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Now you have me wondering if LSD had something to do with this. (#people who've ever used LSD) would have had a meteoric rise in the 60s and then a slow decline from then on, and we know it has permanent effects in the right direction.
Maybe- the people into LSD in the 60s would be 70-80 now, which means that they're rapidly walking out of power into their graves now, and replaced by those who were instead high on the Righteous Anger of the 1980s.
I still don't understand why the average person would take that stuff, though; the equivalent of having weird geometric CRT burn-in on my field of vision and risking breaking the pattern-matching machinery inside my head is just not something I'm interested in.
I've never taken LSD myself, and am not interested in doing so. I'm just noticing this, particularly since it implies that if one wants liberalism, "re-legalise LSD" is an unusually-important issue.
Replying to some of your points upthread:
I'm not sure I've parsed this correctly; are you identifying as a traditionalist and saying that progressives of today will think of resurgent traditionalism as "what happens when you shove alt-right liberalism down the throats of six-foundations who'd [now] have become progressives"?
This seems non-obvious to me. Certainly, care/harm and fairness/cheating are reality-based and loyalty/betrayal and authority/subversion are socially-based, but I'd put liberty/oppression as "socially-based" and sanctity/degradation as "reality-based", and am not sure what you're pointing at with "sustainable"/"unsustainable". Mind elucidating?
No.
With any luck, yes.
Let's say I'm a young man and have the ability to work for a few years and be set for life by answering a particular question. Of the set of things that could prevent me from doing that:
From the perspective of the question-answerers (or people who believe themselves temporarily-embarrassed
millionairesquestion-answerers), the last three are a damping force- a conservative force, if you will. They tend to be frustrated by damping forces simply by being someone who fancies themselves able to be correct more often than the average person, and from that perspective that'sthefttaxationparasitism.As your mindset drifts further and further away from zero-sum it becomes easier and easier to see those people that way; as your mindset drifts closer to zero-sum, enforcing those last three things are what will make sure you get yours.
The trick is that parasitism is a valid evolutionary strategy- in the eyes of the unproductive, it's no less inherently wrong or right than productivity in terms of "mechanisms that mean I won't starve to death". And people can switch from productive to unproductive in the blink of an eye, too- you can be automated into uselessness, you can lose a limb, changing conditions of reality can destroy your niche- so... how many social taxes do you think is the correct amount?
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