Have to say this, in the 19th Century those laws of war or basically civilized conduct was followed many times far more as during our more "civilized" times. It is especially after the slaughter of WW1, the extensive propaganda effort to dehumanize the enemy and the ideological charge to the war effort that changed the way we look at war. With WW2 it turned even worse. As I've said earlier, the only modern conflict where rules of war were followed by both sides was the conflict on remote islands in the Southern Atlantic between the UK and Argentina.Churchill was a creature of 19th century British imperialism (and culture). As such he may have met the standard of being a "war criminal" even while sleeping. — tim wood

This is a very good take on the situation in the 19th Century. Yes, back then it was Americans that went to Germany to educate themselves. And before WW2, a huge portion of science was in German language and many academics of those time were fluent in German. After WW2, English dominates as a true lingua universalis. And this is one of the cornerstonesAt this time for the Germans that meant preparing the young to advance technology for military and industrial purpose. England strongly rejected this education because it wanted to protect it classes, and education for technology tends to make everyone equal, because the child from the poorest home, educated for technology, does not remain in the low class. The focus of English education was to be an English man and woman.
The US with its democratic values, stumbled onto the benefits of education for technology when it mobilized for the first world war. Technologically Germany was the most advanced, and the US had to scramble to catch up. — Athena
Yes. Let's look at this from the viewpoint of the ruling elite. This is the double edge sword for those in power: educated people create a better economy, while an uneducated people likely obey more traditional rulers. Hence many dictators and totalitarian system try the illogical goal of having more doctors, engineers and scientists to advance the technology of the country, yet assume that these highly trained clever professionals won't stray into the realm of thinking about politics or basically using their head. Let's remember that Hitler had been in power only 6 years before he started WW2, hence all the German engineers and scientists had studied and learnt their profession basically before Nazi totalitarianism took hold.If human beings are to be more than well trained, reactionary animals, that obey their masters, or get pushed to the margins of society, then they must learn how to be civilized humans. Leaving moral training to the church does not work in a democracy with liberty. In a democracy with liberty the people must have training for good moral judgment and cultural values. Citizens must be adults, not God's and the king's children. — Athena
Some define this to be the benefit of the loser of a war. Not only Japan and West Germany were forced into soul searching when militarism had catastrophically failed (East Germany simply assumed it had nothing to do with fascism, hence for example the East German army was made in line with the old Wehrmacht as totalitarianism continued there). In fact after Carthage surrendered to the Romans and stopped competing with Rome for the dominance of the Mediterranean, it had a renaissance and prospered so much that the Romans finally decided to attack and obliterate the whole city.Germany has progressed as a civilization better the US since WWII. The US missed the lesson's Germany learned and the US took their culture for granted. — Athena





Yeah, once the other side has done it, that makes it justifiable. Yet a weapon system like the V2, successful in hitting a target as large as London is hardly a weapon of pinpoint accuracy. And when you call them reprisal weapons you hardly take humanity into consideration.That Germany ever carpet bombed in the UK indiscriminately before the British did - and I'm now even certain they did so in retaliation after Churchill did. — Benkei
You know what is a real genuine reason why the Soviet Empire collapsed?A lot of the economic recovery during 2000s can be quite simply accounted by the booming oil prices and the accompanying rise in Russia's oil and gas production. — SophistiCat
The fundamental idea behind is that well known mantra of "limited government" and giving freedom for everyone to pursuit their happiness. And that is a struggle for many, which is a problem.Awe you speak of the American dream where the only thing government provides is a police force to protect private property. — Athena
As neighborhoods aren't similar, in fact even US states differ from each other just like member states of the European Union (even if English is spoken everywhere), one cannot think that neighborhoods, communities and cities can all provide equal opportunity. Hence here is where things start going wrong. Worse schools make it harder to get to the best secondary schools or to apply to tertiary education.In the US the idea of a good education system is neighborhood controlled schools that are as good as want the people in that neighborhood can afford. — Athena
You wouldn't have so many problems or crime, for starters. Not that problems would go away altogether. Still our societies (yours and mine) try to function as meritocracies, which do inherently create inequality. The issue is to have a system with social mobility and not have the classes turn into a caste system.Awe yes, the United States, the richest nation in the world. What would happen to our wealth if threw it away on that scum? Look people get what the deserve and it would be stealing form those who work hard for their money to tax them and give the money to the undeserving. — Athena
No.Do you think? but that isn't what is causing the rioting in our cities is it? — Athena
Exactly.They won the fight. It just took a long time to realize their win. — Athena
I myself find it odd that labor unions had been infiltrated by organized crime at the first place. But I think this is a major reason why real income and wages haven't gone up in the US and inequality has become even greater.Our unions made some progress and then past President Reagan destroyed the unions. — Athena

