REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Compliance can't make a functional society: What Orwell And Huxley Got Wrong And Kafka Got Right

POSTED BY: SIGNYM
UPDATED: Wednesday, April 10, 2024 00:17
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 272
PAGE 1 of 1

Thursday, April 4, 2024 10:43 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Interesting article.

Quote:

What Kafka got right is how societies can become busily dysfunctional.

For self-evident reasons, the fictional visions of Orwell and Huxley resonate as maps to the present distemper. Orwell's account of full-spectrum technological totalitarianism maps Big Tech's mastery of Surveillance Capitalism and governments' full-spectrum surveillance powering the fine-grained coercion of social credit scores and related tools.

Huxley's vision of a doped-up, med-dependent populace that loves its servitude also maps the present. Indeed, not only do we love our servitude, which manifests in our endless addictions and dependencies on everything from debt to junk food to painkillers, our servitude has been so normalized that we don't even recognize the servitude that underpins "normal life."

What Orwell and Huxley got wrong is the limits of these nightmarishly effective systems of control. Full-spectrum technological totalitarianism can certainly enforce compliance with the desired behaviors and expressions of consent, but it can't force individuals to have ambition or creativity, to marry for love and children, or possess values or beliefs beyond the superficial lip-syncing of compliance.

The coercive structures of the Surveillance State and Surveillance Capitalism are intrinsically inauthentic, ersatz, hollow, demanding an entirely artificial and easily faked appearance of consent that mimics devotion to the principles and narratives being shoved down the throats of the populace.

These structures enforce what isn't allowed and superficial compliance, but they can't force what actually makes a society functional: the convictions, hopes and values that inspire individuals to marry, raise a family and pursue self-expression via achievement. What actually happens in societies controlled by the Surveillance State and Surveillance Capitalism is decay and decline, as young people abandon ambition, marriage and raising children by lying flat and letting it rot, expressions of young people in China that speak to youth everywhere where compliance is more important than individual liberty.

If you doubt these dynamics, please observe the dismay of authorities as their national marriage and birth rates collapse. All sorts of explanations for this collapse are offered, except the ones that count: societies that require an appearance of consent are inauthentic, hollow shells.

The same can be said of doped-up, med-dependent, entertainment-addicted societies that love their servitude. Individuals give up ambition, marriage and raising children due to soaring costs, out-of-reach financial security, and the debilitating consequences of all the Soma, meds, addictions, distractions and derangements that are accepted as "normal."

What Kafka got right is everyone's super-busy but nothing gets done. In Kafka's novel The Castle, the bureaucracy toiling unseen in the Castle is bustling 24/7, but nothing actually gets done in the impoverished village below. Attempts to reach the bureaucracy by phone are futile, as calls are only picked up randomly or as pranks.

("You've reached the DMV, the IRS, Xfinity, Engulf and Devour Healthcare, etc. Your call is very important to us...")

In Kafka's fictional world, the authority to actually get anything done is always out of reach. In The Castle, the leader who supposedly has the power to approve projects sits isolated in his office, unreachable and unapproachable, though he can be seen reading a newspaper through a peephole. Whether he actually possesses the power to approve anything is an open question with no answer.

Kafka's world is one of cowed peasants bickering among themselves, nurturing grudges and speculating fruitlessly about the cloaked conspiracies of the authorities in the Castle. The sexual predations of the authorities and the dismal fates of they used and abandoned are described in whispers, and what work that is available is menial and poorly paid.

What Kafka got right is how societies can become busily dysfunctional, cluttered with unseen lines of authority that may not actually have the authority their official titles suggest, an inscrutably unreachable, unseen bureaucracy and an impoverished populace muddling along on gossip and rumors.

Stripped of gaslighting, fake optimism and empty exhortations to YOLO borrow and spend, that's a fair description of our current situation. Yes, yes, everything's wunnerful, it's The Roaring 20s all over again (never mind how the 1920s ended), AI is gonna make corporations trillions in profits by further immiserating the populace, oops I mean "improving productivity," and our tireless authorities are hard at work solving all our problems--don't you hear the whirring of the "money" printing presses running 24/7?



https://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com/2024/04/what-orwell-and-huxley-g
ot-wrong-and.html

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 5, 2024 1:39 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I agree, but I'm not sure that incentive can be entirely summed up as "freedom".

Most people can be trained to "not do" through punishment. Punish a behavior consistently enough, long enough (economically, socially, thru the judicial system) and eventually most people will stop doing whatever it is that you want them to stop doing, whether that is questioning the narrative or agitating for more agency.

People will "do" what is rewarded. Rewards can be ephemeral (such as pleasure, popularity etc) or durable.

In rural areas, and areas where there is no old age security, having children is necessary as farm labor and for old age security. In areas where work is necessary for survival, people work. In areas where ingenuity increases living standards, people will be inventive. In areas where work isn't necessary, or even available, people will turn to other things, and in areas where people have a lot of time on their hands they will be kept passive thru bread (government dole), circuses (the screen) and drugs, and told endlessly that they "can be anything they want to be" ... except being a worker, homeowner, and parent (which are strongly disincentivized).

