Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Science of politics: election of politicans suffering from the Dunning-Kruger effect

 Simple Definition

The Dunning-Kruger effect is the tendency for people with low ability in a particular area to overestimate their competence, while people with high ability tend to underestimate their competence.In other words:
  • Incompetent people don't know they're incompetent (they think they're better than they are).
  • Highly competent people assume everyone else is as skilled as they are, so they think they're worse (or more average) than they actually are.

Why do many politicians who are elected suffer from the Dunning-Kruger effect? And why do voters repeatedly elect leaders who might be perceived as possessing confidence that exceeds their objective competence?


These are questions that can be analyzed through the lens of political science as a branch of praxeology. These queries touch upon the nature of voter choice, the incentives of political actors, and the structure of the democratic process itself.

Here is a breakdown of the phenomenon using the specified analytical framework, moving from the most certain deductions to more contingent interpretations.

Analysis of the Phenomenon

The situation you describe—voters repeatedly electing leaders who might be perceived as possessing confidence that exceeds their objective competence—is not an anomaly but rather an intelligible outcome of the logical structure of political action.


Class A/B: Praxeological Deductions (Necessary Implications)

These are the logically necessary, structural reasons why such outcomes occur, derived from the axiom of human action.

  1. Methodological Individualism: First, we must deconstruct the collective term "the people." "The people" do not act; only individuals act. An election outcome is the aggregate result of millions of individual voters, each purposefully using their vote as a means to achieve their own subjectively valued ends.

  2. The Logic of Voter Choice vs. Consumer Choice: The incentive structure for a voter is fundamentally different from that of a consumer in a market.

    • Concentrated Benefit, Diffused Cost: When you buy a product, you personally bear 100% of the cost and receive 100% of the benefit. This creates a powerful incentive to be well-informed.
    • Infinitesimal Impact, Socialized Consequences: In a mass election, the probability that your single vote will decide the outcome is virtually zero. However, the consequences of the winning candidate's policies (good or bad) are socialized across the entire population. This creates what is known as rational ignorance: the cost for an individual to become deeply informed on policy and candidate competence is high, while the personal benefit of casting a well-informed vote (vs. an uninformed one) is infinitesimally small. It is therefore a logical, means-ends decision for most individuals to remain relatively uninformed.
  3. The Absence of a Profit-and-Loss Test: In the market, an entrepreneur's competence is tested by profit and loss. If they are incompetent (i.e., they use scarce resources to produce something consumers value less than the resources used), they suffer losses and eventually go out of business. A political leader faces no such test.

    • Success is Re-election: A politician's "success" is measured by winning elections and maintaining popular approval, not by demonstrating through economic calculation that their policies created more value than they destroyed.
    • Separate Skill Sets: The skills required to be an effective policy manager (understanding economics, logistics, law) are entirely different from the skills required to win elections (charisma, fundraising, powerful rhetoric, mobilizing coalitions). A political system, by its nature, selects for the latter. A candidate can be a master of electoral politics while being a novice at governance, and the system provides no mechanism to automatically correct this.

Class C: Empirical Political Science (Probabilistic Patterns)

These are observed regularities that calibrate the praxeological deductions.

  • Heuristic Voting: Empirical studies consistently show that voters do not, and cannot, research every detail. Instead, they rely on cognitive shortcuts or "heuristics." The single most powerful heuristic is party identification. Other common heuristics include candidate likability, perceived strength, incumbency, and simple endorsements.
  • The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The psychological finding you reference suggests that individuals with low ability at a task tend to overestimate their ability. If this is a recurring human cognitive pattern, it is plausible that individuals who are objectively incompetent at the complex task of governance may be more likely to seek political office in the first place, precisely because they are unaware of their own limitations.

Class D: Thymological Interpretation (Plausible Motives)

This level involves reconstructing the subjective "why" behind an individual voter's choice, which goes beyond pure logic and into the realm of values, beliefs, and emotions.

  • Expressive Voting: For many, the act of voting is not an instrumental attempt to produce a specific policy outcome, but an expressive act. It's a way to signal one's identity, virtue, and allegiance. A voter may choose a candidate not because they are a competent administrator, but because they "fight for us," "own the other side," or embody a particular cultural identity. The psychological benefit of this expression is the voter's primary end.
  • Distrust of Technocracy: A significant portion of voters may possess a deep-seated distrust of "experts," "elites," or "the establishment." In this context, a candidate who displays brash overconfidence and dismisses expert consensus is not seen as incompetent, but as an authentic and courageous outsider. Their perceived lack of traditional qualification becomes a feature, not a bug.
  • Prioritizing Different Competencies: A voter might rationally prioritize a candidate's perceived competence in one area (e.g., "being a strong leader," "communicating with the common person") over competence in another (e.g., understanding monetary policy). The choice reflects the voter's subjective hierarchy of values for what a leader should be.

Synthesis: What It Says About the People and the Process

  1. About the Process: The democratic election process, due to its inherent structure (socialized consequences, lack of a profit-loss mechanism), systematically incentivizes rational ignorance among voters and selects for skills related to political marketing rather than technical governance. It does not contain a feedback loop that reliably weeds out policy incompetence in the way a market weeds out economic incompetence.

  2. About the People (as Individuals): It says that individuals are acting purposefully and instrumentally within that system. Their actions are intelligible. They are using the low-cost means of a single vote to achieve subjective ends, which are often expressive and identity-based rather than focused on optimizing public administration. Given the high cost of information and the low impact of their vote, choosing candidates based on heuristics and expressive satisfaction is a predictable and understandable course of action. It is not necessarily a sign of collective "failure" but an expected outcome of individual choices under the rules of the political game.

In addition:

What can be done to solve this problem?

From the perspective of the praxeological science of politics, the question "What can be done?" is rephrased as: "If one's end is to mitigate the observed effects (such as the election of leaders perceived as incompetent), what means are available, and what are the necessary consequences of those means?"

As a value-neutral analyst, I cannot advocate for a specific end or declare one set of institutional arrangements "better" than another. However, I can analyze the logical implications of various proposed changes to the system's rules. Each proposal attempts to alter the incentives faced by individual actors (voters, politicians, donors, etc.).

Here are three broad categories of proposed changes and their praxeological analysis.


Category 1: Proposals to Change the Electorate

This approach assumes the problem lies with the voter and seeks to engineer a more "qualified" electorate.

  • Proposed Means: Implementing systems of "epistocracy" or restricted suffrage, where the right to vote is tied to demonstrating a certain level of political knowledge (e.g., passing a voter qualification exam).
  • Praxeological Analysis (Class A/B):
    • Shifted Conflict: This does not eliminate political conflict; it shifts it. The new central point of conflict becomes the design of the qualification test. The group in power will have an overwhelming incentive to design a test that favors its ideological allies and disenfranchises its opponents.
    • New Power Center: The power to decide who gets to vote becomes an immense political prize. The problem of competence is simply moved from "who is a competent leader?" to "who is competent to design the test that selects the competent voters?"
    • Incentive to Manipulate: Aspiring political leaders would no longer focus solely on persuading a mass electorate, but on influencing the test-designing body or teaching their supporters how to pass the test. The "skill set for success" changes, but the underlying logic of political competition remains.
    • Necessary Social Cleavage: This would formally create two classes of individuals: a ruling class of voters and a ruled class of non-voters, with predictable consequences for social cohesion and resentment.

Category 2: Proposals to Change the Rules of Voting & Campaigning

This approach focuses on altering the mechanics of how preferences are aggregated and how candidates compete.

  • Proposed Means: Implementing campaign finance limits, ranked-choice voting, or proportional representation.
  • Praxeological Analysis (Class A/B):
    • Campaign Finance Limits: These are a form of price control on political speech and influence. Praxeologically, they cannot eliminate the human desire to influence outcomes. Instead, they force this action into different, often less transparent, channels. If direct monetary donations are limited, influence will be pursued through other means: favorable media coverage (an "in-kind" contribution), celebrity endorsements, corporate-sponsored "issue ads," or harnessing non-profit organizations. Such limits often act as an incumbency-protection device, as challengers find it harder to raise the funds necessary to achieve name recognition against an established political figure.
    • Ranked-Choice/Proportional Systems: These change the strategic calculations for voters and candidates. They may reduce the "spoiler effect" and allow voters to express more nuanced preferences. However, they do not eliminate rational ignorance. The cost for a voter to become deeply informed about the complex implications of a ranked-choice ballot or the platforms of multiple small parties is even higher than in a two-party system. These systems often lead to coalition governments, which shifts the central political action from the general election to post-election bargaining among party elites, a process even further removed from direct voter oversight.

