Author: Curt Doolittle

  • PRODUCTIVITY I haven’t written much on libertarianism lately. The business is in

    PRODUCTIVITY

    I haven’t written much on libertarianism lately. The business is in crunch mode. Its consuming.

    But I hope to put out a few screen shots of the software that don’t give away too much in the next few weeks. 😉

    I have written a bit. But mostly trying to test minor application of the ideas. Sketches.

    Unfortunately the scoundrels that I work with are a bad influence on my productivity.

    Like when i say i dont want anything to drink. And they buy an entire bottle of scotch from the bar. And then hand me a microphone. And start laughing because they know peer pressure will win out. 🙂

    (Btw: these four women at the next table are really drunk and they cant sing in the first place. 🙂

    Sigh …

    Its hopeless. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-13 19:12:00 UTC

  • KEEPING IT TOGETHER Karaoke. 2:00am. Upper middle class club. Well dressed. Grea

    KEEPING IT TOGETHER

    Karaoke. 2:00am. Upper middle class club. Well dressed. Great food. Small. Maybe 25 people. All if them pretty intoxicated

    You would never know that the 5’10” blonde dancing in the short, pristine white dress and perfect hair was …with..ahem.. the guy in the grey shirt and italian loafers in the men’s room ten minutes ago determining that the sink was exactly the right height.

    Awkward. :/

    Maybe its free now.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-13 18:52:00 UTC

  • I LOVE UKRAINE IT is what we used to be. Men happy as men. Women happy as women.

    I LOVE UKRAINE

    IT is what we used to be. Men happy as men. Women happy as women.

    You can help a woman on the street take a photo and she doesn’t assume you are a rapist.

    Life is. … Wonderful.

    We are all humans here.

    Struggle makes us compatriots.

    Luxury makes us enemies.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-12 19:40:00 UTC

  • LOVED THIS: THE LUXURY OF TREES How trees or lack of them correlates with urban

    LOVED THIS: THE LUXURY OF TREES

    How trees or lack of them correlates with urban poverty.

    Why? Trees are a commons. The poor don’t respect commons. We don’t invest in commons for the poor because they don’t respect them. We call this fact the twin problem of property rights and time preference. Some of us call it ‘discipline’ or ‘upbringing’ or ‘class’. But in the end, it’s the same thing: overbreeding children you can’t support is a short time preference, demonstration of lack of discipline and foresight, and a failure to respect the commons.

    http://persquaremile.com/2012/05/24/income-inequality-seen-from-space/


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-12 03:04:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    Hero treated like a villain


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-11 22:46:00 UTC

  • How Uneducated Are Americans? How Many People Skipped “intellectual Refinement” (no High School, No College And Beyond)?

    A MORE INTERESTING QUESTION THAN IT FIRST APPEARS. I”LL TRY TO DO IT JUSITC.

    1) Americans have the highest confidence despite middling education by comparison to other countries. (Google it.)

    2) Americans are disproportionately wealthy so our lower classes can express their ideas, and are more confident expressing those ideas.

    3) Our education system promotes common falsehoods in support of postmodern ideology, and our religious and traditional systems promote common falsehoods in support of aristocratic ideology (traditional american values).

    4) The Pareto principle applies to all human activity: about 1% of people think of everything, about 19% understand and distribute that knowledge, and the remaining 80% form a long chain of imitation of that 20%. The distribution of IQ over 105 largely reflects the Pareto Principle.  105 is the boundary for articulated reason and repair of machines.

    5) The evidence is that people reason much better over the past century.  Its just that more people, in a wider distribution, with a lower average, participate in public discourse — and our academics have adopted a new but equally fallacious, albeit secular, religion and are propagating that religion, which both encourages confidence and spreads falsehoods.  In response, the traditionalists retrench into their ideologies and so the din of irrationality continues to increase.

