We are developing the social individualist meta-context for the future. From the very serious to the extremely frivolous... lets see what is on the mind of the Samizdata people.

Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. - a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR [Russ.,= self-publishing house]

Linguablog

noun. A specialist blog dealing with regular postings about linguistics, language learning, translation and localization, endangered languages, language rights or other language-related subjects.

(coined by Enigmatic Mermaid)

Why do people think that Britain is overcrowded?

Earlier today I did a a piece for UK Transport, in which I had a go at the idea that we live in an overcrowded country. I said the only reason people think it’s overcrowded is because the crowded bits are the bits that most people spend most of their time looking at.

UKT boss Patrick Crozier linked me to another explanation, and maybe a better one, for this daft idea:

We wonder if those who claim the country is being ‘covered in tarmac’ are looking at small scale maps of large areas on which the width of roads is grossly exaggerated to make them obvious. On a 1:10000000 scale wall map of the UK, a motorway may be shown as being 1mm wide. This equates to 1km, when in reality motorways are only about 32m wide – 1/30 of their apparent width on a map. Surely no-one could be so stupid as to believe that thick lines on a small map represent real tarmac on the ground?

Well, no, not when you spell it out like that. But if people have spent their lives looking at the maps and not thinking … And since this overcrowded thing is such an important anti-progress meme, I think this is a very good question. It comes from the Association of British Drivers.

My big brother did a tour of accountancy duty in Hong Kong a few years back. “Overcrowded?” says he to the greenery-sodden English, “You don’t know the meaning of the word.”

Alexis de Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America”

Paul Marks feels that Alexis de Tocqueville is more quoted than read.

I have been re-reading this work (no, security guards do not have a lot of time to read – that is, sadly, a myth).

There is a lot of ‘good stuff’ in Democracy in America and it is well worth reading (although please be careful that you do not buy or borrow an edition with bits cut out, it only takes a few seconds to check – by reading what the translator has to say for himself).

However, I would warn anyone against treating Democracy in America as an accurate picture of the United States in the 1830’s.

Firstly De Tocqueville is fond of making sweeping statements (I almost find myself typing ‘like so many Frenchmen, De Tocqueville is fond of making sweeping statements’). For example, we are told that Americans know little of the various schools of philosophy. → Continue reading: Alexis de Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America”

Just war revisited

One of the responses to Part II of Libertarians and war, namely the comment by Billy Beck, has puzzled me sufficiently to turn what would otherwise be a rather lengthy comment into another blog. (Part III on Strategic considerations is yet to come…)

“What you have in this is an exemplary waypoint on a logical trail which is consistently extensible toward *validly* including anyone whose productive effort in any way contributes to the efficacy of this so-called “monopoly on the use of force”. And if the logic is consistently extended, then what it means is that your distinction of “civilians” (in your final paragraph, above) is no better than Al-Qaeda’s was on September 11, Adriana.”

It took me a while to work out how anyone could think that the logic of my argument extents to blurring the distinction between combatants and civilians. I came to the conclusion that it must be due to misunderstanding of two other concepts – “monopoly on the use of force” and “collective responsibility” – that I want to clarify.

It is precisely because the state has the monopoly on the use of force that a civilian population can never be a legitimate target. The monopoly on force means that the state usurps the use of force and prevents individuals from using it against external enemies (foreign armies and terrorists) and in many cases, e.g. such as in the UK, internal enemies (criminals). For my part, I resent the state’s exclusive use of force, especially regarding the latter category.

“We were going after military targets. No point in slaughtering civilians for the mere sake of slaughter. Of course there is a pretty thin veneer in Japan, but the veneer is still there. It was their system of dispersal of industry… I’ll never forget Yokohama. That was what impressed me: drill presses. There they were, like a forest of scorched trees and stumps, growing up throughout that residential area. Flimsy construction all gone…everything burned down, or up, and drill presses standing like skeletons.”

