The God Emperor

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) September 2019

Every now and then one of us out here in the backwaters of the evil empire manages to capture the zeitgeist with some clarity.  When that happens, it is helpful to help spread the word.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgbG8AggcHs

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The Shocking Paper Predicting the End of Democracy

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) September 2019

The Shocking Paper Predicting the End of Democracy

Human brains aren’t built for self-rule, says Shawn Rosenberg. That’s more evident than ever.

Everything was unfolding as it usually does. The academics who gathered in Lisbon this summer for the International Society of Political Psychologists’ annual meeting had been politely listening for four days, nodding along as their peers took to the podium and delivered papers on everything from the explosion in conspiracy theories to the rise of authoritarianism.

Then, the mood changed. As one of the lions of the profession, 68-year-old Shawn Rosenberg, began delivering his paper, people in the crowd of about a hundred started shifting in their seats. They loudly whispered objections to their friends. Three women seated next to me near the back row grew so loud and heated I had difficulty hearing for a moment what Rosenberg was saying.

What caused the stir? Rosenberg, a professor at UC Irvine, was challenging a core assumption about America and the West. His theory? Democracy is devouring itself—his phrase — and it won’t last.

As much as President Donald Trump’s liberal critics might want to lay America’s ills at his door, Rosenberg says the president is not the cause of democracy’s fall—even if Trump’s successful anti-immigrant populist campaign may have been a symptom of democracy’s decline.

We’re to blame, said Rosenberg. As in “we the people.”

Democracy is hard work. And as society’s “elites”—experts and public figures who help those around them navigate the heavy responsibilities that come with self-rule—have increasingly been sidelined, citizens have proved ill equipped cognitively and emotionally to run a well-functioning democracy. As a consequence, the center has collapsed and millions of frustrated and angst-filled voters have turned in desperation to right-wing populists.

His prediction? “In well-established democracies like the United States, democratic governance will continue its inexorable decline and will eventually fail.”

***

The last half of the 20th century was the golden age of democracy. In 1945, according to one survey, there were just 12 democracies in the entire world. By the end of the century there were 87. But then came the great reversal: In the second decade of the 21st century, the shift to democracy rather suddenly and ominously stopped—and reversed.

Right-wing populist politicians have taken power or threatened to in Poland, Hungary, France, Britain, Italy, Brazil and the United States. As Rosenberg notes, “by some metrics, the right wing populist share of the popular vote in Europe overall has more than tripled from 4% in 1998 to approximately 13% in 2018.” In Germany, the right-wing populist vote increased even after the end of the Great Recession and after an influx of immigrants entering the country subsided.

A brief three decades after some had heralded the “end of history” it’s possible that it’s democracy that’s nearing the end. And it’s not just populist rabble-rousers who are saying this. So is one of the establishment’s pioneer social scientists, who’s daring to actually predict the end of democracy as we know it.

Rosenberg, who earned degrees at Yale, Oxford and Harvard, may be the social scientist for our time if events play out as he suggests they will. His theory is that over the next few decades, the number of large Western-style democracies around the globe will continue to shrink, and those that remain will become shells of themselves. Taking democracy’s place, Rosenberg says, will be right-wing populist governments that offer voters simple answers to complicated questions.

And therein lies the core of his argument: Democracy is hard work and requires a lot from those who participate in it. It requires people to respect those with different views from theirs and people who don’t look like them. It asks citizens to be able to sift through large amounts of information and process the good from the bad, the true from the false. It requires thoughtfulness, discipline and logic.

Unfortunately, evolution did not favor the exercise of these qualities in the context of a modern mass democracy. Citing reams of psychological research, findings that by now have become more or less familiar, Rosenberg makes his case that human beings don’t think straight. Biases of various kinds skew our brains at the most fundamental level. For example, racism is easily triggered unconsciously in whites by a picture of a black man wearing a hoodie. We discount evidence when it doesn’t square up with our goals while we embrace information that confirms our biases. Sometimes hearing we’re wrong makes us double down. And so on and so forth.

Our brains, says Rosenberg, are proving fatal to modern democracy. Humans just aren’t built for it.

