Nate Silver: Libertarians Are the Real Liberals
"People are not in politics for truth-seeking reasons," argues the data journalist and author of On The Edge: The Art of Risking Everything.
Journalist Nate Silver burst onto the national scene in 2008, when he correctly predicted 49 out of 50 states in that year's election, outstripping all other analysts. His former website FiveThirtyEight became a must-visit stop for anyone interested in political forecasting and helped mainstream the concept of "data journalism," which utilizes the same sort of hard-core modeling and probabilistic thinking that helped Silver succeed as a professional poker player and a staffer at the legendary Baseball Prospectus. Reason's Nick Gillespie talked to Silver about the 2024 election, why libertarian defenses of free speech are gaining ground among liberals, his take on the "crisis" in legacy media, and his forthcoming book, On The Edge: The Art of Risking Everything.
Today's Sponsor:
- Better Help. When you're at your best, you can do great things. But sometimes life gets you bogged down, and you may feel overwhelmed or like you're not showing up in the way that you want to. Working with a therapist can help you get closer to the best version of you—because when you feel empowered, you're more prepared to take on everything life throws at you. If you're thinking of giving therapy a try, Better Help is a great option. It's convenient, flexible, affordable, and entirely online. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist, and switch therapists anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can get you there. Visit BetterHelp.com/TRI today to get 10 percent off your first month.
Watch the full video here and find a condensed transcript below.
Gillespie: Your Substack is called Silver Bulletin. You've put a lot of work into that title, didn't you?
Silver: No, I took about three seconds doing it, and now it has some brand equity, for better or worse. I'm afraid to change it.
Gillespie: You're like American poet and writer Allen Ginsberg. First thought, best thought?
Silver: It's hokey and stupid and I like that. It's unpretentious, right? I've workshopped internally better names that some corporate branding consultant would prefer, but I just like the cheesiness of it.
Gillespie: On November 8, you had a fantastic discussion where you used Friedrich Hayek's libertarian cri de coeur "Why I'm not a conservative" to talk about a crack up on the left side of the political spectrum. Friedrich Hayek wrote "Why I'm Not a Conservative" as a postscript to The Constitution of Liberty. In it, he talked about how in America, the terms conservative and liberal didn't quite make sense the way they did in a European context. Classical liberals or libertarians over there were often in America coded as conservatives, whereas they were quite liberal in a European context, pretty revolutionary and radical.
With that as a backdrop, you applied that Hayekian framework to contemporary U.S. politics after the October 7th attacks on Israel to your piece titled "Why Liberalism and Leftism Are Increasingly at Odds: The Progressive Coalition is Splitting Over Israel and Identity Politics." Can you talk about that?
Silver: There are a lot of dimensions to it. One thing I did internal that helped is that I asked our friend ChatGPT—not the woke one, not Google Gemini—to define liberalism, leftism, progressivism, libertarianism, and "wokeism," which is a term that is not as commonly used as others. If you break that down, issue by issue, you realize that…liberalism is kind of closer to libertarianism than it is to leftism or to more woke modern variants of that.
Gillespie: Why did it take an event like the October 7th attacks to make that visible?
Silver: I went to the University of Chicago and London School of Economics, and I took all the European Enlightenment history classes, and read a lot of political philosophy. To me, it's always been rattling around in the back of my head. I think journalists should take more political philosophy classes. These ideas remain very important and very pertinent to many debates that we're having today. But if you write a Substack, it might seem off the cuff, but you always have a lot of ideas rattling around in your head.
I had half-drafted versions of this post, and an event like October 7th—I'm not super polarized on Israel or anything like that—but you have a news hook, you have a moment which is like an emperor has no clothes moment where these university presidents are so clearly out of touch with the American mainstream, and people feel like they have permission to say this now after holding their tongue in a lot of previous events.
It's a news peg or a news hook about things I think a lot of people had observed for a long time, which is the kind of Hayek triangle between what I call liberalism—but you can call it classical liberalism or libertarianism—and then what was socialism but might be now more social justice leftism, and then what was conservatism is now more like MAGA-fied, particularly illiberal conservatism.
Gillespie: Is progressivism, or wokeism, or identity politics the same as socialism minus economics? Then you're left with identity politics, or what's the defining attribute of that cluster?
Silver: No, I think reorienting the leftist critique around issues having to do with identity, particularly race and gender, as opposed to class, is interesting. I don't get into every detail of every debate, but when you have The New York Times at the 1619 project, the traditional crusty socialists didn't like that very much. That was a sign as an anthropologist about how even leftism and the new form of leftism are different in important respects.
Gillespie: Where are conservatives on this? If there's a crack up on the left between what might have been called liberals—for lack of a better term—and progressives, there's MAGA on the right. What's the non-MAGA right? Is that analogous to what's going on on the left?
Silver: As you pointed out earlier and as Hayek points out, America's weird in that we were the first country founded in Enlightenment values: the rule of law and free speech and individualism. The market economy is something that comes along right at this time. The Industrial Revolution and the Enlightenment are very closely tied together historically. So if you are appealing to traditional American values, you're appealing to values that are fairly lowercase libertarian, certainly liberal values. [Sen.] Mitt Romney [R–Utah], a Republican, says he likes liberal democracy and uses that term correctly like people should. It is weird in that they are traditional American values.
I'm not a fan of almost anything about Donald Trump. I don't think it's the most constructive form of conservatism. And I do believe in technological and societal and economic progress. I think it's very important. It feels like there aren't very many people who do believe in progress anymore. One of the fundamental factors in all of world history is that for many, many centuries, millennia, human [Gross Domestic Product] GDP grew at 0.1 percent per year. You kept up with population growth, barely, if that. The beginning of the late 18th century, there was a take off toward growth. That coincided with both the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution. Which came first is a big debate in economic history. But there was progress when there hadn't been before. People don't know that basic history.
Gillespie: Every year, our cars get a little bit better, our phones transform from something that was plugged into the wall to something you carry around in your pocket, everything is getting better. Yet, we are in kind of a dank mode right now, where people on the right and the left think we have material progress but everything else is terrible, or we don't even have that. What's driving that?
Silver: There are good data driven arguments for secular stagnation.
Gillespie: Can you define that?
Silver: The way it's used informally is to mean that progress is slowing down or maybe not really happening very much at all, or that there are a lot of headwinds. There's a more [former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury] Larry Summers technical definition. But GDP in the Western world grows now at 1.5 percent per year, whereas it peaked at 3.5 percent in the 1960s for example. Life expectancy in the U.S. has stagnated. That's not very good. IQ is a contentious topic, but IQ has stagnated. Mental well-being has declined by various measures. Many European countries have not seen their economy grow substantially in many years. There is lower fertility around the world, which I think is something that the left doesn't like to talk about, but is certainly an important dimension. Political dysfunction is on the rise.