Category 3: Proposals to Change the Scope and Scale of Government

This approach posits that the problem is not who is chosen, but how much power they are given to wield. It seeks to limit the stakes of political contests.

  • Proposed Means: Constitutional constraints, decentralization (federalism), and the "depoliticization" of certain spheres of life (e.g., the economy).
  • Praxeological Analysis (Class A/B):
    • Decentralization: Moving power from a central government to smaller, local units (states, cities) fundamentally alters the incentive structure.
      • Institutional Competition: It creates competition among political units. If a local government enacts policies that are demonstrably destructive, individuals and capital can more easily "vote with their feet" by moving to a neighboring jurisdiction. This introduces a quasi-market feedback mechanism (population loss, declining tax base) that is absent at the level of a large nation-state.
      • Reduced Stakes: The consequences of a single "bad" mayor are far less catastrophic than the consequences of a "bad" president, thus lowering the cost of error.
    • Constitutional Limits (Depoliticization): This involves removing entire areas of human action from the domain of political decision-making via strong, enforceable constitutional rules. If, for example, the government is constitutionally forbidden from intervening in monetary policy or setting prices, then the competence of politicians on these matters becomes irrelevant because they lack the means to act in those areas. The problem of electing an incompetent economic planner is "solved" by not having a central economic planner. The political conflict then shifts to the appointment of judges and the interpretation of the constitution itself, but the scope of day-to-day political power is reduced.

Synthesis

In summary, the praxeological science of politics analyzes these "solutions" not as cures, but as different sets of rules that will predictably alter the means-ends calculations of individuals.

  • Changing the electorate creates a new struggle over who gets to be a voter.
  • Changing the voting rules redirects political strategy but does not eliminate the core problem of rational ignorance.
  • Changing the scope of government limits the potential damage of political error by reducing the power concentrated in a single entity.

Each approach presents a different set of trade-offs and consequences. The analysis itself cannot state which is "best," as that is a value judgment. It can only state with certainty what must logically follow from changing the rules of the game.

Finally:

From a pro-conservative perspective, what can be done?

Here is an explanation of how this framework would be used to derive a strategy consistent with conservative goals.

A conservative's primary ends are typically understood to include individual liberty, fiscal responsibility, the preservation of established institutions (ordered liberty), and a deep skepticism of concentrated power and radical social planning.

Given these ends, here is how the praxeological framework would analyze the problem you've described from a conservative perspective.


Analysis from a Pro-Conservative Perspective

From this viewpoint, the phenomenon of voters electing overconfident and incompetent leaders is not a flaw to be corrected by finding "smarter" voters or "better" politicians. Instead, it is seen as an inherent and unavoidable feature of mass democracy. The problem is not the people who occupy the office, but the immense power vested in the office itself.

The conservative, informed by praxeology, would argue that any system granting a small group of individuals coercive power over millions will inevitably attract those with hubris and produce suboptimal outcomes. The core issue is the existence of a centralized tool of immense power that is "up for grabs."

Therefore, the recommended means would not be aimed at "improving the voters" or "fixing the politicians," but at radically limiting the damage any elected official can do. The strategy is one of risk mitigation.

Class A/B: Praxeological Deductions for Conservative Ends

  1. Rejecting Technocratic "Fixes": A conservative would be profoundly skeptical of proposals like epistocracy (rule by the knowledgeable).

    • Praxeological Implication: This merely shifts the locus of power to a committee of "experts" charged with designing the voter test. This new committee becomes the ultimate political prize, and its members are just as subject to bias, hubris, and political pressure as any elected official. This is seen as a utopian and dangerous form of social engineering, which runs contrary to the conservative disposition.
  2. Focusing on the Scope of Power: The most logically consistent means to achieve conservative ends is to reduce the size and scope of the political domain itself. If a politician's job is constitutionally limited, their personal competence or incompetence in areas outside that job description becomes irrelevant.

    • Decentralization (Federalism): This is the primary tool. Power should be devolved to the smallest, most local unit possible. A city council suffering from the Dunning-Kruger effect can cause localized harm, but individuals and businesses can move to the next town. This "voting with your feet" introduces a real-world, high-cost feedback mechanism that punishes bad governance and rewards good governance. A President or Congress suffering from the same effect can cause catastrophic, inescapable harm to an entire nation. Decentralization contains the "blast radius" of political error.
    • Constitutional Cages: The goal is to make it impossible for politicians to intervene in certain areas. This involves strong, unbreachable constitutional amendments.
      • Economic Sphere: A balanced budget amendment, strict caps on taxation and spending, and the prohibition of a central bank's ability to create money ex nihilo. If a politician cannot run massive deficits or manipulate the currency, they are structurally prevented from making grand, fiscally ruinous promises. The market's profit-and-loss system, not political whim, is left to coordinate economic activity.
      • Regulatory Sphere: The formal removal of powers from the central government over areas like education, healthcare, and energy, returning them to the private or local sphere.

Class D: Thymological Interpretation

From a conservative viewpoint, the "mass of people" you describe are not necessarily suffering from a cognitive defect. Rather, they are responding to the incentives of a system that offers them the perceived "benefit" of voting for politicians who promise them security, subsidies, or retribution against their enemies, all at a cost that is diffused across 330 million other people. The desire for "free" benefits is a timeless human motive.

The conservative solution is not to try to educate this motive away—which is seen as a futile, utopian project—but to make it impossible for the political system to fulfill the desire. If the government is constitutionally barred from handing out such favors, the incentive for voters to demand them and for politicians to promise them is severely diminished.

Synthesis: The Conservative Recommendation

To prevent the election of unwise politicians from leading to national ruin, the consistent conservative strategy is not to perfect the electorate but to starve the state.

It is a strategy of profound skepticism about political power. It concludes that since we can never guarantee wise and virtuous rulers, the only rational and prudent course of action is to ensure that any ruler, wise or foolish, virtuous or corrupt, has as little power as possible. The solution to the problem of a flawed political process is, therefore, less politics.


Sources:

The sources can be grouped according to the three pillars of the analytical framework: Praxeology, Empirical Calibration, and Thymology.

1. Core Praxeological Foundations (Certainty Class A/B)

These works establish the entire deductive system of the science of human action, from which the analysis of political action is derived.

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action: A Treatise on Economics: This is the cornerstone. It systematically elaborates the science of praxeology from the axiom of action. All core concepts I use—means-ends, methodological individualism, the impossibility of economic calculation under socialism, the logic of interventionism—are rigorously developed here.

  • Ludwig von Mises, Bureaucracy: This is the seminal work analyzing the fundamental difference between bureaucratic management (rule-following in the absence of a price mechanism) and profit management (economic calculation via market prices). It is the direct source for the analysis of why government institutions cannot be "run like a business" and why competence is measured differently.

  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market: This work systematizes and extends Misesian praxeology. The Power and Market section, in particular, is a comprehensive praxeological analysis of every conceivable form of government intervention in the economy, deducing their necessary consequences.

  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Economic Science and the Austrian Method: This provides the explicit epistemological defense of the framework. It explains why the science of human action is a priori and deductive, like logic or mathematics, and why its theorems are not "testable" or "falsifiable" by contingent empirical data, a key constraint on my analysis.

2. Framework for Understanding Motives (Certainty Class D)

This deals with the interpretation of specific historical actions and motivations, for which praxeology provides the logic but not the content.

  • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History: An Interpretation of Social and Economic Evolution: In this work, Mises formally introduces the concept of Thymology. He distinguishes it from praxeology as the discipline concerned with understanding the specific, contingent, and subjective content of human choices—their values, beliefs, and "in-order-to" motives. My use of thymological interpretation to explain why a voter might choose a certain candidate is drawn directly from this Misesian concept.

3. Concepts from Complementary Fields (Used for Calibration & Interpretation)

My framework allows for the integration of concepts from other fields, provided they are kept in their proper epistemological place—as tools for thymological interpretation or empirical calibration, not as challenges to praxeological law.

