Intel's Ronler Acres Plant

Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend

Showing posts with label Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Society. Show all posts

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Groups of People Working Together

North American Petroleum Pipelines
Foundation of our civilization

Groups of people working together, commonly called 'businesses' or 'companies', is what makes our modern life possible. Some people like to complain about businesses by using phrases like 'they aren't fair' or they are 'making obscene profits'. Businesses are not the problem. The problem is that we don't have enough people organizing groups of people into productive enterprises. I dunno, maybe it's not possible to have everyone working. Or maybe the people who aren't working don't want to work. Well, sure, there are people who don't want to work, but the problem right now it that there are a large number of people who want to work, but can't find meaningful employment, and by meaningful, I mean a job that pays a decent wage and is not soul-crushing. Just how much a decent wage is is open to debate, likewise how much soul-crushing a person can tolerate is also variable. More money can alleviate some of that soul-crushing, at least for a while.

The big problem is that people can be disagreeable. Getting a group of people to work together requires a cerain force of personality. A thick skin may also be necessary. We complain about politicians being corrupt, or stupid or in league with the devil, but they are the ones who are willing to wade into swamp and deal with all the other swamp creatures. I sometimes think I should give it a try, but that takes energy, and at this point in my life, this blog takes all my creative energy.

But you should give it a try. You can't be any worse than any of the morons who currently inhabit the swamp of politics.

If the economy gets too bad, you start getting rabble rousers calling on the downtrodden to rise up and then you get revolutions and wars. Are people in warmer climates more sensitive to slights? More likely to take offense? Is that why countries in the tropics suffer from wars and revolutions more frequently? Or is it that clear thinking in warmer climes is in short supply?


Monday, December 23, 2024

India: It’s Worse Than You Think

Indians

This is quite the story. The author has a very low opinion of his fellow Indians. I copied the opening paragraphs here. The article is quite a bit longer. It was taken from a speech by the author. You can listen to it here.


Most Westerners know nothing about India beyond vague ideas about Hinduism, yoga, gurus, and maybe a dash of Bollywood. To such people, this article will be a rude awakening.

I grew up in Bhopal in central India. Since as early as I can remember, I worked in my father’s printing press. I studied engineering in the nearby city in Indore and went to Manchester Business School in Britain to do an MBA. I returned to India to set up a subsidiary of a British company, which was a huge success. When I lived in Delhi, I wrote for the mainstream Indian media. I traveled widely in India and around the world.

I had first returned to India with the idea of improving it, but after 11 years, I realized that India was a sinking ship, with worsening and increasingly shameless corruption, degraded people, and a society that was falling apart. I had never met an honest bureaucrat or politician. I applied to emigrate to Canada and my application was approved in a record three weeks.

I now advise East Asian and Western corporations on investing in India. Most of what I tell them sounds to them exaggerated, unrealistic, and unbelievable. After much dance, drama, and a great deal of lost money, they begin to believe what I tell them. However, this learning is never institutionalized because of a refusal to understand India. This is a form of political correctness, a poison eating away the innards of Western values.

Saturday, November 16, 2024

America’s new caste system

Interesting take on the hostility shown in the recent political campaign:

America’s new caste system - The education gap has dented democracy by Mark Lilla

He starts off quoting the opening paragraphs from Tocqueville’s Democracy in America:

“Of all the novel things which attracted my attention during my stay in the United States, none struck me more forcibly than the equality of conditions. I had no difficulty in discovering the extraordinary influence this fundamental fact exerts upon the progress of society; it sets up a particular direction to public attitudes, a certain style to the laws, fresh guidelines to governing authorities, and distinctive habits to those governed.

“Soon I came to recognise that this very fact extends its influence well beyond political customs and laws; it exercises no less power over civil society than it does over the government. It forms opinion, creates feelings, proposes ways of acting, and transforms anything it does not directly instigate itself.”

Friday, October 25, 2024

The Cobra Effect: Why Good Intentions Don’t Solve Problems


The Cobra Effect: Why Good Intentions Don’t Solve Problems - Konstantin Kisin
Triggernometry

Couldn't have said it better myself. The last minute and a half is an ad for gold, just so you know.


