RenOS
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User ID: 2051
Thanks, now I feel old. I've never heard this as a slang term, not even online.
Interesting. Which king, if I may ask? Since there really aren't that many left.
What is passed off as gender abolitionism tends to merely be a rebellion against perceived male supremacism and heteronormativity.
A point I realized in discussions with my wife (early millenial), her mom (boomer) and her sister (gen X) is that there are two fundamentally opposed kinds of male supremacism: First, the idea that biological men are just better, and second, that male social norms are just better. The first is extremely unpopular and is fought very openly and very hard, the second is ... complicated.
Especially among liberal Gen X and older women, there is a common story of noticing that you're being valued for your school and later career accomplishments, and having to become tough and competitive to make it in, often explicitly called, "the world of men". Meanwhile, the worst that can possibly happen to you, that will make your parents bow their head in shame and your classmates laugh about you, is to become pregnant early. Even later, while your parents might switch to start egging you to have kids, your environment will subtly or not-so-subtly never really stops primarily considering your status through the lens of achievements. Anyone can have kids, after all, so it's much more prestigious to become a high-powered lawyer, a professor, or something else.
All of this is a very straightforward application of norms that formerly only applied to men, now also to women. Formerly female norms, centering on communal decision-making, friendliness and inclusivity, as well as achievements, mostly revolving around motherhood and the household, were de-emphasized in the former case and discarded wholesale in the later. Interestingly, acknowledging this will regularly get you dismissed as a male supremacist, on the logic that of course the virtues/achievements I call "male" here are actually just general virtues/achievements, and implying that women might be less good or even just merely care less about them is akin to claiming that women are lesser.
This lead to an dynamic in which Gen X men who are very stereotypically male, who are dismissive of femininity, nevertheless consider themselves pro-feminist in the sense of thinking that women can and should behave the same as successful men. Several of my (former) profs are like that.
Of course people generally don't really change fundamentally, so this just got bottled up for as long as it was necessary. With women increasingly being a majority in many fields, they can now simply enforce new norms, even if it takes some time to (re-)normalize them. And it's unsurprising that these new norms happen to reflect feminine virtues. And the Gen X men are the ones being blasted the hardest, who additionally feel completely blindsided since it's a fundamentally different kind of feminism than the one they were told is the right kind. Millenial men might also be split on whether they like this development, but they seem much less surprised.
My wife notices this a lot, contrasting what she is told by her mother what she "needs to do" to be successful in the workplace, and how much her mom was kept back and discriminated against (in addition to being an east german in a west german company, who didn't get her advanced degree accepted to boot!), often in fairly overt ways ... and many of those don't really apply anymore, except for the part where you get screwed over hard for having kids and actually wanting to care for them. As long as you're childless and conform to male norms, you are, if anything, getting beneficial treatment.
The woke revolution seems to a substantial degree to be women just re-asserting that their values matter, too. But unfortunately these values can be wildly disadvantageous in the workplace; For example, you can't do without substantial competitiveness that women find deeply unpleasant. So at the end we arrive at a weird androgynous ideal, where men are forced to engage in female norms they dislike, while women are forced to engage in male norms they dislike. The "great feminization theory" is in this way correct about the recent changes, but fails to see the ways in which women also have accepted a, for lack of a better word, internalized masculinization a longer time ago that now sits so deep that calling it into question feels to many like a personal attack on their self-worth.
Dunno how we can fix this. Just talking about the issue usually gets you called names, and average differences are dismissed with single counterexamples. It's understable that women don't want to be forced all the way back into the kitchen, but at the same time, many of them clearly aren't very happy in highly competitive workplaces that don't suit their values. And the men likewise don't want to work in an adult Montessori kindergarten, either.
"Seen"? From what I've heard, historical accounts of short leaders and kings were often exaggerated; Napoleon, for example, was just short compared to his unusually tall elite soldiers, not in general. Even those that were genuinely short in the below-average-male-aristocrat sense usually were not so short that they got close in height to women, especially since the aristocracy already had an height advantage and could in addition use shoes and clothing to hide the differences somewhat.
Though somewhat in agreement, I remember having seen a paper showing that if a person is attracted to someone, they are more liable to ascribe to them all sorts of qualities beyond their objective merit, which included women claiming an attractive man is tall even when he was merely average. But, well, social studies and replication crisis and all that.
To be fair to the, uhm, contra-contrarians, there is a noticeable issue here of voting- for-agreement (as opposed to quality of argument) and dogpiling. Even if both are far better than reddit. It's human nature I suppose, I regularly catch myself wanting to downvote only to control myself since the poster is clearly arguing in good faith, I just disagree hard.
