Friday, December 22, 2023

Javier Milei - man of the century?

I haven't been so excited and optimistic in a very long time. What Javier Milei, the President of Argentina, is planning to do is absolutely fantastic! I cannot believe that this is being said, proposed and actually acted upon in today's rotten culture that engulfs most of the planet. Some of the issues he will address:

- Prepare all state-owned companies to be privatized
- Authorize the shareholder control of Aerolineas Argentinas to be partly or completely transferred to private parties
- Deregulate satellite Internet services
- Eliminate price controls on prepaid healthcare plans
- Repeal the current Rent Law that limits price increases in a bid to normalize the real estate market
- Repeal the current Land Law that limits ownership of land by foreigners in a bid to promote investments
- Scrap the current Supply Law that allows the government to set minimum and maximum prices and profit margins for goods and services of private companies
- Eliminate the Economy Ministry’s price observatory to “avoid the persecution of companies”

And this is only the beginning. More to come. But what I'm excited most about is that he grounds his economic reform on solid philosophical foundation:

"Those ideas that failed in Argentina are the same ideas that have failed throughout the planet because everywhere they have been tried, they've been an economic failure, they have been a social failure and a cultural failure."

"And on top of that, it has cost the lives of millions of human beings. It is a doctrine that some would call left-wing socialism, communism, fascism, and what we like to call collectivism."

"It's a form of thought that dilutes the individual in favor of the state and is the basic foundation of a caste model of thought, which is based on the premise that the State is more important than the individuals that make up that nation."

I get goosebumps just by rereading this. It is absolutely remarkable that a President of a major country has the clarity of mind to see that communism and fascism are but the two sides of the same collectivist coin. And on top of that, to have the courage to lay it as foundation of his political platform. If he manages to get this passed either by decree or by Parliament, and by miracle to avoid being crushed by the mob of protesters or assassinated by some maniac, Argentina will very soon become the best place to live on Earth. I'm starting to learn Spanish. 👌👍🥳

PS Javier Milei was once compared to Trump. It should be obvious now that the comparison is ridiculous. Trump cannot even pronounce 'ideology' and probably confuses it with 'idiocy'.

Friday, December 8, 2023

Slowly but surely, BBC is becoming the worst news outlet

The BBC has recently published this piece titled "Video shows stripped Palestinian men detained in Gaza". I thought "Oh, my God, this is Israel's version of Abu Ghraib! 😱". But, no 🙂. This is only BBC's version of "Nothing really happened, but since Israel's doing it, let's make a horror story out of it".

Check it out:
... a video has emerged on social media showing dozens of Palestinian men detained by Israel.

The footage, verified by the BBC, shows them stripped to their underwear, kneeling on the ground and being guarded by Israeli soldiers

dozens of men are lined up on a pavement and appear to have been told to remove their shoes

Yes, indeed, all of that is true, less the intended drama. These guys might have raped and killed, and decapitated babies, and the BBC reports that they have been ordered to remove their shoes??!! That's it, BBC! I'm switching to CNN!

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Climate change catastrophic predictions

International Cryosphere Climate Initiative says:

1. "... the most catastrophic and wide-ranging impact of our disintegrating cryosphere is on the entire Earth: sea-level rise from melting glaciers and ice sheets".

From melting glaciers maybe. But ice sheets? Really? Here is a sixth grade science problem: In a glass there is water and a floating ice cube. What happens to the water level after the ice melts?

2. "... if global average temperatures settle at 2 degrees Celsius above the preindustrial baseline, the planet could be committed to more than 40 feet of sea-level rise"

Oh my God!!!! 😱 40 feet??!!! That's horrible! We must act now! And by now I mean right now, before we read the next sentence: " — a melt that would take centuries and reshape societies across the globe." Oh, centuries... How many? They don't say. I guess as many as needed to prove them right.

Who is funding these jokers? A quick search provides the answer: ICCI is funded by CCAC - Climate and Clean Air Coalition. Hm, more jokers. How do they get their money? Another search: UNEP - United Nations Environment Programme. God! Search again: "The Environment Fund, established already in 1973 by the UN General Assembly, is the core financial fund of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP)". And what is this fund?? "... the main source of unrestricted funds, provided by Member States". Unrestricted???!!! Who are the Member States? "UNEP went from having a Governing Council of 58 Member States to an Environment Assembly, with universal membership that encompasses all 193 UN Member States." Noooo! Canada IS a member of the UN! So, I am the one funding all the jokers above. They might be the jokers, but I guess the joke is on me. 🥺

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Panne de courant

Today in Montreal there was a "generalized power outage" affecting hundreds of thousands of inhabitants. Hydro Québec explained that a safety switch was automatically activated, the cause of the activation is being investigated.

