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The "Bollywood to South Beach" Voyage, part 32

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The Bollywood to South Beach Voyage - Regent Seven Seas Voyager, October 29-December 18, 2009

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Thirty-two

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December 8th sunset


December 9 (Wednesday, Day 42, Fortaleza, Brazil) -

We enjoyed a relaxing morning (Snookums attended a fitness class and Filbert worked on the journal) and while we ate lunch, Snookums did a load of laundry. Unfortunately, the dryers on the 7th deck continue to leave black grease marks on our shirts and t-shirts so she had to take them to the front desk and then they get sent to the ship’s laundry and get cleaned properly. One of the dryers was removed for about two weeks, but even after it was put back, it continued to leave black marks. The other dryer does, too, so from now on Snookums will not use the dryers on Deck 7.

More after the jump . . .

Thought for the day

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From The Road To Serfdom, by F. A. Hayek, 1944, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition, 1994, The University of Chicago Press.

The difference between (the Rule of Law and arbitrary government power) is the same as that between laying down a Rule of the Road, as in the Highway Code, and ordering people where to go; or, better still, between providing signposts and commanding people which road to take.

Excerpted under Fair Use for purposes of non-commercial education, discussion and comment. Any transcription or typographical errors are mine.

The "Bollywood to South Beach" Voyage, part 31

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The Bollywood to South Beach Voyage - Regent Seven Seas Voyager, October 29-December 18, 2009

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Thirty-one

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

December 7 (Monday, Day 40, Salvador de Bahia, Brazil) -

The Regent Invasion of Salvador de Bahia

We woke up and went on our 4-hour shore excursion that showed a contrast between the old and new Salvador de Bahia. This port city is the third largest city in Brazil with about 3,000,000 people. 80% of them are from African descendants that were slaves in the sugarcane fields. To Snookums it almost felt more Caribbean than Brazilian since the music, skin color, native costumes and art were so different than what Rio had.

More after the jump . . .

Thought for the day

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From The Road To Serfdom, by F. A. Hayek, 1944, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition, 1994, The University of Chicago Press.

Nothing distinguishes more clearly conditions in a free country from those in a country under arbitrary government than the observance in the former of the great principles known as the Rule of Law. Stripped of all technicalities, (the Rule of Law) means that government in all its actions is bound by rules fixed and announced beforehand--rules which make it possible to foresee with fair certainty how authority will use its coercive powers in given circumstances and to plan one's individual affairs on the basis of this knowledge.

Excerpted under Fair Use for purposes of non-commercial education, discussion and comment. Any transcription or typographical errors are mine.

The "Bollywood to South Beach" Voyage, part 30

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The Bollywood to South Beach Voyage - Regent Seven Seas Voyager, October 29-December 18, 2009

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Thirty

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December 5 (Saturday, Day 38, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) -

Turtles. You know it's going to be exciting when a day starts with a picture of turtles.

Today was another rainy day but much cooler with an expected high of 73°. Snookums bundled up (pants and a jacket) for our shore excursion to the Botanical Gardens and Tijuca National Park. We boarded our open-sided jeeps where everyone sat facing each other and drove 45 minutes to the 201-year old Botanical Gardens. They had turtles.

More after the jump . . .

You don't understand me, and it's possible you never will

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Peter Schweizer, writing in the UK's Daily Mail, points out recent research indicating that conservatives are generally nicer people than liberal "progressives:"

The full-scale embrace of the importance of self-awareness, self-discovery and being 'true' to oneself, along with the idea that the State should care for the less fortunate, has created a swathe of Left-wing people who want to outsource their obligations to others.

The statistics I base this on come from the General Social Survey, America's premier social research database, but they are just as relevant to the UK, as I believe political belief systems drive one's attitudes, regardless of where you happen to live.

Those surveyed were asked: 'Is it your obligation to care for a seriously injured/ill spouse or parent, or should you give care only if you really want to?' Of those describing themselves as 'conservative', 71 per cent said it was. Only 46 per cent of those on the Left agreed.

. . .
Most surprising of all is reputable research showing those on the Left are more interested in money than Right-wingers.

Both the World Values Survey and the General Social Survey reveal Left-wingers are more likely to rate 'high income' as an important factor in choosing a job, more likely to say 'after good health, money is the most important thing', and agree with the statement 'there are no right or wrong ways to make money'.

. . .
Can there be any surprise then that those on the Left tend to be more envious and jealous of successful people? That's what studies indicate.

Professor James Lindgren, of Northwestern University in Chicago, found those who favour the redistribution of wealth are more envious than those who do not.

Scholars at Oxford and Warwick Universities found the same sort of behaviour when they conducted an experiment.

Setting up a computer game that allowed people to accumulate money, they gave participants the option to spend some of their own money in order to take away more from someone else.

The result? Those who considered themselves 'egalitarians' (i.e. Left of centre) were much more willing to give up some of their own money if it meant taking more money from someone else.

Much of the desire to distribute wealth and higher taxation is motivated by envy - the desire to take more from someone else - and bitterness.

The culprit here is not those on the Left who embrace progressive ideas but the ideas themselves.


I have noted that a huge portion of the self-image of those on the Left is wrapped up in being "compassionate," for certain well-delineated definitions of the word.

Furthermore, the entire worldview of "progressives" is affected by their own biases, and their own inability to understand any motivations for behavior other than the motivations that they, themselves have.

In other words, they project, psychologically, their worldview onto their interpretations of what conservatives--who do not share that worldview--say and do. So, then, they accuse conservatives of all manner of motivations which conservatives in reality do not have, but that instead motivate "progressives."

