Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass. Most people are good.

Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Thoughts about civilization collapse, Armageddon, etc.

A big blast

Abstract
Scientific and technological progress might change people’s capabilities or incentives in ways that would destabilize civilization. For example, advances in DIY biohacking tools might make it easy for anybody with basic training in biology to kill millions; novel military technologies could trigger arms races in which whoever strikes first has a decisive advantage; or some economically advantageous process may be invented that produces disastrous negative global externalities that are hard to regulate. This paper introduces the concept of a vulnerable world: roughly, one in which there is some level of technological development at which civilization almost certainly gets devastated by default, i.e. unless it has exited the ‘semi-anarchic default condition’. .... A general ability to stabilize a vulnerable world would require greatly amplified capacities for preventive policing and global governance. The vulnerable world hypothesis thus offers a new perspective from which to evaluate the risk-benefit balance of developments towards ubiquitous surveillance or a unipolar world order. -- Nick Bostrom, The Vulnerable World Hypothesis, 2019

Modern industrial civilization rests on a tightly coupled global system that is far more fragile than its everyday normality and false beliefs suggest. Bomb shelters would be temporary before supplies ran out and the ugly reality of civilization collapse would start to bite. Existential risk expert Nick Bostrom’s (Future of Humanity Institute, University of Oxford) Vulnerable World Hypothesis about existential risk and the global vulnerabilities, such as famine, describes the situation. Continuing technological progress in a system with weak global governance creates conditions in which civilization is probably destroyed within a few years once certain destructive human forces spin out of control. Bostrom reasonably argues that preventing potential extinction is a current moral priority.


Fragility of modern civilization
Bostrom’s “Vulnerable World Hypothesis” imagines technological progress as drawing balls from an urn, where a single “black ball” technology (cheap, widely accessible means of mass destruction) can render ordinary levels of social control insufficient to prevent civilizational breakdown. In such a world, the combination of high complexity, global interdependence, and increasing offensive or nuclear capability means that a reasonable default expectation is systemic failure unless unprecedented forms of coordination (global cooperation) or control are achieved. Even short‑term survivors of an all‑out nuclear war could be pushed back to “stone‑age conditions,” with no guarantee that recovery to an advanced state is possible. Bomb shelters are going to be useless once people are forced to leave them to continue to survive.


Psychological reluctance to face harsh outcomes
Many existential risk assessments are flawed because humans are flawed. Humans cannot face harsh realities like civilization collapse. Some of the clearest accounts of why academics and policymakers understate horrible possibilities come from the scholars studying global catastrophic risks. In the opening chapter of Global Catastrophic Risks, Bostrom and Cirković summarize a large literature on cognitive biases such as availability, scope neglect, overconfidence, confirmation bias, and affect heuristics. All of those unconscious biases systematically distorted expert judgment about low‑frequency, high‑impact events. They note that when cataclysmic endings are at stake, a distinctive apocalyptic psychocultural mindset tends to appear. Experts evince either irrational enthusiasm for lethal mass scale catastrophe or, more commonly in respectable institutions, denial, fragmentation, and a refusal to follow scenarios all the way to their logical endpoints. This dovetails with empirical work on nuclear‑war psychology finding widespread avoidance and numbing in the face of annihilation‑scale threats. Link 1, link 2, link 3 


A big little blast


Likely death tolls from collapse
Recent climate–crop models give a concrete sense of the stakes. A 2022 study led by Rutgers researchers, modeling a full‑scale U.S.–Russia nuclear war, found that soot‑driven cooling would reduce global average caloric production by about 90% within three to four years. Their results suggest that more than 5 billion people would die from starvation on top of hundreds of millions of direct casualties, meaning over 75% of humanity would be starving within two years and the great majority dead soon after. Even the smallest scenarios modeled, e.g., regional nuclear exchanges, produce food shocks exceeding any recorded anomaly in United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization data, with catastrophic disruption of global food markets. Bostrom classifies such events as candidates for existential risk not only because of their immediate death toll, but because the survivors may be trapped at permanently lower levels of complexity and productivity, unable to recreate the scientific and industrial base required for long‑term flourishing. Link 4, link 5, link 6, link 7, link 8

In other words, once the complexity of modern civilization shuts down, survivors will not be able to restart it. They will have to rebuild it, pretty much from scratch. That will take decades, maybe a century or two.

A civilizational collapse in which on the order of 90–95% of humans die within months to a few years is not an extravagant outlier estimate. It is close to the median of serious model‑based scenarios for large‑scale nuclear war and related global shocks. The real outlier, as Bostrom and others imply, may be our collective insistence on treating such outcomes as too extreme to discuss clearly and honestly.

Q: Are we morally obligated to try to avoid polluting, poisoning or blowing ourselves and civilization to smithereens, or does the great philosopher Alfred E. Newman have it about right?


Is Donald Trump a Time Traveler?

 Courtesy of NYPost no less:

https://nypost.com/2026/03/13/lifestyle/is-president-trump-a-time-traveler-old-clues-spark-new-conspiracy-theories/


A discovered trove of 100-year-old sketches by Prussian-born artist Charles Dellschau could hold clues that the former president —and his youngest son, Barron— could be hopping through the decades, observers suggest.

Conspiracy buffs are zooming in on the word “TRUMP” scrawled across some of the drawings. Add to that a blonde doodled person steering a craft labeled 45, and theorists’ tinfoil hats are practically melting.

As previously reported by The Post, in the 1890s, Ingersoll Lockwood penned tales featuring a boy named Baron Trump who lived in the lavish Castle Trump and traveled through the weirdest adventures guided by a wise mentor, Don.

