Last turtle left wins! . . This log was full of turtles, but I missed most of them falling off. 😂🐢😂🐢 . . . #turtle #logrolling (at Juanita Bay Park) https://www.instagram.com/p/B98PrKkHURC/?igshid=2gjx9215e78w
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Last turtle left wins! . . This log was full of turtles, but I missed most of them falling off. 😂🐢😂🐢 . . . #turtle #logrolling (at Juanita Bay Park) https://www.instagram.com/p/B98PrKkHURC/?igshid=2gjx9215e78w
Logrolling
CRITQUE OF THE NATURAL RIGHTS VIEW, III
The last posting touched on the cleanliness of political systems thinking – its theorizing – in which researchers tend to bank on the rational assumption. That is, by focusing on decision-making, the natural rights perspective can be boiled down at various levels to individuals calculating marginal cost and marginal benefits and choosing which option promises to render the highest profit or the least loss.
While this is a powerful notion and often is sufficient in understanding human behavior, it undermines what all goes on among people when confronted with opportunities or dilemmas. Philip Selznick picks up on this theme and argues that modern thinking about this aspect of life has become more systems oriented. He writes that the ensuing rationality has an effect on how people measure each other and their expectations:
[In traditional society,] The rationality of the lifeworld is oriented toward mutual understanding … not success. Human interaction becomes more rational as people come to know each other’s premises; as they properly interpret meanings and motivations; as they use the resources of a shared language for criticism, dialogue, and agreement. The rationality that looks to success or goal-seeking [in modern societies] employs other resources and a different logic. Instead of relying on human communication and natural language, which are inherently disorderly, fuzzy, and connotative, rationality is sought in artificial languages. These include the abstraction of money and obedience. In engineered and programmed systems, the process of Verstandigung, of working toward mutual understanding and rational consensus, are [sic] swept out as unwelcome distractions.[1]
The problem is that certain benefits and rewards, or the standards that establish conditions as benefits and rewards, are beyond measure and money. What parent would sell his or her child into slavery? What amount of money would one need to give up a way of life, a religious belief, or worship? For many, there is no amount. And when political behavior is based on these kinds of considerations, a political systems approach fails to account for or understand the ensuing behavior.
By way of example, a look at political decision-making by politicians can be instructive. Game theory analysts use the analytical tool – the prisoner’s dilemma[2] – to explain how a representative in Congress would “irrationally” address a problem such as the national debt.
Given that a representative might go to Washington with the intent to work toward eliminating expenditures on wasteful programs, that politician soon faces a dilemma. If the representative votes for eliminating all waste, he/she manages to antagonize those interests in the home district that would benefit from the expenditures locally.
To win the campaign to eliminate the national debt, this congressperson must convince the majority in Congress to follow his/her example. Whether the representative is successful in this latter effort, the lawmaker will not be reelected because it is those interests, the ones that were put off by fighting the problem, that make the financial contributions that lead to successful election campaigns. In addition to not supporting the waste elimination congressperson, the interests will act aggressively to replace this crusader.
As for the rest of the population, their benefits are too diffused to overcome the costs of supporting the good legislator by either making campaign contributions, working for the campaign, or even, for too many, voting. So, the championing legislator can look forward to one term, and since all congresspeople face the same conditions, it will be very likely a majority of the Congress will respond with no action on this issue.
If, on the other hand, the congressperson votes for locally favored expenditures of federal dollars that add to the national debt and might be wasteful, the would-be crusader is likely to win the local affected interest’s active support. If the majority of the House votes to eliminate waste, the somewhat hypocritical representative can feel the satisfaction of seeing the original desired result take place. If the majority does not, a much more likely result, at least the featured legislator can get reelected and return to fight another day.
Of course, if one adds to the mix the practice of log rolling, in which one representative votes for other district spending in exchange for spending in that representative’s district, the likelihood of ever eliminating waste in government spending seems systematically impossible. Marginal thinking, in other words, can lead to conditions generally not desired by the majority of a republic.[3]
Need one hold such a cynical view of republican governance? Only if the system or the polity cannot engender, on the part of the citizenry, other goals and values than those based on financial or, as Selznick points out, command motives. If other values and goals, perhaps those that emanate from communal bonds, are encouraged and promoted, could these be strong enough to make the support of this or any conscientious legislator rational?
