Jul 052013
 

popoffWestern society seems far too lenient on those who harm others due to gross negligence. Far too often people are given a free pass because they “believe” something “deeply”. I was recently gladdened to see that parents who killed their child by resorting to “prayer” rather than going to a doctor were convicted of homicide.

In fairness, this is only a small first step. The true culprit, the man who should be in jail, is the clergyman or woo-peddler who convinced these parents that prayer was the correct course of action. That person (if s/he exists) is morally no better than the man who sold novelty golf-ball finders as bomb-detectors  to governments. Yet somehow he isn’t even prosecuted, whereas golf-ball-man is going to jail.

Usually the priests, homeopaths, anti-vaxxers, and other woo-peddlers avoid any prosecution because they are seen to “believe deeply” in the bullshit they are spouting. This is a terrible excuse. It’s my contention that even if a priest honestly believed that drinking poison gives you super X-Men powers, as someone in a position of authority giving that sort of advice he has a moral responsibility to know at least as much about how poison affects the typical human as a high-school graduate. I don’t give the smallest shit as to what he sincerely believed. Only what he can be reasonably expected to know before advising others.

This is not a claim that anyone who disagrees with the current scientific consensus needs to be jailed. Only that persons who put themselves in positions to advise others have the basic moral decency to ensure that the advice they are giving isn’t going to get people killed. I’m very disappointed in humanity, as most people seem to not care, and that leads to untold numbers of preventable deaths.

This also incentivizes people to know as little as possible about the real world and what effects real things have on real people, because as long as sincere ignorance is a valid defense they can get away with murder by simply not bothering to know anything. This is the most perverse of perverse incentives.

Jul 032013
 

wargames

I said yesterday that the Republicans made a massive mistake – they acknowledged the primacy of the game, and attempted to cheat, at the same time.

The problem with games is that they are weak artificial constructs, and both sides must agree to play them without cheating. If the Republicans simply wanted to get their bill passed they would have done best to say “Three minutes doesn’t matter. It is a technicality. The bill is passed.” and ignored the complaints. Instead they altered the time-stamp on the vote to make it look like it had passed before the deadline. This was an acknowledgement that the Game rules supreme – It is important and its rules are to be acknowledged and followed. At the time it was also a brazen attempt to break those very rules.

(As an aside – altering the public record is illegal. What happened to the concern for our society? What happened to transparency? No one is being prosecuted for this, there isn’t even any sort of investigation. This is all being quietly swept under the rug, because we aren’t allowed to look back into the government. In a radically transparent society this would be investigated immediately and prosecuted. A lot of people know the name of the person who did this, and the names of those who authorized it, and we all know nothing.)

This is a serious breech once we’ve gotten to the point where playing the Game is the only thing that keeps us from descending into an Iraqi-style civil war. If one side has stopped playing by the rules, there’s no reason for the other side to still be bound by them.

The sad thing was it wasn’t even necessary. If the Republicans simply could have accepted “losing”  for a weekend they wouldn’t have endangered anything. Already another emergency session of the Texas congress has begun (queue the “Texan legislatures can have an abortion emergency but Texan women can’t” jokes) and the bill will likely be passed soon. If that doesn’t work it’ll just be passed piecemeal in small parts, quietly over several months.

It seems both sides recognize how dangerous that move was, because no one is talking about it. There was a brief kerfuffle, the record was restored to its pre-tampered time, and now everyone is very diligently looking the other way and pretending it never happened. All the talk is about the new session, or about highlights from the previous one, but no mention of that brief window were the game itself had been suspended. Just let it go… no harm no foul, right?

Perhaps this would be a good time to practice the virtue of silence, but I kinda feel this fragility should be pointed out, so we don’t go stomping on it again. And those who endangered our fail-safe game? They should be identified and prosecuted.

Jul 022013
 

Illusionist David Blaine in IceI was watching the Wendy Davis spectacle last week. For those unfamiliar, the Texas State Legislature was about to put vast restrictions on abortion. There was a populist filibuster where hundreds of people spoke in the congress in order to delay the vote. This was cut short by the Chairman, but not before a day was lost.  In the next session, State Senator Wendy Davis filibustered the bill for 11+ hours, until she was shut down by the Lieutenant Governor just in time for a vote to be taken. The vote was delayed by roars of outrage from the gathered audience, and the bill failed to pass in time.

