just nate – code is poetry, life is code

We haven’t yet tried a free market

14.01.2010 (2:00 pm) – Filed under: philosophy

A discussion I had on facebook with my good friend Bryan about the Great Recession, plutocracy, free market capitalism, the role of government, and our current political state.

Bryan
This is an article summarizing The 15 best explanations for the Great Recession.

http://www.slate.com/id/2240858/

I’m anxious to hear the favored explanation from my conservative and libertarian friends! Do include any heterodox opinions not listed. Note, the author is a friend and former co-author of book with Robert R…ubin (former treasury sec under Clinton and now chairman of Citigroup).

Me
This article’s conclusion is that we need more regulation on big firms in the future. So you’re telling me that politicians can keep a company from failing better than the guys who built the company and have been running it all along? For all the large industries in the entire country? If a large company decides to take a risk, it is their own decision to make, and their own consequences to face. If the firm fails, another one will take its place.

Bryan
I think the deeper issue is what is to be done when the free market fails as spectacularly as it did in this case. You rather flippantly suggest letting the offending companies fail (e.g. almost every major bank in the US and Britain). Intellectual honesty requires you to consider the likely scenario had “politicians” not listened to the pleas of financial firms for a rescue package. That is, severe depression if not complete social and financial anarchy. I’m perfectly fine with a complete breakdown of Babylonian slave economy as you well know, but are you — and your ilk — really ready to brave such storm? I imagine the moment you felt any non-trivial curtailment of your materialistic desires you’d have pitch fork in hand screaming outside the doors of the nearest financial firm! There is a reason there is not a single industrial economy with a true free market, and that is that even sheople have limits on how much abuse they can tolerate!

Me
I disagree with the idea of using taxpayer money to support big businesses for the “common good.” I disagree with your statement that the free market model failed in this situation, since we don’t have a free market, as you admit near the end of your comment. The whole reason companies are able to become so gigantic is because of government regulations. In a truly free market, competition keeps monopolies at bay with no need for extra help from the government. In a free market, companies making poor decisions would get swept aside before they could ever become noticeable, let alone indispensable. With regards to the Great Depression, I postulate that one primary cause was the creation of the Federal Reserve, moving away from free market policies like the gold standard, and moving toward additional government regulation.

I would indeed be upset if my hard-earned money disappeared out from under my nose with neither my consent nor ability to regain it. In fact, that is exactly what I’m upset about right now with regards to the bailouts, the social security system, various other govt. programs and the majority of the taxes I pay. We need to push harder for smaller government and minimized government involvement.

Bryan
You have to have an acute case of historical amnesia to not understand why markets were once free and are now shacked by the heavy hand of the government (tongue firmly in cheek). Look into the gilded age and robber barons, when the economy was completely in the hands of sociopaths like John D Rockefeller, Dale Carnegie and JP Morgan. This is the era when child slavery was widespread and inequality was downright Babylonian in scope! The free market being free and all permits monopoly unless an outside force (e.g. god or government) intervenes. In an economy that is not so dominated by speculative finance and labor-powered-industrialization (like a Jeffersonian agrarian egalitarian Utopian, which I’m quite fond of incidentally) I would be completely supportive of the libertarian model of social and economic order. But within the current context it’s really nothing more than childish fantasy if not a peculiar strain of masochism.

Lastly, we both know the Federal Reserve is not a government agency – it was created by and is owned by some of the largest banks it’s intended to regulate and serve. And your right about baleful role it played in the great depression, among other factors. I think libertarians and liberals ought to unite in recognizing the destruction caused by banks throughout our history. We should start by abolishing the Fed and then instituting public funding of elections, so the precious free market is not subverted by campaign donations. But in doing either of these things you are really talking about a second revolution in American, so if your primary concern is sustaining and augmenting your materialistic lifestyle you should tone down the myopic libertarian rhetoric, and come to terms with the prevailing order.

