Saturday, October 15, 2022

"Non-participating" medical providers

 As I understand it, "non-participating" Medicare providers accept Medicare patients, but may charge them up to 15% more than the Medicare's "Fee schedule" amount.  I think, but am not sure,  that those with a medigap insurance policy  that normally pays the 20% not covered  by Medicare will also take care of the extra 15%.  This chart has an error---the $76 and $19 figures should be in the other order.   Patients may need to pay this full charge (which is much less than what the provider would bill non-Medicare patients) and then get reimbursed by Medicare.  



Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Brief tutorial on understanding the periodic table of human associations

 

Understanding the periodic table of human associations



There are only two points you need to remember in order to understand this periodic table:

1. Associations are defined as the relationships created when one party's satisfaction is increased or decreased by another party's action.

2. The labels beneath the diagram refer to the actions that create an association---the type of action (sanction or inducement), and its circumstances (taken unilaterally or by mutual consent of the parties).

The differences between private, compound, and public associations are indicted by the labels to the right of the diagram.

All associations can be classified into one of the nine categories in the periodic table, but there can also be major differences between the associations in any one of these categories. We can call these differences associational isotopes.

Although both laws and pseudolaws are enforced by governmental sanctions, laws constitute public-involuntary associations because they apply to the entire public (everybody) while pseudolaws create compound-involuntary associations because they apply only to arbitrarily selected people. Bylaws, on the other hand, are enforced by withdrawn or denied governmental inducements, not by sanctions.

For further details see chapter 2 in my e-book, Basic Political Concepts. Basic Political Concepts (opentextbooks.org.hk) It is only 11 pages long.

If you are trying to understand this system and have questions, I will be delighted to try to help if you email me. If you have a class or other group studying the system I will be happy to arrange Zoom meetings in which questions can be raised and answered.

Paul F. deLespinasse Corvallis, Oregon pdeles@proaxis.com

Sunday, June 19, 2022

CONCEPTS OF HUMAN ASSOCIATION DEPICTED BY THE PERIODIC TABLE

 Associations as we will be defining them here arise when the satisfaction of one person is changed by the action of another person. Since not all actions produce changes in other people's satisfaction, actions do not always produce associations, but associations are one possible result of actions. We will be particularly interested in organizations, which we will see are one particular type of association, since governments--the central focal point of political science--are organizations. 

Let us approach the concepts of human association cautiously and systematically:

1. Satisfaction, Social Power, and Association

A. Satisfaction

Satisfaction can be defined as the ratio between an individual's perceived attainments and desires:

                              Perceived Attainments
            Satisfaction = ------------------------
                                Desires

                            Ap
                    S  = ---------
                            D

An individual's satisfaction can change as the result of several things:

  • 1. events in the natural environment;
  • 2. that individual's own actions;
  • 3. actions by other people.

Storms, earthquakes, erupting volcanoes, etc., can affect a person's attainments. By changing the person's attainments, they thereby increase or decrease satisfaction.

A person who is cold can put on a sweater or dial up the furnace, thereby increasing his own attainments which in turn (everything else being equal) increases his own satisfaction. Or the individual, holding his attainments constant, can change his satisfaction by changing what is desired. Increased desires, as the formula shows, decrease satisfaction, whereas decreases on desires increase satisfaction.

Finally, one person's attainments--and thereby satisfaction--can be changed by the actions of other people. It is this fact which renders possible human associations and organizations, including governments.

B. Social Power and Social Causation

Since the actions of others can affect our satisfaction, one thing that we desire may be to get these other people to act in certain ways. Social power is our ability to get another person to act as we desire.

Three kinds of social power can be distinguished. Metaphorically, we can call them the power of the pen, the power of the sword, and the power of the purse.

The power of the pen grows out of our ability to say and to refrain from saying things. Of course "pen" is only a convenient metaphor. Under modern conditions it includes the power of the typewriter, the microphone, and the camera.

We can employ pen-power overtly to persuade others to do what we want. We may try to convince them that they will like the consequences of the action we have prescribed or to convince them to change their values so that consequences already expected will be attractive.

The power of the pen can also be used covertly, although the exact boundary between overt persuasion and covert manipulation is unclear. Manipulation clearly includes cases in which the power of the pen is used negatively. For example, if we delay sending a message to someone until it will be too late for him to react in a way we disfavor, that is manipulation rather than persuasion.

The power of the pen is vitally important in politics. It is not always true that the pen is mightier than the sword, but this old saying still has some validity. The power of the sword may prevail in the short run, but decisions about using it are based on ideas which have been propagated by the pen.

