Archive for February, 2021

Wikipedia fact or fiction with the Waratahs recruit who can bench press 200kg – Sydney Morning Herald

Gary Whetton lifts the Bledisloe Cup in 1991.Credit:AP

Theres bits of truth, says Whetton of his Wikipedia page. The best thing is its almost believable, so youre not too sure. My mates started changing my Wikipedia for fun because they had nothing to do. Its pretty ridiculous but I think its quite funny.

Whetton was born in Auckland and his father Gary chalked up 58 Tests for the All Blacks, captaining the side on 15 occasions. His dads twin, Alan, also played 35 Tests in the famous black jersey but rugby wasnt Whettons first calling.

Dad didnt play rugby until he was about 15, he always played soccer, Whetton says. He tried to get us to play soccer and I hated it. There was never any pressure. When I was 15 and said I wanted to give rugby a good crack, then he switched on to be more hands-on. He was a lock and is my height.

Wikipedia is correct in saying Whetton could qualify for the Wallabies or All Blacks take note Dave Rennie but Germany through birth?

Thats not true. Thats complete rubbish, Whetton says with a laugh. Id love to go though.

At 21, Whetton moved to Australia to take up a deal with the Brumbies, but according to Wikipedia, the Auckland Blues also wanted his services.

In a controversial move, he turned down their offer and instead signed for the Brumbies in October 2012, the page reads.

Whetton sets the record straight.

Id already signed with the Brumbies before they came to me, Whetton says. Steve Larkham and Laurie Fisher offered me a full contract. I played half-a-dozen games for the Brums all off the bench.

Seeking greater opportunity, Whetton found a temporary home in Leicester, where he met Thorn, with a World Cup to his name and one of the most decorated CVs in world rugby, and Geoff Parling, the former England second-rower now doubling as a Melbourne Rebels and Wallabies assistant.

According to Wikipedia, there was only so much he could learn from Thorn and Parling, hence why Whetton left for France.

Whetton during his Brumbies days. Credit:Jeffrey Chan

Whetton bursts out laughing.

I havent seen Brad since that season, so itll be good to catch up with him here in Narrabri, Whetton says. I was a 22-year-old kid who thought he knew the whole world. They just brought a whole new level of intensity, especially at training. Jeez they trained hard.

Then came a French adventure with second division team USO Nevers and neighbour Jean-Luc Emmanuel, the local tax accountant who found Whettons companionship the perfect tonic after going through his third divorce.

Ive got no idea who Jean-Luc is. No clue, Whetton chuckles.

Jack Whetton receives a lineout during Waratahs training in Narrabri ahead of their trial match against the Queensland Reds. Credit:Clay Cross/NSW Waratahs

Dad played in France when I was a baby though. Hes brought us up on the French culture.

Whetton confirms there were a few Yorkshire puddings consumed in the UK from 2016 to 2018 before coming back to New Zealand with Super Rugby firmly on his mind.

One quick fact check. While at Yorkshire, Whetton was a hit with fans due to his prolific try-scoring ability, scoring 39 tries in 39 games. At the same time, the fans grew quite frustrated as he also set a club record for dropping the ball over the try-line.

I only scored one or two tries, Whetton says. Theyve pumped up those.

New Waratahs signing Jack Whetton.Credit:NSW Waratahs

After a short stint in Mitre 10 Cup for Auckland, Whetton was picked up by the Highlanders, where he debuted in early 2019.

Last year, he was the Highlanders starting second-rower in Super Rugby Aotearoa.

It was pleasing, Whetton says. You get a few regular starts and you get used to it more and things come more naturally.

What about the yarn that he can bench press 200kg?

Jack Whetton is one of two Kiwi locks who crossed the Tasman to join the Waratahs.Credit:AP

That is true, Whetton says with a grin.

For context, roughly 13 professional rugby players have been known to join the 200kg bench press club. David Pocock was said to have maxed out at 185kg, while Brumbies back-rower Pete Samu can bench about 160kg. The most on record, according to a RugbyPass article, is Ospreys prop Gheorghe Gajion with 230kg.

I was stuck on 190 for ages and then in 2018 I hurt my ankle, Whetton says. I said to the trainer, lets get 200kg. We did heaps of upper body for four weeks. Testosterone flowing, music raging, and I pumped it out. I got the record for Auckland.

When I went for my first training at the Highlanders and we had testing on day one. I did 200kg again and they were like, this boy is a machine. I havent done 200kg since to be fair. Its crazy big. Just hold your breath and rip it.

How do Whettons Tahs teammates fare?

