Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 111

23 Jun 2020 09:44:42 UTC

Redirected from

Original

history←prior
next→
All snapshots from host archive.org
from host slatestarcodex.com
Webpage Screenshot
HO ME
 AB OU T / T OP P OS TS
 PS YC HI AT - LIS T
 AR CH IV ES
 MEET UP S
 MI ST AK ES
 CO MM EN TS
 AD VERT IS E
 OP EN T HR EA D
CO MM EN TS F EED RS S FEED

Slate Star Codex


ONLY TEN MORE YEARS TILL THE TURCHIN CYCLE REVERSES! HANG IN THERE, PEOPLE!


BUSH DID NORTH DAKOTA

PO ST ED ON MA Y 28, 2020 B Y SC OT T A LEXA ND ER


Continuing yesterday’s discussion of fake news:
Guess et al says that 46% percent of Trump voters endorsed the Pizzagate conspiracy theory. Does
this mean fake news is very powerful?
We can compare this to belief in various other conspiracy theories, as measured by the 2016
Chapman University Survey Of American Fears. About 24% believe there’s a government
conspiracy to cover up the truth about the moon landing, 30% about Obama’s birth certificate, and
33% about the North Dakota crash.
This last one is especially interesting because there was no unusual crash in North Dakota when
the survey was written. The researchers included it as a placebo option to see if people would
endorse a conspiracy theory that didn’t exist. 33% of them did.
Before we make fun of these people, consider: there’s a strong presumption that surveys don’t
contain made-up questions. There was no “don’t know” option included on the poll, just various
shades of “agree” or “disagree”. In order to condemn the people who “agreed” that the
government was probably covering up the crash, we would have to assert that the more correct
answer was “disagree”. In other words, that people should have an assumption of trusting the
government, until they get some specific reason to distrust it. You can make that argument, but
it’s not obvious. You could also start from the opposite assumption, where the government is guilty
until proven innocent.
To put it another way, suppose I gave you the following survey:
SELECT AGREE OR DISAGREE, YOU MAY NOT SAY “DON’T KNOW” OR LOOK FOR MORE
INFORMATION. Alex Jones is lying when he talks about:
1. Sandy Hook
2. The coronavirus
3. Obama’s birth certificate
4. The North Dakota crash
…many of us would guess he was lying about the North Dakota crash, without a second thought.
And if there later turned out to be no North Dakota crash, we wouldn’t feel particularly ashamed;
under the circumstances we made the right choice. If you think the government is as
untrustworthy as Alex Jones, well, there you go.
I’ve previously talked about a lizardman constant of 4% on polls. That is, it’s hard to get a poll
result much lower than four percent for anything, because of respondents making mistakes or
trolling. If 4% of people supposedly believe something, that doesn’t mean we need to be concerned
about that fraction of the population, it just means that poll has it its floor and it’s hard to conclude
what the real number is.
In the same way, maybe we can posit a North Dakota constant of 33%. This is how many people
believe in conspiracy theories when there’s no reason at all to believe them, not even the flimsy
reasons conspiracy theories usually provide. Sometimes, if there’s a lot of evidence against them,
fewer than 33% will believe in a given theory. But if it’s just “Conspiracy! True or false?” – 33%
will say true.
Let’s look again at that statistic from the Guess paper – “46% of Trump voters believe”. I think
their source is this poll, which finds:

Overall 38% of Americans agreed with the claim, so Trump voters (46%) were not outrageously
more likely than anyone else. Other groups unrelated to ideology were about equally likely to
believe it (eg 45% of Hispanics).
Like the North Dakota question, this one had no “unsure” or “what the hell are you talking about”
option, forcing everyone to feign agreement or disagreement. We see that the majority of
agreement is lukewarm. 75% of Trumpists and 85% of Hispanics who believe Pizzagate only
“probably” rather than “definitely” believe it.
I don’t think the evidence suggests Trump voters live in an outrageously different world from the
rest of us. Instead, it suggests there’s a North Dakota constant of 33% – the number of people
who will believe a conspiracy theory for no particular reason. It looks like about 10 – 15% more
Trump supporters than predicted believe Pizzagate, probably because it attacks Clinton, and 10 –
15% fewer Hillary supporters than predicted believe it. But these are relatively small effects, and
equaled by eg whatever mysterious thing is going on with Hispanics. In any case, it all averages
out to about the predicted amount.
Why is this North Dakota Constant of 33% so different from the Lizardman Constant of 4%? I don’t
know. Lizardmen seem like a pretty crazy conspiracy theory, but is Hillary’s involvement with
Satanic pizza parlors really that much less weird? Sure, Pizzagate is more politicized, and that
might make some difference – but then how come a full 24% of Democrats believe it, six times
more than Lizardman’s Constant predicts?
One part of the story is that the lizardman poll offered “don’t know”, and 7% of people chose that.
If, denied that option, those people would split evenly between yes and no, that brings us up to
7%ish pro-lizardman. But that’s still nowhere near 33%.
I think this is probably a story about low-information voters. If you imagine you’ve never heard
about Pizzagate, and you read the question as written, it doesn’t sound too outlandish. Some
Clinton staffers’ emails contained some code words. The pedophilia and Satanic abuse are pretty
out there, but post-Jeffrey Epstein we all assume somebody’s doing some kind of creepy pedophilia
stuff somewhere. Maybe if you don’t know anything about this, and you don’t have the strong
priors about Satanic ritual abuse that you get from studying the history of those claims in the 80s
and 90s, this one seems like a toss-up. Certainly it seems like more of a toss-up than a clearly-
stated assertion that reptilian aliens rule the world. If your prior is “most conspiracy theory-ish
things are probably true”, this sounds like the kind of thing that could be true, whereas you might
balk at the lizardman statement.
Here’s another question from the same poll:

Who believes Obama was secretly born in Kenya? Lots of people – including 28% of blacks. I’ve
been told again and again that birtherism is a racist conspiracy theory and no person could possibly
believe it except as a way of dog whistling white supremacy. Yet here we are with 28% of blacks
supporting it – and this isn’t a small sample either! I have no idea what these people are thinking,
except that 28% is pretty close to the North Dakota Constant and maybe we should just write this
one off.
I conclude we probably shouldn’t draw too many conclusions from specific statements like “X% of
[GROUP] supports [CONSPIRACY THEORY]”, especially if X is around 33%. It’s probably just the
North Dakota Constant. Likewise, we shouldn’t interpret Pizzagate’s high polling numbers as much
evidence that fake news is very convincing – though you could still make an argument that fake
news plays a role in transmitting believable conspiracy theories to people who are predisposed to
believe them.
Of course, there are some high-information voters who still believe these things really strongly. I
think they deserve a more complete treatment, which I want to give later. I think a preliminary
sketch might look like: if you start with a prior on something being true, you don’t necessarily need
much evidence. The North Dakota question suggests that conspiracy theorists start with a high
prior on any given conspiracy being true. What remains to be explained is why some people stick
to that prior even after they get more information.
THIS ENTRY WAS POSTED IN UNCATEGORIZED AND TAGGED POLITICS, STATISTICS. BOOKMARK THE PERMALINK OR
LINK WITHOUT COMMENTS.
← Creationism, Unchallenged
Open Thread 155 →
LEAVE A REPLY
You must be logged in to post a comment.
378 RESPONSES TO BUSH DID NORTH DAKOTA
Reverse order

1. onyomi says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:04 am ~new~
Has anyone done a more systematic experiment/poll replicating that phenomenon where guy with

camera interviews a bunch of liberal college students asking them how they feel about [statement

actually said by President Obama], attributes the statement to Trump, and they all hate it? (And

presumably you could ask a bunch of truckers how they feel about [statement said by President

Obama], attribute it to Trump and they’d like it, or the inverse, if you can find a statement by

Trump without too many working class shibboleths encoded)?

My prior is that we’d find people overwhelmingly evaluating political statements primarily in light of

tribal and personal loyalties. And can we say anything either about the percentage of voters who

maintain their opinion even when attribution is switched and/or statements that won’t be

supported even when you think your guy said it or opposed when the other guy said it, such as

“these are the informed voters” or “these are the real points of disagreement beyond tribal

signalling”?
Log in to Reply Hide

o alexmennen says:

May 29, 2020 at 12:27 am ~new~

I am very suspicious of this. If some small but nontrivial fraction of liberal college students would

harshly criticize an Obama quote when told that Trump said it, it’s easy to make a video that

makes it look like all of them do that by interviewing lots of them on camera and only including the

ones who react the way you want them to in the film.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 toastengineer says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:17 am ~new~

Do any sources do this sort of thing live, so they can’t be accused of this trick?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 6:38 am ~new~

Well yeah, that’s how this always works. A non-political version of it are the classic “Jaywalking”

segments from The Tonight Show with Jay Leno where he’d walk the streets of LA, ask random

pedestrians incredibly simple and easy questions about basic knowledge, and then everyone would

laugh at their stupid answers.

Jay: How many states are there in the United States of America?

Cute blonde tourist girl: Uh, 12? *giggles uncontrollably*

Audience: HAHAHAHA LOOK AT THE DUMB GIRL

It was low-effort cheap entertainment then, and it’s the same now, when applied politically.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 2:12 pm ~new~

A bit hypocritical, seeing as his wife made a comment about how much South Africa oppresses

“African Americans”.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Yosarian2 says:
June 2, 2020 at 6:47 pm ~new~

That’s not a sign of being ill-informed, it just means that lots of people automatically use the terms

“black people” and “African-American people” interchangeably without stopping to parse the

examples where they’re not quite synonymous. It’s a silly thing to criticize someone for, it’s just a

weird artifact of our language.


Hide ↑

 DarkTigger says:
June 3, 2020 at 4:24 am ~new~

@Yosarian

Yes, or it is another example that USAmericans belive that the USA is the whole world floating on

an unending sea of mexican migrant worker. /scnr


Hide ↑

 Squirrel of Doom says:


May 31, 2020 at 12:07 pm ~new~

Jaywalking also had the incentive that people knew the only way to get on TV was to give a stupid

answer.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Trofim_Lysenko says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:06 pm ~new~

As Matt M said, that was a regular feature of Jay Leno’s show. See also the entire oeuvre of Sacha

Baron Cohen (especially his ‘Borat’ and ‘Ali G’ personas).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 MisterA says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:04 pm ~new~

In fairness to Cohen, his real craft was in getting people who really ought to know better –

politicians, public figures, etc – to say the type of stuff a sidewalk sucker on Jaywalking would say.

Or else to make them think they are in front of a friendly audience and can say the horrible stuff

they actually think rather than their public line.

These are both, I think, a more sophisticated trick than Jaywalking.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 DavidS says:
May 30, 2020 at 2:10 pm ~new~
Yes: and Sasha Baron Cohen kept in at least some people who didn’t give in to it – not people who

knew who he was, but people who kept their own principles rather than pandering. His interview

with Tony Benn, Benn acts pretty much like he would on Newsnight. Trigger Happy TV (prank

show) also kept some things in where celebrities challenged when they did something outrageous

etc. too.

In terms of getting celebrities (and lawmakers) to say ridiculous things the best was Brass Eye. I

think the peak being getting a well-known DJ at the time to record something with the line

“paedophiles have more genes in common with crabs than they do with you and me”, adding “Now

that is scientific fact—there’s no real evidence for it—but it is scientific fact”. And then smashing a

crab with a hammer.


Hide ↑

 Logan says:
May 30, 2020 at 2:41 pm ~new~

It’s pretty ungenerous and baseless to say “the things you say in front of a friendly audience are

things you actually think, while the things you say in front of a camera is a pander.” I lie more in

front of friendly audiences, because I know I can get away with it and I know what they want to

hear. Code-switching doesn’t mean you only really believe the damning stuff.
Hide ↑
o wavedash says:

May 29, 2020 at 12:57 am ~new~

I’m not sure what exact part of this “phenomenon” you’re testing for: are you asking if there are

polls on how people approve of actions done by different people; or are you asking for more

rigorous, academic documentation of signalling in particular?


If it’s the former, I’m aware of one infamous example:

“In 2013, when Barack Obama was president, a Washington Post-ABC News poll found that only 22

percent of Republicans supported the U.S. launching missile strikes against Syria in response to

Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against civilians.

A new Post-ABC poll finds that 86 percent of Republicans support Donald Trump’s decision to

launch strikes on Syria for the same reason. Only 11 percent are opposed.

38% of Democratic voters backed Obama’s proposed strikes in Syria, and now, 37% of Democratic

voters support Trump doing the same thing.”

http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/syria-reflexive-partisanship-doesnt-apply-both-

parties
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Tatterdemalion says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:39 am ~new~
I think that the basic point they’re trying to make here is probably both correct and important, but

it’s worth pointing out that reporting “% support” the first time and “% oppose” the second may

make the difference in Republican opinions look larger than it actually is, because if some people

have no opinion then those numbers probably won’t add up to 100% – it probably wasn’t the case

that 78% opposed the first time and 89% supported the second.

But that change is large enough that that probably doesn’t undermine the central point.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Placid Platypus says:


May 29, 2020 at 9:51 am ~new~

Seems like you missed that the second time includes both supported and opposed. If you ignore

the opposed and just look at support, it goes from 22 to 86.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Tatterdemalion says:
May 30, 2020 at 4:15 pm ~new~

Yes, sorry, I missed that.


Hide ↑

 onyomi says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:08 pm ~new~

Thanks, I had not heard of that one, though one can quibble about all kinds of factors like different

historical moment, hypothetical intervention vs. already happened intervention, etc. Though

presumably circumstances and context are also among the major elements people draw on when

rationalizing why it was good when their guy said it/did it/proposed it and not the reverse.

I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that Republican views on military intervention fluctuate more

depending on who’s in the White House, though I am surprised to hear of 38% of Democrats

supporting anything Trump did.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Darwin says:
May 30, 2020 at 7:18 pm ~new~

I have to say, I would probably fall for this.

But I think it’s a Bayesian rational thing to do!

Because I absolutely do not know enough about this issue to know what the right thing to do is. So

my prior for whether the president is doing the right thing here is heavily affected by my prior that

the President is smart and well-intentioned.


EG, my guess for ‘is this a good idea’ will be close to my estimated base rate for ‘what percent of

things this president does are good ideas’.

Since my prior about that is very different for these two presidents, my guess about whether this

action is a good idea should also be different depending on which is doing it.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 muskwalker says:
May 31, 2020 at 10:59 pm ~new~

I would also separate out that “X person should take Y action” depends not only whether I judge X

to know whether Y action is good, but also on whether X person would be good at doing it. (Even if

I did think we should bomb some country, I wouldn’t support a small child leading the action, for

example.)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o len says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:17 am ~new~

I don’t think it’s entirely just tribal or personal loyalties. It can be rational trust in an authority

figure’s values and decision making process. If your model is that Trumobama hates everything

you believe in and stand for and that Obamarump represents your interests, then it’s rational to

agree with X when Obamarump said X and disagree with X when Trumobama said X, especially if

you didn’t have strong feelings about X in the first place.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 onyomi says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:09 pm ~new~

Good point. It could be related to Epistemic Learned Helplessness, which isn’t necessarily a bad

thing.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Manya says:
May 30, 2020 at 3:46 pm ~new~

Yeah. A lot of it comes down to trust. You’re far more likely to trust that a politician you generally

support does not mean anything insidiously awful by X, and you are right to do so.

If I think that Obamarump shares my values, and despite this, he is proposing X which sounds like

something Trumobama would do, my prior is going to be that he’s examined all the alternatives

and they are all worse. When Trumobama does the same thing, my prior is that he considers some

of the things I think of as downsides as upsides, or at least as not relevant.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o adamshrugged says:

May 29, 2020 at 3:55 am ~new~

Yes, Cohen (2003) did this more rigorously:

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/4ecc/34af1b002340a02ed830d296819f64e1172f.pdf
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 onyomi says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:04 pm ~new~

Thanks!
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Darwin says:

May 30, 2020 at 7:14 pm ~new~

Part of the problem with this methodology is that single sentences out of context are usually very

underdeterminative, and the effect is likely driven more by people interpreting the meaning of the

sentence differently rather than changing their preference for the same interpretation.

For example, Trump’s recent tweet including the phrase ‘when the looting starts, the shooting

starts’. There are people convinced that this is a promise that he will order the military to start

gunning down protestors, and there are people convinced that this is a plea for sanity reminding

people that riots evolve from property damage to violence and death very quickly and therefore

order needs to be maintained.

If reasonable people are interpreting the same set of words this differently, it implies that there are
multiple reasonable ways to interpret it. Which of those interpretations you land on is likely to have

a lot to do with the context in which the statement was made, the identity of the speaker being a

big part of teat context.

So although it might look to an outsider like naked partisanship, it would make sense for someone

to endorse that statement if made by one president and condemn it if made by another, because

they might reasonably interpret it to mean different things.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 sauber says:
June 6, 2020 at 6:00 am ~new~
So although it might look to an outsider like naked partisanship, it would make sense for someone to
endorse that statement if made by one president and condemn it if made by another, because they
might reasonably interpret it to mean different things.
Motivated reasoning makes contortionists out of us all, though, as it leads us to contextualize or

decontextualize a statement to fit our priors. It’s why headlines are catnip.
If I believe politician X represents me and my tribe, I’m motivated to interpret his statements and

actions charitably – even if that requires I ignore context and precedent, to the point of being

unreasonable.

Conversely, if I believe politician X does not represent me and my tribe, I’m motivated to interpret

his statements and actions uncharitably – even if that requires I ignore context and precedent, to

the point of being unreasonable.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

2. Luke Perrin says:


May 29, 2020 at 12:07 am ~new~
Who believes Obama was secretly born in Kenya? Lots of people – including 28% of blacks. I’ve been
told again and again that birtherism is a racist conspiracy theory and no person could possibly
believe it except as a way of dog whistling white supremacy. Yet here we are with 28% of blacks
supporting it – and this isn’t a small sample either! I have no idea what these people are thinking,
except that 28% is pretty close to the North Dakota Constant and maybe we should just write this one
off.
Maybe some of the 4% of people who create the lizardman constant also lie about their race? Since

black people form a small percentage of the population their stats will be more greatly affected.
Log in to Reply Hide

o Scott Alexander says:

May 29, 2020 at 12:17 am ~new~

Oh, interesting theory!

If 4% of people lie about their race, and black people are 12% of the population, then about 25%

of supposed blacks will be fake. If 50% of fake blacks believe in birtherism, that’s enough to create
a 12.5% rate in the general black population if 0% of real blacks believe it. Since the observed rate

is 28%, instead we would need an additional 12% of real blacks (is that math right?) to believe it.

But people who lie about being black might also be more likely to lie about believing birtherism, for

the lulz, so I’m not sure.

But maybe Joe Biden was on to something!


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 29, 2020 at 12:56 am ~new~
If 4% of people lie about their race, and black people are 12% of the population, then about 25% of
supposed blacks will be fake.
When I was a kid on the internet, I took it for granted that when their face wasn’t visible, people

would lie about their age, gender, even species if it would help or do no harm to their goals (on the

internet, no one can really know you’re a dog).


When I discovered as an adult in the latter Noughts that there were large bubbles where speakers’s

race was a huge deal in debates, I just avoided all such places if they were online (so like, not

college). Like, how does anyone know?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:08 am ~new~

It reminds me about a scam site ( https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pobieraczek.pl ) that (a) lied that it

was offering legal materials (b) tried to scare users into paying by sending seriously-seeming-

letters to your home.

When I registered to it asked about home address. Apparently many people used real one for some

reason – and they got extortion letters with threats to sue.

I understand why people used real address, it is not changing fact that it is bad idea to use real

data when registering, unless truly necessary.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anonymous says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:15 am ~new~

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Internet,_nobody_knows_you%27re_a_dog
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Vitor says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:35 am ~new~

The math is wrong. you’d need (.28 – .125)/.75 ~ 21% of real blacks to believe. I think you

multiplied instead of dividing.

Also, up to 25% of blacks are fake. Reported blacks could fluctuate between 11.5% and 16% in

your model. You’re implicitly claiming there’s a systematic effect causing all liars to claim being

black, and no blacks to be lying.

I’m only nitpicking because you asked. Overall I think this is an important point that can explain a

significant fraction of the effect.

Edit: math is hard.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Tatterdemalion says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:48 am ~new~

If 5% of your respondents are white birthers who think “let’s give our conspiracy theory legitimacy

by pretending to be black and saying we believe it”, and 100% of black respondents honestly state
that they are black and don’t believe it, that would give you well over 28% of responses that claim

to be from black people coming from frauds.

40% of the electorate support Trump, give or take. 1/8 does not strike me as an implausibly high

guess for the fraction of those who would do this.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 MilesM says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:55 am ~new~

I could maybe believe it if it was some short Facebook quiz focusing on attracting birthers.

But the idea that 1/8th of Trump voters were obsessed enough with the birth question in 2016 that

they’d take a 127-question long poll from The Economist with the intent of pretending to be black

so they can lie and say Obama was born in Kenya seems wildly improbable.

Sorry, but I think it verges on the “willing to believe wild conspiracy theories about the other tribe”

territory.
Hide ↑

 Jaskologist says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:51 am ~new~

Does the poll provide a racial breakdown of its respondents? That’s pretty common in normal

political polling, and would let us sense-check this.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 onyomi says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:05 pm ~new~

Pollsters call it “Dolezal’s Constant.”


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Dan L says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:56 pm ~new~


Since black people form a small percentage of the population their stats will be more greatly
affected.
A specific instance of the general rule: “Don’t get lost in the cross tabs.”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
3. DavidFriedman says:

May 29, 2020 at 12:16 am ~new~

There must have been a North Dakota crash or the poll wouldn’t have asked about it. I never heard

a thing about the crash, so obviously somebody was suppressing the news. Given that news was

being suppressed, 33% of the people assuming that the government is responsible isn’t that odd.
Perhaps a bit low.
Log in to Reply Hide
o Michael Watts says:

May 29, 2020 at 12:46 am ~new~

I was going to make a similar point – if you’ve never heard of the North Dakota crash, that doesn’t

exactly undermine the idea that there’s a coverup.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 10240 says:
May 29, 2020 at 3:37 am ~new~

Do you know why elephants have red eyes?

So they can hide in cherry trees.

Have you seen an elephant in a cherry tree?

No? See, that’s how well it works.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anteros says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:15 am ~new~

Tangential, but you just reminded me..

Why are Elephants large, grey and wrinkled?

Because if they were small, white and round, they’d be aspirins.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:05 am ~new~

How does the elephant get down from the cherry tree?
Sit on a leaf, and wait for fall.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 halfasperger says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:03 pm ~new~

How does an elephant get into a cherry tree?

Sit on a cherry pit and wait for spring.


Hide ↑

 Tatterdemalion says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:53 am ~new~

Throwing-balls-of-paper-out-of-the-window-to-keep-tigers-away exercises are awkward, because if

you stop them then half the time you save vast amounts of littering, and the other half you get

eaten by tigers, and sometimes it’s really hard to tell which is which.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 FeepingCreature says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:49 am ~new~

Sure, but the whole premise here is that you prompt them with “How did the elephant hide in the

cherry tree?” Given that, “Red eyes! I knew it!” is not an entirely unreasonable response.

It’s a loaded question.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Conrad Honcho says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:33 pm ~new~

I thought the joke was “why do elephants paint their toenails red?”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 6:39 am ~new~

Of course Scott would tell us there was no North Dakota crash. He’s in on it!
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

4. Erusian says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:01 am ~new~

Personally, if you told me about the “North Dakota Crash” I’d presume you were talking about the

issues the oil industry is having due to the recent Saudi-Russia spat followed by the coronavirus. I

think we can all agree that Reuters is pretty reliable? If not, you can find other reports on the same

thing. Likewise, in 2016 I’d have been concerned about similar effects due to the (real) oil glut and
the wondering about the long term viability of the fracking boom at new prices.

Neither was called the North Dakota Crash afaik but they were prominent crashes in a region that

covers a big slice of North Dakota.

I’m curious how much of this happens? People who think they know what you’re talking about and

are just wrong about the reference. Because I think we can agree that I’m not imagining these

events or the concern they generated, it’s just relatively niche due to my interests. Though a

Google search says the university is in southern California, which is oil country. And I know the

Republicans love to bang on about fracking and covered it with some trepidation. (I’m not well

adjusted for these things, but didn’t the region get a TV show? Doesn’t that imply some cultural

familiarity?)

There has to be some difficulty in making up fake events that don’t map to real ones. After all, if

someone said “the disaster that happened in November of 2016” I’d have a pretty good idea what

they meant even though I’m not aware of any non-metaphorical disasters at that time.
Log in to Reply Hide
o Scott Alexander says:

May 29, 2020 at 1:13 am ~new~

I am from Southern California and I don’t think it’s oil country in any meaningful sense. I

understand it produces some oil, but most people aren’t connected to the industry or even

necessarily aware of it.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Erusian says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:52 am ~new~

California (and the oil is in the south) produces about a tenth of all the oil in the US, enough that it

(on its own) outproduces several OPEC members. There are other, bigger industries in California to

be sure (entertainment, tech, etc) but that’s more because California is big than oil is small.