The power of the sword is based on our ability to act so as to reduce the attainments of another person so that they are less than they would have been if we had taken no action at all. Diagramming the other individual's satisfaction with the aid of a "number line," point 0 marks that individual's satisfaction in the absence of any action at all on our part:

       
                            0
    lower        -----------|------------- higher
    satisfaction                           satisfaction

Our action reducing his satisfaction down to point L, which we will call a sanction, is social power in the following sense: He may be willing to take an action desired by us, an action which will increase our satisfaction, if we will refrain from the action which would lower his satisfaction down to point L.

                        L     0
    lower        -------|-----|--------------- higher
     satisfaction       <------                 satisfaction

As we will see, sanctions, the power of the sword, are the distinctively political form of social power.

The power of the purse, conversely, comes from our ability to refrain from doing something that another person would like us to do. Such actions, which we will call inducements, increase the attainments of another person so that their satisfaction is greater than it would have been in the absence of any action at all on our part:

                           0       M
    lower       -----------|-------|------- higher
     satisfaction          -------->         satisfaction

On the diagram, such an action increases the other person's satisfaction from point 0 to point M.

Social power is exerted by inducements because the other person may be willing to do what we want in order to get us to do what he wants. Inducements, the power of the purse, are the distinctively economic form of social power.

The following table summarizes the three types of social power:

metaphor          Pen               Sword             Purse

Other             typewriter        gun               dollar
terms             microphone        stick             carrot

Nature of thing
done or not done  communication     destructive       productive
                                    action            action

Name of action    pure persuasion   sanctions         inducements

Example           seduction         rape              prostitution

It should be noted that it is not meaningful to say that social power causes the actions taken by another person. Rather social power causes possibilities and impossibilities for other people, it manipulates the circumstances within which they are deciding how to act. A drawbridge operator who lowers the bridge into position makes it possible for us to cross that bridge. But lowering the bridge does not cause us to cross it, and indeed we may choose not to do so. If we do drive across the bridge, this actualizes the possibility, but the action, as distinguished from its possibility, is not caused by the bridge operator.

C. Associations

Our definition of associations is as follows: An association exists when one person's satisfaction is being changed by the actions of another person. The two persons are then said to be associated.

This definition is not as simple as it sounds. To understand exactly what it means, we need to specify what is meant by several of the words used in defining it.

We have already stipulated that satisfaction, one of the key terms, will be defined as the ratio of a person's perceived attainments to his desires, and that it can be expressed as a point on a number line:

                          Ap
                   S  = ------
                          D

                             0
     lower        -----------|-----------higher
      satisfaction                        satisfaction

The second key term in the definition of an association is "changed." There are two possible kinds of change in the other person's satisfaction: an increase, or a decrease. For purposes of our definition, these changes are measured relative to the level of satisfaction at which there would be no association at all between the people in question, point 0 on the diagram.

Note that the 0 does not mean that the person whose satisfaction is being diagrammed has no satisfaction. Satisfaction is always a positive number, and since the diagram assumes (correctly) that the individual's satisfaction could be lower, its current value must be greater than 0. Rather, the 0 means that there is no association between the individual in question and some other specified person. (To diagram the relationship of our individual to yet another person would require an additional diagram: Jones may simultaneously be associated with Smith and not associated with Baker.)

It must also be emphasized that each diagram of satisfaction represents only a very few elements, abstracted out of a very complex situation because they and they alone are relevant to the existence and nature of an association between particular persons. As noted above, there are many people with whom a given person, Jones, might be associated. Imagine that he is associated with Smith because Smith has imposed a sanction on him, with Kennedy because Kennedy has conferred an inducement on him, and is not associated at all with Baker. All three of the following diagrams are therefore simultaneously true:

1. Jones' relationship to Smith:

                       L        0
	lower sat.-------|--------|-----------higher sat.

                       <---------
                        sanction

2. Jones' relationship to Kennedy:

                       0       M
     lower sat.--------|-------|--------higher sat.

                       -------->
                       inducement

3. Jones' relationship to Baker:

                       0
     lower sat.--------|-----------higher sat.

                      0 = Jones' satisfaction if Baker
                          didn't act at all.

                      0 = (also) Jones' actual satisfaction,
                          since Baker hasn't acted, or if he
                          acted it had no effect on Jones'
                          satisfaction.

Obviously, these diagrams express only relative levels of satisfaction rather than absolute satisfaction. Absolute satisfaction after all will be a composite representing the net effects of actions by the many different persons with whom one is associated, by the person himself, and of events in the natural environment.