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 5, 2024 3:33 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


I think the point the author is missing is that compliance can very well indeed make a functional society, because the meaning of "functional" is just as much subjective as it is objective.

The high bar he has set for calling society functional is so far removed from what is actually necessary of us all to go right on functioning, regardless of how dysfunctionally Kafkaesque we go about doing it.

Join the herd. Follow the hype. Spend what little free time you have after spending most of the waking hours in the prime years of your life making somebody else money watching other people play characters that get to do all of the things that you're never going to do in your life. But don't think about it. Don't think about anything.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 5, 2024 6:41 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


PEOPLE can continue to function at a very low level, but can a SOCIETY continue to function in the long run, i.e. over several generations?

I guess answering that question requires that the word "society" be defined.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Friday, April 5, 2024 8:22 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
PEOPLE can continue to function at a very low level, but can a SOCIETY continue to function in the long run, i.e. over several generations?



Sure. I believe it can. In many ways I believe we've seen the degradation taking place over generations already. What has allowed an "equilibrium" of sorts while this has taken place is the proliferation of technology and manufacturing to make up for it. The average life is infinitely "easier" than it was 100 years ago. And now that we've automated most processes that required skilled people who took a lifetime to learn those skills and gotten to the point where most jobs that still need doing are something almost any idiot could manage (and could and likely will be replaced by automation in the future), we've got the technology on hand to fill up most of that down time so people don't have to dwell so much on the pointless existence they have ahead of them.

Quote:

I guess answering that question requires that the word "society" be defined.



And that's the thing right there...

I don't think we have a very good "society" ahead of us. It certainly will come nothing close to what anyone of any mindset would call idyllic.

But it will continue to function. All it needs is an extremely basic level of knowledge or input or desire on almost everyone's part to do that without completely falling apart. I'd argue that even if we manage to turn the next couple of generations into fully formed adults that walk around with the mind of 5 year old children we could still "function".

The people on top care very little about how the rest of us live our lives as long as it isn't negatively impacting their own. And it turns out that it can get pretty lousy for everyone else before it ever risks adverse effects on their own lives.


That is, unless, there actually are real truths to the manmade climate changes. And if that's the case, I hate to break it to any of the idealists out there, but we're going right back to the subject of the overpopulation problem. Not only aren't at least half of the human beings on this planet completely redundant, but if they're actually contributing to a real problem that needs a solution it's not going to be the gas burning cars that need to go... it's going to be at least 4 billion people that need to go.

They've already got a plan for all of that.

Just like the barely functioning "society" that we have to look forward to in the future, they care just as little about how many bodies are actually inhabiting it as they do the quality of the lives being lived in it.

I just hope for their sakes that they really planned it all out and have contingency plans in place at every single step. When man decides to mess too much with Mother Nature, she's usually pretty good at messing right back.

And I'm not confident that they've got the right people in place to think about all of the possible outcomes of what they're going to eventually end up doing about the problems before them, and when something inevitably goes sideways, I'm not convinced they've thought about all the possible ways that it could go sideways and what they'd need to already have in place to put out those fires that are too late to put out.

They say there's a reason why we're likely to never see extra terrestrial life, and that's because any species that had evolved to the point where interstellar travel could be in their future found a way to extinct themselves before they ever got there.

I'd say we've got about a couple of hundred years left before we truly figure out those mysteries, but when your most brilliant minds are spending their time figuring out how to make bioweapons in the military or coming up with the more effective boner pills in the civilian market, I'm not too hopeful that us lowly Earthlings are ever going to make that leap.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 4:11 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.



Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
PEOPLE can continue to function at a very low level, but can a SOCIETY continue to function in the long run, i.e. over several generations?

SIX: Sure. I believe it can. In many ways I believe we've seen the degradation taking place over generations already. What has allowed an "equilibrium" of sorts while this has taken place is the proliferation of technology and manufacturing to make up for it. The average life is infinitely "easier" than it was 100 years ago. And now that we've automated most processes that required skilled people who took a lifetime to learn those skills and gotten to the point where most jobs that still need doing are something almost any idiot could manage (and could and likely will be replaced by automation in the future), we've got the technology on hand to fill up most of that down time so people don't have to dwell so much on the pointless existence they have ahead of them.



So, how is this supposed to work? Machine spit out stuff, and people with no jobs buy it with ... what?
Life CAN BE easier, as long as we can afford it. But I guess we'll have to charge it on our credit cards.



Quote:

SIGNY: I guess answering that question requires that the word "society" be defined.

SIX: And that's the thing right there...
I don't think we have a very good "society" ahead of us. It certainly will come nothing close to what anyone of any mindset would call idyllic.

