http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/10/why-are-liberal-cities-so-unaffordable/382045/
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-30 07:38:00 UTC
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/10/why-are-liberal-cities-so-unaffordable/382045/
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-30 07:38:00 UTC
MOVING THE GOAL POSTS
—“The left is always moving the goalposts. If you point out that the welfare state (compassion + bureaucracy + taxes + regulation) generates sloth, parasitism, irresponsibility, etc, you might get the answer that “you, too, would be slothful, etc. if you had to face what the average poor person faces everyday”. In other words, the old model of poor people as poor people with middle-class values/sensibilities is gone. Apparently, capitalism is a game of economic musical chairs in which millions of (once) poor folks make it into the lower or middle-class but somehow a vast underclass gets left without jobs, thereby triggering the underclass traits we all know and love.”–
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-28 16:03:00 UTC
Inequality?
Again: 1) feminism and single motherhood along racial lines generates theft from those with good discipline and who create a single household cost, to those with poor discipline and who generate two household costs. The “fair answer” then is to ignore all marriage corporation in taxation, everyone file individual taxes, and halve the income and double the deductions of married cohabiting people, so that married people who co-habitate are not unfairly taxed. If we did that, then taxes would have to be adjusted higher on everyone now that money was not stolen from efficient families to expensive single mothers.
2) companies left the states because we are no longer the exclusive members of the wealth club, able to export products to others. And did so because overpaid labor in the postwar period tried to further increase their take. So rather than lose other markets or lose this market to others, Americans had no choice but to move production to companies with new markets.
I left for that reason. Plus government employees are predatory members of the lower classes. And I am sick of living in fear of them.
3) Education never was able to compensate for racial differences in ability and preference, and cannot now compensate for both biological differences and cultural differences as well.
Educators are overpaid given the statistical relationship between teacher compensation and other graduates with same iq, especially given that teachers do not marginally improve in performance after the first six months of employment.
Our children are largely taught indoctrination and falsehoods and we can prove that by testing against other cultures.
So we can no longer produce employment asymmetrically from the rest of the world.
If we examine voting history we see that without women voters, none of these policies would have been possible to pass. So this state of affairs is due to feminists and socialists.
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-26 04:02:00 UTC
(dammit…. Now that I have Finished Class Theory, Sociology, and Inter-Group Competition, I have to create a graphic, or some form of visually representing the different moral and immoral group evolutionary strategies that different cultures operate by…. I am not sure that I can …. wait….Yes I can. I think…. )
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-25 03:38:00 UTC
Answer by @curtdoolittle to How much more capitalist is the US than Germany? http://qr.ae/DTDZg
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-22 21:35:19 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/525037710835462144
http://www.socialmatter.net/2014/06/24/whither-intellectual-conservatism/THE WRONG QUESTION?
Does intellectual conservatism exist? This may be the wrong question.
I’ll argue that yes, intellectual conservatism does exist. Although, when you say “intellectual” it is somewhat troublesome, because it’s not sufficiently articulate for the purpose you intend. Instead, humans demonstrate the ability to argue( persuade or justify) using a limited number of frameworks – and those frameworks constitute a spectrum of complexity from the simplistically intuitive to the ratio-empirical. The question is, what form of argument do you consider to be classifiable as intellectual, where on this spectrum to conservatives conduct their arguments, and for what reason do they fail to conduct their arguments in the manner you consider intellectual.
ARGUMENTATIVE SPECTRUM
1) EXPRESSIVE (emotional): a type of argument where a person expresses a positive or negative opinion based upon his emotional response to the subject. While used as an argument, it is not. It is merely an opinion or expression.
2) SENTIMENTAL (biological): a type of argument that relies upon one of the five (or six) human sentiments, and their artifacts as captured in human traditions, morals, or other unarticulated, but nevertheless consistently and universally demonstrated preferences and behaviors.
3) MORAL (normative) : a type of argument that relies upon a set of assumedly normative rules of whose origin is either (a)socially contractual, (b)biologically natural, (c) economically necessary, or even (d)divine.
