wcpines

611 posts

wcpines

wcpines

@wcpines

Santa Monica Katılım Ekim 2018
305 Takip Edilen52 Takipçiler
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
@UsingLyft The culture and set of incentives that ensure fathers stick around is the same that reduces incidences like this.
English
0
0
0
91
Pay Roll Manager Here
Pay Roll Manager Here@UsingLyft·
The conservative “we just need fathers in the home” trope just doesn’t stick. He had his son at 21. These men are quick to create children and likely have committed enough crimes prior that they should spend the years that their testosterone is peaking, behind bars. The best way to stop them is to prevent them from. We can pay them to get a vasectomy and make it illegal to reverse it or just leave them in prison long enough they mostly age out of it
End Wokeness@EndWokeness

BREAKING: Father and son arrested in FL for a fatal road rage shooting 14 shots fired, 1 killed, 3 injured

English
10
8
156
6.2K
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
The fact that Apple's native dictation/STT capabilities are not best-in-class, really probably at the bottom of the heap even compared to open source options, is mind boggling to me. It's barely even usable on mobile.
English
0
0
0
5
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
I guess...I guess just conscientiousness. It's good for society.
English
0
0
0
3
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
Ignore me, just read him: x.com/JohannKurtz/st…
Johann Kurtz@JohannKurtz

