tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post8322561196469905860..comments2024-03-19T01:48:39.709+00:00Comments on Power and Control: The Blue And The RedM. Simonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09508934110558197375noreply@blogger.comBlogger14125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-21770327307590281442010-07-10T00:55:21.293+00:002010-07-10T00:55:21.293+00:00My personal thoughts on rural vs. urban politics c...My personal thoughts on rural vs. urban politics center on how well the people of the region understand government efficiency.<br /><br />In rural areas, your average resident understands their tax money pays for goods and services rarely used (county sheriff, fire department) or poorly administered. (schools, roads, ect.) In this case, poorly administered equates to anything that could be bought more cheaply by pooling funds with neighbors. In rural areas, the system is nearly transparent, as residents can easily see what tax dollars are doing for them.<br /><br />In urban areas, government provides a dizzying array of services with a level of complexity understood by few. Yet the system continues to function, year after year, so the average taxpayer assumes with a shrug that things are administered well, since it never required personal involvement. Urban systems are more likely to be horribly inefficient, facing few challenges from taxpayer oversight. Urban residents generally have no clue how much they overpay in taxes to cover all the waste generated by government entities.<br /><br />Rural folks tend to want a smaller, more accountable government. Perhaps the city dwellers would want the same, if they had a clue.Steffenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07389334455596453447noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-7546876307543335162009-11-28T02:42:25.637+00:002009-11-28T02:42:25.637+00:00Oh, and to answer your question, no.
The model wa...Oh, and to answer your question, no.<br /><br />The model was a pure application of the Maximum Entropy Principle. No distinction was made between urban and rural. It all gets mashed up as entropic spread.@whuthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18297101284358849575noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-18430721551545011162009-11-28T02:39:20.058+00:002009-11-28T02:39:20.058+00:00Might as well mention this article on the 2nd Law....Might as well mention this article on the 2nd Law.<br /><br />http://www.physorg.com/news176365278.html<br /><br />I finished reading the basis article. Some interesting connections between energy, entropy, and economic progress.@whuthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18297101284358849575noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-48238415327695877282009-11-26T05:52:05.126+00:002009-11-26T05:52:05.126+00:00WHT,
I'm partial to studies which confirm par...WHT,<br /><br />I'm partial to studies which confirm parallel behavior in humans and animals.<br /><br />In addition dispersion in cities may not be the same as dispersion in a rural/city habitat. <br /><br />Thermo is about heat and the ability to do work. Among other things. <br /><br />Does your piece explain why there might be significant differences in culture between city and rural folks? I'll soon find out.<br /><br />Well it made me think any way. And I have something else along similar lines in the works.M. Simonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09508934110558197375noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-54994471396142129952009-11-26T03:19:42.791+00:002009-11-26T03:19:42.791+00:00Mixing cause and effect perhaps.
Plus what does t...Mixing cause and effect perhaps.<br /><br />Plus what does this have to do with thermodynamics? <br /><br />The population of cities follows a power law which reflects closely the simple dispersion in travel.<br /><br />If you are interested in this, read my latest post on http://theoildrum.@whuthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18297101284358849575noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-17612793594336179752009-11-23T03:54:05.141+00:002009-11-23T03:54:05.141+00:00Dave,
You can be stupider in cities because resou...Dave,<br /><br />You can be stupider in cities because resources are concentrated there.<br /><br />Jimmy,<br /><br />That is true. You also have to consider that reproduction rates in cities are not self sustaining.M. Simonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09508934110558197375noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-71468089708454604312009-11-23T00:41:16.726+00:002009-11-23T00:41:16.726+00:00The world is much more boring than you might think...The world is much more boring than you might think. Middle class [generally white] people flee to the suburbs when they have children because they want to escape the busing system in America that buses their kids to non-neighborhood schools in neighborhoods populated by racial minorities. That move usually gets them to buy property--rather than rent--too, which means they start paying property taxes and have to deal with zoning boards and neighborhood governments. Children and real property ownership push suburb folk to the right.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09007148716358351356noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-3958795198227637002009-11-22T20:48:16.401+00:002009-11-22T20:48:16.401+00:00I have another explanation. Liberals are created b...I have another explanation. Liberals are created by prosperity. The cities are hubs of trade, and excessive money and power are to be found their first. <br /><br />I have a very well written book called "Leftism Revisited" that alleges all socialist movements are created and funded by the indolent wives and children of Wealthy and Powerful men. <br /><br />New York was destined to be wealthy just because of it's geography. Same goes for the West coast of the U.S. where the port cities are. <br /><br />The City mindset may contribute to the phenomenon, but it looks like wealth is the key factor to me. After all, poor people cannot afford stupidity. Only the rich can.RavingDavehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07671059573191161552noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-8325240147572879722009-11-22T16:12:08.577+00:002009-11-22T16:12:08.577+00:00First off I don't see an end state. I see inte...First off I don't see an end state. I see interchange between city culture and country culture. Tending to moderate both.