Theme: Governance

  • “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

  • Erik Weinstein, Theil Capital (From Elsewhere) A, fan. But a few comments 1) Eri

    Erik Weinstein, Theil Capital

    (From Elsewhere)

    A, fan. But a few comments

    1) Eric ends up describing the elusive goal of reducing discretionary economic *policy* to non-discretionary *rule of law*. The way he expresses it is just unclear. This is the holy grail of political, and legal as well as economic and social science.

    2) Regarding the ‘new economy’. Perhaps, it’s rather better to state that the production of commons in the market for commons (politics) by the demonstration of behavior in the commons, is of greater value in producing goods for consumption, than the production of goods, services, and information in the market for consumption (private goods), when the ability to organize people by voluntary incentives (capitalism and markets) is no longer possible because of the excess of labor, and limited contribution of labor to that process.

    3) Unstated in Eric’s assumptions is a concept of ‘We’ evolved under the enlightenment seizure of the organs of the state from the aristocracy, and its universalism under the subsequent influence of Cosmopolitanism and the Industrial Revolution, and my understanding is that this concept of ‘we’ is disintegrating along with the ‘luxury’ of the cosmopolitan presumption.

    4) Because of the ‘we’ question (the value of nation states, because of the dead weight of the underclasses under Cosmopolitanism), as far as I can tell, the most successful group evolutionary strategy is to force new-normative behavior into nations with large underclasses. And I am all but certain that it is this return-to-normal that will play out.

    5) What Eric does not mention is the similarity between silicon valley and the german princedoms wherein monarchies fought for status and wealth by sponsoring talents across the spectrum. Rather than cosmopolitan solutions I suggest that this is the reason that the germans nearly brought about the second scientific revolution and it’s consequential second enlightenment pre-war. And that this is the model we should take from Silicon Valley, not the fact that Silicon valley is

    In other words, Eric is making the progressive error, common in the Cosmopolitans and Postmoderns that the assumption of growth that the Capitalist state relies upon, is not the assumption he himself relies upon. Bigger is only better if capital is brought to people rather than people to capital.

    As far as I an tell there is no means of constructing a higher incentive than kin, when macro incentives fail, and the choice is between absorbing far more risk and change and increased competition, or creating scarcity and benefitting from it.

    This is how I position the worldwide shift at present. My understanding of the 20th century ‘overstatement’ of economics and mathematics is marginally indifferent from Eric’s. But my understanding of human history is that there is absolutely nothing unique about our present condition other than scale. And one can ‘hope’ and ‘pray’ and ‘aspire’ and ‘labor’ to bring about a solution that continues evolving the world to what amounts to a universal caste system, but the mathematics of the formation of voluntary organizations of production in all the markets: association, reproduction, production, production of commons, production of polities, and group evolutionary strategies, suggests that it’s not possible. But that a larger number of smaller polities can achieve those ends without expanding the underclasses and causing the ‘problem’ that Eric is leaving unstated: the market for human beings will not bear goods for that which has no demand – other than kinship.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute.

    Kiev, Ukraine.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-22 13:35:00 UTC

  • Direct Economic (Empirical) Democracy

    DIRECT ECONOMIC (EMPIRICAL) DEMOCRACY When we say democracy we could be referring to the use of votes for very different purposes. We could be using them to select representatives. We could be using them to choose preferred commons.  We could be using them to select preferred behavior. We could be using them to punish impermissible behavior. I see no case at all for representatives in an era of cheap mass communications.  If we are to use representatives at all, they should be chosen by lot for a single year, and held accountable for their actions by rule of law like any other contract maker. As far as I can tell, direct economic democracy either by proportion or by equal share, where one’s votes may NOT be proxied, will produce (a) the most educated and aware population, and (b) the least corrupt government, as long as (c) all statements must be ‘scientifically’ truthful by the terms i’ve defined elsewhere.