The quote above (from Memoirs of Gen. Curtis LeMay) does distinguish between military and civilian installations and makes it explicit that “the veneer was pretty thin in Japan”. It also admits that civilian casualties occurred but the point is specifically made that they were aiming at military targets, never at civilians. Although civilian casualties were to be expected given the [Japanese] system of dispersal of industry…

It is for circumstances like these the double effect doctrine has something to say. The bad effect may be known beforehand but provided it is not the intention and the act itself is required for bringing about the needed good effect, the doctrine of double effect allows waging a war despite foreseeble civilian casualties. I do not see how it opens up a possibility that civilians may ever be a legitimate target just because they have their role in the functioning of the military machine. It is self-evident and blindingly obvious that an army cannot be raised, funded and function without civilian economy and infrastructure supporting it but I fail to see how it can provide a justification for turning civilians into a military target!

It is Al-Qaeda, as Billy Beck correctly points out, and not me, that cannot make the distinction between the effect civilians may have on the efficacy of the military and the moral grounds for turning them into a target for their ‘war’. As I argue in my posting on just war, it is equivalent to taking defenceless hostages – civilians disarmed by the state are targeted by the enemies of that state for its actions.

Here the notion of collective responsibility becomes relevant as it is often implicit in statements of those who hold an individual responsible for actions carried out by a collective entity, such as state merely on the basis of that individual’s membership of such entity. Would you say that all German civilians were equally and personally responsible for the Holocaust and WWII, by virtue of being citizens of the German state or even by virtue of working in one of the armaments factories trying to make a living?! Surely, there is a distinction to be made and one does not need a rigorous moral code to see that.

The doctrines of just war and double effect mean to provide guidance in situations where our moral instincts are torn between two ‘unacceptable’ options. They are meant to provide a moral template, not definitive or comforting answers, for those who want to know right from wrong even in the most difficult situations. They still leave plenty of room for formulation of policy and strategy…

Samizdata slogan of the day

Peace – in international affairs, a period of cheating between two periods of fighting.
– The Devil’s Dictionary, 1911 edition.

Modernism, architecture and Ayn Rand

There’s a nice review by blogger Pejman Yousefzadeh of Ayn Rand’s 1940s classic The Fountainhead, and it got me thinking not so much about architecture, where I think Rand’s views were often an uncritical acceptance of Modernist ideology, as about the fact that she missed a key argument for free enterprise – it can be a lot of fun! Let’s face it, the main hero, Howard Roark, doesn’t come across as the kind of guy to let his red hair down at a blogger bash, does he?

I think one of the unacknowledged aspects of liberal capitalism is that it can tap into humans’ need to play and experiment. Paleo-conservatives like David Brooks, author of Bobos In Paradise, which is a mild send up of 1990s America, seems almost offended that geeky tech entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley and elsewhere liked to have fun even as they made – and later lost – their billions. But what’s the problem with that? In fact, one of the most potent memes we can inject into the culture is the idea that not only is collectivism morally and economically bankrupt, it is also bloody boring. For a good and more considered take on this point, Virginia Postrel’s excellent The Future and Its Enemies is highly recommended.

some graffiti: tblives!

Suborbital war fighting?

I’ve just been reading a very long transcirpt of a DOD press briefing entitled “Gen. Kernan And Maj. Gen. Cash Discuss Millennium Challenge’s Lessons Learned“. It’s about the recent experiments in future warfighting methods, techniques, procedures, C-cubed and so forth. It’s a very long transcript. I woke abruptly from a deep alpha state when I read this comment by Cash:

And the big idea is, I want to be able to, as a concept developer, strike any target on the globe within 45 minutes from the time the president says, “Strike”. Forty-five minutes. That’s the big idea. Then I want to follow up that strike in 20 hours with a ground force. That’s the big idea.

Hands up for everyone who recognizes the significance of “45 mimutes”.

Objects in a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) do one full orbit every 90 minutes. The exact time varies with the orbital parameters, but this has been a rough number for human operations from the time of John Glenn to the time of the International Space Station. 45 minutes is one half an orbit, the time required to reach the antipodes from where you sit.

Maj General Chases’ requirement can only be fulfilled by a suborbital spacecraft or a space based weapon. Since these experiments were aimed at studying future warfighting capabilities and requirements, I would suggest he is thinking about a manned suborbital bomber. It is technically feasible in the near term and I personally know of at least one USAF guy who was pushing for the idea a decade ago. He left the service but that does not mean his ideas died.

