February 19, 2014
— Ace One of those neat "whiteboard" exhibits where they draw pictures and charts while delivering their verbal argument. The video argues that sex, like anything else, can be analyzed as an economic exchange, an exchange of one good for another. And that the "price" women "charge" for sex has dropped precipitously, resulting in men who in turn understand that the market is signaling the price for sex should not be high, and are therefore unwilling to "pay" much for it.
Via Instapundit, who links this New York Post article about the video, if you just want to read the quotes and basic thrust of the argument.
Key insight: "Men tend to behave as well, or as poorly, as the women in their lives permit."
There's a documentary called Sexy Baby, directed by a couple of women interested in exploring current sexual mores. (Trailer here: Content Warning.)
There are several storylines, two of which are particularly interesting. The one that's relevant here is 12-year-old Winnifred's story. She's very precocious, and "gets it" on an adult level. She notes, for example, that FaceBook and other social media pictures of girls must always at least include the suggestion of being open for sex -- of being "DTF," as she says. (Down to F***.)
She says (or implies) that she's rather trapped by the current market forces, in which boys just won't take an interest in girls who don't broadcast that sexual availability.
Remember, she's 12.
The pictures she posts online are not graphic or overtly sexual. They do, however, subtly signal that she might be DTF, which is actually her intent. I mean, it's her intent to signal that, in order to attract boys; based on her interviews, I don't think she actually is ready for a sexual relationship. (But then, her dad knows she's giving these interviews, so who knows what the truth is.)
Remember, again: She's 12.
Her dad argues with her about this, and tells her the sort of things dads tell their daughters, about respect and so forth. But she tells her interviewers, basically: This is the marketplace. If I want to have any boys show any interest me at all, I have to conform to what's being bought in the marketplace. This is just the way it is.
A lot of feminists criticize this sort of argument, claiming it's "slut shaming" girls. I don't buy that at all. I certainly don't buy that two women filmmakers, who seem to me to be feminists themselves, are "slut shaming" girls, and I don't think Winnifred is slut shaming herself or the other girls she's competing with.
And remember: She's 12.
Feminists take this argument to be only about girls' behavior, and seem to believe -- or at least claim -- that anyone who discusses these things "hates" girls or only wishes to "slut shame" them.
Untrue. You can't watch Sexy Baby and not feel sympathy for Winnifred. She is a 12 year old girl, stuck in an ADULT CONTENT WARNING world. Nor can you not feel, by extension, sympathy for the millions of other Winnifreds suffering under the current sexual regime.
You don't have to claim "This is all girls' fault" to recognize that there is a social problem here which is forcing (or, at least, urging) girls into sexual activity at increasingly young ages.
It doesn't matter whose "fault" it is -- huge segments of society are implicated; the "fault" is diffuse.
The important issue is that the issue exists, undeniably. And how can you change that -- how can you try to make things easier for Winnifred -- without discussing the problem at all?
I have a problem with feminists on this point. They are so eager to attack me, a convenient member of the hated "Patriarchy," that they're unwilling to listen at all to Winnifred, or lift a finger to help her.
Helping Winnifred would involve some positive social messaging from role models saying, "Hey, don't listen to boys about sex. Boys are programmed to lie, cheat, and steal (or worse) their way into sex." Hearing a hip-sounding role-model young feminist say that would probably count for more in Winnifred's mind than hearing her fuddy-duddy worryword daddy say it.
But instead of helpful messaging like that -- messaging that might help Winnifred set the "price of sex" in the marketplace a little higher (a higher price from which she gains) -- feminists are just determined to stay in their favorite, easy wheelhouse, their eternal wooby, attacking politically convenient targets, calling everyone who worries about Winnifred a member of the retrograde, evil Patriarchy, and so on.
It is politically easy to attack "The Patriarchy." It is a more difficult conversation to honestly discuss if our current sexual marketplace is behaving correctly, and if our current sexual marketplace is serving Winnifred -- or harming her.
And people love taking the easy way out. And they especially love taking the easy way out when they can then clap themselves on the back and call their cowardice "bravery."
Remember: Winnifred is 12.
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— Gabriel Malor Uh oh.
Some powerful images coming out of Kiev.
An Orthodox priest tries to stop a clash between protesters and the police in the center of Kiev, Ukraine. 2014 pic.twitter.com/rlbQ2mlfpx
— Powerful Pictures (@Powerful_Pics) February 11, 2014
AoSHQ Weekly Podcast: [
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— Ace Eh, looks fun-nish. The conceit that they're not heroes per se, but intergalactic outlaws (who I assume will, in a Firefly-like way, wind up fighting for good despite themselves), is attractive.
I dunno. Eh, I'll probably see it.
But on DVD. more...
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February 18, 2014
— Maetenloch Aurora Alert! Residents of MN, WI, ND, MI, VT, ME, AK and southern Canada (where skies are clear) are enjoying a great northern lights display as of 11PM local time. Go outside and look up!-CAC
Because stomach unhappy tonight's grumpiness factor is 4 - you have been warned.
Liberals Support Higher Taxes to Punish the Rich Rather Than Bring in Revenue
Okay this is from the UK but I have little doubt that a poll of liberals in the US would get similar results. Envy and spite over perceived injustice drive a lot of human behavior and hence a lot of politics.
Sixty-nine per cent of Labour supporters would want a top rate tax of 50 per cent even if it brought in no money.I'm sure they'd dispute the premise. I'm sure they'd insist that it did bring money in. And, on one level, they'd believe it; it's human nature to start with the result we want and then rationalise it to ourselves with what look like hard data. I think their rationalisation would be false, obviously - once the behavioural consequences of the tax are factored in, it becomes a net drain on revenue - but I might be subject to my own confirmation bias in the other direction.
