
Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com All laws are local
27 snips
Feb 9, 2026 A reading about how long‑standing norms often turn out to be recent inventions. Stories range from primogeniture and colonialism to shifts in energy and fossil fuel power. Cultural and legal institutions are shown as mutable rather than eternal. Personal resilience and changing political dynamics illustrate how fast what feels fixed can change.
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Recording In An Empty London Flat
- Cory explains he's back in his old London flat with minimal possessions and an echoey office.
- He attributes the room's sound to hard surfaces and missing soft furnishings.
Family Visit And New Book Deal
- Cory visited Santa Cruz for his daughter Posie's 18th birthday and enjoyed the time with family.
- He also reports his publisher made a formal offer for his next book, likely publishable in 2027.
Eternal Rules Are Often Recent
- Longstanding social rules can become perceived as eternal even when recently invented.
- Piketty's primogeniture example shows widely held 'natural' norms often have specific historical causes.




