Friday, January 27, 2017

Methodologies Do Not Lie, But People Do


"The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie."
    — Joseph A. Schumpeter, 'History of Economic Analysis (New York: Oxford University Press, 1954)', p. 43n


Some scientists would like you to believe that the methodology they supposedly practice has intentions, and can be trusted to have invulnerable integrity.

Science is a methodology and cannot do anything — including such things as tell the truth, or lie.   Only human beings, such as scientists, can lie.

Saying 'Science does not lie' is itself a kind of lie — it is an attempt to deceive others that a process that requires the actions of human beings, can never be corrupt, when that process can only be as valid as the human beings who engage in it are honest.

Especially when monetary reward is possible, the invulnerable integrity implied by the statement 'Science does not lie' is obvious propaganda — of course, a method cannot lie, but scientists, like most other humans, can and will, when it suits them.

Supposed 'scientists' marching on Washington with such obvious propaganda is just one more reason not to trust them —

https://twitter.com/i/moments/824382457570996224
https://web.archive.org/web/20170128023006/https:/twitter.com/i/moments/824382457570996224
https://archive.is/2p47s
Twitter moment, January 25, 2017, Science march.

https://twitter.com/TimKarr/status/824302160859037696
TimKarr tweet, January 25, 2017.  'Science Does Not Lie'.


Saturday, January 21, 2017

Happily Biting A Helping Hand

An associate editor at Reason, Elizabeth Nolan Brown, posted a tweet pointing out protesters she encountered in Washington DC, who purchased goods at a business that is a product of capitalism and free markets, while simultaneously protesting capitalism.  Not surprisingly, her tweets generated some controversy, confusion, and dishonesty (mainly dishonesty) —

https://twitter.com/ENBrown
https://twitter.com/ENBrown/status/822535666441613317
Elizabeth Nolan Brown tweet regarding hypocritical capitalism protesters.

https://twitter.com/ENBrown/status/822583329849544704
Elizabeth Nolan Brown tweets replies to dishonest responses regarding hypocritical capitalism protesters.


The dishonesty in the responses is almost too ridiculous to be believed.  One tweet in reply was that somehow one is forced to patronize capitalist businesses as a result of living under free market conditions — as if freedom compels interaction with businesses.  How many people expect any other even remotely sane person to be convinced by such nonsense?
"surely you understand that fighting against capitalism doesn't change the fact that we currently must exist under capitalism"    https://twitter.com/ENBrown/status/822535666441613317

It is hard to believe, but one person seemed to not understand the original intention of Elizabeth's tweet — as if the hypocrisy of the supposed 'protesters' was not obvious, and the business they had patronized was not a product of what they were protesting.  What is going on here?  Do some people actually believe that businesses like 7-Eleven are some kind of government run, socialist enterprise — i.e. that they are not a product of a free market and capitalism? —

https://twitter.com/ENBrown/status/822582930723766273
Elizabeth Nolan Brown tweets replies to dishonest responses regarding hypocritical capitalism protesters.



To those who honestly do not understand, perhaps part of Elizabeth Nolan Brown's original intent was to point out the very common hypocrisy among people of denouncing that which they happily use and receive a benefit from.

Notice the completely nonsensical, and even aggressively stupid reply from Michael Curry.   Curry did not address the original comment that someone would patronize a nationwide business that only exists because of capitalism and free markets, while simultaneously protesting capitalism and free markets — but instead Curry implies that it is absurd to think that people should not take benefit from that which they think is harmful, as if there is no other way for them to satisfy a particular need —
      Curry: "If capitalism is so bad, why do you eat food?  Checkmate!"
Notice the explicit idiocy here, relative to Elizabeth Nolan Brown's original tweetyou either buy some food at a nationwide, capitalist business, or you starve.

The point is not what was being purchased, but that the mechanics of the production and distribution of the product (i.e. private property and free markets) was being denounced, and yet still patronized.

This is exactly like protesting a slaughterhouse, while simultaneously eating a steak.
This is exactly like protesting slavery, while simultaneously buying a slave at auction.

