Form: Question

  • Should The Government Have The Right To Censor Videos Like Collateral Murder? Why Or Why Not?

    I WILL TRY TO DO THIS QUESTION JUSTICE.

    How you frame the question influences answers. I’ll try to give the correct answer by reframing the question slightly as other than yes or no.

    The philosophical question censorship is not whether government should have the ability, but (1) whether members of the military should or can sign a contract for secrecy inclusive of ‘accidents’ within the fog of war, and exclusive of deliberate immoral actions; and whether that contract has been broken by some member of the military or a non-military person, and (2) whether citizens, or heirs, should possess the universal standing to sue for reparations in the event that such actions subject them to harm. Censorship is always a license for bad behavior from governments, that too often specialize in bad behavior.  Restitution in court is a much more effective means of suppressing bad behavior on everyone’s part, citizen and government as well, than censorship which produces so many negative externalities.

    The combination of contract and harm under the law is superior to monopoly discretion on the part of a bureaucrat or politician with conflicting interests.

    https://www.quora.com/Should-the-government-have-the-right-to-censor-videos-like-Collateral-Murder-Why-or-why-not

  • Why Are Russian People Such Bad Drivers?

    It’s not sampling bias. Russians are disproportionately dangerous drivers. Look up the data. There are just many more repressed people taking out their anger on the road than in many other cultures, plus more alcohol,poorly maintained vehicles, wet and icy roads, less consideration. However, if you get to drive in the middle east, it makes Russians look like churchgoing grandmothers by comparison.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-are-Russian-people-such-bad-drivers

  • Is The Cato Institute Libertarian In Political Views? How?

    Technically, Cato, is a classical liberal libertarian institution favoring small government, and the civil society. (Cato does work within the system and has an audience in DC because it works within the system.) The Heritage group also favors traditional society and classical liberalism. The majority of the remaining think tanks (FEI, etc) place more emphasis on economic policy and less on social (normative) rules.  Only the Mises Institute and its network advocates anarchism, and the Property and Freedom Society advocates private government. The Mises Institute takes advantage of the rabidly autistic male population seeking social connection on the internet, which gives them disproportionate presence relative to their nominal if not negative influence on policy and thought.

    https://www.quora.com/Is-the-Cato-Institute-libertarian-in-political-views-How

  • What Would A Political Economy Representative Of A Public Look Like?

    IMPOLITIC BUT CORRECT ANSWER: The lower the distribution of IQ below 106, the more socialist, and the higher the distribution of IQ above 106 the more individualist.  The higher the impulsivity (testosterone) the more insular the polity needs to be. The lower the impulsivity (testosterone) the more inclusive it can be. The lower the literacy the more authoritarian it must be. The higher the literacy the less authoritarian it can be. In all cases, smaller polities that reflect kin selection are preferable to larger heterogeneous polities.

    The data supports all these positions.

    https://www.quora.com/What-would-a-political-economy-representative-of-a-public-look-like

  • Should The Government Have The Right To Censor Videos Like Collateral Murder? Why Or Why Not?

    I WILL TRY TO DO THIS QUESTION JUSTICE.

    How you frame the question influences answers. I’ll try to give the correct answer by reframing the question slightly as other than yes or no.

    The philosophical question censorship is not whether government should have the ability, but (1) whether members of the military should or can sign a contract for secrecy inclusive of ‘accidents’ within the fog of war, and exclusive of deliberate immoral actions; and whether that contract has been broken by some member of the military or a non-military person, and (2) whether citizens, or heirs, should possess the universal standing to sue for reparations in the event that such actions subject them to harm. Censorship is always a license for bad behavior from governments, that too often specialize in bad behavior.  Restitution in court is a much more effective means of suppressing bad behavior on everyone’s part, citizen and government as well, than censorship which produces so many negative externalities.