Me
Interesting that you refer to Rockefeller and Carnegie (I assume you meant Andrew), two prominent philanthropists, as sociopaths. It is true that some of their business methods were underhanded, but can you discount the huge economic and industrial strides our country took because of the bold maneuvering of these captains of industry? Why is it that, as soon as the great “American dream” is fulfilled by a lone man who stands and achieves, he is denounced and hated? Why crave incompetence and mediocrity? Companies guilty of Enron-ian foul play are the vast minority. It may indeed be a fantasy to hope for a free market in the current political and economic context, but it strikes me as extremely fatalist to stick with what we have only to avoid ruffling any feathers.

Yes, the Fed is privately owned. But its existence is enabled by government regulation. I couldn’t agree more that we need to abolish it. I also agree that something must be done to prevent big money from controlling our legislative process. And yes, these would represent a serious revolution in our country, but that does not make my viewpoint as nearsighted as you make it sound. This country was founded on the idea that if you don’t like something, you try to change it. Unfortunately, the military might of our government makes a traditional revolution pretty much impossible, so it must be a revolution of ideas. (this is why one of my music projects is named Stainless Revolution)

Jennifer
I agree with you wholeheartedly, Bryan. Let’s not forget that the US government subsidized the robber barons with free land, no income or business taxes etc. Enabling them to quickly and ruthlessly establish themselves without competition. This was anything but a free market at the time. I happen to believe that the US would have made those strides anyway as it was happening all over the industrialized world. But what they did at the time was anything but hands-off.

Bryan
Yeah, let’s not forget all of that! Thanks for chiming in Jennifer.

With respect to industrialization, we’ve seen numerous cases of it occurring under quasi-command and control economies (s Korea, Israeli, china, India, most European counties, etc). Industrialization was not “caused” by these great “captains of industry” (btw, could you sound anymore sycophantic!). If it wasn’t them it would have been someone else, and our country would have been better off with people less prone to control and manipulate solely for self-aggrandizement at the helm of key industries. The robber barons did indeed give away large sums of money (often to suspect causes, like the council of foreign relations). But the money they gave away was a fraction relative to their wealth, which of course has persisted through their noxious families dynasties. Besides, most conquers — be they of the political or financial type — will do some good, even if on accident. Hitler made the trains run on time, Napoleon made the legal code more progressive, etc. But for us to celebrate people who engage in vanity charity and then erect statutes to commemorate themselves is kind of sad.

I will close this increasingly boring debate with a quote:

This “disposition to admire, and almost to worship, the rich and the powerful, and to despise, or, at least, to neglect persons of poor and mean condition…is…the great and most universal cause of the corruption of our moral sentiments.” That’s Adam Smith. If the great captains of industry were able to pair their financial acumen with a moral philosophy like Adam Smith’s many of us would be far more tolerant of the libertarian worldview, but when the system is dominated by heartless predators who misuse their intellect and energy to control and exploit others the end result is tyranny masquerading under the banner of freedom. But I guess as long as some “great man” is out there maneuvering boldly false freedom is okay with you.

Me
I do not despise poor people. I despise laziness and a lack of productivity. I know that not all poor people are lazy and unproductive. But I do admire people who became rich by virtue of their own productivity, ingenuity, and incredibly long hours of work. People who become rich by the exploitation of other people are not really heroic any more. They are leeches of an even more egregious sort than those parasites who eat your and my incomes on social government programs. Where the agreement ends is that I do not believe men who are successful of their own merit, true captains of industry (and perhaps men like Rockefeller do not belong in that number), owe anything at all to the poor. The men of true industry have already provided jobs, bolstered the economy, and often provided some new invention to make better the lives of all men.

“I think we have more machinery of government than is necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the industrious.” – Thomas Jefferson

Jennifer, thanks for joining our little discussion. I did not know the details of government subsidization in the case of Rockefeller and crew. If you guys really hate those industrialists as much as you claim, then this is definitely an argument in favor of my claims that government regulation can never know which move to make as well as the market itself. It goes back to my claim that monopolies are enabled by government regulations.

In my mind, it all boils down to one concept, one rule. Altruism is not bad. Forced altruism is bad. When the government or any other entity is forcibly taking my money to help someone they deem “needy,” forced altruism has been established. If you don’t think it’s forced, just imagine the succession of events if I refuse to pay a portion of my taxes. The final event is that men show up at my door with guns and drag me to prison. It is no different from a man approaching me on the street, putting a gun to my head, and saying “gimme your money.”