That thesis is actually fairly well constructed in some ways. But the constant doomerism on all sides—if you have a political quadrant, everybody has something they're deeply worried about. A certain type of person thinks that AI is going to destroy the world, which by the way, I take somewhat seriously. That's a different debate. I had dinner with a group last night and they're like, why would you bring children into this world because of climate change. I think that view is wrong.
Gillespie: How do you think these intra-ideological issues on the right, the left—and that's not particularly among libertarians, we don't want to talk about a right-left spectrum because it tends to leave us out—but how do you think break up on the left and the right is going to play out in the election season coming up?
Silver: In the short term Democrats have going for them is that Trump unites both the liberals and the left. That left-liberal coalition, which partly formed under [Barack] Obama in 2008, in part because people were sick of [George W.] Bush, carried forward unsuccessfully with [Bill] Clinton in 2016 and then [President Joe] Biden successfully in 2020.
Trump really unites people who would otherwise be at loggerheads over many issues. But this time, I'm not sure. I am not trying to articulate an editorial position on Israel-Gaza stuff. But if you have terms that are being tossed around like genocide, that's a sign that people [are] very serious. That's not in the bluffing stage. Maybe I won't vote for Biden, who by the way is 81 years old.
Gillespie: He presents as like 79 or 80.
Silver: He's doing above average for an 81 year old. I don't really want a 78 year old president either.
Gillespie: Are we finally seeing a kind of breakdown—not of the two-party system, because it's always going to be two parties—of the way Republicans and Democrats talk about the constellation of issues that define them. Is this the end of the road for that iteration?
Silver: When the end comes, it will come more quickly than people think. But I wouldn't bet on it happening in like the next five or ten years. In some ways, the parties have become more efficient about building their electoral coalition. It's a remarkable fact that in American politics, each party gets about half the vote. If you get 48 percent versus 52 percent, it's almost considered a landslide these days.
Gillespie: In 2016, it was about 80,000 votes across three states that changed, and it was about 40,000 votes across three states in 2020.
Silver: In a country of 300 million people. Its remarkable elections are that close. It has to do with the efficiency in some ways of the political system. They do it by enforcing more and more orthodoxy. There's no a priori reason why your view on taxation, and abortion, and Gaza, and marijuana legalization, and ten other issues needs to be tied together. But you flatten out this multi-dimensional space into two parties. One difference now versus a couple of decades ago is that the public intellectuals, maybe it's too generous a term, but the pundits are more partisan than the voters. They're the ones who enforce partisan orthodoxy. I'm basically a good center-left liberal. In some rooms in New York, I feel like I'm the more conservative person in this room, probably one of the most woke.
Gillespie: You're practically a stooge of the Soviet Union here.
Silver: Yeah, exactly. But if you break from Orthodoxy, there's a very efficient policing of people who piss inside the tent and dissent from the coalition, and have the credibility to say that out loud. Because you can influence people if you're willing to just speak your mind. It helps to be established where you're not afraid of anything.
Gillespie: A couple of weeks ago, we saw an outpouring of anger that Vice magazine—which up until about two weeks ago had been seen as a charnel house of sexual harassment—suddenly went bankrupt. People were saying, "I can't believe we lost the last outpost of great journalism." Similar things have happened before: when Sports Illustrated finally went belly up, the Los Angeles Times, a newspaper that nobody read, is cutting staff. What's going on with the legacy media? Is that in any way tied to what's going on in the political identity space?
Silver: In an effort to be nuanced and textured, I think it's 80 percent secular economic forces where you have this advertising bundle that was very powerful in that probably wasn't a natural occurrence per se. It was a form of economic rent, more or less, that subsidized the industry. My parents would walk down to the store and buy The New York Times, even growing up in Michigan. I respect traditional journalism, but I think it's mostly an economic story. It's hard because I think journalism does create, in theory, social utility. I'm not sure I think that journalism should be funded by governments, though it is in many countries.
Gillespie: When you say you're not sure, do you mean you know it shouldn't be?
Silver: Here's my idea, which I'm stealing for one of my future Substack posts. I think universities should run—maybe it's a bad idea. I don't know. It sounds like a bad idea. What if universities bought newspapers? Because newspapers are categorically more useful than academic papers.
Gillespie: Because they have comic sections.
Silver: But they are producing journalism in real-time. They're the first draft of history. They're read much more widely. The writing is much, much, much better. Harvard, you take the fact that members can actually write and communicate with the public and have them write for The Boston Globe instead of for some obscure journal.
Gillespie: University of Miami or a party school could take over Vice. It's a brand extension, for God's sake.
Silver: For once, as the most left-wing person in the room, we could agree probably on the many things I think journalists do wrong. I think it's not great that local journalism has been hit so badly. I'm a big fan of Substack. I make money from it. You realize your marginal revenue product a little bit more explicitly. There is always an implicit deal where if you go report from the front lines of Ukraine, that's not actually going to be narrowly profitable. You always had subsidization of enterprise reporting and foreign reporting from cooking and homes. The editorial section, where you pay pretty well. They get lots and lots of clicks, or Wordle or whatever games. If that bundle breaks down, The New York Times has been doing well.
Gillespie: You created FiveThirtyEight. Could you walk through the stages of death that went along with it. When FiveThirtyEight launched, it was a phenomenal resource that was doing things that other sites weren't doing. You ended up moving to The New York Times with it, and then to ABC and Disney.
Silver: We were under license to The New York Times. We got hired by The Times for three years, and then I sold FiveThirtyEight to Disney/ESPN in 2014, which intercompany transferred to ABC News.
Gillespie: Within a little bit more than ten years, you went from starting something fundamentally new that made a major impact on legacy media into giant news organizations, and now is in its Biden years, let's say, where it's taking the afternoons off.
Is that a tragedy or will something else come up? Is it the fact that you could do that because there's so much more possibility and capacity for new things? Are you better or worse off being at Substack for the moment?
Silver: The latter question is easier. I feel much better off. I just have like a little extra pep in my step being independent again. You're probably making the same income, it might be from six different sources of the texts that are more complicated, but it's very nice to have an incentive. If you write a good Substack post, people will subscribe to your blog and you get money in your bank account. That actually feels good, to have actual incentives to work hard and to develop an audience.
The problem with ABC News and Disney is that it was basically run like a socialist economy. Obviously, this is a well-run business in some ways, but we were so small relative to their scale that they didn't care one way or the other. If you make $5 million or lose $5 million, why do they care? It's like one day of theme park receipts at one theme park somewhere in the world. It's actually really bad, though. It makes you kind of a client of the regime. Your capacity to stay there depends on the goodwill of people who are able to kind of write off an x million dollar loss a year.
We had good economics for a subscriber business. We have loyal, high-net-worth readers who have a differentiated willingness to pay, and who have been around FiveThirtyEight for a long time. It could have been a good subscription business, but Disney was literally like, "Well, we are launching Hulu Plus. Therefore this would interfere with that." No, it wouldn't. But when you're in a very large corporation and you're some subdivision of a subdivision of subdivision, it's not run very efficiently. Disney is not one of these cultures, like a friend who works for Amazon. Amazon will micromanage everything. It can be good or bad in different ways.