This is exactly like protesting a violation of individual rights, while simultaneously destroying the private property of individuals.

That the good was food was incidental — the same point would have applied if the protesters had been buying any number of other things — lug nuts, fertilizer, tennis balls, etc.

In an attempt to pretend that he has a point, Curry (like many others) drops the context of Elizabeth Nolan Brown's original comment — in this case, a purchase from an institution that is a product of what what was being protested.

If you fill in the details that Curry conveniently leaves out, in his attempt to sound reasonable, you see that he has no point —
If capitalism is so bad, why would you buy anything (including food) from nationwide, or even global institutions that are a product of capitalism?
In short, if capitalism is so bad, why do you happily take its benefits, when you are not compelled to do so?

And notice the absurd irony of those who claim 'we must exist under this capitalist system', when a free society (i.e. one that has free markets and is actually capitalist) is the only society under which one could actually establish a 'commune' with like minded individuals (or whatever one calls their supposed non-capitalist paradise).  It cannot be done under communist dictatorships like North Korea or Cuba, for obvious reasons — completely socialist governments (i.e. governments that own the means of production), will not allow anyone to produce anything without their control.

Perhaps that is what is revealed by all of this willful blindness in the responses to Elizabeth Nolan Brown's original tweet — that many wish to force everyone else to operate under their dictates.

Many seem to have some bizarre delusion that they will be the ones controlling the initiation of force in their twisted socialist dream, and that somehow, magically, they will be able to control the power they are dreaming of, but only at the expense of everyone else.

As Elizabeth Nolan Brown replied in a tweet to a dishonest responder: "you're willfully misreading what I say.  Why?"

When you prefer a lie, that is what you do.

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Say Anything

Many people are making the claim that they will lose their health insurance if the 'Affordable Care Act' is repealed.   Not so.

What will be lost is a third-party decision maker (the U.S. Government) initiating force against one group, to provide a subsidy to another group for the purpose of purchasing health insurance.  A subsidy is what would be lost, if the 'Affordable Care Act' is repealed — that is, the ability to purchase health insurance partially at someone else's expense.

But even if this were not the case, and many people were actually going to lose a health insurance plan that they had purchased without government assistance only as a result of the 'Affordable Care Act', why should anyone have even the slightest concern, given that supporters of the 'Affordable Care Act' had no concern for those who lost health insurance plans they had purchased when the 'Affordable Care Act' was originally passsed?

Why should supporters of the 'Affordable Care Act' expect such concern, when they had no such concern themselves?

     http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2014/12/trying-to-put-slippery-worm-on-hook.html

Saturday, January 14, 2017

No Great Pride Being A Veteran

I served 5 years on active duty in the U.S. military.  When I enlisted after graduating from high school in the early 1980's,
I was convinced that it was a good thing to do — that the U.S. deserved a strong defense, and that I would benefit from my participation.

When I enlisted I did not see myself as making some great sacrifice, nor did I think that others who did not serve should necessarily see themselves as being in the debt of military veterans — such a debt would be conditional, and would depend on when a veteran served.  As an obvious example, serving during WW II would be more important than serving during peacetime (as I did).

I saw U.S. military service as at least worthy of respect, since any participation contributes to deterrence, and I assumed that the overwhelming majority of U.S. citizens valued freedom, and also that they understood the necessity of a well-prepared military.

For a different take on the value of military service, here is former U.S. Air Force Lt. Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski in the 2005 documentary 'Why We Fight'.  Karen's story is interesting because she became convinced that the U.S. military no longer serves its legitimate purpose —

"I have two sons and I will allow none of my children to serve in the United States Military.  If you join the military now, you are not defending the United States of America, you are helping certain policy makers pursue an imperial agenda."


In 2003 Karen Kwiatkowski retired after just over 20 years of services, over the handling of the U.S. invasion of Iraq —
     http://www.salon.com/2004/03/10/osp_moveon/
     https://archive.is/eYNwT

I agree with Karen Kwiatkowski for keeping her sons out of the military.

