Secretby Wang WeiNo. It is not enough to despise the world.It is not enough to live one's life as thoughRiches and power were nothings. They are not.But to grasp the world, to grasp and feel it growGreat in one's grasp is likewise not enough.The secret is to grasp it, and let it go.
Friday, June 30, 2023
Secret by Wang Wei
NPR and the structural racism of ghosts
History
You will never be as bad ass as Princess Anne during a kidnap attempt. pic.twitter.com/Z8NsXgJlJC
— Andrew Cusack (@cusackandrew) May 9, 2023
An Insight
Chile was on the verge of creating the most far left constitution of any country on gender, sex, environmental rights, indigenous carve-outs. Working class voters not only rejected that proposal but voted this way in the follow up election over a constitutional convention https://t.co/d0O4ZkTOcJ
— Lee Fang (@lhfang) May 9, 2023
I see wonderful things
Cloud iridescence is a colorful optical phenomenon that occurs in a cloud & appears in the general proximity of the Sun or Moon. This one was spotted over Ribeirao Claro, Brazil
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 11, 2023
[read more: https://t.co/QtWyxuvy4s]
[source: https://t.co/zR7Jqc0uqg]pic.twitter.com/SIwzrSfynr
Data Talks
Differences in muscle strength between men and women are significant. pic.twitter.com/OmYkJxZo9X
— i/o (@monitoringbias) May 11, 2023
Competence displacement
3. The politicization of the work environment. Let's begin by distinguishing between policies enforcing equal opportunity, pay, standards and accountability, policies required to fulfill the legal promises embedded in the nation's social contract, and politicization, which demands allegiance and declarations of loyalty to political ideologies that have nothing to do with the work being done or the standards of accountability necessary to the operation of the complex institution or enterprise.The problem with politicization is that it is 1) intrinsically inauthentic and 2) it substitutes the ideologically pure for the competent. Rigid, top-down hierarchies (including not just Communist regimes but corporations and institutions) demand expressions of fealty (the equivalent of loyalty oaths) and compliance to ideological demands (check the right boxes of party indoctrination, "self-criticism," "struggle sessions," etc.).The correct verbiage and ideological enthusiasm become the basis of advancement rather than accountability to standards of competence. The competent are thus replaced with the politically savvy. Since competence is no longer being selected for, it's replaced by what is being selected for, political compliance.It doesn't matter what flavor of ideological purity holds sway--conservative, progressive, communist or religious--all fatally erode competence by selecting for ideological compliance. Everyone knows the enthusiasm is inauthentic and only for show, but artifice and inauthenticity are perfectly adequate for the politicization taskmasters.4. The competent must cover for the incompetent. As the competent tire of the artifice and make-work and quit, the remaining competent must work harder to keep everything glued together. Their commitment to high standards and accountability are their undoing, as the slack-masters and incompetent either don't care ("I'm just here to qualify for my pension") or they've mastered the processes of masking their incompetence, often by blaming the competent or the innocent for their own failings.This additional workload crushes the remaining competent who then burn out and quit, go on disability or opt out, changing their lifestyle to get by on far less income, work, responsibility and far less exposure to the toxic work environments created by depersonalization, politicization and the elevation of the incompetent.5. As the competent leadership leaves, the incompetent takes the reins, blind to their own incompetence. It all looked so easy when the competent were at the helm, but reality is a cruel taskmaster, and all the excuses that worked as an underling wear thin once the incompetent are in leadership roles.By this terminal stage, the competent have been driven out, quit or burned out. There's only slack-masters and incompetent left, and the toxic work environment has been institutionalized, so no competent individual will even bother applying, much less take a job doomed to burnout and failure.This is why systems are breaking down before our eyes and why the breakdowns will spread with alarming rapidity due the tightly bound structure of complex systems.
Thursday, June 29, 2023
History
Completely blown away by this 4th cent BCE greave found in Bulgaria in 2007 assuming it and associated finds are old news to military history types but worth seeing again. 1/ https://t.co/pNUyOQN5Eh pic.twitter.com/KA49queQAj
— Liv Mariah Yarrow (pronounced, 'leave') (@profyarrow) May 9, 2023
An Insight
I'm so old that I remember when Belt and Road demonstrated that China was unstoppable. https://t.co/jKrtcAzsPq
— Megan McArdle (@asymmetricinfo) May 9, 2023
I see wonderful things
Well this got my heart pounding at 7 am while quietly looking for Willow Tits.
