Form: Quote Commentary

  • “Donald Trump’s new national security advisor, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, has inher

    —“Donald Trump’s new national security advisor, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, has inherited a world in which the tectonic plates are perceptibly shifting. Power, long centered in Washington, is radiating eastward toward Moscow, Tehran, New Delhi, and Beijing. Meanwhile, the rules and institutions of the international system that have for 70 years maintained some modicum of order are visibly under stress, as are the states that make up that system. Whether it recognizes it yet or not, the Trump administration will likely be forced to confront the ongoing challenge of how to restore stability.

    The unraveling is most apparent in the Middle East. Four states have failed and collapsed into civil war (Syria, Iraq, Libya, and Yemen); others are at peril of the same. In Syria, it is now Russia, not the United States, that is calling the shots, having brazenly inserted its military — together with Iran and its proxies — into the conflict in 2015 to save Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad from defeat. As in the region’s other civil conflicts, the breakdown of order has led to unmitigated chaos: up to a half-million Syrians killed and more than 11 million displaced. The Islamic State and al Qaeda have profited from the mayhem to secure territory and recruits while committing unspeakable atrocities of their own.

    But the unraveling is evident in Europe as well. Europe is dealing with a not dissimilar crisis of political legitimacy, most noticeably on its periphery, as weak states such as Greece and Bulgaria struggle to provide their citizens with jobs and services in the face of severe fiscal constraints. Europe also is coping with the consequences of the Middle East’s civil wars in the form of massive refugee flows and terrorist attacks. The fear these consequences have generated has strengthened far-right political parties with anti-immigrant, law-and-order messages, contributing to the Brexit victory in Britain and threatening ultimately to undermine the European Union as a whole.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed his preference for the more multipolar world that is starting to emerge from these dark centripetal forces of disorder. He appears to want to revert to 19th-century balance-of-power politics, wherein a few large states broker among themselves issues of war and peace and maintain order within their respective spheres of influence, often by aligning with local strongmen.

    Some people in the new administration have suggested they would not be interested in arresting the unraveling of global politics in this direction. But they will ultimately find themselves compelled, for the sake of American power and prosperity, to try revitalizing for a new era the rules-based international order constructed following World War II. At that time, the United States, eager to prevent Europe’s bloody wars from ever recurring and the scourge of communism from spreading, helped design a web of international and regional institutions to shore up its European allies and encouraged cooperation rather than armed conflict among states.

    A somewhat analogous challenge faces the United States today in the Middle East. <blockquote class=”pullquote-left”>The region is likely to be the fiery cauldron in which the global order either gets reforged for a new era or melts down entirely.</blockquote>The region is likely to be the fiery cauldron in which the global order either gets reforged for a new era or melts down entirely.</span> Syria may provide the first test. The Russians would like the United States to accept Assad’s continued rule of that shattered country, in return for a partnership to fight the Islamic State and al Qaeda together. But that is not how stability will be achieved in the Middle East. Assad has alienated too many Syrians through his misrule and brutalities to be able to put his country back together. In the absence of a viable and vibrant Syria that offers its citizens some hope for the future, any battlefield gains against the Islamic State and al Qaeda are likely to be ephemeral.

    Instead, the United States should seek to negotiate a resolution to the Syrian conflict that safeguards the interests of all parties and provides broad latitude for local and provincial self-government. The Russians need to be persuaded that the war is unwinnable and that Assad is not capable of stabilizing the country. If words alone fail to sway them, then a policy of greater humanitarian protection for civilians trapped in the conflict — combined with a stepped-up U.S. effort against the Islamic State in tandem with regional partners — should provide greater leverage to nudge them toward a negotiated settlement.

    For the region more broadly, the agenda needs to be no less ambitious. The measures required to put the Middle East on a more positive trajectory resemble those undertaken in Europe 70 years ago: stop the fighting, negotiate equitable and inclusive political settlements (in this case to the region’s other civil wars), shore up weak states to make them resistant to subversion, encourage political leaders to govern in ways that strengthen their legitimacy and unleash the talents of their people, and develop regional institutions that help mitigate conflict and enhance the prospects for cooperation. To achieve this, the United States should partner with states in and outside the region that share its interest in a more stable Middle East. It is high time that those in the region took the lead, providing the vision and doing the lion’s share of the work, but the United States, Europe, and potentially Russia and China should help, as a matter of self-interest.

    This may seem a tall order, but the benefits could be substantial. A more secure and prosperous Middle East would undercut radical Islam’s ideological appeal, stabilize Europe’s southern border, and open up a market of more than 300 million consumers. Such a project could give new purpose to the transatlantic relationship while reinvigorating and expanding the existing international order for a new era.

