Thursday, November 29, 2007

Dr. Watson and the Goodthinkers

Watson, the Nobelist DNA co-discoverer, has been run out of conformist society for mentioning the great gap in IQ scores between black Africans and the people of the developed world. The scientific literature counts a 25-30 point differential. Watson's point, in context, was that this is likely a major obstacle to African development, since IQ tests are designed to measure an individual's capacity to function in a modern economy and society. These scores indicate that only 2-5% of black Africans have IQs of 100 or above, 100 being the average IQ of white Americans and Europeans and Japanese and most developed populations. Who in Africa can lead? Who can run government, create businesses, manage businesses, provide technical and engineering services, enforce the law, provide medical care, engage in banking services, manage money for governments, businesses, individuals? In the developed world, we rely on people with IQs over 100 to do these things, or at least to provide the leadership in these sectors. This is not to speak of the surplus IQ needed for actual innovation.

For mentioning this crucial issue in the development, not just of the economy, but of civilization itself--Watson is ostracized and most hypocritically lambasted. If his cowardly critics actually cared about these African unfortunates, they might seek for solutions to this massive IQ deficit instead of persisting in their quasi-religious posing as holier-than-thou saints of political correctness. For example, there is clear evidence that African IQs are substantially depressed by poor pre-natal, post-natal, and infant nutrition. Also, excessive infectious disease rates among mothers and children reduce cognitive potential. Action, thus, might be taken. But the PC scoundrels prefer to engage in a ritualistic excommunication "action."

The following post is a fairly thorough examination of this shameful episode of the intellectual "establishment" working hard to scramble and suppress the truth and invert decent values:

http://www.gnxp.com/blog/2007/10/james-watson-tells-inconvenient-truth_296.php

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Channelling Kafka

Stupidity and brutality in the drug war, aided and abetted by the coward Jeb Bush, a coward judge, scumbag prosecutors and moron cops:
http://jewishatheist.blogspot.com/2007/11/update-richard-paey-pardoned.html
This puritanical frenzy about psychoactive drugs that "our" government has invented and encouraged and financed for decades--really benefits only bureaucrats and gangsters. And considering that government is definitionally the biggest mafia in the land, I suppose that means bureaucrats and gangsters are rather close relations. At least the various ethnic mafias don't force us to pay protection money to protect us from ourselves...the gangsters are too honest for that, but the mendacity of the mandarins is unbounded.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Confidence is High, I Repeat, Confidence is High

Problem: terror in the air

Solution: GED-equipped government employees 

Result:  Report: Airport Screeners Fail To Catch Bomb Components

Liquid Explosives, Detonators Smuggled Past Security

POSTED: 11:36 pm EST November 14, 2007
WASHINGTON -- Government investigators smuggled liquid explosives and detonators past airport security, exposing a dangerous hole in the nation's ability to keep these forbidden items off of airplanes, according to a report made public Wednesday.

What it Means to Support Our Troops

One well-intended, but misconceived notion:
"The troops only concern is the mission. So if you don't support the mission, you don't support the troops."

This is perhaps one of the most mismade quasi-syllogisms I've ever seen. Premise #1 is probably wrong, but it depends upon how one interprets what the mission actually is (Bush has changed the definition of the mission several times as the situation has devolved). Premise #2 also depends upon what the mission is. And the conclusion, following these two undefined premises, becomes meaningless. The only way for the syllogism to work is to define the terms or to assume they take their most abstract meaning--that the mission is whatever the President happens to have directed them to do most recently (to be honest, though I attend to these matters, I have a sense, but am not entirely clear as to what that is). But, then it follows that, in order to support the troops, one is obliged to support any foreign policy the President determines to adopt. The problem with this awkward caravan of reasoning is that it works just as effectually for those Iranians who defend Ahmadinejad's foreign policy or for supporters of any dictator or war criminal you may wish randomly to select. The American dream of America transcends these nations, must transcend them if it is to have any particular value beyond the "petty ephemeral babble of politics and national self-seeking" in which all other nations so shamelessly and exclusively engage.
Policies incompetent or corrupt in nature deserve criticism and ought to benefit by it; nor will the wise and courageous among men neglect their charge to provide it. If the President has any use, he will distinguish smoke from fire, and he will leave the smoke to disperse itself, but he will transmute this fire, at his own forge, into his own new-hammered sword wherewith to smite his enemies foreign and domestic.

