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

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
wirehead-wannabe

Anonymous asked:

Ok, broad question, feel free to answer with a couple links rather than an effortpost but... why are nations a desirable end state? They seem like a piece of legacy infrastructure, a chesterton's fence not to be too quickly destroyed, but hardly good in and of themselves. I feel far less fraternal affection with most co-nationalists than I do with say argumate, even though he's behind a different border.

mitigatedchaos answered:

I’ve been planning a longer post on this that I just haven’t gotten around to.

Meandering rant/textwall incoming.  TL;DR readers: just skim the bolds.

1. The thing to understand is that ingroup/outgroup is actually to do with incentives and information cost.  It’s a successful heuristic, rather than some huge irrational distortion that needs to be answered with “why can’t we just all get along?”

- When an outsider comes to our community, we lack information about them.  Obtaining this information has a cost, whether we or others bear it.  Part of that is time - getting to know others requires effort and time, and as mortals, we could easily spend those scarce resources on something else.  As that information is obtained, the outsider can become more of an insider.

- Bad people do actually exist, whether created by conditions or born predisposed that way.  (And sometimes, we are the bad people.)  The benefit of a new community member is good, but the cost of letting in a bad apple is much more extreme.  It could be discord which breaks the community apart.  It could be theft.  It could be murder.  Each of these erodes trust significantly in addition to being harmful, and trust, when not abused, is extremely resource-efficient, so this is even more costly than it first appears.

Losing $5 in cookies to theft doesn’t seem like much, but it will cost a lot more than $5 in the end. 

(Resident adjacent guru Slartibart would probably link you to that video showing that all the tail risks we accumulate over a lifetime add up to a much bigger risk than they are individually, so minimizing them is rational.)

- There is significantly less leverage over outsiders, since a considerable portion of our soft leverage is in the form of social sanction.  This must be spend wisely, for it can be squandered.  So if there is a bad apple within our community, this may be more manageable.

- Ultimately, for any of this to work, there must be either punishment or exclusion.  We must be able to either punish the thieves or keep them out of the community.  If we can do neither, the community will gradually disintegrate in cohesiveness as trust evaporates.

2. But even that assumes roughly similar preferences that could all be met by one community.

Let us suppose there are the Billys and the Sarahs, who are fans of the obscure Australian faux-anime Emoji no Shoujo Unicode-San (or “Emoji Girl Unicode-san” for our American viewers).

(This example may seem a bit contrived, but I’m avoiding picking a real ethnicity here.)

Billys and Sarahs are rather dorky people with a low average level of social skills.  Some have higher social abilities, but the median level for the community sets the expectations, and these expectations are comfortable for the Billys and Sarahs, who do not find them emotionally taxing.

At this point, wearing an Emoji Girl t-shirt isn’t just a sign of having watched the show.  It’s also a proxy for being a Billy or Sarah.  A cultural signifier that, out in the wild, lets them know they’ve found someone they could connect with.  That’s actually a really big benefit!  It reduces the social risk of approaching someone to create a connection significantly!

One day, internet celebrity, ironylord, and athlete Bruno Pauerlifter features Emoji Girl on his podcast, and many Chads and Staceys begin to pour into the community.

The Chads and Staceys like to enjoy Emoji Girl on multiple levels of irony, and are suave socially adepts.

Soon they outnumber the “natives.”  The median social skill goes up, and with it, the expectations.  The level of irony goes up as well.

The Billys and Sarahs do not enjoy the new level of social expectations, and like to enjoy Emoji Girl unironically.

The Chads and Staceys haven’t done anything wrong, per se.  They’re not actively trying to exclude others with their irony.  They just really like irony, and the others, well, don’t.

The usefulness of Emoji Girl t-shirts as identifiers for Billys and Sarahs is obliterated without anyone even trying to obliterate it.

And that’s how you get gatekeeping behavior on things as “trivial” as video games, anime, and so on.

Now imagine a preference clash over something that actually matters.

3. People will thus ingroup/outgroup automatically.  Putting everyone into one big ingroup is not actually possible.

And because it isn’t possible, trying is only going to fail while creating side effects.

4. The idea of multiple overlapping governments in the same area administering different laws to different individuals is a fantasy, because not only will they disagree on externalities, but some externalities are social.

Take polygamy.

Polygamy, as practiced, has lots of bad correlations.

Is it absolutely proven, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that polygamy must result in worse mental health outcomes for women and children, fewer rights for women, more social control of women, and expelling lower-status men?