Another way to put it: is Texas oil country? Because California is about half a Texas. And I know for

a fact that people in Austin would say that oil isn’t that important too.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 John Schilling says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:39 am ~new~
Another way to put it: is Texas oil country?
Only West Texas and Houston are oil country. And no part of California much outside of Bakersfield

is oil country.

What matters for “X country” status is how important X is to the local economy or culture of the

country in question, not how important the country’s X is to the outside world. If you produce a

tiny fraction of the world’s X, but that’s all you produce, you’re “X country”. If you produce a huge

chunk of the world’s X, but it’s a tiny fraction of all the stuff you produce, you’re not.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Erusian says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:54 pm ~new~

Fair enough. I would point out that South California, including LA, is the area equivalent to West

Texas in terms of where the production is. But I find that a perfectly acceptable standard.

More to the point though, imagine if you were doing a survey. Let’s say 5% of workers producing

5% of the economy work in oil. Let’s say they have two friends or family members each. 15% of

the population, even if its a small minority, would thus be familiar with the state of the oil industry

even if 85% of the population wasn’t. And that accounts for half of your 30%.
Hide ↑

 Watchman says:
May 30, 2020 at 1:12 am ~new~

I think the go-to reference for the Southern California oil industry is one of the Beverley Hills Cop

movies. The one where Axel Foley is surprised there’s an oilfield in LA.

At least that’s the reason I know about it…


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:16 am ~new~

Oil does have some weird implications in SoCal though. The Beverly Center mall is on top of a

gigantic parking garage, but some of the space in the parking garage is blocked off because it’s an

active oil well. Anti-subway people in Beverly Hills use the presence of an oil well on the campus of

Beverly Hills High School to argue that the subway is an unacceptable danger.

https://www.lamag.com/citythinkblog/hidden-oil-wells/

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/05/07/metro-anti-subway-tunneling-video-with-fireballs-

explosions-unfortunate/

But obviously, even in Beverly Hills, oil is not the primary source of money. (I don’t believe there

are many remaining Beverly Hillbillies.)


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Star says:

May 29, 2020 at 8:11 am ~new~

Ya I was in North Dakota in 2015 (was it 2014 or 2016 when the crash happened?) and I

remember the difference in foot traffic at my favorite pizza joint in Watford “city” (they don’t know

what the word city means out there). The place went from standing room only to three tables out

of 20 having patrons at dinner time. I was lucky, I had changed jobs out of the oil sector 5 months

before the price cracked. I have never heard it called The North Dakota crash but it’s what I would

think of were the phrase used on me (older folk would have thought of a similar crash in the 70’s).
As to conspiracy no it was a natural result of the concentrated effort of people like me getting the

infrastructure in place to make the black gold flow.

So basically ya Erusian is right there are huge name collision problems in this space (or search

pollution if you prefer) and for the record don’t go to North Dakota if you are from the north east

the cultures are mutually repulsive. They will think you are too curt and short and you will think

they are slow and dumb (they aren’t it’s an act).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

5. User_Riottt says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:36 am ~new~

Ugh I took part in a survey about conspiracy theories a few years ago…. Turns out I’m a “feelings

first” conspiracy theorist for believing the verifiable fact (complete with whistleblower testimony)

that:
Wall Street colluded to crash the global economy in 2008 (the most popular, with 35% agreeing).
.

Only 35%!!!!! Sadly, propaganda works.


Log in to Reply Hide
o Alkatyn says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:59 am ~new~

Depends what you mean by “colluded” here. To me it implies specific intent. Like they wrote a plan

where crashing the economy was their specific end goal. Which I’d say is obviously false because

crashing the economy is bad for their own self interest.

But if you mean something more like” repeatedly did things motivated by short term profit that

risked the wider economy” and “actively tried to prevent regulation” then sure.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 User_Riottt says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:02 am ~new~

So, picture some really smart people…. They know there is a huge market for MBS They make a

ton of money from selling them, only one problem; there are only so many mortgages people want

to take out. Solution; toss the underwriting standards out the window, it’s time for NINJA loans (No

Income No Job or Assets). Literally that is what they called them. They know, those don’t sound all

that likely to get paid back… Oh well they just decide to bribe the ratings agencies to make them

sound better than they are and then bet that they will go bad.

Was their primary goal to blow up the entire financial system? Maybe not, but you damn well

better believe they knew that it was practically guaranteed to happen. They even bet it would.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:41 am ~new~

Solution; toss the underwriting standards out the window, it’s time for NINJA loans (No Income No

Job or Assets).

Not quite what the Bird and Fortune satirical comedy sketch named it, but close enough 🙂 (video

quality is very poor, sorry about that).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sauber says:
June 6, 2020 at 6:25 am ~new~

Arrested Development was my point of reference for NINJA loans, but I quite enjoyed the Bird and

Fortune sketch.
Hide ↑

 sourcreamus says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:38 pm ~new~

The people making the loans and the people who bet that they would go bad for the most part are

not the same people. There may have been people hedging their investments, but for most people

NINJA loans made sense to them because they had never been in an environment where home

values went down significantly. The contrarians were the ones who bet big on the loans going bust

and they did not originate those loans.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 2:26 pm ~new~

The word “to” means intent. Claiming that someone did X to do Y, when Y was not in fact the

terminal goal, is a lie, pure and simple. I’m not interested in your not technically a lie excuses.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 CptDrMoreno says:
May 30, 2020 at 4:37 pm ~new~

you just switched intent and terminal goal at your own convenience.

“Did the roman senate collude to assassinate Julius Caesar?”

“No, terminal goal was acquisition of power”

They knew their actions would lead to economic collapse and undertook these actions, this is

enough to qualify under “did X to Y” under a reasonable interpretation.


Hide ↑

 10240 says:
May 30, 2020 at 4:55 pm ~new~

@No One In Particular @CptDrMoreno I’d say the usual meaning is between the two: one would
say someone does X to do Y if Y is an intermediate goal towards a terminal goal Z, but not if Y is a

side-effect. Under this meaning the Senate did collude to assassinate Casear, but Wall Street didn’t

collude to crash the economy if it was a side-effect, but not an intermediate nor a terminal goal.
Claiming that someone did X to do Y, when Y was not in fact the terminal goal, is a lie, pure and
simple.
Knock it off. If we are going to nitpick, a lie usually refers to an intentional falsehood, but not to

imprecise talk.
Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 6:27 pm ~new~

@10240 There is a point where imprecise wording becomes a lie.

@CptDrMoreno
They knew their actions would lead to economic collapse and undertook these actions, this is enough
to qualify under “did X to Y” under a reasonable interpretation.
No, it’s not. “to” indicates purpose. If the purpose of X was not Y, then “did X to Y” is not accurate.
Hide ↑

 DavidS says:
May 30, 2020 at 9:50 pm ~new~

I think this is an interesting exchange because it may uncover another issue in understanding

certain types of conspiracy (not very focused ones like ‘Obama born in Kenya’ but general ones

about rich and powerful people pulling the strings.

Typical SSC type probably reads things in a direct, literal way like Alkatyn – so not only would they

say ‘no’ but they’d assume anyone saying ‘yes’ thought that Wall Street met up and discussed how

to deliverately crash the economy. But if other people say ‘yes’ and they mean ‘Wall Street did a

bunch of things that were bad and where they must have known this was a risk’ that’s very

different.

Scott’s own Basic Argument Against Conspiracy assumes the former view (which is mine too)

https://slatestarcodex.com/2019/01/14/too-many-people-dare-call-it-conspiracy/ But on reflection

I can see yours, and more generally I can see people seeing the question

“Did Wall Street collude to crash the global economy in 2008” and reading it as “Do you blame

greedy bankers for the crash”.

Clarity of the question isn’t helped by treating ‘Wall Street’ as a single entity.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 30, 2020 at 10:43 pm ~new~
“Did Wall Street collude to crash the global economy in 2008” and reading it as “Do you blame
greedy bankers for the crash”.
And that is why I would not agree with “Did Wall Street collude to crash the global economy in

2008” and at the same time I may agree with people that agree with this.
Hide ↑
o Tarpitz says:

May 29, 2020 at 3:41 am ~new~

I wouldn’t characterize it as “Wall Street colluded to crash the global economy.” Did widespread

fraud on Wall Street contribute significantly to the bubble and consequently the crash? Absolutely.

Did government/regulators collude with Wall Street to cover it up? Yeah, pretty much. But to me

that question reads as “Was there a Wall Street conspiracy aimed at crashing the world economy,”

which there wasn’t.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 toastengineer says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:21 am ~new~

This is the first I’m hearing of any of this conspiracy stuff. Source?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:12 am ~new~

Which part is conspiracy stuff? Nonfunctioning regulation and hiding deficiencies? Or widespread

fraud/underestimating risk/using faulty models because it allowed higher short term profit?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:43 am ~new~

Most survey questions about complicated questions are worded in a way that eliminates shades of

gray.

Did Wall Street as a whole, everyone down to the janitors, engage in a conspiracy to cause the

world economy to crash? No, no way that could work.

Did some small number of very powerful people on Wall Street engage in a conspiracy to cause the

world economy to crash? That at least could have happened, but seems pretty unlikely and I know

of no evidence to suggest it.

Did some major Wall Street companies engage in behavior that was systematically risky because it

was profitable for them, and then benefit from bailouts (directly and more importantly, indirectly)

when their bets went sour on them? That’s what it looks like to me.

But nobody’s going to write you a survey question like that, so the best you get is some kind of

“Did Wall Street conspire to crash the world economy?” question where there’s not really a way of

indicating what you think is true.


Hide ↑

 Randy M says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:47 am ~new~

I think “Many financiers colluded to profit off of a crash that they had a significant role in causing”

is pretty likely.

Also likely is the fact that knowing they might be able to do so made them dangerously reckless

beforehand.
Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:51 am ~new~
I think “Many financiers colluded to profit off of a crash that they had a significant role in causing” is
pretty likely.
Oh, I completely believe that financiers colluded for profit in ways that increased risk of crash (or

even caused it) and then colluded to profit from the crash and colluded to avoid responsibility for

crash.

But I do not believe at all that they colluded to cause a crash. Primarily because actually causing a

crash and then profiting from it is extremely hard.


Hide ↑

o Cliff says:

May 29, 2020 at 8:05 am ~new~

They are right, you are wrong


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o matkoniecz says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:14 am ~new~

“Wall Street colluded to crash the global economy in 2008” is untrue, though “Wall Street colluded

and crashed the global economy in 2008 as a side effect” is true.

If you are aware about serious evidence that there was collusion that deliberately crashed

economy: [citation needed]


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:25 am ~new~

Yeah. I don’t necessarily believe that Wall Street wanted the global economy to crash. But I do

believe they didn’t necessarily care that it did. It was negligent homicide, but not first-degree

murder.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Gerry Quinn says:


May 29, 2020 at 4:11 pm ~new~

It’s like if you sell someone a car with defective brakes. You don’t *want* them to crash. Indeed,

you would prefer if they did not. The problem is that you don’t care enough about whether they do.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 30, 2020 at 11:52 am ~new~

Difference between deeply dishonest salesman (to the point of causing deaths) and someone

deliberately sabotaging car to cause an accident would – I think – be a good parallel.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 2:40 pm ~new~

1. Wall Street is a paved surface in Manhattan. The idea that it engaged in sentient behavior is

absurd.

2. No, this is not a nitpick. Words are important. Yes, we all know you don’t literally mean Wall

Street. “Wall Street” is simply metaphorical language for … something else. The issue is that by

using a term that obviously doesn’t mean what it means and “everyone knows” that it means

something else is that you get to avoid saying who you actually mean. The very fact that you’re

saying (well, okay, they aren’t your words originally, but you’re still endorsing them) Vague

references to shadowy groups, such as “Wall Street” rather than a reasonably precise phrasing,

such as “a large number of people in the Manhattan financial system”, is a primary characteristic of

conspiracy theories.

3. The claim is hopeless vague in other ways. What level of intent is being asserted? Etc.

4. Posting a link to a twenty page article with no indication of what part of it you are asserting

supports your claims is not a legitimate cite.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Freddie deBoer says:


May 31, 2020 at 11:34 am ~new~

This is the worst comment I’ve ever read on SlateStarCodex, and I’ve read many terrible

comments here. To be so desperate to act pedantic that you pretend not to know how synecdoche

works is just… breathtaking.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Mark V Anderson says:


May 31, 2020 at 6:31 pm ~new~

I agree totally with No One. He is absolutely correct that the original comment makes no sense, for

the reason he says. You can call this the 2nd worst comment on SSC, or maybe realize that yours

is pretty bad itself.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Anatid says:

May 30, 2020 at 10:47 pm ~new~

Financial crises are very bad for Wall Street. 2008 hurt it a lot. I looked up the performance of IYF,

an ETF which tracks financial sector stocks. It was down more than 80% at the bottom. To the

extent that “Wall Street” has collective wants, it wants the global economy to *not* crash. Banks

do well when the overall economy is doing well, and poorly when the overall economy is doing

poorly.
“Wall street colluded to crash the economy” implies that Wall Street as a whole collectively

benefitted from the crash, when the opposite is true.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Freddie deBoer says:


May 31, 2020 at 11:36 am ~new~

Wall Street as a whole benefited from the bubble that led to the crash, of course, and it was the

greed inherent in trying to keep those paper gains forever that caused the crash. The sin is one of

recklessness and a lack of moral hazard, as should be obvious to anyone.

I know that this comments section is filled with witless endorsements of rapacious winner-take-all

capitalism, but they usually aren’t this witless. Please, try harder.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anatid says:
May 31, 2020 at 7:13 pm ~new~

I did not say that banks weren’t reckless or blameworthy. I said that the people you gesture at

when you say “Wall Street” were on average hurt a lot by the crash, and did not want it to happen.

I agree with you that the people doing the reckless stuff benefitted from the bubble (though I

expect that in the end the banks involved lost much more than they ever gained) — the claim I

was responding to was that they benefitted from the crash itself. I completely agree with you about

recklessness and moral hazard.

On another topic — do you mind being a little nicer when you disagree? (though as I said I *don’t*

disagree with the things you wrote).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
June 1, 2020 at 5:15 am ~new~

Indeed. The real calculus that needs to be done here is the success/failure of the total business

cycle.

That is to say, did Wall Street make more or less money during the whole cycle of bubble-bust-

recovery than they would have in a counterfactual scenario where there is no bubble, such that

there is no bust, and no recovery.

I’d guess they did – solely because of the bailouts. All the bubble profit they got to keep, but the

bust losses they were insulated from.

The net loser in all of this is, of course, the taxpayer (and holders of US dollars in general)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

6. Eric says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:36 am ~new~

The important insight when doing psychological measurement is that what a response means is not

equal to what the words used to prompt that response mean. People often are really answering a
degraded or more simple version of the question you ask, especially when moving fast. In this

case, I would say that many people were partially degrading the question “Do you think the very

specific negative thing about Hillary Clinton?” into “HILLARY = SUPER BAD?”. So someone might

look and that question and think: ‘that looks like something extremely crazy anti Hillary. I’m not

quite that extreme, but I do think she is bad so the response option that communicates my feelings

the best is in that direction, but not all the way’.

So I agree with you the reporting the results of polls (particularly ones where responses are made

on a scale and then dichotomized / interpreted as representing distinct answer categories) is

fraught and I’d add this as another reason why.


Log in to Reply Hide

o Zephalinda says:

May 29, 2020 at 4:22 am ~new~

This this this.

It’s super-frustrating that nearly all discussions of survey research, even on SSC, casually

equivocate between the actual research findings and the bigger social phenomenon that somebody

thinks can be distantly inferred from those findings.

No, the survey did not find that [Group] believes X, or regularly does Y, or is likelier to make Z

choice in real life. Those were the very sexiest conclusions the harried researchers thought they

could get away with drawing, based on the fact that of their small and highly selected sample, X%

of people nominally identifying as [Group] answered these specifically worded questions in this

specific way. Long before we jump to debating WHAT SHOULD BE DONE about the conclusions of

any study, it should be absolutely obligatory to have a good long conversation about methods,

including the fact that:


— there were only 1337 people surveyed

— drawn from anonymous Internet folks voluntarily opting into a long YouGov web survey (who

the heck frequents that website, anyway? How was this advertised, and where?)

— who, I guess, self-reported as US adults, but they don’t discuss whether this was verified at all?

So could theoretically have been space aliens, the same bored 14-year-old 4channer 1337 times

over, or Russian trolls.

— whose voter registration status was apparently also not verified, but “imputed” based on the

registration status of the comparable group in nationwide statistics (!)

— clicking 150 separate lines of checkboxes in who-knows-how-much time? (It’s not reported, but

in a 150-question tickbox survey you’re trying to chug through before the start of Jeopardy!, “Do

you believe this unfamiliar bad-sounding thing about Hillary?” absolutely does get rounded off to

“HILLARY BAD??”)

— answering based on a complex set of motivations that may include “this is actually true of me at

the moment” but likely also contain elements of “I want to think I feel this way,” “This would be

hilarious to put down,” “I want them to think the other side would think this other way,” “I don’t
really understand the question, but whatever,” “A… A… A… A… A… A… Jeopardy!’s starting any

minute!…” and so forth.

— and apparently creating data so low-quality, conflicted or inconveniently anti-message that the

researchers decided to just quietly omit results from 24 questions, or ~16% of the whole survey.

At that point, I’d argue it becomes clear that nobody should move on to discussing the conclusions

of this survey, because this survey is meaningless trash. You may as well butcher a pig and ask the

entrails what Democrats believe about President Trump’s actions on climate change.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:36 am ~new~

But…. but… but… there were NUMBERS! NUMBERS don’t lie. And, a bunch of those, like, signs with

the o/o thingies? Oh, here it is: %%55%. I remember that those are sci-en-ti-fic.

It’s a crazy thing about putting numbers up on a screen. No matter how many times you tell even

the smart people how flawed they might be, the numbers still exert a huge influence. You’ve heard

about how the results of spinning a number wheel visibly in front of a person influence the

magnitude of that person’s guess on a follow-up question?

Professionally I’ve stopped putting actual numbers on slides while reporting preliminary data to

stakeholders. I’ll describe the magnitude, but I find the stakeholders treat the data with a more-

appropriate level of skepticism when I don’t include numbers at all.

Same thing with risk mitigation plans; I’ve gone all-qualitative unless there’s some reason to be

sure of a number’s precision.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:58 am ~new~

This was my most significant moral objection I held during my brief career in management

consulting.

Billion-dollar decisions were being made on the basis of some number that some kid one year out

of college basically made up. And nobody really had a problem with this. Everyone at the firm knew

how the numbers were WAGs, but the entire business model was contingent upon major

corporations taking our numbers seriously and being willing to act on them.

I would always trying and hedge myself. Remove the numbers as you say, or give wide ranges. But

my managers never wanted that. They wanted the specific number with two significant digits. Even

if the inputs to arrive at that number were highly general and full of crazy assumptions. It just got

so tiresome.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Randy M says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:10 am ~new~

Reminds me of my favorite Dilbert


Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:23 am ~new~

Well, to go the other way and defend my former industry, I’d actually push back on that Dilbert a

bit.

The WAG from the 23 year old whiz-kid is probably, in fact, the best number anyone has. And it

probably is more likely to be accurate than some truly random guess.

But that’s really just not saying much.


Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
June 1, 2020 at 4:56 am ~new~

Playing devil’s advocate here, a lot of those decisions wouldn’t change too much based on slight

fluctuations in the numbers, or can be adjusted later on.

I wonder what a better decision-making method under quantitative uncertainty would look like…

“Our current estimate is 3.63%. This is just preliminary data, and our 95% CI is 2.4% to 4.9%.

Within that range, our optimum behavior changes depending on whether the result is above or

below 3.3%. Currently we are 69% sure that the result will fall above 3.3%. We can either wait for

more data to refine our projection, proceed until the ‘no return’ point previous identified, or go all

in on the current estimate.”


Hide ↑

 Sauber says:
June 6, 2020 at 7:44 am ~new~

Witnessing this phenomenon from the other side can be madness-inducing.

I was an employee at a major corporation that, for over a decade, was in a constant state of

turmoil caused by CEO turnover and M&A activity. After a particularly significant divestiture

facilitated by an activist PE fund, they required us to bring in a prestigious management

consultancy to improve the efficiency of our operations.

The consultants arrived brandishing a formula that had clearly been conjured-up by someone who

had only a vague concept of the idea behind z-scores without ever having been formally

introduced. It was presented in a way that was pseudo-statistical enough to wow the brass, but it

clearly didn’t measure what it purported to measure. Had it been implemented as intended, the

results would have been catastrophic.

Fortunately, thanks to the aforementioned volatility of the company, our time with this particular

consultancy lasted only long enough for credulous VPs to adopt this nonsensical formula and spend

the next four years halfheartedly attempting to shoehorn it into our operations.

Not one decision was ever made based upon this formula, but an awful lot of money was spent to

obtain it. In an effort to save money, we paid millions of dollars to be told we might be able to save

money if it were possible to extract the same level of productivity from our lowest performers as

from our highest.


Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:50 am ~new~

there were only 1337 people surveyed

Okay, now I don’t believe any of the answers 🙂


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
June 1, 2020 at 4:58 am ~new~

Saw that too. Back when I was flying in military formations I always used to select 133.7 as our

‘Get Well’ frequency, and nobody ever got it… le sigh.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:23 am ~new~

The first two worries aren’t very significant worries. Online polls aren’t completely randomized of

course, but YouGov does manage to get fairly representative samples once they do a bit of

demographic weighting (as exhibited by the fact that their polls tend to give results within 5% of

true election results). A sample of 1337 people would usually have an expected 95% confidence

interval of around 3%. So we can be fairly confident that the fraction of people reporting a given

answer on one of their questions is within 5-10% of the true fraction of people that would report

that answer if we surveyed everyone.

The interpretation of what someone answering a question in a given way means for what they
actually think is definitely problematic. But there’s no reason to worry about 1000 people being a

“small” sample, or about the samples being especially non-representative (apart from having

internet access).
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Zephalinda says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:46 pm ~new~
A sample of 1337 people would usually have an expected 95% confidence interval of around 3%. So
we can be fairly confident that the fraction of people reporting a given answer on one of their
questions is within 5-10% of the true fraction of people that would report that answer if we surveyed
everyone.
They weren’t drawing conclusions about prevalence of beliefs across the sample as a whole; they

were drawing conclusions about belief prevalences within subgroups of the sample. So it seems as

though the relevant N for conclusions about Republicans should be the 318 respondents self-

identifying as Republican, not the total sample, no?


In any case, my understanding of the simple CI math is that it applies when you use random

sampling to get your survey population (we put every single person’s name in a hat and drew 1337

slips, here are the results for that group), but that the correction is a very great deal more

complicated when you have several selection filters in place, which is clearly the case with a

voluntary poll, subject to particular incentives, on an obscure political website. The preweighting

proportions of gender and party self-identification in themselves demonstrate that there are

noticeable selection forces of some kind in operation, so without understanding and correcting for

those, it’s hard to see how the sample can fairly be considered “representative” on these questions.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
June 1, 2020 at 4:59 am ~new~

There’s significant reason to be concerned about poll reliability, because those offsets are based on

historical data. During periods of high turmoil the historical offset no longer works, as 538

discovered in 2016.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
June 5, 2020 at 1:47 pm ~new~

Periods of high turmoil could well cause problems, but the 2016 election wasn’t one of those. The

polls were basically just as accurate in that election as they usually are, it’s just that the actual

facts were closer than in most recent elections (only 2000 was closer, and only 2004 was at all

comparable unless you go all the way back to at least 1980 or possibly 1960) so a small error can

flip the sign of the outcome. And FiveThirtyEight gave a reasonably high probability of 30% for the

outcome that occurred. It’s the Sam Wangs and the like that had real problems in 2016.
Hide ↑

 MugaSofer says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:29 pm ~new~

Most of What You Read on the Internet is Written by Insane People, from the SSC subreddit.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o dogiv says:

May 29, 2020 at 7:35 am ~new~

I would just like to second how annoying it is when pollsters put 4 to 6 options including things like

“slightly agree” and “strongly agree” and then report the results as “X% of respondents agreed or

strongly agreed with the statement…”

Like, if that’s the outcome you want to report, then the response options should be “agree or

strongly agree” and “disagree or strongly disagree”. People who answer “slightly agree” are trying

to communicate that they do not strongly agree, and then the reporting lumps them in with the

people who do strongly agree to make the conclusion sound more surprising.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:41 am ~new~

I agree with this statement.

But only slightly.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anteros says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:16 am ~new~

100% of all respondents agreed with the statement…. either strongly, or slightly
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Gerry Quinn says:


May 29, 2020 at 4:19 pm ~new~

I agreed with it negatively.