I feel increasingly disillusioned with our ability to fix issues. Elite circles have successfully ideologically homogenized to such a degree that pretty much no smart & capable person would willingly, publicly go against the main tenets. It just fucks up your prospects too much.
It further has result that our systemic problems are increasingly caused specifically by ideological blindspots, because all problems that aren't can be fixed, while these are the only ones left to fester. Racism, for example, in the lower and middle classes can be a serious problem yet be fixable if the elite is clearly & openly against it. Racism in the elite is coup-complete.
So the opposing politicians are all clearly dysfunctional in one way or another, even when they're right on some core issues. You can find smart people arguing against ideological dead angles, but either only in a small scale that doesn't call into question the entire framework, or pseudonymously online.
Modern multiculturalist neoliberalism isn't the worst ideology, certainly better than, say, communism, but this also means again that as a smart person there is less pressure to change the system: You can make your own life good just fine, so why bother?
I expect it to be supplanted in the longterm, but most likely by an ideology I consider significantly worse.
You can easily square the circle however by realizing that specifically the subgroup of women who currently have difficulty finding a partner are the ones who disproportionally suffer from hypergamy run amok. Most women have a reasonable or at least mostly functional version of hypergamy. Similar to how the subgroup of men who become NEETS are disproportionally struggling with addiction, anti-sociality and motivational problems that are male-typical and which other men also have, but just not to such a dysfunctional degree. Or to the difference between Asperger vs Autism.
I've noticed this tendency as well. First, progressives claim that changing the law or cultural mores on something will improve this or that, or everything altogether. When their predictions inevitable fail and the changes turn out to be somewhere between less good or outright negative, but everyone already got used to the new norms, the claim becomes that this is what we wanted anyway. Ideally, you start a bunch of tv shows how terrible life as before [X] changed. Didn't chesterton have a quote to that effect?
Ah, found it:
"The whole modern world has divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of Conservatives is to prevent mistakes from being corrected."
The implication here being that the progressives of old are now the contemporary conservatives.
Do you have anything in particular on your mind? Being an European myself, Dase's rant strikes me as substantially worse than anything I've ever read about Europeans on here.
I'd rather say that without western support, they would have simply lost some time ago already, so you're kind of right but I wouldn't say that this means my causality is reversed. I don't think that they wouldn't have at least tried to fight. It's more a case of reciprocal causality that is hard to entangle; I also wouldn't deny the obvious maidan involvement of the US either, which is itself a precursor of the current conflict. But there as well, it worked because the Ukrainian majority did lose trust in the russia-aligned government, and it did want a realignment towards the west.
I'm not so knowledgeable for tractors specifically, but there definitely were car bubbles. When people realized that cars have reached a state close to horse-drawn carriages, will predictably become even better in the near future, and probably replace horses altogether, a host of new companies with various variants of car technology cropped up. Of course, as you should know, almost all modern cars have used the same basic style of engine, the internal combustion engine (and in fact, mostly a specific kind of it).
But it wasn't always so. There was a variety of companies with their own engine designs that overwhelmingly failed. And of course various companies experimented with non-engine related designs that also didn't work out. Some companies successfully made the switch early enough, but many just failed. You could do everything right, correctly predict the dominance of cars, invest in a reasonable company, and lose absolutely everything anyway.
The main difference now is that many of the current competitors are already giants so they can write off a lot of losses without going broke, and it's unclear whether governments will even allow them to outright fail. But a bubble popping on several of them (or even all of them - maybe the real breakthrough will come from a smaller competitor, though I consider it very unlikely) and them losing substantial valuation seems like a foregone conclusion, even if I think that eventually AI will be a technology of the future.
I mostly agree with you in the context of medieval or ancient warfare. Historical societies could rebound fast because they were essentially malthusian-limited: Even if they lose a majority of men, they'd just get them back in a generation or two. Whether you stay at the limit thanks to high infant mortality or dip below for a while thanks to war but recover quickly afterwards doesn't really matter all that much, not even in terms of net-deaths. Arguably, a decent number of the men were more trouble than worth anyway, so it might even be beneficial for the rest to get rid of them. But two can play at game theory, see the Melian Dialogue, so you shouldn't discount the alternative even back then.
Ukraine's behaviour is also beneficial for me, as a cynical european who wants them to bleed russia as much as possible to reduce the chance of them starting a war against us. It's apparently also what Ukraine wants, so they should get our support, and we're in no position to talk them out of it. But for themselves it's basically suicide if you look at the numbers. Lots of dead, mostly men. Lots of emigration, mostly women, and I'd be very surprised if more than a third returns, if even that much. The birth rate is in the gutters as well. There's no coming back from this.
