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100ProofTollBooth

Dumber than a man, but faster than a dog.

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joined 2023 January 03 23:53:57 UTC

				

User ID: 2039

100ProofTollBooth

Dumber than a man, but faster than a dog.

1 follower   follows 2 users   joined 2023 January 03 23:53:57 UTC

					

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User ID: 2039

Who would approve the questions and composition of your "Rational Adult" exam? State legislatures? The Federal government?

I'd like to request a straightforward answers. Are you saying that bureaucrats and/or elected politicians will be granted authority to prepare an exam that deems be sufficiently "rational"?

There is a categorical difference between an employer requesting you put in ear phones or get a health check up (both of which you can refuse) and agreeing upon incubating a human inside of you for nine months in order to receive payment. If you're saying "No, it's just a difference in degree" then we have an intractable disagreement.

Regarding job quality and relative value, my response was when you asserted "we all pay an emotional toll" - which I think is incorrect. Some people do, absolutely. All of us do not.

I can't quite follow your thread on McDonalds PhDs etc. It seems to me your argument is roughly "find the best mix of compensation / perceived labor / emotional stress" and go from there. Valid enough, but I'd argue there are jobs that may in fact be pay well, be low in labor requirements, and have limited emotional stress that you shouldn't take - drug dealer, pornstar etc. (although, I'd also argue that those "jobs" specifically have high emotional stress - those that do not feel emotional stress in those "jobs" are perhaps demonstrating dissociative or anti-social mental states)

How so?

To be explicit; I think it is probably (further) evidence he is a sociopath who will use people and deceive people to further his own ambitions.

The conservative project relies on an idyllic view of the past and of conservative families

Well, no. I don't know what you mean by "conservative project" but conservatives don't simply register the past as "idyllic" as a rule. There's plenty of bad stuff in there! Communism, Nazism, the origin point of modern conservatism was Burke's response to the French Revolution.

The point is that conservatives point to pro-social behaviors, practices, and traditions that over hundreds and thousands of years have repeatedly shown themselves to be unquestionably beneficial to humanity and society. These are the very concepts, ideas, and traditions we seek to conserve. We don't believe in radical and accelerated experimentation with these. Within living memory, we went from "boys shouldn't hit girls" to arguing that more boys should be allowed to pummel girls for money.

My grandparents ‘s generation were all very religious, and so it was common for spouses to hate each other all their life.

Then I'd argue they weren't people of genuine faith, but scrupulous virtue signalers who used organized religious practices - and voiced adherence of them - to assuage their guilt for being shitbags. This is extremely common in evangelical circles and in the online RadTrad and OrthoBro spaces. It is astonishing how people who truly, deeply live the principles of their faith come across as intensely normal, pleasant, and happy people.

‘all mothers love their children’

This is not a core conservative claim unless you add in "should" between "mothers" and "love"

‘all men feel the need to protect women and children’

See above.

‘all people have a god-shaped hole’

Ah, well, credit where it is due. I think this is probably a core conservative claim and one of the big wedges between conservatives and "libertarians" (although, personally, I find the term "libertarian" to be close to meaningless.) For instance, one can't help but smirk at the fact that the "Rational" community has re-invented the concept of Satan as Moloch....when Moloch is literally a Biblical demon.

We all sell our bodies and limited time under the sun to make ends meet.

I've never had an employer or customer put something inside me for even a moment, let alone nine months.

And we all pay an emotional toll for it, unless you're lucky enough to have a job that you'd do for free.

I wouldn't do my current job for free. But I also enjoy talking about it - and find no shame it doing so - with my friends, family, and other acquaintances. Sometimes I have stressful days, but I don't end every day or week thinking, "A what a fucking emotional toll I had to pay!" In fact, I'm quite excited about my job because it lets me do all these other cool things with friends and families - and I feel like I really am creating some tangible value on a day to day basis.

If I'm allowed to daydream, everyone old enough to vote takes a Rational Adult exam, potentially one that's subdivided into multiple ascending tiers of difficulty. The more you pass, the more you are allowed to do, because the presumption is that you've proven yourself intelligent enough to be responsible for yourself. For an existence proof, look at driving tests.

Maybe have people pay for bonds. Maybe allow insurance companies to charge them more for risky behavior. Tax negative external ties and strongly punish anything that spills out of personal bounds.

So, you don't like "blanket illegality" for heroin, but you are totally ok with a kind of authoritarian state evaluation (with follow on coerced financial behavior) of your intelligence, psychology, and ability for self-determination.

I disagree.

