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October 2017

Bank Behind Fearless Girl Statue Agrees To Gender Discrimination Settlementgothamist.com

paxamericana:

Boston-based multi-trillion asset manager State Street Global Advisors, the controversial company behind the now infamous feminist symbol (and selfie cameo) The Fearless Girl, is settling federal allegations that it discriminated against 305 women in senior positions by paying them less than their male counterparts.

The settlement, first reported by Bloomberg, also names fifteen black vice presidents paid less than their white counterparts, genders not specified.

Now remove the statue so that we can have our glorious bull, which was originally placed somewhat subversively but kept due to the adoration of the people, restored to its original context.

Oct 6, 2017 2,096 notes
#gendpol
this is why they don't want to let birds on Tumblr. wildlife conservation is gonna be pissed after you've grimaced yourself to death on discourse. don't you owe it to Australia's environment to log off and go hunt small rodents?

I just find it amusing that every self-described leftist who accuses me of being a fascist invariably gets torn to pieces by other self-described leftists a week later, who then get torn to pieces in turn, and so on ad infinitum, like a bizarre political karma system.

Oct 5, 2017 56 notes
#argunons
so in other words, become a chad if you don't want to get falsely accused of rape??

There is no guarantee, and if you look like a sufficiently valuable target, you may be attacked regardless, however…

Being attractive and high-status is a major defense against many forms of social attack.  People will like you and make excuses for you, when they won’t for equally-deserving others that are less handsome and less popular.

It can help even in environments that say they are against lookism and unfair benefits from popularity.

The best defense against this particular accusation, of course, is to be born cis female.  (Of course, that’s still only a partial defense.)

Oct 4, 2017 4 notes
#rape cw #gendpol #anons #asks

argumate:

we’ve circled all the way around to “you’re too unattractive to be falsely accused of rape”, the mind boggles.

Oh come on mysterious blogger Argumate is thinking of, surely the ugly, undesirable, and otherwise low-status are the best targets for a false accusation?  

People already don’t like them and find the thought of them as sexual beings to be creepy and repulsive.

Oct 4, 2017 12 notes
#gendpol #rape cw

argumate:

One of the things I think about a lot is imagine asking an individual politician what value they provide to society: they can list work they’ve done, initiatives they’ve sponsored, speeches they’ve given, constituent interests they’ve represented, and so on.

Now imagine asking an entire party what value they provide to society: they can do something similar and talk about the good stuff they’ve done and the bad stuff from those other guys they’ve opposed.

Now imagine asking the entire representative body what value they provide to society and suddenly it gets much trickier, because they are inherently working at cross purposes to each other and most of their “work” is simply inhibition.

“As a group we’ve had endless debate, passed a bill, wrangled for a while, repealed the bill, wrangled a little more, then passed a similar but worse bill.”

There really isn’t any way to justify the existence of representative bodies as a group without saying look we’ve had five thousand years of power struggles that involved stabbings and this is a small step up from that, count your blessings.

Oct 4, 2017 79 notes
#politics #queue

flakmaniak:

the-grey-tribe:

But to say, as Sarah Champion did, that “Britain has a problem with British Pakistani men raping and exploiting white girls” is either saying that Pakistanis are more likely to rape and more likely to rape white girls, or that the rape of white girls is more of a problem than the rape of, for example, white boys or brown girls.

– Chi Onwurah

Worst take on Rotherham yet. Seriously.

Isn’t it… Literally true that British Pakistani immigrant men disproportionately rape white girls? Isn’t that a large part of the Rotherham scandal, that this is widespread and well above the base rate? So yeah, people are saying it is more likely. Because it literally is.

Now, if people are saying “therefore we should treat this subgroup with extra suspicion”, sure, you can object to that. Presumably a bunch of Rotherham-complainers are doing exactly that, and they shouldn’t.

But what makes the Rotherham scandal special is not that one subgroup committed a pile of crimes at a rate disproportionate to the population at large. The usual “treat people as individuals” liberal rhetoric is well-equipped to handle such cases and maintain social harmony while prosecuting offenders.

No, it’s that people didn’t treat them the same way. They literally discriminated, but the other way, letting minority groups get away with much more. It’s really hollow to try to dismiss the Rotherham scandal by saying “You can’t treat people differently based on their ethnicity/country of origin!” when the entire problem is that people did exactly that. If the relevant authorities had treated people the same regardless of ethnicity and national origin, Rotherham wouldn’t be nearly so big a scandal.

When I first heard about Rotherham, I was bracing for it to be yet another instance of conservatives claiming “PC culture means you can’t call out minorities who actually commit crimes!” without much basis. But then they had an actual example of just that, and a really grotesque one, too. Maybe all their other talking points and examples are shit, but this one isn’t. Haven’t seen anyone debunk it. People who support the culture that produced this trainwreck need to explain how this type of failure can be prevented under their frameworks. If parts of the progressive agenda are at fault for this, then we need to cut those parts out. I don’t believe that attacking racism has to involve letting rape gangs slide. If I thought that, I’d be a lot more conservative than I am.