Anyway, this isn't a blog about the statistics - I've already posted one of those. No, this is a blog about the mind-set of people who see taxation, not as an unpleasant necessity, but as a way to punish others.
In her last Commons appearance as prime minister, Margaret Thatcher was asked by Simon Hughes whether she was proud of the fact that, for all her undoubted successes, inequality had widened during her eleven years in office. She replied magisterially:And Charles Crooke of NRO points out that the left loves progressive taxation but finds the idea of progressive representation utterly reprehensible. And it's not as if the idea of progressive taxation itself is based on any logical or moral foundation.The hon. Gentleman is saying that he would rather that the poor were poorer, provided that the rich were less rich.
But Mr. Perkins here has only taken a step that progressives took a few generations ago, when they embraced escalating rates of taxation as a foundation for economic justice, and applied it to a different problem. If our political liabilities - taxes - should be as a matter of justice proportional to our income, then why shouldn't our political input be likewise proportionate? Why should proportionality be the rule in one context and not the other? The leap from "No taxation without representation" to "proportional taxation with proportional representation" is not a very dramatic one. But Mr. Perkins has been received as though he were the offspring of Marie Antoinette and an unreconstructed Ebenezer Scrooge.
The case for an income tax that is proportional is far from obvious, and the case for one that is progressive even less so. The principle of equality under the law suggests, to my mind at least, that every man's standing in relation to the state should be the same as every other man's, regardless of his wealth or income. So why should somebody pay 20 times or 50 times or 10,000 times the taxes that another man pays? ...The usual answer given to that question is "the rich can afford to pay more." That is true, but it is not a principled reason. A rich man could afford to pay more for a Big Mac or a Honda Civic, too, but we do not expect him to do so. Another popular explanation is: Paying the same rate as everybody else would be too hard on the poor man. True, but that is an argument for lower taxes, not for progressive taxation.more...
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February 19, 2014
— Open Blogger
- When And Where To Watch Olympic Quaterfinal Hockey
- War On Women, More From The Leftist Front
- VDH: Lessons Of World War I
- CBO Just Went And Fouled Up A Great Democratic Election Issue
- In Which Buzzfeed Andrew Demonstrates What's Wrong With America
- Lefty Meltdown Leads To Latin Revival
- Protests In Ukraine Take A Deadly Turn
- Bipartisan Uproar Over Obamacare's Insane Menu Rules
- NSA Reform Bill Idles In Congress
- VW Workers Escape From Detroit
- John Kerry vs. Dissent
- Why It's A Great Time To Be A Dictator
- Sidewalk Philistine Destroys 1 Million Dollar Vase At Museum
- An Opening For Lindsey Graham's Opponents?
- Harry Reid Attacks Kochs Just Before Heading To Billionaire Fundraiser
Follow me on twitter.
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February 18, 2014
— Ace On February 4th, the CBO released a report projecting that Obamacare will result in the loss of 2.5 million jobs in the next ten years. Kathleen Sebelius just disputed that, and you should believe her, because she oversaw the Obamacare Website.
Now the CBO says that another one of Obama's policies, hiking the minimum wage by three bucks, will cost the country another half-million jobs.
Oh, and not by 2024, either. By 2016.
Countdown until Nancy Pelosi comes out to tell us, once again, how exciting it is not work at all.
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— Ace Good Lord.
Obviously: R E T R A C T E D
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— Ace more...
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— Ace I guess it's possible that this will turn out to be some kind of government shake-down.
Former congressman Melvin Reynolds (D-Ill.) has been arrested by immigration officers in Zimbabwe, the Associated Press reports.An immigration official, Ario Mabika, told AP that Reynolds was arrested for an immigration violation and possessing pornography. The state-run newspaper also reports Reynolds has failed to pay more than $24,000 in hotel bills.
Reynolds had also, in 1995, faced charges for solicitation of child pornography.
I don't know what kind of porn the Zimbabweans are saying he had.
Clinton commuted the last two years of Reynolds' sentence, as he was leaving office, in 2001.
Hot Air notes that only The Hill bothers to note his party affiliation.
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— Ace R E T R A C T E D
As AllahPundit explains, this claim is so misleading and twisted as to be not only insupportable, but indefensible.
This entire post is retracted in red-faced error. YouGov is now changing their claim.
I won't ever link them again.
...
71%, according to a new Economist/YouGov poll.
However, the poll does not detect much new enthusiasm for Romney, either, because you know he gave a dog a gay haircut and then cancer.
Still, given the choice of Obama versus Romney, Obama supporters said they would stick with their guy, 79 percent to 10 percent for Romney.
But 10% of Obama's 53.5% is about 5.35% of the vote. Would that have turned the election?
As for Romney, his favorable ratings have dropped, but he would edge Obama by about three million votes, probably because Americans are not wowed by Obama's second term performance, not because they like Romney more.
Now, this being politics and political writers needing easy stories, you know what this means: Time for a second third look at Romney? As in Romney 2016?
But in recent weeks, a strange thing has happened: Some supporters and donors, pollsters and pundits are starting to suggest — without irony — that the former Massachusetts governor run for president in 2016.
“Once a month, someone would e-mail or call and say he should run again,” said Ron Kaufman, a longtime Romney adviser. “Now I get it every day — from the grass roots, and from donors. I get it every day.”
Exit question: Is this for real?
Exit answer: No.
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