I think it’s rather hilarious that Bryan’s friend’s arguments fell on my side of the fence. It makes me think I’m not communicating my position very well.

Indecision cannot last forever

10.11.2009 (2:17 am) – Filed under: philosophy

Earlier I wrote about how I have been on a journey of discovery in an attempt to decide whether or not to stay in the church of my upbringing, and I likened this to the Amish practice known as Rumspringa.

I think my journey has ended. Without incredible evidence with which I am not yet familiar, my conclusion is that the church is false and that I would do better on my own. This is not an infallible conclusion, and so I leave the door 1% opened. Any more would be unnecessary and limiting.

Rene Descartes believed that our senses are inaccurate and not a good truth-measuring tool. He concluded that the only way to learn truth is to use reason. Descartes suggests removing all preconceived notions of truth, and adding back only those portions which can be proved reasonably and logically. “If you would be a real seeker after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as far as possible, all things.”

I followed this model, as closely as I could. I doubted as much as possible. And I am left with the conclusion that the God hypothesis has some glaring holes.

Just saying.

facebook is for euthanasia discussions

10.11.2009 (1:35 am) – Filed under: philosophy

Behold, one of the most hilarious facebook conversations ever witnessed by mankind!

Tiffany Thorne
Marley and Me= the worst show in the world!

Tiffany Thorne
:,(

Nate Smith
hey, the time I heard you it didn’t deserve a crying frown face emoticon!

Tiffany Thorne
Oh, there were tears, Nate. There were crying frown face emoticon tears.

Nate Smith
Who just guffawed a bunch of water out his nose? Folks, there is not an emoticon for this.

Spencer Peterson
I must admit; I thought Marley and Me would be dumb. But I quite liked it.

Nate Smith
I thought the “me” referred to Tiffany. *blush*

Nate Smith
I thought “show” referred to a musical show. I am striking out all over the place here.

Spencer Peterson
Unless Tiffany is now performing with Ziggy Marley!?!

Tiffany Thorne
Spencer you would have to be a sadist to say you enjoyed a show that made you fall in love with a fury little character and then watched him get sick and injected with a lethal dose of doggy killing drugs in the final 20 minutes of a two hour show. Sorry to ruin it for those who haven’t seen it, but I feel like people should know what they are getting into.
***This post includes an explanation of Marley and Me for Nate.

Spencer Peterson
Perhaps I’m a sadist then?

Spencer Peterson
So you are not performing with Ziggy Marley after all? :sigh: Bummer.

Nate Smith
I’m never commenting on another status without doing extensive google research beforehand.

Tiffany Thorne
Oh, man, Spencer, I was giving you an out. You could have said ‘oh, no that last part was heartbreaking, but the rest of it was good.’ Now the enire facebook audience that frequents my status and all subsequent comments knows you’re a sadist!
And no about Ziggy Marley. When that happens you’ll be there.

Spencer Peterson
We’re all going to face that last 20 minutes eventually Tiff (are we on a half name basis?? hmmm just seems to fit.). I felt Marley and Me was a good synopsis of life. The good and the bad. And I am a fan of life. If that makes me a sadist….so be it.

Tiffany Thorne
Spenc, we have been on half name basis for a long time now, and Marley and Me failed to be a good synopsis of life purely because most of us will not die due to our doctors inability to make us comfortable enough to suit our owner’s tastes, and then decide to kill us with lethal injections. That is just sick.

Nate Smith
Sometimes euthanasia can be the exact opposite of sadist. Even with humans. Me and Jack are hanging out in a few days if you want to come. You know, Jack Kevorkian. You know, the pathologist? Yeah, he’s a pathologist. No, he’s a pretty normal dude. What do you mean, “hanging out with psychos”? Whatever man!! Dying is not a crime!

Oh and thanks for the synopsis. I feel like I know Marley personally.

Spencer Peterson
That’s because we own ourselves and can thus decide for ourselves when we are uncomfortable enough to die. And many people do decide just that for themselves, if not with lethal injection. The only difference is a domestic dog can’t make that decision itself. Are you against pet ownership?

