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Perhaps we should defenestrate ALL licensed "experts"


               
2022 Dec 4, 4:21pm   2,490 views  53 comments

by Patrick   follow (60)  

https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/cuban-style-expert-worship


i have long suspected that the very rich and powerful love authority and regulatory structures because they tend toward status quo and when you’re at the top, that’s good for you. and the rules probably don’t apply to you anyhow. but this is not really the interesting part of mark’s day.

that came when he took exception to some comments by long time gatopal™ and rational ground grounding rod justin hart.



let me make that easy for you:
yes.
they serve only to raise prices, protect guild systems, stifle innovation, limit freedom, and limit choice.

any credential/skill that is truly important will be demanded by the market anyway.

let the customer decide, not the bureaucracy.

make all commerce, association, and interaction voluntary and consensual.

what should med or law school look like?

let the market decide not some technocrat in a regulatory agency who has much to gain by promoting scarcity and lack of choice.

you would not accept this rationale in most aspects of your life. imagine a “marriage panel” the decided who you were allowed to consider wedding. lots of people seem to get it wrong. for many, it’s very expensive. so should “experts” be in charge?

the ethical basis of mandatory credentialing is just as bad.

it’s just taking choice away from you and calling it “public good.”

hardly a practice with a laudable history.

it’s deeply ironic to see a guy who got rich helping to disintermediate over-regulated and ossified media now weigh in in favor of ossification. ...

no one is saying “hey, just trust any old person do to heart surgery or fly your airplane.”

to claim so a silly grandstanding move.

everyone will seek out qualified people.

that is not the issue.

the issue is “who gets to decide what constitutes “qualified”?”
and mark does not seem to want it to be you.

i mean, really stop and think about this: do you trust just anyone with an MD or a JD?

if you care about "credentials," great, patronize those who decide to get them. if you don't, don't.

make it all voluntary and then, like iso-9000, if people care, it will be supplied. in the absence of regulation, accreditation, and other such interference and restrictions on consensual commerce, what the market demands the market gets.

and that is a VERY powerful idea.

licensing lawyers is no different than having a produce czar decide who can grow vegetables, under what conditions, and how many of which they should produce.

it’s trade restriction.

and trade restriction always creates a net deadweight loss for society.



you might have some idea of “how trained a doctor should be” and i might have one too. and they might be different. but in a free market, each of us can satisfy our desires and offerings can evolve to suit demand.

in a market captured by guilds, we cannot. there is only one answer and it provides a high hurdle and a built in system of grift and apprenticeship where it costs people huge money to become a doctor and then they have to work for peanuts for years in “residency” that’s basically medieval style guild apprenticeship.

such a system does not innovate. it does not allow in ideas like AI (that is already outperforming doctors on many tasks including diagnosis) or ideas like “maybe a doctor who is just going to perform lasik does not need a full MD” or “maybe we should be teaching a different curriculum more based in critical thought and assessment rather than rote regurgitation” or “maybe we need more pharmacology and less physiology. or maybe the obverse.” you’re not even really getting “one size fits none.” you’re getting “one size fits guild needs.”

such a system will always seek to over-price access and then constrain supply because that is what maximizes oligopolistic/monopolistic profits.

and this is EXACTLY what they have done. med school and residency batter the hell out of students, push rote learning over critical thought, and leave graduates beholden to boards and credentials and generally in nasty debt.

the schools thrive, the hospitals thrive, the regulators thrive, and if once they manage to milk enough “dues paying” out of you, so too might an aspiring doctor one day but not until they have extracted massive guild profits from you and never without continuing to be under their thumb. california’s new foray into overt medical censorship by holding credentials hostage shows just how powerful and intrusive this can get. ...

this whole notion is just more “expert worship” and the core socialist fallacy of “we just need smarter guys to make top down planning work next time!”

no, we don’t

that never works.

it breaks choice and constrains supply according to what an industry wants rather than what its customers do.

it’s a recipe for stultification and profiteering. it’s a recipe for perpetual guild domination where innovation should be.

medicine in particular is predominantly a technology field. it should be dropping in price, not exploding and the fact that it is not speaks to market breakage.

guilds are market breakage.

giving someone else the power to determine for what and under what conditions you can hire the services of another person is market breakage

the only reason to require such things to sustain a non-market equilibrium.

it’s really that simple.

it’s clear why so much “big business” wants that.

but why do you want that?

you don’t. it’s being sold as illusory safety.

you are surrendering freedom and consumer sovereignty for a cage built by profiteers.

and we all know how that goes…


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41   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Aug 14, 1:56pm  

