One man's ongoing effort to make sense of the world.

Thursday, January 27, 2005

What we need, a prescription for our times

General principles:


Truth first.


Less tolerance and more accountability. On all fronts. Business. Government. Foreign affairs. Heads must roll.


Eliminate externalities. If the decision makers aren't the ones who suffer the consequences of their own decisions, their decisions will never improve.


Tighten the feedback loops. If cause and effect are separated by too much time, stupid people will fail to connect their actions with the consequences thereof.


Expose and condemn all lies. All of them.


Embrace outrage. But make it informed, intelligent outrage. Not this Leftist b.s.


Less whining and more action. Intelligent action, not acting out.


Ignore the pretensions of the Left. Neither the hard Left nor the squishy left ("liberals") are progressive, nor have they been in a very, very long time. They are the reactionaries. They are the establishment. It is the right that is progressive these days. Activism is not the sole province of the Left. In fact, their idea of activism is often just plain stupid. Let's show them what real activism is like.


Defend free speech, where free speech is defined as the freedom to speak freely. Support EFF. Support Joel Mowbray. Support judicialwatch.org.


Do away with notions that compromise our ability to make value judgements and hold scoundrels accountable. No more moral relativism. No more moral equivalance. No more wishful thinking and sentimentality, such as pacifism. No more ideologicially motivated pseudoscience. No playing favorites. No selective outrage based on ideology or partisanship.


No collectivism. Don't just pass the buck to some organization or politician. Hold them accountable for their performance. And take action personally where possible.


Examine yourself to make sure you're not part of the problem.


No compromise. Only a coward compromises on principle, and everything we're talking about here is a matter of principle.



Do not relent. Intelligent perseverance pays off.


Getting more specific: business
Getting more specific: government
Getting more specific: foreign policy

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

What We Need - government

No taxpayer money without accountability.


High tax rates are a manifestation of government out control. Here's a three step program. Do these things in precisely this order:

1. Independent audits of agencies and government funded projects.

2. Fire everybody who's not pulling his weight, or who is corrupt.
If the unions object, break the unions.

3. Cut spending down to what can be justified as necessary.

4. Pay off the government's debt.

5. Cut taxes.

6. Pass an amendment that puts a cap on income and capital gains rates.

Note: the above is applicable to all levels of government, from local to federal.


Oppose the welfare state. It's a huge scam. No more money for top bureaucrats' lavish lifestyles.


Hold government contractors accountable. No ripping off the people.


Fire government employees who don't do their job. That includes in the public school system.


School vouchers. Nothing else will make the public schools reform. Not more money. We tried that in the 60's and it didn't work.


In order to preserve our right to free speech, we must sometimes have recourse to anonymity. To this end, we must defend our privacy. (Yes, I know there's a war on terror going on. I'm all for it. But let's remember what it is we're defending.)


Defend the right to keep and bear arms. If we must have gun nuts, I'd rather they be private citizens. Besides, personal handguns are handy for shooting terrorists.


The courts are not the answer to everything. Sometimes the courts are the problem, especially when the laws are poorly written, and subject to interpretation. We need to get the laws right, and then everything else will sort itself out. We don't need more laws, but we do need better ones. Reform antitrust, coprorate law, and intellectual property law. Replace dysfunctional laws with laws that make sense and represent society's best interests. Do it with constitutional amendments if need be.


Politicians are not the answer. Politicans today are caught up in the mentality that votes can be bought with campaign dollars. They think politics is marketing, and that marketing is advertizing. The Democrats are more guilty of this than the Republicans, but both major parties are guilty. They're beholden to corporate donations, because they think that's how to compete. Use voter initiatives to bypass the politicians. Let's make our own laws.


No party loyalty. If a political party thinks it owns you, it will take you for granted. If a large organization takes you for granted, it will neglect or even abuse you, unthinkingly. Party loyalists are sheep. When their party loses, they are angry sheep. But they're never more than sheep.



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What We Need - foreign affairs

Smash the terrorists. Whatever it takes. Not just the ones that are currently attacking us. All of them. Because they'll all get around to us sooner or later.
Terrorism is a method of fighting, but it is the preferred method of those who hate democracy.



