Arjun Khemani's avatar
Arjun Khemani
arjun@primal.net
npub179es...p48v
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arjun 2 years ago
THE NOT SO GOOD OLD DAYS “[T]he sage gave him the history of man in a single line; it was this: he was born, he suffered, and he died. […] Life was insignificant and death without consequence.” — W. Somerset Maugham, Of Human Bondage Contrary to what climate alarmists might have you believe, we are better off in virtually every way today than we were a few centuries ago and all the centuries before that. Life before industrialization was not a utopia. Indeed, there was some equality; almost everyone was equally poor, lived equally short, miserable lives, and had equally limited opportunities. People didn’t have to worry about running out of resources because they scarcely had any resources to begin with. As Thomas Sowell has written, “Most of what are natural resources for us today were not natural resources for the cave man, who had not yet acquired the knowledge of how these things could be used for his own purposes.” Nor did our prehistoric ancestors have the luxury of enjoying an “untainted” natural world. They were too busy with survival in an often harsh and unforgiving environment. For most of human history, nothing ever improved significantly; people were born, they suffered, and they died. It was indeed a tragedy. Intellectuals have squandered far too much time trying to understand the causes of poverty. In fact, poverty is humanity’s default condition. It is wealth and prosperity that need explanation. The idea of a simple life where humans produce nothing and exist in perfect harmony with an untainted natural world is undeniably appealing to many. However, it is totally unrealistic. Far from alienating us from the natural world, technology enhances our ability to appreciate and interact with it. For instance, without technology, we wouldn’t be able to reach the peaks of the highest mountains, explore the ocean’s depths, or walk on the surface of the Moon. The “good old days” are a myth. In 1900, the average life expectancy of a newborn was 32 years. By 2021, this had more than doubled to 71 years. As recently as two centuries ago, half of the children ever born died before their 15th birthday. Now, only 4% of kids die before the age of 15. One cannot measure the pain of so many parents having to see their children die. Even though people think of capitalism as exploitative, we are working less than everbefore. As people get richer, they tend to work fewer hours. Today, there are significantly fewer deaths due to natural disasters because we started utilizing our unique ability to master the climate. As Barack Obama said, “If you had to choose any moment in history in which to be born, […] you’d choose right now.” Progress is neither automatic nor inevitable, however. We are not entitled to anything. Everything worthwhile has been achieved by creating the necessary knowledge to get there. The future is open. The fate of the universe is up to people like us and what we choose to do.
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arjun 2 years ago
“The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.” — Winston Churchill
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arjun 2 years ago
“The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities.” — Ayn Rand
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arjun 2 years ago
“The philosophy of protectionism is a philosophy of war.” — Ludwig von Mises, Human Action
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arjun 2 years ago
There is no such thing as "excessive profits". On the free market, the greater the profits a company earns, the more efficient it is at serving its customers.
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arjun 2 years ago
Milei at the World Economic Forum image
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arjun 2 years ago
The more we automate with programs and machines, the more we are freed to do that which is uniquely human: to think.
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arjun 2 years ago
“If your purpose is to make someone happy, you’re more apt to succeed if you make yourself the object. You’ll never know another person more than a fraction as well as you can know yourself.” — Harry Browne, How I Found Freedom In An Unfree World
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arjun 2 years ago
It's better to speak in terms of individuals and not a "society". It's better still to speak in terms of ideas and not individuals.
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arjun 2 years ago
A parochial answer for why a society collapsed could be “because of the weather” but the deeper explanation for its fall is a lack of knowledge. We don’t want to be like all the societies before us that failed to create the necessary knowledge to save themselves in time.
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arjun 2 years ago
Currently reading: Pandenomics: La economía que viene en tiempos de megarrecesión, inflación y crisis global by Javier Milei [Pandenomics: The Upcoming Economy in Times of Megarecession, Inflation, and Global Crisis] image
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arjun 2 years ago
They think memes are just funny pictures on the internet. image
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arjun 2 years ago
Disobedience is good, actually. image
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arjun 2 years ago
Just finished recording a podcast with David Deutsch about free-will, Taking Children Seriously, anarcho-capitalism, and much more. Can't wait to publish this one.
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arjun 2 years ago
"Nobody is needy in the market economy because of the fact that some people are rich. The riches of the rich are not the cause of the poverty of anybody. The process that makes some people rich is, on the contrary, the corollary of the process that improves many peoples' want satisfaction. The entrepreneurs, the capitalists and the technologists prosper as far as they succeed in best supplying the consumers." — Ludwig von Mises, The Anti-Capitalistic Mentality (1956) #capitalism
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arjun 2 years ago
Mises on why people ask for socialism in The Anti-Capitalistic Mentality (1956): image
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arjun 2 years ago
Merry Christmas! What an incredible year. image