Ex-Scientologist Paul Haggis, director of the Oscar-winning movie Crash, complains that “We lock up a portion of our own mind. We willingly put cuffs on. We willingly avoid things that could cause us pain, if we looked. If we can just believe something, then we don’t have to really think for ourselves, do we?” Which religion is not like that? Indeed, but I’m wondering more and more which society is not like that? I very much understand that living in a society involves trade-offs. To live together in relative peace and benefit from the positive sum gains of specialization and trade, not to mention security, involves forfeiting one’s right to murder, steal, rape, and slander. That is all for the best. However, in a recent book titled The Hedonist Manifesto, Michel Onfray described what he considered the difference between Christian atheism and post-Christian atheism. It was an idea that had been independently floating around in my own mind for a while, but without a label or vocabulary to discuss it very clearly. A Post-Christian Atheism I think the above passage illuminates exactly what it is that we continue to “willingly cuff” ourselves with. There are so many culturally built norms, mores, and expectations of individuals that simply make zero sense in an atheist, liberal, materialist world. Onfray does a great job detailing many of the values that would change or be rethought and reconstructed given you take the world as it is and not how religion or ideology want it to be.
It will remain forever strange to me that the original sin in Judeo-Christian beliefs was eating from the tree of knowledge and that upon doing so worldly pleasures were equated with sinfulness. This leads naturally to the idolatry of suffering that crystallized so perfectly with the passion of the Christ. There is a lot of suffering in the world, but much of it is our own doing, particularly when we make it an object of worship and disdain pleasure as its better half of life. I think it’s well past time that we simply stop helping the world by adding to the amount of suffering and simply work to create a world with as much happiness as possible, without fear or disgust at the thought of pleasure. Pleasure isn’t wrong. Enjoy it while it lasts. We get about 80 years to do so, some of which we will spend sick and infirm. A Minimal List of Pleasures for All
Living with and engaging in the available pleasures outlined above is most of what we can ask for from daily life. If we add a sense meaning and purpose to the simple pleasures, we are ninety nine percent of the way to a well-lived life. Let’s take of the cuffs and leave the Christian atheism behind. We have all the power needed to create a world from critical reflection if we just decide to live without the Platonic idealism of the past 2,500 years. The costs of idealism seem to continually rise, with the list of atrocities by Onfray above being just the tip of the iceberg. A turn to liberal, hedonist, utilitarian, materialism promises to be a life full of greater well-being, happiness, and satisfaction, with less pain, suffering, and death.
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Jose Manuel Barroso, former Prime Minister of Portugal and President of the European Commission who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012 on behalf of the EU, recently came to the secondary school I work at to give a talk on peace.
In a follow up discussion between my students and him, we reached a point at which he described himself as an optimist who fully acknowledges that the history of human progress is not linear and that we may well be in a downward movement at the moment, citing the various nationalist and populist uprisings over the past couple of years. This was no reason to despair according to him and I agree in principle, although it’s hard to imagine just how worried we ought to be. Progress may continue in the long-run, but that’s no consolation for those of us making due in the meanwhile. The central thrust of his argument was to point out the many historical obstacles that have been overcome in the liberation of various groups of people. He cited the overcoming of slavery, then colonialism, and the ongoing improvements in non-discrimination based on aspects like gender, sexual orientation, etc. When asked what he believed would be the next obstacles to overcome in the upward trend of progress, he stated that absolute poverty and inequality will most likely be two aspects of societies and the world that we look back on and view as morally unacceptable in the same sense as the ones mentioned above. I agree, however, poverty and inequality are qualitatively different than the previous items listed. Slavery, colonialism, and non-discrimination can be viewed as very clear rights in the traditional sense. We simply agree and enforce the practice of not doing or participating in them. Do not enslave, colonize, or discriminate. Non-action is a simple mandate in principle once agreed upon. Poverty and inequality do not follow this same logic. The current GDP per capita at purchasing power parity globally is roughly that of China - approximately $12,500. That is clearly enough to end absolute poverty (roughly $2 per day or about $730 per year) worldwide if we agreed to share all of the world’s wealth equally and perhaps that is the most moral action to take, but that is clearly different in nature than simply agreeing not to do something. It entails doing something, namely giving money and resources. While I do believe that absolute poverty should be felt as morally unacceptable for anyone living in a rich nation, it is not immediately obvious that inequality should currently be seen as morally unacceptable. I don’t believe anyone would be truly happy with $12,500 per year indefinitely. If that assumption is correct, economic growth should be given a higher value than adjusting inequality in the short-run. Psychology has found that life satisfaction nearly plateaus somewhere between $50,000 and $75,000, depending on the study you are reading. On a slightly different measurement of well-being, hedonic pleasure can almost always be experienced without any plateau onset by spending more money. Here it is best to contrast life-satisfaction with hedonic pleasure by thinking of an example. We could purchase a nice vacation and engage in all sorts of hedonically pleasurable activities and experiences while on it and yet not actually increase our life-satisfaction when we step back and reflect upon our lives. Putting those two findings together, money is clearly important and more of it is needed if we wish to maximize pleasure, satisfaction, and overall well-being. Of course, I am not the first person to say this. It is one of the main arguments in support of Tyler Cowen’s premise that we should secure minimum rights (of the traditional sense) and then go ahead with whatever policies maximize growth (of a sustainable sort). This entails prioritizing economic growth as quickly as possible up to at least the level of $75,000 GDP per capita at purchasing power parity globally. Until then, inequality (at whatever level we eventually deem acceptable) should wait its turn as a preeminent value. This view is premised on the fact that full rights for all will not alone make us happy. Better off, yes. Maximally happy, no. I may have every right available, but I would not be satisfied with the life opportunities available at $12,500 per year. That is a life with very few of best things in life - travel, food, novel experiences, high quality education, healthcare, and of course, leisure time to spend with close friends and loved ones. I’m 29 years old, which admittedly is not many years on the planet. I’ve been working in education for 13 years now in various capacities. These include after school programs, tutoring, university teacher assistant, both math and writing labs on college campuses, AVID mentoring, private and public classroom teaching of English, economics, and government, and leadership positions for both international school trips of over 100 people and head of a humanities department of 13 people for the past two years covering grades six through 12 in a secondary school of a thousand students.
