I have been thinking a lot about Trump and I would like to start a discussion thread on him but I recognize that this would obviously violate LW’s implicit rule against discussing politics so I thought I would run a poll to see if I have permission.
Should we have a discussion thread on Trump? [pollid:1128]
Update: I won’t be starting a Trump thread because of these poll results.
As someone who voted yes, and currently seeing how the margin is 32 ‘yays’ (52%) to 29 ‘nays’ (48%), I don’t think you should start this discussion simply because there is a majority in favour of a discussion thread on Trump. I mean, I wouldn’t like to see 48% of users put off by this discussion. So, I think it’s safe to say the discussions should really only start if you get a supermajority, something like 2/3rds in favor of starting the discussion. If that’s not the case whenever you decide the poll is closed, I don’t think it’s worth the costs of hosting the discussion here.
I thus agree with ChristianKI to move the discussion to Omnilibrium.
presently the scores are close to tied with 23 votes. (ROT13 of the current score (guvegrra lrf naq gra ab)) If the tie continues I would encourage you to not post it.
It’s one of the most important and surprising events of our time and much of the discussion is anti-rational, i.e. bad people support Trump so Trump is bad; many are claiming that electing Trump would be catastrophic and discussing potential catastrophes is supposed to be one of the purposes of LW.
I think a question of how Trump interacts with x-risk is a potentially interesting conversation topic. I think an analysis of class that uses Trump as an example is a potentially interesting conversation topic.
But I worry that even here a direct discussion of Trump will be anti-rational / along cultural lines instead of about rational expectations, and I’m not sure what actions we would take differently as a result of having that conversation.
You said (emphasis mine): “one of the most important and surprising events of our time”
I tend to interpret “our time” as a period that is a bit longer than the last six months.
But even if you want to look at recent news, here are three things which I consider to be much more consequential than Donald Trump: (1) the European refugee crisis; (2) the Chinese economic troubles; (3) the Russian direct military intervention in Syria.
May I politely suggest paying less attention to the idiot box?
May I politely suggest paying less attention to the idiot box?
I’m not sure that argument goes through—if the European refugee crisis is important, then aren’t Merkel, Obama, and Clinton important? And if they’re important once they’re in office, isn’t the process by which they enter office important?
That argument involving the idiot box actually looks like this: Mass media optimizes for outrage. Estimating the importance of the topic by the amount of air time it gets is a mistake.
if the European refugee crisis is important, then aren’t Merkel, Obama, and Clinton important?
No. Not in the sense that Merkel, etc. are unimportant, but in the sense that a systemic crisis is not reducible to the importance of whoever happens to be in the office at the moment.
isn’t the process by which they enter office important?
If James_Miller wanted to discuss the crisis of the “establishment” center of the mainstream US parties and the rebellions within them, it might have been an interesting topic. But James_Miller want to discuss Donald Trump, personally.
Of course, that’s what Donald Trump wants as well X-)
a systemic crisis is not reducible to the importance of whoever happens to be in the office at the moment.
The reason I picked those particular people is because of Clinton’s role in the removal of Qaddafi, Obama’s role in the continued destabilization of Syria, and Merkel’s public pledge to take in refugees (which exacerbated the degree to which it is a European crisis, instead of a Syrian or Africa crisis). “Whoever happens to be in the office at the moment” is a factor in many of these crises.
I have a feeling we’re slowly slipping towards the conflict between the “impersonal forces” and “great people” views of history :-)
But I guess the question here is whether you want to discuss people or whether you want to discuss systems. Of course they are related and interdependent, but still. Going back to the source of this subthread, I find thinking about tensions between “rebels” and “nomenklatura” in US political parties to be moderately interesting (especially in the context of how they deal with the need to overpromise during the campaign). I find Donald Trump to be very uninteresting. YMMV, of course.
I have a feeling we’re slowly slipping towards the conflict between the “impersonal forces” and “great people” views of history :-)
A synthesis of the two views clearly outperforms either view on its own. There seems to be a difference between, basically, forest fires and earthquakes—both rely on long build-ups (the impersonal forces contribution) and when they happen may be surprising (I couldn’t tell you when the housing bubble would burst until it had but I could tell you that it would eventually), but the while there’s little control over when an earthquake happens and how the consequences shake out, there’s quite a bit of control over when a fire happens and how the consequences shake out (the great people contribution).
That’s an interesting distinction—can you say more about it?
It seems to me that events and changes vary quite a bit in how much control various people have over them. For things like the Chinese economic difficulties, it looks to me like this is the result of lots of malinvestment over the years, and there’s not too much control over whether or not things get worse / no clear single point of failure. Then there are other issues where there does seem to be a single point of failure, or a single failure avoidance point. Even in those cases, there are systemic forces that created the fuel for the conflagration.
One example that comes to mind is Arkhipov voting against firing nukes during the Cuban Missile crisis. The things that put the missiles there and made their standing orders to fire if attacked (and the officers agreed) might be better thought of as ‘systemic forces,’ but it seems hard to argue that ‘systemic forces’ are a better explanation of a 2-1 vote instead of a 3-0 vote than the ‘great people’ view. Similarly, one can imagine many forest fires that almost happened, and then didn’t because of direct action by a person on the scene.
(Or many forest fires caused by direct action of a person on the scene.)
No. Not in the sense that Merkel, etc. are unimportant, but in the sense that a systemic crisis is not reducible to the importance of whoever happens to be in the office at the moment.
Even if she did greatly exacerbate it by doing something really stupid?
Yes, even, because there are reasons she did that and those reasons don’t have much to do with her personally. It wasn’t like she buckled the entire German consensus.
The refugee crisis is very interesting. Not quite “Camp of the Saints”, but it’s a huge acceleration of frictions I expected to take much longer to play out, and not really hit the fan so soon.
Chinese economic troubles? Recessions are big things, but they happen. Economies go up, they go down.
Russian intervention in Syria. Russian satellite state getting military support. Shrug. Turkey seems much more interesting to me. I suppose the Russians intervention does make it possible for some serious confrontation with the US, but I don’t see Putin or Obama having much interest in that.
There are some complicated wrinkles to this one, including the observation that the (current) legitimacy of the Communist Party rule to a great extent depends on it being able to provide visibly and rapidly rising standards of living. And, of course, the question whether China is done with its growth spurt or it’s merely a hiccup has major geopolitical consequences a decade or two away.
Russian satellite state getting military support.
The first time post-Soviet Russia puts boots on the ground outside of the former USSR. The overarching theme is the global assertiveness of Mr.Putin and Middle East is always an… interesting place. And there is Iran nearby :-/
I agree that Turkey is interesting, too, but nothing “big” happened there recently and were were talking about events.
No, Russia started providing it’s bombers with fighter escorts with orders to shoot in self-defense. This is a situation that can easily escalate the next time one of these planes passes through Turkish airspace.
How about the various welfare states around the world finally starting to run out of other people’s money. The biggest manifestations of this so far have been the financial crisis in the EU, and the various pension crises in US local governments.
Heck, in my more conspiratorial moods I’m inclined to suspect that these migrant crises are an excuse to import a bunch of convenient scapegoats who can than be blamed for the collapse of popular entitlement programs.
I think Trump’s rise is interesting for a number of issues that people here have particular interest in.
How he wins. How his attackers lose. The power of his signature issues in trade and immigration. The potential for a political realignment with the Republican Party, and how that realigns US politics as a whole.
The media has been outraged, they have attacked, and they have failed to bring him down. His poll numbers just go up and up and up. That’s interesting, and merits discussion.
It’s one of the most important and surprising events of our time
I’m saying this in hindsight, but I disagree about this being surprising. Anti-immigration parties are on the rise all across Europe. The National Front in France are probably to the right of Trump, and Golden Dawn in Greece are genuine neo-nazis. More generally, non-mainstream parties are on the rise, probably powered by the ability to organise grassroots activism via the net. Even the Pirate Parties are winning seats.
Given this, is it really surprising that non-mainstream candidates would happen in the US too, both with Trump and Bernie Sanders?
I’m actually surprised that Sanders isn’t the Democratic frontrunner, especially when his only opponent is being investigated for espionage.
probably powered by the ability to organise grassroots activism via the net.
The ideological gate keepers are losing control. The Cologne cover up looks like a pretty significant event for discrediting the Top Men.
On Sanders, all the Democratic Powers that Be lined up behind Clinton, and even Sanders got in lock step to maintain that Clinton’s email catastrophe is much ado about nothing. The Democratic Party has spent a couple of decades dealing with Clinton scandals. It’s all just a cast right wing conspiracy, don’t you know?
Probably the biggest hit Hillary has taken is from younger women, turned off by HIllary “standing by her man” and attacking his sexual abuse accusers, Gloria Steinem belittling Bernie gals as boy crazy for Bernie Bros, and Albright playing the Vote Vagina or Go to Hell card.
It looks just like a swastika. Sure, Putin and Trump and anyone who is nationalistic can be compared to Nazis, but this cheapens the term ‘Nazi’ or ‘fascist’.
By “actual neo-nazi” I mean a group which has significant use of Nazi imagery and when significant members explicitly endorse Nazism.
The flag looks almost exactly like a swastica. Also, see hairyfigment’s comment and read the wikipedia page. There is plenty more evidence.
They wouldn’t have chosen that flag unless they were neo-nazis. If they really wanted that symbol, it could have been against a different color background.
The party denies that it has any official connection to Neo-Nazism. Although it uses the Roman salute, a salute used by the Italian Fascist and German National Socialist movements, it claims to draw its inspiration in this primarily from the 4th of August Regime established by Ioannis Metaxas...Likewise, the Golden Dawn’s meander symbol, while sometimes compared to the National Socialist Swastika, is according to Golden Dawn a symbol drawn from Greek art, which the party sees as representing bravery and eternal struggle.[18][128]
Ilias Kasidiaris, a spokesman for Golden Dawn, wrote an article that was published in Golden Dawn magazine on 20 April 2011, in which he said, “What would the future of Europe and the whole modern world be like if World War II hadn’t stopped the renewing route of National Socialism? Certainly, fundamental values which mainly derive from ancient Greek culture, would be dominant in every state and would define the fate of peoples. Romanticism as a spiritual movement and classicism would prevail against the decadent subculture that corroded the white man. Extreme materialism would have been discarded, giving its place to spiritual exaltation”. In the same article, Adolf Hitler is characterized as a “great social reformer” and “military genius”.[129]
In an article published in 1987 in the Golden Dawn magazine titled “Hitler for 1000 years”, its editor Michaloliakos [see below] showed his support for Nazism and white supremacy.[130] Specifically he wrote, “We are the faithful soldiers of the National Socialist idea and nothing else” and “[...] WE EXIST, and continue the battle, the battle for the final victory of our race”.[130] He ends the article by writing “1987, 42 years later, with our thought and soul given to the last great battle, with our thought and soul given to the black and red banners, with our thought and soul given to the memory of our great Leader, we raise our right hand up, we salute the Sun and with the courage, that is compelled by our military honor and our National Socialist duty we shout full of passion, faith to the future and our visions: HEIL HITLER!”.[130]
...The founder of the party, Nikolaos Michaloliakos, appeared to give a Nazi salute in the Athens city council. He claims that it was merely “the salute of the national youth organisation of Ioannis Metaxas”.[128][136]
Of course, society normally finds it easy to recognize and ostracize such blatantly dishonest Nazism. It doesn’t create any actual confusion - unless people have gone out of their way to weaken society’s immune system, eg by deliberately signalling Nazism when the reality is more obscure.
It doesn’t create any actual confusion—unless people have gone out of their way to weaken society’s immune system, eg by deliberately signalling Nazism when the reality is more obscure.
I think it weakens the immune system more when anyone who isn’t in favour of completely unrestricted immigration gets called a Nazi. And there’s a failure mode where constantly calling people Nazis (or sexists/racists) makes them more favourable towards Nazis (the theory is that on a subconcious level they think ’if I’m a Nazi, maybe Nazism isn’t so bad).
(the theory is that on a subconcious level they think ’if I’m a Nazi, maybe Nazism isn’t so bad).
Or the more straightforward, if anyone proposing sensible immigration policy gets called a Nazi, eventually people conclude that “Nazi” means someone in favor of sensible immigration policy.
LOL. Seriously, do you have any more evidence beyond “their symbol sotra looks like a swastika”. How about you try looking for the factions in Greece using Nazi-style tactics, like say arresting their opponents on vague trumped up charges. Hint: it’s not Golden Dawn.
Try the entire wikipedia page on them! Take these bits for instance:
Scholars and media have described it as neo-Nazi[4][13][14] and fascist,[5][15][16] though the group rejects these labels.[17] Members have expressed admiration of the former Greek dictator Ioannis Metaxas of the 4th of August Regime (1936–1941).[18] They have also made use of Nazi symbolism, and have praised figures of Nazi Germany in the past.[19][20][21] According to academic sources, the group is racist and xenophobic,[22][23] while the party’s leader has openly identified it as nationalist and racist.[24]
On 23 July 2012, Artemis Matthaiopoulos, a member of Golden Dawn, was elected as MP for the town of Serres. The website left.gr (associated with Syriza), reported that Matthaiopoulos was the frontman of the Nazi punk band “Pogrom” and pointed to the band’s song “Auschwitz” with antisemitic lyrics such as “fuck Anne Frank” and “Juden raus” (“Jews out”).[142][143]
Now, I’m not endorsing the other factions, some of whom may well be Stalinists or terrorists. It is possible for there to be extremists on both the left and the right.
I know that ‘Nazi’ may be overused, but you surely must see that in this specific instance, that is what the Golden Dawn are.
Unless the entire wikipedia page and the sources are all fraudulent...
I know that ‘Nazi’ may be overused, but you surely must see that in this specific instance, that is what the Golden Dawn are.
You did mention “using words precisely” at some point. If you still wish to do that, the word “Nazi” is a very specific word—it refers to things associated with the National Socialist German Workers’ Party. I am pretty sure members of Golden Dawn are not members of NSDAP as well.
A better word for you might be “fascist”. It is more general—there certainly were more fascists than nazis—and describes a particular type of ideology (which originated in Italy, by the way).
The word “neo-nazi”, in contemporary parlance, doesn’t mean much beyond “I don’t like these people”.
Note that it’s perfectly possible to be racist, xenophobic, nationalist, and anti-semitic and still not be a Nazi or a fascist.
There’s an ambiguity here. Suppose the official position of the Social Party for German National Workers is as follows:
Germany needs to be a great power once more, and can only become so by military expansion, so that it can fulfil its destiny by ruling all Europe with a fist of iron.
Jews and Communists are responsible for most of the nation’s ills and must be destroyed.
The Aryan race is superior to all others and must be favoured and kept pure.
Traditional views on sex and gender must be preserved for fear of moral degeneracy.
To achieve all these things, it is necessary for the nation’s security forces to be able to know and control what everyone says and does.
… and suppose the SPGNW loudly proclaims “We have no sympathy with fascism or Nazism”. The SPGNW explicitly endorses a big pile of key Nazi ideas, but it doesn’t explicitly endorse the word “Nazism”. What then? Personally I’d be happy saying that they explicitly endorse Nazism and are just lying about it.
I don’t know enough about the Golden Dawn for my opinions on whether they’re doing something similar to be worth much. But it’s certainly possible a priori that they might be.
(Adopting this flag really doesn’t seem like something a party fully committed to not endorsing Nazism would do. The resemblance isn’t exactly subtle.)
Personally I’d be happy saying that they explicitly endorse Nazism and are just lying about it.
I could argue over the semantics of ‘explicitly’ but basically they are Nazis whether they all admit it or not.
Traditional views on sex and gender must be preserved for fear of moral degeneracy.
I don’t think they actually beleived this. Perhaps traditional views on sex and gender must be preserved to maintain the Aryan birthrate, but that’s a little different—if premarital sex leads to lots of Aryan babies, I doubt they would object.
It’s not clear to me what they actually believed. They may have been inconsistent.
modern-day Germany does censor the internet
Pretty much all governments, ancient and modern, left and right, intrude more into their citizens’ affairs than I’d like. But the Nazis seem to have been quite a lot worse in that respect than today’s German government.
I’m not sure whether you’re laughing at or with me. If the former, good; I was hoping to amuse. If the latter, perhaps consider explaining what I wrote that you find laughable?
OK, so let me do something that never works :-) and explain the joke, such as it was.
Of course there is not really such a thing as being fully committed to not endorsing something; it’s not the kind of thing it makes sense to be committed to. So describing someone or something as “not fully committed to endorsing X” has to be an instance of meiosis (understatement for rhetorical effect); and so it is. What I am actually suggesting is that the Golden Dawn looks like a basically-fascist party that’s nostalgic for the good old days of Nazi Germany, and that no one adopts a flag like that without the deliberate intention to evoke the Nazi flag, and that what GD is actually interested in is endorsing Nazism with plausible deniability. But—being a dry-witted English sort of chap—I chose to express that by understating it to pretty much the greatest extent possible. It was intended to be just very slightly amusing, at least to sympathetic readers.
As I already remarked, explaining jokes never works. (Especially, I think, this sort of joke.) And I’ve just spent at least 30x longer explaining what I wrote as I did writing it. Oh well, never mind.
That joke would have worked better if we were not discussing whether a contemporary political movement is actually Nazi and if demands to be fully committed to not endorsing white male cis hetero partriarchy (add more words to taste) did not actually pop up outside of Monty Python sketches.
Getting back to the subject at hand, do you suggest that the Golden Dawn is actually “nostalgic for the good old days of Nazi Germany”? That strikes me as not very likely, not to mention that those good old days were very few before they became terrible, horrible, no good, very bad days.
