Form: Mini Essay

  • Why Do I Use AI For Compare And Contrast Definitions? I am quite skilled at prom

    Why Do I Use AI For Compare And Contrast Definitions?
    I am quite skilled at prompt generation and the use of AIs to save time, especially when writing (a) historical examples (b) comparing and contrasting in order to disambiguate, and suppress loading, framing, conflation, and inflation. That does not mean I cannot make the arguments myself. It also can add legitimacy because whatever the AI’s return is reproducible. Moreover, given the general criticism that I write too academically with impenetrable informational density, using the AIs ensures that I can both reach normies and if necessary ask the AI to dumb down whatever I’m stating to a given grade level.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-29 22:27:58 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1740862248556396544

  • THE IMMORALITY OF THE CIVIL WAR –“There are no solutions only trade-offs”– Thi

    THE IMMORALITY OF THE CIVIL WAR

    –“There are no solutions only trade-offs”–

    This is the first principle social, political and economic measurement: accounting for the difference between choices and full accounting of both the seen and unseen in those choices.

    Regarding: —“So enslaved people just just suffer for an (at the time) unknown number of years waiting for a natural process?”–

    Was the trade off of six hundred thousand dead, the terror of that horrific war, the near destruction of southern (scotts irish) civilization, and the century of consequences, including the current race-marxist division fomenteed by the neoMarxists not worth the less than thirty years of continued enslavement by a three million slaves?
    Worse, was it worth not borrowing the money to pay off the landholders for their slaves (which was considered)?
    Was it worse than paying off the landholders for their slaves and repatriating those slaves back to africa? (which was the optimum solution).

    THE ECONOMIES OF THE NORTH VS SOUTH
    –“The American economy was caught in transition on the eve of the Civil War. What had been an almost purely agricultural economy in 1800 was in the first stages of an industrial revolution which would result in the United States becoming one of the world’s leading industrial powers by 1900. But the beginnings of the industrial revolution in the prewar years was almost exclusively limited to the regions north of the Mason-Dixon line, leaving much of the South far behind.

    In 1860, the South was still predominantly agricultural, highly dependent upon the sale of staples to a world market. By 1815, cotton was the most valuable export in the United States; by 1840, it was worth more than all other exports combined. But while the southern states produced two-thirds of the world’s supply of cotton, the South had little manufacturing capability, about 29 percent of the railroad tracks, and only 13 percent of the nation’s banks. The South did experiment with using slave labor in manufacturing, but for the most part it was well satisfied with its agricultural economy.

    The North, by contrast, was well on its way toward a commercial and manufacturing economy, which would have a direct impact on its war making ability. By 1860, 90 percent of the nation’s manufacturing output came from northern states. The North produced 17 times more cotton and woolen textiles than the South, 30 times more leather goods, 20 times more pig iron, and 32 times more firearms. The North produced 3,200 firearms to every 100 produced in the South. Only about 40 percent of the Northern population was still engaged in agriculture by 1860, as compared to 84 percent of the South.

    Even in the agricultural sector, Northern farmers were out-producing their southern counterparts in several important areas, as Southern agriculture remained labor intensive while northern agriculture became increasingly mechanized. By 1860, the free states had nearly twice the value of farm machinery per acre and per farm worker as did the slave states, leading to increased productivity. As a result, in 1860, the Northern states produced half of the nation’s corn, four-fifths of its wheat, and seven-eighths of its oats.

    The industrialization of the northern states had an impact upon urbanization and immigration. By 1860, 26 percent of the Northern population lived in urban areas, led by the remarkable growth of cities such as Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Detroit, with their farm-machinery, food-processing, machine-tool, and railroad equipment factories. Only about a tenth of the southern population lived in urban areas.

    Free states attracted the vast majority of the waves of European immigration through the mid-19th century. Fully seven-eighths of foreign immigrants settled in free states. As a consequence, the population of the states that stayed in the Union was approximately 23 million as compared to a population of 9 million in the states of the Confederacy. This translated directly into the Union having 3.5 million males of military age – 18 to 45 – as compared to 1 million for the South. About 75 percent of Southern males fought the war, as compared to about half of Northern men.