    The combination of contract and harm under the law is superior to monopoly discretion on the part of a bureaucrat or politician with conflicting interests.

    https://www.quora.com/Should-the-government-have-the-right-to-censor-videos-like-Collateral-Murder-Why-or-why-not

  • RUSSIAN PSEUDOSCIENCE? What is the deal with Russian penchant for pseudoscience?

    RUSSIAN PSEUDOSCIENCE?

    What is the deal with Russian penchant for pseudoscience? It’s like the jewish penchant for pseudo-philosophy. Is it some sort of fear of ignorance that requires nonsensical explanations of physical phenomenon? A sort of dominance of ignorance? You know, Russian diplomas are worth shit in the west. And pseudoscience is the reason.

    Not that western social pseudoscience is any better by the way.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-26 07:09:00 UTC

  • So, can someone explain to me, why housing in the UK is such sh_t? I mean, peopl

    So, can someone explain to me, why housing in the UK is such sh_t? I mean, people live in hovels. Even ‘nice’ homes are little more than rabbit warrens. Dark, low ceilings, small rooms, poorly laid out. Is it just habit? Remnants of socialism? Antique regulatory environment? Heating/cooling costs? What? I mean, in the states, the prices vary but in most of the country $200K US will get you a decent house and yard (garden) front and back. In large parts of the country $300K US will get you what what qualifies as a Manse in the UK.

    Here in Ukraine you can get an amazing apartment overlooking the river in a new building for $200K. You can buy a dacha in the country for 75-150K. (albeit you can’t earn a living here worth a damn).

    Why are homes so expensive (and claustrophobic) in the UK? I mean, Post 1980 US Northwest (ecotopia) architecture is actually pretty awesome, and entirely spacious, even if it’s a small house.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-21 03:09:00 UTC

  • FORMS OF INTERACTION – FROM WAR TO PRODUCTION TO SUICIDE QUESTION: Which of thes

    FORMS OF INTERACTION – FROM WAR TO PRODUCTION TO SUICIDE

    QUESTION: Which of these is moral and ethical or not?

    1) WAR: Both parties prey upon each other in mutual destruction (consumption)

    2) PREDATION: In which on party preys upon the other for the purpose of destruction (consumption)

    3) PARASITISM: In which one party benefits at another’s expense

    4) COMMENSALISM: In which one party benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped

    5) EXCHANGE: In which costs are reciprocally offset without gain.

    6) MUTUALISM (production) : in which both parties benefit.

    7) COLONIALISM : In which one party pays the cost of training the other to cooperate.

    8) SACRIFICE: In which one party harms itself in order to benefit the other.

    9) SUICIDE: In which one party destroys itself in order to benefit the other.

    And, bonus question: which of these is western culture engaging in?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-17 06:35:00 UTC

  • SCARCITY OF CREATIVE DESTRUCTION – WHY?

    http://www.aei-ideas.org/2014/05/is-there-too-little-creative-destruction-in-the-us-economy/A SCARCITY OF CREATIVE DESTRUCTION – WHY?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-05-13 04:29:00 UTC

  • Question: "What are your concepts of Aristocratic, Protestant, Parasitism, Free Riding, and Immoral?"

    QUESTION

    “Hi Curt, I’ve been reading your posts & your blog. I find it really interesting since I share a similar opinion about Rothbardian ethics. However, from your articles&posts, it is difficult to understand what is your concept of “Aristocratic”? Why is it “protestant”? I find it rather unnecessary to link the last one to propertarianism. Also, I would like to ask you if you understand parasitism&involuntary transfers&free riding as synonyms. You probably don’t. Then it intrigues me why do you think free riding is immoral?. I don’t believe free riding necessarily involves involuntary transfers. Then, if it doesn’t enter the circle of “will”, why should it be included in “morality”?.” — Alejandro Veintimilla

