepreneurship,

* scientific advances,

* AI,

* commercialization.

When people discuss Harvard, the conversation is frequently about governance controversies, campus politics, admissions disputes, congressional hearings, donor revolts, and leadership crises.

That doesn’t mean Harvard is no longer great. It means the public narrative has shifted.

In some ways, Harris’s book is about exactly this phenomenon. Americans spent much of the twentieth century thinking that cultural influence flowed from institutions like Harvard, Berkeley, New York, and Washington. Harris argues that another source of power was quietly emerging in Palo Alto: engineers, venture capitalists, military researchers, and technology entrepreneurs.

Looking from 2026, that argument seems stronger than it did when the book was first published. If someone asked which institutions have had the greatest influence on AI, cloud computing, venture capital, semiconductors, and the digital economy over the last forty years, Stanford and Massachusetts Institute of Technology would be near the top of the list.

What’s especially interesting for a reader of Palo Alto is that Harris is essentially saying: don’t judge Stanford by comparing it to Berkeley’s political influence or Harvard’s cultural prestige. Judge it by asking who shaped the systems that now govern technology, capital, and information. On that score, Stanford’s rise since the 1970s has been extraordinary.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Frontier Labs -- June 10, 2026

 

Would SpaceX be considered a "frontier lab"?


The frontier labs partner with SpaceX. 

SpaceX is providing services (mostly) and products for commercial customers.  The frontier labs are providing products (mostly) and services companies like SpaceX and it competitors. Google Gemini corrects me: 

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Scientific-Technological Revolution -- CRISPR -- Doudna -- May 15, 2026

 

Query:

I think it's important not to forget the word "INDUSTRIAL" in these four revolutions. Walter Isaacson in his biography of CRISPR / Jennifer Doudna mentions three great revolutions of modern times: a) first half of 20th century: Einstein, the atom --> nuclear power and nuclear weapons; b) second half of 20th century, information technology (BITS) --> microchip, computer, and digital revolution; and c) first half of 21st century, which he suggests is an even more momentous era, advances in understanding of the genetic code. Was Walter Isaacson somewhat unique in going down that road -- three great revolutions of modern times, or did he take that from some other author(s) or another book(s)? 

 Reply:

Walter Isaacson did not invent this framework, nor is he unique in using it. He popularized a highly specific version of a well-established macro-historical thesis. The concept that modern history is driven by sequential waves of physical, digital, and biological science is borrowed directly from several prominent futurists, economists, and thinkers.

Isaacson himself traced the intellectual ancestry of this framework back to Jeremy Rifkin and Klaus Schwab. The concept of "Atoms, Bits, and Genes" can be traced back to other notable authors: 

1. Nicholas Negroponte: The Shift from Atoms to Bits 

  • The Source: Being Digital (1995). 
  • The Idea: Negroponte, the co-founder of the MIT Media Lab, famously mapped the massive economic shift of the late 20th century as a transition from processing atoms (physical manufacturing) to processing bits (digital information). Isaacson adapted this direct terminology to frame his transition from the "Atom" era to the "Bit" era.

2. Jeremy Rifkin: The Biotech Century 

  • The Source: The Biotech Century (1998). 
  • The Idea: Long before CRISPR was discovered, Rifkin argued that the 21st century would be defined by the convergence of computers (infotech) and gene editing (biotech). He explicitly stated that the digital revolution of the late 1900s was merely the operational infrastructure required to organize the looming genetic revolution of the 2000s.

3. Klaus Schwab: The Fourth Industrial Revolution 

  • The Source: The Fourth Industrial Revolution (World Economic Forum, 2016). 
  • The Idea: While Schwab uses the "Industrial" framing you noted, his exact breakdown of our current era relies on a tripartite taxonomy: 
    • the Physical, 
    • the Digital, and 
    • the Biological. 

Isaacson's three revolutions map cleanly onto Schwab’s structural pillars of modern technological evolution.

4. Freeman Dyson: The Dual Revolutions

  • The Source: Our Biotech Future (New York Review of Books, 2007). 
  • The Idea: The legendary physicist argued that the 20th century was dominated by the materialist sciences (the atom and the silicon chip), but that the 21st century would belong to domestication of biotechnology. He wrote extensively on how the tools of the digital era would ultimately serve as the catalysts for mastering the biological realm.

Why Isaacson Framed it Differently 

By stripping away the word "Industrial," Isaacson shifted the focus from how factories produce goods to how human intellect alters reality.

  • Physics (The Atom): Gave us dominion over energy and matter.
  • Computer Science (The Bit): Gave us dominion over data and communication.
  • Biotech (The Gene): Gives us dominion over life itself.

By framing these as scientific revolutions rather than strictly factory floor shifts, Isaacson created a narrative bridge that allowed him to transition from writing about Albert Einstein and Benjamin Franklin, to Steve Jobs and the digital innovators, and finally to Jennifer Doudna.

**********************
The Scientific-Technological Revolution (STR)

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Spark That Ignited The Current AI Revolution -- May 6, 2026

Query: what was the spark that occurred 2016 - 2020 that was ignited the AI revolution in 2022 (post-Covid)?

Reply:



 

Industrial Revolutions -- May 6, 2026

Query: Industrial revolutions. The first industrial revolution was steam. The second industrial revolution was railway and much more. How long did the second industrial revolution last?

 


 

Query

I would argue the current industrial revolution began after Covid -- Nvidia broke out from gaming to AI in 2001. When would you same the current AI revolution began? The second industrial revolution lasted 44 years; how long might the AI revolution last? 

Reply:



 

Friday, May 1, 2026

LNG Export Chokepoints -- May 1, 2026

 Query

The US has too much natural gas; the world not enough with the Iran War -- what's the major chokepoint getting US LNG to Europe, Asia? US pipeline grid (continental); the last mile LNG pipelines in Texas, Louisiana; the export terminals along the Gulf Coast; tankers; existing long-term contracts; something else?

Reply:  

War Powers Act

The War Powers Act is not specifically "enacted" by anyone. It simply takes effect by statute. The courts do not start the process, but the executive branch can be sued by a member of Congress if the member feels the administration is not abiding by the law. Historically, the courts do not get involved. The US Supreme Court considers this a political issue and they won't get involved; this is pretty much an ironclad issue for SCOTUS.