    The Southern lag in industrial development did not result from any inherent economic disadvantages. There was great wealth in the South, but it was primarily tied up in the slave economy. In 1860, the economic value of slaves in the United States exceeded the invested value of all of the nation’s railroads, factories, and banks combined.”–

    YOU”RE NOT MORAL IN IGNORANCE
    So your moral virtue signaling is neither moral, nor virtuous, but profoundly ignorant and foolish

    THE COST OF THE CIVIL WAR
    The overall cost of the U.S. Civil War from 1861 to 1865 is complex and involves considering both direct and indirect costs, including economic, human, and societal impacts. The financial costs in terms of contemporary currency and today’s values can differ significantly.

    Here’s an overview:

    Direct Costs
    Government Expenditures: This includes military expenses like salaries, weapons, equipment, and supplies. The Union government spent about $3.2 billion, and the Confederacy spent approximately $1 billion in 1860s dollars.
    Economic Losses: The war caused significant destruction, particularly in the South, including infrastructure, agricultural, and property damage.

    Human Costs
    Casualties: The human cost was immense, with an estimated 620,000 soldiers dying from combat, accidents, starvation, and disease. This doesn’t include civilian casualties, which were also significant.
    Veteran Care: Long-term costs for caring for the wounded and for veterans’ benefits.

    Indirect Costs
    Economic Disruption: The war disrupted trade, agriculture, and industry, especially in the Southern states, leading to economic losses beyond immediate war expenses.
    Lost Labor and Productivity: The death of hundreds of thousands of men and the impact on civilian populations reduced economic productivity.

    Adjusting for Inflation
    Adjusting for inflation, the cost of the Civil War would be much higher in today’s dollars. Some estimates put the total cost well into the hundreds of billions or even trillions of current U.S. dollars, considering both direct expenditures and wider economic impacts.
    Societal and Economic Repercussions
    The war also had lasting societal and economic repercussions, particularly in the South, which faced years of rebuilding and economic hardship.

    Conclusion
    The overall cost of the U.S. Civil War is difficult to quantify precisely due to the vast range of direct and indirect factors involved. Financially, it was incredibly costly for both the Union and the Confederacy, and the human and societal costs were profound and long-lasting. The war not only shaped the future of the United States but also left an enduring legacy on its economic and social landscape.

    In the end, it was an economic problem. The south would need to have their slaves paid for and repatriated and time to use those funds to industrialize and the north would not borrow the money via the central government to do so.

    Which was the better choice?

    Especially when agricultural employment was crashing hard and fast. (See attached)

    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-28 17:43:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1740428383488454656

  • ADVICE ON DISCUSSING SEX DIFFERENCES All. I use a consistent strategy to prevent

    ADVICE ON DISCUSSING SEX DIFFERENCES
    All.
    I use a consistent strategy to prevent accusations of bias or agenda in matters of sex differences.

    1) Evolution out of necessity favored compatibility not equality. In fact, it’s counter intuitive, but the greater divergence in cognitive bias between the sexes the greater the opportunity field of discovery of advantage AND compromise for reciprocal benefit. This law is universal at all scales of life, but is much more advantageious among sentient, aware, and conscious creatures.

    2) Whenever possible, when discussing the behaviors of either sex bias, (a) use first principles construction, and (b) state both the construction of the female bias and the male bias. (use my columnar chart for help).

    3) Explain why this division of the labor of sense, perception (disambiguation), world modeling (synthesis), auto association, prediction, valuation, attention, and choice, into time and reproductive resopnsibility for which kinds of capital mitigating which kind of risk, are an evolutionary necessity and if functioning, an advantage.

    WHY OUR WORK IS NECESSARY
    People outside of our organization and it’s followers (students) are not able to make use of this technique because they lack the scientific knowledge of the many disciplines necessary to produce it and reduce it to both first priciples, and a system of measurement, that provides universal commensurability across all sciences (well, accross all the grammars – which means across all human knoweldge and experience.)

