Discussion about this post

User's avatar
משכיל בינה's avatar

In one sense, this analysis would support RH's position because it was when America achieved (word chosen advisedly) its lowest level of diversity (1930s - 1965) that it experienced its biggest growth in the welfare state and government spending, which then stalled after the post-1965 growth of diversity.

RH's argument is simultaneously crazy, evil, and retarded. Crazy because it is denies the most obvious thing in the world, namely that importing immigrants from country X makes your country resemble country X more. Evil, because it proposes using immigration as a democracy hack, crashing social trust in order to trick ethnocentric voters into voting for free market policies . Retarded, because it attributes wildly outsized effects of different welfare state models on economic growth. However, one premise is true: countries with diversity are unlikely to become competently governed social democracies, which for Lolbertarian techbros is the worst fate imaginable.

Expand full comment
Graham Cunningham's avatar

And then there's that other kind of 'diversity'... the West's obsession with 'identity'. Heather Mac Donald's The Diversity Delusion provides chilling evidence of how this is harming the West's competitiveness in science and technology: ”A study by the American Association for the Advancement of Science found “systemic anti-LGBTQ bias within STEM industry and academia.” HM comments dryly that “somehow NSF-backed scientists managed to rack up more than two hundred Nobel prizes before the agency realised that scientific progress depends on ‘diversity’. Meanwhile, “driven by unapologetic meritocracy, China is catching up to the United States in science and technology. Identity politics in American science is a political self-indulgence we cannot afford.”

I reviewed The Diversity Delusion here: https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/how-diversity-narrows-the-mind

Expand full comment
4 more comments...

No posts