https://i.imgur.com/Gibn5SL.jpg
"Sorry, that’s an absolute bullshit argument, Aimless."
― pplains, Thursday, 27 July 2023 12:47 (two years ago)
If Oppo had declined the military could've picked up a nuclear physicist off the streets.
Just like you can do with python programmers today.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 27 July 2023 12:53 (two years ago)
it shouldn't really matter, there are plenty of positions where you do evil shit that are highly replaceable - if you decide not to take a job as a guard in a detention centre, say, you can be pretty sure someone else will get that position, but that's no moral justification for taking it.
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 14:45 (two years ago)
I mean, it's kinda like the thread about the anti-hero protagonist prestige TV "trend" ... you can sympathize somewhat because he is human and wasn't 100% monstrous since birth ... but, still ... is Germany going to come out with a prestige drama called Eichmann?
― sarahell, Thursday, 27 July 2023 14:55 (two years ago)
"He engineered the final solution, but he paid the ultimate price!"
― sarahell, Thursday, 27 July 2023 14:56 (two years ago)
How is this in any way an argument for carrying on? "If this horrible thing is going to happen anyway at least I'll get the credit"?
This didn't all take place in some theoretical, timeless storyland. It took place in a very specific time with a very different social reality, where fighting the war and crushing the enemy was seen by 98% of society as the only acceptable moral position. His thinking was that by retaining that moral credit for the work he'd done to make the project succeed he'd be in a position to use that credit to influence subsequent policy. If he'd walked away, he'd have become a pariah, viewed as a traitor or some incomprehensible fool whose opinions are automatically dismissed, an exile from any further involvement in how the existence of "the gadget" would shape the future.
I've personally met and talked with multiple WWII conscientious objectors (now all dead), because my father-in-law was one of them, and if you all think that walking away from the war effort was a simple, easy, obvious moral choice you have far too simple a view of that era. But I guess that makes me some kind of traitor or incomprehensible fool, whose opinions are automatically dismissed, so I have forfeited any influence I might have upon your thinking.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 July 2023 15:46 (two years ago)
lol I have no illusions that it would be an easy decision to take, in fact I think that rather than your pariah scenario it'd have been much more likely that the US would've just had Oppie quietly killed. But that doesn't make it a morally complex choice.
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 16:22 (two years ago)
xpost to Aimless: My great grandfather was a fighter pilot in World War 1, wrote several major newspaper editorials against WW2 from a pacifist perspective, and then took a long walk off the Staten Island ferry in 1951 because he had what today would be called PTSD. I know the stakes. He wished he’d walked away, and I wish he had, too. His daughter was arrested more than 50 times during her life for blocking and chaining herself to war recruitment offices and other anti-war protests. But I’ve given this family history before. I don’t take the historical context for granted, and that you think I would is frankly kind of insulting, which is why I’m reacting the way I am.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 27 July 2023 16:26 (two years ago)
you might even say oppenheimer was just following orders makes u think
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 27 July 2023 16:45 (two years ago)
it was not my intention to insult you ttitt. your defense of your position is now somewhat clearer, but when the earlier statement of your position was simply "that’s an absolute bullshit argument", it becomes very difficult to see the complex moral argument upon which you are basing that conclusion.
thinking is a good start, but you stopped too soon
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 July 2023 17:14 (two years ago)
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 bookmarkflaglink
Depends on how many secrets he had. If he didn't touch the programme or joined the other side...some people do take the hard roads. Others do not.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 27 July 2023 17:28 (two years ago)
But that doesn't make it a morally complex choice.
If you conceive of morality as an absolute and fixed set of values, unaffected by social consensus or particular circumstances, then no choices are morally complex. That kind of reductionist thinking about morality is very popular, not just among fundamentalists and ideologues, but humans in general. Simplicity is very seductive.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 July 2023 17:37 (two years ago)
Perhaps what some of us are trying to say is “contributing to the invention of a genocide machine” isn’t a morally defensible choice? I also reject the notion that absolute moral codes are always marked by a negative simplicity. It’s an argument that’s often meant to stifle or belittle those seeking redress and justice. “Things are more nuanced than that!” Yeah, I’m positive that the hundreds of thousands dead in Japan and the Indigenous tribes whose land was stolen, bombed, and poisoned really care about these nuances.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 27 July 2023 18:04 (two years ago)
You adduce some very important factors in considering the morality of the Manhattan Project. But if we are going to tabulate war atrocities as the index of morality I think the Nazis and Imperial Japanese military can contribute some factors to consider on the opposite side of the scales. I only got into this because you said that having any sympathy whatsoever for Robert Oppenheimer was "insane". Others have been comparing him Eichmann or other Nazi criminals. This is about as absolute a yardstick as I can imagine.
It seems unlikely any of us could withstand being measured by our complicity in national atrocities. This is not to deny them, but to point out that denying any sympathy at all for those enmeshed in a complex moral situation is to condemn ourselves in equal measure. Instead I see plenty of unearned righteousness in this discussion.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 July 2023 18:23 (two years ago)
I have zero pretensions to righteousness, and I also do not encourage making a biopic featuring my moral dilemmas. But I will say Oppenheimer's complicity was somewhat more active than the average person's, in the 40's or now.
