Author: Curt Doolittle

  • Power: “The opportunity to alter the probability of outcomes”. Sovereignty: “Pow

    Power: “The opportunity to alter the probability of outcomes”.

    Sovereignty: “Power”

    Will to Power: “The Human Desire For Sovereignty”

    Given the diversity of individual ability, the diversity of individual knowledge, and the diversity of the social classes, all desire for sovereignty is constant, but the expression of it varies almost infinitely. Those at the bottom desiring sovereignty from constraints of scarcity and status deprivation, and those at the top desiring sovereignty of expression over that of their competitors for the ultimate in status attainment. Amidst this vast chaos of wills, the public intellectual attempts to define status – a re-distributor and appropriator of not just money, but status and power.

    Make no mistake. It’s all about money, status and power.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-13 11:51:00 UTC

  • Religions Establish The Terms By Which The Population Consents To Be Ruled

    In practical terms, Religions establish the terms by which the population consents to be ruled. Religions differ from systems of ethics, in that they are far harder to alter in response to fashion – ethical systems have a predictable and known life cycle that ends in skepticism and abandonment of the necessary self sacrifice that allows societies to exist as economic entities. Religions seem to persist on a much longer life cycle. THey can be altered, such as the Germanicization, or the enlightenment of christianity. I’ll write more on this topic over the next few years. It’s a core theme of my work. Religions do not need a magical component. Nor do they need a divinity. THey can be constructed without either. But I have come to believe that religions, as political constructs, are a necessary property of any civilization – of any people, of any government. I had previously thought that they were simply exceptional pedagogical tools, given the limitations of human youth and the diversity of human age and ability. But I’m convinced otherwise. We need a new religion. Because we need a new means of persisting the terms by which we consent to be ruled — governed. The west is unique and it was superior, because of ONE BELIEF: THat in all things, we should maintain the balance of power. Christianity can only evaluated as one element of the balance of power. It provided a means by which the collapsing mercantile and bureaucratic south to maintain it’s influence over the militaristic and tribal north. It functioned as a judiciary among the competing european monarchical states. It provided a balance between the state and the individual by establishing the terms by which they would consent to be ruled. It provided a political and military means of balancing the poorer and fragmented west against the wealthier and totalitarian east. We have all but abandoned christendom in our quest for world dominance – we have done this consciously as cross-civilization traders and conquerors who establish a new ethics based upon the necessities of economics — the ethics of trade and trade alone. We have all but abandoned christianity as our pseudo-rational basis of ethics, and the underlying system of ethical pedagogy in an effort to build an international empire, and a domestic multi-cultural society, based upon the economics of trade and trade alone. But we are abandoning the one thing that made the west successful despite it’s weakness, despite it’s poverty, despite it’s small size: the balance of powers. And a balance of powers is only possible among people with a similar framework of ethics. To the rest of the world, a balance of power is antithetical. And a balance of power cannot be enshrined purely in a constitution. The destruction of our constitution by way of the commerce clause, and the conversion of our supreme court from protestant ethical judgements to jewish and catholic judgements is proof enough. The proletarianization of the political mythology into totalitarian democracy and away from noble or upper-class balance-of-powers, and in particular, the balance of powers between social classes is the cause of our loss of western identity. We need a reformation. That reformation needs to specifically state the underlying ethics of the balance of power – where private property for the individual, and the separation of powers, which requires consent of the social classes, is our ethic. Everything else isn’t progressive. It’s regressive. Regressive into those systems which are used elsewhere but led nowhere. The industrial revolution happened twice. Once in greece. Once in England. Both times under rule by the middle class under a balance of power.

  • Well, technically speaking, she’s NOT in the 1%. Someone ELSE made the money and

    Well, technically speaking, she’s NOT in the 1%.

    Someone ELSE made the money and gave it to her.

    So that person is in the 1%.

    And she’s hoping everyone can inherit like she did? Right?

    Is that her logic?


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-11 17:23:00 UTC

  • writer from IBM agrees that post-Jobs, the enterprise market is just too attract

    http://www.zdnet.com/blog/perlow/apple-in-the-enterprise-the-road-forward/18955A writer from IBM agrees that post-Jobs, the enterprise market is just too attractive to pass up.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-11 14:35:00 UTC

  • Weight of 192 today. That’s as good as my best 3 years ago. It’s some kind of ba

    Weight of 192 today. That’s as good as my best 3 years ago. It’s some kind of barrier though. Hard to get into the 180’s in the past. 185 is probably a pretty good weight for me. I doubt I could to 175 without losing muscle mass. I got there in 1996 briefly from that flu that killed all those people in europe. Anyway, slowly improving my health. Slowly.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-05 10:44:00 UTC

  • What makes the west special is competition: the balance of power, and every indi

    What makes the west special is competition: the balance of power, and every individual’s commitment to preserving the balance of power, and respecting the consequences of that conflict as beneficial. It is a social system that is antithetical to everyone else on earth.

