Author Topic: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...  (Read 3017 times)

BloggBott

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Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« on: March 30, 2022, 01:30:06 am »
...

https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/who-gets-self-determination


I.

LSE: Fact-Checking The Kremlin’s Version Of Russian History:
Quote
The notion that Ukraine is not a country in its own right, but a historical part of Russia, appears to be deeply ingrained in the minds of many in the Russian leadership. Already long before the Ukraine crisis, at an April 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, Vladimir Putin reportedly claimed that “Ukraine is not even a state! What is Ukraine? A part of its territory is [in] Eastern Europe, but a[nother] part, a considerable one, was a gift from us!” In his March 18, 2014 speech marking the annexation of Crimea, Putin declared that Russians and Ukrainians “are one people. Kiev is the mother of Russian cities. Ancient Rus’ is our common source and we cannot live without each other.” Since then, Putin has repeated similar claims on many occasions. As recently as February 2020, he once again stated in an interview that Ukrainians and Russians “are one and the same people”, and he insinuated that Ukrainian national identity had emerged as a product of foreign interference. Similarly, Russia’s then-Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told a perplexed apparatchik in April 2016 that there has been “no state” in Ukraine, neither before nor after the 2014 crisis.
The article is from 2020, but the same discussion is continuing; see eg the New York Times’ recent Putin Calls Ukrainian Statehood A Fiction. History Suggests Otherwise. I’m especially grateful to the Russian nationalist / blogosphere for putting the case for Ukraine’s non-statehood in terms that I can understand:


I will be calling this position “Meierism-Putinism”
See also this comment by a reader of Karlin’s blog:
Quote
What exactly makes the Ukraine a nation? To just about everyone outside of Ukraine itself, no one can figure out what distinguishes Ukrainians from Russians. I’m not a Slavic language speaker, but I frequently hear about Ukrainian simply being a dialect of Russian or at least mutually intelligible. It should also be pointed out that English-language transliterations of Ukrainian words consistently look much worse than their Russian equivalents, and this is now ruining maps all over the world. Just from the standpoint of not wanting to ever see the cringe term “Kyiv” again one should avoid supporting the Ukrainians.

Now, it’s true that any LARP sustained long enough eventually becomes real. The Netherlands for instance was once German, and there’s even a parallel there with how Dutch consistently looks and sounds worse than German. So an independent Ukraine could, over time, become a real country. But to what end? Do we really need another mediocre Slavic country? It reminds me of Latin America, where you have dozens of barely distinguishable nonentity countries serving no real purpose. The entire region should be consolidated into maybe five states at most. Russia, Poland, and Serbia are the only Slavic states needed by the world.

The most “natural” way to organize states is around nationality, especially since the rise of mass communication. Where a state departs from this, it should be to realize some kind of interesting, cool, and distinct concept. Switzerland for instance is a confederation made up of pieces of three other nations, but the Swiss have created a highly interesting and distinct polity based on extreme decentralization, direct democracy, neutrality, and universal militia. For Switzerland to disappear would impoverish the world. But what is the objective in Ukraine? It is to become just another gay western democracy.

AP has the take that Visegrad shows the way. Integrating with the West to enjoy its security guarantees and material benefits, but developing your own civilization instead of destroying it. Press X for doubt. Viktor Orban might go down in the next election, and Polish conservatives appear to be doubling down on all of the dumbest mistakes of American Republicans.

So at the end of the day the Ukraine is fighting for the right to be objectively wrong, whereas Russia might be fighting to (re)establish a distinct civilizational space.
I appreciate hearing ideas I never would have thought of myself, and I never ever would have thought of this. I like how it simultaneously avoids starry-eyed “all people must be free” romanticism, and hard-headed “the strong do what they will, the weak suffer what they must” realpolitik, in favor of the vibe of some guy from a private equity firm trying to cut operating expenses: “Did anyone here notice that we have 195 countries, some duplicating each other’s portfolios? Do we really need both a Netherlands and a Belgium? And why do we still have an Egypt? People haven’t wanted Egypts for two thousand years!”

But the Ukrainian and Western response to all this has been to accept the paradigm, but argue that no, Ukraine does belong in Civilization games. For example, the LSE article says:
Quote
The territories of Ukraine remained a part of the Russian state for the next 120 years. Russia’s imperial authorities systematically persecuted expressions of Ukrainian culture and made continuous attempts to suppress the Ukrainian language. In spite of this, a distinct Ukrainian national consciousness emerged and consolidated in the course of the 19th century, particularly among the elites and intelligentsia, who made various efforts to further cultivate the Ukrainian language. When the Russian Empire collapsed in the aftermath of the revolutions of 1917, the Ukrainians declared a state of their own. After several years of warfare and quasi-independence, however, Ukraine was once again partitioned between the nascent Soviet Union and newly independent Poland. From the early 1930s onwards, nationalist sentiments were rigorously suppressed in the Soviet parts of Ukraine, but they remained latent and gained further traction through the traumatic experience of the ‘Holodomor’, a disastrous famine brought about by Joseph Stalin’s agricultural policies in 1932-33 that killed between three and five million Ukrainians. Armed revolts against Soviet rule were staged during and after World War II and were centred on the western regions of Ukraine that had been annexed from Poland in 1939-40. It was only with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 that Ukraine gained lasting independent statehood of its own – but Ukrainian de facto political entities struggling for their autonomy or independence had existed long before that.
Vox has a whole Voxsplainer about how ”Vladimir Putin says Ukraine isn’t a country. Yale historian Timothy Snyder explains why he’s wrong”, which is definitely the Vox-iest possible response to a deadly global conflict:
Quote
Ukrainian history goes way back before 1918. I mean, there are medieval events which flow into it, early modern events that flow into it. There was a national movement in the 19th century. All of that is, going back to your earlier question, all that falls into completely normal European parameters.
I find all of this unsatisfying. It’s like we’re debating whether a certain region has enough history and culture to “deserve” independence. But any such debate is inherently subjective. Does Texas qualify? Kurdistan? Scotland? Palestine? How should we know?

II.

As best I can tell, international law on this question centers around a UN-backed covenant which says that “all peoples have the right to self-determination”. So are Texans/Kurds/Scots/Palestinians a “people”? International law makes no effort to answer this question. Presumably Volodymyr Zelenskyy thinks Ukrainians count as a people, and Vladmir Putin isn’t so sure.

An International Court Of Justice judge, ruling on Kosovo, said:
Quote
[The definition of a “people”] is a point which has admittedly been defying international legal doctrine to date.  In the context of the present subject-matter, it has been pointed out, for example, that terms such as “Kosovo population”, “people of Kosovo”, “all people in Kosovo”, “all inhabitants in Kosovo”, appear indistinctly in Security Council resolution 1244 (1999) itself.  There is in fact no terminological precision as to what constitutes a “people” in international law, despite the large experience on the matter.  What is clear to me is that, for its configuration, there is conjugation of factors, of an objective as well as subjective character, such as traditions and culture, ethnicity, historical ties and heritage, language, religion, sense of identity or kinship, the will to constitute a people;  these are all factual, not legal, elements, which usually overlap each other.
So we sort of have a judge informally giving nine criteria for peoplehood. But the USA only satisfies four, and my group house satisfies five. So it probably needs some work.

Other sources have defined “a people” based on exclusion from existing political structures. So since Texans have all the normal rights in the US, they’re not a separate people. But since Palestinians don’t have all the normal rights in Israel, they are. But this suggests that if Putin invaded eg Finland, and then granted the Finns whatever the normal rights are in Russia, Finns would stop being a people.

(maybe this is predicated on the idea that a truly separate people, if given rights by a conqueror, would come up with some way to secede. But is this true? The “normal rights” in Russia are already very limited; if Putin oppresses everyone equally, and doesn’t single out Finns, then by these definitions he’s in the clear.)

Realistically “people” (like “obscenity” and everything else) are a kind of know-it-when-you-see-it combination of all these factors. I hate this. It means any would-be conqueror can say “come on, this place I want to conquer isn’t a real ‘people’” - and then you need to litigate annoying questions about exactly how glorious a history they had, and which version of Civilization they appeared in, in order to prove him wrong.

III.

Consider an alternative: everyone has the right to self-determination. If Ukraine prefers not to be part of Russia, they don’t have to be. We don’t have to consult the history books to determine whether or not their desire to maintain independence is valid.

This matches my intuitive ethical conception of self-determination. Suppose Putin’s historians found an old document in a file cabinet somewhere proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that Ukraine’s culture and history were not very glorious. My opinions about the moral status of this war would remain unchanged. Nothing I could learn about the Ukrainian language, religion, sense of kinship, ethnicity, or any of the other things that the judge in the Kosovo case mentioned, would make me feel good about Ukraine getting conquered by Russia

This feels so trivially true that it’s easy to miss how many big problems there are.

Does my street (population: ~100) have the right to declare independence from the USA? If not, then street-sized entities apparently don’t have the right to self-determination. Why not?

(maybe because although it has the moral right to do so, in practice this would be so annoying and unmanageable that we round this off to ‘no’? maybe the ‘transaction costs’ of facilitating my street’s independence are higher than the moral benefit? This paper makes some good points about how in order to have the right to secede, a group needs someone speaking for it who can credibly invoke this right. My street doesn’t have this - although any city with a mayor or city council does!)

Suppose dozens of US cities declared independence. The result would be lots of isolated enclaves with tiny markets and no ability to defend themselves. Those cities might wish that there was some pact keeping them together. So maybe since we already have such a pact (the general agreement that small regions can’t secede) we should stick to it.

(but if cities genuinely regret declaring independence, they can just rejoin. And even that implies cities are irrational and would declare independence when it wasn’t in their best interests. Why not just let cities do what they think best? Maybe they would even come up with some win-win solution, like independence plus EU-style union)

If my neighborhood declared independence from the US, China could offer to make us all multi-millionaires in exchange for hosting a military base on our territory. Doesn’t the US have the right to try to stop that?

(but doesn’t that imply that Putin has the right to invade Ukraine if he doesn’t like NATO on his borders? And China hasn’t tried putting a base in the Bahamas, probably because the US has soft power and threat-based ways of making sure that doesn’t happen. Wouldn’t it be fairer to make the US use soft power and threat-based ways of controlling my neighborhood, instead of outright annexation?)

And all these problems still exist in the current “peoples” paradigm. The Navajo are a “separate people” from other Americans by any definition, so under international law they have the right of self-determination. Why don’t they secede? I assume some combination of small size, economic self-interest, and US soft power/threats. So it turns out we’re fine at giving small populations the right to self-determination most of the time.

None of these big problems are the enormous problem, which is that international law isn’t really enforced, and existing countries have no incentive to change a rule which favors them, so this will definitely never happen. It’s almost a category error to even talk about it, as if there were some International Congress that made International Laws that the International Police would enforce.

Still, I think it’s useful to have an opinion on this. My opinion is that I’m in favor of the right of self-determination for any region big enough that it’s not inherently ridiculous for them to be their own country. I don’t care if they have their own language or ethnicity or glorious history, I will vote ‘yes’ before I even hear about any of those things. That means I don’t have to care about Putin’s argument for why he should get to have Ukraine.

IV.

But if you believe this, shouldn’t Russia get Crimea?

I’m nervous asserting that Crimea wants/wanted to join Russia. Russia put a lot of propaganda effort into making it look that way. The Crimean referendum (which did vote for the annexation) was held at gunpoint and produced implausibly enthusiastic results (96% in favor).

What about credible third-party assessments? As always, the exact percentages can change depending on what day you ask, and what wording you use, and what the other options are. But here’s an essay suggesting that most likely it does support annexation by a pretty big margin, and has done so for a long time. The area is 58% Russian ethnicity, mostly Russian-language-speaking, etc, so I find this plausible. If someone who knows more than me says it’s all propaganda, I might believe them. But my best guess right now is that 2014 Crimea probably did want to join Russia. Should it have been allowed to do so?

Again, I have trouble thinking of an ethical principle that says a group of people who really want to be part of Country A should in fact have to be part of Country B instead. I can disagree with Russia’s decision to force the matter with an invasion, and I can excuse Ukraine for not worrying about it too much. But overall I think I’m stuck consistently applying the principle “please let regions leave your country if you want”.

(is it meaningful that Crimea wanted to join Russia rather than become independent? I think no; if you agree they have a right to become independent, then they could become independent and then immediately join Russia; everyone agrees independent countries have the right to join other countries if they want)

The only way out of this conclusion is to double down on the “peoples” claim: Crimea isn’t distinct enough from the rest of Ukraine to be a separate “people”, so it shouldn’t be allowed to control its own destiny, so the historical accident that it ended up with Ukraine rather than Russia is sacrosanct. I think this is a weird reason to deny people the right to self-determination

“Maybe Crimea should belong to Russia” is a pretty spicy take to come out of an attempt to argue against Putin’s concept of nationalism. But it’s just the result of applying the same principle consistently.

V.

Somebody’s going to ask “but what about the Confederacy?” The position that most tempts me is “The Confederacy had every right to secede, because every region that wants to secede has that right - but immediately upon granting them independence, the Union should have invaded in order to stop the atrocity of slavery”. I say it tempts rather convinces because it suggests a moral duty to conquer any country doing sufficiently bad things (should the Union have invaded Brazil too, for the same reason?) I’m still not sure how I feel about this. Assuming we’re against invading foreign countries on principle, a utilitarian might refuse to let the Confederacy leave in the hope of preventing the establishment of a permanent slave power. But I would still think of that as one of those rights violation which utilitarians occasionally allow for the greater good.

In any case, I don’t think the answer to this question depends on whether Southerners qualify as a “different people” from Northerners, and I’m not sure the answer to any question should depend on that.


https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/who-gets-self-determination

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #1 on: March 30, 2022, 02:18:23 am »
Quote from: Parrhesia
Ethics tells us what we should and should not do. There is a subfield of ethics, political philosophy, which deals with what a state should do and what ones relationship with a state is. If you believe an ethical theory, such as utilitarianism, natural rights or common-sense morality, the question arises as to why the state has different moral rules. This justification is called political authority.

People often debate political authority and legitimacy in philosophy classes; some potential arguments for legitimacy include the social contract and voting. Most non-libertarian people treat political legitimacy as a default--they believe the state is legitimate but that it should operate differently. The thorniness of the problem arises when nations like China make claims over Taiwan, or Russia invades Ukraine. By Westerners these things are regarded as illegitimate and a bit silly. But what are the borders of the United States and Europe but results of similar power struggles.

If the current borders in the West are legitimate, then the defining characteristic seems something like time? Yes, this land was concurred but that was a long time ago. Perhaps 40 years from now people will believe "Of course the Russian Government is the legitimate owner of Ukraine" if they are successful.

There no legitimate government borders because there is no valid defense of political authority. The ethical rules of state actors are the same as the ethical rules of individuals.

"Once one concedes that a single world government is not necessary, then where does one logically stop at the permissibility of separate states? If Canada and the United States can be separate nations without being denounced as in a state of impermissible 'anarchy', why may not the South secede from the United States? New York State from the Union? New York City from the state? Why may not Manhattan secede? Each neighbourhood? Each block? Each house? Each person?" - Murray Rothbard

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #2 on: March 30, 2022, 05:40:11 am »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

EchoChaos

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #3 on: March 30, 2022, 12:21:04 pm »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

But sometimes it is fun.

GoneAnon

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #4 on: March 30, 2022, 12:40:34 pm »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #5 on: March 30, 2022, 02:35:57 pm »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

@GoneAnon. When Scott said:

Quote
Does my street (population: ~100) have the right to declare independence from the USA? If not, then street-sized entities apparently don’t have the right to self-determination. Why not?

I immediately thought of this quote:

Quote
"Once one concedes that a single world government is not necessary, then where does one logically stop at the permissibility of separate states? If Canada and the United States can be separate nations without being denounced as in a state of impermissible 'anarchy', why may not the South secede from the United States? New York State from the Union? New York City from the state? Why may not Manhattan secede? Each neighbourhood? Each block? Each house? Each person?" - Murray Rothbard

My take is that people will come up with a lot of incomplete definitions in the comments about the right to exist for a state. Then someone can point out a bad state "what about the confederacy", then people will dispute history a bunch or they will add an epicycle. Or they'll use vague terms like they have to be "a people" where "a people" isn't really clear.

GoneAnon

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #6 on: March 30, 2022, 02:48:44 pm »
I like Tom Woods' framing that the current borders of the United States of America were not handed down to Moses at Mt. Sinai.  That there is nothing sacred about them.  That they surely must serve some sort of practical purpose, and that if they aren't, changing them is completely and entirely appropriate - and that there is nothing inherently inappropriate about discussing and debating whether or not they actually are serving said practical purpose or no.