So my entire professional history involves education. And yet, what is not interesting to me any longer is learning about professional development that aims to increase efficiency or effectiveness in schooling children as is. Most learning simply isn’t worth the time and energy we put into it from my viewpoint. Do I care to get better at literacy teaching when most of that literacy will be used to ingest content the students don’t or shouldn’t care much about? No. Do I care about learning more ICT so that students can access the same material in new ways? Not really. Does it seem to make sense to me that we spend thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours on PD for teachers so that they can turn around and decide what, when, and how students will learn anyway? Nope. The real issue is a lack of seriously intellectually inclined people in the world of education. I’ve seen many “purposes of education”, but just about all of them involve career employment and citizenship in some capacity. So why do teachers do everything in their power to avoid talking about the future of jobs and citizenship? If a PD training doesn’t inform me more accurately on what makes the nation or society I live in better or what the future of jobs looks like for students, I’m not interested. I know of very few PD’s that address either of those topics directly and education across the board is pretty terrible at thinking about them. Try to think of the last time you attended a meeting or PD that directly and openly discussed either of those two topics. I’ll wait. That’s why I much prefer to read books, watch videos, and follow blogs that discuss economics, politics, psychology, and ethics. Those are the central topics of our lived experiences, so those are what I want to know more about and be able to share with students. Because they’re entirely social spheres, they’re also intrinsically interesting to us as social animals and provide all the motivation a person needs to work hard on inventing the next medical technology or manufacturing process that improves millions of lives. Maybe students would be more literate if they learned, discussed, and debated about life in school on a daily basis. They’d almost certainly be more interested in learning and wanting to learn is a short step away from wanting to read more. So maybe skip the literacy PD and just figure out what's important in our lives. I'm confident that interested students will learn far more than any specific strategy or tactic the next workshop offers. With all the fact finding, curating, and synthesizing I’ve been doing lately, I’ve been coming to a few conclusions that I won’t bother providing much evidence for in this post, but simply share. You can read my past articles and posts to see what I’ve been reading and gather any evidence you feel needs to be substantiated, the majority of these conclusions are drawn directly from past writings.
Americans seem to be in large agreement on the importance of security, jobs, and healthcare. To many Republicans, security concerns come in the form of illegal immigration and terrorism, with a bit more worry about crime and drug addiction than Democrats. To many Democrats, gun violence appears to be the biggest security concern, but a majority is also concerned with drug addiction. While any gun violence is tragedy, both parties seem to make a bigger issue of it than suicide, which takes far more lives and is not only an American, but also a global tragedy. Jobs for all Americans are important, but particular concern for the working-class is apparent in Republican supporters and I believe much of the anti-trade and anti-immigration positions arise from this in particular. For whatever reason, not much seems to be made of technology and automation by either party, even though it essentially poses the same problems that free trade and migration create (destruction of American labor), but without much possibility in the way of reversing course. Healthcare is a hugely important issue for all as well, but again takes different perspectives. Republicans tend to place more faith in the free-market and therefore would like to privatize Medicare and Medicaid, while also repealing the Affordable Care Act. Democrats have more trust in the government (and evidence) and would like to continue to see these programs exist and expanded as they tend to have lower total costs of administration than private insurers. Americans do not seem to agree on the issues of equality, the environment, education, or infrastructure. Democrats care much more strongly about sexism, racism, the LGTBQ community, and income inequality. I would tend to classify all of these under the topic of equality in some form. We (Democrats) tend to care about all of these issues because we see groups that are being deprived of equal treatment and opportunity. Sexism in particular is almost completely dismissed by Republicans. Next, Republicans essentially deny or ignore climate change and environmental damage. Some of this is related to jobs (oil and coal) and security (energy independence), but some of it is simply religious fervor around ideas like “the second coming”, that 41 percent of Americans are sure will happen within the next 50 years. Democrats appear to be much more in-line with the rest of the world on this issue and see an urgent need to engage in agreements like the Paris Accord. Environmental destruction is one of two reasons (the other being nuclear security), Noam Chomsky recently stated that the GOP could realistically be classified as the most dangerous group in human history as they seem intent on rushing the world more quickly to the precipice of collapse. Education seems to have moderate support by Republicans, depending on the survey and how the question is worded. It is overwhelmingly thought of as important and a big, important issue for Democrats, with many backing changes in higher education affordability. College debt is now huge and seems very reminiscent to the easy money made available for subprime mortgages just a decade ago. This could be a huge problem as an entire generation is saddled with debt and becomes unemployed, underemployed, or leaves the labor force altogether while becoming incapable of paying their loans back. Finally, the condition of national infrastructure doesn’t get a majority of either party believing it’s a big problem. Democrats give it a bit more attention, but not much on average. This is a bit of shame as much of it is crumbling and in need of repair. This could provide the needed jobs both parties are concerned with and give the nation a chance to redo much of the energy grid to make it more efficient and based more heavily on renewables and green technology. While it would seem that Democrats are mostly on the right side of many issues (and have a majority of the American voting population in their party), both parties seem to be widely out of step with the importance of prioritizing these issues. The environment and nuclear security should be priority number one. These pose existential threats to both America and the world. Jobs