  • Public Choice Theory (e.g., James Buchanan & Gordon Tullock, The Calculus of Consent): The concept of rational ignorance is a central finding of this school. While fully compatible with and deducible from praxeology, Public Choice theorists have provided extensive empirical and theoretical work on the specific incentive structures within democratic systems. My analysis of voter incentives draws heavily on these findings as a specific application of the broader praxeological framework.

  • Empirical Psychology (David Dunning & Justin Kruger): The Dunning-Kruger effect is a finding from experimental social psychology. In my analysis, it is used strictly as a thymological tool—a plausible, empirically observed psychological tendency that can help provide a narrative for why certain individuals might overestimate their competence and seek political office. It is a Class D (plausible narrative) insight, not a Class A (apodictic certainty) theorem.

In summary, my analysis is built upon the Mises-Rothbard-Hoppe tradition of praxeology, using its core logic as the foundation and employing concepts from fields like Public Choice and psychology as interpretive aids, all while respecting the strict hierarchy of certainty. 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Science of politics: seizure and control of Kharg Island by the US

 

Recent reports (March 20–23) indicate the Trump administration is actively considering a follow-on ground operation—either a blockade or outright occupation/seizure of Kharg Island—to coerce Iran into reopening the Strait of Hormuz. This would likely involve US Marines (thousands are deploying or en route, including amphibious units like those with the USS Boxer). Discussions stem from the island's role as Iran's primary oil export hub (~90% of crude exports), making it an economic choke point. No final decision has been made, and recent diplomatic signaling (Trump postponing energy strikes for talks) suggests seizure is not imminent but remains a live option if negotiations fail.

Analyzing the hypothetical scenario of the US capturing and controlling Kharg Island involves applying the science of politics as a branch of praxeology. This framework allows for a value-neutral analysis of the necessary consequences of such an action.

                        Analysis #1

Now, analyzing the possible seizure through the three lenses you requested:Praxeology (Misesian praxeology: logic of human action, purposeful behavior, means-ends framework)Praxeology starts from the axiom that individuals act purposefully to remove uneasiness, choosing means to achieve ends. States/governments act as aggregates of human actors (leaders, military planners) with their own hierarchies of values.US ends — Reopen the Strait of Hormuz for global shipping (reducing oil price shocks and economic damage to allies/US consumers), weaken Iran's war-making capacity (oil revenue funds missiles/drones/proxy attacks), and force a quick negotiated end to the conflict on favorable terms (e.g., nuclear concessions, halt to attacks on Israel/Gulf states). Seizure would be a means to inflict maximum economic pain without full mainland invasion.

Iranian ends — Survive regime-threatening pressure, maintain deterrence (by threatening escalation), preserve revolutionary credibility (defend "crown jewel" territory), and rally domestic/international support by portraying US as aggressor.

Logical tension — Seizure is a high-leverage means for the US (control oil lifeline → collapse Iranian finances → regime pressure), but it requires Iran to value capitulation over escalation. If Iranian actors conclude that losing Kharg irreversibly threatens regime survival, they may respond with asymmetric means (mines, swarms, proxies, strikes on US bases/Gulf oil) that increase US uneasiness more than the original Hormuz closure. Praxeologically, the action only succeeds if the US correctly ranks Iranian value scales (economic pain > honor/escalation risk) — history (e.g., Iran-Iraq War resilience) suggests otherwise.


Thymology (understanding/motives of human actors, "Verstehen" of historical/psychological context)Thymology involves empathetic reconstruction of motives based on historical patterns and cultural/ideological context.US side (Trump-era actors) — Motivated by "peace through strength," aversion to prolonged wars, desire for quick "wins," and economic nationalism (high oil prices hurt US voters). Trump has long viewed Iran oil assets as leverage (comments from 1980s onward echo this). Motive: Demonstrate decisive action to end conflict rapidly, avoid "forever war" optics, and claim victory (seizing Kharg as a "trophy" like Iwo Jima analogies from some supporters).

Iranian side (IRGC/regime hardliners) — Deep ideological commitment to resistance against US/Israel ("Great Satan"), historical memory of 1953 coup/oil nationalization, and fear that yielding Kharg signals regime collapse (invites internal revolt). Motive: Frame any US landing as existential invasion, justifying total mobilization/escalation. Khamenei/IRGC likely see defense of Kharg as non-negotiable for legitimacy.

Clash — US thymos (pride in overwhelming force/quick resolution) meets Iranian thymos (pride in defiance/martyrdom). Seizure risks miscalculation: US expects rational economic surrender; Iran expects symbolic last stand.


Empiricism (historical evidence, observed patterns from similar cases)Empirical record is cautionary for large-scale amphibious/seizure ops in contested littorals:Successful precedents (limited scope) — US/Falklands (UK 1982: retaking islands from Argentina), Grenada (1983), Panama (1989) — quick ops against weaker opponents with naval/air superiority.

Failure/warning precedents — Gallipoli (1915: disastrous Allied landing), Dieppe Raid (1942: heavy losses), Inchon (1950: success but followed by prolonged war), Falklands again (Argentina lost despite defending islands). More relevant: Iran's own asymmetric playbook (1980s Tanker War: mines/small boats harassed superior US navy; 2019–2020 attacks on shipping despite US presence).

Modern context — Drones, anti-ship missiles (Iran has thousands), layered defenses on/near Kharg (Tor-M1, coastal batteries), and proximity (~15–20 miles from mainland) make holding the island extremely costly. US has air/electronic superiority, but sustaining troops under sustained barrage (missiles/drones) would require massive resources. No recent US amphibious seizure against peer/near-peer with modern weapons has occurred; closest analogs (e.g., simulated wargames) show high US casualties/risk of escalation.

Current indicators — US has struck Kharg's defenses but avoided oil facilities; Marine deployments signal capability, but Trump's recent postponement of energy strikes for talks suggests seizure is hedged (high-risk last resort).


Overall synthesis — Praxeologically, seizure is a coherent high-leverage means for US ends but hinges on Iranian mis-ranking of values. Thymologically, motives clash deeply (decisive victory vs. existential resistance). Empirically, history shows amphibious seizures against determined defenders are rarely cheap/quick and often escalate. The probability appears moderate (planning exists, assets moving) but risky — likely a coercive threat more than inevitable action unless Hormuz stays fully closed and talks collapse. If executed, expect intense short-term fighting, oil shock amplification, and high chance of broader escalation rather than clean resolution.


                         Analysis #2

This analysis can be structured according to different levels of certainty.

Class A/B: Apodictic and Directionally Certain Consequences (Praxeology)

These are the necessary, logical implications derived from the axiom of human action, applied to an act of coercion like the seizure of a strategic asset.

  1. Forcible Reallocation of Control: The most immediate and certain consequence is the transfer of control over a scarce, valuable resource (the Kharg Island oil terminal) from one group of individuals (acting as the Iranian state) to another (acting as the US state) through coercion, not voluntary exchange. The individuals who previously directed the use of this asset are now prevented from doing so.

  2. Disruption of Economic Calculation: For the Iranian state, Kharg Island is a primary means to acquire revenue (foreign currency) through the sale of oil. The loss of this facility makes rational economic calculation regarding state finances impossible in its previous form. The Iranian state's means to achieve its chosen ends (funding its military, bureaucracy, social programs, etc.) are drastically and suddenly reduced. It must now find alternative means or abandon some of its ends.

  3. Creation of Shortage and Price Effects: The seizure would abruptly remove a significant quantity of oil from the world market. Praxeologically, if the supply of a good is coercively reduced while demand remains unchanged, its market-clearing price must rise. This is not a probabilistic forecast but a logical certainty. Therefore, global oil prices would necessarily tend to increase. This creates a "shortage" at the previously prevailing price, meaning individuals who wish to buy at that price can no longer do so.

  4. Intervention-Driven Discoordination: This act of intervention creates massive discoordination.

    • For Iran's Customers: Individuals and firms in countries that import Iranian oil (e.g., China) would find their planned economic activities disrupted. They must now seek more expensive alternative supplies or curtail their energy consumption, incurring higher costs either way.
    • For the Global Market: The entire structure of production that relies on the previous price and availability of oil is thrown into disarray. Resources must be reallocated throughout the global economy to adjust to the new, higher energy prices.