The threads around the OpenAI coup attempt highlighted multiple inside sources who have stated that Altman is a unique kind of sociopath. He's a non-technical non-founder. He is the networker's networker.

Him having a child, unfortunately, points to one of two pretty extreme scenarios; either he's in the midst of a pretty big change of heart about Techno-post-humanity and does believe in the future in a "people should have kids an invest in them" sort of way. Or...

He's had a surrogate child (who he can easily support as a billionaire) as a magic talisman to deflect precisely these "you don't care about a human future" attacks. "Sure I do!" Sam says, "Look at this human infant that I now pay for! Is this not our culturally agreed upon signal indicating my allegiance to the future of humans?"

Ask yourself if a billionaire sociopath is capable of this.

Serious question; could I write a surrogacy-style contract for a woman I am married to so that, when we have a child, she gives up all maternal rights to that child?

If I could find a woman willing to sign such a contract - even though we are married - could any state conceivably allow such a contract to stand?

If the answer to both of these questions is not "yes", then I cannot see how all surrogate mothers do not still possess some sort of maternal benefits claim over their surrogate children, despite any contracts signed.

Where this gets even more hilarious is when a WM-WF sniffs around the WMAF couple to determine they're probably kinksters, invites them (the WMAF) to some sort of sex party - and then horribly out-freaks the WMAFs.

The two dudes have to join different run clubs. Sad.

All of the FFANGS discovered that the top performers from Land Grant Flagship universities were nearly as elite as CalTech/MIT years ago. In fact, one of the draws for FAANG was that the NAME on your alma mater didn't matter as much - what counted was work product like a GitHub portfolio, or performance in some of the CS / Cyber competitions etc.

So, I'm not talking about earmark at all. Try to be less stupid.

Here's a CRS report on NIH funding for instance

To the basically literate eye, one would find a table with the following budget authorities:

Institutes/Centers

Cancer Institute (NCI) Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Dental/Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) Diabetes/Digestive/Kidney (NIDDK) Neurological Disorders/Stroke (NINDS) Allergy/Infectious Diseases (NIAID) General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) Child Health/Human Development (NICHD) National Eye Institute (NEI) Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

Those aren't the only ones. There are more, but it's easy enough to understand the breakdown.

Moving money from NCI to NIGMS, for instance, would require congressional approval. How money within NIGMS is spent is more discretionary, sure. But your contention is either a deliberate misunderstanding of my original outline of the problem, or a weird semantic gotcha. Either way, it betrays a profound level of ignorance (intentional or otherwise) of how Congressional appropriations work. But I repeat myself. Your use of the term "earmark" in a wildly inappropriate manner betrays you.

The result of this is grant applications for this money have to include some section about how their research is related to study of cancer, and this is enough for it to qualify.

Fraud is generally not covered by Congressional appropriations.

Did you intend to offer a serious reply, or just use my comment as a way to jerk the spotlight towards yourself?

AUTISMVILLE LOOKS LIT!!!!

Here's the doom loop chart

For those of you too lazy to click on the link; the CBO has crunched the numbers and the net effect on income due to transfers (i.e. medicare, medicaid, SS, etc.) beings to be a net negative starting at the middle quintile.

Phrased differently: the top 60% of Americans have less income, on net, because of the massive transfers to the bottom 40%.

Culture war angle: Which quintiles are the sources of new business formation, full time employment, responsible family practices etc?

60+ years of Great Society-ism and horrific perverse incentives for family formation and work mean that we now have a situation where 40% of the population can be - indelicately - called a drag on growth and prosperity. 40%.

Even Sarah McLaughlin can't save this DOGE, and this DOGE can't save America.

One distinction: homosexual men and men who have sex with men (MSM) are different terms.

As a gay man who has only ever had sex with women, I appreciate this.


This is one of the artifacts of left thought that I find to be especially intellectually bankrupt. The idea that identity is only ever a personally applied label without dependency in the real world, especially behaviors. If I can identify as whatever I want despite hard counters by reality and/or a repeated behavioral pattern, then "identity" is as meaningful as fantasy LARPing; I'm gay, and also a level 40 dwarvish warlock. They're both made up and just fun things to goof around with!

But the problem is that we've imbued identity with the force of law. Protected class of people exist. Bostock v. Clayton County linked sexuality identity and gender identity to the 1964 Civil Rights Act --- what I "identify" as is literally as important, legally speaking, as age and pregnancy status - things that, for now at least, is still objectively measurable.

Either something is real and important or it isn't. If the only arbiter of my "identity" is my own self conception and subject to instant total revision based on nothing more than my mood, how can we ever approach something like equal protection under the law?

