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In the case of conor, the girl was as hammered as he was and her texts were later removed from her friends phones. A womans honor is a pious thing in my society but I do have some suspicions in this case since we have seen rich and famous get accused of rape, in case the evidence out there is sufficient enough to prove that he did rape her then I would absolutely want him punished but these encounters. Conor got accused in the past in Miami too, my statement still stands since rape apologia is not a hill to die on.
It is boo outgroup because hypocrisy is not a bad thing if the people you are up against are that low, Moldbug has echoed similar sentiments and I stand by them. Mass migration protestors are doing what their opponents would do instead of punching right which is very rare.
Doesn't the fact that McGregor has been accused of sexual misconduct by so many different women, completely independently, in different countries or even continents move the needle for you at all? Isn't this exactly why people are so confident that Bill Clinton is a sexual predator, despite (to the best of my knowledge) never having been found guilty even in a civil proceeding?
You've lost me there buddy. If at any point you find yourself thinking "my enemies are so vicious that I must preemptively become more vicious than them before they destroy me outright", I think it's worth taking a step back and asking yourself if that's an accurate appraisal of the state of affairs, or if you're just coming up with some half-baked ham-handed rationalisation to do something you know is bad but want to do anyway. Note that your reasoning is word for word the same as that employed by woke people to justify deplatforming, cancelling or beating up conservatives.
I have never understood the appeal of Moldbug or why he's considered such an intellectual giant. So many of his allegedly profound insights just seem like trite (or even tautological) truisms dressed up with needlessly circomlocutory or obfuscatory language. I think Scott hit the nail on the head with Moldbug's whole approach in 2013:
It says that he's a horndog. As is Clinton. I would not have high confidence in asserting Clinton committed any sort of sexual crime, as opposed to simply taking advantage of his own charisma and the attraction many women have to power.
Well then I'm sure you will have a very different take on this article than I did.
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I don’t think a distributed conspiracy is all that weird. The machinations around power and the seeking of power have not really ever changed, except that they’ve become more sophisticated as knowledge of psychology and technology has allowed for greater social engineering capabilities. In the bad old days of feudal societies, thing we’re done fairly openly because there really wasn’t much knowledge about how to do so quietly. You’d openly scheme that you and your faction want power, find Allies whose wealth, power and influence you could use to take power, and off you go, sitting a Lannister on the throne of Westeros. Not everyone involved would be part of a conspiracy. Maybe you stood to gain a trade deal if you had someone on the throne who shared your interests. In that instance you might well support the movement even if you’re not in on the conspiracy. You might well jump on social trends that increase your power. This is how power always works.
I think by the point at which a conspiracy is "distributed" it can no longer meaningfully called a conspiracy, and is just an ordinary political coalition. The concept of a "distributed conspiracy" just seems to be (neo-)reactionaries attempting to tar a political coalition they don't like by describing it using a scary word. No different, really, from woke people calling everyone they don't like a fascist.
What would distinguish a distributed conspiracy from a political coalition for me is methods and goals that the conspirants would not willingly disclose in the open. Without secret communications, coordination on those would be based on ideas that emerge naturally, that are downstream of memes shared by the distributed conspiracy. In a way this is like encryption, people with the correct key (sequence of memes) will decode the coordination instructions correctly. The left often accuses the right of this in the form of dogwhistles. If you want, for instance, to get widespread cheating in an election but don't want to say it out loud because that has consequences, you push very loudly memes that would justify cheating ("the other side will end democracy", for instance), so that without having to organize (at least not in large conspiracies), susceptible people will naturally wink, nod and act in support when they see hints that another person might be cheating in the direction they support.
This seems functionally identical to "dog-whistle politics" and/or "stochastic terrorism". As with those concepts, I could certainly see how something like this could be true, but in practice it only ever seems to get trotted out as a stick with which to beat one's enemies.
In any sufficiently large political faction, you'll have leaders who make impassioned speeches about the importance of accomplishing their goals, and subordinates who take this to heart and end up bending or breaking the rules in an effort to accomplish those goals. If caught, the leader will inevitably claim that he never explicitly instructed anyone to bend or break the rules. Should we believe him?
I predict that if we agree with the leader's goals, then the movement is only guilty of having a few overly literal-minded bad apples who have been swiftly dealt with; if we disagree, then the movement is really a "distributed conspiracy" in which the leaders use "dog-whistle politics" to escape culpability for "stochastic terrorism".
I am sceptical of the utility of any political term so susceptible to Russell conjugations.
Indeed, at object level they tend to just be unfalsifiable claims against the other side, but I think at least it offers a credible rebuttal to the idea that conspiracies cannot exist past a certain scale.
I would say that past a certain scale even referring to such things as conspiracies is losing an essential component of the definition of the word.
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Collition is a distributed conspiracy. Lobbying is a distributed conspiracy. I’ve never really noted that the NRx groups would not have considered a rightward leaning lobby or collition as not being a distributed conspiracy. Distributed conspiracies are simply the building and wielding of a power base. And really the biggest difference in modern times is how the influence peddling works due to how we perceive the legitimacy of a power base. In modern liberal democracy, legitimacy flows from the deimos— all of us, so power is wielded by creating the appearance of the public being for something and creating propaganda networks.
Why do they only use the Cathedral in reference to the "distributed conspiracy" of left-leaning academia, news media etc.? Why, to the best of my knowledge, is there no equivalently ominous term in NRx circles for conservative lobby groups, the Koch brothers etc.?