No.

But considering that many of these are still issues with polygamist communities in developed countries, it’s likely it does, and it makes sense given the incentives of polygamy.  This includes things like child marriages.

Now, suppose a culture decides to have polygamy in the same geographic area as me, backed by their particular overlapping government.

Could their pool of undereducated, unattached, desperate “surplus” young men become my problem?  Very much yes.

And this isn’t anywhere near the only social issue with externalities.

5. Satisfying preferences has economies of scale.

The easiest way satisfy the people who want to live among Parisian architecture, and not some mish-mash of ugly whatever in the name of freedom, is to have a city or city district where all other building styles are prohibited.

(The above isn’t secretly about race.  I literally mean architecture.)

This applies to many, possibly most, preferences.

6. People will therefore act to rule over others and enforce their preferences wherever they must live with the consequences.

They may not even do this legally.

7. The natural boundary in the absence of nations is around religion, ethnicity, race, class, or clan, not “human.”

Religion is a natural boundary for reasons that should be obvious.  Also, many adherents ACTUALLY BELIEVE religion and are NOT SECRETLY JUST LIBERALS FAKING IT UNDERNEATH.

Race forms a natural boundary because it’s a team you can’t quit and you’re stuck with the actions of others in the same race whether you agree with them or not.

Ethnicity is a bit of a mashup between the two, but a bit less strong.

Clan, of course, genetic relations, etc.

All of these subgroups are going to be more likely to back you up in a conflict than the unified “Earth ingroup”, and organizing around them presents negotiating advantages.

Removing the nation will not remove armed conflict.  It merely moves it inwards one step.

Like, say, a white man ramming unarmed Muslims exiting a mosque with a van as an ethnic revenge killing in retaliation for van attacks by other Muslims.

8. The nation is an engineered pseudo-ethnicity.

This is GOOD, because we can use it to create a bigger ingroup (as it still has exclusion, punishment, and shared traits for cohesion) and overpower lesser subdivisions that might normally cause issues.

Additionally, because people are more likely to help the ingroup than the outgroup, by putting them in a cross-class ingroup like this we might be able to actually fund welfare programs.

It’s also necessary to defend territory, and by God can nations defend territory.  (And no, you’re not going to be able to just stop defending territory.)  People feel like they own the nation.  That matters.  A lot.

Each nation can then be specialized, with different rules to fit different preferences, and limited cross-border migration which does not exceed assimilation levels.

9. Open Borders has bad incentives.

- Extract the maximum value from your area of residence, then leave before the bad side effects catch up with you, moving out to an area that excludes by pricing the poor out of the market.

- Don’t bother helping the poor outside your immediate group, since you have no connection to them and can replace them with new immigrants at a moment’s notice.

- Prohibited from excluding trouble-makers by any other means, pricing is again used to keep out both the regular poor and the criminal poor.  (Any sufficiently large area exclusionary private-buyout counts as “creating borders/nations again” and will be legally destroyed for ideological reasons.)

- The way to deal with poverty in foreign territories is for those areas to PRODUCE MORE.  You can help them produce more, but only what is produced can be consumed.  Everyone talented who can leave escaping will not accomplish this.

And so on.

But it gets a lot worse.

10. Open Borders means World Government.

Someone has to track criminals across the opened borders.

And people aren’t going to sign up to fight and die for territories they don’t really own - and if they can be swamped with migrants that can vote at any moment, they don’t really own the territory.

This means the creation of a world police.

The creation of a world police requires the creation of a world law.

Power flows upwards and centralizes.  As the national governments degrade under open immigration, power will shift upwards towards what little world government there is, which will gradually expand.

US Federal power expanded.  EU power expanded.  This is the natural course of things.

11. World Government is very, very bad.

11.A. The larger the pot, the bigger the spoils.

This means that every political and ethnic faction has near-maximum incentive to subvert control of the world government because it controls all of humanity and the entire economic output of Earth.

Almost any price is worth paying to a political faction to take over Earth and permanently enshrine their ideology or religion as a global dictatorship.  

Likewise, the government won’t allow any breakaways, since that would cause a chain reaction that would destroy it.  This includes space colonies and any infrastructure on the Moon.

So if you make an Earth Sphere Federation, don’t be surprised when you get Gundam-tier interstellar colony-drop war bullshit.  Just, you know, with power armor, because mobile suits are too large to be practical.

