Thursday, April 28, 2011

Extended smear campaign against Rand

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I pride myself on being the best critique there is. If I am going to maintain this mantel then I have to demonstrate as much by critiquing the critiquers, who critised the critiquers who criticised Rand, who seemingly everyone loves to hate. Well, someone must be buying her books!
So how does one critique people effectively? Well, what I do is read completely through their commentary and pick out all the arguments that are baseless or inherently contradictory. Here is the YouTube video I will be critiquing:


1. "During hard time people consider more extreme philosophies"
This is a smear job. Extremism is an arbitrary notion. In what sense is principled philosophy any less legitimate than a philosophy based on a compromise between two extremes. If the 'extremes' are wrong, then so is any derivative of them. There is nothing wrong with absolutes per se; it ultimately depends on whether they are consonant with your nature as a human being. For example, we don't drink poison because it is 'extreme', we drink it in moderation (i.e. alcohol) because its benefits are considered to outweigh the effects. The notion of extremism is really an appeal to moral relativism. i.e. An evasion of principles.
2. "Rand wrote about an out-of-control government siphoning the profits of the rich in her book Atlas Shrugged".
Anyone who has honesty read Atlas Shrugged can tell you this is an under-representation of the book. Its not as simple as that, and really is an extension of the commentators intellectual bias, even if the state is not inherently false. He implies that people are desperate by reading this book....as if this was solely a book for comic value, or discredit it by asserting that Americans are so desperate that will accept any argument. This is all intended to discourage you from reading Rand's books.
3. Some critic of Rand went to university and studied philosophy, who now repudiates Rand and her philosophy of self-interest.
It means nothing that he read Rand. I read Rand and meet plenty of supporters and disparagers who wrongly accept or repudiate her. Not everyone gets it. Most people get some of it. Some people like myself, end up developing our own variant on her themes. Such is the nature of philosophical inquiry. Aristotle called it the Fallacy of Appeal to Authority.
4. The author of this video has written a paper critical of Rand at www.tinyurl.com/RandPaper.
This paper is not particularly insightful. quote:
"Of course, when dealing with philosophy, to attack a theory it is not enough to merely show that a certain action may cause large numbers of deaths".
He first accuses Rand of failing to account for the millions who would die if welfare was abolished as she would like. This is not valid because she never dealt with how such matters would be dealt with, though it's logical to assume that she would not advocate pulling the metaphysical rug from under the feat of people. I would however argue that she did not make a virtue of empathy, though it is implicit in her books. I do think there is a flaw here, which both people did not grasp.
He also states that most Americans would prefer a system which skirts the excesses by helping the poor. This is not the standard of value - 'most Americans think', because most Americans might listen to people like this critic who don't understand economics. The 'excesses', which he speaks of, which Rand wrote of 50 years ago, are here again. Protracted recession because of 'quantitative easing'. Then he 'appeals to authority' again by citing Steve Pearlstein.
The idea that: 'We can moderate the ups and downs' is nonsense. The governments use their arbitrary laws to create excesses. If you remove their capacity to create excesses, then there is no need for stimulus because there is no excess debt.
He then suggests this safety net is worth it because 'you give up a tidy bit of GDP growth'. He cites this falsely as a Conservative argument....when it hardly sits as everyone's arguments, so its a case of shooting down straw men. Rand was not a Conservative. The argument is flawed because the cost of government intervention is VERY HIGH. Not just a 'little GDP', it's huge. Consider China, which does not have the West's minimum wages, which has a structural distortion created by leaving communist (yes the same coercive powers these gentlemen want to embrace - just a different variant - so not to scare you, but same in principle, and same principle as Hitler). If poorly regulated China with scant regard for rights can grow at 10% per annum; how fast could the US grow if it did not have the same restrictions. I think 16% because that is the average growth rate of most business; and if government functioned as a business we might expect such a rate. Personally, I differ from Rand, so I would argue that the West ought to be a meritocracy, not a democracy. By not having a centralised economy ought to result in additional growth. Central decision making might affect 20% of what you do, so we might be looking at up to 20% faster growth.
Worried about the environment? Using up oil reserves faster would actually prompt more innovation, so there would be a technology boom to reduce energy consumption. At present government softens growth, so oil prices are relatively flat...until they artificially stimulate the economy. He argues in support of welfare that:
"There is nothing communist about preferring mixed capitalism to pure capitalism".
The problem is that people clearly give preference to altruism as a virtue when they support the needs of others. Why? Because they don't invite people to make discretionary donations to support others; they use their coercive powers to force people to give. If people are not interested or cynical about the benefits, then proponents of welfare will soon be praising the virtues of atruism, which does lead to 100% collectivism. Why? Well, the reason is evident enough today. Collectivists don't understand, and supported by the state, they lobby government for ever-more concessions because they argue need is caused by capitalism, when its in fact causes by collectivism. So the arguments change accordingly:
1. Small govt - people would prefer some security so we should have some welfare
2. Medium govt - capitalism is hurting people so we need to praise the virtues of altruism to guilt people into welfare, or we need to raise taxes. At this point, capitalism is, far from being the source of wealth, it is identified as the cause of suffering.
3. Big govt - We need complete socialism or fascism because capitalism does not work. In truth, we never had pure capitalism, and anything we had was guttered by altruism.