Citizenship does matter. Ask any illegal immigrant.Difference between a "domestic terrorist" and "foreign combatant" = raising your hand and saying whatever to a 10 second pledge (that really means nothing to pretty much any religion [the world is temporal and without everlasting meaning or consequence]). So. Yeah. — Outlander
If remember correctly, Hitler responded to a tiny force of British bombers bombing Berlin by starting massive bombings of London. The idea that nations can lose their will to fight and can be demoralized by bombing their cities was the theory of Douhet. The opposite appears to be the reality with conventional bombing. Yet politicians are sensitive to these kind of issues and many times the response if more about politics than military necessity.You're right. I think the reason I misremembered is because Hitler was still careful not bomb civilian targets in the UK at first, hoping for an alliance, and Churchill being the first to carpet bomb indiscriminately in Germany. — Benkei
Actually, it is.But I am not sure this discussion belongs in a thread about economics? — Athena

So how then China or India have far less prisoners than the US?That's 70x more in population with only 25x more space.
If I added 70 people to your household overnight do you think things would run as smoothly as they do now? — Outlander
It's a fact.I have heard claims that the United States has some of the most incarcerated persons relative to other countries in the world. Is this just a statistical blunder or fact - with considering populations of other countries relative to prison populations? Why is this so? — The Questioning Bookworm

This isn't true, actually.I think the Allies committed war crimes regularly. Carpet bombing was a UK invention. That's one. Purposefully targetting civilian centers another. — Benkei

We can all agree that the last thing you mentioned the Republicans are indeed doing.But it'd be a huge gamble, and massively destabilising to the country. So again they might not do anything other than sow doubts this time around. — Echarmion
I urge people not to lose faith on your fellow citizens. Even if they can be annoying at times.We are about to find out if this trust is well placed. I hope they are right, to be clear. — Olivier5
Yep. He had a mission which he clearly stated.No, Hitler didn't play several rounds of golf while staging a coup. Say what you like about the Fuhrer, he made an effort. — Kenosha Kid
Well, just don't confuse those 70 million votes to all being QAnon believers. Or do you think that all Biden voters believe that Trump is the new Hitler?Trump has got more than passive support, he's got 70 million votes and a host of extreme right militia armed to the teeth, and biding for their time. — Olivier5
And that's what the plutocrats want. Divide et impera.If Americans are not polarised against plutocrats, they will be polarised against each other. — StreetlightX
In many African countries the entire army is a few battalions.The way it's done in Africa, all you need is a few battalions backing you up. You don't need the entire army t make a coup. — Olivier5
Notice the word when.In other words, they are preparing a coup... — Olivier5
He's up to something, he's replaced most of the civilian leadership in the pentagon in the last 24 hrs. There are lots of rumours going around, my preference is to trigger emergency powers due to civil disobedience, insurgence, or war. So that he can claim that the transfer of powers is postponed indefinitely. — Punshhh
Is there a coup d'état going on, or what? — Olivier5