11.B. The larger the pot, the less your chip matters.

Meanwhile, individual voters have little incentive to pay close attention, because their vote is marginally worthless.

This means the quality of the world government will be terrible.  In fact, the median government on Earth is probably much closer in quality to Brazil than it is to the United States of America.

And it plays into 11.A above, since that makes more extreme actions more cost-effective versus worthless voting.

11.C. There is nowhere to flee to if it fucks up.

Seriously.


Plus a whole bunch of other stuff, like weaving an environment that people can put themselves in and have some semblance of identity, forms a perimeter for arguing against bad social effects in general, and so on and so forth.

But I should probably be more surprised no one is noticing that eliminating nations is the clearest pathway to a world dictatorship.

academicianzex

D.) Humanity continues to exist thanks to the OWG’s ability to solve collective action problems wrt to climate change, nuclear war, and other emerging existential threats.

wirehead-wannabe

What academianzex said, and also (Uncharitabilty time, because apparently I’m the sort of lightweight who gets buzzed off of one pint of beer) There this rightist thing that keeps fucking infuriating me more and more, where they won’t state outright whether their bundle of policy and norm and social technology proposals is supposed to help everyone or whether it’s supposed to help the ingroup. Like, is this whole localism-ingroupism thing supposed to be pursuing the utilitarian optimum, or is it supposed to be pursuing ingroup benefit at the expense of everyone else, or is it supposed to be giving up on the rest of the world and saving yourselves or or or or or or I’ve never found any socially conservative rhetoric that didn’t leave me ruminating for hours on end trying to extract something coherent and driving myself insane trying to articulate what specifically it even is that’s nothing me. I want to just declare this to be a post-hoc justification for selfishness and Slytherin primariness, but there’s just enough of a grain of truth here that I can’t force myself to stop looking for a version of this that makes sense. I dunno. And on the object level, the outgroups that the right picks are fucking insane, as are the ingroups. “Gay marriage is he end of civilization, and ISIS is somehow an existential threat to the US and is the exact same group as the liberal mosque down the street. But don’t worry, fundamentalist Christianity is somehow good and in no way shares all the same root problems as other religions.” Like, liberalism isn’t perfect and does have contradictions, but at least it’s able to put something together that actually resembles an attempt at utilitarianism when you squint just right, rather than whatever the hell the right is doing. I keep flirting with calling myself a political centrist, then realizing that there isn’t a single issue I actually agree more with social conservatives than not, because the end result of all their talking points is insanity. Like, if you want to win me over, you’re gonna have to find a way to build at least a prototype or even a fucking blueprint of a world that I’d actually want to live in or would be comfortable with inflicting upon others. @mitigatedchaos I don’t mean to take this all out on you but, like, akfbeidbthriesbsjfbe and you happen to currently be on my dash

mitigatedchaos

Quick response: Actually, attacking LGBTs is one of the single dumbest things SoCons have done, because LGBTs do not actually undermine the nation just by being LGBT. In fact, gay marriage is good because stable family units are good, and we can incentivize the creation of stable queer families with similar methods to straight families.

(Polygamy, as practiced by people that aren’t autistic-spectrum rationalists, is still bad though.)

And not all strains of Islam are equal, even though Islam is a very illiberal ideology. Quranists, who don’t accept the Hadiths, are more like what Liberals think Islam is. They are a persecuted minority, of course. Sunni Islam is responsible for most of the constant terrorism.

But the SoCons have an overpowered threat assessment and hold on to religion because it’s a whole package to them, and the liberals won’t stop immigrating child rapists but won’t adequately punish them, either.

(OTOH, fundamentalist Christianity appears to cause fewer suicide bombings. I don’t like fundie Christianity, but it still isn’t as bad as fundie Islam.)

I would also like for people to quit pretending that Islam is not a major causal factor for how fucked up the Middle East is, and to acknowledge that the argument “well of course it’s so fucked up, you Westies put different ethnicities under the same government” is actually an argument *against* recreating those same conditions here.

Like, I see the first currents leaning towards legalizing polygamy and I see the impacts of widespread cousin marriage not even being acknowledged, and I don’t want to reproduce those conditions here, because I don’t have a secondary backup America.

It isn’t enough that I not marry my cousins and engage in polygamy. For my home to not be terrible, I must stop others from doing so as well. And if they want to make a place where those are the norms, then let them, and not me, suffer the consequences of that. I don’t need dumb social policies banned everywhere, only in the places I live in/am responsible for. (Why only those places? Balance of freedom.)

