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Factualness

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Yeah, yeah, I know. I should stay out of politics and current events; certainly, if I do, I shouldn’t contribute to our current state of tribalism by affiliating with any political tribe.

But I have to, because (Warning: Breaking Political News follows) in case you missed it, the inmates really are trying to run the asylum. Only they’re failing; also, I’m not being fair to the non-metaphorical asylums, let alone their inmates.

Call me naïve; I can’t help thinking that if we could limit every inmate to statements that are factually correct, then our asylum’s governance couldn’t help but improve.

No, this isn’t a particularly novel sentiment. Worse, merely bemoaning that our public discourse has been polluted by Jewish Space Lasers and preposterous braggadocio about power poles and power lines. doesn’t accomplish very much.

Bemoaning is useless. Fortunately, I think I’ve just designed a way to leverage artificial intelligence technologies to improve the quality of our great nation’s political dialog.

It starts with an ankle bracelet.

But not just any ankle bracelet. This one wouldn’t track its wearer’s location to make sure they don’t violate the terms of their parole.

This one would track the factualness of its wearer’s statements. On uttering something completely or mostly false, the ankle bracelet would emit a deafening sound effect (ah-ooooo-ga!(?)) along with a loud voice yelling “Liar, liar, pants on fire!” or something equally pithy. And unless the wearer immediately retracted the statement it would be ‘posted (what used to be “tweeted”) along with a snarky and disparaging commentary.

The goal would be to humiliate any and every public servant who doesn’t respect basic honest discourse.

Who would have to wear one of these undecorative but useful pieces of information technology?

That would be anyone and everyone who holds or aspires to holding elective or high-level appointive office.

But … I can hear critics complain … wouldn’t this violate the office-holder’s first amendment rights?

I don’t think so, for two reasons.

The first: Nobody (and nothing) stops anyone from saying or publishing anything. The magic AI gadget would be responsive, not preventive.

And second: Very much like a driver’s license, we can define running for office as implied consent.

Now I’m the first to caution that machine-learning-style AI insights aren’t completely reliable. The KJR Honesty-Assessment Ankle Bracelet would only be as reliable as its training data.

A technology and process like this would certainly require an appeals process. We might even imagine that this appeals process would be fair, with published retractions when necessary, and with the cost of investigating the appeal paid by the bracelet manufacturer if the appeal is affirmed, but … fair is fair … paid by the offender if the bracelet’s assessment is upheld.

Bob’s last word: This week’s screed might strike you as satire. Satire was, in fact, my plan.

But as long-time readers know I’ve been warning about the dangers of intellectual relativism and the organizational importance of a culture of honest inquiry for a very long time now, and recent events just reinforce that we as a society need to do something, and the fact-checkers we have in place, no matter how good they are, just don’t scale up enough to cope with the scope of the problem..

I’m not yet convinced we need to do anything quite this radical. But a concerted effort to reinforce the importance of factualness in our public dialog? Absolutely. A process that ridicules, lambasts, embarrasses, and otherwise humiliates the propagandists who increasingly control our public dialog?

Sign me up!.

Comments (11)

  • How about every statement tagged as false would automatically be flagged as such and require both backup from the source or his minions and a rebuttal from ‘the opposition’.

  • For some unknown reason, humiliation and blatant hypocrisy no longer appear to provide any guidance whatsoever to our “representatives”. Only keeping their positions that ensure their pocketbooks remain full matter. Hence I proclaim that the bracelet must deduct $1 from their paystub for every lie told. We have to decide whether negative paystubs will be allowed since clearly at a buck per lie (BPL henceforth) many of our rulers ^H^H^H^H^H^H representatives will flirt with insolvency. Will BPL have to adjust for inflation? Will it be adjusted for cost of living. Which state do you think should have double BPL just for their audacity and why is it Florida?

    • Well, I like the idea, but I don’t think it would survive a first amendment challenge.

      Also, I think you got the Florida question backwards. I’d think a volume discount would be in order there.

  • LOL!

    1. While satisfying, I’m not sure it would help, as I believe a significant percentage of the electorate doesn’t care if their preferred politician is lying, so long as that politician speaks the emotional truth of the person voting for them.

    2. I wonder if AI could be used to elucidate the commonalities of successful autocrats of the past 400 years? There should be enough histories, preceding, during, and after the autocrat’s rule, to shed light on how this dynamic works, and maybe, what can interrupt it.

    Thanks for bringing a light on things.

    • Regarding your first point … sigh. I can’t argue with you that it’s a significant percentage. But as I don’t think it’s a majority (yet) there’s still hope that spotlighting falsehoods might help.

      On your second, there are quite a few analyses of this type in print (Google search phrase: “book about autocracy by historian”). And … I don’t see AI playing this role, as machine-learning AIs depend on statistically significant data sets, and I don’t think historians would be able to identify the thousands of autocrats and autocrat attributes an AI would need.

      I do appreciate the satire and irony, though. Gave me a chuckle.

  • Good post.

    I suggest instead of retiring ISS on Dec 18, you rebrand it PS (Political Survivor) Publishing, a division of KCR (Keep the Country Running).

    This offers you (and your readers) two advantages:
    1. You retire from IS
    2. You retire into a vocation that uses your skills for the common good.

    I always enjoy your perspective. Thanks for many years of thoughtful reflections.

    • Thanks for the very flattering suggestion. I’m going to have to decline, on the grounds that I publish political commentary seldom enough that I can conceal my utter ignorance and lack of sophistication pretty easily. If I went to anything more frequent the main outcome would be for readers to understand, belatedly, why I’m hesitant to jump into such crowded waters.

  • The 4th Estate (in particular newspapers) once handled this task, albeit far from perfectly. Social media is far less up to the task.

    I could get onboard with the bracelet solution if there was a physical pain component included.

  • I LOVED your idea! However, after reading the stories about how Alexa was reporting the 2020 election stolen (depending on how you asked the question) and that AI seems prone to ‘hallucinations’ (fabrications and lies) was well as ‘drift’ (something it used to do well, it does poorly as it ‘evolves’) I no longer have confidence that BPL would work reliably.

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