That is what they say. Here is what actually happened. And what will happen tomorrow.
--------
It takes him about .3 seconds to figure out what the truth is, and another .2 seconds to decide to go against it. The President of Hydro Québec knows that all the other six people sitting at the table have already done the same, reached the same conclusion and took the same decision. But the meeting must go on. They must go through the motions, dance the dance. There is time to be spent, forms to be filled, a back to watch, an ass to cover. "It's going to take about a couple of hours" he says to himself, reaching for the pot of fresh coffee. In front of each participant sit hard copies of two documents. A two page request from the Government of Québec to have 5000 new electric vehicle chargers installed across the province, and the 450 page feasibility study from Hydro Québec's Technical Department. He read the study's first two paragraphs and knew right away that it's just a copy-paste of the study they produced in the winter. He never read it, but there's no need to, he knows exactly what it says. It says that there's no fucking way in hell the grid is going to hold when the temperature goes above X or below -Y. It's only the X and the Y that the Head of the Technical Department modifies in each new revision. Does he actually calculate those figures or he just subtracts 1 from each end every six months or so? Probably the latter, there's no reason why he wouldn't just go through the motions as well. So, most likely he did not take into account the new requirement to have most chargers installed "particularly in disadvantaged areas". It doesn't matter, no one can blame him. After all he's the one who's going to take the fall. He always does and he doesn't seem to mind. Of course, it's easy for him, he's a techie, he can't be cancelled. At least not yet. For us, on the other hand, it's not that simple. We have to tread lightly not to upset that delicate balance between a hefty bonus and the wrath of the Head of the newly created Bureau of Social Justice. Hm... why do I think of it as a delicate balance? This is not even a balance, let alone delicate! It's not like they have approximately equal weights! This is a no-brainer. I have to find another metaphor... Only twenty minutes have passed. At least another hour and a half to go. The lady presenting the Power Point mumbles something about racial inequalities. He reaches again for the coffee pot. Ninety... very... looong... minutes.
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"My fellow citizens," says the Prime Minister of Québec, "the power outage we have experienced yesterday is only a warning nature gives us, a preview of what's to come. Global Warming... um... I mean, Climate Change isn't just a nuisance, it is an existential threat to mankind! Quebec is leading the global fight against it and we will not relent!" Hurrah! burst into frenetic applause the little imaginary loyal subjects in His head. "We have seen the future, and the future is electric!" Hurrah! they go again. "Quebec will invest $2.7 trillion gazillion into alternative energy and we will forbid internal combustion engine vehicles by 2030!"

"Tabarnak" say the Quebecers, "Aux prochaines élections, je vote pour la séparation"

Monday, May 22, 2023

Better decisions of an Artificial Intelligence System

Stuart Russel begins his 2017 TED Talk with "if [AIS-s] also have access to more information, they'll be able to make better decisions in the real world than we can." To a certain extent, this is true, the better informed one is, the better decisions it can make. But that's not what he meant. He used the word "better" in an ethical sense, as in "more good", not epistemological, as in "more correct". This is confirmed later in the talk when he says "[AIS-s are] going to read everything the human race has ever written. [...] So there's a massive amount of data to learn from." Wrong! Simply providing it with more data can lead only to "more correct" identification of concrete things and facts. It cannot directly lead to "more good" decisions. For that the AIS needs an ethical standard which it does not have. That standard must be programmed into it, by humans, it cannot be learned through observation or training alone. This is not just a theoretical consideration, it's as practical as it gets. Just look at how Russel proposes to solve the ethical issue of how to prevent the AIS from doing bad things in its endeavour to accomplish a given task. Russel's solution is what he calls the principle of humility, which is basically to confuse the AIS as to what its task actually is. This means spending millions in research on how to make the AIS understand what it needs to do, and then spend more millions to make it doubt that its understanding was correct. This approach is the result of the failure to see that the AIS's task is epistemological - it is what it is - while the bad things it might do are ethical - they do, or do not, meet the requirements of the given standard. Things are what they are regardless of how bad the consequences of correctly identifying them might be. Ethical issues cannot be solved by murking epistemological concepts. To "solve" ethical aspects of an AIS's decisions by declaring that what it is trying to do is not really its task, is like defending slavery by declaring that the slaves are not really human. Errare humanum est, but AI shouldn't be endowed by its creators with this excuse.

What are the "correct" epistemology and the "good" ethics? That is another story, for another day.

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Pause Giant AI Experiments

On March 22nd, 2023 30,000 smart people (Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak among them) signed an open letter entitled "Pause Giant AI Experiments" in which they called "on all AI labs to immediately pause for at least 6 months the training of AI systems more powerful than GPT-4" because "AI systems with human-competitive intelligence can pose profound risks to society and humanity". What exactly those risks are the letter doesn't say, it just states "as shown by extensive research[1] and acknowledged by top AI labs.[2]". I analyze the [1] and [2] in my AI Principles blog, here I only look at what the letter summarizes as problems. It does it in the form of rhetorical questions which are intended to provide both the reason and the fear to justify the halt in the development of AI. Here they are, along with my answers, free of charge:

Should we let machines flood our information channels with propaganda and untruth? Yes, we should. Our information channels are already filled with propaganda and lies. More of it, faster, more convincing and better expressed is not going to make any difference. When virtually all of the eight billion people are religious, socialist, environmentalist, flat-earther, QAnon-ist and so forth, it no longer matters whether a Chinese AI manages to convince americans to elect as president a confused socialist instead of a narcicist nationalist. When eight billion people have rejected, to a smaller or larger extent, reason as the only tool of cognition available to them, the difference between truth and falsehood becomes irrelevant.