But Disney is all about scale, scale, scale. You know, the National Football League and theme parks and nine-figure budget movies. If you're like a little tiny barnacle on the Disney whale, you'll just get ignored till the politics change, and they have to cut staff and wear this division that no one ever even tried to make a profit with. I think we could have. Of course, at some point, you get cut.
Gillespie: Is it an absolute loss when The LA Times shrinks? Or are you confident that new things will crop up that will perform either the same function or the function as it needs to be done now, rather than what a daily newspaper did in 1970 or 1980?
Silver: Substack is great. Social media has, although complicated, democratized things in a lot of ways. It's the upper middle class, like a lot of things, it's gotten quite squeezed. Things like local reporting, the fact that the very obvious and kind of comical, like George Santos story, didn't get a lot of pick up, for example, like things like that are going by the wayside a bit. I think we can have a few more blind spots: Is it like in my list of ten biggest problems in America right now? No. Top 25? Okay, maybe. I think it's bad. People have a desire to express themselves. There are some outlets, like The New York Times that are still doing very well.
Gillespie: You wrote in a November essay that free speech is in trouble. Young liberals are abandoning it—and other groups are too comfortable with tit-for-tat hypocrisy. Why are young liberals abandoning free speech?
Silver: What I would call Enlightenment liberalism are still relatively new ideas. They've been with us for a few centuries and not more than that. In some ways, they're counterintuitive ideas. The notion is that if we are a little bit more laissez faire, and let people do what they want, the free hand of the market will generate more wealth, and we'll all be collectively better off. It sounds too good to be true, except it mostly is true, empirically over a long period.
But, there are a couple of things: One, which is relevant to my book, is that for the first time in history, the younger generation is more risk averse than older people. They're having less sex. They're doing fewer drugs. Less can be good or bad, I don't know.
Gillespie: It's so bad, they're having less sex than Joe Biden.
Silver: He apparently is doing quite well. I am not somebody who says that there are never any tangible harms from controversial speech. Look at [novelist] Salman Rushdie, free speech can actually have effects. It's a powerful thing. But if you're so risk averse, you just want to maintain harmony. I think that's part of it. Right. Also, these are not people who grew up with the memory of the Cold War or certainly not of World War II.
Gillespie: Or mass censorship. When you think back to the idea that books like Lady Chatterley's Lover, or Tropic of Cancer, or Ulysses really weren't legally published in America until the late '50s, early '60s?
Silver: If you're like 23 or something, even dumb stuff like the Dixie Chicks in the Bush years. People even forget about that kind of thing.
Gillespie: Why do you think other people—not woke progressives, but conservatives who constantly talk about the Constitution, or perhaps even libertarians in certain circumstances—think "let's be hypocritical in order to own the libs." What's going on there?
Silver: One of the universal truths about everything in life is that if you have a longer time horizon, you almost always benefit from that. People are trying to win the argument to feel satisfaction in that immediate moment or that hour. They think, "If I get into the left on things, not the left actually, it's kind of more kind of center-left partisan Democrats about Biden's age," and they think, "Well, if I can dunk on Nate Silver about Biden's age, then I'll win the argument." But the problem is, it's not an argument between you or me. Seventy percent of the American electorate thinks Biden is too old, very reasonably so I might add. Eighty is just above the threshold anyone should be commander in chief. But they're trying to win the argument and not win the war.
Gillespie: This might be an impossible question to answer. It's kind of a chicken or egg thing, but are we more talking about present short-term things? Because that's the infrastructure. That's social media. That's the way cable news operates now. Or have we conjured those things in order to win quick arguments in the idea that that will transform society?
Silver: It's three things. It's partly human nature, partly the nature of modern media, and partly the fact that people are not in politics for truth-seeking reasons. They're in politics to win partisan arguments and to enforce orthodoxy because you have two parties that are taking this 20-dimensional space and trying to collapse it all down into two coalitions that may not actually have all that much in common if you start to pick apart differences. You need useful idiots to enforce those hierarchies.
Gillespie: Why are you different? Your entire career, going back to your work on Baseball Prospectus and elsewhere, you've been more data-driven. Data will tell you whatever you need it to tell you, right? Why aren't there more journalists like you who are trying to ascertain reality and then tease out trends and meaning, as opposed to those who bulldoze things into what they want it to be.
Silver: It's funny because now I feel like I'm more of a traditionalist. When I went to The New York Times in 2010, they were very concerned that I said I had voted for Obama in 2008, which I thought was just a matter of basic transparency. I would make the same vote again, to be sure, but that was a big problem that I had been open about my political views at all. It comes full circle now, where if you don't kind of express your view on every issue, then you're seen as being suspect potentially. But the world is dynamic, so it's possible to overcorrect. I think there was or is truth in the left critique of both-sides journalism. The truth is certainly not always, especially for a libertarian, just somewhere in the middle. You people aren't centrist. It's a different dimension.
Gillespie: It's a very different dimension that some people will claim doesn't even really exist. You certainly can't find it on any map.
Silver: I think even some of the more woke versions of it—at least I think that it's to some approximation true that white men have a lot of power in the media and, of course, that's absolutely true. But when you don't give people credit for being willing to adapt, if you read The New York Times today and compare it to 2013 or something, it's a vastly different paper now and you have to adjust to that moving target and not to the same standard. Give people credit for being. This is part of why the free market is right: it gives people credit for being intelligent and within their domain, relatively rational. I'm the only smart person in the room.
[Similar to the] COVID-19 stuff. The early dialogue about masks where [former Chief Medical Advisor Anthony] Fauci [says] "Later on where I tell people masks are worthwhile, but let's say they don't really do anything. We need them for essential workers." People don't really notice that we're telling a good, noble lie. That shows contempt for people.
If you play poker, then you know that, although bluffing is a part of poker, if you're inconsistent, you're allowing yourself to be exploited by your opponent. Your opponent's smart. If you were only playing a certain hand a certain way with a bluff or with a strong hand, then you will be exploited by your opponent, as opposed to treating them as intelligent and adaptable and more sophisticated. You should treat people as being intelligent. It's a much more robust strategy than to assume that you're the only worthwhile and smart person in the room.
Gillespie: Can you talk about your book On the Edge, which comes out in August. What's it about?
Silver: The book is called On the Edge. It's a book about gambling and risk. It covers a lot of territory. It follows my journey where before we ever covered politics, I played poker online for a period of time in the mid-2000s. It starts out in the poker world.
Gillespie: Why did you stop that?
Silver: Because the government passed a law called the [Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act], which is what piqued my interest in politics. It was tucked into some unrelated security legislation at the end of 2006. I wanted the bastards who pass legislation, who are mostly Republicans, to lose. And they did. Democrats had a good midterm in 2006. And well, they fucking took away my livelihood. What am I going to do now? I wound up starting to write about politics.
Gillespie: And now you are simping for Trump. What a strange world. To write On The Edge you did a phenomenal amount of interviews and research. Can you talk a little bit about the scope of that?
