Would you be ok calling that potential a fundamentally biological thing? Or is there something extra-biological about it? — frank
Trust is earned, it cannot be enforced. When it is lost, we suffer the consequences. But trust will not be regained through enforcement. That ship has sailed. This thread is depressing. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the US, it could be accomplished by the judiciary because there's a federal statute about defrauding the US. A prosecutor would have to show that the lie was intentional. — frank
There is a contingent of 'freedom of speech is freedom to lie and cheat and undermine the fabric of society.' — unenlightened
Or is it a certain kind of society that you're really favoring? — frank
No. Trust cannot be earned. You may have turned down 40 pieces of silver to betray me, but what about 60? — unenlightened
But to enforce a standard is not to create trust at all, it is to declare whatought to be trustworthy. It's like having a law against shop-lifting; it doesn't make every customer trustworthy, but sets out what being a trustworthy customer consists of. — unenlightened
Similarly, t.here is a rule that you cannot print your own money. And that establishes legal tender as something that ought to be trustworthy, and obligates governments to act to maintain it so. That there may be forgers as that there may be shoplifters and dishonest politicians is not in question, we need it to be the case that there ought not be. — unenlightened
What would make the op pop is a convincing historical reconstruction of a time when people *did* trust politicians. — csalisbury
I would never earn your trust? Are you paranoid or what? — Metaphysician Undercover
No. I'm saying that trust cannot be earned. I trust you already. It's not something you are entitled to because you are righteous. — unenlightened
It's not something you are entitled to because you are righteous. — unenlightened
Are you saying that all people are entitled to your trust whether or not they are righteous? — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that you place no conditions on your trust? — Metaphysician Undercover
If i set a condition: - 'I'll trust you to respond thoughtfully, but if you don't, I'll kill you', then I don't trust you to respond thoughtfully, do — unenlightened
So a law against lying would institutionalize mistrust? Does an oath of office also do that? — frank
It's not strange. :up:I am saying we need to trust each other, so we need robust institutions that facilitate our trust. Is that something strange? — unenlightened
No, the opposite; no one is entitled to anyone's trust. — unenlightened
Yes, in so far as one trusts, which may be as far as one can throw or some other extent, there can be no conditions. If I set a condition: - 'I'll trust you to respond thoughtfully, but if you don't, I'll kill you', then I don't trust you to respond thoughtfully, do I? — unenlightened
I still don't understand. You are willing to trust anyone, yet no one is entitled to that trust. On what basis do you give your trust? If trust is some thing that you just randomly give to anyone at anytime, for no apparent reason, how is it of any value? — Metaphysician Undercover
Isn't this exactly what enforcement says? It says that I do not trust that others will be trustworthy, so I want to enact measure to ensure that they will be. — Metaphysician Undercover
The alienation of people from their government representatives mirrors the alienation of the political class from international vectors of power. One way to address this issue is to replace non-compliance with structurally conditioned indifference; the 'non-linear' part of Russian propagandist Surkov's non-linear warfare:
In his enforcement of Putin’s will — or his own interpretation of it — Surkov carefully constructed and presided over a system in which Russians could play-act an intricate imitation of democracy. Every persuasion on the political spectrum was given a Kremlin-backed voice within the system as Surkov ensured that the Kremlin organized and funded a wide range of political groups and movements, from liberal to Communist to conservative, sowing confusion and cynicism in the public while at the same time co-opting any genuine opposition. The messengers differed, but the message was the same — the Kremlin was always in control. Under Surkov’s simulation of politics, dissent wasn’t crushed: it was managed.
The key part of this management strategy is the creation of supported avenues for dissent which stymie the formation of effective popular movements. These are gatekeepers for political action, moving the goalposts or hiding them.
It has the perhaps intentional side effect of alienating honest citizens from politics by denying the efficacy or applicability of their votes and petitions.
The media management of outrage interacts with our modern day equation of politics=political discourse to play a role here, the contours of acceptable opinion are rarely perturbed, and the well known alliance between powerful corporations and media outlets (cough Murdoch and Koch cough) project the voice of the ruling class from the institutions which help shape the terms of debate in which popular opinion is formed. Politics on social media is typically sound and fury organising nothing except the convenience of our ruling class.
An emerging role for 'influencers' is taking place, acting as pseudo-servants of the ruling classes by embodying acceptable opinions which are near the contours of acceptable opinion. The communities which support influencers also necessarily become associated with a consumer identity through the algorithms which shape the medium they are in: these algorithms also watch their every move, and our governments have almost unrestricted access. Here we can see the role of ideological echo-chambers, discretising identity into a panopticon of conflicting units that in reality have far more shared political interest than their antipodal role in discourse suggests.
This promotes a second level of apathy and indifference, there are people who can 'see through' this shit, which includes many liberal commentators, but this is still within the narrows of acceptable opinion; it is fashionable to bemoan the degradation of discourse, and this too is organised over influencer communities. — fdrake
the weirdness of your difficulty is becoming unsettling... — unenlightened
The way to the station is one thing, but I do not ask a random stranger to operate on my hernia, or govern the country. the weirdness of your difficulty is becoming unsettling... — unenlightened
Are you starting to see why you shouldn't have been so quick to trust me? — Metaphysician Undercover
I really don't think you are even talking about trust here. You are judging whether a particular person is fit for a specific job (has the adequate training), not whether the person is trustworthy. — Metaphysician Undercover
The dishonest are capable of hiding their dishonesty, and that's how they deceive us. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems weird and very naive to me that there would have ever been many people, especially educated people, who didn't see politicians/heads of state/etc. as more or less being "professional liars." — Terrapin Station
It seems weird to me that any educated person could imagine that a society built on lies could long survive. — unenlightened
The real tragedy is that lies have become the new "bullshitting". — Wallows
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