Friday, July 19, 2013
How to argue like a Republican
The beauty of this method is that you attack them and you also steal what they were going to say. They're left just staring at you in disbelief that you would lie so brazenly. If they're the really empathic type, which a lot of liberals are, they might even stop a second and try to see if maybe you're right. It's the trolliest kind of trolling there is. Plus, of course, idiots believe you. It's basically the best argument style possible, so long as you don't actually care about being truthful.
DISCLAIMER: This only works if your intentions are evil.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
The filibuster and why It doesn't matter whether Obama's EPA nominee gets confirmed or not
First of all, let me explain what the filibuster process is and is not. When a senator filibusters a vote: he isn't standing before his peers and talking like Jimmy Stewart pretended to do in that old movie. All it really involves in most cases is that the senator makes a phone call and says he's blocking the vote and then the vote cannot proceed. This is a very, very stupid thing to allow, and I'm surprised that ANYTHING EVER gets voted on when that's all it takes.
Even though the filibuster as it is currently used is stupid and obstructive, filibustering is an important thing to be able to do, and by forcing a simple up/down vote by essentially nullifying the filibuster rules, Hairy Reed has just eliminated the filibuster as an option. It's true that being able to block a vote by making a phone call is essentially a subversion of democracy. However, rather than eliminating the filbuster altogether, amending the rules of the filibuster so that the Senator must at least actually be present in the chamber would be a much better move. Frankly, the standing filbuster is a good system. It's a much better idea to make a senator stand and talk the entire time they are blocking a vote. That way, if a senator feels compelled to block a vote, they can do so, but only through expenditure of some personal energy. It would seriously cut down on the frequency of the filbuster's use, but preserves the tactic for dire cases.
If the filibuster rule isn't amended by then, I guarantee that the next time the Republicans are in majority in the senate, Democrats are going to regret having backed the nuking of the filibuster rule.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
My Life Has Been Revolutionized by a Coffeemaker (plus boring minutae)
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
I rode my bike across campus to help some people do something, and during that time, I remembered an interview of Dick Cheney I had seen on a TV show. At the time, he was in a fairly advanced stage of heart failure and I was pretty sure he would die soon. When he took a machine out of his coat and explained that his heart had stopped working, I hoped the interviewer would say something like "may your death be sudden, and your eternity in hell intolerable by any mortal measure." But instead, she didn't. I can't understand how some people get through their days.
After helping the people, which turned out to consist of turning off a television that was bothering them, I saw the newspaper which had an article titled something along the lines of "Serial Killer Rotting in Hell, Family's Pastor Tells Them." without feeling any sense of cognitive dissonance, I felt that it was an extremely harsh thing to say.
Here's my feeling on the matter, though, so you can get a little insight into my judgement. The serial killer in question, who, by the way is named Israel Keyes, and is maybe not actually a serial killer, was definitely a bad guy. I would say he's about as bad a guy as Cheney is. But telling his family that he's in Hell isn't, in my opinion what you have a pastor around for. If a religion can't be comforting in the face of death and other bewildering stuff, what use does it have? On the other hand, telling Dick Cheney that you'll be glad when his corpse is no longer haunted by his forever-doomed soul is, in my opinion, just a statement of a widely-held belief. It would be impolite to lie and say that the fact that he was dying was troubling to you in the slightest.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Sunday, October 16, 2011
I am a scientist
I have always admired scientists, the way one might admire a lizard. The great disc in the sky didn't bless me with abundant scientific prowess, and I've always thought of science that happens To other people. I don't have the patience for real science, or the meticulousness. I'd rather trust my intuition, and I don't want to control for variables.
I have, however conducted a scientific experiment of my own for several years, and though I wont be writing it up for any of the big name journals like PNAS(tee hee), I'll share the result with you. I have discovered, through painstaking research, this: when people tell you, while you're first getting to know them, that they are assholes, it is because they are assholes, and they want you to know. t
Thursday, September 29, 2011
With Citizens United, democracy requires a socialist economy
I'm being a little facetious. There could be ways devised to preserve genuine democracy while giving people time to, for example, grow food and/or send pictures of their genitals to friends and strangers. The main point I'm actually driving for is that the US is a representative democracy, meaning that we decide collectively who the people who will decide the laws will be.
As such, the best we can do, as far as democracy goes, is to make the process of choosing our representatives as egalitarian as possible. We aren't doing that. "We" are doing the opposite, in fact. The Supreme Court's Citizens United decision officially allows the rich to buy politicians, for all intents and purposes. Since there isn't any limit to the amount of money that a company can "donate" to a political campaign, they can strongly influence the outcome of any election in the country.
A medium-sized corporation has tremendously more financial resource than all but the very richest American families. Since the very richest American families generally run those companies, they rarely go against one another. In fact, the richest 20% of Americans control about 85% of the wealth in the country, which gives them the ability affect elections in a way that is almost impossible to counteract by ordinary citizens.
So, the combination of Citizens United plus tremendous income inequality in the US means that the US isn't a democracy of any kind anymore. Since the very wealthy choose the representatives, the representatives represent the very rich. This kind of government system is called an aristocracy.
Given these data, there are two ways to make the US into a more democratic country. The first is to overturn Citizens United. The second is to outlaw wealth. Which would you prefer?