Glen writes:

< So, my answer is: Whatever my tribe finds useful.  If that forces me to rent 
a hovel in a crime-ridden neighborhood of Pittsburgh -- or worse yet, Kermit, 
TX -- then that's probably what I'll do.  Luckily, it all hinges on the 
definition of "tribe". >


Is a company a tribe?   Is a (e.g. married) couple a tribe?   Is a political 
party a tribe?  Are anonymous contributing members of a non-profit organization 
a tribe?   Is any group of people that orient around some small but similar set 
of features is a tribe?   Is a group less tribal as the features advanced by 
any member is overlaps relatively little with other members?   What if the 
relative overlap of features is small, but the absolute amount is larger than 
another group with higher relative overlap?   Is tribalism just the 
preoccupation with the group over the purpose for the group?   When people say 
everyone is tribal (which I guess includes me), I feel insulted!   I want a way 
out of this madness.


Marcus

________________________________
From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of uǝlƃ ☣ 
<geprope...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, January 22, 2018 11:18:48 AM
To: FriAM
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Los "países de mierda" le dejan millones de dólares a 
EE.UU.

Yeah, but this raises the fundamental question.  We're used to having "respect 
for persons" ... as if it's somehow imperative to think of humans as ends in 
and of themselves.  As we go from hunter gatherer, through agricultural, 
through industrial, and informational population sizes to something more akin 
to a biofilm covering the surface of the planet, the question isn't about what 
you, as a single cell "like".  The question is one of finding a place where we 
can exploit you to the fullest extent.

Are you really that useful to _us_ (not you) living in New Mexico?  Or could we 
squeeze a little more RoI from you if you lived in CA or Pittsburgh?

I'm not being completely facetious, here.  For concreteness, we were at a 
dinner party a month or so ago and one of us asked "What do you want to do when 
you retire?"  (Of course, I'll never retire ... So there's only one right 
answer: "Mu". ... But I played along, anyway.)  Everyone at the table, 
constituted by relatively well-off white people with white collar jobs, said 
"Travel".  Already being horrified by the very question, this horrified me even 
more, given the carbon footprint of jetting around the globe for no other 
reason than your narcissistic desire to "see the sights".  So I tried to 
deliver my blow softly.  I would simply like to be useful until I die.  So, my 
answer is: Whatever my tribe finds useful.  If that forces me to rent a hovel 
in a crime-ridden neighborhood of Pittsburgh -- or worse yet, Kermit, TX -- 
then that's probably what I'll do.  Luckily, it all hinges on the definition of 
"tribe". 8^)

On 01/22/2018 09:53 AM, Frank Wimberly wrote:
> I grew up on California but I can't move there in retirement because I'm not 
> willing to pay $1 million for a 2 BR 1 bath house.  Now, if Amazon locates 
> it's HQ2 in Pittsburgh I won't be able to move back there either.  
> Fortunately I like New Mexico.

--
☣ uǝlƃ

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