And if I thought preventing these types of things required keeping out immigrants of certain nationalities, again, I would be a lot more conservative than I am. But as @mitigatedchaos says, you need the will to actually enforce your culture at times, if you want a liberal society that functions correctly. If there is a cultural cause of these rape gangs, then it must be stamped out. The left loves to fight the culture war; they should enjoy fighting this battle of it, too. “Respecting culture” has always been a lie; we have always judged and will always judge the merits of various cultural pieces, just as the left constantly attacks (often rightly!) the culture of conservative Christians. Feminists should be lining up to condemn the rape culture at work here. It seems in their wheelhouse.

Once more, if I believed that culture war tools were insufficient to fight this battle, I would be a lot more reactionary than I am. But I believe that we can change cultures, and yeah, you can call it “imposing our will on minorities” if you wanna make it sound ominous, but that’s kind of what society does. We can and should have broad, consensus standards for behavior. It doesn’t work if murder being okay is just a matter of opinion and cultural difference. If the “murder is okay” people are to coexist with me, they should be on the other side of the globe, in some other society where I don’t have to ever meet them.

Regarding the original quote: I wouldn’t put it as “Britain has a problem with British Pakistani men raping and exploiting white girls”. I would say: “Britain has a problem with British authorities too chickenshit to go after rape gangs because they happen to be a minority ethnicity, and they fear being called racist more than they fear child sex trafficking.” Or perhaps it wasn’t fear of being called racist; perhaps they simply didn’t have the resolve to wield the iron hand of the state in communities not culturally similar to them. But that is their responsibility, to intervene fairly and consistently. (A third option is that they dismissed the allegations as racist, and so didn’t act. That also condemns them, albeit in a slightly different way.)

Whatever the answer, something’s wrong.

Much though it pains me to say it, the conservatives have a point, and it has to be addressed.

In the end, I did become more right wing, not because I think it’s mechanically impossible for the modern left of center to use the tools, but rather because I don’t believe they will have the will to do so unless they are forced to.

To unlock that capability, that willpower to acknowledge that there is actually a problem, which is so unwoke (they’ll defend Islam and Muslims even over other “religions of color”), they ultimately must be threatened with cultural displacement and made to compete.

Oct 4, 2017 22 notes
#politics
Oct 3, 2017 363,361 notes

@mailadreapta liked your post

Don’t get too excited, bro.

A lot of my thinking on what counts as actually-degenerate now, vs what could count as that in the future, depends significantly on available medical and legal technology.

  • Keeping birthrates steady is key in a society where lifespan has not been radically extended.
  • The lack of artificial wombs makes it far more difficult for the state to, if necessary, raise children to make up for population shortfalls.
  • STDs still exist, some of them are becoming antibiotic-resistant, some of them are permanent.
  • Most radical body modifications just aren’t feasible right now without dramatically risking the health of the subject.
  • Difficult-to-impossible for most people to exit their sexuality means that most people are locked in as heteros so gender ratios matter a lot.
  • Difficult-to-impossible for most people to remain young in appearance, and healthy beyond current healthspans.  Long-term irreparable deterioration inevitable.
  • Cannot adequately repair DNA damage accrued through having children while of too great a genetic similarity.
  • Heritable diseases largely incurable, cannot be simply edited out.
  • Can’t repair brain damage beyond some minimum natural level at current tech level, including psychologically-induced trauma.
  • Can’t repair limbs effectively, replacement prosthetics are of substandard performance.

I’m not against a future of immortal cyborg mermaids polyamorously dating cyborg vampires while engaging in extreme Martian exosports per se, but I am against picking the policies that make sense for that future long before they make sense for our present moment.

Oct 3, 2017 11 notes
#politics #my politics #mitigated future

sinesalvatorem:

immanentizingeschatons:

My stretch goal is basically to reconcile LessWrongian high rationalism, hyper-individualistic social liberalism, socialism (or at least something that might be called that), degeneracy, and being really, really autistic into a stable totalizing* ideology, and then use it to overthrow the old world order, reeducate the normies, and hold off the dark forces of GNON until we can ascend to heaven.

Everyone needs a little hubris in their life.

*totalizing is not the same thing as totalitarian

It’s really interesting to see a list of all the things I used to idolise and now find eh, unpleasant, or horrifying all in one place like this.

It’s like imagining living in a utopia designed by a younger me and then immediately searching for a rope to hang myself.

I wouldn’t find a utopia designed by a younger me all that terrifying.

On the other hand, I’ve been getting more extreme over time, not less.

And now, since my political prescriptions vary by time, resources, technology level, and so on, the question of “what does my utopia look like?” depends on just which decade or century it’s proposed for, and for which country.

It’s funny, because I’m the opposite of OP on a number of these.

  1. Integration of intuition over purist high rationalism.
  2. Recreation of stabilizing and mutually-supporting communities over hyper-individualism, even if the borders of those communities are porous.  Pragmatic social centrism oriented towards social welfare and economic production over radical social liberalism.
  3. Something most people would consider to be a variety of Capitalism, even if the nation-state is considered more important than capital, and even though it includes substantial welfare-type payments.
  4. The anti-incentivization of actually-degenerate behaviors.  (”Being gay” doesn’t count.  Cousin marriage does.)
  5. Increased respect for the viability of basic normie intuitions such as relationship jealousy as, while not being right 100% of the time, being right for most normies most of the time.
  6. The prevention of the emergence of a world government, and instead the instantiation of a new order of cooperating groups of Nationalists.
Oct 3, 2017 36 notes
#politics #my politics
moé makes you more attractive and therefore less approachable

But if you aren’t attractive enough, then people won’t want to approach you.

