Trump - Clown Genius

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IlliniDave
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by IlliniDave »

Dragline wrote:This analysis of a popular TV (or is it internet?) show (I've actually never watched it) relates our modern politics to the ancient perspective. It has nothing to do with egalitarian values, which is probably why it, like Shakespeare, is popular and eternal as to the human condition:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2de3LhPxpZU

"Democracy is so overrated" says the main character.
I've watched that show on Netflix (haven't started season 4 yet). I like it because it is a good story. I'm completely oblivious to all of the philosophical elegance drawn out in that analysis, as are, I suspect, most of its viewers, and probably its writers. It's just a gritty story that reinforces some of the negative stereotypes/conspiracy theories we little folks like to entertain (that everything is rigged against us by duplicitous scoundrels with power) and drawing somewhat on the soap opera model of creating many threads of dramatic tension and resolving them slowly. I think the writers succeed in creating morally questionable characters we can identify with and follow because there's a kernel of the game wired into all of us.

I would agree that little new is going on, deceit and manipulation are age-old human traits. Maybe the biggest redeeming quality of a relatively free society is that the widest possible pool of people are free to enter the game if they choose. Outcomes, of course, cannot be guaranteed. In my mind this is all an outgrowth of social organization and the facet of human nature that values our position in a society which motivates us work to be what we perceive our social structure wants us to be, or values. In a complex civilization like our current western one, there are many sloughs and eddies that form their own sub-societies and internal social orders, so I'd guess it is extremely rare for a person to completely escape it.

The interesting thing about the Republicans is that they seem to be taking their backroom power-brokering public. I suspect that might be because they feel themselves losing their grip.

Dragline
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Dragline »

theanimal wrote:@Dragline- Where is the supporting evidence from that video? It seems more to follow the fallacy that we are continually progressing on an upward trend from the beginning of our existence as humans. If you look around, I think you'll find more than enough evidence that points to early human societies being egalitarian. That doesn't mean that they weren't without war or skirmishes with rival groups. Competition is an innate part of our being, just like all other biological creatures. Yet, individual societies were non-hierarchical and matriarchal in nature. And sure, there will be plenty of exceptions to the rule, as with all things.

And with regard to the idea that humans wiped out all mega fauna, there doesn't necessarily seem to be a consensus. Although, I know that you and I have debated this elsewhere before, so we'll just agree to disagree.

Anyways, sorry for continuing OT.

Edit: As an aside, most cave paintings were of or relating to hunting animals (not humans). Especially considering paleolithic groups (which most people are referring to when talking about egalitarian hunter-gatherers). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_warfare https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cave_painting
Yes, this is too big of a topic for this thread, but I would commend you to read Yuval Harari's Sapiens (2015), because he discusses these conflicting interpretations of prehistoric history, and is a lot more balanced about it than most. An excerpt:

"Finally, there’s the thorny question of the role of war in forager societies. Some scholars imagine ancient hunter-gatherer societies as peaceful paradises, and argue that war and violence began only with the Agricultural Revolution, when people started to accumulate private property. Other scholars maintain that the world of the ancient foragers was exceptionally cruel and violent. Both schools of thought are castles in the air, connected to the ground by the thin strings of meagre archaeological remains and anthropological observations of present-day foragers.

The anthropological evidence is intriguing but very problematic. Foragers today live mainly in isolated and inhospitable areas such as the Arctic or the Kalahari, where population density is very low and opportunities to fight other people are limited. Moreover, in recent generations, foragers have been increasingly subject to the authority of modern states, which prevent the eruption of large-scale conflicts. European scholars have had only two opportunities to observe large and relatively dense populations of independent foragers: in north-western North America in the nineteenth century, and in northern Australia during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Both Amerindian and Aboriginal Australian cultures witnessed frequent armed conflicts. It is debatable, however, whether this represents a ‘timeless’ condition or the impact of European imperialism. The archaeological findings are both scarce and opaque. What telltale clues might remain of any war that took place tens of thousands of years ago? There were no fortifications and walls back then, no artillery shells or even swords and shields. An ancient spear point might have been used in war, but it could have been used in a hunt as well. Fossilised human bones are no less hard to interpret. A fracture might indicate a war wound or an accident. Nor is the absence of fractures and cuts on an ancient skeleton conclusive proof that the person to whom the skeleton belonged did not die a violent death. Death can be caused by trauma to soft tissues that leaves no marks on bone. Even more importantly, during pre-industrial warfare more than 90 per cent of war dead were killed by starvation, cold and disease rather than by weapons. Imagine that 30,000 years ago one tribe defeated its neighbour and expelled it from coveted foraging grounds. In the decisive battle, ten members of the defeated tribe were killed. In the following year, another hundred members of the losing tribe died from starvation, cold and disease. Archaeologists who come across these 110 skeletons may too easily conclude that most fell victim to some natural disaster. How would we be able to tell that they were all victims of a merciless war?

