Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: Venomous Bugs, Warning Labels, Carbon Credit Scheme (Vol. 12)
Good intentions, bad results.
HD DownloadGreat moments in unintended consequences—when something that sounds like a great idea goes horribly wrong.
Part One: Net Benefits
The year: 2012
The problem: Birds are congregating on the Texas Medical Center campus and doing…bird things.
The solution: Attach nets to the large oak trees on campus, forcing birds to take their business elsewhere.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, birds eat bugs. With the birds gone, the trees became a haven for cute furry-looking critters that happen to be North America's most venomous caterpillar. Contact with these toxic misery tribbles can cause intense radiating pain, vomiting, fever, convulsions, paralysis, and even death. With nets up and apex predators gone, researchers determined the population of these comb-over pain merchants increased by a whopping 7,300 percent. Bad news for anyone, but especially a vulnerable population seeking health care at, say, oh, I don't know, a medical center campus.
You know what they say: Flock around and find out.
Part Two: Prop Comedy
The year: 1986
The problem: toxins in California!
The solution: Proposition 65! A ballot initiative that included a provision making it illegal for businesses to "expose individuals to chemicals known to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity without first giving clear and reasonable warning."
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
When the warning requirements were established in 1988, 235 chemicals made the cut. Today there are over 900 compounds on the Proposition 65 list, including alcoholic drinks, Chinese-style salted fish, and wood dust. Even cocaine is on the list, so if your eight ball doesn't have a warning label, your dealer is breaking the law.
With penalties for noncompliance including fines of up to $2,500 per violation per day and overzealous litigators looking for their cut, business owners came to the rational conclusion that the cost of a label was less than the cost of litigation. The result? Warning labels everywhere regardless of the severity of risk or degree of exposure. In bars, restaurants, hotels, spas, ski resorts, schools, and Disneyland. On golf clubs, lamps, toasters, kids toys, sunglasses, potato chips, pancakes, pumpkin puree, and even trees. These signs have become so common that one study found Californians have learned simply to ignore them.
But, we don't wanna get sued either, so…
Warning: This video contains information on Prop. 65, known to the state of California to cause ambiguity between things that are dangerous and things that are harmless. For more information, go to holycrapthisisreallynotworkingoutthewaywehadplanned.ca.gov
Part Three: Cold Hard Cash
The year: 2005
The problem: Greenhouse gases are destroying the planet!
The solution: A system devised by the United Nations (U.N.) Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change rewards companies disposing polluting gasses with carbon credits, which can later be turned into cash. The more harmful the gas being disposed, the more credits are awarded.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Hydrofluorocarbon-23 (HFC-23), a manufacturing byproduct of the common coolant hydrochlorofluorocarbon-22 (HCFC-22), was seen as particularly harmful, allowing a large number of credits when destroyed. So manufacturers—predominantly in India and China—ramped up production of the coolant, creating more of the dangerous byproduct, which they immediately destroyed. The system netted the manufacturers tens of millions of dollars a year. Some producers made twice as much from the tax credit than from sales of the actual refrigerant.
Increased manufacturing of the coolant, itself a contributor to global warming, kept the market price competitively low, discouraging air conditioning and refrigeration companies from switching to less harmful alternatives.
When the U.N. announced a plan to stop the scheme, Chinese producers threatened to vent their huge stockpile of the gas directly into the atmosphere—what some activists labeled environmental extortion.
Nice climate you got there.
Great moments in unintended consequences: good intentions, bad results.
Do you know a great moment in unintended consequences? Email us at comedy@reason.com.
Photo credit: Carterhawk/Wikimedia; Judy Gallagher/Flickr
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Flock around and find out.
Well done.
I flip you the bird.
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So maybe the consequences are not so unintended after all?
Always ascribe to malice that which can otherwise be explained by stupidity or incompetence.
Stupidity and incompetence explain accidents or one off mistakes. Generations of authoritarianism is not done by stupidity, accident, or incompetence. The mistakes don't end up with a more anarchic society, only a more totalitarian one, so it's not one offs either. Well, it definitely can't be malice, because you can explain anything as a mistake! Or, maybe, not everyone in the world is as good as they say they are. Maybe the rhetoric of good intentions can be used by idiots and evil people as well. Maybe the only way to tell is by repeated observation of action. Well, repeated mistakes are the hallmark of idiocy, so I guess the people running things end up in charge of all of our lives because they are dumb, not because they are malicious and manipulative.
Authoritarianism is not know for the rhetoric of good intentions being manipulated by people who don't actually have good intentions. Whether that is through a lack of wisdom, or through malice, advocating the rule of other human beings in either instance is evil. Ruling humans unwisely is evil, ruling humans maliciously is evil.
We should only accept as good a wise ruling policy. What gets ignored in the plain text of the constitution on a daily basis is a wise policy, but I'm sure everyone is ignoring it through stupidity or incompetence.
Anyways, if you want the culture to value wise governance again, vote libertarian. Otherwise, good day.
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.”
― C. S. Lewis
Everyone thinks they're the good guys. Especially authoritarians and totalitarians.
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The problem with that is that malice and stupidity/incompetence are not mutually exclusive.
My default position is to assume it's both.
It’s not now and never has been an either-or thing. A combination of incompetence, malice and political opportunism can be applied to almost every “Great Moments in Unintended Consequences” episode in history. Almost all government interventions are committed by committees whose membership is almost always a combination of power-hungry politicians, clueless crusaders and corrupt apparatchiks. It should not be surprising to anyone that the results of their rule-making are a combination of fine-sounding slogans, one-level-deep analysis and regulatory target bribery. What could possibly go wrong with a massive regulatory nanny-state bureaucracy funded with unlimited tax revenues? Who could ever have guessed that this toxic system would lead to endless unintended consequences?
