Although I went too far when I claimed Bernie was unelectable, the fact is that the data suggests he's got a lesser chance than Biden. Do you agree that it's reasonable to take that into account when voting in the primary? — Relativist
On the other hand, if someone's top priority is to move toward a more just social system, one might choose to take more risk and vote for Bernie. I'm not going to tell them it's wrong to take that risk, but I would like them to be aware that they ARE taking that risk. — Relativist
In a nut shell, the rich are going to get relatively and absolutely richer as a result of coronavirus, due to the mere happenstance of economic inequality (not as a result of creating value for society). What makes this appalling to me is that it's the average middle class and below schmucks paying the actual price, while private corporations lap up the blood and sweat as pure profit (even my local grocery store seems to have jacked prices...).
How far can we stretch the social contract upholding this reality before it gets ripped apart? — VagabondSpectre
Never before have such large proportions and swaths of the honeycombs been owned or controlled by so few (this is a problem that inadvertently stems from imperfect markets). — VagabondSpectre
it wasn't that we actually ever needed kings, it's that we were either to escape the direct (usually force based) control they exerted (maybe because of markets, or maybe because the king's power system collapsed). We still have a system that enforces a particularly lord like way of things (Bezos is bona fide global Baron). — VagabondSpectre
If necessary, we can conceptualize the social contract strictly as the set of sentiments and agreements that holds back social chaos or revolution. — VagabondSpectre
Stock purchasing is for day traders and portfolio managers
but assuming that investors have insight on the whole, they will wait and begin buying when appropriate.
but really my point is that the richer you are, the less you are affected, and the more you stand to gain, relatively speaking.
I'm arguing that what you said, given the context, has misleading implications. The discussion was centered on presidential elections. Making general comments about polling is fine, but why announce general skepticism and the importance of questioning them given this specific context? What is the implication there? We know how well the presidential polls have faired -- they have a long history, plenty of good scholarship on them.
So I guess the real question is ere you denying what *I* said was true? If not, your comment is fairly trivial and poorly timed. — Xtrix
Rather, I'm wondering to what extent the polling is itself influenced by virtue of the participant selection process and the framing of the questions... which, in turn, makes me wonder to what extent the actual election is influenced by the same. Nothing trivial about that at all... given both, the timing and the context... — creativesoul
I'm a little angrier than usual nowadays. Again, my apologies. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. — creativesoul
The differences between Bernie and Biden are numerically small in the battleground states, but in my mind, the significance is magnified by the context: Trump can win each one of those states. If he wins the 3 biggest (Florida, Pennsylvania, and Michigan), he will win the election. He won those 3 in 2016. This makes me more nervous than does the coronavirus. Despite the low probability I will die if I get it, I'm taking the recommended precautions (social distancing, hand-washing, etc). Analogously, I'm taking precautions against Trump's being reelected.But as you saw, Bernie is very close with Biden in national polls and fairs well in battleground states as well. So it is a little riskier, but not by much. — Xtrix
The differences between Bernie and Biden are numerically small in the battleground states, but in my mind, the significance is magnified by the context: Trump can win each one of those states. — Relativist
Wealth de-concentrates during depressions. We haven't had one in a while, so I'd easily believe we're at a peak. — frank
You know that you can also do this? — BitconnectCarlos
This is questionable. Traditional financial wisdom advises against timing the market, and instead riding out the storm. Of course in this case we may just need to make an exception (personally, I have sold most of my holdings). In any case, over the past few decades fund managers have not generally speaking outperformed the S&P. — BitconnectCarlos
I feel like we need to define "affected" here a little better. On one hand, the wealthy have lost more than the poor in dollar terms this past week by far. Generally speaking, it seems like people are getting knocked down a peg - so everyone becomes less wealthy. On the very bottom of the social ladder you have the homeless who probably aren't affected by this very much at all. But above them are the poor who are now in a serious situation and threatened with homelessness. The middle class now risk becoming poor in a recession and the wealthy may risk becoming middle class or less wealthy.
If the rich are trying to time the market then they have more to gain and also more to lose if they mistime it. I think if everything were to crash we'd all be more equal, relatively speaking. You would just have a ton of wealth destroyed and everyone would be poor. Even if a rich person did time the market well who would buy his products? — BitconnectCarlos
Bernie would not accept. Trump has been part of the political corruption on both sides of it... the buyer and the seller of public policy. — creativesoul
It's a perfectly respectable opinion all over the media, certainly not original with me.
— fishfry
Ugh. Come on. — Xtrix
I'd let this go but I'm really curious to understand your thinking.
I agree Hillary as the nominee is unlikely. But you think even mention of it is somehow beyond the pale. But I have seen much speculation along those lines from both the right and the left side of the commentariat for months. I just don't see why you think even mentioning the idea as a speculation is somehow wrong. I mean, Hillary's been all over the place in public the past few months, and when asked about her intentions she coyly says, "I never say never."
How do you figure that's not sufficient justification for raising the question?
Please try to answer this in complete logical sentences, not "Ugh . Come on," which is not helpful. — fishfry
Wealth de-concentrates during depressions. We haven't had one in a while, so I'd easily believe we're at a peak.
— frank
Does it manifest as symptom or as a cure?
And what happens when the depression ends? — VagabondSpectre
It seems like you're saying wealth aggregates until shit hits the fan and the distribution becomes untenable (maybe its called a depression). — VagabondSpectre
Are you with me on the subject of wealth redistribution then? I've been arguing for UBI for years... — VagabondSpectre
If performance is in the black then wealth will concentrate merely because most people have no position to begin with.
There is risk and opportunity, but there is more opportunity for those who are already well positioned, and much more risk for those who are not.
Paycheck to Paycheck with no health insurance in America is not well positioned...
The closer someone is pushed toward the bottom, the exponentially worse their living conditions seem to get. Since basic nutrition is already on the concern-table for many American families, I'm confident that the breaking point isn't actually that far off.
Obviously we have a stock market crisis on our hands, but the main reason is the virus and the day to day measures that we're taking to prevent it like not leaving our houses and economic activity coming to a halt. It's a bottom up issue rather than a top down one. — BitconnectCarlos
How far can we stretch the social contract upholding this reality before it gets ripped apart?
Lots of stupid things are discussed somewhere in the media. The fact that they appear in the media doesn't make them any less stupid. Clear enough? — Xtrix
Lots of stupid things are discussed somewhere in the media. The fact that they appear in the media doesn't make them any less stupid. Clear enough?
— Xtrix
Oh, political speculation is verboten? — fishfry
You seem to only know what you read in the papers, and you clearly don't read much. — fishfry
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.