I think maybe “Adopting this flag really doesn’t seem like something a party fully committed to not endorsing Nazism would do” is British understatement for “Adopting this flag is tacitly endorsing Nazism”.
do you suggest that the Golden Dawn is actually “nostalgic for the good old days of Nazi Germany”?
Literally? Quite likely not. Keen to reproduce most of the salient features of those days if they get into power? Yeah, probably. (And I’ll hazard a guess that if asked many of them would say: well, yes, Hitler did some terrible things, but at least he tried to make Germany great through purity and strength. Perhaps with a side-order of Holocaust denial.)
Keen to reproduce most of the salient features of those days if they get into power? Yeah, probably
Depending on your pick of “salient features”, this is applicable to a lot of political movements. The desire for a powerful state, national unity, a strong hand keeping miscreants in check, etc. is quite common.
Take a look at the NSDAP program—isn’t it easy to find some common ground with pretty much anyone? :-/
E.g. Bernie Sanders wants free education and hey look, it’s right here, point 20: “The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program, to enable every capable and industrious German to obtain higher education and subsequently introduction into leading positions. … We demand the education at the expense of the State of outstanding intellectually gifted children of poor parents without consideration of position or profession.”
Re. Bernie Sanders, he is clearly a socialist, and in some ways mildly nationalist, e.g. :
[open borders immigration policy is] …a right-wing proposal, which says essentially there is no United States...you’re doing away with the concept of a nation-state. What right-wing people in this country would love is an open-border policy. Bring in all kinds of people, work for $2 or $3 an hour, that would be great for them. I don’t believe in that. I think we have to raise wages in this country, I think we have to do everything we can to create millions of jobs.[113][114]
So would it be accurate to say that Sanders may be mildly national socialist, but certainly not a capitalised National Socialist?
I dunno. Find a Bernie Bro and tell him that “Sanders may be mildly national socialist”. On an off chance that he knows what National Socialism is, duck X-D
Hmm, it is tempting to find a historically illiterate Bernie supporter and persuade them to describe their politics as “national socialist”.
“Look, many would love to be international socialists and raise the living standard for the entire world. But clearly the US cannot afford to supply welfare, heathcare and education to all 7 billion people in the world. So, maybe one day we can have international socialism, but right now we have to be pragmatic and advocate national socialism”
Get popcorn, sit back, and watch as Bernie Bro tries to convince others to national socialism :P
Common national criminals, usurers, profiteers and so forth are to be punished with death, without consideration of confession or race.
Don’t just imprison the banksters, kill them!
I think we’re onto something here. I mean, if you replace the bits of Nazi ideology about ‘Jews control the banks’ with ‘white men run silicon valley and the banks’ and replace demands for lebensraum with demands for safe spaces then I think the Socialist Workers Party of the American Nation could really take off.
isn’t it easy to find some common ground with pretty much anyone?
Well, that’s why the things that tend to get described as specifically Nazi tend not to be things like “improving the education system” or even more specifically “providing good education for gifted children from all backgrounds” (er, of course some kinds of backgrounds wouldn’t have been acceptable to the Nazis) that have pretty wide support from all quarters. Just as describing someone as “very like Richard Feynman” probably doesn’t mean that they had some artistic talent and enjoyed drawing.
Well, that’s why the things that tend to get described as specifically Nazi tend not to be things like “improving the education system”
No, I think that’s not the why. I think the actual why is because the Nazis lost the last war and so became known as the incarnation of pure evil, and everything they touched turned to pure evil, the end. In less flowery prose, “Nazi” (or neo-nazi) nowadays is just a derogatory term without much historical meaning.
I am not a fan of NSDAP and though I don’t know much about Golden Dawn I doubt they are a bunch of decent fellows. If someone calls them neo-nazis, I mentally translate it to “I don’t really like ’em”. But if people want to insist that they are actually, literally Nazis and pine for the good old days of the Third Reich, well, at this point I feel compelled to point out that no, taking derogatories literally is rarely a good idea.
If someone calls them neo-nazis, I mentally translate it to “I don’t really like ’em”. But if people want to insist that they are actually, literally Nazis and pine for the good old days of the Third Reich
I may have used the word “fascist” or “Nazi” as derogatory terms back when I was an angry young 20 year old, but I am trying to be a little more rational now. I have been arguing that they are literally Nazis.
Well, that’s why the things that tend to get described as specifically Nazi
Where by “specifically Nazi” you mean “the parts that gjm doesn’t approve off”.
that have pretty wide support from all quarters.
Speak for yourself. I very much don’t approve of point 20 from their program. “The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” is a nice-ish sounding way of saying, “we will ram whatever propaganda we want down all kids’ thoughts and force you to pay for it”.
You keep doing this. You keep being wrong. You should stop it.
Speak for yourself. I very much don’t approve of [...]
I fear you misunderstand me (and someone else seems to have misunderstood the same way, so presumably I should have been clearer). I meant not “everyone agrees with this” but “many people with a wide variety of political positions agree with this”. And I didn’t intend to imply that everyone in their programme other than “kill the Jews” is in that category.
“The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” could, in isolation, mean anything from “we’re going to build a lot of new schools and fund a lot of new teachers” to “we’re going to close down the education system entirely” via “we’re going to turn the schools into brainwashing units” and “we’re going to change the schools from brainwashing units to places of actual education”. In the Nazis’ case, it turned out to be the brainwashing one, and no reasonable person would support that. And, lo, I think “brainwash all the children to agree with the State’s position” would generally be regarded as a characteristically Nazi policy, though of course totalitarians of all stripes do that—and this is consistent with both Lumifer’s analysis (something qualifies to be thought of as characteristically Nazi iff the Nazis did it and it was really bad) and mine (something qualifies to be thought of as characteristically Nazi iff the Nazis did it and most others didn’t).
Actually I think both Lumifer’s analysis and mine are right; something is easier to pigeonhole as Nazi if (1) you see it done often by people who aren’t Nazis and (2) you feel positively about it. I’ll add another: once Nazism is associated in everyone’s mind mostly with nationalism, Jew-killing, and war-making, any given other thing is going to be easier to think of as “Nazi” if it feels like it resembles those.
I meant not “everyone agrees with this” but “many people with a wide variety of political positions agree with this”. And I didn’t intend to imply that everyone [sic] in their programme other than “kill the Jews” is in that category.
What do you mean by a “wide variety of political positions”? Your definition of “Nazi” currently amounts to “supports the parts of the Nazi platform only Nazis support”. Now obviously stated this way, it is clearly a circular, hense useless, definition. So we are left with how you use it in practice, which brings us back to “supports the parts of the definition gjm doesn’t approve of”.
“The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” could, in isolation, mean anything from “we’re going to build a lot of new schools and fund a lot of new teachers” to “we’re going to close down the education system entirely” via “we’re going to turn the schools into brainwashing units”
I don’t see the difference between your first and last interpretation. After all if “we” build new school and fund a lot of teachers, “we” are presumably going to have them teach cources on history, social sciences, etc. and do it from our precpective. One could get around this problem by not having education be centralised, but that’s not what either the Nazis or Bernie were proposing.
“supports the parts of the Nazi platform only Nazis support”
Not quite. For instance, Soviet-style communism was pretty big on totalitarianism, which is certainly a distinctively Nazi trait, but Nazism and Soviet communism were very different things.
circular, hence useless
Nope. E.g., if some new political movement comes out for Jew-killing, totalitarian control, military expansionism, moral traditionalism, and fostering the Master Race, I’ll be very happy saying that yup, they’re basically Nazis even if they don’t use that term.
(That’s not meant to be a necessary-and-sufficient condition; just an example.)
“supports the parts of the definition gjm doesn’t approve of”
This seems to be your default assumption, to which you fall back as soon as you think you’ve ruled out any single alternative. It’s still wrong, just as it was before.
For instance: the NSDAP programme includes the abolition of unearned income—interest, rent, etc. I think that’s a terrible idea, but finding that an organization advocates the same idea wouldn’t much dispose me to call it “Nazi”.
(Perhaps it should—it’s a rather unusual idea as well as probably a bad one. So maybe I could be persuaded. But the fact that I’d need persuading indicates that I am not using the word the way you say I am.)
I don’t see the difference [...] “we” are presumably going to have them [...] do it from our perspective.
That word “presumably” would be one key difference. Another would be that teaching from a particular perspective is (possibly bad but) not the same thing as brainwashing.
but Nazism and Soviet communism were very different things.
In what way?
Nope. E.g., if some new political movement comes out for Jew-killing, totalitarian control, military expansionism, moral traditionalism, and fostering the Master Race, I’ll be very happy saying that yup, they’re basically Nazis even if they don’t use that term.
Ok, if a movement endorses their entire platform, it’s safe to call them Nazis. Except that isn’t the case for Golden Dawn, which was the movement under discussion.
Another would be that teaching from a particular perspective is (possibly bad but) not the same thing as brainwashing.
Many ways. Here are some examples. The NSDAP had the word “socialist” in its name but didn’t actually do much in the way of nationalization and communalization, whereas the Soviet communists did. The Nazis had racial purity at the centre of their rhetoric and policy, whereas the Soviet communists did not. (There was plenty of antisemitism in the USSR, but it was less explicit and less central and e.g. the USSR never made a systematic attempt to exterminate all its Jewish people.) Both were religiously oppressive but in quite different ways: the Communists tried to wipe out religion completely, whereas the Nazis tried (with limited success) to align it with their dogmas.
if a movement endorses their entire platform, it’s safe to call them Nazis.
The things I listed aren’t their “entire platform”—you may have forgotten that that was a point you were making a few comments upthread.
Except that isn’t the case for Golden Dawn
Sure. Because the question you asked—sorry, I mean the accusation you made—was not about the Golden Dawn. You claimed that my use of the word “Nazi” is circular and content-free because it amounts to saying “Nazis are those who hold the positions Nazis hold”, so I answered that accusation.
And the difference is?
The extent to which the teachers attempt to get the pupils to adopt that perspective, and the means used to do it.
For instance, schoolteachers would make life unpleasant for children who had not joined the Hitler Youth. And here are a couple of questions taken from Nazi-era school mathematics textbooks.
“A plane on take off carries 12 bombs, each weighing ten kilos. The aircraft makes for Warsaw , the centre of international Jewry. It bombs the town. On take off with all bombs on board and a fuel tank containing 1500 kilos of fuel the aircraft weighed 8 tonnes. When it returned from the crusade, there were still 230 kilos of fuel left. What is the weight of the aircraft when empty?”
“The construction of a lunatic asylum costs 6 million marks. How many houses at 15,000 marks each could have been built for that amount?”
It seems clear that what’s going on here is that even what you’d think was pretty much a maximally non-political subject, namely arithmetic, was being used to deliver particular political ideas to children.
Does that necessarily amount to “brainwashing”? Nope. I don’t know enough about Nazi education to know whether what happened in Nazi schools could rightly be described that way. But it’s certainly further along the spectrum from impartial teaching to brainwashing than, say, anything that happens in typical state-funded schools in the UK.
For instance, schoolteachers would make life unpleasant for children who had not joined the Hitler Youth. And here are a couple of questions taken from Nazi-era school mathematics textbooks.
Funny you should mention that. Let me quote the president of Chicago Teachers Union. She said this in 2014:
People always talk about how there’s no politics and values in math. That you can teach math and there’s no place for social justice. So let me tell you how Bob (Peterson) deals with that…Bob Peterson tells them about José working in a factory making piecemeal clothes. He uses the same numbers and gets the same answer. And yes, math is political too.
There is even a book: Rethinking Mathematics: Teaching Social Justice by the Numbers.
Yup, and moving in that direction is moving in the direction of brainwashing.
So, now, compare the situation in Nazi Germany (the textbooks are full of this stuff, all aligned with a single political perspective, and teachers do it all the time) with the situation in the present-day US (the textbooks don’t do it, and when one (ex-)teacher proposes it it produces a little blizzard of shocked responses).
Whereas Eugine was suggesting there’s no difference between teachers having a particular “perspective” and outright brainwashing.
So, now, compare the situation in Nazi Germany (the textbooks are full of this stuff, all aligned with a single political perspective, and teachers do it all the time) with the situation in the present-day US (the textbooks don’t do it, and when one (ex-)teacher proposes it it produces a little blizzard of shocked responses).
The major difference is diversity—US schools are locally controlled and the outcomes… vary. It’s not hard to find schools where political correctness dominates and social justice is explicitly taught (with no tolerance for dissent, of course). But it’s also not hard to find other schools which are conservative and basically Christian.
Brainwashing is one of major school goals, anyway.
That’s certainly a major difference. It is not the only major difference. Go and buy a dozen randomly chosen elementary mathematics textbooks in the US, or choose them at random from the ones actually used in public schools. I bet you will not find them filled with the sort of politically-loaded stuff that was common in Nazi Germany. (Though if you go looking, I’m sure you can find some that are.)
where political correctness dominates and social justice is explicitly taught
“Political correctness” and “social justice” are … extremely flexible terms. Would you like to say more explicitly what these schools do, and roughly what fraction of US public schools do it?
(The US is big and varied, and I bet there’s a wide variety of bad things we could find some US public schools doing. What we should expect to see if Eugine’s position is correct is, at least, that the majority of US public schools make vigorous attempts to make their pupils accept political positions agreeable to the governments that fund them.)
Brainwashing is one of major school goals, anyway.
I wonder what you mean by “brainwashing”.
There are quite a lot of schoolteachers in my family and nothing I have ever heard from them suggests that they see, or saw, their role as anything I would recognize as brainwashing. (This is in the UK, not the US. Things may be different in different countries.)
I expect that if pushed you could get many of them to admit that they try to encourage their pupils to be decent people—meaning e.g. not going out of their way to make one another’s lives unpleasant. You could call that brainwashing, if you insist. It seems to me quite different from trying to encourage pupils to hate the Jews, or want to die gloriously in battle. Anything beyond that, though? Nope. I’ve seen no sign that any of them have tried to push pupils in the direction of sharing their religion (or lack thereof) or politics (or lack thereof) or economic theories or anything of the kind.
My own recollection of the education I got is that some schools did systematically push a religious agenda (but only in specifically religious contexts, not by putting religion in the arithmetic questions), that at least one history teacher did admit to thinking that Nazism and Soviet communism were on the whole bad things, and … not much beyond that, actually. Now, that might just indicate how subtle the whole thing was and how completely they got to me, but given that plenty of other people who came through a similar education process have ended up with political and religious and other views quite different from mine, I doubt it.
“Political correctness” and “social justice” are … extremely flexible terms. Would you like to say more explicitly what these schools do, and roughly what fraction of US public schools do it?
No idea about the fraction and, obviously, there is a full spectrum from, let’s say, committed creationists to bona fide Marxists, so the fraction will depend on where you (arbitrarily) draw the line.
What I specifically mean is topics like “women scientists” in science classes, “black history month”, etc. I expect you’re familiar with the current epidemic of identity politics, microaggressions, triggers, etc. on college campuses in the US. You don’t think students acquire these… propensities solely on their way from high school to college? See e.g. Haidt’s experience.
I wonder what you mean by “brainwashing”.
It’s a loaded term, of course. Expressed neutrally it is the forming of overall frameworks involved in perceiving the world (especially socially and politically), shaping of values, and internalizing of the social acceptabilities and unacceptabilities. If you want it as a positive expression, it’s “preparing students to enter the society”.
I expect that if pushed you could get many of them to admit that they try to encourage their pupils to be decent people
“Decent people” is a… relative term. Teachers in, say, 1930s Germany or 1950s Russia also probably wanted their students to become “decent people”. It’s just that I think their idea of decency doesn’t quite match yours.
Your definition of “Nazi” currently amounts to “supports the parts of the Nazi platform only Nazis support”. Now obviously stated this way, it is clearly a circular, hense useless, definition.
That doesn’t follow. You can do the comparison of obvious Nazis and obvious non-Nazis to see what the Nazis support, then use the information from that to assess whether the non-obvious cases are nazis.
That one—the frontman of the Nazi punk band “Pogrom”—right? So you’re willing to stick a label onto a whole political party because someone from a punk band said controversial things and generally trolled the public?
Normally, no, I wouldn’t take a punk band’s politics seriously, but when the frontman of a Nazi punk band gets elected, that’s different.
Plus, he’s not the only one:
As depicted in a picture taken on 14 September 2012, Panagiotis Iliopoulos, another Golden Dawn MP, has a tattoo reading the Nazi greeting Sieg Heil.[139]
I mean, obviously a random member of a party’s views do not represent the party, but when they are leaders or get elected, thats different.
The party admitted them as a member, and given that, why wouldn’t it approve their candidacy? Especially since I don’t think there was much of an in-party contest in this case. It’s not like the primaries for POTUS elections.
Of course, society normally finds it easy to recognize and ostracize such blatantly dishonest Nazism.
What do you mean by “normally” and can you find any examples of society that actually operated like you describe? Keep in mind the word “Nazi” was already being applied to anything and everything the speaker disliked as early as 1942.
I find it strange, and counter to my own values, that telling people “shut up, I don’t want to hear what you want to talk about” is considered “polite”, while talking about what you want to talk about, without asking permission first, is considered rude.
It’s about the defaults. The problem with political debates is that it is difficult to contain them—they are likely to grow (because for almost any topic you can find a political point of view), and they attract new people who are interested more in promoting a political idea than about improving their own rationality.
So we can either explicitly support the norm “we don’t debate politics (unless there is an exception)”, or we can either explicitly or implicitly have the norm “political debates are okay”. We have the former.