Duly warned, we can now turn to the archaeological findings. In Portugal, a survey was made of 400 skeletons from the period immediately predating the Agricultural Revolution. Only two skeletons showed clear marks of violence. A similar survey of 400 skeletons from the same period in Israel discovered a single crack in a single skull that could be attributed to human violence. A third survey of 400 skeletons from various pre-agricultural sites in the Danube Valley found evidence of violence on eighteen skeletons. Eighteen out of 400 may not sound like a lot, but it’s actually a very high percentage. If all eighteen indeed died violently, it means that about 4.5 per cent of deaths in the ancient Danube Valley were caused by human violence. Today, the global average is only 1.5 per cent, taking war and crime together. During the twentieth century, only 5 per cent of human deaths resulted from human violence – and this in a century that saw the bloodiest wars and most massive genocides in history. If this revelation is typical, the ancient Danube Valley was as violent as the twentieth century.

The depressing findings from the Danube Valley are supported by a string of equally depressing findings from other areas. At Jabl Sahaba in Sudan, a 12,000-year-old cemetery containing fifty-nine skeletons was discovered. Arrowheads and spear points were found embedded in or lying near the bones of twenty-four skeletons, 40 per cent of the find. The skeleton of one woman revealed twelve injuries. In Ofnet Cave in Bavaria, archaeologists discovered the remains of thirty-eight foragers, mainly women and children, who had been thrown into two burial pits. Half the skeletons, including those of children and babies, bore clear signs of damage by human weapons such as clubs and knives. The few skeletons belonging to mature males bore the worst marks of violence. In all probability, an entire forager band was massacred at Ofnet.

Which better represents the world of the ancient foragers: the peaceful skeletons from Israel and Portugal, or the abattoirs of Jabl Sahaba and Ofnet? The answer is neither. Just as foragers exhibited a wide array of religions and social structures, so, too, did they probably demonstrate a variety of violence rates. While some areas and some periods of time may have enjoyed peace and tranquillity, others were riven by ferocious conflicts."

Elsewhere in the book he discusses how hunter-gatherer humans wiped out other hominids and large fauna. " The wandering bands of storytelling Sapiens were the most important and most destructive force the animal kingdom had ever produced."

Harari, Yuval Noah (2015-02-10). Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (p. 62). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

********************

I think the idea that hunter-gatherer societies were some kind of Garden of Eden is really just recycled and warmed over Rousseau with more modern window dressing. The most successful human societies found ways to organize and direct violence in ways that allowed them to build larger communities, generally by constructing religions centered around violent sacrificial rituals.

One of the more intriguing issues that Harari does not really tackle is why virtually all human societies developed as patriachal/male dominated institutions. If humans were really egalitarian by nature, you should see an equal number of successful matriarchal societies, but there are hardly any in recorded history. I would posit that it has a lot to do with the superior capacity and propensity of males for violence and dominant behaviors. Frans de Waal's groundbreaking studies of chimpanzee societies tend to support this idea. If you are interested in the subject, you should definitely read his classic "Chimpanzee Politics", which Newt Gingrich used to hand out to fellow representatives as a blueprint and road map for how Congress really works. But make sure you read the revised edition, as it includes the end of the male rivalries described in the book, wherein two of the three males vying for leadership ganged up and attacked the stronger rival and ripped off his genitals. He died of his wounds. (I believe de Waal omitted it because he also suffers from cognitive dissonance about it -- his later work is mostly about bonobos, who actually do have more egalitarian leanings, including matriarchal structures.)