In conclusion, you are not 'self-absorbed' to support capitalism (at least not necessarily), it is just that it's the only system compatible with human nature. The problem is not markets, it's the values of the people who participate in the market. Clearly the efficiency and outcomes in the market can only be as good as the values of the people who participate in it, whether as consumers, regulators or producers. Personally, I have yet to meet anyone who is not 'self-absorbed', and I would hope that everyone is honest enough to admit it. If collectivists were honest, rather than argue the capitalists are greedy materialists, it would be helpful that most of them only want money. Some want jobs; but far from being a question of equity, that strikes one as a question of dependence, and people are two proud to concede that. It's difficult to have contempt for the people you depend on. This never stopped the collectivist. No one ever got rich stealing from the poor. The wealthy are creators - the dependents rely on extortion. But the critiques do not want to consider the morality of the issue. They want to focus on the 'practicality' or 'perceptions' of fairness. The reality is that collectivist is not practical, and it's the reason why Western economies stumble along at 2-4% - they are constrained by excessive statutory regulation, democratic PC, under-funded justice, centralised bureaucracy and of course minimum wages and intervention on monetary policy.

The final smear is that pure capitalism has never existed, so it never should. A very anti-intellectual thing to say. Clearly they would never have got us to the moon. The final statement that the justification for "placing yourself first for economic efficiency" is not a accurate representation of Rand. Certainly she acknowledged and lauded the economic efficiency of capitalism, but it was not the justification. It's compatibility with human nature as the primary issue.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Sunday, April 24, 2011

A political crusade against NSW legal services

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If you have ever dealt with the Australian legal system you would know just how bad the system is. The problem is that most of you simply tolerate injustice and avoid legal action. You tolerate high legal charges, you tolerate the extortive market practices of companies subject to token regulation. Here is a Twitterer who is fighting back. Frankly, I think these people are campaigning on issues and not identifying the fundamental problems. That is my role; however I would like to add to their argument from my personal experience. I have many cases of extortive corporate policies in my life, as you have in your life. Don't think I have some loathing for capitalism. I love markets; the problem is the 'mixed economy' we have which has no integrity at all. My effort is to give it that integrity.
My grandfather had a 1/4-acre, waterfront house and land on Sydney Harbour overlooking the Sydney Harbour Bridge. He sold it through a real estate agent who argued that the property could fit a tennis court 'long ways' just prior to the 1997(?) market correction. The buyer was a solicitor who withdrew from the sale on a technicality. He argued that point and guess what? He won, and the real estate agent too was deemed not responsible, and my grandfather got stuck with the costs. One wonders how that situation occurred. At the time, the case attracted a lot of attention.
2. We currently have a class action against the Australian banks for excessive fees. We might wonder why they can charge fees at all for services? Particularly given their capacity to extract minor amounts and the collusive monopoly they have over banking services. They have been during this for decades, and yet only now action is being taken.

If you have similar examples and experiences, you might want to join this petition which relates to corruption in the NSW legal system.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

The role of government

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A Twitter is "doing a paper on whether governments should go for growth or happiness. Got anything interesting, any posts?

