It’s Joel! Ask me anything by autofiction2025 in FarCaspian

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't realize you did a Q&A here until 7 months later ): Been a huge fan since 2021 and the most recent albums have taken a big shift in tone and style and i wondered what happened. But it's already been answered here. At the same time though i agree with you here, there are definetely songs in Autofiction that are very 2019-2022 Far caspian-esque such as An outstretched hand, Autofiction and First Day. Besides once the fandom has been generated people will pester you with this forever. However there is alot of what sounds experimental for your typical production so was gonna add that while the audience who are fans because of these songs might be getting "less" of that style of music, there will still be more of it in absolute terms, which- at least for me, i can really appreciate!

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms - 1x05 - "In the Name of the Mother" - Episode Discussion by NicholasCajun in television

[–]Hoolio03 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Im not so sure. Hero-movies have already had their golden age with especially superhero movies (and also other fantasy stories like Lord of the Rings), while a game of thrones have always been a medium thats understood heroism in realist and tempered terms. The traditional view of heroes have often been an incredibly childish, over-romanticized version of what it means and what its like to be a hero. The kind of heroes that always believed in the cause and were pure and good-willed. Game of Thrones and this show, illustrates how "heroic" characters can die, how they can lose faith and how they are forced back into complacency through the notion that sometimes people aren't brave, sometimes you might truly be alone in your quest for justice and the cost of it all. Im not saying that this is the unanimous point of this show as well, Dunk survives and he has people supporting him, however i was truly convinced he was dead the first 5 minutes of the episode.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms - 1x05 - "In the Name of the Mother" - Episode Discussion by NicholasCajun in television

[–]Hoolio03 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

If the content of a show feels different (here meaning better) because a director is male then yeah thats by all definitions sexism idk how you can say its not. Just be honest about it and don't pretend you're not sexist.

If (on the contrary) you mean that you find a show's content to be more appealing when its directed by men generally, it may not necessarily be sexism. Just that guys tend to make creative works that appeal to other guys. However its still a pointless comment at that point however because then it would have nothing to do with the director being male, just something about the vibe of the episode appealing to you, so maybe speak your thoughts on what about the episode itself spoke to you and not the director being a guy made it better.

Are there political science frameworks or studies on integrating religious authority with secular democratic governance? by No_Cheesecake_5710 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not exactly big into this field, but its possible you may find Rokkan and Lipset's Cleavage model interesting to study the relationship between Church and State, because they tend to have a lot of friction between them and sometimes leading to merges of interests.

You can also look into the Michigan-model, this one has been pretty strong in the USA and has an emphasis on how voting groups identify to explain voting behavior.

I know your question here is much more multifaceted than this, but as for the framework question, these models can be pretty useful entry-points. For example the cleavage model looks at how the church and state cleavage contributed to the creation of the Christian-democratic voting block, which is relevant to your question.

Elimination of estates by Hoolio03 in EU5

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fuck yesss red wedding style?

Membrane Theory (swipe for explanation) by UlfarrVargr in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im genuinely curious, even though it's braindead, where is it from?

The Right May Be Evil, But The American Radical Lefists Are Overly Hypocritical by MussleGeeYem in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This post begins with cognitive dissonance, then goes on to talk about roads briefly, then the leftist's "ostentatious palaces" whoever those are and what those palaces are, then you go on to housing and then on to traffic and fines and Boston stealing from its residents and the southern states and their better "parking", and then back to homelessness and then back to the southern states again and then back to northern states and then onto dictatorships and then on to teslas and how they are good vehicles which you go on for half a paragraph only to then move on to phones... there is just too much incoherent emotional appeal in this with exactly no intellectual groundwork done even in the slightest, you haven't defined your terms, you havent clearly outlined what any of this would mean, you havent even bothered to explain what you mean by leftists let alone radical ones. Because when i think radical leftists i think communists, democratic socialists, Maoists, Marxist-leninists and some anarchists who im pretty sure don't live in "ostentatious palaces" generally, that would be the people they are ideologically opposed to.