Maybe there are other possible solutions, such as trying to contain politics in specific threads, this was tried in the past (if I remember correctly, some people kept making more and more treads for debating NR pretending to be general political threads; or maybe it was other way round and all general political threads were hijacked to debate NR).
In theory, it should be possible to debate politics rationally, but in practice, we have problems keeping the debates civilized.
some people kept making more and more treads for debating NR pretending to be general political threads
NR? Neoreaction?
If you have Neoreactionary views, your general politics will naturally be Neoreactionary. So some people wanted to talk about it. Why is that a problem?
When I see a thread that I don’t want to read, I don’t. It doesn’t cause me any problem.
In theory, it should be possible to debate politics rationally, but in practice, we have problems keeping the debates civilized.
Wouldn’t that be a significant opportunity to get LessWrong?
Sorry for yesterday, I’ll try to post a more coherent reply now.
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Once in a while someone accuses Less Wrong of having a specific political bias and being intolerant towards the dissidents. The alleged political bias depends on who made the accusation. For example, neoreactionaries believe that Less Wrong is politically correct and left-wing; they would probably use the word “demotist”, which pretty much means anyone who is not a neoreactionary. Meanwhile, RationalWiki (an “Atheism+” website) believes that Less Wrong contains “cringe-inducing discussions of the merits of racism”, and the supposedly “non-political” debates in reality promote libertarianism and neoreaction.
Looking at the 2014 survey results, Less Wrong members identify mostly as Social Democratic, Liberal, Libertarian, approximately in equal numbers.
Can this result be interpreted as a unified political bias? I don’t know. Maybe yes. Maybe there is an idea of society that most Less Wrong members would approve of—I imagine something like: universal basic income, universal healthcare, minimal government required to provide security and the basic income, freedom for entrepreneurs, freedom of sexual expression and identity—while they may disagree on some technical details (such as affirmative action: yes or no) and mostly on which label is most appropriate for this idea. Or maybe I am completely wrong here.
If we map this to the traditional American politics (Democrats vs Republicans), Democrats would obviously win, cca 4:1. But this shouldn’t be surprising, considering that Less Wrong is an openly atheist website (Republicans associate with religion) and that half of members are non-American (Republicans associate with American jingoism, which non-Americans have no reason to share). Correcting for these two factors, I think the ratio is pretty much what we should expect.
My conclusion (which anyone is free to disagree with) is that the accusations of political bias more or less express frustration “why don’t these people all agree with me? they said they were rational, and rational people are supposed to agree with me! are they suggesting that I am stupid?” (exaggerated for easier comprehension).
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How to debate politics on Less Wrong without getting caught in the affective spirals? Let me quote:
On a more serious note: cut up your Great Thingy into smaller independent ideas, and treat them as independent.
For instance a marxist would cut up Marx’s Great Thingy into a theory of value of labour, a theory of the political relations between classes, a theory of wages, a theory on the ultimate political state of mankind. Then each of them should be assessed independently, and the truth or falsity of one should not halo on the others. If we can do that, we should be safe from the spiral, as each theory is too narrow to start a spiral on its own.
Same thing for every other Great Thingy out there.
Specifically for neoreaction this means that “neoreaction” is a wrong topic for a debate. (However, “tell me why do you identify as a neoreactionary” can be interesting; probably the most productive LW thread on this topic.) The best approach would be to taboo “neoreaction” (and all other political labels), choose one object-level belief and debate that. Of course this presupposes that someone could compile a list of specific object-level beliefs in simple language without links to the other beliefs (and no, “Cthulhu always swims left” is neither specific nor transparent). Then we could debate the individual beliefs, and perhaps agree on some and disagree on others; and maybe we could find out that some of those beliefs are actually not unique for neoreaction.
(And then there is the issue that people who would disagree with some neoreactionary beliefs would soon find that the karma of their comments written years ago have overnight dropped to −1. Which will require some technical changes in voting mechanism to fix, there is no other way.)
Neoreaction defines itself more in in terms of what it is opposed to than in terms of what it is in favor of.
Fine. So what is neoreaction against?
Democracy.
Neoreaction is the political philosophy that says that democracy is not merely the well-meaning god that happened to fail, but that our current wreckage was predetermined, because democracy fatally intertwined with progressivism since its birth, that it is a tool of progressivism, and that therefore, for a society to accept democracy is for a society to accept its inevitable doom at the hands of progressivism.
So at issue is democracy. Given this, with respect to that belief, it’s easy to see how LW is politically unified. In fact, doubting democracy is pretty much outside of Overton window (that’s part of what makes neoreaction interesting).
Not sure how many neoreactionaries actually agree with that definition. But anyway...
So the belief is that societies that (1) accept democracy (2) will inevitably (3) meet their progressivism-caused doom.
(1) We would need a working definition of “democracy”. Specifically, what about countries like USSR or Burma or North Korea that nominally have elections, but the winner is reliably known in advance. Do they also count as “democracies” for the purpose of our belief; that is, does even half-assed pretext of democracy inevitably bring the doom? Or do we need people to participate in real elections? What if the elections are real, but most media are in hands of a few rich owners, and most voters believe the media?
I am asking this to avoid rationalizations from hindsight, like: “Singapore seems to be doing pretty well despite being a democracy—nah, they are a democracy only in name, it’s actually People’s Action Party ruling since 1959”; “North Korea seems like hell—well, they do have elections, so this is an example of a democracy that already met its doom”.
(2) The word “inevitably” actually doesn’t predict any specific outcome, because if the prophesied thing didn’t happen, you can always add ”...yet”. Could it be made a bit more specific? For example, do countries with a lot of democracy meet their doom faster, on average, than countries with only little democracy? (For example, should we expect Switzerland to meet their doom sooner than North Korea?)
I am not a neoreactionary, so you’ll have to find somebody else to argue their side—shouldn’t be a problem, since you mentioned that they can’t shut up :-P
However I’ll explain why I find their ideology interesting. The thing is, in contemporary political discourse in the West democracy became a sacred cow. One could talk about better or worse implementations, point out issues with specific governments or policies, etc. but the notion that democracy is the best and you should always try to have as much of it as possible seems to be sanctified, enshrined, and maybe even embalmed :-)
And that is a bit of a problem. It’s a problem mostly because democracy (even in an idealized state) is not perfect and has systemic faults and shortcomings. Discussing those is… difficult because of the sacred-cow status of democracy. Trying to mitigate and ameliorate them is also difficult because that usually involves something other than “moar democracy!” and publicly suggesting it can be less than wise.
Note that debates about the merits of democracy were common in the XVIII and XIX century, but are almost extinct now (again: in the West. Asia is quite different in that respect).
And me, I don’t like blinders but I do like sacred-cow steaks :-)
I also find neoreaction interesting, or rather I did while the idea was new for me; later it became rather repetitive. But I do care about this “map reflecting the territory” thing more than I care about things being interesting.
in contemporary political discourse in the West democracy became a sacred cow
Maybe I fail to appreciate this, living in eastern Europe, having communists and nazis in parliament, hearing “democracy doesn’t work”, “Jews are controlling everything”, “vaccination causes autism” et cetera on a regular basis.
And I guess that in Russia, 90% of what neoreactionaries believe is a mainstream opinion, and you just have to turn on your TV to hear it directly from Putin. So I have a problem empathising with the argument by bravery.
I agree that everything should be open to debate, there should be no dogmas. But there is a difference between saying that, and embracing reversed stupidity. I’d rather know what makes some democracies work and other democracies fail. For example, Switzerland does a few things that neoreactionaries would agree with, despite having more democracy than any other country I know.
hearing “democracy doesn’t work”, “Jews are controlling everything”, “vaccination causes autism” et cetera on a regular basis.
The first item in your list is relevant to NRx, but I’m not sure about the rest. Are you implying that from “these people believe in A” you can conclude that “they also must believe in B, C, and D”?
And I guess that in Russia, 90% of what neoreactionaries believe is a mainstream opinion, and you just have to turn on your TV to hear it directly from Putin.
I don’t think that is true.
It looks like you have a tendency to put all the people and all the views you dislike into one big bucket and say “They are all the same”. That’s not a very good idea.
I’d rather know what makes some democracies work and other democracies fail.
You are not interested in what makes some political systems work and others fail..? :-)
It looks like you have a tendency to put all the people and all the views you dislike into one big bucket and say “They are all the same”.
That’s why I said 90%. There are also obvious differences: Putin still keeps a democratic facade in Russia, he supports Orthodox Christianity, and ethnic Russians are considered the superior race. As far as I know, NRs would abhor even pretend-democracy, would support religion but not Christianity because that inevitably leads to progressivism; and would support an idea of superior ethnic group but probably only if it includes themselves.
But they could have a nice debate about how Western civilization is weak, decadent, and doomed to failure; how giving rights to homosexuals is obviously stupid; how religion is necessary for a strong society; etc.
You are not interested in what makes some political systems work and others fail..?
You still haven’t convinced me that Switzerland is a failure. I also don’t know an example of a real country without elections where I would be tempted to move. Shall we discuss fictional evidence?
would support religion but not Christianity because that inevitably leads to progressivism
Depending on which neoreactionary. The neoreactionaries I’m familiar with, admittedly a tiny subset, are pro-traditional, i.e., non-progressive Christianity.
I also don’t know an example of a real country without elections where I would be tempted to move.
How many real countries do you know without elections, period? I here the UAE is rather nice.
But they could have a nice debate about how Western civilization is weak, decadent, and doomed to failure; how giving rights to homosexuals is obviously stupid; how religion is necessary for a strong society; etc.
That’s part of what I mean by saying that you put everyone you dislike into one big bucket. Let me link again the post I already mentioned. I don’t notice it talking about homosexuals or religion, do you? Do you expect the author to broadly agree with Putin?
You still haven’t convinced me that Switzerland is a failure.
Um, you were the one who first brought up that term in this discussion. In fact, the only reason we’re having this meta-debate is because a bunch of people didn’t want to have an object-level discussion about Donald Trump.
My conclusion (which anyone is free to disagree with) is that the accusations of political bias more or less express frustration “why don’t these people all agree with me?
My objections are not about having bias, but enacting a bias institutionally and through social pressures to shut up people you disagree with.
That impulse to shut others up by power and pressure has a marked tendency to go in one direction.
Your projection of “why don’t these people all agree with me?” sounds ridiculous to me. Can you point to a few discussions where NR folks were shocked, just shocked, that there was someone in the world that disagreed with them? I’d think that they’re probably well used to that by now. I wouldn’t expect them to be shocked.
I’ll share my conclusion. In many circles, the Left is accustomed to being able to proselytize their ideology while silencing Unbelievers. LW has a rare density of Libertarian leaning people, who generally aren’t the types to sit silently and assent. Failing to ideologically bully, the Left resorted to pressure to just not talk about politics, which achieves the main goal of silencing the Unbelievers.
LessWrong is not supposed to be a claim, but a goal. We have all sorts of wrong ideas that we share and mutually critique on our path to becoming LessWrong. But for politics, no go. More important to shut up those heretical ideas than actually get LessWrong about them.
they said they were rational, and rational people are supposed to agree with me!
No. The desire to speak, and the desire to be free to speak without being pressured to shut up, is not the demand or expectation that everyone agree.
The best approach would be to taboo “neoreaction”
Yeah, the best approach is to UnIdea “neoreaction”.
As for your suggested LWSpeak dictionary for political speech, that’s conveniently another method of control. You can’t use these symbols. You can’t talk this way.
How about instead we criticize each other’s ideas if we want, and don’t criticize them if we don’t?
I’ll share my conclusion. In many circles, the Left is accustomed to being able to proselytize their ideology while silencing Unbelievers. LW has a rare density of Libertarian leaning people, who generally aren’t the types to sit silently and assent. Failing to ideologically bully, the Left resorted to pressure to just not talk about politics, which achieves the main goal of silencing the Unbelievers.
According to LW census liberals and social democrats make up about two thirds of the whole population. If anything, the fact that talk about politics is discouraged here is good for ideological minorities, such as conservatives, communists or neoreactionaries, because there are plenty interesting LW topics that are unrelated to politics. A few years ago people understood that.
How about instead we criticize each other’s ideas if we want, and don’t criticize them if we don’t?
Discussing specific ideas one by one is different from discussing vague blobs of ideas that have a lot of connotations. The first one is much more productive than the second, because in the second case people tend to constantly move the goalposts and usė motte and bailey tactics. Discussion of specific mechanisms how elections may lead to outcomes that are contrary to the interest of population is different than discussing a vague blob of ideas that contain people as different as Moldbug’s techno-commercialists and religious traditionalists who have basically nothing in common. For any neorectionary proposal there is another idea that is almost an opposite. You can’t discuss it unless you specify exactly which ideas you are discussing. That is what tabooing the word “neoreaction” means. Discuss ideas that are specific and concrete, ideas that have empirical content, not some kind of vague symbols.
According to LW census liberals and social democrats make up about two thirds of the whole population.If anything, the fact that talk about politics is discouraged here is good for ideological minorities, such as conservatives, communists or neoreactionaries, because there are plenty interesting LW topics that are unrelated to politics. A few years ago people understood that.
Is the implication that other third, made up of libertarians, wouldn’t want to be in a political conversation where they are outnumbered?
If so, that’s a pretty good joke.
“It’s good that we don’t talk about X, because there are a lot of NotX things to talk about” is a rather peculiar claim.
Discussing specific ideas one by one is different from discussing vague blobs of ideas
I suppose one could argue that Trump the political animal is in fact a vague blob of ideas, but as a topic of conversation, it’s fairly specific, and yet the poster asking for permission to discuss him was effectively told to “shut up” by 40% of respondents. And he did so.
That is what tabooing the word “neoreaction” means.
But that is not what “shut up” means.
Can he discuss Trump, as long as he doesn’t use his name? Shall it be “He Who Must Not Be Named” then?
Yeah, the best approach is to UnIdea “neoreaction”. As for your suggested LWSpeak dictionary for political speech, that’s conveniently another method of control. You can’t use these symbols. You can’t talk this way.
I guess you have read something about “professing and cheering”, “applause lights”, “affective spirals”, “rationalist taboo”, “anticipated experiences”, and “replacing symbols with substance”. Political debates are not a separate magisterium. Neoreaction is not a separate magisterium within politics.
If your belief has the ambitions to describe the territory, you should be able to describe the same thing without using the shibboleths. A marxist could transform “capitalists exploit workers” into “people who control resources can achieve transactions disadvantageous in long term to people who must participate in transactions with them in order to survive”. A libertarian could transform “free markets lead to progress” into “when interactions between people are free of coercion, people are more likely to fully use their creativity”. A theist could transform “homosexuality is a sin” into “if you live in a universe with an omnipotent being who infinitely punishes people for sexual relationships with people of the same sex, it is prudent to avoid such relationships”.
But if your beliefs are merely cheering for your team, or if the words you use are merely mysterious formless substances, you cannot transform them. Or if your beliefs are wrong (do not match the territory), unpacking the keywords can make the wrongness more obvious. Refusing to unpack your keywords means that on some level you already know that it wouldn’t end well. Just say loudly: “countries with a lot of democracy, such as Switzerland, have lower quality of life than countries with no democracy, such as North Korea, because democracy makes people selfishly destroy the society, while a dictator will optimize for long-term prosperity” if that happens to be your belief with the symbols replaced by the corresponding substance.
LW has a rare density of Libertarian leaning people, who generally aren’t the types to sit silently and assent. Failing to ideologically bully, the Left resorted to pressure to just not talk about politics, which achieves the main goal of silencing the Unbelievers.
Reality check: is Eliezer supposed to be that leftist bully who oppresses the rare libertarians at LW? I’m asking because he wrote the articles about anticipated experiences, tabooing words, affective spirals, et cetera. Do you perhaps believe that the techniques described in the Sequences are merely a clever ploy to oppress heretics?
Because to me it seems like you simply refuse to apply some general techniques to a specific set of beliefs… for pretty much the same reason why a theist would object against using an Occam’s Razor to religion.
If you have Neoreactionary views, your general politics will naturally be Neoreactionary. So some people wanted to talk about it. Why is that a problem?
The problem was they were not able to stop talking about it. Because they had no other platform than Less Wrong where they could present their ideas to wider audience and try recruiting new people.
Also they loved to pretend that the rationalist community as a whole somehow supports their political beliefs, despite the polls showing cca 3% support.
Then at some moment Eliezer became tired of being known as “the guy who hosts the neoreactionary website” and publicly disowned them. They moved their politics to their own website called “More Right” (as you see, they still couldn’t stop making hints that they are somehow connected with LW), so they finally had some other outlet.
(It also didn’t help their PR that the known vote-manipulator Eugine was their supporter. I know, that’s merely an argument by association, but it doesn’t help to keep the debate rational and try avoiding mindkilling, if one side has a member that keeps mass-downvoting everyone who disagrees.)
Thank you for the history. That was before my time. Or maybe I just missed that.
But this is consistent with my observations. It’s not really politics that is the target of the ban, it’s a certain type of politics.
as you see, they still couldn’t stop making hints that they are somehow connected with LW
By your own reporting, they were connected to the LW site. That’s where they came from, until they were booted off as untouchables. It’s part of their own history that LW was the incubator for their site. And given that they were booted from LW for their views, sticking a thumb in the eye of LW is entirely predictable. The name is triply appropriate, given the politics. It would have been too obvious and too good a name to pass up. I would have used it.
It’s not really politics that is the target of the ban, it’s a certain type of politics.
Nope, it’s a certain type of behavior.
