I think the slow collapse of democracies is a good thing. — Agustino
Yeah, though I'm starting to doubt whether Trump will actually be able to stop the decline of the West. — Agustino
I'm pessimistic (about climate change, global warming, rising ocean levels, petroleum depletion, CO2 reduction, etc.) because it is too late by about 40 years to make the critical changes needed, and too much time (50 years, roughly) are required to find, perfect, and implement large technological changes. In other words, the horses are out of the barn and gone. — Bitter Crank
Here's a symbolic example: President Carter installed solar panels on the roof of the White House in 1976. in 1980 President Reagan had them removed -- not because they were ruining the roof, but because he rejected the whole ecological movement. Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, and Bush II, accomplished nothing, and Obama didn't accomplish significant significant reductions, either -- though he at least signed the Paris climate change agreement, which Trump then rejected. — Bitter Crank
The 1970 decade was the last time we could have begun earnestly responding to climate change, but we didn't. Four more decades (1980 - present) pushed CO2 levels, global heating, and all that close to the top. It is now running over the top. — Bitter Crank
IF China, the US, Europe, India, et al ALL committed to radical CO2 reduction today, it would still take at least 50 years to bring about the process. — Bitter Crank
Carbon sequestration? Gigantic solar farms and windmills everywhere? Everybody on mass transit? Abandoning the private automobile, freeways, air travel and airports? Cease petroleum pumping, plastic production, and use? Abandon consumerism everywhere? Empty the suburbs? Gut the world economy? — Bitter Crank
One might as well plan on the second coming of Christ to happen this afternoon. — Bitter Crank
People as old as I am are well advised not to buy green bananas. Respond soon, or I might not be here. — Bitter Crank
That's not true. We haven't yet reached a tipping point as far as I'm aware. — Posty McPostface
False dilemma. — Posty McPostface
The sun works miracles on green bananas. — Posty McPostface
Yes, they are not "actually" democracies because it belongs to the essence of democracy to be unstable and to, over time, decline into tyranny. Although this is the same trope the communists played, saying that the USSR wasn't "actually" communism.The point is that probably any examples you find are not actually democracies. That does not mean that they are not declining or collapsing. It does mean that they're not collapsing because they're democracies. — tim wood
One perspective that others haven't taken into consideration is the fact that China has integrated a robust economy into its central management system. They seemed to have been able to solve the management problem (effective allocation of resources) that the Soviets faced under a central command economy. Some people call this a hybrid economy, but I digress. — Posty McPostface
Please name any democracies that are collapsing. — tim wood
The US is constitutional federal republic. That is, it is not democracy at all. Some aspects of our government are democratic. It remains to find out just what folks exactly mean when they refer to "democracies." The risk is that the imprecision can make a difference. The chart is interesting, but unelucidating. There's a difference between democratic in its noun form and its adjectival form. — tim wood
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