I am very grateful that my own life was not wasted during my military service, in some asinine 'nation building' experiment, being conducted by corrupt bureaucrats sitting behind desks thousands of miles away from the war zone.  I cannot think of any positive outcome that has come from any of the U.S. military actions in my lifetime (from the Vietnam War onward) — never mind an outcome that would justify having sacrificed the lives of any of the members of our military.

To those who think that such a characterization of the more recent U.S. military actions is exaggerated, and that the U.S. military still deserves enthusiastic participation, I have another reason for disagreeing that I think is even more important — the attitude and mindset of many Americans regarding the proper limits on government.

I know almost no one who supports — never mind being able to reasonably defend — the principles of limited government and a free society.  Apart from a small group of friends, the overwhelming majority of people I talk to at work, or read in the media or social media, have some kind of sloppy variant of fascism that they wish to enforce.  That is, a government that exercises almost complete control over private industry and has an elaborate so-called 'social welfare safety net'.

Of course, no one will refer to this as 'fascism', but apart from the same kind of homogeneous racism, today's so-called 'democratic socialists' have all the same intentions as fascists of the past — authoritarian one-party rule, control of private industry by government but without government ownership to avoid responsibility for failure, and a control of personal income that would make Karl Marx proud.  Like the notion of a 'maximum wage', that has been floating around for years —
      https://archive.is/FpVu
      http://articles.latimes.com/1992-04-08/local/me-457_1_maximum-wage

This is exactly what prompted me to write a blog post denouncing Bernie Sanders as a symptom of American dishonesty —
     http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2015/12/bernie-sanders-glaring-symptom-of-american-dishonesty.html

The 2016 Presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders was nothing more than a massive public display of vote buying — a corrupt political candidate promising to buy things (education, medical care, etc.) for one group of voters, with money taken from some other group of voters.  The hypocrisy and dishonesty from Bernie Sanders and his followers has been brazen.

While pretending to be on the moral high ground with their supposed compassion, a simple moral justification for any of their supported policies is never given.  Like a tribal chant, Bernie and his supporters just keep repeating the claim that some have a right to the labor and time of others, simply because of a need.

At one time, I worked with a couple of ardent Bernie Sanders supporters, and (to the degree that I could stand participating at all) I would try to point out the obvious problems in his positions in the political discussions I had with them — mainly the immorality of using the political process to take from one group to give to another in an attempt to pretend you are compassionate.  One day, in a hallway discussion with one of these Bernie Sanders supporters, I pointed out how that not only had our company health care premiums jumped dramatically after the introduction of the 'Affordable Care Act', but that the premiums the employees now had to pay became progressive — if you made more, you had to pay more for the same coverage than a more junior employee.

This particular Bernie Sanders supporter was not comfortable discussing this — he made a comment about the amount of the penalty, as a way of dismissing it — it was as if he knew this was obviously unfair, and he just assumed that trying to pull everyone into the health care system, regardless of whether they could afford it or not, would not harm anyone.  I guess it was lost on him that if one could not afford something, that something did not suddenly become affordable to them if government sold it to them — someone else was being forced to make up the difference.

This was just another expression of the dishonesty surrounding this issue, and is typical of Bernie Sanders supporters in particular, but also of supposed 'progressives' in general — none of them are willing to acknowledge that some people must be harmed to support their supposedly compassionate schemes.   They hide behind such statements as 'medical care is a right'.   Such language only appeals to those who want to force others to purchase what they are using — those who respect individual rights, do not respond to such emotional pleas.

For more examples of American voters who do not support freedom, consider these massively uninformed Hillary supporters, who do not understand that the question being asked was invented to highlight voter ignorance.  And ironically, the typical Democrat views Trump as the danger




Or how about these so-called 'social justice warriors' (SJWs), who aggressively attempt to make others follow their petty little dictates, as if it is painfully obvious that they have the moral high ground (these are Canadian students interacting with Professor Jordan Peterson, but there is plenty of this to go around in the U.S. as well) —



Do such people deserve freedom?   Why?   They do not defend the freedom of others.

Do Bernie Sanders and his ilk deserve freedom?   Why?  They do not defend the freedom of others.

