tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post260096080705553557..comments2023-10-17T15:56:22.827+01:00Comments on Velvet Glove, Iron Fist: A shove is not a nudgeChristopher Snowdonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15963753745009712865noreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-27927391582407826392012-07-11T21:11:09.109+01:002012-07-11T21:11:09.109+01:00I really don't give a shit if people want to r...I really don't give a shit if people want to refer to Gov interference in my life as a ban, a nudge, encouragement, assistance or any other such clap-trap, PLEASE LEAVE ME ALONE FFS!<br /><br />If I want to swig a bottle of Jack Daniels, diluted with Coke, whilst smoking a ciggy and whistling the Horst Wessel Lied, wtf has it got to do with anyone else?<br /><br />Stuff like this makes me want to deliberately do the opposite of what such insane schemes actually want, just to annoy nannying tossers in Gov.<br /><br />It is precisely because the matter of how much Coke I drink is (or should be) a non-issue that it is SO important that people stand up to this patronizing bullshit., because if they don't, these morons will not stop until EVERY area of EVERY person's life (except theirs, of course) is regulated, licensed, franked, stamped, indexed, numbered and inspected.<br /><br /><br />Noggin the NogNoggin the Nognoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-29552302126727133592012-07-11T17:53:05.836+01:002012-07-11T17:53:05.836+01:00Oliver,
The ban on drinking a large Coke from a si...Oliver,<br />The ban on drinking a large Coke from a single cup may seem a pretty small freedom, as indeed it is, but it is one which is not an option in New York now. It is not merely that New Yorkers are subtly *persuaded* to choose a smaller cup. It is *verboten* and that is what distinguishes it from a Nudge.<br /><br />Of course people can buy two cups of Coke, so it will be a relatively minor inconvenience (and an ineffective anti-obesity strategy), but it remains a forced inconvenience from which the customer cannot opt out. Opting out is essential to the Nudge strategy.<br /><br />I would be (genuinely) interested to know how far this thinking would have to go before it was considered a ban in your eyes? Would selling beer only in half pints be acceptable? What about banning medium and large portions of fries? Selling only one cigarette at a time? Are these still nudges and if not, why not?Christopher Snowdonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15963753745009712865noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-90625010016578946032012-07-11T17:41:02.032+01:002012-07-11T17:41:02.032+01:00I guess I'm still confused, though, about why ...<i>I guess I'm still confused, though, about why the presence of a ban (on retailers) automatically disqualifies this from being a nudge (on soda drinkers).</i><br /><br />Because it is a <i>ban</i>. Pretty obvious, really.<br /><br />Joanthan Bagley summed it up - the retailers serving the smaller sizes as a default unless asked is a nudge. A ban of any sort is not.Longriderhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15139120804208136012noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-63733864150867490982012-07-11T16:48:49.614+01:002012-07-11T16:48:49.614+01:00Oliver, perhaps it's partly the scale of the i...Oliver, perhaps it's partly the scale of the inconvenience. To go back to the urinals example; there is no inconvenience whatsoever. At the other end of the spectrum, I've heard some people try and describe the smoking ban as a nudge to get smoking rates down. Apart form the fact it hasn't worked - prevalence has remained at 21% for the first three years following the ban, after falling steadily for decades, it is a huge inconvenience to smokers. Many of us no longer visit pubs.Jonathan Bagleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17331501151709216753noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-88071147720472517472012-07-11T16:07:29.023+01:002012-07-11T16:07:29.023+01:00I guess I'm still confused, though, about why ...I guess I'm still confused, though, about why the presence of a ban (on retailers) automatically disqualifies this from being a nudge (on soda drinkers). There is no conceivable interpretation of the Bloomberg proposal that would involve any form of penalty for people who decided, despite the increased difficulty, to consume gargantuan amounts of Coke. <br /><br />(Of course, I understand why you and commenters here would be predisposed against this kind of policy more generally. I don't expect to reach agreement on any of that.)Oliver Burkemannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-20315819105686043722012-07-11T15:19:11.840+01:002012-07-11T15:19:11.840+01:00Without wishing to double up re my message on your...Without wishing to double up re my message on your original nudge post, but whilst I admire your efforts to defend Nudge, which is benign, from association with the Ban Brigade who are most certainly not, the two things arise from a dangerous assumption that we should deny at every opportunity. Namely, that the government has a legitimate role concerning itself with what I do with my own body.