This is the problem learning at public (government) or private (religious) schools with poorly trained teachers....they presume too much, or think too shallowly. Are they responding to earthily concerns, or are we supposed to conjure up some 'half reality' out of context?
The second problem is establishing what government should be doing, if anything?
The third problem - which they actually imply that you should do - is that you should establish what is the proper standard of value. Is the good that which achieves happiness or is the good that which achieves growth?
The answer to that question depends upon you establishing a link between human nature and your ultimate values. That task I leave to you. But I will give you a clue because the school does not teach you the right answer. Worse still, they will punish you for giving the right one, which I would give you; which is that values are objective. They are rational and they relate to your nature as a human being. So you have to establish if happiness or growth is consonant with facts of human nature, or something else. Warning: Don't presume! I just wanted to give you a chance, because the global education system never would. One day I will establish an online school, but its premature :)
The lesson: Never trust academics to give you an education :)
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Our common path to democratic revolution

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Justice strikes me as a false economy which it becomes seduced by its own power to change intentions by imposing certain values upon people. This is the legacy of statutory laws, which if we reflect on, do nothing but impose a greater tyranny upon us. Let us reflect on some examples:
1. Social protocol or values. There are laws which restrict the use of certain words of vile language. For instance, the work 'f**k' has been supplanted by asterisks, and we can see the same with 'STFU' (an internet abbreviation for "shut the f**k up"). A vile word which has been vetoed has been substituted with other words which convey the same meaning. What is a society to do? Well, perhaps there never ought to have been such a law. Perhaps respect is something that can't be legitimately be legislated.
2. Accounting rules. There were the good old days when accounting was based on principles. I know because I studied accounting, and I loved the topic in so far as it was underpinned by principles. i.e. Everything seemed to make sense. But because accounting was the basis for taxation, governments have sought to avoid 'principle' in order to extort money from taxpayers. The implication is that companies engaged in breaches of these arbitrary 'unprincipled' statutory laws have developed a plethora of 'loopholes' to avoid the consequences. These loopholes have demanded that government develop new laws resulting in more loopholes. Since companies act 10x faster than the 'tortoise', the implication is that companies are always ahead of the 'statutory game'. What is society to do? Maybe extortion by government (i.e. taxation) was never supposed to be tolerated. Maybe it was illegitimate? Certainly its impractical, as today taxation seems more to be a discretionary 'act of charity' than a corporate requirement.
3. Punitive rules. We have a great many punitive rules for such things as speeding, illegal parking. These rules seem to create more drama and injustice than they are systematically supposed to resolve. Consider that apart from being a point of extortion because governments who enforce the rules also design the city (with inadequate parking space); consider that the government regulations which make people stressed (when they confront arbitrary laws) are also anxious when they are finally caught for speeding, which is often a response to anxiety. The police make the argument 'the law is to teach offenders a lesson'. Its not working because its not an education and they have not resolved the problem; they have added to it. They have created new forms of tyranny which cause society more anxiety and depression. Society today is not more compliant, it is less so. Their solution is to 'increase the fines or even offer prison sentences', which just makes them more angry, and introduces them to other 'offenders' in prison, so they can engage in organised acts of ilicit behaviour because their 'so-called offences' have resulted in them ending up on the wrong side of 'legitimacy'. i.e. Society has criminalised them, marginalising them, and far from 'rehabilitating them', it has ensured they pursue a life of crime in a perpetual state of anger, or it has otherwise quashed their soul. It has turned them into a compliant, repressed, obedient zombie who will live on welfare all the rest of their life. Maybe they will tour schools telling the kids why they should be good...because otherwise they will end up like him. i.e. The sublime message - obey the law. Don't question. Obey.

If this looks like totalitarianism...its not. Its democracy. Its dispersed power. It looks the same because from a point of principle it is the same. But people have dispensed with principles. It is the same because both systems entail coercion. It makes little difference whether a person is persecuted by a single autocrat, an entire society, or abused by their neighbour. They are all - in principle - acts of coercion, which under common law are properly crimes. But under statutory law, the law has no 'spirit', it has no context. It is the letter of the law, and its open to arbitrary interpretation in an arbitrary context of 'other arbitrary statutory law', and selectively so.

