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[clinton/website/src/unknownlamer.org.git] / Politics.muse
1 #title Do Not Accept the Weak State of Mind in Our Time
2
3 I have views that could perhaps be seen as odd. Do note that I am **not**
4 a liberal; nor am I a conservative. I do not buy into the traditional
5 socieconomic dipole scale, and I also reject the *political compass* two
6 dimensional scale; my political belief system could best be described
7 as *curmudgeonly bastard* if you must have a label for it. This is only
8 because being a curmudgeonly bastard isn't an ideology, but rather a
9 broad set of ideas centered around the rejection of traditional
10 political and social structures (*i.e* hating everything). I reject the
11 *ressentiment* (lookit I'm Nietzsche) of traditional anarchism and
12 believe not that every man should have no master (for then *all* would
13 be weak), but rather that he should be his own master (does that even
14 *mean* anything? Eh, it sounds nice so who cares).
15
16 These short essays are mere stubs I wrote a long while ago, and each
17 will perhaps be extended in the future.
18
19 * [[Wisdom][The Basis of My Philosophy]]
20
21 I read some things and thought they were cool. Now I can make people
22 think I'm smarter than I really am.
23
24 * The Current Economic and Political Structure Is Broken
25
26 ** The Government of the Unites States
27
28 I feel that the government in the United States is very close to being
29 broken beyond repair (perhaps this is a bit conservative, but one must
30 hope). As it stands the government above the local level (and even
31 there!) ignores the individual citizen and instead is only forced to
32 do anything by large scale action. As far as the individual is
33 concerned we no longer live in a Republic, but rather in an Plutocracy
34 which is quickly descending into something far worse.
35
36 *** Healthcare *Reform*
37
38 Upon airing my objections to the current Healthcare *Reform* bill, I was
39 asked: did you read the bill? To which I replied with action and read
40 [[http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-3590&tab=summary][the official summary of the bill]]. And now I ask those who asked me if
41 I had read it: have *you* read it. I received as a reply an unequivocal:
42 *why should I have to*.
43
44 Fun fact: it isn't as bad as some people make it seem, but guess what?
45 *It does nothing beneficial to the individual*. All it does it require
46 that anyone over 30 purchase insurance, severely restricts the usage
47 of Health Savings Accounts (which, may be not so bad--I have no
48 opinion on their usefulness... but *Republicans* created them so they
49 *must* be *evil*), and is generally a piece of hey-look-I-did-something
50 (but nothing goes into effect until I am out of office)
51 legislation. This has never happened before, obviously. We are on the
52 surface of Mars now too didn't you know.
53
54 Meanwhile there is what amounts to no price controls, an actual *ban* on
55 the formation of State run healthcare (until 2017, and then only at
56 the discretion of the HHS secretary), and token (unfunded) support for
57 the formation of healthcare cooperatives. There are some taxes on
58 large drug makers, but the research required by the FDA for drug
59 approval is *tax deductible* (and so the larger drug makers can avoid
60 most of the new taxes, har). And... an excise tax on overly fancy
61 healthcare plans... more or less, a nice bill that, if it manages to
62 not be overturned by 2018, will do absolutely nothing one way or the
63 other.
64
65 It is obvious that I am indeed a dirty Nazi redneck terrorist
66 teabagger Republican piece of shit who hates the poor and black
67 people. I guess it's time for my white ass to move to Iran and see how
68 I like it there!
69
70 ** Capitalism is Intrinsically Evil
71
72 Cooperation is better than exploitation. How can one justify an
73 economic system based upon paying others as little as possible in an
74 attempt to make the most profit from their labor so as to make some
75 profit?
76
77 But then again, what does *evil* mean?
78
79 * Misc
80
81 ** Long Term Copyright Causes Harm to Society (=Draft Revision 2=)
82
83 ; maybe reinsert intro [[clintons-plans#Writing]]
84
85 ; - Craft work compensated directly
86
87 It is straightforward to calculate a fair cost for material goods. The
88 material cost follows from the materials, and the labor cost generally
89 derives from the complexity of construction. The fixed price for each
90 item consists of both of these factors. Thus it is trivial to ensure
91 that a craftsman is fairly compensated for his effort.
