Thursday, March 9, 2023

Neo Equity As A Corruption Of Equity

 



David Decosimo


https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1539302500888723456.html


Few recent shifts have been more consequential than the deliberate transformation & obfuscation around "equity."


What once named a key dimension of justice has been redefined & repurposed as a tool for culture-warring, institutional capture, & unearned privilege & favors. 1/


Justice sets relations right by rendering someone what's due. It has at least two aspects.

1. Equity is about consistency, like cases treated in like ways. So, *ALL* who do X are treated the same way.

2. Desert is about what *this* person is owed. She did X, so she deserves Y. 

2/


Equity & desert can come apart (qualifications apply).


Equity without desert: Two people with equally superb work get *the same* grade - but it's *bad,* not what's due. 


Desert without equity: Two people with equal work get different grades; only one gets what she deserves. 3/


Believers have redefined 'equity,' fashioning a subtle & effective ideological sword, while hiding what's really going on & leveraging the borrowed capital of *real* equity's true relation to justice.

'Equity' *sounds* righteous - but its meaning is deliberately vague & hazy. 4/


'Equity' now means 'equal outcomes across select, politically useful group identity.'

If there's a field where composition doesn't mirror the broader population or one group 'outperforms' another, that's an 'equity' problem. It's defined as an injustice that must be corrected. 5/


Neo-equity:

The *goal* is equal outcomes.

The *assumption* is that unequal outcomes are necessarily unjust & produced by unjust standards/processes.

The *means* is doing whatever it takes to get equal outcomes: redefining 'excellence,' abolishing grades, declare merit a myth. 6/


In the name of neo-equity (equal outcomes for select groups), anything goes, even outright discrimination.

Yet b/c it is cloaked as 'justice,' what's happening must be redescribed.

It's not that we're rejecting excellence, it's just that our old idea of excellence was bigoted. 7/


The logic of neo-equity is viciously circular: 

How do we know the old idea of excellence was bigoted? Because of the unequal outcomes.

What's true excellence? Whatever standard produces equal outcomes.

The whole thing is deeply dishonest, degrading, & condescending. 8/


The consequences of neo-equity are devastating:

Institutions & practices that require uncompromising commitment to excellence are hollowed out.

Deserving people aren denied their fair shot.

Others have their true merit discounted.

Systemic lying means a loss of real standards. 9/


Unequal outcomes *can* be a symptom of injustice.

Neo-equity makes that 'can' a 'must' & acts unjustly to get desired results. 

True equity says: Look closely & see if there's real unfairness. If there is, we must address it! But not by abandoning desert & forsaking justice. 10/


Call neo-equity what it is: a corruption of the right, a counterfeit virtue, a tool for doing injustice under cover of righteousness.

And *claim* justice & equity. They don't belong to those who abuse their names for personal gain & deploy destructive means for misguided ends. 11/11

Sunday, March 5, 2023

Availability Cascades, Tipping Points And Memes, Briefly Compared And Contrasted

Availability cascades refer to a process by which the repetition of information can lead to its widespread acceptance and influence. Availability cascades do not necessarily lead to a "tipping point" or a sudden shift in behavior or opinion, but rather involve a gradual and cumulative effect of repeated exposure.


Tipping points, on the other hand, refer to a critical point at which a small change in one factor can lead to a large change in behavior or opinion. Tipping points are characterized by a sudden and often unexpected shift in the status quo, and they can result from a variety of factors, such as a change in social norms or a new piece of information that changes people's perceptions.


Memes refer to units of cultural information that are transmitted from person to person through social networks, such as jokes, slogans, or fashion trends. 


Unlike availability cascades, memes can spread rapidly and widely through social media and other communication channels, and they can become deeply embedded in a culture or community.


In summary, availability cascades refer to the cumulative effect of repeated exposure to information, tipping points refer to the critical point at which a small change can lead to a large shift in behavior or opinion, and memes refer to units of cultural information that are transmitted through social networks.

Saturday, February 25, 2023

On The Oxford Comma

 My view of the “Oxford comma:” don’t use it or not rigidly. If the context makes clear that “and” signifies the last item in a series, then the comma is superfluous. If the penultimate item has more than one component requiring “and” to separate them, then the comma is in order.

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Brief Exchange On Israeli Proposed Judicial Reforms

 R


1. It seems the status of Basic Laws confuses most everyone, but my limited understanding is that the Israeli Supreme Court has held that they should be treated as constitution - like.


