Sounds like the TV show Arrow on the CW network.   DW used to be Country
Western and Arrow used to be the "Green Arrow" comic books when I was a kid.
The US is a lot bigger and more integrated and things are a lot more
difficult to do than any of these folks realize.     Remember all of those
stories about Cuban Invasion "Amerika, Amerika" and more recently North
Koreans invading Seattle.    All paranoid ideas thought up by TV dummies
selling paranoia to Rubes.   Remember the population of Canada and all of
that space.      I could see it happening in lower populations but we have
good weather, even with climate change and a large population even though
the parasites at the top are trying to castrate it. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 2:14 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Hijacking democracy

 

Pirates?  The rich'll hire enough of the poor to make sure they have a
strong private army or they'll start an anti-pirating insurance company or
they'll hire some of the pirates to go after other pirates.  You can bet
they'll think of something.  Whatever they do, the super-rich will be OK,
it's the rest of us that'll be swimming in mud puddles.

 

Ed

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Ray Harrell <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION'
<mailto:[email protected]>  

Cc: [email protected] 

Sent: Saturday, March 16, 2013 9:21 PM

Subject: Re: [Futurework] Hijacking democracy

 

Two things.   Whose going to protect them in the Caribbean from the pirates?
How about that 10,000 pounds of TNT for every man woman and child on the
planet, in our nuclear arsenal?

 

Second:  Why do you think the underclass, that was absorbed by the
Republican Party as a Southern Strategy,  has been buying up all of those
Assault Weapons and that ammunition?   They don't figure the Liberals are
coming after them.  They figure it will be the banks like before.  But with
FDR in sight, you protect your own with your neighbors helping.   Why are
they blowing up cars with Bazookas and practicing at the gun range every
weekend?    Not only in Oklahoma but in upstate New York as well. 

 

Interestingly, this is from a conservative Likud connected Newpaper in
Israel. 

 <http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7440,L-4099803,00.html>
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7440,L-4099803,00.html

 

It sort of screams for someone to treat them as a surrogate for the 300 non
Jewish Billionaires who are screwing the CPAC folks.   Note they stayed away
from Trump's speech in droves.   Bragging.    That's the way the State of
Oklahoma killed all of those rich Osage oil barons.   Someone bragged out in
public and the public heard and passed laws about white folks becoming the
"guardians" of rich Indians.    After that, the richest minority in the
world began dying one at a time and poets began to sing about our demise.
"Alas for them, their day is O'er." 

 

Also, what is this about that this population bubble in two one billion
member religions not being seriously questioned?     We ban abortions and
birth control and global weather change makes the food chain unstable and we
have a large elder class (you and me).    Then we blame it on Social
Security since I am already supposed to be dead.   The Cherokee Myths about
the origin of death have to do with over population.    

 

We've been here before and that is why, before the Christians came, we had
sensible birth and child care programs handled by the Mother's clan.   Now
we have a new version of Feudalism of the Euro variety.    

 

Assault weapons in the hands of the poor and many more children.    Maybe
that collapse will happen faster and maybe the wealthy will not be fast
enough.    I don't own a gun.   Don't care to live in that world.   The
Spirit is Eternal or it won't matter. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Saturday, March 16, 2013 3:11 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Hijacking democracy

 

> Positive feedback, unless it triggers some countervailing negative
> feedback mechanism, leads inevitably to runaway.

 

And:

 

> As the article mentions,
> 
>    Historically, prosperous societies tend to fall apart under the
>    burden of widening inequality.  But gaping disparities in wealth
>    and income are rarely the cause of their unraveling, at least not
>    directly. It's the nexus between economic and political inequality
>    that ultimately tears at the social fabric of a nation.

 

It's probably that the rich and powerful who are in control want too much
and expect too much.  In one of his books (forget which) Thomas Homer-Dixon
cites this as having been the primary reason for the collapse of Rome.  The
wealth producers of Rome simply couldn't produce enough to support the vast
apparatus that was needed to hold the empire together at maximum expansion.
The collapse of the Soviet Union is another example.  The operation of the
planning/producing system was enormously costly and the costs kept growing.
Then along came events like the Afghan war, and the economy simply couldn't
produce enough to afford that on top of a worsening domestic productive
system.  Collapse was inevitable.

 

What about the US?  One reads about the enormous and growing gap between the
1% and the 99% and increasingly between the 0.1? percent and 99.9%  One also
reads about the enormous fiscal and private debt.  And, like ancient Rome,
the US has huge foreign commitments which are bound to keep growing given
the rise of wealth and power in parts of the world that are no longer that
dependent on or friendly to Americans.  One can see a collapse coming, not
necessarily a sudden one but a prolonged downward gyration toward a far less
wealthy and probably chaotic bottom.  I don't think the 1% will care very
much.  They will have taken their wealth to some safe haven, perhaps in the
Caribbean or, if necessary, to some island way down in the south Atlantic.

