Theme: Responsibility

  • Interesting how the MORAL people who CHOOSE to sacrifice something ELSE in order

    Interesting how the MORAL people who CHOOSE to sacrifice something ELSE in order to have health care, are now paying for the IMMORAL PEOPLE who CHOSE something OTHER than health care.

    It is not that health care is ‘unaffordable’. It’s that health care is something you would prefer to spend your marginal income on LESS than whatever you spend it on, such as your own apartment, your car, your entertainment. etc.

    I won’t go into all the incentives here, but if you made a law that you had to have health care or you couldn’t drive, couldn’t vote, couldn’t collect social security or anything else for that matter – and that you had to ‘earn’ your redistribution by ‘beautifying the country’ (cleaning it up and maintaining the commons) then that would make perfect sense to me.

    But everything we do in the statist empire is to create every immoral malincentive possible to encourage the free-riding that the west worked so hard to stamp out.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-28 11:24:00 UTC

  • RUTHLESSLY MORAL DOT ORG (personal history) I have managed to put a few companie

    RUTHLESSLY MORAL DOT ORG

    (personal history)

    I have managed to put a few companies out of business for immoral practices in the past.

    The first company, I was 28, and it took me a few years to put the crew together, but we eventually used racketeering laws to take them down. Didn’t cost me a cent. 🙂

    The second company, I was 30, and just out of the Justice Department (Yes, I used to work for the JUSTICE DEPARTMENT. My libertarian friends might find that interesting.) For a very short time. But before then, I spent a few years working in technology related to the bankruptcy system. It only took me about 90 days to force them into a sale after I got the justice department and one other federal agency involved. But I managed to force him to lose most of everything he had. Cost me a few thousand dollars.

    The third company I helped set up the owner with the IRS but it was easy. They took all his houses and his Bentley. They left him a motorcycle for some reason I can’t attribute to much other than irony. Cost me a few thousand dollars.

    The key thing is patience and determination.

    And the next is to find people who can profit from pursuing an injustice. And that, it turns out, is a pretty common preoccupation in America.

    Starting with …. journalists.

    🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-25 18:46:00 UTC

  • THE FIVE SECRETS TO BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP 1) You must have approximately the same

    THE FIVE SECRETS TO BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP

    1) You must have approximately the same ethical and moral code.

    2) You must have the same economic interests.

    3) You must each have your sphere of influence, and the ability to make the final decision in that sphere of influence.

    4) It must be more important to each of you to make the other happy than make yourself happy.

    5) Your relationship must be unbreakable by third parties.

    In effect, if it matters in marriage it matters in business.

    It turns out that this is a lot harder than it sounds.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-21 18:46:00 UTC

  • MORAL HIERARCHY: 1) I CAN USE THAT IN MY LIFE 2) I CAN HOLD OTHERS ACCOUNTABLE F

    MORAL HIERARCHY:

    1) I CAN USE THAT IN MY LIFE

    2) I CAN HOLD OTHERS ACCOUNTABLE FOR THAT

    3) WE SHOULD ALL ACT TO PERPETUATE THAT

    4) WE SHOULD ALL SACRIFICE TO CONTRIBUTE TO THAT

    Which cultures employ which techniques. Why? Family structure.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-12 17:13:00 UTC

  • must-read) YOU CAN’T OWN YOUR TERMS: “OVER-LEARNING” AND “SPECIALIZATION”; WHY A

    http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2013/08/libertarianism_3.html(libertarian must-read)

    YOU CAN’T OWN YOUR TERMS: “OVER-LEARNING” AND “SPECIALIZATION”; WHY ARE LIBERTARIANS MORAL SPECIALISTS?

    (An attack on Caplan’s Progressive Libertarianism as organized privatization of the commons.)

    Bryan Caplan tries yet another attempt at framing. This one partly successful. But like many of his arguments, partly a failure – for moral reasons he cannot seem to grasp.

