Dennis Hackethal’s Blog
My blog about philosophy, coding, and anything else that interests me.
Tweets
An archive of my tweets and retweets through . They may be formatted slightly differently than on Twitter. API access has since gotten prohibitively expensive – I don't know whether or when I'll be able to update this archive.
But in case I will, you can subscribe via RSS – without a Twitter account. Rationale
I see the heaters haven’t changed much since.
They thank you “for supporting struggling Californians.” But it wasn’t you. It was the other Californians from whom you stole that money at the threat of violence. And now you’re taking credit.
What mic is that and does it come with the audio cover thing around it?
From a libertarian perspective, it's as though the headline read: "It's finally a Latino's turn to steal people's money." twitter.com/GavinNewsom/st…
RT @SpaceX:
Falcon 9 launches Starlink to orbit – the eighth launch and landing of this booster https://t.co/zyj8ZdDFql
And if anyone has trouble updating, as I did: stackoverflow.com/a/13626200/137…
@adekunle_dreams @CerebralWisdom
But the main thing children learn in school, even though it's not explicitly on the curriculum, is a very evil thing indeed: blog.dennishackethal.com/posts/the-true…
@adekunle_dreams @CerebralWisdom
I don't understand the second sentence, but re the first one:
Effectively, yes. Children are met with such overwhelming force in school that there's a metaphorical gun to their heads to learn what parents and teachers deem right. Some of those things are good, some terrible.
RT @stackblitz:
💡 JavaScript tip:
When destructuring multiple values you can set one as a default for another. https://t.co/ryrtrKDxCH
I’d guess the secret of tyranny lies in both, for, “educating”, in practice, ends up being forceful indoctrination of “the right” things to learn.
Forcing people to learn certain things is another way to make them ignorant.
Rather CTP-esque at around 40:05.
I respect her courage in the face of authority. twitter.com/TruthAbtChina2…
People under a certain threshold of income or with no income—i.e., poor people—pay no taxes. And the vast majority of taxes are paid by the rich.
You may think poor people are owed something they're not getting, hence "paying" for it. That's not the case.
In fairness, people on SO seem to have gotten nicer ever since SO started saying “this is a new contributor, be nice.”
Also, they’re suddenly much nicer once your score goes up... 🤷♂️
Special-purpose prisons and talk of country-wide, forced vaccinations. Disgusting. Glad I’m not there right now.
“[...] not what in fact ... prison says it is.”
Caught himself at the last second there.
To be clear, you’re suggesting poor people are paying for vaccination sites somehow, despite not being taxed?
A compilation of interviews with and lectures from Karl Popper:
RT @bnielson01:
A new episode of The Theory of Anything Podcast is available. This time we discuss theories of AGI:
@BrouwersIO @_tessr @notwaldorf @github
I believe your domain registrar can help with that too if the copy of the site has a similar name as yours or uses your trademark.
“We conquer problems by creating knowledge—or they conquer us.” twitter.com/DavidDeutschOx…
Why not just pass isFood to the filter fn directly?
Government-managed distribution of vaccines, and now this.
At what point are people going to call it a planned economy? twitter.com/JoeBiden/statu…
Likewise, when asked if people should be forced to wear condoms, they say "no." But when it comes to masks they say "yes."
When this asymmetry is pointed out to them, they come up with excuses to do the latter but not the former.
RT @MurraySuggests:
While liberals are in favor of any sexual activity engaged in by two consenting adults, when consenting adults engage i…
When was the last time you had a full day of doing only things you wanted to do?
Like the openness to criticism and scientific inquiry they display when they say it's "scientifically proven" that lockdowns and the destruction of lives and businesses are necessary to contain the virus, and then go ahead and force that on people?
Biden is making epistemological claims. Yet almost nobody recognizes them as such, or finds epistemology worth studying.
Epistemological mistakes can and have led to countless deaths and abysmal misery.
Nice. Why the word "but" in the fourth-to-last line?
“[...] ensure everything we do is grounded in [...] truth” is a disturbing sentence to hear from a politician.
Contrast this with Socrates’ and Popper’s call for political humility:
RT @ykomska:
Love this artfully collapsed “resting Bismarck” statue in Tiergarten, by Friedrich Seidenstücker, 1946. https://t.co/5HtzVw6ECM
RT @michaelmalice:
If schools were positive environments for children, detention would be a reward and not a punishment
Also, that's what people say, but that's not really what lockdowns are about. See gitpretty.com/dchacke/git-bl…
Note that there's no mention of ending lockdown measures—which is the one thing that would really help.
Everything on this list grows government at the expense of society's productive members.
It's a classic move by the government to abuse a crisis to increase its powers. twitter.com/JoeBiden/statu…
And here's more about what children really learn in school: gitpretty.com/dchacke/git-bl…
I've summarized these views in a new blog post titled "Lockdowns: Science vs. Morals": gitpretty.com/dchacke/git-bl…
10/
But that won’t convince lockdown supporters, because they’re not after solving either of those problems. What they’re really after—and what they learned to do in school—is spreading altruism and forcing others to do what they think is right. Which is disgusting.
9/
New blog post: "Governments Are Involuntary"
Voluntary self-isolation solves the moral problem and the medical problem.
8/
That's why lockdowns are redundant: it locks down those who don't want to lock down in addition to those who'd voluntarily do so. There's no added benefit to the latter group by having other people forced to stay home, too.
