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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. Efficiency in government is a lie told by people who want government to serve the smallest number of (rich) people possible and no one else.

Efficiency in government is a lie told by people who want government to serve the smallest number of (rich) people possible and no one else.

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  • JohnJ John

    @graydon @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft

    "Specify outcomes and reward effectiveness" is precisely what I mean when I say efficiency as an additional benefit of good process is a good thing.

    Cost efficiency and outcome (what I call service) efficiency are an example of designing for efficiency rather than for outcome or effectiveness.

    TBH, it reminds me of when I used to consult with startups and I would ask "why this product?" and the founders would say "because we want to be billionaires".

    Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
    Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
    Eric Lawton
    wrote last edited by
    #30

    @johnzajac

    That's what the Faust legend is about.

    Selling your soul to the devil, for Earthly power and wealth.

    @graydon @bonaventuresoft

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    • cyberveganC cybervegan

      @DejahEntendu @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft What a system does is what it is for.

      Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
      Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
      Eric Lawton
      wrote last edited by
      #31

      @cybervegan

      Not a useful aphorism because it trivializes the important question "is it fit for purpose?"

      With that definition, the answer is always "yes".

      Better (more useful) to ask "Whose purpose?"

      Cicero said Lucius Cassius was famous for asking "cui bono?"—who benefits?.

      @DejahEntendu @johnzajac @bonaventuresoft

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      • cyberveganC cybervegan

        @DejahEntendu @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft What a system does is what it is for.

        DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
        DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
        DThoris
        wrote last edited by
        #32

        @cybervegan @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft
        What a system does it what it was subverted to do.

        JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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        • cyberveganC cybervegan

          @DejahEntendu @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft What a system does is what it is for.

          DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
          DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
          DThoris
          wrote last edited by
          #33

          @cybervegan @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft

          What a system does is what it was subverted to do by those with the power to subvert. That's what checks and balances are intended to stop. Which is why allowing gerrymandering, for instance, is evil. It is using the power of a ruling party to subvert the voice of the people.

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          • DThorisD DThoris

            @cybervegan @johnzajac @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft
            What a system does it what it was subverted to do.

            JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
            JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
            John
            wrote last edited by
            #34

            @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft

            No. The engineering principle of POSIWID (purpose of a system is what it does) is intended to help people understand that "reform" of a system is impossible. A system can either be used or removed, but it cannot be "reformed".

            If you "reform" a system to the point where it has a different outcome entirely, you're simply replacing the system with another whose purpose is...the new outcome.

            DThorisD 1 Reply Last reply
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            • JohnJ John

              @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft

              No. The engineering principle of POSIWID (purpose of a system is what it does) is intended to help people understand that "reform" of a system is impossible. A system can either be used or removed, but it cannot be "reformed".

              If you "reform" a system to the point where it has a different outcome entirely, you're simply replacing the system with another whose purpose is...the new outcome.

              DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
              DThorisD This user is from outside of this forum
              DThoris
              wrote last edited by
              #35

              @johnzajac @cybervegan @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft
              Engineering is not politics. The principle applies to a certain degree insofar as sometimes tearing it down and starting over is the only option to repair/reform. But, in poliotics, new laws are a reformation. Unless, of course, you're using reform as to make again and not as improve.

              Eric LawtonE 1 Reply Last reply
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              • DThorisD DThoris

                @johnzajac @cybervegan @EricLawton @bonaventuresoft
                Engineering is not politics. The principle applies to a certain degree insofar as sometimes tearing it down and starting over is the only option to repair/reform. But, in poliotics, new laws are a reformation. Unless, of course, you're using reform as to make again and not as improve.

                Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                Eric Lawton
                wrote last edited by
                #36

                @DejahEntendu

                Exactly.

                The US government does different things from before Trump. Largely because it's purpose has changed.

                POSIWID is useful in pointing out that it's purpose is not as written in the constitution, but the purpose for the people in power, and for other groups of people, can be understood separately and its actual function analysed in terms of its effectiveness in fulfilling those purposes.

                @johnzajac @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • Eric LawtonE Eric Lawton

                  @DejahEntendu

                  Exactly.

                  The US government does different things from before Trump. Largely because it's purpose has changed.

                  POSIWID is useful in pointing out that it's purpose is not as written in the constitution, but the purpose for the people in power, and for other groups of people, can be understood separately and its actual function analysed in terms of its effectiveness in fulfilling those purposes.