If your primary life goal is to diminish the freedom of others, why should anyone be willing to fight for your freedom?

Enlist in the military to fight for petty cowards, who are constantly trying to use a political process to violate the freedoms of others?   Why would anyone defend such cowardly, hypocritical, and dishonest people?

I am certainly not ashamed of my military service, but I would never do it again — mainly because I find it so difficult to find people who care about freedom.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Meryl Streep's Challenge

Roman Polanski is a famous French-Polish film director.  He is known for such films as 'Chinatown', which won an academy award for 'Best Original Screenplay', and 'The Pianist', for which Polanski won an Academy Award for 'Best Director' in 2003.

Polanski is also well known for having plead guilty to the statutory rape of a 13-year-old girl named Samantha Jane Gailey in 1978.  Polanski fled the U.S. in early 1978 to avoid sentencing for the rape charge, eventually moving to France, where he is a citizen, in order to avoid extradition to the U.S.

When Polanski won an Academy Award in 2003 for 'Best Director' for his film 'The Pianist', he did not attend the awards, since he would have been arrested upon returning to the U.S. —

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-173245/Polanskis-surprise-Oscar-win.html

Polanski's surprise Oscar win

In a stunning Oscar upset, Roman Polanski - who cannot set foot in the United States without going to jail - won the Academy Award for best director on Sunday night for his searing Holocaust drama "The Pianist."

Polanski, who fled the United States for France in 1978 as he was about to be sentenced to prison for having sex with a 13-year-old girl, won the Oscar in his third nomination as best director.

Polanski's award was accepted for him in his absence.

Polanski previously was nominated for directing the 1974 film "Chinatown" and the 1979 drama "Tess." He also received a screenwriting nomination for "Rosemary's Baby."

Many in the audience at the Kodak Theatre rose to their feet in a standing ovation, while others remained seated, including his "Chinatown" star, Jack Nicholson.

It was at Nicholson's home that Polanski later admitted to having sex with the underage girl after plying her with champagne and pills. A stone-faced Anjelica Huston, who was in another area of the house at the time, applauded.
...


Here is Polanski, as quoted from an interview conducted in Paris in 1979, from the book 'Visiting Mrs. Nabokov: And Other Excursions', by Martin Amis.  At the time of this interview, Polanski had yet to realize that not everyone wants to have sex with adolescent girls, and that even if they did, it should not be considered acceptable to give in to that desire — perhaps Polanski would never realize that —

http://archive.is/FXGfF
https://www.amazon.com/Visiting-Mrs-Nabokov-Other-Excursions/dp/0679757937
...
"If I had killed somebody, it wouldn't have had so much appeal to the press, you see?  But… f—ing, you see, and the young girls.  Judges want to f— young girls.  Juries want to f— young girls.  Everyone wants to f— young girls!"
...
Page 246, from 'Visiting Mrs. Nabokov: And Other Excursion', by Martin Amis


Here is Polanski's victim, Samantha Geimer (formerly Samantha Gailey), in an interview on the BBC, where she explains that having to live through the grand jury testimony regarding the rape, was worse than the rape itself.  This is not too surprising, given that she saw doing a photo-shoot with Polanski as an opportunity, since he was a successful director, and she wanted to become an actress, and that Polanski drugged her to help overcome her resistance — not to mention the tendency of people to defend Polanski, and treat her as a liar.  As she said when questioned about this: "Well, right, the rape was ten minutes, the grand jury testimony was all day..."



