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1 year Ago

Let’s not pretend we have principles

Published by marco on

Or, perhaps better: let’s not allow the elites the luxury of thinking that we believe that they have principles. We have to make it perfectly clear to them that we do not believe the fairy tales that they tell about themselves.

The article The World Cup Should Make Us Rethink Our Understanding of Human Rights by Neil Vallelly (Jacobin) writes,

“Whether spectators care or not is a different question, of course. But the signs are that most football fans would prefer that the World Cup was not taking place in a country... [More]”

Second-guess yourself

Published by marco on

A friend of mine quoted Bill Burr from a recent podcast,

“I read a lot of unsavory things have been coming out about that organization and about all the money that has been going into some new tiling for their olympic-sized pool rather than into their breast-cancer research. And by a lot of things, I mean the one article I read on one website online.”
“Something i overheard in a bar and have taken as a fact for the past 20 years.”

To which I responded,

“Something my Dad told me ONE TIME 35... [More]

2 years Ago

War is the worst outcome

Published by marco on

I was just reading The Greatest Evil is War and read Chris Hedges’s statement that bombing Nagasaki and Hiroshima were war crimes. They certainly were, especially in light of the admitted history and reasoning behind it.

Anyone who’s read the actual history pretty much accepts that the U.S. bombed these cities because (A) there was nothing else left to bomb because cities like Tokyo had already been firebombed beyond recognition, but also that the U.S. was (B) already gearing up for its next... [More]

A working definition of propaganda

Published by marco on

I think most people’s experience of propaganda is best defined as,

“Information that one has not yet heard enough times to believe.”

As long as one doesn’t believe it, information remains propaganda. After that crucial repetition, it crosses the threshold into established fact and deeply held belief.

This, all without any change in evidence, believability, deniability or plausibility.

Think about being useful

Published by marco on

We have arrived at a point where “making money” has become completely unmoored from “performing a societally useful task”—so much so that the previous sentence will make no sense to most people.

The will ask: What does doing something useful have to do with making money? You need money to live; ergo, you come by it any old way. Whether you “deserve” it doesn’t enter into it.

An obvious and egregious example is the exponentially increasing “hustle economy”, featuring “influencers” whose... [More]

On Being a Good Person

Published by marco on

I think I’m a good person relative to what society expects of individuals, but I’m not a very good person on an absolute scale.

I understand what is required for me and mine to live out a comfortable life within the bounds of the system we have—and I work within the bounds of that system to obtain it, as ethically as possible.

Everyone else tries to do the same, with varying levels of success—and varying ethics.

I understand that most people’s rate of success will not match either their... [More]

Opinions are like assholes; everybody’s got one

Published by marco on

The way of our world is this.

Suppose we have, on the one hand, someone who watches a couple of hours of Pentagon propaganda and comes to their deeply held convictions that way, slapping a bunch of Support Ukraine stickers on their car (for example).

On the other hand, we have someone who spend hundreds, if not thousands, of hours over several months, collecting information and ideas from dozens of authors and forming a more nuanced and historically “true” opinion and ideas about how to end... [More]

The hamster wheel of regulation

Published by marco on

We seem to be doomed to ride a pendulum of

  1. Build a useful societal benefit (USB)
  2. Have the USB be coopted by vultures and con-men
  3. Organize regulation to prevent abuse of the USB
  4. Have the USB get mired in regulation and become less obviously useful—because things get complex, especially with pressures from con-men that cause a constant papering over of holes in the regulations until they’re so large and complex that no-one understands them except for a cottage industry of experts that has... [More]

Context and intent matter

Published by marco on

The article ‘What-aboutism’ and the Universal by Chris Horner (3 Quarks Daily) provides an example of an atrocity—the bombing of a school—that people would see the need to tell the world their opinion about. He writes of the hypothetical commentator,

“It is a war crime and you name it as such[,] as an evil, criminal thing. Soon after the words leave your mouth, or get posted online, someone responds with something along these lines: yes, that’s all very well, but why just condemn that? What about..? They then name... [More]”

Human achievements are cool

Published by marco on

As in 2020, this year COVID prevented my wife from spending the holidays with our family overseas, So, over the holidays, I was once again made to partake in a smattering of Christmas classics, of varying quality. Most of these stem from the late 60s and 70s and were already classics when we were growing up. Like watching Dinner for One in Switzerland, they are a tradition, regardless of their objective quality.

One of the newest in the stable is The Christmas Chronicles. That movie is more... [More]

Hidden fairy tales

Published by marco on

Those who most easily deem something to be “fake news” are often the same people who can’t see the falsity in the news that they consider to be non-fake. They shout “conspiracy” at everything, except when a cabal of extremely wealthy people conspire to manipulate entire nations to keep money flowing upwards.

  • They believe that that financial system is a free market and that it works for everyone.
  • They believe that the rich pay too much in taxes.
  • They believe that the military budget is... [More]

Unearned confidence in comprehension

Published by marco on

From the article Against Intelligence by Justin E.H. Smith (Hinternet),

“Our default folk-theory of the sky and its objects, as a vestige of the closed world cosmology, is one in which distances between star systems is not significantly different from those between the planets of our own system.

