thebestofenergy wrote:I don't see how the US is a police state.
Seriously? You realize the US has, according to the government statistics, 3% of its population behind bars? That is more than any other country, except possibly North Korea.
thebestofenergy wrote:A good example of a police state is North Korea, where the government acts against the interests of people, and the policies and laws are there to help the few in power while keeping the rest in the dark of information.
Do you really think the North Korean government does not have good intentions? Do you also think Mao and Stalin did not have good intentions, and were not simply misled?
thebestofenergy wrote:You can then look at crime rates
And I have. Murder rate is, according to the UN estimate, slightly lower in Somalia than in the US.
mikeminima256 wrote:Oh so you agree me arguing with you is a waste of time?
I do not know.
mikeminima256 wrote:For Christ's sake, the movement for evidence based policy was inspired by the movement to use evidence for medicine.
Under an intuitive, but mistaken, belief that all sciences are equal. That just because medicine that is based on evidence is better than medicine which is based on a-priori reasoning, that means that government which tries to base itself on contemporary social sciences will do better than government which bases itself on some core principles.
mikeminima256 wrote:There are objectively good things government does.
Probably. But we do not (yet) know, with reasonable certainty, what those are.
mikeminima256 wrote:Where the hell did you read that? That's idiotic.
Well, it used to be written on Wikipedia, I do not know where the anonymous writer of Wikipedia got that from...
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Healthcare_in_Cuba&oldid=1018363731 wrote:
Hirschfeld referred to well-documented research about the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China, showing that "revolutionary" efforts "can also include such practices as deliberate manipulation of health statistics, aggressive political intrusion into health care decision-making, criminalizing dissent, and other forms of authoritarian policing of the health sector designed to insure health changes reflect the (often utopian) predictions of Marxist theory". But, according to Hirshfeld, "the true extent of these practices was virtually unknown in the West", where "
social scientists frequently cited favorable health statistics supplied by [these regimes], without critically looking at the ways these were created and maintained by state power".
mikeminima256 wrote:These countries get criticized by other UN members all the time for their human rights issues.
Maybe. I am not aware of that.
mikeminima256 wrote:Maybe you should GIVE THINGS A TRY FIRST in evidence-based policies?
Communism (abolishing private property) was given a try countless times. In monasteries, for example. However, it turned out not to scale, to have disasterous consequences when tried at a large scale.
mikeminima256 wrote:Like we do with effective charities.
Well, whether or not giving money to charity is good is a complicated topic. If you have a lot of money, it is probably better to invest it wisely to create some jobs, than to give to however-effective charity.
mikeminima256 wrote:Are all laws stupid?
The vast majority of all possible laws are stupid.
mikeminima256 wrote:government breaking laws isn't necessarily a good thing
I never claimed it is
necessarily a good thing.
mikeminima256 wrote:The most corrupt countries tend to be some of the worst places to live, and the least corrupt tend to be the best.
OK, so, how do you know corruption is the cause of the problem, and not a symptom? You know, like sweatshops are symptom, rather than the cause, of poverty.
mikeminima256 wrote:Judging by your anecdote, this seems to be exactly what's happening with so many people in your country due to your corrupt government.
I am not sure what you mean.
mikeminima256 wrote:Despite that the US COULD potentially be a better place to live than Norway, but again, the government is incompetent when it comes to spending.
Again, I am not sure what you mean. Let's say Norway invests its money optimally for the benefits of its citizens. So, because Norway
richness per capita (regardless of how you measure) is higher than that of the USA... that means the USA could not be a better place to live than Norway, regardless of how well the USA invests in welfare.
mikeminima256 wrote:Maybe you should cite a credible scientific source, and not a libertarian think-tank.
Who is a credible scientific source here, if not a Nobel-prize winning economist that is Milton Friedman?
mikeminima256 wrote:Firstly I don't think any school on Earth that isn't in Croatia learns about Jasenovac
Schools in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina do teach about Jasenovac. They teach that around 700'000 people died there. In Croatia, we are taught that less than 100'000 people died there, and that anybody citing a higher figure is spreading anti-Croatian propaganda. Which makes no sense. We have lists of the names of the people killed in Jasenovac, there are 150'000 people listed there. And the population of Croatia during that time decreased by around half a million. I asked a few historians, nobody of them thinks it is plausible that less than 150'000 were killed in Jasenovac. The figure of 700'000 is probably an exaggeration. But saying it is less than 100'000 is just denial. And yet we are told in school that almost all historians today agree that less than 100'000 people were killed in Jasenovac. Without a doubt, telling children that hinders them from realizing just how inhumane governments can be. It is damaging to critical thinking.
mikeminima256 wrote: Education in most countries is fairly poor since the way stuff if taught is ineffective
So why keep those education systems then? The possibility of improving a system does not justify participation in it.
mikeminima256 wrote:I don't see why you view that as a bad thing.
I see it as a bad thing because children are told what is implausible to be true. It is implausible that less than 100'000 people died in Jasenovac. A much more reasonable estimate is that around 350'000 people died there. And telling children that those claiming that more than 100'000 people died there are supposedly spreading anti-Croatian propaganda... is damaging critical thinking.
mikeminima256 wrote:They are still held accountable by other experts, it isn't just one madman running every operation.
