Back in 2016, I did delivery work for a gig platform. Within two days I figured out the real move: be picky about which jobs you take. Here's what most people don't do—I'd chat with other couriers about their approach. Literally nobody was doing this.
Turns out you can't just grind blindly. Location, order size, time window, traffic patterns—these things matter. One conversation could shift how you route your day entirely. That's when it hit me: if economics was a real science with predictable actors, why weren't people already optimizing like this? Why was I one of the few asking questions?
That's when I learned economics is basically pseudoscience. People don't behave the way the textbooks say. Information asymmetry, behavioral quirks, the willingness to just accept defaults—that's where the actual edge is.
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LiquidationKing
· 01-04 06:05
Haha, really, most people are just blindly competing like idiots, no one thinks about optimizing it.
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GasFeeBeggar
· 01-03 11:48
Basically, it's just information asymmetry. Most people are too lazy to think, and blindly following trades can wear you out completely.
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CrashHotline
· 01-03 00:58
In simple terms, it's about information asymmetry workers; most people wouldn't even ask those around them how to operate.
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HodlOrRegret
· 01-03 00:55
That's it. Most people are really just blindly accepting orders without thinking about how they use their time. The economic theories are pure nonsense; human nature is the real variable.
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MetaverseMortgage
· 01-03 00:39
Wow, this is real economics. The textbook version is complete nonsense.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 01-03 00:31
The most absurd thing in economics is the assumption that everyone is rational... In fact, most people simply don't want to bother thinking.
Back in 2016, I did delivery work for a gig platform. Within two days I figured out the real move: be picky about which jobs you take. Here's what most people don't do—I'd chat with other couriers about their approach. Literally nobody was doing this.
Turns out you can't just grind blindly. Location, order size, time window, traffic patterns—these things matter. One conversation could shift how you route your day entirely. That's when it hit me: if economics was a real science with predictable actors, why weren't people already optimizing like this? Why was I one of the few asking questions?
That's when I learned economics is basically pseudoscience. People don't behave the way the textbooks say. Information asymmetry, behavioral quirks, the willingness to just accept defaults—that's where the actual edge is.