And even those distances we grossly underestimate. The planets are light minutes if not light hours apart.[1] Months and years of even the most optimistic feasible journey time. But this lack suffuses most of how most humans—most... [More]

3 years Ago

How dumb can you be?

Published by marco on

The article «Dummheit hat Hochkonjunktur»: Interview mit Psychiaterin Heidi Kastner by Nadja Pastega (Der Bund)[1] discusses the term “Dumm” (dumb, as in stupid). It’s always been a bit difficult to nail down what it means to be “dumb”, once you start to think about it. You can have smart people who act dumb. You can have smart people with no experience, so they’re intelligent, but not wise.

Then there’s the difference between “book smart” and “street smart”—they’re both useful in certain situations. If you don’t have... [More]

John McWhorter interview

Published by marco on

This was a great interview with John McWhorter: ‘The Idea That America Is All About Despising Black People? That’s Fantasy.‘ by Nick Gillespie (Apple Podcasts) He recently wrote a book called Nine Nasty Words: English in the Gutter: Then, Now, and Forever. I haven’t read it, but I’ve read several essays of his. In one of his essays, he named “The Elect” as the keepers of a new religion online.

The interview was illuminating, with a lot of it transcribed below. Gillespie is a good interviewer, preferring to get out of the way... [More]

A couple of interviews with Adam Curtis

Published by marco on

The following video is an excellent interview by Chapo in which they just let him talk. The documentary they discuss is his most recent one, Can’t Get You Out of My Head (the link is to a YouTube playlist of all 4 hours in 4 videos. The videos were published by “Adam Curtis Documentary” and were aired on the BBC, so there’s a good change that they’ll survive.

502 − Units of One feat. Adam Curtis by Chapo Trap House on March 03, 2021 (YouTube)

Curtis did another interview in Can’t Get You Out of My Head w/ Adam Curtis by Red Scare that was just as good. The discussion were similar—they... [More]

Jaocobin Interviews Slavoj Žižek

Published by marco on

Just one day later: another interview with Slavoj Žižek; another wonderful, intelligent, open, wide-ranging, and funny/friendly interview. It’s about 140 minutes long. Ariella Thornhill and Nando Vila did a great job, with Ariella in particular “translating” some of Slavoj’s more convoluted formulations with aplomb and accuracy.

Slavoj Zizek on Biden, Race, and What It Will Take to Stop the Pandemic by Jacobin: Ariella Thornhill & Nando Vila (YouTube)

 

Žižek: Did we notice how the fight against racism is usually in the liberal center, reformulated in the terms of tolerance, which I think is already an... [More]”

Red Scare Interviews Slavoj Žižek

Published by marco on

This is a wonderful, intelligent, open, wide-ranging, and funny/friendly interview. It’s about 100 minutes long.

The Pervert's Guide to Podcasting w/ Slavoj Zizek by Red Scare Podcast (YouTube)

Anyone who disparages Žižek doesn’t listen to him or doesn’t understand him or misunderstands him or deliberately misunderstands him or is incapable of understanding him. He has no pretense; he’s honest. He’s brilliant, he’s well-read, and he draws often-brilliant connections between philosophies, modern media, history, and current events. His insight is always interesting. You... [More]

Choosing Authors by Identity

Published by marco on

The article Shakespeare Matters (And Always Will) by Scott H. Greenfield (Simple Justice) discusses the idiotic-sounding question of whether it’s OK to read books written by people without considering their identities. That is, the books should stand on their own. We can, of course, consider whether we’ve historically ignored some good books because of racism—and dig these books back up. But there is no reason to discard existing books because they were written by white people (i.e. “switching the signs on the drinking fountains”).... [More]

4 years Ago

The Perils of Outrage Fatigue

Published by marco on

I’d never heard of Robert B. Talisse before. He expresses himself well in describing an imminent problem with American culture. People are so invested in their polarized roles that they no longer know how to interact with anyone who doesn’t already hold their worldview in nearly all things. If they disagree with someone on any of myriad issues, then they can’t even consider them human, to say nothing of bridging the gap to find common ground.

The problem he describes doesn’t apply just to... [More]

Consuming Media: Choosing and Cultivating Sources

Published by marco on

A good friend of mine is going to be teaching a course on “Media & Society”. We’ve had a few interesting discussions on how to be a discerning consumer of information and how to build a stable of reliable sources.

As an avid follower of myriad topics, I’ve spent decades doing just this. As an avid writer on this blog, I’ve spent decades[1] trying to create content that presents information in a way that doesn’t come to unwarranted or unreasonable conclusions.

YMMV, of course, but I’m assiduous... [More]

Richard Wolff on Socialism, the Economy and Coronavirus

Published by marco on

Richard Wolff is the gift that keeps on giving. He’s just as brilliant talking into a laptop camera as he is giving lectures. I mentioned him recently as one of my favorite economist. The video is 75 minutes, but well-worth the time.

