Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass.

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.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Democracy failure update: GOP voter suppression laws are still in progress

In states where the Republican Party is in control, the New York Times reports about a slew of new voter suppression laws are aiming at suppressing disabled voters from voting. This is a big deal because there are about 38 million voters who are disabled. That is a big voting block. The GOP aims to make voting for as many of the disabled as hard as they can. Some of the proposed laws are rather creative in the barriers that are being put in place. 

For example, in Texas the legislature is planning a special session to pass laws that would disproportionately affect people with disabilities. One Texas bill bans drive-through voting, further limits absentee voting, and it would allow poll watchers video record voters as possible evidence of wrongdoing. The intent is to give Republican poll watchers a chance to allege that legal accommodations such as a poll worker helping a disabled voter complete a ballot, or a blind voter using a screen reader, is fraud. The law makes it a felony to commit this kind of “vote fraud.” The NYT writes on this tactic:
Breaking these rules would be a felony — a characteristic of bills in several states that advocates said could discourage people from helping friends or neighbors.

“It’s made organizations like ours start questioning, ‘Should we do that?’ because a simple mistake on our end could put them in jeopardy and our organization in jeopardy,” said Chase Bearden, deputy executive director of the Coalition of Texans With Disabilities. “That’s a pretty chilling effect.”
Indeed, being accused of committing felony vote fraud just for helping someone to vote would be chilling. That is the Republican intent. In recent elections, demands from the disabled community have increasingly exerted pressure on politicians to respond. But after the 2020 election where mail-in voting helped the disabled turn out in large numbers, new GOP voter suppression laws are threatening their rights in an attempt to limit their political influence. Similar measures are being advanced in the Georgia and Wisconsin legislatures.

In Florida, new absentee ballot applications rules required that people must apply every election cycle instead of every two elections. That imposes a significant obstacle because many counties’ websites are inaccessible to people with disabilities. In addition, people who have a hard time controlling their hand writing, e.g., people with visual impairment or brain injury, can be subject to signature verification challenges at the polls.

The Republican Party is clearly not yet finished with its intense nationwide campaign of voter suppression and vote subversion. It is probably the best tactic the GOP has to keep a minority of Republicans in power against the will of all Americans who want to vote.

The big question is how effective will Republican efforts to subvert democracy work? The elections in 2022 and 2024 should shed some light.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Environment update: Maine tries to shift recycling costs from taxpayers to plastics producers

Plastic waste - mostly not recyclable 


A Washington Post article discusses an attempt by the state of Maine to shift disposal and recycling costs to waste producers. Not surprisingly, producers staunchly oppose this move. This was prompted by the refusal of China to accept plastic waste for recycling. Recycling is more mirage than reality. Only about 9% of plastic waste is recyclable. The concept of recycling plastic has always been an oil and chemical industry lie. The concept was heavily sold propaganda to get Americans to be deceived into psychological comfort with single-use plastics. WaPo writes:
“It’s good that the bottom fell out,” said Rep. Nicole Grohoski (D-Ellsworth), the bill’s Democratic sponsor, whose district includes Trenton. She doesn’t believe the old system of shipping products halfway around the world to China made sense as countries try to reduce their carbon footprints.

“We have to face this problem and use our own ingenuity to solve it,” Grohoski said.

The proposed legislation, which is vehemently opposed by representatives for Maine’s retail and food producing industries, would charge large packaging producers for collecting and recycling materials as well as for disposing of non-recyclable packaging. The income generated would be reimbursed to communities like Trenton to support their recycling efforts. EPR [extended producer responsibility] programs already exist in many states for a variety of toxic and bulky products including pharmaceuticals, batteries, paint, carpet and mattresses. At least a dozen states, from New York to California and Hawaii, have been working on similar bills for packaging.

“Ten years ago, this would have been unthinkable,” said Dylan de Thomas, vice president of external affairs at the Recycling Partnership, who said he is seeing far more openness to EPR bills from such corporate giants as Coca-Cola and Unilever than in the past.

“It’s a reflection of the pressure they are seeing from corporate investors,” said de Thomas, who anticipates there may be similar shifts in national policies.

The plastic waste problem is worsening, if what one sees in grocery stores is an indicator. Smaller amounts of product means more waste per unit or ounce of product. A vast array, dozens or hundreds, of snacks and prepared foods are now available, mostly in single use, mostly non-recyclable packaging. Thousands and thousands of plastic water and beverage bottles. Just look at all the plastics in grocery stores and snack shops. Little of it is recyclable. So, off to the landfill or onto the streets the plastic goes.