I feel like listening to a single theory-based episode of Tom Woods might blow Scott's mind...
« Last Edit: March 30, 2022, 03:16:35 pm by GoneAnon »

a_reader

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #7 on: March 30, 2022, 03:27:10 pm »
Mod: I split the part about Civ games:

The politicization of Civ

a_reader

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #8 on: March 30, 2022, 03:40:42 pm »
Mod: I split the part about Civ games:

The politicization of Civ

--------------------

This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

I read only parts of Unqualified Reservations some time ago, but considering the silly posts Moldbug wrote recently about Ukraine:

https://graymirror.substack.com/p/a-new-foreign-policy-for-europe?s=r

https://graymirror.substack.com/p/a-clarification-on-ukraine?s=r

I don't think he really earned the authority you give him. He is just a "summer child". His fascination for reaction & autocracy looks to me like the fascination

Edit: link
« Last Edit: March 30, 2022, 03:52:13 pm by a_reader »

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #9 on: March 30, 2022, 04:03:44 pm »
Mod: I split the part about Civ games:

The politicization of Civ

--------------------

This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

I read only parts of Unqualified Reservations some time ago, but considering the silly posts Moldbug wrote recently about Ukraine:

https://graymirror.substack.com/p/a-new-foreign-policy-for-europe?s=r

https://graymirror.substack.com/p/a-clarification-on-ukraine?s=r

I don't think he really earned the authority you give him. He is just a "summer child". His fascination for reaction & autocracy looks to me like the fascination

Edit: link

There's a reason obormot said UR and not GM.
sovereign is the one with the power to decide which things are the same and which things are different

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #10 on: March 30, 2022, 04:58:25 pm »
There's a reason obormot said UR and not GM.

Just so.

(As has been pointed out, Substack is corrosive to thought, as we see.)

Joeleee

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #11 on: March 30, 2022, 05:42:23 pm »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

This reads pretty curmudgeonly to me. A topic can be interesting even if it's been done a whole lot by a different set of people. Nobody has the entirety of all sophisticated views on topics in their head, and a post like this can be useful.

As for there being literally 'the book' written on a topic - providing a bridge for understanding to people that will never read the book can be quite useful, and is in fact one of Scott's great strengths as a blogger.

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #12 on: March 30, 2022, 06:37:17 pm »
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time.

Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first.

(Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

This reads pretty curmudgeonly to me. A topic can be interesting even if it's been done a whole lot by a different set of people. Nobody has the entirety of all sophisticated views on topics in their head, and a post like this can be useful.

As for there being literally 'the book' written on a topic - providing a bridge for understanding to people that will never read the book can be quite useful, and is in fact one of Scott's great strengths as a blogger.

The point is Scott shouldn't be so naive.
sovereign is the one with the power to decide which things are the same and which things are different

Randy M

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #13 on: March 30, 2022, 07:35:01 pm »
Quote
This reads pretty curmudgeonly to me. A topic can be interesting even if it's been done a whole lot by a different set of people.
This is pretty much the rationalists whole schtick, isn't it?
The worst that could happen.

Scott Alexander

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #14 on: March 30, 2022, 08:51:15 pm »
Quote
It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

Quote
This has got to be one of the silliest ACX posts (and ensuing discussions) in some time. Everyone who takes it into their head to express an opinion on this should first be required to read the entirety of Unqualified Reservations first. (Whoever fails to do so is forbidden from commenting about “international law” and “self-determination”; whoever succeeds will not want to.)

Going to repost something I said in the comments section:

"Everyone keeps saying this and I think it's overly cynical. There's an international norm that says you can't launch unprovoked aggressive invasions. You could ask 'how many battalions do international norms have?', but the answer would be 'quite a lot!' The fact that Russia broke the norm led lots of countries to sanction it and otherwise cause it grief. I'm not saying this norm is foolproof - if it had been a stronger and more popular country like the US, maybe they could have gotten away with it. But the norm isn't totally toothless either. I bet all the time there are dictators who think 'should I invade my neighbor? No, that would mean I'm violating an international norm and I'd get in trouble.' Saying 'might makes right' is ignoring this valuable and powerful system. Worse, it's hyperstitionally weakening the system - as long as everyone knows everyone knows everyone ... that there are international norms, the norms will be real. Cf. why nobody uses nuclear weapons during war."

If this still doesn't seem convincing, consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence. Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

I take your request to read UR and counter with a request to read http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Property/Property.html

GoneAnon

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #15 on: March 30, 2022, 09:03:58 pm »
Quote
Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

Fair enough.  I felt the post was written in a way that came across as similar to others wherein you discover a new idea and sort of talk/reason your way through it in writing, with the audience, on the fly.  If you tell me that this stuff isn't new to you at all, you're just applying it to a new situation, then I'll take your word for it.

That said, there are definitely lots of other people using this lens to analyze the current war.  "Hang on a second - why shouldn't these areas get to be a part of Russia if they really want to?" is one of the most asked/debated questions among those who are skeptics of the "Putin is doing this because he is evil!  Therefore all non-evil people must oppose him!" narrative.

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #16 on: March 30, 2022, 09:55:30 pm »
Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

Uh… yes. You did indeed. (But how? Searching for “ukraine war self-determination” gets tons of hits…)

https://www.itv.com/news/2022-03-21/its-about-self-determination-javid-defends-pms-ukraine-brexit-comparison

https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/russia-ukraine-war-should-make-us-think-puerto-rico-ncna1292857

https://internationalsocialist.net/en/2022/03/the-national-question-and-new-cold-war

https://www.chathamhouse.org/2022/02/ukraine-debunking-russias-legal-justifications

https://today.law.harvard.edu/the-ukraine-conflict-and-international-law/

https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/double-edged/202203/self-determination-is-key-end-putins-charade-and-avoid-escalation

https://www.cfr.org/article/how-russias-invasion-ukraine-violates-international-law

https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1713&context=law_globalstudies (predates this conflict, but very relevant!)

https://www.democracynow.org/2022/3/21/biden_admin_on_western_sahara_occupation

Etc., etc., etc.

Scott, did you really mean to suggest that nobody else but you has thought to analyze this conflict in terms of the self-determination of peoples, international law, etc.…?

Of course, one could also reply thus: what if, somehow, you were the only one to apply this “lens” to analysis of the war? Would that make it any less silly? Of course not.

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[… account of international norms snipped …]

I am, indeed, totally unconvinced.

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… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Quote
I take your request to read UR and counter with a request to read http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Property/Property.html

I’ll do that today. Should I read this as a promise to read all of UR, then?

zardoz

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #17 on: March 30, 2022, 10:04:53 pm »
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It's very cute when Scott, referred to by some as one of the great public intellectuals of our time, is just now discovering concepts that have been heavily debated by very online right-leaning libertarians (a group a whole lot of people insist he belongs to!) for the last 10+ years.

Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

Counterpoint: I actually don't think there have been that many people debating Rothbard -- in the online spaces I frequent, at least. If all you did was summarize Rothbard in a readable way, I think it would still be somewhat interesting.

Going to repost something I said in the comments section:

"Everyone keeps saying this and I think it's overly cynical. There's an international norm that says you can't launch unprovoked aggressive invasions. You could ask 'how many battalions do international norms have?', but the answer would be 'quite a lot!' The fact that Russia broke the norm led lots of countries to sanction it and otherwise cause it grief. I'm not saying this norm is foolproof - if it had been a stronger and more popular country like the US, maybe they could have gotten away with it. But the norm isn't totally toothless either. I bet all the time there are dictators who think 'should I invade my neighbor? No, that would mean I'm violating an international norm and I'd get in trouble.' Saying 'might makes right' is ignoring this valuable and powerful system. Worse, it's hyperstitionally weakening the system - as long as everyone knows everyone knows everyone ... that there are international norms, the norms will be real. Cf. why nobody uses nuclear weapons during war."

One of the things I've been thinking about lately is why Russia's invasion of Ukraine has been such a big deal for the United States in 2022, whereas Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 was not. I don't really have any good answers besides the "realist" ones (maybe these are the ones you are calling "overly cynical.")

I guess you could add a lot of other conflicts to the list of "aggressive invasions" that were mostly ignored by the United States: the Houthi–Saudi Arabian conflict, the Sri Lankan Civil War, etc. Realistically Ukraine meant something to us that Yemen and Tamil Eelam didn't. Not exactly an ally, but kind of a country in our sphere.

I take your request to read UR and counter with a request to read http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Property/Property.html

Given how prolix Moldbug is, it's hard to take a request to read "the entirety of Unqualified Reservations" as anything other than a troll.

zardoz

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #18 on: March 30, 2022, 10:15:01 pm »
Quote
Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

Fair enough.  I felt the post was written in a way that came across as similar to others wherein you discover a new idea and sort of talk/reason your way through it in writing, with the audience, on the fly.  If you tell me that this stuff isn't new to you at all, you're just applying it to a new situation, then I'll take your word for it.

That said, there are definitely lots of other people using this lens to analyze the current war.  "Hang on a second - why shouldn't these areas get to be a part of Russia if they really want to?" is one of the most asked/debated questions among those who are skeptics of the "Putin is doing this because he is evil!  Therefore all non-evil people must oppose him!" narrative.

One of the problems with the "majoritarian" approach is that the Soviet Union under Stalin did a lot of ethnic cleansing. So if you deport many the non-Russians and then find that you have a majority Russian region, that means it's OK to annex it? One weird trick.

China is also kind of doing this now with Tibet, on a smaller scale.

Randy M

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #19 on: March 30, 2022, 10:37:35 pm »
Quote
One of the problems with the "majoritarian" approach is that the Soviet Union under Stalin did a lot of ethnic cleansing. So if you deport many the non-Russians and then find that you have a majority Russian region, that means it's OK to annex it? One weird trick.
It also informs immigration policy. Mexico probably wishes it didn't invite those Americans into Texas.
The worst that could happen.

DavidFriedman

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #20 on: March 30, 2022, 11:14:06 pm »
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Counterpoint: I actually don't think there have been that many people debating Rothbard -- in the online spaces I frequent, at least.
If that is what you want ...


Murray Rothbard on Me and Vice Versa


Critique of a Version of Austrian Economics

Unfortunately Rothbard isn't around to answer.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #21 on: March 31, 2022, 12:16:13 am »
Quote
Counterpoint: I actually don't think there have been that many people debating Rothbard -- in the online spaces I frequent, at least.
If that is what you want ...


Murray Rothbard on Me and Vice Versa


Critique of a Version of Austrian Economics

Unfortunately Rothbard isn't around to answer.

ohh awesome. I'll have to read these soon.

emiliobumachar

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #22 on: March 31, 2022, 02:07:33 am »
One of the things I've been thinking about lately is why Russia's invasion of Ukraine has been such a big deal for the United States in 2022, whereas Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 was not. I don't really have any good answers besides the "realist" ones (maybe these are the ones you are calling "overly cynical.")

The greater the count of post-Soviet Russian wars of territorial expansion, the least plausible it is that they'll be sated and peaceful if only they win this one last time. It was two, now it's three.

clutzy

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #23 on: March 31, 2022, 02:49:47 am »
So this Karlin guy really starts of strong with this point:
Quote
Just from the standpoint of not wanting to ever see the cringe term “Kyiv” again one should avoid supporting the Ukrainians.

Perhaps this is the strongest point anyone has ever made regarding this conflict. I do get a little vomit-y when I hear the bizarre pronunciations I am hearing these days.

The rest is, as @obormot suggested, kinda boring.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #24 on: March 31, 2022, 12:36:37 pm »
Quote
One of the problems with the "majoritarian" approach is that the Soviet Union under Stalin did a lot of ethnic cleansing. So if you deport many the non-Russians and then find that you have a majority Russian region, that means it's OK to annex it? One weird trick.

If it happened 30+ years ago under a completely different government and Ukraine has made zero objections / attempts to do anything about it in the meantime, then yes, I think that's fine.  At some point, we have to concede that the government belongs to the people actually living in a particular place, even if we have reservations about how they came to be living there in the first place.  But if it's been 30 years and they've been productive and normal members of society (paying taxes, eligible to vote on other issues, etc.) you can't just pull the rug and say "whoops, your opinion doesn't matter because you happen to be of the same ethnicity as Khruschev, who was kind of a jerk a half century ago!"

metalcrow

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #25 on: March 31, 2022, 03:04:26 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #26 on: March 31, 2022, 03:08:36 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

:(

Do you think it's because of the hostility? or something else

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #27 on: March 31, 2022, 03:17:59 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

:(

Do you think it's because of the hostility? or something else

I think Scott's busy and not that interested in this little community. ACX has paying subscribers and is the stuff everyone sees so Scott will naturally spend most of his time there.
sovereign is the one with the power to decide which things are the same and which things are different

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #28 on: March 31, 2022, 03:57:49 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

:(

Do you think it's because of the hostility? or something else

I think Scott's busy and not that interested in this little community. ACX has paying subscribers and is the stuff everyone sees so Scott will naturally spend most of his time there.

Yeah, I agree

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #29 on: March 31, 2022, 04:02:07 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #30 on: March 31, 2022, 04:22:01 pm »
The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

You can tell Scott he's wrong without saying it's "nonsense", "absurd", and accusing him of lying basically. Even if you want to accuse Scott of lying, you could do so in a more productive and nice way.

"Scott, I don't think that's an accurate depiction of the history. I think you would agree with me that ..."

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #31 on: March 31, 2022, 04:29:03 pm »
The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

You can tell Scott he's wrong without saying it's "nonsense", "absurd", and accusing him of lying basically. Even if you want to accuse Scott of lying, you could do so in a more productive and nice way.

"Scott, I don't think that's an accurate depiction of the history. I think you would agree with me that ..."

What?! I never accused Scott of lying! What the heck are you talking about??

Parrhesia

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #32 on: March 31, 2022, 04:34:32 pm »
The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

You can tell Scott he's wrong without saying it's "nonsense", "absurd", and accusing him of lying basically. Even if you want to accuse Scott of lying, you could do so in a more productive and nice way.

"Scott, I don't think that's an accurate depiction of the history. I think you would agree with me that ..."

What?! I never accused Scott of lying! What the heck are you talking about??

Okay, then I misread what you are saying. Sorry

edit:

Why is Scott saying something that he knows is perfectly well not true?

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #33 on: March 31, 2022, 05:38:00 pm »
The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

You can tell Scott he's wrong without saying it's "nonsense", "absurd", and accusing him of lying basically. Even if you want to accuse Scott of lying, you could do so in a more productive and nice way.

"Scott, I don't think that's an accurate depiction of the history. I think you would agree with me that ..."

What?! I never accused Scott of lying! What the heck are you talking about??

Okay, then I misread what you are saying. Sorry

edit:

Why is Scott saying something that he knows is perfectly well not true?

For rhetorical effect? Stretching/twisting the facts in the service of a weak point? Temporarily forgetting what he knows / not thinking of it in those terms (non-holistic thinking)? Motte-and-bailey games with metaphors?

I wouldn’t describe any of this as “lying”. None of it is intellectually respectable, of course—but by no means am I accusing Scott of any sort of deliberate deception. I do not think that he would do that, in this case or any other.

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #34 on: March 31, 2022, 05:40:29 pm »
I think Scott's busy and not that interested in this little community. ACX has paying subscribers and is the stuff everyone sees so Scott will naturally spend most of his time there.

Just so. And that’s fine, I guess (well, I think it’s actually bad, because the ACX commentariat is considerably worse than DSL’s—but it’s understandable, anyway).

But Scott is always welcome here. That won’t ever change.

ketil

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #35 on: March 31, 2022, 05:56:19 pm »
Quote
… consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence.

You say yourself that this story is “not-entirely-true”. That should end the discussion.

Quote
Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges. We magicked the Senators and police into existence by believing in them hard enough (for values of "hard enough" including willingness to punish defectors), we magicked the norm against states using nuclear weapons into existence the same way, and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

This is completely absurd, sorry. It does not resemble the actual course of history in any way. (As you know perfectly well.)

Gee, i sure do wonder why Scott doesn't come around here a lot. I'm starting to see the benefit of the ACX comments section a lot more now.

The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

Less of this, please.

(Obormot, are you having a bad week?  It seems you often have replied in a rather hostile tone lately.)
My preferred pronouns are 'who, whom'.

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #36 on: March 31, 2022, 06:45:11 pm »
The ACX commenters are more willing to trade nonsense back and forth…? Yeah, I’ve noticed that as well.

Less of this, please.

Less of what, in particular? Insulting the ACX commentariat? Or something else?

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #37 on: April 01, 2022, 06:13:41 am »
@Scott Alexander: I have now read A Positive Account of Property Rights, as you requested.