2. Just because Israel doesn’t have a real Constitution doesn’t mean that the Parliament should therefore always have the final say, with a 50.1 % majority 


3. Democracy is not just majority rule, as it must also include certain sacred minority rights


4. Israel’s democracy differs significantly from all other democracies as it has one parliament ( no Senate, no Provinces ), and therefore doesn’t have the checks on single person rule that others do - especially the US ( famous for the gridlock that your friend Scalia says is the essence of the US system of checks that the framers wanted)


5. In addition to overturning Court decisions the same rationale applies to judge selection - compare to the US where a President nominates for Senate confirmation , often when they are from different parties


6. Finally the problem with these proposals is greatly magnified by the current government with the PM beholden to 3 parties that represent viewpoints that are anathema to a liberal democracy


One more point. I read Bibi’s book. He and his family have made a huge contribution to Israel. He may be Israel’s most important PM ever given his role in the economic transformation, promoting Israeli tech to the world, Abraham Accords and the fact that his view on peace / two states, often vilified, looks like it was correct.


Me


As to your points:


1. Limited understanding is right. How does Israel’s SC get to give various originating laws constitutional status. There’s not any example anywhere of a mature liberal democracy with a judicially created SC. Plus, the court is somehow tied into the AG and they work in tandem to try to engineer results that they want. An example of the SC’s over the top self arrogated power is its recent invalidating a Bibi cabinet pick on the non existent legal ground that it was “unreasonable.” “Unreasonable” is the SC’s judicially created basis for invalidating laws it doesn’t ideologically like.


2. Does lack of a written constitution make  it a jump ball as to who should have the final say as to which laws stand? I’d prefer a court that “stayed in its lane” to have that say on the basis of democratically set grounds. But when the unelected court arrogates extra legal power to itself, then the  jump ball is between a 3’ unelected group of judges and the 6’ people’s representatives. Right now the reform proposals are working their way through Israeli democracy processes, may well get moderated and will reflect in what they do to the court, democratic  processes bringing it back into line.


3. The protection of minority rights will be best be achieved by an effective court whose jurisdiction and limits are redefined to fit with how courts operate under the rule of law in all liberal democracies. VB granted and her good points well made, Canada’s notwithstanding clause represents a compromise between British parliamentary supremacy and US republicanism (not the party.) The reforms now reflect that compromise and, as noted, their final chapter has not yet been written.


4. Your point 4 in Israeli practice is the opposite of what you say. In effect, and as often noted, the splintered party system makes the Israeli theoretical unicameral government in effect multi-cameral to the point of ongoing political instability. 


5. In what liberal democracy does the judiciary or a quasi judicial body pick successor or added on judges? Answer: nowhere escort Israel. So among the the points counting against you here are: 1. that; 2. the people’s representatives as against an unelected core of a power centre that has arrogated to itself unprecedented power under any idea of the rule of law as functioning in liberal democracies around the world; and 3. the just mentioned reality of what is in effect a multi-cameral political system.


6. As to 6, I urge you to read this and deal with the arguments made, and as linked to by Whelan here:  https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-judicial-apocalypse-is-not-upon-us/.

Three Tweets On Doc, Bill Russell, Legend

 1 Compelling, stirring doc, Bill Russell Legend. But:


Too hagiographic?

It didn’t note specifically his activism’s acts (or did I miss them?)

I saw subtext that he seemed a bit purposeless after leaving Celtics (or do I read in too much?)

Were the last minutes over-egged?
—————

My feeling is, his undeniable athletic greatness grounds the off court greatness claimed for him that I’m unsure the doc makes a case for.

I miss what he did off court, other than commendably being his own man, that was so extraordinary.

I’d like to be told what I missed. 2/2
———-

P.S. 3/3

Where were acts by Russell even remotely comparable to the great magnitude of what Ali forfeited in refusing the draft, which the doc extolls but maybe unintentionally defines by contrast what Russell seems not to have come close to doing. 

Happy to be shown wrong.

Saturday, February 11, 2023

A Few Thoughts On Film To Leslie

 Watched it with my wife. Had to rent it but I’m glad I did. 


I think it’s a terrific small movie that suffers not in its excellence by being small. And thats its arc is predictable bothers me not at all. 

Of course Riseborough is spectacular in it. (I checked out the “controversy.” What horseshit! A listers going all out to try to ensure Riseborough gets her due. I’m all for them doing it. She deserves the nomination and if publicizing her by feting her got her there I’m glad for it, even as the academy awards mean little to me.) 

I saw someone say her presence outstrips the movie (maybe like Cate Blanchett in Blue Jasmine.) I don’t agree with that in To Leslie though it’s true about Blue Jasmine. She is the movie; it’s about her and while her performance stands out she doesn’t overpower everything else. Rather there’s a symbiosis between her and everything else that’s effectively mutually reinforcing. 

