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Julian (moissanist)@moissanist• 5 months ago

I think the real scissor here is between European and North American cultural norms. A while ago I left my jacket in my friends room in a European hotel. I had no connection to the room otherwise and my friend was busy. I walked to the front desk, asked for a room key, was given it and got my jacket. No questions asked anywhere. In NA all the norms pertaining to rules are a lot more absolute. I was once nearly thrown out of a games convention because I wasn't wearing my badge around my neck and only presenting it to the guards at the entrance because "the rules". To the European brain this is inconveivable because there's some sense in which it's common sense that the badge is for getting past security so even if the rules say "you have to wear it" on paper everybody would be fine with accomplishing the functional understanding. Same here, to most north Americans there is a big deontological category "lying" or "stealing" in this squarely fits the definition. To me very obviously, taking an item somebody else doesn't want isn't stealing, the category of stealing is about making sure people's property isn't taken away. This reads closer to dumpster diving than taking an item from the supermarket to me very obviously. BUT in there is an explicit step to switch to second order reasoning that uses something like intent instead of categorical enforcement of norms - which requires incidentally a different kind of high social trust about the intent of the people involved. In this particular kind of social trust Europe is a higher trust society than North America. I'm guessing most of this pretty straightforwardly falls out from historical contigency, where the US had to operate at a very different scales, so more explicit/simpler norms are needed (or reddotairplane.gif). Also I think an important reason why reasnoning about e.g. Scandinavian countries doesn't just translate the US 1 to 1. Also often this is hardcoded into the system in a way. Where e.g. another place where I've encountered this before: I wear contacts and ran out while in the US. I tried to buy some. They told me I needed a US prescription or I could go fuck myself because those are the rules. I was thoroughly confused why nobody would sell me this harmless object I clearly know I need, why the employees can't just sell me that, when a friend pointed out that they'd potentially be fired for this under threat of the legal system. Both sides look like barbarians to the other because they're violating their own versions of high trust, but it's not actually a low trust phenomenon but slightly different flavours of high trust clashing.

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5/16/2025
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helen...@nuanceexists• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist best take of the discourse, thank u for ur service

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5/16/2025
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rachel (aka “x’s venus”)@rachelclif• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist really good take, followed back 🫡

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5/16/2025
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Quentin@Tangrenin• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist Moissanist absurdly high quality long tweets return fuck yeah!!!

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5/16/2025
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• 5 months ago
Replying to @Tangrenin

@Tangrenin @moissanist I’m very here for these long tweets

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5/16/2025
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Quentin@Tangrenin• 5 months ago
Replying to @m_ashcroft

@m_ashcroft @moissanist He has so many of those in store, he's the person I've most thought "damn we should have recorded that convo!" about

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daniel brottman 🪷@danielbrottman• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist very interesting!

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5/16/2025
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Jim Kent (鉱夫正義)@ThePurpIeKnight• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist ok, how do you know the person doesn't want the item that's in the lost and found that you stole? or does just assuming they never intend to come back for it let you pretend you're not a thief?

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5/16/2025
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Captain Howel@Mr_Bohrer• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist Handling of lost & found boxes is often very informal. The only consistent policy where I've worked was if the lost item is a phone, the person needed to show me they could unlock it. With clothes, knowing the item was there was usually proof enough.

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5/16/2025
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Prospero@abysmoftime• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist longpoast more this is fire

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5/16/2025
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Kingly Box@UntilTrees• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist is the scissors about whether you expect the real owners to recover their item from lost and found? I expect that hence this feels like stealing, you don't hence this feels like circumventing a silly barrier to recover something that would otherwise be thrown away

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5/16/2025
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brent@_brentbaum• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist +1, thanks for the take! largely agreed. i relaxed this morning a bit when i realized it was americans and brits who were offended.

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5/16/2025
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ChrisD@sensefulronin• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist The meta take I have been promised

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5/16/2025
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George@georgejrjrjr• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist > taking an item somebody else doesn't want The premise of 'lost and found' is that that the item *is* wanted. Grabbing the **nicest** scarf in the box makes "doesn't want" much less likely. If she had grabbed the cheapest / shittiest scarf it would be far less egregious.

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5/16/2025
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Diplopia@_Diplopia_• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist Spirit of the law Vs letter of the law. I much much much prefer the spirit

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5/16/2025
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tess@xsphi• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist in my experience it's exactly the opposite. in the US most people are either too dumb or too rebellious to follow any but the most basic rules, and most actual rules are emergent. whereas in Europe (particularly Germany & the UK) the letter of the law is often followed.

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5/17/2025
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Chip@theMacroChip• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist It's closer to taking from the supermarket than the dumpster. You really gonna steal things from the supermarket that "obviously won't sell" or something?

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5/17/2025
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tao te chic@taotechic• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist this is a great write up

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5/17/2025
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Michael Ashcroft@m_ashcroft• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist on reflection while this is really interesting I think it’s pointing too broadly at a distinction that isn’t really there

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artichoke@Artischoke• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist Feeling into it a bit more i think it's specifically bohèmian norms that celebrate this kind of thing as savoir-vivre. And bohèmian norms are culturally strong among fashionable europeans age 30 and up (i grew up in them). Think Before Sunrise as an aesthetic

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5/17/2025
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Jack@jackinlondon• 5 months ago
Replying to @moissanist

@moissanist > walked to the front desk, asked for a room key, was given it and got my jacket. No questions asked anywhere. agreed this is nice, which is why it's especially egregious when this trust is abused!

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