People maintain all sorts of delusions. One delusion: I could be rich, too. Another delusion: People get rich by their own efforts; work hard, get rich. Rich people deserve what they have. Yes, Mark, Jeff, and Bill earned every cent!
Do I have a choice about severe inequality? Do you? No. It's deeply, systemically embedded and protected by laws and courts. — Bitter Crank
Which is better than you. We could do this all day where you make an assertion, I question it and you evade it. I would have expected such an amazing claim to be supported by amazing evidence. I thought you actually had a quote of Trump saying, "I want all you armed wackos to rush the Capitol and take hostages". Instead you answer my question for specifics and how what Trump said was different than what Dems have said, with a question about what the Dems said. Do you see the problem yet?Half sane then. That's better than none at all. — frank
The chooks are laying at half-speed. So I've started eating more cereal, and also cut back on coffee consumption. Wife has settled on a combination oats, dates and dried mulberries, which has an excellent aroma. — Banno
I've been reading about neoliberalism. I don't think there are CEOs or oligarchs who try to instigate racial conflict. They don't have to. There's generational inertia where a child comes into a community that's waiting to pass on anger and fear. In that sense, today's racism is old. — frank
The neoliberalism I'm talking about is a post ww2 philosophy that identifies various threats to freedom. Freedom is the key word, and the almighty good is a free market. — frank
:up:I think 180Proof is right that there is a war on African Americans and brown people that has deep roots. On the other hand, BitterCrank is right that concentration of wealth has created a sense of loss among whites that leaves them vulnerable to manipulation. So the war is old and new at the same — frank
:up:And where do the assumptions of British Empiricism come from, well, medieval Scholasticism: nominalism. It all goes back to nominalism.
When you believe in nominalism, there's no inherent values or natures to things, so there is no inherent value to things in the world. They're just commodities you sell on a market. And it's value and price is subjective. The value of your land is subjective, of your life, of your drinking water, of your food, of your children and of your country. This is nominalist economics. I don't call it neoliberalism, it's nominalism. — Dharmi
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