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, July 20, 2021

SOMETHING IS WRONG AT FOX NEWS!

Hannity: 'I believe in the science of vaccination'

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/hannity-i-believe-in-the-science-of-vaccination/ar-AAMldSF?ocid=mailsignout&li=BBnb7Kz

https://twitter.com/i/status/1417300107960094720

Fox Faces Rising Delta Variant Crisis: On-Air FNC Hosts Urge Vaccinations, All LA County Staff To Mask Up, Says Company


Even listening to Fox radio - briefly this morning - while on one had trying to mock Fauci and the CDC, the hosts were urging all Americans to get vaccinated!

WHAT IN THE WORLD IS GOING ON HERE?


The social science of political cults and their leaders



This chapter argues that leader personality cults are typically produced by a specific set of mechanisms of flattery inflation. It describes how loyalty signaling, emotional amplification, and direct production mechanisms can combine, under specific circumstances, to transform ordinary flattery into full-blown practices of ruler worship. And it argues for attending to the specific conditions that make possible the operation of these mechanisms, showing how patronage relationships in particular provide fertile ground for the emergence of personality cults. Moreover, the chapter argues that both ancient and modern leader cults depend on similar mechanisms, despite clear differences in context and function. 

False, hypocritical praise has long been thought to be a problem for powerful rulers, as the testimony of political moralists and advisors to princes in both the East and the West indicates. Clearheaded rulers have long understood its dangers; a ruler who cannot see through the praises of sycophants is at risk of losing power, since flattery is not credible as a signal of their loyalty. Yet many ruler “courts”, both ancient and modern, appear to be prone to flattery. Indeed, in some cases flattery of the ruler becomes so widespread and excessive that scholars speak of “cults of personality.” 

In many cases, such flattery does not remain confined to elite figures in the media or in the ruler’s immediate court, but gives rise to widespread ritual practices of ruler worship, genuine “cults” of the leader that demand the participation of many different social groups to recognize the leader’s exalted status. The cults of Lenin and Stalin in the Soviet Union, Mao in China, the Kim family in North Korea, Mussolini in Italy, and Hitler in Germany are the most well-known of these, but such phenomena can be found elsewhere as well, including in comparatively open political contexts like the Venezuela of Hugo Chávez. These forms of flattery seem sometimes humorous or bizarre. Yet they are puzzling, disproportionate to the achievements or charisma of their object: who could possibly believe that Hafiz al-Assad was indeed Syria’s premier pharmacist, and what could possibly be the point of publicizing this ridiculous claim? -- Xavier Márquez, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ; The mechanisms of cult production; In Kirill Postoutenko, Darin Stephanov (Ed.), Ruler Personality Cults from Empires to Nation-States and Beyond: Symbolic Patterns and Interactional Dynamics (pp. 21-45), 2020



An opinion piece by Paul Krugman opines on how current social science sees the basis for the rise of a personality cult leader. We all know what this is about. Krugman writes:
The Mechanisms of Cult Production” compares the behavior of political elites across a wide range of dictatorial regimes, from Caligula’s Rome to the Kim family’s North Korea, and finds striking similarities. Despite vast differences in culture and material circumstances, elites in all such regimes engage in pretty much the same behavior, especially what the paper dubs “loyalty signaling” and “flattery inflation.”

Signaling is a concept originally drawn from economics; it says that people sometimes engage in costly, seemingly pointless behavior as a way to prove that they have attributes others value. For example, new hires at investment banks may work insanely long hours, not because the extra hours are actually productive, but to demonstrate their commitment to feeding the money machine.

In the context of dictatorial regimes, signaling typically involves making absurd claims on behalf of the Leader and his agenda, often including “nauseating displays of loyalty.” If the claims are obvious nonsense and destructive in their effects, if making those claims humiliates the person who makes them, these are features, not bugs. I mean, how does the Leader know if you’re truly loyal unless you’re willing to demonstrate your loyalty by inflicting harm both on others and on your own reputation?