Source: mitigatedchaos
slartibartfastibast
slartibartfastibast

I still want people to be free to make bad decisions after being properly informed of the consequences. I still want to balance said freedom against efforts to minimize suffering. I still want different groups of people to get along (without raping each other). Nothing has changed, value-wise. Y'all just signalled yourselves off a fucking cliff one day, and now I’m expected to be as willfully and openly retarded as Rational Wiki just to keep up.

mitigatedchaos

And now you’re hanging out with people that would threaten the Earth with mobile suits, waiting to be reclassified as a reactionary for thinking genes have an impact on development.

shtpost
wirehead-wannabe
obiternihili

“People are dying of starvation”

“Well if you dirty statists just let us sell rotten food there wouldn’t be a hunger issue”

shieldfoss

Government is just another word for the bleach we pour over donated food so the homeless can’t eat it together.

ranma-official

very interesting

anyway remember when in grapes of wrath they poured kerosene on oranges to not reduce prices as people starved

shieldfoss

Yes I do remember the part in Grapes of Wrath where the farmers followed the legally empowered Agricultural Adjustment Administration’s directives to destroy food.

“The Roosevelt Administration was tasked with decreasing agricultural surpluses,” to quote Wikipedia quoting Douglas.

ranma-official

Huh, it turns out that that act was forced into existence by large farmers and food processors, who financially benefit from people starving! All while these people horribly exploited their workers to the point of starvation and viciously rebelled against the “socialistic” resettlement program!

Turns out that these bastards love to see people die. Huh.

wirehead-wannabe

I have absolutely no idea how this is an argument against free market policies.

mitigatedchaos

Companies will bribe politicians and distort the market if they are not actively prevented from doing so through state interference. Free markets are not a perfectly stable equilibrium and competition requires effort - and state interference - to maintain.

Source: obiternihili
ranma-official
obiternihili

“People are dying of starvation”

“Well if you dirty statists just let us sell rotten food there wouldn’t be a hunger issue”

shieldfoss

Government is just another word for the bleach we pour over donated food so the homeless can’t eat it together.

ranma-official

very interesting

anyway remember when in grapes of wrath they poured kerosene on oranges to not reduce prices as people starved

shieldfoss

Yes I do remember the part in Grapes of Wrath where the farmers followed the legally empowered Agricultural Adjustment Administration’s directives to destroy food.

“The Roosevelt Administration was tasked with decreasing agricultural surpluses,” to quote Wikipedia quoting Douglas.

ranma-official

Huh, it turns out that that act was forced into existence by large farmers and food processors, who financially benefit from people starving! All while these people horribly exploited their workers to the point of starvation and viciously rebelled against the “socialistic” resettlement program!

Turns out that these bastards love to see people die. Huh.

mitigatedchaos

It’s important to remember that the Market™ pays people to subvert public ownership of the State.

This demand originates within the market and then subverts any state not adequately designed to resist it.  Paring back the state doesn’t actually get rid of the demand, and may, depending on circumstances, make the problem worse.

Which is why we should design better states.

Source: obiternihili the invisible fist the iron hand
marcusseldon
marcusseldon

I feel like the Marxist left points out a lot of real problems in society relating to alienation, dehumanization, the lack of meaning, etc. But they get the cause of these things all wrong. The cause is not capitalism and private property, but living in a mass society where you coexist with thousands of people living and working together in one town or city neighborhood, and hundreds of thousands to millions in a single midsized metro area. We are built to coexist with a few dozen to a few hundred friends and relatives for life, and mass modern societies cannot provide that. This is why real world attempts to abolish private property and capitalism arguably worsened, rather than improved, the problems Marxists worry about in those societies.

Interestingly, I think certain kinds of social conservatives see the same problems, but also misread the cause.

For both Marxists and social conservatives, the cure is worse than the disease.

The only hope,  in my view, is some kind of liberal communitarianism, but I’m not sure such a thing is possible.

mitigatedchaos

I outlined a plan to reduce the problem through urban planning in a post called One Thousand and One Villages.