People have been saying for two millennia that democracy is unworkable, going back to Plato. The Founding Fathers were sufficiently worried that they left only one half of one branch of the federal government in the hands of the people. And yet for two centuries democracy in America more or less proceeded apace without blowing itself up.

So why is Rosenberg, who made his name back in the 1980s with a study that disturbingly showed that many voters select candidates on the basis of their looks, predicting the end of democracy now?

He has concluded that the reason for right-wing populists’ recent success is that “elites” are losing control of the institutions that have traditionally saved people from their most undemocratic impulses. When people are left to make political decisions on their own they drift toward the simple solutions right-wing populists worldwide offer: a deadly mix of xenophobia, racism and authoritarianism.

The elites, as Rosenberg defines them, are the people holding power at the top of the economic, political and intellectual pyramid who have “the motivation to support democratic culture and institutions and the power to do so effectively.” In their roles as senators, journalists, professors, judges and government administrators, to name a few, the elites have traditionally held sway over public discourse and U.S. institutions—and have in that role helped the populace understand the importance democratic values. But today that is changing. Thanks to social media and new technologies, anyone with access to the Internet can publish a blog and garner attention for their cause—even if it’s rooted in conspiracy and is based on a false claim, like the lie that Hillary Clinton was running a child sex ring from the basement of a Washington D.C. pizza parlor, which ended in a shooting.

While the elites formerly might have successfully squashed conspiracy theories and called out populists for their inconsistencies, today fewer and fewer citizens take the elites seriously. Now that people get their news from social media rather than from established newspapers or the old three TV news networks (ABC, CBS and NBC), fake news proliferates. It’s surmised that 10 million people saw on Facebook the false claim that Pope Francis came out in favor of Trump’s election in 2016. Living in a news bubble of their own making many undoubtedly believed it. (This was the most-shared news story on Facebook in the three months leading up to the 2016 election, researchers report.)

The irony is that more democracy—ushered in by social media and the Internet, where information flows more freely than ever before—is what has unmoored our politics, and is leading us towards authoritarianism. Rosenberg argues that the elites have traditionally prevented society from becoming a totally unfettered democracy; their “oligarchic ‘democratic’ authority” or “democratic control” has until now kept the authoritarian impulses of the populace in check.

Compared with the harsh demands made by democracy, which requires a tolerance for compromise and diversity, right-wing populism is like cotton candy. Whereas democracy requires us to accept the fact that we have to share our country with people who think and look differently than we do, right-wing populism offers a quick sugar high. Forget political correctness. You can feel exactly the way you really want about people who belong to other tribes.

Right-wing populists don’t have to make much sense. They can simultaneously blame immigrants for taking jobs away from Americans while claiming that these same people are lazy layabouts sponging off welfare. All the populist followers care is that they now have an enemy to blame for their feelings of ennui.

And unlike democracy, which makes many demands, the populists make just one. They insist that people be loyal. Loyalty entails surrendering to the populist nationalist vision. But this is less a burden than an advantage. It’s easier to pledge allegiance to an authoritarian leader than to do the hard work of thinking for yourself demanded by democracy.

“In sum, the majority of Americans are generally unable to understand or value democratic culture, institutions, practices or citizenship in the manner required,” Rosenberg has concluded. “To the degree to which they are required to do so, they will interpret what is demanded of them in distorting and inadequate ways. As a result they will interact and communicate in ways that undermine the functioning of democratic institutions and the meaning of democratic practices and values.”

I should clarify that the loud whispers in the crowd in Lisbon weren’t a response to Rosenberg’s pessimism. This was after all a meeting of political psychologists—a group who focus on flaws in voters’ thinking and the violation of democratic norms. At the conference Ariel Malka reported evidence that conservatives are increasingly open to authoritarianism. Brian Shaffer related statistics showing that since Trump’s election teachers have noted a rise in bullying. Andreas Zick observed that racist crimes shot up dramatically in Germany after a million immigrants were allowed in.

