Monday, May 8, 2023
Are THC Potency Caps Really Necessary?
Thursday, May 4, 2023
The Law of Eristic Escalation Revisited
Or, "Politics In One Lesson"
There is an eternal law of nature that at once explains just about everything, and even makes politics possible to finally understand. It is called The Law of Eristic Escalation:
Imposition of Order = Escalation of Chaos
By that, it pertains to any arbitrary or coercive imposition of order, which at least in the long run, actually causes disorder (chaos) to escalate. Fenderson's Amendment further adds that "the tighter the order in question is maintained, the longer the consequent chaos takes to escalate, BUT the more it does when it does." Finally, the Thudthwacker Addendum still further adds that this relationship is nonlinear, thus rendering the resulting escalation of chaos completely unpredictable in terms of the original imposition of order.
We see the real world consequences of this in everything from Prohibition to the War on (people who use a few particular) Drugs to zero tolerance policies to Covid lockdowns to sexual repression and so much more. And, of course, especially in the ageist abomination that is the 21 drinking age. Any short-term benefits that these arbitrary and coercive impositions of order may provide is entirely outweighed when they inevitably backfire in the long run. Miron and Tetelbaum (2009), Asch and Levy (1987 and 1990), and Males (1986) illustrate this very nicely in the case of the 21 drinking age.
Perhaps that is why most bans on various things have historically had a track record that is quite lackluster at best. Ironically, bans tend to give more power to the very things that they seek to ban.
And now, ladies and gentlemen, you finally understand politics.
Saturday, April 29, 2023
The Trouble With Mandatory Age Verification Online
(See our previous articles about this topic.)
A new bipartisan (aka the very worst kind of tyranny) bill in Congress seeks to 1) ban anyone under 13 from social media platforms entirely, 2) require parental consent for anyone over 13 but under 18 to join such platforms, 3) require mandatory age verification (and verification of parental status) to enforce the above. This is very similar to Utah's new law, which is the strictest one passed to date.
(Arkansas recently passed a similar law as well, but theirs exempts so many social media platforms as to render it largely toothless in practice. I'm sure the fact that the same state that recently relaxed child labor laws for youth under 16 also conveniently exempted LinkedIn is entirely a coincidence, right?)
The bill as currently written would apply the age verification requirement to all new accounts opened after enactment, and would have a two year grace period (why not simply exempt entirely, like in Josh Hawley's bill?) for existing accounts after which unverified accounts would be suspended. Fortunately, unlike Hawley's bill, it does not specifically require government-issued ID (yet).
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the pitfalls of such a sledgehammer approach to a problem that really calls for a scalpel. Not only does it arguably infringe on the First Amendment rights of people under 18, but it also backfires on adults over 18 almost as badly as well. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) wrote an excellent article as to the very real perils and pitfalls that come with mandatory age verification, not least of which include the undermining of what is left of any semblance of privacy and anonymity online for all ages. It is not much of a leap from that to further censorship and surveillance, digital ID, and ultimately social credit scoring to effectively lock "undesirable" people out of the public square for the purpose of power and control--a budding totalitarian's dream come true (and a nightmare for everyone else). As a best case scenario, it will sound the death knell for what's still left of the free and open internet as we knew it.
Kafka, meet trap. Pandora, meet box. Albatross, meet neck. Baby, meet bathwater. Camel's nose, meet tent. Horse, meet barn. Trojan, meet horse.
Make no mistake, this is a Trojan horse!
The ONE possibly good thing in this bill is that it prohibits the use of algorithmic recommendation systems for people under 18 (why not all ages?), but otherwise it throws out the proverbial baby with the bathwater, and likely does more harm than good. While it simultaneously lets Big Tech largely off the hook in terms of design safety. That makes the bill both over-inclusive and under-inclusive.
Thus, Twenty-One Debunked categorically opposes this bill or any other that contains mandatory age verification for social media and/or the internet in general. But in the event that mandatory age verification does become a foregone conclusion, we demand that the following safeguards be included:
- It must be as narrowly tailored as humanly possible. Think scalpel, not sledgehammer.
- The age limit should be no higher than 16 for social media or any other sites (except 18 for stuff like porn, gambling, and dating sites).
- All existing social media accounts (that were opened prior to the law's enactment date) must be "grandfathered" and thus fully exempt from mandatory age verification, period.
- A varied "menu" of options for age verification must be available for all. Government-issued ID should be only one of many options.
- All data collected for the purpose of age verification must be deleted immediately after verification, and not retained for any purpose whatsoever.
- Age verification must be "one and done" when opening a new account.