Ah, the horseshoe theory of attractiveness.

Oct 3, 2017 12 notes
#私

argumate:

argumate:

It’s amazing how computers have improved so much in my lifetime.

But what’s really amazing is how printers are still complete rubbish.

at this rate we’ll have decent 3D printers before decent 2D printers.

Just think, I’m younger than you and I have the same experience.

I use it as small talk within a computer context, for normies.

“Yeah, amazing how the other parts of computers are so much better now but printers still suck, right? lol”

Oct 3, 2017 217 notes

@mailadreapta reblogged this 900,000 note post, which I wanted to add to but Tumblr formatting for this is annoying

age 11: worry about internet people finding me in real life
now: worry about people in real life finding me on the internet

Yeah, I have to admit, I’m actually a lot more boring in real life and a lot more colorful, liberated, and free on the internet.

Oct 2, 2017 11 notes
#私

Huh.

I just realized, allowing men to exit child support through legal paternal surrender would be a borderline Reactionary policy.

It would make having children outside of wedlock way more dangerous and punishing.

Oct 2, 2017 12 notes

argumate:

as I recall the US is off the charts compared with other OECD countries on other metrics too, like drug use.

Wealth, inequality, crime, scientific developments, guns, freedom of speech…

It’s a very… intense country.

Oct 2, 2017 32 notes
#usa #politics

decameter:

I’m becoming more and more suspicious that the christians may be right about porn.

Porn isn’t a mass corrupting influence in the way the opposition portrays it, per se.

It’s alcohol.

Some people can drink responsibly… some people can’t.  And if you’re drinking too often, it’s either a sign that something is very broken in your life and you should fix that instead of drinking so much - or that you’re addicted to it.

Oct 2, 2017 29 notes
#porn discourse cw
🍆

“My Opinion” (Pixels on Tumblr)
- Anonymous (2017)

Oct 2, 2017 5 notes
#anons #asks #intimidation ask meme #shtpost #visual shtpost #the mitigated exhibition
moé makes you more attractive and therefore less approachable

But if you aren’t attractive enough, then people won’t want to approach you.

Ah, the horseshoe theory of attractiveness.

Oct 2, 2017 12 notes
#shtpost #not serious #intimidation ask meme #anons #asks
🍍

You didn’t receive approval from your department manager.

Go put that back in the produce section where you found it.

Oct 2, 2017 4 notes
#anons #asks #intimidation ask meme #shtpost
🍒

You know, I got that on [other platform], too.  In fact, someone once approached my girlfriend at the time because they were too cripplingly socially anxious to approach me.

…and also my other ex described my dating profile as a bit that way, once…

A-am I not moe enough?  * hides pile of guns under strawberry plush pillow *

Oct 2, 2017 6 notes
#anons #asks #intimidation ask meme #half shtpost #私

poipoipoi-2016:

isaacsapphire:

mitigatedchaos:

mitigatedchaos:

nuclearspaceheater:

mitigatedchaos:

nocherrybombs:

Why did the early 2000s neocons think we could export liberal democracy to the Middle East? We can’t even export liberal democracy to the United States.

Once you drink too much of certain variants of Liberalism, you start assuming that Liberal Democracy is the natural condition of mankind and once the restraints are removed, it will naturally emerge and take root, along with economic development.

I mean, it‘s probably doable, but step 1 is to enforce a ban on cousin marriage for 1000 years.

Ah, but you see, Neocons are ideologically prohibited from acknowledging this, because hey, what is a foreign culture but food and clothing waiting to be sold in the United States?

You could do it in far fewer generations, but you’d have to install a 20-year military governorship, still ban cousin marriages out to the third degree, enforce village exogamy, and seize total control of the educational system to wipe out non-trivial parts of the culture and replace them with ideology necessary to support Liberal Democracy.

That’s a pretty big ideological price, and it would require a long troop presence to enforce.

It’s hardly impossible.  Afghanistan was liberalizing at one point.  But if you’re too hooked on the ideology that democracy flowers in all soils, it isn’t possible for you to carry it out.

That actually kinda sounds like “the last few hundred years of Japanese history, but faster”.

I mean, if you believe Clark, it sounds like the last thousand years of Western European history, only faster.

“The Development of Advanced Industrial Civilization, But Faster” 

A plan for the Middle East from Award-Winning1, Internationally-Published2 Politics Blogger Mitigated Chaos

1 Winner of first annual Rationalist Adjacent Award for Blog Most Resembling Mitigated Chaos
2 Blog available in all jurisdictions where Tumblr is accessible

Oct 2, 2017 43 notes
#politics #my politics #shtpost
Oct 2, 2017 26 notes
#racepol #politics

athrelon:

I’ve vaguely heard murmurings about a secular decline in testosterone levels, but imagined it was overhyped or at worst just a result of the obesity epidemic.  @lambdaphagy​ and I had a chance to just scratch the surface of the literature, though, and it’s frankly alarming.