Venezuela becoming a de-facto US vassal seems ... clearly preferential to this? It's true that I prefer the US by far to Russia already so it's hardly a symmetric issue. But to go back to history, there are plenty of independent rulers who swiftly surrendered or even swore fealty to a superior foe when the writing was on the wall, only to bide their time and come out on top eventually.
Yeah, I'm also really not into that dubai style, but I've now heard from multiple people (some I know in person, some just online) who worked with arabs that they've been impressed with how they at least try to think in a genuine long-term perspective on how to keep their society running in a way that isn't just a complete capitulation to the west. Not that I'd expect that to work well long-term, anyway. For an example, the demographer & pronatalist Lyman Stone has commented on the foresight of the UAE to explore possibilities to keep up the birth rate before even dipping below replacement rate. Most other countries dipped below replacement half a century ago, told themselves it's just delay and will surely fix itself, noticed after ca 20 years lol no it doesn't, then told themselves that surely infinite immigration will surely fix it, and now, well, the results speak for themselves.
I've written about the murderbot series before.
Short version, it's pretty straightforward pro-communist/anti-capitalist propaganda, and the author herself makes absolutely no secret of this.
The discourse around Kirk on the left was quite chilling though. There is at least a significant minority of people on the left who genuinely want to murder their political opponents and who are mainly held back by not wanting to risk their comfortable life, in stark opposition to their self-image of being the non-violent non-coercive side.
For many people, "meaning well" and being nice is very important, sometimes even more than actually accomplishing anything. There is in particular a stark divide between left and right (and also men vs women) on this issue. Plenty of my friends and acquaintances, when confronted with the dysfunction of some left-wing regulations, will nevertheless defend them and not want them abolished, mostly on account that they were originally meant well and should at most be reformed (which nobody ever kicks off and thus never actually happens). Aristocrats who never actually accomplished anything and certainly don't deserve their wealth will often be more popular on account of modest charitable spending and a public image carefully designed to be maximally inoffensive (which is much easier if you're not constrained by trying to accomplish something) than a revolutionary entrepreneur.
Their view, as I understand it, is that communism at least sounds nice in theory and means well originally, and the same goes for communist activist, whereas fascist activist are just irredeemable monsters. Which I even partially agree with, the problem is just that the people they call fascists pretty much never identify as such and have only little commonalities with the historic concept. It's always Adorno-style sophistry where you use a definition of fascism that is 50% totalitarism and 50% being right-wing and then, upon showing that the right-wingers are indeed right-wing, claim that there are large parallels between fascism and whatever right-winger you choose. Not to mention that irrespective of the good intention of the communist, I don't want to end up in the gulag anyway.
Plenty of people with more money have tried and failed at the exact same purpose. The majority of the NASA expert class has repeatedly made an ass of themselves claiming that this or that is never going to be cost-effective or not even physically possible, only to be disproven a year or two later. I have no problem saying Musk is an asshole, or that he is clearly abusing substances that fuck with his mind, but you could have given ten times as much money to any other rich guy or even an established subject expert and they would have not even come close to accomplish what he did.
Otherwise, strong agree with @pusher_robot. The rational behaviour for a self-centered person with 100 million dollars is to take no risks whatsoever and make no enemies, just coasting for life. And this is what most of them do. Anyone in that position who instead risks it all and tries to create something new should be highly respected.
Aside from it never going to happen, it would be massively distortionary and set up horrible incentives. We already have the problem that most people who become moderately rich are unwilling to take any risks and basically just coast, especially those who inherited. Trying to become ultra-rich is just not worth it even now. If you look at the ultra-rich, it is often just a side effect of other goals. Say what you will, but Musk clearly wants to develop new, revolutionary technology, taking arguably irrational risks (in the sense of pure expected risk-reward in terms of money), working ungodly hours and making plenty of enemies.
Your proposal would turn everything into ultra-europe, where all the powerful people are somewhere in the government and nominally only modestly rich, and the few very richest would be extremely bland and boring inherited wealth who maybe run some old established uncontroversial business and mostly spend charitably, never taking any risks or making any enemies. Everyone else who risks becoming too rich will try to get rid of that money ASAP since it's just not worth it for the risk to get executed.
I increasingly think it might even be the other way around; The more you limit the powerful people on the free market, the more the powerful will move into the state and other entities that are harder to control since they are the control. Plenty of ultra-rich are happy to let you do whatever you want as long as you let them do whatever they want. But if the same person is instead managing giant flows of money that aren't actually theirs but technically belong to the people, it's suddenly at the minimum their business to control your behaviour insofar as it concerns that flow of money. And unlike the free market, where they need to find a way to offer you a deal or product that sounds good enough, if they are in the state, they can just straight-up force you. And often enough, that taste of power will only grow; If you're already controlling people, you'll find excuses to extend that control. For their own good, of course.