The third key term in our definition of an association is "actions." In its normal usage, this word can very well refer to inactions and to communications as well as to actions in a narrower sense: deliberate bodily motions whose primary significance is not their symbolic meaning. But for purposes of our definition of an association, "actions" will refer only to things done, not to words or to inactions.

2. Classifying Associations

A. Voluntary, Involuntary, and Trust Associations

The fact that there are two kinds of action which can create an association with another person suggests one basis for classifying associations into different types. The additional fact that there are always at least two parties to an association (the actor and the person whose satisfaction is changed by the actor) provides an additional basis for defining types of association. The first person's action either takes place with the consent of the person to be affected, or it is unilateral, without the affected person's consent.

Combining these two consideration we find three possible types of association (and one impossible type!):

                    sanctions           inducements
               _________________________________________
               |                   |                    |
   unilateral  |    1.Involuntary  |   2. Trusteeship   |
               |     associations  |       associations |
               |                   |                    |
               |___________________|____________________|
               |                   |                    |
   mutual      |   (Impossible!)   |   3. Voluntary     |
    consent    |                   |       associations |
               |___________________|____________________|               
	

An involuntary association is created by the unilateral imposition or the threat of sanctions. They may be extremely gross or high subtle. A grossly involuntary association exists, for example, when the victim hands over his wallet in response to the robber's threats. This association involves a sanction that will be imposed unless the victim cooperates, and if the victim could have nothing at all to do with the robber he would gladly do so. But there is no such choice, for their relationship has been unilaterally established by the robber.

Air pollution exemplifies a more subtle involuntary association. Here, the sanction is imposed but not threatened, and the polluting companies, for example, have no desire to manipulate the actions of others. They merely want to achieve cheaply what otherwise would be more costly. They dump waste products from their enterprise into the atmosphere. The pollution is a sanction because it reduces attainments of the people who breath the air--their long-term health and longevity and the general attractiveness of environment. If the magnitude of the sanction is great enough to be perceived, then an association is created between the company and the people breathing the air and that association is involuntary.

A second type of association, which we will call trusts, is created by unilaterally conferring inducements. The most familiar example is the association between parents and children in the nuclear family. Children, especially when very young, are in no position to give or to withhold consent to associate with their parents. The association is created unilaterally by the parents, but their actions-- creating, housing, feeding, clothing the child--are inducements from the child's point of view.

Voluntary associations, a third type, are created by the exchange or transfer of inducements or expected inducements by mutual consent. Traditional difficulties fitting the family into general social analysis may derive from its two-dimensionality. Although it is a trust association between the parents (jointly) and their children, it is a voluntary association between husband and wife. Voluntary associations can be far larger than a family. Four of the predominant institutions in modern America--corporations, labor unions, political parties, and churches--are basically voluntary associations.

The fourth combination of types--sanctions by mutual consent--can exist only when sanctions are falsely expected to be inducements by the party who consents to them. (Since sanctions reduce another person's net satisfaction below what it would be if the actor did nothing at all. Naturally, no one who sees it for what it is would consent to such an action.) Instead of recognizing a fourth type of association--"mistakes"--we will regard these as a special type of voluntary associations. Hence, the definition of voluntary associations is in terms of inducements or expected inducements.

B. Private, Public, and Compound Associations

Any set of objects can be classified in more than one way. For example the people in a room can be classified into groups in terms of the following characteristics: those who wear glasses and those who do no; male and female; political orientation: Democrat, Republican, Independent, Libertarian, Socialist, and so forth; income per year; height. Clearly, classifying associations as involuntary, trusts, or voluntary does not begin to exhaust the possibilities; nor need we assume that only one approach to classifying associations is important or useful. We will now examine a second way in which associations can be sorted into categories.

A private association is one which is not a government and is made up of parties none of which is itself a government. We refer here to "parties" rather than to persons because once a simple association of two or more individuals exists this association itself may enter into still other associations. "Parties" is simply a convenient way of recognizing that the constituent elements making up an association can be either individuals or associations.

Governments, clearly, are not private as defined here, and this is obviously as it must be given the usual connotation of the word "private." Nor are associations between another one government and another private. The association between husband and wife is private, since (1) neither of them is a government, and (2) their marriage does not constitute a government.

Public associations are defined by any one or more of the following characteristics:

  • 1. One of the parties is an organization that imposes sanctions on people who have violated general rules of action laid down in advance;
  • 2. It is an association between a government and the public. (The relevant public consists of all individuals subject to the jurisdiction of this government;
  • 3. All of the parties to the association are themselves governments.