Why are people so wedded to such a bad system? The reason is that judges are wedded to this system is because they are wedded to the morally repugnant values of collectivism, post-modernism and moral relativism which underpin it. They have believed and affirmed these values for a lifetime. Are you wondering why they assert immoral ideas....its because it is their frame of reference, and the system gives you no power to change things. The system is self-defeating. It makes the prospect of change so difficult that the system will have to be thwarted. i.e. Democracy was supposed to lead to stability. It did in the 'relatively' short term, however unless we enter a 'Dark Ages', we can expect that at some point there will be a 'break out'. The psychology of the people will reach a point where they will tolerate no more. You can see this in Tunisia. A small incident can precipitate a psychological reaction far greater than the issue which sparked the outcry. i.e. In Tunisia it was a persecuted shop owner. In the US, the LA riots were the result of mistreatment of blacks by LA police, i.e. Rodney King. Several blocks of LA were destroyed. We are waiting for the repressors to reach 'breaking point'....before they reach a point when they are prepared to do whatever it takes to overcome systematic injustice. Riots however are a call for change. The question is - will the new system offer anything better, or just a different form of tyranny. Sadly, Tunisia wants what we have, i.e. A different form of tyranny, but still collectivism. They know no better because of their moral ambivalence. I suggest before we get to that point where we have to make critical decisions...make sure you are on the right side of the reform agenda because you might just be leading us to a darker place. Many reform movements push society towards a more tyrannical regime than previously existed. The reason is that they did not understand the extent to which their values had departed from objectivity.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

The movie 'Atlas Shrugged' - cause and effect?

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I was first introduced to Ayn Rand's non-fiction book 'Capitalism - The Unknown Ideal' by a manager at Pizza Hut in Sydney when I was 19yo. The book and the sequence of other Rand books I would read over the next few years had a profound impact on me. They gave me a intellectual clarity that surpassed those people who I would confront in society who lived in moral ambivalence.
Years later I retain the belief that Ayn Rand was an important contributor to the restoration of Aristotelean logic as the standard of value. It is debatable what Rand actually contributed, however I credit here with establishing the basic framework for natural law. There are of course libertarians who would support natural law, but Rand was the first I believe to offer the first coherent 'theory of values'. The problem of have with her is not the theory because the 'spirit of the principles' she evokes are more powerful than some of the blaze, even arrogant way she pronounces them. I say this because I think her message goes misunderstood as a result of her fiction writing. In some cases, its the other way around. In The Fountainhead, we see expressions of empathy by Roark for Keating. In her non-fiction, there is no such explicit recognition of empathy as a virtue. Why? She probably considered it secondary. I on the other hand consider empathy a primary virtue, which provides the social contextualisation of concepts of justice. i.e. Can we judge the moral worth of a person with on education the same as a person with a great education. I answer 'No', fully recognising that the different levels of betrayal. Even still, I tend to think those acts of betrayal had reasons. For this reason, I tend to regard punitive law as a failure of 'early justice' or intervention rather than a mis-application of the law. Law does not preserve justice, it merely perpetuates the tyranny to family members. It offers no education; it merely sanctions the interests of the civil over the non-civil, dismissing the unrecognised breaches of law which those 'civilians' failed to prevent. i.e. A selective focus to be sure.
Tomorrow Americans will be able to view for the first time 'Atlas Shrugged' the movie as it is shown in 300+ cinemas. It is being released on Friday because that is considered the first day of the taxing season. Rand liked such symbolism. i.e. Cigarette smoke and her praise of business struck me as rather sweeping gestures which sanctioned 'symbolically' more than she would countenance in her non-fiction....but that was her romanticism speaking more than her realism. I guess women permit themselves such indulgences more than men...but in the modern men maybe we can discard such distinctions....men and women are mostly indulgent.



Another issue evident in the following trail for the movie 'Atlas Shrugged' is the provocative idea that Rearden is only out to make money. This is true but I suspect it might mislead the audience who might be inclined to consider Rearden a hero, and thus the notion that Rand advocates materialism. Rand considered pride in one's efficacy to be the primary value, and the basis of one's pride. I think this is one of the problems with her plot. There are too many characters. She should instead have adopted fewer characters who moved through time. Her message could have been so much simpler and clearer. For this reason, her books might get panned by collectivists. It could be argued that will happen anyway. I will argue that it will happen more than it need to have happened. Its a shame that John Aglialoro regarded it as necessary for the script to remain true to the book. Maybe that was a condition of his original contract. I think it needed to diverge from her works. But I suspect based on conflicts with the movie 'The Fountainhead', that she had similar stipulations in her bequeath so Leonard Peikoff was destined to comply with her wishes. Anyway, any production is welcomed at this time for advancing her intellectual works, which remain important.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Greenpeace disrupts offshore oil exploration