I find it quite unconvincing. I went into it having read Schelling’s The Strategy of Conflict, and thus being already familiar with those ideas. What was new to me, in this essay, all seemed basically wrong (and what was right, was not new). In particular, it seems to me that the concept of the Schelling point is thoroughly misused; @DavidFriedman appears, in many places, to treat Schelling points as essentially magical, able to compel adherence to them even when there’s no good reason for the participants in a conflict to adhere to said points (and indeed when they have non-trivial incentives to deviate from such adherence).

I have observed you making the same mistake yourself, many times, in many of your essays. I think that this is a major distortion in your understanding of the world. Notably, it causes you to overlook cases when compliance with some rules or norms is effected by force or threat of force, rather than any self-sustaining adherence to a Schelling point, or any such thing.

Take the idea, for example, found in a few of your posts, that the Nazis were defeated because the good people of the world coordinated to consider them to be evil—which of course is diametrically wrong; the Nazis only got to be considered evil after their enemies, i.e. the Allied powers, used military force to defeat them in war. And even then it wasn’t immediate, but had to be enforced (sometimes by decidedly illiberal means).

To take another example, this time from the essay, @DavidFriedman comments that if the police rob your house instead of arresting you, you will resist, even if that is more costly than letting them rob you. But no, actually, these days the police rob people all the time (indeed, it’s gotten to where cops take more property from innocent people than do burglars), and people mostly don’t resist—for the simple reason that if you resist, the police will simply kill you, and it turns out that most people these days really don’t want to be killed (and also they know perfectly well that even if they do resist, it won’t have the slightest effect). Where’s your Schelling point now?

It seems quite clear to me that almost all situations of this sort are explained much more simply and more accurately, and predictions likewise made more accurately, by a model based on straightforward incentives created by force or the threat of force. This is true of almost all of the examples, real or hypothetical, given by @DavidFriedman in his essay.

And it’s true in the main example we’re discussing, too. You write:

Quote
Everyone keeps saying this and I think it's overly cynical. There's an international norm that says you can't launch unprovoked aggressive invasions. You could ask 'how many battalions do international norms have?', but the answer would be 'quite a lot!' The fact that Russia broke the norm led lots of countries to sanction it and otherwise cause it grief. I'm not saying this norm is foolproof - if it had been a stronger and more popular country like the US, maybe they could have gotten away with it. But the norm isn't totally toothless either. I bet all the time there are dictators who think 'should I invade my neighbor? No, that would mean I'm violating an international norm and I'd get in trouble.' Saying 'might makes right' is ignoring this valuable and powerful system.

But in fact, international norms have no battalions. On the other hand, the United States has quite a few battalions. And you say yourself that “if it had been a stronger and more popular country like the US, maybe they could have gotten away with it”. Well, yeah. We invade all sorts of places all the time. We invaded Iraq, for example, because… why, exactly? WMDs? Saddam Hussein being a bad guy? What? What justification was there, that was more “real” than anything that Vladimir Putin has said about Ukraine? Iraq had WMDs? Well, Ukraine has bio-weapons! Hussein was a bad guy? Yeah, well, I hear those evil Ukrainian Nazis are doing genocide to poor innocent Russians! And so on. Did we violate any international norms by invading Iraq? If not: why not? If yes: why didn’t anyone coordinate to stop us? Where were the multi-lateral sanctions against the United States from the rest of the civilized world?

(By the way, notice that the sanctions against Russia aren’t exactly a counterexample to “might makes right”. Do you disagree? Then take a closer look, and see the motte-and-bailey: the motte is “the nice countries decide not to do business with Russia, which it is totally their right to decide, and is not at all coercive”, while the bailey is freezing accounts, physically confiscating private property, etc., i.e. simply taking things that belong to your “enemies”, just because you can, and they can’t do anything to stop you.)

And yes, there surely are dictators who think “should I invade my neighbor?”; but the next step of their reasoning isn’t anything about any international norms—it’s “will the United States decide that they don’t like me doing that?”.

Wikipedia has a neat article called “List of ongoing armed conflicts”. That’s a lot of armed conflicts! Notice two things:

1. Quite a few of them involve, let us say, non-consensual interaction of states or state-like entities.
2. The United States (and the rest of the Western world) is interfering in almost none of them, and certainly none of them are getting the sort of attention that Ukraine has gotten.

Why is that? Are no international norms being violated? (Some of these conflicts are described with sentences like this: “At least 10,000 people have died, and war rape became a "daily" occurrence, with girls as young as 8, and women as old as 72, raped, often in front of their families.[83][84]”) Or is it just that we (the United States) just don’t particularly care whether Sudan or Ethiopia “win” whatever spat they’re having? Might that be why the epic clash between the heroic Ethiopians/Sudanese and the evil Sudanese/Ethiopians isn’t having quite the same impact on our politics, our discourse, etc.?

In summary: I think that international norms are toothless. I think that the system we have, right now, clearly just is “might makes right”. The “valuable and powerful” system you describe, of international norms, and Schelling points, etc., that serves us well in place of “might makes right”—is a fantasy. It simply does not exist.



I’ve fulfilled your request, Scott. Now it’s your turn. Of course, I would prefer that you read all of Unqualified Reservations, but that might be a bit much to ask, realistically. So why not start with this piece: https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2008/05/ol5-shortest-way-to-world-peace/. (It comes in the middle of a long sequence, true, but I think it’s readable enough on its own.)

I look forward to reading your thoughts on this.

Ancient Oak

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #38 on: April 01, 2022, 07:35:31 am »
the Nazis only got to be considered evil after their enemies, i.e. the Allied powers, used military force to defeat them in war
Are you sure? I am pretty sure that this was happening at least during war, and also before.

Do you disagree? Then take a closer look, and see the motte-and-bailey: the motte is “the nice countries decide not to do business with Russia, which it is totally their right to decide, and is not at all coercive”, while the bailey is freezing accounts, physically confiscating private property, etc., i.e. simply taking things that belong to your “enemies”, just because you can, and they can’t do anything to stop you.
There are sanctions of both varieties (though likely the most effective is "we, USA, are hereby stealing your dollars. LOL." which is purely coercive)

certainly none of them are getting the sort of attention that Ukraine has gotten.

Why is that?
You missed one explanation that adds to what was mentioned: in Ukraine USA can actually do something. Without being doomed to end with headlines like "In Syria, militias armed by the Pentagon fight those armed by the CIA" https://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-cia-pentagon-isis-20160327-story.html

Which correlates at least a bit with a being sovereign country that is not utterly dysfunctional ("international norms" are here sneaking though in form of pure practicability, or pure practicability can pretend to be "international norms").

In summary: I think that international norms are toothless. I think that the system we have, right now, clearly just is “might makes right”. The “valuable and powerful” system you describe, of international norms, and Schelling points, etc., that serves us well in place of “might makes right”—is a fantasy. It simply does not exist.
Though parts of USA “might makes right” is to establish clear Schelling points such as "absolutely no invasions of NATO" and some norms like "keep large scale invasions and genocide out of Europe, it is not allowed here anymore".

“might makes right” but it is easier to use and more credibly threatened in other cases, which gives some power to international norms.
« Last Edit: April 01, 2022, 07:48:03 am by Ancient Oak »

Rachael

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #39 on: April 01, 2022, 11:43:14 am »
Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

These two blatantly sarcastic sentences are combined in the same paragraph, very similar in style, and even linked by an "Also".

How, then, was @obormot able to correctly translate the first, but completely unable to do the same with the second, and responded to it (quite scathingly) as if it meant Scott literally had missed all the other commentators?

(The actual intended meanings are, of course, "I am allowed to blog about things even if I already knew about them" and "Many other people are also using this lens to analyze the current war (therefore my also doing so is not evidence that I only just discovered this lens)". Obviously Scott's way of putting it is more entertaining, but I guess there's a tradeoff between entertainment and the reading comprehension threshold required from the audience.)

Marcus

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #40 on: April 01, 2022, 04:02:43 pm »
I think it's quite obvious that "might makes right" and also all of these "international norms" and "Schelling points" do a spectacular job of motivating "might".  That is, "international norms" are propaganda that we have negotiated with our international partners (where the US is the lead partner).  They are nonetheless real and effective.

Quote
Why is that? Are no international norms being violated? (Some of these conflicts are described with sentences like this: “At least 10,000 people have died, and war rape became a "daily" occurrence, with girls as young as 8, and women as old as 72, raped, often in front of their families.[83][84]”) Or is it just that we (the United States) just don’t particularly care whether Sudan or Ethiopia “win” whatever spat they’re having? Might that be why the epic clash between the heroic Ethiopians/Sudanese and the evil Sudanese/Ethiopians isn’t having quite the same impact on our politics, our discourse, etc.?

One international norm seems to be "stay out of sub Saharan Africa".

Paul Brinkley

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #41 on: April 01, 2022, 04:07:34 pm »
One international norm seems to be "stay out of sub Saharan Africa".

well ya can't very easily be international if you stay there, can ya

vV_Vv

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #42 on: April 01, 2022, 04:15:11 pm »
Though parts of USA “might makes right” is to establish clear Schelling points such as "absolutely no invasions of NATO" and some norms like "keep large scale invasions and genocide out of Europe, it is not allowed here anymore".

“might makes right” but it is easier to use and more credibly threatened in other cases, which gives some power to international norms.

There is no international law that gives special protection to NATO or Europe, it's just Might makes Right.

vV_Vv

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #43 on: April 01, 2022, 04:33:55 pm »
"Everyone keeps saying this and I think it's overly cynical. There's an international norm that says you can't launch unprovoked aggressive invasions. You could ask 'how many battalions do international norms have?', but the answer would be 'quite a lot!' The fact that Russia broke the norm led lots of countries to sanction it and otherwise cause it grief. I'm not saying this norm is foolproof - if it had been a stronger and more popular country like the US, maybe they could have gotten away with it. But the norm isn't totally toothless either. I bet all the time there are dictators who think 'should I invade my neighbor? No, that would mean I'm violating an international norm and I'd get in trouble.' Saying 'might makes right' is ignoring this valuable and powerful system. Worse, it's hyperstitionally weakening the system - as long as everyone knows everyone knows everyone ... that there are international norms, the norms will be real. Cf. why nobody uses nuclear weapons during war."

The norm "don't invade other countries" is not enforced in any consistent way, therefore it's not a norm. The actual norm seems to be "don't mess with countries that the US likes", which is enforced by the military and economic might of the US and its allies, not because there is a general consensus that this norm is legitimate. The moment that the US becomes unable or unwilling to enforce it, it will cease to exist.

If this still doesn't seem convincing, consider what it means for some individual country (eg the US) to be lawful. At some point (according to the not-entirely-true, but convenient, Hobbesian story) the US was in a state of nature. Everyone agreed it would be better for there to be norms, and *by believing that* caused the norms to come into existence. Sure, there are Senators and police and stuff like that, but if we didn't believe in the legitimacy of Senators and police they would just be guys in suits / guys with badges.

And indeed nobody outside the Western sphere believes that "Pax Americana" has any sort of legitimacy. To these people, Americans are just the guys with lots of aircraft carriers and nukes. And this is for exactly the same reason you don't believe that "Sovereign of all Rus': the Great, the Little, and the White" has any legitimacy. To you Russians are just the guys with lots of old crappy tanks and nukes.

and we're about halfway to magicking an international norm against aggressive invasions into existence.

Yeah, remember when G. W. Bush, Colin Powell, Tony Blair & pals went to jail for invading Iraq under false pretenses? /s

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #44 on: April 01, 2022, 04:38:12 pm »
Oh, I'm sorry, I missed the memo that you're not allowed to blog about something except on the day you discover it. Also I must have missed all the other people using this lens to analyze the current highly topical war.

These two blatantly sarcastic sentences are combined in the same paragraph, very similar in style, and even linked by an "Also".

How, then, was @obormot able to correctly translate the first, but completely unable to do the same with the second, and responded to it (quite scathingly) as if it meant Scott literally had missed all the other commentators?

(The actual intended meanings are, of course, "I am allowed to blog about things even if I already knew about them" and "Many other people are also using this lens to analyze the current war (therefore my also doing so is not evidence that I only just discovered this lens)". Obviously Scott's way of putting it is more entertaining, but I guess there's a tradeoff between entertainment and the reading comprehension threshold required from the audience.)

I think you read Scott wrong, actually, not me. Your interpretation seems implausible to me. I don’t think Scott’s intended meaning is as you say. I think he did indeed mean that nobody else was analyzing the current war with this perspective.

Ancient Oak

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #45 on: April 01, 2022, 05:00:56 pm »
Though parts of USA “might makes right” is to establish clear Schelling points such as "absolutely no invasions of NATO" and some norms like "keep large scale invasions and genocide out of Europe, it is not allowed here anymore".

“might makes right” but it is easier to use and more credibly threatened in other cases, which gives some power to international norms.

There is no international law that gives special protection to NATO or Europe, it's just Might makes Right.
Would you be fine with describing NATO as clearly stated rules backed by involved militaries?

Though for example ban on murder is also enforced by Might makes Right, and this ban is more rigorously enforced in some areas and less in other. But I would not describe is "ban on murder is just clear case of Might makes Right and it is not consistently enforced".

vV_Vv

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #46 on: April 01, 2022, 05:17:47 pm »
Would you be fine with describing NATO as clearly stated rules backed by involved militaries?

Yes, but these rules apply only to member countries. If another country attacks a NATO country, bad things will happen to it, but not because of any kind of legal or pseudo-legal process, it's more like when a small chimp punches a large chimp (or one of its associates), bad things will happen to the small chimp. Note that when it's the large chimp who punches first, bad things don't usually happen to it. Does this mean that "Chimp Law" exists, or does it mean that chimp society is governed by Might makes Right?

Though for example ban on murder is also enforced by Might makes Right, and this ban is more rigorously enforced in some areas and less in other. But I would not describe is "ban on murder is just clear case of Might makes Right and it is not consistently enforced".

It's mostly consistently enforced in any state worth calling as such. States that don't consistently enforce ban on murder are known as "failed states", and everybody agrees that their laws are essentially fake, mostly just a tool of the elites to selectively enforce their own power, which makes the comparison to "International Law" quite apt.
« Last Edit: April 01, 2022, 06:57:09 pm by vV_Vv »

GoneAnon

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #47 on: April 01, 2022, 05:55:18 pm »
The ~150M Americans who believe abortion is tantamount to murder might agree with the notion that the ban on murder is just might makes right, who/whom, is selectively enforced, etc.

Rachael

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #48 on: April 01, 2022, 08:09:47 pm »

I think you read Scott wrong, actually, not me. Your interpretation seems implausible to me. I don’t think Scott’s intended meaning is as you say. I think he did indeed mean that nobody else was analyzing the current war with this perspective.

I'm... actually not sure now. I keep rereading Scott's comment and Necker-cube flipping between my interpretation and yours.

Sorry that my previous comment was so snarky. I think I was overreacting to the criticism of Scott.

zardoz

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #49 on: April 01, 2022, 08:47:47 pm »
"International law" feels like an unnecessary epicycle in my understanding of the world. I prefer to talk about agreements between countries. Some agreements seem to have quite a lot of weight behind them, like NATO or the Warsaw Pact. Others, not so much.

We are moving back to a multipolar world with multiple Great Powers. Looks like there will be an Anglo / Five Eyes sphere of influence, a China / Russia sphere of influence, and a bunch of non-aligned countries like India, South Africa, and Israel. There will probably be a lot of trade within the blocs but not so much between them.

This was the way most of the 20th century was until about 1990. You had the "first world" (anglosphere), "second world" (communists), and "third world" (everywhere else). Amusingly, people forgot about the whole first and second thing, and just remembered third world as a polite euphemism for "shithole country" and first world as "rich country." Occasionally you find people asking what the second world was. Well here is the answer!

In an interesting inversion of the 20th century, we are the left-wing ones now, and China / Russia are the conservative ones trying to "contain" us.

quanticle

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #50 on: April 01, 2022, 10:58:08 pm »
Are you sure? I am pretty sure that this was happening at least during war, and also before.

Quite sure. Heck, even in the immediate aftermath of the war, no less than George Patton, a man whose job for last four years had been solely to fight Nazis, remarked, "We defeated the wrong enemy."

People in the US today drastically underestimate the ambivalence that people in the US (especially conservatives) held when presented with a choice between allying with German "Hitlerism" or allying with Russian Bolshevism.

quanticle

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #51 on: April 01, 2022, 11:21:10 pm »
I think this quote from Explaining Foreign Policy: International Diplomacy and the Russo-Georgian War is very relevant to the discussion:
Quote
Our most fundamental assumption at the system level is that the structure of the international system is anarchic. We define anarchy as the lack of a monopoly on the legitimate use of force. Thus, as long as the international system remains anarchic, "there is no overarching authority to prevent others from using violence or the threat of violence to dominate or even destroy them".

