Gina: Psychologists are the ones who weren't smart enough to be psychics.
Thursday, February 29, 2024
Psychologists and psychics
The virtuousness of blatant misandry
Media and the commercial lee shore
1) Lost advertising revenue - Advertising moved to the internet away from legacy media (TV, Radio, Newspapers and News magazines). Internet advertising can be more finely targeted, more quickly adjusted, and performance more accurately measured.2) Press release journalism - Once revenues started disappearing, Mainstream Media (MSM) had to make content creation much cheaper. They have done so primarily by increasing the proportion of Opinion content and decreased Reporting content. And for reporting, they now overwhelmingly rely on press releases from advocates, agencies, and interested parties instead of doing investigative reporting and independent reporting. There is no more "speaking truth to power", there is mostly just "speaking for those in power."3) Urban monoculture - From the 1950s-1980s, journalists were from all classes, levels of education attainment, walks of life, backgrounds, and parts of the country. Not just from those places in the past, but still reporting from those places. Now, the preponderance of MSM journalists are in the deep urban areas of a small handful of very large cities characterized by high density, high inequality, high crime, mono-political cultures (Progressive Democrats), high education attainment, middle class and above backgrounds, singular ideological affiliation, etc. Journalists are reporting about a country they neither see nor experience. Readers are being asked to consume content that is irrelevant and unreflective of their lives.4) Reduced quality - Mainstream media is slower and more inaccurate than the alternatives. With any breaking story, there is a better than even chance that you can find the story at all, find it quicker, and it more accurately reported than if you rely on The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, or MSNBC. More than that, the patterns of error and omission by the MSM are also more and more transparent.
5) Collapsed trust - Worse and more unreliable reporting, less accurate reporting, more biased reporting, and more quickly exposed errors in reporting in combination reduce trust. Both trust in the product and trust in the brand. Reduced trust further erodes reader or viewership. Reducing advertising rates. Reducing financial viability. Distrust of MSM becomes its own contributor to the downfall of MSM.6) Reportorial Bias - While this gets a lot more attention in many of the opinion pieces, and is a real issue, I am not certain that it is as contributive to the downfall as some make it out to be. The bias is real and is important but I think the above factors are even more critical.
History
Replica of the Batavia longboat at Geraldton WA. After the Batavia was wrecked off the Houtman Abrolhos Islands in June 1629, expedition leader Fransisco Pelsaert and a reported 47 others sailed 3000km in the ship's longboat to the colony of Batavia in search of help. Incredible. pic.twitter.com/ZNX4RIamF2
— Julian Humphrys (@JulesHumphrys) February 1, 2024
An Insight
Shifting power back to the people means taking it away from the political class and their puppets in the press https://t.co/ZKAGnAd9Zb
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 10, 2024
I see wonderful things
This is actually amazing—imagine telling the average American worker in 1924 that in 2024 it’ll only take about seventy hours of work to buy a ticket for this https://t.co/L0uMRQwNZw
— Chris Freiman (@cafreiman) January 16, 2024
Offbeat Humor
If the experts think that misinformation is a bigger problem than war, then a way bigger problem than misinformation is that the experts are fucking idiots. https://t.co/USmbnxhh4m
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) January 11, 2024
Data Talks
DC: 274 homicides, 3,470 robberies, 1,092 burglaries, 6,829 motor vehicle thefts, 1,407 assaults with a dangerous weapon, and 13,349 other instances of theft.
— Abigail Anthony (@abigailandwords) January 10, 2024
In 2023, DC's total violent crime increased by 39%, and property crime increased by 24%.@NRO https://t.co/19oyJJNFzL
Data Talks
"America’s carbon emissions peaked in 2005... Since then, the economy has kept growing, but climate pollution has slowly fallen. Last year, America emitted as much carbon as it did in 1991, when the economy was roughly a quarter of its current size." 👀 https://t.co/jPJUYw0tcp pic.twitter.com/jh8GLgABXf
— Scott Lincicome (@scottlincicome) January 10, 2024
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
The MSM cocoon
I can't get past this line: "Radio is essentially dead aside from NPR." Talk radio is thriving. 8 in 10 Americans listen to the radio. But because the vast majority of talk radio is conservative and its audience is working class, it simply does not exist to leftist journalists. https://t.co/io9nBGpSAa
— Batya Ungar-Sargon (@bungarsargon) January 25, 2024
Radio is essentially dead aside from NPR.
