The Dutch Investors

#77 | Lessons from history on things that never change | Same as Ever - Ep. 3

10 snips
Jan 21, 2026
Explore how the collapse can spark creativity, with history showing that great innovations often arise from desperate situations. Discover the risks of ideas growing too large, illustrated by tragic tales like Starbucks' fall. Delve into the contrast between rapid calamity and slow progress, using the Silicon Valley Bank crisis as a prime example. Uncover the powerful impact of seemingly minor events that reshaped the 20th century. Finally, learn the balance of optimism and pessimism in investing, backed by the wisdom of historical figures.
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ANECDOTE

Starbucks’ Growth Backlash

  • Starbucks expanded from 425 stores in 1994 to opening a store every four hours by 2007 and then suffered a major pullback.
  • The company closed 600 stores and its stock fell 73% when growth became the strategy, not a tactic.
ANECDOTE

When Sexual Selection Kills A Species

  • The Irish elk evolved enormous antlers that ultimately prevented survival.
  • A trait that boosts success can become an extinction driver when it grows beyond a convenient size.
INSIGHT

Stress Spurs Big Innovations

  • Stress and panic focus attention and force rapid, consequential change.
  • Many lasting reforms, like labor laws after the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, sprang from catastrophe, not comfort.
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