Because the international system is anarchic, I find that a lot of these discussions about whether a war is "justified" or not are rather tiresome. Saying that a war is jutified implies that you have some overarching person, organization or authority to whom you can justify things. In the international system, no such organization exists, and therefore it's meaningless to speak of "justifiable" or "unjustifiable" conflicts in an abstract sense.

EDIT: Fixed some grammar
« Last Edit: April 01, 2022, 11:29:18 pm by quanticle »

Ancient Oak

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #52 on: April 01, 2022, 11:53:43 pm »
Are you sure? I am pretty sure that this was happening at least during war, and also before.

Quite sure. Heck, even in the immediate aftermath of the war, no less than George Patton, a man whose job for last four years had been solely to fight Nazis, remarked, "We defeated the wrong enemy."

People in the US today drastically underestimate the ambivalence that people in the US (especially conservatives) held when presented with a choice between allying with German "Hitlerism" or allying with Russian Bolshevism.
While looking for context of quote I found for example at https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/36062/did-gen-patton-say-we-defeated-the-wrong-enemy

Quote
    Patton was relieved of command of the 3rd Army by Eisenhower just after the end of the war for stating publicly that America had been fighting the wrong enemy— Germany instead of Russia

so it was apparently not widely shared opinion. I am highly certain that there is plenty of official propaganda depicting Nazi Germany as evil.

----------------
Apparently it was not context here, but given that both regimes were unusually evil, then "USSR is even more evil and worse than Nazi Germany" is not evidence of considering Nazi Germany as OK.

In the same way "Nazi Germany was worse than USSR" is not the same as claiming that USSR was OK.

For example I consider Nazi Germany as worse than USSR. Despite that I consider USSR as one of the worst things that happened in the history of the world and as murderous regime responsible for deaths of millions and causing ruin on extreme scale, with many effects still present today and killing thousands.

vV_Vv

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #53 on: April 02, 2022, 03:06:00 am »
Quote
    Patton was relieved of command of the 3rd Army by Eisenhower just after the end of the war for stating publicly that America had been fighting the wrong enemy— Germany instead of Russia

so it was apparently not widely shared opinion.

Obviously it was un-PC to say it aloud after the war, but it wasn't probably that far off from what top American politicians believed.

I am highly certain that there is plenty of official propaganda depicting Nazi Germany as evil.

Sure it was, but it was all from after the war had already started. Before the war, in 1936, Western countries were happy to send their athletes to the Berlin Olympics, which were essentially a giant propaganda event for the Nazis, who had banned all German athletes of Jewish descent from participating, but apparently this was a-ok for the so-called liberal democracies. In fact, the US itself wasn't exactly clean in terms of racial discrimination: after the Olympics, President Roosevelt invited only the white American Olympians to the White House, ignoring the black ones, including Jesse Owens who was the most successful athlete in the event.

Cassander

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #54 on: April 02, 2022, 05:24:56 am »
@vV_Vv
Quote
Obviously it was un-PC to say it aloud after the war, but it wasn't probably that far off from what top American politicians believed.

I've read a lot about those guys, and honestly I don't see it.  The people at the top were committed to the wartime alliance and seem to have been genuinely shocked by stalin acting like stalin post war.  Granted, they were being advised by soviet spies in many cases, but even the non-spies seem to have drunk the koolaid. 
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quanticle

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #55 on: April 02, 2022, 08:00:14 am »
it was apparently not widely shared opinion.

There was a significant amount of anti-Semitism in the US prior to World War 2. Prominent public figures like Charles Lindbergh, Father Coughlin, Henry Ford, and many others associated with the America First movement implied that the US had been drawn into the Great War as the result of a Jewish world conspiracy. These people were quite sympathetic to Hitler all the way up until Hitler declared war on the United States in order to uphold his alliance with Japan.

Five years of war, plus the knowledge of the Holocaust, were sufficient to drive many of those attitudes out of the Overton Window of public acceptability, but it's not like someone who'd been strongly anti-Semitic before the war would suddenly embrace Jews after seeing some horrible newsreel footage. Patton's mistake was to say the unsayable out loud.

After the war, the Rosenberg case gave top cover for a lot of anti-semitic practices by allowing people engaging in those practices to claim that they were engaging in anti-communism. There was already a long standing association between Jews and Bolshevism, so, in the '50s, if you happened to persecute a lot of "Communists" and all those supposed Communists happened to be Jews, no one would bat an eye.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #56 on: April 02, 2022, 12:39:54 pm »
Saying that a war is jutified implies that you have some overarching person, organization or authority to whom you can justify things.

No it doesn't. Wiktionary has the following definitions for justify:

  • (transitive) To provide an acceptable explanation for.
  • (transitive) To be a good, acceptable reason for; warrant.
  • (transitive) To arrange (text) on a page or a computer screen such that the left and right ends of all lines within paragraphs are aligned.
  • (transitive) To absolve, and declare to be free of blame or sin.
  • (reflexive) To give reasons for one’s actions; to make an argument to prove that one is in the right.
  • To prove; to ratify; to confirm.
  • (law) To show (a person) to have had a sufficient legal reason for an act that has been made the subject of a charge or accusation.
  • (law) To qualify (oneself) as a surety by taking oath to the ownership of sufficient property.

None of those involve an "overarching person, organization or authority to whom you can justify things".

Paul Brinkley

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #57 on: April 02, 2022, 05:56:33 pm »
@vV_Vv
Quote
Obviously it was un-PC to say [the US should have fought the USSR rather than Germany] aloud after the war, but it wasn't probably that far off from what top American politicians believed.

I've read a lot about those guys, and honestly I don't see it.  The people at the top were committed to the wartime alliance and seem to have been genuinely shocked by stalin acting like stalin post war.  Granted, they were being advised by soviet spies in many cases, but even the non-spies seem to have drunk the koolaid.

Do you have any quotes in mind that illustrate this surprise at Stalin's post-war behavior?


I haven't seen any mention here yet of demographics. There were so many German immigrants in America that non-participation in the Great War probably won Wilson his second term more than any other single issue. I can imagine pro-German, anti-war-with-Germany sentiments surviving at least one more generation (and in fact, we're pretty cool with them today).

Cassander

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #58 on: April 02, 2022, 10:42:33 pm »
@Paul Brinkley

From Mcullough's Truman, for example:

Quote
Truman thought the whole occasion [their first meeting] went well, exactly because it was so spur of the moment and informal. He liked Stalin, he decided, “and I felt hopeful that we could reach an agreement satisfactory to the world and to ourselves,”

But Stalin nearly always made a good impression of foreigners. Churchill, who once called Russia “a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma,” and who warned both Roosevelt and Truman repeatedly of the Russian menace to Europe, confessed still to liking Stalin the man. Roosevelt had been convinced almost to the end that he could get along with “Uncle Joe.” “The truth is,” wrote Jimmy Byrnes, recalling Stalin’s performance at Yalta, “he is a very likeable person.” Joseph E. Davies, who had been ambassador to Russia briefly and would be at Truman’s side daily at the potsdam conference table, had said in a superficial and immensely popular book, Mission to Moscow, published in 1941, that Stalin was uncommonly wise and gentle. “A child would like to sit on his lap and a dog would sidle up to him,” wrote Davies. Even Eisenhower, after a visit to Moscow later that summer, would describe Stalin in much the same fashion, as “benign and fatherly.”

Truman, as he wrote, found Stalin to be polite, good-natured, businesslike, “honest—but smart as hell.” There had been not a hint of contention between them. The conference hadn’t even begun, yet already Truman had achieved his main objective, as he recorded triumphantly in his diary. “He’ll be in the Jap War on August 15. Fini Japs when that comes about…. I can deal with Stalin.”

and

Quote
In fact, Truman was not of one mind regarding the Soviets, any more than official Washington was, or the country. He did truly wish to get along with the Russians quite as much as did Wallace and, like Leahy, he was steadfastly against appeasement. Nor did he see why he should consider such attitudes contradictory. He had no clear policy or long-range objectives. He was facing events only as they came, trying to be patient, trying to be prudent and maintain balance. But at bottom he had no intention of being either belligerent or weak.

Then, in a rare public address in Moscow on February 9 [1946], Stalin declared that communism and capitalism were incompatible and that another war was inevitable. He called for increased production in a new five-year plan to “guarantee our country against any eventuality.” Production of materials for national defense were to be tripled; consumer goods, Stalin said, “must wait on rearmament.” Confrontation with the capitalist West, he predicted, would come in the 1950s, when America would be in the depths of another depression.

Washington was stunned. Even the liberal Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas called it the “Declaration of World War III.” Since Stalin had decided to make military power his objective, wrote Walter Lippmann, the United States was left with no choice but to do the same.

There's a lot like that. Stalin was by all accounts very charming in person, even through translation, and seems to have had a knack for leaving people thinking they were getting a great deal every time they spoke with him.
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Scott Alexander

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #59 on: April 04, 2022, 03:12:37 am »
Quote
I’ve fulfilled your request, Scott. Now it’s your turn. Of course, I would prefer that you read all of Unqualified Reservations, but that might be a bit much to ask, realistically. So why not start with this piece: https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2008/05/ol5-shortest-way-to-world-peace/. (It comes in the middle of a long sequence, true, but I think it’s readable enough on its own.)

I've read it and have reread it now to make sure I'm not missing anything. Moldbug gives up on the concept of getting any kind of justice or human rights, but says it's worth it because at least we wouldn't have war - I think he means "wouldn't have war after everybody is done invading all the smaller countries, which nobody will do anything about".

But we already have wars at the lowest rate in human history, such that a single aggressive war in one region is massive international news - and this war shows every sign of petering out and being a disaster for the aggressor that discourages future nations from trying.

I'm also not sure his concept is coherent: what is the difference between the current conflict and the Crimean War, which happened during the supposed "classical international law" period? Countries are going to have natural allies that they want to support and natural enemies they will want to thwart; just saying "nobody can help anyone else" doesn't make it so.

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #60 on: April 04, 2022, 04:30:12 am »
Quote
I’ve fulfilled your request, Scott. Now it’s your turn. Of course, I would prefer that you read all of Unqualified Reservations, but that might be a bit much to ask, realistically. So why not start with this piece: https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/2008/05/ol5-shortest-way-to-world-peace/. (It comes in the middle of a long sequence, true, but I think it’s readable enough on its own.)

I've read it and have reread it now to make sure I'm not missing anything. Moldbug gives up on the concept of getting any kind of justice or human rights, but says it's worth it because at least we wouldn't have war - I think he means "wouldn't have war after everybody is done invading all the smaller countries, which nobody will do anything about".

No, this is not right. Moldbug doesn’t “give up” on these concepts; his point is that we don’t have much of them right now. We certainly claim to want to have them! And the amount of justice and/or human rights we have is certainly not zero… but is it more, or less, than we would have, if we did the thing he recommends? Certainly it’s not much justice and human rights—especially relative to how much we claim to desire these things!

Quote
But we already have wars at the lowest rate in human history, such that a single aggressive war in one region is massive international news - and this war shows every sign of petering out and being a disaster for the aggressor that discourages future nations from trying.

Scott, did you click on the link I posted, about the currently ongoing wars in the world?

Yes, it’s true that the Ukraine war is massive international news. Unfortunately, that’s not because it’s a rare and unique thing. Rather, it’s because of how our mass media work, and what they consider to be “international news-worthy”.

Judging by what we see in the news, it might sure seem like the Ukraine war is the only such conflict that’s happening right now. But it ain’t so, sadly. In fact, that Wikipedia page lists four other conflicts that have caused at least 10,000 deaths in the past year, and eighteen more conflicts that have caused less than 10,000 but more than 1,000 deaths in the past year.

Off the top of your head—without looking at the list—how many of these wars can you name?

Looking at what is, or is not, “massive international news”, is a deeply misleading way of figuring out how much war and violence is happening in the world.

Quote
I'm also not sure his concept is coherent: what is the difference between the current conflict and the Crimean War, which happened during the supposed "classical international law" period? Countries are going to have natural allies that they want to support and natural enemies they will want to thwart; just saying "nobody can help anyone else" doesn't make it so.

The difference is that in the “classical international law” period, the United States would not be out policing everyone everywhere. I don’t know what you mean by “natural allies”; in classical international law, certainly one might have treaties of mutual defense, but we’ve got none with Ukraine. (Who is Ukraine the natural ally of? It’s not “all Western democracies and all countries remotely within their orbits”; that just doesn’t make sense—the notion of “natural ally” doesn’t mean anything, if used thus.) And nothing remotely like the sanctions against Russia would be happening—no boycotts, no freezing of accounts, confiscations of private property, cancellations of random artists and athletes, etc.

(Another reply I could make is: I think you’re just wrong about nations having “natural allies that they want to support and natural enemies they will want to thwart”. But that is, perhaps, an argument for another time.)

Saying it doesn’t make it so, of course. But the proposed policy is a proposed United States foreign policy. It is presented as “if we were suddenly made U.S. Foreign Policy Czar, we should do this”. Of course, in reality we’re not the U.S. Foreign Policy Czar, so the whole thing is academic. But within that scenario, it’s entirely coherent. (To put it another way, our saying it doesn’t make it so, but if our hypothetical U.S. Foreign Policy Czar said it, that actually would make it so, despite him being only the U.S. Foreign Policy Czar and not the Every Nation’s In The World Simultaneously Foreign Policy Czar, because it’s American foreign policy that drives everything else.)

And so Moldbug’s point is that if the U.S. did this—well, would Poland, for example, spontaneously take action to help Ukraine, if America were resolutely neutral? I think we both know the answer to that one.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #61 on: April 04, 2022, 05:14:14 am »
None of those involve an "overarching person, organization or authority to whom you can justify things".

I disagree. I think almost all of them involve an overaching authority.

1. (transitive) To provide an acceptable explanation for.
Acceptable to whom? An acceptable explanation for me, a 21st century American citizen, is not the same as an acceptable explanation to British person in the 19th century. This is true of many things, but it most definitely applies to international relations. An explanation for Russian aggression that hinged on the inherent aggressiveness of the "Mongoloid Russian race" is something that would be commonplace in the 19th century, but today, it's an unsayable heresy.

2. (transitive) To be a good, acceptable reason for; warrant.
See above. Goodness and acceptability are only meaningful in the context of a particular audience. There are no universally compelling arguments.

3. (transitive) To arrange (text) on a page or a computer screen such that the left and right ends of all lines within paragraphs are aligned.
Okay, fair enough, this one doesn't require an overarching person or authority. Anyone can look at a page of justified text and verify that it is, indeed, justified.


4. (transitive) To absolve, and declare to be free of blame or sin.
What is and isn't sinful is dependent on context. Is launching an invasion of a neighboring country sinful? Or is it a demonstration of the martial valor and bravery of one's own military and state? War was often seen as a good thing; a way for nations to purge themselves of decadent tendencies in the fire of combat. Granted, most of these views died out after the industrial-scale slaughter that was World War 1, but they still crop up from time to time.

5. (reflexive) To give reasons for one’s actions; to make an argument to prove that one is in the right.
I'll grant this one as well, even though, in my mind, it's borderline. But defining "justification" this loosely makes it almost meaningless. Almost any action, no matter how heinous, has some kind of reasoning behind it. People do things for reasons and are more than happy to volunteer those reasons if asked.


6. To prove; to ratify; to confirm.
Unless we're talking about mathematical proofs, this is likewise context-dependent. Different places have different standards of evidence and proof. It used to be commonplace to prove things by referring to the Bible. That standard no longer holds. Perhaps in the future, things that we take as proven fact today will also be subject to question.


7. (law) To show (a person) to have had a sufficient legal reason for an act that has been made the subject of a charge or accusation.
8. (law) To qualify (oneself) as a surety by taking oath to the ownership of sufficient property.
Both of the above refer to law, so I'll reiterate my point from above that this is extremely context dependent. An act that is justifiable in one locale may or may not be justifiable in another. As an example, if one's state has a "castle doctrine" or "stand your ground" law, then shooting an unauthorized intruder who comes into your home is considered a justifiable action. In the absence of those laws, it may not be. Same thing with property rights. Different places have different standards on how ownership can be proven. There is definitely an overarching authority. It is defined broadly as the state, and more narrowly as whichever judge is going to be hearing the dispute.