    As it contemplates how to deal with an increasingly chaotic world, the new administration will ultimately face a choice: Do you throw your lot in with strongmen who offer the semblance of order but cannot provide lasting stability, or do you double down on a rules-based international system that has been far from perfect but delivered 70 years of peace and prosperity in an otherwise anarchical world? No other choice could be more consequential.”—F.P.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-22 14:48:00 UTC

  • NECESSARY BOOK, CONTAINING NECESSARY MODELS FOR ADVANCED THOUGHT ABOUT THE HUMAN

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_IntelligenceA NECESSARY BOOK, CONTAINING NECESSARY MODELS FOR ADVANCED THOUGHT ABOUT THE HUMAN MIND

    (for my advanced followers)

    0) some of my followers are now far enough along in their development that they are making the common errors of rationalist philosophers, by overextending the rationalist method instead of extending their knowledge. It is easy to fall into this trap – primarily because it is cheaper to work with and deduce from your prior investments in your methods of framing questions (context) than it is to research new frameworks that you must adjust your thinking to.

    1) as some of you know, I came to philosophy through artificial intelligence – once I understood that at the time, the technology was not capable of producing a solution without consuming enough energy to reduce the surface of the planet to cinders by its waste heat so to speak. It is this operational inquiry into intelligence that has helped me avoid falling into the traps of rational philosophers – because ‘meaning’ is not enough, without existential correspondence.

    2) In every era, people use by analogy, the current model of technological complexity, to describe mental phenomenon that they cannot introspectively (or even mechanically) speak of otherwise. In the current era, we use computing as that model – and this is an advancement over prior eras. But people do not ‘compute’ in the same sense computers do because we cannot retain (remember) discreet values – the cost would be too high for our life form. Instead we ‘calculate’ (which is very different from compute) what we call ‘categories’: sets of constant relations that reduce the complexity of the passage of time and consistency or change in state of the universe, into what we call objects or ideas that we can compare, contrast, forecast, and decide upon.

    3) Our brains accomplish this feat through rapidly finding layers of constant relations (Patterns) and filtering those ‘symbols’ (abstractions) to the next higher layer, where they are associated with other symbols of similar abstraction. In doing so we ‘activate’ networks of related cells at every level, and then recursively refine this process forming a sort of echo, where each fraction of a second we make use of the prior fractions – as much as three or four seconds of those stimuli. And that is just the beginning of the process. Our brains use similarities and differences to ‘generalize’ very small constant relations into very large constant relations, and then to increasingly create a model of those relations across time. And we can also create comparisons by composing more than one such idea at the same time. And while very simple people can only compare an idea with emotions, some people ideas with other ideas, and some of us if we train ourselves train ourselves to think of four or five, that appears to be the limit of our ability before we start constructing patterns of from them and no longer are tracking different concepts. etc. etc. etc.

    4) I am always thinking of and expressing human mental processes in this still abstract but operational description of human cognition – a model that I think needs very little further granularity to explain the process of intelligence and thinking sufficiently to explain the need for via negativa tests of testimonial truth. And so, because of this operational model, I do not make the mistakes of the rationalists and confuse meaning with existence. In other words, to regress into mere rationalism from science. And I would like this distinction to remain what separates my work and the use of my work by others, from prior eras of less mature philosophy.

    5) So I feel I must shift gears a bit, and emphasize Hawkins’ (and later) work (he’s very accessible), in addition to jonathan haidt’s if for no other reason than to save myself the effort of saving followers, and my work from regression into mere ‘philosophy’ instead of the language by which we speak natural law of sovereign men.

    Meaning has no necessary correspondence with truth. In fact, the record of history is quite clear, that the number of constant relations that correspond with reality is a very small set of general rules, and the meaning (falsehoods) that man constructs in order to produce decidability for himself in some context or other is very different from the meaning (truths) that man must construct for decidability REGARDLESS OF CONTEXT.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine

    ( Ramsey Mekdaschi would you please make sure this is in the library? I am pretty sure it is. )

    ( Bill Joslin, Joel Davis )


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-22 08:23:00 UTC

  • “Stoicism: Via-Negativa spirituality.” –Moritz Bierling

    “Stoicism: Via-Negativa spirituality.”

