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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
argumate
argumate

silver-and-ivory said: seems like there’s a v strong division

silver-and-ivory said: between high status men who get away with everything

silver-and-ivory said: and low status men who get arrested for, idk, wearing a shirt crooked or some shit

yessish, but I’m not sure if that’s the best framing for it as it offloads the difference onto vague notions of status instead of institutional position.

While a prison guard may be “low status” relative to a movie producer or a member of congress, they can still get away with very creepy and exploitative behaviour towards prisoners, sometimes even up to the point of torture and murder without repercussions.

Michael Bay didn’t have that kind of power over Megan Fox, but he still had some power that say a Citibank executive wouldn’t have had, in that his position includes the right to decide who has a career and who doesn’t, with no real oversight or feedback on how he makes that decision.

“you can’t avoid the guy, have to work with him, have to be nice to him, and can’t complain to anyone about his behaviour” is a toxic combination anywhere.

mitigatedchaos

Status is also a factor beyond just institutional power.

People will let popular and attractive people get away with doing things that they would never let an unpopular, unattractive person do, and they’ll make excuses for them that they wouldn’t make for an unpopular person.

I don’t agree with BA that it’s all-consuming, there are things that can pierce and overcome it, but it’s definitely a factor.

Most non-AnCap Anarchists I’ve seen don’t seem to have anything to stop weaponized popularity, except that the communes are limited in size.

gendpol

@silver-and-ivory

do you make the drawings yself
(they’re actually really good)

Yeah, I draw the stuff in the #the mitigated exhibition tag.  I use my old tablet and CS4.

It’s not my primary specialization.  Regular artists, with another thousand hours of practice or more, can do a lot more a lot faster.  I could produce some of what others produce as speed paintings or similar, but it would take me about 10-20x as long, possibly longer.

Then again, do I even have a primary specialization?

Anyhow, I recommend that everyone practice drawing a little, as it’s a useful tool for self-expression and communication.

It would be interesting to see other artist takes on the Union Girl character.

the mitigated exhibition silver-and-ivory
kissingerandpals

Anonymous asked:

Do you think a restriction on visual, technological media would be an effective way to prevent children from being "conditioned" into developing shorter attention spans? Do you see positivity in giving children access to computers or tablets for pleasure or in learning environments?

kissingerandpals answered:

I guess this is where the issue gets political, doesn’t it.

I’m inclined to believe in a sort of Pandora’s box view of history, one of technological determinism. Our world will adapt itself to our short attention span, there will be no going back. Audio-visual media have a content bias for brevity in expression, they demand an immediate emotional response from their audience, they present information through iconography and dramatics, and they present information disjointedly in a sort of “peek a boo” fashion: this happened, then this happened, then that happened, here’s a jeans commercial. If an entire culture is raised on such a medium, the cognitive biases the media develop will not be exclusively limited to that medium. We have been conditioning ourselves to favor brief, iconographic, and contextless forms of communication for decades, it’s no wonder we progressively are getting sillier and sillier by the minute. In what world is Twitter a surprise when we have been conditioned to accept 15 second commercials as normal forms of communication for decades? In what world is our tribalized political life a surprise when our primary forms of communication can only communicate symbolically, in tribal signalling messages, when our dominant forms of advertising sell us unconscious images of ourselves?

Anyway, my point is that a world which has given reign to this sort of media atmosphere can go no direction but forward. Accelerationism is inevitable. State sanctioned censorship will not reverse this process. Information incoherence is useful for the powers that be, anyways. Bread and circus has never been easier.

There is beneficial use in teaching kids responsible uses of technology and media. I can see “media literacy” being an acceptable use of having kids use computers and tablets in class. I personally think this is a crutch though and would never promote regular usage of electronic media in a class. Tablets and computers are really an entirely different level of concentration killers and conditioners, ones that deserve their own posts tbh.

Really the only option you have is to exercise proper judgement as a parent. The Luddite position is impossible, the Chinese position sucks, all you can do is get a sense of what’s healthy for you and what’s not, and do and all you can to pass that on to your child. A smart phone probably isn’t the best thing to give a kid. Using the TV as an instant babysitter isn’t a good idea. Let them use the computer but obviously make sure they aren’t going on weird fucking websites. Reading to your child if they’re young is probably beneficial for developing aural concentration. I don’t know. It’s all about judgement, I guess.

mitigatedchaos

I take it you disagree with my plan to quit dabbling around the edges and unlock the true power of computer-based education, then?

politics media

Anonymous asked:

Assuming I can shatter China, too (for the sake of sidestepping questions of likelihood-of-success, let's make that "assuming I can shatter China *first*"), any objection to me cracking the US into a few more drownable-in-a-bathtub sized chunks?

