September 10, 2008

Let Their People Come Review Part 1 - The Morality of Immigration


Photo from Flickr - celikins

I just finished Lant Pritchett's fantastic Let Their People Come, and I feel compelled to put down a few of the thoughts that I had. I hope this will kick-start my writing on this blog, but that remains to be seen.

I wrote about immigration once before, and reading Mr. Pritchett's book reinforced some of my ideas, and gave me some new ideas.

One of the most powerful arguments, in my mind, is his argument that we treat nationality as a morally legitimate basis for discrimination. He compares labor mobility restrictions to apartheid - "The analogy between apartheid and restrictions on labor mobility is almost exact. People are not allowed to live and work where they please. Rather, some are only allowed to live in places where earning opportunities are scarce . . . The restrictions about who can work where are based on conditions of birth, not on any notion of individual effort or merit"(79).

This is one facet of what I call the "There but for the grace of God" argument, and I think that it is spot on. Any attitude or policy that treats people differently because of the "conditions of birth" is inherently wrong, and the location of birth is no different than race, gender, or ethnicity. He argues that we have as strong a moral obligation to the "Outer Mongolian" as we do to our own countrymen.

While there are serious policy difficulties in determining how to achieve a society without "nation prejudice", Pritchett reminds us that this should be our goal, and we should couch our policy decisions in that framework.

June 18, 2008

Great video on Ants

I just saw this great video about ants from a TED talk:




Her focus is on exactly what fascinates me about ants. She talks about how they coordinate a complex organization using very simple tools, and even more importantly - simple brains. No ant understands the organization, or what needs to occur in order to succeed, and yet the coordinate and "make decisions" about resource allocation, and other things.



I think it can be compared to the cells in a body - each individual cell has very, very limited inputs and outputs, and yet they can work together to create movement, sensory perception, and even consciousness, and even more importantly, can link those complex systems together. Truly amazing.

June 17, 2008

Use Firefox 3!

Firefox 3 was just released today. It is a fantastic piece of software, with some significant improvements over the already-great Firefox 2.

It is amazingly quick, has some really intuitive features like tagging, dragging text, searching page histories, etc.

Firefox can be download at http://www.firefox.com. You won't regret it.