What stirred the crowd was that Rosenberg has gone beyond pessimism into outright defeatism. What riled the crowd was that he’s seemingly embraced a kind of reverence for elitism no longer fashionable in the academy. When challenged on this front, he quickly insisted he didn’t mean to exempt himself from the claim that people suffer from cognitive and emotional limitations. He conceded that the psychological research shows everybody’s irrational, professors included! But it was unclear that he convinced the members of the audience he really meant it. And they apparently found this discomforting.

There were less discomforting moments in Lisbon. The convention gave an award to George Marcus, one of the founders of the discipline, who has dedicated his career to the optimistic theory that human beings by nature readjust their ideas to match the world as it is and not as they’d like it to be—just as democracy requires.

But this isn’t a moment for optimism, is it? What is happening around the world shows that the far-right is on the march. And when it comes to the U.S., the problem might be larger than one man. Liberals have been praying for the end of the Trump presidency, but if Rosenberg is right, democracy will remain under threat no matter who is in power.

HR Back.  Now that you have read this article, I would like to call bullshit.  Not that I don’t agree with everything that Shawn said.  I do think that he is right.  To my way of thinking the problem is not that the right is on the move.  The greatest problem is that the left (communism) is on the move.  I see that you don’t like to spend time watching Tim Pool and I understand your complaints and agree with you.  I too rarely finish one of Tim’s videos.  But this one you might want to struggle through.  He explains through personal experience that the far left, the Bernies and the AOCs and the muslims and the rest of their communist comrades are tearing the Democratic party apart as they try to steer it over the cliffs of insanity.

Anyway, you can watch Tim if you like, as what he is doing is commenting on the article that I have already provided for you.  His insights are, in my opinion, correct.  The base problem that we all face is how to steer a course through the lunatic left and the cliffs of insanity.  We must do the hard work that is required for a representative republic to flourish.  It is we who must stop the corruption that leads eventually to the downfall that Shawn has prophesied.   You have to do your part and I have to do my part.  This little blog in the middle of nowhere is a start.  It can allow us to formulate plans that each of us can implement.

I see this as talking to people and changing their minds.  I have done this and I know that it works.  In a month or so I will be traveling to Harleysville and Phoenixville to visit family and I will be changing minds there as well.  It is done one on one for those of us who don’t have the smarts to create a youtube channel like Tim.  But it is work that we can do.  Take it seriously and a change can be made.

BEER! And How It Makes The World a Better Place

I know this video looks daunting.  But it really starts six minutes in and it ends at the 40 minute mark.  After that it is all questions.

To me, it looks like two guys who thought that they could get away with drinking their way around the world and get somebody to pay for it, but still, they do come to some conclusions that are not informed by splitting headaches.

The Difference Between Lying and Just Being Wrong

Once again I say, it is a strange world that we live in today.  My secondary monitor finally decided to give up the ghost.  It was very old and the primary had been replaced a few years ago so off to Best Buy to pick up a cheap, and I mean really cheap, small replacement monitor.  Well you can’t do that any more.  Oh you can buy a cheap monitor, but it won’t be small.  I guess nobody wants small monitors any more.  Anyway, my computer is really old and it uses a VGA port for the second monitor so I found an $80 HP VGA monitor at the second Best Buy and brought it home.

My video card recognized the monitor and my Nvidia software set it up properly and I installed it with the computer off, so when it fired up there was a picture on it.  Hooray.  But all of the Icons were scrambled because the new monitor was 16×9 and high resolution and the old one was not.  So the windows desktop was scrambled and it took a while to move all of the icons back to some semblance of order.  As I moved each icon, one at a time, it gave me a chance to review why I would have kept that folder, or shortcut and in many cases I deleted entire folders but one stood out and I had to look at what had been put there years ago.  And one of the videos in that folder is what has lead to this post.  So let me begin.

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On the Problems Associated With Faith

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) September 2019

I really didn’t want to step into this particular part of the swamp.  Others have far greater knowledge on their religion than I do.  After all, I don’t even believe in a god at all so I have almost no incentive to learn more about teachings from people who were just learning to write, were mostly illiterate, and had not invented toilet paper yet.  So you can see that I make no claim to knowledge in this regard.  What I want to offer is a response to a question asked in a recent post.

