Help for texas

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Help for texas

Gillian Densmore
Hi all in case anyone is interested in a bit of work I do rather than my ranting and raving.  Here's a link in case anyone is interested or even wants to go to dinner. 
Also if anyone wants a funds added to the page let me know so I can add it.

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Re: Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Note the date on this article.  And this article makes me wonder..

 


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Re: Help for texas

gepr
We lack infrastructure development across the board.  Renee' gave her house a "seismic upgrade" recently.  And although we had to get it *inspected* and get a permit, there is NO code for seismic upgrades.  The inspector just comes out, stares at it while rubbing their chin and calls it good.  When the 9.0 hits us, it'll be trivial to say it's our own fault for not preparing.

Similarly, Oregon is currently on fire, as is much of Washington and California.  The Eagle Creek Fire (https://twitter.com/search?f=tweets&vertical=default&q=%23eaglecreekfire&src=typd) was allegedly started by some teenagers tossing fireworks in the forest. [sigh]  But, systemically, I'm sure there's much more to be said about forest management.

Three cheers for less government!


On 09/05/2017 09:00 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> Note the date on this<https://www.propublica.org/article/hell-and-high-water-text> article.  And this<https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/houston-spent-massively-on-new-stadiums-not-its-aging-dams-as-harvey-proved-that-was-a-very-bad-choice/2017/09/05/94d006de-923a-11e7-aace-04b862b2b3f3_story.html> article makes me wonder..


--
☣ gⅼеɳ

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Re: Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels
If, like Oklahoma, Oregon was pumping waste water underground, then I might see it in an analogous way.  
Fair enough.

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of g??? ?
Sent: Tuesday, September 5, 2017 3:47 PM
To: FriAM <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas

We lack infrastructure development across the board.  Renee' gave her house a "seismic upgrade" recently.  And although we had to get it *inspected* and get a permit, there is NO code for seismic upgrades.  The inspector just comes out, stares at it while rubbing their chin and calls it good.  When the 9.0 hits us, it'll be trivial to say it's our own fault for not preparing.

Similarly, Oregon is currently on fire, as is much of Washington and California.  The Eagle Creek Fire (https://twitter.com/search?f=tweets&vertical=default&q=%23eaglecreekfire&src=typd) was allegedly started by some teenagers tossing fireworks in the forest. [sigh]  But, systemically, I'm sure there's much more to be said about forest management.

Three cheers for less government!


On 09/05/2017 09:00 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> Note the date on this<https://www.propublica.org/article/hell-and-high-water-text> article.  And this<https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/houston-spent-massively-on-new-stadiums-not-its-aging-dams-as-harvey-proved-that-was-a-very-bad-choice/2017/09/05/94d006de-923a-11e7-aace-04b862b2b3f3_story.html> article makes me wonder..


--
☣ gⅼеɳ

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Re: Help for texas

gepr
Well, I didn't intend them to be analogs so much as 3 examples of short-sighted failures to invest in infrastructure. The point being that an investment in building codes isn't that much different from an investment in sane zoning or watershed management. We (Oregon included) often sacrifice such infrastructure in the name of "freedom" (for businesses and individuals). The freedom to eat loads of fried chicken is in the same class as the freedom to build a house inside the 100 year flood plain. The freedoms of the irresponsible are paid for with the obligations of the responsible ... the sick are helped by the healthy ... and the lucky (should) pay for the bad luck of the unlucky.


On September 5, 2017 3:10:45 PM PDT, Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

>If, like Oklahoma, Oregon was pumping waste water underground, then I
>might see it in an analogous way.  
>Fair enough.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of g??? ?
>Sent: Tuesday, September 5, 2017 3:47 PM
>To: FriAM <[hidden email]>
>Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas
>
>We lack infrastructure development across the board.  Renee' gave her
>house a "seismic upgrade" recently.  And although we had to get it
>*inspected* and get a permit, there is NO code for seismic upgrades.
>The inspector just comes out, stares at it while rubbing their chin and
>calls it good.  When the 9.0 hits us, it'll be trivial to say it's our
>own fault for not preparing.
>
>Similarly, Oregon is currently on fire, as is much of Washington and
>California.  The Eagle Creek Fire
>(https://twitter.com/search?f=tweets&vertical=default&q=%23eaglecreekfire&src=typd)
>was allegedly started by some teenagers tossing fireworks in the
>forest. [sigh]  But, systemically, I'm sure there's much more to be
>said about forest management.
>
>Three cheers for less government!
>
>
>On 09/05/2017 09:00 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>> Note the date on
>this<https://www.propublica.org/article/hell-and-high-water-text>
>article.  And
>this<https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/houston-spent-massively-on-new-stadiums-not-its-aging-dams-as-harvey-proved-that-was-a-very-bad-choice/2017/09/05/94d006de-923a-11e7-aace-04b862b2b3f3_story.html>
>article makes me wonder..


--
⛧glen⛧

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Re: Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Glen writes:


"The freedoms of the irresponsible are paid for with the obligations of the responsible ... the sick are helped by the healthy ... and the lucky (should) pay for the bad luck of the unlucky."


Among adults, there's the view that irresponsibility is a form of mental sickness.  And in a deterministic view of things, sickness just occurs whether it `ought to' or not.

But, taking that retrospective view, the healthy could be expected to abandon the sick to remain healthy in certain situations.


Not taking the mechanistic view, I think some would object to an equivalence of responsibility and sickness and also arise at a similar conclusion that the irresponsible could be abandoned in some situations.