Total T dropped about 20%, bioavailable T dropped 50%, over 20 years from 1987-2004. The Finns aren’t exempt either.   Cohorts were matched for BMI, and even if they weren’t, the effect size of obesity is off by almost an order of magnitude.  Doubling BMI causes T to fall by less than half, and, mirabile dictu, American BMI has not doubled (yet, give it time.) Average BMI went from 25 in 1960 to 28 in 2000.

The speed of that T drop is just jaw-dropping. Obesity doesn’t help, but doesn’t explain this level of cratering.  So: phytoestrogens, xenoestrogens, micropharmaceuticals in the water, behavioral effects?  More work is required, but hit me up if you have any good intel.

Cold Take: Crime declined because we removed lead from the gasoline, lowering the amount of lead-induced brain damage.

Lukewarm Take: Crime declined because we allowed abortion, removing some of the worst-off potential people from being born and raised in substandard conditions.

Hot Take: Crime declined because we put drugs in the water supply and we’re all transgender autistics/neurodivergents now, even the women.  (Especially the women.)

Oct 2, 2017 48 notes
#gendpol #shtpost #not serious

flakmaniak:

shieldfoss:

argumate:

hmm arguing with a straight face that racism against white people is bad because it’s a slippery slope that can lead to racism against non-white people

…I

OK separately I think racism against white people is bad because it is racism.

But also I actually think that yes, unironically this? If you officially start designating races and you treat them differently (e.g.: Affirmative action), people will follow suit by thinking of them differently. 

Isn’t this just what @mitigatedchaos argues all the time, that all racism is empowered and normalized by all other racism? (And the generalized version of this for the left’s hypocrisies.)

More seriously, while being racist towards white people is bad on its own merits, either as a violation of justice - judging someone for the actions of another - or on more Utilitarian grounds, most of the people that are seriously racist against the whities aren’t going to accept those arguments.

Thus the appeal to something they might actually care about.

It’s possible to create political will out of thin air, but a lot of the time it’s in reaction to historical or material factors, and political will with those factors will have deeper roots.

It’s important to realize along with this, that most politics will occur around the margins - whether groups of white supremacists are growing or shrinking, whether swing voters shift from one party to another, and so on.  Strong believers do have an effect, but it’s necessary to have raw power mass at your disposal.

As such, the question is not about “but if we be nice to our rivals, they will still be maximally evil,” but about “what’s the marginal rate that people will enter or leave our enemy’s coalition?”

Now that doesn’t mean playing along nicely all the time, but for goodness sake people should be very careful and specific in who they are targetting, and most racism is really bad at doing that.

Oct 2, 2017 50 notes
#racepol #politics #the culture war

so1ido:

Send 🌼 if I come off as friendly and approachable or send🍒 if I come off as intimidating

(Other fruits may also be accepted on a case-by-case basis.  See your department manager for details.)

Oct 2, 2017 16,389 notes
#ask meme #asks

mutant-aesthetic:

The discussion we SHOULD be having RE: the vegas attack is if nihlist mindless violence should count as “terrorism” since there’s no real set ideology driving it


I mean, assuming Stephen Paddock’s brother is correct and he didn’t have any sort of radical political or religious affiliations and just was going for the high score, is it still terror? Is murder for murder’s sake an ideology?

Yes.  Next question, please.

Oct 2, 2017 22 notes

flakmaniak:

shieldfoss:

argumate:

hmm arguing with a straight face that racism against white people is bad because it’s a slippery slope that can lead to racism against non-white people

…I

OK separately I think racism against white people is bad because it is racism.

But also I actually think that yes, unironically this? If you officially start designating races and you treat them differently (e.g.: Affirmative action), people will follow suit by thinking of them differently. 

Isn’t this just what @mitigatedchaos argues all the time, that all racism is empowered and normalized by all other racism? (And the generalized version of this for the left’s hypocrisies.)

Death to the Imperialists, long live the Empire.

Oct 2, 2017 50 notes
#racepol #the culture war

defectivealtruist:

rocketverliden:

mitigatedchaos:

“Nyarlothep?  Wasn’t that some anime thing?”

See, though, has anyone done a parody/fanfic of the original story, except instead of being a mysterious and sinister dark-skinned Egyptian man, Nyarly was just straight-up an anime girl? Maybe like some sort of holo-idol with a hologram posse, and the narrator exits to find himself in not a world of apocalypse, but a world of moe.

Yes

.

Thus, the post. You might enjoy it, RV.

Oct 2, 2017 25 notes

argumate:

collapsedsquid said: need an owl pic with a black mask

nationalism must reach its logical conclusion: one person == one nation!

Oh sht, it’s Anarcho-Sovereigntism!

Oct 1, 2017 21 notes
#shtpost
Oct 1, 2017 9 notes
#私 #me #my politics

nuclearspaceheater:

I was reading about Ethereum.

Solidity is the JavaScript-like programming language designed for developing smart contracts that run on the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM).

Oct 1, 2017 93 notes

“Nyarlothep?  Wasn’t that some anime thing?”

Oct 1, 2017 25 notes
I think self-defense shortcuts a lot of the debate over shooting conscripts. As my sergeant put it, if someone's pointing a weapon at you, you can rightfully kill them, period. Maybe your rules of engagement should include more room to allow for surrender from conscripts, but when the bullets start flying, who is shooting at you is no longer relevant.

