DoubleQuotes, DQs in the Wild, DQs @pmarca style

[ by Charles Cameron — first post in a series, with brief intro to series on top ]

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Okay, a three-post series coming up, of which this is post one. To help you navigate:

  • This post reports a conversation between Adam Elkus, Marc Andreessen (briefly) and Daniel Griffin about “@pmarca style” DoubleQuotes
  • DoubleQuotes — origins discusses the seeds of my own DoubleQuotes practice in the form of a visualization game from 1994
  • DQs in the Wild and DQs @pmarca style offers links to a number of examples of “prior art” relating to all of the above.
  • Some readers may be interested in all three, which would delight me — for myself, they’re an attempt to corral a dispersed set of matching ideas, mostly for the record.

    **

    So here’s the conversation, as far as I managed to track it. It opens with Adam quoting a paragraph from Jean-Marie Guéhenno‘s The Problem with Coalition Airstrikes in Syria, which he finds paradoxical, followed by his comment to that effect:

    Author says there is no military solution, advocates one immediately afterwards http://t.co/i13ZELN3qC pic.twitter.com/aiMmAax0J2

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    this is a nice example of a @pmarca-style double quote spotted in wild.

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    given that war isn't an end in and of itself, the "no military solution" mantra is bizarre. As long as you are fighting you believe that….

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    ,,,,,you can use violence (kill people or threaten to kill people) to achieve a desired political end.

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    hence the paradox of author using the military to convince parties in conflict that there is no military solution to conflict.

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    @Aelkus This kind of thing is such the triumph of hope over experience. !

    — Marc Andreessen (@pmarca) October 7, 2015

    @pmarca One day I hoped I could find a nice natural example of the "do x!" "don't do x!" people you often tweet about, and tonight I got it

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    @pmarca "there is no military solution!" "we'll bomb them to show them there is no military solution!"

    — Adam Elkus (@Aelkus) October 7, 2015

    @Aelkus these always remind me of @hipbonegamer's posts on @zenpundit – looking back they were referred to as DoubleQuotes back to 2010.

    — Daniel Griffin (@danielsgriffin) October 7, 2015

    @Aelkus @hipbonegamer @zenpundit You've prob. seen them, but – earliest I could find & w/ explanation of their use: http://t.co/MlJpD1Kq1t

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