Dragline
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Dragline »

theanimal wrote: It seems more to follow the fallacy that we are continually progressing on an upward trend from the beginning of our existence as humans.
Yes, this is one of Alain Botton's theses. (He makes these videos, and they are quite good basic education on a whole host of topics. Find the one on sexual fetishes for some interesting insights.)

I tend to agree more with you as to humans themselves not changing all that much. But there is a lot of technological progress and cultural experimentation, more so in the past few hundred years. Technology helps by allowing people more opportunities beyond covering just the basics to survive. The trend toward the emancipation of women is really the most fundamental change, which many would consider a form of "evolution". The success of non-violent movements (Gandhi, King, etc) is also significant and different.

What you see in modern society, though, is a flipping back and forth between egalitarian aspirations and old habits of archaic-sacred cultural structures that rely on forms of sacrifice, literal or figurative. They exist together and often one dominates the other for a period of time.

Archaic--sacred sacrificial structures sometimes appear in funny or unexpected ways. The whole edifice of consumerism and the culture of celebrity is one example. What is sacred in that structure is the concept of "scarcity". Everybody wants what only a few have, whether it is an object or fame. And throngs of people delight when seemingly randomly chosen scapegoats are figuratively sacrificed in events like ordinary people being made fools of on reality TV or famous people being brought down and humiliated by a ravenous gossip press. Figurative lynch mobs are still quite popular, even though we like to pretend that we are beyond such primitive behaviors.

Dragline
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Dragline »

Neil Howe on the generational history aspects of this and realignment:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmt2YQT ... fXfwpc5buo

JamesR
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by JamesR »

jacob wrote:http://www.vox.com/2016/3/1/11127424/tr ... itarianism

More on the authoritarian phase transition.
That vox article about authoritarianism was interesting. I didn't realize that Trump was an "Authoritarian" type, and now I'm left feeling worried and hoping that he isn't. I can see how a bunch of his rhetoric fits that.

I've always wondered about why the GOP has long been a catchall for libertarians & religious fundamentalist/conservatives, as these two viewpoints are on the opposite ends of the freedom/change spectrum. (i.e. libertarians are closer to democrat-type thinking if they don't get TOO hung up on government interference), so the whole part about GOP attracting authoritarian voters was interesting!

arrrrgon
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by arrrrgon »

I have to agree with apocraphyl. I've been saying for a while now that we don't need to run every decision through a bunch of rich representatives who don't care about any of us. We have the internet, and we could easily vote using the internet. All we would really need is multiple 3rd party sources to verify that the voting is legit...anyways that's not really the point of this thread I guess.

All I know for certain is that it doesn't matter whether Clinton or Trump wins. We all lose either way.

I'm far more worried about the supreme court. Scalia was a man that listened to both sides of the debate (unless it involved homosexuals which was wrong of him). He fought to keep our freedom intact, and he made all of the other judges around him better. I don't imagine his replacement will live up to what he did. I'm certain Clinton will pick another activist liberal judge like Obama did, and I worry that Trump will pick a right wing extremist. These judges are supposed to be unbiased, but that seems to be another fleeting memory.

Chad
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Chad »

arrrrgon wrote:These judges are supposed to be unbiased, but that seems to be another fleeting memory.
It has never been unbiased/impartial. It just has varying degrees of impartiality.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the ... eme-court/

Some times it's a little worse and some times it's a little better.

On a broader note, we get what we ask for, and it's becoming apparent that the people have screwed themselves and are doing it again with these candidates. Blaming powerful people (rich, party positions, etc.) is a cop out. I'm not suggesting they aren't a problem, but the whole or even main problem? Probably not. The anger over the inevitable change sweeping over the world is appropriately displayed in the current congress by the people's representatives and senators. They refuse compromise. The current Supreme Court opening is a prime example. The people have asked their reps/senators to hold a gun to each others head and not waiver, so that is what they are doing. Then the people, surprisingly, are even more incensed when their reps/senators do exactly what they asked.

