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9 votes
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Elected officials, please stop drinking Silicon Valley's kool-aid
4 votes -
‘My son is not the same’: New testimony paints bleak picture of family separation
23 votes -
Industry brands Australia's 10% migration intake drop 'disappointing'
0 votes -
Little upside for Malcolm Turnbull in debate over religious freedom
2 votes -
Cynthia Nixon announces she will run openly as a socialist
29 votes -
Obama Tops Public’s List of Best President in Their Lifetime, Followed by Clinton, Reagan
13 votes -
Why killing Dodd-Frank could lead to the next crash - Eliminating the bill was a top priority for Trump. So why did any Dems vote for it?
11 votes -
Defending democracy a generational struggle, Australian MPs warn
3 votes -
3 Arguments Against Socialism And Why They Fail
20 votes -
‘I can’t afford that’: A viral tweet shows why we need Medicare for all
34 votes -
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan names son-in-law as treasury and finance minister
10 votes -
Scott Pruitt resigns as US Environmental Protection Agency administrator
32 votes -
Marc Elrich edges out David Blair in Democratic primary for Montgomery County executive
5 votes -
Trump administration halts $10.4 billion in health insurance payments
9 votes -
Worried NATO partners wonder if Atlantic alliance can survive Trump. Europeans hope the president who disparages allies and praises autocrats is an aberration but fear problems may run deeper
7 votes -
Letter from a Birmingham museum
2 votes -
The weaknesses and failures of incrementalism
This is a hard topic for me personally, so please be gentle. I am at my core an institutionalist and an incrementalist, so I tend to want to both value and improve institutions through incremental...
This is a hard topic for me personally, so please be gentle. I am at my core an institutionalist and an incrementalist, so I tend to want to both value and improve institutions through incremental (bit-by-bit) change.
A common concern and criticism of people who are impatient with incremental changes is that there would be tons of unintended consequences. While that concern resonates with me, it clearly doesn't seem to resonate with much of anyone else right now.
So in this I feel alone, frankly, and a lot of the reason for that loneliness is because incrementalism seems to have been firmly rebuked by both left and right wing political groups around the world. Help me understand what's happening. Where is incrementalism failing for you? Do you see any role for bit-by-bit change?
The scope of this thread could expand to the high heavens, so please understand how widely varied the examples might be that we each might bring to this discussion.
20 votes -
The tunnel that could break New York
13 votes -
Wikipedia blacked out across Europe in protest against laws that could change the internet forever
18 votes -
EU sends controversial internet copyright reforms back to the drawing board
13 votes -
Uganda just rolled out a five-cent daily tax to access social media
9 votes -
The hopes and dreams of experimentalism
In opposition to the post about incrementalism, I wanted to talk about a truly revolutionary and designed based approached to a policy called experimentalism. When I was a believer in public...
In opposition to the post about incrementalism, I wanted to talk about a truly revolutionary and designed based approached to a policy called experimentalism. When I was a believer in public policy, this was the final stage for which I believed a benevolent state would move towards. Incrementalism doesn't work unless you have a dictatorship or some unchanging party like in the soviet union or China. This is because incremental changes need people to agree with the degree of which to increments and need to have the shared goal to continue adding them. Also, incremental change might bring little effect on their own or even make things worse rather than just enacting what you think is the final policy. It is politically impossible in a democracy. Instead what I argue for is radical experimentalism. This is a position people of radically different ideas can take an appeal to a general audience to test their political ideas on large groups of willing participants to see what effects policy has on them after certain periods of time. Isolating variables to really see what society works best. Regardless of general political will, the evidence wins out as we test ideas in different parts of the state as they compete to see who provides the best results for people. The only thing that is required is a dedication to results based on political decision and commitment to evidence. Lastly, an acknowledgement that we must dive into the unknown to truly find some answers. A scientific approach to policy that is consistent with democratic values and structures. I find that this spirit of democratic education on a societal level is much like John Dewey would have described as really necessary for democracy to continue to function. Without a dedication to experimentalism and skepticism there is no way I see democracy working very well over time if faced with structural problems and public ignorance.
7 votes -
GST overhaul promises $9 billion federal injection to level playing field
1 vote -
Living Rules
Today, I had a dream. In this dream I have confronted the idea that systems are much like entities, they are living creatures of a sort. Just as groups have some selection process that makes them...
Today, I had a dream. In this dream I have confronted the idea that systems are much like entities, they are living creatures of a sort. Just as groups have some selection process that makes them more likely to survive over time so do systems. Rulesets are not made for human beings but for themselves. Sets of rules beget their own continuation. Their constant reproduction. But this is no reason for an individual or a group to submit to a particular ruleset but a reason for them not to submit to her because she has no interest in the specific survival of a group or individual but in the survival of herself. The survival of herself can easily misalign with that of the group and the individual. Rulesets much like the State or other such things are self-interested. And to complete self-interested systems with altruistic systems would be a grave mistake . And since all systems are infact selfish we we cannot conflate the interest of the system with the interests of the people within the system, that would be the fallacy of composition. If a system existed that perfectly aligned its ideals with that of the people that lives under them there would be no need for such a system to be coercive because all would act according to the system regardless. Competing interests of human beings and of different proofs makes such a system impossible. we are then left only to consider the ruleset in decision-making processes but under no obligation to operate in its interest. We are only able to operate on our own.