In Blue Jasmine, what’s not Blanchett is Woody Allen at his most formulaic and flat. And even as in To Leslie the arc is predictable and we sniff out about 1/2 way, though in a very broad way, how it will end, the movement to the ending is organic —ok with maybe a dash of the formulaic. 

Btw, Allison Janney is utterly potent as the queen bitch. I’m not sure I was 100% persuaded by her final turn around though its effectiveness is helped by her hate-filled bitchiness in the midst of that turnaround as she machine guns Leslie with how awful it was how she abandoned her kid. 

Mind you, when she says she was at fault too in not stopping Leslie when she could have, as though there’s some equivalence between their faults, that seems misconceived to me. The way Leslie’s then raging drunkenness/alcoholism is described, there’s no way a friend’s stern warnings could’ve abated it. So that didn’t ring true to me. 

I also thought the Royal character was too much of an unconvincing distraction even though it fit in with the generally idea of wrecking yourself with booze and drugs. His howling at the moon, prancing around in his underwear or even naked is to me unneeded filigree, caricature.

There’s of course a lot more to be said about the film—Marc Maron, the music supplementing the action, the scene where he dumbly but with good intentions plays the tape of her winning the lottery, the scenes of her resisting drinking and so on—but I’ll leave it here.

8/10 is my score for it, if I were scoring it.

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Thoughts On Film Stillwater

Me:


Watched Stillwater, long, engrossing, with a superb Matt Damon. It’s a real film, solid, serious, intelligent, mature, such a contrast with the crap out these days that Scorsese rightly baffed. I don’t care if it’s at odds with Amanda Knox’s story. It has its own truth that runs deep.


L:


Okay, I was getting ready to not like it. Fine acting by Matt Damon, you're right, but found the character too much of a dumb ass, as he calls himself. Also irked by what seemed like the requisite "deplorable" references -- rednecks, racists, xenophobes, and of course Trump voters. But then the second half kicked in, the dancing scene with Sammi Smith playing in the background, and I warmed to it. But then of course his ability to fuck things up reappears. I ended up mixed, though the final scene in Marseilles was pretty moving. The thing is, I get that he's damaged, as is his daughter, as she says, but  that doesn't seem enough to hang this sort of story on, is my general impression. But I agree that it's a whole order of magnitude above the usual comic-book retread. 


Me:




Good points all, even as I differ some (as law and custom insist I do.)


Knowing that in his person Damon is an entrenched D, in the Obama/Hillary Clinton mode, I had a preconception that that would inform his characterization of his character.


 But that melted away. A bad fuck up he was, but there is an underlying admirable stubborn strength to him and an admiration for his down to earth usefulness as when he fixes things in Virginie’s apartment and in the basement building and on the job in Marseilles as down to earth as that is. It gets him to functioning adequately in Marseilles, truck and all.


Those virtues especially shine in contrast to the theatre director and in what is effectively Virginie’s choice of Baker over the director. 


His first 1/2 goodness and practical virtue are also apparent from the jump when he helps Maya get the key to her apartment. His practical virtue shows too in the cultural and values differences between him and Virginie, for example in owning guns, where he doesn’t come out the loser or the worse for what he values. 


As well he channels and embodies the down to earth power, integrity and depth of the best of  country music. 


So for me, all that and much more—I could go on—melted away my preconception of slagging a deplorable. 


I guess two of my criticisms are:


basically the film goes on too long, which in some ways is a function of the two stories—exonerating his daughter; his new life with Virginie and Maya—not being more tightly interrelated so that I got the feeling at times I was watching two different movies; and 


keeping the murderer in the basement while waiting for the DNA test seems somewhat preposterous to me, more an inorganic plot device to unify the stories and and themes than something he’d do or not realize he didn’t need to do.


That said, I like the moral ambiguity pervading the film and his ability to accommodate it in his daughter and I love the inexorable sadness of the ending, how flat and changed for the worse Oklahoma seems to him after he loses what he had with Virginie and Maya.


You may not recall this but we disagreed about a previous film by this director, Three Billboards Out Of Ebbing Missouri, but with shoes more or less on different feet. I took quite sharp exception to it and you liked it a lot.


L:


I didn't realize this was by the same director as the "Three Billboards" movie -- and alas I can't even remember my own reaction to that, nor yours. But in this case, your take seems more in line with critical and popular opinion, judging by Rotten Tomatoes at least. And you make enough good points about the positive aspects of the movie that it makes me think I should give it another look. But your criticisms are well put too, and I agree with both, so I wind up mixed, as I was. I should look up that director though.