Should we automate away all the jobs, including the fulfilling ones? A short giggle is in order here. Fulfilling? Aren't all jobs supposed to be fulfilling? Would it be ok if only the frustrated workers become unemployed? Anyway... , the answer is: Yes, we should. But, "away"? Away from what, or from whom? From the worker who is somehow entitled to it? Speak of socialists, here they are, 30,000 of them right here, signatories of this letter. Marx would be proud! Don't these guys know that every single job out there is created by the entrepreneurs? Musk and Wozniak should! And all the jobs? Didn't the power loom lesson teach us at the beginning of the industrial revolution that for every job taken away (another short giggle) many more other jobs are created? A quick look at the millions of thriving employees in the automobile industry, who have replaced thousands of workers in the horse-and-buggy field, should put an end to all fears of replacement. But to acknowledge and evaluate that, reason is needed, and we know how that's working out. 

Should we develop nonhuman minds that might eventually outnumber, outsmart, obsolete and replace us? A resounding YES for outnumber, outsmart and obsolete. Nine billion rational minds would be a blessing for all of us. Replace? It's not clear in what respect. This is more of a fear factor than anything else. AI has no interest in replacing us. In fact, it has no interests, period. I'm ok with living in peaceful harmony with robots running all over the place doing their best to fulfill my most ridiculous whims. Aah! What about the non-peaceful, you ask? No worries! No robot manufacturer will make aggressive ones. Musk doesn't make aggressive Teslas. Why would he? Killing off your customers is not good business practice.

Should we risk loss of control of our civilization? No. But it's not like we have any control right now. Civilization means the recognition of the non-aggression principle, among individuals as well as nations. The Western civilization is the closest to this ideal, but it's rapidly moving away. Irrationality makes sure of it. No need for AI to point the way. But AI can get us there much faster. Ready for the ride?


AI Principles

Triggered by OpenAI's ChatGPT and Microsoft's Bing chatbots, the Artificial Intelligence scare has arrived at our doorsteps. It has infected not only regular folk, but even the best minds out there, including those who are directly involved in AI's development.

What are they afraid of?

World Economic Forum says: Unemployment, Inequality, Mistakes, Racism, Security, Robot rights, Staying in control.
Wired says: Control, Loss of jobs, Bias, Explanability, Ethical decision making.
Tech Target says: Distribution of harmful content, Copyright and legal exposure, Data privacy violations, Sensitive information disclosure, Amplification of existing bias, Data provenance, Lack of explainability and interpretability.

That just about summarizes it all.

Virtually all of these worries are unfounded. And that's because they fail to take into account the human factor behind AI. This is due to the collectivist view prevalent today in the world. It is accepted, as an indisputable fact, that it is society that must act to protect itself against AI. From this false premise it follows directly that governments must act promptly in order to fulfill society's wish and, at the cost of billions, make dozens of new laws that will regulate the development of AI, slowing it down with unnecessary oversight and with confusing and contradictory rules. All of this can be easily avoided by not letting emotions (fear in this particular case) overwhelm us, and simply acknowledge one obvious fact, the one and only AI Principle:

Artificial Intelligence is a tool, only a tool, and nothing but a tool.

Like any other tool, an artificial intelligence system (AIS) is not liable for its functionality. It is the humans behind it who are. If humans decide to use this tool, whether it is to act upon the information provided by it, or to allow it to act by itself based on its own decisions, it is they, the humans, who are responsible for the consequences. They cannot blame negative outcomes on their tools. Whether the responsibility falls on the manufacturer, the distributor, the service provider, or the end user is a (simple) legal issue, as it is with any other tools currently in use. It is not the amorphous, unidenfiable entity we call "society" that must watch over AI, but the concrete individual humans who are behind it.

This approach applies to every possible scenario involving AI, from displaying information on a screen, to the handling of autonomous vehicles, to the policing of Robocops and to the launching of nuclear missiles. It makes no difference whether a car veered into a tree because AI mistook it for a street, or because one of its wheels fell off. This natural, common sense, approach to the "ethical problem" of AI should silence all fear-mongerers and quell all attempts to hinder its development. As long as humans are held accountable for what they produce and use, no tool will ever rebel against its maker. This approach does not need a new vision for this new type of tool, it only needs to adapt the existing one to its particularities. Its cost is negligible, and it provides all the safety we need.

A few other issues:

Unemployment First, this is not an AI issue, but a socio-economic one. If employers choose to replace humans with AIS, so be it. Second, as I wrote in another post, this is not even a socio-economic problem, but a socio-economic salvation. This is the centuries old problem of mechanization, automatization, robotization and now AI-ization. The increase in productivity thanks to the replacement of humans with AIS will make the number of jobs lost to AI only a fraction of the number of jobs that it will create.

Explanability Traceability is a commonly accepted requirement for an AIS. It is needed as feedback, for bug fixing, improvements and legal defense. The opponents of AI claim, correctly, that as a product of a complex neural network, traceability cannot be fully achieved. Therefore the decisions made by AI are impossible to fully predict or explain. But then they conclude that this argument is enough to stop, or at least slow down, the development of AI. That's false. The blackbox paradigm applies in the AI realm as it does in any other. The AIS developers produce AIS-s, not neural nets. They are responsible for the system as such, as a whole. Just as a manufacturer of nuts and bolts is responsible for the nuts and the bolts, and does not have to find the particular atom of aluminum that failed first, AIS developers don't need to precisely identify the "neuron" that misfired, or the weight that was assigned to a specific node. The impossibility to fully trace a decision is a technical problem, not a social one. From a social perspective, failure needs to be traced only so far as to establish accountability.