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 19:23 (two years ago)
I don't know this history particularly well, but I read this piece the other day and found it interesting:https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2023/7/22/23803380/j-robert-oppenheimer-film-movie-nuclear-weapons-manhattan-project-world-war-ii-christopher-nolan
I think it's worth reading in full, but this is relevant to the discussion:
How complicit was Oppenheimer? David Hawkins, Oppenheimer’s aide and the Manhattan Project’s official historian, claims that Groves told Oppenheimer at the end of 1943 that the Nazis had abandoned their attempt — and Oppenheimer shrugged. Oppenheimer dominated the ethical discussions among scientists in late 1944, as both the war and the race to the atomic bomb were nearing their end stages, arguing that scientists had no right to a louder voice than other citizens, and that if the war ended without nuclear use, the next war would be fought with nuclear weapons. Was Oppenheimer swept up by the same patriotic fervor that prompted him to have a colonel’s uniform tailored for himself? Was the bomb just too “technically sweet” for him to resist? It is unclear. Perhaps the best we can say in his defense was that Oppenheimer was chumped into doing it (to some extent), and inadvertently or not, he chumped the other scientists as well.
― rob, Thursday, 27 July 2023 19:55 (two years ago)
Others have been comparing him Eichmann or other Nazi criminals. This is about as absolute a yardstick as I can imagine.
I don't think social consensus or particular circumstances were absent in the case of Eichmann and other nazis either, and you could well argue about the specific paths that lead each of those men down the roads they went. But current social consensus, imo rightfully, judges that once you've thrown your lot in with something as evil as the third reich these can only ever be explanations, not justifications. The question them becomes, is the launching of two atomic bombs also an evil where you should draw such a line? And I think yes, it is.
xpost
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 27 July 2023 19:58 (two years ago)
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 July 2023 bookmarkflaglink
Sounds like you struggle with basic stuff.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 27 July 2023 20:51 (two years ago)
Some people just would not want to build a destructive weapon under any circumstances whatsoever.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 27 July 2023 20:53 (two years ago)
I guess, for me, it depends on how you define "sympathy"? Like there is a certain "pathos" to it, but at the same time I agree with Daniel's lines:
once you've thrown your lot in with something as evil as the third reich these can only ever be explanations, not justifications. The question them becomes, is the launching of two atomic bombs also an evil where you should draw such a line? And I think yes, it is.
― sarahell, Friday, 28 July 2023 18:12 (two years ago)
it's kinda like watching "The Fog of War" and seeing the elderly Robert McNamara come to terms with the fucked up shit he did/was complicit in. I watched it once with my parents, and my mom explained her & my dad's response to the movie as, "Imagine watching Donald Rumsfeld or Dick Cheney be humble and apologetic years after the fact."
― sarahell, Friday, 28 July 2023 18:16 (two years ago)
kind of easy for McNamara, since he would never face justice in the Hague or anything. Still, it's something.
― Moritz von Oswald von Wolkenstein (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 28 July 2023 22:49 (two years ago)
Is Edward Teller in the movie? re: SV utopianism, his son is named Astro and is head of Google's moonshot division. He also wrote a really cringey AI chat SF novella a long time ago. I mean Astro did.
― Philip Nunez, Friday, 28 July 2023 23:48 (two years ago)
ok I thought I missed something having seen Astro Teller speak at some college nerd thing in the early 2000s, but noI only partially missed it, he’s the grandson of Edward Teller. I think I have a signed copy of his first book because, hey, it was a college nerd conference and I wanted something to grab other than the conference program. His entire career after that has been between nebulous and cringeI looked him up recently and he co-wrote some book with his wife about marriage and divorce and I assume it’s some un-thinking junk about being swingers
― mh, Friday, 28 July 2023 23:54 (two years ago)
it’s really funny when tech people think they’re ~subverting norms~ by proclaiming what they’re up to in their personal lives and it’s just like, no, it’s obnoxious and you can pretty much live however you like in most places and if you feel guilty about not wanting a picket fence house and 2.5 children and living on the straight and narrow, just don’t do that I guess it’s affirming for people stuck in dead-end marriages or other conventional social problems but the SV people always make it seem like they’re the first to discover everything!
― mh, Saturday, 29 July 2023 00:01 (two years ago)
Whoops! I guess I skipped a generation. I wonder if Oppenheimer has a grandson named Frontside-360-Ollie Oppenheimer who is head of GoPro.
re: swinging tech nerds, does the movie show Feynman organizing key swap parties when they're supposed to be physics-ing?
