Sunday, July 4, 2021
Random Sunday Ramblings
Thursday, June 24, 2021
Tying Two to Two
I have been thinking today about a Greek word I encountered a few weeks ago during my daily Bible reading. It is found in Matthew 13 and Mark 4, shortly after the Parable of the Sower, and it is the word συνίημι ("syniemi"), which means literally "to send, bring, or set together." In a metaphorical sense it also means to "put two and two together," that is, to understand the meaning and implications of a thing. The passage in which this word appears reads thus:
But in recent decades, a number of crises have emerged as a result of this thinking. I will consider only two of these today. Let me mention that both crises could have been mitigated or avoided entirely had our society held a more collectivist mindset - that is, had we been the sort of people who value the common good above the unrestrained exercise of individual "liberty". The first crisis is that of manmade climate change. Yes, I said "manmade." Other accurate phrases or terms would include "anthropogenic" or "human-caused." We have known for decades that industrial activity was altering the earth's atmosphere in ways that would alter the climate - yet the defenders of "liberty" have loudly and insistently denied such knowledge. Why? Because to admit the impact of human industrial activity would have forced these people to confront a moral choice. They would have been faced with the choice of "understanding with their hearts." And that choice would have cost either a numbed conscience or possibly lots of money. The Global North does like its money, doesn't it? (The white American Evangelical/Protestant church really loves its money! Must be why so many of its members and leaders can't seem to put two and two together...) And in addition to the numbing of conscience, these nations chose to continue the destructive chasing of economic gain because many of their citizens told themselves that the consequences of their choices would never fall on them. They said, "What do we care about polar bears? Or about poor island people drowning in rising seas? That's so far from us!"
Sunday, June 13, 2021
In Search of Good Work, Or, A Right Autarky
- The change in the occupational landscape wrought by the deployment of artificial intelligence and task automation. AI is an interesting subject in that there are two camps of human opinion regarding its use. One camp consists of those who look critically at AI in order to determine and define its limits and adverse effects (such as the sometimes disastrous effects of automation-induced complacency). The other camp is enthusiastic about the ability of AI to transform the workplace by automating repetitive tasks or tasks that require a lot of brute force calculation, thus freeing humans to focus on tasks which require "creativity." A barely noticed corollary to this assertion is the fact that software and hardware development teams are trying hard to push AI into realms of human "creativity" as well. (Case in point: if you use AutoCAD for engineering design, you will have known for a long time that Autodesk has automated many design tasks which used to take a fair amount of skill on the part of a designer!) This push is being driven by owners of capital who would much rather use AI to continue their concentration of capital by paying an upfront capital cost for a piece of machinery in order to do more with fewer people. As the push for task automation progresses, people will need to engage in a constant re-skilling in order to keep from being run over by the robot juggernaut of "progress".
- The impact of resource depletion on the kinds of economic activity which a society can sustain. I will not say much tonight about this subject, since much has already been written on this subject. (Some of what has been written actually makes sense. On the other hand, I removed from my bookshelf all books by Dmitri Orlov or James Howard Kunstler and threw them into the compost bin. Those books have better uses as fertilizer than as guidance.) But I will say that there are forward-looking societies run by leaders who know how to play a long game, which have begun to respond to resource depletion by investing in progressive responses such as circular economy principles. On the other hand, there are nations like the United States. If you live in the USA, you may find yourself needing to navigate situations and invent solutions which Asian nations (and I don't mean Russia!) have long since collectively figured out.
Saturday, May 15, 2021
On Fleeing The Glowing Glass
Saturday, May 1, 2021
The Strongest Nonviolent Weapons
“[The] tyrant and his subjects are in somewhat symmetrical positions. They can deny him most of what he wants — they can, that is, if they have the disciplined organization to refuse collaboration….They can deny him the satisfaction of ruling a disciplined country, he can deny them the satisfaction of ruling themselves….It is a bargaining situation in which either side, if adequately disciplined and organized, can deny most of what the other wants, and it remains to see who wins.”
In denying the oppressor what he wants, the oppressed must of necessity bear some costs themselves. However, the oppressed can win only by bearing those costs in a disciplined manner, from a position of mutually helping one another so as not to provide any support to the economic structures of the oppressor. Each member of an oppressed population must ask whether he or she is willing for the "disciplined organization to refuse collaboration" with the oppressor. Those who are not willing become Uncle Toms (UT's) and Aunt Tammys (AT's). Given enough of these UT's and AT's, a nonviolent liberation struggle collapses. Bleeding-heart conservatives such as former President Reagan and former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher cry great crocodile tears at the sufferings which oppressed people take on themselves in their struggle to liberate themselves. Yet those tears will turn to laughter if the oppressed are persuaded to sabotage themselves. We who are of the oppressed must remember that some things are non-negotiable. It was for the purpose of learning to organize exactly the kind of strong, coercive nonviolent action described by Schelling that I spent over two thousand dollars of my own money a couple of years ago to take a series of community organizing classes. I mean business.
As for me, I have a four-pronged hoe that I've been using for several years. A few weeks ago, the wooden handle broke. The next hoe I buy will not be from Home Cheapo. Let's boycott!