Pound for pound, [back-rower] Carlo Tizzano is a strong little bastard, Whetton says. He loves the pound for pound thing because hes so small.

Ironically, Waratahs coach Rob Penney didnt pick Whetton in his New Zealand under-20s side a few years back but clearly saw value in bringing him to NSW on a two-year deal.

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I didnt really want to travel too far from home given the whole COVID situation, Whetton says. Im excited to give it a crack. I knew they needed some older heads, so I thought it could be a good chance to get some minutes under my belt. I back my knowledge and around the dark arts.

I thought last years Super Rugby AU was fast, blokes ran hard. Sometimes it wasnt the most flash rugby, but it was abrasive.

A few more fact or fictions regarding the final line of the Wikipedia page need checking.

In his spare time, he enjoys relaxing at the beach or eating a chicken wrap at Henriettas in Surry Hills. Many people are tipping him to be vice-captain of the side in 2021.

I do like Clovelly and Bronte, Whetton says. And yes, I have been to Henriettas and I had a nice chicken wrap. I said its quite good and now its on my Wikipedia page. But Im not in the leadership group Im just trying to get in the No.5 jersey for the Waratahs.

Dont believe everything you read.

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Tom Decent is a journalist with The Sydney Morning Herald

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Wikipedia fact or fiction with the Waratahs recruit who can bench press 200kg - Sydney Morning Herald

People may be less likely to contribute to a virtual public good like Wikipedia or Waze if they know many others are already doing it Stuff – Stuff…

While people tend to contribute more to a virtual public good if they see others doing the same, this effect reverses if they become aware too many people are participating, according toresearch that I conducted over the summer.Public goods are things that many people share. They can be physical, such as highways, clean air and blood banks, or virtual, like free online encyclopedia Wikipedia or mobile traffic app Waze.

Combining methods from geography, urban planning and big-data analysis, my co-authors and I studied millions of postings by users of a mobile navigation app called Waze, in which users voluntarily post traffic-related updates and road conditions in real time. All users of the app benefit as more of them freely contribute information about traffic accidents and road closures. Economistsdescribe thisas contributing to a public good.

We found that displaying the density of users activities on Waze that is, real time information on how many people are on the app in ones geographic location can encourage participation from others in the area, just as it does in the real world. If you see a lot of people donating blood in your local neighborhood or many parents volunteering in your local school, it may motivate you to do the same.

But we also found evidence of a strong bystander effect that reverses this after a certain threshold is reached. The bystander effect refers to the phenomenon that an individualslikelihood of engaging in a helpful actdecreases when bystanders are present in a critical situation. Paradoxically, our motivation to contribute to a public good could also decline when we see others doing something. For example, if you saw a lot of people donating blood, you may decide that they dont need your blood too.

The idea is thatpeople perceive less urgencyor motivation to help others when others are present, akin to a diffusion of responsibility.

With more public goods moving online for example, in-person pledge drives seeking charitable donationsnow happen through crowdfunding websitessuch as Kiva or GoFundMe its important to study how the motivations and behaviors of people change in a virtual setting.

Users motivation to contribute to public goods in the physical world depends on what is termed impure altruism, also known by economists as warm glow giving. That is, participation is heavily influenced by an individuals motives for public recognition.

My research shows that the same effects that happen in real life also seem to occur virtually, suggesting these online spaces should be designed in ways to overcome the bystander effect to encourage more participation. This can be done, for example, by offeringnonmonetary rewardsfor participation such as virtual badges or making it feel like a game.

Other researchers are also looking into how to influence the behavior of people in virtual spaces.

Some scholars suggest, for example, that participants in primarily digital environments needdigital nudgesandinterventionsto enhance a sense of community and create a shared sense of social self on these digital spaces. Studies from social question-and-answer sites in China seem to suggest thatcommitment toward the site, a shared language and shared visionseem to foster a sense of participation.

Other studies suggest that rather than viewing such online public good platforms in terms of the immediate needs of an information seeker, these platforms should be designed for theirlong-lasting valueto a community of users.

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People may be less likely to contribute to a virtual public good like Wikipedia or Waze if they know many others are already doing it Stuff - Stuff...

How to Write a Novel, According to 10 Really Good Novelists – esquire.com

A long, long time ago, back in the first lockdown, you probably told yourself that now right this moment, in the middle of a pandemic was the perfect time to conceive, plot, write, revise, rewrite, complete and publish a novel which completely transformed what we thought it was possible to express in the English language.