And once this kind of signaling becomes the norm, those trying to prove their loyalty have to go to ever greater extremes to differentiate themselves from the pack. Hence “flattery inflation”: The Leader isn’t just brave and wise, he’s a perfect physical specimen, a brilliant health expert, a Nobel-level economic analyst, and more. The fact that he’s obviously none of these things only enhances the effectiveness of the flattery as a demonstration of loyalty.

Does all of this sound familiar? Of course it does, at least to anyone who has been tracking Fox News or the utterances of political figures like Lindsey Graham or Kevin McCarthy.

Many people, myself included, have declared for years that the G.O.P. is no longer a normal political party. It doesn’t look anything like, say, Dwight Eisenhower’s Republican Party or Germany’s Christian Democrats. But it bears a growing resemblance to the ruling parties of autocratic regimes.

The only unusual thing about the G.O.P.’s wholesale adoption of the Leader Principle is that the party doesn’t have a monopoly on power; ....

Unfortunately, all this loyalty signaling is putting the whole nation at risk. In fact, it will almost surely kill large numbers of Americans in the next few months.

But politics is nonetheless clearly a key factor: Republican politicians and Republican-oriented influencers have driven much of the opposition to Covid-19 vaccines, in some cases engaging in what amounts to outright sabotage. And there is a stunning negative correlation between Trump’s share of a county’s vote in 2020 and its current vaccination rate.

That is, hostility to vaccines has become a form of loyalty signaling.

Seeing the ex-president as a cult leader and the fascist GOP as key the cult leader enabler mostly fits with historical precedent. The FGOP and most rank and file followers likely see and rationalize this differently in public. Some believe he was chosen by God to do God's work as they see it. One can only wonder what they think and say privately. If it is about the same as their public pronouncements, this country is in deep trouble at least until the cult leader dies or becomes fully incapacitated.


Monday, July 19, 2021

Israel: Friend, Enemy or Pakistan?

Over the decades it has come to look like Israel is much more enemy than friend to the US, or at least something akin to Pakistan in terms of relationship with the US. Despite massive US diplomatic and economic support ever since 1949, Israel these days seems mostly independent. It is willing to deal with whoever best serves its interests. It acts as if US interests are of little concern. Over the years, US interests have absorbed great damage over its support for Israel. The US has paid dearly for defending and supporting Israel. 

One of the constant acts of an enemy is Israel's aggressive spying on the US. That has been going on for decades and it continues today. Its aggression in this area goes beyond what one would expect from allies. The latest Israeli insult comes from a sophisticated hack of cell phones of some key people by an Israeli hacker company. The Washington Post writes:
The Pegasus Project, an investigation by The Washington Post and 16 other news organizations in 10 countries, was coordinated by the Paris-based journalism nonprofit Forbidden Stories and advised by Amnesty International. Those two groups had access to a list of more than 50,000 phone numbers that included surveillance targets for clients of the Israeli spyware company NSO Group, which they shared with the journalists. Over the past several months, the journalists reviewed and analyzed the list in an effort to learn the identities of the owners of the phone numbers and to determine whether their phones had been implanted with NSO’s Pegasus spyware.

The investigation was able to link more than 1,000 government officials, journalists, businesspeople and human rights activists to numbers and to obtain data for 67 phones whose numbers appeared on the list. That data was then analyzed forensically by Amnesty International’s Security Lab. Thirty-seven of those showed evidence of an attempted Pegasus intrusion or a successful hack.

Further analysis indicated that many of those intrusions or attempted intrusions came shortly after the phone number had been entered onto the list — some within seconds — suggesting a link between the list and subsequent surveillance efforts.

The most sophisticated spyware is generally deployed by law enforcement or intelligence agencies, and there is a robust private market to provide those tools to nations that can afford them, including the United States. It has long been suspected that terrorist groups and sophisticated criminal gangs also have access to spyware. Spyware from another Israeli company, Candiru, was used to infect the computers and phones of activists, politicians and other victims through phony websites masquerading as pages for Black Lives Matter or health groups, cybersecurity researchers at Microsoft and the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab said this month.

NSO has long said that Pegasus cannot be used to successfully target phones in the United States and that it should be used only against “suspected criminals and terrorists.” But research groups have found that it’s also been used to spy on political figures, journalists and human rights workers — findings confirmed by the Pegasus Project investigation.

