On Editing My School Newspaper

A big activity this year for me that I haven’t blogged about has been my school paper. I’m editor-in-chief, but we assembled a rock star team of really smart editors (all girls other than me, go figure) so I try to stay out the way. I think we’ve broken a number of records. Today, for example, we published a 24 page issue, probably the first time in history. The quality of the content is also better than it’s ever been.

The issues one faces in running a small school newspaper are consistent with those in any organization. I’ve been particularly amused at the similarities of bug testing in software development and copy editing the paper: it’s a real bitch to organize everyone’s feedback. There are also interpersonal challenges, where sometime’s personal pride comes before what’s best for the organization. All stuff that gives a real intellectual high.

Great job guys on a terrific first semester.
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Constant Travelers Wear Their All-Nighters as a Badge of Pride

There are maybe a FEW people for whom this makes sense. But I’m incredulous that people would go against consistent and irrefutable research about the effect of little sleep on performance. It’s a marathon, folks.

Link: Constant Travelers Wear Their All-Nighters as a Badge of Pride – New York Times.

Mr. Stevens belongs to a hardy breed who set themselves apart by their embrace of sleepless nights. Most travelers view insomnia as an affliction: 41 percent of those questioned in January by the Yesawich, Pepperdine, Brown & Russell/Yankelovich Partners National Business Travel Monitor said they did not get enough sleep on business trips, and 29 percent said they did not sleep well.

The mavericks, by contrast, not only welcome the condition, they nurture it and say they thrive on it.

Announcing the Silicon Valley Junto

I’ve mused before that a lot of Silicon Valley folk would like to exercise mental muscles outside their core domain of high tech/business. Most of us realize that breakthrough insights occur at the intersection of ideas, cultures, and disciplines. Further, most of us realize that it’s important to be interesting, which means being able to hold a conversation on topics beyond the one little niche in which you work.

My friend Chris Yeh and I decided to do something about it. Drumroll please…

The Silicon Valley Junto (who-n-toe) will be a free quarterly discussion group/forum – "thoughtful conversations about topics that matter" – for business/hi-tech people to talk about about things they don’t usually talk about. It will be a community of peers, not podiums.

Go check out the Silicon Valley Junto web site, blog, and wiki for more information. The inaugural meeting is January 5 in the morning in Palo Alto/Menlo Park (will alternate btwn South Bay and SF). The topic is "Americanism as an Idea": What does it mean to be American, is the American dream as good as it gets, etc.

Why "Junto"?

In 1727, Benjamin Franklin convinced 12 of his friends to form a club dedicated to mutual improvement. Meeting one night a week, these young men discussed the topics of the day. Junto was a private forum for discussion and as a surreptitious instrument for leading public opinion. One of the functions of the group was to brainstorm publicly beneficial ideas. They recommended books, shopkeepers, and friends to each other. They fostered self-improvement through discussions on topics related to philosophy, morals, economics, and politics.

Why Just Business/Tech People?

We want everyone to speak the same language. Plus it will be a networking opportunity.

I’m really busy, do you think I really have time to talk about stuff not directly related to my work?

Yes. Exercising intellectual muscles that you may not have worked since college will not only be refreshing, but will expose you to new ideas that will help you in your work. Read The Medici Effect: Breakthrough Insights at the Intersection of Ideas, Concepts, and Cultures for more on this. Also see Jim Collins on why executives can increase their leadership capabilities by reading non-business books.

I don’t live in the Silicon Valley. How can I partake?

Hopefully the conversation starts on the blogosphere, continues in-person, and then is continued online again. You can certainly participate in the 1st and 3rd parts of that cycle. Join in! Check out the Junto blog and send a trackback ping. What does being American mean to you?

Atlas Shrugged and Objectivism Continued

The more I read about objectivism and Ayn Rand – the latest being this London Review of Books overview of her works – the more I befuddled I become at how people are simply in love with her and her books. Out of the four basic principles of Objectivism, I happen to agree with two of them:

Politics: capitalism
Epistemology: reason

But not with:

Metaphysics: objective reality (I’m more of a relativist)
Ethics: self-interest (what??)

I reviewed Atlas Shrugged here. Sure – I love the emphasis on the mind and intellectualism…but not enough of it to make it my life philosophy.

Movie Review: American History X

I feel like I’ve thought about race every day for the past year. Everyday there’s a little something which puts it on the radar screen. Maybe the racist joke by a friend which is hilarious but wrong. Maybe the not-so-subtle discrimination from which I benefit. Maybe the affirmative action from which I hurt. Or maybe it’s movies like Crash, or American History X which I saw tonight.

After I posted about Crash a few weeks ago a friend recommended American History X. I only watch movies if it comes highly recommended (but it doesn’t matter how much you recommend a TV show – I will never watch TV live). American History X shook me up like Crash did. This time it showed the extreme side of racism: neo-Nazis and how one man’s prison time changed his outlook. What I liked about Crash was that you left feeling like the problem exists on a very everyday level, on the corner of any street. American History X lets the viewer feel like it’s a problem that only exists on the fringes, but it is instructive and moving nonetheless.