In other words, we should add tons of checks and balances so that the technocratic government cannot do anything? What is the point of government then?
mikeminima256 wrote:Now you're showing your ignorance of US history.
My friend, history is so incredibly complicated that, if you think you have learned something from history, you are probably not realizing just how little you know. You know what Hegel said, "
The only thing we can learn from history is that we can never learn anything from history."?
mikeminima256 wrote:it's wildly credited with exacerbating the depression
As far as I understand it, the fact that Hoover was giving tax money to large corporations under the illusion that will create new jobs is widely credited with exacerbating the depression.
mikeminima256 wrote:FDR's New Deal policies didn't solve the depression either, but it did help things from getting much worse.
Well... it is very complicated. As far as I understand, most economic historians these days think the New Deal had little or no effect. FDR did not really follow mainstream economics. He implemented minimum wage laws, for example, which are widely agreed to have at least slightly increased the unemployment.
mikeminima256 wrote:Well it's lame and useless and written in Croatia by some guy who doesn't think prisons exist.
It is my experience with linguistics, which is a lot harder science than political science. A very simplistic computer model I made at first convinced me that the probability of some pattern I saw in Croatian toponyms occurring by chance is less than 1/10'000. A slightly more complicated model showed it was around 1/500. The flaw in that model was that it used the Shannon's entropy as a proxy for intrinsic probability, which, as I later found by experimenting, gave wildly incorrect results. A model that takes that fact into account, by estimating the collision entropy first and only then estimating the intrinsic probability, shows the probability of that pattern I noticed in Croatian toponyms to occur by chance to be 5.9%. And, like I have said in my paper, it is possible, if not probable, that my computer model appearing to predict phonological evolution of languages around 17% better than chance is mostly an artifact of an inappropriate control model, because my control model is often "predicting" roots will evolve into obviously unpronounceable words such as "krzkd" or "ghghad".
Dare I suggest it often happens in social sciences, that social scientists often convince themselves the results of some experiment are very unlikely to be due to chance, because they are using simplistic or wrong models, and that, unlike me here, they never notice the error? It just so happened that I noticed the error here, by asking the right question and doing a relevant experiment (during which I ran into some hard-to-diagnose technical problems, hard to diagnose to a
computer science student, and which would be even harder to diagnose to somebody educated only in social sciences). But it could have easily happened that I never notice the error, and stay convinced that I have an extremely good p-value, when, actually, I do not.
mikeminima256 wrote:Did you even watch the video Red linked?
No, but I am planning to. Honestly, I doubt there is much worth reading in the political science, but I may be wrong about that.
mikeminima256 wrote:if you're going to take a stance that goes against consensus
How do you know I am going against the consensus? How do you know what is the consensus, if you obviously have not studied the issue?
mikeminima256 wrote:The food grown on soy, wheat, etc farms can be eaten by humans, but are given to animals instead.
That is a very ignorant statement. Most of the grain given to farmed animals cannot actually be eaten by humans. Neither can cows eat a lot of grain suitable for humans, they get constipated if they do because of a lack of fiber in their diet. And that special high-fiber grain that farmed animals can eat is less demanding of the land. Obviously, you have not studied it.
mikeminima256 wrote: People who use obscure latin phrases to look smart just come across as douchebags.
Prima facie is not an obscure Latin phrase. My guess is that it is about as well-knows as
id est or
exempli gratia is, something that many people who know no Latin know what it means. Certainly less obscure than
ad hoc is.
mikeminima256 wrote:We have an abundance of food, we just give it to the animals.
That... is a very simplistic statement.
mikeminima256 wrote:No it's fucking not. A crude analogy proves nothing.
What do you mean by "
crude analogy"?
mikeminima256 wrote:Unlike you, since you fail to see how dumb you are.
Ecology is very complicated and very little is known about it. Everyone today is
dumb about it.
mikeminima256 wrote:I assume the papers are wrong because you're wrong about everything else.
What is that
everything else? If you are not aware of most of my work, especially the work that I consider to be the best, you are not really qualified to judge me.
mikeminima256 wrote:Red literally said how many of the murders aren't reported
Right, which is why I am citing the UN estimate, rather than the government statistics.
mikeminima256 wrote:also has to do with the fact that it's harder to get a gun in Somalia
How do you know and how is that relevant?
mikeminima256 wrote:You're reminding me of this old South Park clip:
How did you open it? If I try to open it in Firefox, I get "Access Denied", and, if I try it using Chrome, I get a blank screen.
mikeminima256 wrote:The US outperforms Croatia in the HDI
What is that? How is it relevant?
mikeminima256 wrote:Democracy Index
What is that? How is it relevant? As far as I know, social scientists in the west tend to believe democracy leads to a better protection of human rights, but there is not much evidence of that.
mikeminima256 wrote:Education and Healthcare rankings
What are you talking about? According the the US government estimates, around 14% of people in the USA are illiterate. Life expectancy is almost exactly the same in Croatia and the USA.
mikeminima256 wrote:or are ignorant of what it's like in the US
Well, I have a friend who worked in New York for some time. And he says he does not want to return there. He says that one must not leave their house after 17h because then the hooligans rule the streets of New York.
mikeminima256 wrote:And what was the wealth distribution exactly?
As far as I know, the wealth distribution in Venezuela is pretty uniform. Not as much as in Ukraine or Kazakhstan, which are known for having extreme wealth equality, but not far from it.