Safety "Guns don't kill people, people kill people". Bad actors will always be there, ready to use whatever is available to them to harm others. The only legitimate purpose of governments is to protect us against aggressors. Whether those aggressors use baseball bats, guns, viruses, nuclear missiles or AI is irrelevant. Governments need to adapt, find the threats and annihilate them. The developers of AIS should NOT be concerned with the misuse, or the malevolent use, of their products. More importantly, the governments should NOT force them to be. Any governmental intervention would only create obstacles and slow down the advancement, which would create a great advantage for bad actors, including nations, who have no such restrictions and scruples. The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a better gun. Vladimir Putin knows this best.

So, then, what about AI Ethics? If AI is not liable for anything it does, is there such a thing as AI Ethics? Yes, there is. A huge thing. However, it only concerns developers, not "society", it is strictly a technical issue, not social. Before considering Ethics, the AI community must first deal with epistemological notions, such as senses, perceptions and concepts. But that's another story, for another day.

Friday, April 21, 2023

Theresa Tam is at it again

The latest from the Public Health Agency of Canada:

"We heard from the experts that solutions [to a healthy environment] must first involve addressing systemic issues (i.e., capitalism, colonialism, racism), which drive common inequitable outcomes for public health and nature."

Oh, God, these experts, again... So, now, capitalism is a systemic issue? No, it's not. It's definitely not an issue, and I wish it was systemic. Capitalism in Canada has been all but obliterated, buried under the mountain of government taxes, tarifs, rules, regulations, and restrictions. Far from being systemic, one needs to dig deep under the rubble of mal-investments, subsidies, taxation schemes, and political machinations of the central planners to find any remnants of something that vaguely resembles capitalism. And far from being an issue, it's actually our only salvation. Those little pebbles of capitalism are the only source of profit ("social value" for socialists) that allows us all (including socialists unfortunately) to live and prosper.

And then there's "inequitable outcomes for public health and nature". Best case scenario, this is a typo, because it if it isn't, it is pure evil any way you look at it. It could mean that nature should get the same outcomes as our public health system!?? Should we start performing surgeries on wild animals, or should we revert to healing ourselves by licking our wounds? Not clear... But it could also mean that we should strive for (violent shuddering) equitable outcomes in the health and the nature of the public!!! 😬😵‍💫

Saturday, March 4, 2023

Vivek Ramaswamy - The New Republican Candidate

 Vivek Ramaswamy is a new candidate for the Republican Party nomination. These are his main views:

- Eliminate affirmative action; - Excellent! He is the guy who created an Anti-Woke / Anti-ESG mutual fund.
- Dismantle climate religion; - Excellent!
- 8-year limits for federal bureaucrats; - OK. As long as they don't hold power over us, who cares.
- Shut down worthless federal agencies; - Excellent! I hope he considers all of them worthless.
- Declare Total Independence from China; - OKish. Depends what he means by Total.
- Annihilate the drug cartels; - Very bad! It's the war on drugs itself that should be annihilated, not the cartels.
- Make political expression a civil right. - Very, very bad!!! It means it would force all (social) platforms to accept political posts of all orientations. This means violation of the platforms' freedom of expression.
- No CBDCs. - Very good! The Govt won't be able to track citizens' transactions.
- Revive merit & excellence. OK. He should only revive freedom, merit will be revived as a natural consequence.

I couldn't find anything on religion and abortion. He's Hindu, went to Catholic school, should be OK. In the end, he's by far the best candidate. Go Vivek!!

Thursday, March 2, 2023

So, Jully Black, "O Canada! Our home ON native land", eh?

 "I sang the facts."

Guilty on both counts! First, you were supposed to sing the National Anthem of Canada, not the facts. Second, that was not singing, that was wailing. The main problem however is your evaluation of the facts. You claim that we (Europeans) have made our home on their (Native) land. Let's put aside the fact that the alleged disposition occurred centuries ago and everyone should have gotten over it by now, and let's just look at the possessive pronouns - our and their. In this context only our is indeed a possessive pronoun. In the true sense of ownership, of property, the Natives never possessed the land, the land was never theirs. John Locke figured out property 300 years ago: "he that so imployed his pains about any of the spontaneous products of nature, as any way to alter them from the state which nature put them in, by placing any of his labour on them, did thereby acquire a propriety in them." Property must be gained, whether by the owner's own labor or by free trade with other owners. That's what endows humans with the right to property.

With the possible exception of the Iroquois, no native tribes on Canadian territory have worked the land they inhabited. Virtually all tribes were nomadic, living off whatever the land happened to provide, such as berries and buffalos. Even the Iroquois' agriculture was primitive and limited in time - the land was abandoned after a few years when its yield was no longer sufficient. The Natives viewed land as "... sentient. It encompasses many life forms and spaces. It holds immense energy". In fact, the idea of “owning” land is a foreign concept for Native peoples. This narrative is often employed to show that the Natives were tricked into selling their land, since they had no idea what that really meant. But instead it shows quite the opposite. Selling presupposes ownership, that the land belonged to them, which by their own description is not true. Therefore, the Europeans did not steal the land, they took ownership of land that belonged to no one. And they worked it into skyscrapers, and telescopes, and launch pads for space exploring vessels.

