Category: Commentary, Critique, and Response

  • WARFARE Worth Reading: It’s the 5% against the 1%

    http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/class-war-within-a-class-war/CLASS WARFARE

    Worth Reading: It’s the 5% against the 1%.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-25 20:00:00 UTC

  • Ack. Squiggly blue mast with a crows nest. Just because you make something big a

    Ack. Squiggly blue mast with a crows nest.

    Just because you make something big and different doesn’t make it art – just a monument to your bad judgement.

    Art has content. Design doesn’t, it has form that manipulates our senses.

    Craft is the mastery of the transformation of materials.

    You can have one, two three or none of those properties, in varying degrees as long as you do not fail – overreach – in any dimension that you choose to employ.

    Otherwise, please keep your dirty dishes in the kitchen of your mind so we guests don’t see them.

    That’s aesthetics in a nutshell.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-24 14:10:00 UTC

  • GEEK HUMOR: QUESTION: What’s the difference between an economist and a used car

    GEEK HUMOR:

    QUESTION: What’s the difference between an economist and a used car salesman?

    ANSWER: Only the used car salesman knows when he’s lying to you.

    (Courtesy of Newmark’s Door)


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-19 07:34:00 UTC

  • Reasons For The Decline In Fine Art

    http://www.capitalismv3.com/index.php/2011/12/the-reasons-for-the-decline-in-fine-art/Fourteen Reasons For The Decline In Fine Art


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-12 20:41:00 UTC

  • created more jobs than Reid ever has. And probably paid more taxes

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2011/12/12/reid_millionaire_job_creators_are_like_unicorns_because_they_dont_exist.html#.TuakAVgFvgw.facebookI’ve created more jobs than Reid ever has. And probably paid more taxes.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-12 20:02:00 UTC

  • My Friend Karl Smith’s Progressive Framing

    Karl States:

    “I actually think this issue brings up extremely deep philosophical questions that virtually no one I can find wants to engage in.”

    What are you talking about? No one wants to engage in those conversations? You haven’t posted an issue yet that hasn’t been addressed in the past century pretty thoroughly. Or at least, you should engage a few libertarian intellectuals. I think you mean, that it is impossible to affect the political dialog by framing policy questions by other than political means. There is only ONE political spectrum (progressive to conservative) but there are TWO political AXIS (incorrectly stated by Nolan) consisting of Individual Property Rights (Economic Freedom per Nolan), and Pseudo-Shareholder Appropriation Of Returns (Personal Freedom per Nolan). ***And so you yourself are framing the question falsely.*** Which is why you can’t get serious traction with your arguments (despite being the best blogger on center-progressive political economy). Now, you’d have to answer your own question here: why is it that a) people don’t frame it the way you prefer, and b) why is it that you frame it the way that you do? It’s the progressive vision versus the conservative vision. ie: you see the world as a run-rate system that has it’s own momentum that is unstoppable and the fruits of which can be siphoned and shared without consequence. Conservatives view the world as a struggle to concentrate capital resting on a fragile edifice that has been constructed by irrational but successful means, and which can be disassembled and lost without constant vigilance. Counter-intuitive results are produced on both sides of the aisle. For example, online pornography drastically reduces sex crimes – it seems obvious now, but it didn’t then. Cheap fattening food, cheap music, cheap movies and cheap video games, and easy access to pot give the unwashed proletariat something better to do than alcohol, hard drugs, violence, crime, rebellion and hanging on street corners like they did until fifteen years ago. Increasing incarceration and increasing punishment (especially three strikes) works to reduce crime. Eliminating the permanent welfare dependency decreased dependency. The inter-temporal redistribution system (social security) created a dependency bubble. The purpose of politics is to win control of the bloody hand of government so that your alliance of minorities can seek rents on the other alliance of minorities instead of working in the market for mutual gain — like we libertarians of the classical liberal bent recommend, by treating society as a portfolio of human capital that must be constantly improved for the benefit of all. All of us want the benefits of the market without the risks of participating in it. People seek to game the market through political rent seeking, through saving enough to live off their savings and investments, to under-consuming so that they have more leisure time. The market is hard.

  • DARWIN’S HUMOR OF THE DAY: A 46-year-old man and a friend had gone hunting duck

    DARWIN’S HUMOR OF THE DAY:

    A 46-year-old man and a friend had gone hunting duck hunting along with a dog on Sunday about 8:30 a.m. on the north end of the Great Salt Lake.

    The two men were in a canoe-like boat in a shallow marsh area. One of the men got out of the boat to set up or collect decoys and laid his 12-gauge shotgun across the bow of the boat

    Shortly thereafter the dog jumped up on the bow and stepped on the gun. The gun fired and shot the man in the buttocks from a distance of ten feet.

    Medical crews later removed 27 pellets of birdshot from the victim.

    The moral of the story? It’s called a ‘safety’ for a reason. Use it. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2011-12-01 08:40:00 UTC

  • Dying Climate Religion

    http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2011/11/green-junk-15000-abandonded-windmills.htmlThe Dying Climate Religion


    Source date (UTC): 2011-11-30 22:11:00 UTC

  • Ask Men is conducting it’s annual top 99 survey. But you can’t nominate anyone.

    Ask Men is conducting it’s annual top 99 survey. But you can’t nominate anyone. Sure, you can vote for the obvious Nicole Kidman and Ann Hathaway. But what good is a survey without Emily De Ravin and Sienna Miller, or even Gwyneth Paltrow? (And what is Pippa doing on that list?) I’ve been working on a long essay on beauty for the past couple of years, on and off. (Did you know people are actually getting better looking?) But like fashion, beauty is becoming a domain of the lower classes, just as have become the arts. Sigh. More vulgar and sexual than representative of human excellence, perfection and grace. … I follow The Sartorialist daily. (Everyone who loves fashion should.) But he captures, better than anyone, the reality that it is a product all too often of the lower middle, and proletarian classes. On the other hand, Ralph Lauren and Gucci pretty much have a creative monopoly on influencing elegance. Fashion is signaling. And from an economic perspective, it’s fascinating.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-11-18 20:50:00 UTC

  • are things we don’t want to know

    http://www.capitalismv3.com/index.php/2011/11/can-we-predict-bubbles-and-dont-we-really-want-them/There are things we don’t want to know.


    Source date (UTC): 2011-11-15 11:03:00 UTC