    ANSWER [A]lejandro, Thanks for the question. Unfortunately, libertarians tend not to be all that well read outside of libertarianism. They aren’t special. Most people aren’t all that well read. I hope what follows helps. 1) ARISTOCRACY Aristocracy / Aristocratic / Aristocratic Egalitarian / Aristocratic Egalitarianism. (See Ricardo Duchesne’s The Uniqueness of Western Civilization) High trust property rights are obtained reciprocally with others who promise to insure each other’s property rights by committing to defend them by the organized application of violence. This says that property rights are obtained by the act of entering into contract to protect the property rights of other contract members. Aristocratic egalitarianism simply implies that this contract is open to all who will voluntarily agree to it. (a) this reflects the origins of western civilization’s aristocracy of peers. (b) this eliminates the necessity for, an fallacy of natural laws, or intrinsic rights. (c) this illustrates that libertarians who are unwilling to enter into such a contract are attempting to obtain their property rights by appeals arbitrarily moral or supernatural means, rather than as mere rights and obligations of a contract. 2) PROTESTANT The protestant peoples are the only peoples to have adopted high trust ethics (high trust property rights) nearly universally throughout their societies. Neither those ethics, nor aristocracy are dependent upon protestantism. Instead, protestant cultures were simply more outbred, with higher trust, than catholic peoples. (They made use of the absolute nuclear family, not the traditional family). And those cultures that were higher trust and more outbred, adopted protestantism as a means of rebelling against the less outbred, lower trust, (parasitic) south. 3) PARASITISM Parasitism, Discounts, Involuntary Transfer, Free Riding, Jan Lester’s “Imposed Cost”, : I treat these as synonyms, yes. When any two or more organisms cooperate, the only way that cooperation is beneficial for all involved, is if net contribution is required of each member. I say, two benefit and one does not, then cooperation is a cost to the third, not a benefit. Rothbardian ethics, by not prohibiting unethical and immoral actions, implicitly allow immoral and unethical actions, and as such allow for parasitism. In fact, encourage parasitism. Because the incentive for free riding is ever present. Production is much harder than free riding. 4) THE DARK ENLIGHTENMENT Over the past decade we’ve seen the rise of the Dark Enlightenment movement out of the libertarian movement. This movement is a reactionary (conservative) set of ideas to fight the “Cathedral’ (the union of state, bureaucracy, university, and corporate interests). The movement rejects universalism, multi-culturalsm, diversity. equality, feminism, and the state. And argues that the enlightenment project that sought to grant all people the rights of aristocracy, and to create an aristocracy of everybody, has been a failure. Instead, they embrace tribal particularism, homogeneity, and genetic differences, hoppe’s monarchy (as well as other models.). One thing they reject is rothbardian libertarianism. For reasons I think I articulate pretty clearly: it’s impossible, it’s immoral, and it is not sufficiently useful for particularists. Rather than relying upon Kantian rationalism and the Continental form of argument, or jewish Cosmopolitanism and its variation on the continental form of argument, the Dark Enlightenment, in typical anglo tradition, relies upon the recent findings of science. Unfortunately, the Dark Enlightenment merely provides a criticism of the “Cathedral”, and Rothbardian “Ghetto” Libertarianism. Not necessarily any solutions. (They might argue otherwise.) So I have attempted: (a) To restate Hoppes arguments in contemporary scientific terms, rather than the “antique” reliance on cosmopolitanism. (b) To Develop a language for the description of all moral codes (Propertarianism) including those that are necessary for the high trust society. (c) To correctly state the origin of rights as obtained in contract. (d) To provide an institutional solution to the problem of government, by allowing all matters of conflict to be settled by law. 5) GETTING UP TO DATE ————————————- PROPERTARIANISM AND ARISTOCRATIC EGALITARIANISM http://www.propertarianism.com/…/propertarianism-and…/ A COMPARISON OF ARISTOCRATIC VS GHETTO ETHICS http://www.propertarianism.com/…/aristocratic…/ THE CULTURE OF THE NORT SEA PEOPLES http://www.propertarianism.com/…/on-the-north-sea-peoples/ SIGNALING PROPERTIES http://www.propertarianism.com/…/the-signaling…/ Cheers Curt PICTURES DO MORE THAN WORDS

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