are hugely important, but rather than focusing on actual jobs being the biggest concern, shared prosperity (the point of jobs) in the age of automated technology and globalization should take the second priority. We need to decide now how we are going to deal with the ever decreasing number of total jobs and what policies are going to work best for the entire society and whether the working and middle classes are left behind or included in future wealth creation. Of course, shared prosperity as it relates to jobs, income, and wealth, should also relate to equality among sexes, races, and genders. Most of this is going in the right direction, just not as quickly as we might like. It’s undoubtedly better to be a member of any of these groups today than any time in the past. It’d be great to simply wave a magic wand on these points, but they will probably need to wait for time to take its course, with plenty of help from progressives fighting and advocating for proper legislation (and court appointees). Lastly, health, education, and infrastructure are public goods and should be treated as such. Every person in a nation as rich as America should have the right to free healthcare, higher education up to the doctoral level (or other terminal degree), and access to safe roads, bridges, and dams. Everyone is better off with these public goods functioning well, including both the national economy and local communities The title of this article is what Greg Fisher, a person I do not know, decided to call me in response to the below Facebook comments between a friend and me about Trump: Friend: He lied to all his constituents; he promised a break from Wall Street Putting aside the fact that Greg’s particular derogatory comment makes little to no sense in this context, it is ironic (comical?) that it comes literally a day after my last article on Global Morality and Why It Matters that ended with: I believe anything not directly physically harmful, intentionally malicious, or actively oppressive is morally acceptable. The above words in bold are added here for emphasis (not in original) because the term “cuckold” is an attempt to emasculate or deride someone on the basis of sex, specifically a man’s wife having sex with (presumably) another man. To add to the above list of sexual activities, I also have no problem with incest (also not mentioned in the original article) between two consenting adults that are not abusive or the product of abuse. Nor do I have a problem with any particular variety of sex between two healthy, consenting adults including, but not limited to oral, anal, or vaginal sex.
None of this is to say that my marriage with my wife includes any or all of the above. What it does or does not include is not the business of friends, family, local, state, or federal governments. Sex is purely between to consenting parties of legal age and is entirely up to them. On the specific action of extramarital affairs which was both the target of Greg’s comment and the action considered most morally unacceptable by Pew’s Global Morality survey of 40 countries, I have zero issue with my wife engaging in that action with a few caveats and have said so to her in several conversations. The caveats are simply the ones listed above regarding not physically harming me or intentionally acting out of malice, for example sleeping with my best friend for the sole purpose of wounding me and not for its own sake of sensual pleasure or loving connection. I can only assume Greg and those like him believe extramarital affairs are a problem for a handful of reasons:
I’ve written at length that I see well-being as being a product of desire satisfaction, goal achievement, and social connection. Sex is a wonderful act that can be additive for both desire satisfaction and social connection. Fear of contracting an STD from a long-term (to your knowledge) monogamous partner is legitimate and can be avoided through genuine dialog. Fear of being financially responsible for a child you do not wish to have is legitimate, but can also be avoided through proper dialog on joint perspectives of having children. Being insecure is a personal issue and should be dealt with individually, although, again dialog with a caring and loving partner or other can help greatly. Holding an archaic belief about a wife needing to obey you is not legitimate and should be discarded or held with shame. Being jealous is perfectly normal, similar to insecurity, but is another personal issue. It should be handled and coped with in a mature fashion, not by restricting the avenues of happiness, love, and connection of someone else, i.e. your partner, whom you presumably and love and care about greatly and hopefully wish all the happiness in the world. The word cuckold is not insulting to me in any way and should not be viewed as such to other men either. Women, whether spouses or not can sleep with whomever they wish. If I were a woman, I would take offense at the idea that my personal decisions of who and when I share my body with other people are determined as acceptable by men, but I’m not and women can decide for themselves. The entire belief system wrapped up in seeing cuckold as an insult is the same belief system that views women as deserving a giant scarlet "A" to wear so that the rest of society can ostracize them. It is the same belief system that is tied to slut shaming, slut being another word that really has no reason to be an insult. It's the same belief system that views women as passive objects for men to conquer, not active subjects who also wish to be fulfilled. It is patently ridiculous that in 2016 any sex act is considered shameful, unless it is with an unconsenting party, an underage child, or some sort of animal (they can't consent!). In all other cases, sex is good. Do who you want. Do what you want, when you want. Don't be ashamed. Don't let others shame you. Don't be insulted by weak minds. Above are the global median views on what is morally acceptable across 40 countries as reported by the Pew Research Center in 2014. Immediately below are the specifics for what is considered morally unacceptable by Americans, with differences in Republicans and Democrats shown in separate columns. This delineation of what is morally acceptable by political party is fascinating when compared to other regions around the world. It clearly shows that the party that is most concerned with immigration and terrorism (particularly of the "radical Islamic" type) has far more in common with the regions they view as a problem than with Europe as a whole. Just to be crystal clear, Republicans are much closer to the Middle East in what they consider to be morally acceptable than they are to Europe as a region, a fact I'm sure they would find shocking and immediately attempt to discredit or deny as false. Extramarital affairs: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 65% of Europeans, 78% of Democrats, 91% of Republicans, and 93% of people in the Middle East. Gambling: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 32% of Europeans, 23% of Democrats, 30% of Republicans, and 