Form: Critique

  • I don’t know if you (Will) are ignorant or intellectually dishonest by inverting

    I don’t know if you (Will) are ignorant or intellectually dishonest by inverting the relationship between Rule of Law (Reciprocity(natural) vs substantive(Rights) vs formalist (Procedure) vs Functional (arbitrary), and Democracy (means of choosing priority of commons within law).


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-18 16:48:26 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174364567784361985

    Reply addressees: @willwilkinson @nytopinion @BetoORourke

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174363590721245191


    IN REPLY TO:

    Unknown author

    @willwilkinson @nytopinion @BetoORourke It’s not a hostility to democracy(Mob Rule), it’s a hostility to your continued undermining of Rule of Law (Reciprocity, Tort, Trespass), by incrementally deceiving the population that there any means: authoritarian, political, democratic of legitimizes violation of rule of law.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1174363590721245191


    IN REPLY TO:

    @curtdoolittle

    @willwilkinson @nytopinion @BetoORourke It’s not a hostility to democracy(Mob Rule), it’s a hostility to your continued undermining of Rule of Law (Reciprocity, Tort, Trespass), by incrementally deceiving the population that there any means: authoritarian, political, democratic of legitimizes violation of rule of law.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1174363590721245191

  • GSRRM is admission of lack of argument, by resorting to poisoning the well, unde

    GSRRM is admission of lack of argument, by resorting to poisoning the well, undermining, ad reputation destruction: the use of female’s conflict strategy of disapproval and outcasting in male’s rational discourse on the truth. 😉

    https://propertarianism.com/2019/02/23/definition-gsrm-or-gsrrm/


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-17 22:27:20 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174087465872875520

    Reply addressees: @jbouie

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174072740313276418


    IN REPLY TO:

    @jbouie

    there’s a lot you could critique about my writing and the arguments i choose to make but for whatever reason the standard line for guys like williamson is that i’m an ignorant know-nothing

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174072740313276418

  • Abortion? Ok. One Immoral Trade for Another.

    —“I have been fighting for reproductive rights for over 40 years, yet some forced birthers still appear to think that their justifications (exclusively religiously based) are so persuasive they will magically change my mind. Save your emails people, I’ve heard ’em all.”—Jane Caro @JaneCaro

    An excellent example of Pilpul (Sophism). So, you want to restore the right of mothers alone to kill fetuses, just as women have killed newborns, and young children for thousands of years by exposure, suffocation, and strangulation when they were too much of a burden. Women have murdered more children then all the wars of men combined. In fact, women’s murder of children is outdone only to the great plagues and Islamic conquest. But let’s not pretend it’s not murder. It is. It’s just justifiable murder in a woman’s eyes. How about a trade? End alimony and child support in exchange for juridical license to murder before their born, rather than after? Restore man’s choice if we are going to restore woman’s? That is a Just trade. Men want their offspring and their genetic lines to survive because they have no other choice. Women don’t want the burden of bearing, birthing, surrendering to adoption, or caring. If women will not pay to birth them then men should not pay to raise them. That is a reciprocal exchange. Trade license for one immorality for another. Or is your moralizing just a shallow attempt to obscure the underlying costs and privileges? Are you just seeking another privilege for women at another cost born by men?    

  • Abortion? Ok. One Immoral Trade for Another.

    —“I have been fighting for reproductive rights for over 40 years, yet some forced birthers still appear to think that their justifications (exclusively religiously based) are so persuasive they will magically change my mind. Save your emails people, I’ve heard ’em all.”—Jane Caro @JaneCaro

    An excellent example of Pilpul (Sophism). So, you want to restore the right of mothers alone to kill fetuses, just as women have killed newborns, and young children for thousands of years by exposure, suffocation, and strangulation when they were too much of a burden. Women have murdered more children then all the wars of men combined. In fact, women’s murder of children is outdone only to the great plagues and Islamic conquest. But let’s not pretend it’s not murder. It is. It’s just justifiable murder in a woman’s eyes. How about a trade? End alimony and child support in exchange for juridical license to murder before their born, rather than after? Restore man’s choice if we are going to restore woman’s? That is a Just trade. Men want their offspring and their genetic lines to survive because they have no other choice. Women don’t want the burden of bearing, birthing, surrendering to adoption, or caring. If women will not pay to birth them then men should not pay to raise them. That is a reciprocal exchange. Trade license for one immorality for another. Or is your moralizing just a shallow attempt to obscure the underlying costs and privileges? Are you just seeking another privilege for women at another cost born by men?    