Silver: It starts out in poker and sports betting but gets into areas like venture capital, gets into crypto—I talked to our friend [FTX founder] Sam Bankman-Fried quite a bit—gets into effective altruism, gets into a lot of the AI stuff. It's a fundamental book about a certain type of nerd.
Gillespie: It's an autobiography.
Silver: Sort of. But they're taking over the world in a lot of ways. They're the ones who run tech and finance. Tech and finance are eating the world. It's an insider's tour about how people like that think. There were like 200 interviews. I did a lot of trips to Vegas, which was fun.
You're trying to immerse people in the topic and get people a front-row seat. I'm not a big network access guy, but I'm flattering myself here, because I think I am fair. I think people will talk to me that would not talk to other people. I am talking to some of the top Silicon Valley [venture capitalists] VCs on their own terms and unguarded ways because I'm not coming in with an agenda apart from trying to understand them. The book is very critical of some things. But I think it's fair. It didn't preconceive what it wanted to say before I actually did the reporting, the interviewing. I think that'll be reflected in the work.
Gillespie: To go back to Hayek, my favorite work by Hayek is The Counter-Revolution of Science: Studies on the Abuse of Reason. He worried that the French Enlightenment got everything too mathematized, and ultimately, people were just data points in other people's grand theories and you erased them if they mess up your equation. Are we too quantified in this world?
Silver: There are a few dimensions of this. One is like the dubious claims to have scientific authority and say, "Oh, we are just doing what the data tells us." You saw this during like COVID-19 and whatnot. You see this with the concept of misinformation, which is often entirely subjective. That's one dimension. The book also gets into utilitarianism a little bit and effective altruism, where they try to quantify everything and you run into problems with that.
First of all, I build models for a living. I build sports models and election models, tried to bet on them myself and in a sense, a game theory of poker strategy is kind of a model. Building a model is pretty hard. There are lots of ways to screw up. There are lots of omitted variable biases. It might be another overcorrection thing where like 20 years ago the world needed to become more data-driven. Now it's become like a little bit of a, when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail kind of problem.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
Photo Credits: Brian Cahn/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Sandy Carson/ZUMA Press/Newscom; 157014269 © Ilnur Khisamutdinov
- Video Editor: Adam Czarnecki
- Audio Production: Ian Keyser
NEXT: The Best of Reason: Commander in Chains: 7 Scenarios If Trump Is Jailed and Wins the Election
Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please log in to post comments
"It feels like there aren't very many people who do believe in progress anymore."
Maybe not the context but I take exception to the wording here. It could not matter less whether people believe in progress or not. Progress is going to happen - for good, for ill or for indifferent - whether people believe in it or not. There have always been people who did not welcome progress and others who capitalized on it and made a fortune from it, and - in the long run - ALL of us have benefitted from that progress, both socially and economically. Politicians can try to obstruct progress or get out of the way as much as possible and that's pretty much all there is to the issue.
People who believe in progress are Progressives practicing their religion, Progressivism.
People participating in progress without believing in it are just people in the way Jesus was a Jew, not a Christian or the Wright Bros. were inventors, not pilots.
Of course, thanks to the idiocy of Atheism, they'll say "Nuh Uh! We don't believe in *anything*!" and then continue operating under the firm belief that science can explain anything and that nothing is incalculable.
In a sense those are two different things. For example, I believe in progress - that it's generally a good thing with some occasional drawbacks for some people - and that progress happens because of human nature - all of it! - taking into account that human nature is a mix of the result of millions of years of evolution overlaid by intelligence counteracting the less useful aspects of instinct after progress has been achieved.
What you are expressing is more an acknowledgement of progress, than a belief in it.
Progressives sincerely believe that evolution can occur in a single generation. It is quite literally Lysenkoism.
See: human sexuality is a social construct.
PRogressives believe that no one sees the cloaked hand of history except Progressives,so Woodrow Wilson could say the Founders were no longer relevant. As to Evolution , it isnot the same as Punctuated Equilibrium nor is the several Cambrian Explosions evidence for or against Lysenkoism
The only core to what you say is the mistaken premise that things do not have a nature --- which destroys any idea of progress, you can't be a better X if you turn into a Y
You wouldn't call it progress if it weren't a good thing so you are reifying your ideas. And it happens with human nature because we are part of reality...And the final part is the crap explosion : Mix and result are not the same, at all, and 'overlaid' has no meaning , nor does instinct (Lwhich is part of human nature) and progress is not achieved , it is an arbitrary choice and comparison of 2 points in history
THis is not worthy of a 15 year old. Start here to unravel this mess All causes have multiple effects, all effects have multiple causes.And drop the New Age psycho weirdness about human nature is a mix of evolution, intelligence, instinct,etc. That would make progress equal to a MIX, it wouldn't even be conscious 🙁
Atheism does not equal: "We don't believe in anything.". It simply equals lack of belief in a God or God's, whether negative or positively affirmed.
One can lack belief in a God or God's and positively believe in and adhere to other things and many Atheists base their Atheism on the findings of Reason (the human faculty) and Science.
And, of course, as one of my T-shirts points out, "Science doesn't care what you believe."
Dummy, your gibberish will be one thing I will not miss when Reason Magazine starts charging admission to give themselves attention and clicks. If you remain, it will lose on both the admission and the attention.
NO, wrong on the data !!!
23% say they do believe in a higher power of some kind...This shows that not all self-described atheists fit the literal definition of “atheist,” which is “a person who does not believe in the existence of a god or any gods,”
THE PEW SURVEY OF ATHEISTS and their beliefs
"Atheism does not equal" "lack of belief in a God or God’s".
Agnosticism equals lack of belier in a God or God's, without a definitive statement of non-existence. Agnosticism is "I don't believe in God, he may well exist but I am unable to confirm it.
Atheism equals "There is no God". It is not just a lack of believe, but also a denial of existence.
Sorry to inject logic here but your argument depends on defining 'regress" as "progress"..
YOu say : Progress is going to happen – for good, for ill or for indifferent
Now I could say REGRESS is going to happen --- for good , for ill or for indifferent
Worse yet, you say 'indifferent' but if 'indifferent then it does not happen no matter what. Is this like Kant's noumena and phenomena. I know that there is this thing that we can never know about !! Then how do YOU know about it.
“There are some outlets, like The New York Times that are still doing very well.”
The point here is that they are doing very well because they play well to the bias of their partisan base. There’s nothing wrong with that. When they perform an investigative journalism service (old style) and bring to light something important for all of us that transcends the sociopolitical spectrum we can appreciate it and be glad, even if we do not, individually, like what they uncovered. We can ignore the rest of the culturally biased propaganda dreck they churn out and let those who want to hear that crap subsidize the real journalism for the rest of us. Of course, the flip side of that is when they suppress important news because it does not fit into their narrative bias.
We can ignore the rest of the culturally biased propaganda dreck they churn out and let those who want to hear that crap subsidize the real journalism for the rest of us.