91% of people in the Middle East. Abortion: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 26% of Europeans, 39% of Democrats, 68% of Republicans, and 54% of people in the Middle East. Alcohol use: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 20% of Europeans, 20% of Democrats, 17% of Republicans, and 75% of people in the Middle East. Homosexuality: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 16% of Europeans, 31% of Democrats, 54% of Republicans, and 92% of people in the Middle East. Premarital sex: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 11% of Europeans, 25% of Democrats, 46% of Republicans, and 90% of people in the Middle East. Divorce: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 10% of Europeans, 17% of Democrats, 37% of Republicans, and 23% of people in the Middle East. Contraception use: This is found to be morally unacceptable by 4% of Europeans, 6% of Democrats, 8% of Republicans, and 14% of people in the Middle East. From this data, it is evident that Republicans are actually less liberal than the Middle East on a couple issues, namely abortion and divorce. Of course, this is not the whole story. A 2015 Gallup survey found that Americans are becoming more liberal on the whole. Even with all this positive change in the liberal direction, Americans still have a shocking distance to go. Besides birth control, between 20% and 89% Americans find everything on the list below morally wrong. If we look at differences in belief between religious and non-religious groups, we see that the Jewish faith on the whole is largely in alignment with the non-religious in their liberal beliefs, with the various Christian sects being far less liberal with the odd exceptions of the death penalty and wearing clothing made of animal fur where all are more or less in agreement. The less liberal beliefs above by Christian Americans are largely mirrored around the world by Muslims as well. A 2013 Pew poll and analysis found that Muslims around the world believe that prostitution, homosexuality, suicide, sex outside of marriage, drinking alcohol, abortion, and euthanasia are morally wrong. The same poll found overwhelming support within the international Muslim community that "a wife must obey her husband". Why This All MattersThe above data is important. As George Lakoff says, "All politics is moral". Lakoff has been studying cognitive science, politics, and morality for decades. He is one of the leading experts on the topic. He is not alone.
Jonathan Haidt of Harvard also believes that moral values are what divide us when it comes to politics and religion. Lakoff and Haidt are joined by sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild of Berkeley and even Aristotle in his class work Politics, written over two millennia ago. This list could go on nearly indefinitely. Morality shapes our politics. For anyone with a liberal attitude, the above facts of the world are hard to swallow. For myself, it is crippling to realize just how much of an outlier I am. On nearly every issue above, I am with the minority. I believe anything not directly physically harmful, intentionally malicious, or actively oppressive is morally acceptable. That means I find extramarital affairs, gambling, homosexuality, abortion, premarital sex, alcohol use, divorce, contraception use, having children outside of marriage, medical research using stem cells, polygamy, cloning humans, doctor-assisted suicide, suicide, cloning animals, sex between teenagers, pornography, prostitution, and euthanasia as morally acceptable. I find the death penalty, medical research on animals, and wearing clothing made from animal fur to be generally morally unacceptable due to the three caveats stated above, with physical harm and active oppression being most relevant for disallowing these actions. Of course, all of the actions listed as morally acceptable by me can be unacceptable in specific instances. Prostitution and pornography are both clear examples that have many instances of morally unacceptable acts attached to them. However, the specifics do not make them innately morally objectionable in and of themselves. The notion that we all want the same things is lie. The notion that all Americans want what is best for the country is lie. I am vehemently opposed to the majority of American and global beliefs about morality. Of course, I believe I am right and others believe they are. The main difference is that some people resort to evidence and some resort to metaphysics and superstition. We can either agree that secular, liberal ideologies are the basis of free and open democracies or we can race to see which group will gain enough power to enforce their beliefs on others. I can only hope and continue to argue that the world, and America in particular, continue to shift to more liberal beliefs about what is morally acceptable. If you agree, please continue to voice your beliefs through voting and advocacy in whatever sphere you can. I’ve already written about Trump several times. Three articles were before the election and two were after. If you missed them, see below (most recent first):
What bothers me quite a bit right now is the reactions I’ve heard spoken to me by several students. Four different students (I teach high school in Singapore) have now asked me if they should stop applying to universities in the United States. All were ernest. This are bright, international students who have a lot to offer. They are now considering not bringing their talents to the United States. I’ve also personally been told by one close friend living in the United States that they no longer feel safe and that they are questioning whether they could ethically consider bringing a child into the world - at least while living in the United States. Now, I’m still largely against having children, but absolutely not on the grounds of fear-based decision making or feeling ashamed of your country of citizenship. Those are the wrong reasons. All of this saddens me. I know I’m not the only one hearing these questions and fears voiced. The New York Times reported a large uptick in “bias-based attacks” following the election, In New York, men shouted, “You’re next!” at a black policewoman, making shooting motions with their hands. In California, a high school student told a classmate, “You support Trump? You hate Mexicans!” before throwing her to the ground and hitting her. Online, anonymous users wrote on Twitter, “Just reported you to ICE. Expect a van at your door tomorrow” to illegal immigrants. Later in the article, a mother tells us what her “12-year-old son experienced at school”, The boy, whose United States-born parents are of Egyptian descent, had come home complaining that his seventh grade classmates teased him about Mr. Trump’s victory and accused him of being part of the Islamic State. Similarly, Al Jazeera reported a surge in hate crimes against Muslims and “black students at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) said they were afraid to attend classes after they were subjected to racial slurs and threats of lynching following the election”.