  • Excellent example of Pilpul (Sophism). You want to restore the right to kill fet

    Excellent example of Pilpul (Sophism). You want to restore the right to kill fetuses, just as women have killed newborns, and young children for thousands of years by exposure, suffocation, and strangulation. Women have murdered more children then all the wars of men combined.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-17 18:42:18 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1174030835361755136

    Reply addressees: @JaneCaro

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1173816850548805633


    IN REPLY TO:

    @JaneCaro

    I have been fighting for reproductive rights for over 40 years, yet some forced birthers still appear to think that their justifications (exclusively religiously based) are so persuasive they will magically change my mind. Save your emails people, I’ve heard ‘em all.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1173816850548805633

  • Everyone wants to defend the malinvestment in their frame no matter how ridiculo

    Everyone wants to defend the malinvestment in their frame no matter how ridiculous, art, literature, religion, philosophy, utilitarianism, marxism – whatever – when science is gradually producing the most unambiguous frame. So what is it that you want to produce and why?


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-16 21:01:03 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1173703367794810881

    Reply addressees: @Semiogogue

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1173703101716606977


    IN REPLY TO:

    Unknown author

    @Semiogogue So I would have to understand WHY you’re trying to do what you’re doing. To undrestand why your approach suits it. Most people want discounted references by increasing homogeneity of narratives required for symbolism to provide discounts on cognition and trust extension.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1173703101716606977


    IN REPLY TO:

    @curtdoolittle

    @Semiogogue So I would have to understand WHY you’re trying to do what you’re doing. To undrestand why your approach suits it. Most people want discounted references by increasing homogeneity of narratives required for symbolism to provide discounts on cognition and trust extension.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1173703101716606977

  • Libertar-idiocy Dissipates Slowly

    —“Ukraine was NEVER an anarcho-capitalist society and was never even close.”– (a) Define Ancap. (anarchic) voluntary Polycentric polylogical (clan) law. Voluntary commons (none). Voluntary Military (gangsters, clans), usury, irreciprocity, blackmail, all permitted. In other words, migratory shepherds of the deserts trying to hold superior farmland, when it is farmland that created demand for infrastructure (commons), demand for armies, taxes, states to fund them. (b) Define State (territory, monopoly of violence, monopoly of rule, hierarchy, bureaucracy (c) ukraine has been a territorial possession not a state, since the golden horde. It was a territorial possession with wide latitude from the 12th century to the fall of the soviet union. If it was not a State, then what was it? What is the name for a stateless territory, not under control of an empire? So we have anarchic territory, territorial possession, and state. What other conditions of social order exist? UKRAINE: —“Part of Scythia in antiquity and settled by Getae, in the migration period, Ukraine is also the site of early Slavic expansion, and enters history proper with the establishment of the medieval state of Kievan Rus, which emerged as a powerful nation in the Middle Ages but disintegrated in the 12th century. After the middle of the 14th century, present-day Ukrainian territories came under the rule of three external powers: 1.the Golden Horde 2.the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland – during the 15th century these lands came under the rule of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, then of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (from 1569)

