In that case, people without children shouldn’t have to pay for any of this. 
I certainly don’t want to fund a neighbor’s desire to impose their superstition 
on an innocent child. 

Pieter wrote:

< But if my neighbour is still paying her taxes like the rest of us, and on top 
of that has to fork out again to send her kids to a private Christian school — 
that's also just not right. A voucher system, to me, seems like a fair 
compromise. It respects both freedom of choice and fairness of contribution. 
Maybe it’s not a perfect solution, but it does stop us from double-charging 
parents for believing something different. > 

From: Friam <[email protected]> on behalf of Pieter Steenekamp 
<[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, June 26, 2025 at 10:33 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Joe Rogan interviewing Bernie Sanders. 

I just want to rewind a bit to what Glenn said earlier in this thread:

"Joe Rogan’s Lies Just Destroyed Public Schools In Texas"
https://youtu.be/sJO_xCw35WI?si=5zr2NGFAGvTQagfM 
<https://youtu.be/sJO_xCw35WI?si=5zr2NGFAGvTQagfM>

I listened to the video, and — as it was presented — my knee did what knees do 
best: it jerked. I found myself instinctively nodding along. But then, 
somewhere between the outrage and the YouTube autoplay, I remembered a tiny 
detail… I don’t actually know enough about the specifics to have a firm 
opinion. So I’m parking my knee and diving into some homework before picking a 
side.

However, for now I wish to zoom out from the details of the Texas school system 
and focus on the principles around this issue:

Full disclosure: I don’t subscribe to the Christian Bible myself. If given a 
choice between a secular school and a religious one — and everything else is 
equal — I’d pick the secular option without hesitation.

But if my neighbour is a Christian and wants her kids to go to a Christian 
school, am I going to criticize her for that? Absolutely not. Not even a 
side-eye.

Now, here’s where it gets interesting. If we’re all chipping in tax money for 
public education, then yes — I’m 100% on board with keeping religion out of 
public schools. That’s not only a fair deal, I would be horrified if any 
religion were included.

But if my neighbour is still paying her taxes like the rest of us, and on top 
of that has to fork out again to send her kids to a private Christian school — 
that's also just not right. A voucher system, to me, seems like a fair 
compromise. It respects both freedom of choice and fairness of contribution. 
Maybe it’s not a perfect solution, but it does stop us from double-charging 
parents for believing something different. 

For me, diversity of opinions and freedom to choose your religion is a very 
good and positive thing. 


On Fri, 27 Jun 2025 at 02:33, Santafe <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: 


On Jun 27, 2025, at 7:31, Marcus Daniels <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: 


Dave writes:

< My 'mysticism', like my hallucinogenic experience, is nothing more than a 
source of what I consider to be "real" data and a supply of fascinating 
questions—never answers. >

Not clear why something that supposedly cannot be captured by mere language 
keeps getting pitched as a real and intersubjective thing via language. 





I am much less bothered by this _in principle_, since I generally hold the two 
premises: 


1. Language is a collection of signals _within_ a system, that are part of 
coordinating states among people; it doesn’t follow that language should 
“contain” or “capture” anything that works as a model “of” the system, in the 
way I would want formalism to have a mappability to phenomena in anything I 
consider science. Often language-in-general will have some mutual information 
with something closer to a model, but that is partly luck and not uniform. 
Languages that do have those mappable qualities tend to be more bespoke, 
because they were under heavy pressure to do that job, which is somewhat 
different from the background social/material criteria for the great majority 
of language (though scientific language and sense can both, I would argue, be 
seen to grow out of their counterparts that have some presence in the broader 
bulk of language and commonsense); and 



2. The term “reality” is a problem in general. It is still too close to its 
origins in the hand-me-down umbrella term from common usage, which gets it 
accepted and used with a fluency that belies its evasive and indefinite 
character. I would put it, in most instances of usage, in the category I call 
“placeholder terms”. They enable the rest of discourse to proceed, because 
something is needed in those slots, but that doesn’t mean they necessarily 
carry very good meanings on their own. To the extent that “reality” has a 
central tendency of meaning, it seems (to me) to be around the notion of “since 
we are always trying to economize on attention, which things are safest to turn 
your back on, in the expectation that they will still be there and not bite you 
in the meantime?” 



So for a language-term to be suggesting that it is trying to coordinate a 
state, with some somewhat reflexive situation-statement acknowleding that it 
does not have a model of the state, together with the state itself’s being so 
loosely handled that it is not clear when the people really are coordinated or 
how they would decide on that, I can certainly see this kind of pattern as an 
ordinary occurrence. Even if some intersubjectivity would be reasonable to 
expect, in view of our vast overlapping constitution shared by all being 
people, primates, mammals, and so on. 



I do like the idea that this is just a version of the normal confusion, for 
things not understood very well (like, quite badly), and that one could find 
ways to do better. 



Eric 





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