Hide ↑

7. ikew says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:42 am ~new~

And I was hoping to do some work today.

Right, so – pizzagate is the kind of conspiracy that requires very little evidence to be considered

“likely to be true” by my tribe and would require a lot of evidence to get dismissed. What gives?

First, it’s a supposed pattern of misdeeds by the highest echelons of power, and all investigative

organs such as the media, police, FBI are downstream from there. This means that “no evidence
found, the witness committed suicide” would be the default outcome of any investigation

regardless of what really happened, and we could only find any fragments of evidence in leaked

materials. Most ordinary cops might be decent humans, but we seen no reason to think they’d even

be involved in any capacity.

Second, we wouldn’t expect these fragments of evidence to be too convincing in a vacuum. We

don’t foresee anyone leaking actual footage of Hillary with a toddler drumstick in her hand. If such

materials do exist, people with access to them would be veteran operatives of whoever is running

the whole operation for blackmail purposes, not some low level temp worker. The bar the leaked

emails would need to surpass is pretty low to reinforce our belief something’s fishy and boy did

they clear it.

Third, Epstein has been known to be involved in organised abuse of underage girls for DECADES.

Those politicians in the UK involved in that underage sex ring have been at it since the 60s. (There

were some articles in 2014, then some people died in accidents and everyone stopped talking

about it.) The fact that nothing gets done about these things sets the tone here. They can act with

impunity. And then when they outlive their usefulness (to the intelligence agencies, most likely),

they will be disposed of, blatantly so, and people will again insist there’s nothing to see here. It’s
mildly infuriating.

If you do consider this unconvincing, that’s perfectly understandable. I have not shared here a

shred of evidence, on purpose. I’m not trying to convert you, dear reader, into a pizzagater. I’m

trying to explain why, when we hear that it has been conclusively debunked, well, we gain literally

no information from that, since our model predicted it would happen regardless of pizzagate being

real or not.

The old adage is “the more people are involved in an operation, the more likely it’s that op-sec gets

broken”. However, there is a strong survivor bias at play here – after all, if information integrity is

maintained, regular humans would never know anything happened. We all have different

guessestimates about the ratio of hidden to visible operations ongoing in the world. My tribe

assumes we live on a tiny island of light in a vast ocean of darkness. How do you evaluate the

unknown unknowns? You don’t. You aim to have a worldview that somewhat protects you from

them without sacrificing ALL of your degrees of freedom. So you paint a dragon on the parts of the

map you can’t safely explore.


Log in to Reply Hide
o Alkatyn says:

May 29, 2020 at 3:03 am ~new~

Seems like a classic example of an unfalsifiable claim. If the world in which its true (and therefore

all witnesses are silent) looks identical to the one where its false (no witnesses because nothing

happened) then there becomes no possible evidence that could disprove the belief.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Alkatyn says:
May 29, 2020 at 3:06 am ~new~

Or to put it another way. There’s an invisible dragon in my pizza parlour abusing children
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 ikew says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:11 am ~new~

There are small fragments of circumstantial evidence that did not get disappeared, however.

Laughably few if we were investigating, say, your middle aged neighbor.

Sufficient to be concerning if the entities involved include intelligence agencies and people at the

highest echelons of power.

Do we agree there are above zero per decade operations conducted by intelligence and security

agencies (foreign and domestic) that maintain complete stealth and no traces of them are ever

discovered by people like you and me (within the next 10 years, at least)? What about above zero

per year? What about multiple ongoing operations at every moment?

Where does the invisible dragon end and the highly trained and motivated special forces operators

begin?

In the absence of data we choose how many invisible dragons hanging above us to protect against.

Most people choose zero – we are basking in the light of a new, liberal, humanistic, democratic sun
after all.

Others find that extremely hard to believe.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:13 am ~new~
Laughably few if we were investigating, say, your middle aged neighbor.
Sufficient to be concerning if the entities involved include intelligence agencies and people at the
highest echelons of power.
This, I think, is where I personally began to get tripped up. I can charitably view the emails as

weird people in their own bubble making inside jokes. Easy stuff there. But when you mix in the

spirit cooking stuff (documented, verifiable), along with Podesta’s taste in art, the image takes a

different tint.

Now, is pizzagate real? Highly, highly likely not. But handwaving everything away as some crazy

conspiracy theory isn’t an effective way to convert believers into non-believers. For More:
Hide ↑

o DocKaon says:

May 29, 2020 at 7:40 am ~new~

In other words, what we thought was going on with your tribe’s thought process is what is going on

with your thought process. You’ve closed yourself off in an epistemic bubble which is impervious to

facts and logical contradictions. Neither evidence or argument will be effective in shaking your

beliefs.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 vaniver says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:46 am ~new~

I think this is unfair, and will talk just about Bayes Rule.

Suppose I have a theory A, and you have a theory B. The naive human approach to assessing “who

is right” is that I look for things that are high-probability under my theory, and you look for things

that are high probability under your theory, and we recite our lists to each other.

But if we take Bayes Rule seriously, then the thing that we need to do is look for evidence which

has meaningfully different probabilities under the two theories. I need to find something that A

thinks is likely and B thinks is unlikely for it to count as evidence for A over B.

That is, I think it’s a mistake to say “look at all the absence of evidence, therefore your theory is

wrong” without looking at what probability the other theory assigned to there being an absence of

evidence. Like, to talk about creationism (since this blog recently brought it up), many creationists

point out that Evolution predicts there should be transitional fossils, and we don’t find those
transitional fossils, therefore Evolution has logical contradictions and its supporters are impervious

to facts and logical contradictions. But, of course, this is a failure to look at the situation from

Evolution’s point of view: if you think that the fossil-creation mechanism is unlikely, then even

under a view where there are lots of transitional animals, there should be many gaps in the fossil

record due to the unreliability of the recording process.

In order to get these sorts of things right, you need to pay careful attention to what the theories

are to see where they actually disagree. [Most people don’t do this, because knowing too much

about theories that are in ill repute is a good way to get into ill repute themselves, even if they end

up believing the ‘mainstream theory’, and you have to be pretty confident in mainstream

epistemics to think you’ll never find out that the truth looks weird and the mainstream is wrong on

something.]
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Randy M says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:24 am ~new~
But, of course, this is a failure to look at the situation from Evolution’s point of view: if you think that
the fossil-creation mechanism is unlikely, then even under a view where there are lots of transitional
animals, there should be many gaps in the fossil record due to the unreliability of the recording
process.
Yes, but you should look at what evolutionary theory predicted prior to knowing about the fossil

record. Because otherwise it’s a moving target.

But that’s also not fair, because it should be a moving target as we learn more about the

fossilization process.

But it’s really hard to detect the difference between “Evolutionary theory predicted intermediate
fossils under fossilization was better understood, then modified to reflect this better understanding

and the evidence matches this new understanding” and “Evolutionary theory predicted

intermediate fossils until it couldn’t find them, then, despite this prediction being falsified, refused

to modify the theory of evolution and instead introduced baseless assumptions about fossilization.”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Some Troll's Serious Discussion Alt says:


May 29, 2020 at 11:32 am ~new~

Darwin expected the fossil record to be spotty and imperfect and in fact explicitly noted that it

would make changes in species look more dramatic than they actually are because transitional

forms would routinely be missing.

Some evolutionary theorists might have once expected a complete record of fossils, but I dont

think its obvious they were everva majority.


Hide ↑
 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:09 pm ~new~

As an aside, it’s also important to remember that one way to get better insights about the theory

of evolution (or any other theory) is to try to find places where it describes the world poorly, and

then work out why. This is consistent with a scientific worldview and way of approaching evolution,

but it’s not consistent with a tribal “evolution is true” campaign. The more you turn questions of

fact into group-membership questions, the more you sabotage your brain.
Hide ↑

 Eugene Dawn says:


May 29, 2020 at 12:20 pm ~new~
The more you turn questions of fact into group-membership questions, the more you sabotage your
brain.
I am a little uncertain about this statement, and the example you give. I definitely agree that

actual practicing scientists should take the approach you describe, but the fact is that without a

decent amount of training and background knowledge, a person trying to pick apart scientific

theories on their own will probably come away with a worse understanding of the world than if they

just accepted some version of the scientific consensus.

Evolution is maybe not the worst example for this; I’d make my case most strongly about quantum

mechanics or other abstruse areas of physics, but I think the point is true across the board.
Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:12 pm ~new~

I’m not saying “assume you’ve figured out the hole in QM from fifteen minutes of thinking,” I’m

saying “treat scientific theories/explanations as things that you’re allowed to question and reason

about, not as articles of faith.”

Partly, that’s because really understanding an idea requires kicking the tires a bit–how the hell

does “a larger fraction of the next generation carries gene X because of selection” get you to “This

male peacock has a tail so huge he can hardly fly?” or “This 10 lb mama cat will take on a 30 lb

dog to protect her kittens?” Asking those questions and thinking hard about the answer is pretty

useful for understanding stuff like sexual selection and kin selection. But if you’re treating evolution

as an article of faith, you’re probably not going to be asking those questions, because it sounds like

you’re questioning the stuff that all right thinking people believe. What’re you, some dirty member

of the outgroup?

And partly it’s important to do that because lots of “science says” statements are bullshit. A large

fraction of experimental psychology results, published in peer-reviewed journals and widely cited,
turn out to have just been wrong. (Public policy decisions and court cases were made on the basis

of some of those wrong results.) Today, you can find mainstream sources telling you that “science

says” stuff that’s observably wrong. (Look at “science says” articles about sexual or racial

differences for one obvious point.)

And finally, the whole mindset of “this is a claimed model of the world, let’s think it through and

understand it and see if there are weak points” is what science is about. Turning it into an article of

faith or received wisdom breaks something pretty fundamental about it.


Hide ↑

 Eugene Dawn says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:33 pm ~new~

Again, I mostly agree that for someone with a decent understanding already and who is willing to

put in serious effort this is can be valuable, but:


And partly it’s important to do that because lots of “science says” statements are bullshit.
Sure, but are they more often bullshit than the statements people make while taking complicated

scientific concepts out for a spin on their own?


And finally, the whole mindset of “this is a claimed model of the world, let’s think it through and
understand it and see if there are weak points” is what science is about. Turning it into an article of
faith or received wisdom breaks something pretty fundamental about it.
I sort of agree with this: obviously from the point of view of practicing scientists, you are always

trying to improve your model of the world, and you probably understand that your understanding

of the world is only ever a model, and so of course is always subject to updating on new evidence

or arguments.

But there really are some “received wisdom” parts of science, and they can be pretty important.
Playing around with scientific concepts is all well and good, but at the end of the day, when you

want to know the permittivity of free space or whatever you tend to just look it up in the back of a

book. Even working scientists have to rely on well-known and well-used tools and ideas without

reinventing them constantly.

This is even more true for the general public, many of whom will not actually have either the

background, interest, or inclination to think through competing hypotheses in a deep way, but who

still may need to rely on scientific conclusions for various reasons. In this case, it’ not unreasonable

to ask them to take the “received wisdom” of science more or less at face value.

It’s (partly) the role of scientists to make sure they are accurately conveying which parts of science

are indeed “received wisdom” and which are not.


Hide ↑

 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:58 am ~new~
@DocKaon We can reverse this statement, too though. “Of course those in power aren’t involved in

pedophilia, and facilitated by other powerful people, that’s ridiculous.”

But you can’t then look at Jimmy Seville, Epstein, Penn State, the Catholic Church etc and not

update your priors. Those are multiple examples of the exact same thing happening! So, if you’re

off hand dismissing the pizzagate allegations, you need to move a level deeper in your reasoning

and figure out why this allegation in particular is different then the other, proven allegations.

Because, “rich guy likes to bang children” is pretty well evidenced.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Eugene Dawn says:


May 29, 2020 at 9:45 am ~new~
But you can’t then look at Jimmy Seville, Epstein, Penn State, the Catholic Church etc and not update
your priors.
Well, you only need to update your priors if the rate of famous people outed as pedophiles is higher

than the base rate you had previously assumed for pedophilia. And even then, you’d only conclude

“pedophiles are common than I had previously thought”–the problem with the Pizzagate allegations

is that the only evidence they adduce for the pedophilia accusations is all the weird pizza code,

none of which is supported by the actually existing examples of famous pedophiles.

Your argument supports the conclusion “a random organizations composed of elites should be

expected to be covering up a pedophilia conspiracy at base rate %X”, where X is some number

based on the cases you cite; but that argument doesn’t single out the Clinton campaign in any

particular way. It is equally applicable to the Trump campaign, or any other collection of rich

people like say the leadership of NASCAR to pick a completely random example.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:48 am ~new~
you only need to update your priors if the rate of famous people outed as pedophiles is higher than
the base rate you had previously assumed for pedophilia.
And least in my case I needed to do this, pedophiles and pedophiles running successful

conspiracies are far more popular than I expected. Especially among supposedly reputable people.
Hide ↑

 Eugene Dawn says:


May 29, 2020 at 10:09 am ~new~

But are they more common than among the general population? I genuinely have no idea.
Hide ↑
 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:13 am ~new~

@Eugene Dawn Right, I should have included a disclaimer there–I don’t want to specifically single

out Clinton/Podesta. I think it’s likely that this fetish applies across political divide. I suspect it’s a

forbidden fruit/power thing, personally. This was just a recent case that fits well with the overall

“conspiracy-minded” personality type.


Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:37 am ~new~
But are they more common than among the general population? I genuinely have no idea.
Pedophiles? Probably not.

Successful long-term pedophile conspiracies that murdered people to keep people from acting on

it? Probably yes.


Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
June 1, 2020 at 5:12 am ~new~

CIA SOP:

1. Take semi-plausible, semi-substantiated theory about malfeasance of the powerful, like building

7 or Epstein running a pedophilia-based blackmail ring that snared the Clintons.

2. Add in heavy mix of crazy

3. Watch sane people run away from the theory, back to the mainstream explanation.
Hide ↑

 Corey says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:32 am ~new~
you can’t then look at Jimmy Seville, Epstein, Penn State, the Catholic Church etc and not update
your priors
Out of those, AFAIK only Epstein was anything like a “pedo ring” – the rest are cases of powerful

people pedo’ing about and others looking the other way. There’s a big difference between “if I blow

the whistle it will turn out badly for me, so I won’t” and “I brought this kid here for you”.

“Conspiracy” doesn’t seem to match “one guy does bad stuff; other people find out but don’t report

him” though to be fair I haven’t got a better term.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:48 am ~new~
What happened in the Catholic Church (scale of coverup) seems sadly to match term of conspiracy.
Hide ↑

 MugaSofer says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:42 pm ~new~

I’ve heard many reports of individual priests abusing minors and having others in their community

look the other way/cover it up.

Have there been cases of multiple pedo priests working together, and if so, how large a network

are we talking?
Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:57 pm ~new~

I was rather thinking about


Some bishops have been heavily criticized for moving offending priests from parish to parish, where
they still had personal contact with children, rather than seeking to have them permanently returned
to the lay state by laicization. The Church was widely criticized when it was discovered that some
bishops knew about some of the alleged crimes committed, but reassigned the accused instead of
seeking to have them permanently removed from the priesthood.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parish_transfers_of_abusive_Catholic_priests
Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:26 pm ~new~

My impression is that in the Catholic Church abuse cases in the US, we had:

a. Individual priests with a pattern of getting sexually involved with teenage boys in ways that

were definitely wrong and probably illegal most of the time (depending on details of ages and local

laws).

b. Church authorities covering up/hushing up the offenses and moving the priests to new parishes.

This appears to have been “protect the instutitution at all costs” rather than conspiracies of

pedophiles, but probably there was also an aspect of a network of closeted gay priests with

potential blackmail on each other.

c. There were also allegations of widespread sexual involvement between older priests and people

studying to become/contemplating becoming priests. I don’t know whether this violated age-of-

consent laws, but it was definitely sex between people across a big power differential, where some

of the people involved were supposed to be spiritual and moral guides/role models to some of the

other people involved. I don’t know how widespread this was, but it appears to have involved at
least a couple US cardinals, and I heard rumors about this sort of thing a decade or two earlier, so

probably it was pretty widespread.


Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 30, 2020 at 11:55 am ~new~
This appears to have been “protect the instutitution at all costs” rather than conspiracies of
pedophiles
Yes, it was rather a series of conspiracies to protect pedophiles (and short term reputation of the

church) rather than conspiracy of pedophiles (though some of them probably happened

somewhere).
Hide ↑

 Andaro says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:45 am ~new~

“So, if you’re off hand dismissing the pizzagate allegations, you need to move a level deeper in

your reasoning and figure out why this allegation in particular is different then the other, proven

allegations.”

Pizzagate involved (imaginary) captive child sex slaves, Epstein transacted with willing teenagers

to trade sex for money. I’ve never heard anyone claim that Epstein kept people captive, or that he

had sex with anyone against their will. The worst I could find is that he was rude to some girls.

(Please correct if this is wrong.)


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 John Schilling says:


May 29, 2020 at 10:57 am ~new~
I’ve never heard anyone claim that Epstein kept people captive, or that he had sex with anyone
against their will.
I’ve definitely heard it claimed that Epstein kept people captive, and the fact that he had a private

island makes that at least semi-plausible. I don’t have any sources I’d trust to tell me whether or

not it’s actually true, given the emotionally charged nature of the debate.

The real difference is that the girls being underaged but otherwise consenting prostitutes is also at

least semi-plausible, and the clients/guests wishfully deluding themselves into believing this is

even more plausible. With the Pizzagate version, I don’t think there’s an even semi-plausible

version that doesn’t have the kids being literal sex slaves and the adult participants all knowing

that the kids are literal sex slaves. Well, except for the version where Pizzagate is a hoax and there

are no kids, of course.


Hide ↑
 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:03 am ~new~

Wikipedia mentions
Details from the investigation included allegations that 12-year-old triplets were flown in from
France for Epstein’s birthday, and flown back the following day
children as young as 11 years old
lawsuit was filed against Maxwell and Epstein alleging that they recruited a 13-year-old music
student
While not as bad as captive child sex slaves, I think that dismissing it as “The worst I could find is

that he was rude to some girls” seems to underestimate of what he did/was credibly alleged to do.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein#Legal_proceedings
Hide ↑

 Andaro says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:49 pm ~new~

Okay, so younger than I thought. I personally have no moral problem with sexualizing these age

ranges, but most people obviously do, probably more so than sexualizing 15+ year olds. So closer

to Pizzagate than I had assumed, but not exactly equivalent.


Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:00 pm ~new~

I certainly would consider person encouraging/using prostitution of 11 year old children as a major

problem.

(or 12, 13…)


Hide ↑

 MugaSofer says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:03 pm ~new~
Rinaldo Rizzo, the house manager for one of Maxwell’s close friends, testified that Maxwell once
brought a “distraught” 15-year-old Swedish girl into his employer’s home […] Maxwell had
attempted to force her to have sex with Epstein on his private island […] by taking away her
passport and threatening her. – [src]
Another alleged Epstein victim, Sarah Ransome, has said that Maxwell and Epstein kept her
passport when she was trafficked to his private island. She once allegedly tried to swim away before
she was brought back. – [src]
Some of the girls went to the island “under the pretext that they would be paid substantially merely
to provide massages” to Epstein and others, the lawsuit claims. But once on the secluded island, the
victims were “pressured and coerced to engage in sexual acts” with Epstein and his associates.
The girls weren’t allowed to leave the island and were forced to “to recruit others to perform services
and engage in sexual acts—a trafficking pyramid scheme,” the lawsuit says.
[…]
The suit alleges one “15-year-old victim was forced into sexual acts with Epstein and others and then
attempted to escape by swimming off Little St. James Island.” After organizing a search party to
locate the girl, Epstein allegedly “kept her captive, by, among other things, confiscating her
passport.”
Another girl also tried to escape after being recruited to give Epstein massages, prompting the
disgraced billionaire to suggest “physical restraint or harm if she failed to cooperate” after being
found, according to the documents. – [src]
Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:23 pm ~new~

I’ve never heard anyone claim that Epstein kept people captive, or that he had sex with anyone

against their will.

You missed this story? Lucky you, some of the more volatile people writing opinion pieces online

were hyperventilating that this would prevent Trump’s inauguration, hurrah!

The “Katie Johnson” accusation was a doozy, you can read the sordid details in the complaint here.

If we believe the accusation, Epstein had a selection of underage (by which is meant “12 and 13”

not “nearly but not quite 18”) sex slaves procured for him by female ‘fixers’ with promises of
modelling careers and the likes.
Hide ↑

 Andaro says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:30 pm ~new~

Ok, I stand corrected (assuming your sources are true).

“I certainly would consider person encouraging/using prostitution of 11 year old children as a major

problem.”

I don’t. I only see the bad faith deals and coercion as poor taste, not the pedophilia. It’s a shame

too, he was rich enough that he could have had consensual deals in good faith, and with parental

permission too. Then again, it’s not like it would make a difference to moral society or the law. If

you’re going to be a hated criminal anyway…

Now I do wonder how common this sort of thing is. I still believe most rich people aren’t rapists,

but my probability estimate just went up.


Hide ↑
 DavidFriedman says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:44 pm ~new~

One small complaint. I don’t know about all of your list, but at least some of them, such as Epstein,

are not accused of pedophilia but of having sex with underage partners. Sex with a fourteen year

old girl is illegal, I think in every state at present, but it isn’t pedophilia. On the historical evidence,

it isn’t even a perversion. It’s just a crime.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:04 pm ~new~

11, 12, 13 year olds are on border or within full-blown pedophilia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedophilia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein#Legal_proceedings ( quotes in

https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/05/28/bush-did-north-dakota/#comment-904088 )

Epstein is also accused of encouraging, organizing and forcing young children into prostitution,

what AFAIK would be generally considered as a perversion.


Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:20 pm ~new~

Penn State fits the model of “people protect their own” better than the model of “lots of powerful

people are pedophiles.”


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Evan Þ says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:59 am ~new~

ikew is not saying that. ikew is making inferences based on the available facts concerning Epstein.

Actively prosecute everyone linked to Epstein or at least visibly investigate them using the same

standards applied to non-elites, spend a decade or a few more pouncing on any Epstein-like

conspiracies without letting them linger for decades – and then the same reasoning would make

Pizzagate much more improbable.

As it is, ikew’s stretching the evidence way beyond where I would take it, but I don’t find his

conclusions immune to logic or even verging on impossible. Though, in the specific instance of

Pizzagate, IIRC the pizza parlor in question didn’t even have a basement.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 DocKaon says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:30 am ~new~
Huh? What does Epstein have to do with anything? One bad person exists (which apparently a

huge amount of evidence can be produced about) therefore that means we can tar anyone

remotely like him with the same sins? Donald Trump is like Epstein in a hell of a lot more ways

than Hillary Clinton therefore any conspiracy theory about him being involved in pedophilia must be

true?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:44 am ~new~
What does Epstein have to do with anything?
Yet another actual conspiracy of high-ranking pedophiles with long-term coverup and some very

suspicious deaths.

AFAIK this is confirmed, not an unsupported conspiracy theory (please correct me if there is any

real doubt about it) – though it remains unclear who was actually pedophile and who was just

aware about this and who was unaware about it.

It makes more likely that rumors about the next conspiracy of high-ranking pedophiles with long-

term coverup is actually true.

—-

Similarly, I would treat “Trump is a reptilian overlord” far more seriously after confirmed discovery

that prime minister of Poland is a reptilian overlord and then discovering that French president also

was a reptilian overlord.


Hide ↑

 Conrad Honcho says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:52 pm ~new~
Though, in the specific instance of Pizzagate, IIRC the pizza parlor in question didn’t even have a
basement.
This was the very last piece of speculation regarding Pizzagate, and isn’t central to the claims

(weird Podesta emails & art collection, weird social media posts by the Pizza parlor).

The dismissal of Pizzagate based on this would be akin to various online commentators laying out

all the circumstantial evidence that Trump colluded with Russia during the election, then a handful

of anonymous people online claim, “And do you know where Trump made his deal with Putin? In

the twelfth subbasement of Trump Tower.” And then Fox News debunks the entire Trump/Russia

collusion idea because there’s no twelfth subbasement of Trump Tower. Great, sure, that’s wrong,

but that’s not really central to the argument, and doesn’t invalidate everything else.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:57 am ~new~

In a world where the Catholic Church/Boy Scouts/sports organisations can have sex abuse scandals

of minors and cases like Bill Cosby amongst others blowing up into “it sounds like a conspiracy but

it really happened”, the tendency is growing towards “why should I believe any authority is above

such a thing happening within it? why should I believe X, Y or Z could never be implicated in

something like that, just because they’re a famous name?”