It wasn't. Obviously it wasn't. You know that now. But even if it turned out a year-long period of isolation and anxiety actually wasn't much good for your inner David Foster Wallace, there's no bad time to start writing. It doesn't really matter if it goes anywhere. Just write something and see where you go.

To help you along, we asked 10 established and emerging writers for the rules of thumb they use to find ideas, to get words onto the page, and to turn an interesting first draft into something more substantial.

"So much of my writing process is in the not writing. I spend a lot of time following my interests, going down Google and YouTube rabbit holes, or immersed in photography books. I always have headphones on and find myself scribbling song lyrics in notebooks. Im most concerned with feeling and Im always trying to find ways to map and express those feelings. And what better way than to follow your curiosities, to pursue your loves? Writing, to a degree, is an act of love and should be treated accordingly."

Caleb Azumah Nelson, author of Open Water

"A collection of miscellanies may prove most interesting and thought-provoking some time later"

"Always keep a small notebook and a pen at hand. Any time you hear something interesting, or you have a fleeting thought, or even, you encounter a new word in a book that you don't know jot it down. A collection of miscellanies may prove most interesting and thought-provoking some time later."

Yiyun Li, author of books including Must I Go, Where Reasons End and A Thousand Years of Good Prayers

"Keep it simple: complexity is the enemy. Task yourself narratively, eg 'Tomorrow I have to write a particular scene', rather than 'Tomorrow I must write 800 words'. Plot can be structured as: situation, complication, new equilibrium. And this applies to scenes as well as whole books: the new equilibrium is the hook for the next scene. Verbs are very important, thats where the action is. Metaphorise them if possible. Write: 'The red-haired man shouldered his way through the door'; not: 'The big-shouldered, red-haired man pushed through the door.'"

Giles Foden, author of books including Turbulence and The Last King of Scotland

"My advice is to use the 'random special' button on Wikipedia as a way to generate unusual ideas for fiction. When you press 'special random' it brings up a random but curated page from the hidden depths of Wikipedia. It might be a page about a grunge band from Vancouver or the World Alliance of Baptist Churches or perhaps Raimo Manninen, a Finnish alpine skier. Keep clicking 'special random' until you have two pages that interest you and then write a story that makes a connection between those pages. For example, it could be a story about a depressed skier who finds god in the mountains and decides to baptise himself in a hole in the ice of an Alpine lake. Or hopefully something better than that."

Joe Dunthorne, author of Submarine, Wild Abandon and The Adulterants

"My writing advice would be: read your work out loud, even if you think it's finished; there'll always be something that can be said more simply, or in a clearer voice, especially if you're writing dialogue."

Paul Mendez, poet and author of Rainbow Milk

1. Your first thought is never your best thought. Its just your first.

2. Most of your ideas are banal. Dig deeper.

3. Go and find things out. Make a fetish of research. Most of the things worth hearing arent already sitting in your head.

4. Stop bothering people with your early drafts. Bother yourself with your early drafts.

5. Work every day. Its not an amateurs game.

Andrew O'Hagan, Esquire editor-at-large and author of books including Mayflies, The Illuminations and Our Fathers

"The trick to writing is to pretend there are no tricks"

The trick to writing is to pretend there are no tricks. I refuse to romanticise the process. If I did, insecurity would creep in. I would be too preoccupied with thinking, but can I do this? Am I a writer? No time for that. The more dramatic the process seems Oh I cannot write unless I am wearing my red beret! Oh I can only write before the sun is up! the more you slow yourself down. It is important, for me at least, to be able to write anywhere, under any circumstance. In your phone notes, in a lunch break, walking down the street. I never said those scraps of writing will be any good. (Although sometimes they are.) But youre flexing the muscle, building it, teaching yourself that writing is only an action. In other words: stop fucking around and get on with it.

Rebecca Watson, author of Little Scratch

"Epiphanies arent queued up politely in waiting rooms behind Word docs; theyre out in the world"

"If in doubt, get on with other things. Take the writing away from the page and let life work on it quietly for a bit. Walk, cook, hoover, call your mum, draw a picture, and you will unknowingly (or knowingly) be solving the problem, dismantling the cliche, refining the turn of phrase, finding the right word, and then you go back to the work, armed with this thinking youve been doing, and progress is made. Gather other things to bring to the page. Language, time, experience.

"The most significant creative breakthrough I ever had with my writing was standing in the Nando's toilet in Bromley changing my baby sons trousers after a nappy explosion. Epiphanies arent queued up politely in waiting rooms behind Word docs, theyre out in the world."