    Cheers

    Reply addressees: @NWEurasian @AutistocratMS @spaceangelvoice @ezra_tezra @StephenThomasHC


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-24 21:28:37 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1739035375354494976

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1739030448234176725

  • The problem with older jaguars (before the purchase by ford) was the universal b

    The problem with older jaguars (before the purchase by ford) was the universal british problem of electronics, and the insufficiency of volume to produce profits necessary for the incremental costs of engineering and manufacturing increasingly precise equipment. That said, I’d rather drive a 1992 XJ than almost anything else because it’s not overcomplicated and easily repaired. Contemporary cars and the complexity of there computers, and the overloading of the vehicles with features, especially say, in mercedess, makes the cars much harder to maintain and much more expensive to produce, sell, and maintain.

    Reply addressees: @ForestHemingway @NoahRevoy


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-23 18:08:06 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738622523825111040

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738607511497027831

  • WHY DO ARABS “MAKE STUFF UP” AND SPEAK NONSENSE, AND WITH BRAVADO? Yampeleg, (al

    WHY DO ARABS “MAKE STUFF UP” AND SPEAK NONSENSE, AND WITH BRAVADO?
    Yampeleg, (all):

    “Because of hermes and the cart of lies”

    A large part of my work consists of the study of methods of lying across the spectrum, especially sex differences, but also cultural differences.

    The Middle east (Traditionally ‘near east’ or ‘orient’) has never practiced anything approximating the equivalent of testimonial (and later empirical) truth at any scale, and the entire history of the regions civilizations consists of mythicization (making stuff up) which is rather obvious in the various religious texts.

    The reasons for this are understood but won’t go into them at depth here.

    It’s partly one of those “the first tech discoverd is the worst tech, and all later tech’s are better because they had the earlier techs to improve upon, and the older techs couldn’t be reformed because they’d become an inescapable tradition upon which all culture was built.” Supernatural Religion is the worst first tech it turns out.

    The rest is reducible to the challenge of tribal conflict and continuouis political turnover by conquest that plagued that part of the world.

    And the 83 average IQ thing doesn’t help either. IT’s not like empirical and operational prose matters to 2/3 of the population when any semblance of logic crashes in the low 90s.

    And so there is a reason for the greek fable of “Hermes and the Cart of Lies”

    HERMES AND THE ARABS
    (Hermes and the Cart of Lies)
    —“Hermes filled a cart with lies and dishonesty and all sorts of wicked tricks, and he journeyed in this cart throughout the land, going hither and thither from one tribe to another, dispensing to each nation a small portion of his wares. When he reached the land of the Arabs, so the story goes, his cart suddenly broke down along the way and was stuck there. The Arabs seized the contents of the cart as if it were a merchant’s valuable cargo, stripping the cart bare and preventing Hermes from continuing on his journey, although there were still some people he had not yet visited. As a result, Arabs are liars and charlatans, as I myself have learned from experience. There is not a word of truth that springs from their lips.”– Source: Aesop’s Fables. A new translation by Laura Gibbs. Oxford University Press (World’s Classics): Oxford, 2002.

    (Greek Original)
    Ἑρμῆς ἅμαξαν ψευσμάτων τε πληρώσας
    ἀπάτης τε πολλῆς καὶ πανουργίης πάσης,
    ἤλαυνε διὰ γῆς, ἄλλο φῦλον ἐξ ἄλλου
    σχεδίην ἀμείβων καὶ μέρος τι τῶν ὤνων
    νέμων ἑκάστῳ μικρόν. ὡς δὲ τῷ χώρῳ
    τῷ τῶν Ἀράβων ἐπῆλθε καὶ διεξῄει,
    λέγουσιν αὐτοῦ συντριβεῖσαν ἐξαίφνης
    ἐπισταθῆναι τὴν ἅμαξαν. οἱ δ’ ὥσπερ
    πολύτιμον ἁρπάζοντες ἐμπόρου φόρτον,
    ἐκένωσαν αὐτὴν οὐδ’ ἀφῆκαν εἰς ἄλλους
    ἔτι προελθεῖν, καίπερ ὄντας, ἀνθρώπους.
    ἐντεῦθεν Ἄραβές εἰσιν, ὡς ἐπειράθην,
    ψεῦσταί τε καὶ γόητες, ὧν ἐπὶ γλώσσης
    οὐδὲν κάθηται ῥῆμα τῆς ἀληθείης.