Here is Samantha Geimer's book about this experience —
     https://www.amazon.com/Girl-Life-Shadow-Roman-Polanski/dp/1476716846

Here is a still image showing Meryl Streep standing to applaud Roman Polanski's award for 'Best Director' in 2003, at the 75th Academy Awards, followed by the video of the Academy Awards during that announcement (the still image is at 1:11 in the video).  Recall that Polanski did not attend the awards to avoid being arrested —

Meryl Streep standing to applaud Roman Polanski's award for Best Director, 2003



Here is Meryl Streep speaking at the 2017 Golden Globe Awards, in accepting their 'Cecil B. DeMille 2017' award, where she denounces an unnamed person for supposedly mocking a handicapped person.  Of course, everyone knows the person Meryl is denouncing is Donald Trump, since this story has been repeated in the media over and over again — despite having been repeatedly shown to have been wildly exaggerated (if not completely false)



At 3:58 in the video above, Meryl Streep made this especially ironic statement —
"... when the powerful use their position to bully others we all lose ..."
That sounds exactly like what Roman Polanski did to Samantha Geimer, but in a way that is far worse than mere mockery, and yet Meryl Streep has celebrated Polanski.  Honest observers are now left to wonder, 'is Meryl lying, or is she just stupid?'

Meryl Streep made some challenging statements in her 2017 Golden Globe acceptance speech — will she be able to live up to any of them?

Monday, January 2, 2017

A Sam Harris Reader Praises The Ad Hominem


"The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie."
    — Joseph A. Schumpeter, 'History of Economic Analysis (New York: Oxford University Press, 1954)', p. 43n

"In the flaring parks, in the taverns, in the hushed academies,
    your murmur will applaud the wisdom of a thousand quacks.
    For theirs is the kingdom."

    — Kenneth Fearing, from his poem 'Conclusion'


In previous posts, I wrote about some of the problems with Sam Harris's attacks on Donald Trump — in particular, Harris's attempt to pretend that his denunciations did not amount to an ad hominem fallacy, but rather were somehow a useful comparison between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton —
     http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-sam-harris-fail.html
     http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2016/11/goodbye-sam-harris.html
     http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2016/12/sam-harris-left-out-tears.html

Here is a post from one of Sam Harris's readers at the 'General Discussion' forum at Sam Harris's website, describing a supposed value in the use of the ad hominem fallacy.  It almost seems as if Sam Harris was channeling this reader's thoughts in his denunciations of Donald Trump, since Harris seemed to count more on the trust of his followers than on making a convincing case to those who did not already agree with him —

https://www.samharris.org/forum/viewthread/68551/
https://archive.is/VyQdU

Posted: 23 August 2016 11:35

I have been thinking lately about the possible value of ad-hominem argumentation. The use of ad-hominem argument is often taken to be a sign of irrationality. However, I tend to think that behaviors, institutions, etc. generally arise for a reason. Virtually everyone uses ad-hominem argument at times and I do not think the strategy would have been so universally adopted if it was irrational to adopt it.

Ad-hominem is certainly a logical fallacy so it is an example of a case where our actual behavior diverges from the rule of logic but that does not necessarily make it irrational. I think the use of ad-hominem argumentation is rational in a world where we have very limited access to information. Let’s say I want to form an opinion about the best policy to pursue in Syria. How would I go about making an informed decision about Syria?

Well, I could go to Syria myself and gather information. I could spend years interviewing the people, travelling the country, etc. but this would be extremely time consuming and there would still be information that I would not have access to (I would almost certainly not be invited to listen in on conversations between Assad and the members of his regime, for example).

I could also read books on the subject but here I run into a problem. If I travel to Syria myself I know I can trust the information I gather because I can trust my own eyes but when I am reading a book how do I know that the information I am getting is accurate? I cannot compare it to the original. When deciding what books to read (or articles) and what books to dismiss I need to make some decisions about who is trustworthy and who is not.

The same applies on a forum like this. People often make posts on a forum like this where they provide information that I have no easy way of checking for its accuracy. So, I need to make some decisions about who to trust, what information to accept, what information to treat as suspicious, and what information to dismiss entirely.

I think I probably follow lots of semi-conscious and unconscious rules when making a decision like this. If people seem very belligerent in expressing their views, or they cling intensely to one side of the political spectrum, I tend not to trust them. If someone has a subtle view that is not easily categorized I am more likely to trust them. Tone is quite important here.

However, another way I can reach a decision is: if someone who I already trust attacks the trustworthiness of someone I have not made a decision about yet (i.e. they make an ad-hominem argument). Absent any other information, this seems to me to be a perfectly reasonable way to decide who to trust.