History
Currently in Singapore. Hotel is opposite the entrance to the underground HQ used by Gen Percival during his disastrous defence in 1942. It's now open to the public and the very realistic recreations include this one of Percival and staff discussing the deteriorating situation. pic.twitter.com/bwNZ5Z5ZVT
— Julian Humphrys (@JulesHumphrys) January 11, 2024
An Insight
If gender dysphoria is simply an inborn medical condition, then why has its incidence increased exponentially in recent years, and why is it concentrated among teenage girls in particular? pic.twitter.com/jhIUCWSZBZ
— Kevin Bass PhD MS (@kevinnbass) January 10, 2024
I see wonderful things
The sun setting illuminating the clouds on a mountaintop and it makes it look like a wildfirepic.twitter.com/Q7IKZNshCi
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 11, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Boeing CEO Assures Nervous Fliers That All 737 Aircraft Are Built To The Highest Diversity Standards https://t.co/8X4G2Sc9bw pic.twitter.com/svOCpAEfjP
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) January 11, 2024
Data Talks
I knew the figure would be low for STEM, but didn’t know 28%. https://t.co/aByxLawnB8
— Justin Tiehen (@jttiehen) January 10, 2024
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
History
Map shows the 17 largest cities in Europe as of 1600 AD. Source: https://t.co/tlqrqxdsU5 pic.twitter.com/FpPWYIZLqQ
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) January 11, 2024
An Insight
My heuristic, first one to ad hominem is losing on the facts https://t.co/P2Q2HFL0Ul
— HFL (@1stoptireshop) January 24, 2024
An Insight
A few years ago it would have been game over for anyone prominent to acknowledge this
— Jeremy Kauffman 🦔 (@jeremykauffman) January 10, 2024
Musk isn't shifting the Overton window, he's smashing it with a bat pic.twitter.com/rOdlGMNc0d
I see wonderful things
Currently in Hobart, Tasmania where we came across this mighty steam crane, squatting like a giant iron dinosaur at Constitution Dock. Manufactured by Jessop and Appleby of Leicester, UK, it arrived down here in 1899. pic.twitter.com/dZznKCJXbF
— Julian Humphrys (@JulesHumphrys) January 18, 2024
Offbeat Humor
The lack of self-awareness is something to behold. https://t.co/5024eVD5rj
— ❄️ Freezing Ginger ☃️ (@mchastain81) January 11, 2024
High trust, high productivity and behavior-based affiliative residential choices.
It’s the not-so-secret secret: retail chains are doing away with these lanes, and many do not want to talk about it.In December, SFGATE.com reported that Target quietly removed self-checkouts in San Francisco, calling it “a trend in ‘defensive retailing’ that may soon spread across the city.”Other reports say Target, when it does allow self-checkout, is only doing so for customers with ten items or less. No more big carts full of items.Other chains, including Costco, have been dealing with the issue, saying that “shrink,” or the measure by which chains track retail theft, has increased in part due to the rollout of self-checkout.
You can’t enjoy high-trust conveniences in low-trust societies.
In economics, Gresham's law is a monetary principle stating that "bad money drives out good". For example, if there are two forms of commodity money in circulation, which are accepted by law as having similar face value, the more valuable commodity will gradually disappear from circulation.
Data Talks
A truly shocking stat in this @AlecMacGillis piece: 28% of American schoolchildren are "chronically absent," meaning they miss 10% of school days or more. More than one in four.https://t.co/yX0hc6L32K
— Jill Filipovic (@JillFilipovic) January 10, 2024
Motions - sun, water, wind, light
Admissionby A.R. AmmonsThe wind high along the headland,mosquitoes keep low: it'sgood to be out:schools of occurring whitecapscome into the bay,leap, and dive:gulls strolllong strides down the shore wind:every tree shudders utterance:motions-sun, water, wind, light—intersect, merge: here possiblyfrom the crest of the right momentone might break away from the final room.