There is little meaningful legal protection against being targeted by spyware in most of the world. NSO says Pegasus cannot be used on numbers inside the United States, Israel’s most important ally. The United States has some legal restrictions on spyware, including the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which was enacted in 1986 and bans “unauthorized access” of a computer or phone, but its vague language has meant that it’s often unevenly applied in court. Some states have passed cybersecurity and privacy laws, such as California’s Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act, which bans electronic tampering or interference. WhatsApp has cited both laws in an ongoing court case against NSO.
Israeli spies whop are caught and jailed in the US are treated as national heroes in Israel once they get out of the slammer. Johnathan Pollard spent 30 years in US jail for spying for Israel. He was arrested in 1985. His escapades cause major damage to US national security. The AP comments on his fun story:

America stabbed Israel in the back, so Israel stabbed America in the back
With friends like that, who needs enemies?

In this Nov. 20, 2015 file photo, convicted spy Jonathan Pollard leaves a federal courthouse in New York. Pollard, an American who served a 30-year sentence for spying for Israel, defended his actions in his first interview since arriving in Israel to a hero's welcome in December 2020, saying America had “stabbed Israel in the back” by withholding intelligence from its ally. In excerpts from the interview with the Israel Hayom daily published on Monday, March 22, 2021, Pollard describes his happiness at being a free man in Israel.

Jonathan Pollard, an American who served a 30-year sentence for spying for Israel, defends his actions in his first interview since arriving in Israel late last year. He says America had “stabbed Israel in the back” by withholding intelligence from its ally.

In excerpts from the interview with the Israel Hayom daily published Monday, Pollard describes his happiness at being a free man in Israel while expressing regret that he was not able to father children because of his incarceration.

Pollard, now 66, sold military secrets to Israel while working as a civilian intelligence analyst for the U.S. Navy in the 1980s. He was arrested in 1985 after trying unsuccessfully to gain asylum at the Israeli Embassy in Washington and pleaded guilty. The espionage affair embarrassed Israel and tarnished its relations with the United States for years.

Pollard was given a life sentence. U.S. defense and intelligence officials said his spying caused great damage and strenuously argued against his release. But after serving 30 years in federal prison, he was released in 2015 and placed on a five-year parole period. Pollard arrived in Israel to a hero’s welcome in December.

He told Israel Hayom that at the time of his spying the U.S. government was keeping intelligence from Israel and lying to it, claiming he witnessed it himself at meetings.

“I know I crossed a line, but I had no choice,” he told the newspaper, adding that the threats to Israel were “serious.”
After all the US has done for Israel and the huge damage it has suffered in the process, it is arguably time to stop supporting that nasty little country. The cost-benefit is bad, sort of like the cost-benefit from tax breaks for religion in the US. It is long past time to cut the financial and diplomatic umbilical cord and acknowledge and treat Israel for what it is, an enemy that just won't back down.[1]

Questions: Does such criticism, and other criticisms, of Israel amount to anti-Semitism, holocaust denial, Nazism and/or fascism? Those are the standard Israeli and Israel supporter responses to criticism of Israel. 

In terms of relations with the US, is Israel almost completely a friend, almost completely an enemy, Pakistan (~70% enemy and ~30% friend or ambiguous) or something else, e.g., ~50% friend/ambiguous and ~50% enemy? 

Should the US continue its generous financial, military and diplomatic[2] support of Israel? 

Footnote: 
The U.S. government concluded within the past two years that Israel was most likely behind the placement of cellphone surveillance devices that were found near the White House and other sensitive locations around Washington, according to three former senior U.S. officials with knowledge of the matter.

But unlike most other occasions when flagrant incidents of foreign spying have been discovered on American soil, the Trump administration did not rebuke the Israeli government, and there were no consequences for Israel’s behavior, one of the former officials said.  
The devices were likely intended to spy on President Donald Trump, one of the former officials said, as well as his top aides and closest associates — though it’s not clear whether the Israeli efforts were successful.

Trump is reputed to be lax in observing White House security protocols.
Reputed to be lax? That is a gross understatement. Known to be lax, sloppy and unconcerned is much closer to the mark. 