    1. the Crimean Khanate (from the 15th century)
    2. After a 1648 rebellion of the Cossacks against the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky agreed to the Treaty of Pereyaslav in January 1654. The exact nature of the relationship established by this treaty between Cossack Hetmanate and Russia remains a matter of scholarly controversy.[5] The agreement precipitated the Russo-Polish War (1654–67) also called The War for Ukraine. In consequence, by the Eternal Peace Treaty, signed in 1686, the eastern portion of Ukraine (east of the Dnieper River) were to come under Russian rule[6], 146,000 rubles were to be paid to Poland as compensation for the loss of the Left Bank of Ukraine[7] and the parties agreed not to sign a separate treaty with the Ottoman Empire.[8] The treaty was strongly opposed in Poland and was not ratified by the Sejm (parliament of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) until 1710.[9][10] The legal legitimacy of its ratification has been disputed.[11] According to Jacek Staszewski, the treaty was not confirmed by a resolution of the Sejm until the Convocation Sejm (1764).[12] After the Partitions of Poland (1772–1795) and the Russian conquest of the Crimean Khanate, the Russian Empire and Habsburg Austria were in control of all the territories that constitute present day Ukraine for a hundred years. A chaotic period of warfare ensued after the Russian Revolutions of 1917. The internationally recognised Ukrainian People’s Republic emerged from its own civil war of 1917–1921. The Ukrainian–Soviet War (1917–1921) followed, in which the bolshevik Red Army established control in late 1919.[13] The Ukrainian Bolsheviks, who had defeated the national government in Kiev, established the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, which on 30 December 1922 became one of the founding republics of the Soviet Union. Initial Soviet policy on Ukrainian language and Ukrainian culture made Ukrainian the official language of administration and schools. Policy in the 1930s turned to russification. In 1932 and 1933, millions of people, mostly peasants, in Ukraine starved to death in a devastating famine, known as Holodomor. It is estimated by Encyclopædia Britannica that 6 to 8 million people died from hunger in the Soviet Union during this period, of whom 4 to 5 million were Ukrainians.[14] Nikita Khrushchev was appointed the head of the Ukrainian Communist Party in 1938. After Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union invaded Poland in September 1939, the Ukrainian SSR’s territory expanded westward. Axis armies occupied Ukraine from 1941 to 1944. During World War II the Ukrainian Insurgent Army fought for Ukrainian independence against both Germany and the Soviet Union. In 1945 the Ukrainian SSR became one of the founding members of the United Nations.[15] After the death of Stalin (1953), Khrushchev as head of the Communist Party of Soviet Union enabled a Ukrainian revival. Nevertheless, political repressions against poets, historians and other intellectuals continued, as in all other parts of the USSR. In 1954 the republic expanded to the south with the transfer of the Crimea. Ukraine became independent again when the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. This started a period of transition to a market economy, in which Ukraine suffered an eight-year recession.[16] Subsequently, however, the economy experienced a high increase in GDP growth. Ukraine was caught up in the worldwide economic crisis in 2008 and the economy plunged. GDP fell 20% from spring 2008 to spring 2009, then leveled off.”—

    2)  –” Icleand, usa…”– Iceland and the US Colonies were COLONIES under the ownership and protection, like ukraine, of empires and states. There were given limited rule by permission of those powerful states. This is as I said earlier, the only conditions under which the pretense of liberty (meaning preservation of local rule and custom) is possible. Furthermore, these were borderland (distant) territories, and settlers provide value in expanding territories because they prevent competing states from taking those same territories, yet require little cost for the state to hold that territory. In other words, settlement of new territories by the disenfranchised, poor, adventurous, or undesirable functions as purchasing an option by a state. 3) —“Thirdly people overcome the incentive to free ride without a state all the time.”– Of course they do. They free ride on the production of commons made possible by the centralization of rent seeking in the state. They free ride on the empire or state that protects their territory from competitors. They free ride on the commons produced by others. That is what people go to cities for: to free ride on the commons. On the other hand, the scale of these societies (communes) is limited since the incentive to ‘cheat’ increases with increases in numbers, scarcity, opportunity SO the question isn’t that SOME people overcome the incentive to free ride out of some strange moral obligation, but the MAJORITY do not. And in fact, almost everyone, literally, demonstrates the minimum avoidance of free riding he or she can get away with. That’s research that just came out over the past few years and was published again yesterday. So, no, you’re claiming that people act irrationally, (not free riding) when in fact the opposite is true: people are rational actors: they seize every opportunity that they can to free ride. In fact, that’s the point of libertarianism: to free ride on empires or states by not paying the cost of access to commons, having the ability to engage in trade with members of those states, the technology produced by them, the discounted goods and services produced by them, the defense that’s provided by them. Net net is either you produce sufficient commons to deny competitors your territory, or you are captured by those who produced sufficient commons to deny you the territory. That is why there are no anarchic societies: they cannot compete for territory. Worse, evidence is that they cannot compete for people unless they give something away for free. In the past this was land. In the present, instead of land, it’s credit. I’m about 10k* smarter than you are, and I have many more years involved in the libertarian movement than you do, and much greater mastery of not only libertarian (jewish diasporic ghetto ethics) than you do, and I have far more understanding of all the competing theories of sexual, social, economic, political and military organization than you do. Libertarianism is just common property marxism. There is no difference. A monopoly. It’s just jewish ethics dressed up in the language of germanic law. I don’t do sophisms. I stop them. -cheers.