— Richard Broughton 🇺🇦 (@woodlandbirder) May 8, 2023
Four European Bison got spooked by something and came stampeding through the forest right past me.
No fences, no familiarity with people, these are the real deal: wild, skittish & fast! And awesome! pic.twitter.com/TiEtz5LBuQ
I see wonderful things
TSUTAYA Bookstore in Japan. pic.twitter.com/8qy0UhgsY4
— World Of History (@UmarBzv) May 10, 2023
If you don't control for confounds and if there is no effect size, is it science at all?
Living near green spaces could add 2.5 years to your life, new research finds
When news editors are more interested in ideological and commercial interests than in reporting the news
These stories are not connected, but they are put together, I suspect, to intensify concern about long-term global warming, which, to me — living where the air quality index is 270 at the moment — feels like a failure to take the smoke problem seriously. It's often hot in the summer in the south! This smoke is something I have never seen in my life. It's actively unhealthy for millions of Americans. After staying home for years hiding from a virus, I am now hiding from the air. On Twitter, I'm seeing conspiracy theories. The mainstream media treating this problem as a phenomenon on the level of 100° temperatures in Texas in the summer is going to make some of us paranoid.
Data Talks
The Censorship Industrial Complex mapped out by @mtaibbi & team shows who is/was behind promoting approved narratives and enforcing censorship.
— TexasLindsay™ (@TexasLindsay_) May 10, 2023
The money & power of these people/orgs gave them the ability to “own the internet” until Twitter broke free. pic.twitter.com/QQMXME9kDS
Wednesday, June 28, 2023
Really? The Liberty Bell?
France has probably produced the most reprehensible coterie of public intellectuals that any country has ever managed
Jordan Peterson: Marxism killed at least a hundred million people in the 20th century and there's still apologists. One in five social scientists identifies as a Marxist. It's like really? Really? That's really where we're going to take this? After the bloody 20th century we're going to say, well that wasn't real communism or something foolish like that even though we had multiple examples of exactly what happens when those doctrines are let loose in the world? So what happened in the 1960s, in the late 1960s as far as I can tell, this happened mostly in France which has probably produced the most reprehensible coterie of public intellectuals that any country has ever managed. In the late 1960s when all the student activists had decided that the marxist revolution wasn't going to occur in the Western world and had finally also realized that apologizing for the Soviet system was just not going to fly anymore given the tens of millions of bodies that had stacked up, they performed what I would call a philosophical sleight of hand and transformed the class war into an identity politics war and that became extraordinarily popular, mostly transmitted through people like Jacques Derrida who became an absolute darling of the Yale English department and had his pernicious doctrine spread throughout North America. Partly as a consequence of his invasion of Yale and what happened with the postmodernists is they kept on peddling their murderous breed of political doctrine under a new guise and resentful people all over the world fell for it and I don't consider that acceptable. You know, one of the things I've learned, for example, I teach my students in my second year now the class about what happened in the Soviet Union in the Gulag Archipelago and I use Solzhenitsyn as an exemplar. Alexander Solzhenitsyn as an exemplar of existential psychology because I think he's actually the wisest of the existential psychologists even though he was primarily a historian and a literary figure. Well, most of the students don't even know what happened in the Soviet Union but why is that exactly? And the reason for that is that radical leftist ideologue intellectuals in the West have never properly apologized for the role they played in that in the absolute murderous of the 20th century so students don't even know about it.
Jordan Peterson: Some of you may know that I participated in a debate on free speech, a so-called debate on free speech that the University of Toronto hosted. It turned into a forum and and whatever that is, but it's certainly not a debate. But one of the things I did when I was talking to the university administration was to suggest how they might deal with the possibility of protesters and so I said, well, that's easy I know how you can have absolutely zero protesters. Have it in the morning they won't get out of bed till ten. So we had it at nine o'clock in the morning and there was one MPP Member of Parliament who showed up to hand out some pamphlets. Not a single protester. Oh it's like if you want a controversial speaker on campus just have it at 7:00 in the morning. You won't get a protester within 50 yards of it because they'll still be sleeping off last night's pot and alcohol induced hangover.