                  @johnzajac @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                  JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  John
                  wrote last edited by
                  #37

                  @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                  It may be that what we call "reform" today - e.g. "shuffling around the deck chairs to try and confuse people into thinking something's changed - and what we called "reform" in previous eras of US government are substantially different things.

                  In this era, esp u40s are (rightly) skeptical of anyone who claims to be a "reformer".

                  But the implosion/surborning of language has been one of the great betrayals of the modern age, so...

                  JohnJ Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R 2 Replies Last reply
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                  • JohnJ John

                    @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                    It may be that what we call "reform" today - e.g. "shuffling around the deck chairs to try and confuse people into thinking something's changed - and what we called "reform" in previous eras of US government are substantially different things.

                    In this era, esp u40s are (rightly) skeptical of anyone who claims to be a "reformer".

                    But the implosion/surborning of language has been one of the great betrayals of the modern age, so...

                    JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    John
                    wrote last edited by
                    #38

                    @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                    While I'm not a fan of exporting industry terms to the public sphere ("don't make perfect the enemy of good" being a stellar example of how dangerous it can be) I do think the concept behind POSIWID is extremely *useful* in an unjust political environment that is both systems-heavy and systems-deferential.

                    When someone says, for example, that "our incarceration system is broken", it ignores the historical and practical *purpose*...

                    JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • JohnJ John

                      @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                      While I'm not a fan of exporting industry terms to the public sphere ("don't make perfect the enemy of good" being a stellar example of how dangerous it can be) I do think the concept behind POSIWID is extremely *useful* in an unjust political environment that is both systems-heavy and systems-deferential.

                      When someone says, for example, that "our incarceration system is broken", it ignores the historical and practical *purpose*...

                      JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      John
                      wrote last edited by
                      #39

                      @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                      ...of that system: to recreate an environment in which slavery can be re-instituted without resistance from most white Americans. After all, the 14th Amendment was really clear that if you wanna, you can enslave prisoners (lol lmao).

                      Californians in 2024, of all people and times, are like "we're curious about this enslaving prisoners thing, and would like to keep it open as an option".

                      JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • JohnJ John

                        @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                        ...of that system: to recreate an environment in which slavery can be re-instituted without resistance from most white Americans. After all, the 14th Amendment was really clear that if you wanna, you can enslave prisoners (lol lmao).

                        Californians in 2024, of all people and times, are like "we're curious about this enslaving prisoners thing, and would like to keep it open as an option".

                        JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                        JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                        John
                        wrote last edited by
                        #40

                        @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                        Is it a coincidence that enforcement is much more extensive (and corrupt) in Black communities, or the prison population is disproportionately Black? Is it "broken" that access to good legal counsel requires money, but Black Americans have been systematically cut off from generational wealth building *as a matter of govt policy* for the last 150 years?

                        Or is it the purpose of the system?

                        JohnJ Eric LawtonE DThorisD 3 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • JohnJ John

                          @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                          Is it a coincidence that enforcement is much more extensive (and corrupt) in Black communities, or the prison population is disproportionately Black? Is it "broken" that access to good legal counsel requires money, but Black Americans have been systematically cut off from generational wealth building *as a matter of govt policy* for the last 150 years?

                          Or is it the purpose of the system?

                          JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          John
                          wrote last edited by
                          #41

                          @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                          POSIWID forces us to think about systems critically, both their purpose, their outcomes, and their *very existence*.

                          That's why I make an exception to applying it to political and social systems under which we live.

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                          • JohnJ John

                            @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                            It may be that what we call "reform" today - e.g. "shuffling around the deck chairs to try and confuse people into thinking something's changed - and what we called "reform" in previous eras of US government are substantially different things.

                            In this era, esp u40s are (rightly) skeptical of anyone who claims to be a "reformer".

                            But the implosion/surborning of language has been one of the great betrayals of the modern age, so...

                            Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R This user is from outside of this forum
                            Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R This user is from outside of this forum
                            Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
                            wrote last edited by
                            #42

                            @johnzajac @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                            Anarchism has always had a consistent understanding of what governmental reform is. In this understanding, it is not a significantly different activity now and in previous eras, just as Trump's actions are not significantly different from past US Presidents'.

                            The state should not exist. It can not be reformed.