But it will continue to function. All it needs is an extremely basic level of knowledge or input or desire on almost everyone's part to do that without completely falling apart. I'd argue that even if we manage to turn the next couple of generations into fully formed adults that walk around with the mind of 5 year old children we could still "function".


As long as the USA could splash dollars around the world and buy stuff then we don't have to do anything except exist. But what if that ends?


Quote:

The people on top care very little about how the rest of us live our lives as long as it isn't negatively impacting their own. And it turns out that it can get pretty lousy for everyone else before it ever risks adverse effects on their own lives.

That is, unless, there actually are real truths to the manmade climate changes. And if that's the case, I hate to break it to any of the idealists out there, but we're going right back to the subject of the overpopulation problem.



Oh, I think we're going to run into problems long before that becomes an issue.

Quote:

SIX: Not only aren't at least half of the human beings on this planet completely redundant,
To who?

Quote:

SIX: but if they're actually contributing to a real problem that needs a solution it's not going to be the gas burning cars that need to go... it's going to be at least 4 billion people that need to go.
Let's start with the rich folks and their private jets. I'll bet 100,000,000 of THOSE would solve the problem!


Quote:

SIX They've already got a plan for all of that.

Just like the barely functioning "society" that we have to look forward to in the future, they care just as little about how many bodies are actually inhabiting it as they do the quality of the lives being lived in it.

I just hope for their sakes that they really planned it all out and have contingency plans in place at every single step. When man decides to mess too much with Mother Nature, she's usually pretty good at messing right back.

And I'm not confident that they've got the right people in place to think about all of the possible outcomes of what they're going to eventually end up doing about the problems before them, and when something inevitably goes sideways, I'm not convinced they've thought about all the possible ways that it could go sideways and what they'd need to already have in place to put out those fires that are too late to put out.

They say there's a reason why we're likely to never see extra terrestrial life, and that's because any species that had evolved to the point where interstellar travel could be in their future found a way to extinct themselves before they ever got there.

I'd say we've got about a couple of hundred years left before we truly figure out those mysteries, but when your most brilliant minds are spending their time figuring out how to make bioweapons in the military or coming up with the more effective boner pills in the civilian market, I'm not too hopeful that us lowly Earthlings are ever going to make that leap.



Wish I had more time. I'd like to get back to this.


-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 8:34 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:

Wish I had more time. I'd like to get back to this.

I've clicked on your link:
https://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com/2024/04/what-orwell-and-huxley-g
ot-wrong-and.html


At the bottom of the page there is another link to the first chapter of Smith's book:
https://www.oftwominds.com/Self-Reliance-sample2.pdf

On page 10 of that sample chapter is this quote: "I have to chuckle when I read an article about a new agricultural robot that will replace human labor, as if human labor were the key cost in industrial agriculture."

I am not taking the sentence out of context, but I had to chuckle, to quote Smith. The robots are there because there is a shortage of humans who will do that work unless there is no alternative but death. Speaking of death, farmers bought tractors and sold their plow horses to glue factories. Similarly, farmers bought cotton harvesting machines and the farmers didn't care what happened to the humans who picked cotton by hand and sent their human cotton pickers to the glue factory, too. Now some robots plow the fields without even a human driving the tractor. I wonder what happened to the 72% of Americans who once worked on farms? Did they die of starvation and suffer mental illness because factories are not farms? Did they long for the good old days of meaningfulness in the countryside communing in perfect harmony with nature?

Figures on the number of Americans in "farm occupations" go back to 1820, when they were reported at less than 2.1 million, or about 72 percent of the American work force of 2.9 million. By 1850, farm people made up 4.9 million, or about 64 percent, of the nation's 7.7 million workers.
https://www.nytimes.com/1988/07/20/us/farm-population-lowest-since-185
0-s.html


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at
https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 9:30 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So, what are you saying, SECOND? That automation is a two-edged sword that benefits some but not everyone? We know that.

That automation is more profitable to the owners than human labor? That labor will always be squeezed to the lowest possible wage in competition with automation?

That doesn't make sense in your argument, bc current agricultural labor is apparently the last remaining nubbin that CAN'T be automated, so in theory those workers aren't in direct competition with machines. There is another factor, then, besides automation to account for low wages, and that is likely the surfeit of cheap imported "stoop" labor.

In fact, there are still a lot of jobs that can't be automated, some of them on the higher end of the wage scale (doctors, dentists, technicians of various sorts, high-level repairmen etc), some in the middle of the wage scale (teachers, police, emergency responders, nurses, therapists, handymen, construction workers etc.) and some at the low end (housecleaners, nannies, gardeners, barristas, garment workers, agricultural workers etc) and the defining factor for wages in the "unautomateable" jobs is the availability of workers. The less education a job requires, the more people there are qualified to do the job, the lower the wages.

Is your point that technology and innovation will soak up that "excess labor" into better, less laborious work? I think we're past that point now.

What I get out of your example us that as long as owners make the decisions on how much to pay to produce an item, they will always chose the cheapest, most profitable (for them) route, whether it's automation, imported cheap foreign (illegal) labor, or cheap offshored labor.