It is not necessarily the case that `we' are a whole and must look after one another.  The population can be partitioned into compartmentalized subsets. 

Advocates of health risk pools basically have this view -- an indirect way to do an ugly thing.  


Marcus





From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of gepr ⛧ <[hidden email]>
Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2017 10:54:26 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas
 
Well, I didn't intend them to be analogs so much as 3 examples of short-sighted failures to invest in infrastructure. The point being that an investment in building codes isn't that much different from an investment in sane zoning or watershed management. We (Oregon included) often sacrifice such infrastructure in the name of "freedom" (for businesses and individuals). The freedom to eat loads of fried chicken is in the same class as the freedom to build a house inside the 100 year flood plain. The freedoms of the irresponsible are paid for with the obligations of the responsible ... the sick are helped by the healthy ... and the lucky (should) pay for the bad luck of the unlucky.


On September 5, 2017 3:10:45 PM PDT, Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:
>If, like Oklahoma, Oregon was pumping waste water underground, then I
>might see it in an analogous way. 
>Fair enough.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Friam [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of g??? ?
>Sent: Tuesday, September 5, 2017 3:47 PM
>To: FriAM <[hidden email]>
>Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas
>
>We lack infrastructure development across the board.  Renee' gave her
>house a "seismic upgrade" recently.  And although we had to get it
>*inspected* and get a permit, there is NO code for seismic upgrades.
>The inspector just comes out, stares at it while rubbing their chin and
>calls it good.  When the 9.0 hits us, it'll be trivial to say it's our
>own fault for not preparing.
>
>Similarly, Oregon is currently on fire, as is much of Washington and
>California.  The Eagle Creek Fire
>(https://twitter.com/search?f=tweets&vertical=default&q=%23eaglecreekfire&src=typd)
>was allegedly started by some teenagers tossing fireworks in the
>forest. [sigh]  But, systemically, I'm sure there's much more to be
>said about forest management.
>
>Three cheers for less government!
>
>
>On 09/05/2017 09:00 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>> Note the date on
>this<https://www.propublica.org/article/hell-and-high-water-text>
>article.  And
>this<https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/houston-spent-massively-on-new-stadiums-not-its-aging-dams-as-harvey-proved-that-was-a-very-bad-choice/2017/09/05/94d006de-923a-11e7-aace-04b862b2b3f3_story.html>
>article makes me wonder..


--
⛧glen⛧

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Re: Help for texas

gepr
On 09/10/2017 10:12 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> It is not necessarily the case that `we' are a whole and must look after one another.  The population can be partitioned into compartmentalized subsets.

You're conflating willing payment with unforeseen consequences.  When we don't look after one another purposefully, we end up "looking after one another" in the form of systemic damage to the whole system.  So, while you're right that we don't have to pay attention, purposefully, to risk pools, the costs will always be present.  By paying attention to it, the argument goes, we lessen the overall damage, at the cost of the "redistribution wealth" the right wingers are so afraid of.

So, you're wrong in the naive assertion.  It is not merely necessary, it is THE CASE that we are a whole and always "look after one another", in the end.  The question is about when to do the looking ... before or after bad things happen.

--
␦glen?

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Re: Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Glen writes:


"It is not merely necessary, it is THE CASE that we are a whole and always "look after one another", in the end.  The question is about when to do the looking ... before or after bad things happen."


One could imagine cultures in which sick people are quickly euthanized similar like sick pets.  Or, in the interest of reducing taxes or debt, that there was refusal to fund hurricane relief.  Sure, there is no defining away that things are connected, but what is valued by the whole can be redefined or localized.  

Another example is how large corporations sometimes break-up into smaller companies, e.g. HP and HP Enterprise.    It is not clear that rebuilding some resorts on the east coast of Florida impacts me as much as, say, Brexit.   Funding for recovery in Houston might make gas a little cheaper or certain domestic products, but such resources could also be routed from the middle east or Asia.   Now that nationalists are so influential, perhaps this a fine opportunity for them to prove they care about how they circumscribe the system.   


Marcus

From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of ┣glen┫ <[hidden email]>
Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2017 12:05 PM
To: FriAM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas
 
On 09/10/2017 10:12 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> It is not necessarily the case that `we' are a whole and must look after one another.  The population can be partitioned into compartmentalized subsets.

You're conflating willing payment with unforeseen consequences.  When we don't look after one another purposefully, we end up "looking after one another" in the form of systemic damage to the whole system.  So, while you're right that we don't have to pay attention, purposefully, to risk pools, the costs will always be present.  By paying attention to it, the argument goes, we lessen the overall damage, at the cost of the "redistribution wealth" the right wingers are so afraid of.

So, you're wrong in the naive assertion.  It is not merely necessary, it is THE CASE that we are a whole and always "look after one another", in the end.  The question is about when to do the looking ... before or after bad things happen.

--
␦glen?

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Re: Help for texas

gepr


On 09/10/2017 11:30 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> One could imagine cultures in which sick people are quickly euthanized similar like sick pets.  Or, in the interest of reducing taxes or debt, that there was refusal <http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article172024032.html> to fund hurricane relief.  Sure, there is no defining away that things are connected, but what is valued by the whole can be redefined or localized.
>
> Another example is how large corporations sometimes break-up into smaller companies, e.g. HP and HP Enterprise.    It is not clear that rebuilding some resorts on the east coast of Florida impacts me as much as, say, Brexit.   Funding for recovery in Houston might make gas a little cheaper or certain domestic products, but such resources could also be routed from the middle east or Asia.   Now that nationalists are so influential, perhaps this a fine opportunity for them to prove they care about how they circumscribe the system.