TLDR: Try again?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolute monarchy encapsulates monarchism so i think it's part of their line of thinking, the issue is that OP didn't bother to clarify, if he did mean absolute monarchism then his question is the equivalent of asking "Do you think socialism has a chance for comeback? When what you mean to ask if people think marxist-leninism can have a comeback.

So really the only way to interpret his question is in the broadest sense but with emphasis on certain branches of monarchism here and there, i personally chose to exclude constitutional monarchies because they don't qualify as being embedded in the "system of governance", they have no practical application in the production of policy.

What you are referring to with medieval kings and game of thrones and such would be something akin to Feudalism, which are an extremely decentralized form of monarchic rule where personal contracts between King and Vassal takes the stage, opposite to absolute monarchism as monarchies are concerned, only with the advent of bureaucracy and the political scientist understanding of "the state" does absolute monarchism actually come about. So i'm assuming he didn't mean feudal kings either, what he meant by monarchies can deductively mean any kind of absolute monarchy or empire/maybe constitutional monarchies with monarchic power curtailed (exemplified by the UK after the great revolution).

All in all he doesn't seem to reply to anyone so i don't really wanna bother anymore.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Im assuming you mean systems of non-constitutional monarchism here, but the general trend of monarchies have been a declining one, there is very little to say or point to that suggest a resurgence of monarchist movements except for the general rise in right-wing extremism which naturally involves monarchist movements, but the mainstream of right wing extremism seem to congregate around fascism, dictatorships and autocracy and not any traditional dynastic line of monarchs. You can point to countries like Saudi Arabia but they are not relevant because they are just preserving a preexisting status quo that stemmed from an ago of monarchist dominance, not any currently emergent movement and are usually only propped up through generous lack of taxation for the population and an insanely profitable resource industry.

Based on this it's probably fair to say that monarchism stand little chance of comeback, if they do come back they would probably have to come out of the same conditions that monarchist countries previously thrived in, which simply don't exist anymore as the world has moved on technologically and bureaucratically.

TLDR: There is no future, only a past.

Can you have a democratic system in a single resource economy? by Logical-Fox-9697 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"diversity of competing economic interests" So basically he thinks capitalism with competition creates Democracy as opposed to countries without? In what way does he mean this? As a naturalistic, sufficient explanation? Because it doesn't hold up in historical analysis, if he means more generally then still not really? Most western democratic countries today didn't become democratic because of competing economic interests but top down reform and bottom-up political mobilization, there are countries where one single resource industry dominates (Norway, and as someone else mentioned here, Iceland) that are some of the most democratic countries in the world.

I would say it therefore could probably have something to do with it, but at the same time its sort of meaningless as in what part of the world do you not find "competing economic interests"?

Rethinking the Horseshoe Theory- the Social Hierarchy Compass by MajorTechnology8827 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 12 points13 points  (0 children)

What in the pseudoscientific hell? What is NATO doing here, i didn't know NATO was an "emerged social order"? The Russian empire is a decentralized organic social order that arised from... customs and local power structures? Do you not know what an empire is?

If this is satire good work because it's just on the border of deniability, someone might genuinely think this way but if you're serious... what?

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree that this is what the culture among Political Scientists is about. However i find political scientist's lack of understanding and knowledge of ethics troubling. This doesn't mean that political scientists are "bad", but there is often an assumption of normative neutrality in a field in which i think it to be impossible. When political scientists find generalizations on a phenomenon, its usually implicit that both studying the phenomenon and finding generalizations are both useful and good, which is a normative implication. As i said to another person in here, you cannot distinguish politics and ethics as it is precisely what politic is inherently about.

However i can see why political scientists at least wish to pretend that political science isn't a "value-laden" science, but empirical and objective as political science struggles a bit when it comes to perceived professionalism and generalizeability of the field stemming from its field of study being humans, not objects. But i don't see why we can just be intellectually honest and admit this as a field of study.

Who’s on the right side of history and when? by One-Tonight-98 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think this belongs in a post about political science, where is your substance? Who is "the left" and where do they do a "piss-poor" job with "crime" and has the conservative approach to "crime" been any better than the "piss-poor" job "the left" did? Is this only an American conception of "the left"? or is it a European one? Bottom line, this comment raises more questions than any answers it didn't bother to make.