The rich should leave their wealth to their children, not to charity. Mick Jagger’s announcement that he would not leave his fortune to his children caused much controversy. A chorus of celebrities have announced the same: "I've told them the same thing my dad told me. My dad says, 'When I die, you can expect that I'm going to die broke, and you're going to be paying for the funeral'." — Guy Fieri (net worth ~$100m) "I just think all an inheritance does is breed laziness and entitlement. I worked hard and I'm gonna spend it all and have fun with my husband." — Marie Osmond (net worth ~$20m) "There won't be much money left because we are spending it! We have a lot of commitments. What comes in we spend, and there isn't much left… They have to work." — Sting (net worth ~$550m) "I am determined that my children should have no financial security." — Nigella Lawson (net worth ~$20m) My basic reaction to these statements is disgust. Many of these celebrities are keen to announce to the world that their wealth will go to charity. What is left unsaid, however, is that they intend to spend the rest of their lives living as some of the wealthiest people on earth. They will not release their riches; death will release their riches for them. Their children will experience the change; they will not - but it is of course the parents who secure the applause. These parents are keen to emphasize that they are giving their children the gift of work - it’s for their own good! The parents are, of course, past the need to work - they have already morally ascended, leaving menial work far behind. No: they can relax. Other celebrity parents will tell you that they’re actually continuing to work themselves (…as stewards of their fame and fortunes - ie. things that are enjoyable to work on). The suggestion that their children inherit this stewardship is, of course, ridiculous: young adults must spend years working in meaningless bottom-tier jobs, or else they will be morally ruined. Far better to disperse the estate and to leave the children to fend for themselves. This notion that everything must be broken apart every generation and thrown into the market to churn has a long history in the liberal tradition. Adam Smith - the so called ‘Father of Capitalism’ - railed against entails (legal structures designed to keep estates intact across generations). "Entails are disadvantageous to the improvement of the country, and these lands where they have never taken place are always best cultivated. Heirs of entailed estates have it not in their view to cultivate lands and often they are not able to do it. A man who buys land has this entirely in view and in general the new purchasers are the best cultivators." — Adam Smith, Lectures on Jurisprudence Like our celebrities, Smith’s view was predicated on the notion of the importance of 'the work'. Continuously breaking inter-generational structures ensured maximum productivity as hungry new generations sought to secure a fortune for themselves. In Smith’s view, nothing should be sacred or spared from this churn. The market should extend into all domains; productivity is held in higher regard than ‘absurd’ and outdated traditions. Royal forests - wild environments preserved for the excellence of hunting across generations - were a prime example of something that must be destroyed in order to unlock productivity. "…in all the great monarchies of Europe there are still many large tracts of land which belong to the crown. They are generally forest… a mere waste and loss of country in respect both of produce and population. In every great monarchy of Europe the sale of the crown lands would produce a very large sum of money… When the crown lands had become private property, they would, in the course of a few years, become well improved and well cultivated." — Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations Gone are the royal forests, but think of the agri-businesses that could replace them! I regard this view as entirely autistic. Hopefully this is self-evident, but to this I will return. Many celebrities reassure us that although they are not giving their children their inheritance, they are giving them the gift of a first-class upbringing and education. Let’s play out the consequences of this. Now, instead of a young adult with a first-class upbringing and education gradually taking stewardship of the family estate - a position of influence from which they could positively affect the lives of many people - they will be forced to pursue a lucrative career in order to continue their family lifestyle. Fantastic! The world just gained another financier, lawyer, or management consultant. It is often asked where all the great academic geniuses - the philosophers and scientists whose names echo in history - have gone. Why are we no longer producing them? Part of the answer is surely that our generation’s geniuses design algorithmic trading technologies and social media attention-maximization tools. They have (logically) chosen to maximize the production of the wealth that they were not given. Gone are the gentlemen polymaths. Instead, academia is a desperate, all-out war for funding, with dubious proposals and grant manipulation taking more time and energy than self-funded inquiry pursued for its own sake. The notion that the moral quality of our elites is improved by laundering them through the job market is absurd. A lifetime of spreadsheet work does not make you a better person. Especially if you feel resentful at being robbed of your inheritance. In fact, what is often happening is that bad celebrity parents are attempting to outsource the cultivation of the virtues of discipline and ambition to the job market, rather than succeeding in inculcating these virtues as a parent. The false virtue of ‘work-for-work’s-sake’ is an attempt at mitigating bad parenting. Deep down, celebrity parents realize their failure to raise children worthy of power, who can be trusted to be good stewards of their inheritance, and so the parents cut the children off in the bud. But society will always have elites. If one generation hamstrings their children from taking its place - someone else will fill the elite vacuum. The actual effect of this hamstringing is to ensure that our societal elites are perpetually first-generation wealth - ie. the latest obsessive fund manager or entrepreneur to take his morally-dubious tech product to IPO. The tyranny of the nouveau riche. Would Britain be a better place if the royal family sold everything they owned and gave the proceeds to a climate charity? Buckingham Palace could serve as a museum for hordes of half-interested Spanish schoolchildren to visit, or perhaps a nice second home for a Ukranian oligarch who earned his wealth! Yes, the British people would lose one of the cornerstones of their culture, identity, history, and place in the world - but think of the solar panels we could build! Prince William could go and become an optician and become a better person. In fact, why stop there? Why should the British people benefit unjustly from their cultural inheritance and enjoy the sight of lavish, unnecessary palaces which occupy huge parts of valuable real estate in Central London? If we level them, we could sell that land and build a second financial district (which could meritocratically employ the next generation of self-made men) and give the proceeds to the Gates Foundation, so they can do whatever it is that they’re doing (I’m told it advances ‘human flourishing!) Unfortunately, this kind of faceless ‘charity’ removes the donating celebrities from any kind of personal contact with the needy, and any kind of personal responsibility, privation, or work. Wealth is just vaguely diffused after death, a last self-satisfied gasp. Ultimately: do you trust a faceless organization more than your child? If so - what does that say about the family you have built? One of the key drivers of this process is the modern ‘capitalization’ of wealth. The very rich now hold the majority of their wealth in intangible financial assets rather than land. This has significantly warped how these families think about wealth, driving detachment from personal ties and responsibilities. If the end goal of wealth generation is to end up with liquid, fungible assets (stocks, shares, investment portfolios), then the nature of the business you build does not matter: it is just being built to be sold. It will not be a multi-generational family business, determining the competencies and destinies of your descendants - it will be sold on the secondary markets within half a decade of being founded. Who cares if it’s fundamentally meaningless or unhealthy? Conversely, if this wealth was held in land, and a single family was tethered to that land across generations, it becomes natural to consider definite, physical, local, personal projects to meaningfully improve the beauty and health of the society around oneself. A landed inheritance is not just wealth, it is history, responsibility, leadership, and the dependence of the surrounding community. Anything that requires multi-generational education to appreciate and support, like the fine arts - ballet, music, etc. - wither and gradually disappear. Nurturing the heights of civilizational refinement is a non-trivial responsibility. What cannot wholly disappear, like the buildings of the great estates, becomes lifeless and ossified, becoming museum pieces rather than elements of a living culture. But no: our celebrities choose discontinuity between father and son, between one generation and the next. No shared responsibility and destiny, just a total reset to individualization. At the deepest level, the issue is that our society no longer has a conception of what an elite man or family is supposed to do; what their values, responsibilities, roles, and teleology are. What aging celebrities are really conceding is that they have built nothing of substance, nothing that is worth keeping together, nothing worth protecting. They have made no contribution to what Burke called the ‘ballast of the commonwealth’. Burke’s defense of the preservation of the estates of the great families of the 18th century illustrates how far we have fallen and how much we have lost. Contrast the following to today’s elites: "The power of perpetuating our property in our families is one of the most valuable and interesting circumstances belonging to it, and that which tends the most to the perpetuation of society itself. It makes our weakness subservient to our virtue; it grafts benevolence even upon avarice. The possessors of family wealth, and of the distinction which attends hereditary possession (as most concerned in it) are the natural securities for this transmission. Let those large proprietors be what they will, and they have their chance of being amongst the best, they are at the very worst, the ballast in the vessel of the commonwealth." — Edmund Burke, Reflections on The Revolution in France Instead, we have abstracted all agency away from humans and into a depersonalized system - and that system is failing. Our society deserves a better class of elite. 3 "Society is indeed a contract… It is to be looked on with other reverence… As the ends of such a partnership cannot be obtained in many generations, it becomes a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born. Each contract of each particular state is but a clause in the great primaeval contract of eternal society, linking the lower with the higher natures, connecting the visible and invisible world, according to a fixed compact sanctioned by the inviolable oath which holds all physical and all moral natures, each in their appointed place… The municipal corporations of that universal kingdom are not morally at liberty at their pleasure, and on their speculations of a contingent improvement, wholly to separate and tear asunder the bands of their subordinate community, and to dissolve it into an unsocial, uncivil, unconnected chaos of elementary principles." — Edmund Burke, Reflections on The Revolution in France If you enjoyed this essay, please do me a huge favor by liking, retweeting, and subscribing. - Johann