It goes back to some insighful research I've posted on before, by Professor Jonathan Haidt at Virginia. Here's the summary again, in brief:

Haidt and his colleagues have identified five "foundations" of human morality, which seem to be valid across cultures. Those foundations are:

1) Harm/care, related to our long evolution as mammals with attachment systems and an ability to feel (and dislike) the pain of others. This foundation underlies virtues of kindness, gentleness, and nurturance.

2) Fairness/reciprocity, related to the evolutionary process of reciprocal altruism. This foundation generates ideas of justice, rights, and autonomy.

3) Ingroup/loyalty, related to our long history as tribal creatures able to form shifting coalitions. This foundation underlies virtues of patriotism and self-sacrifice for the group. It is active anytime people feel that it's "one for all, and all for one."

4) Authority/respect, shaped by our long primate history of hierarchical social interactions. This foundation underlies virtues of leadership and followership, including deference to legitimate authority and respect for traditions.

5) Purity/sanctity, shaped by the psychology of disgust and contamination. This foundation underlies religious notions of striving to live in an elevated, less carnal, more noble way. It underlies the widespread idea that the body is a temple which can be desecrated by immoral activities and contaminants (an idea not unique to religious traditions).


The kicker is that self-identified liberals depend heavily on only the first two foundations when making moral judgments, and give relatively little weight to the remaining three. Conservatives on the other hand give nearly equal weight to all five of the foundations.

One result of this is that there are elements of human moral thinking to which liberals are simply ill-equipped to understand. So, when attempting to make sense of conservative moral acts, arguments, and judgments, liberals must attempt to map those thoughts and actions of conservatives onto their own, relatively incomplete understanding of morality.

Given this incomplete understanding of the full scope of human moral decision-making by liberals relative to conservatives, it is I suppose only natural that liberals then project--incorrectly--their own motives onto their more conservative fellows.

On the other hand, conservatives being familiar with all five dimensions, are able to understand the morality of liberals, but believe that the liberal's morality represents an incomplete view of the entire range of human morality.

So conservatives "get" liberals in a way that liberals are unable to reciprocate.

My prescription is that liberals drop the "we're more progressive and wise" line that they persist on trying to use on conservatives, and drink deeply from that very cup of humility they keep trying to serve to their conservative brothers and sisters. Because whenever a liberal tells a conservative of their superior compassion, sensitivity, intelligence, and morality, the basic reaction of the conservative is to suppress a knowing smile. We know you're full of it, and we know that you have no idea that you don't know what you're talking about.

But it's OK. The first step in overcoming a problem is to admit that you have a problem. We on the right stand ready to work with you to overcome your moral disabilities. Because we're nicer than you are.

Thought for the day

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From The Road To Serfdom, by F. A. Hayek, 1944, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition, 1994, The University of Chicago Press.

Democratic control may prevent power from becoming arbitrary, but it does not do so by its mere existence. If democracy resolves on a task which necessarily involves the use of power which cannot be guided by fixed rules, it must become arbitrary power.

Excerpted under Fair Use for purposes of non-commercial education, discussion and comment. Any transcription or typographical errors are mine.

The "Bollywood to South Beach" Voyage, part 29

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The Bollywood to South Beach Voyage - Regent Seven Seas Voyager, October 29-December 18, 2009

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Twenty-nine

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

December 4 (Friday, Day 37, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) -

Favelas on the Rio hills

We woke up to rain and clouds and temps in the low 80s. Our first shore excursion was a tour of two of the 550 favelas in Rio. The favelas are the slums that emerged around 30 years ago haphazardly built on the steep hillsides of Rio. 20% of the city’s population live in the favelas. They are ruled by organized crime organizations and are little cities on their own with stores, banks, restaurants and schools. Our first stop was at Favela da Rocinha and we bought another little painting for our travel wall for $2.87. Snookums didn’t even try to barter. Favela da Rocinha has 80,000 people living in it and our guide told us not to take photos of certain areas due to the organized crime people not liking it (probably because of drug deals). Snookums thinks the tour is allowed to come to this favela since our first stop was at an area with vendors selling souvenirs. Most of the uneducated people in Rio live in favelas and most of them are employed as maids, garbage collectors, nannies, gardeners and doormen. Rio’s unemployment is 10%. Most of these people came to Rio from the much poorer northeast area of Brazil. Snookums and Filbert thought the conditions were quite “nice” compared to what they’ve seen in Vietnam, China, India, Mexico, Jamaica and Africa. The houses were small but were made out of concrete or brick and have electricity and cable TV that is stolen. The government didn’t bother doing anything about these squatters when they started building these houses 30 years ago and it’s way too late to do anything about them now. Our second stop was at Canoas Village which is a favela with 3,000 people in it.

More after the jump . . .

Thought for the day

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From The Road To Serfdom, by F. A. Hayek, 1944, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition, 1994, The University of Chicago Press.

The fashionable concentration on democracy as the main value threatened is not without danger. It is largely responsible for the misleading and unfounded belief that, so long as the ultimate source of power is the will of the majority, the power cannot be arbitrary. The false assurance which many people derive from (the belief that power exercised by the will of the majority cannot be arbitrary) is an important cause of the general unawareness of the dangers we face. There is no justification for the belief that, so long as power is conferred by a democratic procedure, it cannot be arbitrary; the contrast suggested by this statement is altogether false; it is not the source but the limitation of power which prevents it from being arbitrary.

Excerpted under Fair Use for purposes of non-commercial education, discussion and comment. Any transcription or typographical errors are mine.