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 29, 2020 at 6:45 pm ~new~

That’s true, although the claim of Pizzagate is not just that some major Democrat figures are

paedophiles (which is reasonably likely to be true) but that the references to “pizza” in Democratic

Party emails are references to paedophilia (which is extremely unlikely to be true, and I say this as

someone who followed the Podesta emails closely enough to be able to quote a lot of the pizza

references from memory).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 ikew says:
May 30, 2020 at 1:23 am ~new~

Conspiracy theories are memetically unstable (as in, very prone to mutation) and the selective

pressure on them is not to be accurate and restrained but rather, bombastic and full of easily

recognized imagery.

What we hopefully all want is to bring down the possibly vast network of pedophile rings

(regardless of political affiliation, wealth and power). Not just because it’s the moral thing to do,

but because if such network is protected (and we fail to see how it would have survived this long
without protection), then it gives leverage to unknown players who probably cannot be trusted to

use it to the advantage of us, the non-lizard human people.

For better or worse, conspiracy theory investigation is by now the domain of online dissidents who

are at wildly varying levels of intelligence, ability to strategize and sanity. It is unlikely that such a

community would build a believably sounding unified theory, which is a shame, because individual

members have uncovered a big pile of meaningful connections and if well intended curation was

possible, it would have resulted in a fairly solid and convincing case, well backed up by proper (if

amateur) investigation.

The same properties that make communal investigation possible have the opposite effect on

organized, hierarchical editorial process. Almost by definition we can’t ever trust anyone who would

“sanitize” the conspiracy theory to make it more palatable. If you are a community united by

distrust of entities with vastly more power than you, especially if you maintain a high profile as

pizzagate did, you absolutely must be hostile to all attempts to limit or redirect your efforts. Not

only from outsiders, but from members of your own community, as they can all be compromised at

any time.
There is still hope. Yes, paranoia is cancerous, but iterated paranoia can, over many generations of

investigative effort by motivated and capable members, build something solid. They must start off

where the last generation exhausted it’s energy, separate the wheat from the chaff for themselves

and start off with a pruned, meaningful core of evidence under a new banner. Pizzagate will never

be considered more than a fringe silly conspiracy theory, but if at any point we do manage to nail

down the bastards, we’ll do it in part thanks to evidence collected by earnest (if misdirected) open

minded pizzagaters, stored in pastebins and distributed by rational truth-seekers and satanist-

hunters working as a team… sortof.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 30, 2020 at 2:24 am ~new~
Conspiracy theories are memetically unstable (as in, very prone to mutation) and the selective
pressure on them is not to be accurate and restrained but rather, bombastic and full of easily
recognized imagery.
I mean, I can’t be the only one who Flat Earthers put to sleep until No Forests on Flat Earth.
Hide ↑

 bullseye says:
May 30, 2020 at 5:53 am ~new~

Using pizza as code for child porn isn’t a weird add-on to an otherwise reasonable theory; it’s how

the whole theory got started. To the extent that anything in the Pizzagate theory is true, it’s a

coincidence.
Are there powerful people doing terrible things and covering them up? Of course! Can we trust

conspiracy theorists to figure out which powerful people are doing it, and which terrible thing

they’re doing? No.


Hide ↑

 ikew says:
May 30, 2020 at 1:45 pm ~new~
Using pizza as code for child porn isn’t a weird add-on to an otherwise reasonable theory; it’s how
the whole theory got started.
I beg to differ:
iterated paranoia can, over many generations of investigative effort by motivated and capable
members, build something solid. They must start off where the last generation exhausted it’s energy,
separate the wheat from the chaff for themselves and start off with a pruned, meaningful core of
evidence under a new banner.
Do you really think it started with the emails about pizza?

We had to move the so called “Clintons’ bodycount” from txt to xlsx decades ago.

New symbols, new blood, updated spreadsheets, investigation starts but more to the point, it
continues. Some of the discredited (by the community, not the NYT) chaff has been pruned. Some

new has been added. The cycle begins anew.

Between you and me, the pizza in the emails most likely refers to literal pizza in some places and

money under the table in others ($100k pizza party? Surely children go much cheaper where the

reptiles buy them in bulk). But the new, enthusiastic additions to the investigative effort seem to

really like the pizza thing, and from the inside, you can only prune silly beliefs way after the

investigation has concluded and you build your own personal curated info dump for the next time

something gets it restarted.

And hey. Maybe they are right. Restaurants have been fronts for nefarious activity since forever.
Are there powerful people doing terrible things and covering them up? Of course! Can we trust
conspiracy theorists to figure out which powerful people are doing it, and which terrible thing
they’re doing? No.
This really got me curious tho.

Who can we trust to do it? FBI? CIA? NSA? CNN?

The distributed network of conspiracy theorists has at least not proven itself to be actively,

purposefully malicious. It cannot be, almost by definition. Individual members can be, and I’m fine

with them getting phased out. The network is the process itself. Can’t buy it off, can’t intimidate it,

can’t murder it, can’t destroy its life and drive it to suicide. If you have a safer, faster, cleaner, less

intellectually disgusting process, propose it to the network and if it gets noticed, we’ll evaluate it.

Until then it’s the best we have and not using it is equivalent to enslaving our children’s children.
Hide ↑

 bullseye says:
May 30, 2020 at 7:24 pm ~new~

The Clinton Bodycount stuff is part of Pizzagate? Even though it predates any connect to pizza by

many years?
Hide ↑

 ikew says:
May 31, 2020 at 8:55 am ~new~

In a word, yes.

For explanation, please refer to my previous two explanations why this is the case.

https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/05/28/bush-did-north-dakota/#comment-904408

https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/05/28/bush-did-north-dakota/#comment-904542
Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 1:27 pm ~new~

@ikew
The distributed network of conspiracy theorists has at least not proven itself to be actively,
purposefully malicious. It cannot be, almost by definition.
If you’re going to just define away any objections to your statement, then what’s the point of it to

begin with? The conspiracy theory community is INCREDIBLY malicious. As in sending the parents

of Sandy Hook victims deaths threats, on the basis that they’re paid actors. People have died

because of conspiracy theories.


Hide ↑

o albatross11 says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:48 am ~new~

This is a weird parallel. At the same time, we have a goofy bullshit story about child sexual abuse

(Pizzagate) when there was a guy who actually did move in the top echelons of power and wealth

who was, in fact, sexually abusing minors systematically and involving many important people in it.

Earlier, we had the ritual satanic sexual abuse panic at the same time that the Catholic Church

was, in fact, engaged in large scale coverups of sexual abuse of minors.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 John Schilling says:


May 29, 2020 at 10:19 am ~new~

W/re Epstein, there’s a bit of apples:oranges going on in the different definitions of “child” being

used. The number of people who will go along with organizing parties where middle-aged men

have sex with sixteen-year-old girls is much higher than the number of people who will go along

with the six-year-old version. For both the “I’d like to be a part of this if I’m sure I’ll get away with

it” and the “This is very unseemly but it’s enough for me to walk away, I don’t have to call the

police” version of “going along with it”. That makes it much easier to solve the coordination
problem for the former sort of conspiracy, and actually make it happen without some of your

invitees ratting you out to the police in ways the police won’t ignore. Knowing that l’affair Epstein

happened, doesn’t imply a high plausibility for Pizzagate.

The Catholic church thing is more relevant; either the Vatican is an extreme outlier in its ability to

organize conspiracies, or things like Pizzagate really are more plausible than we’d otherwise have

assumed.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Randy M says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:29 am ~new~

+1

My default initial mode of analysis of conspiracy theories is something like “How many people need

to keep their mouth shut about something I consider terrible?”

And the level of terrible matters. It’s a lot easier to envision someone going along with or being
persuaded to abuse of a sixteen year old than a six year old, like you say (even, of course, while

condemning both).
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:38 am ~new~

AFAIK, Epstein’s type was simply young, teen girls. I don’t believe he was particularly specific on

the lower bound beyond like 12 or so, just the upper.

Regarding your final sentence about likelihood of conspiracies: The Rochdale child abuse ring, for

example, wasn’t technically sophisticated, but still eluded the police for 5 years. It’s easy to miss

something if you’re not really looking very hard.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:12 am ~new~

I think most of the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse was closeted gay priests having some kind of

sexual relationship with teenage boys, so probably similar to Epstein in a couple senses:

a. Teenage boys aren’t little kids

b. Teenage boys/adult men pairings aren’t all that unheard-of among gay men in general, so

maybe this seemed to some other closeted gay priests like “well, he really shouldn’t do that, but…”

than like some kind of atrocity.

It’s worth remembering that non-horrible places have ages of consent all over the place–ranging

broadly from like 14-21. US states have had ages of consent as low as 14 within the last few
decades, though I think now it’s 16 or higher everywhere. So while diddling little kids is probably a

near-universal no-no, adults sleeping with teenagers is something that hasn’t always been illegal

and still isn’t always illegal, even in pretty well-run and decent places. (Personally, an age of

consent of 16 seems about right to me. But then, that’s what I’ve grown up with, and I don’t think

I can actually make a strong case for why it’s the right answer.)

That probably makes it easier to get both kinds of going-along-with-it behvior–either participating

or leaving but not feeling like the police need to be involved.


Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 1:32 pm ~new~

@albatross11

That the sex involved two people of the same gender does not necessarily mean that the

participants were “gay” in the normal sense of the word.


Hide ↑
 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:07 am ~new~

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein#Legal_proceedings mentions 11/12/13/14/15 year

olds with some older.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:28 pm ~new~

things like Pizzagate really are more plausible than we’d otherwise have assumed.

Not necessarily that they’re more plausible, simply that the good old days of “ha ha, of course this

is a crazy conspiracy theory, why [insert name of person/organisation] could and would never do

anything like that, they are beyond reproach, it’s unthinkable!” are well behind us now, given all

the people and organisations thought to be beyond reproach that turned out to indeed have done

stuff exactly like that.

Harvey Weinstein and the entertainment industry may not be a huge surprise, given the existence

of the “casting couch” for decades, but people did expect organisations like the Church and the Boy

Scouts and sporting organisations and so on to be beyond reproach, and it turned out they weren’t.

So now it is less in the realm of “unthinkable, could never happen” to posit that a bunch of

important, influential, or well-connected people could indeed be engaged in some private, shady,

little exploitation.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Thomas Jorgensen says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:31 pm ~new~

Honestly, with Pizza-gate I heard the name “Hillary Clinton” and immediately vent “Slander”,

because people had at that point spent decades making up entirely fictional horrible crimes Hillary

had supposedly done, and thus the overwhelming prior was “It has been nearly a year since the

last slander campaign”.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 DarkTigger says:
May 30, 2020 at 2:41 pm ~new~

The Catholic Church is an outlier in so far that they are a) international b) a lot of cases started to

be discussed at the same time (because of interesst from the media, and an change in leadership

of the church I think) and c) their claim to be an moral authority.

I would argue that all organisations have cases were such stuff happens, and esprit de corps leads

to hiding of the deed, and than putting the offender in a new position were nobody knows of it.
I’m aware of two cases of it happening in local schools with teachers having affairs with extremly

young students, and the board sending them to new schools, w/o informing anyone.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o By-Ends says:

May 29, 2020 at 10:17 am ~new~

The old adage is “the more people are involved in an operation, the more likely it’s that op-sec

gets broken”.

Further to this point: often part of the conspiracy theory is that the pizzagate/pedo elements of the

conspiracy are not just random moustache-twirling evil acts. They are an essential part of op-sec

for the conspiracy. Participants in the conspiracy must have committed vile acts to ensure they will

not break with the conspiracy. Like a gang initiation.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o pdbarnlsey says:

May 31, 2020 at 10:04 pm ~new~

I mean, Hillary Clinton couldn’t successfully delay the FBI from releasing information about a laptop

full of duplicate emails contrary to its own guidelines, for that stated reason that FBI leadership

was certain that its anti-Clinton field offices would just leak it anyway unless they went public

immediately.

Those guys are probably not murdering Vince Foster or dismembering children on her behalf. They

probably wouldn’t even help her Benghazi her emails.

The fact is that, political convenience aside, your middle aged neighbor is a much better candidate

for whatever complicated conspiracy theory you are pushing this decade. John Podesta, specifically,

had all his email released to the public, and all that his enemies could find, after combing over

them, looking for Whitewaters, was “this guy sure does talk about Italian food a lot… Possible child

murderer?”. Hillary Clinton is possibly the most-investigated human in history, and is widely reviled

by large chunks of the law enforcement apparatus. Comet Pizza, itself, has been searched for

kidnapped children by an armed investigator.

If there was something there, we wouldn’t still be hearing “some those pictures he owns make me

feel strange, or at least I like to pretend that on the internet. Possible child murderer?”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

8. Rachael says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:46 am ~new~

This is reminiscent of the poll where 30% of Republican voters supported bombing Agrabah, the

fictional Middle Eastern country where Disney’s Aladdin is set. In that poll there *was* a Don’t
Know option, which seems to suggest that quite a lot of people would still have said they believed

in the North Dakota conspiracy even if there had been a Don’t Know option there.

I think this is a case of people using polls to signal tribal affiliation rather than to express their

actual beliefs, like the creationist example yesterday where people were apparently picking the

strongest-sounding option without understanding what any of the options meant.

(And, lest anyone think I’m having a go at the Republicans, the video where the guy gets a lot of

female college students to sign a petition to end women’s suffrage is a less-formal example of the

same phenomenon.)
Log in to Reply Hide

o Le Maistre Chat says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:09 am ~new~


(And, lest anyone think I’m having a go at the Republicans, the video where the guy gets a lot of
female college students to sign a petition to end women’s suffrage is a less-formal example of the
same phenomenon.)
If you ended women’s suffrage, there’d still be universal manhood suffrage. Obviously we need

utilitarians to try to stop both.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o Brandon Berg says:

May 29, 2020 at 4:28 am ~new~

That’s where my mind went, too. My mental model of this is that people assume that if a question

about bombing a city is on a survey, it must be a real controversy with arguments on both sides. If

everyone agrees that bombing Agrabah is a bad idea, then why would anyone bother to run a poll

on it?
Given that assumption, if you think that Democrats are consistently too reluctant to bomb Middle

Eastern targets, then it kind of makes sense to assume that they’re on the wrong side of this issue,

too, and bombing is the correct policy. If my side’s leaders are for it, it must be a good idea.

This is closely related to tribal signaling, but seems a bit different to me, since it’s not just

signaling.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 dogiv says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:43 am ~new~

I wonder what the numbers would be on a question about bombing London. Probably just

Lizardman’s constant, although if you managed to imply that one side or the other was in favor of

it you might get a few more people to say they support the idea.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:45 am ~new~

The Randy Newman constant?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Watchman says:
May 30, 2020 at 11:44 am ~new~

I’m in favour quite a lot of the time. Mind you, I have the added incentive of being British…
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o PhaedrusV says:

May 29, 2020 at 5:40 am ~new~

The funny thing is that there are actually women who knowingly support ending women’s suffrage.

My cousin told me once she’s willing to give up her vote because the number of women who vote

based on candidate attractiveness is more than enough to swing elections.

I remember seeing that “end suffrage” poll back in the day and wondering how many women knew

what it meant and still agreed.

Also, trolls.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Gabriel Conroy says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:50 am ~new~

Perhaps also: “suffrage” sounds like “suffering.” Who wouldn’t want to end suffering?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:51 am ~new~

I’m the kind of person who would probably say yes in a poll about ending women’s’ suffrage. On
the other hand if I had to vote in an actual serious referendum about it, I would definitely say no.

What accounts for this? Probably just a desire to push the Overton window further right. High poll

numbers for crazy right-wing positions suit me because they make the less-crazy right sing

positions I’m actually interested in more likely… but if the Overton window ever shifted far enough

right that abolishing women’s suffrage became a serious prospect then I think I’d try to push it

back the other way.

So, just another example of strategic rather than literal poll-answering.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:23 am ~new~

@Sorghum Another good example is Roe v Wade positioning. Very few people actually want

abortions to be completely illegal, that’s bad (see 70s-80s Romania.) But it shouldn’t be a point of

pride on Twitter, either. So if “repeal Roe” moves the window, that’s great! But the shift should be
in inches/feet, not miles. If we’re moving miles, then we have a problem that’s equally deserving of

correction.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 29, 2020 at 3:16 pm ~new~

I mean I’m pro-abortion and even I believe Roe should be repealed, it’s bad jurisprudence.

Abortion laws should be made by legislative branches, not invented by Supreme Court justices.
Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 1:40 pm ~new~

@Sorghum

The Supreme Court didn’t make laws, it restricted them. The role of the legislative branch is to

decide how to exercise the authority that they rightfully have. Banning abortion is not an authority

that they rightfully have.


Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:50 am ~new~

There are rare people who actually believe women should lose the vote, but they’re, well, rare. Not

just because it’s an unpopular belief, or a bad (IMO) idea, but because believing that requires

having some nonstandard ideas about politics and society, and mostly that’s more work than

people go to to have political views.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 2:46 pm ~new~

I find “These women are confusing ‘suffrage’ and ‘suffering'” to be a more plausible explanation

than “These women are opposing suffrage as part of tribal signalling”.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Creutzer says:
May 30, 2020 at 10:21 pm ~new~

I believe the tribal signalling part is meant to be “end women’s X” regardless of what X is.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
 albatross11 says:
May 31, 2020 at 11:23 am ~new~

I’m sure the “womens sufferage” questions are just misunderstood, like the prank where you

circulate a petition to ban dihydrogen monoxide.

As best I can tell, most people answering factual survey questions aren’t answering the factual

questions, but rather the “whose side are you on?” questions. For example, almost everyone who

expresses a strong opinion about the theory of evolution or global warming is just telling you what

side they’re on, because only a very small subset of the population has studied either one enough

to have an actual opinion of their own. For people who have never studied much biology, “did man

evolve from lower animals” is a question about whether they’re on the Fundamentalist Christian or

non-Fundamentalis Christian side of a culture war issue.

Interpreted this way, a lot of otherwise bizarre or silly beliefs make sense. For example, this article

from 2006 shows about 27% of surveyed blacks (and 20% of surveyed whites) believed that

“HIV/AIDS is a man-made virus that the federal government made to kill and wipe out black

people.”

Now, this is not true, and can’t be true for a whole bunch of reasons. But I’m pretty sure very few

of the people who said “yes” could have described how a retrovirus worked or what a T cell was, or

could reason intelligently in any way about whether or not this was plausible. Instead, I’m guessing

they answered a question about how they felt about the federal government’s intentions toward

blacks or gays or whomever. (I think a similar thing is true of the common narrative that AIDS was

somehow Reagan’s fault for not caring about gays–most people aren’t actually answering a

question about what Reagan could or should have done differently and what effect that would have

had, they’re answering a question about how they felt about Reagan’s attitude toward gay men.)
I think this is also something inclined to trip up those of us who are usually pretty literal-minded

about factual questions. If Alice hears “did the government cause AIDS to kill off blacks” and wants

to answer the factual question, and Bob hears it and wants to answer the “did the federal

government hate blacks in the 70s” question, they’re going to talk past one another. (And

something similar happens in discussions about the Fergusson shooting or the Zimmerman/Martin

case. In some sense, the factual question w.r.t. this case doesn’t have much to do with the broader

question of “Do I think the police get away with mistreating blacks too much?”)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 10240 says:
May 31, 2020 at 12:17 pm ~new~

An even worse kind of survey question is one that asks for agreement with some sort of slogan,

but technically a “yes” answer can also indicate an even stronger disagreement with the people

who usually use the slogan than a “no” answer.

For example, in the F-scale (an old fascism scale), “The wild sex life of the old Greeks and Romans

was tame compared to some of the goings-on in this country, even in places where people might
least expect it.” I don’t actually know what the sex life of the old Greeks and Romans was like, but

I presume that an answer of “yes, and that’s a good thing” is even more liberal than a “no” answer

—yet one knows that a “yes” answer is interpreted as “yes, and that’s a bad thing“, and taken as

indicating illiberalism. Or “Should Uber be regulated like taxis?” “Yes” is presumably taken as more

pro-regulation than “no“, even though an even more anti-regulation answer is “they should be

regulated the same, not at all“.


Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 4:21 pm ~new~
I’m sure the “womens sufferage” questions are just misunderstood, like the prank where you
circulate a petition to ban dihydrogen monoxide.
I think there’s a significant difference between the two. If there were a poison named “dihydrogen

monoxine”, it would be a better comparison. In the case of dihydrogen monoxide, it’s an issue of

the negative connotations of “chemicals”, with the petitions often throwing in some logical fallacies,

such as correlation fallacies (“over 90% of cancer deaths had hydrogen monoxide in their blood”).
As best I can tell, most people answering factual survey questions aren’t answering the factual
questions, but rather the “whose side are you on?” questions.
I dad qualms about “I believe Antia Hill” bumper stickers because of this. It seems like a rather

transparent case of belief being a proxy for political affiliation.


because only a very small subset of the population has studied either one enough to have an actual
opinion of their own.
You don’t have to study much to believe in evolution (where “believe means” have more than 50%

confidence”, not “be convinced”). We know stuff is here, we know stuff changes, it’s logical to
conclude that the stuff that’s here came from different stuff. To claim that evolution is not true is a

violation of Occam’s razor that has the burden of proof. People who don’t believe in evolution

overwhelmingly do so because they consider “a book written thousands of years ago says so” to

fulfill the burden of proof.


(I think a similar thing is true of the common narrative that AIDS was somehow Reagan’s fault for
not caring about gays–most people aren’t actually answering a question about what Reagan could
or should have done differently and what effect that would have had, they’re answering a question
about how they felt about Reagan’s attitude toward gay men.)
Depends on what you mean by “the narrative”. If you mean historical works asserting that Reagan

was negligent, and his negligence significantly increased the harm of AIDS, I think that the

majority of that is based on the facts.


Hide ↑

 DavidFriedman says:
May 31, 2020 at 4:51 pm ~new~
We know stuff is here, we know stuff changes, it’s logical to conclude that the stuff that’s here came
from different stuff.
In our direct experience, the living stuff that current living stuff came from consists of other

members of the same species — evolutionary change is almost never observable with the naked

eye on a human timescale. Absent a theory, or evidence from paleontology or microbiology, the

obvious interpretation is a stable set of species, just as a flat Earth is the obvious conclusion from

looking around you, since on the scale humanly observable the Earth is very close to flat.

Besides which, change doesn’t imply evolution in the biological sense — rivers wearing their way

through rock isn’t evolution, any more than trees leafing out in the spring. What’s convincing about

evolution is the logical argument which shows how you could get organisms that appear to be

functionally designed without any designer.


Hide ↑

o Conrad Honcho says:

May 30, 2020 at 6:08 pm ~new~

I absolutely know that Agrabah is the fictional Middle Eastern country where Disney’s Aladdin was

set, but if you called me up during dinner time and asked me if we should bomb it I would

definitely say “yes.”

Also, in that same poll, a comparable number of Democrats said we should give Agrabah aid, or

accept their refugees or something like that.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Garrett says:
June 1, 2020 at 6:29 am ~new~

So we can make both groups happy by bombing them and *then* accepting their refugees?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

9. Egregious says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:16 am ~new~

Eh. Even if people had consistent, well thought out beliefs, why assume they would answer

honestly? Someone who distrusts the government might be happier if a study showed high distrust

in the government. This would give their own beliefs more social legitimacy from virtue of being

pervasive. So they exaggerate their own beliefs to pull the average further in their direction. A mild

conspiracy theorist claims to believe in all conspiracies, to demonstate that the population in

general doesn’t trust the government.

In general, ones agenda may be served merely from the perception that it is popular. It is not

reasonable to assume people taking polls aren’t trying to advance their own goals, and any

analysis should take this into account.


Log in to Reply Hide
o Kaitian says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:27 am ~new~

I don’t think most people act with that much strategy. If only because most studies are never read

by more than a handful of specialists. But if they perceive the study as hostile, they might get

ornery and answer accordingly. If the study contains questions along the lines of “do you believe

conspiracy theory x”, they might just start checking “yes” on each one to spite the researcher for

using the word “conspiracy”.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 PhaedrusV says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:43 am ~new~

I’ll happily out myself. Those few times I consent to answering a survey, my answers generally

bear no resemblance to reality unless they are tied to my name, by an employer. I expect knowing

trolling is very common among voluntary respondents. Otherwise, who cares enough to answer the

survey?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Gabriel Conroy says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:53 am ~new~

I’ve taken a few surveys, some online Harris polls and a couple of surveys where someone calls me

up.

Speaking only for myself, it’s hard to game the system. I may start out strategically, but I’m worn

down by the questions and end up answering, if not fully honestly, then more honestly than
strategically. (It’s much easier to be “strategic” in an online poll than in a “live” telephone poll,

perhaps because in the latter I have to think on my feet more.)

Again, that’s just me. I’m sure others are better at it.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Egregious says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:16 am ~new~

From responses here, sounds like there is quite a bit of variation, though some indeed do

intentionally fabricate, even strategically. Think we need a survey to ask people if, how, when and

why they distort their answers to surveys!