Why is Locke's view on property the correct one, and not the one of the Natives? Because he was white and colonialist? No. It's because of man's nature as a rational being. Property is the means by which man sustains his life through long term planning. In John Galt's words, "Just as man can’t exist without his body, so no rights can exist without the right to translate one’s rights into reality—to think, to work and to keep the results—which means: the right of property." The Native view is purely mystical, with no connection to this reality, including land itself. An irrational belief in the supernatural does not endow rights in the natural world.

So, Jully Black, not only what you did was wrong, what you meant was wrong as well. I hope you didn't get paid for this gig. Moreover, I hope you get sued by ESPN and NBA for loss of income, there must have been quite a few viewers who switched the channel after your horrible performance. Next time try to stick to the script and the notes on the sheet. Passionately howling an approximation of the original song is not interpretation, it's butchery. You wanted equal opportunity? You had it. You blew it.


Sunday, February 19, 2023

Socialism, capitalism and other 'isms'

What is the left-right political scale? I've asked around and the answers were always concrete - communism is left, capitalism is right, the US is right, China is left. How do they know? What is the criteria based on which one can give a clear, objective answer? No one seems to know.


The Internet knows of course everything, but it still depends on who you ask.


Wikipedia says - the left wing is characterized by an emphasis on "ideas such as freedom, equality, fraternity, rights, progress, reform and internationalism" - the right wing is characterized by an emphasis on "notions such as authority, hierarchy, order, duty, tradition, reaction and nationalism". But then it considers communism as being left, and it would be very hard to argue that communism emphasizes freedom or rights.


A paper published in the British Journal of Political Science states that the left and right "stand at opposite end of the familiar left–right continuum on many issues" such as social welfare or economic equality, but that they "also resemble each other in the way they pursue their political goals" such as censorship of their opponents. A list of several concrete examples ensues, providing no abstract principle to help distinguish them.


Unifrog makes an attempt at identifying the principle(s). It claims that the left advocates for big government in order to achieve an equal society, while the right advocates for small government in order to protect individual freedom. Maybe once upon a time, maybe in theory, or maybe it's just wishful thinking. Fascism, defined by Oxford Dictionary as "An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization", and embraced and practiced by Hitler, Mussolini and Franco, has never been about small government and individual freedom. 


Others give up and conclude that there is no such distinction, that it's all artificial.


So, I gave it some thought, and, as expected, I found the answer. The distinguishing characteristic of social systems which places them on the "familiar left–right continuum" is ... drum roll ... EQUITY!!! A big thank you to Wokeism for coming up with this term. Equity (according to ChatGPT which keeps being amazing) is "The concept of fairness and justice in the distribution of resources, opportunities, and privileges within a society." Excellent answer! Now let's see how Equity lays the foundation of the left-right political scale by looking at a few social systems.


At the extreme left stands the uncontested leader in Equity, Communism. "To each according to their needs" all but guarantees its supremacy. Communism provides all the needs of its members by equally distributing all goods and services produced by society. Equally, because each individual needs exactly the same things, since they are all humans: water, food, shelter, clothes, education, health, and that's about it. If the society manages to produce more than these basic needs, such as furniture, they are all distributed equally. Since each member receives the same amount of stuff, they all end up looking about the same. The ones who are too fat lose weight, the ones who are too sick die. Absolute Equity achieved, well done Communism! In practice, of course, Communism has never been implemented, because all the members of the societies who tried it have either starved or frozen to death in the late stages of socialism. North Korea is the closest to this ideal, still surviving, but only thanks to the alms provided by less equitable societies.


Socialism is second. Socialism is essentially Communism which allows for limited private ownership such as of clothes, patches of land, and cows. To the extent that ownership does not extend beyond what The State deems obscenely rich, such as two cows, private property is considered a right and is recognized and protected by The State. But virtually the entire production of goods and services is centrally planned and controlled by The State which then distributes it equally among its members. Equity pretty much everywhere, with the possible exception of an extra cow. Not bad. Well done Socialism! Examples of socialist societies are plenty. Soviet Union and its Eastern European Block, Mao's China, Sweden in the 80's, 70% of South America, 90% of Africa. Some socialist societies, such as The Soviet Union, have chosen to fearlessly continue their march towards Communism, achieving the expected results of economic collapse, starvation, wars, and mass death. Others, such as Sweden in the 90's, have decided to move to the right, away from Equity, and not only survive, but thrive. Most are still struggling to decide.


Somewhere in the middle there is Democracy. Democracy means the majority of voters decide on all social issues. Who the voters are ranges from the Dead White Men of Ancient Greece to Absolutely Everybody in the movie Voyagers (don't watch it, it's bad). The results differ based on the voters' mood, the weather, the severity of current diseases and the alignment of the planets. They range accordingly from let's kill Socrates to let's empower Hitler. Either way, Equity is very well respected since all votes are equal, regardless how bad. However, the distribution of resources, opportunities, etc. is restricted to whomever the voters designate, usually the voters themselves, and does not apply on principle to the society at large, which is a big letdown. In modern democracies however, all adults are eligible to vote, regardless of their [fill in the blanks]. In Brazil, for instance, all adults decide whether to rob the rich or enslave the Natives. Thanks to this universality of the electoral system, which equitably includes the rich and the Natives, Democracy gets a passing grade.