Tuesday, October 15, 2024

GIGO


Garbage In, Garbage Out – George Carlin on Politicians and the Public
Harry McKenzie

Is a new president going to make any difference? One can hope, but I wouldn't count on it.

The European View

Sarah A. Hoyt gives us a snapshot of European attitudes:

A Glimpse in Passing

Anyway, one of the scariest things about the trip to Portugal was talking to people and realizing they’re living in an alternate reality.

You know, all the things that the Junta has tried to sell, and push? From “We’re in a booming economy” to “Biden is a patriot who stepped down to save the nation” to “Trump is a criminal” to “The refugee crisis is the result of global warming” ALL OF IT is being bought wholesale in Europe.

Of course, there are a great number of people here in the USA who are buying all the same bullshit. Depressing.

 

The Deep State

From Doug Casey's International Man:

Deep State and Outsiders in Power

The Deep State and the 2024 Election by Nick Giambruno

The Deep State is the permanently entrenched bureaucracy that really runs a country.

It is THE establishment.

While the Deep State concept is commonly associated with the US government, many other countries have their own versions.

Looking at what happens in those countries when an outsider comes to power can help us better understand what the Deep State might do in the US.

If an outsider somehow comes to power, there are three possible outcomes:

  1. The Deep State kills the outsider.
  2. The outsider succeeds in crippling the Deep State and can implement an independent agenda.
  3. The Deep State co-opts the outsider.

Numerous examples of this dynamic have played out in different countries in recent history.

He continues with examples of all three situations and then he talks about the election and what might happen if Trump wins.

 

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Cousin Marriages

Sweden to ban cousin marriages to combat honor oppression and health risks by Thomas Brooke

Caught my eye because I just read that the banning of cousin marriages started before 1300.

Honor oppression is a term that covers much of what is wrong with Moslem and some Asian cultures:

Honor oppression is a type of crime that aims to maintain a group's values and norms around honor, shame, and dishonor. It can include a variety of crimes, such as: Abuse, Child marriage, Illegal threats, and Sexual crimes.

Older related posts:


Sunday, September 29, 2024

Middle Class

US Social Trust
Scale along left hand edge goes from 25 at the bottom to 60% at the top.

I sometimes wonder how the West got so far ahead of the rest of the world. This story offers an explanation:
How Easy Is It To Become Middle Class Now? by Charles Hughes Smith
If we want social / economic renewal, we have to make it straightforward for anyone willing to adopt the values and habits of "thrift, prudence, negotiation, and hard work" to climb the ladder to middle class security
How easy is it to climb the social mobility ladder into the middle class? It's a key question because the middle class is the ultimate source of social stability, innovation and democracy.

To answer this question, we must start with the rise of the middle class in Europe and the market economy which enabled that rise.

This article explores the specific cultural adaptations which set the stage for Europe's adoption of a market economy as the primary social-economic force, supplanting family and feudal ties.
When did Europe pull ahead? And why?
The author notes that Northern European economic expansion began in the 1300s, before the Protestant Reformation, the discovery of the Americas and before the printing press--all factors others have identified as key to Europe's rise to dominance.

He identifies the assimilation by Catholic Europe of two Northern European cultural traits--individualism and the ban on cousin marriages, which led to social trust extending beyond the immediate family-- as critical preconditions for the acceptance of a market economy.

He then adds a third condition: the suppression / elimination of violent males from the social order via harsh secular and religious punishment of evil-doers. Murder rates declined as the most violent were executed or imprisoned in large numbers.

Here are some key excerpts from the article:
"Those three causes--individualism, impersonal sociality, and a pacified environment--allowed the market economy to grow beyond its former limits.

'The Market' could thus spread farther and farther beyond the marketplace, replacing older forms of exchange and ultimately replacing kinship as the main organizing principle of society.

The English as a whole became more and more middle-class in their mindset: 'Thrift, prudence, negotiation, and hard work were becoming values for communities that previously had been spendthrift, impulsive, violent, and leisure loving.'

The Western world thus embarked on a trajectory of sustained economic growth. This is in contrast to what we see in other times and places, where economic growth tended to stall after a while and give way to stagnation or even contraction.