Questions: Should the cost of recycling be pushed onto producers because they are the ones who generate the waste and tricked us into getting used to it? Or are us consumers responsible for dealing with plastic waste because we buy it? 

At present, people toss glass and plastic liquid bottles out and there's not enough deposit fee incentive to recycle. Would getting rid of plastic containers for water and beverages and replacing that with glass bottles, maybe with a non-trivial deposit fee for each bottle, be too inconvenient for most Americans to accept? 

Producers argue that costs to consumers would increase as producers pass the costs through. Opponents deny that. Is it better to do nothing or try to reduce plastic waste?


How to persuade others

Robert Cialdini


Introduction and some context
The NPR program Freakonomics Radio Book Club broadcast an interview with social psychologist Robert Cialdini, professor emeritus of Psychology and Marketing at Arizona State University. Cialdini is a leading expert on persuasion science, i.e., what sensory inputs leads people to be susceptible to persuasion by others. He just published an updated and expanded 2021 edition of his 1984 classic book, Influence: The Psychology of PersuasionThe 50 minute Book Club interview is here

The influence of Cialdini's original 1984 book is evidenced by the fact that marketers and manipulators the world over have used his book as a source of manipulation inspiration. Cialdini got interested in persuasion science after he became self-aware that he was being manipulated and controlled by all sorts of influence peddlers. He was baffled about why he was such a sucker. In the new edition of his book, Cialdini acknowledges what he unleashed as weapons for bad guys, e.g., dictators. demagogues, liars, deceivers, emotional manipulators, etc. To acknowledge what his book unleashed on all of us, he tries to deal with innate human badness and evil by adding a new chapter to the old book that focuses on the ethics of improper or immoral persuasion. 

Obviously, pointing to ethics is not going to faze demagogues, dictators, deceivers, etc. in the slightest. American commerce and politics is far past the point of meaningful ethics in this regard. The only meaningful ethics left are the rule of law and caveat emptor. Unfortunately those lines of defense are crumbling in real time before our eyes. But, at least Cialdini gives ethics (morality) the good 'ole college try. He correctly points out that all or nearly all information can be used for good, bad, frivolous, crime, altruism, truth telling, oppression, bigotry, deceit and whatever else specific information can be used for. 

Note that specific information includes social behavior. Humans are social creatures and most of us act accordingly but unconsciously on social cues most of the time. 

Based on the interview, my read on Caialdini’s current mindset and new book is that he is an astute intellectual successor who builds on a combination of (i) the 1910s-1970s master propagandist Edward Bernays (Crystallizing Public Opinion, 1923) and his contemporary and successor propagandists, and (ii) sociologist Peter Berger (Invitation to Sociology, 1963) and his social science predecessors, cohort and successors, including prominent cognitive and social science researchers of the human mind and/or politics such as Daniel Khaneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow, 2011), Philip Tetlock, (Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction, 2015) Johnathan Haidt (The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion, 2012), Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels (Democracy for Realists: Why Elections do not Produce Responsive Governments, 2016) and others.


Some examples
To try to keep this fairly short (readable) but still meaningful, a couple of examples are probably best to use. According to Cialdini, the art of invoking a mostly mindless state of compliance and belief boils down to appeal to a few innate human biases, or “principles.” Marketers and political, religious, and economic propagandists routinely resort to these biases. Some readers here may recall the human bias list or codex I used to use to try to point out the messiness of how the unconscious human mind thinks.

 

For purposes of understanding influence or persuasion, ignore that list. Cialdini finds there are just seven unconscious biases or “levers of influence” that professional marketers, recruiters, propagandists and the like need to appeal to in their quest for money, power, recruits, deceit, sex and other fun goals. Without some explanation, these won't make much or any sense, but here's the list anyway: reciprocation, liking (~ the halo effect), social proof, authority, scarcity, commitment and consistency, and unity. Proper invocation of any of those seven tends to lead to a distinct, unconscious (automatic) “mindless compliance” in some or most people. People tend to just say “yes” without first thinking when any one of the seven levers of influence (psychological principles) are applied to them.