    The dominance of single houses independent of classes the dominance of parties, the use of representatives, and the cheapness of lobbying representatives rather than the voters, are all malincentives.
  • Direct Economic (Empirical) Democracy

    DIRECT ECONOMIC (EMPIRICAL) DEMOCRACY When we say democracy we could be referring to the use of votes for very different purposes. We could be using them to select representatives. We could be using them to choose preferred commons.  We could be using them to select preferred behavior. We could be using them to punish impermissible behavior. I see no case at all for representatives in an era of cheap mass communications.  If we are to use representatives at all, they should be chosen by lot for a single year, and held accountable for their actions by rule of law like any other contract maker. As far as I can tell, direct economic democracy either by proportion or by equal share, where one’s votes may NOT be proxied, will produce (a) the most educated and aware population, and (b) the least corrupt government, as long as (c) all statements must be ‘scientifically’ truthful by the terms i’ve defined elsewhere.

    The dominance of single houses independent of classes the dominance of parties, the use of representatives, and the cheapness of lobbying representatives rather than the voters, are all malincentives.
  • Yes, Fascism is an Exceptional Extension of Total War

    YES FASCISM IS AN EXCEPTIONAL TOOL OF WAR (read this or remain stupid) —“Curt, would you still say fascism possesses a useful albeit temporary function?”—Robert Harris Scott Hayes

    Fascism has an EXCEPTIONAL short term function. It is a means of marshaling every resource in a nation for war on all fronts: military, trade, economic, financial, cultural, religious and informational. But it’s as costly as war over the long term. It is a means of warfare. Just as an army is an authoritarian means of organizing a people for physical war, and investing in certain commercial sectors is a means of organizing people for trade and economic war, and organizing credit for financial war….. Fascism allows us even to organize INFORMATION for the purpose of warfare. And that is what the Fascist generation did. War is war. But we do not fight the last battle just because we understand the tactic. Today we have a different tactic. We have a very very very fragile civilization that has been at war for a century or more with the cosmopolitan financial vision of managing the world for their benefit rather than each nation using financial, legal, cultural, and informational institutions to advance each nation WITHOUT exporting capital to others – by PREVENTING the parasitism of the cosmopolitan order we live under. Fascism isn’t necessary because fascism is DISCRETIONARY. We can do the SAME THING without putting a dictator in charge. We can simply starve out the other side by cutting off their means of funding. 1) direct redistribution of fiat liquidity to citizens. 2) demand for warranty of due diligence upon truthfulness (testimonialism) for all speech of all forms in the commons. 3) revocation of the copyright and institution of involuntary creative commons. 4) require sponsorship and full warranty of all costs for any immigrant, and rolling back the 64 immigration act, as well as the 14th and all related judgements. 5) addition of voluntary and involuntary disassociation without limit. I can lengthen this list but it is unnecessary. The first three will end globalism, the academy, the media, the entertainment business, and vague statements from the politicians in short order. Whether you understand these things or not, they will destroy the cosmopolitan attack on western civlization in months. Because they may shame us and harm our status and employability. But we will prosecute, judge, and hang them. Dead people can’t propagandize and lie. Curt Doolittle
  • Yes, Fascism is an Exceptional Extension of Total War

    YES FASCISM IS AN EXCEPTIONAL TOOL OF WAR (read this or remain stupid) —“Curt, would you still say fascism possesses a useful albeit temporary function?”—Robert Harris Scott Hayes

    Fascism has an EXCEPTIONAL short term function. It is a means of marshaling every resource in a nation for war on all fronts: military, trade, economic, financial, cultural, religious and informational. But it’s as costly as war over the long term. It is a means of warfare. Just as an army is an authoritarian means of organizing a people for physical war, and investing in certain commercial sectors is a means of organizing people for trade and economic war, and organizing credit for financial war….. Fascism allows us even to organize INFORMATION for the purpose of warfare. And that is what the Fascist generation did. War is war. But we do not fight the last battle just because we understand the tactic. Today we have a different tactic. We have a very very very fragile civilization that has been at war for a century or more with the cosmopolitan financial vision of managing the world for their benefit rather than each nation using financial, legal, cultural, and informational institutions to advance each nation WITHOUT exporting capital to others – by PREVENTING the parasitism of the cosmopolitan order we live under. Fascism isn’t necessary because fascism is DISCRETIONARY. We can do the SAME THING without putting a dictator in charge. We can simply starve out the other side by cutting off their means of funding. 1) direct redistribution of fiat liquidity to citizens. 2) demand for warranty of due diligence upon truthfulness (testimonialism) for all speech of all forms in the commons. 3) revocation of the copyright and institution of involuntary creative commons. 4) require sponsorship and full warranty of all costs for any immigrant, and rolling back the 64 immigration act, as well as the 14th and all related judgements. 5) addition of voluntary and involuntary disassociation without limit. I can lengthen this list but it is unnecessary. The first three will end globalism, the academy, the media, the entertainment business, and vague statements from the politicians in short order. Whether you understand these things or not, they will destroy the cosmopolitan attack on western civlization in months. Because they may shame us and harm our status and employability. But we will prosecute, judge, and hang them. Dead people can’t propagandize and lie. Curt Doolittle
  • I Am Not A Populist. Truth and Preference are Independent from one another