Tiffany Thorne
No, of course not. I am exclusively and firmly against drawing pleasure from a pet ownership/incapacitated animal situation that ends in a mercy killing, and not just that, but an actually viewing of the injection. I understand that the injection was perhaps the best thing for everyone involved, but come on folks, lets not frame it around little children and everyone else crying and call it a comedy.

Spencer Peterson
I was not aware it was classified as a comedy. I certainly did not view it as such. I mean, Owen Wilson is a pretty funny guy, and Jennifer Aniston has her moment, but… I do see why you might have felt deceived by previews/reviews/and movie posters. Also I don’t think “drawing pleasure” is quite the phrase I would use to describe the emotions I felt during the film.

Nate Smith
Guys! Marley is actually named after Bob Marley! How cool is that!

(I’m that one guy who never does the reading before class. Sorry)

By the way. If I am ever euthanized please make sure any reusable organs make their way to deserving recipients.

Spencer Peterson
Speaking of reusable organs, Seven Pounds is a film with a moral I am undeniably against. I can see how producers could take the whole “dying dog to pull your heartstrings” cliche a little too far, but I disagree wholeheartedly with the moral base of Seven Pounds.

Spencer Peterson
Hmmm. It appears we’ve hijacked your status, Tiff. I apologize.

Tiffany Thorne
Amen on that seven pounds comment, a movie I didn’t cry half as hard over as Marley and Me.
Nate, if it happens, and I hope it never does, I will do every thing I can to make sure all your organs are reused by deserving people. This I say while noting that ‘everything I can do’ will probably be nothing at all.

Tiffany Thorne
Not at all, Spenc. I hope you hijack my status again soon ;)

Nate Smith
On Seven Pounds:

It is the portrayal of an impossible moral code made heroic.

If you would not give your life for a stranger, why treat as a hero he who would?

If you would give your life for a stranger, what is the moral basis for your decision? How does it supersede its brother, suicide?

And Tiffany, you’re right. You, my parents, and the parents of a dying 14-year old girl don’t really have the power to harvest my fertile organs. Only Obama has that kind of power. (sigh)

Tiffany Thorne
Lol, Nate, did you google that one?

Nate Smith
Those are my words. Some of them come from an electronic conversation I had on twitter a few months ago.

Nate Smith
And Tiff – can I call you Tiff? – I also apologize for hijacking your status, but it has definitely been fun.

Tiffany Thorne
Gentlemen, I thank you both. Let’s do this again next weekend over a jam session, shall we?

Nate Smith
Agreed!

Spencer Peterson
Schrödinger’s facebook comment experiment- If a cleverly worded and thought provoking comment is made by Nate’s facebook account inside a sealed box. Did the comment come from Google, Nate or are Nate and Google the same thing?!?!

Spencer Peterson
I digress. I need sleep.

Tiffany Thorne
HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA! I love you both so much! I wish I had a motorcycle for this weekend. I can’t believe the conversation I’m going to be missing out on!


By the way, I kept thinking of this xkcd.

Opinions? bleh.

19.10.2009 (12:03 am) – Filed under: grievances, philosophy

There are just some things that you cannot have opinions about.

Let me back up. Today someone told me that evolution is based on “will” and that all animals exercise their will to evolve. When I began methodically removing the several layers of misconception inherent in the statement, my friend exclaimed in a nearly shrill voice, “but this is my opinion! Everyone is entitled to an opinion!”

Really?

Stop playing the opinion card, folks. It pisses me off. Some things don’t allow for an opinion. Math things. Science things. Yes, you’re entitled to believe that the communicative law of addition is false. No, you’re not entitled to shove your medieval, baseless belief on me as some sort of speculative opinion vomit and expect me not to blast it to the ground. No, it doesn’t matter if that’s your opinion. A is A, just as Aristotle’s Law of Identity states.

politicize that, bitches!

ache prophecy

13.09.2009 (11:27 am) – Filed under: philosophy

Some more texting history, this time with Spencer, who is one of my best friends. Oh billy.

I kind of have a stomach ache. I’m pretty sure that means I’m supposed to run for president. Are you with me?

Well i certaintly can’t argue with the prophetic nature of the stomach ache, so i guess i’m with ya.

That is, of course, assuming that all your administrations policies are decided upon using similar “ache prophecy”. If not count me out.