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

10. Entropy42 says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:17 am ~new~

This was helpful to me in thinking about a recent YouGov/Yahoo poll that said over 44% of

Republicans/Fox News Viewers/Trump Voters think that Bill Gates wants to use a COVID vaccine to
implant tracking microchips in people (https://news.yahoo.com/amphtml/new-yahoo-news-you-

gov-poll-shows-coronavirus-conspiracy-theories-spreading-on-the-right-may-hamper-vaccine-

efforts-152843610.html). The North Dakota Effect seems like it could explain some of that.
Log in to Reply Hide
o ikew says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:47 am ~new~

Not in this particular case.

We’ve long been suspicious of Bill Gates, the concept of COVID19 vaccine (given the performance

of all tested SARS vaccines), mandatory vaccination in general. Since the discussion of a COVID19

vaccine did include the topic of “marking” vaccinated people in a way that can be used for

identification (with a nano particle spray, I think, rather than a chip), it’s easy to see how some of

our people made a technologically questionable but politically obvious leap.

In short, it has nothing to do with the North Dakota Effect.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 4:26 pm ~new~
We’ve long been suspicious of … the concept of COVID19 vaccine (given the performance of all tested
SARS vaccines)
What does this mean?
Since the discussion of a COVID19 vaccine did include the topic of “marking” vaccinated people
Cite?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Rachael says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:49 am ~new~

Why is the bogeyman still Bill Gates? That made sense in the 90s when Microsoft was really big

and powerful, but now I’d expect it to be Zuckerberg, Bezos, Musk, or someone like that.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anteros says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:20 am ~new~

Agree with this. I thought Bill Gates was merging with the Dalai Lama in terms of his public virtue

status.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
June 5, 2020 at 1:52 pm ~new~
Only for people who care about whether or not people in Africa die of preventable diseases.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 toastengineer says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:49 am ~new~

I can sort of see how the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation would look shady to someone with very

strong priors to distrust institutions. They don’t have any obvious glurge-y goal like “save the

animals” or “save the cute kids,” a model of human behavior that doesn’t include Hooverian

turbonerds like us could only assume they’re up to something. If you assume that the rich and

connected are all united against you, that too would lead you to believe whatever Bill Gates is up to

must be malicious.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Anteros says:
May 29, 2020 at 4:54 am ~new~

They do have a rather prominent project of ‘Rid the world of Malaria’, but maybe they haven’t

spent quite as many billions of their own money on it as needed for it to be properly convincing..
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 toastengineer says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:00 am ~new~

Right, and I don’t think normal people really care much about strangers with malaria and therefore

assume no-one else does either.


Hide ↑

 Freddie deBoer says:


May 29, 2020 at 9:31 am ~new~

I can tell you that the size and power of the Gates Foundation makes many academics afraid to

seem to be opposed to their neoliberal education “reform” projects, afraid of never having access

to the mountains of cash they give out in ed research and policy.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Milo Minderbinder says:


May 29, 2020 at 3:15 pm ~new~

I have no experience with academic grants, does the Gates Foundation wield outsize power to its

wealth relative to other research-funding bodies?


Hide ↑

 Watchman says:
May 30, 2020 at 1:01 pm ~new~

Speaking from inside the (currently virtual) hallowed halls of academia I’m struggling tho see how

that differs from any other funder. And what does neo-liberal actually mean in education anyway?
Hide ↑
 PhaedrusV says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:49 am ~new~

Bill’s big push to build up public confidence in a vaccine that hasn’t even been developed or tested

yet SHOULD damage his credibility. I would have no issue with Gates saying “a lot of very smart

people are working very hard on a vaccine for COVID-19. Once a promising vaccine has been

developed and tested enough to ensure that it’s not worse than the disease, the Gates foundation

will assist in widespread replication and deployment”

What he’s actually doing is blatant narrative control on the far side of the spectrum, and he’s

sacrificing accuracy and minimizing legitimate concerns in order to do it.

Gates should absolutely be listened to skeptically. Prudent risk mitigation demands it.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 alawisgreen says:
May 30, 2020 at 2:41 pm ~new~
I would have no issue with Gates saying “a lot of very smart people are working very hard on a
vaccine for COVID-19. Once a promising vaccine has been developed and tested enough to ensure
that it’s not worse than the disease, the Gates foundation will assist in widespread replication and
deployment”
Here are some quotations from a recent blog post by Bill Gates:
The world is creating this vaccine on a historically fast timeline.
It might not be a perfect vaccine yet—and that’s okay.
If we were designing the perfect vaccine, we’d want it to be completely safe and 100 percent effective.
It should be a single dose that gives you lifelong protection, and it should be easy to store and
transport. I hope the COVID-19 vaccine has all of those qualities, but given the timeline we’re on, it
may not.
So, Bill Gates is already saying that.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 4:38 pm ~new~
Bill’s big push to build up public confidence in a vaccine that hasn’t even been developed or tested yet
SHOULD damage his credibility. Bill’s big push to build up public confidence in a vaccine that hasn’t
even been developed or tested yet SHOULD damage his credibility.
To what are you referring?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Jaskologist says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:19 am ~new~
The beautiful thing about hate is that you can give it away freely without diminishing your own

store.

Is it really so crazy that people’s memories might extend more than a decade? In a way, it’s almost

nice to see.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:22 am ~new~

I’ve been trying to figure this one out myself. Usually I’m pretty well plugged into the right wing

memeplex, but I have no idea where this Bill Gates thing comes from.

For the most part I don’t think there needs to be a good reason for this kind of thing; somewhere

out there a sufficiently influential person said “boo Bill Gates”, another influential person agreed

with them, and from then on it was just social dynamics.

Why Bill Gates in particular? No identifiable reason; just as there’s no identifiable reason why

everyone jumped on that one dog park lady the other day instead of millions of other people who

were videoed being jerks in the same week, or why everybody jumped on that girl with the Friday

Friday song instead of millions of other crappy songs, or why everyone including Scott is paying so

much attention to one terrible piece of Harry Potter fanfic when the internet is composed of 25%

terrible Harry Potter fanfic already.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 4:31 pm ~new~

Are you saying that 25% of Harry Potter fanfic is terrible, or that 25% of the internet is terrible

Harry Potter? The first seems to low to me, and the second much too high.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 31, 2020 at 7:22 pm ~new~

25% of the internet, I meant.

To first approximation I think it’s safe to assume that 100% of Harry Potter fanfic is terrible.

My Immortal isn’t even the worst Harry Potter fanfic I’ve attempted to read… that honour goes to

Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality…


Hide ↑

 Mercurial says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:55 am ~new~

My father has had a negative opinion of Bill Gates for a while. The general points seem to be:

-Bad experiences with Common Core, which was pushed by Gates


-A general paranoia that “The Elites” want to reduce the global population (for environment

reasons?)

-A general distrust of vaccines, especially when people are swearing up and down that the Corona

vaccine will be safe before it even exists. He also thinks it’s suspicious that all the effort is going

into developing a vaccine rather than a cure.

For the record, he’s also distrustful of Zuckerberg and Bezos, but they’re not putting themselves in

the forefront of this crisis the same way Gates is. I think nobody is really keen on reading

conspiracies into Musk because he fits the archetype of the eccentric inventor quite well.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 4:37 pm ~new~
He also thinks it’s suspicious that all the effort is going into developing a vaccine rather than a cure.
What, he expects someone to come up with a drug that you can inject into someone that will make

pneumonia magically disappear?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
June 5, 2020 at 1:54 pm ~new~

I think there’s an attitude that medicine is about cures. Prevention is all the boring and painful stuff

that we use as a stopgap until we have a cure.


Hide ↑

 pdbarnlsey says:
May 31, 2020 at 10:27 pm ~new~

“Trying to reduce global population” is a pretty tough one to hang on the guy spending hundreds of

millions of dollars every year fighting malaria, TB and HIV.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


June 1, 2020 at 11:31 am ~new~

The two are entirely consistent, if Gates is pursuing average utility rather than total utility.
Hide ↑

 Garrett says:
June 1, 2020 at 6:36 am ~new~

> He also thinks it’s suspicious that all the effort is going into developing a vaccine rather than a

cure.
Side note: in Tom Clancy’s book Rainbow 6, there’s a heated discussion which ultimately points out

that we have no cures for *any* viral diseases.

I was thrilled when the drugs which cure Hepatitis C were released. We’ve gone from none to one.

My knowledge of viral illnesses is too poor to know if the same technique might be used for others.

But in general there is no reason to think that we will have cures for Covid-19. At-best better

treatments. But making a vaccine is *likely* to be the most straight-forward, reliable and effective

way to handle it.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Corey says:
June 3, 2020 at 6:41 am ~new~

Global elites *do* want to reduce the world population. Pretty much everyone does.

(By making the world richer, which will lead to fewer children as a side effect)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Trashionalist says:
May 31, 2020 at 5:23 pm ~new~

Musk has too much credibility with the right, especially after the anti-stay-at-home-order stuff and

the redpill tweet.

Zuckerberg used to be hated equally by the right and the left, but lately, I think he’s been making

a move to appeal more to the right. What really surprised me is that it may be working for him.

After a story came out about Zuckerberg having private dinners with rightwing media figures and

power-brokers, I saw rightwing internet commenters strongly defending him. Mostly it was along
the lines of “He’s corrupt, but at least he’s being corrupt with both the right and the left instead of

just corrupt with the left like he used to be and all the other tech CEOs are”, but that seemed like a

big upgrade for Zuckerberg after so many years of rightists seeing Facebook as the superweapon

of liberal thought control. And recently, Zuckerberg made sure to set himself up as the policy

opposite of Dorsey, with regard to Twitter’s disclaimers on Trump’s tweets.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o albatross11 says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:51 am ~new~

I couldn’t find the actual survey questions or numbers anywhere when I looked for them for that

survey. Does anyone have a link to the actual survey and its results?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Douglas Knight says:


May 29, 2020 at 12:25 pm ~new~
Here is a YG post with most of the internet rumors for context, and a link to all questions and

crosstabs at the bottom.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 30, 2020 at 8:05 pm ~new~

I’ll admit, I have a hard time believing that 28% of adults think Bill Gates is developing a vaccine

to inject them with tracking chips. This is just nuts.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o albatross11 says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:54 am ~new~

I think “someone powerful is implanting a microchip in me” is a common delusion for people who

are seriously mentally ill, so this makes me wonder if they somehow managed to get a bunch of

seriously mentally ill people answering their survey. (Also, wording memes this way probably works

in terms of getting the crazy people to believe and forward them, but also probably has a non-

negligible chance of convincing one of those crazy people to go do something terrible. The

incentives for how you get attention right now are largely incentives for doing extremely socially

destructive things.)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

11. technicalities says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:38 am ~new~
Guess et al
I am shocked our host didn’t cry “nominative determinism!”

But maybe it goes without saying now.


Log in to Reply Hide

12. Xammer says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:40 am ~new~

Btw, when I first heard of the Birther theory, I thought that Kenya was just a random African

country pulled out of their ass. I was very surprised when I found out that his father was indeed

born in Kenya.
Log in to Reply Hide

o Le Maistre Chat says:

May 29, 2020 at 3:08 am ~new~

His quite Kenyan father was also named Barack Obama, for maximum confusion.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
 No One In Particular says:
May 31, 2020 at 4:40 pm ~new~

I think we could imagine greater confusion, such as if his father’s first name were “President”.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 31, 2020 at 6:19 pm ~new~

Ha, well played.

That’s not even beyond the pale of probability for post-colonial black Africa. If you can name your

child Immanuel Very Important Person Amakali…


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Sorghum says:

May 29, 2020 at 6:34 am ~new~

Not just that; as of 1991 his literary agency claimed that Barack Obama (Jr, the future President)

was born in Kenya (https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/promotional-booklet/) so the idea didn’t

come out of nowhere.

Now, the fact that Obama was being advertised as born in Kenya early in his career is enough, in

my view, to lift so-called “birtherism” out of the “negligibly likely” category and into the regime

where we start having to think carefully about our reasoning. We have two possibilities:

1. He was born in Hawaii, as indicated by various documents, and his literary agent was

misinformed when writing the blurb in 1991.

2. He was born in Kenya and used to acknowledge this fact but once his political career started

taking off he started lying about his birthplace; later he managed to obtain falsified documents to

support his phone birthplace.

Given that the documentation supporting his birth in Hawaii includes not only a birth certificate but

also a birth notice in the newspaper (though it’s not like I’ve seen a copy of this paper myself) I’m

inclined to think that possibility 1 is far more likely, but how low am I really prepared to go with

the probability for 2? One percent? One in a thousand? Surely more than one in a million. Does

anyone think it should be less than one in a million?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Business Analyst says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:14 am ~new~

I’ve always thought the key question is how the literary agent got information about Obama being

born in Kenya. I always supported birtherism as a pretext to force a reckoning about just how far

he pushed his exotic upbringing to gain an advantage prior to his political breakthrough.
Given the fight he stoked over the birth certificate, I’d guess there’s something there he really

didn’t discovered.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:05 am ~new~

I’ve always thought the key question is how the literary agent got information about Obama being

born in Kenya.

Either the agent/publisher/whomever thought it would sound better in a story of achievement to

have it “from Kenya to the highest office in the land!” or Obama was willing to have a degree of

wibbliness about his exact birthplace in order to burnish his CV, as it were, in order to help sell his

book. If that were so (the perceived necessity to stress his ‘blackness’) then there’s a degree of

dishonesty or willingness to bend the truth that does excuse some of the birtherism skepticism.

That’s taking the worst interpretation.

Taking the best intepretation, there could be an honest mistake where someone did mix up Barack

Obama Senior born in Kenya, came to the USA to Hawaii first, and Barack Obama Junior born in

Hawaii, lived abroad in his childhood, returned to live with his grandparents in Hawaii then moved

to the (mainland) USA. (It’s a bit confusing even reading the Wikipedia article, could anyone –

without looking it up – name off the top of their head who his half/step-siblings are, even after two

terms in the White House where we learned what was his favourite ice-cream and restaurant?)
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:29 am ~new~

Note this was his book in 1991, so the story would be “from Kenya to the first black head of the

Harvard Law Review”. Which is still a better story than “from an anthropologist mother in Hawaii to

the head of a university organization”.


Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:30 am ~new~

It could also have been an innocent miscommunication , the editor thought he was born in Kenya

because he had mentioned his father was Kenyan or his name was from Kenya.
Hide ↑

 Trashionalist says:
May 31, 2020 at 5:44 pm ~new~
I always supported birtherism as a pretext to force a reckoning about just how far he pushed his
exotic upbringing to gain an advantage prior to his political breakthrough.
To me that sounds like supporting McCarthyism in order to force a reckoning about how there

aren’t enough communists in American institutions.

“I don’t understand. Stronger McCarthyism should’ve shown everyone how few communists there

are, and how much America could benefit from a greater variety of political philosophy. But now

everyone’s just a stark-raving anti-communist, and all my favorite intellectuals have been

blacklisted. What the hell happened?”

If you can’t think of any alternative explanations for why Obama was slow to reveal his certificate,

consider that he may have seen it as a sign of weakness for the president to respond to a reality

TV personality. When Obama did finally speak about the certificate, he made sure to present it as

“I’m too busy to have to deal with petty crap like this.”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:59 am ~new~

The thing about birtherism is that it posits a conspiracy that actually could have happened in a

couple plausible ways. I know of no reason to suspect that it did occur, but it’s not impossible. It’s

way more feasible than the moon landings being a hoax, or the Twin Towers being brought down

by explosives, and those in turn are more feasible than, say, young-Earth creationism.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:06 am ~new~

The other aspect of birtherism that is often overlooked is that the common right-wing telling of it is
that the story/theory/push originated with the Hilary Clinton campaign during the 2008 primaries.

I know this idea is highly disputed, but to the extent the right believes it, it transforms birtherism

into a conspiracy that not only attacks Obama’s credibility, but also attempts to undermine Hillary’s

credibility with the pro-Obama Democrat base.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 zzzzort says:
May 29, 2020 at 1:08 pm ~new~

I think the other weird thing is how little difference the story would make. If Bush did 9/11 then

he’s one of the greatest villains in american history. If Obama was born in Kenya, then… what? He

would still be a citizen at birth, and eligible for the presidency. I guess it would make obama

dishonest, but people generally don’t have first hand recollections of their own birth, so even that

isn’t clear.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
 Evan Þ says:
May 29, 2020 at 2:00 pm ~new~

That’s not actually the case. The law in place at the time of Obama’s birth said that the child of an

unmarried citizen mother and noncitizen father (like Obama) would gain US citizenship only if he

was born in the US, or if the mother had lived in the US for at least N years after age K. Since

Obama’s mother Stanley Ann Dunham was less than (N+K) years old at his birth, Obama would be

a citizen only if he was born in the United States.

Fortunately, I believe, he was indeed born in the United States.

Since then, that law has been changed, but only for people born after the new law.
Hide ↑

 Garrett says:
June 1, 2020 at 6:44 am ~new~

> birth notice in the newspaper

Am I the only one who thinks this is almost anti-convincing? If you have parent(s) smart enough to

work the system, you know that such information posted in a public place would be useful in the

future. Especially if you are worried about the reliability of other information. It’s the kind of quasi-

reputable evidence which you can fake on your own. I could easily see my parents having done

something like that if they thought it was needed. At the same time, I don’t think that it would

have been because they thought that he might be President. Instead, it could have been over a

simple issue such as residency in the country if questions had ever come up.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 John Schilling says:


June 1, 2020 at 7:03 am ~new~

Who are you imagining would have done this, and when? Because I don’t think it’s really plausible

that a random American expat living with her Kenyan husband in Kenya is going to do this on spec.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
June 2, 2020 at 11:22 am ~new~

Especially if birth notices were routinely printed for all/almost all children.
Hide ↑
o Watchman says:

May 30, 2020 at 1:13 pm ~new~

The fairly key question here of course being the one no-one asks: why would a Hawaiian resident

choose to give birth in Kenya rather than Hawai’i. Whilst I am reliably informed that Kenya has

good hospitals now, I doubt they were that good in the 1960s…

I am assuming his mum did actually visit Kenya at some point, but I’m not sure that has been

demonstrated.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 30, 2020 at 1:40 pm ~new~
The fairly key question here of course being the one no-one asks: why would a Hawaiian resident
choose to give birth in Kenya rather than Hawai’i.
I don’t think reading Stanley Ann Dunham’s mind is really the key question. There are any number

of quirky low-probability reasons a WEIRD woman rich enough to afford international travel might

have accidentally given birth in the foreign father’s country. Fortunately we have things like the

Hawaii newspaper birth notice to raise our priors to practical certainty that his Presidency was

Constitutional.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 bullseye says:
May 30, 2020 at 1:49 pm ~new~
I am assuming his mum did actually visit Kenya at some point, but I’m not sure that has been
demonstrated.
Her Wikipedia page makes no mention of her ever visiting Kenya. It says she met Obama Sr. in

college in Hawaii. It’s probably not the college furthest from Kenya, but it’s close.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Dunham

It also says that, despite being white, she’s descended from John Punch, the “first official slave in

the English colonies.”


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

13. Loweren says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:54 am ~new~

I’m inclined to think that these results don’t correspond to mind-states of people polled, but are an

artifact of polling methodology. If people are predisposed to agree with statements they haven’t

heard about, the way to check that would be to give multiple variations of the same statement:

“Was Obama born in Kenya?”, “Was Obama born in USA or in Kenya?”, “Which country was Obama

born in?”. I’d expect massive differences in response rates depending on wording. In fact,

“Sampling: Design and Analysis” provides examples of rewording the question about Elvis’ death

cut the agreement rate from 14% to 7%.


Log in to Reply Hide
o 10240 says:

May 29, 2020 at 4:52 am ~new~

Yes. People don’t expect pollsters to ask trick questions; they assume there is a reason it makes

sense to ask the question. If you don’t follow the news closely, you haven’ heard about the
conspiracy theories, you vaguely recall that Obama has some recent Kenyan (or African) ancestry

but don’t care enough to remember that it was his father who was born in Kenya and not himself,

then you may answer ‘Yes’. I don’t even think the North Dakota constant applies here: the wording

of the question doesn’t include any sort of conspiracy.

Fun experiment: Ask people “Was Obama born in [random African country]?”, with different

countries substituted for different subgroups. I bet the percentages who answer ‘Yes’ would add up

to way above 100%, Yes answers coming from people who don’t remember which African country

Obama has ancestry from, but assume the pollster asks the right one.

Related: Eliezer wrote about scope insensitivity, with examples such as that people answer about

the same when asked how much price increases they are willing to accept in order to save 2000,

20000 or 200000 birds respectively. I think part of the explanation is that people infer that saving

x birds is a worthwhile goal from the fact that the question is even asked. It perhaps doesn’t fully

explain that the answers are nearly the same, but it explains that they are not proportional to the

number saved.

——

Scott writes
Who believes Obama was secretly born in Kenya? Lots of people – including 28% of blacks. I’ve been
told again and again that birtherism is a racist conspiracy theory and no person could possibly
believe it except as a way of dog whistling white supremacy.
Now, “birtherism” is not the same as thinking that Obama was born in Africa when asked. And the

people who answer ‘Yes’ don’t necessarily think he was secretly born in Kenya; they may just be

unaware that he claims to have been born in the US.

I’d say that birtherism implies being aware that Obama claims to have been born in the US, but

thinking that he actually wasn’t, and this fact is somehow covered up. I don’t think that birtherism

is necessarily white supremacism; since being a natural born citizen is an eligibility requirement for

the president, it’s natural for the question to come up with any candidate with foreign ancestry.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:26 am ~new~
It perhaps doesn’t fully explain that the answers are nearly the same, but it explains that they are not
proportional to the number saved.
People interpret number as “many” without really processing it at all?

And differences, if any is about where different people switch from “small numbers of birds” to

“large number of birds”.

And BTW there is more-or-less rational explanation. I do not really care about birds so much that I

would spend my money on that (I spend my money on other things including some more efficient

charities like this fundation with anti-mosquito nets).


But if someone is working on the issue, I am willing to signal “I support your work, and I would like

you to succeed, here is a token amount of appreciation to confirm that”. It is also signal “I am not

spending my money on that but I am OK with lower number of airports and larger number of birds”
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 2:56 pm ~new~
since being a natural born citizen is an eligibility requirement for the president, it’s natural for the
question to come up with any candidate with foreign ancestry.
Can you give an example of another candidate whose citizenship was subjected to a similar level of

scrutiny? Donald Trump’s mother was born in Scotland. Is there controversy about whether Donald

was born in Scotland?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:22 pm ~new~

John McCain was born in the Panama Canal Zone (to a father also named John McCain…), which led

to some confusion when he ran for President because the PCZ being United States soil has been a

mutable political fact, due to smacking of colonialism.

This text was basically put in the Constitution by Alexander Hamilton’s frenemies in the Revolution

to stop him running to succeed the automatic first President, war hero George Washington. It’s

come up more than once since then, always amounting to nothing. The biggest modern

consequence is probably that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has never run for President because it’s
not even an edge case for him.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 6:15 pm ~new~

Presumably, “this text” refers to Article 2, Section 1, Clause 5, but that could be a bit clearer. It’s a

bit jarring to go from McCain to Hamilton. Also, it doesn’t make sense for this to be directed

against Hamilton. A2S1C5 says


No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the
Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any Person
be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty five Years, and been fourteen
Years a Resident within the United States.
[bolding added]

As far as I know, Hamilton was a citizen at the time of the adoption.


Hide ↑
 Le Maistre Chat says:
May 30, 2020 at 9:25 pm ~new~

OK, my mistake for not getting the pull quote from Article 2, Section 1.

It seems to be a popular misconception that the generations of American elites who were born

British citizens had to be born in the states that seceded to be eligible for the Presidency, but no.
Hide ↑

 10240 says:
May 30, 2020 at 3:42 pm ~new~

I can’t (nor did I say there was one). IIRC it came up with Ted Cruz.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

14. Blueberry pie says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:55 am ~new~

Wouldn’t the poll (as all others) also be affected by people just rushing through it? The

methodology in the paper isn’t very clear, but I would assume respondents received some kind of

compensation for participating (at least a lottery draw) and so at least a part of the respondents

would just click through the questions quickly to get the reward and didn’t bother with detailed

comprehension. No checks on attention and comprehension are reported (but might have been

made), so hard to tell exactly, but even in well-meaning respondents, fatigue is a thing and the

survey apparently had 127 questions, which is quite long.


Log in to Reply Hide

o Zephalinda says:

May 29, 2020 at 4:26 am ~new~

The survey apparently had ~151 questions, but 24 were not reported for reasons not disclosed in

the paper. So yes, even worse than that.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o 10240 says:

May 29, 2020 at 5:01 am ~new~

The Pizzagate question, in particular, may be confusing to some people. It doesn’t ask whether

Hillary’s staffers committed pedophilia and Satanic abuse, it asks whether some leaked e-mails

contain codewords for pedophilia and Satanic abuse. Does that even imply that they are

committing it?