So, no, I do not think we would be better with a democracy instead of a republic.

arrrrgon
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by arrrrgon »

Chad wrote:
arrrrgon wrote:These judges are supposed to be unbiased, but that seems to be another fleeting memory.
Blaming powerful people (rich, party positions, etc.) is a cop out. I'm not suggesting they aren't a problem, but the whole or even main problem? Probably not.

So, no, I do not think we would be better with a democracy instead of a republic.
I didn't mean to blame rich people. It did read that way though. It was meant to be a reference to career politicians, but it came off wrong. I'm all for capitalism, and I'm all for people getting rich through hard work.

You might be right. It's hard enough just finding someone that can have a conversation without getting angry if you disagree with them. The problem I see is that our entire political system seems to be filled with those same angry people.

And yes impartial judging is just wishful thinking on my part, but it's how judges should make their decisions. They should be based on logic.

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GandK
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by GandK »

JamesR wrote:I've always wondered about why the GOP has long been a catchall for libertarians & religious fundamentalist/conservatives, as these two viewpoints are on the opposite ends of the freedom/change spectrum. (i.e. libertarians are closer to democrat-type thinking if they don't get TOO hung up on government interference), so the whole part about GOP attracting authoritarian voters was interesting!
No, you are thinking only in terms of social laws. A libertarian is a libertarian because he's hung up on government interference. This is why libertarians are not Democrats. A Democrat wants to use the government to solve society's problems. A libertarian thinks the government IS the problem, to quote Ronald Reagan.

Politically, in the US, libertarians (I am one) and religious fundamentalists (I run with these folks) are firmly united in their deep distrust of all forms of government intrusiveness. They both want as much freedom as possible from national/state/secular government. Politically, the only real difference between their positions is how they'd use their freedom. Usually they do differ about social/morality issues, you're right, although some fundamentalist Christians don't want hard-line social laws either, taking the line that God gave us free will, and "if you outlaw every action except the right, can a man who does right be said to have acted virtuously?" But Christians (all religious people, really) can, in a freer society, impose their own standards on their own adherents. So the less government, the better, in the end. For both groups. The religious man wants to use his freedom to live by his own religious laws and priorities without persecution or interference. The libertarian, to do whatever he damn well pleases.

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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by jacob »

@JamesR - http://www.politicalcompass.org/uselection2016 ... where left=social freedom (or economic restrictions) and right=economic freedom (or social/moral restrictions).

Spartan_Warrior
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Spartan_Warrior »

@Jacob: Great chart. I would read it as the x-axis representing economics and the y-axis representing social issues. E.g. left = economically liberal, right = economically conservative, top = socially conservative (authoritarian), bottom = socially liberal (libertarian).

I agree with the charts' placements. As I've said before, Sanders is very moderate socially and only slightly liberal economically. Again, that he's painted as an extremist tells you more about those calling him that--and the extreme right-wing drift of American politics--than it does about Sanders.

Rich people aren't the problem, for sure. Hard work should be rewarded. No one is arguing that. The problem is not the rich, it is the overwhelming influence of their money in politics. This is what drives our direction as a nation, the direction of our economy, the direction of our foreign policy, the direction of the world and the environment. Letting the unbridled greed of capitalism hold the wheel, when you look in the gestalt, is what drives so many of the negative aspects of the American empire. It's not the only problem, granted, but I believe there is a very strong argument that it is the main problem, as it is the source of so many others.

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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by jacob »

@SW - No, the Y-axis is to what extent you desire a government solution. A full out anarchist or libertarian (do difference in this chart) would be at the bottom-center in this chart. A full-out fascist would be top center. The left/right terms are very bad choices and the political compass didn't always use to have these axes terms.

One axis used to be social freedom and the other axis used to be economic freedom. This conveniently put libertarians in one corner opposite to the fascist corner. The two other corners where then lefties and righties. Since then they've rotated the coordinate system by 45 degrees and renamed the axes.

If you compare over the years, you'll see that political representation is becoming increasingly homogeneous which is very interesting in itself. Here's the US chart from 2004 for example
http://www.politicalcompass.org/uselection2004

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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Spartan_Warrior »

@Jacob: Whoops, sorry. Yeah, didn't look closely enough and was expecting what is apparently the out-of-vogue axes. Plus I couldn't believe they were really conflating so many varying issues in such an arbitrary way. (Of course, it's not arbitrary, but rather conveniently in line with mainstream US political parties. Wouldn't want anyone to think outside the left/right box. An interesting homogenization, definitely.)