7/
To those concerned about ICU numbers, their loved ones, etc: their is another way. Lockdowns are not the only way. You can persuade people to stay home. And those who are vulnerable are free to stay home already, no lockdowns. required.
6/
Same goes for lockdowns. Even if there were overwhelming scientific evidence that locking people into their homes lowers transmission rates, death rates, what have you, it would still be evil.
5/
..., and advocates of such force can always point to scientific evidence for that. It'd be "based on science."
And still, forcing people not to smoke is wrong. Forcing them to exercise is wrong. Force in general is wrong, and no amount of scientific evidence changes that.
4/
Take an example where we know that the outcome of force, in purely scientific terms, is beneficial: that of forcing someone not to smoke. Or forcing them to exercise a few times a week. Scientifically speaking, their body will be healthier as a result of that force...
3/
It's still letting scientism off the hook too lightly.
And say the argument were refuted tomorrow, that would be fine, because the moral problems would remain, and lockdowns would still be a horrendous evil.
2/
I agree with the underlying message, but the thing is, even if lockdowns were scientific, that would say nothing about the morality of the situation.
So the argument that lockdowns aren't scientific runs the risk of being refuted tomorrow through new scientific findings.
RT @cat5657:
@dchackethal
Are you stupid? It's our tax payer money. We earned it.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: do NOT take any government payments. You’d be trading your freedom for a dime.
He calls it “The American Rescue Plan.” He actually sees himself as a savior.
This is why “learn to code” is great advice. twitter.com/tanoaksam/stat…
@CarolaHeibach @EGermroth @c_drosten
Ich bin kein Troll. Du könntest meinen Kommentar ernst nehmen, so, wie ich es bei deinem auch getan habe.
@randomdorkynig @ProJavaOrlovsky @ASpittel
It’s not really a conclusion but an interpretation.
Again, can you think of another?
If you can, you might realize that “aggressive involvement” is not only unnecessary but also counterproductive.
For if you need legal help defending yourself against lockdown measures. twitter.com/angela4LNCChai…
“Master” is a big word. And the first two can be built without JS.
Mastering comes after maybe 10,000 hours, as they say, of coding in JS. For some it will be sooner or later, but it takes a significant amount of time either way.
Nothing to be grateful about when the government robs you of your money at the threat of violence.
@randomdorkynig @ProJavaOrlovsky @ASpittel
There’s no reason to be mean to me.
There are other explanations for that data. Can you think of one?
This is starting to look really good.
Watch yourself react to the robot. I caught myself thinking it was conscious for a second there.
@randomdorkynig @ProJavaOrlovsky @ASpittel
That 90% of JS developers are men does not mean that women only have a 10% chance of becoming Js developers.
@CarolaHeibach @EGermroth @c_drosten
Richtig, jeder sollte die Verantwortung fuer seine Handlungen tragen. Deshalb sollte man fuer medizinische Leistungen auch bezahlen anstatt ein Gesundheitssystem zu bauen, das durch systematischen Diebstahl finanziert wird.
Axes could use labeling. I take it the x-axis is "months"?
I'm responding here in an effort to respond to everything you wrote, but I refer to my previous tweet asking for a way to change your mind about these things before continuing the conversation.
These arguments are very commonplace, so again you could assume that those disagreeing with you have considered them.
That rests on the notion that the state should have a monopoly on violence and that such violence can be justified, e.g. democratically through elections (which you have brought up).
Arrest and imprisonment are okay in certain situations but persuasion would always be better if possible.
I think you're arguing that when the state does it ("it" being taxation/arrest/etc) it's not bad but when private actors do it it's bad.
Also this conversation is getting unwieldy because 1) it's Twitter and the character limit is horrible for discussions and 2) you comment breadth-first not depth-first which makes it harder to navigate.
Instead, you seem to assume that I have problems and lack understanding. That attitude is counterproductive to a rational discussion.
Please state what it would take to change your mind about coercion/taxes/lockdowns. If you can't, there's no point in continuing the conversation
You say things that are conventionally held opinions by many, many people. You could assume that I've heard these arguments before, maybe even shared some of those opinions at some point, and yet have decided to change my mind about them.
You say things like "you don't understand," which isn't a very humble attitude. You seem to think that you already know the right answer.
Also that isn't a problem I have.
If somebody takes away your house against your will, you won't consider that theft as long as they give you something in return?
Theft means something is taken from you against your will, period. Whether you get something in return doesn't matter if you don't consent to the transaction.
There is no "common" morality because there is no such thing as an acting, thinking collective. Morality concerns individuals.
What is the moral explanation for why it should be okay to force one person to help another?
Well, again, I wasn't talking about elections, but yes, taxation is theft, so I don't think elections—or anything else—should grant a government the ability to tax (except for each citizen's individual consent, at which point it's just a voluntary contribution, not a tax).
And even if it did start with my moral obligation, where, pray tell, does that obligation come from?
The logic starts with your moral obligation.
That's in conflict with what you wrote here twitter.com/bizwarre/statu… where you said the reason (i.e., starting point) is the right the constitution grants.
I don't know if the constitution does or doesn't grant such a legal right—I'm arguing that, if it does, it shouldn't.
The moral question of whether it should can't be answered by merely saying that it does (if true).
The first one, the one you had emphasized. Which you seem to have understood correctly because you then replied "the constitution is why."
It's relevant because if they don't have a moral right then I don't have a moral obligation.
When asked "why" it's not enough to say "that's why." You need to give a reason.
The "that" can't refer to the constitution because you hadn't mentioned the constitution previously.