Someone who doesn’t read the questions carefully sees “Blah blah Hillary blah blah pedophilia blah

Satanic abuse”, vaguely recalls that the media has said “blah blah Hillary blah blah pedophilia blah

Satanic abuse”, and answers ‘Yes’.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
 Garrett says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:48 am ~new~

Thanks – that jumped out at me as well. The question is ambiguous.

The question can either mean: Hillary campaign staffers used code words to talk about pedophilia.

or

Hillary campaign staffers used words, which in other contexts, are code words for pedophilia.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

15. b_jonas says:


May 29, 2020 at 3:09 am ~new~

But in that case, what can you say about the claim from your previous article that 40% of people

believe that God created humans within 10000 years?


Log in to Reply Hide

16. thisheavenlyconjugation says:


May 29, 2020 at 3:18 am ~new~

Oh Scott, I thought you were a rational free thinker, but here you are completely falling for a

transparent attempt to pretend that the North Dakota crash never happened…
Log in to Reply Hide

17. jonmarcus says:


May 29, 2020 at 4:39 am ~new~

Re “North Dakota crash”:

If you ask people inclined to trust pollsters if the government is hiding the North Dakota crash, the
most reasonable answer is “Yes” .

“North Dakota crash? It must have happened, because this trustworthy pollster is asking me about

it. But I never heard about it. Clearly it’s been successfully covered up!”
Log in to Reply Hide

o Anteros says:

May 29, 2020 at 4:44 am ~new~

+1
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Star says:

May 29, 2020 at 8:26 am ~new~

Also I was in North Dakota during an oil boom and the subsequent crash… So if someone asked me

about the North Dakota crash conspiracy I would say “Conspiracy? Why would you think that a

conspiracy caused the crash?”


But if you asked me do you believe in the the North Dakota crash I would say “What do you mean

believe? I was F’ING THERE” then I would go look up the WTI price of crude from 2014 to 2015

and rub your face in it (cause I’m a prick).

Surveys that use multiple choice questions are immune to nuance, and thus struggle to mirror

reality.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

18. Lanrian says:


May 29, 2020 at 4:44 am ~new~

Are we sure that these surveys aren’t just crap? All the YouGov surveys sample from their “opt-in

Internet panel” (offering rewards for survey-taking) which could be biased in any number of ways.

It is “stratified by gender, age, race, education, and region”, but that creates some other

problems: how likely is a low-education 60+ year-old who is a member of an opt-in Internet panel

to be representative of low-education 60+ year-olds at large?

I’m not even sure if YouGov double-checks the information that is given to them (although they

say that 1193/1376 are registered voters, and perhaps it’s easy to check demographics of those?).

If they don’t verify demographics, the lizardman constant could mean that the more sparse

demographics are mostly populated by people lying about everything, including their

demographics.
Log in to Reply Hide

19. SJ says:
May 29, 2020 at 5:53 am ~new~

There’s an additional problem when questions include terms that are broad and imperfectly

defined.

For example, if we ask people “Did a plane hit the Pentagon on 9/11/2001?”, we’ll understand what

a YES or NO answer means, because we agree on the definitions of “plane”, “hit”, “Pentagon”, and

“9/11/2001”.

“Is Pizzagate true?” is a different kind of question, because the word “Pizzagate” doesn’t have a

precise definition. Suppose I think that the owner of the DC pizza parlor is a pedophile, and used to

make cryptic pedophilia jokes on social media for his pedophile friends, but I DON’T believe that

the Clintons are involved in an international sex trafficking ring. Should I answer YES to the

question?

If I answer YES, the pollster may interpret my answer to mean that I think the Clintons are guilty,

but if I answer NO, they may interpret my answer to mean that I think the pizza parlor owner is

innocent.
Log in to Reply Hide

o n-alexander says:

May 29, 2020 at 6:45 am ~new~


or rather, suppose I want to drag Clintons’ name through the dirt one more time, so I say Yes even

though I absolutely don’t believe it. Then the pollsters publish the results and voilà, my opinion is

“official”.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 6:54 am ~new~

+1

I’ve talked about this before, but this is how I answer polls. I figure out what tribal direction they’re

generally in, and then pick the most extreme option that favors “my side.”

For this poll, I would have answered that I definitely believe Pizzagate. I don’t. But I would have

said I did, anyway.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Aftagley says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:05 am ~new~

To what end?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:19 am ~new~

To annoy the pollsters and to de-legitimatize the polls. Most polls are used for the purposes of

tribal warfare.
Hide ↑

 keaswaran says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:32 am ~new~

“Most polls are used for the purposes of tribal warfare.”

Citation needed.

I’m pretty sure that most polls are used for boring academic or marketing research, and only a

small fraction are even discussed in the press (primarily ones asking about elections).
Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:46 am ~new~

Maybe “Most polls cited in media are used for the purposes of tribal warfare, and people are

assuming that typical poll will be used this way.” would be better?
Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:01 am ~new~

It’s a little like the difference between police shootings and police shootings that are widely

reported in the national media.


Hide ↑

 Andaro says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:48 am ~new~

“To annoy the pollsters and to de-legitimatize the polls.”

That’s like committing crimes to prove that the crime rate is high.
Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:09 am ~new~
That’s like committing crimes to prove that the crime rate is high.
If you believe that usefulness of polls is 0 and there are negatives of treating them as credible…
Hide ↑

 Andaro says:
May 29, 2020 at 12:51 pm ~new~

I don’t think the usefulness of polls would be zero if people didn’t lie en masse. The same is true

for user-generated reviews and similar communication. If people generally were more truthful,

they would have positive information value.


Hide ↑

 Doctor Mist says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:07 pm ~new~

Regarding “Most polls are used for the purposes of tribal warfare.” and “boring academic research”:

For a year or more I have been registered on researchgate, a site to link up volunteers with

academic studies. It seemed like a worthwhile thing for a retired guy with time on his hands to do.

I just de-registered, after getting attached to two different studies about coping with Covid19, both

of which said a few things about Covid19 and then asked me a lot of questions about how I feel

about blacks and Hispanics and Asians.


Hide ↑

 Gerry Quinn says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:23 pm ~new~

What is your side?


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:00 pm ~new~

The graphic gives the wording


Leaked email from some of Hillary Clinton’s campaign staffers contained code words for pedophilia,
human trafficking and satanic ritual abuse – what some people refer to as ‘Pizzagate’.
I assume this is the wording that the people taking the poll were given.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

20. Aftagley says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:11 am ~new~

Spelling error in the second to last paragraph:


though tou could still
Log in to Reply Hide

21. Gabriel Conroy says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:18 am ~new~

One thing that gets me on such polls is this:


….just various shades of “agree” or “disagree”.
Usually (always?), the “somewhat agree” is placed next to “agree,” as if “somewhat agree” is a

lesser shade of full-on “agree.” Same thing with “somewhat disagree” and “disagree.”

Yet in actual conversation, when I say I “somewhat agree” with something, I usually (though

maybe not always) mean I mostly disagree with it. Same thing when I say I “somewhat disagree”

with something.

I don’t think (most) survey takers are fooled. I think they realize they’re looking at a spectrum and

that in context, “somewhat” means “shy of full-on agree/disagree.” But it irks me nonetheless.

More ambitiously (and this is entirely speculation on my part), I do wonder if survey takers, even

though they know better, might very well approach the “somewhat” options subconsciously as I

(and I suspect, many/most of us) do in everyday life.


Log in to Reply Hide
o tgb says:

May 29, 2020 at 8:53 am ~new~

I had a similar realization a while ago about the weather. Is “Partly cloudy” sunnier or not than

“partly sunny”?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

22. vaticidalprophet says:

May 29, 2020 at 6:30 am ~new~


I like this one, because it’s a variant on something my dad has been saying for years: “Any

position is supported by 25% of the population”. His usual reference is Bush’s end-stage approval

rating…and that Bush, supposedly, had the same end-stage approval rating amongst Americans

and Iraqis. He also used to be a conspiracy theorist, but that’s another note. I grew up with too

many David Icke books.

I’d previously had people make comparisons to the decapitation constant* when I mentioned this,

but the numbers didn’t check out and I felt like they were separate phenomena.

*Probably because of the aforementioned “grew up with too many David Icke books”, I frankly find

it believable 1 in 25 people think the lizard aliens control everything. But 1 in 25 people also claim

to have been decapitated, so…


Log in to Reply Hide

23. ParryHotter says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:31 am ~new~

I wonder if this phenomena is related to what Aziz Anasari revealed when, in his stand-up show, he

showed how many people just want to chime in on a controversy and take a side, even when it’s

totally fabricated. See it here.


Log in to Reply Hide

o Aftagley says:

May 29, 2020 at 6:43 am ~new~

How did I miss this special? Thanks for the link.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:06 pm ~new~

Kind of spoiled the ending, there.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

24. n-alexander says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:41 am ~new~

I’m pretty sure a lot of people say “I believe” or “not” based on their tribe association rather than

their actual belief. Meaning, they’re telling the pollsters what they want the pollsters to hear rather

than what they really think. Not unlike liking a post on FB or Twitter.
Log in to Reply Hide

25. TheRationalDebt says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:02 am ~new~
Worth mentioning: Hillary officiated at the wedding of Anthony Weiner, the democratic

congressman who was sent to jail for sexting with a 15-year old girl. (His wife, huma abedin, was

described by Hillary as her second daughter). Bill’s Epstein connections are just one of a few things

that could lead a high-information voter to believe the Clintons were involved with several

paedophiles. If you know lots of these details, and haven’t really followed PizzaGate, it might even

be correct to believe in PizzaGate.


Log in to Reply Hide

o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:10 pm ~new~


(His wife, huma abedin, was described by Hillary as her second daughter).
I find it a bit odd that out of all the names in your post, you chose the one not familiar to

Americans as a name, and thus in the most need of capitalization to clarify that it is a name (and

not, say, some obscure Latin phrase), to not capitalize.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 31, 2020 at 2:00 pm ~new~

Probably the post was autocapitalised by a phone or tablet.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

26. Corey says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:03 am ~new~

Conspiracy beliefs presumably cluster because people want to believe someone’s in charge.
Log in to Reply Hide
27. sclmlw says:

May 29, 2020 at 7:12 am ~new~

Is it possible for these mysterious Russian bot farms to influence polls like this? For example, if

there’s an online poll is it possible for someone to design a bot farm that can take the survey a few

thousand times with the intent of crafting a result that makes it look like certain segments of the

US population are nutjobs who believe Lizardmen have colluded with Pizzagaters to go back in time

and teleport Obama’s mother to Kenya just before he was born?


Log in to Reply Hide

o keaswaran says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:34 am ~new~


With a generic open website poll, sure. But with something like YouGov, they’ve got a specific

process for selecting the participants, and they manage to do a pretty good job:

https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/pollster-ratings/
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:10 am ~new~

keaswaran:

Thanks, that clarifies things.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

28. Douglas Knight says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:16 am ~new~
post-Jeffrey Epstein
The poll is from December 2016. Does that count as “post-Jeffrey Epstein”? maybe
Log in to Reply Hide

o DarkTigger says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:09 pm ~new~

There was an completely hillarious dynamic going on with the Epstein thing.

At first I think it was aroung the election 2016 there were a lot of people rather to the right (I

mostly saw them here but also in different places on reddit and G+ back than) talking about

Epstein.

Than Epstein, was arrested and to be put on trial. That was when CNN etc. wrote about it. And
suddenly it was almost only people rather to the left talking about it.

After his death, it was the more right wing people talking about him again.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

29. fserb says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:29 am ~new~

Wait, of Hillary’s voters, 17% think she’s involved in a pedophilia/satanic ritual conspiracy and are

still voting for her? Nah. Not. Even discounting Lizardman’s (which interestingly, would remove all

“Definitely true”): 13%? Nah. I think this is more of an issue than saying a fake (lol) conspiracy

theory is true. If 13% is noise, then the difference between all other demo lines on other questions

could also be noise.

Maybe something weird going on during the polling?


Log in to Reply Hide
o Matt M says:

May 29, 2020 at 7:41 am ~new~

Why not?
“I believe Joe Biden is probably a rapist but I’m going to vote for him anyway” seems to be a

relatively common take these days, on Twitter at least.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 fserb says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:55 am ~new~

Sure. But in this particular case, people seem to be choosing the “least worst of two rapists”, or so

I was told. 🙂

You think 13% of people thought Trump was worse than a “satanist pedophile”? It’s possible, but

harder, no? Maybe those words are not understood literally anymore and people just translate

them to “bad people” or “corrupt”.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 John Schilling says:


May 29, 2020 at 8:49 am ~new~
You think 13% of people thought Trump was worse than a “satanist pedophile”?
I would cover a bet that 13% of the Democratic electorate believes that Donald Trump is worse

than a satanist pedophile. The “Satanist” part is a gimme, because the Democratic electorate

mostly doesn’t believe that Satan exists and so considers people’s religious beliefs to be significant

only insofar as it signals tribal affiliation and the LaVeyan Satanists are at least marginally closer to

Blue Tribe than e.g. the Evangelical Christians. “Pedophile” is nasty, but a fair chunk of Blue Tribe

was willing to give Roman Polanski a pass in exchange for some artistically significant movies so

giving Hillary a pass in exchange for defending the faithful against Literally Worse than Hitler isn’t

too much of a stretch. And people of every political affiliation are willing to give their team’s

leaders (as opposed to bench-sitters) a pass on merely personal offenses if they are sufficiently

effective in the political sphere. The idea that personal character really matters is I think a minority

belief and certainly not an 87% majority belief.

It’s also possible that the 13% number is off for reasons others have already raised, but it doesn’t

logically have to be wrong on account of Satanist pedophiles being the Worst People Ever.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 vaniver says:
May 29, 2020 at 8:57 am ~new~
You think 13% of people thought Trump was worse than a “satanist pedophile”? It’s possible, but
harder, no?
You realize that some voters are satanists, pedophiles, or both, right?

And besides that, presumably many voters are consequentialists who care more about the

expected policy impact of politicians than their personal conduct. (“Hmm, which matters more,

healthcare for millions or whether or not someone receives a blowjob in their office from someone

who isn’t their wife that they have power over?”) And if you take this sort of reasoning seriously,

the scales of political impact and personal impact are actually quite different. Like imagine Obama
was out driving his car, struck a pedestrian, and then he just drove off and they died. Imagine

what a deal people might make of that.

And yet, the drone program alone was the equivalent of that once a week for his whole presidency,

if you accept the low estimate for civilian casualties. And that’s just one thing out of many!
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:22 pm ~new~
“Hmm, which matters more, healthcare for millions or whether or not someone receives a blowjob in
their office from someone who isn’t their wife that they have power over?”
This clearly seems to be a reference to Bill Clinton’s impeachment, which was not over a blowjob,

but obstruction of justice in the form of perjury regarding those blowjobs, and I find the repeated

attempts to obfuscate this issue to be tiresome, deeply anti-social, and deserving of a level of

social sanction that Scott has implied is not permitted on this blog.
Hide ↑

 Deiseach says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:19 am ~new~

You think 13% of people thought Trump was worse than a “satanist pedophile”?

As I mentioned elsewhere, I’ve seen somone saying that there is a “literal demon” in the White

House.

Now, “literal” has become so degraded in common usage that it probably means simply “I really

don’t like this guy”, but from the tone of the rest of the comment, I wouldn’t bet against them
believing Trump is actually a devil out of Hell, either.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

30. Silverlock says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:37 am ~new~

Not exactly the same thing, but here is the obligatory Yes, Minister clip re opinion polls.
Log in to Reply Hide

31. North49 says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:38 am ~new~

If we’re stuck with a 30ish% Dakota crash constant, what changes do we need to make to the

process of democracy to offset that? What is our confidence level that Congress as a group is

significantly better than the general public?


Log in to Reply Hide

o keaswaran says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:36 am ~new~

It means that we definitely shouldn’t make policy by a general poll asking “should we raise taxes to

cover the costs of the North Dakota crash”. Having people choose a candidate is subject to *some*

of the same issues, but definitely not all of them.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

32. lil_copter says:


May 29, 2020 at 7:47 am ~new~

My current favorite conspiracy is that Omar Ihan committed immigration fraud. 95% sure from the

evidence I have seen but mainstream media is pretty quite about it. There are tons of websites

that debunk Pizzagate and Sandyhook, but almost nothing about rep Omar. Its actually part of the

fun of debunking something, to have a conspiracy so outrageous that you can easily pick it apart.
Log in to Reply Hide

o albatross11 says:

May 29, 2020 at 10:06 am ~new~

Yeah, but small-scale immigration fraud isn’t much of a grand conspiracy, either. It’s like an

allegation that the mayor got kickbacks from some developers for his political decisions–maybe

true, maybe false, but not requiring any extraordinary leap of faith to imagine it happening.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Matt M says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:08 am ~new~

The “conspiracy” is less about her doing it and more about the notion that the evidence against her

is clear and overwhelming, and that the relevant authorities know she did it, but refuse to act on it

and prosecute her, for entirely political reasons. And likely for CW political-correctness reasons (as
in, I think the conventional right-wing view isn’t “she’s getting away with it because she’s in

congress” and more “she’s getting away with it because she’s a prominent leftist muslim female

who is therefore automatically considered above reproach”)


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

33. craftman says:


May 29, 2020 at 8:16 am ~new~

For what it’s worth I found the Lizardman constant in the Pizzagate question:

4% of Hilary voters said it was “definitely true” that Pizzagate was real….I want to meet these

men/women/lizard overlords!
Log in to Reply Hide
34. Itai Bar-Natan says:

May 29, 2020 at 8:58 am ~new~


I’m not well-informed on the Pizzagate controversy, and when I read the exact statement people

were asked to judge the YouGov poll, I have no idea if it’s true or false:
Leaked email from some of Hillary Clinton’s campaign staffers contained code words for pedophilia,
human trafficking, and satanic ritual abuse – what some people refer to as ‘Pizzagate’.
Does it count statements that were not intended as coded references, but include words that are

considered code words? Also, surely pedophile and human trafficking would come as topics from

time to time among Clinton’s campaign staffers, and some of it would appear in the leaked emails.
Log in to Reply Hide

o Sorghum says:

May 29, 2020 at 11:08 am ~new~

I am overly well informed about Pizzagate and I would say that the poll gives a terrible summary of

Pizzagate.

I would say that it doesn’t count as Pizzagate unless DNC members were actively running and

discussing a paedophile ring centered around a certain pizza joint, and that the many references to

pizza in the Podesta emails are actually references to child sex.

Where does all this come from? It comes from 4chan digging through the Podesta emails looking

for the smoking gun that would blow up the Hillary campaign; turned out there wasn’t one… but

then someone pointed out that “cheese pizza” could mean “child pornography” (because apparently

sometimes it does on /b/) and pretty soon everyone was digging through for references to pizza

and speculating on what they might *really* mean.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 anon-e-moose says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:31 am ~new~

@Sorghum a minor point: CP or Cheese Pizza has meant child porn for a really long time. That

didn’t start with Pizzagate, but it did start on /b/ back when you could actually bomb threads with

CP to troll folks.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Scott Alexander says:


May 29, 2020 at 4:41 pm ~new~

Oh, that makes sense as a way the theory could have started. Of course 4chan would have their

own pedophilia codewords.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Sorghum says:
May 30, 2020 at 12:27 am ~new~
For what its
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 DarkTigger says:
May 30, 2020 at 3:21 pm ~new~

You laugh but Something Awful (the place 4chan branched of from) at least used to string replace

the word “rape” with “surprise sex” if you weren’t logged in.

I also suspect there were more those string replacements, since I saw a couple of discussions were

an SA Goon complaint about someone misquoting them of froum, but when linked I saw the quote

as fiven on the page.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 10240 says:
May 30, 2020 at 3:50 pm ~new~

I found a script to undo the replacements, containing a list.


Hide ↑

 ddxxdd says:
May 30, 2020 at 2:16 pm ~new~

>and pretty soon everyone was digging through for references to pizza and speculating on what

they might *really* mean.

And they found quite a few weird and interesting things. Artwork that sexualizes pre-pubescent

children, instagram posts with children and inappropriate comments, instagram posts that are

oddly sexual for a family-friendly restaurant, a declassified FBI document detailing common

pedophilia symbols that seem to match the logos of the aforementioned restaurant…

Anyone who does not understand why Pizzagate got off the ground, and gained enough steam to
make a news anchor risk his career in bringing it to light, might find this link to a repository of

evidence interesting. Note that it’s not solid evidence, a lot of it is stretching, and we now know

that it all amounts to nothing. But try to imagine if the opposite political party had this evidence

presented against them.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 30, 2020 at 10:56 pm ~new~
might find this link to a repository of evidence interesting
Is it a parody? “Indisputable PizzaGate Evidence”? Seriously? And supposedly crowning proof is a

garbled email on a mailing list.

I personally send more than once garbled email/message due to combination of not doing

proofreading, typos, auto-correct and miss-clicking send too early. Some on a public mailing lists.

I wonder whatever it is deliberate lying and manipulation (like say iPhone waterproofing update) or

just blatant lack of experience/knowledge/research.


Or is it actually the best “proof” that was found in this “case”?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 pdbarnlsey says:
May 31, 2020 at 10:48 pm ~new~

“inappropriate comments” on Instagram? We’re through the looking glass now, Pizzagaters!

I think most people who are dismissive of Pizzagate (like, these days, the guy who took his gun to

the restaurant to “investigate” it) have a pretty clear theory of how the whole project got off the

ground, but it relates primarily to the believers rather than the “evidence”.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

35. albatross11 says:


May 29, 2020 at 9:33 am ~new~

Is it possible that the underlying problem is just that surveys are often not very reliable, or are

becoming less reliable over time? I mean, if the only people who answer unsolicited calls from

unknown numbers are are bored teenagers and the crazies and the shut-ins, maybe you just get

weird answers.

Also, there are mainstream conspiracy theories. The original satanic panic (media reports of satanic

ritual sexual child abuse) was a mainstream thing, even though the stories were utterly nuts. Many

of the mainstream discussions about police misconduct toward blacks openly postulate white cops

going out looking to murder someone for being black, which also doesn’t seem too consistent with

reality. For that matter, tons of people are still convinced that Saddam had something to do with

9/11. That makes me think of another explanation: Most peoples’ expressed beliefs about these
theories are driven by identity and perceived fitting in with their group.

For many conspiracy theories, believing them is costless. I mean, if you really think the moon

landing never happened and it was all a hoax, or that JFK was shot as part of a coup plot by LBJ,

how does that change your daily life as a web developer or an elementary school teacher or an

electrician? If you think Obama is a secret Muslim and was born in Kenya, or that Trump is secretly

in the pay of Putin, again, what actual changes in your behavior does that require? What if you’re

convinced that Covid-19 escaped from a Chinese lab–how does that make you change how you act

day to day? For most people, these are low-cost beliefs, and expressing them is a way of signaling

tribal affinity. For a few people, believing them and acting on them would be expensive–it’s

probably hard to be an astronaut if you think NASA faked the moon landings. But mostly, they

don’t have any consequences, and so when you perceive them as “the party line,” you just start

mouthing them without thinking much about them.


Log in to Reply Hide

o matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 9:38 am ~new~
I mean, if the only people who answer unsolicited calls from unknown numbers are are bored
teenagers and the crazies and the shut-ins, maybe you just get weird answers.
You forgot people deliberately lying for strategic reasons.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 erinexa says:
May 29, 2020 at 10:41 am ~new~

I answer all unknown calls and respond to all polls with my actual opinions. I do this because I

have seen from the “inside” poll responses be used by governments/companies to shape decisions

based on the responses, so it seems pretty obvious that if you tell people what you want, they are

more likely to do it so they can get your votes and money. It always surprises me that more people

don’t see polls this way.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:29 am ~new~

It is not true where poll is made by someone with incompatible targets, especially where it is not

about opinions but about facts.

1) Lets say that you hate billboards with ads (ugliness and because at least in my city [Kraków,

Poland] trees are illegally destroyed around them to make them more visible)

In such case you may encounter poll checking effectiveness of marketing asking whatever you

remember specific bilboard marketing campaign. You may lie to pretend that effectiveness of such

marketing is lower than in reality.

2) Someone is conducting poll intended to support discrimination of your group. Typical method is
to have poll proving that group foobar is over-represented in your community therefore it should

be oppressed or some funding specifically excluding it should be introduced. In such case

strategically not responding, filling “prefer to not answer”/”other” or outright lying may be

beneficial for some people.

3) You hate company X and honestly want its efforts to be misdirected and fail.

4) You consider specific outcome to be hilarious (Boaty McBoatface and its variants of manipulated

polls)

5) Lying about demographics may make your answer more impactful

Also, legitimizing of obviously biased poll

6) Poll is highly biased, participating would make it more credible (“99% of people support removal

of parking lanes and making bicycle lane!” Or “99% of people support tuning park into a parking

lot”)

—-

Personally I am not lying, though I selectively promote or answer polls based on what I consider as

a desirable outcome.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o keaswaran says:

May 29, 2020 at 9:39 am ~new~

> Is it possible that the underlying problem is just that surveys are often not very reliable, or are

becoming less reliable over time? I mean, if the only people who answer unsolicited calls from

unknown numbers are are bored teenagers and the crazies and the shut-ins, maybe you just get

weird answers.