Western Christianity (which assimilated pagan characteristics of northern Europe) enabled 'the peace, order, and stability that allowed the middle class to expand and become dominant.'"
He goes on to talk about how things have changed recently and why.


Monday, September 23, 2024

Populism


Winston Marshall argues that populism is not a threat democracy, but rather is democracy itself 6/6
OxfordUnion


Saturday, September 21, 2024

Gossip

In Black Sails, season 1, episode 2, pirate Captain Flint pays a visit to Richard Guthrie, the pirate's fence and face to the legitimate business world. Royal Navy Captain Hume shows up unannounced and we have this bit of dialog:

Servant: Captain Hume of His Majesty's Ship the Scarborough.

Richard: Captain Hume. You've caught me at business. I must ask you to return another day.

Hume: My apologies, Mr. Guthrie. May I ask what sort of business? 

Richard: I'm sorry?

Hume: I asked what sort of business you're conducting with these men.

Richard: Sugar merchants from the colonies with business I'd just as soon conclude without interruption. So please, if you'll excuse us.

Hume: Tell me something, Mr. Guthrie. Do you have gossip here?

Richard: Gossip?

Hume: I've often wondered if it can survive in so remote a location. You see, gossip is what holds civilization together. It reinforces shame. And without shame, well, the world is a very dangerous place.

Don't think I've ever heard gossip described in a positive light. People do thrive on it, some more than others. If you are running a political campaign you need to take it into account. Probably why I'm not out on the campaign trail. I avoid gossip so I expect most people find me anti-social, and they're right.

Oh yeah, the scene? It turns into a melee when Hume attempts to arrest Richard.

P. S. I started looking for this scene on Netflix, but then I wondered if maybe a transcript was available and there is. Shoot, there are mutiple websites that have transcripts for shows. I'll be durned.

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Age of Rage

Democrat Congressman Preston Brooks beats Republican Senator  Charles Sumner, 1856

Even in the best of times, there are always going to be a few nut cases. It does seem like the there have been more cases lately of people losing their cool / their minds / going berserk, or maybe I've just been hearing about it more. Whatever, this story is a little disturbing.

Age of Rage: 26 Million Americans Believe Political Violence is Justified by Jonathan Turley

A poll released by the University of Chicago via the Chicago Project on Security and Threats offers a chilling account of the growing radicalism in America, particularly after the second foiled assassination attempt of former president Donald Trump, the poll found that 26 million Americans believe “the use of force” is justified to keep Trump from regaining the presidency.

As discussed in my book, “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage,” we have seen an increasing level of rage rhetoric in our political system. For some, violent language can become violent action. There is a normalization that can occur as extreme actions become more acceptable to more and more citizens:

“We are living in an age of rage. It permeates every aspect of our society and politics. Rage is liberating, even addictive. It allows us to say and do things that we would ordinarily avoid, even denounce in others. Rage is often found at the farthest extreme of reason. For those who agree with the underlying message, it is righteous and passionate. For those who disagree, it is dangerous and destabilizing.”

With the unrelenting claims of President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and others that democracy is about to die in America, some now feel a license to commit criminal acts in the name of “saving democracy.”

It is the ultimate form of self-delusion that one saves democracy by committing political violence against those with whom you disagree.

He goes on at length giving us numerous examples of supposedly intelligent, reasonable people, losing their minds and lashing out in an irresponsible if not down right criminal manner. Somebody needs to bring the smack down on these fools.

 

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Drunk Driving

Curious story:

Drunk Driving

How the war on drunk driving was won
 by Nick Cowen
Deterrence alone might not stop crime. But, as the campaign against drunk driving shows, it could help create the norms that do.

Via Detroit Steve

 

Monday, August 19, 2024

What do you know?

Yesterday there was a story in The Oregonian about QAnon. (Original from Washington Post, book review of  The Quiet Damage by Jesselyn Cook) It was a little silly. Lady reads goofball stuff on the internet and takes it to heart. So what? There have always been people who believe weird, even unbelievable stuff. I'm thinking that maybe this is where all these campaigns against disinformation got started - if you could stop the sources of these fairy tales, people would stop believing them, everyone would start believe the correct things and the world would be full of flowers and unicorns. But that's not going to happen. You cut off the supply of nonsense, a new wellspring of fairy tales will erupt somewhere else. I don't understand why it happens, but talking to people convinces me that it does. Some people are gullible, some people are not smart enough to tell truth from fiction, and some people are just crazy. And wherever there are listeners, there are going to be people willing to fill their ears with gibberish.