(repost since it didn’t tag right last time)

cromulentenough

Anonymous asked:

When will they realize the Russians don't want a puppet trump they are just chaos magicians

diarrheaworldstarhiphop answered:

yeaahh… after my effort post, ive been dwelling on the situation all day

for a moment it crossed my mind today, that Trump Jr. posting the email was reminiscent of some insane Vladislav Surkov style non-linear warfare power move, whether or not the collusion allegations are real. The effect of posting it being unsurprisingly stunning and confusing to the effect of disorienting everyone and uh.. and it got me thinking

My thoughts are now, as Russia has always been involved, Russia wouldn’t actually be colluding but potentially sowing hints of it (if at all) particularly to produce chaos and turmoil the way Putin’s government has done on the regular in Russia to suppress opposition. Hell. Similarly to how Russia actively supports california’s leftist separatists as well as America’s far right, why not play America’s media and mainstream factions against eachother?

Because there is nothing. No collusion. There is a tremendous amount of smoke, but no fire… but what if Russia helped produced or fans the smoke particularly to send the Americans into an endless search for fire? All there really needs to be is someone with a russian name and a basic affiliation to Russian “officials” to step in and say “Здравствуйте” and the americans will do the rest of the work.

Russia doesn’t need to actively collude or “hack” an election, but be present enough to keep Americans paranoid and confused, especially in light of wars in the ukraine and Syria that Russia doesnt want the west focused on.

It’s the psychological equivalent of how the USA conducts war in the middle east. Because that the goal is not to beat, but destabilize your opponent with minimal involvement… The difference between ground invasion in Iraq and the no fly zone in Libya to accomplish a similar regime change… Because the American military has evolved, pushing America’s enemies to seek other means to mitigate american strength, tactics… and the USA’s political system is the country’s glaring weakness in light of this.

image
mitigatedchaos

America’s political system is, indeed, the country’s most glaring international weakness.

There are other vulnerabilities - like cyberwarfare attack surface exposure, or insufficiently-defended infrastructure - but those require more direct attacks.

cromulentenough

I was high when i first saw that non linear war segment thingy, and man that fucked me up.

mitigatedchaos

At least one man has read this very blog while high.

Considering how this blog is normally, I can’t imagine what that experience is like.

I wonder if I’m doing non-linear politics correctly.

Source: diarrheaworldstarhiphop
brazenautomaton
marcusseldon

(Note: Rehashing things I’ve said before, definitely a late-night rant)

I still find the fact that 46% of the country decided to vote for Donald fucking Trump of all people for President to be completely baffling at a gut level. 

How could anyone possibly have been comfortable voting for such an obviously mean, selfish, low-IQ, inexperienced, incoherent, authoritarian, and unserious person? How could otherwise educated, moral, rational people, have voted for this man (as many otherwise well-educated, moral, and rational Republicans did)? I still feel like I live in a bad satire of America rather than the real world.

Even if I grant every critique of his opponent, Hillary Clinton, and I try to inhabit the mindset of a person with conservative policy views, and I concede all the frustration with the cultural left that many on the right feel, I still don’t see how there is even a contest between which one would be preferable to run our military, our diplomacy, and our nuclear weapons. Like shouldn’t basic respectability and competence trump all else when the other candidate completely fails on those metrics?

I feel a deep shame whenever I think about the fact that such a horrible man is the face of my nation. I didn’t feel that way about Bush, I would not have felt that way about McCain or Romney.

Something is rotten about the right in this country, something so rotten that they all thought that somehow Trump was a lesser of evils choice. There were signs of this rot earlier: the rise of Fox News, talk radio, and Breitbart, the crazier elements of the Tea Party (Sharon Angle, Christine O’Donnell, Todd Aiken), the radicalization of Republicans in Congress and state legislatures, but it wasn’t clear until Trump how deep the rot went.

The left is by no means perfect, not even close, and if this were another time with a more normal President I’d be more comfortable focusing more of my time on that. But there really is no equivalence between the left’s dysfunction’s and the right’s. Right now there really is something truly different, something scary, something very big and uniquely bad going on with the right at a systemic, sociological level that I don’t really understand no matter how much I obsess about it, at least at an emotional level.

Half the country was willing to accept authoritarian rhetoric. Half the country was willing to accept incoherence and stupidity and lying. Half the country was willing to accept meanness, endorsement of sexual assault, and racist rhetoric. Most Republican voters are not authoritarians, racists, sexists, liars, or mean, but they didn’t mind voting for it at all.

That’s terrifying.

mitigatedchaos

I want you to imagine that there was a group within your country that had been mass kidnapping kids for sex trafficking with more or less impunity, for years.