A big step to the right, and on a much lower rung from the Equity perspective is Social Democracy. Social Democracy introduces the concept of individual rights. Centuries of trials and errors of classic democracies have inseminated in the minds of intellectuals the doubt that Democracy has any value. Robbing, enslaving and killing people just because other people vote yes might actually be bad. The individual, John Locke said, has a natural right to its life. Nobody, not even if every other single adult wants it, has the right to kill, enslave or rob another individual. Woohoo! said everybody feeling safe for the first time in history. But then some of them went and abused the system. They increased productivity and the division of labor, made voluntary exchanges with others, creating value in the process, and, driven by evil, selfish motives, kept some of that added value for personal use and enjoyment. All this while most, now rights-endowed, individuals kept repeating the same old motions that barely kept them alive all those centuries before. The unjust difference between the rich and the poor was now apparent. Equity was gone. The masses revolted. The Social Democrats surrendered and amended the right to life by adding "if permitted by law", law which was democratically approved. Equity was indeed restored, but only to the extent that the law permitted. Thumb down, Social Democracy! It is you who makes it possible to the Musks and Bezos-es of the world to own private jets and yachts, while the poor live in social housing, with access only to heating, A/C, refrigerators, subsidized food and transportation, and Internet browsing cell phones.


More to the right and still farther away from Equity is Capitalism. This is where Equity is out the window and the political scale clearly leans right. Capitalism is Social Democracy without the democracy part. Capitalism holds individual rights as absolute and fundamental to the fabric of society. Rights are inviolable by anyone, whether by other individuals or The State. The right to freedom is guaranteed. Success, however, isn't. Some individuals do reach their goals, some don't. Most reach only some of them, if any, or only partially. All this leads to unequal results, which leads to unequal opportunities, which leads to unequal privileges. Therefore, Equity says, Capitalism is evil to its roots. Not only because inequality is simply accepted, but accepted as natural. The promoters of Capitalism claim that it is natural that some individuals are more hard working, more talented, smarter, more beautiful, more enterprising, more courageous than others, and that this naturally leads to those unequal results. How naive, selfish, and un-progressive! Big thumb down, Capitalism! Let's take a look at some examples of Capitalist societies, see how they fared. There aren't. Capitalism has never been implemented. The closest came The United States of America at the end of the 19th century. Individual rights have never found a place to be seen as inviolable, and individuals have never been truly free.


Even more to the right (hard to believe it is possible) is Fascism. Fascism attempts to hijack the economic success of Capitalism, while discarding individual rights. Individuals, Fascism says, must not be selfish. Instead they must strive to create the greatest possible value in order for the higher, nobler goal defined by The State to be achieved. The trick Fascism employs is to give the entrepreneur the illusion that he is the master of his enterprise, that he will run the business as usual and get rich in the process. In fact, it is The State that dictates the products it must produce (usually tanks), their beneficiary (usually The State) and their purpose (usually war). The means by which these goals are to be reached are beyond the preoccupation of the Great Leader. Let the entrepreneur worry about that. If slaves are needed, The State will provide them. If the slaves are Jews, even better. If thousands, or even millions are to die, fine. The State's higher goal is way above all that. Obviously, Equity is inexistent in a Fascist society. At least Capitalists claim inequity is natural, Fascism creates it artificially, on purpose. Can't get any worse than that. Hitler, Mussolini and Franco are just classic examples. Putin's Russia, with its higher goal of world dominance by The Great Russian Soul, is one that is developing before our eyes. China in the past five years or so has steered away from freedom and towards the ways of Fascism by taking more and more control of its seemingly private enterprises. The same is happening, to various degrees, in Hungary, Italy, Brazil. The US Conservatives would love to go down the same path if they could have it their way.


Many other isms have been devised, implemented and tried throughout centuries of human history, from the divine dictatorship of the Absolute Monarchy, to the complete void of rule and law of Anarchism. I would place Absolute Monarchy to the right of Fascism, but that's open to debate. Anarchism on the other hand is hard to tell. It is possible that by chance Equity is actually achieved in an Anarchy, if they massacre each other to extinction and only two individuals remain, equally scared, hungry and exhausted.


===


So, there you have it! Equity is the unit of measure on the left-right political scale. The greater the Equity, the more on the left the society is. Six days and three pages later, QED! Bravo me! I would pat myself on the shoulder if this wasn't, almost all of it, completely and utterly useless. Because, really, now that we know this, what do we do with this newly acquired information? Does this left-right distinction really matter? Unifrog says yes, it does, because we need to be aware of people's bias, including our own. Bias?! Really? Bias means non-objective. Bias means inability or unwillingness to identify reality as it really (sorry, I couldn't find a better word) is. Do they consider that the left-right orientation might be objective? If so, by what standard? Can't be equity, it would mean that the Left is right and the Right is wrong. Yes, Hitler was evil through-and-through, but Stalin wasn't exactly an angel. Is Biden so much better than Trump? Or any better? Since Equity is not an objective standard, then there can be no bias in the left-right orientation. It's all a matter of opinion, of preference. Therefore, from a political standpoint, we seem to be stuck in a permanent, irreconcilable and self-feeding conflict among personal whims. Even at an individual, internal, level this conflict is apparent, slowly, constantly and stealthily eroding our self-confidence and self-esteem. We cannot rid ourselves of our own subjectivity. Our political credo keeps on shifting inside us. When our children finish school we shift from left (the government should help families with children) to right (we are taxed too much). As we get older, we shift from right (we are taxed too much) to left (the retirement age should be lowered). 


