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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
brazenautomaton

opulentjoy asked:

What do you think of Ta-Nehisi Coates's work?

slatestarscratchpad answered:

I’ve only read a little.

He’s obviously an excellent writer.

He has a rare gift for saying interesting things about race that I hadn’t heard before, which is of course rare in such a saturated subject. This includes giving good history lessons about the things other history lesson givers don’t talk about, which is a rare skill.

On the other hand, he’s not a social scientist, and it kind of shows. I argue against some of his case for reparations here: http://slatestarcodex.com/2014/05/26/compound-interest-is-the-least-powerful-force-in-the-universe/

slatestarscratchpad

Sorry, still not seeing it.

Suppose that I am a racist widget salesman, and I have a stereotype that black people are ignorant and gullible. I go door to door, asking black people for $500 for my widgets but asking white people only $10 for my widgets.

If black people consistently agree to pay me $500 for my widgets, why the heck am I not raising the price I ask of white people? On the other hand, if they don’t agree to pay, why am I not lowering the price I ask of them?

brazenautomaton

Because you are a human being, which means that every single decision you ever make is aimed at preserving your self-image and only extends to ensuring your success so far as “I am a person who is successful” is part of your self-image?

If the correctness of your beliefs is part of your self-image, you will ignore opportunities to benefit yourself that would prove your beliefs wrong.

slatestarscratchpad

Can I propose a less misanthropic explanation?

We know black people, even when they have the same income as white people, have a very different pattern of wealth and investments and so on. We know they have less exposure to financial services and less opportunity to get such exposure; we know they have different cultural norms around money.

Maybe bankers weren’t charging black people more because they were racists who thought black people would pay more because they were gullible, maybe they were charging black people more because they were businessmen whose business analysis told them black people would pay more because of their actual business patterns. Given that black people did in fact pay more, this seems a lot more plausible. Yes, they made fun of the people they were swindling in racist terms, but that sounds like the sort of thing you would do when swindling black people.

Source: slatestarscratchpad