Form: Diary

  • I am pretty good at critiquing what ‘is’, but I am also pretty bad at critiquing

    I am pretty good at critiquing what ‘is’, but I am also pretty bad at critiquing what other people think ‘is’, and I don’t see much value in critiquing what other people prefer ‘is’ unless what they prefer is harmful to others.

    The literary critics, and those who conduct an analysis of others works, always impress me. Because I just can’t do it. I can do my thing. But I can’t do their thing.

    Why is that so frustrating?

    In art school I studied painting primarily because I am bad at it. Which annoys me no end. πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-24 12:07:00 UTC

  • PROPERTY AND FREEDOM SOCIETY CONFERENCE – BODRUM TURKEY Notes from the front: 1)

    PROPERTY AND FREEDOM SOCIETY CONFERENCE – BODRUM TURKEY

    Notes from the front:

    1) Both Perpetual Traveller and I are sick as dogs. Flu. He was worse today, but it caught up with me tonight and I’m a total mess as well now. Today (Monday) is ‘Boat Day’ where we all go out on the local wooden ships and get trashed in the sunshine, in this beautiful little cove. It’s our high point of the year. Unfortunately, I suspect neither of us is going to be able to engage in the usual troublemaking. (I can barely breathe.)

    2) Roman Skaskiw finally has convinced me to love Bitcoin. I’m not exactly an early adopter of technology. But there are at least two means of making money. Roman is more interested in the anarchic and political properties of Bitcoin, but I’m mostly interested in whether I can make money with it or not. (I always feel like I’m pissing on his parade with my skepticism – but that’s just because I couldn’t see how to make a business out of it until today.) So I think we’ll find a venture to kick off together. Something small. Learn it. Then try for the big one. ‘Cause the big one interests me a great deal.

    3) Dr Flynn (of The Flynn Effect) is quite wonderful to listen to, and I finally got the chance to ask him two of my burning questions. One he had the answer to (the decline of Anglo IQ over the past century and a half). The other he confirmed for me, closely enough: that Pareto’s rule appears to be correlated with IQ and Trust. He didn’t and others don’t see trust has having the same level of importance, but then, I’m interested in the informal institutions that set the west apart, and trust is one of the ‘miracles’ that the west developed. The problem is that trust won’t do you much good if you can’t get the vast majority of the property into the hands of your population with IQ over 115, where it can be used by problem-solvers. My third question I couldn’t get answered which was my argument that the ability to articulate your ideas in verbal form, and the ability to repair machines (both forms of problem solving) seem to require about 106 or so IQ. 106 looks like, to me, the ‘median IQ’ that is the minimum for greek, english and jewish levels of intellectual expansion. I think I can prove this with the data pretty easily, but he kept insisting that we can TRAIN people to do most of those things if they are TRAINABLE (meaning down to 90 or 95). But that they can’t innovate. Which appears to be true. But that’s an educational question, that the germans have clearly solved. Whereas I’m concerned about informal institutions (norms) and what norms can develop regardless of whether there is explicit training. Again, the germans have this down cold, and the americans are terrible at it. This is sort of “Le Lion’s” argument to smart fraction put in economic terms. Really, what I got out of the conversation is that I pretty much understand the literature and I’ve pretty much got the arguments down. So It’s going to be pretty hard to attack me on that front.

    3) Continuing my transition from a Hayekian to anarcho capitalist to a Dark Enlightenment Libertarian. And I’m working to unify the economic and political insights of Hoppe with the cultural and informal institutional insights of the Dark Enlightenment project. The problem is that the Dark Enlightenment (Aristocratic Philosophy) is positioned as a reactionary rather than revolutionary movement and I would need to change that. And that involves organizing rather than writing and while that’s something I can do, it’s not something that I enjoy very much.

    FYI: “Dark Enlightenment β€” A new intellectual current made up of Reactionary components. The unifying factor of the Dark Enlightenment is a critique of Democracy, bluntly summarized by Peter Thiel when he wrote, β€œI no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.” The β€œDark Enlightenment” is a term coined by British philosopher Nick Land, who explicated the concept in his Dark Enlightenment sequence. This sequence, along with the writings of Mencius Moldbug, make up the core literature of the movement. The Dark Enlightenment is a Reactionary project that rejects modernity, universalism, and Democracy in favor of Traditionalist, particularist, and aristocratic values. “

    4) @Khan Thank you for the brilliant strategy. Planning is the work of a general staff and everyone finds it interesting. Again. Thank you.