The latest round of fighting between Israelis and Palestinians ended in the usual way: with a cease-fire that left Palestinians worse off and the core issues unaddressed. It also provided more evidence that the United States should no longer give Israel unconditional economic, military, and diplomatic support. The benefits of this policy are zero, and the costs are high and rising. Instead of a special relationship, the United States and Israel need a normal one.

Once upon a time, a special relationship between the United States and Israel might have been justified on moral grounds. The creation of a Jewish state was seen as an appropriate response to centuries of violent antisemitism in the Christian West, including but hardly limited to the Holocaust. The moral case was compelling, however, only if one ignored the consequences for Arabs who had lived in Palestine for many centuries and if one believed Israel to be a country that shared basic U.S. values. Here too the picture was complicated. Israel may have been “the only democracy in the Middle East,” but it was not a liberal democracy like the United States, where all religions and races are supposed to have equal rights (however imperfectly that goal has been realized). Consistent with Zionism’s core objectives, Israel privileged Jews over others by conscious design.


Standard Israel response to criticism: You're just a hateful baby-killing, Nazi anti-Semite 

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Just how human are we?

An AP article, Just 7% of our DNA is unique to modern humans, study shows, indicates that humans are a bit less human than maybe most of us thought. The AP writes:
Just 7% of our genome is uniquely shared with other humans, and not shared by other early ancestors, according to a study published Friday in the journal Science Advances.

“That’s a pretty small percentage,” said Nathan Schaefer, a University of California computational biologist and co-author of the new paper. “This kind of finding is why scientists are turning away from thinking that we humans are so vastly different from Neanderthals.”

The research draws upon DNA extracted from fossil remains of now-extinct Neanderthals and Denisovans dating back to around 40,000 or 50,000 years ago, as well as from 279 modern people from around the world.

Scientists already know that modern people share some DNA with Neanderthals, but different people share different parts of the genome. One goal of the new research was to identify the genes that are exclusive to modern humans.

It’s a difficult statistical problem, and the researchers “developed a valuable tool that takes account of missing data in the ancient genomes,” said John Hawks, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, who was not involved in the research.

The researchers also found that an even smaller fraction of our genome — just 1.5% — is both unique to our species and shared among all people alive today. Those slivers of DNA may hold the most significant clues as to what truly distinguishes modern human beings. 
“We can tell those regions of the genome are highly enriched for genes that have to do with neural development and brain function,” said University of California, Santa Cruz computational biologist Richard Green, a co-author of the paper.

In 2010, Green helped produce the first draft sequence of a Neanderthal genome. Four years later, geneticist Joshua Akey co-authored a paper showing that modern humans carry some remnants of Neanderthal DNA. Since then, scientists have continued to refine techniques to extract and analyze genetic material from fossils.


Chapter review: Noiseless Rules; Objective Ignorance; The Valley of the Normal

Context
This is a review of chapters 10-12 of the 2021 book, Noise: The Flaw in Human Judgment, by Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman et al. These chapters mostly elaborate on the concepts raised in chapter 9, Judgments and Models, which was reviewed here yesterday

Noise is written for a general audience, but it relies on core concepts in statistics to make its points. The book’s main point is that humans are surprisingly noisy in their judgments. In the context of judgment or prediction science, noise refers to being randomly wrong. That kind of error is different from being wrong due to bias, which is non-random, or generally predictable error. Humans are both biased and noisy, both of which are hard to be self-aware about. People who do not understand that, cannot understand the human condition generally or politics in particular.

Some of the relevant statistics concepts are a bit subtle and/or counterintuitive, but they are explained clearly using limited technical language. Some modest understanding of relevant statistical concepts is necessary to understand why (i) most humans, especially self-proclaimed demagogues, political experts and ideologue blowhards, are usually surprisingly bad at making judgments, (ii) we are so confident in our judgments when there is no objective basis for confidence, and (iii) no machine, software or human can ever be perfect in making judgments. Regarding point (i), humans are so bad that most barely do better than random guessing most of the time, including most experts dealing with their own area of expertise. One leading prediction science expert, Philip Tetlock, summed it up like this in his 2005 book, Expert Political Judgment
“The average expert was roughly as accurate as a dart-throwing chimpanzee.”
That statement was based on about 20 years research and thousands of judgments made by hundreds of experts in various fields.[1]