Every single part of this seems crazy to me.

First, the abortion restrictions themselves – the government is supposed to pass laws for the good of the society is governs. Banning abortion is obviously a failure in this regard, it shows either that the senate has been infiltrated by radical elements (if you believe society at large is good), or that society at large has been corrupted to a degree that the government can no longer steer it toward the common good.

Second, the people’s filibuster – rather than attempting to fix the source of the problem (either a compromised govt or a corrupt society) people instead decided to exploit a vulnerability in the system. They took a process intended to help the government make good decisions via testimony and intentionally broke it to halt the law-making process.

I think this was an acknowledgement that society has broken down to the point where we can’t have nice things anymore. The government now seems to work as a fail-safe instead. It is here mainly to prevent the civil war and chaos that results when people can’t live together. We really don’t want to live in Iraq. This is the only way I can make sense of these filibusters – they are games that formalize conflict with artificial rules which, as long as both sides agree to follow them, prevent violent outbreaks. Earlier I claimed that the Diamond Invention  is useful because it prevents us from wasting resources for signaling that could be better used for practical matters. In this case, the Politics Invention is useful because it prevents armed conflict.

Much of the rest of this story makes sense in this context. The opposing team made the next move – the Chairman of the House cut the filibuster short, saying the testimony had become repetitive (which was true). But more importantly – this tactic is too powerful. Either side can use it to stop any bill indefinitely, because it’s not hard to find a few hundred motivated people when pulling from a pool of millions. It’s a game breaker, and the game must continue to prevent war.

The counter-move was the announcing of a champion – Wendy Davis. This is acceptable because there is a very small pool to choose from (only the elected Representatives) and Texas rules make filibustering difficult enough (speaker cannot sit or lean on anything, cannot pause for bathroom breaks or other needs, and must stay on-topic) that it is a costly weapon (until someone like David Blaine is elected…). It is also a brilliant entertainment move – a single champion in a physical contest makes for a great narrative and allows for humans to do our much-beloved hero-worship thing. And games should always be entertaining.

It was also executed with a great eye for drama – the champion may falter twice, but is defeated upon the third fault, and has a deadline. The opposition managed to get in two strikes against the champion, one of them of extremely dubious validity. Then they ruled her in violation at third time with only minutes to the finish line! THE CROWD GOES WILD!

That was where the Republicans screwed up – they failed to account for the climax of an emotional event like this, because not only must they stop Davis, the also need to make one final move before midnight… a move which isn’t possible amidst the cacophony of raging fans. The clock ticks past midnight before a vote can be taken. Win by technicality!

This sort of thing convinces me that politics is a game. What sort of society allows their law-making body to be usurped by a loud mob that managed to delay a vote by three minutes? Seriously, three minutes make a difference here? 12:03 is an arbitrary time, and should make no difference in whether a law is “official” or not. That is the sort of rule that is fully in the providence of games and has no anchoring in reality.

Of course then the Republicans made a mistake so massive that both sides are doing their best to ignore it – they acknowledged the primacy of the game, and attempted to cheat, at the same time. But this post is long enough, I’ll get to that tomorrow.

Jun 272013
 

Throne-of-the-Crescent-Moon-CoverThrone of the Crescent Moon, by Saladin Ahmed

Synopsis: An old ghoul-hunter trains his apprentice while trying to protect the kingdom from evil forces.

Brief Book Review: The cool thing about this book is its setting. Most fantasy is set in an analog of Medieval Christian Europe, and this one is set in an analog of the Islamic Golden Age, primarily in Baghdad. The culture shock is initially very interesting, and draws you in. The book also moves quickly near the beginning, moving from action to action without lingering on minutia. Unfortunately it slows down after a few chapters, which exposes the books flaws – primarily shallowness. No character has any depth, they all chose a dominant personality trait and alignment at character creation, and they stick to it rigidly. The D&D comparison is actually very apt, because it reads very much like a badly run D&D campaign that someone decided to write down. Everything that happens is right there on the surface, there are no hidden depths. The characters don’t grow, they simply gain XP and loot. The final boss is Evil just because it’s evil to be Evil. He does not speak a single word throughout the book, he just throws monsters at the PCs and then dies at the end. It is notable that the author manages to subvert the readers expectations several times. He does so by clumsily playing to old tropes that we see coming from a mile away (“Ah, the Emperor is secretly the Evil Overlord!” or “The Falcon Prince is going to go Dark Messiah”) and then surprising us not by adding a twist or going deeper, but by becoming even shallower! Maybe I’m uncultured, but I think this is the first time I’ve seen a subversion of expectations by retreating to surface appearances. It’s kinda meta, but not in a gratifying way. So – too simplistic, which makes it boring. Not Recommended.