    I AM NOT A POPULIST
     
    I don’t place any weight in ‘popular’ anything. I am not a supporter of democracy whatsoever, unless we mean empirical (economic) democracy. Opinion without warranty (skin in the game) is just self reporting of virtue signals, not demonstrated preference – which always differs substantially.
     
    I only care if statements are TRUE and open to juridical prosecution and defense, so that the false and parasitic can be suppressed.
     
    This DIFFERENCE is what separates :
    1) Prophets, Priests, Literature, Intellectuals, Academics, Politicians, and well intentioned fools (social ambitions) (***reported preference***) (GOSSIP)
    from:
    2) Financiers, Investors, Entrepreneurs, (commercial ambitions – demonstrated preference)(REMUNERATION)
    from:
    3) Physical scientists, generals, and jurists,. (truth ambitions – decidability) in matters of dispute. (FORCE)
     
    If you want a priest go find one. If you want opportunities go find them I’m a not a priest. I don’t care what you want. you can have whatever you can obtain morally – by reciprocity that does not cause me and mine to bear the cost of deciding a conflict, performing restitution, punishment, removal, or murder.
     
    I have a difficult job. Engineering. prophets and intellectuals have an easier job: bullshitting, coercing, lying.
     
    Curt Doolittle
    The Natural Law of Sovereign Men
    The Philosophy of Aristocracy
    The Cult of Non-Submission
    The Propertarian Institute
    Kiev, Ukraine.
     
    Comment by Bill Joslin
    —“Commonwealth democracy has a very different foundation than American Democracy.
     
    Commonwealth democracy extends from the idea that people can have a say in WHO RULES THEM. It has nothing to do with the government actualizing the will of the people.
     
    American democracy conflates common people’s say in who rules them with rulership itself. It was a damaging lie constructed to conceal from the polis THAT THEY ARE RULED.
     
    All the conflations of libertarians, anacaps and protestor’s demands upon the state extend from this lie.
     
    Democratic choice in deciding who rules you was a means to prevent revolution and rebellion – no different than law – a mechanism to prevent the regression back into violence as a means of decidability -prevention of retaliation.”—
  • I Am Not A Populist. Truth and Preference are Independent from one another

    I AM NOT A POPULIST
     
    I don’t place any weight in ‘popular’ anything. I am not a supporter of democracy whatsoever, unless we mean empirical (economic) democracy. Opinion without warranty (skin in the game) is just self reporting of virtue signals, not demonstrated preference – which always differs substantially.
     
    I only care if statements are TRUE and open to juridical prosecution and defense, so that the false and parasitic can be suppressed.
     
    This DIFFERENCE is what separates :
    1) Prophets, Priests, Literature, Intellectuals, Academics, Politicians, and well intentioned fools (social ambitions) (***reported preference***) (GOSSIP)
    from:
    2) Financiers, Investors, Entrepreneurs, (commercial ambitions – demonstrated preference)(REMUNERATION)
    from:
    3) Physical scientists, generals, and jurists,. (truth ambitions – decidability) in matters of dispute. (FORCE)
     
    If you want a priest go find one. If you want opportunities go find them I’m a not a priest. I don’t care what you want. you can have whatever you can obtain morally – by reciprocity that does not cause me and mine to bear the cost of deciding a conflict, performing restitution, punishment, removal, or murder.
     
