Code And Council

"Bold ideas. Fast takes. Counsel for your Council that compounds."

Code and Council is a weekly podcast where two synthetic hosts — Jerry and Rachel — unravel the world’s most consequential ideas with rigor, and historical depth. Each episode weaves together landmark interviews, archival research, and expert commentary to examine how power, technology, and human behavior collide across time. From Cold War grand strategy to the rise of neural networks, from investor psychology to the birth of artificial intelligence, Code and Council traces the patterns beneath the headlines. Why did expert systems collapse while connectionism thrived? How did a 1950 policy memo quietly launch the military-industrial era? What does Charles Munger’s worldview reveal about cognition, risk, and systems thinking? This isn’t a podcast about hot takes — it’s about long arcs. Using synthetic narration, Code and Council builds from first principles, linking past and present, theory and application, philosophy and infrastructure. If you're curious about the ideas that build institutions, shape technologies, and define futures, this is your show. Intelligent but accessible, grounded yet uncanny — Code and Council is where strategic history meets machine learning, and where thought itself becomes terrain. codeandcouncil.substack.com

  1. 19 JAN

    Code and Council Presents: Infrastructure, Speculation, and the Railroad

    In this episode of Code and Council, we look at the nineteenth-century railroad buildout as the first time the United States tried to build infrastructure on a national scale. Using Empire Express by David Haward Bain as our primary source, we trace how an idea turned into a system—how belief became policy, policy became financing, and financing created momentum that was difficult to stop. Railroads weren’t just a transportation project. They were an early experiment in combining public support, private capital, and speculative expectations into a single national undertaking. The episode follows the railroad from its earliest advocates, through congressional land grants and financial speculation, into the labor camps, mountain tunnels, and “Hell on Wheels” towns that absorbed the human cost of building at speed. It ends at the Golden Spike, examining how ceremony and memory simplified a complicated process and fixed the story of the railroad around its outcome rather than its methods. This isn’t a celebration or a takedown. It’s an attempt to understand the structure that made the railroad possible—and the patterns it introduced. Many of the dynamics that first appeared here would return in later infrastructure projects and sector-wide bubbles, long after the rails were finished. If you’re interested in how large systems get built, how speculation attaches itself to infrastructure, and how early choices shape long-term outcomes, this story is worth revisiting. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit codeandcouncil.substack.com

    1h 12m
  2. 5 JAN

    Code and Council Presents: Soft Belief, Hard Power — Alex Karp and Palantir

    For decades, Silicon Valley convinced itself that neutrality was possible. That building consumer products while avoiding the hardest public problems was a moral stance rather than a business choice. That the state was obsolete, belief was naïve, and technology would inevitably bend the world toward progress without anyone having to take responsibility for outcomes. In this episode, we work through The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West by Alex Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska—and take their argument seriously. We examine how belief eroded in elite technology culture, why institutions became optimized to avoid responsibility rather than achieve results, and how software and artificial intelligence have collapsed the distance between engineering decisions and real-world power. Along the way, we look at: * Why fear of misuse has become an excuse for inaction * How Palantir’s work with defense and law enforcement exposes the moral asymmetry in modern technology debates * Why consumer tech crowded out public capability * What “soft belief” actually means—and why it matters * Why hard power has returned, whether we like it or not This is not an episode about slogans or ideology. It is about capacity. About responsibility. About whether the people most capable of building the systems that now shape the world are willing to accept the burden of governing them. Because neutrality is no longer neutral.And standing aside is still a choice . This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit codeandcouncil.substack.com

    1h 4m
  3. 22/12/2025

    Code and Council Presents:Bell Labs, Claude Shannon, and the Architecture of Modern Life

