Results for “seasteading” 24 found
Saturday assorted links
1. “In total, 3,821,926 toys were seized from two warehouses, and would be sold at low prices, it said…The agency also posted photos of the two executives being marched from the premises by a squad of heavily armed soldiers.” Link here, you can guess the country.
2. Peruvian governance update, by Cesar Martinelli.
3. French Polynesia seasteading update.
What I’ve been reading
1. Peter Ames Carlin, Homeward Bound: The Life of Paul Simon. I hadn’t known that Simon originally recorded the Hearts and Bones album with Garfunkel, but later erased his partner’s contributions to the songs. Nor had I known that Simon produced a stripped-down, acoustic guitar version of “Surfer Girl.” For fans, the book is interesting throughout, and most of all the story is of an ongoing rivalry — with Art — that never became functional again once it collapsed.
2. Antonio Di Benedetto, Zama. A 1950s Argentinean novel set in colonial times, and beloved by Roberto Bolaño; the introduction describes the author as “a would-be magical realist who can’t quite detach himself from reality.” For fans of the disjointed tragic. I very much liked it, but had to read the first half twice in a row to grab hold of what was going on.
3. Elizabeth Brown Pryor, Six Encounters with Lincoln: A President Confronts Democracy and its Demons. Fresh and stimulating throughout, I found most interesting the parts of how the Commander in Chief role of the president evolved under Lincoln, and Lincoln as the first “media president.” Highly relevant for current politics too.
Forthcoming is Joe Quirk, with Patri Friedman, Seasteading: How Ocean Cities Will Change the World. Comprehensive and readable, though I am not a convert.
William Mellor and Dick M. Carpenter II, Bottleneckers: Gaming the Government for Power and Private Profit, is a very useful look at how laws and regulation block progress and create barriers to advancement.
I have only browsed Milan Vaishnav, When Crime Pays: Money and Muscle in Indian Politics, but it appears to be a quite interesting political economy take on the (non-optimal) transactional economies from having criminals so deeply involved in Indian politics.
Minxin Pei, China’s Crony Capitalism: The Dynamics of Regime Decay, takes a close look at Chinese corruption, based on a detailed study of two hundred cases.
Give me video games or give me death
Once the craft approaches Mars — a trip of about 20 months or more — the craft will have to get through the atmosphere, reaching a temperature of 1,700°C, and use rockets to lower the craft gently onto the moon.
That is a description of the new Elon Musk plan to settle Mars. He hinted at the ticket price someday being as low as 200k. By the way, space flight is bad for your eyes, and here is Alex on the dangers of space travel.
I get that planet earth someday may be destroyed, but does that give anyone a private incentive to leave for Mars in the meantime?
Seasteading is looking better all the time…
Monday assorted links
2. Christopher Balding on how the Chinese bailouts are going.
3. An excellent Todd Kliman piece applying the Schelling segregation model to DC restaurants.
4. Has the seasteading movement come to an end?
5. Hive Mind: How Your Nation’s IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own; Garrett Jones’s book will be out this fall!
6. Unemployment: what’s really going on?
Assorted links
1. The forthcoming push for (more) Chinese urbanization.
2. In The Great Reset, there is probably no Nashville Symphony Orchestra.
3. Robin Hanson TEDx talk on robot society.
4. Markets in everything: guinea pig armor edition, and more on seasteading.
5. The face slimmer exercise mouthpiece from Japan.
Assorted links
1. Indian ferris wheel (video, recommended; at least five different aspects of this material fascinate me).
2. A critical view of seasteading.
3. Japanese underground bicycle parking, more interesting than it sounds.
4. John Nye on James Buchanan.
5. 12 earth scars.
Assorted links
Charter Cities
Paul Romer's TED talk on charter cities is up and Romer is now writing more about the idea at his Charter Cities Blog. In the TED talk and on the blog Romer gives a "fanciful" example of how a charter city might work:
Imagine
that the United States and Cuba agree to disengage by closing the
military base and transferring local administrative control to Canada…
To
help the city flourish, the Canadians encourage immigration. It is a
place with Canadian judges and Mounties that happily accepts millions
of immigrants. Some of the new residents could be Cuban émigrés who
return from North America. Others might be Haitians who come work in
garment factories that firms no longer feel safe bringing into Haiti…
Initially,
the government of Cuba lets some of its citizens participate by
migrating to the new city. Over time, it encourages citizens to move
instead to a new city that it creates in a special economic zone
located right outside the charter city, just as the Mainland Chinese
let its citizens move into Shenzhen next to Hong Kong.
With
clear rules spelled out in the charter and enforced by the Canadian
judicial system, all the infrastructure for the new city is financed by
private investment. The Canadians pay for the government services they
provide (the legal, judicial, and regulatory systems, education, basic
health care) out of the gains in the value of the land in the
administrative zone. This, of course, creates the right incentives to
invest in education and health. Growth in human capital makes income
grow very rapidly, which makes the land in the zone even more valuable.
It's interesting to compare charter cities to Patri Friedman's concept of seasteading (Alex, Tyler).
Both charter cities and seasteading are motivated by the desire to
break out of conventional political arrangements and create a system
with much greater scope for innovation in rules.
Romer wants
charter cities built on uninhabited land (of which there is plenty),
seasteading is cities built on the sea (even more plentiful). Aside
from the obvious advantage of building on land, charter cities allow
current elites to buy-in and gain from the charter city (ala Shenzhen and in other ways)
and thus probably have a better chance of getting "on the ground."
Charter cities also address a key question about seasteading – will
governments regulate or takeover a successful seastead? A charter city
is an agreement between governments – Cuba agrees to let Canada
import Canadian rules onto a small portion of Cuban property. Cuba
could renege on the deal but it's going to be much harder for Cuba to
renege on Canada than for the U.S. government to regulate or otherwise
control seasteading.
By the way, the fact that Romer wants charter cities built on uninhabitated land with plenty of immigration from the charter nation goes some way to reducing the problem of nationalism that concerns Tyler and also the problem of transplanting legal institutions that concerns Arnold Kling.
We don't have many examples of charter cities in action but Hong Kong is a promising example. Despite nationalism, the agreement with Britain was accepted for over 100 years and it worked. Contra Tyler, we shouldn't think of what happened in 1997 as China
taking over Hong Kong but rather as the final element of Hong Kong taking
over China.
Seasteading does have one big advantage over charter
cities. Seasteading is more radical but it is more open, less
tied to elites, and more flexible so, if it works, it is a better design for what Romer
calls innovation in rules formation.
Google Heads to Sea, Will You?
The NYTimes Bits Blog reports:
The search and advertising company has filed for a patent
that describes a “water-based data center.” The idea is that Google
would create mobile data center platforms out at sea by stacking
containers filled with servers, storage systems and networking gear on
barges or other platforms.This would let Google push computing centers closer to people in
some regions where it’s not feasible, cost-effective or as efficient to
build a data center on land. In short, Google brings the data closer to
you, and then the data arrives at a quicker clip.Perhaps even more intriguing to some, Google has theorized about
powering these ocean data centers with energy gained just from water
splashing against the side of the barges.
Hmmm, do I spy the work of Patri Friedman, libertarian, Googler and seasteading proponent? Perhaps the seasteaders are ensuring that they have good internet access. As you may recall, Paypal entrepreneur Peter Theil is backing the seasteaders so there is more than one Silicon Valley entrepreneur with an eye on the sea.
By the way, the First Annual Seasteading Conference will be held in Burlingame, CA on October 10. The conference is sure to be interesting but shouldn’t it have been held here?