And given that they were booted from LW for their views,
Nope.
sticking a thumb in the eye of LW is entirely predictable.
Yes, this attitude is a part of the behavior.
Generally, you guys love to behave like predators. Never take “no” for an answer, double down when someone refuses to debate with you (but when someone does, it’s obvious you don’t listen anyway), then switch to karma assassinations when arguments fail, or otherwise threaten revenge. You probably believe that this is the right (pun intended) strategy, and if only you stay persistent enough, everyone will sooner or later bend over and take it in the ass. Thus sayeth Gnon or whichever idiotic abbreviation you worship today.
Meanwhile, in the real world, being an asshole often works short-term, but in longer term, there are some complications. Such as being publicly recognized for what you are, and not being welcome among people who have higher standards of interaction.
By the way, you guys are much less different from the SJW predators than either side would admit, except that they are pros (because they were selected from a much larger pool of candidates) and you are mostly wankers. Just saying, because you are going to downvote this comment anyway.
But don’t mind me. Follow your own strategy and see where it leads you.
Downvoted for the kind of attitude actually described in Politics Is The Mind-Killer, the NRxs historically tending v to be the worst offenders is irrelevant.
Nope. Banning a certain type of behavior was used as cover for banning a certain politics.
Then at some moment Eliezer became tired of being known as “the guy who hosts the neoreactionary website” and publicly disowned them.
I don’t see behavior as the issue identified here, I see being associated with certain political ideas.
And given that they were booted from LW for their views, Nope
If you want to be nitpicky, then yes, they personally weren’t booted, just discussion of the offending ideas was booted.
you guys
Are you passing out honorary NR degrees? Don’t think I’m entirely on board, though they make a lot of good points.
love to behave like predators.
It’s predatory to discuss ideas.
It’s not predatory to prevent people from discussing ideas through institutional power.
double down when someone refuses to debate with you
Isn’t it inconvenient when people you disagree with won’t shut up? Don’t worry, you can probably make them.
being an asshole often works short-term, but in longer term, there are some complications.
Ah yes. Maybe I was around. I do recall discussing someone’s equivalence of “NR” = “Assholes”. Or maybe that was a PUA discussion. Basically, I disagree with you, therefore you’re an asshole.
And you’re right in the sense that having unpopular ideas often comes with a cost.
you guys are much less different from the SJW predators than either side would admit
Funny, you seemed just like a SJW predator to me. “Shut up” is also their answer to ideas they disagree with.
Just saying, because you are going to downvote this comment anyway.
Actually, I’ve upvoted one of your comments in this thread, hadn’t downvoted any others, and had no intention of downvoting this one. But don’t let that keep you from feeling persecuted by a mean old predator.
The LW announcement link discusses the motivation for launching More Right. I was linking at the (already deleted) motivation for later abandoning More Right and launching The Future Primaeval.
You’re unable to see the difference between “banish heretics” and “banish cult recruiters”? Or, more to the point, between “banish heretics” and “forbid cult recruitment”?
(I am not sure how good a metaphor either of these is for neoreactionaries on Less Wrong, but the two are quite different things and it’s in no way ambiguous which Viliam is arguing for.)
First, calling them a cult when they exhibited none of the means of indoctrination and control associated with cults seems inaccurate and a boo light.
Those who successfully banned discussion of NR ideas from LW seem more accurately called cult members, using the usual cult tactic of driving out ideas that challenged their cherished beliefs, thereby refusing to engage with critiques of their ideas.
On the flip side, the supposed NR “cult” was doing the rather uncultish thing of choosing to stay in the midst of ideas predominantly hostile to their own, until forced to take their discussion elsewhere.
As for “recruitment”, what do you mean? How is that different from wanting to discuss and share ideas that they found valuable?
To me, it sounds like Viliam disliked the ideas, disliked that others exposed to them found them attractive, and approved of having what power could be mustered to prevent those ideas from spreading at LW.
but the two are quite different things and it’s in no way ambiguous which Viliam is arguing for
It’s two ways to spin what he was proposing—shutting down ideas he disapproved of. A common sarcastic definitions of a cult is “religion I disapprove of”.
Those who successfully banned discussion of NR ideas
No one has successfully (or for that matter unsuccessfully) banned discussion of NR ideas on Less Wrong. Eugine has been banned again and again because he misbehaves again and again. advancedatheist was banned for allegedly suggesting that women should be forced to have sex with men they don’t want to have sex with[1]. I can’t offhand think of anyone else who has been banned lately, nor do I recall ever hearing any moderator say anything at all like “no discussion of NRx on LW”.
[1] It’s less than clear that that was his actual intent, but that’s the reason that was given. The fact that he had a narrow range of topics that he kept going on and on and on about (and kept being downvoted heavily for it, so it’s not like these were topics LW was crying out for opportunities to talk about more) presumably didn’t help.
There is, and has been for some time, more discussion of NRx ideas on LW than anywhere else I know of that isn’t explicitly a right-wing site.
disliked that others exposed to them found them attractive
It doesn’t look to me as if NRx advocates on LW are actually getting much traction. So maybe “disliked the idea that others exposed to them might find them attractive” would be better. But actually I think what Viliam wants to avoid is having LW used for that purpose, whether or not the “cult recruiters” have any success—the point being that being proselytized at is annoying, regardless of whether the proselytism is ever successful.
“religion I disapprove of”
Yeah, that’s a common complaint. But it doesn’t actually match how most people use the word “cult”. Very few people would call Christianity or Islam a cult, for instance, even among those who strongly disapprove of Christianity or Islam. (I don’t mean that that never happens. But it very seldom does.)
So, is Viliam using “cult” to mean “movement I disapprove of” here? I don’t think so. I think he’s using it to mean something more like “very small movement with extreme views that most here find unpleasant and/or highly implausible”. If you replace “movement” with “religion” and delete “here”, that’s a pretty good approximation to how “cult” is actually used.
I see little proselytizing for cryonics here; back in the OB days there was more of it, much of it coming from Eliezer, and yes I did find it a little annoying. (Only a little, because there wasn’t very much even then.) I’m a fan of EA myself, so am not in the right target audience to be annoyed by it. My impression is that most LWers are too. There’s maybe one bit of animal welfare advocacy a year.
None of this much resembles the situation with NRx, where it seems like any time anyone says anything about race or gender you can rely on someone coming along to point out the inferiority of black people and women. I expect it isn’t actually that bad, of course; these things usually feel worse than they are. But the proselytism to pre-existing support ratio is, I’m pretty certain, much higher for NRx than for those other things.
There is a traditional definition out of The Devil’s Dictionary
Yes, I already acknowledged that it’s a common complaint that people use the word “cult” that way. I am suggesting that that isn’t actually how people use it. (You are well aware that TDD is a big mass of snark and doesn’t in any useful sense purport to give actual definitions, I assume.)
I think it was just a pretty clear fnord.
Not a fnord but an overt criticism. (Possibly an unfair criticism, but that’s not the same thing as a fnord.)
None of this much resembles the situation with NRx, where it seems like any time anyone says anything about race or gender you can rely on someone coming along to point out the inferiority of black people and women.
First, I don’t think that’s true. Second, you’re conflating NRx and HBD/race-realism/etc. and these are quite different things. And I haven’t seen anyone pointing out the general inferiority of women in a long while. Inferiority in specific areas (like upper body strength), certainly, but I don’t see why this is a problem.
No, I’m observing that they seem to overlap a lot.
I haven’t seen anyone pointing out the general inferiority of women in a long while.
No, it’s usually just a claim that women are less intelligent, or (in the more nuanced cases) not so good at the kinds of thinking required for, say, science or mathematics.
Very few people would call Christianity or Islam a cult
No, I think that’s usually the point of the snarky definition of a cult as a “religion I disapprove of”, i.e. Christianity and Islam have the same characteristics as organizations called cults, but are not called cults because they’re popular.
“If you wake up tomorrow morning thinking that saying a few Latin words over your pancakes is going to turn them into the body of Elvis Presley, you have lost your mind. But if you think more or less the same thing about a cracker and the body of Jesus, you are just a Catholic.” -Sam Harris
So let’s take the Cult of Cryonics. What do you think “banish cult recruiters” might look like? I would bet that it would look like prohibiting discussions of cryonics and be indistinguishable from “banish the heretics” in practice.
And of course NRx isn’t a cult, Yvain’s offhand comment notwithstanding.
I don’t want LW to be a recruitment place for a political cult.
What do you mean by “cult”? Many people would consider the founding purpose of LW to be a recruitment place for a cult. Or do you mean you don’t want anything that might convert people to a political position different from yours?
It seems to me that Viliam’s complaint is not that there would be more to talk about, but that more talk would be politicized.
Why is that a problem?
I don’t know for sure whether it was (I don’t think I ever paid that much attention to the politics threads) but here’s one way it could have been: suppose LW has few but very vocal neoreactionaries[1] and that most of the non-neoreactionaries are not very interested in talking about neoreaction[2]. If those few neoreactionaries arrange that every political discussion is packed with NRx stuff, then those political discussions will be annoying to everyone else because in order to read the bits they’re interested in they have to wade through lots of NRx comments (and perhaps, though here they may have only themselves to blame, lots of anti-NRx responses).
[1] I think there is some evidence that this is actually so.
[2] This seems likely to be true, but I have no evidence. (I don’t mean that most non-NRx people want never to talk about NRx; only that for most the optimal amount of NRx discussion is rather small.)
When I see a thread that I don’t want to read, I don’t. It doesn’t cause me any problem.
What about when you see a thread that you would want to read, but in which a few people obsessed with things you find uninteresting have posted hundreds of comments you don’t want to read?
Of course it doesn’t need to be neoreactionaries doing this. It could be social-justice types seizing every possible opportunity to point out heteronormative kyriarchal phallogocentric subtexts. It could be people terrified about AI risk turning every discussion of computers doing interesting things into debates about whether We Are All Doomed—or people skeptical about AI risk complaining incessantly about how LW promotes paranoia about AI risk. It could be Christians proposing Jesus as the answer to every question, or atheists leaping on every case of suffering or successful scientific explanation to remind us that it’s evidence against God. Etc., etc., etc.
Wouldn’t that be a significant opportunity to get LessWrong?
It might be. Or it might be so only in the sense that for an alcoholic, having a glass of whisky is a significant opportunity to practice the discipline of self-control. (That is: in principle it might be but in practice the outcome might be almost certain to be bad.)
suppose LW has few but very vocal neoreactionaries[1] and that most of the non-neoreactionaries are not very interested in talking about neoreaction[2].
What do you mean by that? Do you mean that they’re not interested in becoming lesswrong about the issue or that they only want to become lesswrong to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s?
Obviously I mean neither (btw: hi, Eugine!). I mean what I say: for whatever reason they are not very interested in talking about NRx here. Possible reasons other than your maximally-uncharitable ones:
They are just not very interested in the things neoreactionaries get excited about (race, gender, political structures—though it occurs to me that LW’s small but vocal NRx contingent appears to be much more interested in race and gender than in any of the other things theoretically characteristic of NRx).
Is that the same as “not interested in becoming less wrong”? No, it’s broader and typically indicative of a different state of mind. Contrast a hyperzealously closed-minded Christian missionary, who is extremely interested in his religion and not at all interested in becoming less wrong about it, with an apathetic agnostic, who just doesn’t give a damn about religion. Neither will be very interested in a presentation of the merits of Hinduism, but their attitudes are quite different. (It’s not clear that one is better than the other.)
They have already given the matter plenty of thought and done their best to get less wrong about it. At this point they find little value in going over it again and again.
They are interested in becoming less wrong about political structures, gender, race, etc., but NRx positions on these lie outside the range they find credible.
Is that the same as “only to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s”? No, it’s about finding the ideas implausible rather than finding the people offputting. (Though of course the two may go together. If you find people offputting you may dismiss their ideas; if you find an idea repellent or crazy you may think ill of people who hold it.)
They have observed some discussions of NRx, seen that they consistently generate much more heat than light, and decided that whatever the facts of the matter an internet debate about it is likely to do more harm than good.
They have found that they find NRx advocates consistently unpleasant, and the benefits of possibly becoming less wrong don’t (for them) outweigh the cost of having an unpleasant argument.
They have found that they find NRx opponents consistently unpleasant, and (etc.).
Interesting theories, let’s see how they square with the evidence.
•They are just not very interested in the things neoreactionaries get excited about (race, gender, political structures—though it occurs to me that LW’s small but vocal NRx contingent appears to be much more interested in race and gender than in any of the other things theoretically characteristic of NRx).
On the other hand they are interested in questions where where race, gender, and political structures are relevant to the answers.
•They have already given the matter plenty of thought and done their best to get less wrong about it. At this point they find little value in going over it again and again.
•They are interested in becoming less wrong about political structures, gender, race, etc., but NRx positions on these lie outside the range they find credible.
If that was the case, one would expect them to be able to produce counter arguments to say the “NRx” (although it’s not unique to NRx) positions on race and gender. Instead the best they can do is link to SSC (which agrees that the NRx’s have a point in that respect), or say things that amount to saying how they don’t want to think about it.
•They have observed some discussions of NRx, seen that they consistently generate much more heat than light, and decided that whatever the facts of the matter an internet debate about it is likely to do more harm than good.
To the extent that’s true its not the “NRx” people generating the heat.
•They have found that they find NRx advocates consistently unpleasant, and the benefits of possibly becoming less wrong don’t (for them) outweigh the cost of having an unpleasant argument.
•They have found that they find NRx opponents consistently unpleasant, and (etc.).
These are just rephrasing of my hypothesis that they only want to become lesswrong to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s. Good to hear you’re willing to agree with it.
On the other hand they are interested in questions where race, gender and political structures are relevant to the answers.
Maybe, though in some cases their opinion as to that relevance may reasonably differ from yours. But that doesn’t in any way mean that they should be interested in NRx. Consider the following parallel. I am making plans concerning the next 10 years of my life—whether to take a new job, move house, get married or divorced, etc. It is highly relevant to my deliberations whether some time in the next few years a vengeful god is going to step in and put an end to the world as we know it. That doesn’t mean that I shouldn’t be annoyed when my attempts to discuss the next few years are repeatedly interrupted by people wanting to warn me about the coming apocalypse.
one would expect them to be able to produce counterarguments
Yup. But one wouldn’t necessarily expect them to do it. (If I’m talking about the likely state of the world economy 5 years from now and some guy bursts in to tell me excitedly about how Cthulhu will have risen from the depths by then and started eating everyone, I am not going to waste my time telling him exactly why I don’t think Cthulhu is real and why I wouldn’t expect him to start eating people so soon even if he were.)
To the extent that’s true it’s not the “NRx” people generating the heat.
Heat arises from friction. It takes two to generate the friction. I’m not terribly interested deciding which of the sticks getting rubbed together is responsible for the flames.
These are just rephrasing of my hypothesis
No, they’re not. Your hypothesis is that these people want to avoid becoming like the NRx people; mine is that they want to avoid having to interact with the NRx people. (There might be some overlap. If someone thinks NRx people are unpleasant, they might avoid being convinced lest they become unpleasant themselves or find themselves spending more time around unpleasant people.)
I’m not, for the avoidance of doubt, claiming that your hypotheses are never correct. Just that they’re a very long way from exhausting the possibilities for why someone might not want to engage in a lot of argument about NRx, which is one reason why it is wrong to take the general statement I made and “explain” it as the more specific one you claimed was what I actually meant.
Consider the following parallel. I am making plans concerning the next 10 years of my life—whether to take a new job, move house, get married or divorced, etc. It is highly relevant to my deliberations whether some time in the next few years a vengeful god is going to step in and put an end to the world as we know it.
This is an example of these beliefs lying outside the range they find credible, which I addressed in the next point.
Yup. But one wouldn’t necessarily expect them to do it. (If I’m talking about the likely state of the world economy 5 years from now and some guy bursts in to tell me excitedly about how Cthulhu will have risen from the depths by then and started eating everyone, I am not going to waste my time telling him exactly why I don’t think Cthulhu is real and why I wouldn’t expect him to start eating people so soon even if he were.)
The difference is that the NRx’s (or at least the HBD-people) can present arguments for their beliefs, like the fact that things like race and gender, do in fact correlate with IQ, SAT scores, success in various professions, etc.
Heat arises from friction. It takes two to generate the friction. I’m not terribly interested deciding which of the sticks getting rubbed together is responsible for the flames.
You’re taking the metaphor too literally in an attempt to pretend to be wise. In this case “heat” means bad arguments or no arguments at all. One side presents arguments for its positions, the other side presents a variety of ever-shifting excuses for why the topic shouldn’t be brought up at all.
This is an example of those beliefs lying outside the range they find credible, which I addressed in the next point.
Sure. I was just making the point that you can’t get from “X could be relevant to Y, which Z finds important” to “Z should be interested in X”.
the NRx’s (or at least the HBD-people) can present arguments for their beliefs
I don’t know about actual literal Cthulhu-worshippers, if any there be, but the preachers of pending apocalypse have arguments for their beliefs too. And, again, I think you may be misunderstanding the point I was making, which is simply that you can’t get from “Z has good arguments against X” to “Z will present arguments against X whenever someone comes along proclaiming X”, and therefore you can’t get from “X came up and Z blew it off without presenting counterarguments” to “Z doesn’t have good arguments against X”.
in an attempt to
This is far from the first time that you have claimed to know my motives. I’m sorry to inform you that your track record on getting them right appears to me to be very poor.
In this case “heat” means [...]