    6) Despite the increase in population and the dramatic increase in education, hard degrees have remained relatively constant since 1963 – (we have not increased the number of ‘smart’ people getting degrees that require ‘smarts’ since that time. See Louis Menand and his bibliography on this topic.)  Despite he dramatic change in our economy since the introduction of information technology and the decline of labor as an economic value, our education system still teaches using the model of the 1940’s and 1950’s – due largely to the competition over ideological control of education content combined with the resistance of teacher’s unions, and the transfer of spending on budgets from teachers salaries to administrative bureaucracy.

    Advice: Until you understand the failings of science, the limits of mathematics under complexity, the lack of maturity in our understanding of the calculus of measurement, the immaturity of our understanding of economics and statistics, and the extraordinary influence of our cognitive biases – particularly false consensus bias, and the patently false content of most political philosophy, especially Postmodern political philosophy (“liberalism”), you might want to consider that allegorical, moral, and historical arguments have survived evolutionary processes and have produce positive outcomes even if articulated in arational terms. The profundity of this problem is  what those of us who occupy ourselves with the solution to political problems struggle with.  And this is Hayek’s lesson in The Road to Serfdom as well as the warning given us by Popper, Kuhn and Taleb, and historians like Mokyr. Reason is a limited tool, because of the variation in human ability.

    The west is only beginning to understand what made it unique in world history, and it turns out that it’s not what we thought – and it might not even be very comforting – it’s just true anyway.

    7) Most political differences consist of differences in time preference and mating strategy.  As we evolve into individual economic units and the nuclear family becomes a minority, our different reproductive strategies – which determine our moral preferences and biases – are increasingly expressed in our political preferences, and social rhetoric.  We have lost the common interest that multi house republican democracy under majority rule assumes we possess.   Majority rule can solve the problem of selecting priorities for people with similar interests. Multi house majority rule can solve the problem of selecting priorities and negotiating compromises and trades between the social and economic classes.  But majority rule cannot solve the problem of selecting from competing interests, or even negotiating resolutions between competing interests.

    Our political system was designed to prevent legislation without wide support.  But it has devolved for the reasons I mention above. and there is no solution to it in our current political system. We have an agrarian system of government designed in the age of sail, using accounting methods with agrarian (monthly) periodicity, that requires nuclear families with common interests, and a people with homogenous cultural values.  

    But we no longer have homogenous values, we no longer have common interests, we no longer have nuclear families, we no longer have agrarian economies, we operate in an age of instant transfer of information, and our businesses are organized, conducted, and then decline, not over generations but over less than a decades.

    in context – people appear ‘dumber’ for these reasons. 🙂

    https://www.quora.com/How-uneducated-are-Americans-How-many-people-skipped-intellectual-refinement-no-high-school-no-college-and-beyond

  • AND REPRODUCTION (from a post I answered on Quora) “….Atheism is correlative w

    http://www.quora.com/permalink/BKTUIZixFATHEISM AND REPRODUCTION

    (from a post I answered on Quora)

    “….Atheism is correlative with lower reproduction in the upper classes, and CAUSAL with reproduction in the lower classes.”

    QUESTION:

    “Is atheism a threat to humanity due to its lower birth rates?”

    ANSWER: THE ANSWER IS MORE COMPLICATED THAN OTHER POSTERS SUGGEST.

    I’ll try to do it justice.

    The answer is yes, that it’s correlative. Empirically, yes in the aggregate atheists have fewer children. And yes, its partly causal.

    1) Reproduction is losing it’s economic utility as a guarantee of old age security.

    2) Consumer capitalism raises the cost of creating ‘middle class and working class children’ and so birth rates decline along with industrialization.

    3) Atheism is highly correlative with education, and education correlative with income, and income correlative with decreased reproduction. (Children are a net negative on career development because they are time consuming. Or conversely, careerism in two income household deprives both individuals of the time necessary for child rearing. )

    4) Prettier women have more children, married women have more children, women who stay at home have more children. Less attractive women have fewer children. Unmarried women have fewer children. Women who work have fewer children. This is all just data. We have put women into the work force and decreased their rate of breeding RELATIVE to the rates of breeding in other civilizations. (This was most evident in russian and japan, both of whom are facing serious long term economic problems because of it. You cannot easily have both the employment of women AND paid retirement and health care. At least, that’s what it looks like.)