Chapter 10, Noiseless Rules
Algorithms: Simple and complex models of judgment and behavior are all algorithms. The rules that algorithms are built on are noiseless. Applying algorithms to decisions applies analysis that is noise free. Algorithms can be wrong or flawed to a varying extent, ranging from barely flawed to useless, but at least the output is free of noise. The quality of an algorithm depends on how good the input rules are. If the rules are reasonably good, the algorithm output is reasonably good, usually better than human experts. If not, then not.

Algorithms do not have to be complicated. They can be based on just one or two rules, e.g., rank job candidates with high communications skill and/or a high level of motivation higher than other job candidates. One can run the numbers on that algorithm using the ancient fingers and toes technology for scoring people. It isn’t rocket science. It’s common sense. One just needs to understand the human condition regarding judgment and what algorithms are and can do.

The machines rise up and overthrow humans (The Terminator): No, that is not going to happen. Kahneman is not arguing to replace human judgment with algorithms.[2] One can base decisions on input from both humans and algorithms. Sometimes humans know things an algorithm can’t, e.g., golly, this job candidate scores really high on communications skill and motivation, but jeez, he is Larry Kudlow[1] and the job requires excellent economic judgment -- let’s not go there -- bad algorithm, bad, bad algorithm. 

Kahneman calls this the ‘broken leg’ scenario: The broken leg algorithm (rule): If someone breaks their leg during the day, they are unlikely to go to the movies anytime later that same day. Therefore, one can predict that a broken leg tells the human to override the algorithm.

Artificial intelligence (AI): Kahneman points out that humans can come up with good rules for simple but effective prediction algorithms, AI does something that humans cannot. Specifically, AI working with tons of data can spot, describe and evaluate patterns in the data that humans simply cannot see. AI can spot broken legs that humans cannot see. Some of those patterns or broken legs are useful as rules in prediction algorithms. The data here is consistent. In terms of prediction ability there is a ranked order: 
Most experts and chimpanzees < most simple algorithms < most modestly more complicated algorithms (improper linear models) < significantly more complicated algorithms (linear regression models) < most machine learning algorithms (AI models based on huge data sets that contain hidden broken legs)

Chapter 11, Objective Ignorance
This chapter gets at some concepts that have been of intense personal interest ever since I read Tetlock’s 2005 book, Expert Political Judgment,[3] and his 2012 book, Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction.[3] Specifically, what is the outer limit of human knowledge, how far into the future can human knowledge project and what defines the limit? What defines the limit is lack of knowledge, in particular (i) unknown unknowns and (ii) self-inflicted ignorance, e.g., lack of moral courage needed to honestly face reality. These factors limits human projection into the future to about 24 months or less, probably mostly to about 9-15 months. Predictions farther out in time tend to fade into random guessing or chimpanzee status.

The human element -- denial of ignorance: Objective ignorance is fostered by some unfortunate human traits. In particular, humans who have to make decisions and are successful tend to gain in confidence in their ability to be right. They also tend to be expert at rationalizing failed predictions into successes or near successes. Kahneman comments:
“One review of intuition in managerial decision making defines it as ‘a judgment for a given course of action that comes to mind with an aura or conviction of rightness or plausibility, but without clearly articulated reasons or justifications -- essentially knowing but without knowing why.’ .... Confidence is not guarantee of accuracy, however, and many confident predictions turn out to be wrong. While both bias and noise contribute to prediction errors, the largest source of such errors is not the limit on how good predictive judgments are. It is the limit on how good they could be. This limit, which we call objective ignorance, is the focus of this chapter. .... In general, however, you can safely expect that people who engage in predictive tasks will underestimate their objective ignorance. Overconfidence is one of the best documented cognitive biases. .... wherever there is prediction, there is ignorance and more of it than you think.”
Kahneman goes on to point out that people who believe in the predictability of things that are simply not predictable hold an attitude that amounts to a denial of ignorance. And, he asserts that “the denial of ignorance is all the more tempting when ignorance is vast. .... human judgment will not be replaced. That is why it must be improved.”

