BLAM!!! :ok:the obvious and necessary qualifier "also" from their anti-racist cri du coeur which should have been, more aptly, BLACK LIVES ALSO MATTER. — 180 Proof
Whites have a lot of angst. All that virtue signalling and stuff from one side and then delirious fears from another side.Lastly though (just riffin' here mind you), perhaps more fundamentally, many white people (seem to me/us to) feel threatened merely by discussing "racism" because they do not believe the survivors of white terror and their continually brutalized descendents only want "Social Justice" and "Equality", but, what we're really after instead, I believe whites believe, is revenge. We say "Reparations", they (most?) hear "revenge" (i.e. "Race War"). — 180 Proof
How do people in Hong Kong protest the Chinese authorities by burning their own property down? Why would the store owners be the culprits there? You genuinely think that Beijing cares about that?not to resist or protest or break the law is immoral and indefensible, and to seek to protect one's property at the expense of those who oppose and resist is doubly indefensible. Thus spake the Lord. — unenlightened
:up:I just don't buy this. — BitconnectCarlos
The estimates I've seen tell me that the alternative oil extraction methods are not only unacceptably detrimental to the environment and use unsustainable quantities of water, draining and polluting aquifers, streams and so on, but that just to break even they need oil prices to be $50-100 dollars a barrel. — Janus
There's also the additional cost of accidents, such as the Deepwater Horizon spill, as drilling is forced to harder to access and risky sites. — praxis



Interesting question, however we have to remember that electric cars are quite an old invention and without oil there would have been a huge scramble for other technologies.It was lazy of me to not get my facts right. Anyway, coal couldn't have fueled the economic growth that developed with cheap oil, yes? — praxis


Why do you think that?The point is that increased efficiency and substitution can't ever match the cheapness of oil, and if we've reached peak oil then 'American will never be great again'. — praxis


This sounds good.Well let me take it somewhere else, where it might seem less strange. Like Vichy France. — unenlightened
Yes. My options are a) continue as a civilian or b) take part in the resistance or c) try to join the Free French under DeGaulle somehow. If I choose b) and arm myself and start shooting at the first German I see, I'll be an illegal combatant. Hence if I get caught, I can be taken to the nearest forest and shot (with the ease that people can get banned here :snicker: ) and my execution won't be a warcrime.your average boulanger wants to get on with baking and selling bread as best he can, and protests his innocence. — unenlightened
Question: does this apply to children? How about invalids or old people like Bitter Crank? If the resistance decides to plant a bomb using a local six year old boy, Maurice, and an old timer like Bitter Crank posing as his grandfather and both aren't so hot about it, can they be shot as collaborators? Because there's no neutrality! Their dead bodies will surely bring the message home to others that there's no messing around withBut from the point of view of the resistance, there is no neutrality; you are part of the resistance or you are a collaborator. — unenlightened
When Americans here start saying that it is really so bad, then I'll really get worried where the US is going.Of course things are not that bad — unenlightened
Do they come to me and ask: "Bonjour monsieur! We've noticed that there are many Germans shopping in your bakery so if you don't mind, we'll blow them up while they are inside your bakery! Yes, mon ami, you or your employees and your ordinary customers might be killed too, but, it's war, vive La France!"but it is a judgement to be made, how bad they have to be before Joe Public's private property becomes part of the battleground. How many corpses does it take before your property is at the disposal of the resistance? — unenlightened