The police refused to do anything about it.  The politicians not only claimed it wasn’t happening, but celebrated bringing more of that group.  The media gaslit you and said it wasn’t happening.

In fact, when you raised objections, you were sent for ideological retraining.

Of course, I’m not talking about the United States.

But suppose someone in the United States did know about such a thing happening.  And the same cycle of “but it isn’t real” was being used by the same ideological groups to claim that what happened in another developed country was impossible, that it would never happen, and certainly wasn’t happening there and could not possibly happen here.

Approximately how many layers of “FUCK YOU” would they want to send those ideological groups as a message?  Why on Earth would they care about those groups’ criticisms when said groups are a bunch of lying hypocrites?

Quite frankly, if you’re actually baffled that they could put Trump in the Whitehouse, you don’t understand Trump voters as well as you think you do.

And those Very Serious People that Clinton was the representative of?  Clinton wanted even more involvement in Syria than Trump has so far actually provided.  She said as much right before he missile striked that airbase, and we all know that the MSM would have been chanting “YASS, QUEEN, SLAY! #STRONGWOMEN” the whole time.

I didn’t vote for Trump, but the Serious People have worn down the value of being perceived as serious.  If we get through to 2020 with no new big wars, I’m going to chalk it up as a victory.

marcusseldon

1. I don’t claim to understand Trump voters, in fact my post is about how I don’t understand them.

2. The politically correct left does I think have real problems, as illustrated by Rotherham or the naivete of not being worried about Germany taking in so many Syrian refugees. But, with respect to America, they are basically correct. Immigrants to the US have lower crime rates than natives, largely assimilate by the third if not second generation, and you almost certainly won’t be killed in a terrorist attack.The fact that half the country would never believe this is attributable to the intellectual rot in right-wing news sources.

3. On foreign policy, I don’t love those “very serious people” either (or Hillary on foreign policy, way too hawkish), but they wouldn’t be completely destroying America’s leadership position and credibility, thus ceding it to authoritarian states, and they would possess much less of a long-tail risk of a true foreign policy catastrophe that Trump does. Also, I strongly doubt foreign policy had much to do with Trump’s success.

brazenautomaton

But, with respect to America, they are basically correct.

And you can’t even envision the mental state of someone who doesn’t believe this?

And you can’t even imagine a person who has noticed “Hey, they acted exactly the same way they did here, exactly the same way in every possible respect, as they did in Rotherham, and the things those people are telling me about how I’m a terrible bigot who is only driven by bigotry are exactly the same things they said about Rotherham, and all of the statistics they wave in my face are made and controlled by the same people as made the statistics that proved Rotherham wasn’t happening”?

You think it’s “intellectual rot” in right-wing news sources to not roll over and admit defeat and adopt your ideology. You keep admitting that there are horrific, soul-deep problems in Your Ideological Tribe and that they keep lying and they keep maliciously trying to hurt people, but you just act incredibly perplexed when someone actually notices those things, and then acts like a person who noticed it. When someone notices the politically correct left never stops lying to them and about them, they act like people who noticed that, and they stop believing the things the politically correct left demands they believe.

Your continued inability to understand conservatives is seriously because you aren’t trying. 

mitigatedchaos

So, in addition to what BrazenAutomaton says, which gets at why the Conservatives don’t trust “well okay, they lied that time, but overall they’re right.”  (And why I didn’t respond earlier, since what I would have said would not have been so different.)

There are policies you can use to bring a Rotherham-like situation under control.

They are not nice policies.  They are not kind policies.

This kind of price must be paid in pain or blood.

It will have to be very firmly established to not only these men, but the communities in which they reside, that this behavior is utterly unacceptable and intolerable.  No excuses just because they are foreign.  Child sex trafficking isn’t littering.

There are solutions to other problems as well, that are forbidden from consideration, because we are simultaneously too soft and too tough in all the wrong ways at once.

Some of them should be very stupidly obvious, like banning first and second cousin marriage, but oh, we can’t even admit there is a problem.

Source: marcusseldon
ranma-official
obiternihili

“People are dying of starvation”

“Well if you dirty statists just let us sell rotten food there wouldn’t be a hunger issue”

shieldfoss

Government is just another word for the bleach we pour over donated food so the homeless can’t eat it together.

ranma-official

very interesting

anyway remember when in grapes of wrath they poured kerosene on oranges to not reduce prices as people starved

mitigatedchaos

The private sector and the public sector, working together to help people throughout the world.

Source: obiternihili