    This exceptionally good post, from August, positions libertarians as moral specialists because they ‘overlearn’ that morality. Now, he seems to not like my redefinition of his pseudo-objective label ‘overlearning’ as ‘specialist’. (At least in a PM to me that is what I gathered.) But I just view this

    [quote] “The fundamental difference between libertarians and non-libertarians is that libertarians have over-learned common-sense morality. Non-libertarians only reliably apply basic morality when society encourages them to do so. Libertarians, in contrast, deeply internalize basic morality. As a result, they apply it automatically in the absence of social pressure – and even when society discourages common decency.”[end]

    I’m going to rephrase that ‘authorization to steal’ that Caplan is trying to justify, and say that non libertarians place a greater concern on externality. The Caretaker left sees her as exploited, and resorting to prostitution out of desperation. (Something I agree with, but only in the minority of cases.) The Tribal Right sees her as corrupting the family that is the core of society (something I agree with but also only in the minority of cases). As far as I can tell, prostitution serves the needs of two groups of people who have too few alternatives. But that is different from saying that it’s either a ‘good’ or should be visible. I mean, sex is undeniably pretty awesome, but I don’t’t want to see people doing it in public. Or any other terribly hedonic activity for that matter. The public is the market and the rules of conduct are no different from a shopping mall – because the ‘public commons’ is a shopping mall. It’s just a very large one.

    [quote]: “For example, non-libertarians routinely say, “A woman has a right to use her own body as she likes.” But it never even occurs to them that this implies that prostitution should be legal. Why? Because non-libertarians only apply this principle in the exact situations where their society encourages them to do so. They learn the principle without over-learning it. Libertarians, in contrast, can’t help but see the logical connection between a woman’s right to use her own body and the right to have sex for money.”[end]

    Of course, I think this is a perfect example of the difference between ‘progressive (jewish) ghetto libertarianism’ and ‘conservative (european) aristocratic libertarianism’. That is. that in aristocratic ethics, we are responsible for externalities created by our actions. In jewish (Rothbardian) ethics of the ghetto, we are not. Our responsibility ends at the voluntary exchange.

    In fact, if we look at history, the more external consequences to ghetto ethics, the better, and the fewer external consequences to aristocratic ethics the better. That every time we do NOT take advantage of an opportunity to profit from an externality, or profit despite externality, we are creating the commons of the high trust society, where morals and norms are our primary form of capital, is not understood. But it is the reason for the western high trust society.

    In the context of a woman’s rights to her body, It is not that prostitution is not a woman’s choice. It is whether we can see and hear it, and are aware of it, and therefore it becomes part of the normative commons, or whether it is an invisible interpersonal activity that is not visible in and part of the normative commons.

    We westerners hold that normative capital is material capital, and that obtaining a discount on your personal for-profit activities, cannot privatize (steal) the commons. It’s not that you don’t have the choice to engage in prostitution. It’s that you don’t have the right to create a hazard in the commons.

    Conservatives don’t know how to EXPRESS that. They just say it’s wrong or immoral. but that’s because conservative property rights are 4500 years old, and, over that period of time, they’ve been habituated as traditions and norms to such a degree that they are ‘over-learned’ – precognitive.

    So I’ll go on record as correcting Bryan Caplan, and say that in fact, he’s correct that libertarianism is a moral specialization. He may be correct in that libertarians over learn it. He may be correct in that libertarians use autistic applications of those rules.

    But he is very, very wrong, in advocating theft from the normative commons. It is IMPOSSIBLE to construct property rights as a norm that must not be violated in any degree, while at the same time saying that norms are not property. This is logically inconsistent, and it’s demonstrably false.

    We need to criticize, ridicule, and eliminate the progressive libertarian fantasy brought about by Rothbard, and drawn from the anti-social ethics of the ghetto, and restore liberty to its cultural origins in aristocratic western culture. You have property rights as, because you respect others property. And the normative commons is property, It costs us to respect property. It costs us to respect norms. We pay for private, common, and normative property by our actions.

    And that is what we have done with propertarianism. Propertarianism is a universal descriptive ethical system for describing and rendering commensurable all ethical models by making transparent all voluntary and involuntary transfers.

    And using propertarian reasoning, makes visible that the progressive libertarian argument is in fact, advocating theft from the normative commons as a means of privatizing an existing public good. It is theft.

    End Progressive Rothbardian Libertarianism as the same as progressive leftist theft. Progressives leftists want to steal your physical assets and prevent development of the normative commons. Progressive libertarians want to steal the commons and make it impossible to have a normative commons.

    The uniqueness of the west is its high trust normative commons which extends familial altruism to all, in all exchanges by forbidding involuntary transfer in all means in all conditions, in all forms, of all forms of property whether private, common or normative. Period.

