Theme: Governance

  • I’d feel differently, perhaps, if I had ever met a bureaucrat whose incentives w

    I’d feel differently, perhaps, if I had ever met a bureaucrat whose incentives were to help the customer rather than engage in rent seeking. I haven’t. The people who deal with the tradesmen and permits are much better than the rest. But none of them is anywhere near the service provider of the worst discount store, or the best coffee shop.

    If you spend any time with government at all (I was in the justice department) it’s pretty clear that aside from perhaps judges and short term members of the house of representatives, that everyone’s a rent seeker. Everyone. And they want expansion of powers so they have access to expansion of rents.

    I don’t know yet how I feel about condo and neighborhood associations, but from what I’ve been able to collect (and it’s not easy) a town of ten thousand people is probably the maximum scale where bureaucrats act anything like citizens rather than rent seekers.

    Once you’re out of the city-state, everything collapses rapidly into corruption. In america, corruption is systemic and procedural, and takes advantage of the fact that the voting process cannot correct a bureaucracy. The competition to a bureaucracy is the court, not the vote.

    I actually prefer the corruption here in the east. I dont mind increasing the payroll of policemen and bureaucrats if they provide service for it. I do mind increasing the budget of the bureaucracy when they DONT give service for it.

    Russian friends always told me this was true but I couldn’t put my arms around it. They’re right. It’s MORE CORRUPT in America than in the east. It’s just that the corruption in systemic, not interpersonal.

    The rule of law is good government. Bureaucracy is bad government. The problem of government is bureaucracy.

    If a government wants to conspire to achieve my preferred ends, then it is not a government that’s hired labor. If it wants to conspire to use the products of my labor to achieve ends I disapprove of, then that is not government that is slavery.

    I am having a hard time defining good government. Unless government is hired labor under the law, rather than dictators in charge of the law.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-20 03:34:00 UTC

  • know its painful to accept, but politics like all other human behavior is bounde

    http://crookedtimber.org/2013/08/18/krugman-keynes-kalecki-konczal1/comment-page-1/#commentsI know its painful to accept, but politics like all other human behavior is bounded by morality more so than ignorance.

    There is too much search for cognitive error in this thread, and too little understanding of morality.

    Austerity worked in Europe. It is working in America. Because it

    is accomplishing moral ends – according to the moral criteria of citizens.

    Humans will suffer greatly to punish the immoral. And that is what they are doing.

    It may be difficult to grasp but morality in the political context is as important as prices and incentives. If people do not think the world is moral, they will not act morally. And they hate the idea that the world might be immoral. Morality and norms are the original human currency. People are masters of its accountancy

    Conservatives place higher value on norms than consumption. And their view is that empowering the government is rewarding immorality. Conservatives understand morality. They speak in moral language and they win moral arguments. And the control the public discourse with moral arguments.

    I have been arguing since ’08 that the only way to push spending through would be to limit it to moral channels. And the progressive argument is always the same: morality doesn’t matter and its all nonsense.

    But its not. Its as necessary as law. More so.

    If you had told me this as a student I would have laughed. But there it is.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-19 03:30:00 UTC

  • BECOMES A REACTIONARY Politics is determined by morality not economics. People w

    http://crookedtimber.org/2013/08/18/krugman-keynes-kalecki-konczal1/comment-page-1/#commentsKRUGMAN BECOMES A REACTIONARY

    Politics is determined by morality not economics. People will universally endure hardship to punish immorality. The majority may like democratic candidates, but they prefer conservative morality. The conservatives understand this which is why they hold power.

    I stopped posting thus mantra on left economic blogs in 2012, trying to persuade them to strike a bargain with conservatives on education reform. Which they would have bought. But the left us just as fanatical in their devotion as the right. So its not one sided.

    You might also put Krugman in context: austerity worked. It worked in both Europe and the states. It achieved moral ends. And it taught lessons: the lessons the productive people wanted taught.

    Communism failed. Socialism failed. And much of democratic redistibutive socialism is failing.

    When socialism failed the left in academia created and promoted Postmodernism: anti-rationalism. Now that their only hope is failing. They will resort to reactionary tactics that are even less rational than Postmodern irrationalities : diversity and equality.

    Humans all demonstrate the moral principle of proportionality. But proportionality is dependent upon your moral code, and your moral code on your family structure and social class. (Reproductive desirability.)

    Democracy cannot work across heterogeneous family structures. In particular not across single mother, serial marriage and nuclear or extended family structures. Bucause the morality if property rights differs irresolvably between them.

    Economic reality, political data, and scientific research dismantling the progressive and postmodern religious beliefs are combining to accomplish what a universe of conservative and libertarian think tanks could not.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-18 08:29:00 UTC

  • FIRST PROGRESSIVE WHITE FLAG We conservatives and libertarians spent 30 years tr

    http://theumlaut.com/2013/07/09/age-of-negation/THE FIRST PROGRESSIVE WHITE FLAG

    We conservatives and libertarians spent 30 years trying to destroy the progressive fantasy, first economically, second intellectually, third morally, and finally with media. We were slow. But we were willing to lose everything to stop communism, socialism and its successor ideological postmodernism.