Unfortunately, this isn't how it all works - by law.

Congress approves various agencies budgets at various levels of detail. If, however, Congress is approving your funding line by line (most common in the Defense budget), you are not allowed, by law, to take funding from one line and apply it to another line without congress explicitly re-authorizing it.

Okay, so this must be pretty easy, right? When everyone agrees AIDS is super important to research, Congress just dashes off a little law saying "yeah, do it."

Well, no. In regular order, it would have to go through the committee of jurisdiction with all of the committee processes - markups, hearings, etc. Then, once it passes committee, it goes out to a floor vote.

Why not just skip to the floor vote? Because floor time is incredibly scarce and is controlled by party leadership. If you just go out and start introducing bills, you aren't even going to have a quorum to vote on them (which is why most bills introduced don't get passed and are "signalling" bills only).

I could go into more detail, but you get the point. The U.S. gov't is NOT like a corporation where you have budgets as guidelines for spending but, really, it's all coming from the same corporate account so just spend how you need to. The money not only has to exist, but has to be specifically slotted in for its purpose. If you don't obey those rules as an agency, you're violating federal law.

Yet another reason why state capacity is so fucked. We've created this arbitrary and capricious self-limitations that are blindingly obviously inefficient

If you're full time employed by a single employer at a company over 50 people, by law they are required to provide some level of health insurance. You might still have to pay some level of premiums out of pocket (in fact, most people do) but the cost is heavily deferred by the employer.

If you're making 100k or so per year on your own (self employed) you will have to pay out of pocket one way or another. I believe there are some small biz health insurance co-ops but it's still going to be painful.

To answer your question directly - I am not saying you should do anything. Personal choice is important! I'm say that, from a median financial expected return and risk perspective, at about 100k / year, yes, you should be buying health insurance.


Returning to the conclusion of my original post; Health Insurance in America is fucked up. Its cost only becomes reasonable once you're already a top 20% earner or if you have an generous employer who can afford to cover most of your premiums for you (and, perhaps, provides some sort of HSA for deductibles). But, by definition, this means that the big majority of Americans aren't in this position. So, the bottom 30% or so just defect. They don't buy insurance and when they need medical treatment they either skip out on the bill or (kind of) use government subsidies to get in the door...and then skip out on the bill anyway. For the middle ~30% percent, they pay crazy premiums, still get hit with deductibles that don't square with their savings capability, and receive substandard care. They lose in nearly all cases except for that rare medical emergency that happens in just the right way so that insurance does, in fact, pick it all up.

In this system, the people who "win" are those who don't need the system in the first place (the wealthy) or those who actively corrupt it (the non-insurance-having non-payers).

Sorry, I realize I made a very unclear presentation there.

It's either/or. You have $1m in liquid assets at an income of any level. Well, probably not poverty wages. Let's say any income at or above median household for your local area.

-OR-

You have approx $500k in annual income for your household. And it's a reliable and consistent income - betting big on a commission only sales role, or your crypto day trading does not count.

As an aside to your aside: You'd be surprised how many people in super high COL areas (NYC, SF, LA) have > $500k annual incomes with low single digit savings. Private schools and even modest "keeping up with the joneses" are wild.

I've been passively thinking about this for a few years now after a conversation with my parents. They actually kept the receipts and did the math - they would've been better off paying out of pocket for the last 40 years of medical expenses than having insurance (which they did have for everyday of their working lives without exception). At ours was not a family of indestructables; a sibling had four major surgeries over about an 8 year span, and both Mom and Dad have been on a variety of not-so-cheap prescriptions for 20+ years.

Especially considering the surgeries (which had approx 10 day hospital stays after, each time), I was totally blown away that the numbers still came out against the insurance. As a side note: To note let the insurance companies weasel out of some of the major costs for the surgeries, my Mom was spending up to 20 hours a week painstakingly collecting documentation from all necessary parties.

That's some background. Here are some numbers. This is better than back of envelope, but not perfect and, as usual, normal caveats; what's your risk tolerance? What's your family medical history etc.

Liquid assets: You should have $1m in liquid assets beyond your home. Income: 250-300k for an individual, 500k+ for a family of the usual size (1-3 kids)

With some smart negotiating, you can survive even the most catastrophic events so long as they don't cluster in an insanely unlikely scenario (i.e. you get into a car wreck driving home from your chemo appointment and the ambulance taking you to the hospital T-bones your poor spouse who is speeding to meet you there).

But, take a look at those numbers again. With that kind of wealth and income, you can afford to pay for a "cadillac" insurance plan. So, why not?