    So it is all well and good that we have progressive libertarians trying to make self-congratulatory terminology to obscure their advocacy of theft of the hard won commons. but it is even better that we end this divisive campaign and focus instead on uniting aristocratic libertarians with aristocratic conservatives. Because that way we can restore the normative commons and the high trust society that Progressives on the left and progressive libertarians are out to destroy.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-12 14:23:00 UTC

  • DEADLY SINS” (important) Propertarianism captures the universal human moral intu

    http://www.propertarianism.com/”PROPERTARIANISM’S DEADLY SINS” (important)

    Propertarianism captures the universal human moral intuition that prohibits involuntary transfer, and then presses all competition into the market for goods and services under the requirements of transparency and warranty so that competition is, while intuitively immoral to many, a system of incentives that produces a virtuous cycle of innovation, production and adaptation.

    All rights in all moral systems are reducible to statements of property rights – assuming we take a descriptive definition of property not a proscriptive one.

    DEADLY SINS

    Murder

    Violence

    Theft

    Fraud

    Omission

    Impedance

    Externalization

    Free-Riding

    Privatization

    Socialization

    Rent-Seeking

    Corruption

    Obfuscation

    Pooling-and-Laundering

    Conspiracy

    Legislation

    Taxation

    Conscription

    War

    Genocide

    Do you want to know why my book is taking so long?

    Because there are a lot of deadly sins.

    http://www.propertarianism.com/

    VIRTUES

    Property,

    symmetry,

    warranty,

    internality,

    operational language,

    “calculability”,

    contract,

    natural law,

    common law,

    voluntary commons.

    Still not done with the second list. I need to find a way to talk about calculability more accessibly.

    PROPERTIES

    Personal (Private, Several)

    Interpersonal

    Normative

    Institutional

    Artificial

    PROPERTARIANISM IS THE RHETORICAL SOLUTION TO POLITICAL DISCOURSE

    It’s what praxeology should have been. It’s what conservatives and libertarians need. It’s what progressives and progressive libertarians should fear. Because it’s true. Its explanatory power is universal, and independent of any moral code. And it is based upon testable empirical science. Humans vehemently reject involuntary transfers of property. They just differ on the distribution of ownership of property. And they differ because of their necessary and inalterable reproductive strategies.

    COMMON GOODS

    There can be no common good unless there are common interests. We can learn from the market that we can cooperate on means even if we have alternate ends. But democracy is a family model, and assumes de facto, that we have common or optimally common ends. When we do not, because reproductive and productive strategies are not longer sufficiently homogenous. Democracy can assist us in establishing priorities from common interests, but it cannot assist us in establishing goals between disparate and conflicting interests – such as those that we have under a division of knowledge and labor as extreme as under industrialism and information economies.

    MONOPOLY

    There is no reason for monopoly bureaucracy and monopoly government in a diverse heterogeneous population. In this environment democracy is simply a means of conquest of one or more groups by others.

    It is possible to construct means of achieving the benefits of scale organizations in insurance, investment in the commons, and group bargaining over trade. And to do so without a monopoly.

    Democratic and representative government is an artifact of the age of agrarianism and sail. It’s time for a reformation. We have to adapt government to our new diversity. And that means, small states, and governments that facilitate ANY cooperation, not just those that are approved by the majority. And that approach will make law making impossible, only contract negotiation. Because laws are local phenomenon, and contracts for the commons are not. They are merely cooperation at scale, on goods that cannot be produced by the market because free riding prohibits their construction.

    More later. But that is the essence of Propertarianism in a few thousand words.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-10 07:21:00 UTC

  • ANIMAL RIGHTS If you cannot be trusted with the care of an animal – pet or prope

    ANIMAL RIGHTS

    If you cannot be trusted with the care of an animal – pet or property. Then we cannot trust you with care of the rest of us.

    Simple people use empathy toward animals moral and legal claims, and anthropomorphize all sorts of things instead of using reason.

    But what they intuit in their arationalism is at least functionally correct if not causally correct.

    The seek to protect the victim because it is less aggressive and confrontational than punishing the actor. It is an effective technique but a dishonest one.

    And as such, these people – sensitives – perform a function even though their arguments are arational justifications of their intuitions.

    Unfortunately their arationality creates consequences that are morally, politically and legally damaging to civilization.