Richard D. Wolff − Is the Coronavirus the end of Capitalism & the Revival of Socialism? by AcTVism Munich (YouTube)

The following citation/transcript is from about 55 minutes, when the interviewer asked him what he thought of Biden vs. Trump..

“Biden is better than Trump, that seems clear to me. But, it’s almost meaningless because that’s such a low bar that the statement is,... [More]”

Bernie Blindness and the U.S. hatred of Socialism

Published by marco on

Bernie Sanders is doing extremely well in the campaign for presidential election in the U.S.

And he should be doing well. His basic message is:

Lets stop fighting over table scraps; instead, let’s get a real meal—take it, if we have to—stop being dicks to each other for four years, and see what happens.

There is still almost a year to go until the election in 2020. The campaign is already more than a year old. I can’t think of another country that starts campaigning more than a couple... [More]

5 years Ago

Rumination on culture and learning

Published by marco on

Americans are deliberately deluded. They are steeped in propaganda, but are also heavily complicit in their miseducation. They throw themselves into their miasma of disinformation with elan.

Regime Change in Venezuela

For example, the charge for regime change in Venezuela is not only in full swing, but has culminated in the replacement of the president by an unelected—and unknown—man.

~230~ Venezuela Fake Coup, Truth About Kamala Harris, & Yellow Vests by Redacted Tonight (YouTube)

Lee points out several salient characteristics of the target of a U.S. regime change:

  1. The country... [More]

Occupy vs. Burning Man

Published by marco on

Chuck Palahniuk on Joe Rogan says that there was only one Occupy because it wasn’t any fun. Burning Man, on the other hand, has been going on for 30 years and is bigger and better every year.

This is an insipid analysis of the two events. Occupy is about a revolution, against the corporate dominance. Burning Man is about subsuming revolutionary fervor in a corporate way. Tickets cost $200-$1200.

At least Joe Rogan pushed back against that.

Occupy never got a chance because it was squashed as... [More]

Explicit vs. Implicit Violence

Published by marco on

On a post on Reddit, someone cited Michael Moore as follows,

“In my first film, Roger & Me, a white woman on social security clubs a rabbit to death so that she can sell him as “meat” instead of as a pet. I wish I had a nickel for every time in the past 10 years that someone has come up to me and told me how “horrified” they were when they saw that “poor little cute bunny” bonked on the head. The scene, they say, made them physically sick. The Motion Picture Association of America gave Roger &... [More]”

On not seeing or understanding context

Published by marco on

Here are some features of modern discourse that I’ve noted.

  • It’s very easy to express an opinion publicly.
  • This is the default mode for many.
  • Entire conversations are carried out in public.
  • Speed is of the essence to get attention.
  • Distribution is the same for insipid thoughts as for pithy
  • There is no undo.
  • People writing or saying stupid things is funny
  • Market penetration and remuneration is overarchingly important
  • Learning is not rewarded
  • Neither is apology or correction

Taken together,... [More]

Dr. Ben Goertzel on consensus-based AIs

Published by marco on

Joe Rogan Experience #1211 − Dr. Ben Goertzel (YouTube)

This is wide-ranging discussion with Goertzel doing 95% of the heavy lifting. He and Rogan discuss uploading consciousness, a confluence of nanotech and AI Research to create the future and the inevitability of a technological singularity. He is interested, hopeful for and actively working toward,

“[…] biasing technology-development to control [the singularity] so that it creates a world of abundance and benefit for humans as well as AIs.”

They discuss the value system of an AI, with Joe... [More]

6 years Ago

Schizophrenic Society

Published by marco on

 This photo was taken on an international flight from Switzerland to the U.S. I think it captures, in a nutshell, how insane, how schizophrenic, how hypocritical we are.

It is considered utterly non-noteworthy for a flight attendant to push a cart full of cancer sticks—clearly marked as such with a photo of an intubated man in the last throes of the crushing grip of what I assume was terminal lung cancer, for which one can hope that his orphaned family is seeing at least some... [More]

7 years Ago

The “great ideas” hype machine

Published by marco on

I recently read the following citation in the review Yuval Noah Harari: ‘Homo sapiens as we know them will disappear in a century or so’ by Andrew Anthony (The Guardian):

“It’s one of those books that can’t help but make you feel smarter for having read it. Barack Obama and Bill Gates have undergone that experience, as have many others in the Davos crowd and Silicon Valley. The irony, perhaps, is that one of the book’s warnings is that we are in danger of becoming an elite-dominated global society.”

Ugh. This in no... [More]

Identity Politics: Is Jordan Peterson saying anything interesting?

Published by marco on

I read the article ‘We’re teaching university students lies’ – An interview with Dr Jordan Peterson by Jason Tucker & Jason VandenBeukel (C2C Journal) with interest. I’d never heard of Jordan Peterson. He was eminently quotable and I highlighted the following passages.

“Part of the reason I got embroiled in this [gender identity] controversy was because of what I know about how things went wrong in the Soviet Union. Many of the doctrines that underlie the legislation that I’ve been objecting to share structural similarities with the... [More]