In practical terms, sure.

Oct 1, 2017 3 notes
#anons #asks #politics

Or to put it another way, if you give voters the same level of responsibility for a war that you give a soldier volunteering to go over and fight it, then you are starting to weight very heavily on partial causal factors - which means that you can weight on the causal factors that contribute to the risk of a war.  No snowflake thinks itself responsible for the avalanche.

Attempted murder is just as bad, in a more Deontological sense, as murder, right?

Thus being a Fascist and not starting a war is as bad as being a Fascist and starting a war, under that line of thinking.

However, Fascism is not the only ideology to start wars of imperialism.  Communism and other ideologies have done this, too.  Therefore, before a war even starts, and even if it’s hopeless that they could hope to start one, Communists are a potential valid target.

So this isn’t really seeming like a good plan to me, here.

Oct 1, 2017 6 notes
#politics
Just war theory and the UK soldier killing – MattBruenig | Politicsmattbruenig.com

mitigatedchaos:

mitigatedchaos:

collapsedsquid:

invertedporcupine:

collapsedsquid:

In ideal liberal theory, citizens themselves are the source of all governmental actions in one form or another. This is a unifying principle of what makes a liberal theory a liberal theory, at least for the contractarians. The conclusion then that citizens within liberal societies are not covered under the [Neutrality-innocence justification] follows in a fairly straight-forward fashion. If a government decides to go to war, that decision only comes about as a result of the citizens authorizing the government to do so. The citizenry’s role in the war is as the originator of the action towards war. This might happen electorally or it might happen by consenting to a societal structure that allows wars to be waged. Regardless of which one happens to be the case, the citizens are necessarily participating in the process of waging war. Thus, the citizens are not innocent of the decision to pursue war, for it is they who are authorizing the decision; and, the citizens are not neutral towards the war effort because it is their actions (consent) that causes the war to occur. Because the citizens are non-neutral and non-innocent, the [Neutrality-innocence justification] cannot apply.

You’re either a subject of your government with no say and therefore not a legitimate target, or a citizen with say and therefore a legitimate target.

An interesting argument.

A terrorist blowing themselves up in the middle of a crowd of anti-war demonstrators would be perfectly justified according to this theory, which is your first clue that it is not also a good argument.

If killin antiwar protesters is forbidden, what about killing civilian pro-war activists?  What about conscripts?

Since when do such movements limit themselves to civilian pro-war activists?

As far as I can tell, “a terrorist movement which only selectively attacks political operatives that are against their national separatism” (or similar) is something that largely just doesn’t happen.

I think it would be a lot smarter and likely to succeed than what tends to actually happen.  It provides a very clear Exit path, draws in far fewer in opposition (since those of opposed ideologies are at much less personal risk), spends scarce public resentment resources over targets that disproportionately help the opposition, etc.

From what little I know, that might fit the IRA?

Anyhow, whenever I see this argument, I never see it in a more nuanced form suggesting that the force of violence be directed over the actual movers of political power towards war.  

Instead, it’s usually “and therefore 9/11 was justified.”  The problem with this is that the same reason meddling over there created the conditions for bringing about 9/11, launching 9/11 creates the conditions for the Iraq War.  That’s just how people are - and in many ways it makes sense for them to be that way.  From a practical perspective, all this viewpoint does is increase, rather than decrease, war.  

@collapsedsquid

that’s a utilitarian case though

an entirely separate domain

Okay, how about this take - the power falloff is fairly significant as you go from politicians, to political operatives, to voters, and war is only one axis of any major political party.

As such, retribution/war justification falloff is also significant.  Otherwise, you start losing the argument that says forced-/non-supporters of $FASCIST_REGIME should be killed because they didn’t do enough to resist it.

(Which is of course not the Utilitarian “we don’t want to kill them, killing them is not good in itself, but from a practical perspective we must destroy $FASCIST_REGIME and that takes priority.”)

How much control do soldiers have?

See, that’s part of why I think a more highly Deontological justification for war is unsuitable, generally.  You get weird things like desperately trying not to shoot the enemy conscripts or something, instead of dealing with the practical matter that it is likely necessary to do so in order to win the war.

It might be relevant if you have extraordinarily more power than the enemy.  The US military fighting Iraq the first time deliberately held back on anti-personnel tactics and let lots of them surrender.

But, let’s suppose you’re a state on the border of the Soviet Union, they’re throwing waves and waves of conscripts at you, and it’s taking everything you have not to become the next megafamine zone.

You just can’t afford that.

There are other issues.  As one chips away at civilian protection for the powerful, developed nations, one is chipping away at the civilian protection for less powerful nations.  Even the non-voting subjects contribute economically to the despot’s war effort, if unwillingly.  

It risks summoning Total War if people actually start to accept this doctrine, rather than this weird, chewing-around-the-edges thing we have now.

But it goes deeper.

If you go after the civilian political factions that cause a war now, it makes sense to start going after ones that might cause a war in the future - like Communists.  

And if ideology is a valid target, then so is religion.