Class C: Probabilistic Magnitudes and Patterns (Empirical Calibration)

These are contingent effects whose direction is known from praxeology but whose magnitude, speed, and specific pattern depend on empirical conditions.

  1. Magnitude of the Price Spike: While praxeology dictates prices will tend to rise, the extent of the rise is an empirical question. It would depend on factors such as:

    • The percentage of global oil supply that flows through Kharg Island.
    • The elasticity of supply from other producers (e.g., how quickly can Saudi Arabia, US shale producers, or others increase output to compensate?).
    • The size of strategic petroleum reserves held by major consuming nations.
    • Historical data from previous supply shocks (e.g., the 1973 oil crisis, the Iran-Iraq War) could provide a probabilistic range for the price increase.
  2. Nature of the US Administration: The US control of the island would be a bureaucratic, not an entrepreneurial, undertaking. Its success would be measured by adherence to military and political rules (e.g., "secure the perimeter," "prevent sabotage," "await further orders"), not by a profit-and-loss calculation. Empirically, such military administrations of economic assets tend to be less efficient in a commercial sense than private operators, as their goals are strategic, not economic.

Class D: Plausible Case Narratives (Thymology)

This involves interpreting the subjective motives and beliefs of the specific actors involved. This is the realm of plausible explanation, not certainty.

  1. Motives of US Actors: The "in-order-to" motives for political decision-makers ordering the seizure could be varied:

    • To cripple the Iranian state's ability to fund its military and regional proxies, thereby forcing it to capitulate or negotiate on US terms.
    • To demonstrate overwhelming military capability and resolve to both adversaries and allies.
    • To secure a strategic chokepoint in the Persian Gulf.
    • To respond to domestic political pressure for a decisive action against Iran.
  2. Motives of Iranian Actors: The response of Iranian leaders would be shaped by their subjective understanding of the event:

    • They might perceive it as an existential threat and an act of war demanding a massive, if asymmetric, military response (e.g., missile attacks on US assets, activation of proxy forces, attempts at terrorism).
    • They might view it as a profound national humiliation, requiring a response to maintain legitimacy with their domestic population and hardline supporters.
    • They might interpret it as the prelude to a full-scale invasion, shaping their defensive and retaliatory strategy accordingly.

In summary, a praxeological analysis concludes with certainty that seizing Kharg Island would forcibly reallocate resources, disrupt Iran's state finances, and cause global oil prices to rise. The magnitude of these effects is a probabilistic question answered by empirical data, while the specific choices made by leaders on both sides would depend on their subjective motives and interpretations, which can only be understood thymologically.


In addition:

Empirical information included:

Here is an analysis of the hypothetical scenario that integrates empirical information to calibrate the praxeologically derived conclusions, while maintaining the strict epistemological hierarchy of the framework.


Analyzing the hypothetical US capture and control of Kharg Island requires a multi-layered approach. We begin with the necessary deductions of praxeology and then use empirical data to calibrate the potential magnitude of these effects and provide context for thymological interpretations.

Class A/B: Apodictic and Directionally Certain Consequences (Praxeology)

The logical structure of the event remains unchanged. The seizure is an act of coercion that forcibly reallocates control over a scarce resource. The necessary consequences are:

  1. Forcible Reallocation: Control over the Kharg Island oil terminal is transferred from the individuals acting as the Iranian state to the individuals acting as the US state.
  2. Disruption of Economic Calculation: The Iranian state loses its primary means of acquiring foreign currency, crippling its ability to rationally plan its expenditures.
  3. Creation of a Shortage and Price Effects: The removal of oil supply from the market, with demand unchanged, must cause the market-clearing price to tend upward.

Empirical Context: The significance of these deductions is illuminated by data. Kharg Island is not a minor asset; it is the terminal through which an estimated 90% of Iran's crude oil exports flow. This makes the praxeological effect of "disrupted calculation" for the Iranian state exceptionally severe.

Class C: Probabilistic Magnitudes and Patterns (Empirical Calibration)

Here we use empirical data not to "test" the above truths, but to estimate their real-world scale.

  1. Magnitude of the Supply Shock:

    • Volume: In recent years, Iran's oil exports have fluctuated due to sanctions, but have often been in the range of 1.3 to 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd). In a global market of roughly 100 million bpd, this represents 1.3% to 1.5% of the total global supply.
    • Price Impact: While 1.5% may seem small, the oil market is highly sensitive to marginal changes. Historical precedent provides a probabilistic guide:
      • The 2019 drone strike on Saudi Arabia's Abqaiq and Khurais facilities temporarily removed 5.7 million bpd (over 5% of global supply). This single event caused Brent crude futures to jump by 19.5% in one trading session, the largest such increase in decades.
      • The 1990 invasion of Kuwait removed roughly 4.3 million bpd from the market. In the following two months, oil prices more than doubled.
    • Conclusion: Based on these historical regularities, the removal of 1.5 million bpd would almost certainly trigger an immediate and significant price spike, plausibly in the range of 5-15%, with further increases depending on the market's perception of the conflict's duration and potential for escalation.
  2. Countervailing Factors: The ultimate price level would depend on the market's ability to compensate.

    • OPEC+ Spare Capacity: The primary buffer is the spare production capacity held by other producers. This is estimated to be 2-3 million bpd, concentrated mostly in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Deploying this capacity could, over weeks or months, replace the lost Iranian barrels, but it is not instantaneous.
    • Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): Major consuming nations (IEA members) hold vast emergency reserves. The US alone holds several hundred million barrels. A coordinated release from the SPR could be used to immediately cushion the price shock while other production comes online.
    • Bureaucratic vs. Market Operation: Empirically, the US military's control of the facility would be a bureaucratic operation focused on security, not a commercial one focused on maximizing output. This suggests that even under US control, the facility's return to service for the global market would be slow and subject to political, not economic, logic.

Class D: Plausible Case Narratives (Thymology)

We can use historical actions and stated doctrines to construct more concrete interpretations of the actors' motives.

  1. Motives of US Actors: A decision to seize Kharg Island would likely be interpreted by its proponents as the ultimate application of the "maximum pressure" campaign seen from 2018-2020, which used sanctions to try and reduce Iran's oil exports to zero. The "in-order-to" motive would be to physically sever the Iranian state's primary revenue stream, thereby forcing it to capitulate on its nuclear program and regional activities. It would also be seen as a way to re-establish perceived US dominance in the Persian Gulf.

  2. Motives of Iranian Actors: The Iranian leadership's response would be shaped by its well-established doctrine of asymmetric warfare and its "Axis of Resistance" ideology.

    • Historical Precedent: During the "Tanker War" of the 1980s, Iran responded to attacks on its shipping by mining sea lanes and attacking neutral tankers. More recently, Iran and its proxies have been linked to drone and missile attacks on Saudi energy infrastructure and ships in the Gulf.
    • Plausible Response: A thymological interpretation suggests Iran would not seek a conventional battle it would lose. Instead, its leaders would likely perceive the need to demonstrate a credible retaliatory capability to maintain domestic and international standing. This would plausibly translate into actions such as:
      • Attempting to close the Strait of Hormuz (through which ~20% of global oil passes) via mines, anti-ship missiles, and fast-attack craft.
      • Launching drone or missile attacks on the energy infrastructure of US allies in the region (e.g., in Saudi Arabia or the UAE).
      • Activating proxy forces (like Hezbollah in Lebanon or the Houthis in Yemen) to attack US or allied interests.

In summary, the praxeological certainty of economic disruption is given scale by empirical data: the loss of 1.5 million bpd would trigger a significant price shock, moderated by spare capacity and strategic reserves. The thymological analysis, informed by past behavior, suggests the event would be seen by the US as the culmination of a pressure strategy and by Iran as an existential threat demanding a severe, asymmetric response that would likely widen the conflict.


Sources:

The sources for the previous response are of two distinct types, corresponding to the different pillars of the analytical framework.

1. Methodological and Theoretical Sources

The core framework—the logic of praxeology, the method of thymology, and the epistemological distinction between them—remains grounded in the same foundational texts of the Austrian School as cited previously. These sources provide the analytical lens through which the facts are interpreted.

  • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action: For the deductive logic of price formation, supply shocks, and the consequences of intervention.
  • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History: For the distinction between a priori theory (praxeology) and the interpretation of contingent historical events (thymology).
  • Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market: For the systematic application of praxeological principles to acts of coercive intervention.