    I have a difficult job. Engineering. prophets and intellectuals have an easier job: bullshitting, coercing, lying.
     
    Curt Doolittle
    The Natural Law of Sovereign Men
    The Philosophy of Aristocracy
    The Cult of Non-Submission
    The Propertarian Institute
    Kiev, Ukraine.
     
    Comment by Bill Joslin
    —“Commonwealth democracy has a very different foundation than American Democracy.
     
    Commonwealth democracy extends from the idea that people can have a say in WHO RULES THEM. It has nothing to do with the government actualizing the will of the people.
     
    American democracy conflates common people’s say in who rules them with rulership itself. It was a damaging lie constructed to conceal from the polis THAT THEY ARE RULED.
     
    All the conflations of libertarians, anacaps and protestor’s demands upon the state extend from this lie.
     
    Democratic choice in deciding who rules you was a means to prevent revolution and rebellion – no different than law – a mechanism to prevent the regression back into violence as a means of decidability -prevention of retaliation.”—
  • THE COPY AND PASTE ARGUMENT AGAINST LIBERTARIANISM — Libertarianism has good i

    THE COPY AND PASTE ARGUMENT AGAINST LIBERTARIANISM

    — Libertarianism has good ideas —

    And arsenic has good uses as well.

    Libertarianism has good ideas in so far as i) it attempts (correctly) to produce an amoral analytic political philosophy by reducing all rights to property rights in the anglo contractualist (anglo-saxon) tradition. And ii) because of this it is the only ethical, moral, and political framework capable of competing with cosmopolitan marxism, socialism, pseudo-scientific socialism, postwar conservatism, neo-conservatism. But unfortunately, because the anglo conservatives cannot in a democracy state that conservatism, as demonstrated by Darwin, Spencer, and Nietzche, is and always was, a eugenic group evolutionary strategy, conservatives were barred from ratio-scientific argument. At least, until the end of the 20th century when we had accumulated enough empirical evidence about the nature of man to overcome the religious, pseudoscientific, and wishful thinking visions of man.

    But while libertarianism contains a at least one good idea, it also has catastrophically bad ideas in (a) the assumptions of the nature of man as balanced between immoral and moral, rather than completely rational, and the higher cost of moral productivity than immoral parasitism to the strongest of individuals, (b) the assumption of the distribution of talents and interests in any population as indifferent rather than as preferring very different orders that better suit their interests, (c) the abandonment of commons because of the inability to solve the problem of choosing, constructing and maintaining commons, (d) the unsurvivability of any such polity without the competitive advantage of commons, (e) the definition of property such that unethical and immoral action is licensed, or a preference not a necessity for the formation of a demographically, economically, and militarily competitive polity, (f) the demand for an authoritarian rule to suppress retaliation against unethical, and immoral actions. (g) and where demand for rule cannot be created, the only individuals who will select for such (remote) polities will be those that consume parasitically upon the products of societies that produce commons – and if sufficiently ‘successful’ in accumulating those parasites, will be exterminated by those polities; (h) especially given that the first, and most necessary common we must produce in any polity is the formal institutions that insure our property rights, from those with greater individual, group, collective, and political resources;

    As such, ‘liberarianism’ is a recipe for recreating the THE LEVANT, not the western high trust, highly productive, highly innovative, order of sovereignty, liberty, freedom, and subsidy.

    Libertarianism is a semitic, tribal, low trust, and ghetto, but not western social order.

    THUS ENDETH THE LESSON.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Cult of Non Submission

    The Philosophy of Aristocracy

    The Natural Law of Sovereign Men

    The Propertarian Institute, Kiev, Ukraine


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-20 10:31:00 UTC

  • McCain: “This is how dictators get started.” No John. This is why dictators are

    McCain: “This is how dictators get started.”

    No John. This is why dictators are necessary: the are the universal outcome of democracy: underclass rule. Next comes chaos, and a restoration of monarchy, the evolution of the ruling class and the cycle continues.

    We invented perfect government and idiots like you destroyed it.


    Source date (UTC): 2017-02-19 19:50:00 UTC