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https://graymirror.substack.com/

His new writing is interesting.


Anyone who writes [0]

> Not all humans are born the same, of course, and the innate character and intelligence of some is more suited to mastery than slavery. For others, it is more suited to slavery.

should be disqualified from having his works shared here. I'll pass.

[0] https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2009/07/why-carlyle...


"Aristotle said that some people were only fit to be slaves. I do not contradict him. But I reject slavery because I see no men fit to be masters." -- C.S. Lewis

https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/393200-i-am-a-democrat-prop...


Yes, he said that 2300 years ago. Yarvin said it 10.


I was going to share that exact quote. And I think I'm going to believe Lewis more than Moldbug...


Gack. How did you wade far enough into that pretentious twaddle to find that quote?


Know your enemy as they say!

But in all seriousness I find it important and necessary to do due diligence before throwing big claims around like I did - if you can stomach it.


"Interesting" in what way? (No, I'm not going to go look based on that one word.)


His mapping of the structure of our current governmental system was eye opening to me. I liked the explanation of the prescriptive (planned/written) vs. the descriptive (actual/unwritten) constitution. I also liked the idea that organizations that aren't officially part of the government are effectively part of it without having any accountability.

https://graymirror.substack.com/p/3-descriptive-constitution...

He's certainly not for everyone, but the most common criticisms of him I see are usually pull quotes taken from Wikipedia.


Well... Isn't this old news? You could read for example Foucault and have a similarly enlightening but more cohesive reading experience.

But maybe immersing yourself in the rohrschach/barnum-effect nature of these texts is more fun.


So old we use Latin terms to describe it, like de jure and de facto.


His imagination is limited. He is a statist and thinks if a persons opinion doesn't matter (subjects of the state) Then they have ultimate freedom. He equates having zero power as freedom.


Isn't that a valid way of thinking? I think most Chinese citizens are in many ways more free than American ones. Obviously in other ways not so much, but it isn't obvious that it's all for the worse. For instance, they don't have to pay attention to politics nearly as much as Western citizens do. Look at the state of our politicized society, how much stress it generates, and how much better your life would be if you didn't have to deal with politics invading every aspect of society.


But the Chinese have politics invading many aspects of society anyway, but lack the ability to do anything about it. Is that less stressful, or more?


Less, because the way it invades those aspects is direct, and not indirect through other human beings. In our society, for power to work it has to convince the population of what power wants, which means that the political invasion happens by other people caring about politics. In a country ruled by a dictator, that isn't the case, because the dictator doesn't have to convince the population of anything, he just does it, and if it works and it's better then good, and if it doesn't then he can try something else (without having to reconvince anyone that now this something else might work).


And if what he tries is working for the dictator and not the population?

And China's social credit system looks like "indirect through other human beings", at least in part.


China's social credit system is highly exaggerated, and not far too different from what already exists in most Western nations. People get fired here for the slightest social mistakes, right? On top of not being able to buy all sorts of things if they don't have enough credit.

As for the first question, it's not a problem for China specifically because their leaders seem competent. But more generally the problem of power transfer in case of poor results probably has lots of different solutions that haven't been tried in the past, especially now that we have more technology available. One interesting thing China does is have lots of surveys about local policies, which seems to me like something easier and more practical to have now that everyone is online.

In any case, that question is not too different of a problem than what to do when the government in a decentralized democracy such as ours has been taken over by all sorts of interests that are not aligned at all with the population's interests.

Decentralized systems like the one we have are very hard to fix incrementally precisely because they're optimized for stability in the face of constant growth, and we've reached a point of no growth, so the stability starts working against it as it makes the necessary changes harder to enact (since it's very decentralized). Like it or not, the most logical solution for this is more centralization of power. And this will likely happen in the coming decades. It's better that it happens willingly than unwillingly.


You are right about social credit system and western credit systems but that doesn't make it right.

Optimizing society for growth is a dead end (collapse or extinction). It's completely irrational. The most sane approach is sustainability.


I don't think we disagree and I don't know why you responded to my comment with this. Even Yarvin himself sort of agrees with you (starting at the Extending Economics section) https://graymirror.substack.com/p/5-the-land-its-people-and-...


Yarvin is terrible.

> Its subjects are its assets. Their proprietor’s purpose is to preserve and improve this human capital—hence, salus populi suprema lex.

People are people, not assets to some monarch. Sorry, I can't stand behind some backwards 17th century thinking.

He is also completely wrong about economics. Economics is not a science that Yarvin thinks it is.


Lovely. This emits some strong Christopher Hyatt vibes.


The New York Times is on it.


> how does it help prototype anything?

Sketch, Figma, and XD all make it quick to do the most basic prototyping: click hot spot to go to a different screen. They are much more focused on visual design than prototyping.


The most interesting thing about looking back at Kurzweil's writing is the tech optimism we were all smoking back then.


Gwern has some interesting personal reflection [0] on tech optimism vs. tech pessimism.

[0] https://www.gwern.net/Mistakes#near-singularity


I agree.

It is fascinating though, to see what predictions still seem as likely (though less optimistic) when we go from a "don't be evil" perspective to the 2020 one.


I wouldn't say I recommend trying this, but it takes time to find people you are actually interested in on Twitter.

All the obvious "blue check-mark" people have zero insight at best. There is a whole weird world of small follower count people on there. Small communities. People with unique ideas. People that will actually respond to replies.

Again, I don't think it an addiction you should necessarily cultivate, but there is value to be had.



This looks good -- but it looks like they host the mail server, correct?


I genuinely enjoyed your story about your nephew, but it's bit like telling an anecdote about an incompetent engineer and then saying there isn't a large number of engineers that are good at solving problems.


These articles about the issue were both interesting:

Matt Stoller (Journalist specializing in monopoly) https://mattstoller.substack.com/p/epic-games-kicks-off-the-...

iA (App developer) https://ia.net/topics/monopolies-apple-and-epic


What choice are you referring to?


I've spent a lot of time in big US cities and more rural parts of the country.

I had culture shock going to stores in the rural areas, because the friendly customer service attitude appeared to be much less fake. People didn't feel as rushed. They took a little extra time to have genuine communication. It drove me crazy, because I was accustomed to the efficiency of city retail, but I've come to appreciate it.


I had occasion to work the phone at my father's small business. He had numerous customers in rural areas. I think you're right; these people like to talk. They apparently have more time and don't mind a friendly chat for extended periods.


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