Unilateralism is not a sin. It's just what happens when only one nation is willing to follow through. (Pleasing people who may not be thinking clearly, or who may not even have our best interests at heart, has no place on our list of priorities. And we don't have to apologize to anyone for doing what must be done.)



Support democracy and freedom abroad. That includes Israel. DOn't accept the argument that some countries aren't ready for democracy. We can't afford to wait until they're ready. Non-democratic countries make the world a dangerous place. This is the lesson of 9-11. Shove democracy down their throats if need be.



Territories, yes. Colonies, no. The difference is, we intend to at least try to set territories loose, eventually.


Don't let anyone sponge off us forever. Not even a territory. There should be a time limit.
(This means you, Puerto Rico. Statehood or independence. One or the other.)



Oppose tyranny abroad. No "realpolitik." Thugs is thugs.



Defend our borders. It's that simple.



Immigration with standards. Give us you tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. But terrorists and other lowlifes, keep the hell out.


Communist China is not our friend, and is not going to make us rich. It's a brutal, repressive regime with expansionist aims. And nukes.


The Cold War being over is over. Forget the peace dividend. The government already spent it.
Forget living without fear. The world hasn't changed all that much. Oh, and did I mention China's got nukes?



Mutual Assured Destruction does not make for a good night's sleep, but it's worked in the past. When a better idea comes along, I'll be ecstatic. Corollary: support missile defense programs in any form. They're all worth a shot.



No appeasement. It never worked, and it never will. No pacifism. Pacifism is just appeasement with pretensions of moral superiority.



If we must fight a war, and we frequently must, fight in a such a way as to win. No compromises with sentimentality or politics. Our enemies certainly won't make any. That, by the way, is one of the lessons of Vietnam.


We need to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil. Hydrogen, hydroelectric, nuke, ANWR, wind farms, whatever it takes. (Except maybe unsafe little cars. It's not worth civilians dying for.) In the meantime, the western world developed those oil reserves in the Arab world.
We have a legitimate claim to them by virtue of sweat equity. Let's keep the option open of enforcing that claim.



We don't have to try to respect other cultures if they don't rate respect.


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What We Need - reforming the business world

"When things get too big, I don't trust them at all
You want some control, you got to keep it small"
- Peter Gabiel, "DIY"


Oppose corporatism. Mergers are not growth. Mergers are merely consolidation of power.
A corpotation is not a person, whatever the laws say. A corporation has no soul, no conscience.
The idea that corporations make decisions is a bad metaphor stretched to the point of being a lie. It's people that make decisions. Hold people responsible.


Support small business. It's small businesses that innovate. Big businesses can't. (Read Christensen's The Innovator's Dilemna.) It's small businesses that create jobs that won't go overseas. It's small local businesses that are responsive to customers. And it's small businesses that possess an entrepeneurial spirit. Big businesses don't. They chase fads, but that's not at all the same thing.


Competition is accountability. Those that seek to eliminate the competition seek to eliminate accountability.


Ask yourself: is there any good thing an LLC can accomplish that can't be done
with a joint venture?


There's a right size for everything. There will always be a place for big business. At a minimum, we will always need big defense contractors, as a necessary evil. But right now we need more smaller businesses.



Antitrust. Oppose collusion and monopolies wherever possible. Example: don't run Microsoft software, or give Microsoft any money, unless you're absolutely forced to.



Intellectual property. Defend fair use. Demand that copyright laws be rolled back to sanity. Support artists that try (legally) to circumvent the corporate establishment.



Bogus accounting. You know what I'm talking about. These people have to go to jail. This shouldn't even be debatable.


Too much advertising. Junk mail. Spam. Telemarketers. They treat us with absolute contempt. Let's return the favor. (That said, the fact remains that Adbusters is kinda lame.)


Corporate news (mainsteam media) is crap. (Actually, so are "alternative" newspapers, they're just crap from a different animal.) The solution is to get your information from multiple sources. Enter the Web!


There's nothing wrong with building something yourself, if you know how, or are willing to learn how. Self sufficiency was an American virtue once.


Outsourcing of anything nontrivial is dangerously stupid. If it's important enough to be worth doing, it's worth maintaining control over. Do it inhouse, and you're less likely to get screwed.


