obsessively talking about the cheapest way to eat
sustainable level for our family to be happy. I just make sure I don't pay someone else to cook or
clean up. And that will have to be frugal enough.
obsessively talking about the cheapest way to eat
Unlike FIRE, there are degrees to this. You can improve your life right now, rather than eat shit sandwiches for decades while you try to reach some distant number. There’s no need to save ten million dollars. Even ten thousand is enough to change things up.
Mary had neither genius nor taste; and though vanity had given her application, it had given her likewise a pedantic air and conceited manner, which would have injured a higher degree of excellence than she had reached. (emphasis mine).There is more than one way to make yourself appear ridiculous. One is to be of a low quality. Another is to put on a brazen bluff that something of middling quality is the very best. This is my critique of white Texans, and their cult of Texas.
Writers facing the problem of Texas find themselves floundering in generalities, and I am no exception. Texas is a state of mind. Texas is an obsession. Above all, Texas is a nation in every sense of the word (165).This is far as I can tell a unified front that white Texans deliver to the rest of the world. And it is worth saying that this front is not without its admirers. I once saw an online thread where more than one person said how great it was -- inspiring, even -- to hear people so uniformly "positive" about their state, and how wonderful is it to hear such pride! These admirers are plebs -- plebs, I say! -- who have been ground down by a wider culture of endless advertising and vulgar self-promotion to the point that they come to expect it. If someone says they are "the best" enough, these people start to think there must be something to it. This is how you get a con man as President.
I've studied the Texas problem from many angles and for many years. And of course one my truths is inevitably canceled by another. Outside their state I think Texans are a little frightened and very tender in their feelings, and these qualities cause boasting, arrogance, and noisy complacency -- the outlets of shy children. At home Texans are none of these things. The ones I know are gracious, generous, and quiet (166).I have not had the pleasure of visiting any acquaintance of mine who is a Texan in their native land. Instead, I have only been a tourist of that great state. All I have ever received is the "boasting, arrogance, and noisy complacency" that was obvious to Steinbeck in the early 60s.
I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine.But what is this Texas that it's boosters (and boasters) are promoting? (Really, I just want an excuse to share another Steinbeck quote I had copied. They are fantastic):
What I am trying to say is that there is no physical or geographical unity in Texas. Its unity lies in the mind, And this is not only in Texans. The word Texas becomes a symbol to everyone in the world. There's no question that this Texas-of-the-mind fable is often synthetic, sometimes untruthful, and frequently romantic, but that in no way diminishes its strength as a symbol (169).So how did this symbol come to be? In true essay fashion, as established above, I thought about this problem for a few days, and came up with my best attempt at an answer. I then sat on that thought for some time, and eventually (months later) came across a quote in a book that lends some credibility to my thinking.
As late as April 8, 1865, just hours before the final gasps of surrender commenced, Governor Pendleton Murrah in Texas still struggled to put clothes on his people's backs, but found not a single machine in his frontier counties. He had dreamed of making Texans self-sufficient, but instead now they were reduced to selling the few cattle that escaped the impressment officers, in order to buy fabric brought though the blockade, or misappropriated from the military and sold on the black market, and at grotesquely extortionate prices (286).Texas: born in insurrection, seasoned early by defeat and humiliation. That would absolutely make for an "us against the world" mentality.
I have said that Texas is a state of mind, but I think it is more than that. It is a mystique closely approximating a religion. And this is true to the extent that people either passionately love Texas or passionately hate it and, as in other religions, few people dare to inspect it for fear of losing their bearings in mystery and paradox (166, emphasis mine).I think an essayist should be willing to tread where others dare not. I have explored some of the depths of the Texan psyche, or at least how the Texas diaspora takes to the road. I want to be clear that I neither hate nor love the Texas religion. I have no passionate feelings for the state whatsoever, and have not since I was in my early teens [2]. Instead, I just wanted to unravel the puzzle of what some otherwise decent individuals flip a switch and become so braggadocios, if not nasty, with so little cause (And I assure you, I never try to provoke the Texas response. . . well, in person). What makes someone lose all taste, proportionality, fair-play, and reason? I think it's an interesting case study in identity formation. It's also more enjoyable and safe to investigate because the stakes are low. Frankly, I find the absurdity of it all amusing.
Lilla presents his point succinctly: “Hopes can be disappointed. Nostalgia is irrefutable.”
. . . One might expect nostalgia to be a condition of the old. Surprisingly it isn’t. It is often the young who long for the return of a fictional past which never existed but offers a life without the tedious concerns of the present.
. . . The old know better than the young that cultural memory is selective, and like memory of childbirth, tends to obscure the worst bits and present them as quaint. The old have heard the stories before, and their counter-stories.
is probably derived from the Sanskrit/Odia Jagannātha (Devanagari जगन्नाथ, Odia ଜଗନ୍ନାଥ) "world-lord", combining jagata ("world") and natha ("lord"), which is one of the names of Krishna found in the Sanskrit epics.I learned that the Brother's Grimm began the Deutsches Wörterbuch, the German equivalent of Oxford English Dictionary.