In ‘The Last President,’ Lockwood imagined a chaotic New York vote and Fifth Avenue riots — yes, really.

In the author’s tale, President Bryan picks a ‘Pence’ for his cabinet — just like Trump’s former veep Mike Pence.




As per The New Yorker, Donald Trump’s uncle, MIT professor John G. Trump, once reviewed Nikola Tesla’s papers, which conspiracy theorists claim could have included secret time-travel tech.




Friday, March 13, 2026

Transferring precious public lands to ruthless capitalism

The public's precious land
is under MAGA threat


Context
“In my book a pioneer is a man who turned all the grass upside down, strung bob-wire over the dust that was left, poisoned the water, cut down the trees, killed the Indian who owned the land, and called it progress. If I had my way, the land would be like God made it and none of you sons of bitches would be here at all.” 1920 speech by Charles M. Russell to the Montana Pioneers Association in Great Falls, MT

Most American public lands west of the 100th meridian to the east side of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade mountain ranges in California, Oregon and Washington. Nature writer Chris Ketcham described the public lands of the West as being about 450 million acres (~7,031,250 sq mi) of grassland, steppe, desert and forest. It is managed in trust for the American people by the Unites States Bureau of Land Management and Unites States Forest Service. They are grossly underfunded parts the National Park Service which is well funded but controls only about 50 million acres (~78,125 sq mi). In the public's West a person can hike, fish, hunt, raft, ride horseback, roam like the American Indian tribes, and “get lost, stay lost for as long as you wish”.

In the 1930s-1950's, American historian Bernard DeVoto wrote about the public lands of the American West and how they were being used. He called the West “a plundered province”. The West was a resource colony for corporations and absentee landlords that practiced a brutal “economy of liquidation”. He openly attacked the liquidators. He criticized the mining companies, the stockmen, the cattle barons, the oilmen, the clear cutters, and the profiteers of gold rushes, grass rushes and false dreams. DeVoto had a name for the ruthless bankers and congressmen who abetted and profited from the plundering. He called them the Western hogs.

The Western paradox: There always has been a paradox about the public lands of the West that the US government holds in trust for us. DeVoto’s western paradox is that the West loudly denounces “big government” while simultaneously depending on massive federal subsidies, water projects, and public‑lands giveaways to sustain an extractive, boom‑and‑bust economy. He described this aspect of the West as a mindset that imagines itself fiercely independent, but is in fact politically and economically dependent on the federal generosity and power it claims to resist. The paradox always was irrational. It was and still is based mostly on public deceit and ignorance.


MAGA's Western hog plans for the West
An article published in the Feb. 2026 issue of Scientific American, The true worth of America’s public lands, makes clear that the Western hogs mentality is still very much alive and very powerful in MAGAlandia today. The article is based on analysis of winners and losers from more federal land being sold off to private interests.


Extremist MAGA Senator Mike Lee’s (R-UT) Houses Act (HA) would make hundreds of millions of acres of public land eligible for sale. The goal of the HA is cynically smoke screened as “solving” the housing crisis. Selling public lands under the proposed law will not noticeably reduce the cost of homes in the US. But that isn't the goal. Affordable housing is just MAGA's propaganda ploy. The law is marketed as pro–working class, but there are few affordability requirements, no guardrails on who can buy, and few constraints against speculation and luxury development.

The lands that Lee wants to make eligible for privatization are overwhelmingly remote and highly wildfire‑prone. There is very limited accessible low‑risk land. Most of the land is neither safe nor practical for typical residential working families. Clearly, mainstream housing is not MAGA's main goal. Homes built on the main parcels of public lands would mostly be too far from jobs, schools, services, and existing infrastructure. Costs for roads, water, sewer, and power, would necessitate toward high‑end, exurban, or resort‑style housing, not affordable homes for working families (other than the servants working for the rich folks).


As is the norm for MAGA propaganda about the environment, the public lands that HA proposes for sale are called barren wasteland. In reality they are functioning ecosystems that provide pollination, water purification, carbon storage, recreation, and biodiversity. Those benefits are worth billions of dollars annually. Most of that would be obliterated by large‑scale privatization and development. Once again, the Western paradox is clear -- MAGA politicians exploit housing affordability problems to revive long‑standing, unpopular ideas of selling off public lands.

How unpopular? Polling indicates that about 71% of Americans oppose selling existing public lands to private bidders. Majorities across parties and regions oppose the selling. If people polled were aware of the history and MAGA politics here, probably about 80% would oppose the sale of their precious land to Western hogs

Probably the single most potent weapon that authoritarian American MAGA politicians and propagandists use against the public is MAGA disinformation coupled with public ignorance. That is a real democracy killer. 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Hey there, America. How are you doing?

  I'm just checking in because, well, you seem a little down.

About how 50% of you don't like Immigration and Customs Enforcement, to the point that you want to abolish it?

 Like 75% of you have no interest in a little national expansion into Greenland.

And then there's President Donald Trump. Remember him? The guy so many of you voted for in 2024? Well, now it turns out, 60% of you don't like him.

 Also, back in 2024, about three-quarters of you told pollsters that you trusted government health agencies, like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But now only 60% of you do.

You're upset about us bombing Iran (59%). You're not pleased with tariffs (60%). To top it off, the number of you who are optimistic about the future is at a nearly 20-year low.

OK. I have an idea. Instead of dwelling on the gloom and doom, let's talk about positive things. For example, what is it that the United States is doing that makes you proud? What are the things you like about our country? There's musician Bad Bunny, for example. You told the pollsters you like him.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2026/03/06/polls-americans-disapprove-unhappy-trump-policies/89001942007/?tbref=hp


Hmmm, what does SNOWFLAKE like about the country?