The global economy is here, and there's nothing to do about it. But there should be a limit to offshore outsourcing, if only because of national security considerations. It's a bad policy to become dependent on foreigners for anything we need.


Enlightened self interest is one thing. Mindless greed is another.


Adam Smith wrote more than one book. Become acquainted with the Theory of Moral Sentiments.


No more corporate welfare. Make business earn its keep.



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Sunday, January 23, 2005

Where I stand: Proverbs and axioms for the real world


Truth first.

Beauty is a sort of truth, but ugliness is often more true.

Facts are the first step on the path to truth.
First facts, then inference.

Treasure all knowledge, but in proportion to its utility.

Knowledge is probabilistic, because of the limitations of the knower. Cover all bets.

Truth is discrete. The laws of contradiction and the excluded middle
are at the core of reality. It is the shades of gray that are mere appearance.

We all have an inherent knowledge of reason from unreason, and
good from evil. But it is in inchoate and must be developed by training.

Reason and conscience are two aspects of the same thing.
The moral law within our souls comes from the same universe that formed the rest of us.

Only the evil or cowardly feel a need to heatedly deny the existence of moral truth.

Clarity above cleverness. Treat obscurantism with contempt.

Just because you don't understand something doesn't mean it's nonsense
(the logical positivist fallacy.)

Just because you don't understand something doesn't mean it's above you
(the obscurantist deflection.)

Entities should not multiply beyond necessity.

Nobody understands everything. Just do the best you can.

Everything's a mystery until you figure out how it works.


Arguing
Claims
Culture
Others
Practicality
Society



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... zIWETHEY

Where I Stand: society


Society is how individuals try to come to terms with one another's mutual presence of the same planet. It's the polar opposite of private life.

Absolute privacy is impossible, because our actions affect others in countless ways.
Therefore society.

A totalitarian regime is inimically hostile to the private life of the common individual.
It seeks to deny its subjects the right to be human. This is simply evil, in and of itself.

An Objectivist "society" would leave too little in the public realm for society to function.
It is atomizing, alienating, and ultimately unworkable. Selfishness is *not* a virtue.


The individual human above the collective.

The greater good above the concerns of the few, but only if the greater good is understood as the aggregrate good of many individuals.

Inherent dignity of all human life. Especially when it's inconvenient.

Beware any attempt to dehumanize anyone. Nothing good ever comes of it.

Individual responsibility of all adult individuals.

One size does not fit all. Beware both excessive centralization and excessive decentralization. There is a proper level for each function.

No special rights for victim groups, and no affirmative action.


Politics co-opts all issues. Everything becomes political sooner or later.

It makes no sense to talk about keeping religion out of politics if politics won't reciprocate. Let religion defend its natural turf - morality, societal values and transcendental meaning, against encroachment.

The political realm is where we make decisions on a societal level. The only way to avoid politics is to try to make decisions on some other level. Sometimes that's just not feasible, therefore we have politics.

Politics at its best is a means to an end, namely the resolution of issues on a societal level.

Politics as an end to itself is a grave evil. "The purpose of power is power." People who think like that are not to be trusted with any power at all.

If a politician, or even an entire party, will say anything to win, what will he/it do when in power?


The social contract. And remember, it cuts both ways.

Citizenship must never be divorced from the social contract.

Privacy of the less powerful from the more powerful.

Laws and rules should be few, well understood, and beyond reasonable objection.

"Liberty under law" - Edmund Burke

Progress in a desirable direction is a good thing. Progress in the wrong direction is bad.

Charity to the truly needy, and only the truly needy. Be careful what behaviors you reward.

Some resources are finite. Reasonable individuals can work something out. Unreasonable individuals can go pound sand. Hence the social contract.

In any war, at least one side is in the wrong. No gas about liebensraum. No whining about needing resources (see above.) No excuses.

If you must fight a war, fight it in such a way as to win. There is no other reasonable way to fight a war.

If diplomacy alone solved all disagreements, there would be no war. Obviously, war exists, so diplomacy does not solve all problems by itself.



"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely."

But powerlessness also corrupts, in its own way.

No one has ever found a way to prevent extreme concentrations of power in the hands of a few.
Levelling schemes are futile.