    Morality is a mirror of family structure. And family structure a mirror of production structure. Without a common family structure, we have no common morality. Without a common morality we cannot democratically select priorities, and instead are stuck in perpetual conflict.

    The northern universalist fantasy was developed in ignorance of our own homogeneity as an outbred extended family. The rest of the world finds this anti-kinship ethic horrifying and immoral. Neither they nor we understood that our la k of corruption was a byproduct of our small states and extended tribalism. As such its impossible elsewhere – where trust is impossible at our level.

    The historical fact that the proletariat never leads anything, and cannot, was not enough. The falsehoods of the labor theory of value, the necessity of prices and incentives, the fact that capitalism produces mass consumer goods cheaply was not enough. The failures of socialism and communism were not enough. The success of converting communist countries to consumer capitalism wasn’t enough. The economic crisis wasn’t enough. But the result of diversity combined with the degeneration of the family, and the loss of our privileged status of the only technologically advanced society was enough.

    But we cannot undo the damage from destroying the nuclear family, intergenerational saving and lending, and the rule of common law, the constitution, or the homogeneously moral society.

    Pending a dramatic reversal driven by economic necessity the progressive movement will succeed as did the french revolution, the Bolshevik And Maoist revolutions, albeit more slowly: the reduction of the competitive norms of the people and setting them back for centuries.

    The left didnt kill capitalism. Just our civilizations prosperity. And maybe our status as a people forever.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-18 08:01:00 UTC

  • DEMOCRACY, KANT, ROUSSEAU, MARX, ERRORS AND FAMILY My ambition, like many that o

    DEMOCRACY, KANT, ROUSSEAU, MARX, ERRORS AND FAMILY

    My ambition, like many that of many others, is to find a resolution to the problem of political conflict between and within heterogeneous groups – which seems to be a barrier to our happiness and prosperity.

    Since Postmodern thought has become the religion of the state, it’s useful if we study influential works of Rousseau, Kant and Marx.

    MARX

    Interestingly enough, we find that only Marx dealt with material reality, even if an impossible economy, while Rousseau an impossible morality, and Kant an impossible philosophy.

    Marx is most interesting. His logical failures were at least understandable:

    (a) the labor theory of value was an error, because it was an impossibility. Value is subjective, and objectively only known at the point of exchange, and must be so. (Locke making the same mistake);

    (b) Consequently he failed to understand the problem of prices and incentives in organizing a division of labor. (He was not alone.) And;

    (c) He conflated the problem of alienation from work, with the problem of alienation from membership in a group, drawing the emotions from the second to justify the first.

    (d) He didn’t grasp that mass production is only valuable in the service of consumer wants (which is where capitalism often fails to satisfy our reason: it satisfies consumer wants, not what is ‘good or necessary’ in the abstract sense.)

    These failures were catastrophic, and he built his entire edifice on misplaced emotions, misplaced causes, and impossible means and ends.

    Our feelings are reactions to changes in state both of present and future. And the human mind excels at conflation, and is weak at causal discrimination. It is easy for people to make these mistakes, and Marx was not immune to them. While it is true that working on an expensive pair of shoes if you can’t own one can be alienating, the fact that one can eventually afford something other than them is something else entirely. If one can drive a used ford mustang by working on a luxury BMW, when the difference is merely signaling, it seems difficult to say that one has moral right to status signals.

    The problem with our feelings is that we don’t live in tribes. Our feelings originated when we could have some idea of our place in the family and the world. We still seek it. All of us. The problem is the only information system we operate by outside of the family is prices and it’s exasperating: prices, unlike family, don’t care about us. So capitalism is alienating, yes. But Marx misplaced the source of alienation. Because it’s not possible to obtain the same feeling of cause and effect in a vast division of knowledge and labor, that it is as a craftsman. Thats’ why so many people practice hobby crafts.

    ROUSSEAU

    Rousseau actually doesn’t say anything more meaning than “I was cast out by my family and I want a means of survival as an outcast, so that I can experience eternal childhood.” He tries to recreate the obligations of the family for all of society. Which is what we all want – instinctually. The problem is people don’t act that way if they aren’t homogenous in family structure, and mythos. So, under heterogeneity there can be no ‘general will’, as we see from current political polarity.

    KANT

    Kant tries desperately, to recreate the protestant church by rational rather than mystical means. Not only does he fail, but he tells us that we can never understand reality – the most anti-scientific ideology in history, second only in harm to Zoroaster and Abraham.

    PERSON, FAMILY, TRIBE, and PRODUCTION

    The data appears to universally demonstrate that extended families who eschew marriage of relations develop both high trust and redistributive morality. It appears that people who do not do this, do not, and experience high corruption.

    As diversity of any kind increases (particularly of family structure) morality changes with it, and disparate family models compete with different moral codes. Signaling is used by groups to demonstrate moral affiliation, and trust declines. (just the data. That’s how it is.)