Or, better yet (for them), no labor and production at all: speculation in the rent-seeking sectors of finance (finance, insurance, and real estate).

However, the most profitable for the small group of owners isn't what's best for society overall. For example, if a society gives up on production completely, it winds up at the mercy of societies that still produce, such as our current relationship with China and Russia.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 10:34 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
So, what are you saying, SECOND? That automation is a two-edged sword that benefits some but not everyone? We know that.

What I am saying is that Charles Hugh Smith, Signym, and 6ixStringJack cannot philosophically adjust to changes. Instead, they get nit-picky, angry, sad, and long for the old ways, expending huge quantities of mental energy and feeling emotional turmoil that never ends while accomplishing nothing. They are Captain Malcolm Reynolds permanently feeling dislocated and hostile, never coming up with an actual plan on how to prosper. He is still fighting a lost war, searching for a feeling of victory by being as useless and grumpy as possible, just barely surviving while opposing all changes. I could see Mal becoming a Trumptard, if another Trump came along in the future. Someone like Trump already convinced Mal to go to war against the Deep State of the Alliance.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at
https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 1:37 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


And what I'M saying is that it's important to look at the end state of whatever changes are taking place.

There is a downside to many changes, as well as an upside. The downside to mass automation- driven by profit motive- is that it squeezes many people out of the formal economy, both as workers AND as a market for goods. The problem isn't automation, per SE, the problem is that it's used to increase parasitical profits. If profit were not in the picture, EVERYONE would enjoy the benefits of automation.

Another downside to mass automation- is the increased emissions of CO2. Something for you, especially, to consider.

But I think there is another downside to automation. I think that we have run into an intrinsic limit of human nature. Humans, like other animals, are adapted to taking some kind of activity that ensures their survival. Horses, for example, graze and wander. Give a horse a choice between being fed in a stable or being outdoors it will choose outdoors, even in bad weather. Monkeys will forage, act as a troop etc. Hunting animals will hunt.

Animals in zoos, adequately fed, show pathologized behavior bc they're bored. Zookeepers have to provide, "enrichment" activities.

People are the same way.

Screen time is no substitute for work that people feel is necessary, and for real social interactions - face to face dealings with people you can count on in a pinch.

The reason why we see such pathologized behavior is probably bc of lack of meaningful activity, which includes work. As intrinsically social animals (except for the sociopaths and psychopaths among us) "work" is our ticket to belonging in society, whether that's at a tribal or national level.

People have several natural inclinations. Being foragers and hunters, humans are adapted to using hands and eyes and mind together. Humans also have advanced abstract thinking and language skills, and some people have advanced visualization skills. Humans (most of us, anyway) are also intensely social. Engaging all of these strengths together would make people happier.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, April 6, 2024 8:41 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


The real question is, can Second have a single conversation without injecting Trump into it?


--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 12:24 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
The real question is, can Second have a single conversation without injecting Trump into it?


The question is, can SECOND have a single conversation?

The guy acts like an internet zombie who's been living in a dark room staring at a screen for years. That's why I keep advising him to get out into the fresh air and sunshine and DO SOMETHING he can be proud of. He'd feel a lot better for sure.

Unless he's just a natural born sociopath/ psychopath in which case he's kinda stuck with himself.

*****

Anyway, my point is that the United States can muddle along dysfunctionally and do as well as it has but ONLY WITH THE FOREBEARANCE OF THE REST OF THE WORLD. But it's like we're living on a giant international credit card that the rest of the world can cut off any moment.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 2:05 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Personally, I think if something happened that just destroyed all technology it would be the best thing to happen to the planet, including people.

What's it all done for anybody other than make life last twice as long and easy enough where we get to make up a bunch of problems. Maybe some other species out there could improve as technology improved, but we're not it.



As for the other countries cutting us off, I'm fine with that. It's not going to make their lives any better either.

We've got everything we need to live here. We need to cut everyone else off and fortify the defenses here. Let the rest of the world deal with their own problems.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 2:08 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Personally, I think if something happened that just destroyed all technology it would be the best thing to happen to the planet, including people.

There's a lot of technology I wouldn't want to do without, like fire, indoor plumbing, and air conditioning. What level of technology do you think would be more helpful, and what point does it become a hinderance?

Quote:

What's it all done for anybody other than make life last twice as long and easy enough where we get to make up a bunch of problems. Maybe some other species out there could improve as technology improved, but we're not it.


A large part of the problem is "who is making the decisions" to jump into a specific technology? Right now, it's venture capitalists, startups, and governments (including China) looking for The Next Big Thing to make $$$$. They don't care what the ultimate effect is.

Quote:

As for the other countries cutting us off, I'm fine with that. It's not going to make their lives any better either.