The U.S. government is public by virtue of characteristic number 1: Some of its laws are general rules of action in the sense that they apply to anyone who takes the prohibited action. And the available punishments--deprivations of "life, liberty, or property"--are clearly sanctions as we have defined them above. The United Nations, on the other hand, qualifies as public under characteristic number 3, even though it is not itself a government. Its Charter is a multilateral treaty or contract between a number of governments.

A compound association is any to which at least one party is a government and at least one party is not a government (and is also not the public as defined above). Thus the U.S. government may hire an individual to work for the Department of Justice or it may buy jet fighters from a private corporation. The resulting association is not private, since one of the parties to it is a government, and it is not public, because the other parties are not governments. It is, instead, compound.

C. A Periodic Table of Associations

More than one way of classifying associations can be used at the same time, extending our analysis into a second dimension. Outside the context of politics, two-dimensional classifications are in fact quite common. For example, locations on the earth's surface are described in terms of two numbers, one representing classification by latitude and one indicating classification by longitude. The roomful of people mentioned above can also be grouped on the basis of more than one consideration. For example, its individuals can be classified both in terms of gender and in terms of whether they are wearing glasses. Four categories of people are thus created. It is always possible, of course, that no members of a possible subgroup may be found in a particular population we are classifying. For example, only bespectacled males may be present, so that in mathematical terms the category "males not wearing glasses" would be the "empty set."

Dmitri Mendelyeev's periodic table of the chemical elements is probably the most famous example of a two-dimensional classification in the history of science. It established the frame of reference within which chemical research has produced a dramatic increase in understanding and practical accomplishments during the last century. It even suggested the existence of new elements that were, in fact, later discovered or synthesized. It can and has been argued that the science of chemistry did not even exist before the periodic table.

A "periodic table" of human associations can be constructed by combining the two one-dimensional classifications which we examined above:

  • 1. Horizontal dimension: involuntary, trusts, voluntary;
  • 2. Vertical dimension: private, compound, public.

                  Involuntary       Trusts          Voluntary
              _________________________________________________
              |               |             |                 |
              |               |             |                 |
     Private  | 1.robber-vict.| 2.parents-  |  3.husband-wife |
              |               |    children |                 |
              |_______________|_____________|_________________|
              |               |             |                 |
     Compound |               |             |                 |
              | 4.Govt-as-    | 5.Govt-as   |  6.Govt-as-     |
              |     bandit    |    trustee I|     contractor I|
              |_______________|_____________|_________________|
     Public   |               |             |                 |
              |               |             |                 |
              | 7.Govt-as-    | 8.Govt-as   |  9.Govt-as-     |
              |    legislator |   trustee II|    contractor II|
              |_______________|_____________|_________________|
    
    

    The resulting diagram contains room for nine basic types of association, eight of which--for better or for worse--already exist:

    • 1. Private-Involuntary. Your relationship with the robber who sticks you up as you walk through a park is a private-involuntary association. It is private because neither you nor the robber is a government. It is involuntary because the robber unilaterally creates the association by threatening you with a sanction if you do not hand over your money.

    • 2. Private-Trust. The example given earlier of a trust, the parent-child association, is also private, since neither the parents nor the children--the parties to the association---are governments. Remember that a trust is an association where one party unilaterally confers inducements on another party.

    • 3. Private-Voluntary. The examples, as noted earlier, of voluntary associations are legion: marriages, corporations, unions, parties, churches. As it happens, these examples are all private too, since they are not governments and none of the parties that make them up are governments.

    • 4. Compound-Involuntary. When a government threatens particular people with sanctions, a compound-involuntary association is created. It is involuntary because sanctions are involved, and it is compound because one party is a government and the other party is neither a government nor the public. (The public includes everybody, but here only particular people are subject to the sanctions, not everybody.) Examples of such associations are, unfortunately, not difficult to find: the German regime's extermination of Jews during World War II is only a particularly egregious case. We will discuss this type of association more fully, below, when we examine pseudolaws. The aspect of government which is involved in this type of association can be called government-as-bandit.

    • 5. Compound-Trust. Here government unilaterally confers inducements on particular people. Since these particular people are not themselves governments and, being less than everybody, are not the public, the association is compound rather than public. Government-as-trustee I, as we will call this aspect of government, acts as residual trustee for children whose parents have abused their responsibilities as trustees or who are seeking a divorce. Government-as-trustee I also presides over Indian reservations. (Unfortunately, there is no residual trustee in case government abuses its responsibilities.)