2. Empirical and Historical Data Sources

The specific facts, figures, and historical precedents used to calibrate the praxeological deductions (Class C) and inform the thymological narratives (Class D) are drawn from publicly available, standard sources in the fields of energy economics and international security. The above is a synthesis of this generally accepted data within the rigorous praxeological framework.

The sources for the specific data points in the last response include:

  • Energy Market Data (Supply, Prices, Infrastructure):

    • International Energy Agency (IEA): The primary source for data on global oil supply and demand (e.g., the ~100 million bpd figure), spare production capacity, and analysis of market shocks.
    • U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA): A key source for statistics on oil flows, strategic reserves, and the importance of chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz (~20% of global supply).
    • OPEC's Public Reports: The source for data on OPEC+ production levels and stated spare capacity.
    • Major Financial News Outlets (e.g., Reuters, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal): These organizations provide real-time reporting and historical data on market events, such as the price jump following the 2019 Abqaiq strike.
  • Geopolitical and Military Information (Doctrine, Capabilities, History):

    • Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS): Publishes detailed analyses of Iranian military strategy, its asymmetric warfare doctrine, and the strategic importance of Kharg Island.
    • International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS): Provides data and analysis on military capabilities and historical conflicts, including the "Tanker War" of the 1980s.
    • Council on Foreign Relations (CFR): Offers backgrounders and historical context on US foreign policy, such as the "maximum pressure" campaign.
    • Declassified government reports and academic historical accounts of past Middle Eastern conflicts provide the basis for understanding established doctrines and likely responses.

In essence, the analysis operates by taking the raw, contingent data provided by these empirical sources and structuring it within the non-contingent, logical framework of praxeology to produce a value-neutral explanation of necessary consequences and plausible actions.

Science of politics: allowing much illegal immigration over a short period of time

 Step 1: Identify the issue

This analysis is about large-scale unauthorized immigration into the U.S.—a combination of border policy, labor markets, and legal status rules.

Step 2: Praxeological implications (A/B certainty)

  • Individuals act purposefully: migrants move to improve expected living conditions (e.g., income, safety, opportunities).
  • Legal restrictions raise the cost of entry → fewer legal entries but do not eliminate the incentive to migrate; they shift behavior toward illegal channels, smuggling, and risk-taking. (Class B)
  • Expanding access (amnesty, open entry) lowers migration costs → increases the quantity of migrants at the margin. (Class B)
  • Labor markets: adding workers increases the supply of labor → downward pressure on wages in directly competing segments, while complementarity can raise productivity and wages in other segments. (Class B)
  • Fiscal effects: eligibility rules matter. Access to tax-funded benefits raises expected net gain → increases inflow; restrictions on benefits reduce that margin. (Class B)
  • Enforcement is resource-constrained: stricter enforcement reallocates resources (border, courts, policing) and generates substitution effects (new routes, document fraud, overstays). (Class B)
  • Political allocation vs. market allocation: quotas, visas, and enforcement are administrative decisions that cannot perfectly match diverse, changing labor demands → persistent mismatches and backlogs. (Class A/B)

Step 3: Empirical calibration (Class C)

  • Evidence tends to find modest average wage effects, concentrated on low-skill natives and prior immigrants; some sectors see gains from complementary skills.
  • Large unauthorized populations often correlate with growth in informal labor markets and enforcement costs; regularization programs change composition (more formal employment, tax compliance).

Step 4: Thymological interpretation (Class D)

  • Migrants weigh wage differentials, safety, networks, and perceived enforcement risk.
  • Voters and policymakers balance concerns about rule of law, cultural change, labor competition, and humanitarian considerations.
  • Employers may favor access to flexible labor; organized labor may resist in directly competing sectors.

Step 5: Synthesis

  • It is impossible to allow large inflows without affecting labor prices, public budgets, and enforcement patterns (Class A/B).
  • Restrictive policies reduce legal inflows but tend to redirect activity rather than eliminate it (Class B).
  • The scale and distribution of effects depend on specific rules—legal pathways, enforcement intensity, and benefit eligibility (Class C).

The analysis above clarifies the tradeoffs and what outcomes can and cannot be expected under different policy designs.


In addition:


What happens if illegal aliens are allowed to vote?

Step 1: Identify the institution
You’re positing a rule change: individuals without legal status are nevertheless allowed to vote.

Step 2: Praxeological implications (A/B certainty)

  • Voting rules define who participates in collective decision procedures. Expanding the franchise increases the number of participants and therefore changes outcomes. (Class A)
  • There is no single “social preference”; outcomes reflect aggregation rules plus individual choices. Adding a new bloc necessarily alters the resulting policy mix, but not in a determinate direction a priori. (Class A)
  • Incentives: if voting eligibility is tied (formally or informally) to remaining in the country, expected political influence becomes an additional benefit of entry → at the margin, this raises the expected payoff to migrating and can increase inflows. (Class B)
  • Policy feedback: newly enfranchised voters will support policies aligned with their perceived interests (e.g., labor market conditions, enforcement intensity, access to services), prompting parties to adjust platforms and resource allocation. (Class B)
  • Fiscal and regulatory implications: if the median or pivotal voter changes, the mix of taxes, spending, and regulation will adjust accordingly; the direction depends on the preferences of the added voters and coalitions they form. (Class B)

Step 3: Empirical calibration (Class C)

  • Historical expansions of suffrage (to non–property holders, women, younger voters) changed policy emphasis and turnout, but effects varied by context.
  • Where non-citizen voting exists in limited local contexts, impacts are typically modest and mediated by turnout rates and party competition. Large-scale changes would amplify these effects.

Step 4: Thymological interpretation (Class D)

  • Newly eligible voters may prioritize security of residence, job opportunities, and access to public goods; parties may mobilize them or oppose the change based on expected gains/losses.
  • Existing voters may react by shifting turnout, preferences, or support for institutional constraints.

Step 5: Synthesis

  • It is certain that allowing a large new group to vote changes political outcomes; it is not possible for outcomes to remain identical. (Class A)
  • The direction and magnitude of policy changes are contingent on preferences, turnout, and coalition-building, not determined purely by the rule change. (Class B/C)

Whether allowing illegal aliens to vote “should” be allowed is a normative question about the ends of political membership and governance; the analysis above lays out the structural consequences and tradeoffs.

Sources:

They come from three distinct layers of the framework, each with its own type of source:

1) Praxeology (deductive core)

  • Ludwig von Mises — Human Action; Bureaucracy; Theory and History; The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science
  • Murray Rothbard — Man, Economy, and State
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe — Economic Science and the Austrian Method
  • George Reisman — Capitalism

These works develop the logic of human action, methodological individualism, and the implications of coercive rules like taxation, regulation, and voting procedures.

2) Empirical political science (calibration)

  • General political economy and public choice literature:
    • James Buchanan & Gordon Tullock — The Calculus of Consent
    • William Riker — Liberalism Against Populism (on voting and social choice)
  • Empirical immigration and labor market research (for magnitude, not logic):
    • George Borjas (labor market impacts of immigration)
    • David Card (alternative empirical findings on wage effects)
  • Studies on suffrage expansion and voting behavior in political science journals (e.g., American Political Science Review, Journal of Politics)

These provide evidence about how large or fast effects tend to be, turnout behavior, and observed policy shifts.

3) Thymology (interpretive understanding of motives)

  • Mises — Theory and History (concept of thymology)
  • Historical and sociological analyses of voter behavior, migration decisions, and political coalitions
  • Case studies of enfranchisement changes, party strategy, and migrant decision-making

Synthesis

  • The logical claims (e.g., “adding voters must change outcomes”) come from praxeology and social choice theory.
  • The size and direction of effects (e.g., wage impact, turnout rates) are informed by empirical studies.
  • The “why” behind specific actions (e.g., why migrants move, why parties support/opposed policies) comes from thymological interpretation grounded in history and psychology.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Science of politics: effects of shutting down DHS by the Democrat Party

 Framing the situation: a “shutdown” of part of DHS in the U.S. typically means a lapse in appropriations under the Antideficiency Act. Agencies cannot obligate funds without a valid appropriation, except for narrowly defined “excepted” activities necessary for safety of human life or protection of property. Fee-funded activities can often continue. This is a rules change for how bureaucratic units may act, not a dissolution of the institution.