Background story: I thought I was falling in love with this amazing girl who had a stomach ache and decided it was a sign from God that we should not be dating anymore. I’ve been really bummed about it and then Spencer went and made me feel so much better. Love ya man.

I finally found a word to describe what I’m up to.

25.08.2009 (11:11 am) – Filed under: philosophy

I just watched Devil’s Playground, a 2002 documentary about the Amish rite of passage called “Rumspringa.”

Rumspringa begins for each Amish youth at the age of 16. They are released out into the “English” world, which is the Devil’s Playground, to experience electricity, drugs, sex, parties, and “English” clothing. This goes back to the origins of the Amish religion, which are based on the doctrine of original sin and infant baptisms. The Amish believe in accountability, but for adults, not infants. And so, when Amish children become mature and accountable (when they turn 16), they are free to fully educate themselves about their options. It might take months or years for them to decide whether to join the church or not. Apparently, a staggering 90% do decide to join the church in the end.

I was not aware of Rumspringa, but I really quite like it. I like a lot of things about the Amish people. They are industrious and peaceful. They have quirky traditions, like wearing a beard to show you are married. What I like about Rumspringa is that it at least gives the more adventurous children a chance to find out what they really want to do before they go joining a church. Obviously, the pressure to return to the Amish religion is very strong, from both a cultural and a social standpoint, and I imagine it takes a certain courage to leave.

Rumspringa is a perfect word to describe what I’m up to. My family and friends just don’t understand why I am not going to church. It’s because I can’t live my life based on a decision I made when I was eight years old! And what I’m doing is trying to figure out just what I really believe. I’m having my own personal rumspringa! And the pull of the LDS church I grew up in is incredibly powerful, but for all the wrong reasons. I don’t want to go back to church based on pressure from my family, or based on the fact that most girls around here want a Mormon Man. I have to really decide for myself, by myself.

when texting gets philosophical

25.06.2009 (7:16 pm) – Filed under: philosophy

I sat down to watch TV for the first time in about a year, and one of the first things I saw was a melodramatic moment with a woman who whispered, “do you believe in destiny?” I thought it was hilarious, so I texted it to a friend, and the following conversation ensued.

Do you believe in destiny?

Depends.. What is your definition of destiny

the predetermined, usually inevitable or irresistible, course of events.

I believe that there are things you are better suited to, but i don’t think anything is predetermined. It’s your agency

Good answer. I didn’t mean to start a deep philosophical discussion, but I’m not opposed to it. It was on tv, made me laugh, so I sent it to u

And Allison, we were definitely destined to be friends. ;)

You guys tell me i’m not the best to have that kind of discussion with. Do you believe in destiny?

What!? I love discussions like this with you.

And no, I think the idea of fate or destiny is a total contradiction of reality and logic. But, maybe I’m destined to think that way

You’re such a nerd but i love it. Lol. I do think there is more to life then pure chance and determination though

So here’s a conundrum. If God is omniscient and has all time before him, can we through some decision act contrary to his knowledge?

It’s my understanding that God doesn’t see time as a line… He can see all time at once… So he knows the end and the beginning even if you change it midway

“Can omniscient God who knows the future find the omnipotence to change his future mind?” -Karen Owens

If God sees all time at once, doesn’t that mean he already knows the end? That he already knows what we will do? Otherwise he would have to see it as a line as we do

Another theory I like is that God sees trillions of branches of time, and every time someone makes a decision more branched are discarded

Why discarded and not created? Wouldn’t it have to go both ways

I see another contradiction in the branch idea, namely that it takes away God’s omniscience and makes him uncertain of which path is the future

Because if the branch is created, there is no need for a branch because it means he did not know it in the first place and has forfeited omniscience

The reason for the branches is to try to maintain the concept of omniscience

Just got your other texts. There is no end for god, having an end would put time on a line. i still mulling over the branches… It seems like a lot of waste

The question is, how can I make a decision contrary to God’s omniscience? And if he doesn’t know what I will do, isn’t his omniscience lacking?

You don’t, you can make a decision he wishes he wouldn’t but he already knows what path You’ve chosen

So you believe in destiny after all!