It was I, not you, who made the more-heat-than-light metaphor in this case, and you don’t get to tell me what I meant by it. I did not, in fact, mean “bad arguments or no arguments at all”; I meant “rudeness and crossness and people getting upset at one another”.
As for taking it too literally: no, I am observing that the metaphor happens to correspond to reality in a possibly-unexpected way. “Heat” in an argument really does come from “friction” between people, from them “rubbing one another up the wrong way”.
(Incidentally, it feels very odd to be criticized for doing that by an admirer of Chesterton, who did the same thing all the time. (More stylishly than me, no doubt, but if writing as well as Chesterton were a requirement for participation here it would be a quiet place indeed.)
why the topic shouldn’t be brought up at all
I think the problem many people have isn’t that it’s “brought up at all” but that some of those who want to talk about NRx and HBD seem to want to talk about those things all the time. That may mean that the only actually-achievable options are (1) a strict “no talking about this stuff” policy and (2) having every discussion to which race, gender, drawbacks of democracy, etc., could possibly be relevant being full of (neo-)reactionary stuff. Those both seem like bad outcomes, and if we end up with bad outcome #1 I wouldn’t want to blame whoever chooses #1 over #2 for its badness, because #2 is bad too.
It was I, not you, who made the more-heat-than-light metaphor in this case, and you don’t get to tell me what I meant by it.
Yes, I have a habit of assuming the most sensible interpretation of what my interlocutor says, it appears to be a bad habit with some people.
I meant “rudeness and crossness and people getting upset at one another”.
Ok, plugging that definition into your argument, and removing the metaphor, your argument appears to come down to “arguing ‘NRx-type’ positions gets makes my side upset therefore the ‘NRx’ side should stop doing it”.
That is pretty much the reverse of what you have been doing.
I think your actual habit is of assuming the interpretation that makes most sense to you. Unfortunately that isn’t the same, and in particular it gives very wrong results when your mental model of your interlocutors is very inaccurate.
your argument appears to come down to “arguing ‘NRx-type’ positions gets makes my side upset therefore the ‘NRx’ side should stop doing it”.
Not quite. (Though, as entirelyuseless says, that wouldn’t in fact be such a bad argument.) Here’s a link to where I came in; as you can see, I was explaining how having NRx discussions tend to proliferate could be a problem. My answer was that I didn’t know whether it actually is, but it could be so in a situation where (1) there are very few NRx’s (but vocal enough to have a lot of impact) and (2) most of the other people aren’t interested in NRx discussions. And then we got into a lengthy discussion of why #2 might be; rudeness-and-crossness was one of many possibilities.
So the argument is: in this hypothetical situation that may or may not be actual, most LWers don’t want to have a lot of NRx discussions. One of the many possible reasons is (as you put it) that these arguments get their side upset. Since (in this hypothetical situation) most LWers don’t want these discussions, and very few actively do want them, LWers as a whole would be happier without them.
(Although I’ve adopted your spin-laden language in the paragraph above, I would like to point out that it’s actually quite far from what I meant. My hypothetical person-who-doesn’t-want-to-talk-about-NRx is concerned not only that his allies might get upset, but also that his opponents might; and that the result of all this getting-upset on both sides is likely to be that no one learns much from anyone else. That’s why the metaphor is “more heat than light” and not just “lots of heat”.)
Assuming that was his argument, it seems like a pretty good one. You do not persuade people by making them upset. You make them more convinced than ever of their original position.
So, being “less wrong” is measured by “how much time one spends debating neoreaction”? If you refuse to keep endlessly debating neoreaction, you are closed-minded. Don’t worry about evidence; the signalling is cool!
I was running monthly politics threads. I don’t recall that conversations involved NR specifically, but I do recall that the discussions taking place were so specific they had no general/popular appeal, and conversations were short, muted, and didn’t go anywhere.
I was left reading the discussions taking place with the impression that people were looking for things to try to argue about, rather than having anything particularly meaningful they wanted to argue about which they previously couldn’t. Given that one of my purposes was to try to arrange a safety valve for a perceived growing political pressure (which eventually exploded in the feminism war that got Eugine Nier banned and which caused most of the more prominent feminist-leaning members to leave), they were failing for my intended purpose, so I stopped creating them.
The debates didn’t generally have an issue staying civilized, though, as I recall.
Saying “I don’t want to hear that” when specifically asked if you want to hear it is very different from “shut up, I don’t want to hear what you want to talk about”.
In the past I’ve seen people suggest that a controversial topic/thread should have been brought up in a poll beforehand instead of just posting it outright. James_Miller seems to be following the suggested convention.
I have been thinking a lot about Trump and I would like to start a discussion thread on him but I recognize that this would obviously violate LW’s implicit rule against discussing politics so I thought I would run a poll to see if I have permission.
Should we have a discussion thread on Trump?
[pollid:1128]
Update: I won’t be starting a Trump thread because of these poll results.
Would doing so Make Less Wrong Great Again?
I think Omnilibrium is a better place for those discussions.
Exactly. I voted ‘no’ because Omnilibrium is far more apt, and still quite high in quality of the Discussion.
See also Prof. Noam Chomsky’s recent answer on Quora: https://www.quora.com/Why-is-Donald-Trump-having-so-much-success-during-this-election-cycle
There also is a reddit thread on Trump from a while ago with 14,000 comments: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/3gd3hh/serious_redditors_who_want_trump_to_become/
As someone who voted yes, and currently seeing how the margin is 32 ‘yays’ (52%) to 29 ‘nays’ (48%), I don’t think you should start this discussion simply because there is a majority in favour of a discussion thread on Trump. I mean, I wouldn’t like to see 48% of users put off by this discussion. So, I think it’s safe to say the discussions should really only start if you get a supermajority, something like 2/3rds in favor of starting the discussion. If that’s not the case whenever you decide the poll is closed, I don’t think it’s worth the costs of hosting the discussion here.
I thus agree with ChristianKI to move the discussion to Omnilibrium.
I agree.
presently the scores are close to tied with 23 votes. (ROT13 of the current score (guvegrra lrf naq gra ab)) If the tie continues I would encourage you to not post it.
“just show me the answers”
What benefit would you propose it would bring?
It’s one of the most important and surprising events of our time and much of the discussion is anti-rational, i.e. bad people support Trump so Trump is bad; many are claiming that electing Trump would be catastrophic and discussing potential catastrophes is supposed to be one of the purposes of LW.
I think a question of how Trump interacts with x-risk is a potentially interesting conversation topic. I think an analysis of class that uses Trump as an example is a potentially interesting conversation topic.
But I worry that even here a direct discussion of Trump will be anti-rational / along cultural lines instead of about rational expectations, and I’m not sure what actions we would take differently as a result of having that conversation.
*cough*bullshit*cough*
Then name three more important events that have transpired mostly in the last 6 months?
You said (emphasis mine): “one of the most important and surprising events of our time”
I tend to interpret “our time” as a period that is a bit longer than the last six months.
But even if you want to look at recent news, here are three things which I consider to be much more consequential than Donald Trump: (1) the European refugee crisis; (2) the Chinese economic troubles; (3) the Russian direct military intervention in Syria.
May I politely suggest paying less attention to the idiot box?
I’m not sure that argument goes through—if the European refugee crisis is important, then aren’t Merkel, Obama, and Clinton important? And if they’re important once they’re in office, isn’t the process by which they enter office important?
That argument involving the idiot box actually looks like this: Mass media optimizes for outrage. Estimating the importance of the topic by the amount of air time it gets is a mistake.
No. Not in the sense that Merkel, etc. are unimportant, but in the sense that a systemic crisis is not reducible to the importance of whoever happens to be in the office at the moment.
If James_Miller wanted to discuss the crisis of the “establishment” center of the mainstream US parties and the rebellions within them, it might have been an interesting topic. But James_Miller want to discuss Donald Trump, personally.
Of course, that’s what Donald Trump wants as well X-)
The reason I picked those particular people is because of Clinton’s role in the removal of Qaddafi, Obama’s role in the continued destabilization of Syria, and Merkel’s public pledge to take in refugees (which exacerbated the degree to which it is a European crisis, instead of a Syrian or Africa crisis). “Whoever happens to be in the office at the moment” is a factor in many of these crises.
I have a feeling we’re slowly slipping towards the conflict between the “impersonal forces” and “great people” views of history :-)
But I guess the question here is whether you want to discuss people or whether you want to discuss systems. Of course they are related and interdependent, but still. Going back to the source of this subthread, I find thinking about tensions between “rebels” and “nomenklatura” in US political parties to be moderately interesting (especially in the context of how they deal with the need to overpromise during the campaign). I find Donald Trump to be very uninteresting. YMMV, of course.
A synthesis of the two views clearly outperforms either view on its own. There seems to be a difference between, basically, forest fires and earthquakes—both rely on long build-ups (the impersonal forces contribution) and when they happen may be surprising (I couldn’t tell you when the housing bubble would burst until it had but I could tell you that it would eventually), but the while there’s little control over when an earthquake happens and how the consequences shake out, there’s quite a bit of control over when a fire happens and how the consequences shake out (the great people contribution).
Of course—they are just endpoints and the discussion is about where in the middle the proper balance is struck.
That’s an interesting distinction—can you say more about it?
It seems to me that events and changes vary quite a bit in how much control various people have over them. For things like the Chinese economic difficulties, it looks to me like this is the result of lots of malinvestment over the years, and there’s not too much control over whether or not things get worse / no clear single point of failure. Then there are other issues where there does seem to be a single point of failure, or a single failure avoidance point. Even in those cases, there are systemic forces that created the fuel for the conflagration.
One example that comes to mind is Arkhipov voting against firing nukes during the Cuban Missile crisis. The things that put the missiles there and made their standing orders to fire if attacked (and the officers agreed) might be better thought of as ‘systemic forces,’ but it seems hard to argue that ‘systemic forces’ are a better explanation of a 2-1 vote instead of a 3-0 vote than the ‘great people’ view. Similarly, one can imagine many forest fires that almost happened, and then didn’t because of direct action by a person on the scene.
(Or many forest fires caused by direct action of a person on the scene.)
Even if she did greatly exacerbate it by doing something really stupid?
Yes, even, because there are reasons she did that and those reasons don’t have much to do with her personally. It wasn’t like she buckled the entire German consensus.
The refugee crisis is very interesting. Not quite “Camp of the Saints”, but it’s a huge acceleration of frictions I expected to take much longer to play out, and not really hit the fan so soon.
Chinese economic troubles? Recessions are big things, but they happen. Economies go up, they go down.
Russian intervention in Syria. Russian satellite state getting military support. Shrug. Turkey seems much more interesting to me. I suppose the Russians intervention does make it possible for some serious confrontation with the US, but I don’t see Putin or Obama having much interest in that.
There are some complicated wrinkles to this one, including the observation that the (current) legitimacy of the Communist Party rule to a great extent depends on it being able to provide visibly and rapidly rising standards of living. And, of course, the question whether China is done with its growth spurt or it’s merely a hiccup has major geopolitical consequences a decade or two away.
The first time post-Soviet Russia puts boots on the ground outside of the former USSR. The overarching theme is the global assertiveness of Mr.Putin and Middle East is always an… interesting place. And there is Iran nearby :-/
I agree that Turkey is interesting, too, but nothing “big” happened there recently and were were talking about events.
Um, shooting down a Russian plane.
And… nothing happened.
No, Russia started providing it’s bombers with fighter escorts with orders to shoot in self-defense. This is a situation that can easily escalate the next time one of these planes passes through Turkish airspace.
How about the various welfare states around the world finally starting to run out of other people’s money. The biggest manifestations of this so far have been the financial crisis in the EU, and the various pension crises in US local governments.
Heck, in my more conspiratorial moods I’m inclined to suspect that these migrant crises are an excuse to import a bunch of convenient scapegoats who can than be blamed for the collapse of popular entitlement programs.
That’s not one of the events “that have transpired mostly in the last 6 months” :-)
But yes, I’m watching Japan with great interest :-D
I think Trump’s rise is interesting for a number of issues that people here have particular interest in.
How he wins. How his attackers lose. The power of his signature issues in trade and immigration. The potential for a political realignment with the Republican Party, and how that realigns US politics as a whole.
The media has been outraged, they have attacked, and they have failed to bring him down. His poll numbers just go up and up and up. That’s interesting, and merits discussion.
I’m saying this in hindsight, but I disagree about this being surprising. Anti-immigration parties are on the rise all across Europe. The National Front in France are probably to the right of Trump, and Golden Dawn in Greece are genuine neo-nazis. More generally, non-mainstream parties are on the rise, probably powered by the ability to organise grassroots activism via the net. Even the Pirate Parties are winning seats.
Given this, is it really surprising that non-mainstream candidates would happen in the US too, both with Trump and Bernie Sanders?
I’m actually surprised that Sanders isn’t the Democratic frontrunner, especially when his only opponent is being investigated for espionage.
The ideological gate keepers are losing control. The Cologne cover up looks like a pretty significant event for discrediting the Top Men.
On Sanders, all the Democratic Powers that Be lined up behind Clinton, and even Sanders got in lock step to maintain that Clinton’s email catastrophe is much ado about nothing. The Democratic Party has spent a couple of decades dealing with Clinton scandals. It’s all just a cast right wing conspiracy, don’t you know?
Probably the biggest hit Hillary has taken is from younger women, turned off by HIllary “standing by her man” and attacking his sexual abuse accusers, Gloria Steinem belittling Bernie gals as boy crazy for Bernie Bros, and Albright playing the Vote Vagina or Go to Hell card.
Depending no who you listen to, so’s the National Front, Putin, anti-Putin, Trump, mainstream Republicans, insufficiently left-wing Democrats, etc.
Ok, so what’s your reason for believing Golden Dawn are actually neo-nazi? (Edit: and what do you mean by “actual neo-nazi” anyway?)
Just look at their flag:
https://www.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/17/Meandros_flag.svg/150px-Meandros_flag.svg.png&imgrefurl=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Dawn_(political_party)&h=100&w=150&tbnid=CDly4gAodIMPcM:&tbnh=80&tbnw=120&docid=g-53Bx9BWHOy2M&usg=__gcjSL8sDC3eM9-5mVj4vERTCyW8=&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi-oezK-bfLAhVpQpoKHY3fANQQ9QEIITAA)
It looks just like a swastika. Sure, Putin and Trump and anyone who is nationalistic can be compared to Nazis, but this cheapens the term ‘Nazi’ or ‘fascist’.
By “actual neo-nazi” I mean a group which has significant use of Nazi imagery and when significant members explicitly endorse Nazism.
Seriously? You’re only argument is that their flag looks like a Swastika if you squint just right?
The flag looks almost exactly like a swastica. Also, see hairyfigment’s comment and read the wikipedia page. There is plenty more evidence.
They wouldn’t have chosen that flag unless they were neo-nazis. If they really wanted that symbol, it could have been against a different color background.
You think so?
Glad you asked, Eugine:
Of course, society normally finds it easy to recognize and ostracize such blatantly dishonest Nazism. It doesn’t create any actual confusion - unless people have gone out of their way to weaken society’s immune system, eg by deliberately signalling Nazism when the reality is more obscure.
I think it weakens the immune system more when anyone who isn’t in favour of completely unrestricted immigration gets called a Nazi. And there’s a failure mode where constantly calling people Nazis (or sexists/racists) makes them more favourable towards Nazis (the theory is that on a subconcious level they think ’if I’m a Nazi, maybe Nazism isn’t so bad).
Or the more straightforward, if anyone proposing sensible immigration policy gets called a Nazi, eventually people conclude that “Nazi” means someone in favor of sensible immigration policy.
I agree, and I am trying to use words in a precise manner. Trump is not a Nazi. The Golden Dawn are.
LOL. Seriously, do you have any more evidence beyond “their symbol sotra looks like a swastika”. How about you try looking for the factions in Greece using Nazi-style tactics, like say arresting their opponents on vague trumped up charges. Hint: it’s not Golden Dawn.
Try the entire wikipedia page on them! Take these bits for instance:
Now, I’m not endorsing the other factions, some of whom may well be Stalinists or terrorists. It is possible for there to be extremists on both the left and the right.
I know that ‘Nazi’ may be overused, but you surely must see that in this specific instance, that is what the Golden Dawn are.
Unless the entire wikipedia page and the sources are all fraudulent...
You did mention “using words precisely” at some point. If you still wish to do that, the word “Nazi” is a very specific word—it refers to things associated with the National Socialist German Workers’ Party. I am pretty sure members of Golden Dawn are not members of NSDAP as well.
A better word for you might be “fascist”. It is more general—there certainly were more fascists than nazis—and describes a particular type of ideology (which originated in Italy, by the way).
The word “neo-nazi”, in contemporary parlance, doesn’t mean much beyond “I don’t like these people”.
Note that it’s perfectly possible to be racist, xenophobic, nationalist, and anti-semitic and still not be a Nazi or a fascist.
Well, everyone to the right of Stalin has been described as neo-Nazi by scholars.
I guess there goes your “explicitly endorse Nazism” claim.
Weren’t people saying the same thing about the National Front ~20 years ago?
I said if “significant members explicitly endorse Nazism”, and in this case it seems at least one elected official does, even if the group doesn’t.
Perhaps. I’m not an expert on the history of European politics.
There’s an ambiguity here. Suppose the official position of the Social Party for German National Workers is as follows:
Germany needs to be a great power once more, and can only become so by military expansion, so that it can fulfil its destiny by ruling all Europe with a fist of iron.
Jews and Communists are responsible for most of the nation’s ills and must be destroyed.
The Aryan race is superior to all others and must be favoured and kept pure.