There needs be another way for us to express our anger and frustration. Daron Acemoglu and Larry Summers seem to be correct when they respectively write, “the root of our problems is our inability to create shared prosperity and the unwillingness of the political system to discuss and tackle this problem,” and that “what is needed is responsible nationalism -- an approach where it is understood that countries are expected to pursue their citizens’ economic welfare as a primary objective but where their ability to damage the interests of citizens of other countries is circumscribed.” If they are right - and I think they are - then surely, as Americans we can learn to cope with these issues without virulence thrown at other groups. Securing shared American prosperity via a “responsible nationalism” does not also need to be accompanied by hatred, violence, and stripping of the rights of others. Not long ago, I wrote an article titled “Acceptance and Tolerable versus Intolerable Harm” in which I detailed that we need to push and expand our acceptance and tolerance of others as individuals up to the point where they cross the three lines of:
I still feel all three of those are good benchmarks for tolerance and the U.S. could use them at the societal level in its search for understanding human rights and liberties. Yes, we are country that values liberty. BUT, your freedom to do something (practice religion, speak, protest, etc.) should not prevent my freedom from any of the three actions listed above (harm, malice, and oppression). We cannot let “making America great again” become about making everyone else worse. I was shocked that Trump won. Not surprised, but in physical shock. Of the post-trauma sort you see on TV shows. I’ve always understood how people could vote or think differently than myself, so it’s not helpful to feign ignorance and surprise at an event like this. It’s not surprising or unbelievable. But the shock quickly turned to anger. I think I handled the anger okay considering just how visceral it was and that it lasted for two whole days, with mild nausea cropping up sporadically. First, I’m Angry at the Left I self identify as liberal. I don’t really self identify as the left, although I am certainly left of center on average. However, I think most people underestimate just how “conservative” I lean on some issues. I’m fine with a less complicated government when it comes to taxes and regulation of many things, such as professional licensing and prescription drugs. I’m okay with a fairly high degree of utilitarian violence and war, with the dropping of the nuclear bombs in Japan being the ultimate example of what I would consider to be legitimate death and use of extreme force. I’m also okay with more stringent security measures based on statistical profiling in many cases. And of course, I share much of the same fear that middle America has about job destruction from automation and understand that immigration really does cost Americans laborers, particularly low-skilled ones. In the book linked directly above on immigration, We Wanted Workers written by the leading American expert on the subject, George Borjas states that immigration laws are really a question about who you are rooting for, domestic native laborers or often extremely poor and disadvantaged immigrants who live in poverty and come looking for a better life? He, and I tend to agree, thinks that the domestic worker should be privileged when it comes to federal and national legislation. Citizens deserve to be treated as first in order of importance. I do wish for a world with open borders and unrestricted mobility in the long-run, but citizens deserve to come to that conclusion themselves and hurting Americans understandably root for themselves first. I think the question of who you are rooting for extends to and explains much of this election and modern US politics beyond just immigration. So being liberal, rather than left-wing, means to me that I hold liberty as a cherished value, perhaps the highest and typically the default if I am unsure how to decide. When in doubt and there is not much evidence one way or another, siding with maintaining liberty over other choices gives the best chance of benefitting total welfare. In general, people are better at making their own choices for themselves than a central planner and according them the respect and dignity to do so is a defining feature of liberalism and what has made the world an extremely better place over the past 250 years. I believe the default to liberalism when empiricism doesn’t clearly dictate otherwise should hold true for both economics and social justice. This is where the left tends to lose me with their default to equality over liberty and a utopian belief that socialism of some as yet untried variety will get us there. The empiricism of history says otherwise. The Nazi regime of national socialism was a human catastrophe. Stalinist communism was even worse. Maoist communism possibly exceeded even that. Then other state leaders got the message that people’s idealism of an equal society could be fairly easily manipulated by offering a plan and then slowly (or quickly) seizing complete power as they gathered more and more power to themselves - all in the name of necessary encroachments on liberty in order to realize the socialist equality the people wanted. Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, and others all walked down that path of equality over liberty. Equality is a great ideal. But the cost of implementation has been repeatedly shown to be higher than it’s worth. That leftist ideology slowly morphed into postmodernism as academic elites began to realize that their utopian socialist state and dreams wouldn’t happen. This resulted in extreme skepticism of reason, objective truth, evidence, facts, and logic, which were fundamental to liberal enlightenment and what the left viewed as needing to be undermined. They’ve done a great job of that. A recent Pew survey found that 81% of Clinton and Trump supporters could not agree on “basic facts”. That is a resounding win for postmodernism and the left, but I don’t think any of them will take solace in that “fact”. As before with socialism, it hasn’t quite worked out how they hoped. I think it’s time the left give up their designs for both a socialist utopia that requires central planning with concurrent loss of liberties and a world without common and shared agreement of what constitutes reality, facts, and evidence. It has proved empirically costly and highly destructive. Second, I’m Angry at the Democrats Robert Reich is correct. We need a new Democratic Party. I’m not that old, but the Democrats as I understood them in the past were the party of the working people. They supported blue-collar workers, unions, greater equality, social justice for the marginalized, and the underprivileged. This election cycle, whether factual or not, no one believed that to be the case. “A majority of voters say they are very or