I think “logical knock-down arguments” generally fail to sway us on their own because whether an argument is “logical” or not is not the most important question we face when attempting to reach a decision about something. The most important question we face is: Can I trust the information I am getting? and the personal characteristics of the person presenting the information absolutely is relevant to that question.

This is why the best way to win an argument is not to provide some knock-down argument but to convince people that the person you are arguing with is not trustworthy (and any signs that a person gives off that they are trustworthy or untrustworthy is generally more important to me than the content of their argument). So, unless we can find another solution to this problem, (i.e. an objective way to determine what information we should trust), I think ad-hominem is here to stay, and I think it serves a necessary function.

Thoughts?



Notice the absurd contradiction in the forum post quoted above — the author of this post writes that it can be useful for one to use a distracting, flawed form of argument (i.e. a fallacy) to convince others that an opponent is untrustworthy.

Only ignorant or untrustworthy people are manipulated or swayed, never mind convinced, by fallacies.  If you witnessed someone you initially trusted using any fallacy in an argument, why would you continue to trust them, and why would you expect them to be at all convincing to anyone else who had no experience with them?

Given that Sam Harris does not refrain from arguing this way, when it suits him, it should not be surprising to find this kind of perverse logic in a discussion post on Sam Harris's website.   Obviously, no writer, including Harris, is responsible for the ignorance (or wisdom) of his readers.   But if arguing without resorting to the use of fallacy is not one of a writer's principle concerns, then it should not be surprising that it is not a principle concern for that writer's core audience.  The post quoted above is a good example of the kind of like-mindedness one finds in approving followers — indeed, being like-minded is one of the main motivators for following anyone.

Obviously, being like-minded with another, in itself, is value neutral — it is not necessarily a denigration, since the value of a belief, if any, depends on its content (like the content of the belief that fallacy is useful).  And, of course, some will read bad writers as an exercise in studying illogic and destructive cultural trends (i.e. writers are often read precisely because they are bad (see my critical posts on Paul Krugman, for example)).

Also, notice the example used by the forum post author — the action to pursue in a foreign nation's civil war (i.e. Syria), which, by necessity, requires the use of forced tax collections.  The author of the post makes an excellent case for why such foreign policy actions are usually a fools errand in practical terms, and have a track record of some level of failure (Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.), given that it can be impossible to get the information required to determine if any course of action has even a remote possibility of being helpful.  People who have no access to even a substantial portion of the relevant information (which is to say, everyone not in the country and involved directly (and even most of them)) obviously have no chance of making an informed decision, and the use of fallacy from an individual that they admire (but probably should not), will not make their decision informed — it just adds another fallacy to the mix, the 'appeal to authority'.

And, again, the author of the post is making the recommendation to consider the value of distracting and irrelevant statements — that is, a personal attack (i.e. an ad hominem) that does not bear on the position under consideration, as some kind of aid in sorting it all out, to help deal with a lack of information.

The much more serious moral issue of invading a foreign country to intervene in a civil war, using the forced tax collections from citizens who have no stake in the outcome (other than the vague hope that any innocents can escape harm), is not mentioned by the author of the post .  The supposed 'value' of a fallacious argument — even if you agree with that questionable premise — is a trivial absurdity by comparison.

The unstated implication of this terrible example is very telling too, since it also fits perfectly with statements Sam Harris has made, which take it for granted that the state has complete freedom to dispose of the lives and labor of its citizens.