Book Club Review: As you may have noticed, the last three books reviewed have all been 2012 Hugo Nominees. The next two reviews will be as well, this is a tradition our bookclub has been exercising for a few years. We spent a fair bit of our discussion trying to figure out how this book had managed to get nominated for a Hugo. While it’s technically proficient – it reads well and is clear – there’s nothing of substance here. Not much to discuss aside from the falling short of expectations. Not Recommended.

Jun 262013
 

J72My friend, Autumn Rachel Dryden, is probably known to most of you as the voice of Prof McGonagall from the Methods of Rationality podcast. A number of years ago she wrote a short story called “Respite”, originally published in IGMS and soon to be included in the “Beyond The Sun” anthology. It has now also been picked up and produced into an audio podcast, with Autumn doing the voice of the narrator. Listen to it here!

Jun 242013
 

 

PornandDisney

Inspired by a “friend-zoned” post. There’s a serious failure mode in society where guys are not taught how to attract females in any formalized way. Seems most decent guys have to go through *years* being the idiot portrayed in this XKCD (I know I did), and women have to go through years of being surrounded by idiots or assholes. I haven’t interviewed any older folks on this (maybe I’ll ask my parents next time I visit them), but did they not know we’d need these skills when we were growing up? Or was this just one of those things you aren’t allowed to talk about?

The PUA community was almost on the right track, but they end up just turning idiots into assholes (unless the guys are very picky and ignore all the shit advice about treating women as commodities). This should not be a hard problem to fix. We already have a “Sex Ed class”. Currently it would more accurately be called a Biology of Human Reproduction class, as it’s primarily a biology lesson with the only useful thing taught being that condoms are great (and many states are trying to strip THAT out!). Why not include some education about *actual* sex, and how to be an attractive mate? The basics are well known. The alternative is that kids continue to get their education for their current teachers – Hollywood Romantic Comedies and Porn. Those are both Kabuki Theater that have no bearing on real life, and it can take a loooooong time for people to figure that out via trial-and-error.

Seriously, I had to learn the capitals of all 50 States. Quite a lot of time was wasted on that useless knowledge, it was integrated into other subjects (our music class had a song for it), and I’ll wager most schools still teach this. Cut that crap out and use the time for something useful that will improve everyone’s quality of life.

Jun 212013
 

23122312, by Kim Stanley Robinson

Synopsis: A guided tour of our solar system after extensive terraforming and space-settling.

A note – this review is over a week late because I wasn’t able to finish the book in time. I still haven’t quite finished it, so please keep in mind the “book review” part is based on incomplete information. However the book club meeting we had about it is threatening to fade from my memory, so I’m getting this done now.

Brief Book Review: If 2312 was to be summed up in a single word, it would be “leisurely”. My parents are of an age where they travel abroad twice a year for weeks at a time, taking guided tours of historically or culturally important areas. This book feels exactly like that, in book form, in the future. The descriptions are gorgeous, every aspect of any given location – from the physical to the political – is worked with loving care. There is a plot and characters in this book as well, but they mainly function as a way of getting you from one place to another so you can take in the sights and wonders. The whole thing is very relaxing and rather enjoyable. The lack of urgency is sometimes very conspicuous – it can be a little jolting to go from interplanetary terrorist intrigue on one page to a Victorian Tea Party discussing sentience a few pages later, especially as the tea party is given a higher word count. But the book lulls you into its rhythm. This certainly isn’t a bad read, but ultimately there’s nothing here that will stick with me when I’m done. It is a much higher caliber of popcorn, but I can only recommend it as popcorn reading, to be enjoyed in delightful lulls between other books. So ultimately – Not Recommended.