    Those of us who because of our lack of fear in confrontation or punishment, have the luxury of honesty, certainly feel compassion for our pets, animals and wildlife. But we correctly understand that not only are the animals a commons that they should respect no matter who cares for them, but that someone sick enough to harm creatures for emotional reasons of any kind, is a danger to all of us. And science has thankfully finally proven why – genetic and birth defect exacerbated by living in families with the same defects.

    Tolerance is not a good thing without accompaniment by training. Without correction it is not tolerance but convenience.

    Animals cannot have rights since they cannot enter into contract. A few pets to some degree can closely imitate that contract (dogs) at the level if a child when dependency forms.

    Humans have contractual obligations with each other not to be cruel to animals. As such it is your contractual duty to the rest of us – your price for our promise not to use violence against you, and to cooperate peaceably with you – that you treat animals as if they are human whenever possible as a ritualistic test of your adherence to contract.

    This contract is a necessary natural law that does not need codification. Natural laws are the minimum rules for peaceful cooperation. They are reducible to statements of property rights. And they are necessary. Human rights are not necessary, they are aspirations once natural rights have been achieved.

    And should you break that contract if natural law, the foolish and weak may shame you and claim animals have rights because they lack the intelligence, wisdom, means and capacity to punish you for violating natural law and demonstrating you are unfit for the contract by which we agree to cooperate, and rescind our use of violence.

    But those of us wise and strong enough will be honest with you.

    And since you have broken the contract of natural law with us, we are no longer forbidden to use violence.

    And we will logically, rationally, wisely, and legally under natural law, punish you sufficiently that you either will not, or cannot, do so again.

    That punishment too, is part of the contract that the strong agree to.

    Curt

    (Propertarianism in application)

    ( also another example of solipsism on one end and autism on the other. )


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-10 04:59:00 UTC

  • “CONSERVATIVES WANT TO MAINTAIN THE LAW OF KARMA” Great way of explaining conser

    “CONSERVATIVES WANT TO MAINTAIN THE LAW OF KARMA”

    Great way of explaining conservative sanctity and proportionality.

    Haidt Rules.

    (thanks roman)


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-09 20:23:00 UTC

  • “IF I CANNOT HAVE MY MORAL CODE, AND YOU WANT ME TO HAVE YOUR MORAL CODE…” And

    “IF I CANNOT HAVE MY MORAL CODE, AND YOU WANT ME TO HAVE YOUR MORAL CODE…”

    And if morals, ethics and manners (norms) cost me opportunities.

    Then you are just using an excuse to deprive me of my savings in the normative commons, as well as my reproductive strategy, as well as my family structure, as well as my reproductive status, as well as my future opportunities.

    Property rights is the only form of cooperation under diversity.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-09 17:19:00 UTC

  • STORY OF MY LIFE (venting) Now that you have once again learned what happens whe

    STORY OF MY LIFE

    (venting)

    Now that you have once again learned what happens when you disagree with my business forecasts, and cost us and shareholders millions, can you please stop disagreeing? Its not like this was a unique case.

    Do us all a f–king favor and try to know more than I do. But dont try to be smarter than I am. It wont work. And it costs us money.

    Without intending to I have integrated Austrian thought so deeply that I pretty much see the world as nothing but incentives.

    You collectively still rely on the error of induction. But the past has little bearing on the future unless past incentives are also current incentives.

    This little twist: merging incentives theory with anti-inductivist critical rationalism, defeats induction and inductive intuition at all times.

    And thats your problem. You think you’re rational but your’e not, because induction is false. It is the result of evolution – a cognitive bias.

    And intuition is also inductive. Its how we evolved to make associations. But induction, whether intuitive, rational, or empirical, is still false.

    And even if you try to model it, Empiricism isn’t enough. Its only enough if you measure incentives. Because the past was a product of past incentives and the present is a product of present incentives and empirical data that is divorced from that relationship is worth precisely zero. The past does not predict the future unless incentives are the same. In that sense incentives, and not the past, are all that matter.

    FURTHERMORE.

    And this may be more relevant to you. People are only moral when their interests are marginally indifferent. We would like to think otherwise. But there isn’t any evidence at all to support that desire.

    Morality is a cost. All moral actions carry costs. Those costs are opportunity costs

    If you are in business with people who have different economic and financial incentives you must treat them as if morality is merely a form of manners, but not a promise of future conduct.

    So please stop trying to be smarter than I am. Cause its not because I am particularly smart. Its because you are not particularly wise.

    Idiots.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-10-09 03:15:00 UTC