Wrong.You say “the only thing” like is was a small thing, as though the economic growth the world has seen since the beginning of the industrial revolution weren’t entirely dependent on it. — praxis
With the commercial development of the petroleum industry and vegetable oils, the use of whale oils declined considerably from its peak in the 19th century into the 20th century. In the 21st century, with most countries having banned whaling, the sale and use of whale oil has practically ceased.
Cooperatives have nothing to do with state socialism,btw. They haven't been formed by the state and given some monopoly decree. Cooperatives fit into a capitalist economy perfectly. We have large cooperatives that are run very well. I think the largest food store chain here is a cooperative, a retail cooperative, with (ghasp!) nearly 40 000 employees and hence being one of the largest firms in the 5,5 million country. Some large cooperatives that come to mind are Crédit Agricole, Co-op Kobe, Arla foods, S-group here are among millions of cooperatives around the World. But of course, large firms are evil.I'm talking about the fact that you cannot have capitalism without some kind of wage labour, and you cannot have wage labour without economic inequality. You could move to a cooperative basis, where all workers have equal share in the company, as is being done successfully atm, but -- gulp! -- evil socialism!!! — Kenosha Kid
Yes, because your now confused on what you are referring to. That population boom doesn't happen anymore in the rich industrialized countries. Check out the countries with the highest fertility rates and all of them are poor countries. It's called a Demographic Transition, how countries shift from high birth rates to low birth rates. Check the link and learn something new.So let's break this down.
1. Thanks to capitalism, there has been a trend toward universal prosperity in the last 100 years.
2. There has been a worldwide population boom over the last 100 years.
And your conclusion from this is that capitalism-driven universal prosperity reverses population growth. Ab initio, I guess :rofl: — Kenosha Kid
What are you talking about? I have now no clue what you are saying.51% in the agricultural industry that you believe will drive population recession. — Kenosha Kid
And this is your belief you have. To utter that lithurgy makes you better.Like climate change, the expectation ought to be that this will continue toward catastrophe. — Kenosha Kid
Forums like these need new members.Is the forum just a reflection of the world, that we’ve reached a sort of evolutionary point of weariness without any reason to struggle or make things new? Is there really nothing new to come, is it out there ahead of us or do we have to create it? — Brett
What on Earth are you talking about? How has the universal increase in prosperity from the early 19th Century to early 21st Century killed capitalism stone dead? Why do you think that more prosperity would be so bad? It would be great if the average Chinese or Indian would be as prosperous as the average American.Universal prosperity would kill capitalism stone dead. — Kenosha Kid
And I'd say that you are willfully ignorant about how a) markets work and b) that dwindling resources has been the new norm already for ages, and that you c) forget the role of technological innovation in the equation. You could have made that argument in the 1900s, the1960s, the 1970s, the 1980s, the 1990s, the 2000s and the 2010s. So would have been indulging myself in wishful thinking for the last 120 years?We adapt very well when the resources are there to sustain our adaptation. problem is the resources are dwindling and the demand for them is growing. If you don't see this as a problem; then I would say you are being willfully ignorant; indulging in wishful thinking. — Janus

Companies are surely driven by profit and not by charity. Yet their actions are just part of the whole.Yeah kinda. Companies don't outsource production because they want to spread the wealth. They do it because poorer countries have low production costs, especially human labour. — Kenosha Kid



These people typically won't find anything good in the other sides arguments.I agree, some people are so smitten with an ideology that they'll believe it is a cure-all despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary — Kenosha Kid
Yes. However coming from a country that seems by many as a bastion of social democracy as our neighboring country in the West, I would actually promote a mixed economy. Libertarianism/liberalism and especially capitalism is hard in a country where one doesn't have strong institutions, which are necessary. My political ideology actually is this: extremist movements who want a totally new world are terrible for the World, especially those that think killing people will make the World a better place.So really you're political ideology is: not socialism! Okay we can agree we're not likely to solve the problem with socialism. — Kenosha Kid
And that's why I earlier noted India. It genuinely hadn't the stupid one child policy as China, which is a huge problem for them now. Another example is Singapore: earlier they were panicking that there would be too many Singaporeans and imposed strict rules and now they panic about Singapore women having too few babies. Demographics of nations simply aren't decided by politicians. Usually the politicians fail miserably with such policies. If we skip genocides and the like, that is.Although for your several reminders about increased Chinese prosperity, it is worth remembering that it wasn't that which lowered their population growth. — Kenosha Kid
Does it?It's not. But this already depends on massive economic disparity between the trader and the place if production. This is not the universal prosperity dream you're selling. — Kenosha Kid
Sure, sorry for responding a day later.I wonder why I am so hard to understand. Can you perhaps let me know what two different things I am talking about and whether or not one of them is the same thing that BC is being consistent about? That will make it easier for me to correct you if you are wrong. — unenlightened
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
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
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

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


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
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





And that the whole thing was brought up in March in the NSC, which isn't an intelligence gathering entity, but a policy decision making entity, makes it clear that this was not just speculative intel. As if Trump didn't know it? Nonsense.The bolded qualify FDT aka "Individual-1" as a traitor vis-à-vis knowing about and ignoring Russian bounties on US troops in Afghanistan. — 180 Proof
Yes, people not endorsing or condoning looting and violence obviously is the huge attitude problem they have here. — ssu
That's not remotely what I am saying. What I am suggesting is that there is a disparity between the condemnation of violence in defence of the human right to fair and equal treatment, and the support of violence in defence of property rights. — unenlightened
No. the real real problem is the unfair and unequal treatment of people and the violation of their most basic human rights. — unenlightened
If the problem is with the state/the system why not go after them as opposed to random private businesses? — BitconnectCarlos
Hit em where it hurts, not where you get annihilated. — unenlightened
Remember that Joe Sixpack isn't like Daan, the Heineken drinker, from your country.So Biden is against defunding the police. Great way of wasting an opportunity to consolidate a lead. Do Democrats want to lose? I mean, at least lie about it like every other politician just to get the goddamn votes. — Benkei
I do like the US, Wheatley. Yet is being truthful and realistic an act of hostility?What should the US do about that now? Terribly sorry you don’t like the US, we’ll stop being the word’s currency, just for you. — Wheatley
Just like the stats here show how a great job he has done:And he’s still doing a better job than any grandiloquent, Ivy-league lawyer that has dominated the position until now. That’s the best part: I get to watch Trump reveal the ineffectiveness of establishment politicians, and a better country to boot. — NOS4A2