And here we confront the real decision about healthcare. It isn't so much about the cost - if you're rich, you don't need it and if you're rich you can pay for it. If you're not rich, you basically throw your money away for multiple decades a little bit at a time so that in the low probability change you need it, you do have it.

The real decision is; how do you feel about subsidizing a system that works BEST for people with horrible habits and defectors in the system? We've created a situation in which doing the "right thing" with health insurance and personal health habits makes you the sucker. The game theoretic optimal path of behavior is to smoke, drink, never workout, and then walkout on all of your medical bills.

Short of the Government mandating we inject ourselves with an untested substance lest we lose our basic rights (WAIT WHAT?!), I don't see how you could make a worse healthcare scenario.

I'm still hoping that something truly crazy happens and we get Athanasius Schneider as the next Pope.

Eijk or Erdo seem to have the best realistic shot of the "obvious" conservatives. Conservative American Catholics have the fever dream of Burke, but that's just not going to happen - the American Catholic church is a weird combination of too powerful, in long term decline, and far to schizophrenic within itself to get that brass ring of a Papacy.

I have an unverifiable theory that a lot of even more liberal Cardinals see Pope Francais as a failed experiment in promoting a "third worlder." Conservative or note, I would be heavily included to wager the next Pope is from Europe - and nowhere east of Berlin.

I think success for a new Pope is clarity in doctrine of the faith and a renewed evangelization focused on bedrock truths that are unanimous; real presence, the trinity, marian sinlessness etc. Defenders of Pope Francais can quibble about intent and outcome, but I think it's safe to say that the man has been unnecessarily vague on many issues ("Who am I to judge?" ... "We're not blessing the union of same sex couples, but just the individuals who may or may not be in those couples") and has neglected a lot of the basic near unanimous issues (real presence is, imho, one of those rallying cries).

I still don't know entirely what to Make of Vatican 2 from a purely theological perspective. I do believe strongly that Vatican 2 created an opening for beige Catholicism. Once you have a watered down liturgy with Father Friendly playing an acoustic guitar and preaching about The Buddy Christ, a lot of kids who grow up in these kind of parishes end up leaving pretty quickly because it all starts to seem, well, fake and gay.

But it all stems from the same original issue - spending too much time paying attention to highly modern concerns that aren't at the core of the Faith. This is an inversion. "Hmmm, we really need to tackle the Catholic approach to climate change because climate change is really important in the world right now." The Church should not be led around by the concern of The World. The whole point is that it's helping to prepare the faithful for the Kingdom of God without getting bogged down and distracted by worldly distractions, pleasures, concerns.

So, I'd like to see a Pope who makes Playing The Hits a big part of his time in The Big Chair. Focus - and get others to focus - on the 2000 year old bedrock stuff. Maybe get a little tough on the Orthodox about the Filioque or something. Get behind the Latin Mass in a big way. Make Nuns Great Again.

We need a clear and strong - perhaps, "based", as the kids say - Catholic leader to reinvigorate the Church.

I can tell you from being adjacent to the porn industry for a while

Respectful request for stories. You must have several good ones.

I really appreciate the first part of the post re: sports. I have a number of close friends who don't care about sports at all, and, although I bear them no animosity, I can't help but feel like they've missed this entire part of life that, if they engaged with it, would make every other part of their life better. My very best friends not only played and enjoy sports, they each have an attitude bordering on obsession with one or more professional or college teams. It means something. It means ... everything?


On conspiracy theories, I think people get tripped up in defining them. As @FirmWeird post indicates, sometimes what people call a "conspiracy theory" is really just the truth that one or more parties have attempted to conceal. If we don't get more specific, than a personal conspiracy can be as commonplace as telling your significant other a white lie about their appearance to preserve domestic bliss.

Therefore, my model of what makes something a conspiracy has more to do with the epistemic rubric people apply to any causal series of events. To be more direct about it, a "conspiracy theory" is a method of processing evidence wherein any counter-evidence is treated as, inversely, additional evidence that further proves the initial point.

"The Earth is flat"

"Here's a picture from space. It's a globe."

"OBVIOUSLY THAT'S A FAKED PHOTO THEY PRE-PRODUCED AS A PSYOP, WAKE UP, SHEEPLE"

In dealing with this epistemic rubric, there's simply no evidence, no matter how compelling, you can ever produce to change the other person's opinion. Note how this is actually distinct from confirmation bias in which confirming evidence is amplified 10x, and counter-evidence (sorry for that goofy phrase) is diminished 10x.