- At most, only people who look and/or claim to be under 25 should be subject to age verification, similar to how it is done for requiring ID for buying tobacco products offline at the store.
- And there must be full liability for any misuse or abuse of data collected for the purpose of age verification.
Sunday, April 23, 2023
The Trouble With "Competency Testing"
One idea often floated by some libertarians, paleoconservatives, and youth rights activists alike is the idea that most if not all age restrictions can and should be replaced with a competency test of some sort. Dr. Robert Epstein (not to be confused with that other Epstein!) famously advocates this in his book Teen 2.0. The arguments for this may seem appealing at first glance, but upon closer examination they largely fall apart as quixotic at best, and perhaps even worse than the current abominable status quo.
First of all, like most other glib and specious technocratic and ivory tower solutions in search of a problem (see Epstein's other idea from 2020 about instantly ending the Covid pandemic with mass testing of the entire population and isolating the positives, then ask Slovakia how well that idea worked out), it is unrealistic and impractical. For example, Epstein literally uses the DMV (!) of all things as a model, without seeing the irony of it all. Who exactly decides what the tests consist of, who administers and evaluates each one, and what adult rights, responsibilities, and privileges even need any tests or age restrictions at all? Who validates whether these new tests even have any predictive value at all, as opposed to merely being gatekeeping of privilege? And who watches the watchers? Epstein leaves the hopeful but bewildered readers with far more questions than answers. Strike one.
Secondly, there is the problem of scalability. Traditionally, any formal coming-of-age ritual "tests", to the extent that they even existed at all, were done at the local or tribal level, and administered by familiar elders, not by large faceless bureaucracies governing millions of people. Strike two.
Finally, and more importantly, all competency tests of any kind are, by their very definition and nature, inherently ableist. True, one can argue that Mother Nature is also ableist, but while that is technically true, that does NOT justify being any MORE ableist than Mother Nature already is, only that anti-ableism is unfortunately an imperfect duty rather than a perfect one. And ableism, just like ageism/adultism, is both bad enough on its own as well as a major "gateway" and "underpin" to the rest of the kyriarchy (patriarchy, sexism, racism, classism, heterosexism, and all the other intersectional -isms out there).
For example, can you imagine if everyone had to take a test to be allowed to vote regardless of age? There was a precedent for that in the Southern states prior to the civil rights movement, and it wasn't a good thing at all. Having a test only for people under 18 (or under 16) to vote could be defensible perhaps, but if applied to the entire population regardless of age it opens the door to not only ableism, but also racism, classism, elitism, and perhaps other -isms as well. It is far too easy to rig such tests, as history has shown.
Strike three, you're OUT!
Thus, after giving it much thought, Twenty-One Debunked keeps coming back to the same answer. And that answer is, competency tests have their place as an alternative to age limits for some but not all things, and regardless, there needs to be a default age of majority above which one is automatically given the benefit of the doubt and presumed to be an adult (unless an individual is formally declared incompetent by the state), and thus exempt from such tests for all general adult rights, responsibilities, and privileges. And after that, once you are an adult, you are an adult, period. That would take most of the ableism out of the equation, albeit with an unavoidable tradeoff between ableism and ageism/adultism for people below that age. And for that reason, some current age limits for specific things simply should be lowered or abolished rather than replaced with all-new competency testing.
And Twenty-One Debunked believes that default age should be no higher than 18. Before that age, there is plenty of room for nuance, of course. But NOT after.
(Mic drop)
Sunday, April 16, 2023
Looks Like The "Teen Vaping Epidemic" Was Just A Brief Fad All Along
Looks like the "teen vaping epidemic" of 2018-2019 was really just a brief fad all along. Since then, per the National Youth Tobacco survey, teen vaping has plummeted by 50%, returning to its 2015 baseline by 2021, and teen smoking continues its long-term decline. Two Tweets with infographics say it all:
And JUUL? The brand that notoriously drove the "epidemic"? That's not cool anymore either, apparently, as use of that particular brand was approaching nil by 2022. And the survey results pan out, as one can even see with their own eyes a marked reduction in vape pod litter (especially JUUL pods) on streets, sidewalks, and parking lots these days compared to 2018-2019 and early 2020.
And lest anyone spuriously credit the raising of the age limit to 21 with these positive trends, keep in mind that the "epidemic" self-evidently occurred just as much in states like California and New Jersey that raised their own tobacco and vaping age limits to 21 prior to 2018 than in those states who did so later or not at all, and it had already peaked nationwide before the federal age limit of 21 was enforced. And the secular decline in teen smoking began well before any state or major city raised their age limits to 21.
But don't expect the MSM to tell you that.


