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Comment by jjulius

8 months ago

>Maybe what the world needs.

One line that's been recurring between my wife and I for the past half-decade or so is that the whole planet needs a good hotboxing.

That's the scattergun controlled approach of seeing like a state - give everyone medication even though it's only some that need it.

There's a small percentage ruining it for most: a few defectors when most are cooperators.

How do we identify the defectors?

What do you do if you identify defectors?

  • It's maybe inefficient to hotbox everyone but I think I would rather that than give my government the green light to define and identify defectors.

    If humanity has proven one thing over and over and over again to itself it's that we're terrible at witch hunts.

  • >There's a small percentage ruining it for most: a few defectors when most are cooperators.

    >What do you do if you identify defectors?

    Simple: you put them in charge of the government. That's what we do now, after all.

  • you're being too fixated on individuals. everyone's doing the same thing: avoiding pain, uncertainty, and the limitation of their future choices; seeking pleasure, security, and to increase their future choices. the very few people who aren't doing that don't matter: history unfolds because people do what makes sense for them, not because some don't.

    • I think you're being too fixated on your own perspective. History is nothing but the individual having a large blast radius.

      History ABSOLUTELY unfolds the way it does because they were tired of being 'taking the reasonable/way that makes sense path'.

      You can argue that every invention from the wheel forward has had this approach.

      2 replies →

My friend Andy smoked weed with us once.

He disappeared about an hour after.

We found him a day later at his house.

He let us know he was okay, and everything was "cool and stuff", because the ice dogs didn't manage to catch him. He was able to run away into the woods to hide all night and eventually found his way back home in the morning. He was then curious why the ice dogs didn't chase us at all.

We didn't smoke Andy up anymore.

  • > We didn't smoke Andy up anymore.

    I got open eye visuals from smoking some dubious hashish, 2 other people smoking the same stuff had no issues. I really enjoyed the experience, except for a small incident where I woke up in the middle of the night and started slapping my snoring friend -- I hallucinated he was in fact chocking on his own vomit and was going to die and in my mind I was saving his life.

    I also got mild HPPD that got better in a few years -- mainly I could not look at certain grid patterns because bright flashes of light would come from the intersection -- this mostly happened from vent iron grids and some shirts of mine.