    by Babrius
    https://t.co/9UWrGpx9xH

    Babrius (Greek: Βάβριος, Bábrios; c. 2nd century), somewhere between 3rd century BC and 3rd century AD. He was also known as Babrias (Βαβρίας) or Gabrias (Γαβρίας), and was the author of a collection of Greek fables, many of which are known today as Aesop’s Fables.
    Practically nothing is known of him. He is supposed to have been a Hellenized Roman, whose original name may have been Valerius. He lived in the East, probably in Syria, where the fables seem first to have gained popularity.

    -Cheers
    CD

    Reply addressees: @Yampeleg


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-23 04:29:28 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738416506751311873

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738199568930480368

  • BEAUTY AND … AI One of my long term projects is the study of beauty. Most of u

    BEAUTY AND … AI
    One of my long term projects is the study of beauty.

    Most of us are aware of the de-whitening of art, literature, cinema, advertising and media (and especially the de-nordicizing of beauty), since the anti-white ‘plague’ started by the neomarxists (left) in the late sixties but was institutionalized in the early seventies, and made mainstram under Obama.

    But math is math and in the end, it still plays out, and the evidence holds up over time.

    Now, I have this search that runs periodically for lists of most beautiful women – one that tolerates actresses and models, and one that looks for ordinary people like businesswomen.

    The truth is that the world is full of beautiful women – at least wherever the fatpocalypse hasn’t done it’s work.

    However there is a collision between the marketing at the top for actresses and models, and the marketing at the bottom for … well, the underclass ‘actresses’ so to speak (which are almost universally revolting). The majority middle is unserved. Unfortunately. 😉

    Yesterday I opened my email, and the search had retured a disturbigly rare set of beautiful women with symmetric features, gracility, health, and fertility…

    … and they were all AI generated. 😉

    The new version of Midjourney is … unbelievable.

    It’s also gonna make irrational expectations even worse. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-22 22:57:23 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738332937056088064

  • ATLANTIC INTERVIEW ARTICLE WITH TWO MEMBERS OF THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY Yes I’ve r

    ATLANTIC INTERVIEW ARTICLE WITH TWO MEMBERS OF THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY
    Yes I’ve read the opinions verbally stated by two members. But scholars are public intellectuals that provide opinions – they are not oracles. Me included.
    There is a bit of an argument to be made that the terms of insurrection have been changed over time, especially in regard to the civil war. But he reverses the meaning of insurrection and rebellion to get away with it – which I find a bit humorous.
    The next argument equates the circumstances of the civil war where the 14th was enacted (and should have sunset as it’s the most controversial amendment) in order to force the south into compliance and reconstruction. There is no other legislative device for creating legislation, adding competitors to the congress, and preventing the new merged congress from reversing the legislation that constituted the terms of their inclusion. So that doesn’t hold.
    Otherwise, it’s a bit of thinking out loud, but there are no arguments in that discussion I wouldn’t much through like a can of pringles at a college frat party watching a game.
    I have, my organization has, an advantage in that we have strictly constsructed the law, and we are not easily misled by the 20th century innovations in skirting the law.

    Reply addressees: @sqpatrick77


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-22 18:37:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738267543779909633

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738263210988314775

  • WHAT’S THE SUPREME COURT GOING TO DECIDE REGARDING TRUMP ON THE BALLOT? I just r

    WHAT’S THE SUPREME COURT GOING TO DECIDE REGARDING TRUMP ON THE BALLOT?

    I just recorded a segment for the Stew Peters Show (https://t.co/nAYmaiRMCf) on the Colorado Court’s findings against Trump, barring him from the ballot (not really).