    This explains why northern european countries are redistributive: they are highly related, homogenous extended families, with small political structures. So they do not feel ‘alienated’ from their labor under capitalism. Whereas transitional families do. ie: Marx got it wrong. Capitalism isn’t alienating if you’re a tribe. It is if you’re alone.

    Despite the fact that the vast number of social cognitive biases we evolved with lie to us about the similarity of our thoughts, and the Dunning Krueger effect prevents us from discovering it. We always believe we are ‘the average person’ or ‘in the top 20%’. But neither is true. And all but a few are competent to make that assessment, and those that are, underrate their competence.

    Democracy is a familial process – for use with Kin. It can be used to choose which of the priorities is highest among people with similar interests. But it cannot choose between competing interests without conquest of one group by another. That is purely logical. And that is what the evidence has shown us.

    As such alienation CAN ONLY be a product of inclusion or exclusion from the commons of production that we call a family. Where a family has some maximum size before interests are no longer common. A social contract always exists. It is called ‘norms’: manners, ethics and morals. And they vary by family structure. And family structure is determined by the means of production, whether that be informational, industrial, agrarian, or hunter gatherer.

    As such I am fairly sure that diversity and scale are contrary to both any social contract, and any desire to prevent alienation. And Kant’s contribution is just another iteration of mysticism.

    Smith and Hume were right. And the conservatives were right: democracy across any variation in interests, is just the slow road to dictatorship.

    Cheers.

    (eh… not a fan of comparative religion. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-18 07:11:00 UTC

  • TO THE POLICE STATE 🙂

    http://www.policestateusa.com/archives/144WELCOME TO THE POLICE STATE 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-17 02:32:00 UTC

  • THE WEST VS THE EAST VS THE ARAB MODEL Citizens as individual actors with the st

    THE WEST VS THE EAST VS THE ARAB MODEL

    Citizens as individual actors with the state as neutral arbiter vs citizens as troublesome dependents to be managed by the paternal head of family.

    “These societies possess the outward trappings of a modern state but are founded on informal patronage networks, especially those of kinship, and traditional ideals of patriarchal family authority. In nations pervaded by clannism, government is coopted for purely factional purposes and the state, conceived on the model of the patriarchal family, treats citizens not as autonomous actors but rather as troublesome dependents to be managed.” – the Arab Development Report.

    We are different. Our ancestry is that of egalitarian warriors not extended familial hierarchy.

    We were different from the start.

    And that difference: the need to debate between peers is the origin of reason, science, and all else that we have used to dig humanity out of ignorance and poverty.

    Kicking and screaming, all the while.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-16 04:03:00 UTC

  • RISING ANTI-CAPLANISM – THE MOVEMENT AGAINST OPEN BORDERS I go back and forth on

    RISING ANTI-CAPLANISM – THE MOVEMENT AGAINST OPEN BORDERS

    I go back and forth on Brian Caplan. I agree on almost everything is but his stand on immigration and his argument against calculation getting blown out of proportion by giving higher priority to incentives. That’s silly. They’re two sides of the same coin, and neither has meaning without the other. He had an opportunity to clarify an issue and just clouded it. And that’s been a problem for me and the movement.

    There is a bit of an anti-Caplan movement building in the conservative intellectual community. Which, I think is only driven by his immigration stance.

    I can’t expect him to think differently. Any more than I can be expected to disavow my ancestors.

    But it’s a preference, not a truth.

    Open immigration is incompatible with the preservation of individual, several, private property rights.

    Period. We didn’t know that. Now we do.

    Conservatives didn’t know that homosexuality was genetic and in-utero, not a choice. But they stick to their position out of religious conviction, even when they know the rational reasoning.

    Libertarians stick to the fantasy that property was a moral preference, rather than a reflection of a reproductive strategy, that is in opposition to the desires of the majority of people on the planet.

    It’s illogical to hold to a position when the evidence is contrary to your beliefs.

    Open borders must require symmetrical respect for property rights. And open borders and democracy are a direct opposition to property rights.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-15 09:27:00 UTC

  • IF DEMOCRACY IS A MEANS OF SQUASHING PUBLIC OPINION” We can’t improve, repair, o

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QT8Q-Hcll0″WHAT IF DEMOCRACY IS A MEANS OF SQUASHING PUBLIC OPINION”

    We can’t improve, repair, or replace government, if you think that democracy is a means for change, rather than a means of preventing change.

    My definition of libertarian is anyone who advances liberty.

    So that positioning out of the way, If you eliminated the advocacy of Ron Paul from this video, so that it would be entirely neutral, it would be the most accurate condemnation of american government that a talking-head has made on-air.

    It’s worthy of one of the great orators of our past.

    And I can’t recommend it enough.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-15 08:48:00 UTC

  • OF DIFFERENT REGIONS OF AMERICA AND HOW THEY AFFECT VOTING

    http://jaymans.wordpress.com/2013/08/14/maps-of-the-american-nations/ANCESTRY OF DIFFERENT REGIONS OF AMERICA AND HOW THEY AFFECT VOTING


    Source date (UTC): 2013-08-14 09:42:00 UTC