I see no connection at all between that phrase and anything I said.
I’m thinking that might be the issue.
“they make the all-too-common mistake of placing the blame for that harm on a set of tools used by the people who do that harm rather than on the people themselves”
“…by which some relatively small number of people can and inevitably do accumulate enough authority… [to] further their own shallow self-interest by bringing harm to others”
tl;dr you blame the people rather than the system, or, in your words, the “tools”. But don’t let me distract you from hearing yourself talk.
Ah - so that’s the part you failed to/chose to misapprehend.
If you had actually read and considered what I actually said rather than just scanning for out-of-context quotes to colorably affirm your cherished preconceptions, you potentially would’ve grasped that I’m actually blaming the set of mechanisms and presumptions under which people cede authority to others, which authority is inevitably abused by the relatively small number of people who come to possess it.
Certainly those people deserve some blame as well, but they were never my focus, since, without the authority by which they carry out their abuses, they’d just be garden-variety noxious assholes.
In much the same way that without the authority that has defined it, implemented it and continued to protect it, capitalism could not exist.
The people are the actors and the systems are the tools, but the institutionalization of authority is the thing that makes it all possible. And that was and remains my point.
You are one of those people that get avoided at parties, aren’t you?
The irony here is that people who say stuff like this are the most insufferable ones at parties. The type of guy who smugly butts into a conversation with some unoriginal insult and doesn’t elaborate.
I love talking to people capable of a nuanced conversation whether I agree with them or not. They read the article, formed an opinion, and expressed their issue in an understandable way. What’s not to like?
What?
I see no connection at all between that phrase and anything I said.
I’m thinking that might be the issue.
“they make the all-too-common mistake of placing the blame for that harm on a set of tools used by the people who do that harm rather than on the people themselves”
“…by which some relatively small number of people can and inevitably do accumulate enough authority… [to] further their own shallow self-interest by bringing harm to others”
tl;dr you blame the people rather than the system, or, in your words, the “tools”. But don’t let me distract you from hearing yourself talk.
Ah - so that’s the part you failed to/chose to misapprehend.
If you had actually read and considered what I actually said rather than just scanning for out-of-context quotes to colorably affirm your cherished preconceptions, you potentially would’ve grasped that I’m actually blaming the set of mechanisms and presumptions under which people cede authority to others, which authority is inevitably abused by the relatively small number of people who come to possess it.
Certainly those people deserve some blame as well, but they were never my focus, since, without the authority by which they carry out their abuses, they’d just be garden-variety noxious assholes.
In much the same way that without the authority that has defined it, implemented it and continued to protect it, capitalism could not exist.
The people are the actors and the systems are the tools, but the institutionalization of authority is the thing that makes it all possible. And that was and remains my point.
You are one of those people that get avoided at parties, aren’t you?
The irony here is that people who say stuff like this are the most insufferable ones at parties. The type of guy who smugly butts into a conversation with some unoriginal insult and doesn’t elaborate.
I love talking to people capable of a nuanced conversation whether I agree with them or not. They read the article, formed an opinion, and expressed their issue in an understandable way. What’s not to like?