    5) With the advent of redistribution, loss of male property rights, and child support and financial support, Women are “marrying the state”, or “marrying the state via child support”. Both of these do statistically decrease reproduction, as they also render the males economically not viable for other women. (That’s the data. Sorry if it’s unpleasant.)

    6) The lower classes are dramatically shifting out of monogamy into serial monogamy. Humans are naturally serially monogamous in tribal life. Monogamy is economically competitive, but not natural to man – we evolved to manage relationships that last on the order of four years – long enough for a child to walk with a migrating tribe. The moral prescription for monogamy, and therefor for higher reproduction rates associated with monogamy, was caused by (a) the agrarian mode of production and the family farming unit (b) the politically dangerous problem of single men unable to have access to sex – the source of most revolutions. Monogamy was imposed by religious leadership for these reasons – although we are still trying I think to link all that history together. It looks like it’s a natural evolution, not just the copying of an idea worldwide.

    CONCLUSION

    1) The strain on the rest of the planet’s biomass by our enormous population is pretty severe. It’s possible we’re more than twice the population that the planet can handle. We do not need more people. There are no pollution problems. There are few resource problems. There is a population problem.

    2) We have created an economic and political system of intergenerational redistribution that requires constant growth and constant new generations.

    3) Consumer capitalism seems to put a cap on uncontrolled population expansion.

    So it isn’t clear that we need to increase population. In fact, just the opposite. And we could do so, but our current system of redistribution is a system of dependencies that we can’t likely get out of without a political crisis.

    So the glass is half full (declining population) and half empty (we are dependent upon population growth that the earth cannot sustain, and which causes political infighting.).

    In these cases Atheism is correlative with lower reproduction in the upper classes, and CAUSAL with reproduction in the lower classes.

    I hope this makes sense.

    Curt Doolittle

    http://www.quora.com/Is-atheism-a-threat-to-humanity-due-to-its-lower-birth-rates/answer/Curt-Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2013-06-10 01:16:00 UTC

  • When Did The Capitalist Regime Under Which We Currently Live *begin*?

    INTERESTING QUESTION. I”LL TRY TO DO IT JUSTICE.

    The west has been more ‘capitalist’ since its inception 4500 years ago, because it’s been more individualistic, and it’s property rights have been more widely distributed and therefore power has been distributed and balanced for most of our history.   It’s also true that enfranchisement in those property rights has expanded and contracted along with prosperity. YOu had more under rome, and less under feudalism.  More under english common law, and less under european napoleonic law.  More in the 19th century and less today.

    ‘Capitalistic’ means that property rights are distributed.  ‘Socialistic’ means that property rights are concentrated in the state.  The concentration of large amounts of credit under a network of contracts is illogical and unnecessary under concentrated socialistic  systems that we associate with totalitarian governments.

    You could argue that the invention of Venetian accounting, followed by English and Dutch mercantilism is the origin of our modern political model, and that it was formalized into language by Smith, Hume, and the American Constitution.

    Most people, I think, would argue that Napoleon created the nation state and the concept of ‘total war’ and that the system of credit that developed in response to the Napoleonic wars was the origin of our capitalist state.

    Others would argue that the 20th century development of fiat money, fiat credit, the practice of regulating unemployment, and the state as the insurer of last resort was probably when we developed an institutional balance between capitalism, socialism and corporatism.

    Most modern states are ‘capitalistic’ in that they use consumer capitalism and individual property rights to run their economies.  Most modern states levy taxes and and redistribute those taxes under the social democratic thesis that we must have capitalism but we can abscond with a considerable amount of the profits people make, and treat those profits as common property, even if all property is held privately.  Most modern states subsidize key industries as a means of creating an internationally competitive product that gives the country an economic advantage – this is corporatism.

