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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

  1. Home
  2. Uncategorized
  3. Holy shit.

Holy shit.

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  • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

    @peterbrown Once you have enough organization for professional armies and centralized power (that is, you've got a working bureaucracy and can more or less tax reliably), you can get back to god-king autocracy (Great Harry, in the UK) and from there you get to the beginnings of an aristocratic oligarchy with very low social mobility, only two things happen.

    One is the creation (by adopting ship-crew social norms into wider society) of the Pirate Kingdom by Elizabeth I.

    @darkling @cstross

    graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
    graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
    graydon@canada.masto.host
    wrote last edited by
    #63

    @peterbrown The second thing is that by the time of the protracted struggle over who has the biggest world empire/colonial holdings/external cash inflow with the French, the UK is far enough into maritime norms that their oligarchs will accept that the choice between Napoleon guillotining them all and sharing some power socially ought to come down on relaxing the utility of incumbency.

    Combine that with the institutions created to supply the navy and industrialization.

    @darkling @cstross

    graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
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    • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

      @peterbrown The second thing is that by the time of the protracted struggle over who has the biggest world empire/colonial holdings/external cash inflow with the French, the UK is far enough into maritime norms that their oligarchs will accept that the choice between Napoleon guillotining them all and sharing some power socially ought to come down on relaxing the utility of incumbency.

      Combine that with the institutions created to supply the navy and industrialization.

      @darkling @cstross

      graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
      graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
      graydon@canada.masto.host
      wrote last edited by
      #64

      @peterbrown Industrialization includes enclosure; private property was already extending, agriculturally, to a whole lot of things that had been historically common, but now it's coal seams and iron ore and so on. Extractive norms get added to the mix. ("I have the right to nigh-all the profit from extraction based on a philosophical abstraction"; this is a more or less linear progression from pirate->colony->mineral rights.)

      @darkling @cstross

      graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
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      • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

        @peterbrown Industrialization includes enclosure; private property was already extending, agriculturally, to a whole lot of things that had been historically common, but now it's coal seams and iron ore and so on. Extractive norms get added to the mix. ("I have the right to nigh-all the profit from extraction based on a philosophical abstraction"; this is a more or less linear progression from pirate->colony->mineral rights.)

        @darkling @cstross

        graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
        graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
        graydon@canada.masto.host
        wrote last edited by
        #65

        @peterbrown From 1860 for about the next century there's a hiccup, because from 1860 or so power rests on rifle regiments (and after 1914, industrial mobilization) and you have to get the majority of the male population to believe they're in on it; thus the Century of the Common Man, universal suffrage, and so on.

        This ALSO involves the maximum territorial expansion of territory under colonial (=purely extractive) administration, because rifle regiments are North Atlantic.

        @darkling @cstross

        graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
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        • militant_dilettante@mastodon.socialM militant_dilettante@mastodon.social

          @cstross a person, whose Telegram channel I'm reading since 2022, has this take: every known (far-)right politician contemporary to us is a scam, a fraud, a con artist, a grifter, and a thief. This heuristic more or less holds, with almost no exceptions.

          tho99@mendeddrum.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
          tho99@mendeddrum.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
          tho99@mendeddrum.org
          wrote last edited by
          #66

          @militant_dilettante @cstross I think the word here is axiomatic…

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

            @peterbrown From 1860 for about the next century there's a hiccup, because from 1860 or so power rests on rifle regiments (and after 1914, industrial mobilization) and you have to get the majority of the male population to believe they're in on it; thus the Century of the Common Man, universal suffrage, and so on.

            This ALSO involves the maximum territorial expansion of territory under colonial (=purely extractive) administration, because rifle regiments are North Atlantic.

            @darkling @cstross

            graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
            graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
            graydon@canada.masto.host
            wrote last edited by
            #67

            @peterbrown From there you get the VLSI Oops, the resulting gold rush, displaced incumbents (or at least incumbents with rivals), and the semblance of innovation. The problem is the only actual innovation was to create a global panopticon, and suddenly the administrative possibilities, stuck on quill-pen-and-ledger for millennia, change. Which means the kind of state you can have changes, and the whole progression has been toward extraction.

            @darkling @cstross

            graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
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            • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

              @peterbrown From there you get the VLSI Oops, the resulting gold rush, displaced incumbents (or at least incumbents with rivals), and the semblance of innovation. The problem is the only actual innovation was to create a global panopticon, and suddenly the administrative possibilities, stuck on quill-pen-and-ledger for millennia, change. Which means the kind of state you can have changes, and the whole progression has been toward extraction.

              @darkling @cstross

              graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
              graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
              graydon@canada.masto.host
              wrote last edited by
              #68

              @peterbrown All wealth arises from work and if you want to be really rich you have to capture the work of others, which means the whole progression of the norms of enclosure (which are functionally a selection pressure; the better you are at this, the greater your relative success, and that includes "my culture colonizes effectively so children born to it eat better") is about "how much of this person's life span can I structurally compel them to use for my purposes?"

              @darkling @cstross

              graydon@canada.masto.hostG 1 Reply Last reply
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              • graydon@canada.masto.hostG graydon@canada.masto.host

                @peterbrown All wealth arises from work and if you want to be really rich you have to capture the work of others, which means the whole progression of the norms of enclosure (which are functionally a selection pressure; the better you are at this, the greater your relative success, and that includes "my culture colonizes effectively so children born to it eat better") is about "how much of this person's life span can I structurally compel them to use for my purposes?"

