Why do rightwing populist leaders oppose experts? 
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/mar/26/rightwing-populist-leaders-oppose-experts-not-elites

I was first accused of being a technocrat as a sophomore in high school. I 
didn't know what it meant, then. And I don't know what it means now. Soon after 
Renee' and I met (>2 decades ago? really? OMFG), she claimed that cops might 
avoid giving a nurse a traffic ticket as a "professional courtesy", which 
really rubbed me the wrong way because of my conception of what it meant to be 
a professional. I'd argue the cops should give the nurse a ticket *because* 
they're a professional. Professionals should be held to a higher standard than 
the normies. She didn't like my response. >8^D

But the gist of Müller's article makes some sense. He's largely arguing that 
professionals mix heuristics and "soft" lessons learned from experience with 
more trustworthy/delegatory algorithms, whereas a technocrat leans heavily on 
the algorithms. And although I don't disagree with such a distinction in any 
fundamental way, I have to back up a bit and argue that *infrastructure* is 
critical. The only way we short-memoried, biased little creatures can do great 
things is to stand on the shoulders of our ancestors. And our ancestors were 
just as stupid as we are. So, where does the "wisdom" and knowledge accumulate? 
In the infrastructure, in the libraries, in the bridges, roads, databases and 
... in the algorithms.

So, Müller's distinction (if it survives) would lie in the process and speed 
with which the lessons/experiences move from just-learned, through heuristics, 
to algorithms. Technocrats would argue that this process is faster and more 
trustworthy, whereas the professionals would argue that it's fairly slow and 
untrustworthy.

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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