Protectionism is always in tandem with rent-seeking and regulatory power hoarding
Covid-19 was man-madeCovid-19 leaked from a labRussia Collusion was never a real thingESG won't make a material difference to climate
The year long baby formula shortage was always caused by the FDA
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has finally determined what's to blame for America's recent shortage of baby formula.The FDA.More specifically, it's the FDA's unnecessary and protectionist rules that effectively ban foreign-made baby formula from being imported into the United States. On Wednesday, the agency announced plans to tweak those rules so foreign formula manufacturers can permanently import their goods into the U.S., giving American consumers greater choice in the marketplace and ensuring more robust supply chains."The need to diversify and strengthen the U.S. infant formula supply is more important than ever," FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said in a statement. "Ensuring that the youngest and most vulnerable individuals have access to safe and nutritious formula products is a top priority for the FDA."That might be true now, but it clearly hasn't been the case in the past. As Reason has detailed throughout the recent crisis, the FDA's priorities have been protecting the domestic formula industry (and the dairy industry, which provides key inputs for baby formula) from foreign competition. As a result, it's nearly impossible to find foreign-made baby formula in the U.S., even though formula manufacturers based in England, the Netherlands, and Germany are some of the biggest suppliers of baby formula to the rest of the world.
When the Abbott Nutrition plant in Michigan was forced to close temporarily due to an FDA investigation into possible contamination, it created a supply shock that left store shelves empty and parents scrambling to find formula. Because of the FDA's protectionist rules (and high tariffs levied on foreign-made formula), markets could not adapt quickly to the shortage here in America—instead, we got political stunts like the White House's "Operation Fly Formula" that accomplished little.In testimony to Congress, FDA officials admitted to botching the response to the contamination at the Abbott plant. But the real culprit of the recent shortage was a deeper and more pervasive one. No matter what nationalists like Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) might suggest, closing off the country to international trade is not a recipe for resilience. The baby formula crisis demonstrated that it is quite the opposite.So it's good to see the FDA admit those mistakes and crack open the door to allowing foreign formula into the U.S. on a permanent basis.
Unfortunately, the list of policy changes the FDA announced on Wednesday mostly amounts to providing technical assistance to foreign firms that want to sell formula here. That is, offering help in navigating the complex approval process, rather than sweeping aside those regulations entirely. If a formula maker has passed muster under E.U. regulations, that should be good enough for the FDA.There's also the matter of tariffs on imported formula, which are so high that they effectively make any imported formula uncompetitive in the American market. Why would a foreign manufacturer like Holle or HiPP go through the complicated FDA approval process (even after the announced changes) if it knows in advance that its goods won't be able to compete on a level playing field in America?
Portlandia meets Kafka
History
US Marine Eugene Sledge is on Okinawa, observing the reaction to announcement of Victory in Europe: 'Considering our own peril and misery, no one cared much. '“So what” was typical of the remarks I heard around me. Nazi Germany might as well have been on the moon.' pic.twitter.com/u7IMXv1UCV
— Second World War tweets from 1945 (@RealTimeWWII) May 9, 2023
I see wonderful things
Daisugi is a 14th century Japanese forestry technique that allows growing and harvesting perfect tall trees from the upper portions of existing trees leaving the base and root structure of the “mother tree” intact.
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) May 9, 2023
📸IG iszkt2g pic.twitter.com/vFvvgPYkXR
Data Talks
America’s ‘Atlas Shrugged’ Moment Has Already Arrived, New IRS Data Show | Jon Miltimore https://t.co/xXJvHK2qjT via @feeonline
— Charles Bayless (@CharlesBayless) May 10, 2023
AQI to Cigarettes Calculator
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
The clerisy is the breeding ground of Change Merchants. Fear has to be created in order to drive regulatory change in order to sustain the clerisy.