Like this example from Sam Harris's podcast from October 26, 2016

https://youtu.be/bcWmpHsszbg?t=4910   (segment begins at 1:21:50)
. . .
Sam Harris: "... To take the point I just raised about the progress of technology, clearly, at a certain point, once we arrive at the actual end of human drudgery — I mean, when you have, when you have, self-driving cars, and not only is there no need for ape-driven cars, you would have to be irresponsible to let an ape drive a car, because they are so much worse at it, right?  It'll be illegal to drive your own car, and it should be, because right now, 30,000 people, or 35,000 people die every year reliably, because of how bad we are at driving cars.  So, at a certain point, the machines are going to steal jobs that aren't coming back, and we have to break this connection, this, this, pseudo-ethical connection between work and having a claim on your own survival in society, right?  So the idea that if you don't work, you shouldn't be able to eat, which is where a lot of people, you know ironically, a lot of the people who would vote for Trump, or who will vote for Trump, are people who look across the way at, you know, their shiftless neighbor and think, if you don't work for it, you don't deserve anything.  I don't want any of my tax dollars going to support your shiftless lifestyle.  Well, at a certain point, I mean, it's an understandable way of thinking, but at a certain point, we will arrive in a world where, again, only if we play our cards right, we'll arrive in a world where there is so much wealth, and so much automation of boring jobs, that there will not be enough productive things to do, and we'll be left with just creative and fun things to do, and people will still have to be paid for that."

Andrew Sullivan: "No, the trouble is that not everybody is capable of being creative."

Sam Harris: "Right.  So you need a universal basic income, or you need something that, you need a safety net that get's better and better and better the more wealth gets created.
. . .


Notice how Sam Harris drops the critical issue in his choice of words regarding a 'universal basic income' — that a third party decision-maker must initiate force to provide unearned income to one person at the expense of another.  And who gets to decide who works and who doesn't, and how long do you think it will take for a Stalin or Pol Pot like figure to take the job of deciding, and do you think society will be more, or less productive when everyone is promised an income from someone else, even if they do not work?   With an endless stream of scandals and human rights violations emanating from world governments, giving governments even more power is still the only recommendation that many people will make regarding improving the human condition.

And, of course, there is no 'pseudo-ethical connection between work and having a claim on your own survival in society'.   There is a very real ethical connection between your supposed desire to help people, and your willingness to initiate force against others to do so — the ethical connection is that an initiation of force makes you immoral.   The critical point is not, as Sam Harris seems to think, that the principle ethical issue regarding work is that you support yourself — that is conditional (if you are able to work, it is your responsibility).   The critical point is that you do not use a political process to force others to work for you, so that if you do not, or cannot, support yourself, you must rely on charity from others for your support — that is, you must rely on the free choice of others.

Some people may 'look across the way at, their shiftless neighbor and think, if you don't work for it, you don't deserve anything', as Sam Harris put it, though it is just as likely that they think 'others do not deserve what I worked for, unless I willingly give it to them.

That is, this is a choice for the individual who worked to produce the wealth, and not those individuals who may want to steal it (it is theft, if it was not given by choice, regardless of the intent) — or, as in Sam Harris's case, the individuals who wish to engage in moral preening by pretending their demand for an initiation of force is what is helping others, rather than the productivity of those individuals whose wealth they plan to steal.

Sam Harris's statement in the quote above is the essence of why society is so divided — at least half of the people (or perhaps many more) think that they are justified in subjugating others for any goal that has even the vaguest hint of supposedly being compassionate.  The mythical Trump supporter Harris denigrates is not the problem for wanting to be left alone, or perhaps for wanting to help only those who they feel deserve their help (how dare they) — the problem is all of the dishonest people who think, like Sam Harris, that the individual lives of an entire society are their play thing, and that they are free to dispose of them to satisfy their moral pretensions.

In the forum post quoted previously, the same pattern is displayed — the more important moral issue of initiating force to support an intervention in a foreign civil war is simply ignored, as if it has long since been settled and is not worth even being questioned.

Oh, but let us discuss the supposed value of our chosen authority making insulting comments as a way of making those who disagree with their position look untrustworthy.   ... sigh ...

In closing, here is a portion of Ayn Rand's essay 'Collectivized Ethics' — I repeat this often, since it is so applicable to this repetitious pattern of ignoring individual rights in people's attempt to grasp at pretending they are a social benefactor --

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OvL1_89QDs
http://www.aynrand.org/novels/virtue-of-selfishness
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Since nature does not guarantee automatic security, success and survival to any human being, it is only the dictatorial presumptuousness and the moral cannibalism of the altruist-collectivist code that permits a man to suppose (or idly to daydream) that he can somehow guarantee such security to some men at the expense of others.