Because until very recently the only conservative lobby groups that had any degree of success were already Cathedral-friendly. Financial liberalisation tempered (controlled) by light government regulation is quite popular among the great and the good. Not amongst deBoer and his ilk but he is clearly a heretic.
The original right wing Cathedral was, literally, the Cathedral. An alliance between priests, lords and burghers, all of whom came from similar backgrounds and had a shared interest in keeping the peasants down and the aristocrats, bureaucrats and propagandists up. Thus the French revolutionary saying: “France will not be free until the last lord is strangled with the entrails of the last priest”. I.e. until the Cathedral is destroyed.
So would you say the Catholic Church was a historical example of a distributed conspiracy?
Precisely. Specifically, that it combined the theorycrafter/propagandist role now filled by academia/media respectively.
AFAIK this is explicitly Moldbug’s thesis; it’s why he uses the specific term “Cathedral”.
Someone brought up the point in discussion with @Ben_Garrison but Moldbug’s thesis is really meant to be a theory of post-1500s modernism rather than modern American politics. Of course these days he’s more public and no longer pseudonymous so he’s slipperier and grifter.
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Yes. As would noble houses.
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Not really. If mcgregor was a nobody, then yeah absolutely. But all things equal I would expect a famous person to have more accusations against them since the cost of making the accusations are low (even the accusers name is shielded) and the upsides are there (payout, excuse for cheating etc).
Not saying these are false but count doesn’t really do it for me.
How many rape accusations does e.g. Barack Obama have against him? What about Chris Pratt? What about JD Vance? What does it say about McGregor that plenty of prominent men have approximately zero rape accusations to their name?
My guess is it says Mcgregor engages in more trysts. I’m unwilling to say he is a rapist based solely off of accusations.
I’m not saying all famous people Will have these claims but I’m saying they are less reliable indicator of guilt compared to non famous people.
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This seems like a weird heuristic which no one ever applies in any other context. If a company is accused of fraud once, well, that happens; twice, well, accidents happen. But I strongly suspect that you would avoid doing business with a successful company currently facing five or more independent concurrent investigations/lawsuits for fraud. Sooner or later you have to start wondering if there's fire in addition to smoke.
It's also plainly untrue that every sufficiently famous person will eventually face an unfounded accusation of sexual misconduct. There are celebrities who've been in the public eye for decades without once being accused of misbehaving.
I suspect it depends on what business they're in, Accountants probably have a one strike rule, contractors probably need about 20 or you're not going to find one to work with!
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Apples and oranges. When someone is accusing the company of fraud, it isn’t a relative free ride. They ca. easily be sued for defamation. If it is a hedge fund, they lose reputation if there isn’t fraud. If it is an insider, they have a lot to lose.
That is, there is significant skin in the game. But accusations of rape against celebrities? He’ll look at the Bauer situation. Dude was summarily kicked out of baseball over a claim where due to discovery it was determined the whole thing was a made up exhortation scheme and the AP still refuses to name the perp’s name because it is their policy not to release the name of accusers when it comes to sexual assault. The power these women wield is enormous and the downsides are relatively narrow — especially if they don’t leave obvious incriminating evidence like the claimant in the Bauer situation.
I guess what I’m saying is I wouldn’t simply take the word of Samsun that Sony TVs are bad.
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Fair and people are divided on mcgregor since most of the behind the scenes evidence of the case is not as public, once that is the case and it is fairly clear that he voilated her consent, I will wish for him to be seen as an offender.
If people will go out and doxx Scott Alexander, a good-hearted lib who did no one wrong, get Charles Muray cancelled for Milque Toast hbd and have laws that punish any reactionary statements at all, then I have no issues with others using whatever means they have at hand. You cannot expect to win against people who want your life destroyed, scott was hounded by the NYT, that reporter is still doing whatever he did and a bulk of the people who cancelled NYT subs happily agree to go on their podcasts and talk to their journalists. Boo outgroup is the only solution in many cases, not a defence of conor though since if he is indeed a rapist then you dont want such people around but boo outgroup is a completely fine thing imo.
This is the problem with stipulative framings and sorting people into arbitrary buckets to suit the rhetorical needs of the moment. No one here disputes that the Grey Lady was wrong to attempt to dox Scott. What on earth does that have to do with how Irish journalists who've lived in Ireland their entire lives cover migrant crime? What does that have to do with how an Irish satire website cracks jokes about Conor McGregor? "Because an American newspaper tried to destroy a blogger I greatly admire, I must show no mercy and give no quarter to Irish journalists who've never worked at said newspaper and have never heard of said blogger" sounds functionally indistinguishable from "I must murder prostitutes because my dog told me to".
You have no evidence that the Irish journalists under discussion are utterly lacking in moral principles, or that they couldn't be shown the error of their ways and gently be persuaded to properly live up to the moral principles they do in fact possess. Not a single one of the examples you cited were from Ireland; two of them weren't even from Europe. Your entire argument rests on the transitive property of "these journalists have demonstrated that they are part of my enemy's team; members of my enemy's team have been known to do bad things and disregard their stated principles; ergo, these specific journalists have no principles and want to destroy me, so I must destroy them preemptively". Compare "@mrvanillasky is Indian; India has a higher rate of sexual assault than many other nations; ergo @mrvanillasky is a rapist, no further evidence required". Obviously you wouldn't like someone drawing that inference about you, so try to extend the same courtesy to members of your out-group.
Fair enough, I was a little too uncharitable there.
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