Yep, there still is this absurd idea of an economic rebound once the pandemic is over. It will be only a statistical one, not a real economic upturn. On a global level the service sector is such a huge provider of employment that the impact that pandemic has had is quite dramatic to overall aggregate demand. Same thing goes for tourism etc. The impact will be measured in years.Incomes have been either erased or diminished, and will not be recouped in entirety for several agrarian and industrial sectors around the world for at least 5 to 6 years. — Aryamoy Mitra
Have they? Likely that is counted from their wealth and not from income and from the rebounce from the initial covid scare and stock market plunge until today seen from the graph below:In the midst of all of this, having exploited the nature of sheer capitalistic brilliance, the world's billionaires have generated over half a trillion additional dollars to their name. — Aryamoy Mitra

Unfortunately there are too many that feel this way.If you've ever housed dormant misanthropic proclivities, now would be a fitting time for them to manifest. — Aryamoy Mitra
That's your first false idea, as if I'm promoting a short timescale answer. Or that just throwing money to everything is an answer. Believe me, the US is a prime example of how that goes and that with higher costs you don't always get better health care. The fact is that better health care systems do have positive outcomes, but if a pandemic breaks out, likely the best system and the best policy actions just minimize the deaths.That doesn't have any bearing on the point I'm making. There are key components of a healthcare system which cannot be bought in a short timescale no matter how much money you throw at them. — Isaac
That's nice to hear positive things about the Reagan era. Unfortunately you might get that violent revolution (or something like it), which just makes things worse.It's all been steadily going downhill since Reagan. Nothing in our present field of view remotely indicates the slightest desire to alter direction. I see nothing short of radical violent revolution as a viable means for actual reform in the government. Unfortunately, judging from the current attitude of the youth in America, it is likely such a thing would propel the US into a Soviet-esque nightmare. Shit is bad, and ain't nothing Biden or Trump can do. — Merkwurdichliebe

Agreed. Joe won't make things better. I'm confident, though, the Biden administration won't deliberately make things worse or work against them (all-too-gradually) improving. — 180 Proof
Tell it to Oppenheimer? — Hippyhead
At least this forum has helped me understand mathematics better. Doesn't that count in our age of hedonism?Anyway, I very much doubt that any philosophical thought will be built out of this forum. — Gus Lamarch
2) Knowledge often delivers power to edit our environment, which is typically why we seek it. — Hippyhead
Another possible angle....
The problem is not knowledge, or even power, but rather the gap between power and our maturity, or rather relative lack thereof. If science could close this gap by somehow accelerating our maturity to match the demands that will increasingly be placed upon it, in theory that could be a solution. — Hippyhead
Likely the countries that score the highest points in various studies with the public health sector.Really? What nation did you have in mind whose health service is run primarily with the health of the nation in mind, without demands of greater efficiency being laid on it to either increase profits or reduce government expenditure, whose health industry is not suffuse with influence from multi-national pharmaceutical companies? I may well like to move there. — Isaac
Again here notice that it isn't just one or two governments doing this, this is a global effort. And in that global effort there might be also players that are indeed effective, even if many are inefficient.It's not about the simple act of spending money on a problem, it's about where the money's spent. — Isaac
I wouldn't call it lunacy especially as the investment does also go into treatment, not only in a vaccine.It's lunacy to invest this amount of money in a medicine which might not even work when there's absolutely proven interventions which we know will save tens of thousands of lives not only now but in the next one, and the next one... — Isaac
There isn't really a basis for this belief. — boethius
... where else would you here such an expression outside of this narrative? — Isaac

You are always so positive, Benkei. :grin:Let's stay negative! Errrrr... — Benkei
And also to get orders in, have a normal competition and inspection. This simply doesn't happen in few weeks or in a month. But in several months, then the capitalist machine gets it's act together.Which is pretty amazing. Part of the reason shortages were a problem was that supply lines stopped during the lockdown. IOW, our ability to respond to it depends on limiting lockdown. — frank
Commitment to a relationship is seen as a burden and our consumer society upholds individualism alongside materialism. There are long term changes behind these developments, starting for example on the number of people being single.Another example. Why are dogs so incredibly popular? Because they are great friends, whom we can control. When they become inconvenient we don't have to listen to their boring stories, we can just put them in the backyard. We can leave them in the backyard all day while we're at work so that they're bored out of their minds and desperate for companionship. And so when we arrive home we are greeted by a very enthusiastic friend. We can do what we want. We can get what we want. We are in control.
It's hard for real life human beings to compete with that, because engaging with real life humans involves all kinds of compromises. — Hippyhead