Excellent comment.
Except it is self-contradicting.
NOBODY would believe your fairy-tale belief that the staff of any of those sht papers breaks neatly into dreck-pushers and reality-pushers. So it MUST BE that the same false philosophy/relgion/superstition infects almost all of them regardless the truth they write about. Because: It is what is left out that usually is important.
EG who on here is commenting on the true moral statement of the world's most powerful libertarians,the Argentine leaders :
MILEI
Mar 6, 2024 — President Javier Milei said he considers abortion, which is legal in Argentina, to be "murder", in a speech to high school students
VICTORIA VILLARRUEL
“I defend the right to life, because life begins at conception and – just as I had the right to be born – I want any other human being to be able to have it, regardless of whether they are desired or not. It’s not a question of religion: it’s pure biology. Those who deny it live in an obscurantism that’s costing us innocent lives,”
Didn't Nate Silver (along with most/all other Trump haters) inaccurately predict a Hillary Clinton victory in 2016?
I don't think so. The final results were within the margin of error. That's as accurate a prediction as you can rightfully expect.
Clinton has a 79 percent chance of winning, compared with Trump's 20 percent, according to FiveThirtyEight’s forecast.
Hell of a margin of error.
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/fivethirtyeights-nate-silver-predicts-hillary-clinton-wins-election/story?id=40213871
Okay that story is from 5 months before the election. He gave Trump around a 30% chance before that election. Much higher than any of the other model people. He had a pretty robust argument going with the NYTimes before the election, as they gave Clinton a 90%+ chance. He was giving Trump a much higher chance of winning than anyone who wasn’t a partisan in the tank for Trump
Misconstrueman lies.
Not what "margin of error" means, as well you know. IIRC his prediction of percentages was within the margin of error.
Here's the thing - you can't reasonably falsify a single probabilistic prediction. If I say, the chance of a fair 6-sided die coming up 6 is only 1 in 6, and a 6 comes up on the first throw, was my probability wrong? Nope.
All you can do is look at a long series of predictions and see on average how the outcomes compare with the predictions.
Notice how all the shrike NPCs don’t actually provide evidence of their recollections. Lol.
Here’s the thing – you can’t reasonably falsify a single probabilistic prediction. If I say, the chance of a fair 6-sided die coming up 6 is only 1 in 6, and a 6 comes up on the first throw, was my probability wrong? Nope.
So you took a single course in probability and statistics? Why are you using a uniform distribution when a binomial distribution would be more appropriate (after removing excess choices)?
A binomial distribution for the roll of a single die? Are you out of your mind?
Are you out of your mind?
Yes he is. His pathology requires him to spew out anything that comes to what can laughably be described as his mind in order to contradict anyone who he feels morally (and pathologically) obliged to disagree with. Note that I made a minor and in reality uncontentious post about probability and yet he felt compelled to respond the way he did.
Still not shrike, you lying cunt. I often enough provide evidence rather than merely say IIRC. but you don't care about evidence anyway. Further, if my recollection had been faulty, you would have gleefully posted that. You didn't.
I took A-level maths with statistics, which means I spent two years on statistics and probability. You, apparently, didn't even take a single class, else you would not have made such a crass error as to ask, "Why are you using a uniform distribution when a binomial distribution would be more appropriate (after removing excess choices)?"
I note that you didn't actually address my underlying point. That's the nearest a cunt like you would come to conceding it.
I have to channel William Briggs , Statistician to the Stars, you assume that it is a fair 6-sided die...but if history gives you reason,statistically, you might well conclude otherwise, right?
But that doesn't apply to free objects acting in freedom.
That's like saying my probability of committing adultery
That is like the margin of error that a nunclear bomb will fall on you house -- and then talking about the damage as if it fell on the same spectrum If it falls on your house, that's it.
He gave Trump a better chance of winning than essentially any serious pundit or pollster, and repeatedly fervently warned Democrats that they were not prepared. One didn't have to dislike Trump to think he wasn't going to win. There were no measurable signs or indications that he was going to. It's such a bizarre and pathetic line of attack on Silver, who is an excellent statistician and pundit who better than almost anybody else accurately reads what the signs are saying. The Trump stans who predicted Trump's win have been far more wrong about basically every election since.
Nate silver isn't a pollster. He is a data analyst who tries to infer data from multiple pollster. TIPP was the most accurate pollster.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/12/05/which-was-the-most-accurate-national-poll-in-the-2016-presidential-election/
charnel house of sexual harassment
Nick, you coin a nice phrase. Good interview.
Was he referring to the Biden family home? Poor Ashley.
“The notion is that if we are a little bit more laissez faire, and let people do what they want, the free hand of the market will generate more wealth, and we’ll all be collectively better off.”
It’s a subtle point, but I believe it’s still important to also recognize that letting people do what they want is not only good because it might – or likely DOES – generate more wealth making us all collectively better off. It’s important in and of itself whether it generates more wealth collectively or not. One of the reasons laissez faire policy has not taken root more firmly with young people in recent generations is because it leaves the principle hostage to the narrative that the rich benefit more from laissez faire than the poor and the marginalized, whether that narrative is true or not. Fairness - in the sense of equality - is important to idealistic youth whether they understand what it means or not.
Laissez-faire and free markets don't just encourage cooperation, they depend on it. How collectivists cannot see that, I do not know, but I assume it is because cooperation is the enemy of coercion.
No matter how much people are cooperating at the moment or how successful the trend has been lately, there will always be someone who can be perceived as having been left out or left behind. There will always be someone who can be seen has having profited unfairly. There will always be someone who INSISTS on correcting those perceived “problems” even if they do not recognize the inevitable unintended downside consequences.
Yes, and that's the trouble with statism, that monopolistic, coercive, immortal governments conflate themselves with society and provide the means for the lazy and unproductive to force everybody else to waste time countering them.
-Bastiat
http://bastiat.org/en/the_law.html
We object to the state experts' opinions. Then the socialists say we are anti-science.
Aaah, but since life is hugely multi-dimensional that must happen to all of us. Bezos must muse :Why am I ugly as sin with all this dough 🙂
Laissez-faire and free markets don’t just encourage cooperation, they depend on it. How collectivists cannot see that, I do not know, but I assume it is because cooperation is the enemy of coercion.
From what I’ve seen collectivists tend to mock the idea of voluntary cooperation.
No, what real collectivists believe is that we are naturally driven towards voluntary cooperation, and once the revolution is complete and we are all disabused of our false consciousness, then voluntary cooperation will be the only order of the day.
See: Libertarian Marxism.
See: Marxist Anarchism.
See: Mutual Aid.
See: Herbert Marcuse.
See: Critical Theory (1930s inception)
They just seem to blithely skip over the part where we are forced to abandon our false consciousness in order to get rid of the state and its manipulation of our thoughts. That was why I had so much trouble wading through Marx's writings. It was equal parts observation, unsupported assumptions and pure imagination.
Laissez-faire and free markets don’t just encourage cooperation, they depend on it.
