So you mean the entrepreneur providing a service or a utility doesn't benefit anybody?I claimed that the wealth entrepreneurs create benefits no one but themselves. — Kaarlo Tuomi
markets, like gardens, must be tended, that the market is the greatest social technology ever invented for solving human problems, but unconstrained by social norms or democratic regulation, markets inevitably create more problems than they solve.
The new economics must and can insist that the purpose of the corporation is to improve the welfare of all stakeholders: customers, workers, community and shareholders alike.
And this is the real issue here.And of course, assuming every second person is a racist and sexist even if they say they're not. — Judaka
You can obviously disagree with Azimuth's opinion about it, but isn't it genuinely the problem that people are offended, make a huge row and accusations when some is assumed to be political incorrect? All the dog whistles etc.No, I disagree, I think being courteous doesn't need a synonym, be courteous to be courteous. Even criticise others for being discourteous, that's fair. The problem with PC is that it's extremely political, unlike being courteous.
PC is more than just the concept of PC, it's about how it's implemented, by who, where and for what? — Judaka
Yet it isn't equivalent to Liar Paradox or perhaps in this case to Russell's paradox. This is something that some writers erroneously think. The self refence doens't fall into a vicious circle (as Russell put it), even if there's a statement / Gödel number referring to a Gödel number.Last but not least, Godel admits that his method of proof has a connection with the Liar Paradox which, to me, should set the alarm bells ringing. — TheMadFool
You mean those who formerly voted labour that didn't get excited about Jeremy Corbyn last time? :snicker:their voter base has become fundamentalist, so it doesn't matter how crazy they behave. — Punshhh
Is it too simple answer to say that entrepreneurship seems like focusing on income and money, where as philosophy on thinking and knowledge? Yet we shouldn't forget that some philosophers (on the right) think quite highly of entrepreneurs.So why is it that most people that are interested in philosophy aren't interested in Entrepreneurship? — Gitonga
“Many are worth defending in light of our founding; others aren’t,” Pompeo said at a launch ceremony in Philadelphia. He did not specify which rights he thought were superfluous, but the state department during his tenure has been aggressive in opposing references to reproductive and gender rights in UN and other multilateral documents.
But notice it isn't so clear cut: human population may peak in this century and then diminish, which means declining demand. And thanks to technology and the market mechanism, the decline in natural resources isn't so clear cut either as the used resources change too.But now resources are declining and demand is increasing. — Janus
That's the old traditional way of thinking. But not with MMT!if a sovereign government prints money willy-nilly, then traders may lose confidence in the currency leading to its losing value. — Janus
I'll recap the discussion.I have no idea what you are talking about anymore, your argument is so far removed from the initial issue that 'political correctness' isn't even mentioned here. — Maw
I bet you and NOS4A2 will surely differ in your views about just what kind of extremism is really the problem, but does that change the real issue? — ssu
Yes, that undeniably changes the issue because then you can't say "80% of respondents agree that extremism is a problem" or any other aggregate judgements, because that binds myself and NOS4A2 together in an unsound and baseless way, since we don't agree on the actual content of the word 'extremism' given definitions that are detached from one another. — Maw
As I've pointed out to you before, the study in that article doesn't define political correctness, leaving the term completely open to interpretation per respondent, making the analysis useless. — Maw
Sorry to repeat this, but I don't really understand what is your problem.That's why a definition, and other caveats, would have been useful :wink: — Maw
What data exactly? The data that 88% Native Americans oppose PC, was it so?So what conclusions do you draw from that bit of data? — fdrake
It is obvious that certain elements on the right mock instances in which political correctness goes awry in order to win the license to spew outright racial hatred. And it is understandable that, in the eyes of some progressives, this makes anybody who dares to criticize political correctness a witting tool of—or a useful idiot for—the right. But that’s not fair to the Americans who feel deeply alienated by woke culture. Indeed, while 80 percent of Americans believe that political correctness has become a problem in the country, even more, 82 percent, believe that hate speech is also a problem.

I'm aware that questionnaires can be made (and often are) to further some agenda and the questions can be leading or loaded.I would like to live in a world where people seem as unaware as you are that questions can be leading or loaded, and intentionally or negligently made that way. — fdrake
Ah, the best example of these kind of policies was Ceaucescu's Romania. The Romanian dictator wanted a larger country by prohibiting abortions and contraception with Decree 770. It failed to reach it's goals, of course.I think economic growth is also the driver for population growth. Back in the John Howard days here in Australia, there was a Government TV add campaign urging couples to have three children: one for mum, one for dad and one for the country, because they foresaw that if lifespans increase and reproduction decreased then there would not be enough workers to enable the economic activity needed to support the population. — Janus

Partly,Also bear in mind that credit is based on the assumption that the future will be bigger and better economically speaking than the present. As long as this illusion is maintained then then the mere existence of so much credit necessitates economic growth, or else there will be defaults. — Janus

