Posted on 09/26/2010 12:59:28 PM PDT by Bean Counter
Ive gotten 95% of my information from the internet over the past 5-6 years. There exists a special mix of intelligence, altruism and collegial respect that can unite to make internet forums worth much more than the price of admission. As such I've become habituated to a variety of sources, bloggers, websites, and internet personalities. Of late it seems these forums have become more shrill and predictable in their aggregate coverage of real life. Recently the signal to noise ratio is so low that I find myself using the internet for learning less and less, and when I do, with increasing occasion shake my head at the content. Buzzwords such as 'fiat currency', 'fractional reserve system', 'banksters', 'hyperinflation' and even 'peak oil' are prevalent, though the analysis and understanding of these concepts seems shallow and repetitive. Worse, the denizens of particular forums (not surprisingly) all seem to drink their own particular form of kool-aid. Given the prevalence of high quality content and thought of a few years ago, the blending and parroting of the major themes that a casual perusal of the resource/energy/finance blogosphere reveals today reminds one of the time shift in the movie Idiocracy. A psychiatrist might label this phenomenon information anhedonia. An economist would say weve reached decreasing informational returns from the marginal blog entry. I'll just call it clown-fest.
We evolved to favor the in group over the out group, for resource, defensive, and ultimately reproductive advantages. The internet has spawned millions of in-groups peak oilers, tea-party evangelizers, deflationistas, gold-bugs, Austrian economics followers, anti-abortion activists, and myriad less controversial groups such as Claremount High School Boosters", "Kerr Jar Enthusiasts", Earthworm Snack Creators and the like. People gravitate towards groups they identify with. And they usually stay there. (After all, a room full of clowns feels a lot less clown-like).
*SNIP*
It is possible, that with highly polarized issues like finance, energy depletion, and environmental damage, that some leading clowns may act as decoys on the way to (positive?) change. As Dan Ariely wrote about in Predictably Irrational, there is a concept termed asymmetric dominance effect where the existence of a third, extreme value causes what was originally an extreme option to be preferred. The example in the book was (something like) the choice between buying a $250 barbecue grill or a $1000 grill. Ceteris paribus, most people chose the cheaper grill. But if the grill manufacturer put up a super stacked $5,000 grill next to the other two, then people would start to prefer the $1000 grill as next to the $5,000 version it didn't seem so outrageous. This practice, known in professional marketing as 'the decoy effect' may inadvertently apply to what appears to be a clown uprising among the energy/environment/economic tribes. Options for change that at first seem extreme might not seem so extreme in the face of a carnivale barrage.
*SNIP*
If this post has sounded a bit harsh on the status of blogging/education on the major topics of our time, it is meant to be. Those glorifying dystopian futures, and only recommending action steps involving Kruggerands and/or ammunition etc., are probably getting their status/ego boost at an ultimate cost to society. A hijacked pursuit of status and novelty gets firmly in the way of real education and change. Just like time, greed and entropy have caused our political system to become a one dollar one vote monolith, the blogoshphere has become a one neuron one vote system. Those who have free time and are vocal, novel, confident, and possessive of short memories drown out the less clown-like in their forums - Greshams Law. Democracies cease to work in these circumstances unless there exists a strong republic/framework of rules. The watershed moment comes when clowns have become the scout team for the civically minded, rational systems-thinkers who find their voices. Or maybe that already happened years ago and we're mean-reverting.
I love “The Confessor”.
Creeeeeeeepy video!
Needs more leather, whips and chains.
That would be a nice video to show a 3 year old kid right before a trip to the circus. LOL
"Roscoe" couldn't fin his whip.
Keep in mind that Alice is the Sunday school teacher at his church.
If that’s not a mental image, I don’t know what is.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASUHlK8skIw
Wait for the final word after the song.
:)
Full clown getup, gnarly teeth, smacking his bible and screaming at the 3 year olds “REPENT!” Yup. He’s an odd man, indeed!
He can borrow one of mine.
[braided leather or nylon woven over fiberglass...different “effects”, ya know...choose wisely]
:]
That’s a ~flog~.
Geeze.
S&M noob.
:-P
Bet he always gets results....;]
A whip is too big for a dog that size. A flog will do just fine.
We’re gonna need a bigger dog.
:)
You naughty thing you!
Kneel before DOG.
A little leather and Chihuahuas look like bad asses!
“Indian Summer” is the one for me.
That whole first side is awesome....First time I heard it was while living in Ft. Yukon, Alaska...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.