― Philip Nunez, Saturday, 29 July 2023 00:05 (two years ago)
Such genius (his bail was indeed revoked)
https://www.reuters.com/legal/ftxs-bankman-fried-seeking-avoid-jail-due-back-court-2023-08-11/
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 11 August 2023 19:34 (two years ago)
I need help confirming or denying a story:Someone told me that in the old Uber offices Travis Kalanick set up what was effectively a "pacing" route, and he would constantly walk through this giant circle or figure eight, walking miles per day in these giant loops.Accurate?— Austen Allred (@Austen) August 11, 2023
“i need help confirming a story that this guy walked around the office”
― just sayin, Friday, 11 August 2023 23:32 (two years ago)
the responses are even worse
― just sayin, Friday, 11 August 2023 23:33 (two years ago)
Yes, 100% accurate. Used to sit near one of his turns and just marvel.— Jordan Dickerson (creed/acc) (@Jordevant) August 11, 2023
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 12 August 2023 00:38 (two years ago)
this is sadly a concept the d1lbert guy made fun of years ago, Management By Walking Around or MBWA
― mh, Saturday, 12 August 2023 15:30 (two years ago)
"Tell me what you're working on! ... Good, good"
― Tracer Hand, Saturday, 12 August 2023 16:01 (two years ago)
Slightly troubling article about a group of mysterious SV tech lords buying up a shitload of pretty worthless farm land near Travis Air Force base in Northern California
I think they plan to build a utopian city, and this is basically how we get from where we are to THX 1138
https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/michael-moritz-solano-county-property-18331473.php
― Andy the Grasshopper, Saturday, 26 August 2023 01:35 (two years ago)
the trueanon podcast just did an episode on “charter cities” and I have no idea how they’d work inside the US but I do not doubt they would try
― mh, Saturday, 26 August 2023 03:02 (two years ago)
that said, walkable city with orchards and whatever sounds very nice but I also suspect, given some of the people involved, it’s a new take on a factory town
― mh, Saturday, 26 August 2023 03:06 (two years ago)
work where you live! live where you work! shop at the coop, where you're the owner
Yeah, you're probably right
― Andy the Grasshopper, Saturday, 26 August 2023 03:57 (two years ago)
https://www.thedailybeast.com/big-tech-billionaires-utopian-dreams-are-actually-dystopian-nightmares
“Big Tech Billionaires’ Utopian Dreams Are Actually Dystopian Nightmares”
― Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Friday, 1 September 2023 23:29 (two years ago)
dang, who would have thought
― sleepy bee (cat), Friday, 1 September 2023 23:58 (two years ago)
and congrats to the doofus who wrote the piece for being so obtuse that i'm still annoyed days later
As a conservative, I have long worried about the power of big government. But big tech’s domination in this scenario would be even more pervasive, and likely less responsive.In some ways, these tech billionaires are already starting to supplant our government, partly because our government has retreated from big projects like space.
In some ways, these tech billionaires are already starting to supplant our government, partly because our government has retreated from big projects like space.
jfc
― sleepy bee (cat), Wednesday, 6 September 2023 00:41 (two years ago)
ATLAS CRUSHED
― mh, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 00:47 (two years ago)
https://i.imgur.com/h3ROuWm.png
https://californiaforever.com
because californiauberalles.com was already taken?
― Alba, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 08:10 (two years ago)
Reminds me of this amazing podcast - https://www.npr.org/podcasts/890392491/california-city
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 09:49 (two years ago)
xp the writing on that site is killing me. how many times can you write “good paying local jobs” — what a clunky phrase — and conspicuously refer to Travis Air Force Base?
― mh, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 11:03 (two years ago)
xp that podcast is wild, thx.
― you need magical thinking ay my name is david blaine (Hunt3r), Wednesday, 6 September 2023 14:11 (two years ago)
that website looks pretty hastily assembled, I guess they finally needed to go public with all the worry and speculation about that shell company
They tried something similar with nearby Mountain House, back in the 90's... and it's pretty much a bedroom/commuter community now, with people getting up at 5am to drive to the Bay. There really are no jobs there. Now the tech companies are demanding people come back to the office, so this new Fruitopia will likely just end up as another dull commuter suburb
― Andy the Grasshopper, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 16:53 (two years ago)
the ruined sticks of the main street thoroughfare will make an excellent paintball terrain one day
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 6 September 2023 18:04 (two years ago)
warning, malarky alert:
Effective altruism put Bankman-Fried, who lived in a luxury compound in the Bahamas, “on a pedestal, as this Corolla-driving, beanbag-sleeping, earning-to-give monk, which was clearly false”, Kemp said.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/nov/20/sam-bankman-fried-longtermism-effective-altruism-future-fund
― Andy the Grasshopper, Tuesday, 12 September 2023 20:02 (two years ago)
https://www.wired.com/story/elon-musk-pcrm-neuralink-monkey-deaths/
― chihuahuau, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 22:34 (two years ago)
According to Reuters, the agency’s major concerns involved the device’s lithium battery, as well the possibility that the implant’s wires might migrate to other parts of the brain. This May, the FDA gave the company approval for human trials.
at least they're not concerned about brain damage, extreme pain, and infection surounding implantation leads and tearing at leads.
― you need magical thinking ay my name is david blaine (Hunt3r), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 23:48 (two years ago)
I encourage all Musk sycophants to step up for those trials.
― beard papa, Thursday, 21 September 2023 21:48 (two years ago)