Max Porter, author of The Death of Francis Bacon, Lanny and Grief is the Thing with Feathers

"My advice would be: 1) establish a routine whereby you write for at least couple of hours each day; 2) keep going even when you feel uninspired; 3) when you're mid-flow don't think about how your work will be received; 4) when you've finished a draft DO think about it or, better still, find someone who will give you honest feedback; 5) be prepared to revise, revise and revise."

Blake Morrison, poet and author of The Executor, The Last Weekend and And When Did You Last See Your Father?

"Unfortunately this isnt a good time to ask for my advice precisely because its all going rather well at present. I'm not having to force myself to write; I just feel like doing it. How has this come about? I've really no idea but this rare and happy state of affairs is consistent with something Victor Hugo said on the subject (cant remember where): when you can write its easy, when you cant, its impossible."

Geoff Dyer, author of books including White Sands: Experiences from the Outside World, Another Great Day at Sea and Jeff in Venice

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How to Write a Novel, According to 10 Really Good Novelists - esquire.com

Bitcoin History: Libertarianism and the Economy’s ‘Final Boss’ – CoinDesk – Coindesk

In the great game of the world economy, the final boss victory for crypto would be to rob nation-states of the ability to issue legitimate money at least, that would be the libertarian win condition.

Everyone who has been around long enough in crypto, if you scratch off the surface, is a closeted but very committed political radical, Preston Byrne, an attorney and past startup founder, told CoinDesk.

In Byrnes view, libertarianism is a close cousin of the original philosophical core of crypto: cypherpunk. Cypherpunks want control over how much anyone knows about them, but libertarians have a more profound agenda: They want to eliminate coercion of any kind. So it makes sense that libertarians would gravitate to a technology that undermines nation-states ability to mandate which money we all use with each other.

The two viewpoints have always been intertwined, as internet prophet and early Intel engineer Timothy May attested in 1994s The Cyphernomicon:

"A point of confusion is that cyberpunks are popularly thought of as, well, as 'punks,' while many Cyberpunks are frequently libertarians and anarchists of various stripes. In my view, the two are not in conflict."

The crypto industry is not just talking about a payment system, Nic Carter of Castle Island Ventures told CoinDesk. For the most part, were talking about a monetary system. Those are like deeply, deeply political things, because whomever administers the monetary system has enormous leverage in the way that society looks, Carter said.

Crypto is philosophical technology or maybe technological philosophy.

Thinking about money

Aside from payments, in its generally accepted definition, money also provides the basic unit of account and a way to store value.

Money that can flow freely and whose supply wont expand just because a politician wants to build some highways, pyramids or award some no-show jobs gets right to the heart of what libertarians are all about. The 1997 book The Sovereign Individual by James Dale Davidson and William Rees-Mogg foretold a future where civilians shop for a state much as they shop for electricity suppliers in deregulated markets.

The book predicted that money would play a key role in undermining state authority, largely due to nation-state preference for continually downgrading the value of their currency. Remarkably, they predicted a money native to the internet (cybermoney) would be key to this undoing. They wrote:

"This new form of money will reset the odds, reducing the capacity of the world's nation-states to determine who becomes a Sovereign Individual. A crucial part of this change will come about because of the effect of information technology in liberating the holders of wealth from expropriation through inflation."

This argument that the internet would change how value gets transferred seems like a natural extension of the work of Austrian-born economist Friedrich Hayek, who published The Denationalisation of Money in 1976, a book that advocated for competitively issued private forms, a model that sounds much like the current explosion in stablecoins we are seeing today.

The economist-philosopher was also an advocate for decentralization long before Satoshis white paper, contending that central planning is cumbersome and daft.

We need decentralization because only thus can we insure that the knowledge of the particular circumstances of time and place will be promptly used, Hayek wrote in his 1945 essay, The Use of Knowledge in Society.

How do people, in Hayeks conception, coordinate their activities? They do it with prices.

The Market is the sum of all voluntary human action. If one acts non-coercively, one is part of the Market.

With prices, people are able to put their knowledge about local supply and demand into the system without revealing to others exactly what they know, much as zero-knowledge proofs allow a person to answer a question without revealing any more information than is essential.

Today it is almost heresy to suggest that scientific knowledge is not the sum of all knowledge, Hayek wrote 75 years ago. But a little reflection will show that there is beyond question a body of very important but unorganized knowledge which cannot possibly be called scientific in the sense of knowledge of general rules: the knowledge of the particular circumstances of time and place.

The ability to coordinate society simply through price signals rather than politics is crucial to the libertarian worldview, and many suspect those price signals get warped by, for example, a government that has so much power to influence the economy on a macro scale.

