Institutionalizing the Progress Movement

Updated: 2025.12.31 29D ago 2 sources
A recent year‑end letter from Roots of Progress shows a once‑small blog converting into a bona fide institute: sold‑out conferences with high‑profile tech and policy speakers, an expanding fellowship that places alumni into government and industry influence roles, and an education initiative with plans for a published manifesto‑book. These are observable markers of a movement moving from online argument to organizational power. — If small, idea‑focused communities successfully build conferences, fellowships, and training pipelines, they can systematically seed policy, staffing, and narratives across politics and industry—so tracking which movements do this matters for forecasting influence.

Sources

2025 in review
Jason Crawford 2025.12.31 100% relevant
Jason Crawford’s letter reports concrete metrics and events: a sold‑out Progress Conference (speakers: Sam Altman, Michael Kratsios), 74 fellows with documented policy impacts (e.g., drafting the Trump AI Action Plan, YIMBY policy wins), a signed MIT Press book deal, and 55k+ Substack subscribers.
The Techno-Humanist Manifesto, wrapup and publishing announcement
Jason Crawford 2025.12.29 95% relevant
The newsletter explicitly announces that Jason Crawford’s Techno‑Humanist Manifesto — a programmatic statement of a progress movement — is being revised into a book for MIT Press; this is the same pattern flagged by the existing idea about turning online progress communities into conferences, fellowships and institutional influence.
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