                            Eric LawtonE 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • JohnJ John

                              @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                              Is it a coincidence that enforcement is much more extensive (and corrupt) in Black communities, or the prison population is disproportionately Black? Is it "broken" that access to good legal counsel requires money, but Black Americans have been systematically cut off from generational wealth building *as a matter of govt policy* for the last 150 years?

                              Or is it the purpose of the system?

                              Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                              Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                              Eric Lawton
                              wrote last edited by
                              #43

                              @johnzajac

                              It's the purpose of the system for the oligarchs who have captured it.

                              @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                              JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • Eric LawtonE Eric Lawton

                                @johnzajac

                                It's the purpose of the system for the oligarchs who have captured it.

                                @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                John
                                wrote last edited by
                                #44

                                @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                It's been the purpose of the system for 150 years. At what point do we stop trying to pretend it was "captured" or it's "broken" and just accept that its purpose has always been thus, and we know this because of what it does and has done, and that it needs to be burned to the point where the atoms separate from one another and it drifts into the cosmos as elemental hydrogen?

                                I'm tired of giving the depraved system the benefit of the doubt

                                cyberveganC DThorisD 2 Replies Last reply
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                                • Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝

                                  @johnzajac @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                  Anarchism has always had a consistent understanding of what governmental reform is. In this understanding, it is not a significantly different activity now and in previous eras, just as Trump's actions are not significantly different from past US Presidents'.

                                  The state should not exist. It can not be reformed.

                                  Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Eric LawtonE This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Eric Lawton
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #45

                                  @richpuchalsky

                                  I agree.

                                  The challenge is to construct a non-hierarchical system that is robust against attempts to rebuild hierarchies.

                                  Most revolutions fail to do this, because they substitute a different hierarchy. Napoleon, Stalin and Trump are only a few examples.

                                  @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                  cyberveganC 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • JohnJ John

                                    @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                    It's been the purpose of the system for 150 years. At what point do we stop trying to pretend it was "captured" or it's "broken" and just accept that its purpose has always been thus, and we know this because of what it does and has done, and that it needs to be burned to the point where the atoms separate from one another and it drifts into the cosmos as elemental hydrogen?

                                    I'm tired of giving the depraved system the benefit of the doubt

                                    cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cybervegan
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #46

                                    @johnzajac @EricLawton @DejahEntendu @bonaventuresoft And not just in the USA

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                                    • Eric LawtonE Eric Lawton

                                      @richpuchalsky

                                      I agree.

                                      The challenge is to construct a non-hierarchical system that is robust against attempts to rebuild hierarchies.

                                      Most revolutions fail to do this, because they substitute a different hierarchy. Napoleon, Stalin and Trump are only a few examples.

                                      @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @cybervegan @bonaventuresoft

                                      cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                      cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                      cybervegan
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #47

                                      @EricLawton @richpuchalsky @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @bonaventuresoft It's not a thing you can do just once... It has to be maintained and constantly adjusted, refined and recentred. There will always be ways to improve and there will always be times when it goes off in the "wrong" direction.

                                      Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • cyberveganC cybervegan

                                        @EricLawton @richpuchalsky @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @bonaventuresoft It's not a thing you can do just once... It has to be maintained and constantly adjusted, refined and recentred. There will always be ways to improve and there will always be times when it goes off in the "wrong" direction.

                                        Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #48

                                        @cybervegan @EricLawton @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @bonaventuresoft

                                        Reform is always, or periodically, attempted. This results in the preservation of the state, often with a high degree of historical continuity in the state's basic functions. For instance, US military interventions in Latin America have continued under all historic US administrative systems and after/during many different sets of reforms. There has never been and never will be reform that "improves" them.

                                        cyberveganC 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • Rich Puchalsky  ⩜⃝R Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝

                                          @cybervegan @EricLawton @johnzajac @DejahEntendu @bonaventuresoft

                                          Reform is always, or periodically, attempted. This results in the preservation of the state, often with a high degree of historical continuity in the state's basic functions. For instance, US military interventions in Latin America have continued under all historic US administrative systems and after/during many different sets of reforms. There has never been and never will be reform that "improves" them.

                                          cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          cyberveganC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          cybervegan
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #49

                                          @richpuchalsky sorry, I still have brain fog so I'm not writing very clearly. I wasn't trying to justify reform, just staying that a non-hierarchical, non-coercive society would need constant vigilance. That it's not an endpoint but a process in itself.

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