If you're implying that the trade-off mentioned in that article is ethically sound, then I'd tend to agree.  It's useful to compare a) spending money on disaster relief/recovery versus b) spending money on the much longer-term, and slower percolating, amelioration of suffering that is "entitlement spending".  Personally, I would tend to favor (b) over (a).  Episodic/acute disasters are the type of thing that's *easier* to keep within our attention span ... much easier than, say, the systemic costs of diabetes or lost productivity in old age.  The costs being addressed by (b) are much less evident, even in these times when the Boomers are starting to place serious drag on the system.  So, my contrarian self would tend to emphasize (b), as the sheeple's short attention span is turned to (a). 8^)  But, in the end, both cost categories will be paid one way or another.  So, it's stupid to pay more attention to one over the other, really.


--
␦glen?

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Re: Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Glen writes:


"If you're implying that the trade-off mentioned in that article is ethically sound, then I'd tend to agree."


Yes, if you accept his premises, which of course I do not.   Revenue is a free parameter that can be increased.


Marcus


From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of ┣glen┫ <[hidden email]>
Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2017 12:47:16 PM
To: FriAM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Help for texas
 


On 09/10/2017 11:30 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> One could imagine cultures in which sick people are quickly euthanized similar like sick pets.  Or, in the interest of reducing taxes or debt, that there was refusal <http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article172024032.html> to fund hurricane relief.  Sure, there is no defining away that things are connected, but what is valued by the whole can be redefined or localized.
>
> Another example is how large corporations sometimes break-up into smaller companies, e.g. HP and HP Enterprise.    It is not clear that rebuilding some resorts on the east coast of Florida impacts me as much as, say, Brexit.   Funding for recovery in Houston might make gas a little cheaper or certain domestic products, but such resources could also be routed from the middle east or Asia.   Now that nationalists are so influential, perhaps this a fine opportunity for them to prove they care about how they circumscribe the system.

If you're implying that the trade-off mentioned in that article is ethically sound, then I'd tend to agree.  It's useful to compare a) spending money on disaster relief/recovery versus b) spending money on the much longer-term, and slower percolating, amelioration of suffering that is "entitlement spending".  Personally, I would tend to favor (b) over (a).  Episodic/acute disasters are the type of thing that's *easier* to keep within our attention span ... much easier than, say, the systemic costs of diabetes or lost productivity in old age.  The costs being addressed by (b) are much less evident, even in these times when the Boomers are starting to place serious drag on the system.  So, my contrarian self would tend to emphasize (b), as the sheeple's short attention span is turned to (a). 8^)  But, in the end, both cost categories will be paid one way or another.  So, it's stupid to pay more attention to one over the other, really.


--
␦glen?

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Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by gepr

Glen/Marcus/et alia -

I have of late, been trying to understand a little more deeply the concept of "Enlightened Self Interest", mostly as it applies to me personally, but by extension how it applies to my identity groups (family, neighbors, region, culture, nation, species, sapients-at-large, life-that-plays, life in all it's forms, pan-conscious matter, et/ad, cet/naus).

In Out of My Life and Thought Schweitzer wrote:

The most immediate fact of man’s consciousness is the assertion "I am life that wills to live in the midst of life that wills to live"

— Albert Schweitzer
I find this particular observation/assertion by Schweitzer nicely poetic in it's self-referentiality, but also quite apt toward my apprehension of "what is life?" and just how far must/might I extend my "self-interest" to be properly enlightened.

Since the beginning of the Holocene (by definition), we humans have been adapting our environment to our (presumed) liking at a monotonically increasing (and concave up if not precisely geometric nor exponential?) rate.   I'm not needing to invoke Singularian concepts to suggest that we are (and have been for some time) out-driving our headlights.   For all of our abilities in predictive science and constructive engineering, there are always "unintended consequences".   Even in a clockwork universe, we must live with "the halting problem" whence the only way to know for sure how things are going to turn out is to watch them evolve into their fullness over time.  

It is not surprising (to me) that at every turn our "best ideas" turn out to have "hidden gotchas".... that building a global civilization predicated on a constant expansion of resource exploitation (first forests and prairies, then clean water sources, then coal, oil, and gas deposits) eventually hits a limit.   Hubbert's "Peak Oil" didn't even consider (or was aware of?) the consequences of greenhouse gas buildup and climate change.   Hubbert's predictions seem to have borne out pretty well in the US until we figured out "hydraulic fracturing" (see upturn in green line)


It is also not surprising (to me) that Free Markets and Capitalism and even Representative Democracy are loaded with unintended consequences and that we are very naturally faced with the possibility that they are fundamentally flawed in ways we might only be starting to understand.   I'm not advocating a return to *earlier* flawed systems (e.g. autocratic/fuedal/fascist/???) but rather a *continued* reflection and refinement on WHAT MEANS "enlightened"?  And what are the boundaries of "self". 

In the thread I bent/hijacked here, I would cynically claim that Marcus was trying to find relief in some of these paradoxes by gerrymandering "selfness"...  and Glen holding the line on a more holistic view of systems.  

A great deal of our problems in the world seem to arise out of shifting definitions of "self".  The populism in the first world that recently exhibits as xenophobia, whitelash, etc.  is precisely that.     I think it is built into us as humans/mammals/vertebrates/life-itself to be self-centered, to look after our own personal well-being before we look to that of others.   Our tribal/clan dunbar-number-scale affinities may cause us to be locally altruistic at times and look after family/friends/neighbors/tribe before ourselves, but beyond that our instincts are xenophobic.   It takes more careful thought to extend one's enlightenment very far I suspect.