Whether an academic, a journalist, a financial analyst, or a software developer, a member of this Virtual class makes his living—and, indeed, establishes his social and economic value—by manipulating, categorizing, and interpreting symbolic information and narrative. “Manipulate” is an important verb here, and not merely in the sense of deviousness. Such an individual’s job is to take existing information and change it into new forms, present it in new ways, or use it to tell new stories. This is what I am attempting to do as a writer in shaping this article, for example.Members of this class therefore cannot produce anything without change. And they cannot sell what they’re producing unless it offers something at least somewhat new and different. Indeed, change is literally what they sell, in a sense, and they have a material incentive to push for it, since the faster the times are a-changin’ in their field, or in society, the more market opportunity exists for their products and services. They are, fundamentally, merchants of change.This is not a new observation. As the writer Kevin Phillips noted in Mediacracy in 1975:Change does not threaten the affluent intelligentsia of the Post-Industrial Society the way it threatened the landowners and industrialists of the New Deal. On the contrary, change is as essential to the knowledge sector as inventory turnover is to a merchant or manufacturer. Change keeps up demand for the product (research, news, theory, and technology). Post-Industrialism, a knowledge elite, and accelerated social change appear to go hand in hand.What has shifted since 1975 is that the proportion of would-be intellectuals and other Change Merchants in society has grown vastly larger as our manufacturing sector has declined and we’ve steered a greater and greater share of young people into postsecondary education. We face an ever greater surplus of “knowledge elites,” who form a growing portion of our ever more postindustrial economy; therefore, ever more intra-class competition rages as these elites attempt to sell unique theoretical “products” in disruptive new ways. The result is a vastly elevated number of suppliers of social change. And that supply creates its own demand.The most vibrant example of this dynamic today is academia. In recent years, many have lamented the infiltration of political activism into the ivory tower, allegedly once devoted purely to the pursuit of truth. But the whole structure of academia is almost perfectly designed to incentivize activism. To advance in or merely survive the competition of their crowded fields, academics must constantly strive to produce something—anything—new and seemingly innovative. It’s “publish or perish.” In other words, academia creates its own demand for continual disruptive change. And activism maximizes opportunities for such profitable disruption. After all, academia is a “marketplace of ideas,” and sellers in a marketplace will naturally advertise to stimulate demand. Some naive academics may have hitherto sought only to understand the world, but the whole point of academia is to sell the need for academics to change it. Activism is the inevitable strategic business innovation of the academic market.Today, almost every sector of the postindustrial economy operates with a similar incentive structure. Fast culture is good business for the same reason as is fast fashion. Just as promoting hedonism and conspicuous consumption can stoke demand, so a strong incentive exists to promote a whole suite of values that encourage sustained and faster change. Values that scramble sensibilities, obliterate old borders, uproot ties that bind, eliminate the limits of old obligations, pry open and plunder distinct and exclusive communities and cultures; or that discover new rights, or temporarily establish fashionable new moral norms that suddenly compel conformity; or that launch grand moral crusades—all create new demand for services that otherwise wouldn’t exist. “Progress” is profitable.By contrast, the prospect of deaccelerated change—or, worse, the notion offered by conservative traditionalists that there exist permanent truths, a fixed human nature, or inherited ways of life that have already provided best-fit solutions to intractable human challenges—is, in a real sense, an existential threat. Like the shark who must keep swimming constantly in order to breathe, the Change Merchant finds that stability means death.
Anthropogenic Global WarmingPublic Health a la Covid-19Income InequalitySocial Justice
Systemic racism
Decarbonization
Defunding the police
Vision Zero
Critical Race Theory
Recycling
DEIESG
Etc.
History
This is a good point, and brief thread which applies far beyond Canada - people seem to fail to recall how crazy people were during prior mass movements. https://t.co/OdeUuaZmKO
— David Manheim - bsky:@davidmanheim.alter.org.il (@davidmanheim) May 9, 2023
An Insight
The most harm of all is done when power is in the hands of people who are absolutely persuaded of the purity of their instincts-- and the purity of their intentions. - Milton Friedman
— Cerebral Wisdom (@CerebralWisdom) May 8, 2023
I see wonderful things
Tumbleweeds start out as tiny seedlings; by summer the plant has a round shape. They grow flowers and fruits. By fall they dry and detach from their roots, so they spread their seeds
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 9, 2023
[source: https://t.co/XLKA9YjF8U]
[video: https://t.co/JqAMLmJ4nx]pic.twitter.com/2kurUZu1vp
Data Talks
Behold, Twitter! I have produced the *inflation-adjusted* Ozimek line, which accounts for the substantial automobile inflation since his original tweet.