Such goals and values might verge on formulating and socializing a social morality. This critique postulates that such goals and values can be developed and maintained. Without such a possibility, which is outside the realm of concern of the natural rights perspective, one is left with the cynical conclusion that a republic cannot have the discipline to develop policy that entails sacrifice, even when the majority favors such efforts.
Of course, a review of successful legislative ideas and ideals might demonstrate to readers that this lack of fortitude describes the system more accurately than one that entertains the possibility of conscientious politicians. Yet the history of the nation does include a series of beneficial legislation. While nirvana has not been reached, how many readers are willing to move elsewhere or give up on the system? After all, this blogger has heard that he should not ask what America can do for him, but what he can do for America.
[1] Philip Selznick, The Moral Commonwealth: Social Theory and the Promise of Community (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1992), 255.
[2] “The prisoner’s dilemma presents a situation in which two parties, separated and unable to communicate, must choose between cooperating with the other or not. The highest reward for each party occurs when both parties choose to co-operate.” See “What Is the Prisoner’s Dilemma and How Does It Work?,” Investopedia (August 4, 2022), accessed February 12, 2023), https://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/prisoners-dilemma.asp#:~:text=Understanding%20the%20Prisoner's%20Dilemma&text=The%20prisoner's%20dilemma%20presents%20a,parties%20choose%20to%20co%2Doperate.
[3] “Special Interest Politics,” OER Services/OS Microeconomics 2e (n.d.), accessed February 11, 2023, https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-microeconomics2/chapter/special-interest-politics/ AND Paul Heyne, The Economic Way of Thinking (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1997/ with Peter J. Boettke & David L. Prychitko – Tenth Edition – 2002).
Fun at the fair! Free characiture, fun fighting with foam weapons, time to pet a horse and EV doing a log roll! She did a great job too. #fair #logrolling #characiture #horses #funtimes #summerfun https://www.instagram.com/p/CRuA9pggMLx/?utm_medium=tumblr
대인관계 기술을 적용한 대화사례를 10일치의 일기형식으로 제출하고 본인의 이야기 또는 신문에 나온 갈등사례를 정리하고 이를 Interest / Position 으로 구분하고 적절한 협상방법(Bridging, Logrolling, Frationation)을 적용하여 대안을 마련하시오
대인관계 기술을 적용한 대화사례를 10일치의 일기형식으로 제출하고 본인의 이야기 또는 신문에 나온 갈등사례를 정리하고 이를 Interest / Position 으로 구분하고 적절한 협상방법(Bridging, Logrolling, Frationation)을 적용하여 대안을 마련하시오
(협상조정론 공통)10일치의 일기형식으로 제출하고 본인의 이야기 또는 신문에 나온 갈등사례를 정리하고 행정4_협상조정론.hwp 해당 자료는 해피레포트에서 유료결제 후 열람이 가능합니다.
분량 : 16 페이지 /hwp 파일설명 : 대인관계 기술을 적용한 대화사례를 10일치의 일기형식으로 제출하고 본인의 이야기 또는 신문에 나온 갈등사례를 정리하고 이를 Interest / Position 으로 구분하고 적절한 협상방법(Bridging, Logrolling, Frationation)을 적용하여 대안을 마련하시오.
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1. 대인관계 기술을 적용한 대화사례를 10일치의 일기형식으로 제출하시오. 2. 본인의 이야기 또는 신문에 나온 갈등사례를 정리하고 이를 Interest / Position…
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#Shameless plug. Seriously, if you haven’t checked out my show, The Big Inside, well, you’re missing out on a lot more than just ridiculous #thirsttrap #logrolling. Just follow the link in my bio. Available on Spotify, Apple, stitcher, or wherever you like to listen to whatever you listen to. And please, always DM me with your feedback. I love producing these shows for you guys, and love even more when you get involved. ▫️ #podcast #podcaster #baitandswitch #independentpodcaster #thirst #trap #thot #vtaper #bodybuilding #independentartist #dslr #pecs #abs #fitfam #muscle #instagood #shirtless #noshirt #lats #quads #calves #beard #mustachewax #mustache #scruff #aesthetic #bodybuilding #mensohysique #malemodel #40something #biceps #legday #instagay #strongman #lifting #gym #powerlifting #akaXN #TheRealXN (at The World-Famous Public Alley 701) https://www.instagram.com/p/BvCiWQdgU1n/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1osmnqtuw2bzd