Book Club Review: There is a fair bit to like about this book when it comes to a book club meeting. Robinson has a style that will appeal to a particular type of reader, and repel another, while being fairly neutral to most. If you happen to have both kinds of reader in your book club, this can make for some great debate. He also has a habit of incorporating rather rarefied concepts in this book without explaining them, which can be a boon for readers who like to google new ideas they encounter and are willing to give brief summaries to others. The only major downside to this book is that its length combined with its sedate pacing makes it hard to get it finished on time. There are books that demand one’s attention/comments which would likely be better served by discussion. If you have other good options, go with those first. But in the end our discussion was pretty good, so a Mild Recommendation.

Jun 202013
 

manosteelBWAHAHAHAHA!  Hyperbolic (and hilarious) recounting of vital scenes from the new Man of Steel movie

“Pa Kent: Remember! Remember this one thing!

Young Clark: I will, Dad!

Pa Kent: KEEP… MURDERING… CHILDRENNNnnnnnnnnnnnnn! (Pa Kent is carried away — flashback ends)”

 

 

YAY!
HPV Vaccine has cut infections in teen girls by half

 

A cool promotional item for a new book. Apparently I specialize in Defense Poetry – shying away from risk, but striking at logically optimal moments.

 

I really love this blog. It’s helping me to stop thinking of people on the “other” side as idiots and fascists and more like people similar to me who have started with different assumptions and come to reasonable conclusions based on what they have to work with. Hoping they can see me that way too.
These are shining examples of what I used to see (and do) all the time.

 

“Intern” shouldn’t be used as an excuse to make a non-paying position. It’s a good first step.

 

Lawsuit alleging “Happy Birthday” should be in the public domain. And Warner should pay it back with *interest*

 

Hooray for more transparency! Let us know what They know.

 

Fight Clubs are a major factor in Turkey’s uprising? This is kinda awesome.

 

Harry ruined Cedric’s life without realizing it

 

Remember when Fred Clarke did his EPIC page-by-page analysis/take-down of Left Behind? Adam Lee is doing a similar thing for Atlas Shrugged. Less exhaustive, and a bit less awesome IMHO, but still good times. It’s been so long since I read the book that this is really a great refresher. Totally fun if you haven’t read it, and since the series is just started, it’s still easy to catch up to the current post!
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/daylightatheism/series/atlas-shrugged/

 

“Game of Thrones” Ultimate Birthday Rap Battle

 

Hacker Who Exposed Steubenville Rape Case Could Spend More Time Behind Bars Than The Rapists If you’re against rape and have a few bucks to spare, consider donating to his defense fund.

 

On Consequences. Gotta ask those questions *before* :)

 

Portland is controlled by Birchers! /dramaticmusic

The Laffer Curve is everywhere misundestood (even I think by Art Laffer himself)  “Thus the real Laffer Curve effect to watch for is not the change in revenue, but the change in productive output.”

 

An interesting economic model – Mondragon – where the workers are owners, and hire/fire the CEOs. People who are laid off from industries that don’t need them any more are transferred to other industries within the Co-op that do need people. Fully 45% of all corporate profits are returned to the members. It’s been working and growing for over 50 years.

 

The Problem with ‘Boys Will Be Boys’

“I taught my daughter the preschool block precursor of don’t “get raped” and this child, Boy #1, did not learn the preschool equivalent of “don’t rape.”
Not once did his parents talk to him about invading another person’s space and claiming for his own purposes something that was not his to claim. Respect for her and her work and words was not something he was learning.”

 

To Batman: Efficiency is important

 

A great episode of Planet Money that highlights what I consider three system failures. I found this episode insanely amusing. I think my troll-side is starting to take more enjoyment in basic failures in human systems. I’m starting to worry this is a bad thing.

Jun 192013
 

brainsnotcomputersIn an old post, an LW user asked:

 

Imagine that the technology has just come available to resurrect a frozen brain. However, the process has low fidelity, … these limitations are purely practical – as the technique is refined, the process of resurrection will become better and better … The results of the process is effectively a copy of the old brain and personality, but with permanent brain damage in several regions … The technology will not progress in refinement without practice, and practice requires actually restoring cryogenically frozen human brains …

 

If your brain was frozen, at what stage in this technological refinement process would you like your brain to be revived?