<br /><br />Libertarians must insist that our bodies and minds are ours to use and abuse and enjoy or destroy. Life is about balancing risk and reward, or short term certainty with long term speculation. If once you allow that government should gather information about general risks to individuals and that they might as well do <i>something</i> about it then you've conceded way too much ground. You've basically accepted that limited government is bad for individuals.Blingmunnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-32790524749871822072012-07-11T13:16:18.905+01:002012-07-11T13:16:18.905+01:00This originated from Thaler, so isn't it up to...This originated from Thaler, so isn't it up to him to say whether it is a "nudge"? It's hard to define, but you know one when you see one. Banning large sodas seems a long way from painting a fly in the bowl of a men's urinal - the oft quoted example. I would say, always serving the smallest size unless the customer specifies otherwise is more of a nudge.Jonathan Bagleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17331501151709216753noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-60731992957331885092012-07-11T12:56:29.752+01:002012-07-11T12:56:29.752+01:00A nudge would be hey we dont like the smoke please...A nudge would be hey we dont like the smoke please move!<br /><br />Bloombergs nudge is a swift kick in the BOLLOCKS!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-36846973733584081062012-07-11T10:06:18.659+01:002012-07-11T10:06:18.659+01:00Oliver Burkeman comes across as someone who knows ...Oliver Burkeman comes across as someone who knows better than anyone else. If you think the word nudge means a gentle guide rather than a draconian dictat Oliver will say that you are wrong because he is right. If you think black is black, Oliver will say that you are wrong because he is right. Oliver is a know it all who actually knows nothing and tries to hide it by writing lots of words.SadButMadLadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17836368722377421009noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-23536427765623100542012-07-11T09:50:53.277+01:002012-07-11T09:50:53.277+01:00As I recall, the criteria for a nudge are that you...As I recall, the criteria for a nudge are that you're nudging people towards what the vast majority would like to do (not BECOME, eg. slim, but DO, eg. have a Coke of their choosing - unlike Bloomberg they have targets for outcomes at the population level) and that the penalty for doing otherwise should be minimal, if anything. Consequently they are against bans of any kind which necessarily have serious consequences for offenders.<br /><br />I've got to leave the house. I'll write more about this tomorrow.Christopher Snowdonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15963753745009712865noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-14682710329090998892012-07-11T08:34:27.839+01:002012-07-11T08:34:27.839+01:00"It has become a bit easier to take the choic..."It has become a bit easier to take the choice to stick to smaller sizes."<br /><br />Says it all. Inarticulately, but still.<br /><br /><b>Get out of our lives.</b>Snurglenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-55687012272262622022012-07-11T08:26:50.975+01:002012-07-11T08:26:50.975+01:00I too would like to see you explanation for why th...I too would like to see you explanation for why this is not a nudge because it's not immediately clear to me what the problem is.Wigarsenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-10214460174238458502012-07-11T03:11:08.552+01:002012-07-11T03:11:08.552+01:00Isn't it also true that the line about the sof...Isn't it also true that the line about the soft drink/tobacco industry spending more on advertising/lobbying has the following weakness:<br /><br />Tobacco industry spends $30 mil to fight a tax<br />Anti-tobacco spends $15 mil, claims they're outspent<br /><br />Anti-tobacco encourages tax on the basis of it helping close a $1 billion budget shortfall. Mind, this is $1 billion per year, not a 1-time $1 billion tax.<br /><br />The state has more incentive to raise taxes in this case. It's the legislators who get to appropriate the tax money who matter the most.Andrewnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-64032309128055717352012-07-11T01:42:45.156+01:002012-07-11T01:42:45.156+01:00I have no idea why the above post is credited to &...I have no idea why the above post is credited to "Smart Driver" (?!) It's from me.<br /><br />Oliver BurkemanOliver Burkemanhttp://oliverburkeman.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-13093066733078153332012-07-11T01:41:55.961+01:002012-07-11T01:41:55.961+01:00I'll be happy to add an update to my post to c...I'll be happy to add an update to my post to clarify that my use of the term shouldn't be taken to imply Thaler's endorsement of my doing so. It might take till tomorrow morning to get posted now.<br /><br />I'm going to assume you don't really believe that the person who coins a term automatically gets to decide how it's applied. But moving on from that, I'm sincerely intrigued as to why, exactly, this can't be viewed as a nudge. (Thaler doesn't say in his tweet, and you don't say in your post.) The ban is *not* on consuming certain quantities of soda; it's a ban on (some) stores selling soda in certain sizes. It has become a bit harder, but not by any means impossible, or punishable by any kind of state sanction, to drink massive amounts of Coke in New York City. It has become a bit easier to take the choice to stick to smaller sizes. I'd be sincerely intrigued to understand why that can't be characterised as a nudge.Smart Driverhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04544749432955623121noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3585028625507474093.post-56728126775956320842012-07-11T01:12:41.930+01:002012-07-11T01:12:41.930+01:00The book isn't bad, but it seems designed to l...The book isn't bad, but it seems designed to lead to this kind of thing. The line from nudge to shove had to have been known to be hazy. And there were tons of warnings that this would be the outcome of his proposal.Eric Cramptonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15831696523324469713noreply@blogger.com