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Thomas Sowell Thread


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2021 Jan 22, 2:01pm   25,046 views  126 comments

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15   Patrick   2021 Jan 22, 11:09pm  

Patrick says
The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy.


And it looks like a very good book:

https://www.independent.org/publications/tir/article.asp?id=484
16   NDrLoR   2021 Jan 23, 8:13am  

Patrick says
"The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy."
The first sentence in this book is: "Dangers to a society may be mortal without being immediate."
17   Patrick   2021 Jan 23, 4:26pm  

I have to read that book.
18   Bd6r   2021 Jan 23, 4:54pm  

NoCoupForYou says
The other being it sucks all the air out of the room for 200-300% more non Jews, esp. Slavs (and of those, esp. Russian POWs), being executed / worked to death en masse

Nazis killed about 3M Poles in Poland, and more in Lithuania and Belorus. No one hears about that as well.
19   Robert Sproul   2021 Jan 24, 7:08am  

Robert Sproul says
Walter E. Williams (RIP)
Glen Loury
Kemele Foster
Roland Fryer
Larry Elder
Thomas Chatterton Williams
Coleman Hughes

These guys may be going to the Racial Awareness Struggle Camps with us.
The Lunatic Left has invented something they call Multiracial Whiteness (more genteel than screaming "Coon" or Uncle Tom" at them) in order to discredit and defame Blacks that attempt to think for themselves.
https://www.npr.org/2021/01/24/960060957/understanding-multiracial-whiteness-and-trump-supporters
20   HeadSet   2021 Jan 24, 7:55am  

Seems the best answer to any virtue signaling white who spouts this nonsense should be:

"So why don't you resign and let a person of color have your job?"
21   Patrick   2021 Jan 24, 6:00pm  

Rb6d says
Nazis killed about 3M Poles in Poland, and more in Lithuania and Belorus. No one hears about that as well.



I heard about it from Polish relatives when I visited them. I thought they were just confused, but the truth is that I was the one suffering the politically motivated history blackout.

Nothing is allowed to compete with The Holocaust.
22   fdhfoiehfeoi   2021 Jan 24, 10:10pm  

I remember the first time I watched Sowell. He was schooling some lady on the whole wage disparity BS in the 70's. Guy is ON-POINT!
23   Bd6r   2021 Jan 25, 2:23pm  

Excellent documentary about Sowell:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WK4M9iJrgto&pbjreload=101

WARNING: may cause fatal errors in brains of left-leaning persons.
24   MisdemeanorRebel   2021 Jan 25, 4:54pm  

The first gas experiment was on Polish Political Prisoners, Nazis first used carbon monoxide. This was only a few weeks after Fall Green.

They kept the Prisoners in the mental ward for a while after executing the actual mental patients. The had the foresters dig "drainage ditches" then give them the day off whenever they had to mass execute people.

Polish jokes aside, the smart Polish foresters instantly knew the drainage ditches were 110% BS, so they made blazes to indicate the sites, then they were uncovered after the War.
25   Karloff   2021 Feb 18, 2:10pm  

Probably my favourite aspect of Sowell's wisdom is that he sums it up so efficiently. No flowery wording added to make it sound pompous and intellectual, it gets to the point within a couple of sentences.
26   Buck_Fiden   2021 Feb 18, 6:53pm  

Patrick says
Right, you never hear in the US about the murders of the Russian POWs by the Germans.


What's so special about that? Plenty of German POWs were killed by Russians too. War is hell.
27   Robert Sproul   2021 Mar 7, 12:27pm  

A quote I ran into today from the indispensable Dr. Sowell regarding the willful destruction of rigorous scholarship at the hands of lunatic ideologues:
“Ours may become the first civilization destroyed, not by the power of enemies, but by the ignorance of our teachers and the dangerous nonsense they are teaching our children. In an age of artificial intelligence, they are creating artificial stupidity.”

Artificial Stupidity, or A.S., I’m using that.
28   Robert Sproul   2021 Apr 14, 3:32pm  

“One of the most dangerous signs of our times is the growing number of individuals and groups who believe that no one can possibly disagree with them for any honest reason.” Thomas Sowell
29   AmericanKulak   2021 Apr 19, 7:31pm  

Robert Sproul says
It really is a tonic to listen to these guys if you are ever despairing from exposure to too much Leftist Lunacy. They have podcasts and books, talks on Youtube. Here is Loury talking to John McWhorter, another worthy voice: https://campusreform.org/?id=16663



Jesse Peterson. Not afraid to question Lez bee anns. He's amazin'

(And yes, almost all of them were abandoned/abused by a male figure or had a single mom with really weird behavior)

Here he is grilling some "Female" Pastor (impossible according to NT).

original link
/
32   PeopleUnited   2021 May 27, 4:19pm  

When I read this thread, it’s fuck yeah Thomas you are right on target. Why can’t you be our president/anchorman/editor and not the clowns in power?
33   BayArea   2021 May 27, 6:59pm  

I agree with everything this fellow says.