  • Libertar-idiocy Dissipates Slowly

    —“Ukraine was NEVER an anarcho-capitalist society and was never even close.”– (a) Define Ancap. (anarchic) voluntary Polycentric polylogical (clan) law. Voluntary commons (none). Voluntary Military (gangsters, clans), usury, irreciprocity, blackmail, all permitted. In other words, migratory shepherds of the deserts trying to hold superior farmland, when it is farmland that created demand for infrastructure (commons), demand for armies, taxes, states to fund them. (b) Define State (territory, monopoly of violence, monopoly of rule, hierarchy, bureaucracy (c) ukraine has been a territorial possession not a state, since the golden horde. It was a territorial possession with wide latitude from the 12th century to the fall of the soviet union. If it was not a State, then what was it? What is the name for a stateless territory, not under control of an empire? So we have anarchic territory, territorial possession, and state. What other conditions of social order exist? UKRAINE: —“Part of Scythia in antiquity and settled by Getae, in the migration period, Ukraine is also the site of early Slavic expansion, and enters history proper with the establishment of the medieval state of Kievan Rus, which emerged as a powerful nation in the Middle Ages but disintegrated in the 12th century. After the middle of the 14th century, present-day Ukrainian territories came under the rule of three external powers: 1.the Golden Horde 2.the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland – during the 15th century these lands came under the rule of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland, then of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (from 1569)