In this globally connected world we have built (it has always been a single whole, but with transportation and communication, we have short-circuited a lot of the existing feedback loops in "nature" with our own) it is likely that our instincts aren't even close to being on-mark.   At best, we need to be very careful (IMO) at how we define "self" as we pursue "enlightened self-interest".    We have collectively shown a great amount of disregard for the subjects of our exploitation and colonization over the centuries, and in some cases, that is coming back to bite us hard with terrorism, but maybe more significantly in the form of mass refugee movements.    In a yet-larger scope, our abuses/exploitation of other species and even the very geology of the planet have lead to unintended consequences (local diversification and ecological collapses, and now global climate change),  yet one common response is to just "push harder".   

Perhaps that is all we are geared to do...   if something isn't working... push harder?    History suggests that this (almost) works for (a subset of) the population which survives today.   Maybe there will be a Muskian civilization on Mars or in the Asteroid Belt or even the Moon or LEO space habitats.  Maybe there will be bubbled cities on the ocean floor or underground or even on the surface, where the ultimate in "gated communities" survive.   And some vestigal collapsed ecosystem which, if our lucky bubble-people can leave it alone will return to some kind of robust and diverse equilibrium over some (long by human attention standards) time.

Looking more closely for the first time at Carbon Footprints and per-Capita budgets... I'm appalled to realize that the USA and the first world in general are at 10-20x what is considered sustainable for the planet and that even the least developed (China/India) are over the limit and heading toward our standard as fast as possible.

Here is a very accessible (and I hope not too naive or inaccurate) resource that provides an interesting summary:
    http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/carbon-targets-for-your-footprint

with a 4 ton footprint (1/4 our average but 4x what might be needed) we see estimates like:

Housing: 1.04 t = 1500 kWh of US grid electricity

Travel: 0.94 t = 2000 miles driving at 20 MPG

Food: 1.1 t = a mostly vegan diet with limited food waste

Products: 0.51 t = $1000 worth of products

Services: 0.4 t = $2000 worth of services


Which only a truly homeless person today can beat by much?   Maybe the demi-wealthy (read most of us here, even if you think you aren't) can game this a little by installing PV on our homes, replace our ICE vehicles with EVs (hybrids in the interim) that double or quadruple our vehicular travel range, grow some of our own food (I think most of the 1.1 t is commercial farming techniques and transportation) and pick and choose the products and services we feel we need to match our ethical ideals.  


I've rambled enough here...

Carry on,
 - Steve




On 9/10/17 12:05 PM, ┣glen┫ wrote:
On 09/10/2017 10:12 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
It is not necessarily the case that `we' are a whole and must look after one another.  The population can be partitioned into compartmentalized subsets.
You're conflating willing payment with unforeseen consequences.  When we don't look after one another purposefully, we end up "looking after one another" in the form of systemic damage to the whole system.  So, while you're right that we don't have to pay attention, purposefully, to risk pools, the costs will always be present.  By paying attention to it, the argument goes, we lessen the overall damage, at the cost of the "redistribution wealth" the right wingers are so afraid of.

So, you're wrong in the naive assertion.  It is not merely necessary, it is THE CASE that we are a whole and always "look after one another", in the end.  The question is about when to do the looking ... before or after bad things happen.



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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Steve writes:


"In the thread I bent/hijacked here, I would cynically claim that Marcus was trying to find relief in some of these paradoxes by gerrymandering "selfness"...  and Glen holding the line on a more holistic view of systems."


I do gerrymander my definition of worthwhile ideas around the universe of ideas that I know about.   I don't see why that is a cynical interpretation.   For example, I always vote, as far as seems winnable, to the left.   I don't really have any selfish motive for that.   I have various sorts of insurance and the kind of redistribution of wealth I would get behind mostly would never benefit me in any material way.  It might even put me at a disadvantage.   Of course, like anyone, my situation could change and I suppose one could argue I'm advocating collective funding for a vague sort of government insurance policy -- just for me!    Well, if you must see things this way, guilty-as-charged!


As far as out driving our headlights, yes please.  That's all there is, in the end:  Figuring stuff out.   Everything else is just marking time.


Marcus


From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of Steven A Smith <[hidden email]>
Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2017 1:28:41 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas
 

Glen/Marcus/et alia -

I have of late, been trying to understand a little more deeply the concept of "Enlightened Self Interest", mostly as it applies to me personally, but by extension how it applies to my identity groups (family, neighbors, region, culture, nation, species, sapients-at-large, life-that-plays, life in all it's forms, pan-conscious matter, et/ad, cet/naus).

In Out of My Life and Thought Schweitzer wrote:

The most immediate fact of man’s consciousness is the assertion "I am life that wills to live in the midst of life that wills to live"

— Albert Schweitzer
I find this particular observation/assertion by Schweitzer nicely poetic in it's self-referentiality, but also quite apt toward my apprehension of "what is life?" and just how far must/might I extend my "self-interest" to be properly enlightened.

Since the beginning of the Holocene (by definition), we humans have been adapting our environment to our (presumed) liking at a monotonically increasing (and concave up if not precisely geometric nor exponential?) rate.   I'm not needing to invoke Singularian concepts to suggest that we are (and have been for some time) out-driving our headlights.   For all of our abilities in predictive science and constructive engineering, there are always "unintended consequences".   Even in a clockwork universe, we must live with "the halting problem" whence the only way to know for sure how things are going to turn out is to watch them evolve into their fullness over time.  