I fear that the online behavior will have an effect on our "offline" interactions. And the reasoning behind that might be that "having manners" and "being polite" is seen to be hypocritical and just a facade while the "online" way of talking is more "honest". Some people can have this attitude towards others, but I don't agree with them. Having good manners is a serious issue in any society and this isn't realized in the "online" community, where flaming, trolling or being redflagged isn't a big issue.The way we converse on the web is totally different from the way we do in person. What I can't tell for sure is that, whether this rude talk on the web is going to consequently reflect in our offline interactions. — Konkai
Inclusiveness indeed lowers the quality and creates that noise. I do miss many members here that truly upheld some topics in the Forum with an educative approach and gave fruitful responses yet had the persistence to answer those who obviously didn't know much more than the basics.Yes again. This is one of the big drawbacks of the forum/social media publishing model which prioritizes inclusiveness over quality. Those we might most wish to talk to are bored by the discussions and have largely left the medium long ago. Back in the nineties when all of this was new some of the most interesting people engaged, until they realized what the signal to noise ratio was going to be. Many or most users today don't even realize what has been lost. — Hippyhead
I think this is a perfect example how the society is breaking up or changing. Earlier society gave us far more rules to adhere to and we kept far more in touch with our neighbors and family. People did visit extensively their family members and friends, while now something like Facebook makes everything so easy. The real issue is that we substitute actual socializing with net & social media use, and those are not the same thing.That seems to be a pattern which transcends the Net. My Dad (1925-2000) used to talk about this even before the Net took off. People really did used to be more polite in general (assuming we ignore blatant racism, sexism, homophobia etc), but that came in part from a more confining and controlling social environment where people were trained to worry about things like "what will the neighbors think?" Nobody gives much of a #%^ what the neighbors think these days, a form of social liberation, which comes at a price. — Hippyhead
I don't think this would help much. It could perhaps make things even worse. During this pandemic teleconferencing, using Zoom or Microsoft Teams etc. has become very typical. Yet if you have met a person only through the net in these situations even with the camera on, that person is still quite remote to those that you have actually met.If social media moves more from text to video, perhaps that will restore some of the social clues we need to stop acting like animals? — Hippyhead
Good luck finding that mature and coherent criticism of anybody today.I have yet to find a genuine critique and criticism of Peterson that is mature and coherent - I think he would welcome it himself. — yebiga
I would add upholding a fraudulent bubble economy, which doesn't create much else than asset inflation that deepens the divide between the rich and others. And benefits the financial sector.The excessive military presence around the world.
A burgeoning police-state. The corporate corruption of the political process. The gradual erosion of constitutional rights. — Merkwurdichliebe
But those are great issues to focus on during an exceptionally bad economic downturn that people somehow still think will go away once the pandemic is gone.I'm not concerned with racism, xenophobia, self-righteousness, pettiness, and intolerance. Those are mere symptoms based in the frustration over the seeming futility of enacting true change. — Merkwurdichliebe
Does the animal want to find the bars of the cage or really think how the cage is built?I think of our predicament like an animal trapped in a cage trying to break free, doing whatever it can to break free. But it cannot find the bars of the cage, so it creates an imaginary cage with imaginary bars that can be readily found, thus it can have something to potentially break free of. — Merkwurdichliebe
So... nothing dramatic happened until 2010???I can say that Sweden, my home country had a development like that from say 1920 up til 2010 after which globalization issues with a very large immigration and unstable job market has caused a very unstable poltical landscape and a lot of frictions. — Ansiktsburk

Pew Research Center telephone surveys conducted in 2018 and 2019 show that 4% of American adults say they are atheists when asked about their religious identity, up from 2% in 2009. An additional 5% of Americans call themselves agnostics, up from 3% a decade ago.




This is true. Ah, to get a presidential candidate to "get people to notice the party". It's psychology: people see everywhere just how fed up with the two ruling parties, want change in an instant and think it could be possible. How about getting people to notice the party at first on the local level at city and municipal level? Likely best way would to many sister parties starting at the state level, as the US is made of quite different places.Third Parties like the Green Party are notorious among activists going back decades for wasting all their mental energy and funds every 4 years on the Presidential campaign when it's statistically guaranteed to failure by the nature of the winner-take-all electoral system. To the extent some of the members try to take power in local politics, they have been incompetent failures with a few exceptions, perhaps because all the competent people stay away from third parties because they don't want to waste their time. — Saphsin
Even if this is going a bit off topic, I agree.Consumers are about as dumb as it comes, hard to believe they can be dumbed down even further.
I would say Apple has mastered that strategy better than any other corporation. — Merkwurdichliebe
Apple is said to be planning a major change in the top-end 2021 iPhone model. If predictions made by noted Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo are to be believed the Cupertino, California-based company is planning to kill the Lightning port in the highest-end 2021 iPhone model. By ditching the Lightning port, Apple will make the iPhone completely free of ports as it is only port present in the iPhone models right now after the company stopped including the 3.5mm audio jack after iPhone 6S.

Yet is this different from the view of the Egyptians, the Chinese or the Aztecs? What I gather, large empires are typically quite ethno-supremacist and quite full of themselves.For instance, Rome and to a greater extent Greece have to be condemned for their ethno-supremacism, for instance, though it must be said that Rome appears to have been far less ethno-supremacist than Greece, see e.g.: — Tristan L
If that is so, then I believe it shouldn’t be. — Tristan L
The Bourgeoisie would be close to upper-middle class. Those people who indeed do have actually capital, at least once in older age they have paid their debts to the bank.That may be the etymology of the word but you know that’s not its meaning in this context. In this context it means the capital-owners, in contrast to the laborers. — Pfhorrest
I think the counterargument would be that in the time of Marx there wasn't a true middle class.. I think Marx unfairly ignores the true middle class that he ought to be championing — Pfhorrest
An NBC News affiliate, KUSA-TV, said on its website that the man taken arrested for the shooting was a security guard hired by the television station to provide protection to its crew.
“It has been the practice of (KUSA) for a number of months to hire private security to accompany staff at protests,” the station said.
As you noticed, in the UK there is more physical demand for houses as your population has rapidly grown, as the following graph shows:The asset inflation is a big deal in the UK at the moment, as I pointed out in the Brexit thread. It is done through property in the UK. The housing stock has not kept up with demand for over 40 years, resulting in house price inflation. This results in the middle classes and the rich reaping the rewards. Many areas have seen over 1000% increase in value over the period. — Punshhh

The elites didn't let the bubble burst during the financial crisis and they are desperately trying to let it correct even now. That is the actual policy. We have to remember, that the interest rates are at an all time low in written history now.Unfortunately we are now in the predicament that this is a bubble just as we are descending into a depression caused by Covid and Brexit. — Punshhh