Traditional views on sex and gender must be preserved for fear of moral degeneracy.
To achieve all these things, it is necessary for the nation’s security forces to be able to know and control what everyone says and does.
… and suppose the SPGNW loudly proclaims “We have no sympathy with fascism or Nazism”. The SPGNW explicitly endorses a big pile of key Nazi ideas, but it doesn’t explicitly endorse the word “Nazism”. What then? Personally I’d be happy saying that they explicitly endorse Nazism and are just lying about it.
I don’t know enough about the Golden Dawn for my opinions on whether they’re doing something similar to be worth much. But it’s certainly possible a priori that they might be.
(Adopting this flag really doesn’t seem like something a party fully committed to not endorsing Nazism would do. The resemblance isn’t exactly subtle.)
I could argue over the semantics of ‘explicitly’ but basically they are Nazis whether they all admit it or not.
I don’t think they actually beleived this. Perhaps traditional views on sex and gender must be preserved to maintain the Aryan birthrate, but that’s a little different—if premarital sex leads to lots of Aryan babies, I doubt they would object.
Interestingly, the leader of the SA was gay.
Of course, modern day Germany does censor the internet for anti-migrant comments...
It’s not clear to me what they actually believed. They may have been inconsistent.
Pretty much all governments, ancient and modern, left and right, intrude more into their citizens’ affairs than I’d like. But the Nazis seem to have been quite a lot worse in that respect than today’s German government.
LOL
I’m not sure whether you’re laughing at or with me. If the former, good; I was hoping to amuse. If the latter, perhaps consider explaining what I wrote that you find laughable?
At :-P
I find the idea of being fully committed to NOT endorsing something to be laughable.
Are you fully committed to not endorsing, say, Genghis Khan? Can you prove it? X-D
OK, so let me do something that never works :-) and explain the joke, such as it was.
Of course there is not really such a thing as being fully committed to not endorsing something; it’s not the kind of thing it makes sense to be committed to. So describing someone or something as “not fully committed to endorsing X” has to be an instance of meiosis (understatement for rhetorical effect); and so it is. What I am actually suggesting is that the Golden Dawn looks like a basically-fascist party that’s nostalgic for the good old days of Nazi Germany, and that no one adopts a flag like that without the deliberate intention to evoke the Nazi flag, and that what GD is actually interested in is endorsing Nazism with plausible deniability. But—being a dry-witted English sort of chap—I chose to express that by understating it to pretty much the greatest extent possible. It was intended to be just very slightly amusing, at least to sympathetic readers.
As I already remarked, explaining jokes never works. (Especially, I think, this sort of joke.) And I’ve just spent at least 30x longer explaining what I wrote as I did writing it. Oh well, never mind.
That joke would have worked better if we were not discussing whether a contemporary political movement is actually Nazi and if demands to be fully committed to not endorsing white male cis hetero partriarchy (add more words to taste) did not actually pop up outside of Monty Python sketches.
Getting back to the subject at hand, do you suggest that the Golden Dawn is actually “nostalgic for the good old days of Nazi Germany”? That strikes me as not very likely, not to mention that those good old days were very few before they became terrible, horrible, no good, very bad days.
I think maybe “Adopting this flag really doesn’t seem like something a party fully committed to not endorsing Nazism would do” is British understatement for “Adopting this flag is tacitly endorsing Nazism”.
That was in fact exactly my meaning.
I like to believe I understand British understatements. This one… didn’t perform as expected :-P
Your opinion is noted.
Literally? Quite likely not. Keen to reproduce most of the salient features of those days if they get into power? Yeah, probably. (And I’ll hazard a guess that if asked many of them would say: well, yes, Hitler did some terrible things, but at least he tried to make Germany great through purity and strength. Perhaps with a side-order of Holocaust denial.)
Depending on your pick of “salient features”, this is applicable to a lot of political movements. The desire for a powerful state, national unity, a strong hand keeping miscreants in check, etc. is quite common.
Take a look at the NSDAP program—isn’t it easy to find some common ground with pretty much anyone? :-/
E.g. Bernie Sanders wants free education and hey look, it’s right here, point 20: “The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program, to enable every capable and industrious German to obtain higher education and subsequently introduction into leading positions. … We demand the education at the expense of the State of outstanding intellectually gifted children of poor parents without consideration of position or profession.”
Re. Bernie Sanders, he is clearly a socialist, and in some ways mildly nationalist, e.g. :
So would it be accurate to say that Sanders may be mildly national socialist, but certainly not a capitalised National Socialist?
I dunno. Find a Bernie Bro and tell him that “Sanders may be mildly national socialist”. On an off chance that he knows what National Socialism is, duck X-D
Hmm, it is tempting to find a historically illiterate Bernie supporter and persuade them to describe their politics as “national socialist”.
“Look, many would love to be international socialists and raise the living standard for the entire world. But clearly the US cannot afford to supply welfare, heathcare and education to all 7 billion people in the world. So, maybe one day we can have international socialism, but right now we have to be pragmatic and advocate national socialism”
Get popcorn, sit back, and watch as Bernie Bro tries to convince others to national socialism :P
Bonus points if the expression “workers’ party” gets used.
Double bonus points if you persuade him to rail against fat-cat bankers who suffocate the common people with their greed. Abolish unearned (work and labour) incomes! Break debt (interest)-slavery!
Don’t just imprison the banksters, kill them!
I think we’re onto something here. I mean, if you replace the bits of Nazi ideology about ‘Jews control the banks’ with ‘white men run silicon valley and the banks’ and replace demands for lebensraum with demands for safe spaces then I think the Socialist Workers Party of the American Nation could really take off.
It’s not a new observation :-/
Well, that’s why the things that tend to get described as specifically Nazi tend not to be things like “improving the education system” or even more specifically “providing good education for gifted children from all backgrounds” (er, of course some kinds of backgrounds wouldn’t have been acceptable to the Nazis) that have pretty wide support from all quarters. Just as describing someone as “very like Richard Feynman” probably doesn’t mean that they had some artistic talent and enjoyed drawing.
Providing special attention to gifted children is extremely controversial. Far more resources are spent on the slow kids.
I didn’t intend to imply it’s uncontroversial. Only that it’s widely supported by people with very varied politics.
No, I think that’s not the why. I think the actual why is because the Nazis lost the last war and so became known as the incarnation of pure evil, and everything they touched turned to pure evil, the end. In less flowery prose, “Nazi” (or neo-nazi) nowadays is just a derogatory term without much historical meaning.
I am not a fan of NSDAP and though I don’t know much about Golden Dawn I doubt they are a bunch of decent fellows. If someone calls them neo-nazis, I mentally translate it to “I don’t really like ’em”. But if people want to insist that they are actually, literally Nazis and pine for the good old days of the Third Reich, well, at this point I feel compelled to point out that no, taking derogatories literally is rarely a good idea.
I may have used the word “fascist” or “Nazi” as derogatory terms back when I was an angry young 20 year old, but I am trying to be a little more rational now. I have been arguing that they are literally Nazis.
Literally Nazis means they are members of Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei.
How are you defining the word “Nazi”? (or the word “literally”?)
Where by “specifically Nazi” you mean “the parts that gjm doesn’t approve off”.
Speak for yourself. I very much don’t approve of point 20 from their program. “The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” is a nice-ish sounding way of saying, “we will ram whatever propaganda we want down all kids’ thoughts and force you to pay for it”.
You keep doing this. You keep being wrong. You should stop it.
I fear you misunderstand me (and someone else seems to have misunderstood the same way, so presumably I should have been clearer). I meant not “everyone agrees with this” but “many people with a wide variety of political positions agree with this”. And I didn’t intend to imply that everyone in their programme other than “kill the Jews” is in that category.
“The state is to be responsible for a fundamental reconstruction of our whole national education program” could, in isolation, mean anything from “we’re going to build a lot of new schools and fund a lot of new teachers” to “we’re going to close down the education system entirely” via “we’re going to turn the schools into brainwashing units” and “we’re going to change the schools from brainwashing units to places of actual education”. In the Nazis’ case, it turned out to be the brainwashing one, and no reasonable person would support that. And, lo, I think “brainwash all the children to agree with the State’s position” would generally be regarded as a characteristically Nazi policy, though of course totalitarians of all stripes do that—and this is consistent with both Lumifer’s analysis (something qualifies to be thought of as characteristically Nazi iff the Nazis did it and it was really bad) and mine (something qualifies to be thought of as characteristically Nazi iff the Nazis did it and most others didn’t).
Actually I think both Lumifer’s analysis and mine are right; something is easier to pigeonhole as Nazi if (1) you see it done often by people who aren’t Nazis and (2) you feel positively about it. I’ll add another: once Nazism is associated in everyone’s mind mostly with nationalism, Jew-killing, and war-making, any given other thing is going to be easier to think of as “Nazi” if it feels like it resembles those.
What do you mean by a “wide variety of political positions”? Your definition of “Nazi” currently amounts to “supports the parts of the Nazi platform only Nazis support”. Now obviously stated this way, it is clearly a circular, hense useless, definition. So we are left with how you use it in practice, which brings us back to “supports the parts of the definition gjm doesn’t approve of”.
I don’t see the difference between your first and last interpretation. After all if “we” build new school and fund a lot of teachers, “we” are presumably going to have them teach cources on history, social sciences, etc. and do it from our precpective. One could get around this problem by not having education be centralised, but that’s not what either the Nazis or Bernie were proposing.
Not quite. For instance, Soviet-style communism was pretty big on totalitarianism, which is certainly a distinctively Nazi trait, but Nazism and Soviet communism were very different things.
Nope. E.g., if some new political movement comes out for Jew-killing, totalitarian control, military expansionism, moral traditionalism, and fostering the Master Race, I’ll be very happy saying that yup, they’re basically Nazis even if they don’t use that term.
(That’s not meant to be a necessary-and-sufficient condition; just an example.)
This seems to be your default assumption, to which you fall back as soon as you think you’ve ruled out any single alternative. It’s still wrong, just as it was before.
For instance: the NSDAP programme includes the abolition of unearned income—interest, rent, etc. I think that’s a terrible idea, but finding that an organization advocates the same idea wouldn’t much dispose me to call it “Nazi”.
(Perhaps it should—it’s a rather unusual idea as well as probably a bad one. So maybe I could be persuaded. But the fact that I’d need persuading indicates that I am not using the word the way you say I am.)
That word “presumably” would be one key difference. Another would be that teaching from a particular perspective is (possibly bad but) not the same thing as brainwashing.
In what way?
Ok, if a movement endorses their entire platform, it’s safe to call them Nazis. Except that isn’t the case for Golden Dawn, which was the movement under discussion.
And the difference is?
Many ways. Here are some examples. The NSDAP had the word “socialist” in its name but didn’t actually do much in the way of nationalization and communalization, whereas the Soviet communists did. The Nazis had racial purity at the centre of their rhetoric and policy, whereas the Soviet communists did not. (There was plenty of antisemitism in the USSR, but it was less explicit and less central and e.g. the USSR never made a systematic attempt to exterminate all its Jewish people.) Both were religiously oppressive but in quite different ways: the Communists tried to wipe out religion completely, whereas the Nazis tried (with limited success) to align it with their dogmas.
The things I listed aren’t their “entire platform”—you may have forgotten that that was a point you were making a few comments upthread.
Sure. Because the question you asked—sorry, I mean the accusation you made—was not about the Golden Dawn. You claimed that my use of the word “Nazi” is circular and content-free because it amounts to saying “Nazis are those who hold the positions Nazis hold”, so I answered that accusation.
The extent to which the teachers attempt to get the pupils to adopt that perspective, and the means used to do it.
For instance, schoolteachers would make life unpleasant for children who had not joined the Hitler Youth. And here are a couple of questions taken from Nazi-era school mathematics textbooks.
“A plane on take off carries 12 bombs, each weighing ten kilos. The aircraft makes for Warsaw , the centre of international Jewry. It bombs the town. On take off with all bombs on board and a fuel tank containing 1500 kilos of fuel the aircraft weighed 8 tonnes. When it returned from the crusade, there were still 230 kilos of fuel left. What is the weight of the aircraft when empty?”
“The construction of a lunatic asylum costs 6 million marks. How many houses at 15,000 marks each could have been built for that amount?”
It seems clear that what’s going on here is that even what you’d think was pretty much a maximally non-political subject, namely arithmetic, was being used to deliver particular political ideas to children.
Does that necessarily amount to “brainwashing”? Nope. I don’t know enough about Nazi education to know whether what happened in Nazi schools could rightly be described that way. But it’s certainly further along the spectrum from impartial teaching to brainwashing than, say, anything that happens in typical state-funded schools in the UK.
Funny you should mention that. Let me quote the president of Chicago Teachers Union. She said this in 2014:
There is even a book: Rethinking Mathematics: Teaching Social Justice by the Numbers.
Yup, and moving in that direction is moving in the direction of brainwashing.
So, now, compare the situation in Nazi Germany (the textbooks are full of this stuff, all aligned with a single political perspective, and teachers do it all the time) with the situation in the present-day US (the textbooks don’t do it, and when one (ex-)teacher proposes it it produces a little blizzard of shocked responses).
Whereas Eugine was suggesting there’s no difference between teachers having a particular “perspective” and outright brainwashing.
The major difference is diversity—US schools are locally controlled and the outcomes… vary. It’s not hard to find schools where political correctness dominates and social justice is explicitly taught (with no tolerance for dissent, of course). But it’s also not hard to find other schools which are conservative and basically Christian.
Brainwashing is one of major school goals, anyway.
That’s certainly a major difference. It is not the only major difference. Go and buy a dozen randomly chosen elementary mathematics textbooks in the US, or choose them at random from the ones actually used in public schools. I bet you will not find them filled with the sort of politically-loaded stuff that was common in Nazi Germany. (Though if you go looking, I’m sure you can find some that are.)
“Political correctness” and “social justice” are … extremely flexible terms. Would you like to say more explicitly what these schools do, and roughly what fraction of US public schools do it?
(The US is big and varied, and I bet there’s a wide variety of bad things we could find some US public schools doing. What we should expect to see if Eugine’s position is correct is, at least, that the majority of US public schools make vigorous attempts to make their pupils accept political positions agreeable to the governments that fund them.)
I wonder what you mean by “brainwashing”.
There are quite a lot of schoolteachers in my family and nothing I have ever heard from them suggests that they see, or saw, their role as anything I would recognize as brainwashing. (This is in the UK, not the US. Things may be different in different countries.)
I expect that if pushed you could get many of them to admit that they try to encourage their pupils to be decent people—meaning e.g. not going out of their way to make one another’s lives unpleasant. You could call that brainwashing, if you insist. It seems to me quite different from trying to encourage pupils to hate the Jews, or want to die gloriously in battle. Anything beyond that, though? Nope. I’ve seen no sign that any of them have tried to push pupils in the direction of sharing their religion (or lack thereof) or politics (or lack thereof) or economic theories or anything of the kind.
My own recollection of the education I got is that some schools did systematically push a religious agenda (but only in specifically religious contexts, not by putting religion in the arithmetic questions), that at least one history teacher did admit to thinking that Nazism and Soviet communism were on the whole bad things, and … not much beyond that, actually. Now, that might just indicate how subtle the whole thing was and how completely they got to me, but given that plenty of other people who came through a similar education process have ended up with political and religious and other views quite different from mine, I doubt it.
No idea about the fraction and, obviously, there is a full spectrum from, let’s say, committed creationists to bona fide Marxists, so the fraction will depend on where you (arbitrarily) draw the line.
What I specifically mean is topics like “women scientists” in science classes, “black history month”, etc. I expect you’re familiar with the current epidemic of identity politics, microaggressions, triggers, etc. on college campuses in the US. You don’t think students acquire these… propensities solely on their way from high school to college? See e.g. Haidt’s experience.
It’s a loaded term, of course. Expressed neutrally it is the forming of overall frameworks involved in perceiving the world (especially socially and politically), shaping of values, and internalizing of the social acceptabilities and unacceptabilities. If you want it as a positive expression, it’s “preparing students to enter the society”.
“Decent people” is a… relative term. Teachers in, say, 1930s Germany or 1950s Russia also probably wanted their students to become “decent people”. It’s just that I think their idea of decency doesn’t quite match yours.
That doesn’t follow. You can do the comparison of obvious Nazis and obvious non-Nazis to see what the Nazis support, then use the information from that to assess whether the non-obvious cases are nazis.
Except then you’d have to use some other criterion to determine the “obvious” cases.
I think Otto Wels, Ernst Thälmann and Ludwig Kaas would be the most obvious non-Nazis.
That one—the frontman of the Nazi punk band “Pogrom”—right? So you’re willing to stick a label onto a whole political party because someone from a punk band said controversial things and generally trolled the public?
Normally, no, I wouldn’t take a punk band’s politics seriously, but when the frontman of a Nazi punk band gets elected, that’s different.
Plus, he’s not the only one:
I mean, obviously a random member of a party’s views do not represent the party, but when they are leaders or get elected, thats different.
When they get elected, that’s evidence about the voters, not about the party.
But the party approved their candidacy.
The party admitted them as a member, and given that, why wouldn’t it approve their candidacy? Especially since I don’t think there was much of an in-party contest in this case. It’s not like the primaries for POTUS elections.
What do you mean by “normally” and can you find any examples of society that actually operated like you describe? Keep in mind the word “Nazi” was already being applied to anything and everything the speaker disliked as early as 1942.
scores are still at the same place with 54 votes ROT13 (gjragl avar lrf, gjragl svir ab). Mostly tied. As I said before:
I vastly prefer voting “no” on a poll like this, vs. the idea of downvoting a post I think doesn’t belong here but is fine otherwise.