 

The scale given included these two lines:

 

0.950 – liminal reduction in facilities (IQ loss of 5 to 10 points; occasional slowness in memory recall, occasional mood swings)

1.000 – a perfect reproduction of your original personality and capability

 

Obviously everyone would prefer 1.0. But I commented that I’d be willing to accept .95 to help the research effort. This was a selfish choice, there were many much worse stages that I wasn’t willing to volunteer for.

I’ve stated in previous posts that I don’t fully trust reality to be real. And I’ve explicitly stated in the About page that part of this blogs purpose is to be a reconstruction aid in the event that I do die and am cryonically frozen. Looking at the description for 0.95, it strikes me almost immediately that I do have occasional slowness in memory recall (sometimes for the most absurd things. How the hell did I forget my brother’s name for a few minutes?). In general I have a fairly poor memory for personal life events, people recall things I’ve done much more readily than I do. I have occasional mood swings. Less often now, and I’ve developed ways of dealing with them, but they are there.

One might consider this correlation between my willingness to accept such mental impairment and my having this mental impairment as weak evidence that I’ve actually been reconstructed after my death and revived with some impairments per my recorded statements on the matter (which would make this reality a sped-up simulation that’s moving me through the intervening years quickly to minimize future-shock once I catch-up to the actual present-day).

Of course it’s far more likely that this is just The Forer Effect. Everyone has trouble recalling things sometimes, and has mood swings on occasion. Right? It’s just part of being human.

Jun 182013
 

anger-enjoyThis doesn’t have any significance beyond my own personal venting, but I need to vent.

Over the weekend I met an older relative of my fiancé. I hope to never see her again. She put on a friendly show and smiled a lot, but she betrayed herself with a “joking” question.

“You know you’re not the first guy she’s dated right?”

First of all, you aren’t fooling anyone with your wording, we all know you mean she’s had sex before me. So fuck you and your bullshit sex-negative attitude.

Fuck you for implying that women are little more than fuck-dolls and that once they’ve been “used” they are damaged goods and not worth shit. Humans have far more worth to them than that regardless of their gender. And to be quite frank, sex is a skill you get better at with practice – I wouldn’t want a virgin because they don’t know shit and they’re a damned project. Especially if she’s been a virgin up until friggin’ 26 years old!

Fuck you for imply there should be a different standard for men than for women, because you certainly didn’t seem perturbed by the fact that at 30 (when I met my fiancé) I certainly wasn’t a virgin either. I’m not going to hold anyone else to a standard I don’t aspire to, but I guess that isn’t a problem for a hypocritical old hag like yourself. I assume you still hold yourself in pretty fucking high regard, even though you’ve (*gasp*) had The Sex!

Fuck you for implying that I’m the sort of mouth-breathing Neanderthal who considers a woman his property and would be scandalized or even slightly embarrassed that his girlfriend had ever seen another penis! Newsflash: we both have sex with other people and we can’t imagine how horrible your puritan nightmare of a sex-life must be. I wouldn’t want to be the type of person you’d call a friend.

Fuck you for obviously trying to drive a wedge between us within ten minutes of seeing us together for the very first time, as you obviously felt this was a major issue. Did you assume I was shocked she wasn’t a virgin? Do you envision our relationship being shrouded in lies and deceit so that we can’t even know each other’s sexual history, and that this bombshell would shake everything up? Or maybe it was just meant to re-awaken old hurts that I’d somehow gotten over? I’m glad that your shot went so far wide of anything approaching something we’ve argued about that I can only stand aghast of your brazen attempt at vandalism, but I obviously can’t trust you to be around anything I care about because you appear to delight in destruction.

And finally, fuck you thrice over for putting on such a friendly, happy facade that I didn’t even realize what was happening and instead made some off-hand deflection about how I don’t want to take on the project a newb would represent. I never stood up for Good, I never got angry. I didn’t say a single thing in the rant above, when I should have said all of it. I’m ashamed of how hard I failed! It took me days just to realize what had happened, and I had been pre-warned! You are a vile old woman and I’ll do what I can to never interact with you again.