| > Do you think the problem is that they haven't been understood? That's a possibility. U/L didn't get their message across to the public and the public voted against them. Occam's razor. > Also if they're the consolation prize for having chased Uber away, the city will give them concession after concession to make it appear that they made a good choice. You seem to be concluding that the decision made by the city is morally wrong. Many things end up this way in the world, and we manage to move forward in spite of the world's imperfections > That's like saying that if I burned down your factory and got away with it that other business owners would become wary and probably pay protection money. True, but horrid. Yes. I don't know how you perceive the world. In my view, it's mostly good. > No, when companies advertise to me they aren't reaching into my pocket to do so. There was a vote.. > The city is spending taxpayer dollars to lie to the people. People make up their own minds. Flooding them with pro-U/L or pro-fingerprint messages is just a means of sharing information. At the end of the day, people decide for themselves. In America we're lucky to have the freedom to seek out other news sources. As buried as the other side of the story may be, it's better than only being allowed to read one side. > Yeah, approach the city officials and, cough cough, build a relationship. "Mr-Mayor Stadium" would go a long way to making anything happen. That's not what I meant. I meant, any negotiation first requires treating the other person like a person. You're a person, I'm a person, we can shake hands and even agree to disagree without even raising voices. We can also find agreement without money exchanging hands. It might not be exactly what you or I had in mind at the outset of the meeting but it's something. You and I agree that perceptions, or context around facts, are what drive votes. People interpret facts depending on the context. That's something on which we can agree. > Right, unlike the people of Austin. The ones who paid to be lied to, and paid to be denied market rate service, and (if you believe the rape-epidemic stories) paid to be stuck with the rape-mobiles we call taxis. They had a vote. Some voted for U/L, some voted against it. Voters would be offended if you told them they were too mindless to interpret the facts in the right way. Politicians told voters they're intelligent enough to vote, and U/L implies that they're not. Who do you think wins that vote, even before it starts, regardless of the facts? Beginning with the intent to offend people, or thinking that you're smarter than they are, wins zero votes. Again thanks for the discussion! I'm continuing because you seem cool with it. I'm also fine if you want to drop it, as it's been quite a number of responses and I understand if it is getting tiresome. I won't consider it a forfeit, and I respect your opinion. I'm surprised you had no comments about the negotiations in China in the 70s. That example may not be the best since it depends on your familiarity with history of that time & place. But if anti-communists and communists working together doesn't convince you that anything's possible, I've no idea what will. Who do you look up to? Who do you admire? I also still think you're overlooking how Americans feel about security. They want the best there is. Even if a cold medicine's ingredients are the same, people are most likely to buy the one whose package says "guaranteed cure!". That's their perception acting when interpreting facts, or, as you might put it, warping facts. Either way the perception is the driving force. |
It's vanishingly unlikely that the incumbents wouldn't win the election (get their way) when they've been propagandizing to the people.
> You seem to be concluding that the decision made by the city is morally wrong. Many things end up this way in the world, and we manage to move forward in spite of the world's imperfections
It feels like you keep trying to make this something spiritual.
I'm saying the decision is wrong because it's a bad strategy predicated on a mistaken risk analysis used because of lies. That's inefficient and will, almost by definition, be the consolation prize. Something designed as a negotiation with taxi companies who were asked "How much competition do you want?"
>> No, when companies advertise to me they aren't reaching into my pocket to do so.
> There was a vote..
On a heavily propagandized and scaremongered issue which make it essentially meaningless as an indicator of the people's true feelings.
> Flooding them with pro-U/L or pro-fingerprint messages is just a means of sharing information.
No, not really.
And the main issue is that they used the taxpayers own money to advertise and justify the city's side - which was actually mostly lies.
> People make up their own minds.
So no, they really don't. Not when the government itself is selling them messages of rape and terrorism.
> Voters would be offended if you told them they were too mindless to interpret the facts in the right way.
That's very meta-liberal of you to be offended for people who would be offended if only they knew. Especially because the insult was yours.
My contention is that the facts are hidden, and worse, are lies from people they should be able to trust.
You're the one making the implication that being fooled must be shameful.
> We can also find agreement without money exchanging hands. It might not be exactly what you or I had in mind at the outset of the meeting but it's something.
Concessions are as good as cash. That sidesteps the issue of why, and how there's no good reason.
> You and I agree that perceptions, or context around facts
In this context (hah), context means additional facts. Yes, a bullet hole, but also IN a person.
> People interpret facts depending on the context.
And in this context, you're referring to emotional context, and what these people are doing isn't valid reasoning. They're reacting differently to the same stimuli because of unrelated historical events (the propaganda.)
> I also still think you're overlooking how Americans feel about security. They want the best there is.
No, I don't. I work in a similar industry. And no they don't, they want easy choices.
If you ask people what they want they'll say the best, and if you watch them they'll choose the cheapest, but they're happiest when an seemingly affordable option says "Guaranteed" because it frees them of the responsibility to think.
> Either way the perception is the driving force.
Yes, and in this case the very experts we elect to help us reason about this are lying to us, intentionally shaping these all-important perceptions. Then they're polling us right after the 10-minute hate and using those results to drive decision by consensus.
It's meaningless, except that it's being used to steal from all of us.