                @darkling @cstross

                graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                graydon@canada.masto.host
                wrote last edited by
                #69

                @peterbrown It's not precisely slavery; or at least, it doesn't have the chattel aspects. It's just really hard to do anything but the stuff that surrenders your lifespan to another's purposes, because the penalties for non-compliance are death by exposure or starvation.

                And this really gets going as an identifiable, post-aristocractic-autocracy stultification thing, with the Pirate Kingdom of Elizabeth I and just kept rolling on selective advantage thereafter.

                @darkling @cstross

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                • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                  Holy shit.

                  Hungary’s New Leader Reveals Viktor Orbán Was Paying CPAC

                  Magyar noted that his government will be investigating Orbán’s expenditures, and will no longer finance CPAC or other right-wing institutions abroad.

                  Link Preview Image
                  Hungary’s New Leader Reveals Viktor Orbán Was Paying CPAC

                  Péter Magyar called the payments a “crime” and said his government would stop the funds.

                  favicon

                  The New Republic (newrepublic.com)

                  msbellows@c.imM This user is from outside of this forum
                  msbellows@c.imM This user is from outside of this forum
                  msbellows@c.im
                  wrote last edited by
                  #70

                  @cstross
                  Them: "American conservativism is a legitimate political movement advancing sincerely-held, patriotic American ideals and is not at all a front for pro-Russian foreign operatives trying to destabilize our country."

                  News story: "The [former, pro-Putin] Hungarian government has been bankrolling the Conservative Political Action Conference for years."

                  netraven@hear-me.socialN djr2024@mastodon.socialD 2 Replies Last reply
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                  • cstross@wandering.shopC cstross@wandering.shop

                    Holy shit.

                    Hungary’s New Leader Reveals Viktor Orbán Was Paying CPAC

                    Magyar noted that his government will be investigating Orbán’s expenditures, and will no longer finance CPAC or other right-wing institutions abroad.

                    Link Preview Image
                    Hungary’s New Leader Reveals Viktor Orbán Was Paying CPAC

                    Péter Magyar called the payments a “crime” and said his government would stop the funds.

                    favicon

                    The New Republic (newrepublic.com)

                    timo21@mastodon.sdf.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
                    timo21@mastodon.sdf.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
                    timo21@mastodon.sdf.org
                    wrote last edited by
                    #71

                    @cstross There have been rumors in the U.S. about Saudi money paying for various organizations also, podcasters, etc. Making millionaires dependent on outside money like might explain not only why there are more rich people, but why they behave like they do, politically. This CPAC funding might lend some credence to those rumors.

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • msbellows@c.imM msbellows@c.im

                      @cstross
                      Them: "American conservativism is a legitimate political movement advancing sincerely-held, patriotic American ideals and is not at all a front for pro-Russian foreign operatives trying to destabilize our country."

                      News story: "The [former, pro-Putin] Hungarian government has been bankrolling the Conservative Political Action Conference for years."

                      netraven@hear-me.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                      netraven@hear-me.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                      netraven@hear-me.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #72

                      @msbellows @cstross Meanwhile @ CPAC America. Everyone is whistling and pretending they have no clue what he's talking about.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • msbellows@c.imM msbellows@c.im

                        @cstross
                        Them: "American conservativism is a legitimate political movement advancing sincerely-held, patriotic American ideals and is not at all a front for pro-Russian foreign operatives trying to destabilize our country."

                        News story: "The [former, pro-Putin] Hungarian government has been bankrolling the Conservative Political Action Conference for years."

                        djr2024@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                        djr2024@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                        djr2024@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #73

                        @msbellows @cstross

                        Does this mean that they should have registered as or declared themselves to be agents of a foreign government - something which I have been told may be required under #us #federal #law ?🤔 .

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                          graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                          graydon@canada.masto.host
                          wrote last edited by
                          #74

                          @peterbrown Pre-feudalism we could have the Divine Augustus or Sargon of Akkad! lots of direct taxes before the feudal period.

                          The thing I'd consider unusual about feudal taxes would be a combination of hierarchy-by-public-oaths (effectively contracts) and the change from a gift culture setup (the king gives you stuff, including land tenure, for service) and the creation of permanent land tenure by Christianity. (Can't give a temporary gift to an eternal god.)

                          @darkling @cstross

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                            graydon@canada.masto.hostG This user is from outside of this forum
                            graydon@canada.masto.host
                            wrote last edited by
                            #75

                            @peterbrown I think that's more bookland/charter land (=permanent tenure for entities smaller than a sovereign, aka it's not a gift economy where the king rewards service but it all resets when anyone involved dies) rather than feudalism as such; feudalism works pretty well, and arguably better, pre-bookland.

                            And, yes, growth of wealth because this is the invention of private property. It's enclosure zero, the idea that land is a thing you can own. (As distinct from hold.)

                            @darkling @cstross

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • marcas@mastodon.ieM marcas@mastodon.ie

                              @cstross @militant_dilettante When AfD was formed, it was not a nazi party. Its founders were ordoliberal* economists whose idea was to withdraw Germany from the eurozone to alleviate the Greek debt crisis. (As a € state, Greece could no longer kill debt by devaluing the drachma. AfD figured German withdrawal would effectively devalue the euro.)
                              1/n

                              gemlog@friendface.kalum.caG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gemlog@friendface.kalum.caG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gemlog@friendface.kalum.ca
                              wrote last edited by
                              #76
                              I'm UK/Kanadian - I don't have a dog in that fight, but I'm still worried how many countries in the 'west' are sliding to the right. It doesn't really matter what the origins of the AfD were, but what they are right now. You know as well as I do how many far rights there are in europe and the americas.
                              I find it very worrying for my kids and grandkids.
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