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My main reason for pointing to Bell Curve was, in the context of being warned (by Orwell and Rand) about ominous trends in the culture and the country, my belief that current policies deliberately deny the spectrum of cognitive ability. I find that just another manifestation of ignoring, denying and deliberately obfuscating reality.
I took a quick look at the posting and comments on the "bell curve URL" you indicated. I see a lot of misunderstandings. Individuals are parts of groups. Statistics are meaningful only in adequate size samples representative of a group one wishes to evaluate. The most fundamental question is do you believe that cognitive ability is objectively measurable? I do. But, as the book says, cognitive ability is only about 60% inherited. Consequently ...
Real life is different than games. In real warfare, as an old Serbian proverb says: "Two bad ones killed the hero." Team sports are a ritualized battle and despite different contributions of individual members of the team, the victory belongs to the team. A superstar soccer player cannot beet a full high school team. If one craves for recognition of the individual, let him choose singles tennis, not football.
I have seldom seen, in one sentence, brilliance and depth expressed so clearly to me as Milton Freedman's comment on the book. That is exactly what I thought after having read the book. Except that probably I would have taken half a page to say the same thing.
I have only small amount of time that I can dedicate to the Gulch. I would love to discuss more in detail the implications of that book. If we want to do it, and if you have the patience with the infrequency of my response in the conversation, should we move that conversation to the other post?
You too. If we all reach just a few and they reach few... Like staring with a penny and doubling your money every day... We may end up with a fortune!
Carpe diem!
Regards,
O.A.
The grass is always greener on the other side.
Ignorance is bliss.
Just watch. The next two to three years will be game changing.
They are the zombies they seem to be fascinated with on so many shows and video games they engage in. We must edify them ourselves.
Regards,
O.A.
We will have to pick up the slack. I encourage people, especially my nieces and nephews, to read these materials and I will even lend them my copies, but I am a ruthless librarian. I demand they read and return them promptly. If they don't they can forget about birthday presents etc. :)
Regards,
O.A.
I would also support automatic twilight provisions - that every bill passed only lasted as long as the current tenure of the body passing it. If they wanted it renewed, they would have to reauthorize it.
Most of those on Obamacare were just transferred over from Medicare - they weren't new signups. Repeal Obamacare and put them back on Medicare while we figure out a way to get government out of healthcare entirely.
I look at the problem from a business standpoint. One of the core business fundamentals is to keep overhead (fixed costs) low so as to shift costs to variable costs which can more easily be ascertained and passed on in product costs. That means limiting or eliminating much of the bureaucratic red tape that doesn't add any value. And there is so much red tape when visiting a doctor's office, most patients (and doctors) look like mummies. One study I saw polled doctors and found out that they spent almost 50% of their time just on paperwork for regulations, while the other 50% had to get split up between running their offices and seeing patients. It's no wonder health care is so expensive!
Neither side is facing the fact that freedom and life are the same thing. Without one, you can't have the other."
The argument is: Freedom and life. VS Slavery and death.
That's basically why I say they are fundamentally the same. Death is death no matter how it's packaged.
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