    When the socialist movements succeeded in Europe and Canada, they did not succeed in the USA – probably because we were the military and political center of western civilization in the post war period. Instead, the combination of the Vietnam war, the temporary economic rise of the proletariat due to the rest of the world’s economic collapse from the war, the increase in proletarian birth rates that gave us the 60’s and 70’s, the racial movement of the 60’s,  feminism because of birth control, and various other factors led to a fracturing of american society that continues to effect us to this day.  

    It had become apparent that socialism had failed in theory (incentives and calculation) and as the 70’s progressed we learned that the great society programs ambitions were also a failure, so socialism was a failure in practice. And finally in the 90’s we saw the collapse of world communism and the universal adoption of consumer capitalism.

    1) Starting in the 50’s progressives and liberals (socialists) began trying to develop a philosophical and political framework given that socialism was failing in theory, and because the american people were not ‘buying it’.  This system of philosophy was called ‘postmodernism’.  Postmodernism is an attempt to use the technique of monotheistic religious dogma to propagate falsehoods, that must be passionately treated as moral truths (equality, equality of outcome, relativity of morals except postmodern morals, relativity of cultures except western culture which is bad, and a dozen more.)  Postmodernism and postmodernists have been successful and has effectively become the state religion in america. This is because it both sells goods and services, as well as promotes concentration of power in the state.

    2) Staring in the 70’s conservatives and libertarians developed a series of strategies to combat socialism and postmodernism.  This included what we see today in think tanks, policies, and ideologies.  All of which were designed to combat the state.

    These ideas fell into the following groups:

    1) The most rigid was that the state would bankrupt capitalism, and destroy our traditional society if capitalists didn’t bankrupt the state first.  This meant effectively hiring the corporations and financial empires by granting them privileges and protecting them from taxation.  This approach has been successful – mostly, because Keynesian economic policy requires that the government use the financial sector to insert money into the economy, and the profit available to the financial sector provides them with the incentive to fight the state.

    2) The more practical approach was to promote libertarian policy solutions to social democratic problems, which would accomplish redistribution without empowering the state and expanding its bureaucracy.   This approach has been marginally successful. Most voucher systems or privatization in both Europe and America, were the result of these libertarian ideas.

    3) The ancient approach has been used too. The purpose of organized religion is largely to oppose the state. As the state has grown, the more traditional segments of the populace have turned increasingly fundamentalist as a means of opposing the state. For ancient reasons, it is not possible in america to interfere with religion.  And religions determine the limits of political power.  So religious fervor has increased as a means of opposing the state’s attack on the nuclear family and traditional roles for men and women – and therefore the status signals available to people in nuclear families.

    4) The marxists were extremely successful in promoting ideology instead of philosophy – ideology is a collection of statements for the purpose of obtaining power by appealing to emotions instead of reason.  (This is, again, a tactic taken from the monotheistic religions.)  The conservative and libertarian think tanks began promoting conservative and libertarian ideology, as well as launching news networks and talk radio shows as well as books and magazines.  Ideology and religion are more effective than reason in a population because we are, in total, when voting, expressing our moral feelings, not our rational understanding.

    THE RESULT

    Capitalist ideology (libertarian and aristocratic conservative) , and socialist ideology (postmodernism and democratic socialism) are opposing means of running a society and so we are constantly subjected to extremist arguments form both sized.  Meanwhile we vote our morals. And our morals are almost entirely a reflection of our reproductive strategy.  Since women have more in common in their reproductive strategy than do men, as the number of single women and single mothers increases, the vote continues to move to the socialistic (feminine) social model.  However, immigration and the minioritization of the white population are causing a consolidation of parties into racial and gender distributions that are fairly predictable.

    So most of it is noise.

    ON CAPITALISM

    It is not possible to have any means of production that is not capitalistic. Money and prices contain information and convey incentives that cannot be done in this level of complexity by other means.  However, it is also true that it is possible to expropriate the profits from individuals and redistribute them while preserving the capitalist system of information and incentives.

    Given that a population is small and heterogeneous enough, it appears that a combination of socialistic redistribution and capitalistic production is politically possible. However, heterogeneous societies resist redistribution and increase competition and friction in the state.