    (More Later)


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-23 00:02:00 UTC

  • TIME TO FIND A NEW PALACE πŸ™‚ Eh, 30% raise in rent is more than I”m up for. Even

    TIME TO FIND A NEW PALACE πŸ™‚

    Eh, 30% raise in rent is more than I”m up for. Even if it’s a fully serviced, ideal location. So it’s time to find something new. This time, with parking! And a bit more quiet. πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-14 14:27:00 UTC

  • (ACK) I have that damned twinge near my liver that says I’m not out of the woods

    (ACK) I have that damned twinge near my liver that says I’m not out of the woods yet. Sigh. Time for tests.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-14 13:51:00 UTC

  • DEATH AND FEAR You know, once you’ve thought you were going to die a few times,

    DEATH AND FEAR

    You know, once you’ve thought you were going to die a few times, it’s pretty liberating. Life is something to enjoy. To experience. To consume. Death is something you recognize, and try to avoid, but once you’ve made peace with it, it’s something that you no longer fear.

    Now, it takes a long time to get over every episode for some reason. I don’t know how the men on patrol do it. But it takes a year or more for me every time. My friends overseas are tougher than I’ll ever be.

    But it does give you a very different perspective on threats. Because when you aren’t afraid of dying, risk is just another experience to enjoy.

    At least from my perspective, it feels like, if fear is a weapon, then:

    “I’m not locked in here with you; You’re locked in here with me!”

    πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-10 13:56:00 UTC

  • My neighborhood. πŸ™‚

    My neighborhood. πŸ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-08 16:26:00 UTC

  • RANDOM ACTS OF CHARITY I do stupid little stuff all the time. I bought the secur

    RANDOM ACTS OF CHARITY

    I do stupid little stuff all the time.

    I bought the security guards coffee yesterday.

    I stuck 500H (about 60 bucks) in an old lady’s pocket today, while idling on a corner.

    I offered to buy two people I’ve only met once dinner at a restaurant they can’t afford.

    Just little stuff.

    And I can personally attest that the data is correct: doing stupid little stuff for other people makes you incredibly happy.

    Now, I don’t have the fortitude like our friend Scott (in Seattle) does. I mean,he’s the real thing. A real christian hero.

    So It’s not the kind of thing that you get into eternity for.

    But it certainly makes you happier.

    And I’m pretty sure it makes the world a better place.

    Just a little bit.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-08 12:55:00 UTC

  • At the age of I think seven or eight I got a piece of horoscope paper that said

    At the age of I think seven or eight I got a piece of horoscope paper that said “You are capable of amassing a fortune.” You wouldn’t believe that an impact that suggestion had on me.

    Well, having made a couple of fortunes now. I gotta say, that I’m glad I did it. That I’ve proven I can do it. When my book is done I’ll have accomplished everything I had desired in life. (Assuming I finish it before I get run over by a bus, or struck by lightening.)

    But the idea of just enjoying life like most people do seems really awesome.

    So. Here is a toast to living life for the purpose of enjoying it.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-08 12:49:00 UTC

  • “NIETZSCHE ENVY” Nietzsche and the joy of wandering. When I came to the Ukraine,

    “NIETZSCHE ENVY”

    Nietzsche and the joy of wandering.

    When I came to the Ukraine, my idea, was that I would either start the business, or I would buy a toyota truck and drive from london to mongolia by the most dangerous and uncivilized route possible before there were no such routes left to travel. The sort of minimalist adventure travel that I would use to cleanse my soul (and body) of the 2000’s.

    For most of my childhood I had mini-bikes and small motorcycles, and my sense of freedom was sated by exploring on them, or on bicycles. Today, I realize the range I covered was less than ten miles in all directions. But that was what freedom meant to me: exploration.

    But you know, I know Nietzsche had health problems, and I have had plenty of them too. And he spent a lot of time ‘wandering around’. And you know, it turns out that if all you want to do is think, then wandering around is a pretty good way of doing it.

    And then, you sort of remember how awesome life is on a motorcycle, and you’re actually connected with the world rather than insulated from it. And you read a few articles by people who have spent a year traveling. And, then, you think, that even if your soul is already cleansed, maybe there is room now to fill it with joy.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-04 08:44:00 UTC

  • SOLACE Fresh local fruit from the farmer’s market. Pears, Peaches, Plums, and Fi

    SOLACE

    Fresh local fruit from the farmer’s market.

    Pears, Peaches, Plums, and Figs.

    Dark chocolate.

    Nepalese coffee.

    Couch.

    Pillow.

    Priceless.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-09-02 09:40:00 UTC