Monday, November 12, 2007

A Lengthier Torture Session

Here are a few common pro-torture arguments I've heard and my responses:
 
1 "Government inflicts torture for good reasons."
Unfortunately, this concession does not distinguish your position from that of Hitler or Stalin: neither tortured for amusement, but only for defined purposes.
 
2 "Torture is justifiable if there is an imminent threat or a high profile detainee."
There are several problems with this position. First, it cedes the moral high ground in an absolute sense (though not relative to our current enemies): it is in clear violation of the Geneva Convention. Second, lines tend to blur in practice--who is to define what these this imminent threat is and when it is at stake in a given case. This is ultimately a subjective judgment which will be made by men who have a much stronger incentive to err on the side of inflicting a little more torture instead of permitting a little higher risk of terrorism or some other calamity. I do not trust unchecked power; it would be positioned to inflict torture at its discretion upon whomever it considers a suitable information source. Unchecked government power is anathema to Anglo-American political culture--indeed it is anathema to any decent political culture: unchecked executive power is the simplest definition of tyranny. Third, it would be wise to consider whether, given the costs of torture outlined above, the benefits we may reasonably expect to derive from it are commensurate. I am not persuaded that they are. Not only would we in theory use torture rarely, according to your standards, but on those occasions when it might be used there is no guarantee that it would be effective. To my sense, the costs of employing torture against suspected terrorists are so high that it would only be justified if we were threatened with much more dangerous organizations--ones that could mount more sophisticated attacks than training 4 suicide pilots on flight simulators and finding 14 more suicide volunteers to hijack some planes and do a suicide run.
 
3 "We have the right to torture when necessary because our history demonstrates that we have the moral high ground."
Relative to the values of our enemies in the last century, we clearly have the high ground. But, we judge ourselves by our own values, and, to a large extent, are so judged by the rest of the world. It is relative to our own values, not our enemies' values, that we have ceded ground since 9/11. This process, the widening of the gap between our values and our policies, has damaged our image abroad; also, it has eroded the rights of our citizens and the power of the media and of all governmental institutions except the Executive branch of the federal government. Moreover, policies that fall short of our moral standards, if sustained, will noxiously erode our moral nature and slowly undermine our "higher ground."
 
4 "We committed torture in the war against Japan and this was done to save lives--a simple value equation."
In diametric contrast to our current struggle, PR considerations were not immediately relevant to the war in the Pacific Theater. The only two audiences that mattered in the short term were the Japs and us. Neither was likely to falter in its convictions (in the context of such a hot and brief war) due to an occasional war crime. But, whether such torture as occurred benefitted us in the war is another question. Few Japs were captured and most of the torture occurred at the tactical level, which was likely to accrue benefits only at the tactical level, if at all. Given the probable insignificance of any benefits derived from torture, I doubt whether your "value equation" worked to our advantage in the long run. 
 
The most effective foreign policy is one which maximizes the leverage of both our hard power (military, economic) and our soft power (image, culture, PR, values) to achieve strategic objectives. It follows that in determining which of these forms of power to implement in face of a given challenge we must learn to make intelligent trade-offs informed by cost-benefit analysis (and torture may be the most dramatic instance, and one of the most important, of this conflict).

Sunday, November 11, 2007

The Torture Obsession

On the torture question we have not, as we ought to have, held to the moral high ground in the struggle to prevent terrorism. We can afford still to hold this ground and ought to hold it, even at the inescapable risk of paying a tangible price. Instead, we have begun the descent toward the moral level of the enemy. And the further we proceed on this path the closer we come to aiding and abetting the enemy in our defeat. I define defeat as the destruction of our culture and value system, and, thus, by definition whatever is necessary to sustain their existence. Survival of our government and national borders and military, at the cost of the destruction of this essential core is not an end for which I would fight or sacrifice. The Bush people apparently believe that the Anti-Terror struggle can be won without resort to the public relations campaign that was a major element in our victory in the Cold War. In this they are dunces. P.R. is even more important in this struggle than it was in the Cold War, because information is much more easily disseminated now than it was then. And virtually all the terrorists seem to be ideologically-motivated volunteers--as few Soviet soldiers were. Torture, rendition, detention without trial, heavy-handed encroachments upon the rights of American citizens--all of these tactics function as the most effective P.R. for the terrorists and Islamo-fascists.