— Alan Cole (@AlanMCole) May 5, 2023
The figure is now $48,737. @ModeledBehavior https://t.co/JWvRl7Z4lh pic.twitter.com/G9OBGsbJy2
Monday, June 26, 2023
Marchetti Constant, just another God of the Copybook Headings
We don’t realize it, but the shape of our cities—from how big they are to what services they have—is mainly driven by one thing: transport technologies.1. MarchettiThe size of cities is determined by transportation technologies, whether it’s Ancient Rome, Medieval Paris, Industrial London, turn-of-the-century Chicago, or Highway Atlanta.People live within 30 min of their work. This is the Marchetti Constant.For millennia, most cities were limited in size because people moved by foot. Even big cities like Ancient Rome or Medieval Paris didn’t grow beyond 3 km in diameter. Indeed, since people walk at a speed of about 5 km/h, and they are only willing to walk up to 30 min to commute, they were only willing to walk for ~3 km.Then, in the early 1800s, London (orange) built the first urban railway. Suddenly, you could live much farther, close to a station, take the train, and in 30 min reach your work. The city grew accordingly. But not uniformly.
Cars make all the difference. As they have a speed of 6 to 7 times greater than a pedestrian, they expand daily connected space 6 or 7 times in linear terms, or about 50 times in area.—Marchetti, Anthropological Invariants in Travel Behavior.
Since 1970, the number of US workers roughly doubled, increasing from 77 million to more than 150 million. But over the same period, the number of transit commuters increased by only about 1 million. Just 5 percent of workers now get to work by bus or train nationwide, compared with almost 9 percent a half century ago. Most people are driving instead.
And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world beginsWhen all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn,The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return!
History
Erich Schwam, died at 90 years old. In his Will, he left $2M+ to the French village of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon in thanks to the town for hiding and saving his family during WWII.
— Humans of Judaism (@HumansOfJudaism) May 8, 2023
Schwam arrived to the village with his parents in 1943. The family was saved by local residents who… pic.twitter.com/sH7tvfNEUB
An Insight
"Those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience."
— Mark W. (@DurhamWASP) May 8, 2023
C.S. Lewis pic.twitter.com/69rhuYRkrW
I see wonderful things
The elephant beetle typically ranges between 7 and 12 cm (2.75–4.75 in) in length, with the largest male specimen known measuring 13.7 cm
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 9, 2023
[read more: https://t.co/xVoGGdO3Hb]
[📷 https://t.co/3lP5NLsF7V] pic.twitter.com/uZMBdb1mPT
Offbeat Humor
The greatest autist in history was the English mathematician Charles Babbage. He once sent a letter to Alfred Tennyson telling him that his poetry was insufficiently accurate with regards to current population growth trends
— Swann Marcus (@SwannMarcus89) May 7, 2023
A true icon. pic.twitter.com/8bCqfayTR0
Data Talks
NEW Trust in Media 2023 Poll:
— YouGov America (@YouGovAmerica) May 8, 2023
Americans are sharply divided along partisan lines on how much they trust the news reported by national media organizations.https://t.co/5VTrkTr0MU pic.twitter.com/a7heKK5fGt
Sunday, June 25, 2023
History
An ethereal London skyline sketched into this 13th-century manuscript of Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of Britain.https://t.co/nqe4F3OmNW
— Calum Cockburn (@CCockburn2) May 8, 2023
(@BLMedieval Royal MS 13 A III, f. 14r) pic.twitter.com/7iDueXbv3y
An Insight
When politics are used to allocate resources, the resources all end up being allocated to politics. - P.J. O'Rourke
— Cerebral Wisdom (@CerebralWisdom) May 7, 2023
I see wonderful things
Using its strong back legs, the basilisk lizard, aka the Jesus Christ lizard, pushes down so fast and so hard with its feet that it never sinks further than a few inches below the surface of the water
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) May 9, 2023
[BBC Earth: https://t.co/CJcPVZnG9n]pic.twitter.com/4J5CNvfMJy
Offbeat humor
I'm a professor of Latin. My pronouns are 𝘪𝘴, 𝘦𝘪𝘶𝘴, 𝘦𝘪, 𝘦𝘶𝘮, 𝘦𝘰, and I expect my students and colleagues to memorize them and use correctly. https://t.co/KINxWNSIuc
— Jake 🇺🇸 (@omni_american) May 8, 2023
Data Talks
San Francisco is experiencing its biggest commercial real estate crisis. 31% vacancy across-the-board and some buildings are 80%. It is not pretty. pic.twitter.com/7BQ5pgmcEh
— Justin Hart (@justin_hart) May 8, 2023
The Classical Liberal is inherently humble, accepting the limitations of man
Take the issue of whether a nation should have an industrial policy, which is defined as a strategic effort to develop specific parts of a national economy, or manufacturing in general. A country may decide it wants to, say, manufacture cars, rather than let the market send price signals about what its citizens should be doing.When I hear such plans, I’m taken aback by the faith it puts in intellectuals and politicians. At most, I think the smartest human beings might be capable of being small cogs in vast machines that no one can understand or control. I trust that the guy who runs a single car factory, or the logistics manager of a major hotel chain, might know what he’s doing in his limited domain. I am, in contrast, inherently suspicious of those who think they have answers to questions like “What kinds of jobs should most people have?” or “Which goods should we manufacture at home instead of buying from China?” If you believe that you have 20 extra IQ points on proponents of industrial policy, but it would take a superhuman AI to even have the possibility of doing central planning well, is that arrogance or humility? Sounds like arrogance relative to fellow humans, but humility in the sense of understanding your limitations.Markets take into account the information necessary to allocate goods and resources in efficient ways. Through the price system and individuals making decisions that they’re directly responsible for, they provide answers to an endless array of questions that no central planner can even begin to consider and weigh in their entirety.Is your nation any good at making