92
93 ; - Creative work indirectly
94 ; - Harder to regain effort spent on creating
95
96 Creative works must have their value calculated via a more circuitous
97 route. The physical form of a creative work is of little importance;
98 the ideas it represents are. The material and direct labor costs
99 (printing, binding, etc.) are thus so small as to be of negligible
100 importance when calculating value. There is effectively no objective
101 way to place value on abstract work; all the value judgements we can
102 make are subjective. We must then rely on irrational human valuations
103 to determine the value on their own.
104
105 ; - Works contain ideas
106 ; - Focus on written works
107 ; - Inherent nature of ideas
108 ; - Absorbed into the mind of the reader
109 ; - Freely copied orally, libraries, ...
110 ; - Absorbed into the culture
111
112
113 Creative works are fundamentally different from concrete works. A
114 painting may inspire others start a new stylistic movement, the
115 structure of a story may cause the formation of a new literary form,
116 an essay may incite a new political movement, etc. Creative works
117 weave themselves into the mental fabric of each individual exposed to
118 them in a way that material goods cannot. A book may change your life;
119 a table will never do that. This suggests that the abstract concepts
120 which compose a work have a strange nature and great value. Those who
121 control the distribution of creative works wield great power as a
122 result of the ability of ideas to change the individual.
123
124 After a certain period of time the physical manifestation of a
125 creative work loses commercial value. New art is being created
126 continually, and no one can be expected to read every important book
127 written, see every film, and so on for other areas. When a work ceases
128 to be profitable to publish distribution ceases. Allowing abstract
129 works to simply drop from the market creates a serious problem. New
130 ideas are built upon old ones, and after ideas have assimilated into
131 the collective concious it is important to be able to go back to the
132 old ideas and analyze them to understand the present culture. If a
133 work is no longer available it is impossible to do this. Thus works
134 that are no longer being commercially exploited should become the
135 property of the public so that any worth preserving will be preserved
136 by *someone* and avoid death.
137
138 ; - Copyright helps authors
139 ; - Gives reasonable period for ideas to be commercially exploited
140
141 Copyright manages to work fairly well for ensuring creators are
142 compensated for their effort, preventing abuse of creator rights to
143 the detriment of society, and ensuring that works will become public
144 property after they are commercially unprofitable. Irrational human
145 judgements over time often work well, and so giving exclusive right to
146 copy a work makes sense for a period of time to allow society to
147 determine its monetary value. The fair use provisions of copyright
148 give society reasonable leeway in the use of the ideas contained
149 within a work while the work is protected, and this allows society to
150 continue enriching its creative culture. The limited term of copyright
151 and ensuing reversion to the public domain prevents the cultural
152 stagnation and the loss of history that would result from works
153 becoming unavailable.
154
155 ; - Copyright should be short
156 ; - Purpose is to give the creator time to compensate himself for the
157 ; effort spent writing
158 ; - Works often have short commercial life (cite)
159
160 The term of copyright must be finely balanced between the need to
161 ensure creators have enough time to receive fair compensation for
162 their effort, and the desire to avoid cultural stagnation from
163 unavailable works. The term must be short enough that a work will not
164 be unavailable for too long after commercial interest dies. Every year
165 that passes where the work isn't being published tends to reduce the
166 number of copies in existence. It must also be long enough that a
167 creator can profit according to the value that society puts upon his
168 work.
169
170 A term should be just long enough that a work will fall out of
171 copyright when physical copies are still likely to exist. A man may
172 keep his book collection unto his death, but his children may simply
173 sell them off or discard them after he departs the mortal
174 coil. Intuitive judgement says that things that are worth entering the
175 public domain will be preserved by someone for at least his life. A
176 person who has creative works in his posession is often attached to
177 them and will keep the ones he likes the most for as long as possible
178 (e.g. my music collection is backed up in flac so that I will be able
179 to listen to my music forever). After he dies there is a large
180 increase in the chance that the works will perish unless he by chance
181 made special arrangements to have them preserved.