If a man speculates on what “society” should do for the poor, he accepts thereby the collectivist premise that men’s lives belong to society and that he, as a member of society, has the right to dispose of them, to set their goals or to plan the “distribution” of their efforts.

This is the psychological confession implied in such questions and in many issues of the same kind.

At best, it reveals a man’s psycho-epistemological chaos; it reveals a fallacy which may be termed “the fallacy of the frozen abstraction” and which consists of substituting some one particular concrete for the wider abstract class to which it belongs—in this case, substituting a specific ethics (altruism) for the wider abstraction of “ethics.”  Thus, a man may reject the theory of altruism and assert that he has accepted a rational code—but, failing to integrate his ideas, he continues unthinkingly to approach ethical questions in terms established by altruism.

More often, however, that psychological confession reveals a deeper evil: it reveals the enormity of the extent to which altruism erodes men’s capacity to grasp the concept of rights or the value of an individual life; it reveals a mind from which the reality of a human being has been wiped out.

Humility and presumptuousness are always two sides of the same premise, and always share the task of filling the space vacated by self-esteem in a collectivized mentality.  The man who is willing to serve as the means to the ends of others, will necessarily regard others as the means to his ends.  The more neurotic he is or the more conscientious in the practice of altruism (and these two aspects of his psychology will act reciprocally to reinforce each other), the more he will tend to devise schemes “for the good of mankind” or of “society” or of “the public” or of “future generations” —or of anything except actual human beings.

Hence the appalling recklessness with which men propose, discuss and accept “humanitarian” projects which are to be imposed by political means, that is, by force, on an unlimited number of human beings.  If, according to collectivist caricatures, the greedy rich indulged in profligate material luxury, on the premise of “price no object”—then the social progress brought by today’s collectivized mentalities consists of indulging in altruistic political planning, on the premise of “human lives no object.”

The hallmark of such mentalities is the advocacy of some grand scale public goal, without regard to context, costs or means.  Out of context, such a goal can usually be shown to be desirable; it has to be public, because the costs are not to be earned, but to be expropriated; and a dense patch of venomous fog has to shroud the issue of means—because the means are to be human lives.

“Medicare” is an example of such a project.  “Isn’t it desirable that the aged should have medical care in times of illness?” its advocates clamor.  Considered out of context, the answer would be: yes, it is desirable.  Who would have a reason to say no?  And it is at this point that the mental processes of a collectivized brain are cut off; the rest is fog.  Only the desire remains in his sight—it’s the good, isn’t it?—it’s not for myself, it’s for others, it’s for the public, for a helpless, ailing public ... The fog hides such facts as the enslavement and, therefore, the destruction of medical science, the regimentation and disintegration of all medical practice, and the sacrifice of the professional integrity, the freedom, the careers, the ambitions, the achievements, the happiness, the lives of the very men who are to provide that “desirable” goal—the doctors.

After centuries of civilization, most men—with the exception of criminals—have learned that the above mental attitude is neither practical nor moral in their private lives and may not be applied to the achievement of their private goals.  There would be no controversy about the moral character of some young hoodlum who declared: “Isn’t it desirable to have a yacht, to live in a penthouse and to drink champagne?”—and stubbornly refused to consider the fact that he had robbed a bank and killed two guards to achieve that “desirable” goal.

There is no moral difference between these two examples; the number of beneficiaries does not change the nature of the action, it merely increases the number of victims.  In fact, the private hoodlum has a slight edge of moral superiority: he has no power to devastate an entire nation and his victims are not legally disarmed.

It is men’s views of their public or political existence that the collectivized ethics of altruism has protected from the march of civilization and has preserved as a reservoir, a wildlife sanctuary, ruled by the mores of prehistorical savagery.  If men have grasped some faint glimmer of respect for individual rights in their private dealings with one another, that glimmer vanishes when they turn to public issues—and what leaps into the political arena is a caveman who can’t conceive of any reason why the tribe may not bash in the skull of any individual if it so desires.
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