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Authoritarianism and American politics
#34
(01-20-2017, 02:37 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: ... As to "the question", *shrug*.  Victorian Britain and the pre-1930s US had comparatively minimal bureaucracies.  The Soviet one was quite extensive.  Somalia doesn't have one to speak of.  It is presently fashionable for big tech companies to have relatively flat hierarchies.  Mid-20th century industrial companies had much more structured ones.  I don't think the evidence bears out a claim of "bureacracies good, no bureaucracies bad" or vice versa.  The technological substrate, the presence or not of unifying norms mores and values, the security environment, etc. influence the extent of formal organization required...

In a way, that makes my point.  At one point in time, Chicago was served by 9 railroads that all used different track spacing and profiles.  Needless to say, moving goods from rail system A to rail system B involved unloading by hand, transport between rail yards in some cases and reloading by hand.  That is intolerable today.  Since the 1930s, when the reality of modernity finally sunk in, standardization has been employed to eliminate these issues -- among many others.  Could there be an internet or wireless devices if that were not the case?  Of course not.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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RE: Authoritarianism and American politics - by David Horn - 01-21-2017, 11:50 AM

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