They depend both on co-operation and competition. Opponents of free markets, and supporters of centralised economies undervalue the benefits of competition.
It is neither subtle nor a point
And it assumes a correlation between wealth or some Utilitarian proxy and happiness...worse and a good life.
The Founders rejected that on 3 grounds
1)as with the Sumptuary taxes they thought a certain material progress would emasculate the population. Among males it would produce ---as it had in many societies: pansies, dandies, Beau Brummels
2) The Family was the locus of Founders' concerns and definitely not the individual
A New Birth of Marriage: Love, Politics, and the Vision of the Founders 2022
by Brandon Dabling
3) Idealistic youth generally do NOT have ideals. They resemble the child that says "why don't we give everybody a million dollars" not realizing that would bring inevitable mass poverty. Ideals come from education, good family life, and the culture you inherit.
BLM leaders siphoning donations to build a mansion with a swimming pool come to mind
“free speech can actually have effects. It’s a powerful thing. But if you’re so risk averse, you just want to maintain harmony.”
Don’t want to let this one go, either. Free speech is important BECAUSE it can actually have effects. It SHOULD take courage to speak out about a controversial issue. Controversial issues should be IMPORTANT enough to you for you to be willing to take the risk, like Rushdie criticizing an oppressive cult subscribed to by over a billion people who have never been known for their non-violence. Maintaining harmony is also important, and it is the source of the “invisible hand.” Maintaining harmony should be the main theme of any society; and controversy, culture war and polarization should be the exceptions.
>>First of all, I build models for a living.
getting the decals right was always a bitch
Don't you just hate it when they crumple up instead of going on flat?
I always got the firebird wrong. and the side stripes on the '69 Camaro
All models are wrong, some are useful. - George Box.
I would argue his models aren't useful. In many ways they are meant to manipulate outcomes.
I'm sure he's much much smarter than me but so what
He doesn't open his source, but I doubt his models are very complicated at all. Some type of weighting factor based on historical poll accuracy. A college kid could write the model. The tuning parameters of the weights would be the "art" in the modeling.
Of course using a machine language trial on the data would likely be more accurate and take very little time.
“Data will tell you whatever you need it to tell you”
I don’t know if this was intentional or unintended irony, but data CAN, quite literally, tell you whatever you WANT it to tell you. That’s a massive problem in the information age. Sometimes professionals even manufacture data to support their careers or fudge the data to come to the pre-conceived conclusion they're looking for. Whether the data tells you what you need to know or not depends on the integrity and competence of the source, how the data were collected and what questions you were asking when you started the research. Professionals are also experts at drawing incorrect conclusions from good data that don’t support the questions asked.
Yeah, I think that presumption is one founded in post-modernism. I can give the benefit of the doubt and assume he means people will poorly collect and misinterpret data. Still, properly collected data only shows exactly what it shows. Shifting the framing and extrapolating the data is where the errors and lies come into play.
A poll asking "do you prefer person A or person B" only gives a vague answer of what respondents think of the two. It doesn't say who I would prefer to watch my kids, trade with, talk to, or give power.
With that as a backdrop, you applied that Hayekian framework to contemporary U.S. politics after the October 7th attacks on Israel to your piece titled “Why Liberalism and Leftism Are Increasingly at Odds: The Progressive Coalition is Splitting Over Israel and Identity Politics.” Can you talk about that?
Silver: There are a lot of dimensions to it. One thing I did internal that helped is that I asked our friend ChatGPT—not the woke one, not Google Gemini—to define liberalism, leftism, progressivism, libertarianism, and “wokeism,” which is a term that is not as commonly used as others. If you break that down, issue by issue, you realize that…liberalism is kind of closer to libertarianism than it is to leftism or to more woke modern variants of that.
Gillespie: Why did it take an event like the October 7th attacks to make that visible?
As my main account remains ‘shadowbanned’ and with the introduction of Reason Plus as a way to engender the ideals of Libertarianism Plus, I considered myself done here, but I couldn’t let this one go by without one last shot across the bow.
Allow me to retort:
You’ve got to be fucking kidding me. This became “visible” only after October 7? JFC, you could have done this interview with half a dozen commenters here back in 2015 (or even earlier) and we could have informed you about this phenomenon then, with more insight. Fuck off. You’re gonna treat Nate fucking Silver as some kind of visionary sage on this shit?
Hopefully Reason Plus brings in Taylor Lorenz as a regular feature writer.
It's because progressives like Nick need a bloodbath to even think of pulling their head out of their ass.
>>you’re gonna treat Nate fucking Silver as some kind of visionary sage on this shit?
Nate has been given David French status here.
One thing I noticed here is that Nate Silver didn't even address the question forthrightly and honestly.
Reason Magazine is about to commit Harakiri if this is who they take as interview-worthy. Be glad when they bar the door on you, as I know I will be when they bar me.
"First of all, I build models for a living. Building a model is pretty hard."
This is one of the most annoying misconceptions of them all! Even professional statisticians frequently forget that "models" are essentially linear and are only useful for analyzing linear systems. Although some very clever innovators have invented some esoteric tools for modeling non-linear systems, they themselves are useless for chaotic systems, like elections and economic behavior. Chaos theory is still in its early stages and cannot be used yet in any meaningful way to model and predict things like climate change or recessions or economic regulatory impacts.
libertarian defenses of free speech are gaining ground among liberals
_Spit Take_
Yeah, I had to replace my monitors several times this morning...
Corporation free speech influenced by government trumps individual free speech and is libertarian free speech. Easy peasy.
“Tech and finance are eating the world.”
I can see how a particular kind of person would – myopically – conclude that, but it’s not true. No matter how automated manufacturing and farming and energy production and transportation might become, people still have to drive the vehicles and plant and harvest the crops and operate the machinery at some level. We’re still a long ways from total automation and robot labor, even in the mechanized parts of the world. Progress in communications, finance and automation is extremely important and the tech guys are becoming increasingly important no doubt, but it’s far from “eating the world!” There may be at some point the question of what people who will never be competent at tech will do to earn their livings after total automation, but finance is not yet subject to modeling and accurate prediction and may never be. For an interesting read on such a world, I recommend Hogan's "Voyage From Yesteryear."
https://archive.org/details/voyagefromyester0000hoga
in which robots do a lot of the work and people are free to pursue whatever personal interests they have without worrying about food.
Wrong.
Libertarians are the counter-revolutionaries that Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Castro warned us about.
They must be either be sent to the local gulag for their re-education or shot.
Otherwise, the cancer of freedom might infect the masses and destroy all the oppression, terror, mass murder and our beloved failed economy has produced by our loving and considerate slave masters in government.
This is just Hegel's 'negative of the negative" --maybe from his writing on Logic. Accept any substitute 🙂
"Models"
Reading fractal leaves.
Nate Silver: Libertarians Are the Real Liberals
So what? Any flavor of liberal means your town is getting 10,000 Somalis and a lady's room full of trannies. It's not exactly something to brag about.