Drownable-in-a-bathtub is too small for any reasonable national government, but setting that aside…

How perceptive.

That the dominant hegemony is a democratic republic founded on liberal and enlightenment values, human rights, and democracy as ideology has some advantages.  For instance, it likely plays a part in just about every autocrat having to pretend to democratic legitimacy.  But those advantages are pretty intangible, so we’ll set those aside as well.

And let’s assume a breakup of Russia and India as well.

Sometimes I oppose things not just because I disagree with them on values, but because I think they won’t even work for the stated goal.  (Doesn’t everyone?)  So a lot of the opposition to American power wants to supplant America with Communism, or Anarchism, or smash it to bits, or dissolve it into global capitalism, or install a world government.

And while often this is based on ideological values about how people should live,

it’s also based on “OH FUCK GEORGE BUSH COULD JUST RANDOMLY INVADE SOMEWHERE AND NO ONE COULD STOP HIM.”

But while knowledge is knowing that America has hegemonic power, wisdom is knowing that that level of relative power isn’t entirely unique to America.  

So not only will those ideas, like turning America Communist, be undesirable in themselves, but they will fail to actually abolish hegemony.  They won’t even work for that stated purpose that was supposed to justify such a radical course of action.

For someone like me, this is a terrible deal.

So as long as anyone else has a continent-spanning superstate, I and the other American nationalists have no reason to dismantle ours.


But this question posits that a breakup of the other 9 million square kilometer nations has already happened.

At that point, I don’t really need a continent-spanning superstate.  It has certain advantages, but the pressing need, to avoid living under someone else’s hegemony, is gone.

And I’m willing to make weird ideological trades.  (I may be a lot less pro-immigration than most of the ratsphere, for instance, but there are conditions where I’d be willing to add all of Mexico to the United States.)

It may surprise you to learn this, but I’ve periodically thought about breaking the United States into a new level of “Regional Federalism” to deal with the increased political polarization.  It wouldn’t work as well as we might like for that, due to the primary divide being urban/rural, so some other designs might have to be investigated, but I’m not as opposed to the idea as some readers may expect.

So let’s suppose we take the idea of a North American Union.  There’s a sort of slider on a continuum of being more like a unified central government towards being a bunch of barely-connected separate nations.  We’ll put the slider more towards the latter.

The American states are too small to be effective countries in the way that we’d like, and many of them are landlocked - very unfair!  So we break America into 3-6 countries, based on the regions.  Each one has some coastline of its own (if 3-4 countries), or else, through the NAU, the Great Lakes Region gets prenegotiated access to the sea.  

This gives us a group of countries which each have a power level somewhere between that of France and that of Japan.  

Minimum military development spending is pegged by the NAU to some % of the GDP and is shared between all of them.  Actual militaries are individual to each country.  There is a mandatory mutual defense pact, and a military coordination center, but pre-emptive wars and the like are optional.  If Texas decides to invade Iran, New York does not have to pay for it.  Outside of this, minimum military % GDP spending is tagged to 2.5%, and NAU members can sue each other if they fail to meet it.

The US Dollar is not abolished, but becomes a basket currency based on the currencies of each of the new NAU member countries.  New currencies are issued for the new countries so that their economies don’t have currency problems like the EU does.

The official language of the NAU is American English.  Proficiency in English must be taught in every NAU member country.  There is no prohibition on adding other languages at the member country level.

The Bill of Rights is kept.

Other than this, since we’re looking for a dismantling, the power of the NAU government is pretty limited.  The number of representatives for each member country is not proportional to population.

For the individual countries, I think multi-party parliamentary systems might result in a bit less infuriating dipolar partisanship.  However, to be more decisive, each should have a President elected by Approval Voting.


That’s all pretty radical, and it’s more of a rough sketch than anything, but I am willing to make ideological trades with people that are primarily anti-nationalist because of things like the Iraq War - they’re just trades that no one can realistically offer.

Then again, by the mid-century, who knows?

anons asks policy politics flagpost tired north american union
discoursedrome
quoms

For it is said that Bernie never truly died, but only lies sleeping in a cave somewhere in Vermont, with Ben on his left and Jerry on his right, and resting alongside him a great army of campaign microdonors; and that in America’s hour of greatest need he will awake and come thundering down from the Green Mountains to lead a successful presidential campaign. I do not know of its truth myself, but so it is spoken.

Source: quoms shtpost politics queue