We've got everything we need to live here. We need to cut everyone else off and fortify the defenses here. Let the rest of the world deal with their own problems. [/

I agree that it would be better for us in the long run. But it would be a helluva transition. Altho we have a lot of resources we don't have the manufacturing capacity for even the most basic industries like steel- making. And TPTB won't invest in the USA. They'll just take their $$$ and convert it to whatever currency they can and speculate elsewhere, pretty much abandoning us. And our government, beholden to big $$$, would go along with it.

I imagine 20 years of giant clusterfuck, and it could easily go to outright tyranny, like what happened in Germany under Hitler. "Never let a good crisis go to waste " is the operating principal of our government, and this would be a crisis like we've never seen in our entire national history.

It would take a giant remake of our government and its policies, like what happened in Russia under Putin: half-nationalization (government is 51 -100% shareholder of oil, gas, weapons, civil aeronautics, mining, shipping and ship building, telecoms including satellites, banking and bank insurance, electric energy and nuclear power etc) by a government DETERMINED to rebuild America. Not just economically but socially.

Not the quislings who currently infest DC.

A political revolution, if not an actual one.

The next challenge after that is, having handed government a huge amount of power, keeping the government clean and honest.


-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 4:01 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Personally, I think if something happened that just destroyed all technology it would be the best thing to happen to the planet, including people.

There's a lot of technology I wouldn't want to do without, like fire, indoor plumbing, and air conditioning. What level of technology do you think would be more helpful, and what point does it become a hinderance?



I'm thinking anything that involves any sort of micro-processing. I think everything that you and I would want to live with would still be available to us once the withdrawal from all things internet wore off.

Quote:

Quote:

What's it all done for anybody other than make life last twice as long and easy enough where we get to make up a bunch of problems. Maybe some other species out there could improve as technology improved, but we're not it.


A large part of the problem is "who is making the decisions" to jump into a specific technology? Right now, it's venture capitalists, startups, and governments (including China) looking for The Next Big Thing to make $$$$. They don't care what the ultimate effect is.



We will never have responsible people in charge of technology. It's one of the reasons we shouldn't have it. Arguably the main reason.

Quote:

Quote:

As for the other countries cutting us off, I'm fine with that. It's not going to make their lives any better either.

We've got everything we need to live here. We need to cut everyone else off and fortify the defenses here. Let the rest of the world deal with their own problems. [/

I agree that it would be better for us in the long run. But it would be a helluva transition. Altho we have a lot of resources we don't have the manufacturing capacity for even the most basic industries like steel- making. And TPTB won't invest in the USA. They'll just take their $$$ and convert it to whatever currency they can and speculate elsewhere, pretty much abandoning us. And our government, beholden to big $$$, would go along with it.



None of the actual solutions to any of our problems are going to be painless and easy.

That's why nothing will ever be done until it's too late.



Quote:

I imagine 20 years of giant clusterfuck, and it could easily go to outright tyranny, like what happened in Germany under Hitler. "Never let a good crisis go to waste " is the operating principal of our government, and this would be a crisis like we've never seen in our entire national history.

It would take a giant remake of our government and its policies, like what happened in Russia under Putin: half-nationalization (government is 51 -100% shareholder of oil, gas, weapons, civil aeronautics, mining, shipping and ship building, telecoms including satellites, banking and bank insurance, electric energy and nuclear power etc) by a government DETERMINED to rebuild America. Not just economically but socially.

Not the quislings who currently infest DC.

A political revolution, if not an actual one.

The next challenge after that is, having handed government a huge amount of power, keeping the government clean and honest.



That's why I'll just keep doing what I'm doing and focusing on things I have control over. The wrong people are always going to be in control of everything. Why spend my time worrying about that? I feel bad for anybody with kids who have a reason to though.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 4:06 PM

JAYNEZTOWN


I think maybe Rival Counties and Parish in a game or bid, Family Business vs other business, the Competition, an enterprise created by workers, individuals, stockholders, shareholders and designers in contest against other Corporations in a Free and Fair market...not crony capitalism, but both Big and Small Business and the States running against each other to see who have the best ideas and all of that is a fine idea but 'Compliance'...misconduct delinquency troublemaking revolt DO NOT COMPLY! the Compiance termis not a word I would use, its just too much for me, and describe the wrong stuff like a stubborn angry creature freaking out in the animal kingdom

I don't normally agree with Jimmy Kimmel

but he's correct the West is becoming a filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole

while other places are CLEAN and FUNCTIONAL
the sh**-hole remark by Trump?



If Trump said that...soon it might have to add USA and other Western nations to the list of 'Countries'



NOTIFY: N   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 6:26 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Jimmy Kimmel also said that people who didn't get a Covid vaccination should be denied life-saving medical treatment.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 8:33 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Also though, my neighborhood is fine. I live in a Republican ran state and I'm 150 miles away from Democrat shithole Indianapolis. We don't have bums living out on the street and shit and hypodermic needles lying around everywhere.

It's not as if the entire country is becoming a "filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole". But there are very large pockets containing a very large portion of the electorate that live in such places.