    Modern life runs on invisible systems: networks, signals, standards, and abstractions so deeply embedded we rarely stop to notice them. This episode of Code and Council traces the origins of those systems to Bell Telephone Laboratories and to a small group of scientists and engineers who quietly rewrote the rules of communication, computation, and coordination in the twentieth century.Drawing on Jon Gertner’s The Idea Factory, we examine how Bell Labs operated not as a startup or a skunkworks, but as an institutional engine of innovation—one sustained by monopoly economics, long time horizons, and a belief that basic research was a form of national infrastructure. From wartime radar and the invention of the transistor to the standardization of global communications, Bell Labs reveals how modern technology was shaped by councils, committees, and systems thinking rather than heroic lone geniuses.At the center of the story is Claude Shannon, explored through Jimmy Soni and Rob Goodman’s Mind at Play. Shannon’s work transformed information itself into something measurable and engineer-able, severing it from meaning and emotion. At the same time, his playful, contrarian intellect—juggling machines, maze-solving mice, and unicycles in the hallways of Bell Labs—embodied a deeper truth: that serious ideas often emerge from play, curiosity, and intellectual freedom.This episode is not a celebration of a lost golden age. It is an inquiry into architecture—how institutions decide what gets built, which problems matter, and how knowledge becomes power. Bell Labs was more than a laboratory. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit codeandcouncil.substack.com

    59 min
  4. From Builders to Lawyers: How America Traded Competence for Compliance

    04/11/2025

    From Builders to Lawyers: How America Traded Competence for Compliance

    For a century, the United States defined progress through construction. Its engineers built dams, highways, rockets, and an economy that remade the world. Then, beginning in the 1960s, the nation turned inward. Law replaced design, rights replaced capacity, and moral authority displaced material ambition. While America perfected the art of regulation, China perfected the art of execution — transforming itself, in a single generation, into the world’s dominant engineering civilization. This episode examines the long arc of that inversion: how the builder’s republic became a lawyerly one, how China’s technocracy filled the vacuum, and what this symmetry reveals about the limits of both. It is not a story of decline or triumph, but of two civilizations exchanging virtues and vulnerabilities until each became the other’s reflection. Acknowledgment:This essay could not exist without the work of Christopher Caldwell and Dan Wang.Caldwell’s The Age of Entitlement charts the moral and institutional transformation of postwar America, while Wang’s Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future captures the scale and logic of China’s technocratic ascent. Their ideas form the foundation of this analysis. Readers are encouraged to study their books directly; this work stands in gratitude to them both. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit codeandcouncil.substack.com

    42 min
  5. 27/10/2025

    “Operating Systems: The Inner Logic of Great Investors”

    Operating Systems is a long-form audio essay examining how the greatest investors think, decide, and act under uncertainty. This episode draws directly from four foundational texts that shaped modern investment thought: * Market Wizards by Jack Schwager * Principles by Ray Dalio * The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham * The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America, edited by Lawrence Cunningham Together, these works chart the evolution of rational investing—from the psychology of the trader, to the systemization of the decision-maker, to the moral philosophy of the value investor. The podcast explores what drives them, what disciplines sustain them, and how their approaches converge into a unified theory of decision-making under uncertainty. We acknowledge with full gratitude and intellectual debt the source material that made this project possible. These texts do not simply inform this episode; they define its boundaries. Every insight presented here is an interpretation built upon the ideas, experiences, and writings of their authors. Our purpose is not to compete with their work, but to understand it, synthesize it, and pass forward the reasoning it contains. For those who study markets, philosophy, or the limits of human judgment, this is an inquiry into the machinery of thought itself—the systems, principles, and temperaments that separate speculation from discipline, and opinion from understanding. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit codeandcouncil.substack.com

    1h 11m

About

Code and Council is a weekly podcast where two synthetic hosts — Jerry and Rachel — unravel the world’s most consequential ideas with rigor, and historical depth. Each episode weaves together landmark interviews, archival research, and expert commentary to examine how power, technology, and human behavior collide across time. From Cold War grand strategy to the rise of neural networks, from investor psychology to the birth of artificial intelligence, Code and Council traces the patterns beneath the headlines. Why did expert systems collapse while connectionism thrived? How did a 1950 policy memo quietly launch the military-industrial era? What does Charles Munger’s worldview reveal about cognition, risk, and systems thinking? This isn’t a podcast about hot takes — it’s about long arcs. Using synthetic narration, Code and Council builds from first principles, linking past and present, theory and application, philosophy and infrastructure. If you're curious about the ideas that build institutions, shape technologies, and define futures, this is your show. Intelligent but accessible, grounded yet uncanny — Code and Council is where strategic history meets machine learning, and where thought itself becomes terrain. codeandcouncil.substack.com