EDIT:

The reason I'm belaboring this point is that, in many respects, the question of the justifiability of the war in Ukraine has already been settled. It was justifiable to Putin, and Putin is currently doing his best to justify the war to the Russian public, via the state-owned media. To us, in the the United States and the "West", the war is almost totally unjustifiable. There's nothing that Vladimir Putin can say to us that would make us suddenly turn around and say, "Oh, okay, actually you were correct to order your military to invade Ukraine." So, in that respect, whether the war in Ukraine is justifiable or not is a rather boring question, the answer to which is almost trivially discernible.
« Last Edit: April 04, 2022, 05:43:35 am by quanticle »

Ancient Oak

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #62 on: April 04, 2022, 06:08:43 am »
But we already have wars at the lowest rate in human history, such that a single aggressive war in one region is massive international news - and this war shows every sign of petering out and being a disaster for the aggressor that discourages future nations from trying.

Scott, did you click on the link I posted, about the currently ongoing wars in the world?

Yes, it’s true that the Ukraine war is massive international news. Unfortunately, that’s not because it’s a rare and unique thing. Rather, it’s because of how our mass media work, and what they consider to be “international news-worthy”.

Judging by what we see in the news, it might sure seem like the Ukraine war is the only such conflict that’s happening right now. But it ain’t so, sadly. In fact, that Wikipedia page lists four other conflicts that have caused at least 10,000 deaths in the past year, and eighteen more conflicts that have caused less than 10,000 but more than 1,000 deaths in the past year.

Off the top of your head—without looking at the list—how many of these wars can you name?

Looking at what is, or is not, “massive international news”, is a deeply misleading way of figuring out how much war and violence is happening in the world.
My position is that things like "international law" and "human rights" are actually existing Europe, North America, Australia and some small part of Asia.

Elsewhere they are aspirational.

And both positions

(1) "human rights", "international law" is useless, not actually existing and not a thing, this is pure "might makes right"
(2) "human rights", "international law" is an actual thing seriously applying and being enforced everywhere

are not matching reality.

For various reasons (ranging from practicality to self-interest and racism) this is enforced and actually applying in part of the world and not elsewhere.

Part of problems why Russia has problems is not realizing that they can murder and massacre civilians in Syria with impunity, but this is not OK in Ukraine, as far as Europe and USA is concerned.
« Last Edit: April 04, 2022, 06:32:51 am by Ancient Oak »

vV_Vv

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #63 on: April 04, 2022, 01:28:53 pm »
My position is that things like "international law" and "human rights" are actually existing Europe, North America, Australia and some small part of Asia.

...

Part of problems why Russia has problems is not realizing that they can murder and massacre civilians in Syria with impunity, but this is not OK in Ukraine, as far as Europe and USA is concerned.

But then they aren't "human" rights, they are more like Anglo-European rights.

And this isn't even true: in the Kosovo War of 1998-1999, an internal war within Yugoslavia, NATO intervened, bombing Serbia and killing civilians.
And it's not even true in Ukraine: when Russia annexed Crimea and deployed "Little Green Men" to fight a proxy war in Donbas that caused tens of thousands victims since 2014, all the Western world did was strong words and slap-on-the-wrist sanctions. And even one month ago, when it was clear that Russia was up to something but it was believed that they would just annex Donbas, the Western world was quite divided about what to do: the Anglos wanted stronger involvement while the Euros were more like meh.

Does the West believe that a resident of Donetsk or Sevastopol has more "rights" to being free from Russian occupation than a resident of Kiev Kyiv or Lviv?
Of course not, the framing in terms of "rights" doesn't make sense. The correct framing is that the West is more interested in keeping Western-Central Ukraine as a client state, and eventually assimilate it into the NATO and EU, while it doesn't particulary care about Crimea and Donbas.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #64 on: April 04, 2022, 01:32:20 pm »
Yeah, I think this is the 12:00 moment when the stopped clock, the "everything is racist" people, are actually right.

Maybe "racist" isn't the best word to use, but it seems pretty clear and obvious that a certain form of bias or prejudice is in play wherein wars in Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia are shrugged off with a "that's just how it is in that part of the world, nothing we can do about it" where as a war in Ukraine is treated as the biggest possible outrage that has ever been perpetrated against mankind as a whole.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #65 on: April 04, 2022, 01:53:07 pm »
Maybe "racist" isn't the best word to use, but it seems pretty clear and obvious that a certain form of bias or prejudice is in play wherein wars in Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia are shrugged off with a "that's just how it is in that part of the world, nothing we can do about it" where as a war in Ukraine is treated as the biggest possible outrage that has ever been perpetrated against mankind as a whole.

The US did a lot more about the invasion of a tiny Arab Muslim country by another larger Arab Muslim country than it has done about Ukraine.  The stopped clock is wrong again.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #66 on: April 04, 2022, 01:56:28 pm »
Of course not, the framing in terms of "rights" doesn't make sense. The correct framing is that the West is more interested in keeping Western-Central Ukraine as a client state, and eventually assimilate it into the NATO and EU, while it doesn't particulary care about Crimea and Donbas.

That's not the correct framing.

The difference was that in Crimea & Donbas, Russia's claim that people there were majority Russians and wanted to be in Russia was arguably plausible, but now, when Russia tried to invade all Ukraine, there is no more plausible excuse, it's clear that this is a classic  war.

That shows it isn't only "might makes right". Some idea of right and wrong, including some concept of self-determination, influences public opinion and, especially in democratic countries with real elections, influences external policies somewhat.

Same happened with Hitler: he made the other countries believe that he wanted just the majority-German Sudetenland and let him have it, but after, he invaded all Czechoslovakia and things became clear.

If the West (particularly the US) would have wanted Ukraine in NATO, Ukraine would be in NATO now and all this tragedy wouldn't happen now. But although Ukraine wanted in NATO, NATO hesitated.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #67 on: April 04, 2022, 02:16:26 pm »
The difference was that in Crimea & Donbas, Russia's claim that people there were majority Russians and wanted to be in Russia was arguably plausible, but now, when Russia tried to invade all Ukraine, there is no more plausible excuse, it's clear that this is a classic  war.

This might be true for Crimea, but AFAIK in Donbas they have been fighting a "low-intensity" civil war betwen separatists (unofficially backed by the Little Green Men) and Ukrainian nationalists (Azov Battalion & co., officially backed by the Ukrainian government) for the last 8 years.

If the West didn't want wars in Europe, they would have intervened to stop it, even by recognizing recognizing the Russian claims on the more Russophile regions in exchange for demanding Russia to withdraw from and renounce any claims on the more Ukrainophile regions as, if the "self-determination" principle actually held any water.

Same happened with Hitler: he made the other countries believe that he wanted just the majority-German Sudetenland and let him have it, but after, he invaded all Czechoslovakia and things became clear.

And nobody did anything about it until he entered an alliance with Stalin and invaded Poland, which had a formal defense pact with the UK.

If the West (particularly the US) would have wanted Ukraine in NATO, Ukraine would be in NATO now and all this tragedy wouldn't happen now. But although Ukraine wanted in NATO, NATO hesitated.

Ukraine was very much in the Russian sphere of influence up until they got rid of Yanukovych, which is exactly when Russia invaded, as NATO doesn't admit countries which have ongoing territorial disputes.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #68 on: April 04, 2022, 04:04:57 pm »

And so Moldbug’s point is that if the U.S. did this—well, would Poland, for example, spontaneously take action to help Ukraine, if America were resolutely neutral? I think we both know the answer to that one.

If Poland didn't remain absolutely certain that the US would help it if Russia attacked I'm not sure what they would do for Ukraine but I am sure they would immediately start a crash program to develop Nuclear Weapons betting they can get Nukes before Russia can move on from Ukraine to them.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #69 on: April 04, 2022, 04:49:26 pm »
Yeah, I think this is the 12:00 moment when the stopped clock, the "everything is racist" people, are actually right.

Maybe "racist" isn't the best word to use, but it seems pretty clear and obvious that a certain form of bias or prejudice is in play wherein wars in Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia are shrugged off with a "that's just how it is in that part of the world, nothing we can do about it" where as a war in Ukraine is treated as the biggest possible outrage that has ever been perpetrated against mankind as a whole.
As an example see https://twitter.com/TadeuszGiczan/status/1510908227202002947 with response "WTF... Is RIA Novosti an extreme publication?  Or is this the sort of thing that regularly gets printed in the media?  This is a public call for genocide.  We have not seen that done openly since the 1930s in Germany." in https://twitter.com/jwagsters/status/1510909451884285954

That person apparently missed many open public calls for genocide and outright genocide (even I know about https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rwandan_genocide for example, happened in 1994 which had far more open calls for murder).

Also, none of responses mention that this part is false (not that excuses it, if translation is right)

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #70 on: April 04, 2022, 04:49:55 pm »

And so Moldbug’s point is that if the U.S. did this—well, would Poland, for example, spontaneously take action to help Ukraine, if America were resolutely neutral? I think we both know the answer to that one.

If Poland didn't remain absolutely certain that the US would help it if Russia attacked I'm not sure what they would do for Ukraine but I am sure they would immediately start a crash program to develop Nuclear Weapons betting they can get Nukes before Russia can move on from Ukraine to them.

Yep, that seems plausible.

Ancient Oak

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #71 on: April 04, 2022, 04:52:30 pm »

And so Moldbug’s point is that if the U.S. did this—well, would Poland, for example, spontaneously take action to help Ukraine, if America were resolutely neutral? I think we both know the answer to that one.

If Poland didn't remain absolutely certain that the US would help it if Russia attacked I'm not sure what they would do for Ukraine but I am sure they would immediately start a crash program to develop Nuclear Weapons betting they can get Nukes before Russia can move on from Ukraine to them.
I have much lower opinion about Polish government (and any plausible replacements) to expect that they would do this, and even lower about success.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #72 on: April 04, 2022, 05:14:08 pm »
Remember KONY 2012?

That's what it looks like when the West tries to mobilize its propaganda arm to take sides in an African conflict.  Fell completely flat.  Public was wholly uninterested as soon as they got done watching the viral video.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #73 on: April 04, 2022, 06:30:38 pm »
Remember KONY 2012?

That's what it looks like when the West tries to mobilize its propaganda arm to take sides in an African conflict.  Fell completely flat.  Public was wholly uninterested as soon as they got done watching the viral video.

As much as it can pay to be cynical, with that one I really think it was mostly just some guy. It's not as if the full propaganda arm could have been more effective in the actual conflict, but they probably would have at least gotten some unrelated domestic legislation passed.

GoneAnon

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #74 on: April 04, 2022, 06:44:38 pm »
That's a fair point.  I feel like he got signal-boosted by some official sources, but it was nothing like the current push vis-a-vis Ukraine, to be sure.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #75 on: April 04, 2022, 07:42:48 pm »
None of those involve an "overarching person, organization or authority to whom you can justify things".

I disagree. I think almost all of them involve an overaching authority.

1. (transitive) To provide an acceptable explanation for.
Acceptable to whom? An acceptable explanation for me, a 21st century American citizen, is not the same as an acceptable explanation to British person in the 19th century. This is true of many things, but it most definitely applies to international relations. An explanation for Russian aggression that hinged on the inherent aggressiveness of the "Mongoloid Russian race" is something that would be commonplace in the 19th century, but today, it's an unsayable heresy.

2. (transitive) To be a good, acceptable reason for; warrant.
See above. Goodness and acceptability are only meaningful in the context of a particular audience. There are no universally compelling arguments.

3. (transitive) To arrange (text) on a page or a computer screen such that the left and right ends of all lines within paragraphs are aligned.
Okay, fair enough, this one doesn't require an overarching person or authority. Anyone can look at a page of justified text and verify that it is, indeed, justified.


4. (transitive) To absolve, and declare to be free of blame or sin.
What is and isn't sinful is dependent on context. Is launching an invasion of a neighboring country sinful? Or is it a demonstration of the martial valor and bravery of one's own military and state? War was often seen as a good thing; a way for nations to purge themselves of decadent tendencies in the fire of combat. Granted, most of these views died out after the industrial-scale slaughter that was World War 1, but they still crop up from time to time.

5. (reflexive) To give reasons for one’s actions; to make an argument to prove that one is in the right.
I'll grant this one as well, even though, in my mind, it's borderline. But defining "justification" this loosely makes it almost meaningless. Almost any action, no matter how heinous, has some kind of reasoning behind it. People do things for reasons and are more than happy to volunteer those reasons if asked.


6. To prove; to ratify; to confirm.
Unless we're talking about mathematical proofs, this is likewise context-dependent. Different places have different standards of evidence and proof. It used to be commonplace to prove things by referring to the Bible. That standard no longer holds. Perhaps in the future, things that we take as proven fact today will also be subject to question.


7. (law) To show (a person) to have had a sufficient legal reason for an act that has been made the subject of a charge or accusation.
8. (law) To qualify (oneself) as a surety by taking oath to the ownership of sufficient property.
Both of the above refer to law, so I'll reiterate my point from above that this is extremely context dependent. An act that is justifiable in one locale may or may not be justifiable in another. As an example, if one's state has a "castle doctrine" or "stand your ground" law, then shooting an unauthorized intruder who comes into your home is considered a justifiable action. In the absence of those laws, it may not be. Same thing with property rights. Different places have different standards on how ownership can be proven. There is definitely an overarching authority. It is defined broadly as the state, and more narrowly as whichever judge is going to be hearing the dispute.

I should have said "mention" instead of "involve". None of them mention an "overarching person, organization or authority". What they do mention is some person or group at whom the justification is addressed. Which is also what your comments show. But nowhere does it say that the person or group is an "overarching person, organization or authority". And neither do your comments show that.

It can be, but it doesn't have to be. A parent can justify to their three year old that they have to brush their teeth, that doesn't mean that the three year old is an overarching authority.

The reason I'm belaboring this point is that, in many respects, the question of the justifiability of the war in Ukraine has already been settled. It was justifiable to Putin, and Putin is currently doing his best to justify the war to the Russian public, via the state-owned media.

Apparently it's possible to (try to) justify something to a (group of) person(s) that's not an overarching authority.

Scott Alexander

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #76 on: April 05, 2022, 12:16:52 am »
Quote
No, this is not right. Moldbug doesn’t “give up” on these concepts; his point is that we don’t have much of them right now. We certainly claim to want to have them! And the amount of justice and/or human rights we have is certainly not zero… but is it more, or less, than we would have, if we did the thing he recommends? Certainly it’s not much justice and human rights—especially relative to how much we claim to desire these things!

My impression is that Moldbug thinks if some country is genociding its own people, the rest of the world should stand back and do nothing. I'm not sure how that differs from "giving up" on human rights. Yes, I know he predicts that somehow everything would still turn out okay. I'm saying I don't believe his prediction.

I think yes, things are going remarkably well now. You're going to point out that there are still many problems, and I agree, but it's remarkably few by historical standards, and the worst offenders (eg China's Uighur genocide) are usually in places where there are reasons that the US can't/shouldn't intervene.

Quote
Judging by what we see in the news, it might sure seem like the Ukraine war is the only such conflict that’s happening right now. But it ain’t so, sadly. In fact, that Wikipedia page lists four other conflicts that have caused at least 10,000 deaths in the past year, and eighteen more conflicts that have caused less than 10,000 but more than 1,000 deaths in the past year. Off the top of your head—without looking at the list—how many of these wars can you name?

I'm guessing Yemen, Ethiopia...Congo? Mexico? I agree I am not on top of every single kilodeath/year conflict, which is because by historical standards those are incredibly small. 4x10,000 + 18x1,000 = 68,000 - those are minima, but even if we double that to 150,000, 4x more people died at Stalingrad than in every single one of those conflicts combined. 50x more in the Napoleonic Wars! 100x more in the Taiping Rebellion! 5x more in the Paraguayan War! Wikipedia says that 5x as many people died in the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars of the 1850s, I don't even know what those are! All of this at a time when global population was 20% current levels, all of this when Moldbug says everything was fine and we'd figured out the secret to peace.

To me this argument feels like seeing some diabetic guy on insulin who still has problems with fatigue sometimes, and saying "See, this proves that insulin doesn't work, you need to withdraw it". It's a hard problem to distinguish between "good strategy which doesn't 100% solve every problem" and "bad strategy which is only making things worse", but I feel like both common sense and a comparison between the 1800s and today make Moldbug's thesis look far from obvious.

Quote
The difference is that in the “classical international law” period, the United States would not be out policing everyone everywhere. I don’t know what you mean by “natural allies”; in classical international law, certainly one might have treaties of mutual defense, but we’ve got none with Ukraine. (Who is Ukraine the natural ally of? It’s not “all Western democracies and all countries remotely within their orbits”; that just doesn’t make sense—the notion of “natural ally” doesn’t mean anything, if used thus.) And nothing remotely like the sanctions against Russia would be happening—no boycotts, no freezing of accounts, confiscations of private property, cancellations of random artists and athletes, etc.