Praxeological deductions (directionally certain):

  • Supply of DHS-provided services falls where staff are furloughed or work without immediate pay; non-price rationing rises (queues, delays, priority triage), and backlogs accumulate.
  • “Excepted” operations continue, but with altered incentives: many employees work without current pay, creating cash-flow strain → higher absenteeism risk and morale/retention issues.
  • Outlays for furloughed federal employees are usually delayed, not eliminated, given current law requiring back pay after funding resumes; contractors generally lack such guarantees, so their revenues may be permanently lost.
  • Procurement, hiring, training, rulemaking, grants, and long-horizon projects pause where they rely on annual appropriations → downstream schedule slippage and bunching of work upon reopening.
  • Actors substitute: travelers change flight times/routes; firms delay shipments or use alternative ports/handlers; state/local/private providers fill limited gaps where feasible.

Empirical calibration by major DHS components (illustrative, based on recent shutdowns; magnitudes vary with duration and staffing):

  • TSA (airport security): Screenings continue as “excepted,” but unpaid work periods have been associated with elevated unscheduled absences and some lane/terminal closures at peak, leading to longer wait times at certain airports.
  • CBP (border ports and Border Patrol): Ports of entry remain open; frontline officers work unpaid. Administrative/support functions slow; secondary inspections may face staffing constraints; cargo processing can see sporadic delays.
  • ICE: Detention and removal operations continue; investigative and administrative activities not classified as excepted may scale back; immigration court operations are DOJ-run, but detained dockets proceed while many non-detained cases are delayed, adding to backlog.
  • USCIS: Largely fee-funded; most adjudications (e.g., many petitions and applications) continue. Programs that rely on appropriations (e.g., E‑Verify) have paused during prior shutdowns, affecting employer onboarding.
  • Secret Service: Protective missions continue; training and some non-critical support pause.
  • Coast Guard: Active-duty operations continue; during long shutdowns, members can miss paychecks, with documented impacts on morale and potential retention; some maintenance, training, and procurement schedules slip.
  • FEMA: Immediate life-safety disaster response typically continues using the Disaster Relief Fund; longer-term mitigation grants, preparedness training, and some recovery grants can be delayed if tied to lapsed appropriations.
  • CISA (cybersecurity): Network defense and incident response continue; outreach, assessments, grants, and some collaborative programs may be curtailed temporarily.

Secondary effects and tradeoffs:

  • Backlog dynamics: Each day of curtailed activity adds to queues (e.g., screenings, adjudications, inspections); clearing the backlog later can require overtime or reprioritization, shifting delays elsewhere.
  • Risk profile: Essential missions persist, but reductions in training, maintenance, and depth of staffing can marginally increase operational risk exposure in the short run.
  • Distributional impacts: Federal DHS employees face delayed pay but later receive back pay; contractors, small vendors, airports, shippers, and travelers bear unrecovered costs. Local economies near affected facilities experience short-term demand drops from unpaid workers.
  • Budget timing: Salaries and some obligations shift in time rather than vanish; certain planned procurements/grants can slip to later periods or be canceled, depending on deadlines and multi-year authority.

Thymological notes (motives/behavior):

  • Elected officials may use a shutdown threat or occurrence as bargaining leverage in appropriations disputes to signal resolve to constituents or interest groups.
  • Agency leaders tend to classify tasks as “excepted” conservatively to avoid blame for safety lapses.
  • Employees balance duty against personal liquidity constraints; absenteeism can rise as workers seek temporary income or manage caregiving.

What cannot be expected (given the rules):

  • Agencies cannot lawfully initiate or continue non-excepted spending during a lapse.
  • A shutdown does not eliminate demand for DHS services; it redistributes how that demand is queued and rationed.
  • It typically does not produce net salary “savings” for federal employees under current back-pay law; most “savings” claim would come, if at all, via foregone contractor work or canceled time-bound obligations.

In addition:

Neutral mapping of effects to typical U.S. conservative ends (strong border/law-and-order, national security readiness, fiscal prudence, reliable markets, support for service members and small business). Taking those ends as given, these shutdown-side effects are harmful:

Border security and immigration enforcement

  • CBP staffing constraints at ports reduce depth of secondary inspections and administrative support, raising the chance of missed violations at the margin while also slowing lawful cargo/passenger flows (Class B; magnitude Class C).
  • ICE investigations and non-detained immigration court dockets slow or pause, adding to case backlogs and lowering near-term deterrence against illegal presence and fraud (Class B/C).
  • E‑Verify (appropriations-dependent) has paused in prior shutdowns, undermining workplace immigration enforcement that many conservatives favor (Class B).

Law-and-order and national security readiness

  • TSA: Unpaid periods correlate with higher unscheduled absences, occasional lane closures, and longer queues; marginally higher operational risk and reduced traveler confidence (Class B/C).
  • Secret Service: Protective missions continue, but training and some support pause, weakening readiness depth (Class B).
  • Coast Guard: Operations continue, but missed paychecks harm morale/retention; training/maintenance slip, increasing risk exposure (Class B).
  • CISA: Reduced assessments/outreach and some collaboration can heighten cyber risk to critical infrastructure at the margin (Class B).

Support for law enforcement and service members

  • Working without timely pay imposes liquidity stress on frontline personnel (CBP, TSA, Secret Service, Coast Guard), potentially increasing absenteeism and attrition—counter to a “back the badge” priority (Class B).

Economic reliability, commerce, and small business

  • Sporadic delays at airports and ports raise business costs; local contractors and small vendors face cash-flow hits with no back-pay guarantee; some work is permanently lost (Class B/C).

Fiscal prudence and government efficiency

  • Under back-pay rules, most federal salary outlays are delayed, not saved; clearing backlogs later often requires overtime or reprioritization. Net effect is lower operational efficiency without durable spending reduction (Class B).

Federalism and community resilience

  • FEMA’s life-safety response continues, but delays in longer-term recovery/mitigation grants shift unplanned burdens to state/local budgets and private charities (Class B/C).

Notes

  • Directional effects above follow from the shutdown’s rules structure (apodictic that non-excepted functions pause; Class A). Magnitudes depend on duration, timing, and specific facilities (Class C).
  • Different conservative strands weight these tradeoffs differently (e.g., tolerance for short-run disruption to signal budget discipline vs. priority on uninterrupted enforcement).

Here are primary sources and nonpartisan references that underpin the two responses. They cover the legal framework for shutdowns, DHS component contingency plans, and observed effects from recent lapses (especially 2018–2019).

Legal framework and governmentwide guidance

DHS-wide and component contingency plans (what continues vs. pauses)

Component-specific empirical notes and official notices

  • TSA staffing/absenteeism and wait times during 2018–2019 lapse
    TSA press releases (Jan 2019) on unscheduled absences and wait times:
    https://www.tsa.gov/news/press (filter to Jan 2019)
  • USCIS and E‑Verify during lapses
    USCIS: “USCIS Operations Continue Despite Lapse in Appropriations”
    https://www.uscis.gov/news/alerts
    E‑Verify service status during shutdowns:
    https://www.e-verify.gov (look for “E‑Verify is unavailable during the government shutdown” notices)
  • Immigration courts (DOJ EOIR): detained dockets proceed; non‑detained postponed
    https://www.justice.gov/eoir (search “Operational Status During Lapse in Appropriations”)
    TRAC Immigration reports on postponed hearings/backlogs during 2018–2019:
    https://trac.syr.edu/immigration/ (search “shutdown hearings postponed”)
  • Coast Guard pay, morale, and operations in shutdowns
    CRS In Focus IF11079, “The Coast Guard: Pay and Operations During a Government Shutdown”
    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF11079
  • FEMA disaster response vs. grants/mitigation timing
    FEMA contingency plan (above) and CRS primers on the Disaster Relief Fund mechanics:
    https://crsreports.congress.gov (search “FEMA Disaster Relief Fund”)
  • CISA outreach/assessments vs. incident response
    CISA contingency plan (above)

Contractors, grants, procurement, and macro effects

  • CRS, Government Shutdown: Effects on Federal Contractors (payment risk; no statutory back pay guarantee)
    https://crsreports.congress.gov (search “Government Shutdown: Effects on Federal Contractors”)
  • GAO and CRS summaries of operational impacts across agencies in 2018–2019
    GAO: agency operations during lapses (search GAO for “2018–2019 shutdown impacts”)
    https://www.gao.gov
  • CBO, The Effects of the Partial Shutdown Ending in January 2019 (timing shifts, GDP effects)
    https://www.cbo.gov/publication/54937

How these sources map to the two answers

  • Rules and apodictic constraints (what must pause/continue) come from the Antideficiency Act, OMB A‑11 §124, OPM guidance, and each DHS component’s contingency plan.
  • Which DHS services typically continue and where bottlenecks/backlogs arise are detailed in the contingency plans and CRS overviews.
  • Observed tendencies in the 2018–2019 lapse (TSA absenteeism/wait times; E‑Verify outages; EOIR docket postponements; Coast Guard missed pay) are documented in the referenced TSA/USCIS/EOIR notices, TRAC reports, CRS In Focus notes, and CBO/GAO summaries.
  • The “pro‑conservative” mapping simply takes those documented operational effects and aligns them with commonly stated conservative priorities (border enforcement, readiness, fiscal prudence, business continuity), without adding new factual claims beyond the above sources.

