Maybe global coordination really is an impossible situation to bring about — Janus
I'd love to hear what the brightest minds have to say about our greatest problems and the one greatest problem that is behind them all; overpopulation. — Janus
The point is that we cannot feed the world population sustainably. — Janus
I don’t know if I’d agree with that, nor do I think that Capitalism rests on the distance of a reserve army of unemployed. The whole Capitalism thing seems like an easy blame game in terms of over population. — Brett
There might be a lot of reasons in poorer countries for people having children or having what might be regarded as too many and adding to problems. Women might get pregnant against their will, adults might have children to help with what’s needed to survive. There was a time when men preferred to have boys because they were of more use to them in terms of working the land or whatever else was needed. So there may be all sorts of reasons for having children that we can’t comprehend. — Brett
The so called reserve army of unemployed would consist of a lot of people with no skills at all, people who can’t even read and write. The profits you might be referring to come from a cheap labour force. In fact a population of healthy, educated people is the real benefit to Capitalists. — Brett
That’s not very reasonable either. You have to be clear about who you’re referring to. Most parents are good at what they do under many different and trying conditions. — Brett
people must come to understand and care about the real situation. I'm not proposing actual solutions, but trying to encourage discussion about the scope of the problem, and maybe the kinds of things we might expect any practicable solution to involve. — Janus
We are all being screwed (to varying degrees) by the financial elites, in a system in which we are all hopelessly complicit. We expect our politicians to do something, but our politicians are too cowardly, or stupid, or "in the pockets of the plutocrats" or just plain impotent to do anything, other than make vague promises, about doing "something".
The angry outrage is the outcry of systemic impotence; it's all noise in a deadly vacuum. Predictably, once some degree of the customary comfort is restored, we will settle back into, as much as resources allow, "business as usual", and we'll do that until resources no longer allow. That is what is coming; whether next year, or in five, ten, twenty or fifty years.
The greatest problems we collectively face are resource depletion, destruction of habitat, species extinctions, destruction of soils by the industrial agricultural machine that is needed to feed our absurdly over-bloated numbers. — Janus
And this is the core error that has been and still is ever so popular on the leftist side. Note the word "always", which is the problem. Not that sometimes, but always. That improvement, that profits have to be taken from someone else. To profit one HAS TO BE stealing from others. Wealth cannot be created, but only taken away from someone else.Profit always has to be at someone's detriment. — Kenosha Kid
Hence basically you are against the idea of more prosperity. You basically believe that poor countries today could not have it as good as we have it now.The result of uniform prosperity is not to make the world as prosperous as the developed West, but to reduce the prosperity of the West down to some Goldilocks zone with everyone else, which in itself is fine. — Kenosha Kid
It's definitely more complicated than that. China's Ghost cities are an indirect result of their significant gender imbalance.The existence of China's never inhabited ghost cities may indicate that the promise of economic growth to lift populations out of extreme poverty may be somewhat overrated, or at least shortsighted. — praxis
The result of uniform prosperity is not to make the world as prosperous as the developed West, but to reduce the prosperity of the West down to some Goldilocks zone with everyone else, which in itself is fine.
