Saturday, September 28, 2013

A program to set stichera: not yet done

I've been thinking about it. I've been setting the stichera manually. I'm sort of getting an idea of how the text needs to be preprocessed for input and am slowing acquiring a library of stichera melodies and getting more of a feel for which notes in the cadences get divided and whatever. But I'm getting fairly speedy at setting things anyway and I've almost got a library of all the tones. So I'm kind of wondering if I really need to write a program, since I'm barely working much more than the whole "mark up the text" part, which is actually fairly involved. And then I would have to make a pass afterward anyway to correct things that didn't quite come out right. I don't know.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Saving Laos from the Barbarians

I couldn't help but make this pun. I hope you, too, enjoy and see a use for it. Joy of the feast to all of you.

Saturday, September 07, 2013

Yet another reason to oppose Ron Paul.

Think what you will about conservative politics, libertarian politics, and liberty, Ron Paul has too many wrong ideas about history.

Here is yet another reason I cannot take the man seriously: He completely sidesteps the academic consensus on the Civil War and is apparently ignorant of Lincoln's failed attempts to push for compensated emancipation.

And shouldn't defenders of Liberty(TM) be ardently opposed to slavery? I think freedom for millions of slaves is one of the few things a defender of Liberty(TM) should be willing to go to war for. After all, Liberty(TM)!

Friday, September 06, 2013

Desegregation

Contra the states rights/libertarian crowd, federal enforcement of desegregation at the point of a gun (eg in Alabama) is perhaps one of the best possible modern uses of government force. It is also a reasonable justification for the need for federal supremacy rather than letting the states do whatever they want. I am not implying that libertarians and others who are interested in localizing control of government are racists, but I will say that institutionalized racism is the inevitable result of their policies and that this is a mark against them that cannot be erased, especially when they campaign on "liberty".

While there are economic arguments that racism is inefficient and will be punished by the free market (and that, for instance, slavery would have died off on its own), why wait for the market to cull it out when we have the feds to guarantee it? Wait, guaranteeing individuals rights by using federal power is a statist trick, the libertarians will instead ensure your liberty by guaranteeing that states will have rights, not individuals. Especially when, in living memory, that sort of policy meant that for approximately 100 years after being constitutionally given the right to vote, certain races were not really able to vote because of state policies. And especially when people prominent in the libertarian movement have expressed reservations or even outright opposition to laws which strongly guarantee individual liberties (eg the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act) because they infringe on a state's right or a corporation's right.

In short, fuck everything about this guy and what he advocates for.

Even the Communists, who murdered millions, had a legitimate point when they pointed at America and said, "А у вас негров линчуют."

Friday, August 30, 2013

Interesting rhetorical victory

Opposition to Obamacare in some circles is very, very harsh, and there certainly is a lot to criticize, but a lot of it is unfair. However, there are some bits of rhetorical flair that I do find very effective.
  • Exempt from Obamacare - This is the best example. It is a rhetorical shorthand that I see popping up in many places, but when examined, it suddenly becomes transparently innocuous. What this really means is, "exempt from having to purchase health insurance through the mandate". What makes you exempt? Having health insurance or something close enough to it, essentially. Or being Amish. I see a lot of bluster about government employees being exempt from Obamacare, but, sure, they already have health insurance through FEP. Should they? The government is a large employer, so they are mandated to provide health insurance or pay a penalty, and I do not see a reason the feds should be exempt from that requirement.

    The only place this really holds water is if you're talking about genuine exemptions. But, unless you're talking about the Amish, this is not what you're talking about. It's not just any random religious group that has an objection to having insurance. It is a handful of specifically enumerated groups.

    This even extends outside of this kind of rhetoric: I recently saw some group selling an insurance-like product that they said would make you "exempt from Obamacare". This is a fantastic way of playing into the rhetorical fears of a certain demographic: yes, it will make you exempt from the individual mandate by providing you with a service that is enough like insurance to fulfill the mandate. You are not really "exempt", you are fulfilling the mandate. At a price that may or may not be better than subsidized prices on the exchange.

  • They will be better off paying the penalty. Well, the penalty will be cheaper than insurance for almost everybody who is buying insurance on the individual market, yes, even after subsidy. This is because the penalty this year is $95 or 1% of salary above $10,000. But what do they get in exchange for their money? Health insurance. This has some value to the customer. Perhaps it is in excess of the price they pay for it, but for many of the people mentioned in this context, the utility of spending the additional money is perhaps greater than the utility of having money less the penalty and less the insurance plan.

    Here is what I mean: one study indicated that 3.4 million people would be less than $500 better off if they paid the penalty. If you play with the calculator for this, you get the impression that the way to do this is generally to have insurance costing less than $1000/yr after the subsidy, typically much less. In one cited example, some article indicated a single man making $18,100/yr would save $117 by paying the penalty. Wait - at that income level, the penalty is $95. For less than $20/month, he could have had health insurance. I realize that the income is very small and even $20/month could hurt. But I find it hard to accept that paying $95/yr with no health insurance is seen as a "better" outcome than paying $222/yr and having health insurance, even if does not end up being needed. I think this is fairly true for every combination of incomes and penalties that could fall into the "less than $500 difference", as, from fiddling around, it seems that for individuals that is pretty much less than $1000/yr for health insurance - I didn't do the math, I'm just fiddling around with the calculator. While $1000/yr for health insurance might make somebody on a tight budget nervous, that's compared to $500 for nothing at all.

    Still, if you don't do the math or think too hard, it's an impressive bit of rhetoric.

I am sure I will think of more rhetoric about this. There may be a part two.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

A fun story about Sam Houston.

I was reading a discussion about whether slaves ever fled to Mexico (answer: they did) and somebody said this about Sam Houston:
When two of Senator Sam Houston's "best slaves" fled to Mexico, he said that they would "civilize and refine" the Mexicans, since they were "remarkably good" companions.
Note, of course, Mexico had abolished slavery and yet they were considered less civilized and refined.

In case you cannot tell, I've been on a Civil War/Slavery kick recently because of the apparent rise of "Lost Cause" apologists and neo-Confederates in popular discourse, especially among Libertarians.