It is not surprising (to me) that at every turn our "best ideas" turn out to have "hidden gotchas".... that building a global civilization predicated on a constant expansion of resource exploitation (first forests and prairies, then clean water sources, then coal, oil, and gas deposits) eventually hits a limit.   Hubbert's "Peak Oil" didn't even consider (or was aware of?) the consequences of greenhouse gas buildup and climate change.   Hubbert's predictions seem to have borne out pretty well in the US until we figured out "hydraulic fracturing" (see upturn in green line)


It is also not surprising (to me) that Free Markets and Capitalism and even Representative Democracy are loaded with unintended consequences and that we are very naturally faced with the possibility that they are fundamentally flawed in ways we might only be starting to understand.   I'm not advocating a return to *earlier* flawed systems (e.g. autocratic/fuedal/fascist/???) but rather a *continued* reflection and refinement on WHAT MEANS "enlightened"?  And what are the boundaries of "self". 

In the thread I bent/hijacked here, I would cynically claim that Marcus was trying to find relief in some of these paradoxes by gerrymandering "selfness"...  and Glen holding the line on a more holistic view of systems.  

A great deal of our problems in the world seem to arise out of shifting definitions of "self".  The populism in the first world that recently exhibits as xenophobia, whitelash, etc.  is precisely that.     I think it is built into us as humans/mammals/vertebrates/life-itself to be self-centered, to look after our own personal well-being before we look to that of others.   Our tribal/clan dunbar-number-scale affinities may cause us to be locally altruistic at times and look after family/friends/neighbors/tribe before ourselves, but beyond that our instincts are xenophobic.   It takes more careful thought to extend one's enlightenment very far I suspect.

In this globally connected world we have built (it has always been a single whole, but with transportation and communication, we have short-circuited a lot of the existing feedback loops in "nature" with our own) it is likely that our instincts aren't even close to being on-mark.   At best, we need to be very careful (IMO) at how we define "self" as we pursue "enlightened self-interest".    We have collectively shown a great amount of disregard for the subjects of our exploitation and colonization over the centuries, and in some cases, that is coming back to bite us hard with terrorism, but maybe more significantly in the form of mass refugee movements.    In a yet-larger scope, our abuses/exploitation of other species and even the very geology of the planet have lead to unintended consequences (local diversification and ecological collapses, and now global climate change),  yet one common response is to just "push harder".   

Perhaps that is all we are geared to do...   if something isn't working... push harder?    History suggests that this (almost) works for (a subset of) the population which survives today.   Maybe there will be a Muskian civilization on Mars or in the Asteroid Belt or even the Moon or LEO space habitats.  Maybe there will be bubbled cities on the ocean floor or underground or even on the surface, where the ultimate in "gated communities" survive.   And some vestigal collapsed ecosystem which, if our lucky bubble-people can leave it alone will return to some kind of robust and diverse equilibrium over some (long by human attention standards) time.

Looking more closely for the first time at Carbon Footprints and per-Capita budgets... I'm appalled to realize that the USA and the first world in general are at 10-20x what is considered sustainable for the planet and that even the least developed (China/India) are over the limit and heading toward our standard as fast as possible.

Here is a very accessible (and I hope not too naive or inaccurate) resource that provides an interesting summary:
    http://shrinkthatfootprint.com/carbon-targets-for-your-footprint

with a 4 ton footprint (1/4 our average but 4x what might be needed) we see estimates like:

Housing: 1.04 t = 1500 kWh of US grid electricity

Travel: 0.94 t = 2000 miles driving at 20 MPG

Food: 1.1 t = a mostly vegan diet with limited food waste

Products: 0.51 t = $1000 worth of products

Services: 0.4 t = $2000 worth of services


Which only a truly homeless person today can beat by much?   Maybe the demi-wealthy (read most of us here, even if you think you aren't) can game this a little by installing PV on our homes, replace our ICE vehicles with EVs (hybrids in the interim) that double or quadruple our vehicular travel range, grow some of our own food (I think most of the 1.1 t is commercial farming techniques and transportation) and pick and choose the products and services we feel we need to match our ethical ideals.  


I've rambled enough here...

Carry on,
 - Steve




On 9/10/17 12:05 PM, ┣glen┫ wrote:
On 09/10/2017 10:12 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
It is not necessarily the case that `we' are a whole and must look after one another.  The population can be partitioned into compartmentalized subsets.
You're conflating willing payment with unforeseen consequences.  When we don't look after one another purposefully, we end up "looking after one another" in the form of systemic damage to the whole system.  So, while you're right that we don't have to pay attention, purposefully, to risk pools, the costs will always be present.  By paying attention to it, the argument goes, we lessen the overall damage, at the cost of the "redistribution wealth" the right wingers are so afraid of.

So, you're wrong in the naive assertion.  It is not merely necessary, it is THE CASE that we are a whole and always "look after one another", in the end.  The question is about when to do the looking ... before or after bad things happen.



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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

gepr
In reply to this post by Steve Smith



On September 10, 2017 12:28:41 PM PDT, Steven A Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:
>it is built into us as humans/mammals/vertebrates/life-itself to be self-centered, to look after our own personal well-being before we look to that of others.   Our tribal/clan dunbar-number-scale affinities may cause us to be locally altruistic at times and look after family/friends/neighbors/tribe before ourselves, but beyond that our instincts are xenophobic.

