Source: Facebook

  • Love you all. Revolution Comes. 😉

    Love you all. Revolution Comes. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 12:47:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 12:44:00 UTC

  • BY REQUEST Good try. Good thinking and good writing. But, you should study econo

    https://medium.com/@ciaran_92884/hierarchies-of-competence-competitive-proxies-and-the-conscious-generation-of-the-collective-df68e67bad03REVIEWED BY REQUEST

    https://medium.com/@ciaran_92884/hierarchies-of-competence-competitive-proxies-and-the-conscious-generation-of-the-collective-df68e67bad03

    Good try. Good thinking and good writing. But, you should study economics, law, political history, and war rather than whatever it is you are studying at the moment (software? computer games?), so that your framing, which is ‘ideal’ can be described in existential (real, operational) terms. If you did, you would grasp that you are saying what is common knowledge. So while you correctly understand the problem in ‘private language’ and you argue by ideal analogy, you are stating the obvious to those who are informed, and who argue not by analogy but by descriptive example of demonstrated human behavior.

    A market allows people with dissimilar ends to cooperate on similar means.

    A government creates markets by the suppression of murder, harm, theft, fraud, conspiracy, immigration, conversion, economic warfare, and physical warfare, using law, and communicating that law honestly (jurists, education), or dishonestly (priests, indoctrination).

    These markets function as the ‘games’ you refer to. They government and it’s military and judiciary in particular are compensated indirectly via taxation for suppression of the multitude of rents extracted otherwise.

    A ‘good’ government is merely one that survives competition so that people can organize, plan, produce, and inter-generationally survive.

    A ‘better’ government is one that is suitable to the needs of the population in competition with other populations, not one that is ideal and may or may not survive in competition with other governments.

    A ‘better’ government is one that creates survivable markets yet does not do so by creating rents, and whose externalities are not devolutionary.

    A ‘best’ government is one that provides higher returns from the markets to the people, than others so that their productivity is higher (time necessary to produce competitie returns is lower).

    Network effects always and everywhere create a majority (practical monopoly) player, where capital as previously a competitive advantage it no longer is so.

    And all of that said, people seek at all times to circumvent markets because they ARE competitive.

    If it is possible for people to seek and obtain power by political means they will do so rather than circumvent the market by cheating somehow, or compete in the market.

    People don’t want fair. The want unfair in their advantage. Why? Markets (games) produce Meritocracy, and Meritocracy screws the incapable and so, the incapable organize to circumvent the market by cheating, or circumvent the market by political control.

    Games exist precisely because they have immaterial outcomes. Markets exist because they have material outcomes. Political markets in particular either create more market conditions or less.

    So how do you get from where we are to the circumstance you are describing, as a series of steps?

    People don’t want fair. Markets do not seek equilibrium, but disequilibrium until crash. Because people do not seek fair, they seek advantage. And the seek advantage through every unethical immoral, and illegal means available

    Hence why we have such enormous institutions to prosecute those who circumvent the market.

    More than half of the population cannot read a manual and repair a device.

    The world must be organized for them. Because they are the problem. Not us.

    And organizing it for them requires continuous diligent education, training, disciplining, monitoring, policing, prosecution and punishment.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 12:41:00 UTC

  • The Sanctuary Cities have already seceded from the government and actively viola

    The Sanctuary Cities have already seceded from the government and actively violated the constitutional requirement for federal control of immigration and naturalization.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 11:10:00 UTC

  • NEVER EXTEND BEYOND YOUR KIN Greece was done more harm than good by the hellenic

    NEVER EXTEND BEYOND YOUR KIN

    Greece was done more harm than good by the hellenic expansion east. Rome was done more harm than good by the roman extension east.

    Old Europe (Byzantium-Balkans), Mediterranean Europe (Classical Civilization), Northern europe (Germania), Slavic Intermarium Europe (borderlands), and Russian Europe are unique sub-civilizations. North African civilization was previously mediterranean and caucasian but has been destroyed by the muslim conquest. Byzantine, Anatolian, Persian civilizations have been destroyed by muslim conquest. Roman civilization was destroyed by germanic raids, christian undermining, byzantine conquest, and the accumulation of raids by the muslim conquest.

    NEVER EXPAND BEYOND YOUR KIN


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 10:57:00 UTC

  • CULTURAL DIFFERENCES IN THE USA, EAST OF THE CASCADE-SIERRA-NEVADA MOUNTAINS by

    CULTURAL DIFFERENCES IN THE USA, EAST OF THE CASCADE-SIERRA-NEVADA MOUNTAINS

    by Mike Page Via Quora

    Cultural differences arise among people of different regions of the U.S.A. These differences are largely the result of different dominant cultures that were established following the early migrations of colonial European settlers.