    –Moritz Bierling


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 19:18:00 UTC

  • Not Since Slavery…. The White Middle And Working Classes Enslaved

    Not since slavery have we seen people work so hard to justify the taking of the productivity of others – (rough quote of thomas sowell)

  • JAMES ON CONFLATION > DECEPTION > UNEARNED DISCOUNT (THEFT) (behold the parsimon

    JAMES ON CONFLATION > DECEPTION > UNEARNED DISCOUNT (THEFT)

    (behold the parsimony of genius)

    By James Augustus

    Propertarian Heuristic: where one observes conflation, one is likely to observe some degree of deception.

    Corollary: where one observes deception, one is likely to observe some dimension of discount-seeking (parasitism).

    And that can apply to:

    (a) conflation as substitution for understanding of existential operations (seeking discounts on intellectual authority), and;

    (b) conflation as means of limiting the scope of information considered on matters that require decidability (seeking discounts on exchange/cooperation).


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 16:00:00 UTC

  • TESTIMONIAL: THIS IS MY TARGET AUDIENCE, EVEN IF I’D LIKE MORE REACH FROM BL Wil

    TESTIMONIAL: THIS IS MY TARGET AUDIENCE, EVEN IF I’D LIKE MORE REACH

    FROM BL Wilson

    —“I’m a MENSA member (top 2%, generally seen as minimum 138 IQ), and your writings challenge me more then anything else I’ve tried to comprehend and I have a doctorate of pharmacology degree.

    I think I’m just too lazy to USE a large, expanded vocabulary, but I do understand almost all of what you post. I also appreciate how much you interact with your followers and fans.

    Anyhow, love your stuff. Never heard of propertarianism until you and Eli Harman. Always wanting to learn more.”—- BL Wilson

    YOU SHOULD MAKE SURE YOU FOLLOW ELI

    Eli is much, much better than I am at teaching propertarianism and I probably (out of not wanting to impose upon the man I consider my partner) don’t push more people to him first.

    It actually bothers me that I don’t have more reach, but so many people volunteer to increase that reach that it isn’t necessary. So while I don’t take incomprehensibility as a criticism, I still wish I could.

    I don’t like to name names or show favoritism mostly because it seems to alter the behavior of my best followers, but the if you read the comments even casually you’ll see who else to follow.

    We have people across the spectrum.

    We are achieving our goals.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 14:34:00 UTC

  • MUST-READ: ON SPECTRUM OF AGENCY DEMONSTRATED BY USE OF TESTIMONY BY BILL JOSLIN

    MUST-READ: ON SPECTRUM OF AGENCY DEMONSTRATED BY USE OF TESTIMONY BY BILL JOSLIN

    —-“Thoughts that might be worth exploring ->

    Qualification to acquire membership in a class based on demonstrated agency affords commensurability in assessing worthiness.

    Demonstrate the degree one lives by their own agency dictates which class they belong (vertically) regardless of horizontal class (much talk with Joel on this in January)

    Testimonialism forces one to “demonstrate due diligence in speaking truthfully”. But this can also be stated as “demonstrating the degree of agency (due diligence) one has invested in the speech act (truthfulness).

    This adds a new “moral” level to testimonialism – in that one can communicate a testimonial truth which they have invested only the time it took to memorize it without any personal agency in developing it(low agency)…. one can speak a testimonial truth another developed but has invested their agency into understanding it (mid agency)… or one can speak a testimonial proof which one has developed on their own (the proof stands as a demonstration of their agency).(posts on cognitive self ownership)”—– Bill Joslin

    Now lets look at that last paragraph again:

    This adds a new “moral” level to testimonialism –

    LOW AGENCY

    One can communicate a testimonial truth which they have invested only the time it took to memorize it without any personal agency in developing it….

    or

    MIDDLE AGENCY

    One can speak a testimonial truth another developed but has invested their agency into understanding it…

    or

    AGENCY

    One can speak a testimonial proof which one has developed on their own (the proof stands as a demonstration of their agency).(posts on cognitive self ownership)

    Agency of the youth, the adult, and the wise.

    -Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 11:05:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    https://twitter.com/ThomasSowell/status/832050626351738880/photo/1?utm_source=fb&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=Roman_Skaskiw&utm_content=832978238649561089

    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 06:07:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    https://twitter.com/ThomasSowell/status/831926812317990912/photo/1?utm_source=fb&utm_medium=fb&utm_campaign=Roman_Skaskiw&utm_content=832978283885105152

    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 06:07:00 UTC

  • “The Quest in reactionary circles is to how to manage the good impulses within u

    —“The Quest in reactionary circles is to how to manage the good impulses within us and bad ones outside of us.”—Jaromír Miškovský


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-19 15:43:00 UTC