Politicomaniac

Archive for the ‘The World’ Category

Terrorism in Disguise

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

“Terrorists in disguise” is apparently what China’s officials have started calling Tibetan monks (and nuns) who set themselves on fire in protest at the communists’ continued occupation of Tibet.

Terrorism, in so far as it is defined (since it’s an etymological misnomer,) is generally held to refer to an attack on a state which damages citizens or infrastructure or both.

Setting yourself on fire as an act of protest is pretty much the ultimate peaceful demonstration. I would say it’s pointless, but it was just such an action which sparked the Tunisian revolution, and this arguably the entire Arab Spring, so clearly not. However, it is still further than any protester should have to go.

Perhaps if China were to give Tibet an augmented version of the autonomous status it has conferred on many other regions, say by giving full political and economic control to a locally elected governing body, the deeply peaceful inhabitants of Tibet wouldn’t keep choosing to peacefully, if visibly, kill themselves in frustration.

Killing people is bad, surely?

Friday, July 15th, 2011

I was very sad to see the story about Mumbai this week, as well as the reports that Afghanistan was even more dangerous than last year in the six months to June, (and that four people were killed at Hamid Karzai’s brother’s funeral.)

We should also not forget that there are still significant problems in Sudan and South Sudan, where we hear of “heavy bombing and gunfire,” and while numbers of deaths go unreported (presumably for lack of reliable numbers,) we know of the 70,000 people displaced last month as the creation of the new country was underway, and in Libya, the ongoing civil war continues to claim lives.

It is surprising to me that one of the few commons rules from societies across the world, that killing people is generally considered wrong (even if there are occasional exceptional circumstances), is violated so frequently by people everywhere. To find the causes we need to look in a few different places.

Guns and Ammo

Firstly, we must consider technology. There is a (possibly apocryphal) story that knights of old, wearing armour and carrying a sword onto a battlefield, actually rarely aimed to kill their opponents. The natural human aim in such situations was to disable your opponents; put them out of the fight – but scenes from Gladiator et al of some strident actor slicing off limbs and stabbing people in the abdomen, fire in his eyes, are vastly exaggerated.

The psychological theory is easily understandable; it is harder to kill someone when you can see the expression in their eyes, hear their moans of pain, and so on. Thus, the story goes, killing people with guns, bombs and other weapons which act at a distance makes it much easier to kill much more frequently. I’m not sure I believe in this school of thought, although it may contain an element of truth.

Exceptional Circumstances

The alternative, and in my mind more probable, explanation is that people have chosen to expand the definition of the get-out clauses, to make “allowed killing” more frequent.

I don’t presume to provide any new insight into the Rwandan Genocide, nor to place the blame at the feet of the dutch or native populations, but the radicalisation of the population and the killings that followed were an instance of extending the exceptions to the rules; making killing members of the Tutsi minority more acceptable via a generalised historical and political narrative.

The rules have been twisted in an entirely different way in Libya, where the world’s failure to remove a corrupt, undemocratic and violent leader has led to the justification of a struggle against him, and those who support him. This is also an extension of the normal circumstances where it is considered acceptable to kill someone; Gaddafi’s crimes are not to be tested in a court, but on the battlefield, and most of those paying the price are not in positions of any power in the regime and thus are only marginally responsible at best for the transgressions.

In Northern Ireland during the height of the unionist-republican war, a people who are anecdotally more serious about their christianity than most in the british isles were tearing up the rulebook on what was acceptable, and eagerly murdering and torturing other people simply because they were born on the wrong side of town. This, like Libya, was all justified in terms of a wider political struggle, but ultimately this became hollow, unyielding and uncompromising rhetoric that was eventually defeated by Tony Blair’s devolution pincers – making Northern Ireland’s so-called politicians the exception out of themselves, the Welsh and the Scottish. While we still see riots in Belfast on Orange Day, the politicians have learned that people prefer the language of reconciliation after years and years of polarisation, and the rise of the Alliance Party is testament to this.

I could name many other examples, Gun Ownership in the United States, non-peacekeeping missions by western forces across the middle east (including both Iraq and Afghanistan, which started out as wars against the native governments) and significant amounts of Israel’s “meet stones with tanks” approach to the Palestinian people, as well as their rocket-propelled retaliation, and more, there are always even more instances of this. However, this is a blog post, not a dissertation.

What went wrong?

The examples I have laid out are all failures of several things. Firstly a failure of politics, or rather the failure of politicians to take responsibility for standing up against a populist but dangerous movement. Additionally, a failure of the rule of law, where international crimes are inconsistently and rarely prosecuted, or in the case of the US Gun Ownership where the law itself is plainly wrong. Finally, a failure of morality, where people forgot their common humanity with all members of our unique and wonderful species and descended into insanity.

The third failure cannot exist without at least one of the other two – at least not on the huge scale discussed in all these examples. Political collapse is also only possible if international law is not properly enforced – putting on leader’s shoulders the responsibility to keep their government’s actions within some basic standards is essential to ensuring they act in ensuring the protection of all members of their societies. And so I believe all this comes down to the enforcement of international law – which I’ve already written about.

The Black Hat Defence

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

What is a black hat?

A black hat is an awkward kind of person. They’re the troll, the class clown, the devil’s advocate. Their job, whether self-appointed or not, is to critique, toy with and interrogate someone from an arbitrary, hostile point of view in order to test how well they understand their own views, actions and decisions.

The cartoon above contains a character who embodies this spirit, who regularly does terrible things to reveal other people’s weaknesses and is generally feared and loathed in his world for it. In this encounter he meets a black hat for black hats, and is rightly terrified.

This phenomenon is well used in industry; whether its software engineers peer reviewing one another’s code, managers going over their employees work in an annual review, or companies bidding to run huge government contracts panel-reviewing their delivery models – everyone checks their working, in one way or another.