    I mean, y’all expect me to be thorough, right? That’s my job. But we only had ten or twelve minutes so I couldn’t get through all the material. And as a result it was a bit of a speed run. But I think I got the main points across if not the usual ‘rigor’ of my arguments.

    I’ll post my notes (the full argumet) for the show here on Twitter and on the Website later today (still adding bits to it).

    Criteria The Court Must Use In Deciding This Matter

    1) What was the State of mind of Trump – What was he attempting to do if anything?

    2) What were the ambitions of the participants in Jan6 event – what were their reasons and ambitions?

    3) Whether it was an insurrection or not?
    (Given: |Severity|: Demonstration > protest > riot > rebellion, > insurrection > civil war > facilitation of conquest by others)

    4) Whether defining Jan 6th as an insurrection opens the door to more abuses of the courts in these matters?

    5) Whether they want to permit the states to circumvent the people, given the presidency and the electoral college are federal tests of concurrency, in lieu of a high court findings of an insurrection. Conversely, whether the court feels it is the only viable institution capable of making that decision. (Note: Probably. The legislture lacks the constraints of a court, and as such legislatures solve political questions but not legal questions. While say, impeachment is a political question (decision, agreement), insurrection is a legal question (fact,disagreement).)

    6) Whether they want to enable the use of similar pretenses of insurrection to disqualify any candidate by his words, his deeds, or by constructive undermining of a candidate through causing conflict and escalation independent of the will of the candidate.

    7) Whether any other externalities would be produced that might effect the electoral process as a test of the people by concurrency. There are plenty of rasons the people might want a radical change in the policy of the governmetn without replacing the system of government or even altering the constitutions – such as whether the deep state really exists and really is working against the interests of the people – especially where the test of concurrency exists across our constitution to preserve minority interest not advance majority interests over them.

    So I’ll answer these questions and more, in the post I will release later today,

    (Short answer? Unless a miracle happens he’ll be on the ballot.)

    Cheers

    Curt Doolittle
    The Natural Law Institute
    The Science of Cooperation


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-22 18:12:04 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1738261136510742528

  • Let me clarify my position: I consider all abrahamic religions destructive to ma

    Let me clarify my position: I consider all abrahamic religions destructive to mankind. For rather ideosyncratic reasons, christianity was overcome in the west, but then we were subjct to the revision of abrahamic religion into the marxist sequence. I understand very clearly that abrahamism in religious or pseudoscientific form is not only a lie but it teaches people to lie, and to socially construct societies of lies, so that the people diverge from he laws of the universe. As such the abrahamic religions, with christianity the least harmful, judaism harmful, and Islam a disease, are simply a drug for simple people to resist learning, adaptation, and evolution, and remain primitives in poverty and ignorance and a threat to those that encountr them. Chia is right about islam. Russia is containing it. The west is within a few decades of purging it. Because without the unification provided by the american contiuation of and globalization of the remains of the british empire – all he other major civiliztions: eastern, western, indian, and subsaharan african correctly view islam as the greatest threat to civilization – it is the cheapest drug most desirable by the underclasses who are easily seduced into a system of irresponsibility for adaptation to the laws of nature. And if there is a god, and those are his laws, then islam is not the word of god, but of a devil or demon.

    “We know the name of the devil. His name was abraham. He was from Ur.”

    Reply addressees: @entelechhhy @FuryForth


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-21 04:25:02 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1737690616476143616

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1737684538891915768

  • Islam is a cancer that only is tolerated because the postwar west has institutio

    Islam is a cancer that only is tolerated because the postwar west has institutionalized freedom of religion – even evil religions. That tolerance is evaporating along with the west’s postwar stratgey.

    Why?

    The islamic world taught us that we were wrong about the ability of all humans to evolve into high trust, rule of law, participatory governments.

    That islam is a cancer – a mental disease – is the reason the USA and therefore the west is abandoning it’s postwar project of free world trade that has raised mankind out of poverty, and trying to do so without leaving the remaining three broken cultures: MENA, Russia, and China the opportunity to expand, by restoring the military capacity of the developed world.

    Reply addressees: @entelechhhy


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-21 00:10:55 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1737626664719241216

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1737623229588508832