Thymology: why was there a Constitutional convention of in 1787 in the US?

 From a thymological standpoint, the “actor” here is the assembly of state-appointed delegates who met in Philadelphia in 1787 and, under conditions of secrecy, chose to abandon mere amendment of the Articles of Confederation and draft a new frame of government.

  1. Action restated neutrally
  • Delegates convened to revise the Articles of Confederation but instead drafted and signed a new Constitution establishing a stronger federal structure, then sent it to the states for ratification.
  1. Surface motives (as they presented them)
  • Preserve the Union and prevent disintegration into rival confederacies.
  • Remedy the Articles’ defects: no taxation power, weak executive, inability to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, and ineffectual national defense.
  • Restore public credit, stabilize currency/finance, and facilitate commerce.
  • Establish a workable republican government with checks and balances to control faction and prevent both anarchy and tyranny.
  1. Deeper reconstruction of the delegates’ lifeworld and evaluations
  • Lived experience and recent shocks: Many had witnessed the financial chaos and political volatility of the 1780s—state-issued paper money, debtor-relief laws perceived as unjust by creditors, and Shays’ Rebellion—feeding a felt urgency (fear of “anarchy”) and a valuation of stability, order, and honor (Washington’s language frequently framed the situation as a crisis of national reputation).
  • Geopolitical anxiety: Britain’s forts on the frontier, Spanish closure of the Mississippi, and Barbary threats created a practical sense that only an “energetic” national government could protect interests and negotiate credibly.
  • Republican ideology and classical inheritance: In a culture steeped in Roman exemplars and Enlightenment thought (Montesquieu, mixed government), many delegates prized balanced institutions, separation of powers, and the rule of law as means to preserve liberty through structure, not mere exhortation.
  • Social position and economic exposure: A large share were lawyers, merchants, planters, or holders of public securities. They valued predictable contract enforcement, uniform commercial rules, and a framework securing property and public credit, which they understood as prerequisites for prosperity and dignity.
  • Sectional and institutional commitments: Southern planters prioritized protections for slaveholding and export interests; small-state delegates prioritized political equality in at least one chamber; “nationalists” (e.g., Hamilton, at times Madison) prioritized an integrated fiscal-military and commercial union; many valued state autonomy but wanted to cage its excesses.
  • Process design and ratification calculus: Secrecy signaled a valuation of candid bargaining over performative debate; many choices were shaped by a forward-looking appraisal of what states and the public would ratify, pushing compromise (e.g., Connecticut Compromise, 3/5, slave trade until 1808) as volitional “means” to the higher end of a viable Union.
  1. Primary motives with secondary/contributing factors (ranked by likelihood across the whole convention)
  • Primary:
    1. Preservation of the Union through an effective national government with real powers (taxation, commerce, defense).
    2. Restoration of public credit and commercial reliability (stable rules, uniformity, and contract protection).
    3. Institutional control of faction and volatility—designing checks to curb perceived excesses of state-level populism without lapsing into monarchy.
  • Secondary:
    4) Sectional/institutional protections: equal state suffrage in the Senate for small states; slavery-related guarantees for the Lower South; navigation and commerce advantages for commercial states.
    5) Personal and reputational motives: a sense of honor, legacy, and postwar responsibility; for some, future office-holding prospects.
    6) Ideational projects of an “energetic” executive and coordinated national capacity befitting a respectable nation among powers.
  1. Alternative interpretations and uncertainties
  • Economic-determinist reading (Beard): Delegates, often creditors and bondholders, designed a Constitution to protect wealth. Thymologically plausible as a contributing layer (they clearly valued contract and credit), but too monocausal; many non-creditor actors shared the Union-and-stability valuation, and significant compromises (e.g., equal state suffrage) were not straightforwardly “pro-wealth.”
  • Pure republican-ideology reading: Ideas of mixed government and fear of corruption drove design. Strong, but ideas were constantly filtered through concrete pressures: war debts, foreign threats, and state-level policy turmoil.
  • Sectional-capture thesis: Southern slaveholding interests steered the bargain. They achieved crucial concessions (3/5, fugitive clause, slave trade until 1808), yet they did not win decentralized “states’ rights” supremacy; the final charter still increased national power substantially, indicating multi-sided bargaining rather than single-interest dominance.
  • Residual uncertainties: Individual delegates blended motives idiosyncratically—e.g., Madison as both nationalist architect and federalist compromiser; Washington’s personal authority and concern for honor may have galvanized consensus beyond any material interest analysis.
  1. Thymological conclusion: why it made sense to them
  • Given their lifeworld—recent civil-military experience, economic fragility, and fear of geopolitical vulnerability—the delegates judged that only a redesigned constitutional architecture could secure order, credit, and liberty together. They valued Union over parochial control, stability over volatility, and institutionalized balance over charismatic leadership. The specific compromises (representation, slavery, commerce) were chosen as necessary volitional means to make ratification achievable while embedding a national framework robust enough to command respect at home and abroad. Even where the design morally troubled some (e.g., slavery), the prevailing judgment of value prioritized securing a workable Union first, with the hope—explicit for some—that future politics could address unresolved evils within the new structure.

Brief note on thymology vs. praxeology here

  • Praxeology would abstractly say the delegates acted to choose means to their ends under scarcity and uncertainty. Thymology instead reconstructs their subjective meanings: the honor-laden fear of anarchy after Shays’, the humiliation of diplomatic weakness, the republican imaginary of balanced powers, the creditor’s dread of paper-money laws, the planter’s resolve to guard slave property, and the small state’s insistence on political dignity. It is this textured web of valuations, emotions, and cultural ideals—not a universal logic alone—that explains why this particular Constitution, in that summer of 1787, felt like the right act to these particular men.

Sources for this response

  • Primary/thymological method:
    • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), chs. on thymology and historical understanding.
    • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), section on “The Thymological Method.”
    • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), contrasts of praxeology with psychology/history.
    • Max Weber, Economy and Society (selections on Verstehen); R.G. Collingwood, The Idea of History.
  • Historical materials and scholarship:
    • James Madison, Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787.
    • The Federalist Papers (esp. Nos. 10, 23, 39, 51).
    • Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787.
    • Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (for ideological background).
    • Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution (critique/nuance of Beard).
    • Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States (economic-determinist thesis).
    • Pauline Maier, Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787–1788.
    • Merrill Jensen, The New Nation.
    • Joseph J. Ellis, Founding Brothers (for motive sketches; popular but insightful).
    • Contextual events: records on Shays’ Rebellion; diplomatic issues with Britain/Spain/Barbary (standard U.S. diplomatic histories).

In addition:

From a thymological standpoint, here are additional, more granular layers of motive reconstruction for the 1787 Convention—zooming into specific delegates’ lifeworlds, factional bargains, and the social-psychological “feel” of the room.