Monday, February 26, 2024
History
e/acc - technologists can create far more growth than any single government or charity https://t.co/75AAYSAWkH
— Beff Jezos — e/acc ⏩ (@BasedBeffJezos) January 10, 2024
An Insight
Nearly three-quarters of tested psychological scales failed the test of measurement invariance needed for meaningful group comparisonshttps://t.co/nwGt08o1xP pic.twitter.com/4T0DOiTuB9
— Jelte Wicherts (@JelteWicherts) January 9, 2024
I see wonderful things
This is great: A compilation of some of the crazy handwork of sexual selection. pic.twitter.com/9ZPeoR3iqI
— Steve Stewart-Williams (@SteveStuWill) January 14, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Women-are-wonderful effect (among the most replicated findings in Psychology): 1 - Barbie movie soundbite: 0@stevestuwill sets the record straight—women are not universally hated, quite the contrary:https://t.co/yxyaMqziTe pic.twitter.com/oBzaVnWqsG
— Koenfucius 🔍 (@koenfucius) January 14, 2024
Data Talks
More regulation of dentistry doesn't improve dental outcomes, but it does raise prices. pic.twitter.com/OhmcKTJ6ec
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) January 9, 2024
Sunday, February 25, 2024
History
Here’s one of my favorite discoveries… Imagine you’re at a flea market in West Virginia and you see this chair, that nobody wants because it’s sort of impressively ugly. But something about it says buy this thing, because it’s just so unusual. So you buy it for a couple hundred… pic.twitter.com/NgTS7V5kf8
— The Civil Rights Lawyer (@johnbryanesq) January 10, 2024
An Insight
"fair" is a word that was invented so children and idiots had some way to participate in conversations.
— Scott Adams (@ScottAdamsSays) January 9, 2024
It isn't a useful word for policy, #DementiaHitler https://t.co/OZRujPiIZe
I see wonderful things
Elon Musk 🎙️
— Dr. Apurv (@MEAInd) January 10, 2024
" I'm head engineer and chief designer as well as CEO ( at SpaceX ), so I don't have to cave to some money guy. I encounter CEOs who don't know the details of their technology and that's ridiculous to me. ” @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/53QQzxSkXr
Offbeat Humor
I interpret this to mean the sex trafficking problem is bigger than we imagine and important Democrats are involved. https://t.co/O2St3SPi93
— Scott Adams (@ScottAdamsSays) January 10, 2024
Data Talks
Nearly three-quarters of tested psychological scales failed the test of measurement invariance needed for meaningful group comparisonshttps://t.co/nwGt08o1xP pic.twitter.com/4T0DOiTuB9
— Jelte Wicherts (@JelteWicherts) January 9, 2024
Saturday, February 24, 2024
History
If you thought the medieval diocese of Lincoln was big, spare a thought for the early modern diocese of Vilnius, which covered the whole shaded area (nearly the entire Grand Duchy of Lithuania - about half of present-day Lithuania, with the whole of Belarus and bits of Russia) pic.twitter.com/XuJAm1Ebf1
— Dr Francis Young (@DrFrancisYoung) January 10, 2024
An Insight
This article wasn't the place to go into it, but, we need to face a difficult truth in academia: Original thought—truly original, creative research ideas—are extremely rare now. Scholarship is mostly careerist incrementalism, the profession deserves sneers for it. https://t.co/rBJvVKMJaF
— Ian Bogost (@ibogost) January 7, 2024
Intellectual yet idiot. When fanatical beliefs override simple facts.
Maybe he is arguing that Russia did not defeat Germany alone.
Maybe he is arguing that because Hitler committed suicide (with Soviet troops knocking at the outskirts of Berlin) that Russia did not defeat Hitler.
Maybe he is making a distinction between Russia versus the then USSR (of which Russia was the primary component).
My post about Trump’s ignorant and stupid comment that “russia defeated Hitler” went viral. One thing that surprised me is how many brainwashed people still believe in this myth. No, it was not russia who defeated Hitler.1/ First, the Soviet Union included, not only russia, but another 14 countries. Ukraine alone lost over 8 million people in WW2. As a percentage of population, Belorussia lost 25% and Ukraine 16% of its population, while russia only 12%.2/ Second, just because the Soviet Union had the most causalities, doesn’t mean that they won the war. The reason Soviets had such large casualties is because they used people as cannon folder. Something russia is still doing today.3/ Third, the Red Army was poorly equipped and heavily relied on the US support. Through the lendlease, the US has provided over 400,000 trucks, 14,000 airplanes, 13,000 tanks, and more.4/ Forth, Nazis were defeated only after the second front was open. Nazis had to fight against the US, UK, and all their allies.So, it is plain stupid to attribute victory over Hitler to russia.
