 Good morning, John. Sometimes I worry a little bit about how central social media has become in my life, like you watch Bo Burnham's Inside and you think to yourself, well that doesn't all seem great. And then you look over at loneliness and isolation and mental health problems, and it does seem a little bit correlated, if not causative. And then over there, you have the erosion of shared truth and discourse, and it does seem like the radical decentralization of information sharing and gathering has played a part in that. But then like also I do like it and I am good at it and I've been doing it for a very long time and it is fun. On an average day, I'm really grateful to have the job that I have creating things on the internet. Basically what I'm saying is that I would hate to hate it because I do like it. Now there are things that I hate to hate but I should hate, like eating hamburgers. Like I hate to hate a hamburger because ultimately I do love them, but they are bad for pretty much everyone involved. And the question is, is the internet like a cow? And I don't think it is. I think that not having cows anymore, if it just happened, would probably be for the best. Whereas I think if the internet just vanished one day, that would be worse. Just what I've been thinking about, like I'm on Twitter, and there are times when Twitter does not make me happy. But there are also times when it does make me happy. So here are the choices that are generally presented to me. You can stay on Twitter or you can leave Twitter. I don't like that choice. I think there is a third choice, which is to use Twitter the way that you wish other people used it. And never don't do that. It's hard! It's hard, but it's possible. Since, you know, I don't know, like around January of this year, I have started to be able to use Twitter in a way that I actually quite enjoy. Just trying to make jokes, talk about things that I love, talk about my life a little bit, and maybe, maybe inspire and participate in discussion that is productive around things that are not as hot as the center of the sun. Which is hard, because it seems like either the culture or structure of Twitter does want to draw you into whatever the hottest thing is that day. Two days ago, Lindsey Graham tweeted that he would go to war for the values that Chick-fil-A stands for, which is a tweet that, like, couldn't be more well designed to create screaming, so much so that it becomes clear, upon reflection, that that's the goal! And I did! I began to compose a tweet about the absurdity of a U.S. senator proposing that he would go to war for a fast food restaurant during a global pandemic. And then I snapped back into my brain and I deleted it because this is the exact thing that Twitter is worst at. And the only thing that paying attention to a controversy like that does is lend power to the divisive politician who's trying to chip different parts of humanity into pieces so that he can create more engaged anger stands. I think it's very easy to look at any large, complicated system and notice only the problems and say, we should throw that away. But that's not what happens because usually, one, you can't. Like, it's not possible. But what it ignores is that the intellectually simple thing is to just, like, carve that out and say, ugh, that shouldn't exist. Whereas the complicated, hard thing that we're not going to have great answers to, it's going to take a long time, is to say, what actions make this better? Not how do we stop doing this, but how do we do it differently? Not how do I not eat hamburgers anymore? How do I make a hamburger without a cap? A massive scale, many to many communication is brand new. It did not exist when I was born. We are bad at it. Because we are new to it. I think it causes a lot of disruption and division and confusion and suffering. But problems don't get fixed by ignoring them. And I love the internet and I still believe in the promise of the internet, even if it is more delayed than I assumed that it would be. In short, I just think that that promise is something we should continue to think about and fight for. John, I'll see you on Tuesday. Speaking of thinking about the internet too much, I have written two novels that tell one story. The first one to me is a story within the frame of what the internet is like right now, whereas the second one is more about what the internet might be like in the future. And as of this week, they are both available in paperback, so if you've been biding your time, the prices are now right and they are available wherever books are sold.