    SOUTH

    For example, the dominant culture in the South is derived from the early influence of Royalists from southern England to Virginia and the Carolinas to start plantations. They were joined later by “Borderers” from Northern England, Scotland, and Ireland who became yeomen farmers. All emanated from the British Isles – but brought considerably different civic and religious traditions with them to the New World.

    THE NORTH

    The culture of the Southerners can be contrasted with that of New England which was also settled by Englishmen – except that these were, initially, Puritans who were motivated to create a utopian community that would be shielded from the interference and persecution of the King’s church.

    THE MIDATLANTIC

    In between New England and the South – the territory that forms the Mid-Atlantic coastal colonies of Delaware, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania was first organized by the Dutch West India Company and a rival trading company from Sweden. The English eventually took possession of all these lands and, of course, the learned Quaker, William Penn, was bequeathed large land holdings by the English Crown – out of which he founded Pennsylvania.

    So, there is a profound English influence upon all of the early colonies – but origins; aspirations; civic and religious tradition; climatic, agricultural, and other geographic considerations – all influenced the growth of unique regional traditions in the original colonies.

    Some of these regional differences are apparent to a contemporary observer.

    – Speech patterns & vocabulary

    – Observance and participation in a church

    – Support for military service

    – Emphasis on education & personal achievement

    – Emphasis on individual rights (right to own a handgun) vs. “the common good”

    If you would like to understand in more detail how these factors shaped modern America – I recommend you read both Albion’s Seed, and American Nations, and The Nine Nations of North America


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 10:48:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 10:04:00 UTC

  • We have, for the first time, the Freedom to Separate and Speciate. There is no n

    We have, for the first time, the Freedom to Separate and Speciate. There is no need for compromise. No need to dominate. Just Revolt, Separate, Prosper, and Speciate.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-07 09:57:00 UTC

  • Professor Who Coined Term ‘Net Neutrality’ Thinks It’s Time To Break Up Facebook

    Professor Who Coined Term ‘Net Neutrality’ Thinks It’s Time To Break Up Facebook (theverge.com http://theverge.com )

    Best known for coining the phrase “net neutrality” and his book The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Wu has a new book coming out in November called The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age. In it, he argues compellingly for a return to aggressive antitrust enforcement in the style of Teddy Roosevelt, saying that Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other huge tech companies are a threat to democracy as they get bigger and bigger. “We live in America, which has a strong and proud tradition of breaking up companies that are too big for inefficient reasons,” Wu told me on this week’s Vergecast. “We need to reverse this idea that it’s not an American tradition. We’ve broken up dozens of companies.”

    “I think if you took a hard look at the acquisition of WhatsApp and Instagram, the argument that the effects of those acquisitions have been anticompetitive would be easy to prove for a number of reasons,” says Wu.

    And breaking up the company wouldn’t be hard, he says. “What would be the harm? You’ll have three competitors. It’s not ‘Oh my god, if you get rid of WhatsApp and Instagram, well then the whole world’s going to fall apart.’ It would be like ‘Okay, now you have some companies actually trying to offer you an alternative to Facebook.’”

    Breaking up Facebook (and other huge tech companies like Google and Amazon) could be simple under the current law, suggests Wu.

    But it could also lead to a major rethinking of how antitrust law should work in a world where the giant platform companies give their products away for free, and the ability for the government to restrict corporate power seems to be diminishing by the day.

    And it demands that we all think seriously about the conditions that create innovation. “I think everyone’s steering way away from the monopolies, and I think it’s hurting innovation in the tech sector,” says Wu.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-06 23:46:00 UTC

  • “The purpose of social hierarchies is to organize social groups in order to allo

    —-“The purpose of social hierarchies is to organize social groups in order to allocate limited resources, such as mates and food (Sapolsky, 2005), facilitate social learning (Henrich & Mcelreath, 2003), and maximize individual motivation (Halevy et al, 2011; Magee & Galinsky, 2008). By definition, some individuals within the hierarchy – those at the top – will be afforded more resources and benefits than others, thus affecting morbidity and mortality. Despite that fact that there are always losers in this scenario, social hierarchies are highly pervasive across human cultures (Sidanius & Pratto, 1999) and they appear to emerge naturally in social groups (Anderson, John, Keltner, & Kring, 2001; Berger, Rosenholtz, & Zelditch, 1980; Chase, Tovey, Spangler-Martin, & Manfredonia, 2002; Gould, 2002; Magee & Galinsky, 2008). Further, this group organization is not strictly a product of human cognition, as almost every group-living species demonstrates a natural tendency to organize into a social hierarchy (Sapolsky, 2004; 2005) where the higher-ranking members possess more power, influence, and advantages than the lower-ranking members (Fragale, Overbeck, & Neale, 2011; Mazur, 1985; Zitek & Tiedens, 2012).”—

    ( h/t Bill Joslin )


    Source date (UTC): 2018-09-06 22:06:00 UTC