Would vote for him if he ran for president.
34   richwicks   2021 May 27, 7:39pm  

BayArea says
I agree with everything this fellow says.

Would vote for him if he ran for president.


Haven't you learned from the last presidency? He won't be allowed to change anything.
35   Patrick   2021 May 27, 7:40pm  

Still, it's useful to have truth-tellers in power when almost everyone else in power is corrupt.

I would absolutely vote for Thomas Sowell as well.
36   richwicks   2021 May 27, 8:21pm  

Patrick says
Still, it's useful to have truth-tellers in power when almost everyone else in power is corrupt.

I would absolutely vote for Thomas Sowell as well.


Unless Sowell is willing to die, he won't speak truth if he were president.

Look at the shit that Trump had to deal with? He pointed out that our intelligence agencies were corrupt, our media is propaganda and our enemies (although he softened it by just calling out the "fake news" which is all of it), he demonstrated the DOJ engages in selective prosecution, and that the leadership of both parties suck each other's cocks.

He is a billionaire, and he barely survived it. Sowell won't. He'd be assassinated, Ron Paul openly said if he were elected, he'd be assassinated. Trump had his own security as part of the secret service. There's no fucking areas of our government that is putridly corrupt.

Ideally, we need to aim for a Soviet Union style collapse. It wasn't bloodless, but it largely was. Civil war, that's the wrong enemy - the enemy is our government but few people have the balls to say it, and even fewer have the balls to do something about it - I don't. I don't think there are enough people yet.
40   Robert Sproul   2021 Sep 9, 8:17pm  

Thomas Sowell
@ThomasSowell
·
13h
A $100 bill would buy less in 1998 than a $20 bill would buy in the 1960s. This means that anyone who kept his money in a safe over those years would have lost 80 percent of its value, because no safe can keep your money safe from politicians who control the printing presses.
41   Tenpoundbass   2021 Dec 10, 2:54pm  

HunterTits says


That's my Bass player and it's frustrating.

He once copped to me, that he often doesn't understand issues or questions. And it's something he always struggled with. But he's learned, as long as he takes the exact opposite stance of what someone is saying. Then you wont look stupid trying to agree with what they are saying, when you don't know shit about it. It makes him feel informed to disagree, object or flip what is being said.
42   Robert Sproul   2022 Feb 10, 5:38pm  

"You could run through an impressive list of disasters brought about by people with very high IQs."

~Thomas Sowell
44   Robert Sproul   2022 Jul 9, 10:45am  

In the same vein:
“Many of todays problems are a result of yesterday’s solutions.”

Thomas Sowell
46   Patrick   2022 Aug 24, 6:04pm  

ZipperTits says

New column from Thomas Sowell


Holy cow, he's 92 and still writing!
48   richwicks   2022 Aug 25, 2:31pm  

ZipperTits says

Doubt he uses a computer, for example.


Of course he does. They've been around for a solid 40 years.
49   HeadSet   2022 Aug 25, 3:18pm  

richwicks says

ZipperTits says


Doubt he uses a computer, for example.


Of course he does. They've been around for a solid 40 years.

Mr Sowell could likely school you on the Osborne.
50   Onvacation   2022 Aug 25, 5:14pm  

Stage one thinking
51   Onvacation   2022 Aug 25, 5:25pm  

Not a Luddite
https://www.dispatch.com/story/opinion/cartoons/2016/01/05/thomas-sowell-commentary-modern-technology/23353331007/

Engineers who design computerized products and services seem to have an almost fanatical determination to avoid using plain English. It is understandable when complicated processes require complicated operations. But when the very simplest things are designed with needless complications or murky instructions, that is something else.

For example, like all sorts of other devices, computers and computerized products and services have to be turned on and off. And everybody knows what the words on and off mean. But how often have you seen a computer or a computerized product or service that used the words on or off?

These simple and obvious words are avoided like the plague on many electronic devices — and this is symptomatic of a mindset that creates bigger problems with other operations. It is as if using words that everybody understands is beneath the dignity of a high-tech product.

