Category Archives: Uncategorized

A new RCT on guaranteed annual income

from: November 20, 2016 at 09:06AM

The Words That Remade America

“Lincoln’s speech at Gettysburg worked several revolutions, beginning with one in literary style. Everett’s talk was given at the last point in history when such a performance could be appreciated without reservation. It was made obsolete within a half hour of the time when it was spoken. Lincoln’s remarks anticipated the shift to vernacular rhythms which Mark Twain would complete twenty years later. Hemingway claimed that all modern American novels are the offspring of Huckleberry Finn. It is no greater exaggeration to say that all modern political prose descends from the Gettysburg Address …”

When and Why Nationalism Beats Globalism

Jonathan Haidt: “Legal immigration from morally different cultures is not problematic even with low levels of assimilation if the numbers are kept low; small ethnic enclaves are not a normative threat to any sizable body politic. Moderate levels of immigration by morally different ethnic groups are fine, too, as long as the immigrants are seen as successfully assimilating to the host culture. When immigrants seem eager to embrace the language, values, and customs of their new land, it affirms nationalists’ sense of pride that their nation is good, valuable, and attractive to foreigners. But whenever a country has historically high levels of immigration, from countries with very different moralities, and without a strong and successful assimilationist program, it is virtually certain that there will be an authoritarian counter-reaction, and you can expect many status quo conservatives to support it.”

How Two Trailblazing Psychologists Turned the World of Decision Science Upside Down

Michael Lewis on Tversky and Kahneman:

“Apparently, the foreign minister didn’t want to rely on the best estimates. He preferred his own internal probability calculator: his gut. “That was the moment I gave up on decision analysis,” said Danny. “No one ever made a decision because of a number. They need a story.” As Danny and Lanir wrote, decades later, after the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency asked them to describe their experience in decision analysis, the Israeli Foreign Ministry was “indifferent to the specific probabilities.” What was the point of laying out the odds of a gamble if the person taking it either didn’t believe the numbers or didn’t want to know them? The trouble, Danny suspected, was that “the understanding of numbers is so weak that they don’t communicate anything. Everyone feels that those probabilities are not real—that they are just something on somebody’s mind.””

a dissertation on monocausal parataxis in social media

from: November 14, 2016 at 03:45PM

What So Many People Don’t Get About the U.S. Working Class

“One little-known element of that gap is that the white working class (WWC) resents professionals but admires the rich. […] professionals order them around every day. The dream is not to become upper-middle-class, with its different food, family, and friendship patterns; the dream is to live in your own class milieu, where you feel comfortable — just with more money.

[…] Hillary Clinton, by contrast, epitomizes the dorky arrogance and smugness of the professional elite. The dorkiness: the pantsuits. The arrogance: the email server. The smugness: the basket of deplorables. Worse, her mere presence rubs it in that even women from her class can treat working-class men with disrespect.”

against tweetstorms

from: November 13, 2016 at 11:47AM

Donald Trump Does Have Ideas—and We’d Better Pay Attention to Them

“If you listen closely to Trump, you’ll hear a direct repudiation of the system of globalization and identity politics that has defined the world order since the Cold War. There are, in fact, six specific ideas that he has either blurted out or thinly buried in his rhetoric: (1) borders matter; (2) immigration policy matters; (3) national interests, not so-called universal interests, matter; (4) entrepreneurship matters; (5) decentralization matters; (6) PC speech—without which identity politics is inconceivable—must be repudiated.

[…]

What I am saying is that Trump is that quintessentially American figure, hated by intellectuals on both sides of the aisle and on the other side of the Atlantic, who doesn’t start with a “plan,” but rather gets himself in the thick of things and then moves outward to a workable idea—not a “principled” one—that can address the problem at hand, but which goes no further. That’s what American businessmen and women do. (And, if popular culture is a reliable guide to America, it is what Han Solo always does in Star Wars movies.) We would do well not to forget that the only school of philosophy developed in America has been Pragmatism.”

Tweet by kottke


via https://twitter.com/kottke

Tweet by voxdotcom


via https://twitter.com/voxdotcom

Tweet by tpgMets


via https://twitter.com/tpgMets

Tweet by Olivianuzzi


via https://twitter.com/Olivianuzzi

Tweet by awinston


via https://twitter.com/awinston

Tweet by hilzoy


via https://twitter.com/hilzoy

Tweet by emmabaccellieri


via https://twitter.com/emmabaccellieri

Tweet by MichaelHogueDMN


via https://twitter.com/MichaelHogueDMN

Tweet by UCBerkeley


via https://twitter.com/UCBerkeley

Tweet by baseballcrank


via https://twitter.com/baseballcrank

Tweet by ByRosenberg


via https://twitter.com/ByRosenberg

Tweet by doriantaylor


via https://twitter.com/doriantaylor