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Last weekend Greenpeace undertook some demonstration at sea in maritime waters north of NZ. The offshore seismic work was performed by Petrobras, the Brazilian national oil company. Such actions are illegal under common (maritime) and NZ statutory law, as well as UN conventions. Despite these laws, Greenpeace was able to sabotage disrupt exploration activity for a few days until the police was asked to interview by the Minister.
In the House, the leader of the ACT Party (part of the National Party coalition) asked the Minister of Police in the National Party why NZ Police had not enforced the law. Her answer was that the NZ Police has the discretion to charge Greenpeace or take into custody the persons obstructing the oil exploration vessel, but clearly had decided not to. This raises several questions:
1. Whether there is a need for the police to get involved at all. Clearly there is the opportunity for the explorer to call in the police. There is also the opportunity for Petrobras and its contracting body to prosecute Greenpeace under Common Law.
2. Under Common Law Greenpeace could also explore the legitimacy of the Seabed Resource Act, which assumes that the government ought to have control over such lands, and regulates the way in which such resources are administered.

What this display in parliament shows is:
1. How arbitrary the law is - both in enactment as well as enforcement
2. Rodney Hide is not an agent for law and order but punitive action against 'arbitrary' law breakers.



I don't dispel the possibility that Greenpeace could be conceived as engaging in an educational role by raising awareness of oil drilling in maritime areas of NZ. I do however this this oil exploration is in the best interests of NZ. An oil discovery would greatly transform the fortunes of NZ, a country which is an economic laggard with low wages by OECD standards. There are important issues however of resource ownership to raise, and Common Law is the appropriate 'logical' framework for discussing the issue. Statutory law is merely some extortion racket whereby some political party professes to be acting under some sanction of 'righteousness' or a 'mandate' which has no logical standing. No more standing than Hitler's democratic majority. Democracy is a rort, even if a sanctioned one. It ought to be abolished and the efficacy of Common Law restored.

People are protesting at sea because democracy sanctions the idea that 'might makes right'. Yes, democracy sanctions extortion. The implication is that Greenpeace is merely engaging in the same extortive practices as the government. The difference is that hundreds of years ago some monarch (i.e. autocrat) decided that statutory law developed by our parliaments had primacy over 'logical' common law. I would argue that there is no sound justification for this demotion of common law. That is not to say that common law cannot be improved...merely that it is a sounder basis for justice than extortion - whether by the public or private sector.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Gulf of Mexico oil spills - debatable impact

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According to the experts it is still too early to determine the impact of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. See this report by the NY Times.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon
Resource Rent Tax
Applied Critical Thinking | www.SheldonThinks.com

Labor right for once - regulation of gamblers

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I don't know who in the Australian Labor Party (ALP) came up with the idea to regulate gamblers, but I'm pleased. Unfortunately for them, I had the same idea about 20 years ago, and they should of as well. This is the problem with democracy....decision making is just too slow. This problem has been around for a long time....but successive governments have done nothing.
Really the gaming industry has no justification for being upset. Gambling must give them a payback every 1 year. These machines were so lucrative, and the reason is that they are 'bad business', no better than drugs. Making money off people's vulnerability. These people have no sense of self-respect. Develop a business which is not based on others suffering. Why do people find it so hard to come up with business ideas. I can come up with a good business idea on average about once every 1-2 weeks.
This will be very effective regulation as well. I can't imagine problem gamblers will be sharing ID's around....even if that were possible. It could plausibly result in the creation of illicit gambling dens, so I spoke too soon....however there is good reason to think that this will not occur readily, and illegal dens will be restricted to city locations.
The notion that such regulation is 'unAustralian' is pathetically the type of response you'd get from an Australian business group. The leaders of Clubs Australia Peter Newell ought to oversee a training program of his members - how to be ethical Australians. Finally the law is grasped some aspects of reality. Unfortunately, with democracy, we can expect to wait another 20 years for a major policy initiative. Any ideas what it could be?
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Monday, April 04, 2011

NZ government drug policy is a joke - synthetic drugs

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The NZ government has taken the unusual step of legalising a swag of synthetic drugs. This is despite the lack of evidence supporting their safe use. I would suggest that there is a failure in government to recognise that:
1. Government approval is tantamount to government endorsement of drug-taking
2. Government approval implies that these drugs are safe when the evidence suggests otherwise

The problem is the government's anti-intellectual framework for regulating drugs. These policies fail by:
1. Placing a prohibition upon 'legislated drugs', as opposed to making all drugs illegal until the required testing has been performed.
2. Failing to develop an intellectual or ethical framework to regulate drugs
3. Failing to make broader ethical value judgements which would make people less vulnerable to drugs.