cars? Are the people culturally or temperamentally suited for that kind of work? Would forcing them to manufacture their own cars make them better off than just doing whatever produces the most value and then buying cars from other nations? Are you sure, from all the goods and labor it takes to produce a car, the market can’t figure out a better way to create wealth or make technological breakthroughs? Can the supply chains for each product that goes into making a car be put together at a reasonable cost? What are the second and third order effects of distributing resources toward what are, based on the choices of those who could risk their own money, inefficient uses?Many conservatives who support industrial policy seem to see economic efficiency as no more than a secondary concern. They somehow think manufacturing jobs are better for people getting married, forming families, and instilling virtue. As someone with a background in the social sciences, I find the idea that one can not only plan an economy, but also predict the cultural impacts of an economic policy to be absurd. That project is way beyond any tools that we have. Just because in previous decades the US had better manufacturing jobs and higher rates of family formation does not mean one can recreate through trade policy the culture of Eisenhower’s America. This is pure cargo cultism.
Orestes Pursued by the Furies, 1862 by William-Adolphe Bouguereau (French, 1825–1905)
Saturday, June 24, 2023
But there is always a market for the authoritarian statist view. Regrettably.
Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson have written a long, eloquent book arguing that technological progress is a decidedly mixed bag. They believe that the power of the state can and should be used to select the best of the goodies from the bag. The state, they argue, can do a better job than the market of selecting technologies and making investments to implement them.Mr. Acemoglu is a prolific economist and a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize; his MIT colleague Mr. Johnson is an economist and professor of management. In “Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity” they claim that the billions of daily decisions by you and me—to venture on a new purchase or a new job or a new idea—do not “automatically” turn out optimally for ourselves or society. In particular, poor workers are not always helped by new technology. The invisible hand of human creativity and innovation, in the authors’ analysis, requires the wise guidance of the state.This is a perspective many voters increasingly agree with—and politicians from Elizabeth Warren to Marco Rubio. We are children, bad children (viewed from the right) or sad children (viewed from the left). Bad or sad, as children we need to be taken in hand. Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson warmly admire the U.S. Progressive Movement of the late 19th century as a model for their statism: experts taking child-citizens in hand.The strange history of ‘vitalism’ in America, technocracy on the rise, Henry Threadgill’s musical odyssey and more.The authors begin with the questionable assertion that the most prevalent attitude toward technology today is a heedless optimism. “Every day,” they write, “we hear . . . that we are heading relentlessly toward a better world, thanks to unprecedented advances in technology.” Their chapters then skip briskly through history—from the agricultural revolution of the neolithic era, to the industrial revolution of the 19th century, to the Western postwar economic expansion of the 20th century—seeking to show how at each turn new innovations tended to empower certain sections of society at the expense of others. The “power” that concerns them, in other words, is private power.Since the 1920s, economists from John Maynard Keynes to Paul Samuelson to Joseph Stiglitz have been claiming, with increasing self-assurance though with surprisingly little evidence beyond the blackboard, that (1) private arrangements work poorly, (2) the state knows better, and (3) we therefore need more state. Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson have long believed in this anti-liberal syllogism. Statism recommends a growing Leviathan, as Mr. Acemoglu argued equally eloquently in “Why Nations Fail,” a 2012 book with James Robinson.We need, in other words, the legislation currently being pushed by left and right to try again the policies of antitrust, trade protection, minimum wage and, above all, subsidy for certain technologies. Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson are especially eager to regulate digital technologies such as artificial intelligence. “Technology should be steered in a direction that best uses a workforce’s skills,” they write, “and education should . . . adapt to new skill requirements.” How the administrators of the Economic Development Administration at the Department of Commerce would know the new direction to steer, or the new skills required, remains a sacred mystery.Choosing a path for a society and its economy is not the only role of Leviathan; distributing economic justice is equally important. “Government subsidies for developing more socially beneficial technologies,” the authors declare, “are one of the most powerful means of redirecting technology in a market economy.” Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson regard the private economy as an inequality machine.In former times, they write, “shared benefits appeared only when landowning and religious elites were not dominant enough to impose their vision and extract all the surplus from new technologies.” Today we need the state to use its powers “to induce the private sector to move away from excessive automation and surveillance, and toward more worker-friendly technologies.” Fear of surveillance is a major theme of the book; therefore “antitrust should be considered as a complementary tool to the more fundamental aim of redirecting technology away from automation, surveillance, data collection, and digital advertising.”“Power and Progress” puts forward a new statist agenda and argues against a foolish reliance on individual discovery and free entry into jobs and markets. Well, so what? What’s wrong with their case for a new Leviathan, so long as it is advised by certain economists from MIT?