    While the self congratulatory set would love to say we achieved this feat on purpose, through debate and wisdom, that’s entirely false. It is a remnant of tribal heroism. Something else much of the world criticizes us for. (See John Keegan)

    While the self congratulatory set would love to say that our success comes from democracy, that’s false. It comes from aristocracy. From a balance of power between small states, who treated the church as a sort of supreme court system. Democracy is a luxury good. It’s something the very wealthy can afford for very short times – it’s a means of spending your trust fund. But it doesn’t make that trust fund.

    The west’s “Killer Apps” as Nial Ferguson calls them are, 1) competition, 2) science, 3) property rights, 5) the consumer society 6) the work ethic. It’s these killer apps that created the great divergence between “the west and the rest”.

    But those six apps are CAUSED by every individual’s commitment to preserving the balance of power, and competition as a means of determining outcomes.

    Under the competitive model, we do not develop consensus.

    We develop experiments.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-05 10:19:00 UTC

  • Some human social mechanisms are black boxes filled with chaotic nonsense gears,

    Some human social mechanisms are black boxes filled with chaotic nonsense gears, which even under analysis are absurd. In fact, they work, in part, because they are absurd, chaotic, nonsensical black boxes impervious to rational scrutiny.

    Rationalism is overrated. You cannot teach a child to be fully rational in real time. You cannot teach all human beings to be fully rational – because the grasp of some of the greater abstractions upon which our complex world is based is simply beyond all but perhaps ten percent of the population. (Nothing is so irrational as the idiocy of smart people.) You can however, teach parables, myths, and legends: narratives and history, and from that teach children how to use the black box.

    Protestant christianity is a mashup of the objective and technical nature of germanic language, ancient germanic social sentiments and legal customs, pagan river and forest mythology, the demands of being a poor minority on the world stage, an attempt to keep the ‘decadent’ east at bay, the christian ethic restated in germanic terms, a history under the church and a rebellion against it in favor of germanic customs, and a rapid assimilation and embracing of classical aristotelian ideas.

    No sane person would devise such a mechanism. It is a personal philosophy with political ends, and enormously beneficial economic consequences. (And plenty of other religions achieve just the opposite ends – perpetual ignorance and poverty.)

    It works. That’s the problem. Christianity produces ‘goods’. Even in the developing world, the market and political reforms are driven by christians.

    That’s why I support it. Not because it’s rational. But because supporting it is rational.

    I don’t care that it’s nuts. I care that it’s a goose that lays golden eggs.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-05 09:24:00 UTC

  • Numbers in financial statements are a record of your decisions, not a predictor

    Numbers in financial statements are a record of your decisions, not a predictor of the future. They don’t predict your business. They predict your behavior. They are predictive to the extent that the quality of your decisions tends to decline if your business changes, tends to remain constant if your business remains constant, and tends to improve if your decisions improve. And the only way to demonstrate that your decision have improved is if your goods and services remain competitive in the market, and profit results from their sale. So, the numbers are a record of decisions. Look to your decisions for insight, not the numbers.

    Why it is that numbers are so addictive to so many people that they inverse the causal relations, and seek insight in the numbers rather than the market is beyond me. I suspect it’s because it’s easier to rely on the false promise of certainty in those numbers, for some, and for others, that their reliance on those numbers allows us to evade the political confrontation that comes from the conflict between the battle for ideas and the organization necessary to execute them, and the constraint on collective resources where everyone in the organization seeks to use them for their own ambitions or fulfillment.

    This is why organizations decline over time: In the organizational battle, the number-certainty-addicts, and rent-seekers win over the customer and market reflectors because of the difference in effort and risk between the two factions.

    The CEO’s problem is to choose whether he will be part of the false-number coalition – a rent-seeker, part of the customer and market coalition – an innovator, or an arbiter between the two – an administrator. And from that decision all other decisions follow.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-10-05 09:02:00 UTC

  • Free Speech Is A Good Only In Public Not Private Venues

    Free Speech Is A Good Only In Public Not Private Venues http://www.capitalismv3.com/index.php/2011/09/free-speech-is-a-good-only-in-public-not-private-venues/


    Source date (UTC): 2011-09-29 16:44:30 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/119452500934934528

  • Aggregationists Vs Individualists

    Aggregationists Vs Individualists http://www.capitalismv3.com/index.php/2011/09/aggregationists-vs-individualists/


    Source date (UTC): 2011-09-29 16:43:59 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/119452371901353985