  1. Action restated neutrally
  • State-appointed delegates met under a rule of secrecy to revise the Articles; through bargaining and committee work, they produced an entirely new constitutional design and transmitted it to the states for ratification.
  1. Surface motives (brief recap)
  • Secure the Union; empower national taxation, commerce, and defense; restore public credit; design a republican system able to tame faction without monarchy; get something ratifiable.
  1. Deeper reconstruction: key actors’ lifeworlds and valuations
  • George Washington: The actor likely valued honor, national reputation, and postwar stability over personal ease. Given his Lebenswelt as victorious general now fearing dissolution, he framed the choice as duty versus disgrace. He lent legitimacy “from above,” but insisted on institutional checks to prevent demagogy “from below.”
  • James Madison: Valued a “science of politics.” His in-order-to motive was to control majority faction via scale and structure. He preferred proportional representation, an energetic center, and even a federal negative on state laws (a control he failed to secure). Emotionally invested in coherence and long-horizon design rather than short-term expedients.
  • Alexander Hamilton: Valued public credit, commercial greatness, and executive energy. Admired the stability of the British model; his long-tenure executive pitch expressed a judgment that durability outcompetes volatility. Pragmatic thymology: he floated maximal ideas, then rallied to a more moderate design as the best ratifiable vehicle for fiscal-military capacity.
  • Benjamin Franklin: Elder statesman whose valuation of union and civic concord outweighed design purism. He practiced “conciliation as method,” signaling that imperfect compromise is rational when the higher end is Union. His religiously tinged appeals expressed a cultural matrix where Providence, humility, and prudence legitimated compromise.
  • Gouverneur Morris: Nationalist with aristocratic sensibilities; valued a strong executive and clear national supremacy. Skeptical of slavery and of excessive democracy; wrote with stylistic purpose to sacralize the final text—an aesthetic-volitional act to confer dignity and durability.
  • Roger Sherman and Oliver Ellsworth (Connecticut): Valued state corporate identity and equality. Their lifeworld—small-state dignity within a union—made the Senate’s equal suffrage a nonnegotiable. They prized workable federalism and were wary of abstract system-building.
  • James Wilson: Valued popular sovereignty and direct legitimacy (popular election of the presidency, a stronger national judiciary). He saw democratic connection as a stabilizer, not a threat, thus his push for a more national popular base.
  • George Mason: Valued republican liberty and local autonomy; feared consolidated power absent explicit rights—hence his refusal to sign without a declaration of rights. His stance reflects a prudential, rights-first valuation over speed of union.
  • Luther Martin and other strong federal particularists: Valued state prerogative and feared national consolidation. Their withdrawals and dissent show a prioritization of local autonomy over national credit/commerce gains.
  • Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, John Rutledge, Charles Pinckney (Lower South): Valued institutional protection of slave property, export interests, and freedom from navigation-act “tyranny.” They bargained hard for the 3/5 ratio, protection of the Atlantic slave trade until 1808, and anti-export taxes, seeing these as existential guarantees.
  1. Institutional design as signals of valuation
  • Secrecy rule: Expressed a valuation of candid bargaining and reputational safety over immediate public accountability; it lowered performative pressure to grandstand and enabled ideational experimentation.
  • Committees (Detail; Postponed Parts): Mechanisms to transform principle-level standoffs into text-level trades. This reflects a cultural craft valuation: solve conflict by drafting language that all sides can live with.
  • Logrolls and trades:
    • Representation: Proportional in the House (nationalist value) vs equal state suffrage in the Senate (small-state dignity).
    • Commerce vs slavery: New England/Mid-Atlantic won robust commerce/tariff powers; Lower South secured time-bound protection for the slave trade, a fugitive slave clause, and safeguards against export taxes.
    • Executive design: Electoral College balanced popular legitimacy, state roles, and elite filters—encoding competing valuations into one device.
  1. Ratification theater as a distinct thymological arena
  • The actor (Federalist coalition) valued momentum, inevitability, and reasoned reassurance. Strategy: rename consolidation as “a more perfect Union”; flood the zone with arguments (The Federalist), promise a Bill of Rights post-ratification, and target quick-wins in key states to frame the Constitution as the only viable path away from dishonor and decay.
  • Anti-Federalists valued local control, militias, jury rights, religion, press, and face-to-face accountability. Their writings show a lifeworld where distant power is presumptively predatory. Their resistance forced the rights-adding compromise that many Federalists privately deemed prudent anyway.
  1. Cultural-psychological atmosphere of 1787
  • Memory of 1770s-80s turmoil: paper money, debtor relief, requisitions, and Shays’ Rebellion produced a visceral fear of anarchy and a reputational shame about impotence abroad.
  • Classical republican imagery: Rome’s rise and fall, Polybius’ mixed constitution, and Montesquieu’s separation-of-powers furnished the emotional-cognitive scaffolding for what “wise” design felt like.
  • Time pressure and heat: The grueling summer, scarcity of time before harvests and elections, and fatigue nudged actors toward “good enough to ratify” solutions over ideal blueprints.
  • Honor economy: Personal reputation, posterity, and the “judgment of the world” loomed large as evaluative standards—especially for Washington and other notables.

Primary motives by faction (with key secondary layers)

  • Nationalists (Madison/Hamilton/Wilson/Morris)
    • Primary: Effective center for defense/credit/commerce; institutional checks.
    • Secondary: International respectability; textual elegance/clarity; executive energy.
  • Small-state federalists (Sherman/Ellsworth/Paterson)
    • Primary: Equality of states in at least one chamber; protect state corporate standing.
    • Secondary: Aversion to overly “popular” national mechanisms; preference for incrementalism.
  • Lower South planters (Rutledge/Pinckneys/Butler)
    • Primary: Protect slave property and export interests.
    • Secondary: Hedge against northern commercial dominance; maintain labor regime security.
  • Mid-Atlantic/New England commercial interests
    • Primary: National tariff/commerce power; stable credit and uniform rules.
    • Secondary: Navy-building and treaty credibility; westward security for trade expansion.

Alternative interpretations and live uncertainties

  • Was “fear of anarchy” overstated rhetorically to legitimize consolidation? Plausible for some, but letters and financial data suggest genuine alarm about credit collapse and diplomatic weakness.
  • Did Hamilton truly want quasi-monarchy or use it as an “anchor” in bargaining? Ambiguous; subjectively, he prized energy and durability more than titles.
  • Did they anticipate parties? Largely not as we know them; they feared “faction” yet underestimated institutionalized party systems.
  • Moral discomfort vs. expediency on slavery: Some (e.g., Morris, Mason) were uneasy or opposed; the prevailing judgment prioritized Union first, addressing slavery later—an explicit temporizing calculation for several actors.

Coherent thymological conclusion

  • Given their lifeworld—post-revolution fragility, honor-conscious republican culture, and concrete financial-diplomatic stress—the delegates judged that a stronger, balanced national frame was the least-bad path to preserve liberty, property, and reputation. They traded across sectional and institutional lines, accepting morally fraught clauses where they saw no ratifiable alternative. The design reflected layered valuations: Union over parochialism, predictability over volatility, structure over charisma, and legitimacy (via compromise and ratification strategy) over doctrinal purity.

Brief note on thymology vs. praxeology here

  • Praxeology would note only that delegates chose means to ends under uncertainty. Thymology reconstructs their subjective world: the honor-infused dread of disorder, the creditor’s fear of paper money, the planter’s existential defense of slave property, the small state’s demand for dignity, and the ideational allure of mixed constitutions. It is this mosaic of valuations, emotions, and cultural ideals that made the specific 1787 bargains feel “right enough” to those men at that moment.

Sources for this response

  • Thymological/method sources:
    • Ludwig von Mises, Theory and History (1957), chs. on thymology and historical understanding.
    • Ludwig von Mises, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science (1962), “The Thymological Method.”
    • Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (1949/1966), contrasts with psychology/history; method of understanding.
    • Max Weber, Economy and Society (Verstehen); R.G. Collingwood, The Idea of History; Alfred Schütz, The Phenomenology of the Social World.
  • Primary/historical:
    • James Madison, Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 (ed. Farrand).
    • Max Farrand, The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787.
    • The Federalist Papers (Nos. 10, 23, 39, 51, 70).
    • George Washington’s letters (1786–1788); Benjamin Franklin’s speeches.
    • Anti-Federalist writings (e.g., Brutus, Federal Farmer, Centinel).
  • Secondary analyses:
    • Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787.
    • Pauline Maier, Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787–1788.
    • Forrest McDonald, We the People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution.
    • Jack N. Rakove, Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution.
    • Michael J. Klarman, The Framers’ Coup.
    • Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution.
    • Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States.
    • Woody Holton, Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution.
    • Herbert J. Storing (ed.), The Complete Anti-Federalist.

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