At least, for now, it hasn't bled very much into the suburbs.



--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 10:50 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Also though, my neighborhood is fine. I live in a Republican ran state and I'm 150 miles away from Democrat shithole Indianapolis. We don't have bums living out on the street and shit and hypodermic needles lying around everywhere.

It's not as if the entire country is becoming a "filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole". But there are very large pockets containing a very large portion of the electorate that live in such places.

At least, for now, it hasn't bled very much into the suburbs.

It is revealing that Trumptard-controlled states strongly tend to have lower incomes compared to Democrat controlled.

Map Reveals States Where People Earn Most, Least Money
Published Apr 04, 2024 at 11:31 AM EDT
https://www.newsweek.com/map-states-rich-poor-earn-money-1886945

In a Trumptard-controlled state like Texas, most of the economic activity is in the counties controlled by the Democrats, not the Trumptards:
Biden-voting counties equal 70% of America’s economy. What does this mean for the nation’s political-economic divide?
By Mark Muro, Eli Byerly-Duke, Yang You, and Robert Maxim | November 10, 2020
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/biden-voting-counties-equal-70-of-a
mericas-economy-what-does-this-mean-for-the-nations-political-economic-divide
/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at
https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 11:05 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Economic performance is stronger when Democrats hold the White House

By Josh Bivens • April 2, 2024

https://www.epi.org/publication/econ-performance-pres-admin/

Summary: The economy performs much better during Democratic presidential administrations than during Republican ones.

Key findings

• Since 1949, there has been a Democratic advantage in the average performance of key macroeconomic indicators measuring economic health, including:
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth
Job growth
Unemployment rate
Growth in inflation-adjusted wages
Growth of market-based incomes per capita
Inflation
Interest rates

• This Democratic advantage is across the board in all variables we measure but strongest in private-sector outcomes—notably, business investment, job growth, and the growth of market-based incomes.

• Household income growth (adjusted for inflation) was faster on average and far more equal during Democratic administrations, and the Democratic advantage shows up for every group.

Why this matters

We suspect that the simple facts on economic performance during Democratic and Republican administrations aren’t well known. Providing accurate economic information at a time of rampant misinformation supports an informed citizenry.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at
https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, April 7, 2024 11:36 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Also though, my neighborhood is fine. I live in a Republican ran state and I'm 150 miles away from Democrat shithole Indianapolis. We don't have bums living out on the street and shit and hypodermic needles lying around everywhere.

It's not as if the entire country is becoming a "filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole". But there are very large pockets containing a very large portion of the electorate that live in such places.

At least, for now, it hasn't bled very much into the suburbs.

It is revealing that Trumptard-controlled states strongly tend to have lower incomes compared to Democrat controlled.



It's not revealing of what you're thinking it is.

The average apartment rent for a 2 bedroom apartment in Indiana in 2022 was $814 per month. The same year it was $1,538 in California for the same 2 bedroom apartment.

https://ipropertymanagement.com/research/average-rent-by-year

People in California who rent an apartment need to earn nearly twice as much as the same people in Indiana who want to keep housing costs at 30% of their income.

No wonder idiots that work as adults at fast food companies need to make at least $20/hr in California in order to survive. If we pretend that Federal/State taxes and Social Security/Medicare doesn't exist and pretend that a $20/hr employee gets to keep all $20/hr they make, they've got to work 76.9 hours in a month just to pay their apartment rent. So you know that after taxes they're working more than two weeks per month just to pay the rent with no equity built up.

And they're likely not allowed to work more than 30 hours per week anyhow, since they're very unlikely a full time employee with health insurance or other benefits unless they're in management. So unless they have a 2nd job, they're working almost 3 weeks out of the month to pay for their apartment rent.

Nearly everything else in California is twice as expensive too. Don't try to deny that. These people aren't making twice as much and banking it. They're not making twice as much and having twice as good of a life buying twice the amount of shit they don't need even. What money they manage to keep by not paying twice as much for the same things they're giving to the state and local government in higher taxes on literally everything.



And as a bonus we don't have the trash companies going on strike all the time so our trash always gets picked up on time. And our street sweepers still keep everything clean since they still work because they haven't been jammed up with hypodermic needles and human shit. Oh... and we don't have drug addicts and alcoholics jerking off in the middle of the streets in broad daylight or people running up to white women and punching them in the face, which is a nice plus. That might have nothing at all to do with the fact that our police actually make arrests and put people in jail too. Most of the degenerates in society just tend to flock to Democrat ran shitholes.

Gee... I wonder why that is?