It is far better, in this view, for such signals to circulate through an economic system (like Bitcoin) that is indifferent to particular circumstances of a historical moment.

Crypto as bricks

Libertarianism, as developed to this point, discovered the problem and defined the solution: the State vs. the Market, philosopher Samuel Konkin wrote in 1980s New Libertarian Manifesto. The Market is the sum of all voluntary human action. If one acts non-coercively, one is part of the Market. Thus did Economics become part of Libertarianism.

Like the old man in the Legend of Zelda game who handed the hero, Link, his double-powered white sword, blockchain is what enabled libertarians to start standing up a little economy all their own.

It wasnt until crypto that libertarians started to build things people actually use that reflected libertarian values. Successfully doing so caused the CEO of a publicly traded company, Overstock.com, to bow multiple times and say Im not worthy when he first encountered ShapeShift founder Erik Voorhees at a gathering of bitcoiners.

Voorhees built a significant nook within that crypto-libertarian economy and Overstocks founder could see it. Voorhees company has seen setbacks on its ideal, but its moving fast to get back in line with its founders values.

Meanwhile, the architect of the software that powers EOS quit working on it because the reality didnt square with his views about the primacy of individual liberty.

Thinking a way out

Bitcoins creator decided it would have a fixed supply: 21 million coins. Similarly, theres no more DAI in the world than MakerDAO users are willing to post collateral for and borrow.

These arent just design choices. They are statements.

Carter contended the blockchains that are interesting tend to have relatively well-developed views on society, and then that is manifested in their protocol.

Theres a class of philosophers today who are native to the internet. Its not lost on some of these thinkers that cryptocurrencies arent just software but also a way to express conviction about the social world.

They are a way to incentivize people to play a new kind of game in new ways.

Bitcoin has shown the true face of the banking system. It was all about monopoly.

Ole Bjerg is a philosopher at the Copenhagen Business School who has written extensively about money, including about bitcoin. He and Byrne pointed out that libertarian skepticism extends beyond the state to the massive corporations that rely on it to persist.

In a conversation with CoinDesk, Bjerg contrasted bitcoin with the banking industry, which he said has no conviction. Banks and the financial system, they would portray themselves as: We are capitalists. Theyd say, We need competition and innovation. Innovation is good.'

But then when entrepreneurs actually try to compete with a genuinely new, disintermediating way to manage payments, Bjerg continued, then all the sudden the banks become state socialists and say: No, no, we can only have one currency. What I see is bitcoin has shown the true face of the banking system in a way. It was all about monopoly.

James Ellis is an independent philosopher and scholar who has been investing in cryptocurrencies for some time. Ellis is better known as Meta-Nomad to his followers online. He said the project of cryptocurrency was sort of philosophical from the start. Not anarchic but detached. An element of leaving something behind and finding your own space.

Ellis believes crypto fits into a larger theme he likes to pursue, that of exit. Cypherpunks started articulating ways for citizens to make their activities illegible to the state, and Bitcoins arrival presaged a future where even whole economies could be built invisible to terrestrial authorities.

If you can cordon off your own currency then arguably you can cordon off your own state, Ellis said. This is the idea that cypherpunks and libertarians share, but not all libertarians are cypherpunks and not all cypherpunks are libertarians.

The concept of a libertarian

If the libertarian is the hero of some kind of Mega Man-esque game, what does the hero do after the rug pull of the final boss? He declares: No more bosses.

Bosses in video-game legend are defined by one thing: firepower. To the libertarian mind, thats no way to be a boss.

One of my goals when Im talking about politics with people is to get them to see the gun in the room, Chainstone Labs CEO and Satoshi Roundtable co-host Bruce Fenton told CoinDesk in an interview. An OG both in bitcoin and libertarianism, Fenton invests to express his viewpoint.

A worldview needs practitioners like Fenton and theorists who can help fellow travelers envision the next steps after they are victorious. Travis Corcoran is a Kickstarter-enabled novelist who self-describes as a Catholic anarcho-capitalist.

To him, a philosophy offers at least one of two things: a way of understanding the world or a way of thinking about what is the good life, he told CoinDesk.

Previously a software developer, Corcoran was on the cypherpunk mailing list back in the day and he was sold on cryptocurrency from the jump, but he is best known as the author of the Aristillus Series, a sort of libertarian what-if story in space. Cryptocurrency hasnt popped up in his books yet, but he promised that it is coming.

Libertarianism doesnt even want to talk about understanding the world, Corcoran said. Libertarianism says: The best way to interact with each other is without force, without top-down controls.

