Theme: Deception

  • RT @MatthewCrispell: “Instead the feminine left seeks to lie that we are in fact

    RT @MatthewCrispell: “Instead the feminine left seeks to lie that we are in fact equal rather than that we should treat each other equally…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-29 16:44:17 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1784987078645686570

  • RT @NoahRevoy: Most “freedoms” (or rights) that people advocate for are false pr

    RT @NoahRevoy: Most “freedoms” (or rights) that people advocate for are false promises (lies and manipulation) of an escape from responsibi…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-29 13:35:06 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1784939466848678000

  • CURT WHY DO YOU ATTRIBUTE NEGATIVE INFLUENCE TO KEYNES AND RAWLS? Great Question

    CURT WHY DO YOU ATTRIBUTE NEGATIVE INFLUENCE TO KEYNES AND RAWLS?
    Great Question:

    TLDR; The Conversion of economics from the science of cooperation over the long term (capitalization) to the science of manipulation of the public in the short term (consumption) – under the presumption that the industrial revolution and it’s consequences had produced a horn of plenty that would lead to eternal growth.

    Context: I was educated in science, engineering, computer science, economics, and law. So I have an engineers perspective on problems in social science.

    As such I have maintained a foundation in the Austrian school of economics as the study of economic science, compatible with the empiricism of western common law, and concurrent legislation, with a cautious acceptance for the Chicago “freshwater” school which seeks to insure economies and facilitate the production of such commons as education, and a disdain for the Keynesian, New York, “saltwater” school of economics, that seeks to maximize consumption and debt at the consequence of cumulative risks: kicking the can down the road. These three fields all claim the title of economics but they are instead economics, it’s insurance against shocks, and it’s manipulation.

    Now, that said, in economics I consider Keynes (as did my mentor Hayek) a disaster for economics and policy, and

    I consider John Rawls a disaster for both law legislation and economic policy – because it is their collective efforts that have brought about the present economic crisis in the west: their pretense of endless growth and endless risk, has come to roost.

    So, my critiques of Keynes and Rawls emphasizes their roles in baiting ignorant legislators and willing financiers into economic and legal policies that have led to unsustainable growth, increased debt, and extraordinary economic risks.

    CRITIQUE OF JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES:

    Short-term focus: Keynes advocated for government intervention and increased spending to stimulate economic growth during recessions. However, critics argue that this short-term focus on boosting consumption and aggregate demand neglects the long-term consequences of accumulating debt and the potential for creating economic bubbles.

    Disregard for savings and investment: The Keynesian approach often involves lowering interest rates to encourage borrowing and discourage saving. This can lead to a misallocation of resources, as the artificially low cost of capital may encourage investments in projects that are not economically viable in the long run.

    Inflation and currency devaluation: Keynesian policies, such as expansionary monetary policy and deficit spending, can lead to inflation and currency devaluation over time. This erodes the purchasing power of money, disproportionately affecting savers and those on fixed incomes.

    Crowding out of private investment: When governments borrow heavily to finance spending, they compete with the private sector for available funds. This can lead to higher interest rates and reduced private investment, hindering long-term economic growth.

    Ignoring the role of prices: Keynesian economics often focuses on aggregate demand and overlooks the crucial role of prices in allocating resources efficiently. This can result in market distortions and a misallocation of resources.

    CRITIQUE OF JOHN RAWLS:

    Disregard for individual rights and property: Rawls’ “veil of ignorance” and “difference principle” prioritize redistributive policies over individual rights and property ownership. This can undermine incentives for innovation, risk-taking, and wealth creation.

    Encouragement of rent-seeking behavior: Rawls’ focus on redistribution can encourage rent-seeking behavior, where individuals and groups lobby for special privileges and transfers rather than engaging in productive economic activities.

    Centralized decision-making: The implementation of Rawlsian principles often involves centralized decision-making and government intervention, which can lead to inefficiencies, unintended consequences, and the concentration of power in the hands of a few.

    Disregard for the knowledge problem: Rawls’ theory assumes that a central authority can gather and process all the necessary information to make optimal redistributive decisions. However, this ignores the inherent complexity of economic systems and the dispersed nature of knowledge, as highlighted by the Austrian school.

    Conflict with the rule of law: Rawls’ emphasis on redistributive justice can come into conflict with the principles of the rule of law, such as generality, predictability, and equal treatment. This can lead to arbitrary and discriminatory policies.

    In summary, my criticism of Keynes and Rawls emphasizes their role in promoting short-term thinking, unsustainable policies, and the erosion of individual rights and market efficiency.

    They are the innovators and justificationists of policies whose short term goals produced unintended consequences and long-term risks associated with their ideas, which are seen as contributing factors to the current economic crisis in the West.

    Reply addressees: @cowcow8237465


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-26 22:19:41 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1783984320111079424

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1783975871272927609

  • I doubt it’s a ‘coup’ but the fact that there was some deep state something or o

    I doubt it’s a ‘coup’ but the fact that there was some deep state something or other with or without foreign entanglement is certainly possible if not likely.