somewhat concerned Clinton (62%) would have relationships with organizations, businesses or foreign governments that would conflict with their abilities to serve the nation’s best interests.” I imagine that comes primarily from Clinton’s ties to both Wall Street as a privately paid speaker and Saudi Arabia’s donations to her foundation, among other things. Regardless of the exact reasons, a huge percentage of the American population feels, rightly so in many cases, that their economic situation in rural, white non-college educated areas is worse today than it was yesterday, is likely to be worse for the next generation, and that the direction of the country is seriously off track. Furthermore, “A majority of Clinton supporters (58%) say they have a hard time respecting a person who supports Donald Trump for president while 40% say they have no trouble doing this.” That seems to imply that the reality the above statistics paint is totally discounted by huge percentages of the Democratic party. Of course, it is hard to determine if what the supporters on the Trump side say is true or not, but it is very difficult to say Clinton supporters voluntarily claim to have no respect for the other side, unless they actually did feel that way. A Democratic Party that has managed to engender that sort of elitist attitude toward the “other” is one that goes against the very qualities I listed above that are aimed specifically at helping the “other”, not looking down on them. Then there are the issues of actual policy and topics of concern among huge numbers of “middle America” where wages have stagnated for decades and jobs have been lost to foreign producers, free trade, immigration, and automation. Again, it doesn’t seem to matter much exactly how much those factors are causal in the stagnation of middle America. The feeling is there and they have voiced it to deaf ears when it comes to the Democrats. As a result, far more Trump supporters are angry and frustrated that the reality they see isn’t addressed. This anger was not addressed at all by the Democratic party. In fact, large majorities of people in the United States believe Clinton would be about the same or worse than Obama, which is not at all inspiring to people who are angry and frustrated at their current and future prospects. After looking at people’s actual views of their current situation, their anger and frustration with it, and their belief that Clinton would be more of the same it is not difficult to understand the following, otherwise absurd fact: “Far more voters describe her as well-qualified than say that about Trump (62% vs. 32%), and the gap is nearly as wide in perceptions of whether each is “reckless.” Roughly seven-in-ten (69%) describe Trump as reckless”. This is essentially an admission that uncertainty with a small chance of success is better than high certainty of little to no improvement. “We” would rather take a huge gamble on winning the lottery with a large chance of implosion over sitting around and taking more of the same. I actually can’t think of something more American that. We are a country of pioneers and entrepreneurs with low risk-aversion. Bet it all and hope for the best. Another Pew survey below shows just how seriously Trump supporters take immigration, terrorism, and job opportunities. These are concerns that should be legitimate in any liberal nation and not ignored. However, in the smug condescension described above, most of the voiced concerns were unheard, not discussed, or dismissed as not central issues. Democrats cannot expect to win an election without compromising on the issues that the entire middle America feel very seriously about. Addressing those issues would not only gain Democrats single-issue voters by giving those groups what they want, but also provide leeway in not compromising on other less negotiable ones, to which I’ll turn to next. Third, I’m Angry at “The Basket of Deplorables” Many have taken the stance that we are all on the same team and it is now time to unify because we are all Americans. President Obama stated this recently in a short speech the day after the election ended. This is again where I depart from many on the left. I disagree here. The left seems to want to wish into existence a world where everyone really does think of themselves as American first and just do what they think is best for it as citizens who disagree. That is clearly not reality and denying that not all voters see themselves as Americans first makes it difficult to identify them and have the needed conversations. Americanism is essentially an experiment in liberalism. A place where all cherish “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” and there exists a separation of church and state to keep our liberties from being infringed upon. However, “Exit polls show white evangelical voters voted in high numbers for Donald Trump, 81-16 percent, according to exit poll results.” This matters because evangelicals make up 26% of the vote and have for the past three elections. These are not people that see themselves as Americans first. They see themselves as Christians first, with a duty to actively influence other people’s rights and choices based on their faith. We are not on the same liberal American team. I would also include the groups of people in the graph above on the seriousness of an array of problems in the US that don’t believe sexism or racism to be serious issues, which is by no means exclusive to Trump supporters, but whom did display a disproportionately higher disposition towards racism, sexism, and xenophobia than Clinton supporters. It is shocking to live in a country where we say that we are all on the same team, the team of liberty and a right to pursue what makes us happy, and to have groups actively seeking to strip rights (i.e. liberties) from women, LGBTQ, Muslims based solely on their religion, and minorities of all colors. These people are not on our team and we should not support them. Anyone that has sexist, racist, ableist, xenophobic, or bigoted attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors needs to be challenged and decried as un-American. For God’s sake, we have a Statue of Liberty as a national symbol of pride that reads, Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! Those tired, poor, and huddled masses are real people. Not abstract ones. They need everyone’s help and protection and it is insulting to state or believe that we all agree on that. We cannot be a country that says to them, “you deserve fewer rights than me. You deserve a lesser human experience.” In Summary
“If someone doesn't value evidence, what evidence are you going to provide to prove that they should value it? If someone doesn’t value logic, what logical argument could you provide to show the importance of logic?” - Sam Harris I am completely deflated. All air has gone out of me since watching the electoral college counter tick over the 270 mark for Donald Trump today during my fourth period class at work.