This notion of eschewing force or coercion emerged several times in reporting this essay, and it is key. Libertarians disagree on a lot, but they have consensus around the Non-Aggression Principle, that force must not be used against people or property.

Similarly, Preston Byrne said, Libertarianism doesnt command you to do anything. It commands you to not command.

Arthur Breitman, the architect of the governance-oriented blockchain Tezos, put it another way. The thing that defines libertarianism for me is consent, he said. We are a social species. We are meant to collaborate with each other.

Specialization is for insects.

The nice thing about Tezos, Breitman contended, is that no one is forced to use it. The same, so far, can be said of all blockchains, though all bets are off once central bank digital currencies arise.

Libertarianism always has a bit of a macho, do-it-yourself and damn the torpedoes veneer that is no doubt off-putting to many. It is the kind of thinking that can lead a gang of entrepreneurs to attempt to found a utopian enclave in another nation on another continent, only to have it devolve into hopeless infighting.

Indeed, the philosophys favorite novelist might be science fictions Robert Heinlein, author of both the paean to free love, Stranger in a Strange Land, and the revolutionary vision, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. Heinlein articulated the high expectations of the do-it-yourself ethos in his novel, Time Enough for Love, when he wrote:

"A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyse a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."

Libertarians, in other words, can be a little extra, as the kids might say perhaps even sometimes a bit self-delusional (suburban dads cosplaying as Delta Force). Or they can at least come off that way to those who dont buy in. Fenton granted to CoinDesk that the school-of-thought has some image problems.

But realistic or not, takes such as Heinleins make it a bit surprising to hear libertarianisms proponents propound this non-aggression consensus, an idea that sounds while not exactly pacifistic more like pacifism than the typical, say, Western head-of-state would endorse.

But while libertarians have that one point in common, they differ in many ways. Byrne provided the most helpful way of breaking out the various categories without making it over-complicated. He described three varieties of libertarians:

Corcoran loosely identifies with the last category. Any time a bunch of friends get together and accomplish something without violence, thats an example of anarchy, Corcoran said.

To Fenton, whatever kind of libertarianism an adherent gravitates to, crypto complements it. Its a free and open voluntary system and thats exactly what it means. Whereas, most of our relations in the world, they are coercive, Fenton said.

In other words, the bosses of our modern economy can force everyone to use a particular currency because they have the heavy artillery; governments have the monopoly on legal violence.

It's not all about the money

As cryptocurrency has progressed, its become clearer that it offers new pathways for large groups of people to come to agreement. In crypto parlance: consensus.

Many hope that the importance of distributed consensus could extend beyond maintaining a ledger.

Consensus is very hard. Thats why the game of statecraft today is largely played by some version of majority rule. Some theorists think we now have the tools to do better.

Rachel ODwyer, now a lecturer at Dublins National College of Art and Design, wrote an essay in 2015 called The Revolution Will (Not) Be Decentralized: Blockchains, which dealt with the re-centralizing tendency of technology while noting some special hope for blockchains, the data structure that underlies most major cryptocurrencies.

"Where questions about how to reach consensus, negotiate trust and especially scale interactions beyond the local are pervasive in the commons, the blockchain looks set to be a game changer. In this context, the blockchain is presented as an algorithmic tool to foster trust in the absence of things like social capital, physical colocation or trusted third-party management."

ODwyer only wrote to point out only that cryptocurrencys underlying technology opens up a new design space for decision-making, but her point would be echoed in 2017 by the then-CEO of bitcoin infrastructure firm, Chain, Adam Ludwin, in an open letter to Jamie Dimon, the chairman of JPMorgan Chase.

Ludwin wrote, Decentralized applications are a new form of organization and a new form of software. Theyre a new model for creating, financing and operating software services in a way that is decentralized top-to-bottom.

Ludwin would go on to say that blockchains really only had one advantage over other kinds of software, but that one advantage had a distinctly libertarian tinge: a means to circumvent coercive powers ability to silence.

Censorship resistance means that access to decentralized applications is open and unfettered. Transactions on these services are unstoppable, he wrote.

Thats the new thing about crypto that distinguishes it from other assets. Its just really hard to confiscate.

That was back when the industry was more about transactions. These days, its more about individuals holding onto value themselves in a way thats also non-intermediated and resists the states or the banks ability to assert control. To that point, Carter brought in another philosopher, John Locke, who offered a theory of property in his treatises on government.