It’s not that far out and there are those of us who think it might already exist in the very deep black world. More because it could and because it would be rather useful than because we “know” anything.

It just seems like such a bloody good idea.

Death in the home

Alice Bachini is a blogger in her own right and supporter of Taking Children Seriously

I read in The Telegraph the depressing statistic that even when the police know a child has been killed by one of his parents, they still only convict 27 percent of murderers, as opposed to 90 percent when the murderer is a stranger.

“This failure to convict arises when parents blame each other or refuse to disclose any details about the injuries and there is no independent evidence.”

So the law against murder doesn’t exactly guarantee children’s safety. And I’m not sure giving them guns is the answer. The trouble goes deeper than anything libertarianism is qualified to solve, because it is about what goes on behind closed doors, and libertarians are only interested in protecting the rights of door-owners.

Except that I don’t think this is true. I think there are some libertarians who believe in right and wrong, and who think that the reason freedom matters is that it is morally a good thing, and that children benefit from it just as much as adults do.

At the moment, the family, or the parent/child relationship, is a largely private institution. This benefits those of us who want to improve on the norm in radical ways without being scrutinised, but those who want to do evil to their children sometimes abuse this private freedom in the most horrible ways imaginable.

Libertarians are right, I believe, that subjecting all families to more state interference would, even on this kind of balance, be wrong. But this does not mean that murdering children should be more legal than murdering adults. Nor does it make hitting kids OK. It just means that legislation is too flawed and clumsy a mechanism for improving children’s lives.

What’s the real answer? You really need to ask?!

Alice Bachini

Did you come here looking for two particular articles?

As they are both about to drop off the front page and we are still getting visitors looking for them…

The article mentioned by Kathleen Parker:

…To those suffering anger deficiency, click over to http://www.samizdata.net/blog (linked by Instapundit.com) to jump-start your moral outrage. The Web log features a photo – of a man plunging headfirst from one of the towers – that ought to help us remember exactly what no one deserves…

The article Kathleen refers to is called News from another universe.

And the article mentioned by James Bennett:

…However, after I returned to my office, I began looking at some of the Web logs I like to follow. On one, samizdata.net, there was a modest little posting. Perry de Havilland, one of the site’s contributors, based in the posh London neighborhood of Chelsea, had walked out at lunchtime, and had been stuck by the fact that “shop after shop are displaying signs saying words to the effects of ‘At 1:46 p.m. today, we will be observing two minutes silence in remembrance of the atrocities on September 11th of last year in the United States.’ Others are expressing memorial sentiments, still others just displaying small American flags.”…

The article James refers to is called The real England speaks.

Just another fine service from samizdata.net!

Just when you thought it was safe to sleep

In case there is one person in the world who doesn’t read Instapundit… you really have to read this.

We can only hope the error was due to Soviet era inflated production numbers. I’d much rather believe the 200 “missing” nukes were never actually built than imagine them in the hands of the Russian Mafia. That just does not bear thinking about.

Real Estate on isolated Pacific desert islands is a good investment possibility with an expectation of a very high near term ROI. Samizdata’s cracked investment advisory team also gives a strong buy recommendation on abandoned hard rock mine shafts in the Rocky Mountains…

Free software even if we have to pay for it

We’re seeing more and more software ending up under GPL after it becomes abandoned or the original company goes out of business. I know how many lines of code I wrote in the 70’s for a company no longer with us, and if I imagine that multiplied by all the other hackers in the world, the total loss of human effort and creativity is simply staggering.

Times have changed. It appears people are now willing to buy the source for important packages rather than let them die. According to this week’s Debian News:

Blender is Free Software. After the company behind Blender, a very fast and versatile 3D modeller and renderer, went bankrupt, the Blender Foundation was created. The purpose was to secure and maintain the Blender source. 100,000 Euro were required to purchase the source from the company, and this was donated by many volunteers from around the world. To celebrate this, a conference will be held in October, closing with a party at which Blender 2.26 will be released as free software.

Although I am not a graphics person myself, I have it on the best of authority Blender is a magnificent piece of kit.

Once again, a picture is worth a thousand words

Graphic from ‘Blue Skies of Freedom’ blog (click)