4) HISTORICAL (analogical / correlative):
5) RATIONAL (internally consistent)
6) SCIENTIFIC (correlative and directly empirical)
7) ECONOMIC: (correlative and *indirectly* empirical)
8) RATIO-EMPIRICAL (Comprehensive, internally consistent and externally correspondent)
Conservatism, when discussed outside of economics, where it is almost never discussed, is almost always expressed in arational terms (moral argument). Sometimes it is expressed in legal terms – the classical liberal and constitutionalist argument). Sometimes it is expressed in what we call the Burkeian or ‘psychological’ form of argument. But rarely as an analytic, scientific, or economic argument. And never as the central propositions of conservatism – because those central propositions would be untenable to a popular democratic polity – even if they were indeed morally, economically, and politically superior. This is because the popular democratic argument is a failed one, that is in direct conflict with conservatism as a social, economic, political and legal strategy.
So, conservatism is argued most often, “arationally”. The value of conservatism, as an *ARATIONAL* social system of myths, traditions, habits, and formal institutions, is that such a structure, much like religious faith, is impervious to fashionable changes, and in particular, verbal manipulation by Schumpeterian public intellectuals. In fact, I have argued, and I think successfully, that conservatism as practiced is demonstrably scientific: evidentiary – while progressivism is demonstrably and successfully verbalist. A fact which is somewhat humorous or ironic or depressing depending upon one’s own disposition: in effect while conservatism is arationally structured, and progressivism is rationally structured, it turns out that conservatism as practiced is scientific, and progressive is unscientific (religious). Furthermore, science itself is practiced demonstrably, not argumentatively – which only serves to lend credence to the conservative prohibition on hubris, and the mandate for demonstrated results rather than verbal hypothesis.
THE PROBLEMS OF AN ‘INTELLECTUAL’ CONSERVATISM
1) Just as we solved the calculus and physics, before we solved economics and social science, conservatism has been unsolved (unarticulated in ratio-scientific terms) because it is a more complicated system than we had anticipated. And such complicated systems of thought are very hard to use in argument. Worse, they are hard to use in political argument because, under a democratic polity, we require numbers, and complicated arguments are the province of a permanent minority. Until conservatism is articulated in ratio-empirical form, and until public intellectuals can reduce those complex statements to simple narratives and memes, conservatism (Anglo-European Aristocratic Egalitarianism) is an advanced form of social order that is nearly impossible for ordinary people to argumentatively defend.
2) There doesn’t appear to be demand for intellectual argument in conservatism, precisely because conservatives are so dependent upon taught, learned and innate moral intuition. If conservatives cannot ‘feel’ it then they don’t trust it. This turns out to be fairly good when one prevents adding false ideas to conservatism, but it turns out to be fairly difficult to argue conservatism rationally. So therefore, as a majority, conservatism can function and persist in a body of people. But under democratic rule, cultural and political diversity, the need to argue rationally in order to produce laws, and the ability to use law to impose changes upon the body politic, conservative arationalism is a weakness because conservative principles are not sufficiently defensible against (dishonest) framing, loading, overloading, pseudo-rationalism, and pseudoscience. Which is why the 20th century has been so harmful to conservatism: the cosmopolitans were merely superior at using the media to broadcast and repeat as a mantra, nearly any framed, loaded, overloaded, pseudo-rational (postmodern), and pseudoscientific (marxist-socialist) program.
3) I generally test my ideas in the libertarian (libertine) community precisely because libertarianism (libertinism) is an intellectual ideology: structured as a very rigid, very analytic, moral, legal, and economic argument. Libertarians (libertines) are wrong, which is why their argument fails universally in all political populations. But at least it is possible to conduct conservative argument in moral, legal, and economic terms, and develop one’s arguments there. Most of us find, that even if we produce, as you say ‘intellectual’ philosophy, but I would state as ‘ratio-empirical, moral, analytic, legal, and economic philosophy’, conservatives behave so anti-intellectually, that the advocacy of conservatism in ratio-empirical, analytic, moral, legal, and economic terms, is exasperating.
SO THE QUESTION MAY BE “WHY ARE CONSERVATIVES SO ANTI-INTELLECTUAL” rather than why are no conservative philosophers extant. I’m here. A few others are. But the conservative community does not demonstrate a demand for ‘intellectual’ arguments. All things considered, that is not necessarily a criticism. It just so happens that if the academy and the state conspire rather than are separated as were church and state, and in an age of expensive consumer-driven media, financed by hedonistic consumption, conservatives face a perfect storm of destructive incentives, against which traditionalism is not a sufficiently resistant means of argument, because we lack the economic means of ostracizing bad behaviors.