All the theories about the Luka trade, therefore, are NOT conspiracy theories until someone says something like "Lakers doc did Luka's physical and says he's fine" and the original conspirators respond with "Well, duh, the Lakers would never tell you the truth if he was injured."


A lot of the more enduring "conspiracy theories" (JFK comes to mind most easily) are fun because you can judge the available evidence pretty evenly and still find a lot of holes. Not believing in the Warren Commission report is nowhere near "lol tin foil hat alert!" I'd call it a kind of popular narrative agnosticism.

More recently, this is exactly how I felt about the lab leak theory. I couldn't give you a full, evidence laden dossier on why I felt unsure about the wet market hypothesis, or why I gave some credibility to the lab leak theory. I just kind of felt that way. What's more, nobody could offer me any sort of counter-evidence totally falsifying the lab leak theory. Instead, it was just an endless, yet vague, appeal to authority. "Jeepers! No serious SCIENTIST believes the lab leak theory. Get over it, man! A pangolin fucked a bat and now we can't hug grandma. That's just how life is sometimes!"

At the same time, you had John Stewart (of all people!), putting the regime on notice in real time. Wild.


In terms of conspiracy theory filter up / trick down, I think the key variable is mostly how an individual views information as a commodity. Meaning, when I encounter a new piece of information on anything, what's my initial reaction to it before I even process it. Is it "well, here's some data, I ought to consider it vis-a-vis my existing model." Is it "Someone obviously put this here for me to find. Let met try to discern this unknown person's motivations." Is it "I will begin with the assumption that, whatever this new piece of data is, it's wrong until proven right (or vice versa).

A smarter person than I might have some sort of snappy label for this (metabias? omni-priors?). The point remains the same; people are going to have attitudes about information even before they have enough information to justify having an attitude.

My response is as follows:

Read all of Pslam 17.

Replace God/The Lord, with "Chiefs".

Remember that all Chiefs haters;

They close up their callous hearts,

and their mouths speak with arrogance.

Red Kingdom, Baby.

I agree. It might even fail to rise to the low bar of "performance art." This is a publicity stunt and one that a Kanye affiliated lady has done already!.

When women don't have clothes on, people take notice. It isn't just attractive or famous women. All over the world, every single day, men pay out inordinate amounts of cash simply to see women with less or no clothing on. Sexual interaction need not be present. I'm talking about topless bars / strip clubs / what have you. Let's also remember that men continue to do this when endless explicit sexual content is freely instantly available in digital form. In 2025, more people have access to endless free porn than clean drinking water - and men are still literally throwing cash at IRL women on the daily.

So, Kanye, a person who has made his money in the pop culture entertainment industry, knows that "tits = eyeballs" and that this will be the same today, tomorrow, and forever.

There is nothing more and nothing less to the story.

We should close the borders AND restructure large parts of the economy.

Specifically, labor laws; see this previous post from yours truly.

American consumers are simply not going to want to pay US citizen level wages to fruit pickers and landscapers

This is a self-inflicted wound that we could be corrected overnight. Again, read my earlier post. Our employment laws cause so much friction in hiring (and firing) that the entire reason we have this indentured servant class of illegal workers is because their very lack of citizenship is a competitive advantage in the marketplace. If you want to see what it looks like when a government screws over its own citizens, look no further than American employment law.

Predictions about rapid price inflation of basic groceries due to border enforcement paper over the fact that the American working class is already unable to afford their own lives because they can't get jobs quickly enough. Some simple math with reasonable assumptions;

  • Job search length; 1 - 3 months
  • Offer to first day; 2 - 4 weeks
  • First day to first paycheck; 2 weeks.

All in, we're talking anywhere from 2.5 - 4.5 months between paychecks for a typical lost-job-need-new-job scenario. You can see how untenable this would be for a single person (let alone a family) living paycheck to paycheck. Lost my job at Waffle House? Oh, no problem, I've got four months of cash savings, right?

Contrast this to off the books cash labor which can and routinely does find work (and payment!) within a single week.

American agriculture is the product of hundreds of years of compounding laws and regulations. I've done a little research into the economics of "family farms" and have discovered that your median small farmer is technically a multi-millionaire, but with both assets and debts backed by oceans of Federal dollars. They pay cash for F-350s and also supplement their groceries with SNAP benefits. It's wild, but, with enough over-regulation, anything is possible!

And that's what we're really talking about. Horrible shit-ass legislation in one area (employment law) has created a wholly separate awful situation in another area (immigration). So it isn't about X or Y, but how X and Y interact.