Oct 1, 2017 49 notes
#politics
Just war theory and the UK soldier killing – MattBruenig | Politicsmattbruenig.com

mitigatedchaos:

collapsedsquid:

invertedporcupine:

collapsedsquid:

In ideal liberal theory, citizens themselves are the source of all governmental actions in one form or another. This is a unifying principle of what makes a liberal theory a liberal theory, at least for the contractarians. The conclusion then that citizens within liberal societies are not covered under the [Neutrality-innocence justification] follows in a fairly straight-forward fashion. If a government decides to go to war, that decision only comes about as a result of the citizens authorizing the government to do so. The citizenry’s role in the war is as the originator of the action towards war. This might happen electorally or it might happen by consenting to a societal structure that allows wars to be waged. Regardless of which one happens to be the case, the citizens are necessarily participating in the process of waging war. Thus, the citizens are not innocent of the decision to pursue war, for it is they who are authorizing the decision; and, the citizens are not neutral towards the war effort because it is their actions (consent) that causes the war to occur. Because the citizens are non-neutral and non-innocent, the [Neutrality-innocence justification] cannot apply.

You’re either a subject of your government with no say and therefore not a legitimate target, or a citizen with say and therefore a legitimate target.

An interesting argument.

A terrorist blowing themselves up in the middle of a crowd of anti-war demonstrators would be perfectly justified according to this theory, which is your first clue that it is not also a good argument.

If killin antiwar protesters is forbidden, what about killing civilian pro-war activists?  What about conscripts?

Since when do such movements limit themselves to civilian pro-war activists?

As far as I can tell, “a terrorist movement which only selectively attacks political operatives that are against their national separatism” (or similar) is something that largely just doesn’t happen.

I think it would be a lot smarter and likely to succeed than what tends to actually happen.  It provides a very clear Exit path, draws in far fewer in opposition (since those of opposed ideologies are at much less personal risk), spends scarce public resentment resources over targets that disproportionately help the opposition, etc.

From what little I know, that might fit the IRA?

Anyhow, whenever I see this argument, I never see it in a more nuanced form suggesting that the force of violence be directed over the actual movers of political power towards war.  

Instead, it’s usually “and therefore 9/11 was justified.”  The problem with this is that the same reason meddling over there created the conditions for bringing about 9/11, launching 9/11 creates the conditions for the Iraq War.  That’s just how people are - and in many ways it makes sense for them to be that way.  From a practical perspective, all this viewpoint does is increase, rather than decrease, war.  

@collapsedsquid

that’s a utilitarian case though

an entirely separate domain

Okay, how about this take - the power falloff is fairly significant as you go from politicians, to political operatives, to voters, and war is only one axis of any major political party.

As such, retribution/war justification falloff is also significant.  Otherwise, you start losing the argument that says forced-/non-supporters of $FASCIST_REGIME should be killed because they didn’t do enough to resist it.

(Which is of course not the Utilitarian “we don’t want to kill them, killing them is not good in itself, but from a practical perspective we must destroy $FASCIST_REGIME and that takes priority.”)

Oct 1, 2017 49 notes
#politics
Just war theory and the UK soldier killing – MattBruenig | Politicsmattbruenig.com

collapsedsquid:

invertedporcupine:

collapsedsquid:

In ideal liberal theory, citizens themselves are the source of all governmental actions in one form or another. This is a unifying principle of what makes a liberal theory a liberal theory, at least for the contractarians. The conclusion then that citizens within liberal societies are not covered under the [Neutrality-innocence justification] follows in a fairly straight-forward fashion. If a government decides to go to war, that decision only comes about as a result of the citizens authorizing the government to do so. The citizenry’s role in the war is as the originator of the action towards war. This might happen electorally or it might happen by consenting to a societal structure that allows wars to be waged. Regardless of which one happens to be the case, the citizens are necessarily participating in the process of waging war. Thus, the citizens are not innocent of the decision to pursue war, for it is they who are authorizing the decision; and, the citizens are not neutral towards the war effort because it is their actions (consent) that causes the war to occur. Because the citizens are non-neutral and non-innocent, the [Neutrality-innocence justification] cannot apply.

You’re either a subject of your government with no say and therefore not a legitimate target, or a citizen with say and therefore a legitimate target.

An interesting argument.

A terrorist blowing themselves up in the middle of a crowd of anti-war demonstrators would be perfectly justified according to this theory, which is your first clue that it is not also a good argument.

If killin antiwar protesters is forbidden, what about killing civilian pro-war activists?  What about conscripts?

Since when do such movements limit themselves to civilian pro-war activists?

As far as I can tell, “a terrorist movement which only selectively attacks political operatives that are against their national separatism” (or similar) is something that largely just doesn’t happen.

I think it would be a lot smarter and likely to succeed than what tends to actually happen.  It provides a very clear Exit path, draws in far fewer in opposition (since those of opposed ideologies are at much less personal risk), spends scarce public resentment resources over targets that disproportionately help the opposition, etc.

From what little I know, that might fit the IRA?

Anyhow, whenever I see this argument, I never see it in a more nuanced form suggesting that the force of violence be directed over the actual movers of political power towards war.  

Instead, it’s usually “and therefore 9/11 was justified.”  The problem with this is that the same reason meddling over there created the conditions for bringing about 9/11, launching 9/11 creates the conditions for the Iraq War.  That’s just how people are - and in many ways it makes sense for them to be that way.  From a practical perspective, all this viewpoint does is increase, rather than decrease, war.  