    For this reason we will likely continue to have friction here in America until the demographic system plays out with white minority status, and likely some serious conflict at that point.

    YOUR ANSWER

    The capitalistic system evolved over thousands of years and is one of the primary reasons why the west, despite being small, poor, and on the fringe, developed rapidly both in its ancient and modern periods.

    Today we are in less of a capitalistic system but capitalistic rhetoric is very high because of the minoritization of whites, and the opposition to the state. 

    Furthermore, regardless of rhetoric you will always live under a capitalistic system because it’s not possible to coordinate a complex division of knowledge and labor without capitalism.


    I hope this helps provide some clarity amidst the nonsense we are subject to every day.

    Curt Doolittle
    The Propertarian Institute
    Kiev

    https://www.quora.com/When-did-the-capitalist-regime-under-which-we-currently-live-*begin*

  • Which Articles Of The Universal Declaration Of Human Rights Are Negative Rights?

    1-2 Address who is included in these rights.

    3-20 Address negative rights. These rights prohibit everyone, including government, from violating the life, body, movement, association, speech,  and property of individuals in various ways.

    21-29 Address positive rights.These are ambitions that all governments are chartered with attempting to achieve.

    30 closes prohibiting exception.

    https://www.quora.com/Which-articles-of-the-Universal-Declaration-of-Human-Rights-are-negative-rights

  • When Did The Capitalist Regime Under Which We Currently Live *begin*?

    INTERESTING QUESTION. I”LL TRY TO DO IT JUSTICE.

    The west has been more ‘capitalist’ since its inception 4500 years ago, because it’s been more individualistic, and it’s property rights have been more widely distributed and therefore power has been distributed and balanced for most of our history.   It’s also true that enfranchisement in those property rights has expanded and contracted along with prosperity. YOu had more under rome, and less under feudalism.  More under english common law, and less under european napoleonic law.  More in the 19th century and less today.

    ‘Capitalistic’ means that property rights are distributed.  ‘Socialistic’ means that property rights are concentrated in the state.  The concentration of large amounts of credit under a network of contracts is illogical and unnecessary under concentrated socialistic  systems that we associate with totalitarian governments.

    You could argue that the invention of Venetian accounting, followed by English and Dutch mercantilism is the origin of our modern political model, and that it was formalized into language by Smith, Hume, and the American Constitution.

    Most people, I think, would argue that Napoleon created the nation state and the concept of ‘total war’ and that the system of credit that developed in response to the Napoleonic wars was the origin of our capitalist state.

    Others would argue that the 20th century development of fiat money, fiat credit, the practice of regulating unemployment, and the state as the insurer of last resort was probably when we developed an institutional balance between capitalism, socialism and corporatism.

    Most modern states are ‘capitalistic’ in that they use consumer capitalism and individual property rights to run their economies.  Most modern states levy taxes and and redistribute those taxes under the social democratic thesis that we must have capitalism but we can abscond with a considerable amount of the profits people make, and treat those profits as common property, even if all property is held privately.  Most modern states subsidize key industries as a means of creating an internationally competitive product that gives the country an economic advantage – this is corporatism.

    When the socialist movements succeeded in Europe and Canada, they did not succeed in the USA – probably because we were the military and political center of western civilization in the post war period. Instead, the combination of the Vietnam war, the temporary economic rise of the proletariat due to the rest of the world’s economic collapse from the war, the increase in proletarian birth rates that gave us the 60’s and 70’s, the racial movement of the 60’s,  feminism because of birth control, and various other factors led to a fracturing of american society that continues to effect us to this day.  

    It had become apparent that socialism had failed in theory (incentives and calculation) and as the 70’s progressed we learned that the great society programs ambitions were also a failure, so socialism was a failure in practice. And finally in the 90’s we saw the collapse of world communism and the universal adoption of consumer capitalism.

