Author Topic: Stephen Browne's thread  (Read 704 times)

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69384
    • View Profile
Stephen Browne's thread
« on: July 09, 2023, 07:42:10 AM »
Starting a thread for Stephen:

SWBrowne

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 32
    • View Profile
    • Rants and Raves
Re: Stephen Browne's thread - who am I?
« Reply #1 on: July 09, 2023, 07:59:57 AM »
Hi all, I'm Steve Browne.
I'm 72 years old, divorced single dad of two kids, a son 21, and a daughter 16.
After working for years as a garbageman and sewage treatment plant operator and going to university part time, I graduated with an MA in anthropology in 1991 and immediately took off to live in Eastern Europe.
Over the next 13 years I lived and worked in Poland, Bulgaria, and Serbia, traveled widely throughout the region and "made my year" in Saudi Arabia.
I've smuggled cash to support the families of imprisoned dissidents in Belarus, wrote an English program to teach advanced students how to read the slightly archaic dialect in documents important to the history of political liberty, and in 1997 was elected Honorary Member of the Yugoslav Movement for the Protection of Human Rights.
Along the way I got into some scrapes and on one occasion learned what jackboots and rubber truncheons applied to tender places feels like.
I started writing professionally about the things I'd seen and done, like marching down the yellow brick road with the people of Sofia, Bulgaria in the protests against the last coalition government or covering the election that brought down the Milosevic regime from the streets of Belgrade.
Well I was either selling this stuff for beer money or giving it away to journals "of much passion and small circulation." Even I could tell this was stupid so I returned with growing family to the states to study journalism formally.
Since then I've served an apprenticeship in small rural newspapers where I covered... basically everything but sports, but concentrating on city and county government - which after Eastern Europe I find fascinating.
Now semi-retired I work as a stringer covering county government in a couple of southwest Minnesota counties and have a weekly column syndicated in all of three newspapers, which you'll all be seeing more of.
I also practice martial arts, mainly a Wing Chun-derived style and of course FMA.
Please to make your acquaintance.
« Last Edit: July 10, 2023, 10:07:40 AM by SWBrowne »
"As weird as it's gotten, it still hasn't gotten weird enough for me."

SWBrowne

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 32
    • View Profile
    • Rants and Raves
"As weird as it's gotten, it still hasn't gotten weird enough for me."

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69384
    • View Profile
Re: Stephen Browne's thread
« Reply #3 on: July 09, 2023, 09:20:57 AM »
Here is his description of his book "Crisis in the Ruling Class":

This is the print companion to a series of video lectures I started in 2017. The theory has evolved as I discovered others thinking along the same lines. Basically the important points are:
- There is a ruling class because every complex society has a ruling class.
- The historical functions of a ruling class are: arms, land (production), and knowledge.
- A ruling class can be stable as long as it fulfills those functions, loves or at least identifies its self-interest with the country, and is open enough to admit the ambitious but not too open.
- We have a ruling class which is unfit to rule. They do not fight, they are increasingly invested in rent-seeking and influence peddling rather than wealth production, and the knowledge they peddle is crap. (Anything ending in "-Studies.)
- They not only do not love their country, and their civilization, they appear to hate it.
- They have fostered a generation which believes they are owed a place in the ruling class for the price of getting a college degree and holding all the correct opinions within a very narrow range of permissible disagreement.
- They are destroying this country in their desire to feel important.

SWBrowne

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 32
    • View Profile
    • Rants and Raves
Re: Stephen Browne's thread Correction
« Reply #4 on: July 10, 2023, 06:50:57 AM »
"I've smuggled cash to support the families of imprisoned dissident in Bulgaria,"

Should read "in BELARUS."
"As weird as it's gotten, it still hasn't gotten weird enough for me."

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69384
    • View Profile
Re: Stephen Browne's thread
« Reply #5 on: July 10, 2023, 07:30:28 AM »
SWB:  Note that there is a Modify button that enables you to go into your post and make the correction.

SWBrowne

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 32
    • View Profile
    • Rants and Raves
Re: Stephen Browne's thread
« Reply #6 on: July 10, 2023, 10:08:06 AM »
Thanks!
Still learning my way around the controls.
"As weird as it's gotten, it still hasn't gotten weird enough for me."

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69384
    • View Profile
Re: Stephen Browne's thread
« Reply #7 on: July 10, 2023, 12:25:15 PM »
No worries-- glad to have you here.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69384
    • View Profile
Stephen Browne's column this week
« Reply #8 on: July 15, 2023, 05:51:05 PM »
This was my weekly column inspired by Ben & Jerry's virtue signaling about "stolen indigenous land."

Musings on property
By Steve Browne

Well Ben & Jerry’s 4th of July announcement that America was built on stolen indigenous land and should give it back was well received in at least some quarters.
Chief Don Stevens of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation in Vermont noted the corporate headquarters was located on Western Abenaki land and urged opening a dialog with Ben & Jerry’s to work together to uplift their people.
The company itself was sold to multinational corporate giant Unilever in 2000, but founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield are still employed in non-managerial positions under an agreement whereby the ice cream company maintains its political and social activism.
I urge a look at the company’s history. Ben and Jerry are said to be socialists of some sort, but have succeeded very well as venture capitalists. They actually do try to put their money where their mouths are, whatever you think of any given stance they take. (They attempted to end sales in parts of Israel they consider occupied land for example.)
Frequently of course, economic reality catches up with them. After supporting defund the police and the July 4 tweet the parent company has lost an estimated $2.5 billion in market cap due to boycotts.
We shall see what happens, but in the meantime I was prompted to consider the nature of property and how we look at it.
So what is this thing we call “mine” as opposed to “thine”?
I think we probably have a broad general agreement that property consists of: the right to use it, the right to exclude others from using it, the right to the usufruct of it, and the right to sell it.
The devil of course, is in the details. Anyone who has sat in on a permit hearing for a proposed pig farm knows there are some pretty significant hoops one has to jump through to use your land in certain ways.
The whole concept of property in land is actually a late development in human history and the source of a lot of conflict between cultures. (“Late” as in the last 10,000 years or so, since the beginning of agriculture.)
The English philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) came up with a rule of thumb of what defines property: what is found in a state of nature that man “mixes his labor with.”
Interestingly Locke used the example of “the Indian that hunteth the deer” and thereby mixes his labor with it. That is he changes the state the deer was found in, from alive to food. But he does not change the land the deer lives on.
The indigenous peoples of America were quite familiar with changing the nature of land. Half the world’s food crops originated in the Americas, greatly changed by generations of selective breeding from their natural state.
But the Americas are poor in large domestic animals and so agriculture was constrained by lack of a crucial bottleneck resource – manure. The great civilizations of Mexico and Peru could work around this, but in North America horticulturalists had to move their gardens frequently due to soil exhaustion.
When Europeans arrived they brought livestock that produced large quantities of… you get the idea.
And with their livestock and all their… stuff, they brought the idea of permanent land tenure which conflicted with indigenous notions of temporary stewardship. Not for the first time, high civilizations have been in conflict with nomads in the Americas, Asia, and Europe for millennia.
The different notions of what constitutes ownership in land created problems which persist to this day.