    1. the Crimean Khanate (from the 15th century)
    2. After a 1648 rebellion of the Cossacks against the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, Hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky agreed to the Treaty of Pereyaslav in January 1654. The exact nature of the relationship established by this treaty between Cossack Hetmanate and Russia remains a matter of scholarly controversy.[5] The agreement precipitated the Russo-Polish War (1654–67) also called The War for Ukraine. In consequence, by the Eternal Peace Treaty, signed in 1686, the eastern portion of Ukraine (east of the Dnieper River) were to come under Russian rule[6], 146,000 rubles were to be paid to Poland as compensation for the loss of the Left Bank of Ukraine[7] and the parties agreed not to sign a separate treaty with the Ottoman Empire.[8] The treaty was strongly opposed in Poland and was not ratified by the Sejm (parliament of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) until 1710.[9][10] The legal legitimacy of its ratification has been disputed.[11] According to Jacek Staszewski, the treaty was not confirmed by a resolution of the Sejm until the Convocation Sejm (1764).[12] After the Partitions of Poland (1772–1795) and the Russian conquest of the Crimean Khanate, the Russian Empire and Habsburg Austria were in control of all the territories that constitute present day Ukraine for a hundred years. A chaotic period of warfare ensued after the Russian Revolutions of 1917. The internationally recognised Ukrainian People’s Republic emerged from its own civil war of 1917–1921. The Ukrainian–Soviet War (1917–1921) followed, in which the bolshevik Red Army established control in late 1919.[13] The Ukrainian Bolsheviks, who had defeated the national government in Kiev, established the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, which on 30 December 1922 became one of the founding republics of the Soviet Union. Initial Soviet policy on Ukrainian language and Ukrainian culture made Ukrainian the official language of administration and schools. Policy in the 1930s turned to russification. In 1932 and 1933, millions of people, mostly peasants, in Ukraine starved to death in a devastating famine, known as Holodomor. It is estimated by Encyclopædia Britannica that 6 to 8 million people died from hunger in the Soviet Union during this period, of whom 4 to 5 million were Ukrainians.[14] Nikita Khrushchev was appointed the head of the Ukrainian Communist Party in 1938. After Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union invaded Poland in September 1939, the Ukrainian SSR’s territory expanded westward. Axis armies occupied Ukraine from 1941 to 1944. During World War II the Ukrainian Insurgent Army fought for Ukrainian independence against both Germany and the Soviet Union. In 1945 the Ukrainian SSR became one of the founding members of the United Nations.[15] After the death of Stalin (1953), Khrushchev as head of the Communist Party of Soviet Union enabled a Ukrainian revival. Nevertheless, political repressions against poets, historians and other intellectuals continued, as in all other parts of the USSR. In 1954 the republic expanded to the south with the transfer of the Crimea. Ukraine became independent again when the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. This started a period of transition to a market economy, in which Ukraine suffered an eight-year recession.[16] Subsequently, however, the economy experienced a high increase in GDP growth. Ukraine was caught up in the worldwide economic crisis in 2008 and the economy plunged. GDP fell 20% from spring 2008 to spring 2009, then leveled off.”—

    2)  –” Icleand, usa…”– Iceland and the US Colonies were COLONIES under the ownership and protection, like ukraine, of empires and states. There were given limited rule by permission of those powerful states. This is as I said earlier, the only conditions under which the pretense of liberty (meaning preservation of local rule and custom) is possible. Furthermore, these were borderland (distant) territories, and settlers provide value in expanding territories because they prevent competing states from taking those same territories, yet require little cost for the state to hold that territory. In other words, settlement of new territories by the disenfranchised, poor, adventurous, or undesirable functions as purchasing an option by a state. 3) —“Thirdly people overcome the incentive to free ride without a state all the time.”– Of course they do. They free ride on the production of commons made possible by the centralization of rent seeking in the state. They free ride on the empire or state that protects their territory from competitors. They free ride on the commons produced by others. That is what people go to cities for: to free ride on the commons. On the other hand, the scale of these societies (communes) is limited since the incentive to ‘cheat’ increases with increases in numbers, scarcity, opportunity SO the question isn’t that SOME people overcome the incentive to free ride out of some strange moral obligation, but the MAJORITY do not. And in fact, almost everyone, literally, demonstrates the minimum avoidance of free riding he or she can get away with. That’s research that just came out over the past few years and was published again yesterday. So, no, you’re claiming that people act irrationally, (not free riding) when in fact the opposite is true: people are rational actors: they seize every opportunity that they can to free ride. In fact, that’s the point of libertarianism: to free ride on empires or states by not paying the cost of access to commons, having the ability to engage in trade with members of those states, the technology produced by them, the discounted goods and services produced by them, the defense that’s provided by them. Net net is either you produce sufficient commons to deny competitors your territory, or you are captured by those who produced sufficient commons to deny you the territory. That is why there are no anarchic societies: they cannot compete for territory. Worse, evidence is that they cannot compete for people unless they give something away for free. In the past this was land. In the present, instead of land, it’s credit. I’m about 10k* smarter than you are, and I have many more years involved in the libertarian movement than you do, and much greater mastery of not only libertarian (jewish diasporic ghetto ethics) than you do, and I have far more understanding of all the competing theories of sexual, social, economic, political and military organization than you do. Libertarianism is just common property marxism. There is no difference. A monopoly. It’s just jewish ethics dressed up in the language of germanic law. I don’t do sophisms. I stop them. -cheers.