I couldn't disagree more. It's a common kind of social Darwinism to think that we are innately wired to be selfish. And as we've seen going round and round on this mailing list our understanding of evolution is childish at best. So there's no convincing evidence, that we can coherently package, that proves your assertion: that it is built into us to be self-centered.

To be clear I'm not claiming one way or the other, that we are innately wired to be altruistic or that we are innately wired to be self-centered. I just think it's reasonable to let biologists continue to study the issue(s) and if they come up with the biological explanation for altruistic behavior then great. If they don't and we demonstrate that we're all ultimately self-centered then great. But I think it's a stretch to say that we've settled all of that science at this point.

--
⛧glen⛧

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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

gepr
Just for a little backup:

https://evolution-institute.org/article/richard-dawkins-edward-o-wilson-and-the-consensus-of-the-many/

> What prompted the 137 co-authors to respond to the Nature article was not based on what Nowak et al. said about group selection, but their denial that it could also be framed in terms of inclusive fitness theory or that ideas framed in terms of inclusive fitness theory had ever proven to be useful.


On September 10, 2017 2:42:09 PM PDT, "gepr ⛧" <[hidden email]> wrote:

>
>
>
>On September 10, 2017 12:28:41 PM PDT, Steven A Smith
><[hidden email]> wrote:
>>it is built into us as humans/mammals/vertebrates/life-itself to be
>self-centered, to look after our own personal well-being before we look
>to that of others.   Our tribal/clan dunbar-number-scale affinities may
>cause us to be locally altruistic at times and look after
>family/friends/neighbors/tribe before ourselves, but beyond that our
>instincts are xenophobic.
>
>I couldn't disagree more. It's a common kind of social Darwinism to
>think that we are innately wired to be selfish. And as we've seen going
>round and round on this mailing list our understanding of evolution is
>childish at best. So there's no convincing evidence, that we can
>coherently package, that proves your assertion: that it is built into
>us to be self-centered.
>
>To be clear I'm not claiming one way or the other, that we are innately
>wired to be altruistic or that we are innately wired to be
>self-centered. I just think it's reasonable to let biologists continue
>to study the issue(s) and if they come up with the biological
>explanation for altruistic behavior then great. If they don't and we
>demonstrate that we're all ultimately self-centered then great. But I
>think it's a stretch to say that we've settled all of that science at
>this point.

--
⛧glen⛧

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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

gepr
In reply to this post by gepr
There is no such thing as enlightened self interest. Enlightenment is (well, includes anyway) the realization that "self" is an illusion. Moreover, it's a willful illusion, one we can consciously manipulate. So, I agree with your basic idea that we can manipulate our sense of self. But I think anyone who chooses to define their "self" in terms of anything smaller than the entire universe CHOOSES to be selfish.

Just to be clear, I don't condemn anyone for choosing to be selfish. But our world would be a lot more pleasant if more people chose to be less selfish.


On September 10, 2017 6:27:34 PM PDT, Steven A Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:
>Glen/Marcus/all -
>
>So, I gave you both plenty of target to potshot.
>
>Instead, might I ask what YOUR take on the question of "enlightened
>self
>interest" is and how it might be relevat to the myriad
>socio/political/economic challenges of the day?
--
⛧glen⛧

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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

gepr
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
I found this essay interesting:

Why the Greatest Advocates of Nonviolence Didn't Condemn Anti-Racist, Anti-Fascist Acts of Violence
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/41902-why-the-greatest-advocates-of-nonviolence-didn-t-condemn-anti-racist-anti-fascist-acts-of-violence

It loops back on our conversation about bringing tasers to protests as well as my question to Merle about Hinduism vs. Buddhism and "Dharma himsa tathaiva cha", or violence in the service of Dharma.  Being of an "interactivist" bent, I don't believe one can understand anything without manipulating it.  The objective observer is a convenient fiction.  This came up quite a bit in relation to the recent "March for Science".  Should scientists really be marching?  What are they marching for?  It's also relevant for politics, this tendency for people to call themselves "apolitical" or to say they don't like or pay attention to politics.  Personally, I think everyone is political, though they may lie to themselves and believe they're not.  That's why I take the opportunity, at every chance, to talk about both religion and politics ... especially when someone proscribes it.  I was playing horse shoes at the neighborhood picnic with a stranger and I made some comment about our Liar-in-Chief Trump.  He said something like "Uh-oh, you just said something political."  So, I took the opportunity to tell him that I don't believe in God, either. 8^)  And he told me his wife is an atheist!  It's rare a thing to get a non-atheist to admit they're married to an atheist.  The trick is to make it clear that Everything is permitted.  Do what thou wilt is the whole  of the Law. >8^D  But don't complain when you get punched for, say, acting like a Nazi.


On 09/10/2017 01:26 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> As far as out driving our headlights, yes please.  That's all there is, in the end:  Figuring stuff out.   Everything else is just marking time.

--
☣ gⅼеɳ
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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

Marcus G. Daniels

Is an action that is not visible (or is very localized) is taken that shortens a life of an individual or a threatening group of people (e.g. neo-nazis), consistent with nonviolence?   What about an action that prevents reproduction?   What if it is not known who caused harm or if it was caused by a human agent at all?   (As opposed to cosmic rays or common toxins in an environment.)   If there is no cycle of violence is it still objectionable to pacifists?  Is  the concern among pacifists about the practical consequences of violence or about the actual physical harm to another?   This article suggests to me it is about the practical consequences.   For example, I am against the death penalty, but I am not against the permanent removal of some pathological individuals if it can be done without a public representation of vengeance.    If a child or a spouse is abused so badly that they kill their parent/spouse, I'd say we should move on (if it is discovered).   I claim this is not paradoxical. 