The NZ government is going to look like an absolute hypocrite when it 're-regulates' these drugs in coming months. One wonders if they retain this idea that youths take drugs to rebel against their adult parents and other authorities like the police. This is 'so 60s thinking'.

You want to keep people off drugs; change the way you govern the people. Our democratic tradition is causing depression, anxiety and other psychological illnesses. There is no system of government as discordant with reality than the current framework of democracy. i.e. The notion that we have rights is a blatant departure from reality.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Understanding Julian Assange and Wikileaks

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Sixty Minutes has prepared a 26minute interview with Julian Assange. You can see the YouTube footage below. This was a good interview, with no inherent bias, and very fair questions. The interview allayed my concerns that Julian Assange is motivated by dubious values. He identifies as a 'libertarian', which is superficially a healthy disposition, but ultimately it would be desirable about his deeper values. Why? Because he has the capacity to hurt people. There have been a few instances in which he has released information potentially injurious to people:
1. Informants in Afghanistan - This is a charge made by the US State Dept. This need not be valid criticism, but its noteeworthy, as the State Dept is surely politically biased.
2. Bank privacy - He has released private client documentation from people who are concealing assets in Swiss banks. He might argue that these people are tax evaders. The reality is that based on their values, they might have good reason to evade tax. i.e. They might not believe in taxation, or 'the system'. Ought they be persecuted by his standards?
This is worrisome coming from a Libertarian. The problem with his campaign is that there is every risk that he will not remain true to the US revolution tradition. More concerning is that he might make the same mistakes as it, by failing to develop a deeper philosophical conviction.
Irrespective of his future actions, he is not someone who ought to be persecuted. He is acting in 'good faith', and any lives lost through his actions are so small in number compared to the lives saved, they pale into insignificance. He is fighting a war against illegitimate government, and lives might be lost. But unlike the State Dept, he is not intentionally doing so. The State Dept in contrast, can be expected to kill people to force compliance. The State Dept does not want a repeat of WikiLeaks. It does not want a plethora of 'copy-cat' sites. The reality is that there is every prospect of that.

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Author
Andrew Sheldon

Friday, April 01, 2011

How much honesty reporting is there?

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One of the biggest problems in the modern world is our media as a defender of our interests. This ought to raise people's concerns because we should naturally expect the media to act in its own interests. What does this mean? Well, different things to different 'interests':
1. Owners: They tend to have long term interests, so they are inclined to want to diminish competition by embracing concentration of media ownership because they can achieve very lucrative economies of scale. They want to placate the leaders of the old communist countries, so they can water down rights to privacy, if they think that decision suits them.
2. Manager CEOs: They have shorter term profit incentives, so they tend to want consolidation like the owners, but they also want to cut costs. They are likely to go for measures which dress advertising up as news. For instance, this story by the NZ Herald promoting smartphones, which I personally think at this point are alot of features which don't integrate very well at this stage, functioning on very poor battery life. This article promotes smartphone, and makes no critical statements about them. This type of 'informercial' is likely to be funded by an telco association rather than a specific company because it appeals to the media (as less of a conflict of interest) as well as increasing the telco spending pie of all telco companies. More demand helps raise phone prices, as well as demand. But that's my critical judgement...but I don't get much air time because no one is going to make any money out of my two cents.

In a choice between a media which offers you 'informercials' or paid advertising and a media which offers you critical, honest, insightful media, which would you choose as a consumer. Of course you would choose critical media - if you were critical. If you were unthinking and indifferent, you would of course not make the distinction. Too many people have sunk to a point where they filter what they read through their own conscious judgement. I call this a 'loss of sovereignty' or identity. There will come a time in future when we see greater respect for facts, and consumers will seek out media that speaks to their interests. A media that's first interest is its own interests, but whose interests are compatible with yours, not because they are altruists, or purport to be, but because they respect the same facts and existence as you. i.e. People who don't want to defraud you or your reality in order to make money. We are talking about a media which functions with integrity. That is its value proposition.
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Author
Andrew Sheldon

ConvinceMe.Net - Anyone up for a debate?