Organization
Organization

Congress

6 Books9 Highlights92 Themes

Congress appears across 6 books, with 9 highlights.

Books

Notes

Most coverage

This Vast Enterprise has the strongest coverage in these notes.

Recurring themes

Timeline Thinking Across Decades, Unintended Consequences of Intervention, Secret Messages for Urgent Priorities

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In 1787, Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance, which created a system for converting that side into tidy farms and future states. The ordinance said Native land would “never be taken from them without their consent.”…

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Answers use only the 6 books and 9 highlights on this page.

Highlights

"In 1787, Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance, which created a system for converting that side into tidy farms and future states. The ordinance said Native land would “never be taken from them without their consent.” But that was the theory of America’s political elites. The practice of America’s settlers was that, almost immediately, thousands of them began pouring into Shawnee territory, squatting where they wanted and daring the Natives or, for that matter, their own government to do something about it."

This Vast Enterprise

"That summer, while Congress was out of session, Jefferson read a book that suggested the someone would be British: *Voyages from Montreal* by Alexander Mackenzie. In the book, which quickly dominated imperial conversations around the globe, Mackenzie described leading a small group across the northern part of North America, negotiating the Rockies and reaching the Pacific. This time, Jefferson didn’t need to rouse his imperial paranoia. Mackenzie spelled his plans out, urging Britain to build a series of trading posts. The region, he wrote, was “fit for colonization.”"

This Vast Enterprise

"Jefferson borrowed the next part of his plan from Gallatin. For only the second time in his presidency, he wrote a secret message to Congress. This choice hinted at his urgency, but Jefferson focused the text on a popular and bipartisan policy, a policy he wanted Congress to continue: Native trading posts. These posts, he wrote, provided America with a peaceful way to acquire land, “which the rapid increase of our numbers will call for.” They could even help with New Orleans by lining the Mississippi’s American side with “the means of its own safety.”"

This Vast Enterprise

"Lewis’s intelligence and drive led Jefferson to expand his duties, especially regarding Congress. The Capitol sat a mile and a half from the White House, connected by a mostly empty Pennsylvania Avenue that alternated between dusty and marshy, depending on the rain. Lewis carried messages back and forth, noting the partridges that resided along the avenue. (Legislators loved to hunt them.) He tracked congressional debates and met privately with key figures. His demeanor, remembered a charmed senator, was “easy and unaffected.”"

This Vast Enterprise

"Another reason economies are impossible to model involves the messy presence of human beings. Financially massive organizations warp the environment they inhabit much like the way gravitationally massive bodies warp space-time in physics: Normal rules do not apply to them. Giant companies influence Congress, the executive branch, and local governing bodies to pass legislation they want—granting them subsidies, protection, environmental relief, favorable tax status, and so on—and otherwise treat them in ways that are perfectly legal, but outside what the equations of economics predict."

Certain to Win

"Rather than resorting to bribery, John Jacob Astor gained political influence by lending generously to the United States government during the War of 1812. Once peace was restored, he cashed in his favors by in¬ ducing Congress to ban noncitizens from competing in the fur trade. As¬ tor quickly pushed out British and Canadian operators and obtained a near monopoly.13"

How to Be a Billionaire : Proven Strategies From the Titans of Wealth

"How can the United States do better? As a starting point, it could develop a better understanding of how China has grown into a technology superpower. If members of Congress continue to resort to the laziest explanations (“they’re just stealing all our IP”), then the United States will never grasp the importance of building up process knowledge. And it will fail to gain urgency to fix its technological deficiencies."

Breakneck

"Young people soured on politics and politicians, and I can’t say I blamed them. Washington had become an elitist, self-absorbed city that cared little for the values of everyday Americans who believe deeply in the work ethic and in family, freedom, and faith in God. Behind those majestic monuments in the backrooms of Congress, self-serving politicians were busily spending and borrowing America ever deeper into debt. The country was at a critical juncture and I felt that, perhaps, I could make a contribution."

A Time for Reflection

"Churchill recognized the value of accountability and opposed efforts to add layers of advisers who lacked actual responsibility. “Lots of people can make good plans for winning the war if they have not got to carry them out,” Churchill pointedly noted when he addressed a Joint Session of Congress in 1943. “I dare say if I had not been in a responsible position I should have made a lot of excellent plans.”"

Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill

Themes

Timeline Thinking Across DecadesUnintended Consequences of InterventionSecret Messages for Urgent PrioritiesDebt Leverage to Dissolve Native Land HoldingsAgrarian Republic as Expansion DoctrineDouble-Man the MissionPreemption Rights Before Permanent SettlementPractical Visionary's ParadoxConstitutional Framing as Political ShieldCabinet Collaboration on Critical MessagesScience as Diplomatic Camouflage for EmpireConfidential Letters in Partisan CrossfireCommerce Before Empire PipelineEngage with the Expected, Win with the SurprisingSnowmobile Synthesis from Unrelated PartsPromote the Practitioners, Remove the ResistersShape the Market Before the Fight BeginsFingerspitzengefühl Through Deliberate ApprenticeshipImplicit Communication Beats Explicit by Orders of MagnitudeGarden Design Over Seed SelectionEinheit Outweighs Weapons CountOrientation Is the Schwerpunkt, Not SpeedTwenty-Eight Years to Install Toyota's SystemIf You Can Be Sand-Tabled, You Have No StrategyAsymmetric Fast Transients Beat Superior ForceSurvival on Your Own Terms as Strategic North StarClosed Systems Always Run DownReconnaissance Pull Over Central PlanningCost Reduction as Daily Operating DisciplineMission Contract Replaces MicromanagementFog Grows Inside the Slower OrganizationBe the Customer, LiterallySchwerpunkt Is a Focusing Concept, Not a GoalBad News Is the Only Useful IntelligencePerot: Obscene Demands Until They Stop Saying NoBuffett: Insurance Float as a Super Margin AccountHuizenga: Close in the Stench Until They Say YesSteal the Playbook, Then Outrun the AuthorLuck Acknowledged Then Ruthlessly ExploitedJoy in the Chase Not the PrizeHold Your Equity Until It Compounds Past Nine FiguresThick Skin Inherited or Forged by FireConsolidate Fragmented Industries at Blitzkrieg SpeedNobody Got Rich Watching from the StandsHigh-Growth Industry as the Only On-RampInsurance Float as Empire FoundationKerkorian: Sell Before the Peak, Never Pick the Bone CleanPolitical Access as Wealth Multiplier Not Wealth CreatorKeep the Back Door Open on Every BetFrugality as Permanent Competitive MoatWalton: Spy on Every Competitor Then Outwork Them AllRockefeller: Silent Desk, Then Swivel-Chair KnockoutBridges to Nowhere Become SomewhereFactory Floor Innovation Beats Lab BreakthroughsTolerate Low Profits to Cultivate Deep WorkforceMaking Money Is the Core CompetenceEngineering State vs. Lawyerly SocietySue the Bastards Becomes the BastardSanctions Ignite Domestic SubstitutionScaling Beats Inventing: Climb Your Own LadderOpen the Door, Then Climb Past Your TeacherSmartphone War Peace DividendsEvery Factory Closure Is a Permanent Brain DrainProximity Collapses Coordination to HoursCompletionism: Never Cede a Rung of the LadderConservative Marxists and Reaganite CommunistsRotate Officials, Incentivize Vanity ProjectsProcess Knowledge Lives in People, Not BlueprintsTrillion-Dollar Regulatory ThunderboltsOutsider Aggression as Market EntryTake the Pay Cut, Take the Risk, Take the FloorSell Too Early, Never Go BrokeConviction Without CompromiseBonuses Locked as Skin in the GameSchumpeter's Prophecy as Battle CryAll Capital Locked Inside the ShipInflation Punishes the Poor FirstAthens Warning for Comfortable DemocraciesInstill Faith Others Can't See in ThemselvesControls as Volcanic PressureCrisis as Finest Hour OpportunityNever Surrender AbsolutismMany Ideas Generate Few Good OnesWords as Weapons Before BulletsIntense Simplicities From ComplexitySelf-Deprecating Humor as DisarmamentDemocracy Despite Its FlawsFighting Nations Rise AgainSimplify Self Into SymbolMemorized Speech as Spontaneous PerformanceShort Words Over Long OnesAccountability Over Advisory Layers