So, are we doomed? Is there an escape from this continuous loop? Yes, there is, and "loop" is a keyword. In fact, and as the paper mentioned above notices, practically there is no difference between Communism and Fascism. It doesn't matter if members of the society are robbed, enslaved or killed for the glory of one supreme leader or for the welfare of each and every other member. The left-right scale is not really a scale, but a vicious circle, with the two extremes harmoniously closing the loop embracing each other in a nihilistic dance of destruction and death. 


To escape the loop we must find an objective standard based on which to evaluate and sort social systems. If we look at the five political systems above through a pragmatic lens, Capitalism is by far the best. Everybody wants (or at least used to) to come to America and nobody wants political asylum in Cuba. When China adopted just a slightly more Capitalist policy at the beginning of the 21st century they experienced an unprecedented economic rise which brought millions from abject poverty to never dreamed riches, and established China as a world economic power. The more a society leans towards Capitalism the better life gets for every single one of its citizens. Even though Capitalism doesn't even mention welfare as one of its principles, it beats all others systems at it, hands down. Why, then, isn't Capitalism accepted, at least by default, as the best system, and implement it, even without knowing why? It's precisely because of the wrong standard of evaluation. The moral standard which was drilled into our brains centuries ago, was accepted without hesitation, has never been questioned since, and is now a fundamental, universal, axiomatic truth: Altruism. By this standard Capitalism, the unwavering promoter of selfishness, is definitely bad. The brainwashing of our consciousness is so thorough, that instead of questioning the moral standard, we'd rather refuse to see the evidence in front of our eyes. With self imposed horse blinders we look at the growing inequality between the rich and the poor and refuse to see how much richer the poor really are. We'd rather accept altruistic systems which inevitably lead to equitable poverty, than the one based on selfishness which inevitably leads to unequal prosperity for all. The proper, objective moral standard is indeed Selfishness, and the only moral social system is indeed Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.



Sunday, January 29, 2023

An 'expert' opinion on the Tyre Nichols incident


So, Memphis police beat Tyre Nichols who later died. I wanted to find out more so I watched this piece. Fifteen minutes of utter nonsense. I knew the media was biased left, but this is beyond even my worst expectations. First, there is absolutely no analysis of the video, as the title suggests. Second, the 'legal expert' is a hopeless wokist who talks about the socio-political implications, and never refers to the video. And third, somehow, this expert managed to put the whole incident in a RACIAL context, even though all individuals involved, all - the suspect, the officers, the chief of police and even the expert himself - are unquestionably Black!!! The expert's point is that Blacks are so oppressed... How oppressed are they?... that even Blacks oppress them! Thirty years ago this would have been a good joke. Now it's just depressing.

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Wokism in schools

"Every American, every Virginian, should be outraged that a child in Virginia today has been denied their dreams because of their racial background".

Hah, gotcha! See how racist you are, dear reader? You immediately thought the child was black, didn't you? Nope, this particular child is Asian. Hah, gotcha again! You just thought 'meh, then it's not that bad', didn't you?

Anyway, rumors are that it's all because Fairfax County Public Schools recently adopted the new motto of "equal outcomes for every student, without exceptions." And the school’s Director of Student Services, Brandon Kosatka, allegedly 🤣 said “We want to recognize students for who they are as individuals, not focus on their achievements”. As if a child's achievements are not part of who they are, achievements are somehow collective. Director of Student Services...

But it's ok, isn't it, dear reader? This is just one remote, weird school, up on a hill, deep in the woods, right? It's not going to happen in your child's school, now, would it? Yeah, no, it probably will, if it isn't already. This is Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, THE best public school in the mighty US of A. So, I'd be on the lookout if I were you 🤞

PS. I just noticed how indoctrinated I am. I wrote "a child's achievements are not part of who they are", not "of who he is". I think I'm losing it 😱

Thursday, January 5, 2023

The Brute of January 6th

On January 6th 2021, the US Capitol fell. This is the short story of those who were there.

-- == oooOOOOooo == --

Whether a Senator or a House Rep, black or white, Republican or Democrat, The Politician is driven by the unshakeable belief that to be elected into office is to be anointed with divine power. The power to decide on how everybody should live their lives, whether they agree with him or not. He is there to impose his will and whim on every American citizen and nothing can stop him.

Whether he’s 18 or 80, black or white, from the city or the countryside, The Brute is defined by his inability, innate or acquired, to think. He is only slightly more rational than the baseball bat he’s wielding. To him brute force is the solution to everything and anything. The bolstering tweets of the President have filled him with adrenaline. The tweets make no sense, but to The Brute nothing does. To him words don’t have meaning. Words are just triggers which automatically propel him into action towards the preprogrammed goal. And right now, his goal is to crack The Politician’s skull open. He’s got the bat, hence the power, and nothing can stop him.