What is this asking for permission via a poll thing?
Make a thread and watch its karma. It will tell you all you need to know.
It’s called politeness.
I find it strange, and counter to my own values, that telling people “shut up, I don’t want to hear what you want to talk about” is considered “polite”, while talking about what you want to talk about, without asking permission first, is considered rude.
It’s about the defaults. The problem with political debates is that it is difficult to contain them—they are likely to grow (because for almost any topic you can find a political point of view), and they attract new people who are interested more in promoting a political idea than about improving their own rationality.
So we can either explicitly support the norm “we don’t debate politics (unless there is an exception)”, or we can either explicitly or implicitly have the norm “political debates are okay”. We have the former.
Maybe there are other possible solutions, such as trying to contain politics in specific threads, this was tried in the past (if I remember correctly, some people kept making more and more treads for debating NR pretending to be general political threads; or maybe it was other way round and all general political threads were hijacked to debate NR).
In theory, it should be possible to debate politics rationally, but in practice, we have problems keeping the debates civilized.
And having more to talk about is a problem how?
NR? Neoreaction?
If you have Neoreactionary views, your general politics will naturally be Neoreactionary. So some people wanted to talk about it. Why is that a problem?
When I see a thread that I don’t want to read, I don’t. It doesn’t cause me any problem.
Wouldn’t that be a significant opportunity to get LessWrong?
Sorry for yesterday, I’ll try to post a more coherent reply now.
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Once in a while someone accuses Less Wrong of having a specific political bias and being intolerant towards the dissidents. The alleged political bias depends on who made the accusation. For example, neoreactionaries believe that Less Wrong is politically correct and left-wing; they would probably use the word “demotist”, which pretty much means anyone who is not a neoreactionary. Meanwhile, RationalWiki (an “Atheism+” website) believes that Less Wrong contains “cringe-inducing discussions of the merits of racism”, and the supposedly “non-political” debates in reality promote libertarianism and neoreaction.
Looking at the 2014 survey results, Less Wrong members identify mostly as Social Democratic, Liberal, Libertarian, approximately in equal numbers.
Can this result be interpreted as a unified political bias? I don’t know. Maybe yes. Maybe there is an idea of society that most Less Wrong members would approve of—I imagine something like: universal basic income, universal healthcare, minimal government required to provide security and the basic income, freedom for entrepreneurs, freedom of sexual expression and identity—while they may disagree on some technical details (such as affirmative action: yes or no) and mostly on which label is most appropriate for this idea. Or maybe I am completely wrong here.
If we map this to the traditional American politics (Democrats vs Republicans), Democrats would obviously win, cca 4:1. But this shouldn’t be surprising, considering that Less Wrong is an openly atheist website (Republicans associate with religion) and that half of members are non-American (Republicans associate with American jingoism, which non-Americans have no reason to share). Correcting for these two factors, I think the ratio is pretty much what we should expect.
My conclusion (which anyone is free to disagree with) is that the accusations of political bias more or less express frustration “why don’t these people all agree with me? they said they were rational, and rational people are supposed to agree with me! are they suggesting that I am stupid?” (exaggerated for easier comprehension).
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How to debate politics on Less Wrong without getting caught in the affective spirals? Let me quote:
Specifically for neoreaction this means that “neoreaction” is a wrong topic for a debate. (However, “tell me why do you identify as a neoreactionary” can be interesting; probably the most productive LW thread on this topic.) The best approach would be to taboo “neoreaction” (and all other political labels), choose one object-level belief and debate that. Of course this presupposes that someone could compile a list of specific object-level beliefs in simple language without links to the other beliefs (and no, “Cthulhu always swims left” is neither specific nor transparent). Then we could debate the individual beliefs, and perhaps agree on some and disagree on others; and maybe we could find out that some of those beliefs are actually not unique for neoreaction.
(And then there is the issue that people who would disagree with some neoreactionary beliefs would soon find that the karma of their comments written years ago have overnight dropped to −1. Which will require some technical changes in voting mechanism to fix, there is no other way.)
Right. And let me quote from a post (again):
So at issue is democracy. Given this, with respect to that belief, it’s easy to see how LW is politically unified. In fact, doubting democracy is pretty much outside of Overton window (that’s part of what makes neoreaction interesting).
Not sure how many neoreactionaries actually agree with that definition. But anyway...
So the belief is that societies that (1) accept democracy (2) will inevitably (3) meet their progressivism-caused doom.
(1) We would need a working definition of “democracy”. Specifically, what about countries like USSR or Burma or North Korea that nominally have elections, but the winner is reliably known in advance. Do they also count as “democracies” for the purpose of our belief; that is, does even half-assed pretext of democracy inevitably bring the doom? Or do we need people to participate in real elections? What if the elections are real, but most media are in hands of a few rich owners, and most voters believe the media?
I am asking this to avoid rationalizations from hindsight, like: “Singapore seems to be doing pretty well despite being a democracy—nah, they are a democracy only in name, it’s actually People’s Action Party ruling since 1959”; “North Korea seems like hell—well, they do have elections, so this is an example of a democracy that already met its doom”.
(2) The word “inevitably” actually doesn’t predict any specific outcome, because if the prophesied thing didn’t happen, you can always add ”...yet”. Could it be made a bit more specific? For example, do countries with a lot of democracy meet their doom faster, on average, than countries with only little democracy? (For example, should we expect Switzerland to meet their doom sooner than North Korea?)
I am not a neoreactionary, so you’ll have to find somebody else to argue their side—shouldn’t be a problem, since you mentioned that they can’t shut up :-P
However I’ll explain why I find their ideology interesting. The thing is, in contemporary political discourse in the West democracy became a sacred cow. One could talk about better or worse implementations, point out issues with specific governments or policies, etc. but the notion that democracy is the best and you should always try to have as much of it as possible seems to be sanctified, enshrined, and maybe even embalmed :-)
And that is a bit of a problem. It’s a problem mostly because democracy (even in an idealized state) is not perfect and has systemic faults and shortcomings. Discussing those is… difficult because of the sacred-cow status of democracy. Trying to mitigate and ameliorate them is also difficult because that usually involves something other than “moar democracy!” and publicly suggesting it can be less than wise.
Note that debates about the merits of democracy were common in the XVIII and XIX century, but are almost extinct now (again: in the West. Asia is quite different in that respect).
And me, I don’t like blinders but I do like sacred-cow steaks :-)
I also find neoreaction interesting, or rather I did while the idea was new for me; later it became rather repetitive. But I do care about this “map reflecting the territory” thing more than I care about things being interesting.
Maybe I fail to appreciate this, living in eastern Europe, having communists and nazis in parliament, hearing “democracy doesn’t work”, “Jews are controlling everything”, “vaccination causes autism” et cetera on a regular basis.
And I guess that in Russia, 90% of what neoreactionaries believe is a mainstream opinion, and you just have to turn on your TV to hear it directly from Putin. So I have a problem empathising with the argument by bravery.
I agree that everything should be open to debate, there should be no dogmas. But there is a difference between saying that, and embracing reversed stupidity. I’d rather know what makes some democracies work and other democracies fail. For example, Switzerland does a few things that neoreactionaries would agree with, despite having more democracy than any other country I know.
The first item in your list is relevant to NRx, but I’m not sure about the rest. Are you implying that from “these people believe in A” you can conclude that “they also must believe in B, C, and D”?
I don’t think that is true.
It looks like you have a tendency to put all the people and all the views you dislike into one big bucket and say “They are all the same”. That’s not a very good idea.
You are not interested in what makes some political systems work and others fail..? :-)
That’s why I said 90%. There are also obvious differences: Putin still keeps a democratic facade in Russia, he supports Orthodox Christianity, and ethnic Russians are considered the superior race. As far as I know, NRs would abhor even pretend-democracy, would support religion but not Christianity because that inevitably leads to progressivism; and would support an idea of superior ethnic group but probably only if it includes themselves.
But they could have a nice debate about how Western civilization is weak, decadent, and doomed to failure; how giving rights to homosexuals is obviously stupid; how religion is necessary for a strong society; etc.
You still haven’t convinced me that Switzerland is a failure. I also don’t know an example of a real country without elections where I would be tempted to move. Shall we discuss fictional evidence?
Depending on which neoreactionary. The neoreactionaries I’m familiar with, admittedly a tiny subset, are pro-traditional, i.e., non-progressive Christianity.
How many real countries do you know without elections, period? I here the UAE is rather nice.
That’s part of what I mean by saying that you put everyone you dislike into one big bucket. Let me link again the post I already mentioned. I don’t notice it talking about homosexuals or religion, do you? Do you expect the author to broadly agree with Putin?
I do not believe I have tried.
Um, you were the one who first brought up that term in this discussion. In fact, the only reason we’re having this meta-debate is because a bunch of people didn’t want to have an object-level discussion about Donald Trump.
My objections are not about having bias, but enacting a bias institutionally and through social pressures to shut up people you disagree with.
That impulse to shut others up by power and pressure has a marked tendency to go in one direction.
Your projection of “why don’t these people all agree with me?” sounds ridiculous to me. Can you point to a few discussions where NR folks were shocked, just shocked, that there was someone in the world that disagreed with them? I’d think that they’re probably well used to that by now. I wouldn’t expect them to be shocked.
I’ll share my conclusion. In many circles, the Left is accustomed to being able to proselytize their ideology while silencing Unbelievers. LW has a rare density of Libertarian leaning people, who generally aren’t the types to sit silently and assent. Failing to ideologically bully, the Left resorted to pressure to just not talk about politics, which achieves the main goal of silencing the Unbelievers.
LessWrong is not supposed to be a claim, but a goal. We have all sorts of wrong ideas that we share and mutually critique on our path to becoming LessWrong. But for politics, no go. More important to shut up those heretical ideas than actually get LessWrong about them.
No. The desire to speak, and the desire to be free to speak without being pressured to shut up, is not the demand or expectation that everyone agree.
Yeah, the best approach is to UnIdea “neoreaction”.
As for your suggested LWSpeak dictionary for political speech, that’s conveniently another method of control. You can’t use these symbols. You can’t talk this way.
How about instead we criticize each other’s ideas if we want, and don’t criticize them if we don’t?
According to LW census liberals and social democrats make up about two thirds of the whole population. If anything, the fact that talk about politics is discouraged here is good for ideological minorities, such as conservatives, communists or neoreactionaries, because there are plenty interesting LW topics that are unrelated to politics. A few years ago people understood that.
Discussing specific ideas one by one is different from discussing vague blobs of ideas that have a lot of connotations. The first one is much more productive than the second, because in the second case people tend to constantly move the goalposts and usė motte and bailey tactics. Discussion of specific mechanisms how elections may lead to outcomes that are contrary to the interest of population is different than discussing a vague blob of ideas that contain people as different as Moldbug’s techno-commercialists and religious traditionalists who have basically nothing in common. For any neorectionary proposal there is another idea that is almost an opposite. You can’t discuss it unless you specify exactly which ideas you are discussing. That is what tabooing the word “neoreaction” means. Discuss ideas that are specific and concrete, ideas that have empirical content, not some kind of vague symbols.
Is the implication that other third, made up of libertarians, wouldn’t want to be in a political conversation where they are outnumbered?
If so, that’s a pretty good joke.
“It’s good that we don’t talk about X, because there are a lot of NotX things to talk about” is a rather peculiar claim.
I suppose one could argue that Trump the political animal is in fact a vague blob of ideas, but as a topic of conversation, it’s fairly specific, and yet the poster asking for permission to discuss him was effectively told to “shut up” by 40% of respondents. And he did so.
But that is not what “shut up” means.
Can he discuss Trump, as long as he doesn’t use his name? Shall it be “He Who Must Not Be Named” then?
I guess you have read something about “professing and cheering”, “applause lights”, “affective spirals”, “rationalist taboo”, “anticipated experiences”, and “replacing symbols with substance”. Political debates are not a separate magisterium. Neoreaction is not a separate magisterium within politics.
If your belief has the ambitions to describe the territory, you should be able to describe the same thing without using the shibboleths. A marxist could transform “capitalists exploit workers” into “people who control resources can achieve transactions disadvantageous in long term to people who must participate in transactions with them in order to survive”. A libertarian could transform “free markets lead to progress” into “when interactions between people are free of coercion, people are more likely to fully use their creativity”. A theist could transform “homosexuality is a sin” into “if you live in a universe with an omnipotent being who infinitely punishes people for sexual relationships with people of the same sex, it is prudent to avoid such relationships”.
But if your beliefs are merely cheering for your team, or if the words you use are merely mysterious formless substances, you cannot transform them. Or if your beliefs are wrong (do not match the territory), unpacking the keywords can make the wrongness more obvious. Refusing to unpack your keywords means that on some level you already know that it wouldn’t end well. Just say loudly: “countries with a lot of democracy, such as Switzerland, have lower quality of life than countries with no democracy, such as North Korea, because democracy makes people selfishly destroy the society, while a dictator will optimize for long-term prosperity” if that happens to be your belief with the symbols replaced by the corresponding substance.
Reality check: is Eliezer supposed to be that leftist bully who oppresses the rare libertarians at LW? I’m asking because he wrote the articles about anticipated experiences, tabooing words, affective spirals, et cetera. Do you perhaps believe that the techniques described in the Sequences are merely a clever ploy to oppress heretics?
Because to me it seems like you simply refuse to apply some general techniques to a specific set of beliefs… for pretty much the same reason why a theist would object against using an Occam’s Razor to religion.
The problem was they were not able to stop talking about it. Because they had no other platform than Less Wrong where they could present their ideas to wider audience and try recruiting new people.
Also they loved to pretend that the rationalist community as a whole somehow supports their political beliefs, despite the polls showing cca 3% support.
Then at some moment Eliezer became tired of being known as “the guy who hosts the neoreactionary website” and publicly disowned them. They moved their politics to their own website called “More Right” (as you see, they still couldn’t stop making hints that they are somehow connected with LW), so they finally had some other outlet.
(It also didn’t help their PR that the known vote-manipulator Eugine was their supporter. I know, that’s merely an argument by association, but it doesn’t help to keep the debate rational and try avoiding mindkilling, if one side has a member that keeps mass-downvoting everyone who disagrees.)
Thank you for the history. That was before my time. Or maybe I just missed that.
But this is consistent with my observations. It’s not really politics that is the target of the ban, it’s a certain type of politics.
By your own reporting, they were connected to the LW site. That’s where they came from, until they were booted off as untouchables. It’s part of their own history that LW was the incubator for their site. And given that they were booted from LW for their views, sticking a thumb in the eye of LW is entirely predictable. The name is triply appropriate, given the politics. It would have been too obvious and too good a name to pass up. I would have used it.
Nope, it’s a certain type of behavior.
Nope.
Yes, this attitude is a part of the behavior.
Generally, you guys love to behave like predators. Never take “no” for an answer, double down when someone refuses to debate with you (but when someone does, it’s obvious you don’t listen anyway), then switch to karma assassinations when arguments fail, or otherwise threaten revenge. You probably believe that this is the right (pun intended) strategy, and if only you stay persistent enough, everyone will sooner or later bend over and take it in the ass. Thus sayeth Gnon or whichever idiotic abbreviation you worship today.
Meanwhile, in the real world, being an asshole often works short-term, but in longer term, there are some complications. Such as being publicly recognized for what you are, and not being welcome among people who have higher standards of interaction.
By the way, you guys are much less different from the SJW predators than either side would admit, except that they are pros (because they were selected from a much larger pool of candidates) and you are mostly wankers. Just saying, because you are going to downvote this comment anyway.
But don’t mind me. Follow your own strategy and see where it leads you.
Oh, boy. Who’s that “you guys”? I don’t think bbdd is one of the NRx.
In any case, let me point out that you just threw a hissy fit. That wasn’t a good move… X-/
Sure. I’m going to spend the rest of the day offline, to clear my mind.
Downvoted for the kind of attitude actually described in Politics Is The Mind-Killer, the NRxs historically tending v to be the worst offenders is irrelevant.
Nope. Banning a certain type of behavior was used as cover for banning a certain politics.
I don’t see behavior as the issue identified here, I see being associated with certain political ideas.
If you want to be nitpicky, then yes, they personally weren’t booted, just discussion of the offending ideas was booted.
Are you passing out honorary NR degrees? Don’t think I’m entirely on board, though they make a lot of good points.
It’s predatory to discuss ideas. It’s not predatory to prevent people from discussing ideas through institutional power.
Isn’t it inconvenient when people you disagree with won’t shut up? Don’t worry, you can probably make them.
Ah yes. Maybe I was around. I do recall discussing someone’s equivalence of “NR” = “Assholes”. Or maybe that was a PUA discussion. Basically, I disagree with you, therefore you’re an asshole.
And you’re right in the sense that having unpopular ideas often comes with a cost.
Funny, you seemed just like a SJW predator to me. “Shut up” is also their answer to ideas they disagree with.
Actually, I’ve upvoted one of your comments in this thread, hadn’t downvoted any others, and had no intention of downvoting this one. But don’t let that keep you from feeling persecuted by a mean old predator.
FWIW, I agree despite being very unfavourably disposed towards their political views.
Apparently they’ve also splintered to another site:
http://thefutureprimaeval.net/
LW announcement on More Right—A Good Time Thread
http://lesswrong.com/lw/hcy/link_more_right_launched/
Too bad they already deleted the reasons why.
I believe there was some discussion of the motivation on the LW announcement link.