Here’s what’s wrong with that (I could go on all day but here’s a sample): my town is only getting Somalis if the government plans it and pays for it (not libertarian). I don’t have ANY “lady’s room” although my city, school district, county, state and national property may have “lady’s” rooms (again, not libertarian). Any flavor of liberal means letting people do what they want to with their own property ON their own property and does not include any flavor of “public” property or “public regulation.” When someone says that libertarians are the true liberals, it means that people who have been calling themselves liberals lately are NOT, actually, any flavor of liberal.
Another asshole I will not miss. Make sure to multitask and do the dry-cleaning of your brown uniform side-by-side-side with your witch-burning. The future will belong to everyone you leave behind, Nazi!
Libertarians Are the Real Liberals
Ouch.
Sickest burn ever dude.
He's absolutely right. The American tendency to group libertarians with conservatives has never made much sense to me. You do sometimes hear the term "classical liberal" to mean libertarian, but it's become rare. We need to revive it and stress that that's what we are.
I'd love to see those of us who support individual liberty and free markets reclaim the banner of liberalism.
It's going to be tough, considering how thoroughly the word "liberal" is used a synonym for "left-wing" by the average American.
On the other hand, it might be helped by the level of hatred that both academic leftists and very online progressives have for "liberalism".
Maybe we need another term entirely, since "liberalism" has been destroyed beyond repair.
I like: "Live-And-Let-Live-r-Or-Not-er."
🙂
😉
No, it's the fact that the Sam Harrises, the Reason readership,and the enlightened in general do not support "all men created equal...government exists to protect those rights" and will not lift a finger for things like the UN Declaration on Human Rights.
Why? They really do not want freedom of conscience or of speech because then people like Harris and many Reason family will have to produce the bacon and convince folks about God and death and sin and all those others things they now claim are obvious. Have seen it hundreds of times with people.
"Those " are the Founders. We were founded on truth not on a banner ! All men are created equal, all have unallienable rights from their Creator. Your seeming approach is just going lower in the pit. My team versus your team.
Let's see you , for Liberal Education, the Greek, Roman, Biblical basis of all Western Civilization. The LOGOS, reason as root of all virtue.
Here is what liberalism is not,what Pope Benedict decries
"When, as today, there is a market in human organs, when fetuses are produced to make spare organs available, or to make progress in research and preventive medicine, many regard the human content of these practices as implicit. But the contempt for man that underlies it, when man is used and abused, leads -- like it or not -- to a descent into hell."
Pope Benedict XVI
The problem is that it's in The Farmer And The Viper territory now.
Liberalism/Progressivism is gone. It's the Viper. It WILL bite you, and it WILL kill you. It's so hardcore retarded at this point that no sane person wants to be associated with them anymore. Reason finds itself in a pickle because they want to seem like a "smart Farmer." But they're not. That's why this is a sick burn on them.
Libertarians have intentionally transformed into their mockworthy slur: Losertarians.
Because they keep siding with liberalism/progressivism. Which has obviously gone insane. The meme exists for a reason:
https://i.imgur.com/LJfJC2a.jpeg
Liberty has opponents on both the left and the right, and focusing on only one side distorts and denies that reality. I support the course that Reason is trying to thread, and will continue to do so.
Opponents on the right seem to come in two varieties, the intellectual (like Sohrab Ahmari) and the anti-intellectual (like Donald Trump).
Dan, Reason has given that up, obviously. Paid membership to post comments!!! Is there anyone that doesn't see that will tilt everything pro_Reason paty line.
Over the years, I have seen Reason always favor the Democrat over the Republican in elections, if they favor anyone at all, no matter how Statist the Democrat is, compared to the Republican in question.
It's bad enough that when a fellow libertarian (note the small L) suggested Reason is likely a front of the Democrat Party that is intended to peel off Republicans from voting at all, or if possible, to convince them to vote Democrat, I had to nod my head in agreement, that this was, indeed, likely to be the case.
Llibertarians said Russell KIrk only ever had one thing in common with conservativfes and that was a negative, a fear of BIg Government.
Nothing liberal about the fact that Libertarians never open Great BOoks schools or schools professedly for Liberal Arts.
As JOhn Henry Newman stresses in The Idea of a University you cannot be liberal if you on some principle leave religion out of education.
You need to read Toynbee and get some religion
A real libertarian would be working his asss off to get Freedom of Religion in the world,whether a believer himself or not.
Read again that seismic article from years ago
====> Matthew Parris, columnist for The Times of London, wrote in December 2008: “As an atheist, I truly believe Africa needs God.”
First of all, when you use the word "conservatism", you always have to ask yourself: what is it we are trying to conserve? For many people in America, that answer is liberty.
Second, it's entirely possible to have conservative values, but believe that laws shouldn't be there to enforce them -- and that any government program that hurts those values should never be established, or if already established, should be dismantled.
I personally became "politically aware" via Rush Limbaugh, so I considered myself conservative before I became libertarian -- but I considered (and still do consider) that liberty is a fundamental aspect of American conservatism -- and thus, as I gradually became aware of libertarianism, my reaction to it was "these are the most conservative guys I've ever seen! Why do they think they are opposed to conservatism?"
Meanwhile, "liberal" has somehow come to mean "maximize government interference in everything", as opposed to its original meaning, "get the State out of the way of individuals, except where necessary", and thus, it makes sense to have to use a silly term like "classical liberal".
Yeah, political language is messed up, particularly in the United States!
It's not a "burn" to you, Mister Pickup-Truck-And-Rope!
Whether you drive it my way or not, I won't miss it either!
Of course it's not.
But it is to you. In fact, it may be the harbinger of a stake in the ground for you. You only have so much time left to figure out which side you're on - because the days of groomers and their rainbow cult enablers is going to come to an end. A very violent one, I suspect.
Pick a side.
The “groomers” you seek are in Religion and State, neither of which I hold as sacred!
However, if you’re looking to get ungroomed and messed up, you’ll have come to the right place!
Aeon Flux said it all years ago!
https://youtu.be/wtytbh50ChQ?si=O6kSER6v8tT2W5OU
No, they're under your pride flag.
And everyone knows it.
And, more and more, they're done with it. The rainbow flag is going to go the way of the swastika in a very, very short time.
God willing!
You'll be saying that when the likes of AT come for you!...and if "Ed Grinberg" is who you say you are, they might take a shine to your name!
By the bye, the God you want to be willing does not exist, M'Bubby!
*Tips long-brimmed fedora.*
You mean to say that The Pride Flag will go the way of your Swastika?
Well your Swastika got blown the Hell up in 1945 and will remain a symbol superstitious evil forever!
Destroying the Swastika--An Iconic WWII Moment
https://youtu.be/DQFMCjRta-8?si=E2Uhm7yv3vrN3Nan
As for The Pride Flag, it will go on and comes in Libertarian versions as well:
Don't Tread On Me Pride Flag
https://lpmn.org/product/dont-tread-on-me-pride-flag/
Heed the words of this flag! The beat-up, broke-ass pick-up truck you save may be yours!
https://lpmn.org/product/dont-tread-on-me-pride-flag/
Hi , i pretend to be liberal and talk against Reliong and State so that you will amputate your brain and do exactly as I say.