I'm still confused. Yes, the US wasn't policing everyone, but UK and France certainly thought it was worth their time to fight Russia on its own territory in the name of some combination of Great Power politics and standing up for oppressed people. How's that different from what's happening now?

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #77 on: April 05, 2022, 01:37:01 am »
I'm guessing Yemen, Ethiopia...Congo? Mexico? I agree I am not on top of every single kilodeath/year conflict, which is because by historical standards those are incredibly small. 4x10,000 + 18x1,000 = 68,000 - those are minima, but even if we double that to 150,000, 4x more people died at Stalingrad than in every single one of those conflicts combined. 50x more in the Napoleonic Wars! 100x more in the Taiping Rebellion! 5x more in the Paraguayan War! Wikipedia says that 5x as many people died in the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars of the 1850s, I don't even know what those are! All of this at a time when global population was 20% current levels, all of this when Moldbug says everything was fine and we'd figured out the secret to peace.

To me this argument feels like seeing some diabetic guy on insulin who still has problems with fatigue sometimes, and saying "See, this proves that insulin doesn't work, you need to withdraw it". It's a hard problem to distinguish between "good strategy which doesn't 100% solve every problem" and "bad strategy which is only making things worse", but I feel like both common sense and a comparison between the 1800s and today make Moldbug's thesis look far from obvious.

You missed Myanmar and Afghanistan. But I don't think "the media didn't cover Afghanistan enough" is a valid claim. Myanmar got plenty of coverage too at the outset. There's also Somalia and the ongoing Sahel Wars both of which have gotten some sporadic coverage but not in a systematic way.

But honestly I don't care about media coverage. If you could prove to me by some fact or figure that less media coverage of conflicts saved lives then I would be for it. It doesn't matter whether CNN covers a war. What matters is if the war has victims. And in that context, that is looking at damage in lives and property, violence has been going down. The only theoretical disagreement is over why that is. They range from optimistic to pessimistic but the fact itself isn't in dispute.

Further, the idea that the US doesn't have these concepts "right now" is wrong. The idea that the US doesn't try to defend the international system is either cynical lying or deeply mistaken. Mostly by people who have a vested interest in the return of great power politics. If the US acted like an old style European colonial power it would act very differently. Even arch-reactionaries like Schmitt have to admit this. Moldbug's not just a reactionary but a reactionary who's clearly less than familiar with reactionary philosophy. Or if he isn't he just skips over a lot of its ideas. (Though to be totally fair to him, a lot of reactionaries like Schmitt or De Maistre were snobs and purposefully closed off parts of their thought by writing in dead languages. I don't think this really recommends the philosophy...)

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Saying it doesn’t make it so, of course. But the proposed policy is a proposed United States foreign policy. It is presented as “if we were suddenly made U.S. Foreign Policy Czar, we should do this”. Of course, in reality we’re not the U.S. Foreign Policy Czar, so the whole thing is academic. But within that scenario, it’s entirely coherent. (To put it another way, our saying it doesn’t make it so, but if our hypothetical U.S. Foreign Policy Czar said it, that actually would make it so, despite him being only the U.S. Foreign Policy Czar and not the Every Nation’s In The World Simultaneously Foreign Policy Czar, because it’s American foreign policy that drives everything else.)

And so Moldbug’s point is that if the U.S. did this—well, would Poland, for example, spontaneously take action to help Ukraine, if America were resolutely neutral? I think we both know the answer to that one.

In the war of all against all, a pure Mearsheimerian world? Yes, it would. It would be providing more help. There'd probably be an explicit alliance against it as happened historically. Also, in that world Ukraine would have nukes and the two of them would have mauled each other. Or more likely still: the Soviet Union would have butchered its own citizens and still be around and we'd still be in the Cold War. Or perhaps Tsar Nicholas would have butchered the Bolsheviks. Or perhaps, as I suspect Moldbug would like, King Louis XIV would have executed the revolutionaries and the American revolutionaries would have been hanged and we'd all still be living under European colonialism. But I can't see how that would be a better world than today in a material sense.

That's a fair point.  I feel like he got signal-boosted by some official sources, but it was nothing like the current push vis-a-vis Ukraine, to be sure.

While the US news media might not be all that effective at intervening in Africa, the economic, diplomatic, and military establishment are much more so. Kony was never captured but he was either killed by an airstrike, his own men, or has shrunk off into the jungle with no more than a few dozen survivors of his force. His entire organization was systematically dismantled by the Ugandan government, the African Union, and the US intelligence, military, and diplomatic apparati. Maybe the media campaign didn't do much. But it sure seems like "a coalition of a dozen nations including the US coordinate with the local government to destroy a murderous rebel army" is a win in the international column.


zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #78 on: April 05, 2022, 01:48:01 am »
I see you are taking Mark Twain's position about German.
sovereign is the one with the power to decide which things are the same and which things are different

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #79 on: April 05, 2022, 02:33:03 am »
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No, this is not right. Moldbug doesn’t “give up” on these concepts; his point is that we don’t have much of them right now. We certainly claim to want to have them! And the amount of justice and/or human rights we have is certainly not zero… but is it more, or less, than we would have, if we did the thing he recommends? Certainly it’s not much justice and human rights—especially relative to how much we claim to desire these things!

My impression is that Moldbug thinks if some country is genociding its own people, the rest of the world should stand back and do nothing. I'm not sure how that differs from "giving up" on human rights. Yes, I know he predicts that somehow everything would still turn out okay. I'm saying I don't believe his prediction.

In King Harald’s Saga (Snorri Sturluson’s account of the life of King Harald Sigurdsson of Norway, a.k.a. Harald Hardrada), there is the following anecdote. The context is: Harald, at the time a commander in the Varangian Guard, gets into an argument with another commander, Georgios, about whose men will set up their camp in a more favorable location. They argue for a while, until it’s suggested that they settle the matter by drawing lots:

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Now the lots were made. But before they were marked, Harald said to Georgios, ‘I want to see how you are marking your lot, to make sure we do not mark our lots in the same way.’

Georgios agreed. Then Harald marked his own lot and threw it on the cloth alongside the other. The man who had been chosen to draw the lots now picked one of them out and raised it aloft between his fingers and said, ‘The owner of this lot shall take precedence when riding and rowing and putting in at harbor and choosing the ground for his tents.’

Harald seized his hand and snatched the lot away from him and threw it into the sea. Then he said, ‘That was my lot that was drawn.’

‘Why did you not let everyone else see it?’ demanded Georgios.

‘Look at the one that’s left,’ said Harald, ‘and you will recognize your mark on it.’

When the remaining lot was examined, everyone saw that it had Georgios’s mark upon it; so it was decided that the Varangians should take precedence in all the matters that were in dispute.

(Moldbug actually alludes to this point as well, but it’s much more fun with Old Norse sagas)

The point is: you say “Look! Your [that is, Moldbug’s] strategy doesn’t solve the problem! That makes it a bad strategy! Therefore, by elimination, my strategy is the good one.”

But you’ve conveniently thrown your solution into the sea, instead of letting us look at it. Well, let’s retrieve it, and take a look. Does your strategy solve the problem? Because, you see, if your strategy also does not solve the problem, then this can hardly be an advantage for your strategy over Moldbug’s!

(Aside: as @DavidFriedman can, no doubt, tell you about in considerably more detail and with many examples, this is very similar to the sorts of criticisms often heard by libertarians, ancaps, etc. “If we don’t have the government solving Problem X, then it will go unsolved! And that’s bad!”—but in fact it turns out that, currently, Problem X very much exists, does not appear to be at all solved by government efforts to solve it, and indeed it’s not clear whether the government isn’t actually causing it. “Approach A doesn’t solve the problem!” is no criticism at all, if the choice is between approach A and approach B which also doesn’t solve the problem.)

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I think yes, things are going remarkably well now. You're going to point out that there are still many problems, and I agree, but it's remarkably few by historical standards, and the worst offenders (eg China's Uighur genocide) are usually in places where there are reasons that the US can't/shouldn't intervene.

This is, actually, diametrically wrong. Things are going remarkably poorly. By historical standards, there are remarkably many genocides in modern times.

Take a look at this list of genocides by death toll.

First, notice that the top 5 entries are all in the 20th century (after the collapse of the old system of international law).

Second, sort the list by year, and notice that the 20th/21st centuries have 30 entries… out of a total of 37. (In fact, just the 1990s onward account for 9 of the 37 total entries, and 2 of the genocides are ongoing!)

As you see, your claim that “things are going remarkably well now” (on the genocide front) could hardly be more wrong.

(If you prefer a slightly broader category, here’s Wikipedia’s list of “genocides, ethnic cleansing, religious persecution”, incidentally just one section of a delightful page called “List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll”. It should probably not surprise you that modernity—i.e., the 20th century onward—utterly dominates this larger list, as well, with six ongoing genocides / ethnic cleansings / etc., and quite a few from the 1990s onward.)

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Judging by what we see in the news, it might sure seem like the Ukraine war is the only such conflict that’s happening right now. But it ain’t so, sadly. In fact, that Wikipedia page lists four other conflicts that have caused at least 10,000 deaths in the past year, and eighteen more conflicts that have caused less than 10,000 but more than 1,000 deaths in the past year. Off the top of your head—without looking at the list—how many of these wars can you name?

I'm guessing Yemen, Ethiopia...Congo? Mexico? I agree I am not on top of every single kilodeath/year conflict, which is because by historical standards those are incredibly small. 4x10,000 + 18x1,000 = 68,000 - those are minima, but even if we double that to 150,000, 4x more people died at Stalingrad than in every single one of those conflicts combined. 50x more in the Napoleonic Wars! 100x more in the Taiping Rebellion! 5x more in the Paraguayan War! Wikipedia says that 5x as many people died in the Punti-Hakka Clan Wars of the 1850s, I don't even know what those are! All of this at a time when global population was 20% current levels, all of this when Moldbug says everything was fine and we'd figured out the secret to peace.

Wikipedia’s geometric mean estimate for deaths in the Rwandan genocide is 700 thousand; for the Darfur genocide, 170 thousand (so far!); the Second Congo War, 3.7 million; the Syrian civil war, 535 thousand (so far!); the wars in Iraq/Afghanistan, 493 thousand (so far!); the Angolan Civil War, 504 thousand; the First Congo War, 447 thousand; the Somali Civil War, 387 thousand; the Burundian Civil War, 300 thousand; the War in Darfur, 287 thousand; the Yemeni Civil War, 233 thousand (so far!); the Lord's Resistance Army insurgency, 223 thousand; the Colombian conflict, 220 thousand; Myanmar, 180 thousand; 1991 Iraqi uprisings, 141 thousand; the Yugoslav Wars, 135 thousand; the Sierra Leone Civil War, 122 thousand; the Mexican drug war, 107 thousand; the Bosnian War, 101 thousand; the insurgency in Laos, 100 thousand; the Kivu conflict, 100 thousand; the Algerian Civil War, 94 thousand; the Sri Lankan Civil War, 89 thousand.

Total is over 9 million. This is almost entirely the 1990s onward (forget the rest of the 20th century…).

I’m afraid that you are very, very wrong about this.

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To me this argument feels like seeing some diabetic guy on insulin who still has problems with fatigue sometimes, and saying "See, this proves that insulin doesn't work, you need to withdraw it". It's a hard problem to distinguish between "good strategy which doesn't 100% solve every problem" and "bad strategy which is only making things worse", but I feel like both common sense and a comparison between the 1800s and today make Moldbug's thesis look far from obvious.

As you can see from the above, currently we have a bad strategy that doesn’t solve anything.

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The difference is that in the “classical international law” period, the United States would not be out policing everyone everywhere. I don’t know what you mean by “natural allies”; in classical international law, certainly one might have treaties of mutual defense, but we’ve got none with Ukraine. (Who is Ukraine the natural ally of? It’s not “all Western democracies and all countries remotely within their orbits”; that just doesn’t make sense—the notion of “natural ally” doesn’t mean anything, if used thus.) And nothing remotely like the sanctions against Russia would be happening—no boycotts, no freezing of accounts, confiscations of private property, cancellations of random artists and athletes, etc.

I'm still confused. Yes, the US wasn't policing everyone, but UK and France certainly thought it was worth their time to fight Russia on its own territory in the name of some combination of Great Power politics and standing up for oppressed people. How's that different from what's happening now?

To what are you referring, exactly…? When did either the U.K. or France invade Russia in the name of standing up for oppressed people?
« Last Edit: April 05, 2022, 02:39:11 am by obormot »

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #80 on: April 05, 2022, 03:15:43 am »
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The difference is that in the “classical international law” period, the United States would not be out policing everyone everywhere. I don’t know what you mean by “natural allies”; in classical international law, certainly one might have treaties of mutual defense, but we’ve got none with Ukraine. (Who is Ukraine the natural ally of? It’s not “all Western democracies and all countries remotely within their orbits”; that just doesn’t make sense—the notion of “natural ally” doesn’t mean anything, if used thus.) And nothing remotely like the sanctions against Russia would be happening—no boycotts, no freezing of accounts, confiscations of private property, cancellations of random artists and athletes, etc.

I'm still confused. Yes, the US wasn't policing everyone, but UK and France certainly thought it was worth their time to fight Russia on its own territory in the name of some combination of Great Power politics and standing up for oppressed people. How's that different from what's happening now?

To what are you referring, exactly…? When did either the U.K. or France invade Russia in the name of standing up for oppressed people?

Update: I guess you’re talking about the Crimean War? But saying that it happened “in the name of … standing up for oppressed people” is an … odd way of describing that conflict. (As Wikipedia notes: “At present most historians (except for the new Russian Orthodox nationalists) accept that the question of the holy places was no more than a pretext for the Crimean War.”)

In other words, it was just Great Power politics.

(Also, the European powers mostly attacked Russia’s Black Sea ports, which is surely a non-central example of “fight[ing] Russia on its own territory”!)

Humphrey_Appleby

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #81 on: April 05, 2022, 03:26:57 am »

(Also, the European powers mostly attacked Russia’s Black Sea ports, which is surely a non-central example of “fight[ing] Russia on its own territory”!)

My understanding (possibly based on something @bean wrote over at Naval Gazing?) is that the Anglo-French alliance was also planning a campaign aimed at St.Petersburg, and it was the threat thereof that led Russia to sue for peace. If so, this would be a highly central example of fighting Russia on its own territory.

Erusian

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #82 on: April 05, 2022, 06:16:55 am »
Update: I guess you’re talking about the Crimean War? But saying that it happened “in the name of … standing up for oppressed people” is an … odd way of describing that conflict. (As Wikipedia notes: “At present most historians (except for the new Russian Orthodox nationalists) accept that the question of the holy places was no more than a pretext for the Crimean War.”)

In other words, it was just Great Power politics.

One side can be fighting for Great Power politics and the other for broader principles. For example, Russia could be seizing an excuse for expansionism against the Ottoman Empire while the other powers could be defending the state sovereignty system by insisting Ottoman law applied in the Ottoman Empire (as was the dispute).


(Also, the European powers mostly attacked Russia’s Black Sea ports, which is surely a non-central example of “fight[ing] Russia on its own territory”!)

My understanding (possibly based on something @bean wrote over at Naval Gazing?) is that the Anglo-French alliance was also planning a campaign aimed at St.Petersburg, and it was the threat thereof that led Russia to sue for peace. If so, this would be a highly central example of fighting Russia on its own territory.

It was more than that: There was a naval blockade that had deeply hurt the Russian economy. Then Palmerston got Prussia and Sweden to agree to join in. Russia was saved by the French who did not want to see Russia hurt too badly and who had taken serious damage and so wanted the war over. France raised the possibility of exiting the war unilaterally to force a peace and Russia was in a clearly losing position.

Russia was forced to abandon its navy in the Black Sea, to formally promise to end its territorial expansion, and to acknowledge the supremacy of Ottoman law in Ottoman territory. Other than that no territory exchanged hands except for the independence of Romania (which Austria, the Ottomans, and Russia lost territory to).

While some historians have seen this as a weak peace in the context of this debate it's worth noting almost all of the big concessions Russia gave up were towards agreeing to abide by an international order. Russia would renounce the demilitarization clauses in 1870 and started another war with the Ottomans in 1877. But notably, to give it color of law, they did not seek to annex any territory. Instead they tried to create independent states. The only territory they annexed for themselves was Southern Bessarabia which had been Russian territory prior to the Crimean War. Russia would not seek to annex territory from another European power again until World War 1.