That's a nice compliment to the forum, Athena.I love how you all force me to think! :heart: — Athena
Making a spear better is likely a far more difficult thing than planning a new computer program, when you think of it. I'd say we are always making similar simple advances, but just adding up on the aggregate collective understanding. "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants" as Newton once said.You will not be planning a new computer program and giving any thought to technological development, but you may discover a better way to make a spear because your survival pushes you to do what you do better. — Athena
Half of the country is excited of Trump leaving. That's for sure. But come February 2021, just few months from now, that isn't the focus anymore. Then the fact is that Biden has to pick up from the situation that Trump has left the US.It's difficult to pin down exactly which parts of this are relevant to what you quoted. While there does seem to be plenty of excitement (don't get your news from internet forums), I feel like people are much less excited by the prospect of Biden than by ridding themselves of Trump. Either way, the point of what you quoted had nothing to do with people's feelings about the election; it was a reaction to hearing a president who can speak eloquently, humbly, respectfully, reasonably and positively after four years of hateful verbal diarhhoea, before remembering that actually used to be expected. — Kenosha Kid

Trump surely doesn't have an ideology, but the reason he was elected in the first place isn't a mystery. Call it simply populism: be for the ordinary people against the ruling elite. A deviation from the ordinary, what Trump presented, was enough to get the Republican candidacy and finally the elections. Once, with close race the second time.there is no 'Trumpism'. To create an -ism of any kind, even facism, you need principles. Trump has no principles, only wants and impulses, which he executes spontaneously, as they come to mind. — Wayfarer
Not actually.It's also quite something to realise that Biden's speech wasn't particularly special; it just feels alien after a mere four years of Trump. Like I said earlier, Trump has lowered the standards for everyone — Kenosha Kid
True.It's not just risky, it's counter intuitive. Increased efficiency and specialisation in production should lead to lower prices. Rising prices are purely a result in increases in the money supply or debt leveraging. — Benkei

True, but notice there are indicators as Price to earnings ration, the P/E. Usually with "normal" stocks this is something like 30, meaning that the company will pay in dividends it's stock price in 30 years. If a company grows and creates profits, that ratio could stay the same. If it anticipated to grow a lot, maybe the P/E would be 50 to 75. Now you have stocks in the P/E 100 - 1000. Now of course, the standard rhetoric is that these companies have a bright future, but now they aren't yet profitable, but will soon be. Amazon has an P/E of 98 now, is it this "small company destined to have far brighter future"? The company is over a quarter century old and is the leader in it's field, but I guess it will have to grow multiple times.One could expect, understandably, the value of an asset to keep going up during the times of sustained profitability, demand, production, and other sound economic conditions. This is not speculative bubble -- this is called sound investing. — Caldwell
That had escaped my notice, thanks!About a month ago, he put out a statement telling the UK no trade deal if they renege on their part of the deal with the EU that relates to Ireland. The House did the same. — Baden
The duopoly has found the perfect formula:Now is the moment for the American people to begin plotting a viable third party for 2024, to finally oust the two parties that have been ruining the country for decades. But it won't happen, because Americans are as dumb as they come...keep doing the same thing and wonder why everything sucks, idiots. — Merkwurdichliebe
Good question. Where does the Republican party go from here?What about the post-Trump Republican party? — VagabondSpectre
Economic history tells how to do it.Third world countries are not going have our standard of living, making shoes and clothing for wages that keep these jobs in third world countries. That is not good for them nor all the people in the developed countries needing jobs. — Athena
Trump lost the election. It is over. — Baden
That's the classic example how economics get's things wrong: if the mother stays at home, looks after the children and takes care of the house, that isn't seen in the GDP. A bigger problem is in Third World countries where a lot of people are subsistence farmers. Farmers that live off their land and have minimal amount of transactions again aren't counted in the economics statistics, which is the reason why some countries seem even poorer than they are.What you have said is kind of like figuring the value of a homemaker. Traditionally a man supports the woman, and we know his value by what he earns. The wife does not earn money, so her value is zero, right? — Athena
Some do that, but many just choose the fancy mathematical models that nobody else understands to make their findings "academic" or "professional" and are happy focusing on the mathematic models and equations. As long as everybody else is saying the same things, it doesn't matter if the World then develops totally differently as one has described. Just call it a black swan event.I lost any trust in economist when I realized they are not grounding their thoughts on economics with geological reality. — Athena