    • 6. Compound-Voluntary. Government-as-contractor I enters voluntary associations with non-governmental parties, which may be individuals or associations. The relationship between government-as-contractor I and an individual employee of the Department of the Interior is a compound-voluntary association. It is compound because one party is a government and one is not; it is voluntary because it is established by mutual consent of the parties to the exchange of inducements. The inducement conferred by the worker on the government is the services he performs, say, as an accountant. The inducement conferred by the government on the worker is his salary and other benefits. When government-as-contractor I buys jet bombers from a private corporation, the other party to the resulting association is itself an association.

    • 7. Public-Involuntary. A public-involuntary association is exactly like a compound-involuntary one except that here government threatens everybody with sanctions, not just particular people. This difference, however, is crucially important. When government threatens sanctions against anyone who deliberately kills another or against all who fail to pay 24% of their income to the Internal Revenue Service, it is not selecting particular people or groups of people to threaten. Since everyone is in the same boat and subject to the same rule, no one has an interest in imposing rules that are intolerable such as, say, a 97% tax. This power to threaten the entire public with sanctions is the essence of government, and we will call this aspect of government government-as-legislator.

    • 8. Public-Trust.   Government-as-trustee II is like government-as-trustee I except that it acts as trustee--i.e. unilaterally confers inducements--for the entire public, not just for selected individuals or groups of individuals.  The Alaskan oil dividend is an example.

    • 9. Public-Voluntary. Another aspect of government, government-as-contractor II, enters into voluntary associations with other governments. These associations are public because all of their parties are governments. The two governments may be coequals, or they may have a superior-inferior arrangement. Treaties are an example of voluntary associations between coequal, independent governments. Within the U.S., public-voluntary associations often exist between two or more states. These states are equal and independent of each other, but subject to the national government in Washington. The Constitution requires that such "interstate compacts" go into effect only with congressional consent. There are also many voluntary associations between the national government and those of the states.

    3. Laws, Pseudolaws, and Bylaws

    The most important distinction to emerge from the categories created by the periodic table of human associations is between three different meanings all commonly pointed to by the word law:

    • 1. A general rule of action enforceable by sanctions (government-as-legislator);

    • 2. A non-general rule enforceable by sanctions (government-as-bandit);

    • 3. A statement of the terms on which, and with whom other parties, a government is willing to enter into voluntary associations (government-as-contractor).

    Since these three meanings are so very different, using the same word to indiscriminately refer to all of them can only produce confusion. We will therefore stipulate that the word law will be used only to refer to the first meaning: a general rule of action enforceable by sanctions. For the other two meanings we will assign the following terms:

    • Pseudolaws: a non-general rule enforced by sanctions.

    • Bylaws : a statement of the terms on which and with whom a government is willing to enter into voluntary associations.

                Involuntary       Trusts          Voluntary                  
                              
              _________________________________________________
             |               |             |                 |
             |               |             |                 |
    Private  | 1.robber-vict.| 2.parents-  |  3.husband-wife |
             |               |    children |                 |
             |               |             |                 |                
             |_______________|_____________|_________________|
             |               |             |                 |
    Compound |               |             |                 |
             | 4.Govt-as-    | 5.Govt-as   |  6.Govt-as-     |
             |     bandit    |    trustee I|     contractor I|
             |               |             |                 |
             |  pseudolaws   |             |    bylaws       |                
             |_______________|_____________|_________________|
    Public   |               |             |                 |
             |               |             |                 |
             | 7.Govt-as-    | 8.Govt-as   |  9.Govt-as-     |
             |    legislator |   trustee II|    contractor II|
             |               |  Social     |                 |
             |  laws         |    dividend |   bylaws        |
             |_______________|_____________|_________________| 
    

    The two key elements in distinguishing laws, pseudolaws, and bylaws are generality and sanctions. To be a general rule of action, it must apply to everybody without any exceptions whatever. It is because the public is defined precisely as everybody who is subject to a given government that laws are an expression of government-as-legislator and constitute public-involuntary associations.

    Since generality is not an issue one way of the other with bylaws, the first question to be considered, when translating the word laws as it is used by the general public into our more precise terms, is whether there is a sanction involved at all in the rule. If there is not, then the rule is a bylaw, which is "enforced" by withdrawn or denied inducements rather than by sanctions. If there is a sanction, however, we must still ascertain whether the rule is a law or a pseudolaw, and this is where we must consider generality.

    The following are examples of rules which are not general, and which therefore are pseudolaws rather than laws:

    • Any black person who does not ride in the back of the bus shall be fined $100.

    • Any Jew who does not wear a yellow star shall be punished as follows ....

    • No woman can receive a license to work as a bartender unless the bar is owned by her husband or father.