    1) Starting in the 50’s progressives and liberals (socialists) began trying to develop a philosophical and political framework given that socialism was failing in theory, and because the american people were not ‘buying it’.  This system of philosophy was called ‘postmodernism’.  Postmodernism is an attempt to use the technique of monotheistic religious dogma to propagate falsehoods, that must be passionately treated as moral truths (equality, equality of outcome, relativity of morals except postmodern morals, relativity of cultures except western culture which is bad, and a dozen more.)  Postmodernism and postmodernists have been successful and has effectively become the state religion in america. This is because it both sells goods and services, as well as promotes concentration of power in the state.

    2) Staring in the 70’s conservatives and libertarians developed a series of strategies to combat socialism and postmodernism.  This included what we see today in think tanks, policies, and ideologies.  All of which were designed to combat the state.

    These ideas fell into the following groups:

    1) The most rigid was that the state would bankrupt capitalism, and destroy our traditional society if capitalists didn’t bankrupt the state first.  This meant effectively hiring the corporations and financial empires by granting them privileges and protecting them from taxation.  This approach has been successful – mostly, because Keynesian economic policy requires that the government use the financial sector to insert money into the economy, and the profit available to the financial sector provides them with the incentive to fight the state.

    2) The more practical approach was to promote libertarian policy solutions to social democratic problems, which would accomplish redistribution without empowering the state and expanding its bureaucracy.   This approach has been marginally successful. Most voucher systems or privatization in both Europe and America, were the result of these libertarian ideas.

    3) The ancient approach has been used too. The purpose of organized religion is largely to oppose the state. As the state has grown, the more traditional segments of the populace have turned increasingly fundamentalist as a means of opposing the state. For ancient reasons, it is not possible in america to interfere with religion.  And religions determine the limits of political power.  So religious fervor has increased as a means of opposing the state’s attack on the nuclear family and traditional roles for men and women – and therefore the status signals available to people in nuclear families.

    4) The marxists were extremely successful in promoting ideology instead of philosophy – ideology is a collection of statements for the purpose of obtaining power by appealing to emotions instead of reason.  (This is, again, a tactic taken from the monotheistic religions.)  The conservative and libertarian think tanks began promoting conservative and libertarian ideology, as well as launching news networks and talk radio shows as well as books and magazines.  Ideology and religion are more effective than reason in a population because we are, in total, when voting, expressing our moral feelings, not our rational understanding.

    THE RESULT

    Capitalist ideology (libertarian and aristocratic conservative) , and socialist ideology (postmodernism and democratic socialism) are opposing means of running a society and so we are constantly subjected to extremist arguments form both sized.  Meanwhile we vote our morals. And our morals are almost entirely a reflection of our reproductive strategy.  Since women have more in common in their reproductive strategy than do men, as the number of single women and single mothers increases, the vote continues to move to the socialistic (feminine) social model.  However, immigration and the minioritization of the white population are causing a consolidation of parties into racial and gender distributions that are fairly predictable.

    So most of it is noise.

    ON CAPITALISM

    It is not possible to have any means of production that is not capitalistic. Money and prices contain information and convey incentives that cannot be done in this level of complexity by other means.  However, it is also true that it is possible to expropriate the profits from individuals and redistribute them while preserving the capitalist system of information and incentives.

    Given that a population is small and heterogeneous enough, it appears that a combination of socialistic redistribution and capitalistic production is politically possible. However, heterogeneous societies resist redistribution and increase competition and friction in the state.

    For this reason we will likely continue to have friction here in America until the demographic system plays out with white minority status, and likely some serious conflict at that point.

    YOUR ANSWER

    The capitalistic system evolved over thousands of years and is one of the primary reasons why the west, despite being small, poor, and on the fringe, developed rapidly both in its ancient and modern periods.

    Today we are in less of a capitalistic system but capitalistic rhetoric is very high because of the minoritization of whites, and the opposition to the state. 

    Furthermore, regardless of rhetoric you will always live under a capitalistic system because it’s not possible to coordinate a complex division of knowledge and labor without capitalism.


    I hope this helps provide some clarity amidst the nonsense we are subject to every day.

    Curt Doolittle
    The Propertarian Institute
    Kiev

    https://www.quora.com/When-did-the-capitalist-regime-under-which-we-currently-live-*begin*