I do not believe that testing for the ability to perform a task without actually observing someone performing the task for real is a trivial task And I believe the idea that one can test *generally* for the ability to "perform tasks" (the g-factor) is false
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Kajel96536401 and
You may not believe it, but the scientific evidence is extremely strong that the correlation between the g-factor and the ability to perform cognitive tasks is large. The problem that observing someone is often extremely costly and/or hard. 1/2
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Replying to @NotoriousAapje @arthur_affect and
When you demand the unreasonable, people usually start cheating (as a Stalinist, that should be familiar to you). We pretty consistently see that the alternative to general testing is influence peddling, benefiting the rich and powerful. 2/2
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Replying to @NotoriousAapje @Kajel96536401 and
Yup, the problem with all other methods of social sorting is they're all "subjective" and "irrational" and therefore benefit the already-powerful But standardized testing just measures objective truths and puts the people in power who objectively should be there Awesome
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Kajel96536401 and
The true positions of power are not usually achieved through testing, but through other means. Your entire argument is false for that reason, because you fail to distinguish between the workers who just do what they are told (most of us) and the few with significant power.
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Replying to @NotoriousAapje @Kajel96536401 and
Yes, under a Marxist analysis a highly paid software engineer in San Francisco is in the "working class" the same as a burger-flipper in Wichita, and the members of the "ruling class" are indeed very few However, the idea that the engineer *has no power* is horseshit
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Replying to @arthur_affect @NotoriousAapje and
If nothing else, on the small-scale day-to-day level where we live most of the time, *money is power* (I'm still kind of seething over Scott's incredibly headass post where he tried to deny this fact and be like "Hey money is only useful for, like, buying stuff")
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Replying to @arthur_affect @NotoriousAapje and
Now I'm reminded of Justine Tunney suddenly flipping from far-left to far-right (she started off running the Occupy Wall St. Twitter account and website before becoming a hardcore neoreactionary) because people dared say techbros had power
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Replying to @arthur_affect @NotoriousAapje and
"I understand when you say *bankers* and *lawyers* and *politicians* in the 1% wield unelected power over ordinary people's lives But don't you get that people in Google and Facebook aren't wielding power, they're just trying to solve problems?"
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Replying to @arthur_affect @NotoriousAapje and
Dumb 101-level self-serving shit (There is no one, in any job, anywhere, who does not have a thorough technocratic justification for why society needs them to do what they do Health insurance executives are trying to solve problems ICE is trying to solve problems)
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(Harvey Weinstein's "reputation management" company staffed with former government intel operatives was trying to solve problems The generals who invaded Iraq were trying to solve problems Anything can be defined as this depending on what -- or who -- is the "problem")
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