Yeah, while I disagree with the minor point Barry makes about the coloring
(e.g. CA is darker but with larger pop than TX, same re NY and PA), the
visualization isn't the point. The point is a database GUI so you can hover and
see the vector of numbers, click to see the names, etc.
As for putting them down hard, I tend to think the death by 1000 cuts is more effective. The
actual penalty isn't really the deterrent. The deterrent is being "in the System" ...
having the bureaucracy keep an eye on you. Look at the many people whose outlook has
deteriorated simply from The System Gaze. When Rittenhouse was acquitted, it reminded me of
Zimmermann <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Zimmerman>, child movie/music stars, and
cancelled professors/pundits. Unless you've got a really solid support system, that focused
attention will be excruciating. You'll learn to punch the paparazzi in the face and hermit
yourself away quickly ... or die from a drug overdose eventually.
Swift punishment is supposed to be a citizen right. But if The System Gazes at
you, that's the real punishment. Plus, many people have short attention spans.
So if you put some down hard, you'll radicalize some onlookers. But if you put
them down over, say, 10 years, the onlookers get bored or distracted.
On 1/5/22 10:58, Marcus Daniels wrote:
I suppose it depends on the question. Is the question where to place resources
to tip the balance of power, esp. for the senate? It's starting to feel like
COVID. They are around, everywhere... I kind of wonder what would happen if
there were a second Jan 6th where they were put down hard. Would it change
anything if they were dead in front of the capitol and it was on Fox News?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of Barry MacKichan
<barry.mackic...@mackichan.com>
*Sent:* Wednesday, January 5, 2022 11:49 AM
*To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
*Subject:* Re: [FRIAM] The Insurrection Index
This map, like many others, is pretty much a map showing the population of each
state. Using color to give #insurrectionists/population would be better, but
even this still improperly gives relative importance to the states with large
areas.
Dave named the two states that are formerly independent. For completeness I’ll
add West Virginia which seceded from Virginia when Virginiu seceded from the
US. (I think some counties in east Tennessee also seceded, but weren’t enough
to make a state and weren’t contiguous with the US.
—Barry
On 5 Jan 2022, at 10:19, glen wrote:
https://insurrectionindex.org/ <https://insurrectionindex.org/>
It's interesting how bright Texas and Florida are. Maybe I should move to
Vermont next. 8^D
--
glen
Theorem 3. There exists a double master function.
--
glen
Theorem 3. There exists a double master function.
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