This doesn’t seem likely. YouGov is an effective pollster whose election surveys tend to come within

about 5% of the actual election results. They take precautions about getting moderately

representative participant pools, though I suppose it’s quite possible that the biases involved with

survey response are more closely related to conspiratorial thinking than to partisan affiiliation.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Sorghum says:

May 29, 2020 at 10:58 am ~new~

The Saddam-9/11 connection is another one that didn’t come out of nowhere, and it’s not insane to

believe it.

The strongest evidence came from “intelligence reports” that Mohammed Atta met with an Iraqi

official at a cafe in https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed_Atta

%27s_alleged_Prague_connection

The evidence was talked up by such luminaries as Dick Cheney and Will Safire. Now, years later it

emerged that these “intelligence reports” were based on some random dude who saw Atta’s face

on the news after 9/11 and thought he remembered seeing him meeting the Iraqi; pretty damn

weak sauce. But if you’re the kind of person who reads New York Times articles and doesn’t read

the corrections issued many years later, you could be forgiven for being aware of the initial

plausible sounding claims but not the slow walk back of them.

One wonders how many other things that our intelligence agencies believe are based on similarly

flimsy evidence.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 29, 2020 at 11:28 am ~new~

I suspect most peoples’ understanding of all kinds of things that have happened in the news are

similarly fuzzy, based on the first news reports + stuff you’ve heard from your tribe. For example, I

think most people think that Zimmerman (the neighborhood watch guy who shot the black

teenager in Florida some years ago) was a big white guy instead of a smallish hispanic guy, and

few know that he was on his back with Martin on top of him beating him up when he shot Martin.
To get the detailed knowledge, you needed to pay attention to the story throughout, but most

people didn’t. (Probably rightly so–this was a national news story only because it got promoted on

a slow news day and caught fire.) My experience in talking with people informed enough to be

upset about police shootings is that almost none of them know how many police shootings there

are per year, what fraction of the people shot are black, what fraction are unarmed, etc. Finding

that out means digging around and reading in-depth coverage of the issue, not headlines and TV

news coverage and discussions on Facebook. I mean, those statistics were put up by two major

newspapers (Washington Post and Guardian), so they were out there. But most people don’t pay

that much attention.

For that matter, I think this is a major part of Trump’s strategy politically. His attempted ban on

immigration from a few high-terrorism-risk countries was done in an inept, slapdash way and got

challenged in court and there were battles back and forth before a modified version was allowed to

go into effect. The result of the initial hamfisted attempt was a lot of protest and outrage. A lot of

Trump voters round that all off to “Trump tried to do the Muslim ban[1], but the damned liberals

stopped him in court.”

My guess is that most people, most of the time, have only a vague initial-headline-based model of

even big events. Most people don’t follow politics all that closely.

[1] It wasn’t a Muslim ban, but it was described so for political reasons by Trump’s enemies. That

guy is scarily good at getting his enemies to help him out.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:37 pm ~new~
and few know that he was on his back with Martin on top of him beating him up when he shot
Martin.
Is that based on anything other than Zimmerman’s claims?
It wasn’t a Muslim ban, but it was described so for political reasons by Trump’s enemies.
It was a ban of Muslims, that followed a campaign in which Trump said he would institute a Muslim

ban.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
May 30, 2020 at 7:59 pm ~new~

IIRC, there were eyewitness (maybe earwitnesses) to the fight between them, and also

Zimmerman had injuries consistent with it (damage to his face and the back of his head).

Trump talked about banning all Muslim immigration; the policy he imposed stopped immigration

from seven countries that were already very hard to immigrate to the US from because they were

serious terrorism risks. Those are very different things.


Hide ↑
 SmilingJack says:
June 2, 2020 at 7:37 pm ~new~

I think the angle of the gunshot on Martin was basically consistent with this positioning as well.
Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:34 pm ~new~

The claim that Saddam had “something” to do with 9/11 is literally true at least in that his

existence was part of the causal chain the resulted in 9/11. For instance, one of the causes cited by

bin Laden was the presence of US troops in Saudi Arabia, which was due to them being deployed

as part of Desert Shield. And of course there was the optics of a Western nation attacking a Muslim

one.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

36. Subb4k says:


May 29, 2020 at 11:26 am ~new~

Please stop trying to name “constants” out of like three data points in which the things you observe

aren’t even constant! Then you keep using it, people start using it elsewhere on the internet, and

people start to believe it’s actually backed by rigorous research when you pulled that out of your

ass.

I seem to recall you saying that when you don’t understand something that you can observe, you

should name it something that makes it clear that it’s still not understood. Maybe have the name

involve “magic” or some other ridiculous non-explanation.

Similarly, when you’re just making a conjecture based on close to no data, then don’t give your

conjecture a name that makes it seems like you did an actual serious meta-analysis.
Log in to Reply Hide

o Randy M says:

May 29, 2020 at 11:38 am ~new~


then don’t give your conjecture a name that makes it seems like you did an actual serious meta-
analysis.
You and I have different reactions to the phrase “Lizardman constant”, although in general it does

feel that Scott should reread “Beware the man of only one study” every now and again.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Gerry Quinn says:


May 29, 2020 at 6:42 pm ~new~

Sure, Lizardman constant may be over-egging the cake. But who can argue that there is not a

Lizardman *parameter*?
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o 6jfvkd8lu7cc says:

May 29, 2020 at 1:46 pm ~new~

And while for Lizardman constant there is at least a chance it is universal, for Generic Conspiracy

ballot I would expect pretty large cross-country variation! And probably there is underlying

variation both in belief that the government is hiding information, and in the belief that the

government has some information to hide in the first place.

On the other hand, _strong_ belief in North Dakota Crash Coverup is indicated at 7.5%, given that

the governments _do_ have a questionable track record with transparency that has lately been

discussed in detail, some difference with self-reported decapitation rate makes sense…
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

37. CthulhuChild says:


May 29, 2020 at 2:12 pm ~new~

I appreciate that Scott is being charitable by using a reverse example that his audience is likely to

be sympathetic with (IE, Alex Jones is always lying). But I don’t think this example is symmetrical.

“The government” (which one?) does things other than cover up things. Like even if you are

reeaaallly cynical about government, it is easy to verify government and government personnel are

involved in things other than cover ups. You can do this on a personal basis, without outside

assistance. Nor does the government suceed at covering everything up it wants to, otherwise there

would never be any embarrassing information available on the mainstream media or otherwise,

and there is lots of both. Or put it another way, one’s default experience with “the government”

looks more like parent teacher interviews, IRS forms, the DMV, etc. Thus, default presumption that

“anything I haven’t heard of is probably the result of a government conspiracy” lacks internal
consistency.

By contrast, assuming that everything Alex Jones says is a lie (or at least a hyperbolic distortion

intended to pump his brand and sell vitamin pills) is entirely consistent with both casual experience

and in depth exploration.

In other words, it’s one thing to assume that the government is basically untrustworthy. Its

another thing to assume that the government literally lies about everything in all domains 100% of

the time. The former is an arguable (even if I disagree with it), the latter isn’t. By contrast, I feel

comfortable defaulting to the assumption that Alex Jones is full of crap, because 100% of the

videos I’ve seen him in he is full of crap.

I agree that the format of the question definitely influences this number, and there should have

been a “I have no idea” option. But I would attribute the 33% to noise caused by survey setup

rather than assume any significance, nor would I try to relate it to other surveys. As to the 24% of

democrats that “believe” in Pizzagate, I’d attribute that to either 1) Bernie Bros who are prepared

to believe literally anything bad about the Democratic Party Establishment, or 2) People who are

transmuting Pizzagate from it’s most extreme form into a proxy for “powerful dems sometimes do
shady shit”. IE, that 24% doesn’t believe the Clintons regularly rape children in a pizza parlor with

the assistance of the democratic national committee, but they DO believe John Podesta and

Anthony Weiner are creeps.


Log in to Reply Hide
o Matt M says:

May 29, 2020 at 2:15 pm ~new~


By contrast, assuming that everything Alex Jones says is a lie (or at least a hyperbolic distortion
intended to pump his brand and sell vitamin pills) is entirely consistent with both casual experience
and in depth exploration.
I don’t think this is true at all. Alex Jones does like 3 hours of radio a day, mostly discussing

current events, mostly with a pretty standard right-wing take. You think something near 100% of

his statements are verifiable lies? I feel like that would be darn tough to pull off even if you were

trying. You’d have to luck into statements of facts sometimes, even by accident!
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 CthulhuChild says:
May 29, 2020 at 7:46 pm ~new~

You’d think, and yet I just logged to his live broadcast and he is proclaiming that Infowars is the

most cencored show in history, and that this censorship is being done by American intelligence at

the behest of Chinese communists and the military industrial complex.

I mean, that’s a standard right wing talking point if you squint hard, but I stand by my point that

literally everything he says on his show is a hyperbolic distortion. I’m sure we could iron out a

formalized definition if you want, but government speakers just don’t come.close to the same

volume of bullshit per minute. The president himself is a more moderate and factual source.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:44 pm ~new~


Thus, default presumption that “anything I haven’t heard of is probably the result of a government
conspiracy” lacks internal consistency.
That doesn’t follow.
Its another thing to assume that the government literally lies about everything in all domains 100%
of the time.
It’s not merely an issue of P(government cover-up|event), but P(government cover-up|cover-up).
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

38. ajfirecracker says:


May 29, 2020 at 3:36 pm ~new~

I generally dig into things that interest me, so maybe I’m a high-info “voter”
I am more predisposed than most to “believe” conspiracy theories in the sense that I try to

understand what is meant to have happened and if the official or accepted story doesn’t make

sense one explanation is that the official or accepted story isn’t the whole story.

So for example, I might be labelled a moon landing conspiracist because I have learned about a

few strange things that make the official story less believable (e.g. NASA taped over all the Apollo

mission data), but I don’t pretend to know what really happened or have some strong proof that

the official story is wrong.

I think perhaps people like me are being included in your data with people who claim to know the

truth behind events which feature discrepancies.


Log in to Reply Hide

o No One In Particular says:

May 30, 2020 at 3:48 pm ~new~


a few strange things that make the official story less believable (e.g. NASA taped over all the Apollo
mission data)
I think this makes your age a relevant question. Taping over data is going to look weirder to

someone who grew up with terabyte hard drives that to someone who paid $10 for a 144 kilobyte

disc.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 matkoniecz says:
May 30, 2020 at 11:04 pm ~new~

Also, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_Who_missing_episodes and many similar cases of


data loss.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o Watchman says:

May 30, 2020 at 4:00 pm ~new~

When you learnt the Apollo mission data was taped over, was your reaction to check if this was

normal (note that tv companies at the time still refused film a lot for example)? I tend to find belief

in conspiracy theories correlates with a willingness no investigate something but then a tendency

to stop at the interesting result (data was destroyed!) without checking the significance of this (my

guess is NASA reused tape as a matter of routine: that stuff was expensive).

Interestingly this makes conspiracy theories incredibly similar to bad science, where again results

are interpreted as automatically significant, not understood and contextualised.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 CatCube says:
May 30, 2020 at 9:40 pm ~new~
My particular bugbear is the 9/11 “controlled demolition” theory, and I’ve spiraled in on believing

that the people who put great stock into variations of it tend to have incorrect views on what a

structural collapse should look like, and because the Twin Towers didn’t collapse the way they

imagined it should that there must be some coverup, so they start nitpicking irrelevant details in

search of the conspiracy they’ve already decided exists.

Tangentially related to your discussion of the missing Apollo tapes, I have an anecdote from my

job. I work on dams for the federal government, most of which were built between the ’30s and the

late ’60s.

Most of you probably aren’t familiar with construction contracts, so a quick aside: construction

contracts consist of two things, the plans (the drawings–often called “blueprints” though that term

is erroneous today–that all of you can picture), and the specifications, which is textual information

explaining detailed requirements for the products to be provided, construction methods to be used,

and testing and certification to be provided by the Contractor. For example, while you’ll typically

put a single note for the strength of concrete on the drawings–f’c=5,000 psi, for example–there’s

way more requirements the Contractor needs to meet to provide a suitable product. For example,

the cement needs to be ASTM C150 Type I cement, they need to test each batch for compressive

strength according to ASTM C39 (and do they use 6″ cylinders or 8″ cylinders). How many

cylinders do they take (6 or 8 are typical) and when do they test them and how many do they hold

back? Etc., there’s way more stuff, but I’m going to stop here. This information is provided in the

specifications.

In the Department of Defense, we use the Unified Facilities Guide Specifications, which are about

80% complete specifications that experts in specifying concrete have written to help us working

engineers avoid pitfalls. For concrete you can see the one we’d typically use here:

https://www.wbdg.org/FFC/DOD/UFGS/UFGS%2003%2030%2000.pdf

All that seems important, right? Detailed information on how we expect contractors to build stuff

seems like the thing we’d like to keep, wouldn’t you think? For the 21 dams in my organization,

I’ve never found specifications for the original construction for any that I’ve tried to locate. Now,

I’ve not tried for all 21. I’ve only done major work on about 4, and conducted inspections on

another 2, but for those 6? Can’t find the specs. I can find the original drawings, no problem. As a

matter of fact, I need to be careful, because we have drawings that were made as part of the

design, but were superseded by design changes and never actually used for construction, but they

were kept. I can find the Design Memoranda, which is the record of what the designers did and

why, for example, what load they used for floors, what earthquakes they used, what various other

assumptions they made, etc. Test records for all the concrete of the dams made during

construction, or photographs made during construction? Can find those just fine.

But 50% of the construction contract that we were holding the Contractor to? Disappeared like a

fart in the wind. Now, to be fair, about 90-95% of the information I need to do my job is contained

in all those other records. The only reason I started looking for this was a note on a drawing for

something I was looking at: “PAINT SYSTEM FOR ALL GATES IS SYSTEM NO. 3. SEE
SPECIFICATIONS.” What is System Number 3? The specs were the only record. Looking at the

paint as it stands today I’d guess it was the red lead in linseed oil that was used in every industrial

facility until about the late ’70s–and this question turned out to be unimportant enough that I

didn’t bother asking anybody to test for the particular paint system. I just found it weird that this

was the piece of information we didn’t keep.

My private hypothesis is that there was just a gap in “who was supposed to keep this” that caused

this, and my guess is that this is a result of the rather ironic fact that the specs were the easiest

part to keep. Keeping engineering drawings before scanning into a database or printing to PDF

directly from CAD was a thing was a very expensive pain in the ass requiring special cabinets and a

lot of space, so there was a careful plan for maintaining them. The design memos and construction

records had specific offices designated to maintain copies of them–our organizational library and

our construction office, respectively–because very few copies were ever made.

But the specs were easy to copy, so most of the ten or so offices responsible had a copy, and didn’t

require any special furniture or anything to keep, so they were just on a bookshelf in each of those

offices. And since everybody was keeping a copy, nobody thought to specify somebody who had to

keep a copy. So by the early ’80s, everybody looking to make shelf space had happened to throw

out their copy and nobody was left with one when it came time to scan everything in to our records

database.

Now, I don’t know that these are gone forever. I’ve only had questions that could, with some

effort, be answered by other methods, or things that I decided I could move on with my life not

knowing. So maybe if I hit something that truly couldn’t, I could somehow find something in the

National Archives if I put in a lot of effort.

But to cycle back to the Apollo tapes: sometimes, stuff just…disappears, due to bad recordkeeping

or oversights. There’s no plausible conspiracy for why these specs would have disappeared, just

benign neglect by people who probably would have kept a copy if they had realized that there

wasn’t one being stored anywhere else.

So do I find it totally inexplicable outside of conspiracy that some of what you would think were

important records were lost from Apollo? No. Sometimes, that…just happens, and not because

anybody was being malicious.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Mark V Anderson says:


June 1, 2020 at 7:29 am ~new~

+100 Cat cube this was a great description of why things go wrong. This time the special case of

why things disappear.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 nkurz says:
June 1, 2020 at 10:31 am ~new~

@CatCube:

> My particular bugbear is the 9/11 “controlled demolition” theory


I’d be very interested in your analysis of the UAF report on the collapse of WTC Building 7. I

haven’t read it closely, largely because I don’t think I have the expertise to determine if their

analysis is reasonable — but you probably do! I haven’t seen anyone outside the project was both

qualified and brave/stupid enough to touch it. I’d love to hear what you make of it:

Main site: http://ine.uaf.edu/wtc7

Which links to the full report: https://files.wtc7report.org/file/public-download/A-Structural-

Reevaluation-of-the-Collapse-of-World-Trade-Center-7-March2020.pdf

Superficially, their preliminary research struck me as a physically plausible. The authors seem

properly credentialed, and while they maybe wrong on their facts, they don’t seem to be making

unsupported claims. They do a pretty good job of holding back from the claim that controlled

demolition was used, and restrict themselves to showing that the collapse was not caused by fire.

> because the Twin Towers didn’t collapse the way they imagined it should

It’s probably worth highlighting that Building 7 was not one of the Twin Towers, was not hit by an

airplane. Instead it was the third building that collapsed that day. If it was to be shown that

Building 7 did not collapse due to fire, it would call into question that narrative for the other

buildings, but would not preclude the standard explanation for the collapse of the other two.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 CatCube says:
June 1, 2020 at 12:31 pm ~new~

No promises. I’ll have to wrap my head around the basic of their theory, and if that’s not well-laid-

out I’m not going to bother further. “Controlled demolition” is pretty implausible from a “how do

you actually conduct this demolition without magic explosives and an unrealistic degree of control

over the progression of the situation?”* perspective, so if I can’t figure out what they’re talking
about in about 30 minutes of reading I don’t have high hopes that the rest of it isn’t a waste of

time.

As you point out, it strains plausibility for a controlled demolition collapse to strike Building 7, with

a different framing system (steel pans on W-sections compared to the Twin Towers steel pans on

open-web steel joists), but that it was *totally* a fire-induced collapse in WTC 1 & 2 (the collapse

of the roof in the Charleston Sofa Super Store fire shows the weakness of this system to a large

uncontrolled fire, indicating the plausibility of that). It starts to approach the fundamental silliness

of this xkcd comic.

* How do you pick which floors to plant explosives on, then make sure the suicide bombers flying

the planes pick *that exact floor* to strike, which is wildly different in both buildings? And how do

you prevent the explosives from being consumed by the post-crash fire, since explosives are very

flammable (hence the “magic explosive” comment)?


Hide ↑

 Another Throw says:


June 1, 2020 at 6:38 pm ~new~
And how do you prevent the explosives from being consumed by the post-crash fire, since explosives
are very flammable (hence the “magic explosive” comment)?
I think you are being uncharitable with the “magic explosive” bit. It is in fact pretty straightforward

to make a time-delayed flame ignition device. Designing a device to, e.g., complete a circuit when

the temperature inside a fire-proofed container reaches a set temperature intermediate between

room temperature and the combustion-but-not-explosion temperature of your explosive is left as

an exercise for the reader.

While it may not be practical, it isn’t magic.


Hide ↑

 CatCube says:
June 2, 2020 at 10:50 pm ~new~

I’ve got the PDF open on my computer but haven’t had a chance to read through it in any detail

yet. Probably not before this weekend.

@Another Throw
Designing a device to, e.g., complete a circuit when the temperature inside a fire-proofed container
reaches a set temperature intermediate between room temperature and the combustion-but-not-
explosion temperature of your explosive is left as an exercise for the reader.
When I said that the 9/11 controlled demolition theory is “[m]y particular bugbear” this, this right

here ↑, is exactly what I’m talking about.

I apologize that I’m sort of using “you” as a synecdoche for the people who make a career of this,

but I’m going to drive on anyway.

There’s a floor plan of floors 12 & 13 of WTC7 on page 18 (pdf page 31) of the report @nkurz

linked. Tell me how many pounds of explosive, P, of explosive type Z, at setpoint T°F are placed at
each location X and Y in the building (be particular about where it is on the column), and what your

“fireproof container” is made of and its dimensions. I don’t necessarily want a schematic of the

circuit you propose, but I’d like to hear what temperature sensor you’re using, where you have it in

your fireproof container, what it’s margin of error is, and how that location in your container and

error in measurement might affect your demolition plan. It probably wouldn’t hurt to give the specs

of the components you propose, some idea of what temperature they’ll be subjected to, and what

the tolerances of their ratings will be over the temperatures even in the “fireproof container” and

how that tolerance will affect the performance of your circuit. Also, when were these installed?

Because it turns out that if you don’t let yourself just do the “Star Trek technobabble” with a couple

of sentences about how dilithium crystals let us violate known physics and totally travel faster than

light, and actually sit down with a pencil, an engineering pad, and a calculator, you start to realize

just how complex this starts to become, and just how bonkers this turns out to be.

The first thought that comes to mind when reading your post: how do you know what temperature

each location is going to reach at what time to set off your explosives, even if your “fireproof

container” is something that could be built to control the behavior of your explosives and
associated circuitry to tight tolerances? (And I’m not convinced it could.) Do you imagine you have

enough control over the progression of the fire that you’re going to get something happening in

anything like a reasonable plan? That’s literally what I thought of in the first ten seconds of

considering your post, and I’m sure I can come up with more complexity with a little more

thinking. Maybe you can come up with answers for these; I’d sure be interested in hearing them.

Do not give me <jazzhands>”I’m sure somebody could figure out how to do this”</jazzhands> If

you’re going to say it’s possible, you tell me, exactly, how you think this is going to work. When a

professor writes “xxx is left as an exercise for the reader” in a textbook, he’s done the exercise

himself.

BTW, the report that nkurz linked discusses in the executive summary that the failure of WTC7

involved the “near-simultaneous” failure of its columns. Since instability is a pretty sudden

phenomenon, I don’t know exactly what that means relative to a fire-induced collapse, but maybe

it becomes clearer as you work through the report. But you may want to consider how adversely

your proposed “temperature-controlled” demolition charges will play with that hypothesis. Of

course, maybe the report is wrong. We can both look at that together!
Hide ↑

 Another Throw says:


June 3, 2020 at 9:13 am ~new~

1. GTA 05-10-033 should have a handy table showing you how much of what where.

2. Silica is used in applications up to 3000 °F, which is rather more than we need. Pile it on as thick

as necessary.

3. A few microcontrollers coordinate the demolition of all the columns nearly simultaneously when

the attached sensors (not necessarily exclusively temperature) exceed the trigger condition(s). The

course of the fire needn’t be controlled nor, for that matter, which floor the plane crashes into.

Thank you, next!

Look. THE WHOLE ARGUMENT IS STUPID. Every alternative hypothesis would require truckloads of

supplies that somebody would have noticed being hauled in, and left abundant physical evidence

that would be impossible to miss. There ain’t no national security letter that would be able to keep

that under wraps. Putting in the effort to figure out exactly how many truckloads is a waste of

time. But rounding off “moderately complex engineering problem that would require

interdisciplinary expertise and a hell of a budget” to “magic” is a bit uncharitable.


Hide ↑

 CatCube says:
June 3, 2020 at 10:16 pm ~new~
But rounding off “moderately complex engineering problem that would require interdisciplinary
expertise and a hell of a budget” to “magic” is a bit uncharitable.
No, “magic” is the correct level of contempt, and the rest of your post lays out why.
Every alternative hypothesis would require truckloads of supplies that somebody would have noticed
being hauled in, and left abundant physical evidence that would be impossible to miss.
Exactly. Because with actual (non-magic) explosives, all of this stuff is unreasonably large and

couldn’t possibly be hidden for the “controlled demolition” theory to have occurred the way people

seem to think did.

If you did have some magic explosive that wasn’t flammable at “building on fire” temperatures you

could start to come up with a more-plausible demo plan that does what people think it did while

remaining secret. We don’t have magic explosives, so there isn’t one. (There are still problems with

the initiation system, as I was alluding to with comments about the electronics, hence why I say

“more-plausible” and not “plausible”, but I don’t think I need to go further down that rabbit hole.)
1. GTA 05-10-033 should have a handy table showing you how much of what where.
2. Silica is used in applications up to 3000 °F, which is rather more than we need. Pile it on as thick
as necessary.
3. A few microcontrollers coordinate the demolition of all the columns nearly simultaneously when
the attached sensors (not necessarily exclusively temperature) exceed the trigger condition(s). The
course of the fire needn’t be controlled nor, for that matter, which floor the plane crashes into.
The first result on DDG pulls up a GTA from 1965, but it doesn’t look like it’s changed much in 40

years. However, it does consume a bunch of card space talking about how to execute a road crater,

which you don’t have much opportunity for in 2001 Manhattan. I feel like that for something like

this you’d bust out the actual FM 5-250–or whatever they’re calling it now, as they keep

renumbering the damn things, but that’s what it was when I was a baby lieutenant.