Reciprocity
Cialdini did three years of research by posing as a trainee in training programs in different industries. Within 6 months, he perceived all the levers of influence that professionals use in their training programs. He got these people to willingly tell him their secret techniques by applying the reciprocity lever. As one might imagine, professional politicians, trainers and recruiters usually don't want people to know how they get people to say yes. Marketers don’t want customers to know how they have been played into buying something they might not have bough if they weren’t manipulated. Demagogues, dictators and autocrats absolutely do not want people to know that they are being played and manipulated.

Reciprocity boils down to this: people instinctively want to give back what has been given to them in terms of behavior. Reciprocity is universal across cultures. What did Cialdini give the experts that, with 100% effectiveness, got the professional persuaders to spill their guts and knowingly tell their secrets of persuasion? He told them he was just a university professor doing research and not a real trainee. He said he came to the real experts to learn from them. Cialdini gave the professionals something, flattery in this case, and in return Cialdini freely got the information he wanted. 

Gifts from pharmaceutical company salespeople to prescribing doctors effectively induces the doctors to prescribe more of the company’s drugs. The gift can be a a free lunch to the doctor or their office staff. Research has also documented the same phenomenon with legislators. Gifts or donations to legislators induces them to give something back. A key point about reciprocity and the other six levers is that a small thing used as the lever tends to net a significantly larger return. 


Social proof
Here, social behavior is at play. If we perceive, correctly or not, that lots of other people more or less like us are doing something or believe something, the tendency is to do or believe the same. One study found the only thing that affected whether people would wear a mask in public during the COVID pandemic was whether most other people around them were wearing masks. Whether people believed the virus was a serious or not, or spread by air and masks reduce infection rate, did not matter. The only thing that mattered (made a statistically significant difference) was what other people were doing.

Research has now shown that in general, people who watch a presidential debate on TV are significantly swayed by audience applause. Whether a candidate the audience applauds is informed or not or is a crackpot or not doesn't matter. What matters is audience reaction. The human mind evolved to be responsive to the behavior of others and to fall in line with that behavior. 

Social proof is reflected in the presence of hired responders or “clacks” in theater, opera and other audiences. The responders enthusiastically act (laugh, cry, applaud, shout for an encore, etc.) to get the whole audience to respond similarly. Professional clacks are hired for their specific abilities, crying on cue or infectious laughing on cue, etc.

Social proof was a significant part of what got the German people to go along with the Nazis. We all know how that worked out. Social proof in places where people tend to refuse to get vaccinated, e.g., states that voted for T****, lead others in the state to not get vaccinated. 

Cialdini calls the social proof that the internet easily generates a “big, big problem.” Society has not caught up to the reality that they are being played in real life and in online life, in politics and most everything else. For example, the most persuasive number of stars in 5 star online produce or service reviews, e.g., Yelp, is 4.2 to 4.7. Five stars is too good for credibility. Smart businesses know how to get the average rating to the sweet spot.

Social proof for the public good sometimes backfires. Too many public service ads or news items that emphasize suicides or mass shootings tends to increase suicides and mass shootings. A notices at a national park entrance that people should not take artifacts because too many people are taking artifacts, leads some to want to take some artifacts before they are all gone. 


Question: Since social proof in pro-T**** states is a significant part of what leads people in those states to not wear a mask and not get vaccinated, is that mostly the fault of T**** and his anti-COVID propagandists, or mostly the fault of affected people because they are responsible for their own arguably stupid or bad behavior?

Saturday, June 12, 2021

As monkeys see, I find that monkeys will do…

 


Strong personalities rule the world. What do I mean by “strong personalities”?  I mean “leader types” versus “follower types.”  Without follower types, leader types would be up the infamous creek without a paddle, and with no one to follow them. Leaders need willing followers to, for better or worse, get their positive/negative agendas passed. 

This phenomenon can be seen in all walks of life. From office politics to world stage politics, strong personalities set the tone for the rest of us. In every office I’ve ever worked in, and I’ve worked in many, I’ve seen it in action. If our office had a positive influential (strong personality) leader, things ran smoothly. If we had a negative influential (strong personality) leader, hardly anyone got along, and everyone pretty much hated their job. Just as the media can, I believe strong personalities can “make or break” any system, in that way.

Let’s look at the world stage now. Take the last five-ish (I’d call them hellish) years. What’s happened to the U.S. society with the strong negative influential leadership in Trump?  (When I say "negative," I believe I speak for the bulk of the world here, according to international polls.)  What’s happened is that we’ve devolved; taken those “two steps back” versus any single steps we’ve managed to take forward up until now. And why?  Because of a negative influential strong personality leader in one Donald J. Trump.  

