• Aging

    Random insight on New Years Eve

    I suppose my current consuming insight is that America is lacking in quality old people.  As my dad put it (around 2003 IIRC) foolishness used to be fatal, but now everything is seat belted, idiot-proofed, and somewhat treatable medically, thus permitting a lot of the less wise to reach old age, and bringing down the average level of wisdom in society.  We can expect young people to be reckless and impulsive, but traditionally the older generation grows out of that.  Thanks to technology, they have not been doing that lately.

    Comments Off on Random insight on New Years Eve
  • Adages

    World Health Indicators

    The prime indicator of whether the economy is in a recession is if people complain about Walmart – if more people are complaining, we are in a recovery, if people stop complaining we are in a recession.  WalMart related angst is a luxury good.

    If the military spends untold billions developing fighter aircraft that are too expensive to actually use (we’ve had air superiority for generations now, no one else is close, and missiles have huge advantages of human piloted craft) then America faces no real threats in the world, and the power that be feel free to reward constituents and districts with interesting graft instead of focusing on saving the country.  Similarly, (while Peter Thiel is right, mass NSA surveillance is not a sign of competence, rather the opposite) the fact that the NSA devotes a lot of time and energy to spying on Americans by solving interesting technical puzzles instead of their legal job is a sign that there is no looming terrorist threat.

    One universal truth I now recently recognize is the importance of projects to the middle aged – I’ve got my cnc machine and prediction tracking site, others have universal democracy and government health insurance, but at a certain age the projects become pillars of your worldview.  I need to flesh that idea out a bit more.

    Comments Off on World Health Indicators
  • Uncategorized

    Quote of the day

    Quote of the day

    The improvement of our way of life is more important than the spreading of it,” Colonel Lindbergh told his countrymen. “If we make it satisfactory enough, it will spread automatically. If we do not, no strength of arms can permanently impose it.”

    Comments Off on Quote of the day
  • Uncategorized

    Quote of the day

    Make mistakes of ambition and not mistakes of sloth.
    Develop the strength to do bold things, not the strength to suffer.

    Machiavelli

    I think the second line is the more telling.  I remember Tyler Cowen (I think) describe raising children as the proper determination of what activities will be character building and which will be needless suffering.

    Comments Off on Quote of the day