Democracy and algorithmic governance
Episode Summary
IQ, Institutions & Why Every Country Is Run Poorly Crémieux is a pseudonymous statistician and writer with a large following on Substack and X. He likes to take widely cited studies, reopen the data, and argue the conclusions don't always hold up. His readers include Elon Musk and JD Vance, and his work circulates widely in tech and policy circles. Timothy Allen sits down with Crémieux in Honduras, for a wide-ranging conversation about IQ, institutions, fertility, biotech, agglomeration economies, and why he thinks every country on Earth, even Singapore, is run poorly. The result is part interview, part real-time error-correction service: every casual claim Timothy makes gets gently audited against the data, and the answers are usually "harsher, less equal, and less comforting than people want them to be." In this conversation: Why complex problems get clearer with honest inquiry and why the answers are usually harsher than people want The IQ data nobody wants to talk about, and why most "special" groups aren't statistically special at all Why El Salvador transformed without the people changing and what that says about institutions over genetics Honduras as a case study in self-imposed poverty: severance taxes, FDI delays, and 80% informal employment What predicts socialist tendencies (and why champagne socialists are a statistical blip) Voice vs exit: why Switzerland and Dubai work, and why one-world government would be a "global Honduras" The privacy-biotech tradeoff: Florida's Sunshine Genetics Act, China's biobank race, and the data we owe the future The unsolved problem at the heart of every charter city: how do you generate the agglomeration effects of San Francisco? Enjoy the conversation. Timestamps (Audio version only, includes Timothy's episode introduction): 0:00:29 - Introduction to episode 0:07:26 - Start of conversation: ChatGPT, distilling a guest's worldview, and the macro view 0:09:38 - Cremieux's philosophy: honest inquiry, good data, and harsher answers 0:11:58 - The IQ question: simple models, predictive power, and conversations nobody wants to have 0:13:19 - "Most things are not special": Nigerian immigrants, group differences, and what falls apart under scrutiny 0:14:01 - The macro view of the human condition: heritability, institutions, and El Salvador before and after Bukele 0:16:34 - Evolutionary biology vs evolutionary psychology, and the limits of data 0:20:06 - Religion as social technology: the Catholic Church, cousin marriage, and the Hajnal line 0:24:48 - Jordan Peterson, abstraction, and why getting too wacky means losing substance 0:26:13 - Honduras governed like a socialist hellhole: severance taxes, informal employment, and the Washington Consensus 0:30:06 - Property rights, El Zonte, and the development problem in Latin America 0:31:30 - Why Singapore and Israel got it right when the rest of the third world didn't 0:32:41 - What predicts socialism: poor mental health, downward mobility, and resentment 0:35:55 - The champagne socialist deviation, and why hypocrisy isn't really the point 0:38:27 - Paul Ehrlich, neo-Malthusianism, and how India sterilised more people in one year than the Nazis did in twelve 0:40:09 - Some people are just correct: knowing better, the data, and the difference 0:42:01 - ChatGPT modelling competing polities, and the IQ correlations of political ideology 0:44:46 - Why libertarians lose: bad at marketing, bad at organising, and the few good rules worth following 0:47:55 - Switzerland, Dubai, and exit over voice: "voice is annoying" 0:51:13 - Democracy: not a fan, but currently necessary 0:52:22 - "Every country is run poorly,