The key mistake IMO lies in the idea that money equals power. No, money is primarily a consumptive element of power. You can always trivially convert money into gaming consoles, vacations, yachts or any other consumptive good. Once you try to convert it into other elements of power, you'll have to expect losses and/or require sufficient skill to do it correctly: If you want to create something new, you need a good idea and the capability of running at the very least a lab, possibly a lean&mean start-up, often against much larger, established companies with massive legal moats. If you want to change or manipulate society, you need charisma and social acumen. If you want to simply force people to submit, you need to get control of the government, and those who already control it will not appreciate your meddling. A minimum amount of money is certainly required to get things off the ground, but you don't need to be ultra-rich. Upper-middle class money and/or a bank loan is often already enough for most purposes.
The Problem of a Flying-Machine
Others have already explained in-detail how some of the arguments don't even hold water given current technology levels, but I always find these kinds of arguments deeply silly general. As shown from the link, there is no shortage of technology that was claimed to be outright physically impossible, yet which turned out to work just fine; See also NASA vs SpaceX discussions on reuse for a more pertinent example, though that was more about never being cost-effective, as I understand it.
That said, especially given the rapid progress in AI we're seeing, I'm expecting that space colonisation will happen first through robots, which sidesteps a large number of your objections entirely. These can then build up an adequate habitat for us anywhere, given enough time & if we so choose. I also think that we are in no hurry to colonise space soon. But it will have to happen eventually if we want to exist for a cosmologically relevant timespan.
It's funny, I have the exact opposite as an impression. In Hollywood, the bully is always a complete, irredeemable asshole who ALSO is extremely privileged and from the wrong political background, making him extra-unsympathetic. The victim is always a misunderstood, gentle soul from a difficult background who will instantly blossom once given a chance. It's very obvious whom you're supposed to sympathize with.
Reality is always more complicated. Sometimes it's just two assholes trying to bully each other, and other people join in on one or the other side or even switch depending on momentary sympathy. And every time whoever is currently losing will play the victim card to authority figures.
Sometimes there just is a really self-centered, difficult kid that the others try to include, but it always predictably fails, and instead of trying to get better, the kid tries to get authority figures involved to force the others to include them.
Sometimes the bully is popular and nice in general but for some reason dislikes the victim, who is just less socially adept and so gets excluded. But the bully doesn't actually seek out and hurt the victim, he just doesn't want anything to do with him, while to the victim it feels like vicious bullying since he gets excluded so much.
And so on. Sometimes the hollywood depiction really is correct, and yours as well. But at least my impression is that on average the bully is less bad than usually portrayed and vice versa the victim is less good. Though I wouldn't quite go as far as saying that bullying is good.
She did the career thing, and has somewhat waited out the pool of guys that she considers worthy of a relationship. She's probably going to settle for somebody at one point and be somewhat quietly disappointed.
Or not. At least from my PoV, it seems that one part of the relationship recession is women who got a wrong impression what kind of guy they can realistically have a long-term relationship with and what real relationships entail, and after seeing the reality that is possible, they decide to forego long-term relationships altogether. And as you say, these women often don't sleep around much either; They are, for lack of better word, volcels.
But otherwise I agree, settling and then quietly resenting your partner is also a popular option.
I did enjoy my listening of HPMOR, but it IMO also gets pretty silly at times. I don't really remember examples of the top of my head unfortunately since it's quite some time ago, but I do remember coming away with the impression that there isn't a lot that Harry is doing which would work nearly as well IRL as it does in the book.
Increasingly I think that the fundamental problem is, not only would very few strategic (or tactical, for that matter) genii write a book like that, if anything writing fiction like this anti-selects for competence in harsh competitive environments, since it's fundamentally escapism. And there's no way out of this inherent contradiction.
Most military action currently is one dominant side enforcing its will unilaterally on a weaker enemy, or a slow boring grind like Ukraine. If a weaker side wins, it's usually on morale and propaganda terms as opposed to military genius.
So the closest thing we've got currently IRL is probably gaming competitions, I guess.
FWIW, girl has been so normalized as a generic casual word for young-ish woman that it doesn't really register to me the same way as "boy". Boy is pre-puberty; Girl can be anything below ... 40 or so? It functions more like "guy" nowadays, woman would sound stilted to me.
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No offense, but this seems completely unworkable to me. The universities are already simply ignoring existing laws when it suits them, they'll just ignore those, too. They might at most need to find a paper-thin excuse that will allow already sympathetic judges/lawyers to sign it off, but I'm not sure even that is necessary.
A new march is impossible, since the old one was only possible thanks to the conservative old guard allowing it. Which is also the reason they lost to the trumpist new right.
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