Jane Jacobs and the Problem of Monstrous Hybrids - Forbes »

There are two basic strategies for survival: taking and trading. That is, we can forcibly take what we need from other people, or we can trade what we have (including our labor) for things we need. Jacobs argues that each of the two strategies for survival has a corresponding “moral syndrome”—a cluster of related values that define virtuous behavior for people who survive in that fashion. Those who live by taking tend to observe what Jacobs call the “guardian syndrome,” which values loyalty and obedience and shuns trading. Those who live by trading observe what Jacobs calls the “commerce syndrome,” which values inventiveness and hard work and shuns force. Jacobs makes a list of 15 characteristics of each syndrome, which you can see here.

Jacobs argues that society needs both syndromes because it needs both a government and a private sector. The values of the guardian syndrome—loyalty, obedience, and respect for hierarchy—are best suited for those who hold power over others. On the other hand, the values of the commercial syndrome—be innovative and industrious, deal with others honestly and peacefully—are essential for wealth creation in the private sector.

I keep thinking about this. It’s a really useful way to look at the institutions around us.

990000:

Hitler reacts to SOPA

surprisingly good

Excellent.

Congress wants to cripple the only medium that’s consistently creating jobs and growth.

The techno-libertarian utopianism that pervades Silicon Valley means that both corporations and individuals buy into the idea that they don’t need to bend anyone’s ear in Washington D.C.

The problem is, D.C. is still going to talk other people. (Notably, the entertainment industry, which has a long, effective track record of getting its legislation passed.) Together they’re going to talk about us, and we can be a part of that conversation, or not. But no matter how much we may wish that Congress wouldn’t listen to lobbyists, it’s an unrealistic expectation borne of idealism that ignores how our broken, dysfunctional government actually works. In the America of 2012, laws are written by lobbyists.

Mat Honan says SOPA And PIPA are the internet’s own damn fault and he’s right.

(via jimray)

From the Congressional Record, January 19, 1999:

FURBYS CITED AS THREAT TO U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY

(Mr. TRAFICANT asked and was given permission to address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)

Mr. TRAFICANT. Mr. Speaker, the President is on trial, we are bombing Baghdad, Kosovo is in turmoil, and the American steel industry is literally being raped.

After all this, the National Security Agency has designated a new major threat to our Republic, the furby; that is right, this furby cyberpet, that stands 4 inches tall and sells for $30, has just been designated as the next great threat to our freedom.

Beam me up, Mr. Speaker. Beam me up. I say, the only threat these furbys really pose is they seem to appear to be much smarter than the bungling nincompoops at the National Security Agency. I recommend, for $30 a smack, here, that we hire furbys and fire those bureaucrats. Think about that one. Furby this, James Bond.

Literally?

Found via @925saint on Twitter thanks to 1.USA.gov links.

The thing is — and this is kind of important — governments are not corporations. I cannot stress this enough. There’s the obvious point that in democracies, legislatures tend to impose a more powerful constraint than shareholders, making it that much harder for leaders to execute the policies they think will be the most efficient. … There’s been a lot of bragging in the 2012 primary about candidates that have “real world” business experience, and how that translates into an effective ability to govern. That logic is horses**t. Being president is a fundamentally different job than being a CEO — because countries are not corporations.

latimes:

George Skelton: Let’s make textbooks affordable. Making textbooks truly affordable, or even available free, is the least we can do for California’s beleaguered college and university students. And the state would ultimately benefit.

State Senate leader Darrell Steinberg plans to introduce legislation aimed at slashing the price of textbooks to about $20.

Smart. I hope this idea gains traction, and I’m curious to see how the textbook cabal organizes to quash it. The market cannot bear insanely priced textbooks for much longer.

Srsly?

(Department of Education site lists Canada as a state.)

Don’t Confuse the Genre for the Medium »

In which I riff on Neal Ungerleider’s story about the State Department’s new Tumblr.

ataxiwardance:

excellent exposition on the inevitable tragedy of the democratic social choice function powered by a first past the post voting system.

Important. See also instant runoff voting.

I'm Jed Sundwall. This is my blog, which you can follow on Tumblr or via RSS. You can talk to me on Twitter.