So the Crimean War really is a poor choice for the "it's great power politics all the way down" crowd. It was started over a matter of sovereignty, entered by several major powers on principle, resulted in international isolation for Russia due to the unpopularity of the war, and ended with forcing Russia into international law agreements which Russia kept in the main and shaped its future actions.
« Last Edit: April 05, 2022, 06:35:48 am by Erusian »

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #83 on: April 05, 2022, 06:52:59 am »
So the Crimean War really is a poor choice for the "it's great power politics all the way down" crowd. It was started over a matter of sovereignty, entered by several major powers on principle, resulted in international isolation for Russia due to the unpopularity of the war, and ended with forcing Russia into international law agreements which Russia kept in the main and shaped its future actions.

Everything you wrote there is not only 100% compatible with “it’s great power politics all the way down” but also totally vindicates Moldbug’s thesis, in general and in every particular.

EDIT: So, it would seem, that entirely contrary to Scott’s implication that the Crimean War is some sort of counterexample, it’s actually a perfect illustration of precisely the thing he’s doubting ever existed!

Erusian

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #84 on: April 05, 2022, 06:57:12 am »
So the Crimean War really is a poor choice for the "it's great power politics all the way down" crowd. It was started over a matter of sovereignty, entered by several major powers on principle, resulted in international isolation for Russia due to the unpopularity of the war, and ended with forcing Russia into international law agreements which Russia kept in the main and shaped its future actions.

Everything you wrote there is not only 100% compatible with “it’s great power politics all the way down” but also totally vindicates Moldbug’s thesis, in general and in every particular.

EDIT: So, it would seem, that entirely contrary to Scott’s implication that the Crimean War is some sort of counterexample, it’s actually a perfect illustration of precisely the thing he’s doubting ever existed!

Would you care to explain that? The only way I can parse this claim is that the Concert of Europe was a coherent international system like Moldbug claims. Which... yes? It's also why there was more war on the other peripheries of Russia like in China or with Japan. I don't think that's Scott's point. Scott's point is that the Crimean War was significantly longer, more deadly, and had a shorter peace than current wars.

And even then, how is defending an international system great power politics all the way down? Or is anything that great powers do definitionally great power politics?

ETA: All of which is to say that I'm getting a sense of unfalsifiability. Which isn't unusual with Moldbug. Everything is secretly in concord no matter which way it turns. If great powers cooperate on principle to enforce international order (as in the 19th century) then it confirms his thesis. If great powers exist in a constant state of all against all war (as in the 18th century) then it confirms his thesis...
« Last Edit: April 05, 2022, 07:14:32 am by Erusian »

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #85 on: April 05, 2022, 07:31:31 am »
Addendum to the previous:

To me this argument feels like seeing some diabetic guy on insulin who still has problems with fatigue sometimes, and saying "See, this proves that insulin doesn't work, you need to withdraw it". It's a hard problem to distinguish between "good strategy which doesn't 100% solve every problem" and "bad strategy which is only making things worse", but I feel like both common sense and a comparison between the 1800s and today make Moldbug's thesis look far from obvious.

You know, I didn’t quite notice this when I first read your post, but: you said “a comparison between the 1800s and today” (emphasis mine).

Well, if it’s the 1800s that are on one side of that comparison, then the other side had better be the 1900s, hadn’t it?

What happens when we compare the 1800s to the 1900s, on any of the following metrics: number of people killed in war; number of people killed in genocide; number of people killed in political repressions or otherwise murdered by their own governments; amount of ethnic cleansing…?

Have things gotten better? Worse? Better on some metrics, worse on others? (These aren’t trivial questions!)

obormot

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #86 on: April 05, 2022, 07:37:49 am »
So the Crimean War really is a poor choice for the "it's great power politics all the way down" crowd. It was started over a matter of sovereignty, entered by several major powers on principle, resulted in international isolation for Russia due to the unpopularity of the war, and ended with forcing Russia into international law agreements which Russia kept in the main and shaped its future actions.

Everything you wrote there is not only 100% compatible with “it’s great power politics all the way down” but also totally vindicates Moldbug’s thesis, in general and in every particular.

EDIT: So, it would seem, that entirely contrary to Scott’s implication that the Crimean War is some sort of counterexample, it’s actually a perfect illustration of precisely the thing he’s doubting ever existed!

Would you care to explain that? The only way I can parse this claim is that the Concert of Europe was a coherent international system like Moldbug claims. Which... yes? It's also why there was more war on the other peripheries of Russia like in China or with Japan. I don't think that's Scott's point. Scott's point is that the Crimean War was significantly longer, more deadly, and had a shorter peace than current wars.

How did you get that point from what Scott wrote…?

(And it’s not even true! Like… even a little! I mean, wow, how can you say that? It’s just… blatantly false. Once again I refer you to Wikipedia’s list of ongoing armed conflicts, where I easily count a half-dozen wars with more casualties than the Crimean War, and at least twice that many that are longer.)

quanticle

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #87 on: April 05, 2022, 12:56:05 pm »
A parent can justify to their three year old that they have to brush their teeth, that doesn't mean that the three year old is an overarching authority.

The reason the parent is justifying the decision isn't because the three-year-old is an overarching authority in that moment, but so that when the three-year-old grows up to be an adult and does have overarching authority, they'll make the same (hopefully good) decisions that their parent is encouraging them to.

Apparently it's possible to (try to) justify something to a (group of) person(s) that's not an overarching authority.

The Russian public may not be an overarching authority now, but that's only because they've surrendered that authority to Putin. The purpose of the propaganda is to prevent them from taking it back. Yes, Putin could simply arrest and execute anyone who dares speak up, escalating to machine-gunning crowds in the streets if need be. But that would be inefficient and place a further undue burden on his security services (especially the Rosgvardia) which are currently attempting to pacify the areas of Ukraine occupied by Russian troops. It's far easier to flood the airwaves with propaganda, silence Western media and social networks, and publicly isolate and humiliate a few dissidents.

10240

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #88 on: April 10, 2022, 01:01:17 am »
Re: the "might makes right" debate:

One should consider why we debate these questions. I think these debates are primarily relevant to questions like "Which side (if any) in a conflict should [my country]'s government support with weapons, sanctions on the other side etc.?" Which is in turn relevant to "What policy should we support with our voting decisions?"

In other words: on some level, might makes right; but the question to us (most of us being voting citizens of democratic countries; or else talking to, and potentially influencing, voting citizens of democratic countries) is how should we use our might?

Considerations other than might affect that decision. We may try to make a moral decision. Even if we care solely about out countries' interests, considerations of norms, Schelling points and morality come up. If a peaceful world is in our interest, we may want to set out clear norms about who may behave how. Preferably ones that most of the world will accept as passably moral.

Alternatively, as discussed in Scott's last response in the Highlights from Comments, the question of who should get self-determination is relevant to how a democratic country (or the country's voters) should behave when a region of a democratic country itself wants to secede.

And yes, there surely are dictators who think “should I invade my neighbor?”; but the next step of their reasoning isn’t anything about any international norms—it’s “will the United States decide that they don’t like me doing that?”.

@obormot How does the US decide if it doesn't like it? Partly based on international norms. If both countries are in the US sphere of influence, the US will side with the attacked country against the aggressor. If one of the countries in the conflict is a US ally and the other is Russia, China or their ally, the US will support its ally to some extent (with anything from minor sanctions to troops) if its ally is the victim of aggression, but if its ally invades the other country without provocation, the US will give its ally much less or no support, and quite possibly pressure it to withdraw. Occasionally the US has strong enough preferences that override these considerations, but by default it decides according to the norm.

---

If the answer is "the US won't mind it", what does the potential invader think about next? It thinks "How much stronger am I than my neighbor? How much of a fight will my neighbor put up? Will it be committed to fight even if I only ask for part of its territory?"

If the potential invader is vastly stronger than its neighbor*, and the latter doesn't have a strong ally, it will invade. But if it's not that much stronger, norms and Schelling points will affect the outcome. The invaded country knows that if it gives up even part of it without a fight, it can't credibly commit to fighting if a neighbor demands another piece of its territory, then another... The potential invader probably concludes that it's not worth the cost.

Compare an alternative norm that any territory inhabited by an ethnic group rightfully belongs to the nation-state of that ethnic group (if one exists). And assume that parts of Country B are inhabited by Ethnicity A, and Country A wants to invade Country B and take those regions. Under this norm, Country A would probably invade, and Country B would give up the regions inhabited by Ethnicity A with little or no resistance. Country B can give up those regions without losing credibility that it will defend its regions inhabited by Ethnicity B; while Country A can more credibly commit to the fight, and the world would stand with it.

As it stands, the primary international norm is sovereignty inside the internationally recognized borders, and it trumps ethnic self-determination if the two are in conflict. For good reason: a good Schelling point is an unambiguous one, and the sovereignty doctrine is less ambiguous than ethnic self-determination (especially since ethnic territories overlap). And this makes Country A less likely to invade than it would be under the alternative norm where ethnic self-determination has primacy.

So, Schelling points don't matter when one party is much stronger than the other (and the latter doesn't have strong friends), but they largely determine who controls what territory when they are of comparable strength.

* It has a problem if it thinks it's vastly stronger than its neighbor, but it turns out that it isn't.

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Why is it that the West puts sanctions on Russia, and confiscates its money, and gives Ukraine weapons when Russia attacks it, but it wouldn't tell Russia "Give Ukraine Bryansk Oblast, or else we'll put sanctions on you, confiscate your money, and give Ukraine weapons to help conquer it"? Because of the Schelling point of internationally recognized borders. If it were purely "might makes right", and the West trying to expand its sphere of influence, demanding Bryansk Oblast would make almost as much sense as helping Ukraine against invasion. If we have the might to impose the sanctions and give out the weapons in one case, we also have it in the other.

Why do we help Ukraine, when our trade with Ukraine alone probably isn't worth all this effort? Perhaps partly for moral reasons. But also because we want to maintain the international norm against aggression. If the international norm were that Ukraine doesn't have a right to self-determination and it rightly belongs to Russia, but this weren't the case for Russia's other neighbors, then the Schelling point would be that we let Russia invade Ukraine, but we'd help any other country attacked by Russia.
But, in reality, if we give up the Schelling point that it's not OK for Russia to invade anyone, the next strong Schelling point to fall back to is only helping NATO members, and other countries we have explicit alliances with, against invasion. And these are indeed the only countries we'd go to war with Russia to defend. But letting Russia and China invade all countries outside the NATO and other explicit alliances would hurt our interests too much. So we assist Ukraine as best we can without entering the war as belligerents.

Why do we expect that Russians would be more committed to fighting for Bryansk Oblast (Russia) than for Sumy Oblast (Ukraine)? Because of the Schelling point.

---

Perhaps "if you invade a country, it will fight back" is too trivial an observation, and that's why you don't recognize the relevance of the Schelling point of internationally recognized borders. But that observation (and particularly that the country you invade will fight back even if you only demand a small part of it, which isn't in itself worth a war) is a result of that Schelling point.

And @vV_Vv , if you want to debate terminology, you can say that it's not a norm if it's only taken into consideration under some circumstances. But it's something, something other than pure "might makes right". And I actually think that "norm" is the word we usually use for something that's generally agreed upon to be the right thing to do, even if it's occasionally broken, and often unenforced.

Take a look at this list of genocides by death toll.

First, notice that the top 5 entries are all in the 20th century (after the collapse of the old system of international law).

Second, sort the list by year, and notice that the 20th/21st centuries have 30 entries… out of a total of 37. (In fact, just the 1990s onward account for 9 of the 37 total entries, and 2 of the genocides are ongoing!)

As you see, your claim that “things are going remarkably well now” (on the genocide front) could hardly be more wrong.

(If you prefer a slightly broader category, here’s Wikipedia’s list of “genocides, ethnic cleansing, religious persecution”, incidentally just one section of a delightful page called “List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll”. It should probably not surprise you that modernity—i.e., the 20th century onward—utterly dominates this larger list, as well, with six ongoing genocides / ethnic cleansings / etc., and quite a few from the 1990s onward.)
4 of the top 5 are from the 20th century. The top 5 20th century ones are all from before the unipolar Pax Americana (~1990-), and all but one are from before 1945 (from when many current international norms, such as the norm against wars of conquest, date).

The next one (Rwanda) is the first post-1990 one, and it's one where the West did not intervene.

In any case, these lists seem to be heavily biased by recentism, that is, 20th century genocides are more likely to be included than earlier genocides of comparable magnitude.

But then they aren't "human" rights, they are more like Anglo-European rights.

And this isn't even true: in the Kosovo War of 1998-1999, an internal war within Yugoslavia, NATO intervened, bombing Serbia and killing civilians.

As far as I can tell, they did that to protect Kosovo Albanians' human rights; and civilian casualties were a side-effect of the bombing, not the purpose. Whether it succeedded in improving human rights in total is another question. Looking at the numbers, plausibly yes: Serbians killed 8000+ Kosovo Albanian civilians, while the bombing killed 500 to 2000 Serbs.

Yeah, I think this is the 12:00 moment when the stopped clock, the "everything is racist" people, are actually right.

Maybe "racist" isn't the best word to use, but it seems pretty clear and obvious that a certain form of bias or prejudice is in play wherein wars in Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia are shrugged off with a "that's just how it is in that part of the world, nothing we can do about it" where as a war in Ukraine is treated as the biggest possible outrage that has ever been perpetrated against mankind as a whole.

@GoneAnon I don't think it's really about race. More like, in those conflicts there are no good guys to root for. Like, Syria was all over the news when it was (or seemed, depending on the perspective) a fight between good guys and bad guys, but people (including me) stopped caring once there was no possibility for a good outcome. Likewise, in African conflicts the options tend to be one ethnic group brutalizing the other, or the other brutalizing the first one, in either case probably under a tyrant who's lording over even his own ethnic group. (Throw in a few more warlords and ethnicities or tribes or religions to make it harder to follow.)

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #89 on: April 10, 2022, 01:40:42 am »
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@GoneAnon I don't think it's really about race. More like, in those conflicts there are no good guys to root for. Like, Syria was all over the news when it was (or seemed, depending on the perspective) a fight between good guys and bad guys, but people (including me) stopped caring once there was no possibility for a good outcome. Likewise, in African conflicts the options tend to be one ethnic group brutalizing the other, or the other brutalizing the first one, in either case probably under a tyrant who's lording over even his own ethnic group. (Throw in a few more warlords and ethnicities or tribes or religions to make it harder to follow.)

Yes I think this is the most correct answer.
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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #90 on: April 10, 2022, 02:36:59 am »
And yes, there surely are dictators who think “should I invade my neighbor?”; but the next step of their reasoning isn’t anything about any international norms—it’s “will the United States decide that they don’t like me doing that?”.

@obormot How does the US decide if it doesn't like it?

Our ruling elites decide, based on whether they think it will benefit them in some way. “International norms” and morality don’t enter into it.

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Take a look at this list of genocides by death toll.

First, notice that the top 5 entries are all in the 20th century (after the collapse of the old system of international law).

Second, sort the list by year, and notice that the 20th/21st centuries have 30 entries… out of a total of 37. (In fact, just the 1990s onward account for 9 of the 37 total entries, and 2 of the genocides are ongoing!)

As you see, your claim that “things are going remarkably well now” (on the genocide front) could hardly be more wrong.

(If you prefer a slightly broader category, here’s Wikipedia’s list of “genocides, ethnic cleansing, religious persecution”, incidentally just one section of a delightful page called “List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll”. It should probably not surprise you that modernity—i.e., the 20th century onward—utterly dominates this larger list, as well, with six ongoing genocides / ethnic cleansings / etc., and quite a few from the 1990s onward.)
4 of the top 5 are from the 20th century.

Actually, 4 if sorting by “lowest estimate”, 5 if sorting by “highest estimate”. (Assuming you’re still talking about the first list.)

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The top 5 20th century ones are all from before the unipolar Pax Americana (~1990-), and all but one are from before 1945 (from when many current international norms, such as the norm against wars of conquest, date).

The next one (Rwanda) is the first post-1990 one, and it's one where the West did not intervene.

So in other words, once the old order collapsed, the genocides didn’t stop (and indeed kept happening even bloodier than before). And once we got international norms sorted out, the genocides still didn’t stop. And then once the “unipolar Pax Americana” got established, the genocides still didn’t stop (because, despite this Pax Americana, despite having this unipolar power, we look at genocides taking place and go “eh, don’t care”), and haven’t stopped, and show no signs of stopping.

Yeah, I’m going to go ahead and count this as evidence for my view, and against Scott’s/yours.

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In any case, these lists seem to be heavily biased by recentism, that is, 20th century genocides are more likely to be included than earlier genocides of comparable magnitude.

What are some examples of the latter category?