Jeez, that’s not very comforting, especially when it is manifest in stubborn, self-centered, ignorant political and business leaders. Does flawed human judgment constitute an existential threat to modern civilization, and maybe even to the human species itself? I came to the conclusion and belief long ago that it does. Tetlock helped me see that possibility with clarity. And Kahneman reinforces it again. 


Chapter 12, The Valley of the Normal
Humans are lulled into overconfidence by routine life with few surprises. It’s a great big valley of normalcy, at least in rich countries in times of relative peace and stability. Kahneman raises a huge red flag about the limits of what the social sciences actually know, regardless of what experts say or think they know. Social science research results rarely are better than ones that allow predictions of how two variables move in tandem (concordance) ~56% of the time at most (correlation coefficient ~0.20).  Randomness is 50% concordance (correlation coefficient ~0.00, i.e., no correlation or relationship beyond random chance between measured variables). In other words, the social sciences are able to understand much less about the world it studies compared to physicists who can see concordance at ~70% (correlation coefficient ~0.60) in their data. 

Objective ignorance causes us to understand less because social science research data usually doesn't explain much about the hyper-complex, unpredictable real world.  Once again, how the human mind deals with incomprehensible reality is front and center -- we routinely see causes in things for which is there is no basis to know the cause of an event:
“More broadly, our understanding the world depends on our extraordinary ability to construct narratives that explain the events we observe. The search for causes is almost always successful because causes can be drawn from an unlimited reservoir of facts and beliefs about the world [we unconsciously apply hindsight to explain the inexplicable]. .... Genuine surprise occurs only when routine hindsight fails. This continuous interpretation of reality as it unfolds consists of the steady flow of hindsight in the valley of the normal. As we know from classic research on hindsight, even when subjective uncertainty does exist for a  while, memories of it are largely erased when the uncertainty is resolved.”

Humans routinely employ causal thinking to the world and events that we experience. We do this to limit the cognitive load needed to make sense of the routine and to spot abnormalities, especially threats. This is part of the mostly unconscious clinical thinking that humans rely on most of the time, as discussed in the review of chapter 9.  By contrast statistical and mechanical thinking (algorithmic, statistical) require discipline and lots of conscious effort. Kahneman comments:
“Relying on causal thinking about a single case is a source of predictable errors. Taking the statistical view, which we will also call the outside view,[4] is a way to avoid these errors. .... The reliance on flawed explanations is perhaps inevitable, if the alternative is to give up on understanding the world. However, causal thinking and the illusion of understanding the past contribute to overconfident predictions off the future. .... the preference for causal thinking also contributes to the neglect of noise as a source of error, because noise is a fundamentally statistical notion.”
A final concept that Kahneman makes clear here is this: Correlation does not imply causation, but causation does imply correlation. The higher the correlation, the more we understand about what we observe. We often believe we understand events, but we generally cannot predict them, implying we do not really understand them.


Footnotes: 
1. In his 2012 book, Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction, Tetlock singled out two self-professed blowhards (experts) as having exceptionally awful judgment. One was Larry Kudlow, the ex-president’s Director of the National Economic Council and the other was his short-lived national security advisor, Lt. General Michael Flynn. Flynn is now a twice self-confessed and convicted (but pardoned!) felon who spews lies and slanders no gullible people for a living. Kudlow moved briskly on to host a Fox News financial program. He is proudly and confidently spewing bad advice on the poor people who listen to him mindlessly bloviate for a living. 

That is some real world evidence that bad judgment includes not being able to pick competent people for really important jobs. That exemplifies just one of the non-trivial reasons the human species finds itself in the precarious situation it is in today, i.e., too often humans exercise bad judgement.

2. But really folks, given the data, sometimes humans should be replaced by algorithms. Some humans are real stinkers in terms of judgment ability, e.g., Larry Kudlow.