    Trump would not redact something that was harmful to the deep state unless it would be harmful to the american people as a whole. And the fact that he’s said to napolitano that it’s not something he would ever divulge is scary enough to respect trump’s decision.

    Reply addressees: @DrewandCharlie1


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-23 16:59:39 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782816618411622400

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782810627507159179

  • FYI: TRUMP AND KENNEDY ASASSINATION DOCS In October 2017, President Trump announ

    FYI: TRUMP AND KENNEDY ASASSINATION DOCS
    In October 2017, President Trump announced that he would release previously classified documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

    The release observed the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, which mandated that all assassination-related records be released within 25 years, unless the President decided that doing so would harm national security or foreign relations.

    On October 26, 2017, the National Archives released 2,891 records, but some documents remained withheld or redacted at the request of government agencies.

    President Trump gave agencies a deadline of six months to review the remaining documents and justify any further postponements.

    In April 2018, the final set of documents was released, with some redactions still in place.

    In other words, it’s not trump that obscured some of the information, it’s the agencies that did so.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-22 21:38:40 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782524446403596288

  • (Social Media Ethics) I should just use this as part of my signature on every po

    (Social Media Ethics)
    I should just use this as part of my signature on every post. 😉

    –“I suspect you may be smart enough to understand this post but that you might need exposition for the purpose of clarification. So please ask if necessary. But under no circumstances assume I err (I don’t), and instead, seek to understand, such that we may find fault with either person’s understanding or communication.”—

    Cheers.
    😉


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-22 20:02:13 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782500176461983744

  • RE: SIMULATION THEORY (pseudoscience, sophistry, ‘religion’.) –“Q:Curt:Could I

    RE: SIMULATION THEORY
    (pseudoscience, sophistry, ‘religion’.)
    –“Q:Curt:Could I get you to spell out for me how simulation theory reflects the behavior of human memory?”—@AMaskedMartyr

    Always happy to answer intellectually honest questions respectfully asked. 😉

    We reconstruct memories constantly in response to present modeling, patterning, and understanding. ie: reverse causality.

    Add to this that while we perceive space and time within our range of sense and perception with extraordinary accuracy for any purpose for which we are capable of acting.

    However, we project our auto-associative ‘predictions’ (imaginations) upon that accurate perception and thus create cause and consequence in our imaginations from the oft ignorant, erroneous, if not absurd content we have managed to accumulate in memory over time.

    So, we differ within the margins of human indifference, in ability, in bias, in experience, in knowledge, and as such in presumptions. And we project a near infinite fiction both causal(back) and consequential (forward) on top of local sense perception (present).

    Reality however remains objective and consistent independent of of those differences in our projections – and that’s why we require such a thing as truth: decidability – so that it is still possible to cooperate on means if not ends, when there are differences in our perceptions of cause and consequence.

    Simulation theory is nonsense.

    But you know, from what I understand at the moment, the discipline of philosophy is essentially dead and has been for as long as physics has been failing.

    Affections;
    Please feel free to ask questions for clarification.
    Curt Doolittle
    The Natural Law Institute
    The Science of Cooperation

    Reply addressees: @AMaskedMartyr @ScottAdamsSays


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-22 19:35:39 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782493488149303296

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782481684635488341

  • Me too. Dunno why. Your insight that what we usually call leftist magical thinki

    Me too. Dunno why. Your insight that what we usually call leftist magical thinking, is the equivalent of, and more accurately explained as creationism is correct and a frame of reference we should use more frequently.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-22 19:08:09 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782486566939787495

    Reply addressees: @AutistocratMS @BlemmyaeTruther

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782412573352014295

  • I would agree that the people on the fringes are more likely to identify questio

    I would agree that the people on the fringes are more likely to identify questionable government and private sector activity, but it comes with the equal likelihood of exaggeration and fictionalization of conspiracy theories.

    In ukraine, belarus, russia, the soviet era and post-soviet era corruption systems are essentially how people are paid to tow the line – becasue everyone can be bought, because almost everyone is qualitatively poor by western standards.
    I mean at $80 to $200 bucks a month for people on the margin, and an average salary in total of $500 in post soviet economies, even with their ultra low cost of labor, food, and energy (and less so housing), it’s just almost impossible for everyone not to circumvent limited salaries if they are in any position to do so.
    Our american government is far more corrupt, it’s just indirect corruption by abuse of systematic opportunities rather than direct cash payments for performance.
    Franky having lived in those countries I”m not sure it’s not better to pay a copy $20 for a ticket rather than many hundreds to in the west.

    Reply addressees: @AltPublishNow @Rockwale @RealPatrickWebb


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-21 18:47:48 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782119059292663808

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782105504262844440

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @AltPublishNow @RealPatrickWebb SEYMOUR HERSH’S REPUTATION FO

    RT @curtdoolittle: @AltPublishNow @RealPatrickWebb SEYMOUR HERSH’S REPUTATION FOR CLICKBAIT AND MEDIABAIT WITH CONSPIRACY THEORIES: SPECULA…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-04-21 16:00:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1782077063882498467