Some power to every individual. Absolute power to no one.

More power to the responsible, less to the irresponsible, still less to children, least of all to the criminal.

Accountability of the more powerful to the less powerful.

Virtue must be rewarded or else something else will be, and that which we reward, we encourage.
Therefore, the good must be rewarded with greater power, as long as they remain good.

The Anglophone peoples, and the United States in particular, have hit upon a way to keep the powerful accountable, and thus ameliorate the ill effects of concentrated power. It involes the rule of law, and the separation of powers.


Justice is about making society work for the greatest good. It resolves competing claims in accordance with the social contract. Justice is a necessity. It deters evil and encourages good.

Vengeance is about assuaging the feelings of the aggrieved at the expense of the one he blames. It resolves nothing. Vengeance, in human hands, is inevitably petty and cruel. It is unlikely to serve the greater good.

Woe to those who call for vengeance in the name of "justice." If they can't tell the difference, how likely are they to be in the right in whatever grievance they may have?

Mercy up to a point. We all screw up sometimes. But we don't all make a way of life out of it.

Might doesn't make right. It often works in the opposite direction, though. The universe rewards those who come to terms with it, and punishes those who will not learn.

There is no such thing as social justice. All true justice deals with individual choices.


Free speech to anyone who has something to say, and is not known to be deliberately lying. And no, porn is not speech.

Freedom to hear what someone else is saying to you or saying publicly.

Freedom to ignore what someone else is saying.

Not everyone who is emitting a series of words is actually trying to say something. Infants babble. So do postmodernists.

No prior restraint to speech. But if someone is caught lying or talking nonsense, don't let him disown his words.

Sometimes fires do break out in crowded theaters. What then?



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Where I Stand: practicality


Pragmatism properly defined, is a focus on getting good results. But this is meaningless unless we first define "good results." Therefore it impossible to be truly practical before first having values.

The larger picture over the smaller one.

The long term view must not be neglected.

The immediate must also be dealt with.

Initiative above passivity.

Efficacy above ineffectuality.

Perfectionism is a trap. Go with what works best.

I have a right to question, and will err on the side of caution by exercizing it.

On any matter that is likely to affect me, I have a right to answers, and I'll get them one way or another.

Life isn't fair and it never will be.

The moment of truth is the fulcrum of a responsible life. It's when we must derive from probabilistic, imperfect knowledge, a discrete, concrete action (or inaction.) It is the collapsing of the wave function.

Absolute truth exists, because truth is absolute by definition. Absolute knowledge is another matter entirely. Settle for partial knowledge, or else you'll never get anywhere (perfectionism again.)

Each of us is a demiurge. We must work with what we are given. Some of us try to do the best we can. Some of us don't try.

Angst is not something to be wallowed in. Angst is for teenagers, French philosophers and other subadult personalities. Grow up.

It's silly to say "I accept the consequences of my actions" if you have no idea what the consequences might be. A responsible person first tries to get some idea of the likely outcome of an act. Then he can decide whether to do it.

Accepting responsibility after the fact is all well and good. But you'll make better decisions if you accept responsibility up front, before you even consider a course of action.



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Where I Stand: others


If you value rights, you'll fight for those rights.

If you only fight for your own rights, and don't care about other peoples' rights, you're not really fighting for rights. You're fighting for self interest.

Rights cut both ways.

Patience is not inherently a virtue, and anybody who says it is should be regarded with suspicion. Patience has its place, however. Just don't overdo it.

Personal loyalty is prized by criminals. Decent people are loyal only to principle.

Beware the conspiracy of silence. Only crooks say that it's bad to be a snitch.

Never rat out a friend. If a friend needs ratting out, first let him know that you're not friends with him anymore. Then rat him out.

With regard to friends, quality over quantity.

Not everyone is worth the trouble of trying to please.

If you need to go along to get along with people, those people will turn out not to be worth having gotten along with.

Lying is a hostile action. It's something you do to confuse an enemy.

"White lies" generally end badly. Better to tell the ugly truth and get it over with.

In anger is truth. When people are angry, they haven't the presence of mind to misrepresent themselves convincingly.

You can't please everyone, so don't waste effort trying.