3. After reading Expert Political Judgment and what it taught finally sunk in, I almost gave up on politics entirely. Humans aren't just chimpanzees, they are stubborn and arrogant chimpanzees who simply cannot handle the reality of their own deep flaws. Those cognitive and social flaws are inherent and unavoidable from human evolution. What kept me going was Tetlock’s second book, Superforecasting, which showed that some humans can learn to rise above their evolutionary heritage and actually translate knowledge into at least modestly better political outcomes.

4. Kahneman’s outside view, seems to get at what Thomas Nagel called the view from nowhere when he tried to envision reality without reliance on the reality-distorting lens the human mind and body constitutes. The idea of what unfiltered reality actually looks like is a fascinating question.

Friday, July 16, 2021

An expert on tyranny and political violence makes a prediction

Fascist GOP narrative: peaceful tourists visiting the Capitol and taking selfies 
Reality: A coup attempt on 1/6/21


In an opinion piece by Dana Milbank, the Washington Post writes:
In September, I wrote that the United States faced a situation akin to the 1933 burning of Weimar Germany’s parliament, which Hitler used to seize power.

“America, this is our Reichstag moment,” the column said, citing the eminent Yale historian Timothy Snyder on the lessons of 20th-century authoritarianism. Snyder argued that President Donald Trump had “an authoritarian’s instinct” and was surrounding the election in “the authoritarian language of a coup d’etat.” Predicted Snyder: “It’s going to be messy.”

Trump enablers such as Sen. Lindsey Graham scoffed. “With all due respect to @Milbank, he’s in the bat$hit crazy phase of Trump Derangement Syndrome,” the South Carolina Republican tweeted, with a link to my column.

But now we know that 1933 was very much on the mind of the nation’s top soldier, Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “This is a Reichstag moment,” Milley told aides of Trump’s “stomach-churning” lies about election fraud. “The gospel of the Führer,” Milley labeled Trump’s claims.

Milley, as reported in a forthcoming book by The Post’s Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker, feared that people around Trump were seeking to “overturn the government,” saw that pro-Trump protesters would serve as “brownshirts in the streets” — and was determined that “the Nazis aren’t getting in” to block Joe Biden’s inauguration.

American democracy survived that coup attempt on Jan. 6. But the danger has not subsided. I called Snyder, who accurately predicted the insurrection, to ask how the history of European authoritarianism informs our current state.

“We’re looking almost certainly at an attempt in 2024 to take power without winning election,” he told me Thursday. Recent moves in Republican-controlled state legislatures to suppress the votes of people of color and to give the legislatures control over casting electoral votes “are all working toward the scenario in 2024 where they lose by 10 million votes but they still appoint their guy.”

History also warns of greater violence. “If people are excluded from voting rights, then naturally they’re going to start to think about other options, on the one side,” Snyder said. “But, on the other side, the people who are benefiting because their vote counts for more think of themselves as entitled — and when things don’t go their way, they’re also more likely to be violent.”

The extinguishing of our Reichstag fire on Jan. 6 made Trump’s failed coup less like 1933 Germany than 1923 Germany, when Hitler’s clownish Beer Hall Putsch failed. Historically, most coup attempts fail. “But a failed coup is practice for a successful coup,” Snyder said. This is what’s ominous about the Republicans’ determination to sabotage investigations that could help us learn from the Jan. 6 insurrection. Also ominous is the move in many Republican-controlled states to ban schools from teaching about systemic racism — “memory laws,” Snyder calls them — which “feeds into this authoritarian turn” by providing cover for the new attempts to disenfranchise more non-White voters. “They’re trying to ban the discussion of things like voter suppression, and it’s precisely the history of voter suppression which allows us to see it for what it is,” Snyder said.

Two things. Sen. Lindsey Graham is stupid, corrupt and a blind fascist in the bat$hit crazy phase of T**** Ignorance Syndrome. I'm not the only one who sees the 1/6 coup attempt as a coup attempt. Just because a bunch of corrupt fascists have not yet attained the power and single party rule that they are desperately fighting for right now in the guise of the corrupt fascist Republican Party, does not mean they are not corrupt fascists. It just means they have not achieved their goals yet. 

OK, that was three things. My mistake.

Fascist GOP narrative: peaceful tourists helping the Capitol police tidy up a bit 
Reality: A coup attempt on 1/6/21