English
0
0
1
19
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
This strikes me as like asking why one would want one's progeny to be healthy. It's just self-evidently good. It's not like the healthy food and sporting activities a kid is subjected to by his parents necessarily makes him eschew eating well or going to the gym later in life. Done properly, generational wealth is stability, charity, creativity, and virtue extended through time. @JohannKurtz is the one to read on this topic. But great families build up and contribute to society. The thing that confers wealth upon each successive generation is also the thing which provides opportunity, conveys virtue, moral enrichment etc (e.g. being included in a family business early on, and being taught to think longterm, to lower time preference, to become a shrewd judge of character when making hiring decisions, to consider the duties one holds as an employer etc).
Sulla@spqr_sulla

Not a stupid question. What actually is the purpose of generational wealth? Obviously if you’re deeply impoverished and suffering daily you don’t want your kids to end up like that, but once you have secured the basis of say a middle class life, is the goal that they never have to work?

English
1
0
2
34
Lars Andersen
Lars Andersen@LarsAnders1620·
The few seconds of video that was recorded before the power was cut:
English
51
413
8.4K
8.4M
Lars Andersen
Lars Andersen@LarsAnders1620·
Police go directly for the circuit breaker panel to avoid being filmed This post will be in English, because there apparently is a lot of interest in what happened to me yesterday. I'm a libertarian danish privacy activist and former police officer and I have been doing activism for about 15 years. I have had a bit of time to think about my arrest and the actions of the masked police that broke down my door - with no prior warning. The prefece to the story is, that I in a kind of roundabout and (I think) humorous way published "my two favorite numbers" by spelling out a 10 diget and a 8 diget number with letters. I didn't tell what they ment, but they where prime minister Mette Frederiksen's social security and phone number. I also published a screenshot of me trying to interview Mette Frederiksen on what app, asking her about her wanting to ban encryption (CSA) and introducing mass surveillance via granting the police intelligence services access to all sorts of information (medical journals, social media posts, DNA registers ment for research and so on). That resulted in me being arrested by armed and masked police breaking down my door without me having any chance of opening it for them. When the two civilian dressed masked men entered the apparentment one of them immediately went for the circuit breaker panel to shut off the power to my router. They then removed my Google Nest cameras - because they knew that the cameras contains local storage. That way they could avoid having video of the (in my view) illegal arrest. Only the few moments before the power is cut was filmed. There is video of me asking them for the charges - and them refusing to tell me (which is illegal). But I can't access it, because they took the cameras. I'm not even sure if that is legal. In Denmark it is (nominally) totally legal to film the police. That way it is possible to know what happened and it's not just your word against there's. Denmark and the West are moving in the wrong direction, and it makes me sad.
Lars Andersen tweet media
English
154
2K
13.5K
365.4K
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
The people who decry your life as a facade, possible only through privilege and wealth, are possessed by the very ideology that made 1-income homes and full time homemaking an endangered species (now mostly out of reach). They have 0 historical awareness. In fact, some progressives even used to talk about this
wcpines tweet media
English
0
1
3
226
Jesse Genet
Jesse Genet@jessegenet·
What I’ve learned from some recent publicity is “tradwife” as an accusation can be distilled down to two attributes - not hating your husband - not hating motherhood 🤣
English
30
16
582
23.5K
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
@growing_daniel Homebrew was how probably hundreds of thousands of people installed programs and languages for a maybe a decade. I dunno, he created substantial value for all of software development for years. I still use it.
English
4
1
1.2K
52.5K
Daniel
Daniel@growing_daniel·
remember that time the guy who invented homebrew was furious he got turned down for an eng job so he posted about how this company turned down the guy who invented homebrew, then everyone was like dude homebrew sucks
English
115
65
8K
557.2K
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
@pegobry_en Literally all she had to do was cut the first 21 seconds.
English
0
0
0
8
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
*Mumble* rap. But who cares. It sucks.
English
0
0
0
8
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
Most people, whatever their political stripe, have no taste. In fact most people in *every class* have no taste these days. But some people, especially more traditional types (and also just those with any sense), rightly prefer the aesthetics of the elite class from a previous era. Charlie Parker was fairly avant-garde. I prefer bebop to bumble rap. And I prefer almost anything over brutalist architecture.
i/o@avidseries

Bottom line is that when it comes to art and design the American right are hicks. They have either bad or retrograde taste in almost everything. Anything new or challenging or innovative or relevant to the zeitgeist terrifies them. It's the curse of low Big 5 openness.

English
1
0
1
41
wcpines
wcpines@wcpines·
@dickclucas Makes sense in a way. Many of them, in fact, are not actually American.
English
0
0
0
10