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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 26, 2026

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“The poor will always be with you” is not a moral statement, it’s just a fact. We cannot, long-term, take care of everybody that we might like to. And no politics, no ideology however well-meaning can make it otherwise.

--Corvos, 2026

The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.

--Paul Ehrlich, 1968

The abolishment of pain in surgery is a chimera. It is absurd to go on seeking it... Knife and pain are two words in surgery that must forever be associated in the consciousness of the patient.

--Alfred Velpeau, 1839

Same schist cheems mindset, different day century....

You will note that I said nothing about technology. Technology may change this fact, although it's less able to do so given that poverty unlike famine frequently deals in relative goods (status-related), in goods that are extremely inelastic (land) and in goods that are able to absorb extremely high spending (medicine). If you would like to attempt the creation of technologies that will alleviate the majority of poverty-related conditions, then taxing R&D out of existence as they do in the UK and Europe is not the way to go.

More to the point, if you have an argument to make, then please make it. Rolling your eyes and saying 'oh, well, they said we'd never X too lol' is not an argument, and it's beneath you.

I don't think we will ever have cross-galactic teleportation either, but that's what they used to say about going faster than horses amirite? They used to think we'd never have energy too cheap to meter, and actually we don't have energy too cheap to meter, and it's getting more and more expensive. As is almost everything in my country except electronics, because we have reached the apparent end of a very specific confluence of beneficial factors. Some things are possible, some things are impossible, sometimes we turn out to be wrong about what those are.

If you think I am wrong, please make your case. And please explain why your preferred policies have failed so badly in the UK.

in goods that are extremely inelastic (land)

Land may be inelastic, but the inelasticity of housing is a choice.

They used to think we'd never have energy too cheap to meter, and actually we don't have energy too cheap to meter

Also a choice; see the writings of Jack Devanney. (Summary will be posted below.)

And please explain why your preferred policies have failed so badly in the UK.

Artificial constraints such as 'the elites and middle managers must not be stopped in their monkey-dominance games', 'land-owners must never see their assets not gain in value', 'advances in nuclear technology must not be used to make cheaper energy if they can instead reduce already minimal radiation exposure by epsilon', &c., &c.

Summary will be posted below.

Thank you, much appreciated.

Land may be inelastic, but the inelasticity of housing is a choice.

To some degree, yes. It's a choice that's very difficult not to make - even my father (who is very hard headed about such things) got very short with me on the topic, simply because short-term he simply can't keep his family afloat through 20 years of retirement and medical bills (again, paying all that tax!) unless we can sell the house for a good amount of money. House prices are theoretically crashing in the UK at the moment, at least in certain areas, but nobody is selling because their life plans will explode.

There is a corollary, which is that the poor will not actually thank you for putting them in flophouses or big soviet blocks, or suburb-style council housing with a huge commute. They will take them but they will still feel poor.

Also a choice; see the writings of Jack Devanney. (Summary will be posted below.)

I don't believe that nuclear is cheaper than fossil fuels? Though I do believe that much of what you say in your summary is true.

@FirmWeird believes that the economic benefits of nuclear have been vastly exaggerated and someday I want to do a deep dive on what makes him say so. (Nuclear in France apparently requires heavy subsidies but that could be a union or regulation issue).

Artificial constraints such as 'the elites and middle managers must not be stopped in their monkey-dominance games',

Here, on the other hand, is where you and I part ways, and to my mind it deeply undermines what you've said in this and other comments. At least if I am understanding you correctly.

Wouldn't It Be Nice If Everyone Was Nice is not a program for government. There is nothing artificial about these constraints. You are going to get monkey-dominance and consequent 'misallocation' of resources. You can shift it to the bureaucrats and the allocators as happened in socialist Britain circa 1970 and communist Russia. You can shift it to the dictator-for-life and his court, or to the trade union leaders, or to the CEOs and middle managers, or to the scientific advisors and their committees as happened during COVID, but I will not accept arguments for high taxes and 'from each according to their ability, to each according to their need' on the basis of 'if people would just' because they won't 'just' and we both know it.

I am not going to ask you to write a 100 page monogram here, but I need something more than 'when I am King I will really crack down on this sort of thing'. Point to countries where it worked and continues to work. Talk about how you are going to address the second-order consequences of what you're advocating. Talk about public choice, or how to prevent the country falling into the kind of tax spiral I've described. Give a much more slimmed down expression of the sentiments you've already expressed and try to state clearly how far you think the obligation to help goes. Something. Because from where I'm standing this kind of politics failed. It failed over and over again, in many different countries, and whenever I buy something in this country or wonder how I'm going to get through my old age I am reminded that it's failing right here, right now.

Summary of content in link:

  • The linear no-threshold model of radiation is not an accurate model of biology, as cells have DNA repair mechanisms; thus dose profile is as relevant as total dose. Long-term exposures adding up to high totals show little-to-no additional cancer risk if less than one millisievert is received per day. (There were over 2,000 'radium girls'; about 100 of them developed cancers, all of whom were exposed to >1mSv/d, and most of whom received >20mSv/d.)
  • More has been spent than is prudent on reducing very small daily radiation exposures.
  • The requirement that no opportunity be forgone to reduce radiation exposure, even if from 0.0004 millisievert/day to 0.000395 millisievert/day, combined with the structure of nuclear regulations (e. g., requiring a half-built plant, fully compliant with regulations at beginning of construction, to be torn out and restarted to comply with new standards), has driven up the cost of nuclear energy, and made the cost of building nuclear reactors unpredictable.