Identities and category errors
Do you remember the homosexual?It’s been a while, hasn’t it? He was, for a period, a key figure in the conversation about gay rights. He was Will in “Will And Grace,” or Keith in “Six Feet Under,” or Cam in “Modern Family” — a normie-enough dude randomly distributed across the human population and country. Once invisible and closeted, the AIDS epidemic exposed him without mercy in every state in the country. With this unexpected visibility, and in the wake of hundreds of thousands of young corpses, the survivors built a movement that won every gay and lesbian the right to be free from discrimination and to marry and serve openly — and proudly — in the military.It was the most speedily successful civil rights story in memory. Its case for equality was simple and clear: including us in existing institutions needn’t change anything in heterosexual life. “Live and let live” in equality and dignity was the idea. And the most powerful force behind this success was the emergence of so many ordinary gays and lesbians — of all races, religions, backgrounds, classes, and politics — who told their own story. America discovered what I had discovered the first time I went into a gay bar: these people were not the stereotypes I was told about. They were not some strange, alien tribe. They were just like every other human, part of our families and communities; and we cared about each other.What would happen if and when we won the battle was always an open question. The question of transgender rights — associated with but very different from gay rights — remained unresolved. But in the new climate of acceptance, transgender people also became increasingly visible and accepted, and they too won a stunning victory in the Supreme Court. The Bostock decision in June 2020 gave those who identified as the opposite sex full civil rights protection. Yes, there were still skirmishes over cakes. But with equal rights, and growing toleration, it seemed as if we’d achieved a settlement that would allow us all — straight, gay, and trans — a chance to get on with our lives in freedom.And now? Back in culture war hell.If you read the MSM, you’ll be told this war is back because the GOP has, for cynical reasons, become an even more unhinged hate-machine, now dedicated once again to “targeting the freedom and dignity of queer people,” as one NYT columnist writes today. You will, in fact, almost never see a news story that isn’t premised on this idea. And it’s obviously true that some on the right have never really accepted gay equality and have jumped at a new opening to undo gay integration and dignity — and the rawness of some of the homophobia and transphobia out there right now is palpable. The resurrection of bathroom bills and the move to curtail the rights of trans adults are repulsive and dumb.But when you examine the other issues at stake — public schools teaching the concepts of queer and gender theory to kindergartners on up, sex changes for children before puberty, the housing of biological males with women in prisons and rape shelters, and biological males competing with women in sports — you realize we are far beyond what the gay rights movement once stood for. It’s these initiatives from the far left that are new; and the backlash is quite obviously a reaction to the capture of the gay rights movement by queer social justice activists.
It’s these initiatives from the far left that are new; and the backlash is quite obviously a reaction to the capture of the gay rights movement by queer social justice activists.
History
By showcasing every documented battle in human history, this map emphasizes the importance of the European project.
— Xavi Ruiz (@xruiztru) May 9, 2023
Happy #EuropeDay 🇪🇺 pic.twitter.com/DTF8NWEBUV
An Insight
Sober perseverance is more effective than enthusiastic emotions, which are all too capable of being transferred, with little difficulty, to something different each day. - Vaclav Havel
— Cerebral Wisdom (@CerebralWisdom) May 7, 2023