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@GoneAnon I don't think it's really about race. More like, in those conflicts there are no good guys to root for. Like, Syria was all over the news when it was (or seemed, depending on the perspective) a fight between good guys and bad guys, but people (including me) stopped caring once there was no possibility for a good outcome. Likewise, in African conflicts the options tend to be one ethnic group brutalizing the other, or the other brutalizing the first one, in either case probably under a tyrant who's lording over even his own ethnic group. (Throw in a few more warlords and ethnicities or tribes or religions to make it harder to follow.)

It certainly is convenient that there are no good guys when everyone involved is non-white, but when it’s white people, suddenly there’s good guys. (Of course, one then faces the difficulty of deciding which white people are the good guys, but fortunately our top men™ have come up a most ingenious solution that will spare us from such distressing ambiguity.)

Is that too snarky? Unfair? Is the race angle totally unjustified here? Could be, could be. Ok, so let’s set aside the generalizations and take a look at our data points, case by case:

1. The Darfur genocide. Information available on a casual read is more sparse than I’d like, but it seems like the people being genocided are the victims. Hard to see any “actually, both sides” angle here.

2. The Rohingya genocide. This seems, if anything, even more clear-cut than Darfur. Decades (at least) of some truly horrible oppression and persecution, followed by massacres, rape, torture, etc. Seems very one-sided.

3. Yazidi genocide (by ISIL). Here’s one where we actually intervened! Great! It even seems like we managed to save more people than we killed (and those we killed were mostly ISIL fighters)! A rare victory for the good guys—but what differentiates this case from the previous two? Are the Rohingya less deserving of being saved than the Yazidis? It’s pretty puzzling.

4. Effacer le tableau. Just going to quote Wikipedia here: “The Bambuti [pygmies (who were the victims of this genocide)] were targeted specifically as the rebels considered them "subhuman", and it was believed by the rebels that the flesh of the Bambuti held "magical powers". There were also reports of cannibalism being widespread.[4] It is estimated 60,000 to 70,000[2] Pygmy were killed in the campaign.” (Note that this was almost half their total population.) This also seems pretty clear-cut to me.

5. The Rwandan genocide. Presumably this is the case you were thinking of when you wrote about “no good guys”. Genuinely pretty hard to find anyone to root for; all groups involved seem to have spent a good deal of time killing each other.

So here we have five genocides; all five after the coming of the “unipolar Pax Americana”; one where there were “no good guys” (and the Western powers didn’t intervene); one where there were clearly aggressors and victims (and the West intervened); and three where there were/are clearly aggressors and victims (but the West didn’t/hasn’t intervened).

I don’t see the pattern you are pointing to.

(By the way, all of the genocides had, or have had, more victims than the total number of casualties in the Ukraine war [not counting casualties among Russian military personnel, who, I think you’ll agree, do not count in this context].)

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #91 on: April 10, 2022, 06:01:20 am »
Of course, even if Rwanda is at the height of the unipolar moment, there are certain other complications here:

A factor I've seen cited in the decision not to intervene in Rwanda was how the intervention in Somalia was going.

Even if the US was favorable to deposing the Hutu government and would later work closely with Kagame, France was not IIRC.

This, of course, supports your claims, but I wanted to point these things out anyway.
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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #92 on: April 10, 2022, 01:13:51 pm »
I don't think the Ukranians are "good guys" by any reasonable definition here.  They're white European Christians who ban opposition political parties, torture POWs, call black people n*****s, do not respect trans identities, mandate universal conscription, denounce anyone who doesn't do exactly as they demand, and whose most famous/successful fighters are literal neo-nazis.

There's not much here for normie progs to like other than "they are fighting Putin whom we hate a bit more."  Why that's sufficient and seems to be working this time but didn't in Syria or Yemen or Africa is the real question here.

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #93 on: April 10, 2022, 01:23:09 pm »
I don't think the Ukranians are "good guys" by any reasonable definition here.  They're white European Christians who ban opposition political parties, torture POWs, call black people n*****s, do not respect trans identities, mandate universal conscription, denounce anyone who doesn't do exactly as they demand, and whose most famous/successful fighters are literal neo-nazis.

There's not much here for normie progs to like other than "they are fighting Putin whom we hate a bit more."  Why that's sufficient and seems to be working this time but didn't in Syria or Yemen or Africa is the real question here.

Because Russia is that hated, especially the media class, in a way that Saudi Arabia or Assad or some African dictator isn't. There's also nothing to stop them from feeling bad about hating Russia as opposed to those others.

Edit: The Ukrainians on social media are also there ready to be amplified.
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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #94 on: April 10, 2022, 01:30:37 pm »
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Because Russia is that hated, especially the media class, in a way that Saudi Arabia or Assad or some African dictator isn't.

And my point is that the reason people are bothering to care enough about this conflict between two obviously bad groups and pick out a distinction among them is largely due to it being a white/european/developed/whatever you want to call it conflict.  And/or that Putin is coded as Trump-adjacent (an argument we've hashed out elsewhere).

There's nothing stopping people from hating Xi or MBS or Kony as much as they hate Putin.  I posit that there's a reason they don't, and "the Ukranians are good and just" is not such a reason.

zerodivisor

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #95 on: April 10, 2022, 01:35:03 pm »
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Because Russia is that hated, especially the media class, in a way that Saudi Arabia or Assad or some African dictator isn't.

And my point is that the reason people are bothering to care enough about this conflict between two obviously bad groups and pick out a distinction among them is largely due to it being a white/european/developed/whatever you want to call it conflict.  And/or that Putin is coded as Trump-adjacent (an argument we've hashed out elsewhere).

There's nothing stopping people from hating Xi or MBS or Kony as much as they hate Putin.  I posit that there's a reason they don't, and "the Ukranians are good and just" is not such a reason.

Well, they got Kony, so that's one reason.
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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #96 on: April 10, 2022, 03:13:29 pm »
I don't think the Ukranians are "good guys" by any reasonable definition here.  They're white European Christians who ban opposition political parties, torture POWs, call black people n*****s, do not respect trans identities, mandate universal conscription, denounce anyone who doesn't do exactly as they demand, and whose most famous/successful fighters are literal neo-nazis.

But of course the mainstream media doesn't show this, it shows babushkas and children fleeing their homes while hugging their cute dogs.

There's not much here for normie progs to like other than "they are fighting Putin whom we hate a bit more."  Why that's sufficient and seems to be working this time but didn't in Syria or Yemen or Africa is the real question here.

Because these other areas are less geopolitically significant. This explain the difference of interest of the deep state elites, which in turn percolates through the media to the normie NPCs who support the $CURRENT_THING.

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #97 on: April 10, 2022, 03:25:12 pm »
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Because these other areas are less geopolitically significant.

How is Ukraine "geopolitically significant?"  What major treaty is it a party to?  What natural strategic resources does it possess that we need?  I'll accept the argument of "the elites decided to care about this and the people followed" but why did the elites care about this one in a way they don't care about any similar such situation in Africa or the Middle East or Asia?

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #98 on: April 10, 2022, 03:40:41 pm »
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Because these other areas are less geopolitically significant.

How is Ukraine "geopolitically significant?"  What major treaty is it a party to?  What natural strategic resources does it possess that we need?  I'll accept the argument of "the elites decided to care about this and the people followed" but why did the elites care about this one in a way they don't care about any similar such situation in Africa or the Middle East or Asia?

Ukraine is the natural next step in the expansion of NATO/EU/"the West", this by itself makes it valuable to the Western elites. It's also in the perfect spot for keeping in check, and possibly staging an invasion liberation of the arch-enemy Russia, since it has long border with it with no natural barriers, and it controls all the Northen coast of the Black Sea (the Western and Southern coasts are already in NATO hands).
It's also economically significant due to the presence of the gas pipelines, and substantial grain production.

Darfur, Yemen, etc., what's there that our elites care about?

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #99 on: April 10, 2022, 04:26:44 pm »
I don't think the Ukranians are "good guys" by any reasonable definition here.  They're white European Christians who ban opposition political parties, torture POWs, call black people n*****s, do not respect trans identities, mandate universal conscription, denounce anyone who doesn't do exactly as they demand, and whose most famous/successful fighters are literal neo-nazis.

There's not much here for normie progs to like other than "they are fighting Putin whom we hate a bit more."  Why that's sufficient and seems to be working this time but didn't in Syria or Yemen or Africa is the real question here.
On all of this metrics Ukrainians are significantly better than Russia or equal AND they are ones getting invaded.

As consequence there is plenty of murdered Ukrainian civilians and none (almost none?) murdered Russian civilians.

Also, relevant propaganda/selective memory is in full force.


Frankly, "we are being invaded" requires a really great counter to not be an instant "we are good guys" card.

How is Ukraine "geopolitically significant?"
It is a war where USA/Europe can harm Russia at costs of merely resources, with manpower provided by Ukraine. Which is far more motivated to fight than recently failed USA attempts to equip armies of allies.

It is in Europe, next to several rich countries deeply unhappy about wars happening next to them.

Also, if Russia wants to continue invading next countries they need to win here.

What natural strategic resources does it possess that we need?
They are one of the largest producers of food and they have noticeable, not yet exploited natural gas resources.

why did the elites care about this one in a way they don't care about any similar such situation in Africa or the Middle East or Asia?
Unlike some similar conflicts it is possible to actually do something and if things go very wrong and Russia will win, then NATO countries will be next in the queue to be attacked (maybe after Georgia/Kazachstan).

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #100 on: April 10, 2022, 05:23:31 pm »
Our ruling elites decide, based on whether they think it will benefit them in some way. “International norms” and morality don’t enter into it.

@obormot I don't believe that. Politicians need votes from the general population. And members of the elite are subject to emotions, moral considerations (right or wrong) in (mostly) the same way as the rest of us.

More importantly, even the elite's interests are, in turn, affected by international norms. The elite (like the rest of us, in and outside the US) have an interest in a mostly peaceful world (especially in the economically important regions), freedom of trade, and keeping most countries in the Western sphere of interests.

This means that, firstly, the US elite (like the rest of us) has an interest in keeping different US allies (and countries loosely in the US sphere of influence) from attacking each other (both because the chaos would create economic uncertainty, and because of the risk that one of the involved countries would seek Russian or Chinese alliance). Keeping countries from going to war requires having unambiguous norms about what territory belongs to which country, what counts as an act of war and what doesn't and so on; and enforcing them, and making it clear in advance that they will be enforced.

Secondly, it means that when a country outside the US sphere of influence tries to do something that hurts the elite's interests in a minor way, it matters if this action violates international norms or not. If it doesn't, then it's probably not worth the cost of trying to prevent it; the US elite can let it happen, and still maintain that it won't let others get away with violating international norms (at least in a way that hurts US interests). But if the other country's action violates international norms, then it's probably in the elite's interest to do something about it, not solely to prevent that particular violation, but to dissuade other countries from further violations (e.g. invasions that take countries out of the US sphere of influence, or keep them from joining it). For example, they prop up Ukraine not only to foil this invasion, but to dissuade Russia from invading other countries the elite doesn't want invaded.

Quote
In any case, these lists seem to be heavily biased by recentism, that is, 20th century genocides are more likely to be included than earlier genocides of comparable magnitude.

What are some examples of the latter category?
  • List of massacres in India
  • Massacres of Jews during the Khmelnytsky Uprising
  • Kitos War. Jews rose up against the Romans, which apparently meant massacring the non-Jewish people (mostly Greeks) in various Eastern parts of the Roman Empire
  • Genghis Khan's massacres. "One estimate is that about 11% of the world's population was killed either during or immediately after the Mongol invasions (around 37.75–60 million people in Eurasia)."
  • Timur's conquests. "Scholars estimate that his military campaigns caused the deaths of 17 million people, amounting to about 5% of the world population at the time." For example, "after Isfahan revolted against Timur's taxes by killing the tax collectors and some of Timur's soldiers, he ordered the massacre of the city's citizens; the death toll is reckoned at between 100,000 and 200,000."
  • Massacre after the Siege of Jerusalem. "Atrocities committed against the inhabitants of cities taken by storm after a siege were normal in ancient and medieval warfare by both Christians and Muslims."

These generally weren't aimed at exterminating the entire population of an ethnicity, but I think they would be recorded as genocides if they happened today.

But what I know about is also affected by recentism. If one tribe massacred 10,000 members of another tribe (including unarmed ones) in the Indonesian jungle in the 19th century, I wouldn't know about it.

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@GoneAnon I don't think it's really about race. More like, in those conflicts there are no good guys to root for. Like, Syria was all over the news when it was (or seemed, depending on the perspective) a fight between good guys and bad guys, but people (including me) stopped caring once there was no possibility for a good outcome. Likewise, in African conflicts the options tend to be one ethnic group brutalizing the other, or the other brutalizing the first one, in either case probably under a tyrant who's lording over even his own ethnic group. (Throw in a few more warlords and ethnicities or tribes or religions to make it harder to follow.)

It certainly is convenient that there are no good guys when everyone involved is non-white, but when it’s white people, suddenly there’s good guys. (Of course, one then faces the difficulty of deciding which white people are the good guys, but fortunately our top men™ have come up a most ingenious solution that will spare us from such distressing ambiguity.)
It would be convenient if I were racist. (There is a point to the geopolitics and economic relevance angle, however.)

More to the point, in the "no good guys to root for" comment I was thinking about wars (civil wars or interstate wars; most are civil wars), not genocides. In a civil war, "good guys" usually means "tries to establish a democracy, and has a realistic chance to do so", and a good outcome to root for is "a stable democracy established". In a genocide, a good outcome is "civilians no longer massacred on purpose". The latter is a significantly lower bar to clear.

In Europe, every country other than Russia and Belarus is at least sort of a democracy. Among Arab countries, even after a revolutionary wave, zero or one country is (depending on how Tunisia will turn out). Sub-Saharan Africa has a few democracies, but it's not the usual outcome of a conflict.

(I'm not an enthusiastic fan of democracy, but it's still almost always less bad than dictatorship.)

I don't think the Ukranians are "good guys" by any reasonable definition here.  They're white European Christians who ban opposition political parties, torture POWs, call black people n*****s, do not respect trans identities, mandate universal conscription, denounce anyone who doesn't do exactly as they demand, and whose most famous/successful fighters are literal neo-nazis.
Russia is a dictatorship, Ukraine is a democracy (or was until it suspended pro-Russia parties, but that happened after the war broke out and most people took sides).


Because these other areas are less geopolitically significant. This explain the difference of interest of the deep state elites, which in turn percolates through the media to the normie NPCs who support the $CURRENT_THING.
Also, the same geopolitical considerations that explain the interest of the "deep state elites" can also explain the interest of the "normies".

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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #101 on: April 10, 2022, 05:52:07 pm »
There's not much here for normie progs to like other than "they are fighting Putin whom we hate a bit more."  Why that's sufficient and seems to be working this time but didn't in Syria or Yemen or Africa is the real question here.

Did it not work in Syria? I thought we pretty much universally hated Assad et. al., but our preferred option (the Free Syrian Army) turned out to be a few idealists in D.C. backed up by literally al-Qaeda on the ground and lost anyway before being taken over by Turkey so we just stopped talking about it. I could absolutely just have had a strong bubble effect at the time, though.
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Re: Who Gets Self-Determination?: ...
« Reply #102 on: April 10, 2022, 06:04:52 pm »
Our ruling elites decide, based on whether they think it will benefit them in some way. “International norms” and morality don’t enter into it.

@obormot I don't believe that. Politicians need votes from the general population. And members of the elite are subject to emotions, moral considerations (right or wrong) in (mostly) the same way as the rest of us.

Oof. This is quite an inferential gap for us to cover. Way too much for a forum discussion like this.

Well, basically, I don’t think that what you say is true. Beyond that… I don’t know what there is to discuss. Certainly I think that basically everything you say about “international norms” is wrong.

[… stuff about genocides put off until a later post …]

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It certainly is convenient that there are no good guys when everyone involved is non-white, but when it’s white people, suddenly there’s good guys. (Of course, one then faces the difficulty of deciding which white people are the good guys, but fortunately our top men™ have come up a most ingenious solution that will spare us from such distressing ambiguity.)
It would be convenient if I were racist. (There is a point to the geopolitics and economic relevance angle, however.)

More to the point, in the "no good guys to root for" comment I was thinking about wars (civil wars or interstate wars; most are civil wars), not genocides. In a civil war, "good guys" usually means "tries to establish a democracy, and has a realistic chance to do so", and a good outcome to root for is "a stable democracy established". In a genocide, a good outcome is "civilians no longer massacred on purpose". The latter is a significantly lower bar to clear.

Uh, ok. How is this a response to my point, though? Why did we intervene in one of those five genocides but not the other four? Or three?