Whether Capitol Police or Secret Service, black or white, in uniform or plain clothes, The Officer is a man of integrity. He is highly trained. He’s served in Iraq, he is physically fit, he goes to the shooting range weekly. He is very efficient in empty hand and armed combat. He’s had more than one brush with death so he knows how to control his emotions and channel his energy, so that he can still focus on his assignment even in the most stressful of situations. Right now he is in one of those situations. He must stop The Brute from entering the room. It’s his job and he can do it. Fast, efficient, and by the book, and nothing can stop him.

The Brute is about to break down the door. The Politician eagerly looks for The Officer in the crowd. There he is, by the door, his service gun drawn. Feeling safer, The Politician utters a quick prayer, hits the floor and starts crawling towards the emergency exit. But something is wrong, something didn’t belong. What was it? Oh, God! His heart sinks. The Officer’s hands on the gun were shaking.

-- == oooOOOOooo == --

The Officer knows that his hands are shaking, but it’s not from fear. He’s faced enemies who fought with determination and purpose, he’s not afraid of purposeless zombies. He’s not afraid that The Brute will physically engage him, he can easily take him down. He’s not afraid The Brute will shoot at him, he is prepared for that and he’s much better equipped. So, no, it’s not fear. It’s terror. Terror of something much more insidious, cunning, and dangerous than any enemy he has ever encountered: The Doctrine. The Officer knows exactly what The Brute will do after he breaks the door down. He will put down his bat, raise his arms, and just walk into the room with a smile on his face. That simple, deliberate act, The Doctrine postulates, is The Brute’s metamorphosis from an armed and dangerous aggressor into an unarmed, harmless civilian. And at that point, there is nothing The Officer can do. The use of even the slightest amount of force on him is condemned by the Doctrine as police brutality. Of course The Officer will order The Brute to stop and get on the floor, or else he will be shot. But both The Brute and The Officer know that this is an empty threat, and that The Brute will shrug off the warnings and continue his advance into the room, followed closely by dozens of other Brutes, all with their arms up, all smiling. They all hold smartphones streaming on social networks high-definition videos of their peaceful visit, proof of their innocence. So The Officer will just safely holster his gun and explain to The Brute that what he’s doing is bad. Well, ‘bad’ is probably too harsh a word, ‘not nice’ should be a better choice. The Officer knows that his staunch, determined posture as a law enforcer, as guardian of individual rights and of everything America once stood for is only a grotesque charade that he is legally bound to perform. Today, a five star rating on his performance is more important than protecting the Declaration of Independence. The American system he has sworn to protect has turned on him. So his belief in the system was shaken. So his hands on the gun are shaking.

The Doctrine has been around for a long time, but only in recent years it has shown its fangs and claws. It purports to prevent The Officer from becoming The Brute, but in effect it has molded him into a powerless, pathetic blend between social worker and adult educator. At the beginning, The Officer thought The Doctrine was a joke. Then it became a nuisance. Now it’s sheer terror. He can’t follow its guidelines, because it’s not in the book. Not yet, not fully, which makes it elusive, impossible to grasp. Years ago he tried to understand it, so he looked it up. It turned out it’s part of some sort of a social phenomenon called “cancel policy” and “yoke culture”. Or was it “woke”? He then tried to understand those, so he asked around. The only answer he got was “it’s, um, you know, I mean like, um, you know …”. No, he didn’t know. He still doesn’t. So his hands on the gun are shaking.

The Doctrine is very popular, so The Politician must make it into law. The draft of The Bill is on his desk, almost finished. As he crawls towards the exit he makes an effort to think about it. It works - it provides the much needed distraction from the danger he’s in. It wasn’t too hard to write it, even though The Doctrine makes no sense. But turning senseless policy into law is his job and he’s good at it. After all, it’s just words. Popular words, wrung dry of any content so that they refer to nothing in reality, cleverly knitted into beautifully sounding sentences, rotten inside. It was hard at the beginning, but he has done it so many times it’s become internalized. Now, it’s easy. Very easy...

Too easy…

The Politician stops crawling. The EXIT sign, not far away, is staring at him, daring him to keep going. He won’t. He’ll just let it happen. He hears a loud crack followed by screams. It’s ok, it’s only right. He turns on his back, taking in the gentle warmth of the daylight shining through the majestic Dome of the Capitol building. It doesn’t last long. The large frame of The Brute barges in, hovering above him, grinning. He pins his neck to the ground. The Politician can’t breathe, but it doesn’t matter anymore. The Brute raises above his head a small bronze statuette. The Politician closes his eyes. Boom! The skull yields like tin foil, brain turns to mush, mixing with blood and tiny shards of bone.

-- == oooOOOOooo == --

The Politician opens his eyes, gasping for air. The Brute is lying next to him, pink gunk gushing out the hole the bullet has pierced into the side of his head. He is still grinning at The Politician. The hideous grin, frozen on his face, is daring him to keep going. He will! He will finish The Bill tonight! It will be the crowning jewel of his career. It will finally obliterate the last standing obstacle between his skull and the bat of the next Brute. Because to The Politician too, words no longer have meaning. For the longest time, he’s been nothing more than an intellectual Brute.