Curt Doolittle
The Philosophy of Aristocracy
The Propertarian Institute
Kiev, Ukraine.
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-21 16:07:00 UTC
TRUTH IS ENOUGH: ARGUMENTATIVE FRAGMENTS
Over the past day, I have accumulated the following posts, started by Michael Phillip’s excellent short piece on the persistence of marxism, but which taken together compose an argument: That we pursue status signals by the use of verbal justification; that very bright people use their intelligence to signal; that this cognitive bias promotes immorality; and that there is but one cure for our cognitive bias: truthful speech; and that truthful speech is only possible to conduct operationally; and that truthful speech is the necessary and sufficient criteria for constructing a moral polity; where morality is defined as avoidance of breaking the incentives to cooperate, by the total prohibition upon free riding.
Immorality is a Competitive Advantage
https://www.facebook.com/curt.doolittle/posts/10152813033212264
The Incentives Of Marxists
https://www.facebook.com/curt.doolittle/posts/10152808947787264
Education Makes one Cunning but Not Moral
https://www.facebook.com/curt.doolittle/posts/10152812455752264
What Must A Moral Man Do?
https://www.facebook.com/curt.doolittle/posts/10152813014372264
My Own Bias for Truth Telling As Conflict Suppression (Gene Machine’s and Unconscious Justification)
https://www.facebook.com/curt.doolittle/posts/10152813003142264
BUT THE ARGUMENTS THAT ARE MISSING FROM THE LIST:
1) That arguing truthfully is merely tedious, and burdensome, not difficult. It is moral, not cunning.
***2) it is logically impossible pursue a cunning moral strategy, and it is ONLY Possible to pursue a moral society using Propertarianism and Aristocratic Egalitarianism.***
This last statement is profound. I have merely captured in scientific and modern language the ancient aristocratic egalitarian practice that we have developed for as much as 8000 years, but certainly no less that 4000. I am the first to do it. And the only reason I could do it was because science gave us the tools that were unavailable to previous generations.
***THE TRUTH IS ENOUGH***
It has been, and is, and it always will be.
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-21 07:22:00 UTC
THE PERSISTENCE OF MARXISM
—“The persistence of Marxism in the West is a function of its persistence in academe. Without that, it would wither and die. Why does it persistent in academe? Because Marxism satisfies three deep cognitive wants for academics:
(1) It is a complex theoretical system. There is nothing that establishes one’s bona fides as a Very Clever Person more than mastering a complex theoretical system: the denser and more jargon-heavy the prose, the better. And Marx’s writings have plenty of dense, jargon-heavy prose.
(2) It is a system of grand intent. If one lives the life of the mind, then the grander one’s intellectual projects, the grander one’s cognitive sense of self: Marxism not only “explains” human history and society, it “reveals” the final end point of human and social transformation. What could be grander than such a project?
(3) It completely de-legitimises commerce. Under Marxism, the only legitimate economic role is to supply labour. All commerce is de-legitimised and all those engaged in it—including all those people who have far more wealth and organisational significance than academics—are de-legitimised, reduced to “exploiters” who are but immoral dust beneath the heels of academics in no way “polluted” by vulgar commerce.”—
Michael Philip
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-19 06:28:00 UTC
ARISTOCRACY PROVIDES THE ONLY NECESSARY EQUALITY
Aristocracy is geographically portable. It’s the lower classes from which diversity creates ‘Bads’.
Aristocracy can think independently of context (yes, we can measure it). But the lower classes depend upon shared knowledge, shared ethics, shared morality, to act. And it is those differences which cause conflict.
Aristocracy is marginally indifferent in these matters.
So the logical consequence is that the ‘family’ or ‘tribe’ of aristocracy work together for the betterment of their tribes, just as parents in a village work together for the betterment of their children.
Equality divides us. Aristocracy unites us.
It may be counter intuitive, but it’s true.
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-15 02:45:00 UTC
http://feedly.com/e/d_SCnbxVThe numbers: republicans are the party of whites and democrats the party on non. Just how it is and the trend will continue.
Source date (UTC): 2014-10-08 21:34:00 UTC