TheReEncogitationer is an ass directing you to another ass. Aeon Flux
HIs main word is in quotes , always a sign of a moron.
Oops, maybe you are both wrong, way wrong.
Just the fact that both of you take on the task of officially deciding who is coming from Religion or State makes YOU the enemy
Here is a Libertarian Atheist arguing from your viewpoint the rationale for murdering millions of women and children because of his same view about State and Religion
This is Sam Harris from a hugely lauded , best-selling book :
"What will we do if an Islamist regime, which grows dewy-eyed at the mere mention of paradise, ever acquires long-range nuclear weaponry? If history is any guide, we will not be sure about where the offending warheads are or what their state of readiness is, and so we will be unable to rely on targeted, conventional weapons to destroy them. In such a situation, the only thing likely to ensure our survival may be a nuclear first strike of our own. Needless to say, this would be an unthinkable crime—as it would kill tens of millions of innocent civilians in a single day—but it may be the only course of action available to us, given what Islamists believe. How would such an unconscionable act of self-defense be perceived by the rest of the Muslim world? It would likely be seen as the first incursion of a genocidal crusade. The horrible irony here is that seeing could make it so: this very perception could plunge us into a state of hot war with any Muslim state that had the capacity to pose a nuclear threat of its own. All of this is perfectly insane, of course: I have just described a plausible scenario in which much of the world’s population could be annihilated on account of religious ideas that belong on the same shelf with Batman, the philosopher’s stone, and unicorns."
====================
There,now in what sense is this not DETESTABLE
Leftists, mistakenly called “liberals”, have in the past 30 years moved sharply into the realm of being moral scolds, unable to articulate a political philosophy without painting their every concept as a bogus choice between good and evil.
This change has made them advocates of clamping down on fundamental rights such as free speech, parental rights, and freedom from searches and seizures. They are intolerant of viewpoints that they don’t support politically. There is nothing liberal about that.
Fortunately for the USA, this has split the Democratic Party in two, but not in a bad way as in 1860. The saving grace of the situation is Trumpism has also split the Republican Party in two, creating a massive faction of politically homeless people from both parties.
You start with moral scolds and end happy to see a "massive faction of politically homeless people" --- this was the soil of Nazism , nothing to happy about at all. Why do you leave out the principles of the Declaration and "unalienable rights" ? We are where we are because of things like lazy and stupid Biden's "Disinformation Governance Board (DGB)" -- that is the root cause of all the present problems, the hope that a man like Biden "the Unifier [ my ass 🙂 ] will solve the gay perverision, the killing of babies , and the destruction of family and education by --- An official agency to decide what is true.
well that lowered my opinion of both of you.
Nick talks like an ex-Catholic (let me explain) .He sounds like he has to get up every morning and tell himself his view of the world might not be spot on but it’s better — and to prove that you talk about Hayek, and James Buchanan and Freidman on abortion and marriage and why homosexuality is okay. Maybe Nick is a devout something or other. Just saying what he sounds like Get a solid Catholic there at Reason and you will SEE what I am talking about.
As to Nate….He is living off his correct view of what was wrong and now thinks that must mean he knows what is right. That doesn’t follow.
Three things Nate gets utterly wrong.
1) Scare up the Mirowski article : “What is fascinating for me is that Polanyi ultimately arrived at different
answers, as Hayek acknowledges: different answers concerning the institutional character of science,
different perspectives on the personal character of knowledge, and different prognoses concerning the future
of political economy. I personally think Polanyi’s answers were richer and better supported with subsidiary
arguments than Hayek’s ”
Hayek was not the scientist that MIchael Polanyi was yet MP was solidly devout and saw the errors in scientism with much more clarity without thinking that implied anything about letting morals slide to show your Enlightenment, which brings me to 2) Do read The 3 Enlightenments by Himmelfarb, there is no excuse for your simplistic view of thee so-called Englightenment
3) Voting for Obama and never regretting it ??? Biden is the worst President in our history but Obama is not far behind. Nate doesn’t care about the fact that whenever B. went abroad on a mission to tell the worldto vote against Brexit, or Africans to support abortion and homosexuality, he created lasting enemies of America
One more comment about Nate, the more I see him the less I think he has a 'center'. They say the best actors have no personality and that fits them to adopt any other way of living. What does Nate believe in with his soul? I am not talking ideology or finger in the wind----what would he die for. I imagine: nothing. I could be wrong but at least a Jordan Peterson has a view.
Biden :bottom 10 of his law class
Biden nominates Ketanji ,who declines to define 'woman'
And we are to think he really had reservations about Clarence Thomas J.D. from Yale Law School
Biden BOTTOM 10 from SYRACUSE LAW SCHOOL
FiveThirtyEight has Leah Lebresco and that redeems it. But Nate needs to retire or something. All that 'the numbers say" -- if it says "kill your Mother" will you do it. Nate reminds me of students who say dumbass stuff and then add "welll you gotta go with the facts"
NO, Nate, they need Economics. Nate, what have you seen on MMT by any major economist? But a Nobel Prize winner can say utter sht-- though this time he was caught:
NY Times’ Paul Krugman says ‘inflation is over’ — if you exclude food, gas and rent
By Social Links forAriel Zilber
Published Oct. 13, 2023
My CMA study caught that immediately and then I wondered how he got a Nobel Prize.
It seems, given the selective application of outrage at Reason, leftism is liberalism and libertarian-ism, which is now a dead movement since they were completely absent during the totalitarian Covid years.
Nate, get out and see the world 'the young are more risk averse" !!!
Way off, Nate, Has nothing to do with that. They are disheartened, depressed, have no one (incl you )to ask the ultimate questions to :Life, death, good, evil. A life without meaning is barely a life. Has almost nothing to do with risk and most to do with meaning
The National Commission on Children concluded its 1993 report with sober words: “Today, too many young people seem adrift, without a steady moral compass to direct their daily behavior or to plot [a] responsible course for their lives.”
Nate, you are adrift in the sea of speculation, call home
There are precious few libertarians who aren't part of the Non-Profit Industrial Complex (from which they cheerlead for profit) or the Academic Industrial Complex. You can probably number the rest in the several of thousands. There has never been a grassroots libertarian movement, and libertarianism is now a form of careerism.
nate doesn''t understand Trump because he isn't a fan of our Founding. He thinks that insofar as there is any good in it, it is Libertarian.But several things destroy that prejudice.
The Natural Law basis
The Biblilcal basis
The 'conservative' nature of the Revolution --- based on American keeping to the British principles but Parliament and George III not. (see first draft of Declaration of Independence)
FInally, Nate seems to reject totally Lincoln's core belief, that the Constituion implements the Declaration.
There is only even one connection between Libertarianism and Convervatism,the opposition to big centralized federal government.