A Stopped Clock, Once Again, In California

     Like an alcoholic having a “moment of clarity”, once again a the state of California has somehow passed bills that do something good and positive… which is a very, very rare occurrence for the California Grand Soviet Legislature. It happened not just once, but somehow twice!

     The first is a protection of a consumers neural data.

“The new bill amends the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, which grants consumers rights over personal information that is collected by businesses. The term ‘personal information’ already included biometric data (such as your face, voice, or fingerprints). Now it also explicitly includes neural data.

“The bill defines neural data as ‘information that is generated by measuring the activity of a consumer’s central or peripheral nervous system, and that is not inferred from nonneural information.’ In other words, data collected from a person’s brain or nerves.

“The law prevents companies from selling or sharing a person’s data and requires them to make efforts to deidentify the data. It also gives consumers the right to know what information is collected and the right to delete it. ”

     While this may seem like a solution to a yet non-existent cyberpunk dystopia, it is the type of forethought that California stumbles into less frequently than a nut found by a blind squirrel with epilepsy.

     Another bill has already resulted in a win for consumers.

“Steam, a digital PC game store, now says you’re buying a license to a game and not a product, not long after California signed a new law requiring digital stores to make this change.

“While the new law, AB 2426, won’t go into effect until 2025 – Steam has made the change already to their global digital store, the largest digital PC game on the planet.

“‘A purchase of a digital product grants a license for the product on Steam,” the new disclaimer says when making purchases on the platform. The disclaimer also has a link to the Steam subscriber Terms & Conditions.

“The new law will prohibit online stores from using the words ‘buy, purchase, or any other term which a reasonable person would understand to confer an unrestricted ownership interest in the digital good or alongside an option for a time-limited rental.’

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Values Matter

     Sometimes it seems that the politics of both the Left and now the Right are based upon foreign ideology imported from Europe that developed there after America severed it’s “shared history” nearly a quarter of a millenium ago. But even before that, America derived much of its heritage from England and the Anglosphere. While America is the most worthy inheritor of that civic and cultural heritage, it developed as separate and distinct from the continental Europe beginning ca a millennium ago.

     Nigel Farage, who led the UK Independence Party and now Reform UK, reminds us of that special inheritance that has broken the constraints of blut und boden.

     Perhaps, there is hope for the rest of the Anglosphere.

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The Election As A Game Of Chicken

     Your humble author has noted repeatedly this year that the Presidential race seems less of a campaign to win than a game of chicken, with each side trying to be as bad as possible while still remaining second worst. The problem with this strategy is that once you’ve won, you’ve ceased to be the second worst option.

     This is perilous at best.   Most election years for Republicans after Trump became President resulted in either subpar election results overall, or even absolute disasters. The one exception was the 2021 off year elections in Virginia and New Jersey where Trump was not a factor. This year, Trump, as of the writing of this post, is likely favored to win a second and non-consecutive term.

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News of the Week (October 20th, 2024)

 

News of the Week for October 20th, 2024


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Free to Choose Friday, Revisited (Part 8)

     With the Presidential election but a few weeks away, this is a good time to revisit Milton Friedman’s ten-part Free to Choose each Friday before the election as a reminder of why politically good sounding policies are often bad economics.

     The eighth episode: Who Protects the Worker

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Quick Takes – Deathpod: Dead In Switzerland; Forrest Corpse; Arrested For Gawking

     Another “quick takes” on items where there is too little to say to make a complete article, but is still important enough to comment on.

     The focus this time: Well, it certainly ain’t pod racing.

     First, a little soylent scene:

     Carrying on…

Death, Rx

     The already infamous “suicide” pod, where a person gets inside and pushes a button to die, has been used for the first time.

“The ghoulish Australian ‘doctor‘” Philip Nitschke has long been obsessed with making suicide readily available to anyone who wants to die. Indeed, years ago, he told NRO’s Kathryn Jean Lopez that he wanted what he called “peaceful” suicide pills sold in supermarkets, even to ‘troubled teens.’

“Nitschke also sold plastic suicide bags in Australia (which I helped cause to be outlawed when I busted him for his ghoulishness in the national media there in 2001). Subsequently, he traveled the world teaching how-to-commit-suicide classes and starred at international death-movement conventions. Awful.

“More recently, Nitschke made world headlines in the assisted-suicide-boosting media for inventing a “suicide capsule” that asphyxiates the suicidal person with nitrogen. At first, Swiss authorities said it would be legal, and then they backtracked.

“Legal or not, it appears the capsule was used by an American woman to become dead in Switzerland.”

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The Othering Of Libraries

     One of the sadder aspects of online hyperpartisanship, especailly on social media sites designed to farm outrage, is the need by some people to fall into a false dilemma fallacy of pure contrarianism against anyone who disagrees. Such a contrarian self-positioning happened recently in a response about libraries in rural areas.

     A person posted a tweet on Twitter/X mentioning that they noticed on a drive between two rural locations they saw many churches and Trump signs, but no libraries. Another persons on Twitter responded with not only a defense of churches, but a belittlement of libraries—which rural areas and their churches apparently don’t need—to the point where libraries had become synonymous with “authoritarian control-freaks and “ignorant SNOBS”.

     It is as if a bad thing becomes bad because a bad person thinks they are good. This is a very, very manichean view of the world.

     Ignoring the fact that many urban cores and others outside rural areas also tend to have many more churches than libraries, this person who posted this tweet is equally guilty of derisive scorn against non-rural people as the original poster was guilty of derision aimed at rural people.

     Plenty of people in urban, suburban, and exurban places indeed do have many friends, just as there are people in rural areas who feel isolated and alone (typically leaving the rural area if they have a chance), just as much as the opposite can be true. The value of books and learning, and the importance of education and libraries has been recognized for generations, especially amongst those who built this nation.

     When libraries become a symbol of evil, perhaps it is you who need to reevaluate your views if not your life.

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Fear, Hatred, & The Political Internet

     The online vitriol connected with politics (and really, almost anything these days) is not caused by a narrowing of the mind by living in a bubble, but the the narrowing of the mind by living from living in a bubble as a reaction to being shown the other side who live outside your sense of normalcy in the most demagoguing and fearmongering way, which causes people reject, knee-jerkingly, anything out of the safety of their online “safe spaces”.

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The Woke Right

     One thing your humble author has tried to do is look at the more fundamental underpinnings of Leftist thinking, and not just the more noticeable superficial effects that others tend to focus on. One of these is the belief that all cultures are different, but somehow equal with their own “way of knowing” of equal validity and worth… except for those inferior cultures that distinguish the good non-Western “ways of knowing” from the bad Western “ways of knowing”. It is this fundamental point of view that underlies the Left’s world view. Increasingly it is becoming a view accepted by many on the Right, except with the good and bad reversed like two of the same coin but with one side showing heads and the other side showing tails.

     Notice that they try to diminish the superiority of America over the rest of Western Civilization be denying it has its own distinct values and even culture that is worth preserving. This is why you see such belittlement of America as an idea—they want to replace it with foreign and alien ones. After all, if two different things are of equal value, then they can be but equally valueless. And woe to those who are the on the receiving end of that void getting filled.

     James Lindsay terms these individuals the “Woke Right”. It is a rejection of what makes America separate and distinct from Europe, specifically continental Europe. Such rejection allows those Alien European ideas to be offered as a substitute of equal value despite those demanding the change clearly valuing those alien values more than America’s!

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News of the Week (October 13th, 2024)

 

News of the Week for October 13th, 2024


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