Thats quite central, I think, to the crypto doctrine, to reasserting extremely strong property rights that cant really be interfered with. Thats the new thing about crypto that distinguishes it from other assets. Its just really hard to confiscate, Carter said.

Confiscation resistance might be another feature the industrys libertarians will one day tout alongside censorship resistance; in the U.S., authorities already seem to have taken notice.

The libertarian proposal

So in our imagined libertarian video game, the hero doesnt beat the final boss in a face-off. The libertarian does it by making the states firepower irrelevant.

In other words: Today everyone only uses state-backed money. Maybe one day some people start using the internets money and maybe eventually too many people are using it for the state to stop it. Thats a rug pull.

Said another way, the libertarians dont break the princess out of the castle; they build another castle beneath the castle. Then the princess slips from one to the other when Bowser isnt looking.

That is to say, censorship and confiscation resistance are just the beginning. After that there is getting along together in a decentralized fashion, and thats just a totally different way of life. Its a game with no win condition.

Libertarians seem to believe people could live side by side more amicably by building a system around what people are capable of rather than around protecting against what might harm them a system geared more for the next opportunity than the next larceny.

For example: If we can agree that the economic problem of society is mainly one of rapid adaptation to changes in the particular circumstances of time and place, it would seem to follow that the ultimate decisions must be left to the people who are familiar with these circumstances, Hayek wrote in 1945. We must solve it by some form of decentralization.

For Katelyn Sills, a libertarian-sympathetic but not allegiant software developer and blogger, the real question is whether or not people get to choose what kind of decision-making system they are subject to.

Like Breitman, consent to be governed is an important philosophical sticking point, even though she knows that any piece of land can really only have one government (for now).

But blockchains allow her to tinker with new arrangements for finding consensus in a way almost nothing else does.

What crypto is giving me is the ability to experiment with societal-level, institutional-level building blocks, with structures and designs, without having to go off and create an entirely other country. The costs are just lower tremendously. And I think that allows for a lot of innovation, Sills said. Its very consensual.

Which is another way of saying what Fenton said: pursuing ways of living among others without guns in the room.

Sills has more sympathy for left-of-center issues and causes than many others in the industrys libertarian cohort, and perhaps for that reason she liked the thought experiment laid out by another internet-native philosopher, the rationalist blogger Scott Alexander, who wrote on Slate Star Codex in 2014 about a nation where there were a bunch of closely packed islands (an archipelago). Each island had a different government but it was really easy for people to shift their citizenship and residence from one to another.

Alexanders ultimate point was that the internet made it more feasible for people to create societies they liked and to largely live within them to exit at the margins.

"I already hang out with various Finns and Brits and Aussies a lot more closely than I do my next-door neighbors, and if we start using litecoin and someone else starts using dogecoin then Ill be more economically connected to them, too."

Alexanders larger point is that this is the beginning of a much more robust societies-within-societies moment. More than subcultures, even: groups intertwined by shared tastes, ideas and currencies.

Implied in Alexanders exhortation is that if everyone can interface more with folks who want to live as they do, then they should also STFU about others who dont (but no one does).

Agorism

Obviously, the libertarian willing to metaphorically build the castle beneath the castle is more the anarchist than the legalist, in Byrnes construction. So what kind of society would be built in that castle?

One future that came up again and again in CoinDesks conversations was one described by the aforementioned Konkin. In his manifesto he described a way of thinking he called Agorism, an ideology where all problems could be solved in the market. Adherents would practice counter-economics, a black market, not because of what it sold but because its participants abjured established authorities.

Though he wrote in an era where the dominant audio format was the cassette tape, his ideas make more sense if you just add blockchain. Konkins writings square nicely with Dan Larimers vision of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), which has been showing progress in 2020, in fits and starts.

As Corcoran put it, When things are lurking in the corners or on the outside long enough it really does build up momentum and it can start to do things much better than the market-dominant product can.

Win condition

But ideological purity seldom wins history.

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Bitcoin History: Libertarianism and the Economy's 'Final Boss' - CoinDesk - Coindesk

Conspiracy theories of QAnon find fertile ground in an unexpected place the yoga world – Minneapolis Star Tribune

During the pink-salt-lamp-lit evening classes she'd conduct at Yess Yoga in Minneapolis, Marnie Bounds frequently shared a mixture of metaphysical philosophies about the "subtle body," a person's energetic layers that transcend the physical, while folding in her own astrological interpretations.

After the pandemic started, Bounds' classes moved online and she added a weekly info session "What on Earth Is Happening?" that brought something new to the mix: QAnon.