No individual presided over making Earth such a hellhole. Much destructive behaviour is just individual survival tactics that scaled poorly.— Sindre (@Triquetrea) September 1, 2017
We keep electing sociopaths because what we want from our leaders is impossible and only liars would promise it to us— brainsturbator (@brainsturbator) September 26, 2014
It is very difficult to make unsexy topics sexy. Traits that make it hard to create good conversations: things change slowly and gradually with no big breakpoints, vast information gap between small core of deep insiders and large apathetic outside world, no Hero’s Journey arcs— Venkatesh Rao (@vgr) January 10, 2018
At a high enough rate of change, nothing stands still long enough to maintain the illusion of permanence.— Sindre (@Triquetrea) January 3, 2018
Great for personal transformation, awful for social cohesion.
Punishing enemies and wrongdoing, moreso than free markets or religious morality, is the most common element of a right-wing argument.— Arthur Otke Keim (@ArthurOtkeKeim) January 12, 2018
Nothing is more viscerally offensive to a rightist than seeing outsiders prosper by a bad act.
i reject any vision of the world in which victims are blamed when someone deliberately victimizes them— Gravis (edited) (@gravislizard) January 10, 2018
I'm glad to finally be at a place in my life where I no longer suspect I need to learn to code.— Ariel Greenwood (@greenwoodae) January 22, 2018
The uniquely American fetishization of cars is both a symptom and a cause of our social dysfunction. It’s one of the big contributors to the growing polarization and tribalization of our country.— Alan Cooper (@MrAlanCooper) January 20, 2018
...by the late 2010s, talking ape societies oriented around "telepathy stone" technology could no longer cope with sharing minds... pic.twitter.com/xAKSq9xliI— Ian Willey (@Ian_Willey) January 27, 2017
For liberalism to survive and eventually thrive again, it basically *has* to solve problem of low-income housing in cities in medium term— Venkatesh Rao (@vgr) February 16, 2017
I wonder if you can actually train people to not think of elephants when someone says "Don't think of an elephant."— Chris Johnson (@spiderfoods) January 18, 2018
Future of entire world may rest on that question.
AIs will never match humans at problem-solving through intuition, love, humor and spirituality.Those are dumb meatbag ways to solve problems— Venkatesh Rao (@vgr) March 10, 2016
Diversity is not a problem to be solved, it is the precondition for the existence of any interesting behaviour e.g. innovation & resillience— Sonja Blignaut (@sonjabl) January 17, 2018
@leashless literacy had a fairly good run but it may be a blip in the arc of humanity. Back to storytelling now.— KarmicResonance~🏴 (@bhangakhana) March 4, 2017
If your response to experiencing a pattern you despise is to replicate that pattern a thousand times more, you have no memetic immune system and have become a host.— niftierideology (monky) (@niftierideology) January 13, 2018
Alas it's quite difficult to publicly not spread memes so that others can learn from your example.— Durchlass Kilometer 5,698 (@emareaf) November 21, 2019
According to determinism, if someone (the demon) knows the precise location and momentum of every atom in the universe, their past and future values for any given time are entailed; they can be calculated from the laws of classical mechanicsThis notion makes sense in terms of the intellectual victories classical mechanics had won in Lapace's day. Also, it is probably intuitive in terms of the materialistic worldview held by those who wants to be able to say respectable things at parties [1]. Lapace's Demon, however, is not the consensus of mathematicians and physicists. In the book Infinite Powers Strogatz writes
When a system is nonlinear, its behavior can be impossible to forecast with formulas, even though that behavior is completely determined. In other words, determinism does not imply predictability. pg 280[Update: it has come to my attention that the above reads as those I am dismissing determinism. That was not my intention. Instead, I am arguing against Lapace's Demon. I imagine the universe is deterministic. The emergent properties of it, however, are not all predictable even with complete information.]
. . . all of biology is nonlinear; so is sociology. That's why the soft sciences are hard -- and the last to be mathematized. Because of nonlinearity, there's nothing soft about them. pg 280Huge swathes of reality are irreducibly complex [2] -- even more things that cannot be understood at a human level of IQ. On the bright side, that leaves always more to explore, to wonder at, and be surprised by.
Ancient and Modern Celebrated Freethinkers
The Ancient Regime. Hippolyte Taine.
The Enormous Room. E. E. Cummings.Martin Lutero (Spanish)
Money : the true story of a made-up thing. Jacob Goldstein. The Spanish Tragedie. Thomas Kyd Doctor Faustus. Marlow Tamburlaine the Great. Marlow. Edward II. Marlow Measure for Measure. Shakespeare.
October : the story of the Russian Revolution. China Miéville.
The Long Loneliness. Dorothy Day
The Limits of Convergence. Mauro F. Guillén The Best and the Brightest. Halberstam, David
Views of Society and Manners in America. Fanny Wright.
McTeague. Norrris Comedy Sex God. Holmes, Pete
The Shape of the New. Scott L. Montgomery Selections From the Works of John Ruskin by John Ruskin Walter Bagehot Oscar Wilde!
Walter Pater Portrait of a Lady. Henry James Far from the Maddening Crowd. Hardy Fortune's Formula. William Poundstone Priceless : the myth of fair value. William Poundstone. The Hidden Life of Trees. Peter Wohlleben The World Beyond Your Head. Crawford Main Street. Sinclair Lewis. Loonshots. Safi Bahcall. Big Business. Cowen. The Secret of Our Success. Joseph Henrich The WEIRDest People in the World. Joseph Henrich
Contrarian Investment Strategy. David Dreman. Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World Paperback. René Girard
The Art of Problem Solving, Volume 2. Richard Rusczyk and Sandor Lehoczky