  • (archive) I don’t make errors. Let’s test these statements. –” statement isn’t

    (archive)
    I don’t make errors.
    Let’s test these statements.

    –“
    http://1.My statement isn’t a matter of benefit. It’s a matter of math.
    2. A reduction in genetic data can be for better or worse…. https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=461040207826208&id=100017606988153


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-06 17:26:27 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1170025482034847744

  • (archive) I don’t make errors. Let’s test these statements. –” 1.My statement i

    (archive)

    I don’t make errors.

    Let’s test these statements.

    –“

    1.My statement isn’t a matter of benefit. It’s a matter of math.

    2. A reduction in genetic data can be for better or worse. The point is that these phenomena do not amount to one species becoming another one.

    3. No amount of reducing the genetic data of a single celled organism can get us to the diversity of life as we see it.

    4. Your thoughts aren’t in your head. Thought is a phenomena within the transcendental order of life.

    “—Kahl O’Dournian

    My claims:

    a. You cannot demonstrate the mathematics you are testifying to, and if tried you would self falsify that you can, that you understand the system of measurement (mathematics) and what it is you’re measuring with it (calculation of capture of energy).

    b. You do not know the amount of information necessary to calculate a single celled organism, nor the rate of calculation, nor the time to produce the calculation of the information, so you cannot make such a claim as it is impossible. Conversely almost anyone can show that the rate of calculation can be effectively infinite even in asexual reproduction, before we get to the much higher rates of sexual reproduction, and that (a) the central problem is not calculation of successful mutations by trial and error, but (a) the tendency for trial and error to pursue non-random direction, (b) the central problem of distribution of novelties is multidimensional, including noth less that travel distance, rates of reproduction, degree of caloric advantage, and competition in favor or against it, and the degree of correction already in the genome, as well as the rate of information loss of intermediary steps in the evolution of an expression of a protein (molecular machinery).

    c. Consciousness consists of the conflation (experience) of awareness of space and time, produced by the hierarchy of memory beginning with the shortest term to longest term (hippocampal, entorhinal, perirhinal, parahippocampal, inferotemporal, and cortical) controlled by attention (thalamus), given priorities calculated in a competition then released (basal nuclei) according to timing (parallel order) calculated by the cerebellum. In other words, consciousness is a spatial model into which we conflate sensory information through massive parallelization. Or in simple terms, consciousness consists of short term memory of the past few moments of short term memory. This brief explanation refers to a set of theories the narrowest of which is ‘thousand brains’ model of the cortex, and the broadest of which is the “Thalmo-cortical resonance theory”, in which the frequency of oscillation determines the narrowness of focus, urgency and rate of resulting action. This science is rather current but it is pretty well understood (and I am current with the research).

    d. You are lying, because you cannot testify to those claims. I can however testify to the possibility of each of those claims to the exclusion of all other testifiable claims.

    A NOTE TO THOSE WHO ARGUE WITH THE FAITHFUL

    The purpose of theological speech is to teach sophism, and to reward sophism. You cannot really argue with the faithful for at least these reasons.

    1. All addicts defend their addiction relentlessly and have no choice. And there is a great deal of addiction in christianity, judaism, and islam – that is the reason for their success.

    2. Christianity like judaism and islam teaches theological sophism, fictionalism, idealism, and critique. In other words, just as math, science, and law teach us to speak truthfully, the monotheistic religions teach us to lie.

    3. The monotheists are not intellectually honest, nor in pursuit of the truth, but simply trying to defend their addiction. So you are never, ever, debating with someone of intellectual honesty. They have been trained for intellectual dishonesty, and intellectual dishonesty is one of the rewards (addictions) that result from the practice of monotheistic theology. They will, in the end, always just deny, or leave. You cannot convince an addict not to take his promiscuity, solipsism, alcohol, drugs, or religion.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-09-06 13:26:00 UTC