It changed me. My outlook is different. The world and the people in it don’t look the same. My immediate reaction was to post an article from the Washington Post describing how Trump embodies the postmodern value set and this election was essentially a victory for that camp over reason, truth, evidence, facts, and logic. The American people have clearly stated with their vote that reason and truth are no longer relevant or meaningful. Instead, brute force via identity politics is what matters most and America’s identity was clearly shown. We are white, male, and fearful. We dislike others and actively berate them. We don’t care about the problems of the world and even try to undermine them by devaluing scientific evidence through aggressive and angry rhetoric. None of these identity traits are hopeful. There is no love or even faith. Instead, a complete subjectivism has taken over that gives only “our” identity relative importance. And it has won. This identity of rage and fear doesn’t know how to make these terrible feelings of anxiety go away and has elected a leader who promises that “only he can fix them”. We have given him and his party complete control over the entire government. The executive, legislature, and judiciary once the supreme court is fully stocked. This is the same exact situation that gave rise to national socialism. A rabid nationalist movement based on identity politics mixed with a charismatic leader who had a complete plan to fix it - i.e. socialism. F.A. Hayek described this path beautifully and eloquently as The Road to Serfdom. It is a road paved by a gradual encroachment of freedoms by the “fixer”. Freedoms that have already been threatened in much of Trump’s rhetoric, such as those of the press or religion. This will not end well and I no longer see it as responsible for liberals to continue to stand by passively and quietly. In our angst over political correctness, decency, respect for others, and the fact that we liberals have made our home on the left, the same place postmodernism has sprung from, we have been paralyzed into a large group of bystanders that have just empowered the most dangerous president elect in US history. And he used the far left’s weapon of postmodern rhetoric to do it. In much the same vein that 9/11 blasted us into a world that clearly demonstrated an entire group’s complete lack of respect for our values and a willingness to use violence to meet their own ends, this election should result in a similar awakening in us of the very real truth that our facts and progress do not matter to a large group of our fellow citizens. People we thought we understood because they look like us and speak the same language. If we value our ideals of liberty, love, justice, decency, diversity, dignity, and incremental betterment, then we must admit that we may need to fight for them with tools beyond the ones we are accustomed to using. As the quote from Harris points out above, we can’t use evidence or logic to combat this group of people’s beliefs. This is a war of ideology and values and persuasive rhetoric will need to be used with brute force and aggression. The many marginalized groups may depend on it for their defense. Doing nothing is not an option if we genuinely care about them and our future. "The ultimate purpose of economics is to understand and promote the enhancement of well-being." - Ben Bernanke Economics is often described as the study of scarcity or the study of decision making, which is a result of scarcity. If we have scarce time, money, or resources, we must choose how to allocate and use them by making some decision on what we do. Decision making is assumed to be done by rational agents who wish to maximize what economists call “utility”, which is really just a fancy word for satisfaction, happiness, or well-being. Understanding that economics is simply the study of how we maximize our happiness by making better decisions lets us see how several important concepts interact. Consumption The term consumption is often tied to expenditure in economics, i.e. spending money on goods or services. However, consumption can actually be thought of as using resources to gain utility. This fundamentally results in consumption being just another proxy, albeit an incomplete one, for happiness. By using resources, humans attempt to gain utility and therefore increase their well-being. Use of resources in consumption isn’t the only way we gain well-being, but is a large piece and the piece economics has traditionally focused on. Because the bulk of economics studies resource accumulation and allocation, economists sometimes confuse consumption of these resources with the main, or even only, source of well-being. That is clearly not true from any half-hearted skimming of the research from fields like positive psychology, philosophy, and history (see links at the end of this article for further reading). However, if we limit our view of well-being to consumption, economists have recently started asking just how best to consume for maximization of well-being. One source, Happy Money, lists five ways to consume for maximal well-being by researching the topic and recommending that you spend money on:
If consumption is undertaken to provide well-being, the above five uses will get you the most bang for your buck. Investment The best way to frame investment within the perspective we are taking here is to think of it as future consumption. You delay the act of using up resources in today’s consumption by instead saving and then allocating those savings to channels which are likely to be worth more in the future. This delaying of today’s consumption allows one to consume more in the future. If we are able to recognize the above, it is not difficult to then see that: Investment = future consumption = future well-being We should therefore allocate our savings to investment channels which we believe will be worth more in the future and thereby enhance our future well-being by expanding our consumption options. Typical examples and channels for investment include business, securities, property, infrastructure, and education. Figuring out just what channel will maximize returns into the future is obviously dependent on preferences, risk tolerance, and a lot of luck, but the goal is the same - future consumption as a proxy for well-being. Credit and Debt These two concepts are closely related, but serve the same purpose. Credit, properly used, allows people to smooth consumption over their