--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Tuesday, April 9, 2024 1:34 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by JAYNEZTOWN:
I think maybe Rival Counties and Parish in a game or bid, Family Business vs other business, the Competition, an enterprise created by workers, individuals, stockholders, shareholders and designers in contest against other Corporations in a Free and Fair market...not crony capitalism, but both Big and Small Business and the States running against each other to see who have the best ideas and all of that is a fine idea but 'Compliance'...misconduct delinquency troublemaking revolt DO NOT COMPLY! the Compiance termis not a word I would use, its just too much for me, and describe the wrong stuff like a stubborn angry creature freaking out in the animal kingdom

I don't normally agree with Jimmy Kimmel

but he's correct the West is becoming a filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole

while other places are CLEAN and FUNCTIONAL


If Trump said that...soon it might have to add USA and other Western nations to the list of 'Countries'



Just to get back to this....

First of all, I would eliminate the stocks and stockholders. IN THEORY, making a number of people part owners would give them, you would think, a vested interest in how the company is run. IN PRACTICE, stocks values are determined by speculators who can choose between stock futures, Treasuries, and commodities futures, and stock holders are more interested in speculating than making their company function. So companies are run with an eye to stock prices, which disorts their internal policies.

But I did a mental experiment in which ALL production is run by cooperatives i.e. where all employees are part owners of the company and there are no outside owners. In a milieu of employee-run companies (cooperatives), there is nothing preventing a particularly astute and aggressive cooperative from automating heavily and taking over the market. You would probably still wind up with a sector being dominated by one large monopolistic, heavily automated cooperative and the benefits accruing to a small number of people with a vested interest in filling their pockets to the detriment of workers and consumers everywhere. Because there is nothing preventing it, and monopolies are highly efficient, benefit from economies of scale, and can eliminate potential competition.

So in order to prevent large monopoplies from forming, there has to be some FORMAL LEGAL limit to company size, probably in dollar amount. And there might have to be some formal limit on automation and possibly on profits as well.

The conundrum comes in that some enterprises work best on a national scale and are "natural monopolies" like telecomm, highways, riverways, etc. Or at least need national or international interoperability. Rail lines need a common gage (a problem in early railways), electric grid, telecomms, even such things as grades of steel, piped nat gas, or cement.

SOME things, like electric grids, need to be coordinated on a regional basis to prevent local shortages from turning into regional blackouts, for example.

So creating a host of smaller startups - even cooperatives- won't prevent to problems of monopolies and automation from recurring.


-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Tuesday, April 9, 2024 3:19 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by JAYNEZTOWN:
I think maybe Rival Counties and Parish in a game or bid, Family Business vs other business, the Competition, an enterprise created by workers, individuals, stockholders, shareholders and designers in contest against other Corporations in a Free and Fair market...not crony capitalism, but both Big and Small Business and the States running against each other to see who have the best ideas and all of that is a fine idea but 'Compliance'...misconduct delinquency troublemaking revolt DO NOT COMPLY! the Compiance termis not a word I would use, its just too much for me, and describe the wrong stuff like a stubborn angry creature freaking out in the animal kingdom

I don't normally agree with Jimmy Kimmel

but he's correct the West is becoming a filthy disgusting schizo degenerate sh**hole

while other places are CLEAN and FUNCTIONAL


If Trump said that...soon it might have to add USA and other Western nations to the list of 'Countries'



Just to get back to this....

First of all, I would eliminate the stocks and stockholders. IN THEORY, making a number of people part owners would give them, you would think, a vested interest in how the company is run. IN PRACTICE, stocks values are determined by speculators who can choose between stock futures, Treasuries, and commodities futures, and stock holders are more interested in speculating than making their company function. So companies are run with an eye to stock prices, which disorts their internal policies.



Truth.

Quote:

But I did a mental experiment in which ALL production is run by cooperatives i.e. where all employees are part owners of the company and there are no outside owners. In a milieu of employee-run companies (cooperatives), there is nothing preventing a particularly astute and aggressive cooperative from automating heavily and taking over the market. You would probably still wind up with a sector being dominated by one large monopolistic, heavily automated cooperative and the benefits accruing to a small number of people with a vested interest in filling their pockets to the detriment of workers and consumers everywhere. Because there is nothing preventing it, and monopolies are highly efficient, benefit from economies of scale, and can eliminate potential competition.


I was thinking the same thing while reading your first sentence here, so I'm glad you got to that right away too. I've been involved in quite a few buyouts over the years. There's no room for allegiance to anything in that environment. If you don't immediately fall in line with the new ownership/direction of the company and you don't go out of your way to prove to them why you even deserve to keep your position or even a further offer of employment when there usually is so much overlap and redundancy after a merger... you're gone. They have developed many means of figuring out exactly who is going to keep their jobs when this happens. A lot of it is through social engineering, and when a large percentage of a group all the sudden realizes that they're part of a bigger group that is now too big, it's a lot easier to manipulate the behaviors of people who want and/or need to do whatever is necessary to maintain their place in the herd.

Even if you gave employees the ability to become invested in the company and speculators from the outside couldn't gamble and profit off of human labor within the company, they would never be given enough share in the company where all of them combined would have any influence over such mergers or other high-up decisions that would negatively impact all those employee shareholders.