QAnon is the movement that falsely believes former President Donald Trump has been working to destroy a child sex-trafficking cabal of Satanists run by prominent Democrats and celebrities. Its adherents include a handful of Minnesota politicians along with members of the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, including horn-helmeted, self-declared shaman Jake Angeli.

But the QAnon movement also has found a surprising foothold in the yoga and alternative-medicine community.

Julia Szilagyi, a yoga teacher in Naples, Fla., noticed a spike in QAnon-influenced yoga teachers last spring, around the same time that people started wearing masks. She believes QAnon influencers observed the yoga community's focus on freedom and authenticity, and then lured in vulnerable yogis via social media.

"I started hearing things like, 'QAnon encourages me to think outside the box,' from people I've known and worked with for a long time," Szilagyi said.

QAnon believers are typically anti-vaccine, a view shared by some practitioners of alternative medicine.

"The anti-vax part of QAnon is deeply embedded in libertarian beliefs about the body/individual as self-property and the needle as invasion," said Jack Bratich, a professor at Rutgers University and expert on conspiracy theories. "It can connect to 'body as temple' [theories] in Western versions of yoga, where more 'natural' health beliefs also circulate.

"QAnon takes this a step further to say vaccinations are part of a deep state plan to control people through microchips."

That was precisely the view voiced by Twin Cities teacher Bounds in a YouTube video she posted in November. Bounds opined that people who got the COVID-19 vaccine might get a chip implanted under their skin. She also stated that COVID is "hugely important ... for our evolutionary process."

Since May, she has crafted regular 60- to 90-minute informational sessions for her YouTube channel, "The Time Is Now: Teachings for the Great Awakening", which has more than 170 subscribers.

Bounds and Yess Yoga did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

E. Romero, a yoga teacher in Tucson, Ariz., said she became concerned when she heard an offhand comment made by Bounds during an online yoga class, implying that protesters were somehow less enlightened than those in the know.

"That really worried me as a BIPOC person," said Romero. "There were some things she was saying that sounded almost Trumpian. I started to think, 'That's not possible I am in a yoga space.'"

How did some people in the yoga community, which uplifts care, connectedness and a holistic approach to the environment and humanity, come to embrace QAnon?

Los Angeles-based yoga teacher Seane Corn and other wellness community influencers first noticed QAnon beliefs spreading among yoga followers via social media. They called it out in a joint message posted last September. (Corn has 109,000 followers on her Instagram account.)

"Conspirituality," a podcast focused on the intersection of far-right extremism and New Age spirituality, compiled a list of nearly 50 prominent yoga and wellness community influencers who espouse QAnon theories.

The followers of QAnon claim to receive information from "Q," a self-proclaimed, mysterious "government insider" with a supposed high-level security clearance.

Since 2017, "Q" has posted cryptic messages ("Q drops") to online boards. According to QAnon, the "Great Awakening" would happen when Trump won the 2020 election. An apocalyptic showdown would ensue, destroying the aforementioned child sex-trafficking cabal and transforming America.

Neither happened, but QAnon persists.

Facebook continues to shut down QAnon pages, calling the conspiracy theory a "militarized social movement." The FBI labeled QAnon a domestic terrorist threat but Trump has said its followers "basically believe in good government."

Following President Joe Biden's inauguration, some QAnon believers have tried to rationalize the transfer of power, convincing themselves that Biden is part of Trump's plan to take down the global cabal.

Rutgers professor Bratich said QAnon's stance against masking and surveillance makes it attractive to "the influencers community around lifestyle. I think yoga becomes part of that."

He said QAnon is as much a religious movement as a political one: "QAnons are developing a sort of holy war/spiritual warfare around good and evil. Trump is good, and he's going to destroy the evil Satan-worshiping cabal. It's pretty classic Christian demonology."

QAnon's presence in the yoga community sounded an alarm for Minneapolis-based teacher Serita Colette, who was born in Kerala, India, a renowned center for the spiritual practice.

"These people sound very lost and disassociated from the tradition," she said. It's an example, Colette said, of the ways that yoga has become subject to cultural appropriation. At the same time, she said, QAnon is creating "a deeper distaste for communities of color, which, by and large, have not been met with great experiences in the white-dominant [American] yoga world."

For longtime yogis, QAnon's presence disrupts the core of yoga.

"If you are going to honor yoga's philosophy and roots in the practice, you are either one or the other either a yoga teacher or a QAnon person," said Szilagyi. "They can't exist together."

@AliciaEler 612-673-4437

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Conspiracy theories of QAnon find fertile ground in an unexpected place the yoga world - Minneapolis Star Tribune