<br /><br />And I disagree about Islam. There is a city culture and a country culture. The Wahhabis dominate Sunni Islam. <br /><br />And the Taliban dominate in Afghanistan. <br /><br />The Wahhabis are from a place called the empty quarter in Saudi Arabia. And the Taliban dominate in mostly rural Afghanistan. <br /><br />Islam is rather unique in that it is really a two culture religion if you judge by the Koran. The "early" stuff is city culture and the later stuff is rural (nomad) culture. <br /><br />As to energy modulation. True to at least some extent. It is why abortion is popular in city culture. <br /><br />Cities of the future will be built under large transparent domes. It would cut energy use by 90 to 99%. It would requite an all electric city including transportation. It may be a while.M. Simonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09508934110558197375noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-76892073210863702652009-11-22T12:03:26.145+00:002009-11-22T12:03:26.145+00:00First of all, the "end state" of both id...First of all, the "end state" of both ideologies should be mentioned. The "target" of progressive selection is the mindless automaton, 100% controlled by the state. People so hugely incapable of taking care of themselves that killing millions of them is easy. The "target" of conservatism is just the opposite : the lone family. Living in a tiny, self-sufficient village where the only reason for it's size is the number of men necessary for it's military defense, and otherwise as small as possible. One is totally free, but almost no-one can help when things go wrong. You see this in history : huge, city-bound civilizations, like the mayans or the muslims were eradicated in a time period that barely exceeds 10 years, when they overexerted centralized resources. Going from being the dominant military power of 2 continents to being hard-to-remember and totally abandoned.<br /><br />There is one huge mistake in the article :<br /><br />"Liberals do a much better job at the other major behavior associated with species survival, which is the ability to rapidly modulate their thermodynamic properties to match the available energy of a given habitat"<br /><br />This presumes that there exists such a thing as a habitat with constant "thermodynamic properties", ie. a habitat where the food supply is constant. Where the weather (esp. from year to year) is constant. <br /><br />In other words, progressives can only survive where there is massive pressure from the environment equalizing all other factors.<br /><br />If this is true, in the middle ages there would hardly be any progressives at all, as they'd be quickly killed, if not by thieves, then by a famine, resulting in civil war in their high density environment. <br /><br />It's also strange : I can see how this applies to the roman empire and medieval christians. BUT anyone who knows even a modicum of middle eastern (or even Indian or Australian) history knows these things don't apply there. <br /><br />The middle east had exclusively high density population centers, and it was not possible to construct a countryside due to environmental limitations. Muslims very, very rarily spread to the countryside, no matter the amount of pressure there was behind it. If cities depopulated in the middle east, which happened regularly, they mostly died out. The end result was generally a large majority of christians in those areas.<br /><br />Australia was just the opposite. Central cities shine mainly through their absence. For some reason the original southeast asians (not the people currently living there, either in australia, indonesia or even up until china) never made very big cities (even moderately large cities were more than a rarity), and only invasion could bring them. <br /><br />Most of Northern America was similar until Columbus. <br /><br />This is an interesting datapoint, but it's not the full story. Ideologies affect these mechanics.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15714394489266177248noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-89326321479310720422009-11-22T06:56:23.213+00:002009-11-22T06:56:23.213+00:00Not everyone KNOWS that the adaptation is organic ...Not everyone <b>KNOWS</b> that the adaptation is organic but guys like me, who've left my (English-language) birthplace and learned to APPRECIATE Korean culture and Thai culture, IN Korean and IN Thai, have often learned that<br />'different' means 'its done differently here', and does NOT necessarily mean 'better here OR there' BECAUSE of the contextual Adaptative Imperative.Karridinehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13896934615468594744noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-18873152995901471982009-11-22T02:13:02.229+00:002009-11-22T02:13:02.229+00:00it's simple. thermodynamics correctly interpre...it's simple. thermodynamics correctly interpreted <br />in relation to city people <br />as compared to non-city people proves that <br />city people live more closely together <br />and SHARE HEAT,<br /> where as non-city people <br />do not share heat.<br /><br /> A non-city person's home stands alone <br />surrounded by a yard or fields or woods <br />and does not emit any thermodynamic heat waves <br />which will reach their neighbor. <br /> <br />Now, the reason the city folk are voting so dumb <br />is in proportion to earlier in history <br />when it was proven<br /> that the people in more northern climates <br />appeared to be more intelligent because they<br /> HAD TO INVENT MORE to survive. <br /><br /> Now, the dummied down city folk have gotten lazy <br />so they want a commie socialist government.<br /><br />Notice how smart that Alaskan Sarah Palin is?USMJP.com United States Marijuana Partyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16482200763572291499noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-2031524076634126252009-11-22T01:05:08.838+00:002009-11-22T01:05:08.838+00:00"Few things support the long-term reproductiv..."Few things support the long-term reproductive capacity of a population better than an appropriate mixture of conservatives and liberals, as the conservatives optimize reproduction across space, and the liberals optimize it across time."<br /><br />Lib-Con CORRIDORS... optimizing growth of BOTH<br /><br />"I will raise up a NEW RACE of MEN..." might mean 'humans who understand and respect BOTH lifestyles while embracing neither'Karridinehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13896934615468594744noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8282587.post-40637222050598630312009-11-21T23:33:55.167+00:002009-11-21T23:33:55.167+00:00This is fascinating. The book is pricey at 48.00,...This is fascinating. The book is pricey at 48.00, though. Even the used ones aren't cheap.<br /><br />I went to the website, too. Good images to underline his points.<br /><br />I'm going to ask my co-blogger to print that one out.<br /><br />Must admit, I'm partial to counter-intuitive meta-explanations for behavior. Or maybe "meta" isn't the right term since he seems to be drilling down here...<br /><br />...anyway, enthralling to read. When I'm done reading maybe I'll understand why more people are beginning to call themselves 'conservatives' than ever before.Dymphnahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11332644582520636279noreply@blogger.com