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

Code And Council

Business EN ↓ 17 episodes

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 me...

Author

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

Category

Business

Podcast website

codeandcouncil.substack.com

Latest episode

Jan 19, 2026

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Episodes

Code and Council Presents: Infrastructure, Speculation, and the Railroad 19.01.2026

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. Railro...

Code and Council Presents: Soft Belief, Hard Power — Alex Karp and Palantir 05.01.2026

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 throug...

Code and Council Presents:Bell Labs, Claude Shannon, and the Architecture of Modern Life 22.12.2025

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...

SpaceX — America’s Most Important Company 08.12.2025

This special long-form episode tells the story of SpaceX from its improbable origins in 2001 to the era of Starship, reusable boosters, global communications infrastructure, and geopolitically significant launch capability. It’s a documentary-style narrative built from firsthand accounts, interviews, technical histories, and the voices of the engineers who actually lived it. We trace the people, f...

ASML: Forty Years at the Edge of Physics 27.11.2025

This episode examines the engineering, organizational, and geopolitical history behind ASML’s development of extreme ultraviolet lithography. It traces the company’s evolution from its origins in Veldhoven to its position as the world’s sole supplier of EUV tools, and explains how collaborations with Carl Zeiss, Cymer, TSMC, Intel, and a global supplier network made the technology possible. The na...

The Precisionist: Morris Chang and the Making of the Modern World 10.11.2025

Morris Chang’s life is the story of modern Asia — and, in many ways, of modern civilization itself. Born amid the collapse of Republican China, educated in the industrial optimism of postwar America, and reborn in the laboratories of Taiwan, Chang carried the twentieth century’s trauma into the twenty-first century’s precision. The Precisionist traces his journey from the bomb shelters of Chongqin...

From Builders to Lawyers: How America Traded Competence for Compliance 04.11.2025

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 — transfo...

“Operating Systems: The Inner Logic of Great Investors” 27.10.2025

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...

“Credible Commitments: The Logic of Responsible Leadership” 20.10.2025

Leadership is often portrayed as instinct and charisma, but the real architecture of influence lies in structure, credibility, and foresight. Credible Commitments explores how game theory reshaped modern management — and how it can be used ethically to build trust rather than manipulate it. This episode draws from the foundational works Game Theory at Work by James D. Miller, Employee to Entrepren...

The Persuader’s Paradox: David Ogilvy and the Architecture of Influence 13.10.2025

From the genteel poverty of his Scottish youth to the polished boardrooms of Madison Avenue, Ogilvy built an empire on an ethical paradox: that the human mind could be influenced without being betrayed. This episode traces his journey from the kitchens of the Hôtel Majestic to the founding of Ogilvy & Mather, through his disciplined philosophy of advertising and his resistance to manipulation. Alo...

The Invisible Engineer: Edward Bernays 06.10.2025

Long before algorithms measured attention, Edward Bernays learned how to shape it. The nephew of Sigmund Freud and self-styled “counsel on public relations,” Bernays redefined democracy as a system of guided consent. From wartime propaganda to consumer capitalism, from bacon breakfasts to regime change, he built the invisible machinery that still governs what we believe and why. This episode trace...

Market Cycles and Middle-Class Strains 29.09.2025

We trace the story of American economic crises from the crash of 1929 to today’s inflationary pressures. Moving through the Great Depression, the postwar boom, stagflation of the 1970s, financial deregulation, the 2008 housing collapse, and the pandemic shock of 2020, we examines how each cycle reshaped the fortunes of the middle and lower middle class. We trace the wake of the 2008 crisis, and di...

Economic History: From Barter to Algorithms 22.09.2025

This narrative traces the full arc of economic and monetary history. It follows the evolution of exchange and production from Mesopotamian clay tablets and Greek silver coinage, through the banking houses of Renaissance Italy, the gold standard and industrial capitalism, the upheavals of the twentieth century, and into today’s age of financial globalization. The series concludes with reflections o...

The Prussian Warning: Clausewitz on Institutional Decay 15.09.2025

In October 1806, the Prussian army—heir to Frederick the Great's victories and Europe's model of military discipline—disintegrated in a single day of combat against Napoleon. Carl von Clausewitz, a young officer who experienced this catastrophe firsthand, spent the rest of his life analyzing how institutions that appear strongest often prove most brittle. This episode examines the Prussian state f...

Milton Friedman: Markets, Power, and the Price of Ideas 08.09.2025

This episode of Code and Council explores the life, thought, and legacy of Milton Friedman — from his controversial role in reshaping South American economies to his revolutionary theories of consumption, money, and inflation. We trace his biography, his battles with Keynesian orthodoxy, and his enduring influence on global policy. A deep dive into the economist whose ideas changed the way nations...

Washington Bullets: Latin America, 1950–2000 01.09.2025

A sweeping narrative of U.S. intervention in Latin America during the Cold War, from the 1954 Guatemalan coup to the dirty wars of Operation Condor. Through the stories of disappeared students, broken singers, and marching mothers, this episode traces how the template for regime change shaped fifty years of Latin American history. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with ot...

Green Gold: The Banana Empire—From Steamships to Supermarkets 25.08.2025

This Code and Council episode documentary traces the banana trade from its scrappy beginnings to the present day—an apolitical, deeply reported history of how a single crop transformed companies and countries. Part I follows the rise: Lorenzo Dow Baker’s first cargo, Andrew Preston’s Boston Fruit system, Minor C. Keith’s railways-for-land concessions, United Fruit’s Great White Fleet, and the riva...

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