lifetimes. When we are young, we typically have very little income and wealth and cannot consume much as a result, even if we have high needs. When we are old, we typically have lots of income and wealth (relative to our youth), but less need to consume. By utilizing credit, a person can take on debt to pay for today’s consumption while postponing payment until later. Essentially, credit is equivalent to consuming today and paying tomorrow. Understood in this way, credit and debt are two of humanity's best inventions. Rather than be forced to go on a “low consumption diet” when young and live with a large surplus of unneeded consumption in old age, we can simply smooth our consumption curves by consuming on the basis of credit and debt while young and knowing that we will be able to use our old age surplus to pay for it. This does have a natural consequence that should be clearly noted. If we take on debt by using credit to consume without ever increasing our earnings potential, we will not actually be richer in our old age. This means that the debt we take on as young people ought to be focused mainly on the investment channels described above: business, property, and education. By focusing on these channels when taking on debt, we make it much more likely that we will in fact be richer in the future and more able to pay back the debt we’ve taken on today. Ideally, one would invest in education while young, using debt if necessary, and then move on to start new businesses or gain employment in established businesses, before investing savings into channels like property and securities, which themselves act as vehicles for long-term savings. Sustainability If consumption, investment, credit, and debt are really just concepts that act as proxies for the management of well-being, then sustainability can properly be thought of as “future happiness”, not too unlike investment. This takes a little bit of explaining. Sustainability is often discussed in terms of stocks and flows, which are most easily illustrated with the image of a sink containing a given water level that is affected by a drain with water exiting the bottom and a tap with water entering the basin from the top. The water that already exists in the sink is the stock, while the water flowing out and in via the drain and tap are the flows. To maintain the same stock in the sink, the rate of outflows and inflows need to match each other. If the outflow is greater than the inflow, the stock will deplete over time. If the inflow is greater than the outflow, the stock with increase over time.
Sustainability is therefore the management of the stock level for given needs over a given time. In the case of a single person planning for their own life and retirement, sustainability is managing one’s savings so that they run out when the person’s life runs out. If we begin retirement with one million dollars in savings (stock) and plan to live for 20 years without new income (inflow), we can’t simply spend $100,000 each year (outflow) or we will run out in ten years. The outflow is not sustainable. The stock (savings) will be depleted through the outflow (spending) with no new inflows (income) before the person dies. In the case of humanity as whole, we aren’t worried about the savings and spending of a single retiree, but the world savings (all natural resources) and world consumption (total GDP). We can choose to deplete our stock of natural resources today, by consuming at a rapid pace, but this will have effects on what stock is left to posterity. If the stock goes to zero, because of poor management, it will be very difficult to enjoy the future. That’s because for all the limitations of using consumption as a proxy for happiness, one thing is clear, Kanye West was correct when he rapped, “Havin' money's not everything, not havin' it is”. Said differently, having infinite resources may not make us infinitely happy, but having no resources will make us infinitely unhappy. So as stated above, sustainability is really just future happiness that results from proper management of our resources today so that they are available for use in the future. A Model This all points to a model for living based on individuals maximizing well-being while simultaneously being mindful of others’ well-being. As individuals we want to consider maximization of well-being as an intra-relational, inter-relational, and temporal problem, meaning that how to maximize well-being for an individual will be a result of internal desire and goal states (intra-relational), our external relationships with others (inter-relational), and the balance of today’s and tomorrow’s (temporal) well-being in relation to both ourselves and others. I’ve written extensively on the first two problems already. See The Well-being Algorithm for a description of the intra-relational problem. See Be Happy or Be Good?, Having Children, Deciding Who Loses, The Communication Market: Speaking Honestly, Lies, or Not at All, Acceptance and Tolerable versus Intolerable Harm, The Future of Work, Why I Don't "Like" Adoption, Prioritizing World Problems, and A Trump Presidency Will Kill Thousands, Possibly Millions for discussions of the inter-relational problem. I’ve also written a bit about the temporal problem. See Why You Need Stress, The Exercise Algorithm, The Feudalism of America Today, The Education Algorithm, and F*ckin' Baby Boomers: Some Good Paragraphs about Them. All of these previous writings have in one way or another highlighted areas where tradeoffs and conflicts exist, either between our own desires and goals, our own well-being and that of others, or between today and tomorrow’s level of well-being. This article is attempt to add to these previous discussions and elaborate on how the often abstract, everyday economics we see in the news relates to well-being in reality. How we choose to consume, invest, use credit and debt, and manage issues of sustainability matter. They matter to us, both today and tomorrow. They matter to others, both those alive today and those alive tomorrow. Ultimately economics is the field of study that attempts to figure out all of these trade-offs and the consequences we face for whatever decision we eventually make. Seeing, knowing, and recognizing that these decisions aren’t really about money or profit and loss, but real people’s lives and real people’s well-being helps us decide what really matters and allows us to act accordingly. |
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