    • Anybody under 21 years of age who consumes alcoholic beverages shall be fined $200/

    • Any male who does not register for the draft upon reaching age 18 shall be fined and/or imprisoned.

    • Rich people shall pay a 70% income tax, other people shall pay 24%.

    Generality requires that the rule apply to the equivalent of "anybody who," and all of the above examples discriminate on the basis of race, sex, age, or wealth. People are treated not merely on the basis of how they act, but also on the basis of who they are.

    Pseudolaws are enacted by government-as-bandit, a term suggested by St. Augustine's famous observation: "Justice being taken away, then, what are kingdoms but great robberies?" Footnote 1. The only difference between a compound-involuntary association and a private-involuntary one is that government is a party to the former. In both, individuals are arbitrarily singled out and sanctions imposed or threatened against them. If anything, government-as-bandit is even more intolerable than private robbers, for it wields the resources of the entire community and one cannot seek government protection from it.

    The word "bylaw" reflects the fact that when Congress determines the terms on which and with whom the U.S. government is willing to enter a voluntary association, it is doing no more and no less than is done by the boards of directors of any private corporation.

    Bylaws apply both to compound-voluntary and to public-voluntary associations. Examples of bylaws applying to compound associations include portions of the Bacon-Davis Act, the Hatch Act, and the Philadelphia Plan. The Bacon-Davis Act prohibits the federal government from making contracts with private firms paying their employees less than "prevailing wages" as determined by the Secretary of Labor for each occupation and region of the country. The Hatch Act prohibits the federal government from retaining civil servants who engage in certain types of politicking, including addressing a political rally or holding office in a political party. (Any law prohibiting such actions and enforced by sanctions would clearly violate the First Amendment; the Supreme Court, however, has twice upheld the Hatch Act, which is enforced by withdrawn inducements.) Under the Philadelphia Plan the federal government contracts only with private construction firms that agree to hire at least a certain percentage of minority employees. The Plan is an effort to overcome racial discrimination by the power building trades unions and acquiesced in by employers.

    Bylaws applying to public associations include the Hickenlooper Amendment and the federal enactment producing the 65 (originally 55) miles per hour national speed limit. The Hickenlooper Amendment cuts off foreign aid to any country that nationalizes property owned by U.S. citizens without paying them fair compensation. It tries, via the power of the U.S. government purse, to extend the protection against uncompensated seizures provided domestically by the Eminent Domain Clause of the Constitution. When President Nixon proposed a national speed limit during the 1973 Arab oil embargo, Congress lacked constitutional authority to enact a law requiring people to drive more slowly. The state governments had the power to enact such laws but where not disposed to do so. Acting on Nixon's proposal, Congress merely enacted a bylaw cutting off all federal highway funds to any state whose legislature did not enact a law making the speed limit 55 or less. If any state had refused to comply, its action would not have been illegal. It would merely have been a violation of a federal bylaw. But the states, sometimes with great reluctance, knuckled under unanimously--few local politicians were willing to climb off the federal gravy train.

    ________________________

Saturday, June 18, 2022

How to understand my periodic table of human associations

 

As this short article indicates, my periodic table makes it much easier to think systematically about politics and political issues. Political Analysis Clearer With My Periodic Table of Human Associations | Newsmax.com

But if you are unable or unwilling to spend a small amount of time to understand the system of concepts summarized in my periodic table of human associations, you should forget about it.

The periodic table shows how these concepts are related to each other, but by itself is not enough to give an understanding of the system within which they exist.

This system is admittedly complicated, but its complexity is the result of a series of simple interactions of simple elements, and it is therefor understandable by anyone willing to make a little effort.

The simple elements are definitions of a few key words, which for the purposes of this system of concepts are defined more precisely than these words are when used in ordinary discourse. One must memorize these definitions and apply them come hell or high water.

The 15 key words are:

associations

actions

satisfaction

sanctions

inducements

laws

pseudolaws

bylaws

involuntary

trusteeships

voluntary

public

private

compound

non-association point

For a very concise introduction to this system of concepts see chapter 2 in my e-book, Basic Political Concepts. Basic Political Concepts (opentextbooks.org.hk) The whole book is only 39 pages long.

If you are trying to understand this system and have questions, I will be delighted to try to help if you email me. If you have a class or other group studying the system I will be happy to arrange Zoom meetings in which questions can be raised and answered.

Paul F. deLespinasse

Corvallis, Oregon

pdeles@proaxis.com

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

Repblican Congress Not An Existential Threat To Democracy

 Many pundits fear American democracy will be in existential danger if Republicans capture one or both houses of Congress in this November's elections. I disagree.