Do what they leaders so, not what they say

I remember Boris Johnson busted having a big Christmas Party with all the bigshot ministers who just came off TV saying if you didn't isolate and vaccinate, you were a lunatic, then feeling each other up and breathing alcohol in their mutual faces dancing hip to hip to music.
43   Patrick   2025 Aug 21, 9:00pm  

https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/medicine-goes-ai


the upshot is this:

doctors alone scored 73.7% on diagnosing patients even when using google etc.

doctors using GPT scored 76.3%

but GPT alone scored 92%.

adding a human hurt the results hugely.

it led to 24 errors in 100 instead of 8. triple the misdiagnosis rate is not the kind of outcome one would be wise to dismiss.
44   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 21, 9:10pm  

Patrick says







Esp if they are Housing Experts of PatNet who imagine shit up in their head and pronounce it facts the rest of us have to accept or get spammed with a lecture on "you don't know real estate. I do."
45   WookieMan   2025 Aug 22, 8:41am  

MolotovCocktail says

Patrick says







Esp if they are Housing Experts of ParNet who imagine shit up in their head and pronounce it facts the rest of us have to accept or get spammed with a lecture on "you don't know real estate. I do."

You don't real estate and haven't proven otherwise. Not much else to say.
46   MolotovCocktail   2025 Aug 22, 4:07pm  

WookieMan says

MolotovCocktail says


Patrick says








Esp if they are Housing Experts of ParNet who imagine shit up in their head and pronounce it facts the rest of us have to accept or get spammed with a lecture on "you don't know real estate. I do."


You don't real estate and haven't proven otherwise. Not much else to say.


Oh man...see everyone?


47   Patrick   2025 Aug 25, 2:11pm  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/forbearances-monday-august-25-2025


Regular readers know I’ve very little patience left for the failing expert classes. Now, I propose a radical solution. Just as Reagan fired all the illegally striking air traffic controllers back in the 1980’s, I suggest we fire the entire expert class— every single one who got the pandemic wrong.

I’m sorry (not sorry) if that sounds extreme. It’s not revenge. It’s self-protection. All these sold-out experts are dangerous.

If we don’t ashcan them, the same credentialed parrots will still be squawking about cars and guns while another 700,000 young Americans quietly shuffle off this mortal stage. Pretending the problem doesn’t exist guarantees it persists. Ignoring the vaccine-shaped hole in the mortality curve isn’t just playing politics, it’s malpractice. We’ll never develop protocols, treatments, or genuine public-health safeguards to save the people who’ve been hurt if the official line remains, “shhh.”

Come on, let’s go for it. Let’s just purge them all. Then we can start over from scratch. And let’s do it now, before everybody forgets or kicks the bucket. Who’s with me?
49   WookieMan   2025 Sep 8, 1:55pm  

MolotovCocktail says

You don't real estate and haven't proven otherwise. Not much else to say.

Oh man...see everyone?

Congrats on finding a typo. You don't DO real estate. Which is true. You know nothing about it. I've posted dozens of links on areas that have proven my point. You post a map with no data. Picture book kid.
50   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Sep 8, 5:11pm  

Trying to think HOW we can get experts off the crazy train.

First is definitely fixing Higher Ed for certain

Tenure doesn't seem to work.

We have a culture problem where salaried PhDs are happily taking money from all and sundry, and switching between private and public too much.
51   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Sep 8, 5:12pm  

Ah, multiple licensing agencies and prof assocs.

Who gave the AMA a monopoly? Why does the Bar Assoc have a monopoly? The ACS?

We need MOAR professional associations with different viewpoints. The AMA should not be able to kick out members, should be advisory, and we should have half a dozen AMAs.
52   MolotovCocktail   2025 Sep 8, 7:15pm  

WookieMan says

Congrats on finding a typo. You don't DO real estate. Which is true. You know nothing about it. I've posted dozens of links on areas that have proven my point. You post a map with no data. Picture book kid.


Keep doing this to save your ass:



Won't work. Your rep is burned already.
53   Patrick   2025 Sep 8, 7:58pm  

DemoralizerOfPanicans says

Ah, multiple licensing agencies and prof assocs.

Who gave the AMA a monopoly? Why does the Bar Assoc have a monopoly? The ACS?

We need MOAR professional associations with different viewpoints. The AMA should not be able to kick out members, should be advisory, and we should have half a dozen AMAs.


Yes, multiple agencies would be good, but the AMA and ABA exist to restrict supply, raise salaries, and provide job security for doctors and lawyers at the expense of the public, so pretty much all doctors and lawyers are strongly in favor. This is why they are monopolies. Every doctor and lawyer sees his own self interest in those organizations.

So they accomplish those goals by defeating all free market competition in the name of "safety".

Maybe the right answer is to prosecute both of them as conspiracies against the public under the RICO act. It's literally racketeering.

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