Sometimes it works

Academia is the prime example of black hattism working its magic – there is always an academic willing to take any damn position, whether they really believe it or just for the notoriety, and academics fight to the death forever. Of course software engineers, seeing themselves as pseudo-academics, are quite happy to be merciless in their criticism too, and routinely are in their self-formed collaborative groups online. Managers actually have a financial incentive to do down their employees come annual review time, since the review almost always feeds into pay rises, and a high-performing but low-cost team is very much in their (or their boss’) direct financial interest.

Sometimes not so much

However there are plenty of cases, especially in industry and government, where hearing a regular robust criticism of your thoughts and actions is not the default way of running things. Senior politicians and business executives rarely expose their own working practise to scrutiny at all, let alone their strategic decisions. Even the government bids aren’t properly scrutinised, because it’s not in the companies interest to spend tens of thousands more on wages to redo all the work they’d just finished.

In government departments, civil servants work off points systems. Taking initiative is not rewarded; instead, each role is mapped out from on high, and your performance is judged within a bunch of predefined criteria; reviewers aren’t allowed to appreciate wider benefits, internal efficiencies and out-of-the-box thinking at all. These points are the basis on which people are promoted to a new role, with new criteria. People aren’t encouraged to think they are encouraged to sit there and get on with it. This is also the experience of the many many people employed up and down the country in jobs that don’t require degrees (well, some of them do, but only because of degree inflation – you don’t actually need a degree to do the job.) This is a massive waste of brain power and talent, and we aren’t being as efficient, as productive or as awesome as we could be, because people aren’t even allowed to black hat their own work.

Essentially I think there is not enough black hattery, devil’s advocacy and general listening to of critical ideas in the world. This is partly a problem with pride, and partly a problem with culture. But we’re going to have to get better at it or we won’t get very far at all. Black hat teams should be made up of hand-picked-but-random groups – someone from the canteen staff, someone from IT, someone from accounts or HR and finally someone from the actual department who you’re testing, and making sure that you have a mixture of newbie and veteran employees, high level managers and staff from the “trenches”. That way you’ll have the maximum diversity in expectations, life experience and way-of-thinking, and at least a sprinkle of knowledge from a relevant discipline.

This is how Markets are supposed to work

I am very confused why companies, particularly the capitalists at the top of them, don’t understand that more criticism is better, not worse. If someone has found a hole in your plan, great – they’ve stopped you falling into that hole! Now stop feeling hurt because a twentysomething woman was cleverer than you, and get on and do what she said! Black hatting should be standard practise at every level of every organisation, all the time, and implementing other people’s better ideas should be a no brainer.

Markets are built on the principal that someone else is trying to beat you. They are watching your every move and will pounce and scoop up half your market share if you make a single mistake. In that situation you not only want everyone working at their most performant, which you only get by regular black hatting at every level, but you also want to have a bunch of black hats of your own who only see what the enemy see – lock them in a building down the road and pay them to tell you exactly what their strategy is, given your latest move. Not only the clash of collaborations, companies, whatever but also the clash of ideas within those collaborations is what makes markets strong, and superior in every sense to top-down planned and designed systems.

This is how Governments are supposed to work

For a political blog getting this far before really laying into politicians must be something of a rarity. In case you’d forgotten for a moment, this principal is identical to the reason we have both elections and parliamentary debates. Politicians are supposed to argue publicly, criticise one another’s ideas mercilessly, and then vote in a chambre based on how many of them were convinced. Of course, thanks to parties and whips, this almost never happens, but it’s nice to have a target to work towards nonetheless.

Similarly, at election time they argue and argue for weeks on end, and eventually people are allowed to vote them in or out, based on who they judged to be the winner of the arguments. It’s a shame they then immediately set about surrounding themselves with advisers who agree with them.

The Black Hat should be a new defence in libel suits and employment tribunals

There are too many companies willing to sue their critics – I’m thinking of Simon Singh and the Homeopaths in particular – or even take out an injunction to hide their incompetence and irresponsibility – I’m thinking of Trafigura – and there should be a legal defence against these unjust attacks on free speech and thought based on black hat theory. It is not cool to slag people off – that’s just plain libel – but a detailed criticism of an organisations operations at any level, whether by a former employee or a journalist, is a legitimate attempt at improving the workings of that organisation by definition, and should be defensible against either libel or, almost worse, an attempted dismissal. Whether the criticism occurs verbally, junior employee to senior or to a meeting, in a company-wide document, like a memo, or in the national press, companies should not be allowed to sack or sue people, and journalists should not be in breach of injunctions, for well applied constructive criticism.

Loyalty vs. Black Hattism

Finally, a quick word about the Labour party and it’s tendency for loyalty, no matter what. There was a blog post recently where one brave Labourite climbed the barricades and hoisted a flag of rational argument. The result? He came very close to being disowned.

Now I’m not going to get into whether Mr Bozier was right or wrong – that’s ultimately a debate for Labour to have amongst themselves – what is interesting is Labour’s reaction to a dissenting voice speaking against the party line; a party line that the base is particularly fond of too. When you get a post on Lib Dem Voice arguing something unpopular sure you get grumbles, and arguments, and a clash of ideas in the comments, but you don’t get people telling each other to leave the party.

Labour need to learn from black hat theory – they need to open up their conference to debate once more – and start generating fitter, stronger, faster policy, and generally being more tolerant about people throwing political ideas around on the net. Then they might actually have something to talk about in debates, instead of the constant faux-fight that we see week in week out. I’m glad the Lib Dems are in government at the moment – and thus having a far greater impact on policy than before – it’s just a shame the official opposition are nowhere near as effective.