However, looking at the front of that card you see the arrangement of explosives in a steel wide-

flange section (which describes either the columns in WTC 1, 2, or 7). Now consider how you

arrange that with your silica that you “pile…as thick as necessary.” How does that standoff affect

the efficiency of your explosives, and hence the size of your charges? Which is why I want to hear

how thick you think it needs to be.

You also can’t wave away the problems with either the course of the fire or the floor where the

plane hit. We need to be careful, because WTC7 and WTC 1&2 had very different structural

systems, and @nkurz original comment was regarding WTC7 but talking about “where the plane

hit” obviously only applies to the Twin Towers. However, just using the Twin Tower to illustrate

why I claim you can’t handwave this away, you can see in videos that if the collapse didn’t initiate

right at the wingtips of the holes the planes made, it was damn close. So how did they get these

magic demo charges there? Did somebody climb up there and plant them in the 45 minutes to an

hour and 15 minutes the building was burning? Or did they wire up a range of floors? If they did

the latter, how did they choose which floors to initiate, without a robust system for sequencing the

demolition to “match” what a fire-induced collapse would have been?

This is why I keep trying to pin you to specifics, rather than accepting the jazzhands about “Here’s

a GTA, I’m sure somebody could figure this out!” I spent two years as a working structural

engineer on active duty–here, I mean “working structural engineer” as somebody who’s actually
doing literal calculations to design stuff, not what most officers who had a civil engineering degree

with a focus in structural engineering would be doing, which is general management responsibilities

with no focus on real design. As far as I know, for those two years, I was literally the only working

structural engineer on active duty. (Not necessarily a Mewtwo-level rare beast, as about a year and

a half after I got out, another active-duty Soldier got assigned to us to work as a working structural

engineer, and I think he’s the only one right now, but this job description isn’t common either.)

If you actually tried to create your proposed “interdisciplinary team” with “a hell of a budget”, I

think I could at least justify submitting a resume to it, and I’m a lot less sanguine than you are

that there’s a solution to the problem.

I’m not claiming that you can’t come up with a plan to destroy the WTC site with explosives. That’d

be stupid. You can pull up plenty of examples on YouTube of building demo with explosives, and

Las Vegas especially loves this spectacle. I’m not even going to claim that it’s literally impossible to

create demo charges that would work during a structure fire, thought that’s a pretty weird

requirement and I’m not totally confident that it can be done safely. I do claim that it’s impossible

on a level that involves “magic explosives” to conduct a building demo of a secret conspiracy of the

type that would be required to do a “controlled demolition” on 9/11.

You can’t divorce engineering problems from their constraints. The whole point of engineering is to

find an economic solution with constraints imposed by the limitations of physics and what laws and

society require. The secrecy requirements for 9/11 overconstrain the problem to the point that they

admit no solution, unless you start to work with magic.


Hide ↑

o matkoniecz says:

May 30, 2020 at 11:07 pm ~new~


but I don’t pretend to know what really happened
And I claim to know what happened. In this case conspiracy would require USSR to cooperate in

conspiracy to present themselves that they lost space race.

If I start believing (or suspecting) that USA and USSR conspired in this way I may as well to start

believing that Harry Potter was a documentary.

Seriously, “Harry Potter was a documentary” has stronger position that “USA faked moon

landings”. There is no counter-evidence and has a self-consistent explanation why there is no

evidence, not requiring additional weird things over mind magic already included in the story

anyway.

And an easily constructed explanation why it become available (either as controlled information

release, probably bundled with propaganda or as way to discredit/coverup any leaks), while faked

moon landing make no sense on any level.

I probably should now do something productive rather than look for someone already claiming to

believe this one and making weird websites with evidence.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o albatross11 says:

May 31, 2020 at 11:04 am ~new~

I think one thnig I’ve come to accept more with experience and age is how messy real-life is

compared to nice stories. The story in the newspaper usually is crafted with facts and quotes

included or omitted to tell a coherent story. An official history is usually the same, but more so. A

story in fiction is even more smoothed-out. But reality usually doesn’t give us nice clean narratives

that make sense, where people are all of a piece and good guys are good/bad guys are bad and

the facts nicely fall into the rows we expect.

I think most large-scale things done in our society have a certain amount of fraud and malfeasance

in them, some covering up of local f–k-ups, some errors so dumb you’d think nobody could make

them, some internal political forces leading to inexplicable decisions. Human memories are

extremely fallable, many people have dark sides to their personality and personal history, decisions

are messy, records are often lost or imperfectly kept, etc. All this means that it’s pretty common to

look into any big thing and find lots of weird loose ends and questionable facts that don’t perfectly

fit together as a story. People mostly used to consuming the smoothed-out, strong-narrative

version of the story from a newspaper or magazine or book are likely to see all these messy facts

as suspicious.

This person told very different stories about the same event in different settings a couple years

apart. That person who was somewhat involved in the event had some really sketchy stuff going on

in his finances. Those records which would clarify some of the decisions made are incomplete or

missing. These major decisions made by some organization look really inexplicable. These two

people in the organization told some really creepy and distasteful jokes on email. And so on.

If you look at this expecting there to be some kind of conspiracy, it’s easy to keep convincing
yourself by these contradictions and weird things that seem to need an explanation. But they may

just be the messiness of reality. People who committed suicide mysteriously often did have serious

enemies, but they still actually did themselves in. Big disastrous decisions by companies or

government agencies often did have people involved with potential conflicts of interest, but were

still the result of internal political pressures rather than malfeasance. Etc.

And this same fact leads to the situation where it’s usually possible to make a plausible-looking

case for all kinds of malfeasance or conspiracy or evil intent by pointing a few such weird facts out

and “connecting the dots.” If I pore over your personal messages for the last six months, I can

probably find evidence that would look convincing, when carefully excerpted, that you were a

terrible person engaged in terrible things.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 DavidFriedman says:
May 31, 2020 at 12:37 pm ~new~

Part of this is that humans are equipped with pattern recognition software so good that it can even

find patterns that aren’t there.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 mtl1882 says:
May 31, 2020 at 1:16 pm ~new~

Agree 100%. Life is just full of weird things that aren’t significant or connected. Most people don’t

look into things too closely. Few who do are able to put things into perspective, and they often get

derailed in their reasoning. Being a good investigator is mainly dependent on your ability to figure

out what pieces actually fit together and what is noise.

When I mention certain errors I come across in historical research, a lot of smart adults are baffled

by the existence of these errors. I’m talking about things like writing December instead of

November at the top of a letter. They keep asking me for an explanation as to why the writer

would have done this, which I find very odd. Who has not done something like this at least a few

times in their life? Doesn’t matter how smart or conscientious you are–everyone slips up. But

people read stuff like that as inherently significant.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

39. JohnBuridan says:


May 29, 2020 at 8:50 pm ~new~

I am most wondering whether the dynamic that causes this result is stronger than 20 years ago.

For example, if you asked Americans in 1999 about Government UFO coverups, Satanism in D&D,

the “NWO” lobbying for seatbelt legislation, and the Bilderberger group deciding the destiny of

American finance would you get even close to similar numbers?


Log in to Reply Hide

40. Telomerase says:


May 30, 2020 at 11:13 am ~new~

Sorry, this isn’t a conspiracy post about malaria drugs or bleach… Why hasn’t anyone noticed that

there’s now a human trial on nicotinamide riboside against SARS-CoV-2? The preclinical work is

very convincing, and there are ~100K people taking it anyway for sleep and cognitive

improvements:

https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04407390

Personally, I’d like the rationalist community to talk about rational stuff occasionally, anyway 😉
Log in to Reply Hide

41. Conrad Honcho says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:09 pm ~new~

I think it depends on what you mean by “Pizzagate.” The original version was about John Podesta’s

emails, which contained odd, nonsensical statements, some of which resembled pedophile code

words. Also, one might check out his art collection, which contains disturbing stuff, some of which
looks like depictions of child rape. Then, there was a connection to a pizza parlor, which posted

stuff on their social media that also looked as though it sexualized children, and included pedophile

slang for child sex.

The media description of Pizzagate, though, is “child sex dungeon in a pizza parlor,” which

definitely didn’t happen.

So if you ask me, “do you believe in Pizzagate, meaning a child sex dungeon in a pizza parlor,” the

answer is “no.” If you ask me, “do you believe in Pizzagate, meaning John Podesta had creepy

artwork that looks like the sort of thing someone who sexualizes children would own, and said

weird stuff in his emails, and there’s a pizza parlor that posts stuff with pedophile slang on it on

their social media accounts, and maybe it wouldn’t be too awful if some journalists tried to ask

them what, specifically, they meant by these non-obvious terms,” then the answer is “maybe.”

The whole pizza parlor basement thing was very non-central to the Internet conspiracy theory. But

that’s what the media latched on to.


Log in to Reply Hide

42. No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 3:54 pm ~new~

Why are there statements followed by the question “Do you think the following statements are true

or not true?”
Log in to Reply Hide

43. No One In Particular says:


May 30, 2020 at 4:03 pm ~new~

Believing that Obama was born in Kenya is not racist. But when someone insists that Obama was

born in Kenya, and dismisses all evidence to the contrary, and demands that he provide a level of

proof for citizenship that no other presidential candidate has been required to provide, it sure starts

to look like racism.


Log in to Reply Hide
o 10240 says:

May 30, 2020 at 4:39 pm ~new~

By that logic anything related to Obama that didn’t happen with any other president is necessarily

a function of his race. There are too many confounders to assume that.

What’s a reason a racist would scrutinize Obama’s birthplace in a way that someone who is not

racist but strongly opposed to him wouldn’t? Sure, a racist would have liked to derail an Obama

presidency, but so would have anyone strongly opposed to him.

Or does a racist put a bigger probability on Obama having been born in Kenya than a non-racist?

Racists know perfectly well the (for them regrettable) fact that black people do get born in the US.

Hating black people shouldn’t affect in any way what probability one would put on Obama having

been born in Kenya.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Le Maistre Chat says:


May 30, 2020 at 4:51 pm ~new~
What’s a reason a racist would scrutinize Obama’s birthplace in a way that someone who is not
racist but strongly opposed to him wouldn’t? Sure, a racist would have liked to derail an Obama
presidency, but so would have anyone strongly opposed to him.
As I said, the “natural born citizen” text in the Constitution was put in because of Alexander

Hamilton (born in the British West Indies colony that’s now Saint Kitts and Nevis) by his frenemies

among the American Whigs who rebelled against the Crown together. By analogy, someone

wouldn’t have to be too strongly opposed to Barack Obama (II)’s political ambitions to want to

body block him like that.

It just so happens that there are multiple points of evidence that his mom gave birth in the US

state of Hawaii.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 bullseye says:
May 30, 2020 at 7:35 pm ~new~

As noted in another thread, two categories of citizens are eligible to be president: natural born

citizens, and people who were citizens at the time the Constitution was signed. We forget the

second category because they’re all dead now. Pretty sure Hamilton was a citizen when he signed

the Constitution.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 No One In Particular says:


May 31, 2020 at 10:10 pm ~new~
By that logic anything related to Obama that didn’t happen with any other president is necessarily a
function of his race.
By what logic, precisely? People making stuff and just saying it’s “according to that logic” is rather

annoying. I never said it’s necessarily racism.


What’s a reason a racist would scrutinize Obama’s birthplace in a way that someone who is not
racist but strongly opposed to him wouldn’t?
What reason would there be for our country to go several centuries of rancorous, sometimes

violent political disagreement, and yet not a single president is accused of not being a citizen, until

a black person is elected? You don’t see the racist overtones of “he’s not a real American”? While it

is certainly possible for a non-racist to come up with the “claim that a black man isn’t really an

American” gambit, it is also clear that the probability of this occurring to a racist is larger than to a
non-racist. And it would difficult to convince a non-racist, no matter how anti-Obama, that all

evidence of him being an American should be dismissed out of hand.


Racists know perfectly well the (for them regrettable) fact that black people do get born in the US.
Racism isn’t about logic.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 10240 says:
June 1, 2020 at 9:22 am ~new~
What reason would there be for our country to go several centuries of rancorous, sometimes violent
political disagreement, and yet not a single president is accused of not being a citizen, until a black
person is elected?
Some reasons:

(1) The internet has made it easier for people to spread silly theories. There has only been

widespread internet access, and a lot of user-generated content, under the last 3 or so presidents.

(2) Well-known recent foreign ancestry. (Yes, some other presidents have had it too, but not all,

and not necessarily as well-known.)

(3) Random noise. (Why is there a silly pedophilia conspiracy theory about Hillary and no other

candidate?)

Anyway, do you know that no previous president has been accused of not being a citizen? I have

no idea whether there were such accusations about any other than the last few presidents.
By what logic, precisely?
That if there were no theories about other presidents not being natural-born citizens, but there

were about Obama, that’s because Obama is black.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 albatross11 says:
June 2, 2020 at 1:40 pm ~new~

I think there have been bizarre conspiracy theories (including about prominent politicians) forever,

probably most of them not ever written down anywhere until printing was cheap.
Hide ↑
o MostlyCredibleHulk says:

May 30, 2020 at 5:25 pm ~new~

TBH, questioning the place of birth of somebody who didn’t live in the country for many years in his

childhood, who had a foreign father and who at certain time has had promotional materials issued

about him claiming he was born out of the country is not the same as questioning the same

circumstance of the president who didn’t have these peculiarities in his biography.

BTW Ted Cruz was also attacked about his birthplace (Canada) and his eligibility for President. And

if he runs again (which very well may happen in 2024) that question would undoubtedly be risen

again. I’d have hard time concluding it’s because of racism against him. More like it’s just a

convenient thing to attack an opponent, especially if there’s a grain of truth in it – as in, Cruz was
born in Canada (but still is eligible), and Obama did have unusual (compared to other presidents)

biography (but still was born in Hawaii).


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

o Sorghum says:

May 31, 2020 at 2:19 pm ~new~

Strong disagree. As we’ve seen all over this thread, people latch onto all sorts of wacky but

politically convenient theories and refuse to change in response to evidence.

To pick the one of these theories which happens to involve a black guy and call it “racist” is

ridiculous.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑
o Evelyn Q. Greene says:

May 31, 2020 at 4:24 pm ~new~


demands that he provide a level of proof for citizenship that no other presidential candidate has been
required to provide
Nonsense. Both McCain and Ted Cruz faced similar accusations. Besides, you’re underestimating

your degrees of freedom here. For instance Trump is regularly accused of being an agent to, or

dupe of foreigners which is something that would certainly be spun as racism if he where a

nonwhite democrat.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 bullseye says:
June 1, 2020 at 7:01 am ~new~

If you seriously believe the other party’s candidate isn’t legally allowed to be President, you’re

going to pound on that issue. It’s going to be all over the place. I saw almost nothing about

McCain’s citizenship.

I’m in a liberal bubble, and all I saw was one article, just one, saying that, in theory, one could

question whether he’s a natural-born citizen, because the Constitution doesn’t define that term. I

never saw anyone actually make the leap in “he’s not a natural-born citizen”.

As for Cruz, I think I heard about the existence of a citizenship controversy; maybe something

within his party that I wasn’t really aware of. Most of what I heard about him was claims that he’s

just personally repulsive, and jokes that he’s the Zodiac Killer.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

 Evelyn Q. Greene says:


June 1, 2020 at 10:22 am ~new~

The McCain one was weird because there was no dispute about facts, just flimsy legal

interpretation about the panama canal zone. It seemed like throwing everything out there to see

what stuck, but I’ve seen more than one article about it.
The Cruz thing was much bigger, though since Cruz never made it out of the republican primary,

only among republicans. It has entries on both his own and his campaign’s Wikipedia pages, and I

know a least one person who liked him but was turned of by it. Trump was the one who started it,

and I think the whole thing is pretty good evidence that Trump and some fraction of republicans

like to rules lawyer the only rules lawyerable constitutional eligibility requirements.
Log in to Reply Hide ↑

44. MostlyCredibleHulk says:


May 30, 2020 at 5:15 pm ~new~

That makes me feel good about recent poll in the UK that suggested 20% believed Jews created

COVID19 (also 20% say the same about Muslims though I am not sure whether it’s the same or

different people). Apparently, still 13% below the ND constant, so everything is well. Or at least

not worse than it always has been.


Log in to Reply Hide

45. yildo says:


May 30, 2020 at 6:17 pm ~new~

I suppose the conspiracy theory that President Obama had been born in Kenya rather than Hawaii

sounds different depending on whether you conclude “…and is therefore ineligible to have run for

President and therefore the US Presidency should be retroactively awarded to John McCain, himself

born in Panama” or “…and is therefore even awesomer as US President because Kenya is an

awesome place”. The natural born restriction on the Presidency is unintuitive for those who may be

unfamiliar with it.

Here in Canada, the Conservative leader in the last federal election turned out to have a secret

American citizenship. When this came to light, he said that he was renouncing it. Since losing the

election, he changed his mind and is no longer renouncing the dual citizenship. Hypocritically, he

had previously harangued one of our Governor Generals and a previous Liberal leader into

renouncing their French dual citizenships.


Log in to Reply Hide

46. TheTurtleMoves says:


May 31, 2020 at 1:55 pm ~new~

I have very little faith in polls in general. Especially if they have anything to do with anything big

and open. I honestly think they are more confusing that illuminating.
Log in to Reply Hide

47. Trashionalist says:


May 31, 2020 at 6:02 pm ~new~
But these are relatively small effects, and equaled by eg whatever mysterious thing is going on with
Hispanics.
When I was on /pol/ before the 2016 election, I saw the proto-Pizzagate stuff being cooked up.

Specifically, it was about this artist associated with Podesta, Marina Abramovic, and her “spirit
cooking”. The /pol/ users were excited about the “spirit cooking” stuff specifically, because they (or

at least this one user) thought it might hurt Clinton with Hispanics, because of Catholic anxieties

about Satanism. This guy was basically saying something along the lines of “Everyone try to spread

this to Hispanics on social media, they get so freaked out by Satanist stuff it might actually scare

them away from voting for Hillary”.

Maybe he was onto a winning strategy. I doubt Pizzagate spread that much among Hispanics, but

maybe that particular form of religiosity makes Hispanic respondents more likely to believe

authorities are engaging in Satanic ritual abuse.


Log in to Reply Hide
o liz says:

June 1, 2020 at 1:20 pm ~new~

Yeah. Weird.

Marina Abramovic had, at the time, demonstrations of her “Spirit Cooking”, a form of ritual

employing pigs blood, fresh breast milk and sperm (ostensibly to act as a medium connecting

spirits to the material world). Also, there were statements about violence writ in blood (if memory

serves).

Nothing unusual about a political adviser (some grown-assed person, not a person stuck on lord of

the flies Island at age ten)…”looking forward” to something like that at all.

Hispanics are so simple, and super judgy!

I know I myself am looking forward to my next pig’s blood/breast milk/sperm dinner show.

Bring it! I’ll invite all my friends.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

48. argentus says:


June 1, 2020 at 6:18 pm ~new~

Apologies if it’s already been said, but I don’t have time to read the whole comment section.

There’s some pretty strong evidence that Trump himself is in that 33% constant of people who just

believe conspiracy theories for whatever reason. Since he is the first modern president to believe

this and not to have the sense to hide the fact that he believes this, I think it’s reasonably possible

that other people in that 33% might find him appealing for this reason. Thus, you might very well

find higher numbers of conspiracy theory believers among Trump supporters than among the

general population.
Log in to Reply Hide

49. Thomas says:


June 1, 2020 at 7:40 pm ~new~

How does one decide that something is a conspiracy theory?

There are pedophiles, and somehow they communicate with each other. Some of them are

prominent people. I’d call that a conspiracy. No idea if Hill is involved, but Bill? Would not be

surprised. Am I a sucker for conspiracies?


In the Obama/Kenya case, he spent millions, fighting for months to prevent release of his birth

certificate. Why? I suspect he was running an op against the Republicans to make them look

stupid, but he did spend those millions. Asking why he squandered that money and coming to the

conclusion that he had something to hide doesn’t sound like nonsense to me.
Log in to Reply Hide

o Andaro says:

June 2, 2020 at 2:17 am ~new~

“There are pedophiles, and somehow they communicate with each other. Some of them are

prominent people. I’d call that a conspiracy. No idea if Hill is involved, but Bill? Would not be

surprised. Am I a sucker for conspiracies?”

I think this has more to do with probability per potential case rather than overall probability. We

pedos are a small minority of the population. If we weren’t, child prostitution would simply be legal

and normal. The fraction of us who are also rapists and slavers is smaller still. So you end up with

a low probability per person. If you have no specific independent evidence, counting on a 50% or

higher chance that an individual is a child rapist/slaver is very badly calibrated. We know some

people are, but the vast majority aren’t.

Before you had any evidence that Bill Cosby is a rapist, you should not have given a 50% chance

or higher that he’s a rapist, even knowing that some people are rapists and even though in

hindsight we know better.


Log in to Reply Hide ↑

50. n8chz says:


June 3, 2020 at 7:21 am ~new~

Don’t forget the Bowling Green incident.


Log in to Reply Hide

51. TysonsCorner says:


June 14, 2020 at 6:49 am ~new~

The Obama poll would be more interesting if they just asked if they like/dislike Obama.

Conservative/Liberal and Republican/Democrat are less accurate proxies. I’d like to know the

percentage of people who like Obama but definitely think he’s from Kenya.

I tend to think people respond with what they want to be true, versus actually think is true, and

they are more or less aware of the discrepancy. If you conducted a similar poll (conspiracy-based,

partisan, polarizing, etc.), then followed up separately with a $100 incentive for giving the correct

answer (something provable), I’d suspect you’d get very different answers.
Log in to Reply Hide
LEAVE A REPLY
You must be logged in to post a comment.
 META
 Register
 Log in
 Entries feed
 Comments feed
 WordPress.org
 SUBSCRIBE VIA EMAIL

Email Address

 ADVERTISEMENTS

AISafety.com hosts a Skype reading group Wednesdays at 19:45 UTC, reading new and old articles on
different aspects of AI Safety. We start with a presentation of a summary of the article, and then
discuss in a friendly atmosphere.

Substack is a blogging site that helps writers earn money and readers discover articles they'll like.

Jane Street is a quantitative trading firm with a focus on technology and collaborative problem
solving. We're always hiring talented programmers, traders, and researchers and have internships
and fulltime positions in New York, London, and Hong Kong. No background in finance required.

Metaculus is a platform for generating crowd-sourced predictions about the future, especially science
and technology. If you're interested in testing yourself and contributing to their project, check out
their questions page

Beeminder's an evidence-based willpower augmention tool that collects quantifiable data about your
life, then helps you organize it into commitment mechanisms so you can keep resolutions. They've
also got a blog about what they're doing here

Altruisto is a browser extension so that when you shop online, a portion of the money you pay goes to
effective charities (no extra cost to you). Just install an extension and when you buy something,
people in poverty will get medicines, bed nets, or financial aid.
Giving What We Can is a charitable movement promoting giving some of your money to the
developing world or other worthy causes. If you're interested in this, consider taking their Pledge as a
formal and public declaration of intent.

Seattle Anxiety Specialists are a therapy practice helping people overcome anxiety and related mental
health issues (eg GAD, OCD, PTSD) through evidence based interventions and self-exploration. Check
out their free anti-anxiety guide here
.

MealSquares is a "nutritionally complete" food that contains a balanced diet worth of nutrients in a
few tasty easily measurable units. Think Soylent, except zero preparation, made with natural
ingredients, and looks/tastes a lot like an ordinary scone.
Norwegian founders with an international team on a mission to offer the equivalent of a Norwegian
social safety net globally available as a membership. Currently offering travel medical insurance for
nomads, and global health insurance for remote teams.

B4X is a free and open source developer tool that allows users to write apps for Android, iOS, and
more.

The Charter Cities Institute is working on ways governments can set up special zones with unique
legal institutions. Learn more about how this could help tackle problems from global poverty to
climate change.

80,000 Hours researches different problems and professions to help you figure out how to do as
much good as possible. Their free career guide show you how to choose a career that's fulfilling and
maximises your contribution to solving the world's most pressing problems.
Dr. Laura Baur is a psychiatrist with interests in literature review, reproductive psychiatry, and
relational psychotherapy; see her website for more. Note that due to conflict of interest she doesn't
treat people in the NYC rationalist social scene.
The COVID-19 Forecasting Project at the University of Oxford is making advanced pandemic
simulations of 150+ countries available to the public, and also offer pro-bono forecasting services to
decision-makers.
Support Slate Star Codex on Patreon. I have a day job and SSC gets free hosting, so don't feel
pressured to contribute. But extra cash helps pay for contest prizes, meetup expenses, and me
spending extra time blogging instead of working.
The Effective Altruism newsletter provides monthly updates on the highest-impact ways to do good
and help others.
378 comments since
[+]
0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

You might also like