Friday, August 9, 2024

Foxes and Lions

This story is about the UK but it could be applied to every country in the West. Stolen entire from Unherd. It's great.

The Machiavellian cause of Britain’s disorder - The country is ruled by weak and effete foxes

N.S. Lyons, August 10, 2024

While the UK’s recent spate of rioting reflects decades of pent-up public frustration with the country’s governing elite, particularly over mass immigration, they also represent something else. They are a signal that the British elite’s whole strategy of governing is beginning to break down. And that carries significant implications.

To understand why, we need to take a brief detour back about five centuries — to Florence and the writings of Niccolò Machiavelli. He identified two archetypical psychological profiles of people who become leaders: the cunning but weak fox, who can outmanoeuvre his opponents but is “defenceless against wolves”; and the strong and brave lion, who likes to fight and can scare off wolves, but who is “defenceless against traps”. Machiavelli argued that a true statesman must embody both personalities, or risk destruction.

A distant student of Machiavelli, fellow Italian political theorist Vilfredo Pareto, would later expand the metaphor further. Observing history, he noted that the rise and fall of states and civilisations could be matched to a cyclical pattern in the collective personality of their ruling classes.

Nations are founded by lions, who are a society’s natural warrior class — its jocks, so to speak. They establish and expand a kingdom’s borders at the point of a sword, pacifying external enemies. Like Sparta’s Lycurgus or Rome’s Augustus, their firm hand often also puts an end to internal strife and establishes (or re-establishes) the rule of law. Their authority can be dictatorial, but it is relatively honest and straightforward in nature. They value directness and the clarity of combat. They are comfortable with the use of raw force, and open about their willingness to use it, whether against criminals or enemies. They have a firm sense of the distinction between enemies and friends in general — of who is part of the family and who is a prowling wolf to be guarded against. The security and stability they establish is what allows the nation to grow into prosperity.

Security and prosperity produce a proliferation of foxes. Foxes are unsuited to and deeply uncomfortable with the employment of force; they prefer intellectual and rhetorical combat, because they’re nerds. They will use physical force if necessary, but prefer to disguise its nature and are prone to use it ineptly. The brainy and cosmopolitan foxes have talents the lions don’t, however: they are good at managing complexity and scale, navigating the nuances of diplomatic alliances, or extracting profits from an extensive empire.

As long as peace prevails, civilisations come increasingly to morally prize the indirect and diplomatic methods of foxes and to avoid and indeed abhor the strength and violence of lions. As states grow larger and more complex, establishing new layers of bureaucracy, law and procedure, this quickly favours the Byzantine organising and scheming of foxes. In comparison, lions are inarticulate and unprepared for the traps of more underhanded mammals. So eventually, a wholesale replacement of the elite occurs: the lions who founded the nation are pushed out of its leadership, marginalised and excluded by a class of foxes who see them as brutish relics of a barbaric age.

But a curious thing then happens, Pareto observed: the instability of societies overly dominated by foxes begins to increase relentlessly. The foxes, reluctant to properly distinguish and identify real threats or to openly employ force even when necessary, find themselves defenceless against wolves both internal and external. When faced with escalating challenges, the foxes tend to resort to doubling down on their preferred strategy of misdirection and manipulation, and attempt to bury or buy off threats rather than confronting them directly. This does nothing to solve problems that require the firm use of force, or the threat of it, such as keeping packs of wolves on the other side of the borders. Eventually, when things get bad enough, foxes may desperately lash out with violence, but do so indecisively, ham-fistedly, or in entirely the wrong direction. The wolves, for their part, can instinctively smell weakness and just keep coming.

Like the rest of the West, Britain has been ruled for decades by an effete managerial elite whose system of technocratic control is absolutely characteristic of foxes. There could be no better example of this than how the Government has attempted to manage immigration and the ethnic tensions it has brought with it.

