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RE: Top Level CPS Official Arrested For Child Pornography in Philadelphia
Yes, sadly, you are right and this too could (and mostly likely is) very much a part of the problem. I feel sick knowing that such atrocious people even exist. So what is the solution, I wonder. How do we keep these people from attaining positions of power?
-Aimee
Ps. Not exactly sure how the book ties in
The problem isn't the people attaining certain positions but the very existence of those positions. I'm a huge fan of Ludwig von Mises (Human Action), Frédéric Bastiat(The Law) and Ayn Rand(Fountainhead). The law is the preservation of the Non-Aggression Principle. Anybody has the right to swing a stick in any way as long as it stops before the other person's nose. This should be the objective of the law and all entities associated. Anything that is beyond this objective is a cancer. Right people in those positions would only buy you some time. Anything that can happen will happen (Murphy's Law) and it's only a matter of time before a person who rape 4 year olds till they die as a competition becomes the head of CPS and it'll be a gold mine for such a disgusting individual. A system must be designed assuming the absolute worst or else we'd see things collapse.
We need a simple, clear, transparent system where incentives are properly aligned. We should make the system incompatible with the worst kind of human beings. Think about the cryptocurrency. They are built from ground to be trustless. You don't have to trust anyone to take care of your work on STEEM. You don't have to trust anyone to send some cryptocurrency. When we have a tight auditable system the bad actors would either give up or stay long enough to be prosecuted.
If a person isn't been aggressed upon, the law has no purpose being there. If there was aggression then there should be transparent actions taken. Above all incentives should be properly aligned. You can't and shouldn't control human actions. You can and should control the incentives for those actions. If CPS was paid based on the delayed ratings of the victims and public donations, many things would be fixed.
The book is also about the kind of people in positions of power. Not all of their degenerate actions should be considered illegal (Ruining your own wellbeing isn't a crime no matter how degenerate it is). The drug addicts are like a worse version of alcoholics. Pedophiles are worse version of these Hollywood Psychopaths.
Thank you for reading recommendations! They sound very thought provoking. I am also very interesred on your perspective in this matter. You're right, that if we weed out the villains from positions of power, they will eventually find their way back and that the system itself needs an overhaul. I think similarly in respect to government. We would see much more honourable politicians if the positions were voluntary and there could be no financial gain made through career connections. I appreciate your insight.
-Aimee
The financial gains can be actually a good thing if the incentives were properly aligned. Steemit wouldn't be this great if the financial incentives weren't there. We'd be just a more sophisticated reddit like what Everipedia is to Wikipedia. That's why I mentioned public donations and delayed rating based compensation. If a child grows to be an adult and then rate the people who took part in the process, it would be a more accurate judgement on the work that has been done.
The delayed gratification always has the tenancy to attract good people and repel bad actors to a significant degree. Also the social workers would be forced to think in the long term.
Read the books I recommended. Start with The Law which is kind of short. Try reading some quotes on goodreads to get an idea about the main points.
Good luck and happy steeming!
Steemit is a great example of financial motivations indeed and is set up in a way to reward those who work hard instead of participants who try to take short cuts. Although, even Steemit seems to have some areas where rewards can be a bit unbalanced.
In terms of government, I would like to see contraints where politicians could not cross into private sectors they played a role in governing previously, or have influence in. Currently, financial motives are plagued by conflicts of interest.
I do like the idea of creating a rating system where incentives are delayed but that idea in and of itself has problems. For one, how are the incentives being secured until payout? We are already seeing hard working individuals who were counting on their pensions in financial strain because the money promised to them was spent. I would also worry that the rating system would lead to blackmail or threats of the children in care. Even though the rating would take place as an adult there lies a possibility for years of, manipulation to take place in the meantime. Although, I do admit delayed gratification would be a better route than the current system in place.
I am adding your books to my reading list! As a mom of young twins, I may take a while to get through them but I definitely think they are worth a read.
-Aimee
Many of the problems can be solved with blockchain tech. Blockchain is immutable without quantum computers and eveyrthing can be handled trustlessly.
The only real problem is the kids being manipulated. But in a better system manipulation would be less worse and less severe. I've always said that there can be perfect people but not perfect systems. Improvement is a process. As long as its in the right direction we should do what we can. With future developments we will be able to solve more problems.
I always want to believe therea lies good in everyone, but to believe people can be perfect is to truly have faith in humanity. Perhap, I am a bit more cynical or at least skeptical than you.
I am on board with your belief that if there are better systems available that we should be implementing them or at least working in that direction.
Thank you for the thought provoking conversation you really pushed me to explore different ideas and analyze where break downs could occur.
-Aimee
People always tend to underestimate both the darkness and the good in people. I'm pretty sure I'm more cynical than you. (I found Requiem for a Dream to be a mercerizing experience and took me many months to even figure out why people even consider the movie depressing. I'm also a huge Gen Urobuchi and Junji Ito fan) But I'm also a very hopeful person.
My reasoning is that Evil is self destructive while good isn't. Evil survives because of the good that is left. I would even say there are 4 kinds of people that do good:
1)The benevolent ones
2)Those who have nothing else to do. (I consider myself a mix of these 2)
3)The miserable suckers
4)Evil people
The best weapon of Evil is the good. I invite you to read these 2 short stories I've written.
300 Word Short Story #+1 A story about a criminal family and a young man who lost everything.
300 Word Short Story #-1 A story about a criminal family and a man who lost everything.
Perfect evil would be perfect self-destruction. This cannot exist. But Perfect goodness is only insanely difficult. If it's achievable, someone would achieve it. As a trader I'll also say this: You cannot loose betting against(shorting) humanity. But the best wins would come from the Individuals who become the exception. When banks fall, precious metals shoot for the moon. I'm willing to make both these bets.