It’s a familiar split. When he makes claims like this, the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally.
I see wonderful things
Crazy truck driver carrying locomotive across river https://t.co/nvEJoQMiju via @FacebookGaming
— Charles Bayless (@CharlesBayless) January 11, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Cops are advocating on behalf of [… checks notes ….] the criminals, and in opposition of [… checks notes ….] the victims.
— Marina Medvin 🇺🇸 (@MarinaMedvin) January 10, 2024
Times sure have changed. Damn. pic.twitter.com/lgT6bXwuHe
From Beckers theory and evidence, racial discrimination in America is on life-support and it is Government and its race based discriminatory policies which is the life-support.
Becker’s work suggested that an incentive existed for nondiscriminating employers to hire black workers: they could increase profits by hiring black workers rather than whites. Since black workers were paid less than white workers in equilibrium, if enough nondiscriminating employers entered the market—to hire a relatively cheap source of labor—they could even eliminate the wage differential between races.Becker therefore thought that greater competition would act as a strong force in reducing labor-market discrimination.
Data Talks
A truly shocking stat in this @AlecMacGillis piece: 28% of American schoolchildren are "chronically absent," meaning they miss 10% of school days or more. More than one in four.https://t.co/yX0hc6L32K
— Jill Filipovic (@JillFilipovic) January 10, 2024
Friday, February 23, 2024
History
In 1970s, Archaeologists in Bulgaria stumbled upon a vast Copper Age necropolis from 5th Millennium BC, containing oldest golden artifacts ever discovered near city of Varna, Bulgaria.
— Archaeo - Histories (@archeohistories) January 9, 2024
Most people have heard of the great civilizations of Mesopotamia, Egypt and Indus Valley,… pic.twitter.com/ECxhfzF2T8
An Insight
Why is antisemitism so common at universities, but not at other American institutions?
— Jonathan Haidt (@JonHaidt) January 9, 2024
If you teach students academic theories that encourage them to hate groups and countries, you get students who can quickly learn to hate groups and countries. https://t.co/7439hgkYj6
I see wonderful things
The cartwheel courtship flight of the bald eagle. Bald eagles usually mate for life; their “divorce” rate is less than five percent.
— Steve Stewart-Williams (@SteveStuWill) January 13, 2024
Credit: Todd A Grayam Il pic.twitter.com/SvrEkPNNu4
History
Lawrence Durrell, Prospero's Cell (1945) pic.twitter.com/XIJBDpzvS2
— Durrell Society (@DurrellSociety) January 6, 2024
Offbeat Humor
Turtles physics challenge
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) January 10, 2024
[📹 Larissa Hernanlandia]pic.twitter.com/Hhbsq5NrNt
Data Talks
More regulation of dentistry doesn't improve dental outcomes, but it does raise prices. pic.twitter.com/OhmcKTJ6ec
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) January 9, 2024
Thursday, February 22, 2024
History
'The Wrestlers' is a masterpiece of Roman marble sculpture showing two naked combatants engaged in the ancient pankration wrestling contest. The upper wrestler straddles his opponent with a 'cross-body ride', holding his arm in a painful 'reverse arm bar'. Following a sequence of… pic.twitter.com/XtRhaOVgAA
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) August 7, 2023
An Insight
"The masses, in their capacity as consumers, ultimately determine everybody's revenues and wealth." - Ludwig von Mises
— An-Cap Quotes (@ancapquotes) January 9, 2024
I see wonderful things
The United States is vast country with a complex topography.