“Britain has been ruled for decades by an effete managerial elite whose system of technocratic control is absolutely characteristic of foxes.”

It has attempted to manage the perception of it, in classic fox-like fashion, via careful control of media and online information. Those who continue to speak out on the issue are then smeared with reputation-destroying labels such as “racist”, “xenophobic”, or “far-Right” in order to deflect others from listening to them. This reflects foxes’ consistent instinct to turn first and foremost to information warfare and narrative manipulation over direct confrontation. Hence the immediate reaction to the latest riots: to blame them on “misinformation” and “unregulated social media”. The implication being that nothing at all would be amiss if the information common people had access to could just be better suppressed.

This controlling instinct is also reflected in the UK’s “Neighbourhood Policing” model, which, as Aris Roussinos has noted, makes state-managed avoidance of ethnic conflict the top priority of the police forces. In practice, this means deploying police to swiftly shut down anything that might provoke unsightly public disturbances in minority ethnic communities, such as “openly Jewish” men walking too near pro-Palestine demonstrations, people criticising Hamas, or Englishmen holding the English flag. Meanwhile, inciting rhetoric and open violence committed by the same ethnic communities is met with studious non-confrontation or polite de-escalation in order to avoid upsetting “community relations”.

This means British police now operate much less like a conventional crime-solving and deterrent force, as Ed West has pointed out, and far “more like that of a colonial [police] force, charged with preventing community relations from spilling over into violence”, while keeping multi-cultural imperial possessions  stable despite the natives’ displeasure.

The British elite’s habitual reliance on these techniques of information control and relationship micromanagement have combined most spectacularly in the Home Office’s “controlled spontaneity” programme, which aims to pre-empt any backlash to terrorist attacks and violent crimes by “pre-planning social media campaigns which are designed to appear to be a spontaneous public response to attacks”, such as candle-lit inter-faith vigils and people handing out flowers “in apparently unprompted gestures of love and support”. This is of course all a façade that government “contingency planners” and their “civil society” partners rush to impose in order to, as Roussinos writes, “present an image of depoliticised community solidarity” meant to head off any potential escalation of ethnic tensions and violence. Or as one planner described it, the whole effort is intended to serve as “an anaesthetic for the community”.

The result is what Matthew Crawford has noted is essentially government by psyop, or soft managerialism. The ruling elite, Labour and Tory wings alike, would rather try to manage the British public’s whole perception of reality than ever use force to stop illegal immigration, actual police crime, or attempt — in the longer-term — to salvage the cratering popular legitimacy of their regime. Such is the way of the fox.

But this way now seems to be reaching its inevitable failure point. The explosion of violence in the streets is proof enough of that. Pareto and Machiavelli would not be surprised, as this is exactly how just about every other fox-ruled regime in history eventually collapsed.

So, what is likely to happen next in Britain? We should first expect the foxes to immediately double-down on soft managerialism, including by restricting even further the digital information space, expanding surveillance and financial restrictions, and using the techniques of obfuscation and manipulation to control dissent — all of which Keir Starmer has already committed to doing.

His government has also already demonstrated its willingness to lash out with naked force against the disgruntled “far-Right” that it blames for disturbing the peace (doubtless along with the broader political opposition). And we should certainly expect to see more of this in the future. But the flailing response, and the resulting escalation in Britain’s state of anarcho-tyranny (“law and order for thee, but not for them”), will hardly solve the deeper problems driving the nation further into chaos.

That would take lions. But the foxes of the Western elite are even more scared of lions than they are of wolves — and perhaps for good reason: again and again in history, the oligarchic rule of foxes tends to end when the people finally get fed up enough to turn to a lion to save them from wolves.

Friday, August 2, 2024

Empire of Lies

George Carlin's First Rule

JMSmith explains how the dirty commies work. He uses a couple of fancy words. I had to look them up.

    anamnesis - the remembering of things from a supposed previous existence (often used with reference to Platonic philosophy).
  • epigones - a less distinguished follower or imitator of someone, especially an artist or philosopher. "the epigone's habit of exaggerating his master's voice"

Here's his post: 

Remembrance False and Otherwise
“I cannot forget that widely organized lying about the past which is one of the chief activities of the epigones.”
Leon Trotsky, My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography (1930)*
The key word in the foregoing sentence is organized. There will always be adventitious lying about the past, as there will always be historical untruths engendered by lazy ignorance, wishful thinking, and the natural human love of spouting off; but organized lying about the past is altogether different.