Often power is substituted for on and all sorts of words or symbols are substituted for off. A laptop computer of mine had an unidentified symbol on the screen, and only after you clicked on that symbol did another symbol appear, with some words indicating where you could turn the computer off.

Designers of many electronic products do not condescend to use words at all. There is just an array of symbols or buttons that you can either guess what they mean or else dig into a thick book of instructions and search for explanations, much like a pioneer trying to find his way in the wilderness.

My cell phone is a classic example. It does not have a single word blemishing its gleaming surface, except for the name of the manufacturer and the name of the phone company. There is ample room for words like on or off but nothing so pedestrian is allowed to upset the design.

For people who spend hours every day talking on their cell phone, no doubt it is easy enough to remember how to turn it on and off. But, those of us who have a life to live, and work to do, cannot spend our time yakking it up with all and sundry. We may keep a cell phone on hand just for emergencies — and months can go by without using it, or a year or more in my case.

But when there is an emergency, that is no time to have to dig into an instruction booklet, in order to do something as simple as making a phone call. Nor are these instruction booklets always models of clarity. Too often they reflect the same mindset as the devices they describe. Plain and simple words are avoided whenever there is some fancy, murky or esoteric word that can be used instead.

All sorts of things are computerized these days, and the same preference for murkiness often prevails in their design.

After I bought a minivan, everything seemed to go well until I found myself running out of gas. After pulling into a filling station, I wanted to open the cover of the fuel tank — and saw nothing among the forest of anonymous control buttons and levers that would open the fuel tank.

There was nothing to do but get out the 300-page instruction book. However, nothing in the table of contents or the index had any such pedestrian word as fuel or gas. Eventually — and it seemed like an eternity at the time — I finally stumbled across something in the instruction book that revealed the secret identity of the lever that opened the fuel tank.

There was ample space on the lever for 4 letters for fuel or 3 letters for gas.

There is a certain newspaper whose outstanding editorials I read every day, usually on my iPad in the morning, since I don’t get the paper edition until evening. At one time, it was equally simple to find the editorials in either edition. In the paper edition, I just opened the editorial page, and on the iPad, I simply clicked on the word editorial and the editorials appeared. But then electronic “improvement” reared its ugly head.

In the new electronic version, all kinds of items are grouped under all kinds of titles — none of these titles including editorials. After plowing through a long list of items, I discovered the new alias for editorials. It was Issues and Insights.

I wish someone would issue some insights to engineers designing computerized products and services.

Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.
52   richwicks   2022 Aug 25, 6:39pm  

Onvacation says


For people who spend hours every day talking on their cell phone, no doubt it is easy enough to remember how to turn it on and off. But, those of us who have a life to live, and work to do, cannot spend our time yakking it up with all and sundry. We may keep a cell phone on hand just for emergencies — and months can go by without using it, or a year or more in my case.


Why would anybody have a cell phone, pay a monthly bill for it, and only use in once ever couple of months?

Onvacation says


Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.


Oh, apparently somebody who is 92 and still has money to burn.

He's living in the past, nearly nobody has a cell phone AND a land line. They have one or the other. He just doesn't realize this.

I've not had a land line in 30 years. I had to have a cell phone, so what was the point of having a land line?

In 2000, Skype was able to make free phone calls all over the United States, during that time, I didn't bother with a phone at all, I just used skype and logged in wherever I was at.

I'm actually considering getting rid of my phone again. I mean, I will have a phone, but no monthly payments, I'll just use wifi. I tend to do that in telegram and google voice anyhow.

I doubt I'll make it to Sowell's age, but if I do, there will be no concept of a "phone" at that point, at least as we have it now.

We really should get rid of them. Call somebody on Telegram/Skype/Google Voice/Whatever and compare the sound quality of that to a phone call. The phones are using ANCIENT technology from the 1980s. uLaw is OK for voice, but it's hardly as nice as just about anything else. People being born today will be looking at "phones" as being antiquated technology in just 20 years - like a 20 year old looks at a CRT television screen. It "works" but, why use that when what we have is so much better?
53   richwicks   2022 Aug 25, 6:55pm  

HeadSet says

richwicks says


ZipperTits says



Doubt he uses a computer, for example.


Of course he does. They've been around for a solid 40 years.


Mr Sowell could likely school you on the Osborne.


The Osborne computer? I'm sure he could!

I've never used one, and I've never even seen one or fired up a simulator of one.

I know people that know NOTHING about computers that own one.

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