— Lafayette Lee (@Partisan_O) January 10, 2024
"Merciless terrain" would include both natural and man-made features: 12,383 miles of coastline and 3.5 million miles of rivers and streams; a 1,500-mile mountain range from Alabama to Maine, with broad valleys, low… https://t.co/E8g9dbeXxk pic.twitter.com/MhOQEOZORR
Expert knowledge is contingent and useful forecasting constrained by the interplay of complex systems
The government has become increasingly suspicious of major mergers over the past decade, under both political parties. The Justice Department under Donald Trump sued to prevent AT&T from buying Time Warner. The Federal Trade Commission under President Biden is continuing a case the Trump administration initiated against Meta, parent of Facebook, to force the firm to cough up Instagram and WhatsApp, which it swallowed during the Obama years. In January JetBlue Airways’ plans to merge with Spirit Airlines and Amazon’s plans to acquire iRobot were deterred under regulatory pressure.In April 2020, however, T-Mobile and Sprint managed to sneak past regulators, merging to reduce the number of major U.S. mobile networks from four to three.[snip]T-Mobile’s takeover of Sprint was controversial among analysts. “If this merger is not anticompetitive,” Eleanor Fox, a trade regulation and antitrust law professor at New York University, told reporters in 2020, “it is hard to know what is.” Yale economist and antitrust scholar Fiona Scott Morton delivered her verdict on the deal in a co-authored 2021 article: “The era of aggressive price competition in wireless is over.” The authors predicted that the wireless industry, whittled down to a big three, would “nestle into a cozy triopoly.”
The prediction proved wrong. Average monthly mobile subscription fees dropped sharply. In the three years before the merger, according to government price data, mobile charges declined in real terms by about 8%. In the three years following the merger, the real price decline has been nearly 12%.These trends were even more impressive given dramatically improving network performance. Before the merger, the top four U.S. carriers delivered data download speeds averaging about 26 megabits per second, nearly all via 3G or 4G. By early 2023, with 5G deployments spreading, Verizon and AT&T data flowed 24% to 39% faster, while T-Mobile was more than three times as fast as before. T-Mobile’s high-speed coverage had also expanded; half of its connections were via 5G by January 2023, against just 10% to 20% for its rivals.T-Mobile’s aggressive deployment of the Sprint spectrum rights it had purchased paid dividends in enhanced services for customers. It was also a boon for shareholders. As T-Mobile pulled market share from its rivals, its stock soared. Between 2018 and 2023, T-Mobile shares outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 50%.Further evidence that the merger of T-Mobile and Sprint was pro-competitive was seen with Verizon and AT&T share prices. From 2018 to 2023, Verizon and AT&T stock prices declined sharply, losing more than a third of their real value. The postmerger marketplace was a great victory for T-Mobile but a blow for its rivals. The cozy-cartel thesis collapsed.
Offbeat Humor
I really have no idea how The Babylon Bee can complete with this pic.twitter.com/5OSzp9IREs
— Joel Berry (@JoelWBerry) January 9, 2024
Data Talks
Such important (depressing) findings from @marinambgg :
— Anna Stansbury (@annastansbury) January 5, 2024
female TT economics professors started many fewer coauthored projects with men after MeToo.
(Strikingly: A bigger effect on women’s productivity than COVID was). pic.twitter.com/uQCc51nEQ6
Corporate suicide
Here's @GoogleAI stating it cannot create an image of Tiananmen Square because of complicated nuance.
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) February 21, 2024
Thankfully we have the actual image. Do you guys understand how important this AI issue is yet? pic.twitter.com/kHH9cdPQFO
Insane. Just a step away from Holocaust denial.
— AG (@AGHamilton29) February 22, 2024
What a disastrous product launch. https://t.co/z7rlGXgtdV
Strike 2 - catering to antisemites everywhere.
This is absurd. Hiding data isn’t going to lead to better conclusions. A search tool that filters results to ensure specific takeaways and narratives is completely useless in real discussions. https://t.co/ErmJlzVCkW
— AG (@AGHamilton29) February 21, 2024
Strike 3 - a rejection of Age of Enlightenment empiricism, scientific method, and epistemic curiosity and openness.
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
History
6 January 1663
— Diary of Samuel Pepys (@DPepys31853) January 6, 2024
So to my brother’s, where Creed and I and my wife dined with Tom, and after dinner to the Duke’s house, and there saw “Twelfth Night” acted well, though it be but a silly play, and not related at all to the name or day.