If we make one assumption, these fears make sense. Democracy is only possible if those losing elections are willing to concede, as Marine Le Pen commendably just did in France. Otherwise you just have what is often derogatorily called a "banana republic."

The apparent problem is that so many Republican candidates facing primaries say they agree that the 2020 presidential election was "stolen."

The assumption upon which the fears rest, however, is that these Republican politicians are all expressing their true opinions about 2020. If they really believe the election was stolen, it would be extremely troubling.

This assumption, however, is probably a false one. Americans---including Republicans---- who venture into politics are nearly always above average in intelligence and education, skilled at critical thinking, and able to evaluate the credibility of things other people claim.

As I have often said, our leaders are smarter than they act!

Most Republican candidates probably understand full well that, although Republicans did well in winning other offices, their candidate lost the presidential election, his persistent claims to the contrary notwithstanding.

(If Democrats were able to steal the presidency, why didn't they also steal enough congressional elections to secure majorities in House and Senate too?)

The problem for these candidates is that the former president was a marketing genius who managed to convince a large number of Republican voters that the election was stolen. Like any excellent marketer, he started claiming this well before the election, when his private pollsters predicted he would lose, and repeatedly articulated that claim after the election.

Republican primary voters who have fallen for the lie that 2020 was stolen will likely vote as a bloc against candidates who disagree with them.

The ideal strategy for Republican candidates who understand that 2020 was not stolen is therefore to pretend they agree with it. Seeking to neutralize the political consequences of the big lie that 2020 was stolen, these candidates are telling smaller lies.

These smaller lies are probably in the general interest, since otherwise candidates who actually believe the big lie might win the primary elections. And thanks to partisan gerrymandering, the extremist candidates could win the general election, even though this is less likely.

Cowardice, never admirable, is far from unusual among politicians, who generally cannot afford to be "profiles in courage."

But this is why I am not contemplating the possibility of a Republican takeover of Congress this November with great dread. Unhappiness, yes, since I disagree with many of their policy preferences. But dread that this will mean the end of American democracy, no.

The basic problem American democracy faces, therefore, is not with its politicians. It is with a public where a substantial minority has been sold a bill of goods by a talented demagogue.

Republican politicians pretending to have swallowed that bill of goods in order to win primary elections are behaving responsibly, in this regard at least. They are good Americans who realize that to save the democracy bequeathed to us by our ancestors, they will have to get their hands dirty.

History will absolve them, just as it has absolved Abraham Lincoln for the unscrupulous things he did to keep the country together and rid it of slavery.

History will absolve them, just as it has absolved Franklin D. Roosevelt for the terrible compromises he had to make with southern members of Congress in order to pull us out of the Depression and win World War II.

As sociologist Max Weber explained, a political career is not for those with weak stomachs.

As Weber put it, politics is indeed a "slow boring of hard boards."



Thursday, April 28, 2022

Brief bio of Paul F. deLespinasse

 

Paul F. deLespinasse is Professor Emeritus of Political Science and Computer Science at Adrian College. He received his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1966, and has been a National Merit Scholar, an NDEA Fellow, a Woodrow Wilson Fellow, and a Fellow in Law and Political Science at the Harvard Law School. His college textbook, "Thinking About Politics: American Government in Associational Perspective," was published in 1981 and his most recent book is "Beyond Capitalism: A Classless Society With (Mostly) Free Markets." His columns have appeared in newspapers in Michigan, Oregon, and a number of other states. He read Правда, the Russian Communist Party daily newspaper, as part of his work for 29 years.

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Incorrect translation of Vladimir Putin's "geopolitical catastrophe" statement

 

The official Russian government translation of Putin’s remark:

“Above all, we should acknowledge that the collapse of the Soviet Union was a major geopolitical disaster of the century.”

Putin’s remark in the original Russian language (with the source in the following url):

Прежде всего следует признать, что крушение Советского Союза было крупнейшей геополитической катастрофой века.

http://www.consultant.ru/document/cons_doc_LAW_53088/

The Russian language does not have words for “a” and “the.”   Whether a speaker has said “a book” or “the book” must therefore be determined by context.   

The word   крупнейшей  is in the grammatical form that  Russian experts call a “simple superlative.”  As a leading textbook notes,  “The simple superlative does not show comparison, but rather indicates a high degree of the given quality.”  That is why the correct translation is “a major catastrophe” rather than “the greatest” catastrophe".  Putin clearly therefore did not say the Soviet collapse was “the greatest” geopolitical catastrophe.