Oct 1, 2017 49 notes
#politics
I just want there to be some nefarious group working to exploit horny dudes on the internet to funnel power to whatever dark god (2D) they serve okay

uggggh why can’t you just settle for a metaphorical dark god like the neoreactionaries do

Oct 1, 2017 2 notes
#anons #asks #porn discourse cw #shtpost
You know, why /doesn't/ the internet have a native sex cult?

…what?

Alright look we’ll just redefine the meaning of ‘cult’ a little so that people who think Rule 34 must be made real are defined as a cult okay.

Oct 1, 2017 3 notes
#shtpost #anons #asks

peridieu:

mitigatedchaos:

peridieu:

mitigatedchaos:

thivus:

if u accept the idea that the porn industry is toxic bc of how they treat the actors then hentai is basically veganism for porn

Now see, this makes for a very interesting screening question.

Is someone actually arguing due to the treatment of women in the porn industry, or are they arguing to reduce sexual alternatives to straight women for straight men, relatively increasing straight womens’ sexual power/negotiating leverage?  Or, are they arguing for women (or rather their faction) collectively owning the cultural intellectual property of the idea “women”?

Etc.

See, um, there’s one other reason that you guys are kinda missing, I think, and it’s the idea that porn isn’t actually bad in and of itself, but that virtually all porn is bad because it teaches bad, um, morals? And you can, like, say that these morals are, um, inherent to the pornographic medium or just, like, products of our, uh, patriarchal society, but, like, people are definitely anti-porn on the assumption that they’re there.

Obviously, the solution is to mandate multiple age grades for pornography starting with simple nudity and progressing through “sex within the context of a healthy relationship between two consenting adults,” before getting on to the weirder and more extreme stuff, thus setting up sensible expectations for future relationships, like alcohol laws in Europe.

This isn’t a shitpost, by the way.  Depending on the country and its legal and political environment, I think this could potentially be a good policy.

(Edit: Also, to a degree this “bad morals” explanation falls under “ownership of [the idea of women] as intellectual property.”)

How do you keep kids from getting into the real bad stuff, though? I mean, porn’s digital. Are you going to have, like, DRM on porn?

It depends on the country and its legal environment.  

The country I originally developed this idea for was a hypothetical one which had a more cryptographically-rooted internet, where each citizen was issued multiple pseudonymous identifiers that the government could track back if needed, but which corporations were prohibited from tracking in some of the ways they currently track identity in the United States.  

However, the political and technical landscape of the various real countries is much different.

In this case, while we already have mechanisms that somewhat limit the sale of pornography by age, especially in physical stores, people can get around that with the Internet if they know the right keywords.

What I’m wondering about is if a limited lifting of some restrictions in combination with the imposition with new ones would create a new market.  The sheer amount of, uh, let’s call it sexual energy present in humanity is what drives the demand that creates oceans of pornography.  Like, Rule 34 exists not because of some 4Chan cult but because of the demand plus available infrastructure.  Trying to end it all because it ‘teaches bad morals’ is practically impossible short of the introduction of a far more totalitarian state.  

So instead of abolishing it, channel some of that energy and adjust the ease of access such that rates of exposure to healthy vs unhealthy versions, especially at key times, shift.

Contextualize sex.

Oct 1, 2017 3,961 notes
#porn discourse cw #policy
Exmachina on Twittertwitter.com

The problem with your AR holographic waifu is that she still can’t cook for you.

Oct 1, 2017 2 notes
when are continuity complaints justified vs. just nitpicking?

I will explain

by means of Star Trek reference

In Star Trek, you can’t beam through the shields.

This is established. Can’t beam through the shields. It has been a plot device multiple times. Entire episodes have hinged on it. The Enemy in TNG is a good one, one of the big Romulan episodes.

So, whenever an episode (or movie) fucks up and has someone beam through the shields, I think it’s valid to call them out on it cause they used it as a plot device and drew attention to it previously. Expecting a production or author to remember their own plot points is not too much to ask.

If Peter Parker wore a red shirt once in Issue 360, then later they flashback to events and it’s a green shirt, that isn’t something worth complaining about.

Now, if he wore a red shirt, and wearing that specific red shirt distracted some bull-themed super-villain specifically by being red, then yes, by all means be annoyed they forgot that, cause it wasn’t just a detail, it’s a plot device.

Oct 1, 2017 351 notes
#mitigated fiction

peridieu:

mitigatedchaos:

thivus:

if u accept the idea that the porn industry is toxic bc of how they treat the actors then hentai is basically veganism for porn

Now see, this makes for a very interesting screening question.

Is someone actually arguing due to the treatment of women in the porn industry, or are they arguing to reduce sexual alternatives to straight women for straight men, relatively increasing straight womens’ sexual power/negotiating leverage?  Or, are they arguing for women (or rather their faction) collectively owning the cultural intellectual property of the idea “women”?

Etc.

See, um, there’s one other reason that you guys are kinda missing, I think, and it’s the idea that porn isn’t actually bad in and of itself, but that virtually all porn is bad because it teaches bad, um, morals? And you can, like, say that these morals are, um, inherent to the pornographic medium or just, like, products of our, uh, patriarchal society, but, like, people are definitely anti-porn on the assumption that they’re there.