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I’m Bored – Correlation is not Causation… But Gebus

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) August 2019

Recently the radical leftist communists in the form of antifa have been labled as NPCs.  That to us who play video games is a designation for a character in the game that is a non-player character.  In most modern games these characters will interact with the real people but due to their simplistic computer scripts they are are incapable of complex actions and of course, they do not think.

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This Is How Antifa Works

You either run and hide, or you stand and fight.  Antifa, the communists, will never stop coming.  They will never stop harassing you.  They believe in their cause and they will attack you until you either submit or hide.

You have seen their manifesto as published by Sal Alinsky.  You have seen their handbook as published by Mark Bray.  Mark’s publisher, Melville House Publishing, is, according to Wikipedia, known for books of leftist political reportage.

Anyway, you might not think that you have anything to worry about.  Why would they come for you?  Well, they came for Tim Poole.

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The NYT is dead: long live the NYT

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) August 2019

Tim Pool does often prattle on, but I watch him every day because he is a good news aggregator.  He seems to spend almost every waking hour reading news from all of the MSM, and then he still finds time to sit in front of his computer and bang out several videos each day.

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Where Is The Real Battle

We all see the world through our own lens.  Our opinions, which we freely express here, are formed by our experiences and our interactions with others.  So in a very real sense, the battle that is currently being waged is over control of the zeitgeist which is a concept from 18th- to 19th-century German Philosophy meaning “spirit of the age” or “spirit of the times”. It refers to an invisible agent or force dominating the characteristics of a given epoch in world history.  The zeitgeist is formed through communications between people.  Between people like us.  Our zeitgeist is formed by these discussions spurred on by the posts where each of us is free to express our opinions to the others and they are free to agree, or disagree.

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Do You Honestly Want To Do Something To MAGA

Are you willing to expend just a little effort?  Are you willing to do what’s right?  Because this little girl is willing to do what is right and if you aren’t as brave as this little girl, then you are at the very least a coward.  So stand with her.  Do what you can do.

Miss Nevada Banned From Entering Miss America Over Her Support For Trump

Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Summit News,

Miss Nevada says she was banned from competing in the upcoming Miss America beauty contest because of her refusal to hide her support for President Trump.

“I was officially disqualified from competing in the Miss America pageant for 2019,” said Katie Jo Williams in an Instagram video.

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LOSING HER GUN

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) August 2019

A few days back I received some shade for leaving SLO out of my story on a trip down from Monterey to LA.  You might surmise that I hold some animosity to the good people of San Luis Obispo but I can assure you that that is not the case.

As you now know, the great city of SLO not only has several perfectly serviceable gas stations, and all the fast food you can eat, but they also boast of some of the best apple pie you can ever hope to eat.  In addition to these culinary delights, apparently, they can also offer up a constabulary that is second to none.  In addition to a wonderful police force led by top notch career officers, apparently you can pick up a free gun in any El Pollo Loco in town.  In addition to the gun you can also acquire a free belt, holster, and most likely (although this is not guaranteed) several magazines of spare bullets.

San Luis Obispo police chief loses gun she left in restroom

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On The Importance Of Being Earnest

Robert Bronsdon (Hollywood Rob) August 2019

The Importance of Being Earnest, A Trivial Comedy for Serious People is a play by Oscar Wilde. First performed on 14 February 1895 at the St James’s Theatre in London, it is a farcical comedy in which the protagonists maintain fictitious personæ to escape burdensome social obligations.

But this post is not about trivial people and it most certainly is not a comedy.  Your world is about to become a lot more complex, and most of us already find the world as it is to be quite difficult to keep up with.  If you follow this blog you will no doubt be aware of “Deep Fakes.”  You have perhaps seen the videos that purport of take videos of one person and replace the words and expressions with another.  You may recall the one on Barack Obama.

Well, that technology has bloomed quite quickly into this;

https://www.notjordanpeterson.com/

You can now type anything you want into this web page and you will hear Jordan Peterson saying what you typed.  And while I suggest that you try it out for yourself, I am sure that you will find that the likeness is uncanny.

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