There are enough troubling things about Mr. Putin’s recent behavior that there is no need to exaggerate, let alone to seriously mistranslate, things that he has said. Unfortunately,  when one googles the alternate translations, the incorrect ones outweigh the correct ones by ten to one!  This is probably because most people who quote Putin do not see the original Russian and probably do not speak Russian or don't speak it very well.


Wednesday, January 19, 2022

Real Life: Far More Complicated Than Any Game

 According to Wikipedia, "Game theory is the study of mathematical models of strategic interactions among rational agents."

Game theory has only limited usefulness for social scientists because society consists of many games, not just one, and these games interact with each other. The world is much more complicated than any single game.

Decades ago, I tried to make chess more like society, converting it into a more complicated game than it already is. On an ocean liner between Honolulu and San Francisco, I was accosted by guy who wanted to play chess. When I informed him that I was not a strong player, he claimed he wasn't either. He lied.

He clobbered me, having memorized standard approaches to chess moves. Mortified, I invented a chess version to force people like him to live by their wits, like I have to.

Flexichess begins like regular chess. But instead of moving a piece players can, within a few limits, change a rule, altering the whole balance of forces on the chessboard. No one can predict how rules will be changed, throwing rascals like my steamship companion off balance.

Later, I converted Flexichess into a team sport, Perplexichess. Teams consisting of 7 players play Flexichess on seven boards. On top of this a team's eighth member---a grand strategist---can move pieces to the same location on another board if it is unoccupied, without taking turns with the other grand strategist!. The grand strategist's goal is to win a majority of the boards.

Board players, playing Flexichess rationally, may be defeated because their team's grand strategist sacrificed their board by moving key pieces to a board where they were worth more.

Since it has many games going on simultaneously at two different levels, Perplexichess is very complicated. But it is still much less complicated than human societies are.

The world is made up of a vast number of different "games" simultaneously played by seven billion people. The main game many people play, especially in poor countries or among poorer people in rich countries, simply seeks physical survival.

Other people may be playing romantic games. And there are an endless number of games played by individuals in corporations, labor unions, churches, schools and universities, interest groups, hospitals, and charitable organizations.

Most individuals are playing several different games.

At a still higher level we find games played by politicians seeking appointment or election to high government positions.

The winners in these political games find themselves in games at a still higher level, seeking to protect themselves from challengers. While they remain in power, many of them may seek to advantage their own glory and their government at the expense of others, sometimes even getting their countries into wars.

As in Perplexichess, the games played at a higher level of society can throw the games of people playing at a lower level into total chaos. For example, a student planning to become a scientist might be drafted to fight a war in some country with which he (or she, in some countries) has no connection, concern, or knowledge.

On 9-11 many financial executives working in the Twin Towers found their professional games, and their lives, undone by a game played by the fanatics who crashed hijacked airliners into their buildings.

Lower level games can also confound those playing higher level games. National leaders attempting to minimize injuries caused by Covid have been frustrated by games played by governors, political opportunists, and foreign enemies who injected divisive social media memes into our society.

No wonder it is nearly impossible to predict what is going to happen next! And the complexity caused by the interactions of multiple games also makes it difficult to understand what has already gone on, creating opportunities for crazy conspiracy theories to catch on.

A conspiracy theory can be simple and consistent, whereas reality is often messy.






Monday, January 10, 2022

Bad translation of Vladimir Putin's "geopolitical catastrophe" statement


Putin did NOT say that the collapse of the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century.

 The official Russian government translation of Putin’s remark:

“Above all, we should acknowledge that the collapse of the Soviet Union was a major geopolitical disaster of the century.”  (Emphasis added.  P.deL.)

Putin’s remark in the original Russian language (with the source in the following url):

Прежде всего следует признать, что крушение Советского Союза было крупнейшей геополитической катастрофой века.

http://www.consultant.ru/document/cons_doc_LAW_53088/

The Russian language does not have words for “a” and “the.”   Whether a speaker has said “a book” or “the book” must therefore be determined by context.   

The word   крупнейшей  is in the grammatical form that  Russian experts call a “simple superlative.”  As a leading textbook notes,  “The simple superlative does not show comparison, but rather indicates a high degree of the given quality.”  That is why the correct translation is “a major catastrophe” rather than “the greatest” catastrophe".  Putin clearly therefore did not say the Soviet collapse was “the greatest” geopolitical catastrophe.

There are enough troubling things about Mr. Putin’s recent behavior that there is no need to exaggerate, let alone to seriously mistranslate, things that he has said. Unfortunately,  when one googles the alternate translations, the incorrect ones outweigh the correct ones by ten to one!  This is probably because most people who quote Putin do not see the original Russian and probably do not speak Russian or don't speak it very well.