Obviously, the solution is to mandate multiple age grades for pornography starting with simple nudity and progressing through “sex within the context of a healthy relationship between two consenting adults,” before getting on to the weirder and more extreme stuff, thus setting up sensible expectations for future relationships, like alcohol laws in Europe.

This isn’t a shitpost, by the way.  Depending on the country and its legal and political environment, I think this could potentially be a good policy.

(Edit: Also, to a degree this “bad morals” explanation falls under “ownership of [the idea of women] as intellectual property.”)

Oct 1, 2017 3,961 notes
#porn discourse cw #policy #politics

thivus:

if u accept the idea that the porn industry is toxic bc of how they treat the actors then hentai is basically veganism for porn

Now see, this makes for a very interesting screening question.

Is someone actually arguing due to the treatment of women in the porn industry, or are they arguing to reduce sexual alternatives to straight women for straight men, relatively increasing straight womens’ sexual power/negotiating leverage?  Or, are they arguing for women (or rather their faction) collectively owning the cultural intellectual property of the idea “women”?

Etc.

Oct 1, 2017 3,961 notes
#porn discourse cw

squareallworthy:

mitigatedchaos:

argumate:

pay to unlock premium Facebook friends

I tried that once.  The premium Facebook friends are actually pretty great, they’re just reaaaally really expensive.

In the end I ended up using a bunch of AIs at that time growing up.  It wasn’t really, you know, healthy.

Psh, you don’t need Facebook for that. There are plenty of people working freelance who will take your money in exchange for paying you attention and pretending to care what you think.

I didn’t know about YesManFinder at the time, and Facebook has the advantage of being able to advertise to minors (anyone under 30), so…

Oct 1, 2017 17 notes
#shtpost #augmented reality break #chronofelony
Oct 1, 2017 7,898 notes
#gendpol

kontextmaschine:

argumate:

collapsedsquid:

argumate:

argumate:

@collapsedsquid if you want to start a movement you need to make some bold claims that contradict conventional wisdom, setting you apart from the crowd and acting as useful shibboleths to identify your followers.

also helps if you have some sacred texts, but I understand those can take quite some time to write.

aspiring empiricists, or empies,

Someday, man.   Someday I’ll have cultists.

well that’s a bold claim that contradicts conventional wisdom, so you’re off to a good start already!

Hey are any of us here, uh, not planning to start a cult?

Or at least an institution of collective living consciously dedicated to promoting and living out doctrines at odds with contemporary norms?

Yud’s like the Velvet Underground or something, not that many apostles but every one goes off to start their own

Uh, does a city-state count as an institution of collective living?

Oct 1, 2017 47 notes
#shtpost

argumate:

pay to unlock premium Facebook friends

I tried that once.  The premium Facebook friends are actually pretty great, they’re just reaaaally really expensive.

In the end I ended up using a bunch of AIs at that time growing up.  It wasn’t really, you know, healthy.

Oct 1, 2017 17 notes
#shtpost #augmented reality break #chronofelony

September 2017

I don't know why people got so upset about my plan to use genetically-engineered kudzu to capture the carbon from the air and synthesize it back into crude oil. It would make the vehicular carbon cycle a natural part of this planet's biosphere, just like killer bees.

makes sense to me

Sep 30, 2017 25 notes
#shtpost #queue
Misc SF Moral Ideas

Here, did you want some background ideas for you science fiction?  In-universe, violating some of these could be considered morally unthinkable.

  • Abortion is banned, but everyone is born naturally sterile unless they get a procedure to allow them to have children.
  • Meat-eating from animals is banned except for a few “traditional” cultures.  This actually includes the Amish and a few "historical,” pasture-based farms.  Everyone just eats engineered meat grown in tubes instead. 
  • Similarly, aside from a handful of traditional farms, the vast majority of milk products are created using tissue engineering and modified bacteria due to perceived animal consent issues.
  • Predator-prey relationships still exist in nature, but prey animals have been genetically modified to lose awareness after sustaining a sufficient level of injury.
  • Prison is considered cruel and inhumane.  Instead, convicted criminals are fitted with internal cybernetic restraints that are monitored by AIs and physically prevent them from engaging in certain actions.  (Alternatively, it weakens, dampens, and delays their motor actions.)
  • Alternatively, prison is considered cruel and inhumane, instead, convicted criminals are subjected to a regime of corporal punishment, but otherwise are allowed to roam a small, isolated town. 
  • It is unthinkable that someone would choose for their child to be monosexual instead of bi- or pansexual.  It has not yet been classified as child abuse.
  • People are almost immortal.  It turns out population explosion isn’t a risk because wanting to have lots of kids is not genetic, but primarily social.  Thus, it’s only considered a weird thing some women do.  To meet population replacement goals, most children are grown in vats and raised by the state.

Moral progress, you guys.

Sep 30, 2017 9 notes
#mitigated future #mitigated fiction #gendpol
hey, i've got an argument against being "prolife." you should listen. here it is. wait for it... IT'S 2017

The passage of time magically made unborn children not human beings anymore and killing them not murder?

Morality is an objective constant whether you like it or not. Try again.

Sep 30, 2017 122 notes
#gendpol
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