Laugh at what is silly. Leave the nonsilly for fools to laugh at.



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Where I stand: culture


A culture is not an end to itself. Cultures are expendable. Individuals matter.

Not all cultures are of equal worth. Some simply work better than others.

A culture can be a source of knowledge, both for positive examples and warnings. But that's not what most people mean by "multiculturalism."

Values are a central aspect of culture. All that I say about culture applies to value systems as well.

Race is a meaningless and pernicious abstraction, leading to unspeakable mischief. Race is nothing. Individuals matter.

There are two kinds of tolerance, one good, one bad. Sometimes "tolerance" is simply not making needless trouble. But sometimes "tolerance" is a word for not dealing with things.

Liberty is that part of the social contract that enforces tolerance of the actions of others.
And so, like all other forms of tolerance, it can be either good or bad.

Not everything is America's fault.

Not everything is the White Man's fault.

Not all social ills have their roots in poverty.

Not all poverty is the result of oppression.


The Western cultures are demonstrably superior to others. Never mind political correctness or ideology. This is simply the manifest truth of the matter.

The Anglophone cultures are superior to the rest of the West.

The United States is the current undisputed leader of the Anglophone world, and thereby of the West, and thereby of the world. So shall it be until someone comes along who can do a better job.

We can't just leave other cultures well enough alone, because some of them simply won't reciprocate. First time we tried that, we got the Barbary Pirates. We tried it again and got the Kaiser, and then Soviet Communism.

Globalization is neither inherently good nor inherently evil. It is simply an inescapable fact that we must come to terms with.

We can't all just get along. Certain cultural differences can't be swept under the rug or politely ignored. They must be resolved. This is the meaning of Jihad.

Because the Anglophone culture is superior to all others, I propose that all cultural differences be resolved in its favor.




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Where I Stand: regarding claims


Slogans are not necessarily truth.

Nobody, when opposed, retorts that there's no absolute truth
if he thinks he can defend his position on merit.

Some distinctions really are binary.

A great many distinctions really are discrete and enumerable.


If anyone presents hard, verifiable facts, look at the facts,
and then consider his argument, if he has one based on those facts.

If anyone does not present hard verifiable facts, put him in his place.
Especially if he yells a lot.

If anyone treats hard, verifiable facts with contempt, treat him with contempt.

If the facts back you up, stand your ground.

Nobody tells just one lie. If you catch somebody in a lie,
you've caught yourself a liar.

Beware one-sided accounts of the facts. Always look for the other side of the equation.

An assertion of fact is not the same thing as a fact. A fact is something you can verify.


Not everyone who says he's been wronged has been wronged.

Not everyone who says he's won based on merit has won based on merit.

Sometimes the majority is wrong.

Sometimes the majority is right.

The difference between a principled stand and bullheadedness
is that the one is well thought out, and the other is not.

One man's principled stand is another man's pigheadedness. And vice versa.



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Where I stand: arguing


Free will exists. It is the foundation of human consciousness.

Character is what you make of yourself. Nature and nurture are
not all there is. So no excuses.

Authority contingent on competence. Those who can, should be
deferred to.

Respect (beyond essential human dignity) contingent on character.

People of lesser organic mental ability do not personally deserve contempt, but
their opinions do not merit equal weight.

Some forms of stupidity are not organic, but derive from a
character flaw. Treat them as they deserve, until they smarten up.

Willful stupidity is a blight upon humanity. Give no quarter.

Denial is a crime against truth. It is a rebellion against
reality itself.

Cultivated ignorance is a sort of pre-emptive denial.

Failure to draw a necessary logical conclusion is a pre-emptive denial in the realm of deduction.
"I acknowledge that if A then B, and that A, but I don't agree that B" is just plain pigheaded. (Viz Lewis Carroll's dialogue of Achilles and the Tortoise.)

If you can happily entertain nonsense, then you are too open-minded.

If you cannot entertain an idea that happens to be true, then you asre too closed-minded.

It's possible to be too open-minded and too closed-minded at the same time.
In fact, it's distressingly commonplace.

The whole point of thinking is to arrive at a conclusion.
If you're too "open-minded' to settle on a conclusion, you're a ninny.
Thinking is not supposed to be mental masturbation.



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