 

Ed 


 

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: "Mike Spencer" < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

To: < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

Sent: Saturday, March 16, 2013 11:28 AM

Subject: [Futurework] Hijacking democracy

 

> 
> Ed wrote:
> 
>> The richer rich and the poorer poor, and never the twain shall meet
>> -- not in the US anyway.
>>
>>
<http://www.alternet.org/economy/new-study-finds-wealthy-are-different-us?&p
aging=off>
http://www.alternet.org/economy/new-study-finds-wealthy-are-different-us?&pa
ging=off
> 
> No one ever seems to mention that this is a classic case of positive
> feedback, a concept we've had at hand (and the catastrophic
> consequences of which we've known about) at least since Norbert Wiener.
> 
> Negative feedback has been understood for centuries and the classic
> iconic example is the centrifugal governor seen on old steam engines.
> In biological systems, it's what makes biology stable enough to
> survive and propagate and occurs at many points at the molecular
> level.  It is arguably what keeps climate as stable as it has been
> for a few millennia.
> 
> Positive feedback, unless it triggers some countervailing negative
> feedback mechanism, leads inevitably to runaway.  If global warming
> leads to melting of tundral or marine methane hydrate, then as Pete
> observed,
> 
> pv> ...with global warming, clathrates are likely to start
> pv> spontaneously dissolving, throwing huge amounts of methane into
> pv> the air with its huge boost to greenhouse effect.
> 
> That's a positive feedback effect leading, at least potentially, to
> runaway.
> 
> The accumulation of great wealth and the attendant power it typically
> confers is, in the absence of countervailing effects, a case of
> positive feedback.
> 
> From the article Ed cited:
> 
>    "When politics gets thus hijacked," write Acemoglu and Robinson,
>    "inequality of opportunity follows, for the hijackers will use
>    their power to gain special treatment for their businesses and
>    tilt the playing field in their favor and against their
>    competitors."
> 
>    With the field so tilted, those at the top continue to grab a
>    greater share of income, and more political clout, which leads to
>    the vast majority of us losing not only an opportunity to climb
>    the economic ladder, but also our collective voice. The "best
>    bulwark" against this vicious cycle, according to the authors, is
>    to make sure "that those whose rights and interests will be
>    trampled on have a say and can prevent it."
> 
> That's what we've done traditionally.  I'm weak on history but I think
> numerous ancient societies (as well as those less ancient, of the sort
> that we cavalierly call "primitive") have had social imperatives,
> often religious ones back by supernatural sanctions, that imposed
> duties on those who accumulated great wealth, duties that typically
> reduced their great wealth. Sacrifice, tithes, potlatch inter alia.
> More recently, we've had graduated income tax, luxury tax,
> pre-Citizens United restraint of political funding etc. All of these
> disparate traditions and measures emerged from circumstances of
> relative political or social equality or at least notional
> equitability. [1]
> 
> As the article mentions,
> 
>    Historically, prosperous societies tend to fall apart under the
>    burden of widening inequality.  But gaping disparities in wealth
>    and income are rarely the cause of their unraveling, at least not
>    directly. It's the nexus between economic and political inequality
>    that ultimately tears at the social fabric of a nation.
> 
> With that nexus increasingly obstructing the erection of a "best
> bulwark" to which the authors allude, perhaps we should deviate from
> the traditional approach of detecting paths to imbalanced wealth and
> power and simply erecting hurdles and speed bumps on them.
> 
> Maybe we should look to ways that those who enjoy a deficit of
> political or financial power in conventional terms can engender
> negative feedback mechanisms.  We already have some of those, of
> course. Thieves and fraudsters target property of the wealthy,
> reducing the imbalance.  Robbers target the wealthy in person,
> reducing motivation to be wealthy. But the wealthy have been prompt to
> impose severe disincentives for participating in such negative feedback
> schemes.
> 
> What might we do, what viral meme might we create and disseminate,
> that would eventuate in a mechanism of negative feedback on wealth
> accumulation? A mechanism that is distributed (because that prevents
> effective retaliation or suppression [2]), motivated and effective?
> How do we DDOS [2] the upper strata of the wild-FIRE [3] with some
> contagion that causes each gain above some threshold to trigger a loss
> greater than the gain?
> 
> It is a dogma of the right that any restraint on greed will lead to
> collapse or at least to an Ayn Randian secession of the (putatively)
> great and wise.  But a centrifugal governor doesn't make a steam
> engine *stop*, y'know.  It just diverts steam from the cylinders at
> some speed threshold such that the whole shebang doesn't fly apart.
> If a direct confrontation or regulation is a governor-type mechanism
> that is now no longer implementable, what distributed one might serve
> the same purpose?
> 
> 
> FWIW,
> - Mike
> 
> 
> 
> [1] Alright, that's a bare-faced assertion, offered without support,
>    for the sake of rhetoric. Argument and analysis will, IMHO,
>    substantially modify but not contradict it.
> 
> [2] Compare DDOS, Distributed Denial Of Service, attacks on a computer
>    system by entraining hundreds or thousands of widely distributed
>    computers to send a few packets each to the target host. Defense
>    is problematic for the victim because of the distributed nature of
>    the attack.
> 
> [3] Finance, insurance and real estate, the support base for runaway
>    power.  
> 
> -- 
> Michael Spencer                  Nova Scotia, Canada       .~. 
>                                                           /V\ 
>  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
/( )\
>  <http://home.tallships.ca/mspencer/> http://home.tallships.ca/mspencer/
^^-^^
> _______________________________________________
> Futurework mailing list
>  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
>  <https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework>
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
>

  _____  

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to