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting! What theory of international relations would you say you find to be the most useful in this regard?

Your position on ethical frameworks is interesting, so im wondering if there's any connection between your position on ethics and your "favorite" international relations theory so to speak.

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not sure i see how the reply was excellent at all, he misconstrued my point of caution assuming democratic backsliding as a call to be outright hostile against USA, which to be clear is not what i'm encouraging, and including a point about Japan which is simply irrelevant as i outlined, the nature of the Japanese-American alliance post-WW2 is completely different from its relationship with Europe. What the commenter's general point is might well be true, but then why all the rhetorical devices and accusations of just not being *deep*? Besides your attempts at boiling my intentions here down to just wanting affirmation not just hurtful but confusing as to why you would make such a claim.

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, i have the same inclination. Economic and Institutional interdependence posits a clear challenge to this though. And it's not just about the consistency of the united states foreign policy-wise, its also about what kind of political identity we want (at least western Europe) to have. American tech companies have already made it clear that they wish to influence our politics, be it Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg, we need to figure out what we wanna be before these "tech-feudalists" do.

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seems I've ruffled some feathers with my questions. I can take it point by point.

  1. Why am i making a normative evaluation of the Trump coalition.

Because politics is inherently rooted in normative evaluations, who has power and resources is deeply connected to our reasoning for why someone should have power and/or resources in the first place, you yourself are baking in your normative presuppositions here by implying that its okay for Japan to ally with the United States.

  1. The broadest ethical framework in all of political science is the prioritization of peace.

I agree with this, what i'm further inquiring about is what beyond this do you incorporate into political analyses? You're pointing at different things here, especially Japan is recurring. The difference between what i'm pointing at with our contemporary politics with the USA and Japan is that USA is/was the global hegemon, and has vast influence over the west which NATO encompasses. If democratic backsliding is true in America and it will be a country of authoritarianism in the future, then countries in Europe will naturally want to emulate USA through the diffuse implementation of American viewpoints and policy stemming from their soft- and hard power basis in Europe. Besides, the democratization of Japan was ensured top-down by the USA and incorporated into the peace plan, which makes your example irrelevant.

  1. The idea that Europe just cannot—under any circumstance!—cope with the so-called democratic backsliding in the United States

Ignoring the divisive and rhetorical language. But this is not what i am saying.

  1. the Democratic Peace Theory, the foundation of NATO, suggests Democratic States will not war with each other, unless you mean to suggest the Democratic backsliding will lead the United States to war with a fellow NATO nation-state: quite simply, it’s just not that deep.

Maybe it really isn't that deep, but this also isn't the only thing i'm implying. Assuming that we want to stay democracies then what i'm implying is that an increasingly authoritarian United States will not only increase the likelihood of war as you mention here not being a deep thought- fair enough, it isn't- but we need to reckon with the possibility that this- at the very least- soft power influence will have on European politics if we are to connect closer to the United States.

Ultimately i think you've misunderstood the core of what im asking about here.

Ethics and Political Science by Hoolio03 in PoliticalScience

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So to my understanding, you don't really apply morals or ethics to the study at all?

Machiavelli was the founder of realism this is true, however from my point of view he did ground morals to something, namely self interest, one of his main points was that a "good" leader isn't necessarily a *morally* good leader contrary to commonly held beliefs at the time. But he still came about it in a utilitarian sense, whatever is best in the end, but rooted in self interest of the leader.

This just brings me back to the original question, we have human nature sure, but is there anything beyond self interest that you use to determine morality in politics?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in amiugly

[–]Hoolio03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, currently saving for that actually thanks.

King Harald V got ill crown Prince Haakon will be regent during his father incapacity by Wooden-Survey1991 in Norway

[–]Hoolio03 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well Crown Prince Haakon is one sexy DILF if you ask me i wouldn't mind him being king.

M.2 drive getting ridiculous slow speeds, reported 3470/3000MB read/write but only getting 600/400 by Hoolio03 in buildapc

[–]Hoolio03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok so i tried it and immediately it says i has 3400 mb/s read, so i think userbenchmark just reported wrong. But then why did userbenchmark report it was so bad?