Organized lying is altogether different because it aims to permanently alter collective memory, and organized lying works because a false collective memory is engendered and sustained by repetition. More particularly by repetition that appears unorganized. Organized lying (propaganda) works to the degree it infiltrates everyday discourse and is unwittingly passed along by dupes in their casual conversations.

We find shills more persuasive than salesmen because we do not see that the shill has an interest in selling us what the shill is in fact selling us. This is because his sales pitch is disguised as a casual remark, and in this disguise slips past our skeptical sales resistance. But a salesman must share his commission with his shill, so he seeks to recruit shills who will spread the disguised sales pitch unwittingly and for free. These second-order shills are the dupes who, unbeknownst to themselves, pitch sales in their casual conversation.

It is important to remember that organized lying includes organized silences, and that the power of organized silences also comes from repetition. When circumstances repeatedly demand that a memory be publicly recalled, and when that memory is instead repeatedly not recalled, private recall of that memory begins to fail. This is one aspect of what we now call gaslighting. It is very hard for a man to keep a memory if others do not recall and confirm that memory when circumstances demand that that memory be recalled and confirmed.

Christ instituted the eucharist because he knew that a conspiracy of organized lying and silences would try to put the memory of Christ “down the memory hole,” as George Orwell would say. “Do this,” Christ said, “in remembrance of me.” The conspiracy that St. John called the Synagogue of Satan would, Christ correctly foresaw, undertake organized lying and silences about the past. It would engender and sustain a false collective memory by means of repeated lies—mostly in the mouths of paid and unpaid shills—and by gaslighting silences that would cause Christians to believe they were losing their minds.

* * * * *
“The history of the church as written down by the medieval apologists is a model of scientific treatment compared with the historical investigations of the epigones.”
Leon Trotsky, My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography (1930)**
Epigones, as you know, are the mediocrities that follow in the train of a cultural or religious genius. Indeed, we call many epigones mediocrities only out of courtesy. Many lack the energy and wit that is required to discover that they are repeating the falsehoods of a conspiracy of organized lying, and many lack the conscience that is required to feel shame if they did, by some accident, make this discovery. These epigones are just obedient functionaries—what Trotsky called “apparatus men”—in the organized empire of lies.

The ”red pill” is what Eric Voegelin called anamenesis, the Platonic principle that knowledge is not so much discovered as unforgotten. The conspiracy of the empire of lies creates collective amnesia; anamnesis is the “red pill” by which memory is restored. Theodore Parker was a Platonist theologian who described anamnesis as
“a reminiscence of what the soul knew in a higher state of life before it took the body.”
A Christian articulation of the same idea might be:
“a reminiscence of what the soul knew in a higher state of life before it took the Fall.”
But my subject here is mundane historical anamnesis, the essence of which is:
“a reminiscence of what you once knew in an earlier state of life before the empire of lies.”

Saturday, July 27, 2024

Age of Majority


He didn’t stutter once.
Case

Still trying to figure out who this guy is. I posted about this earlier:

Seems that Ukraine has lowered the age for drafting men into the military has been lowered from 27 to 25. When we were fighting in Vietnam the draft age was 18. I haven't heard anyone explain this discrepancy, and I have no explanation myself. I just find it very odd.
 
Anyway, got me to wondering about why we use the age of 21 to mark when a person becomes an adult. Didn't find much, but I did find a couple of things.

Why 21?: A brief look into the history of the Minimum Legal Drinking Age (MLDA) - talking about the 19th and 20th century in the USA and Protestant religion.