Like the dysfunctional office, we are not happy campers.  Everyone is suspicious of everyone else.  No one wants to work together toward common goals. We all “want out” from the “opposing thumb” of the other.  But we can’t get out (of the world). It’s our permanent “office.”  

So where am I going with all this?  Well, I want to know what YOU think is the fix to our status quo:

First, do you think the status quo even needs fixing?  If yes, where do we find positive strong personalities to lead us out of the dysfunction?  

Do you see Biden, now, as the strong Yin to counter Trump's ongoing nasty Yang?  Or, has Biden no hope of undoing the influence of a heretofore strong negative personality leader?  

Has the cement now hardened and any “positive influence ship” has sailed, never to return back to port?  Where is our Roy Cohn Hundredth Monkey to save us?  If s/he exists, who is that influential positive leader?

Thanks for posting and recommending.

Friday, June 11, 2021

The Cost of the Reset

As I build and write code for little smart gadgets I wonder how much of this work will become swept up and destroyed along with all the rest of everything in the wake of what is coming.


My little Library of Alexandria, yours, your family's - they're about to burn.


We're staring down the business end of catastrophic social upheaval and the possible end of democracy in the United States as we know it. That doesn't come without cost.


All of the stupid, hidebound and relentlessly paternal white supremacy, pretending to be complacent when it is coddled, will destroy everything the minute it is threatened. 


And it is threatened. Demographics is a dragon no ideology can slay. 


And here we are, as awful and frustrating as it is inevitable, the backlash of white power against the threat of a multiracial dominant order is determined to destroy everything rather than cede any ground.


You. Me. And not just us, but anything we create. Because when they want to destroy what you represent, they won't just come for you, but they'll come for everything that in any way reflects you.


We're going to let it happen because we must. What we see as stupid and willful ignoring of an existential threat by the powers that be (such as the Biden admin and Merrick Garland in particular) is just them hopelessly following the math of it. We need the reset, as much as a volcano eventually needs the eruption. We can't contain it forever, and we're at the point now where the center doesn't hold. 

We all have a role to play. Theirs is to play the part of the Weimar Republican leaders, ours the German citizens some of whom can see what's coming, but are no better for it, and the opposition fascists to be played by the the GQP.


It's all going to burn. We're well past votes fixing anything.




An update: The fall of the rule of law

The Biden administration is making it clear that it will not take the rule of law seriously. It is now actively protecting the ex-president from prosecution for his crimes. The Washington Post writes:
For Donald Trump’s entire presidency, top congressional Democrats used every tool at their disposal to investigate the Washington hotel he leased from the federal government, issuing subpoenas, holding hearings and filing a lawsuit to try to bring the inner workings of Trump’s luxury property to light.

The efforts were framed as a defense of democracy itself. Rep. Peter A. DeFazio (D-Ore.) said the Trump administration’s refusal to provide documents “was not just disconcerting but an affront to the democratic institutions that the United States has been founded upon.” Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) said the lawsuit, filed in federal court, was “in pursuit of justice to make sure our committee can fulfill its duty to the American people.”

None of it worked — a testament to Trump’s willingness to fight at every turn. But now, with the Biden administration in place, Democrats’ efforts to unearth and make public the information haven’t gone much better.

Biden’s team has steadfastly defended some of the protections the Trump administration put in place to conceal Trump’s financial interests. The Justice Department under Biden is appealing a lower court judgment in favor of the congressional Democrats in their suit, another move by the agency to defend Trump-era legal positions. Biden’s General Services Administration, which holds the lease for the Trump International hotel, has provided only a portion of the documents Congress is seeking and asked that none of them be disclosed publicly.  
White House spokesman Andrew Bates declined to comment.

Since there is no explanation from Biden or the Department of Justice, one can assume that they are corrupted or subverted and maybe somehow coerced into protecting the crook. We are on the verge of the fall of democracy and the rule of law, and neither Biden nor the DoJ is willing to stand in their defense. The fascist GOP has no interest in the rule of law except to apply it to attack their political opposition. Biden and the DoJ are actively betraying us by cementing corruption and criminality as politically acceptable precedents. From here on out, a president really is above the law. A pox on Biden and the DoJ.