I figured they must be including some truly "extreme" social-liberal policies to get those Y-axis placements. I was a little impressed by it, actually, but I must admit this makes more sense. :lol:

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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by JamesR »

GandK,

I'm fairly libertarian as well, though VERY moderate (pro-minarchist, pro-infrastructure). The problem is that GOP is fundamentally a socialist party. Given that libertarians are about personal freedom, they are pro-choice, and pro-euthenasia, same as democrats and opposite of GOP. Arguably both parties are socialist, but my general impression is that democrats tend to focus more on building infrastructure that benefit everyone and in cases where they reduce freedoms, it's more to restrict poor actors from violating other people's freedoms - which a minarchist libertarian would support... On the other hand GOP appears to focus on promising to lower taxes and they will also increase freedoms but mainly for the poor actors, while simultaneously reducing personal freedoms as well as using fear-mongering to grow the government even more.

Warning: I'm not american, my understanding of GOP/Democrat differences is pretty shaky. I've of course seen libertarian material pointing out this is all really just a 1 party demopublican or republocrat system and shit's completely screwed anyways. :)

P.S. Back in the day, between 2000-2008, I remember when there were loads of charts pointing out how many gazillions of dollars that George W. Bush's administration was spending and how massive the deficit was going to be and how deep into debt the country was going to go, especially once the military was committed to Iraq & Afghanistan. Imagine my surprise when I started seeing the blame being placed on Obama within 1-2 years of his first election? I mean really? Blaming him for what GWB's administration stuck him with? Not to mention that GWB massively increased the government during his time, adding on many departments in the name of security. Also I vaguely recall Bill Clinton, a democrat, massively reduced the deficit during his terms? My tiny observation based on the last 24 years is democrats are more minarchist than republicans..

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GandK
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by GandK »

JamesR wrote:I've of course seen libertarian material pointing out this is all really just a 1 party demopublican or republocrat system and shit's completely screwed anyways. :)
:lol: This is right.

What a party stands for in general collides hard with what people in a given geographic area in the US want, as well as that area's collective personality type. The most comprehensive book I've seen on this subject, if you're interested, is American Nations by Colin Woodard. Here's a 20,000 foot overview of the various regional attitudes in the US. You can see how a Republican from Yankeedom and a Republican from The Deep South would probably be focused on very different goals.

Also, I know Republicans who are liberal people when questioned, but who identify as Republican and vote Republican for social reasons.... basically the people they love would condemn them if they didn't wear conservative colors, so that's what they do. And I know a conservative who's a registered Democrat because most of the Republicans she knows "are scumbags, and I don't want that label on me!"

Sigh. I wish we had more than two main parties.

IlliniDave
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by IlliniDave »

Any more, the parties seem best defined by what they are against rather than what they are for. Republicans/conservatives are against democrats/liberals, and democrats/liberals are against republican/conservatives. They are both "for" whatever happens to be most advantageous for them to be "for" given who they are pandering to at that moment. I've seen many things go full circle even in my modest-length life. I remember when it was democrats who opposed other-than-legal immigrants to retain union votes and republicans that turned a blind eye to get support from those who wanted cheaper labor. Now the democrats are cultivating a minority voting block and favor immigrants while the republicans position themselves opposite with national security as the rationale to gain support from security advocates. It's actually rather amusing.

I consider myself a conservative, tree-hugging, libertarian. I should probably go to the end of the road somewhere and, to some extent, go off the grid. Wait, that's what I'm planning to do! :D

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GandK
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by GandK »

IlliniDave wrote:I consider myself a conservative, tree-hugging, libertarian.
Wow... me too. Free to care, basically.

We should start a new party. 8-)

Dragline
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Dragline »

Will it be the Tree Party or perhaps the Lentil Party? :lol:

JamesR
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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by JamesR »

The Liberal Libertarians ;)

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Re: Trump - Clown Genius

Post by Spartan_Warrior »

Apparently I'm not the only one had this impression.

Is Donald Trump Running a False Flag Campaign to Help Hillary Clinton?

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