Thence Mr. Battersby the apothecary, his…
An Insight
Credentialism at this late date, after the failure of so much of the expert class on covid policy, is simply obtuse.
— Jay Bhattacharya (@DrJBhattacharya) January 10, 2024
I see wonderful things
Suckermouth catfish survive in oxygen-depleted environments with a highly vascularized intestinal tract to absorb air. They enter a hibernation-like state, called aestivation, to conserve energy and moisture, waiting for favorable conditions to return pic.twitter.com/bHbBdNAGcH
— Wolf of X (@tradingMaxiSL) January 9, 2024
The tyranny of the mediocre matched with a surplus of stupid
The tyranny of the mediocre (almost always related to government functions and project implementation)A surplus of stupid (split 2:1 between criticisms of the products of universities and criticisms of government policy ideas.)
Data Talks
So pleased to see my paper out in the BU Law Review!
— Megan Stevenson (@MeganTStevenson) January 2, 2024
This paper surveys 50+ years of randomized control trials in criminal justice and shows that almost no interventions have lasting benefit -- and the ones that do don't replicate in other settings. 1/ https://t.co/xIvIcCseGL pic.twitter.com/Duj4ybbbS6
The ultra-citified are islands of insanity in an America that is still a sea of reasonableness.
In recent weeks, you probably have seen articles about a Rasmussen poll (actually conducted last September) showing that elites do not want the rest of us to eat meat, cook with gas, engage in “unnecessary air travel,” and so on. Before piling onto this poll with my own commentary, I first wanted to look at the way it was conducted. Polls, like documentaries, can easily be used to construct a narrative rather than provide objective information.
The most comprehensive description I can find is a report by the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, which commissioned the poll. The first thing I noted was the criteria for selecting the “elite.”The Elites are defined as those having a postgraduate degree, a household income of more than $150,000 annually, and living in a zip code with more than 10,000 people per square mile. Approximately 1% of the total U.S. population meets these criteria.The requirement of having a postgraduate degree and a household income more than $150,000 strikes me as not very strict. Google tells me that fourteen percent of Americans have a postgraduate degree, and twenty percent of U.S. households meet the income threshold. Even if there were zero correlation between income and education, almost 3 percent of the population would meet the criteria. But because the correlation between income and education is pretty high, a conservative estimate is that between 5 and 10 percent of the population is “elite” by those standards.I can infer that the requirement to be “living in a zip code with more than 10,000 people per square mile” is doing a significant amount of work here in whittling the “elite” down to one percent. This is confirmed by checking out various zip codes with which I am familiar. My oldest daughter lives in a zip code in tony Newton, Massachusetts, where many households meet the elite income and education thresholds. But the population density there is less than half of what is needed to qualify for the Rasmussen survey. The same is true for many of the affluent zip codes near me.In practice, a population density of more than 10,000 per square mile almost assures that high-rise buildings will supply a big share of housing. You are pretty much selecting for large northern cities, like New York, Chicago, and Boston. And you are selecting against some of the most affluent suburbs near those cities. Wealthy residents of large homes in Beverly Hills, California or Potomac, Maryland are going to be excluded from the sample.In the United States, the typical person living in a zip code with at least 10,000 people per square mile is poor. I would bet that a large fraction of the zip codes with that much density are slums.When you think of the elite, you think of the most affluent, highly-educated Americans. You think of what Charles Murray says is represented by Belmont. Residents of Belmont are not in the Rasmussen poll because Belmont fails to meet the density requirement.Instead, what this sample is picking is people who are indeed well above average in terms income and education, but whose most distinguishing characteristic is choosing to live in crowded sections of older cities. The best label I can come up for this demographic is Ultra-Citified Upper Middle Class, or ultra-citified for short.
But if you were to study more broadly the affluent and highly-educated portion of the American public, you would find a diverse set of values and beliefs. It is not just “the deplorables” living in small towns that are alienated by the ultra-citified. It is not just the working-class urban neighborhoods that Murray symbolizes with Fishtown. The ultra-citified also alienate much of Belmont.The ultra-citified are islands of insanity in an America that is still a sea of reasonableness. At a national level, the ultra-citified are destined to lose most of the political battles.