And now for the strawman.You go on interpreting the poorly designed survey in accordance with whatever political worldview you think it confirms then... — fdrake
What I'm saying that many statistics are vague. Yet that vagueness doesn't mean the statistic is useless.You're all approving of the vague statistic — fdrake
If someone talks about "great art" or "great food", can they articulate what that precisely is? Will they have different opinions about it? Yes, absolutely. Do we have to cancel the use of these terms as we may differ on what exactly contributes to good art or a fine meal? No, we still can get the idea when talking about great art and great food.When someone talks about "political correctness", they usually cannot articulate precisely what it is. — fdrake
It's usually an "excessive version of (undefined allegedly progressive blah)", and everyone dislikes unspecified undefined allegedly progressive blah when it is excessive. — fdrake
Yes, that undeniably changes the issue because then you can't say "80% of respondents agree that extremism is a problem" or any other aggregate judgements, because that binds myself and NOS4A2 together in an unsound and baseless way, since we don't agree on the actual content of the word 'extremism' given definitions that are detached from one another. — Maw
Remember that population growth is the natural reason for economic growth.Interesting that you say peak population will be a problem for perpetual growth. It seems to me that real growth is already ended, and that what may appear as growth is an apparition created by the generation of ever more credit. — Janus
Would they agree with yours?. Given this, what does it mean when "88% of Native Americans oppose political correctness", do you think each and every Native American surveyed would agree with your meaning, and how do you know that? — Maw
Which people usually understand.PC in political discourse isn't wanted. Common decency in everyday life very much is. — Benkei
Vast majority of people are sincere believers, very few are cynical grabbers of power. But many understand how "the game" works and that makes them to look to be "cynical". Westboro Church and Klu klux clan are extremes, while the average evangelical or religious person or the average person with bigoted views are different.These cancellers are not cynical grabbers of power but sincere believers. — DingoJones
See article: World's population likely to shrink after 50 yearsThe world's population is likely to peak at 9.7 billion in 2064, and then decline to about 8.8 billion by the end of the century, as women get better access to education and contraception, a new study has found.
By 2100, 183 of 195 countries will not have fertility rates required to maintain the current population, with a projected 2.1 births per woman, researchers from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington's School of Medicine said. Some 23 countries -- including Japan, Thailand, Italy, and Spain -- will see populations shrink by more than 50%, researchers said. However, the population of sub-Saharan Africa could triple, allowing for just under half of the world's population to be African by the end of the century.
Hahahahaaa!!! :rofl:As I've pointed out to you before, the study in that article doesn't define political correctness, leaving the term completely open to interpretation per respondent, making the analysis useless. — Maw
That doesnt answer why Im wring about Daryl Davies way being more effective. You are just saying that most people dint do it that way. That doesnt mean its not the best way to do it. — DingoJones
Perhaps there is a conspiracy to divide the people, yet make the issues so stupid, so unimportant to the greater audience that it actually doesn't rock the boat. As you said, the true focus should be in income distribution and how we make our society better, not the nonsense of a perpetual culture war.What I really, really dislike about banning, deplatforming, PC culture, cancel culture, and so on is that it is too crude to be useful. Portraits of "white supremacists" have been drawn with nothing more subtle than paint rollers, where sharp pencils are in order. Who, and what, exactly, is a white supremacist? Or a transphobic? Will the real fascists please state your party platform? — Bitter Crank
And that evidence, assuming there would be that, likely isn't coming out from the Chinese authorities.Sure, the point being that without actual evidence making 1 more likely we should award it a very low probability. — Benkei
Parents still use the genitive when talking about their children, I guess.I assumed this was a typo or autocorrect the first time, but do you somehow own an “Indian” person or something? — Pfhorrest
Why am I wrong? — DingoJones
More like 1. a 0,999% and 3. a 0,001% as option 3 doesn't make any sense at all.I'll give 1 a .9% chance, 2 a 99% chance and the last .1%. — Benkei
I agree. And since no government in the World would be indifferent about the possibility that it really did get out of a laboratory by accident and just reply "Sorry about that!", it will be genuinely hard to prove this (or disprove). We may never know.Also, as I stated, it may have been a virus that evolved at the lab (not intentional), and got out. Though that might be harder to prove. — schopenhauer1
That's been dismissed as a hoax. — Benkei
See article Wuhan lab had three live bat coronaviruses, but none matched COVID-19One of their research teams, led by Professor Shi Zhengli, has been researching bat coronaviruses since 2004 and focused on the “source tracing of SARS,” the strain behind another virus outbreak nearly two decades ago. “We know that the whole genome of SARS-CoV-2 is only 80 percent similar to that of SARS. It’s an obvious difference,” she said. “So, in Professor Shi’s past research, they didn’t pay attention to such viruses which are less similar to the SARS virus.” - In an interview with Scientific American, Shi said the SARS-CoV-2 genome sequence did not match any of the bat coronaviruses her laboratory had previously collected and studied.
The World Health Organization warned Monday that there could be no return to normality any time soon as too many countries were bungling their response to the coronavirus pandemic. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that if public health guidelines are not followed, the crisis will get "worse and worse and worse."
We noticed.Did that already on page 6 — Maw
It's very difficult to articulate something that is a longer process, something that takes years even decades to happen. To articulate something you basically have to have a narrative of something that is happening. That narrative only emerges from history. From history we get things like that there was a "Cold War between two Superpowers". Of the present that is hard to agree simply because only in hindsight we know what happened.As far as I see, there is a principal difficulty: we do not know how to articulate the ongoing crisis in the US. — Number2018
For most the pandemic isn't a problem.For most people there is no problem at all. Why? — Number2018