THE ORIGINS OF THE 21ST BIRTHDAY
The origin of the 21st birthday actually came from a boy being groomed for knighthood. In medieval times, there were 3 stages to becoming a knight, all of which were 7 years apart;

    • 7 years old – The boy’s training begins as he becomes a page. Essentially a Knight’s servant, the boy would learn what was required to become a Knight while acting as a messenger and performing other basic servant duties.
    • 14 years old – The boy would become a Squire. The Squire’s primary duties would be as an armour and shield carrier, caretaker of the weapons and armour, and tasks like saddling the Knight’s horse. This was also the first time that the boy would be taken into battle with the Knight. Often acting as a flagbearer, the Squire would be given a chance to prove himself in battle. A Squire’s role would also involve ensuring the Knight had an honourable burial should he be felled in one of these battles.
    • 21 years old – Providing the boy succeeding in his two previous posts, he was officially dubbed a Knight at the age of 21. The Knight was a form of lower nobility and a trusted agent of a Monarch and a skilled fighter bound by a code of chivalric conduct. 

Lessons From The Drinking Age Experiment
For 600 years of English common law and throughout most of U.S. legal history, the age of 21 was regarded as the age of full adult status. Until 1971 the legal minimum voting age was 21 and many states maintained age 21 as their legal drinking age. It was not until the Vietnam War with the unpopular, forcible draft of disenfranchised 18-year-olds, that the age to vote in the U.S. was shifted downward to 18 by the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Update - dude in the video is Jesse 'The Body' Ventura, former professional wrestler and governor of Minnesota. Thanks to ColdSoldier.


 

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Sheep Herding

I've probably been down this rathole before, but I think I've got a new twist on it. Or it maybe it's an old twist and I've just forgotten about it. 

Propaganda is used to herd the sheep through the right door when they go to the poles. Most people are sheep, they have actual lives they are living, they aren't wasting their time on idle keyboard wars about shit they have no control over. Okay, I try to break free daily but the lure of thrill of a new bit of knowledge keeps sucking me back in.

The Clash playing Should I Stay or Should I Go?

Influencing a vast group of people who have almost no real interest in what you are saying is a problem well understood by Madison Avenue. The zillions spent on advertising result in messages being blared on the radio, television, smartphones, radio and social media. If you want to herd the sheep, you need an enormous media campaign to get the message out over as many channels as possible.

Ray Orbison singing Pretty Woman

One characteristic of people is their degree of socialization, that is, how strong is their desire to conform, and how much do they value their own thoughts? Reminds me of the old joke about the first robin of spring. The first robin shows up too early and it snows. He is sitting in the barnyard freezing his tuchus off. A cow wanders by and takes a dump right on top of the robin. The manure thaws out the robin. He starts feeling so good he pops his head up out the cow pie and starts singing. The cat (all barnyards have cats) hears the robin, jumps on him and bites his little head off. The moral of the story is that if you warm and comfy in a pile of shit, keep your mouth closed.

Nancy Sinatra singing These Boots are Made for Walking

Some people are seduced by logical thinking. We have always studied the ancient Greeks, the Bible, the law and now we even study math, logic and engineering. But not all of us, and even among those who do, not all would be willing to put their heretical thoughts up against society.

I want to blame the Republicans for allowing the Democrats to gain control of all the big media, but then I remember that while we have two different names for politicians they are really all members of the same party, the uniparty, the party of making fortunes by any means what-so-ever.

Reef Break by The Atlantics

Make no mistake, big business has done some great things for the people in this country. The problem is we are systematically pushing the fringe farther from the center. You get rejected enough and some people will just give up. Why bother trying if nothing you have tried has ever worked? Much of this is that we outsourced manufacturing to east Asia, notably China. Has all that manufacturing benefited the Chinese sheep? One would hope that some good came out of the ritual suicide of our manufacturing industry.

For a Few Dollars More (Main Title) by Solist de Orchestre del Cinema Italiano

At this point I hope the campaigns of perversion have overextended themselves and the pendulum might be beginning to swing back, maybe even to old Victorian standards. There was a reason those muthers were so strait laced - no one wanted to hear about your perversions, or your lack of perversion. You start talking about that shit and someone, no matter what you are talking about, will take offense and may even be repulsed by it. Do what you like in private but when you are out in public, keep your clothes on and your mouth shut.

I was listening to music while I wrote this so each time I finished a paragraph I wrote down the name of the tune that was currently playing. Probably took two or three songs to write each section, so what we have here is just a random sample.