On YouTube (I don't know whether the Web pages here scrape the ads off) it was preceded and outshone by a great 7-minute ad for "American PsyOp". See it if you possibly can.
I couldn't find it searching YouTube for "American PsyOp". It's labeled as the making of "Patriot Front". I had to refresh a bunch of times before it reappeared.
It's on YouTube channel Free The People.
Yeah, I want to spend time watching ads.
Why would you assume, even for a minute, that "good intentions" are behind this stuff?
Because most people are not psychopaths.
Believe it or not, most of us actually have good intentions. Where people usually differ is on the how, not the what. Yet instead of debating the how they say the other opposes the what. Take health care for example. Proponents of government health care and proponents of free-market health care both want everyone to have access, yet both accuse the other of wanting to take it away.
Didn't you ever notice how everyone is evil except me?
"most people" are not in positions of power.
Those people are not representative of the population at large.
I think it's very unlikely that the appratchiks and bureaucrats and legislators (mostly comprised of powermad psychopaths) tend to have "good intentions"
Altruism is the standard government differentiator of good from evil. Popular politicians like Herbert Hoover, Adolf Hitler--in fact, EVERY politician in Europe, Asia and Africa wholeheartedly agree that altruism is the intrinsic good thing, and that individualism is greedy, crass, vulgar, selfish and evil.
If you don’t vote because you don’t see the point in picking between the lesser of two evils, you’re admitting that the people that makes these laws are, in fact, evil. Just sayin.
Good intentions should always be inextricably coupled with punishment for being wrong. If a politician sponsors a regulatory bill that a bureaucrat then implements without considering the unintended downside consequences of the intervention, they should both be immediately placed on "paid leave" during the investigation. If the investigation demonstrates incompetence or corruption, they should both be fired from their government positions. That would put a very quick stop to the regulatory feeding frenzy in the national and state capitols.
My favorite in the series so far.
Part Four: Orange Man Bad
The Year: 2016
The Problem: Mean Tweets, threatened Norms
The Solution: Reluctantly support a senile corrupt puppet who is installed as the figurehead of the most corrupt, undemocratic, unconstitutional, totalitarian regime ever seen on this land, which directly threatens every Liberty we still have
“What could go wrong?”
Oh. Damn.
Brilliant as always, but the makers clearly have never heard ten million Texas grackles wheezing, squeaking and cackling--each in his own key. Some decades ago Houston's Sound Pollution Supression agents hitched fire trucks to hydrants near just such a murder of grackles while freeze warnings were announced. They sprayed the birds with water at freezing sunset. Truckloads of dead birds were carted off as Audubon Sassiety bird-huggers campaigned and donated for replacement politicians and bureaucrats.
I am clearly in the minority loving those critters. Makes me smile when I walk beneath the oaks listening to their constant chatter. Now, if they were in my oaks over my driveway and vehicle…?
Hey! What kind of BS is this, Bragg! http://www.holycrapthisisreallynotworkingoutthewayweanticipated.ca.gov/ gets a 404 error.
As a California resident since 1987, Prop 65 seems like it ought to be a no-brainer to repeal. I don't think a single person has seen a Prop65 warning and changed behavior. I doubt any company has had the discussion "warning sticker or change behavior?" and decided to change behavior. I realized it was a farce when I bought a house and it had a Prop65 warning.
It's a complete flop except for the trial lawyers. It's an object lesson in why you want to be careful about voting for propositions because they're very, very hard to get rid of.
I go over the propositions with my kids. Every year they give me a hard time when I explain that even though Sacramento is filled with craven, lying weasels with room temperature IQs, I still generally would rather let them do their job instead of overriding them with a proposition.
Well, the real problem here isn’t the Proposition passed by voters, it’s the idiot regulators who think wood dust and Mai tais need a warning
They'll put 46 even more idiotic replacements on the ballot and most voters will of course not agree on which of those reeks the least. It's what they did when the 7th recall petition actually caused a recall "election" of Governator Gag-em Newsom. The rigged ballot list ordering was scrambled differently for different counties so the Zodiak Killer and The Doodler showed up in different columns here and there. Republicans assure us the same trick in reverse brought about Fatass Donnie's recall.
The real victory for them is every time someone outside of California sees a useless "according to the state of California" sticker.
April, er July Fools!
This must be where Grand Goblin Greg's Texas fugitive girl-enslaving law came from. I followed the link to the California law and it says:
"In addition, any individual acting in the public interest may enforce Proposition 65 by filing a lawsuit against a business alleged to be in violation of this law.
Lawsuits have been filed by the Attorney General’s Office, district attorneys, consumer advocacy groups, and private citizens and law firms. So just as any redneck Army of God bully can legally kidnap your daughter in Texas on suspicion of pregnancy, any moron living in a sidewalk dung-heap can hail you into the dock for huge fines and bankrupting legal fees. Izzis a Great AmeriKKKa or what?
Anyone who spells America with 3 Ks is a total fucking idiot.
Let’s see: hank, sqrlsy, and the buttplug all do this.
Fact check: True
Bloody vaginal uncle fucker pie.
1. Steal the prop warning from a business
2. Wait a few days to make sure they don't notice
3. Sue
4. Settle
5. Repeat
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These videos have been getting longer as the situations become more complicated and require more explanation. I do not mind this at all. Personally, I find the more explanation required to get the "you done fucked up" punchline the funnier it is. Please, continue until we reach The Big Short levels of explanation with Margot Robbie in a bubble bath.
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