182
183 A generation then seems to be a reasonable term; how many things are
184 really commercially viable after thirty years? Some works may be
185 relevant to the children of the generation who created them; it seems
186 reasonable then that if a work is still commercially viable after a
187 generation then the creator deserves to retain copyright for a second
188 generation. It is questionable whether more terms would be good
189 (issues of supression of information, right to profit, etc. come into
190 play), but they can't quite be ruled out. A renewal system with a span
191 of roughly thirty years ensures that a work will be out of publication
192 for at most a generation's time. This appears to be a good balance
193 between the right of the creator and the desire to keep knowledge from
194 dying (from my eyes).
195
196 The works of the current generation, their parents, their
197 grandparents, and their great-grandparents are still copyrighted in
198 the US. Works created in the present will be copyrighted for the
199 lifetime of the author and seventy years after; a span of roughly six
200 generations.
201
202 ** Fewer Laws Are Better
203
204 *** Individuals should not have their actions regulated
205
206 *** Corporations must have their actions heavily regulated
207
208 Corporate power disrupts the functioning of a free society. If the
209 power wielded by a corporation were merely the sum of the individuals
210 that composed it there would be little issue; the fundamental problem
211 is that the benefits of gaining access to mass production facilities
212 and a huge workforce that can be forced to cooperate on certain goals
213 gives a large corporation much more than this.
214
215 **** Corporate Personhood should be revoked
216
217 **** Corporations should not be allowed to influence politics
218
219 * Social Ills
220
221 ** Mass Culture
222
223 American culture in the early 1900s began to homogenize, and now there
224 is a single massive culture that almost all three hundred million
225 people in the country share. This presents problems to those who do
226 not fit in; in the days of the self sufficient village one could move
227 to another location to find people similar to him, but now there is
228 nowhere to go. Everywhere a *social deviant* goes he will feel alienated
229 and have his social options severely limited.
230
231 A monoculture reduces the rate of idea formation, and ours is actively
232 hostile toward anything not falling in line with the
233 mainstream. People are trained to act as a mass instead of as
234 individuals; this results in far less creative people. Critical
235 thinking is not encouraged; no, it is far worse! Critical thinking is
236 discouraged, and those of us who wish to argue our points with logic
237 are met with the undefeatable enemy of a closed mind that has been
238 exposed to propaganda from birth.
239
240 *** The Talking Heads
241
242 Poison the well. Burn a strawman.
243
244 This is real argument. Real thought.
245
246 ** The Automobile
247
248 ; How far is your average trip in a car? If you don't often go further
249 ; than twenty miles have you thought about getting rid of your car?
250 ; Twenty miles! Quite the distance, isn't it? In reality it is a short
251 ; [[Bicycle][bicycle]] ride that is often under or only slightly longer than an hour
252 ; long! If this pathetic nerd can do it so can you!
253
254 ; We have finite natural resources, and oil is a resource that we have
255 ; foolishly exploited to the point of exhaustion. Ethanol and other
256 ; biofuels are pipe dreams, and you **shall** have no choice but to learn to
257 ; live without a car as oil is going to increase in cost substantially
258 ; over the next twenty years. Why wait until you are forced to give up
259 ; your car to do so? It makes more economic sense to give it up now
260 ; rather than spend more and more of your income every year just to
261 ; travel. Even ignoring that aspect the confidence it fills you with is
262 ; quite wonderful; there was a time when I walked staring at the ground
263 ; fearful of the world, and now I stand tall and can stare a driver in
264 ; the eyes and tell him to go ahead and try to run into me because I'm
265 ; not giving up my ground.
266
267 ; Try self transport; it is good for your body and mind. The relative
268 ; low cost of automobiles has forced us into a false sense of needing to
269 ; be transported by machine. We are humans; the lone bipedal upon this
270 ; planet. We were born to transport ourselves!
271
272 ** Learned Ignorance and Weakness
273
274 [[Old Viewpoints][obsolete]]
275
276 [[TRUTH]]