Marcus


From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of gⅼеɳ ☣ <[hidden email]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 13, 2017 11:51:18 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas
 
I found this essay interesting:

Why the Greatest Advocates of Nonviolence Didn't Condemn Anti-Racist, Anti-Fascist Acts of Violence
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/41902-why-the-greatest-advocates-of-nonviolence-didn-t-condemn-anti-racist-anti-fascist-acts-of-violence

It loops back on our conversation about bringing tasers to protests as well as my question to Merle about Hinduism vs. Buddhism and "Dharma himsa tathaiva cha", or violence in the service of Dharma.  Being of an "interactivist" bent, I don't believe one can understand anything without manipulating it.  The objective observer is a convenient fiction.  This came up quite a bit in relation to the recent "March for Science".  Should scientists really be marching?  What are they marching for?  It's also relevant for politics, this tendency for people to call themselves "apolitical" or to say they don't like or pay attention to politics.  Personally, I think everyone is political, though they may lie to themselves and believe they're not.  That's why I take the opportunity, at every chance, to talk about both religion and politics ... especially when someone proscribes it.  I was playing horse shoes at the neighborhood picnic with a stranger and I made some comment about our Liar-in-Chief Trump.  He said something like "Uh-oh, you just said something political."  So, I took the opportunity to tell him that I don't believe in God, either. 8^)  And he told me his wife is an atheist!  It's rare a thing to get a non-atheist to admit they're married to an atheist.  The trick is to make it clear that Everything is permitted.  Do what thou wilt is the whole  of the Law. >8^D  But don't complain when you get punched for, say, acting like a Nazi.


On 09/10/2017 01:26 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> As far as out driving our headlights, yes please.  That's all there is, in the end:  Figuring stuff out.   Everything else is just marking time.

--
☣ gⅼеɳ
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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by gepr
Glen -

Great find.

I was just in DC over Labor Day and experienced the various Monuments,
the Museums, the Galleries, and the edifices of power in a whole new
way... more as a tourist than ever before, but also able to take in some
of the grandeur, not just the grandiosity of it all.   The White House
with (yet more?) expanded security perimeters looks (yet more!) like a
bunker.  The extreme multiculturality of Georgetown and the Mall (with
so many embassies nearby?) was more fascinating than ever.

I didn't come close to visiting Harper's Ferry but the spirit of John
Brown and that moment was very much with me, and this article and your
commentary is very relevant to some of my maunderings (most of which I
won't bother you with here).

I think that violence/non-violence is as much a false dichotomy as
self/nonself.   I had a bit of a denouement 25ish years ago when the
Dali Lama visited Santa Fe... he had a few acutely relevant things to
say (only in response to acute questions) about Nuclear Weapons and MAD
that really woke my already-awakening self up to my own relationship to
these dualities.   I was a pacifist who believed in MAD.

I think we often conflate action/inaction with violence/non-violence.  
I think *some* use the paradoxes of action/inaction to motivate/excuse
their own violence and I think others use the paradoxes of
violence/non-violence to motivate/excuse their inaction.   I am given to
both.

- Steve


On 9/13/17 11:51 AM, gⅼеɳ ☣ wrote:

> I found this essay interesting:
>
> Why the Greatest Advocates of Nonviolence Didn't Condemn Anti-Racist, Anti-Fascist Acts of Violence
> http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/41902-why-the-greatest-advocates-of-nonviolence-didn-t-condemn-anti-racist-anti-fascist-acts-of-violence
>
> It loops back on our conversation about bringing tasers to protests as well as my question to Merle about Hinduism vs. Buddhism and "Dharma himsa tathaiva cha", or violence in the service of Dharma.  Being of an "interactivist" bent, I don't believe one can understand anything without manipulating it.  The objective observer is a convenient fiction.  This came up quite a bit in relation to the recent "March for Science".  Should scientists really be marching?  What are they marching for?  It's also relevant for politics, this tendency for people to call themselves "apolitical" or to say they don't like or pay attention to politics.  Personally, I think everyone is political, though they may lie to themselves and believe they're not.  That's why I take the opportunity, at every chance, to talk about both religion and politics ... especially when someone proscribes it.  I was playing horse shoes at the neighborhood picnic with a stranger and I made some comment about our Liar-in-Chief Trump.  He said something like "Uh-oh, you just said something political."  So, I took the opportunity to tell him that I don't believe in God, either. 8^)  And he told me his wife is an atheist!  It's rare a thing to get a non-atheist to admit they're married to an atheist.  The trick is to make it clear that Everything is permitted.  Do what thou wilt is the whole  of the Law. >8^D  But don't complain when you get punched for, say, acting like a Nazi.
>
>
> On 09/10/2017 01:26 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>> As far as out driving our headlights, yes please.  That's all there is, in the end:  Figuring stuff out.   Everything else is just marking time.



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Pacifism: was Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels

Marcus -

I can only answer this for myself.  To the extent I am pacifistic, and identify with pacifism as a principle, I will state my own position/experience:

While I do value consequences, I value intentions yet more, there has been a lot of ambiguity and ambivalence in my life because of this duality.