The oxymoron was right wing doing Animal Farm. It's like Marxists privatizing industry, pacifists rearming, etc...What is it about selectively reporting almost exclusively favourable sounding out of context statistics to support a political agenda, despite the reality being quite opposite, which is not Animal Farm shit? — fdrake
That's good.That's not remotely what I am saying. — unenlightened
Is it really? I'm not so sure about that. It think that there's a difference between people here rejecting violence and looting and right wing commentators instilling fear of looting and violence with the objective to divide people (for the elections). The latter are the real problem, not the people with ideas similar to PF.What I am suggesting is that there is a disparity between the condemnation of violence in defence of the human right to fair and equal treatment, and the support of violence in defence of property rights. — unenlightened
Coming from a country where you simply DO NOT get a licence for a firearm for personal protection and killing a burglar would likely get you yourself in court, I'm not at all a fan of the "If you step on my lawn, I will shoot" thinking. But I can assure you that I'm not a pacifist, far from it.As you are so clearly a man of peace, no doubt you also condemn the use of violence to defend property rights, in which case you will support and applaud my efforts to point out the need for even-handedness in these matters, so as to minimise the tendency to violence. — unenlightened
You should forget the Native Americans. And there's how the systemic racism shows itself.What Feldman finds is notable: the correlation between poverty and susceptibility to fatal police violence that exists for white people is much stronger than for black and Latino people. In other words, white people who live in the poorest neighborhoods are at high risk of getting killed by a police officer, but black people are at high risk everywhere.". — StreetlightX
How about having the ability to print trillions of dollars with the World accepting the printed money (or treasuries) and finance the state through all that debt financing? Sorry to say, but part of your wealth (which is distributed quite inequally, as you know) exists because of your Superpower status.Do you think all attention and pressure on the US has benefited it? Keep in mind all the foreign terror attacks and wasteful wars. — Wheatley
Let's put another way. It's unlikely that the US will ever be in a position it was in the Eisenhower era. Now it's rather unlikely that the US will find itself in the position where it was at the end of the Cold War.What makes you think the USA will never recover. Other countries recovered from much worse. Even Germany recovered after Hitler. — Wheatley
Yes, people not endorsing or condoning looting and violence obviously is the huge attitude problem they have here. The reason, I guess, has to be their utter ignorance about the issues at hand thanks to their white priviledge, their false understanding of history and/or their hidden racist tendencies they have not have had to come to terms with. No other reason can exist, right?So how are we going to convince what appears to be a majority of people on this site for intelligent people, that their attitudes are the problem? — unenlightened
Nah.And here you guys promised us the next Hitler... — NOS4A2
180 Proof, many Americans really don't care at all about "national interests". National interests are the agenda of the evil political elites, so in their mind Trump is doing a great job!As reported here & elsewhere, months ago the
M_oscow
A_ss(et)
G_overning
A_merica
was told that his "handler" Putin has been paying Afghan Taliban to kill US troops. Told months ago. And, like the Covid-19 outbreak, the pos-in-Chief has ignored this danger to Americans & our national interests. 'Treason' by inaction - depraved indifference mass homicide - at best. — 180 Proof
Or part of the so-called "Culture war". To portray this as being part of a "culture war" is the way to try to marginalize this (and as you said, identity politics). Fox News is all over it. Yeah, I know, it's watched just by old people, but old people tend to vote and what they have their focus on the next elections.In any case, I think we can agree that far reaching reforms of police that is supported by Republicans and Democrats alike is better than such reforms only being supported by Democrats. Or that it becomes an identity politics issue and as a consequence automatically marginalised. — Benkei
That's true, but those times are really far away. You don't have eugenics departments in the university anymore.Okay, but that consensus about classic racism wasn't reached by merely talking to eachother. It was the result of a hard fought battle, and not only metaphorically. — ChatteringMonkey
84% of black adults said that, in dealing with police, blacks are generally treated less fairly than whites; 63% of whites said the same. Similarly, 87% of blacks and 61% of whites said the U.S. criminal justice system treats black people less fairly.
I genuinely believe you don't, Aussie.I have no idea what you're babbling about here. — StreetlightX
Seeking consensus doesn't mean inherently mean compromise. I think your view here is that if you make something in the democratic process and find a point that the majority can agree to do, usually it's some kind of compromise. What I referred here to "consensus" is something different. There is a consensus that openly racist views and classic racism, not just bigotry, isn't tolerated. Hundred years ago it really wasn't so.In compromising maybe you avoid some tensions, and that can be a reason, but you probably also lose some of the integrity that a certain set of ideas has as a self-contained whole. — ChatteringMonkey