Quote:

So in order to prevent large monopoplies from forming, there has to be some FORMAL LEGAL limit to company size, probably in dollar amount. And there might have to be some formal limit on automation and possibly on profits as well.


I don't really know how into specifics they've gotten on the issue, but we can't even get our elected representatives on either side of the aisle to prevent further monopolies and then break up any existing ones. We've got laws on the books that just aren't enforced.

Quote:

The conundrum comes in that some enterprises work best on a national scale and are "natural monopolies" like telecomm, highways, riverways, etc. Or at least need national or international interoperability. Rail lines need a common gage (a problem in early railways), electric grid, telecomms, even such things as grades of steel, piped nat gas, or cement.

SOME things, like electric grids, need to be coordinated on a regional basis to prevent local shortages from turning into regional blackouts, for example.



I think that this could still be done extremely well on a small business scale as long as communications between businesses remains excellent and a merit based system ensures that the most capable to handle these responsibilities are the ones in charge instead of mopping floors.

Actually, you could probably create a new business that didn't exist in the past. A sort of "Regional Liaison Service" which would employ individuals who excelled at making and maintaining the human parts of the machine. Of course, something like this would probably be a bad idea from the start though since it would probably end up being run by government bureaucracy that just starts forcing a lot of rules and regulations and make the system as expensive and inefficient as it is right now.


Quote:

So creating a host of smaller startups - even cooperatives- won't prevent to problems of monopolies and automation from recurring.



No. I don't think any system could be put in place that was just perfect without the ability to ever crumble. At least not one run by humans anyhow.

Eternal Vigilance and all that. It's the only way to stop it or even slow it down.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Tuesday, April 9, 2024 11:56 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Something that libertarians fail to take into account. They think that by reaffirming that all people own themselves and violence is forbidden from extracting exploitative agreements, everything will be peachy keen and we'll reach utopia. They don't realize that market forces create crushingly powerful entities that steamroll entire nations.

I used to discuss this with GEEZER ... that successful small companies that grow midsized will be bought up by giants bc the ONE THING that any big business hates is competition. Every example he came up with ... the two that I remember specifically were Ben$Jerry's and Burt's Bees... turned out to have been bought up.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Wednesday, April 10, 2024 12:17 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Something that libertarians fail to take into account. They think that by reaffirming that all people own themselves and violence is forbidden from extracting exploitative agreements, everything will be peachy keen and we'll reach utopia. They don't realize that market forces create crushingly powerful entities that steamroll entire nations.

I used to discuss this with GEEZER ... that successful small companies that grow midsized will be bought up by giants bc the ONE THING that any big business hates is competition. Every example he came up with ... the two that I remember specifically were Ben$Jerry's and Burt's Bees... turned out to have been bought up.

-----------
"It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal." - Henry Kissinger

Why SECOND'S posts are brainless: "I clocked how much time: no more than 10 minutes per day. With cut-and-paste (Ctrl C and Ctrl V) and AI, none of this takes much time."
Or, any verification or thought.




Yeah. Me personally, it's the loss of all those small companies in the video game industry.

There's a reason why the 90's were "edgy" and that mentality peaked and has nearly disappeared in the span of 25 years.

For a few decades when it was a hobby thing that just a fraction of the population enjoyed, there were small companies that were always taking risks and bringing new ideas to the surface. They all bought each other up and now there's only really a few big ones left that are just as formulaic about what they put out as Hollywood is.

Once they get that big, the only move they have is to always play it safe and be on the defensive, because the only way to go is down.

--------------------------------------------------

Political correctness is just tyranny, with a smiley face.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

OTHER TOPICS

DISCUSSIONS
In the garden, and RAIN!!! (2)
Mon, April 29, 2024 13:13 - 3577 posts
14 Tips To Reduce Tears and Remove Smells When Cutting Onions
Mon, April 29, 2024 13:12 - 14 posts
Russia Invades Ukraine. Again
Mon, April 29, 2024 11:15 - 6331 posts
Grifter Donald Trump Has Been Indicted And Yes Arrested; Four Times Now And Counting. Hey Jack, I Was Right
Mon, April 29, 2024 10:14 - 805 posts
Elections; 2024
Mon, April 29, 2024 08:39 - 2316 posts
Russian War Crimes In Ukraine
Mon, April 29, 2024 00:31 - 17 posts
Another Putin Disaster
Sun, April 28, 2024 21:09 - 1514 posts
Russia, Jeff Sessions
Sun, April 28, 2024 21:07 - 128 posts
Scientific American Claims It Is "Misinformation" That There Are Just Two Sexes
Sun, April 28, 2024 21:06 - 25 posts
Dangerous Rhetoric coming from our so-called President
Sun, April 28, 2024 18:10 - 2 posts
You can't take the sky from me, a tribute to Firefly
Sun, April 28, 2024 18:06 - 294 posts
Russian losses in Ukraine
Sun, April 28, 2024 02:03 - 1016 posts

FFF.NET SOCIAL