Personal Choice: For me, pacifism is a personal choice and it is about who I choose to be/come.   I can offer advice and opinions to others about their own personal choices, about where their line between violence/non might be and what to do with it, but I don't presume to know what their context and choices are better than they do... to do so would be it's own form of violence.  

Vegetarianism: At 14 I chose not to eat any meat from any animal I did not kill or butcher myself.   This made me a vegetarian as a matter of practice.   I held that line for nearly 20 years.   I am no longer a strict vegetarian, but am very sympathetic with the ideals of those who choose it on moral grounds, and even moreso those who choose vegan lifestyles.  I may return there.  I considered this my first significantly pacifistic decision in life.

War: I chose (but was relieved of acting on it) to refuse military service to my country and was prepared to leave it and never return to it as I came of 'conscription age'.   This was neither because I was a coward (though the reality of war WAS deeply threatening) nor because I believed the Vietnam War to be patently *wrong* (though there were plenty of indicators and I think time proved them correct for the most part).  I simply did not want to become a killer, especially one who killed on the orders of others, or put himself in a situation of kill-or-be-killed for arbitrary reasons.

War Profiteeting: I also *chose* to work at a nuclear weapons laboratory (eventually) in support of MAD and came close to working for the more conventional Military-Industrials, because I believed that "somebody has to have the big stick, it might as well be 'us' ".   I also liked the pay, the benefits and the presumed prestige.  But I never adopted a hawkish stance and took no more than passing *technical* pride in the products of my efforts, many of which were far from exclusively or even mainly military in application.   The fall of The Wall/Soviet Union helped me understand that MAD may always have been truly unnecessary (ill conceived?) madness, and a few choice words of Wisdom by the Dali Lama soon after, about the nature of violence/non  helped me understand all of that a little more.   Some time supporting the National Intelligence effort helped me appreciate how slippery the slopes were and how much *I* didn't want to tread anywhere near that line of no return. Fortunately I ducked the "Edward Snowden" bullet, I saw plenty I didn't like, but nothing beyond the pale.

Spare the Rod: I chose to raise my children without giving over to the "spare the rod, spoil the child" mentality handed down by my parent's generation and held by more than a few peers.  I never struck nor threatened to strike my children, nor used abusive language toward them.   I recognized that the violences I DID perpetrate (witholding of approval, of resources, timeout/grounding) were acknowledgements of my own failure to guide/support them well enough and/or a failure in my own patience.  As far as I know, this worked out very well with them.   They might tell their intimates (or therapists) otherwise.

Intervention: I still have strong opinions about others' behaviour and the consequences of that behaviour and have been known to actively intervene when I felt inaction would allow significant harm to occur.   These actions are never easy to come to, to execute, nor to be smug about afterwards.   The few times I have taken significant interventive action (physically, verbally, legally, economically) were pivotal to my evolving character and I doubt I will ever feel with certainty that "I did the right thing".    There is nothing I feel acute regret about, but my judgement remains open on them.  I think that ambiguity/ambivalence is key to my continued pacifism.

Capital Punishment: Your point about capital punishment is well taken and I align with it for the most part.   I'm not willing to be a party to state-sponsored vengeance.   I accept that individuals DO take vengeance and accept that as part of "the human condition" and can imagine my own participation.  I accept that sometimes organizations (e.g. states) choose practical over ideological decisions (capital punishment as a way to avoid the expense and inconvenience of lifetime incarceration) but seek other alternatives.  

War Again: Similarly, I don't like nor endorse the violence of war but accept that sometimes it is a point that groups arrive at, but I will not be party to the "vengeance" part of it.  Vilifying the enemy only makes war "easier", it doesn't make it "better".  True "self defense" is a practical admission of failure of all other means, and nothing to be proud of, merely to be exercised as effectively, thoughtfully and compassionately as possible.   Sadly I find very little of this in those who promote the death penalty nor war.  I hope there are truly "compassionate warriors" and suspect that some of my friends who have "been there" may have a significant component of that in them, it is not something easy for them to talk about and I respect that.

Peace Out Man...

 - Steve


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Re: Enlightened Self Interest: was Help for texas

gepr
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
I suspect your questions are rhetorical.  But since I never tire of hearing my own voice...

On 09/13/2017 11:20 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> Is  the concern among pacifists about the practical consequences of violence or about the actual physical harm to another?   This article suggests to me it is about the practical consequences.

The section about Gandhi was good.  If I understand correctly, Gandhi was very into engaging with reality, living closely in touch with his surroundings.  He was embedded.  And I think his position on ideology and abstract learning followed that bent (i.e. somewhat against it).  If that's true, then his non-violence would largely be one of practical consequences.  But my guess is there are plenty of ideologues involved with both sides.  And anyone who places ideas/thoughts above physical presence will be at risk of the idealization of "physical harm".  (Since we all continually suffer physical harm as soon as we're conceived, it seems silly to be anti- physical harm. ... perhaps this is why so many people love the idea of downloading their brain into a (pain-free) computer?)

> For example, I am against the death penalty, but I am not against the permanent removal of some pathological individuals if it can be done without a public representation of vengeance.    If a child or a spouse is abused so badly that they kill their parent/spouse, I'd say we should move on (if it is discovered).   I claim this is not paradoxical.
I agree.  I'd go even further to claim that all organisms require damage.  Life is pain.  There are no highs without the lows.  Or the phrase my parents loved: This hurts me more than it hurts you.  Etc. with whatever favorite aphorism.  "Far from equilibrium" has more meanings than we often give it.

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