The LW announcement link discusses the motivation for launching More Right. I was linking at the (already deleted) motivation for later abandoning More Right and launching The Future Primaeval.
I saw that in there as well. That’s where I got the link for the new site.
In which way is this is a problem on an internet forum the purpose of which is to let people talk about things?
I know some people who can’t stop talking about existential risk or quantum immortality X-) Is that a problem, too?
If you want to say “I don’t want to be associated with people of such political beliefs”, well, just say so.
I don’t want LW to be a recruitment place for a political cult.
If the political cult is unable to find a better recruitment place, well, sucks to be them.
Banish the Heretics!
You’re unable to see the difference between “banish heretics” and “banish cult recruiters”? Or, more to the point, between “banish heretics” and “forbid cult recruitment”?
(I am not sure how good a metaphor either of these is for neoreactionaries on Less Wrong, but the two are quite different things and it’s in no way ambiguous which Viliam is arguing for.)
First, calling them a cult when they exhibited none of the means of indoctrination and control associated with cults seems inaccurate and a boo light.
Those who successfully banned discussion of NR ideas from LW seem more accurately called cult members, using the usual cult tactic of driving out ideas that challenged their cherished beliefs, thereby refusing to engage with critiques of their ideas.
On the flip side, the supposed NR “cult” was doing the rather uncultish thing of choosing to stay in the midst of ideas predominantly hostile to their own, until forced to take their discussion elsewhere.
As for “recruitment”, what do you mean? How is that different from wanting to discuss and share ideas that they found valuable?
To me, it sounds like Viliam disliked the ideas, disliked that others exposed to them found them attractive, and approved of having what power could be mustered to prevent those ideas from spreading at LW.
It’s two ways to spin what he was proposing—shutting down ideas he disapproved of. A common sarcastic definitions of a cult is “religion I disapprove of”.
I agree. “Cult” is not a great description.
No one has successfully (or for that matter unsuccessfully) banned discussion of NR ideas on Less Wrong. Eugine has been banned again and again because he misbehaves again and again. advancedatheist was banned for allegedly suggesting that women should be forced to have sex with men they don’t want to have sex with[1]. I can’t offhand think of anyone else who has been banned lately, nor do I recall ever hearing any moderator say anything at all like “no discussion of NRx on LW”.
[1] It’s less than clear that that was his actual intent, but that’s the reason that was given. The fact that he had a narrow range of topics that he kept going on and on and on about (and kept being downvoted heavily for it, so it’s not like these were topics LW was crying out for opportunities to talk about more) presumably didn’t help.
There is, and has been for some time, more discussion of NRx ideas on LW than anywhere else I know of that isn’t explicitly a right-wing site.
It doesn’t look to me as if NRx advocates on LW are actually getting much traction. So maybe “disliked the idea that others exposed to them might find them attractive” would be better. But actually I think what Viliam wants to avoid is having LW used for that purpose, whether or not the “cult recruiters” have any success—the point being that being proselytized at is annoying, regardless of whether the proselytism is ever successful.
Yeah, that’s a common complaint. But it doesn’t actually match how most people use the word “cult”. Very few people would call Christianity or Islam a cult, for instance, even among those who strongly disapprove of Christianity or Islam. (I don’t mean that that never happens. But it very seldom does.)
So, is Viliam using “cult” to mean “movement I disapprove of” here? I don’t think so. I think he’s using it to mean something more like “very small movement with extreme views that most here find unpleasant and/or highly implausible”. If you replace “movement” with “religion” and delete “here”, that’s a pretty good approximation to how “cult” is actually used.
Cryonics? EA? Occasional animal welfare?
There is a traditional definition out of The Devil’s Dictionary:
Religion—a large successful cult
Cult—a small unsuccessful religion
:-)
I think it was just a pretty clear fnord.
I see little proselytizing for cryonics here; back in the OB days there was more of it, much of it coming from Eliezer, and yes I did find it a little annoying. (Only a little, because there wasn’t very much even then.) I’m a fan of EA myself, so am not in the right target audience to be annoyed by it. My impression is that most LWers are too. There’s maybe one bit of animal welfare advocacy a year.
None of this much resembles the situation with NRx, where it seems like any time anyone says anything about race or gender you can rely on someone coming along to point out the inferiority of black people and women. I expect it isn’t actually that bad, of course; these things usually feel worse than they are. But the proselytism to pre-existing support ratio is, I’m pretty certain, much higher for NRx than for those other things.
Yes, I already acknowledged that it’s a common complaint that people use the word “cult” that way. I am suggesting that that isn’t actually how people use it. (You are well aware that TDD is a big mass of snark and doesn’t in any useful sense purport to give actual definitions, I assume.)
Not a fnord but an overt criticism. (Possibly an unfair criticism, but that’s not the same thing as a fnord.)
First, I don’t think that’s true. Second, you’re conflating NRx and HBD/race-realism/etc. and these are quite different things. And I haven’t seen anyone pointing out the general inferiority of women in a long while. Inferiority in specific areas (like upper body strength), certainly, but I don’t see why this is a problem.
No, I’m observing that they seem to overlap a lot.
No, it’s usually just a claim that women are less intelligent, or (in the more nuanced cases) not so good at the kinds of thinking required for, say, science or mathematics.
No, I think that’s usually the point of the snarky definition of a cult as a “religion I disapprove of”, i.e. Christianity and Islam have the same characteristics as organizations called cults, but are not called cults because they’re popular.
Note that “unpopular movement” and “movement I disapprove of” are very (and relevantly) different things.
So let’s take the Cult of Cryonics. What do you think “banish cult recruiters” might look like? I would bet that it would look like prohibiting discussions of cryonics and be indistinguishable from “banish the heretics” in practice.
And of course NRx isn’t a cult, Yvain’s offhand comment notwithstanding.
What do you mean by “cult”? Many people would consider the founding purpose of LW to be a recruitment place for a cult. Or do you mean you don’t want anything that might convert people to a political position different from yours?
We are not a phyg! We are not a phyg! We are not a phyg!
Because nothing says “we are not a phyg!” quite like having to rot13 the Unholy Word.
Perhaps that’s one reason why (to a very good approximation) no one actually does that any more.
I thought he said it pretty clearly. EY didn’t want to be associated with NR, untouchable heathens that they are.
It seems to me that Viliam’s complaint is not that there would be more to talk about, but that more talk would be politicized.
I don’t know for sure whether it was (I don’t think I ever paid that much attention to the politics threads) but here’s one way it could have been: suppose LW has few but very vocal neoreactionaries[1] and that most of the non-neoreactionaries are not very interested in talking about neoreaction[2]. If those few neoreactionaries arrange that every political discussion is packed with NRx stuff, then those political discussions will be annoying to everyone else because in order to read the bits they’re interested in they have to wade through lots of NRx comments (and perhaps, though here they may have only themselves to blame, lots of anti-NRx responses).
[1] I think there is some evidence that this is actually so.
[2] This seems likely to be true, but I have no evidence. (I don’t mean that most non-NRx people want never to talk about NRx; only that for most the optimal amount of NRx discussion is rather small.)
What about when you see a thread that you would want to read, but in which a few people obsessed with things you find uninteresting have posted hundreds of comments you don’t want to read?
Of course it doesn’t need to be neoreactionaries doing this. It could be social-justice types seizing every possible opportunity to point out heteronormative kyriarchal phallogocentric subtexts. It could be people terrified about AI risk turning every discussion of computers doing interesting things into debates about whether We Are All Doomed—or people skeptical about AI risk complaining incessantly about how LW promotes paranoia about AI risk. It could be Christians proposing Jesus as the answer to every question, or atheists leaping on every case of suffering or successful scientific explanation to remind us that it’s evidence against God. Etc., etc., etc.
It might be. Or it might be so only in the sense that for an alcoholic, having a glass of whisky is a significant opportunity to practice the discipline of self-control. (That is: in principle it might be but in practice the outcome might be almost certain to be bad.)
What do you mean by that? Do you mean that they’re not interested in becoming lesswrong about the issue or that they only want to become lesswrong to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s?
Obviously I mean neither (btw: hi, Eugine!). I mean what I say: for whatever reason they are not very interested in talking about NRx here. Possible reasons other than your maximally-uncharitable ones:
They are just not very interested in the things neoreactionaries get excited about (race, gender, political structures—though it occurs to me that LW’s small but vocal NRx contingent appears to be much more interested in race and gender than in any of the other things theoretically characteristic of NRx).
Is that the same as “not interested in becoming less wrong”? No, it’s broader and typically indicative of a different state of mind. Contrast a hyperzealously closed-minded Christian missionary, who is extremely interested in his religion and not at all interested in becoming less wrong about it, with an apathetic agnostic, who just doesn’t give a damn about religion. Neither will be very interested in a presentation of the merits of Hinduism, but their attitudes are quite different. (It’s not clear that one is better than the other.)
They have already given the matter plenty of thought and done their best to get less wrong about it. At this point they find little value in going over it again and again.
They are interested in becoming less wrong about political structures, gender, race, etc., but NRx positions on these lie outside the range they find credible.
Is that the same as “only to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s”? No, it’s about finding the ideas implausible rather than finding the people offputting. (Though of course the two may go together. If you find people offputting you may dismiss their ideas; if you find an idea repellent or crazy you may think ill of people who hold it.)
They have observed some discussions of NRx, seen that they consistently generate much more heat than light, and decided that whatever the facts of the matter an internet debate about it is likely to do more harm than good.
They have found that they find NRx advocates consistently unpleasant, and the benefits of possibly becoming less wrong don’t (for them) outweigh the cost of having an unpleasant argument.
They have found that they find NRx opponents consistently unpleasant, and (etc.).
Interesting theories, let’s see how they square with the evidence.
On the other hand they are interested in questions where where race, gender, and political structures are relevant to the answers.
If that was the case, one would expect them to be able to produce counter arguments to say the “NRx” (although it’s not unique to NRx) positions on race and gender. Instead the best they can do is link to SSC (which agrees that the NRx’s have a point in that respect), or say things that amount to saying how they don’t want to think about it.
To the extent that’s true its not the “NRx” people generating the heat.
These are just rephrasing of my hypothesis that they only want to become lesswrong to the extent it doesn’t involve being similar to those weird NRx’s. Good to hear you’re willing to agree with it.
Maybe, though in some cases their opinion as to that relevance may reasonably differ from yours. But that doesn’t in any way mean that they should be interested in NRx. Consider the following parallel. I am making plans concerning the next 10 years of my life—whether to take a new job, move house, get married or divorced, etc. It is highly relevant to my deliberations whether some time in the next few years a vengeful god is going to step in and put an end to the world as we know it. That doesn’t mean that I shouldn’t be annoyed when my attempts to discuss the next few years are repeatedly interrupted by people wanting to warn me about the coming apocalypse.
Yup. But one wouldn’t necessarily expect them to do it. (If I’m talking about the likely state of the world economy 5 years from now and some guy bursts in to tell me excitedly about how Cthulhu will have risen from the depths by then and started eating everyone, I am not going to waste my time telling him exactly why I don’t think Cthulhu is real and why I wouldn’t expect him to start eating people so soon even if he were.)
Heat arises from friction. It takes two to generate the friction. I’m not terribly interested deciding which of the sticks getting rubbed together is responsible for the flames.
No, they’re not. Your hypothesis is that these people want to avoid becoming like the NRx people; mine is that they want to avoid having to interact with the NRx people. (There might be some overlap. If someone thinks NRx people are unpleasant, they might avoid being convinced lest they become unpleasant themselves or find themselves spending more time around unpleasant people.)
I’m not, for the avoidance of doubt, claiming that your hypotheses are never correct. Just that they’re a very long way from exhausting the possibilities for why someone might not want to engage in a lot of argument about NRx, which is one reason why it is wrong to take the general statement I made and “explain” it as the more specific one you claimed was what I actually meant.
This is an example of these beliefs lying outside the range they find credible, which I addressed in the next point.
The difference is that the NRx’s (or at least the HBD-people) can present arguments for their beliefs, like the fact that things like race and gender, do in fact correlate with IQ, SAT scores, success in various professions, etc.
You’re taking the metaphor too literally in an attempt to pretend to be wise. In this case “heat” means bad arguments or no arguments at all. One side presents arguments for its positions, the other side presents a variety of ever-shifting excuses for why the topic shouldn’t be brought up at all.
Sure. I was just making the point that you can’t get from “X could be relevant to Y, which Z finds important” to “Z should be interested in X”.
I don’t know about actual literal Cthulhu-worshippers, if any there be, but the preachers of pending apocalypse have arguments for their beliefs too. And, again, I think you may be misunderstanding the point I was making, which is simply that you can’t get from “Z has good arguments against X” to “Z will present arguments against X whenever someone comes along proclaiming X”, and therefore you can’t get from “X came up and Z blew it off without presenting counterarguments” to “Z doesn’t have good arguments against X”.
This is far from the first time that you have claimed to know my motives. I’m sorry to inform you that your track record on getting them right appears to me to be very poor.
It was I, not you, who made the more-heat-than-light metaphor in this case, and you don’t get to tell me what I meant by it. I did not, in fact, mean “bad arguments or no arguments at all”; I meant “rudeness and crossness and people getting upset at one another”.
As for taking it too literally: no, I am observing that the metaphor happens to correspond to reality in a possibly-unexpected way. “Heat” in an argument really does come from “friction” between people, from them “rubbing one another up the wrong way”.
(Incidentally, it feels very odd to be criticized for doing that by an admirer of Chesterton, who did the same thing all the time. (More stylishly than me, no doubt, but if writing as well as Chesterton were a requirement for participation here it would be a quiet place indeed.)
I think the problem many people have isn’t that it’s “brought up at all” but that some of those who want to talk about NRx and HBD seem to want to talk about those things all the time. That may mean that the only actually-achievable options are (1) a strict “no talking about this stuff” policy and (2) having every discussion to which race, gender, drawbacks of democracy, etc., could possibly be relevant being full of (neo-)reactionary stuff. Those both seem like bad outcomes, and if we end up with bad outcome #1 I wouldn’t want to blame whoever chooses #1 over #2 for its badness, because #2 is bad too.
Yes, I have a habit of assuming the most sensible interpretation of what my interlocutor says, it appears to be a bad habit with some people.
Ok, plugging that definition into your argument, and removing the metaphor, your argument appears to come down to “arguing ‘NRx-type’ positions gets makes my side upset therefore the ‘NRx’ side should stop doing it”.
That is pretty much the reverse of what you have been doing.
I think your actual habit is of assuming the interpretation that makes most sense to you. Unfortunately that isn’t the same, and in particular it gives very wrong results when your mental model of your interlocutors is very inaccurate.
Not quite. (Though, as entirelyuseless says, that wouldn’t in fact be such a bad argument.) Here’s a link to where I came in; as you can see, I was explaining how having NRx discussions tend to proliferate could be a problem. My answer was that I didn’t know whether it actually is, but it could be so in a situation where (1) there are very few NRx’s (but vocal enough to have a lot of impact) and (2) most of the other people aren’t interested in NRx discussions. And then we got into a lengthy discussion of why #2 might be; rudeness-and-crossness was one of many possibilities.
So the argument is: in this hypothetical situation that may or may not be actual, most LWers don’t want to have a lot of NRx discussions. One of the many possible reasons is (as you put it) that these arguments get their side upset. Since (in this hypothetical situation) most LWers don’t want these discussions, and very few actively do want them, LWers as a whole would be happier without them.
(Although I’ve adopted your spin-laden language in the paragraph above, I would like to point out that it’s actually quite far from what I meant. My hypothetical person-who-doesn’t-want-to-talk-about-NRx is concerned not only that his allies might get upset, but also that his opponents might; and that the result of all this getting-upset on both sides is likely to be that no one learns much from anyone else. That’s why the metaphor is “more heat than light” and not just “lots of heat”.)
Assuming that was his argument, it seems like a pretty good one. You do not persuade people by making them upset. You make them more convinced than ever of their original position.
So, being “less wrong” is measured by “how much time one spends debating neoreaction”? If you refuse to keep endlessly debating neoreaction, you are closed-minded. Don’t worry about evidence; the signalling is cool!
I was running monthly politics threads. I don’t recall that conversations involved NR specifically, but I do recall that the discussions taking place were so specific they had no general/popular appeal, and conversations were short, muted, and didn’t go anywhere.
I was left reading the discussions taking place with the impression that people were looking for things to try to argue about, rather than having anything particularly meaningful they wanted to argue about which they previously couldn’t. Given that one of my purposes was to try to arrange a safety valve for a perceived growing political pressure (which eventually exploded in the feminism war that got Eugine Nier banned and which caused most of the more prominent feminist-leaning members to leave), they were failing for my intended purpose, so I stopped creating them.
The debates didn’t generally have an issue staying civilized, though, as I recall.
Is this actually true? I don’t think LW is having this kind of problems.
Same with “difficult to contain”—I do not observe these difficulties.
Hint: “civilized” is a euphemism for “not reaching conclusions that make Villiam feel uncomfortable”.
No, it’s an umbrella term for things including “not mass-downvoting people because they disagreed with you once”, etc.
Hello back, Eugine.
Saying “I don’t want to hear that” when specifically asked if you want to hear it is very different from “shut up, I don’t want to hear what you want to talk about”.
Yes. I was referring to the latter, which I’ve seen a lot of.
So much so, that people tip toe around and ask for permission to speak.
FTFY.
That implies most everyone on LW is impolite most of the time.
Well, yes, but
In the past I’ve seen people suggest that a controversial topic/thread should have been brought up in a poll beforehand instead of just posting it outright. James_Miller seems to be following the suggested convention.