— Kenosha Kid
Hence basically you are against the idea of more prosperity. You basically believe that poor countries today could not have it as good as we have it now. — ssu
Because what on Earth would be that "Goldilocks zone" you would deem appropriate for us? The US of the 1980's? Western Europe of the 1990's? Even if we take the present as the goldilocks, is really the goldilocks zone a world where we still die from heart attacks and have corona viruses? — ssu
Perhaps it's confusing to be both critical of the problems that capitalism has and do exist, yet acknowledge that many things have improved under our less than perfect capitalist system. — ssu
Hence if you Kenosha Kid lets say invent a battery for smart phones that uses 50% less raw materials giving 80% more power with half of the production cost, obviously you could sell it at half price compared to other battery makers and people likely would opt for the cheaper far better battery. — ssu
Does central planning work so great all the time?The existence of China's never inhabited ghost cities may indicate that the promise of economic growth to lift populations out of extreme poverty may be somewhat overrated, or at least shortsighted. — praxis
I don't believe the World is perfect, but I can see when some things work better than others. History tells it. Starting from the most clear examples of when a countries have been divided into two with one part going with capitalism and the other with socialism. A better example could not be given.Your ideal vision was to make the world prosperous. If you understand that capitalism is "less than perfect", how consistent can it be with this perfect world you believe possible? — Kenosha Kid
You underestimate the competition. You think they would stand idle when they simply could copy your technology? You could bitch and moan about intellectual theft, of course. But no way you can buy a monopoly from all the power elites of the world.The reality is that I put my competitors out of business by undercutting them, making them poorer and me richer. — Kenosha Kid
You know, the Byzantine court used the predatory pricing in silk production to bankrupt private competition and gain monopoly, but notice that monopolies aren't typical in our globalized World. If you would be successful, then you would be one of the ten or so battery makers in the World. And we seem to forget that in the history of capitalism trust-busting happened too: there's no Standard Oil today as there was earlier. We just now have forgotten that the US did something about the robber barons, as they were called in their day.My next move would be to do a Shkreli and hike up the price of my battery. Because I am a capitalist. That is my job: to take money from the many and put it into my hands. — Kenosha Kid
So let's say you would be a genuine risk taker and go for the cheapest labour anywhere with in mind to shorten your manufacturing distances. So why wouldn't you take the bold move to produce the batteries right there where the raw materials are extracted in the DRC?And presumably I'm not hand-making these personally, right? To undercut my competitors I'm probably going to rely on the economic disparity between my prosperous country and somewhere much less prosperous in East Asia somewhere. And if not, I'm certainly going to have to rely on wage labour. — Kenosha Kid
The fact is that it hasn't been overrated or short sighted what the Chinese have been able to do. — ssu
Better to build homes, make the largest high speed rail system than spend the billions in stock buy backs.Wasted infrastructure is the result of an overestimation. Endless economic growth is inherently short-sighted because it's unquestionably unsustainable. — praxis
Drastic economic downturns have been with us for at least 250 years.Economic downturns will become more frequent and longer lasting, in fact this may already be happening. — praxis
Yes. Nobody is forecasting a 20% growth in the US economy and why should it be so? If the poorer countries get more wealthy, sure, the growth rates will come down. And if the global population growth stops and starts to diminish, why would we need rapid economic growth?The economic growth of China and other countries will inevitably fall to the rates of developed economies and by that time global resources or in particular cheap energy, the backbone of economic growth, will be further diminished — praxis
Read, learn and use more than one reference, that's all it takes. If you read enough you will notice that neither peak oil or climate change clearly are fake. For such complex issues there's no distinct "truth" or a yes or no answer. Peak conventional oil has already happened some years ago. We already have seen what happens with over 100 dollar prices (the global economy halts) and that we can be in a situation of negative oil prices in the US (because, hey, it's a casino). And climate change is similar, quite true thing.I imagine that because of the money and big players involved it's difficult to know who's telling the truth about peak oil, climate change, and the like. — praxis
Besides, women are squeezed out of their rightful contraception, away from possible emergency abortion and to give births against their will only to fuel the flames of evil, tragedies guaranteed! — DrOlsnesLea
Starting from the most clear examples of when a countries have been divided into two with one part going with capitalism and the other with socialism. A better example could not be given. — ssu
You underestimate the competition. You think they would stand idle when they simply could copy your technology? You could bitch and moan about intellectual theft, of course. But no way you can buy a monopoly from all the power elites of the world. — ssu
So why wouldn't you take the bold move to produce the batteries right there where the raw materials are extracted in the DRC? — ssu
So why would it be bad if one of the most poor countries in the World suddenly get an advanced and extremely competitive tech industry that uses domestic resources giving a headache to Chinese battery manufacturers? — ssu
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