4 votes -
Poland purges Supreme Court, and protesters take to streets
10 votes -
China's social credit system is controlling foreign companies
12 votes -
Australian states and retail chains ban single-use plastic bags
16 votes -
Former Malaysian PM Najib arrested in $4.5bn 1MDB probe. The investigation focuses on how the money went missing from the state 1MDB fund
5 votes -
Americans Seek to Escape News
19 votes -
It Is Happening Here, Trump Is Already Early-Stage Mussolini
23 votes -
Poland's supreme court constitutional crisis approaches a standoff. The government’s attempt to lower the mandatory retirement age of judges is due to come into effect this week
8 votes -
Anti-union laws associated with significantly more workplace deaths in US states, 1992-2016.
12 votes -
Be It resolved: What you call "political correctness" I call "civility"
I'll level with you right now: I hate both of these terms. "Political Correctness" is a term that gets used by a lot of people to talk about what I would consider to be basic politeness ("don't...
I'll level with you right now: I hate both of these terms.
"Political Correctness" is a term that gets used by a lot of people to talk about what I would consider to be basic politeness ("don't intentionally offend someone if they've made it clear they don't like a word, or would prefer to be referred in a certain way; just try"). I have suspected for a while that what these people typically really mean when they talk about political correctness is a fatigue with feeling like they're being forced to meet standards of politeness that are decided by others, and which they do not share.
"Civility" is a term that gets used just about every way you can imagine. It can mean politeness, it can mean "nonviolent protest," it can mean voting, it can mean only certain kinds of protest, and it can mean meeting decorum (which is a more formal way of saying politeness, but it has its nuanced differences, so I suppose I'll list it, goddamn, twist my arm why don't you). The range of possible meanings makes it pretty annoying, and borderline useless to talk about directly.
The title of this thread is an intentional play on one of my frustrations with a munk debate which was shared about a month ago. I believed the terms were too dependent on who "you" are in the statement. So rather than have them redo the munk debate, I thought we could have one of our own.
I definitely have my own views on this claim (that I'll be sharing below), but this has been such an awkward issue on this site that I think it's worth exploring directly. So explore with me:
- Is there a difference between "political correctness" and "civility"?
- Is either term valuable to society?
- Why the hell are so many people so hot and bothered about these two terms, and also seemingly unable to interact meaningfully with anyone else?
21 votes -
China has refused to recycle the West's plastics. What now?
7 votes -
Facebook chats from planning session of Unite The Right 2 have been leaked
17 votes -
If you could scrap and rewrite the Constitution, what would you do differently? What would you change, add, or remove?
[Serious]
25 votes -
Australian Senate backs loot box investigation
7 votes -
Parliament passes sweeping new foreign influence laws
3 votes -
Politics have always been divisive - A brief discussion on the Journal of Nicholas Cresswell (1774-1777)
2 votes -
Young, progressive, DSA-backed Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez ousted ten-term incumbent in NY primary
31 votes -
The Civility Debate Has Reached Peak Stupidity
23 votes -
Do you think "incivility" can be used as a tool for positive change?
I have been reading a lot of the articles on uncivility. A big complaint is politicians don't like the power it gives people. Which I understand can be bad, but it also seems like for the first...
I have been reading a lot of the articles on uncivility. A big complaint is politicians don't like the power it gives people. Which I understand can be bad, but it also seems like for the first time in a long time, the average person has a way to impact these high powered politicians. Ordinarily there is nothing we can do, we can't touch them when they continually do things not in the best interest of the people they represent. They do shady things, and we have to go with it.
They are arguing uncivility is dangerous because it creates the problem of officials being scared to make decisions based on how they will be impacted. If a judge rules one way, and the masses start making his life hard, they say it isn't really fair to the judge. Which makes sense.
This is the information age. We have access to so much more going on than adults did before us. We actually have platforms to be heard on a large scale. Which means pressuring these people to do right through "uncivility" could be harnessed and used positively to enforce change. If the people making these decisions that are not in our best interest have something to lose, maybe they will finally start doing right by us.
What are your thoughts on this aspect of the uncivility debate going on right now?
16 votes -
Whistleblower leaks video from detention facility where children were threatened against speaking to press
17 votes -
Chinese tech giant Huawei revealed as leading sponsor of travel for Australian MPs
3 votes -
'The Expanse' co-author Daniel Abraham tells the inside story about sci-fi books, TV … and politics
8 votes -
BMW joins Airbus in Brexit warning
8 votes -
Venezuela crisis: UN says security forces killed hundreds
12 votes -
China just handed the world a 111-million-ton trash problem
17 votes -
Ethiopian prime minister vows to stick to reforms after explosion at rally. Abiy Ahmed commented on Addis Ababa blast that killed one and injured more than 100, saying ‘killing others is a defeat’.
7 votes