Oh, it's quite possible: Just add there Democrats working with Brussels to emasculate the US and a sinister plot against American white heterosexual males. Also add a global pedophile ring there too. The Russian intelligence services would be so excited to nurture this new conspiracy with their trolls and bots!Americans would like to blame Brussels as well. We are tired of criticizing and blaming Washington, and Washington has grown accustomed to being criticized, excoriated, referenced as a swamp, and threatened with draining. Perhaps American criticism of Brussels would be refreshing to the bureaucrats there. — Bitter Crank
I think both the left and the right have a lot to say about that. And how do we philosophically validate the context of 'the good life'. I assume people have different opinions about this.Once appropriately defined and philosophically validated in the context of 'the good life' it might then have the social and political potential of becoming the aspiration of the majority. When this occurs, the polarity between left and right, republican and democrat will begin to naturally dissolve, and man can then begin to aspire towards the best form of government, which is the government which has the least need to govern. — Marcus de Brun
How the EU would make reforms is the problem. And I think it cannot create an common European identity.Yes it's a bit of a mess at the moment, which is why I think institutional reforms are necessary, in one or the other direction, but not this hybrid form. — ChatteringMonkey
Your wellcome.Some of you have done your job of challenging my thesis. You've failed, but you have tried, and I thank you for that. — Jake
Trust me, I think that they could do that.Governments historically don't exactly have a good trackrecord of interfering in economics, so it's hard to see how trying to stop economic growth could work. — ChatteringMonkey
Even if I'm a right wing conservative (by European standards I should add), I still view that government definately has a role in all this. Simply left to their devices the market won't take care of things like environmental protection. There simply will be those actors who a) won't care if they don't brake a law and b) won't think it's their job even to care. Besides, the government and the state lay down the grown rules, foundations and institutions that create a functioning market, no matter what an anarcho-capitalist could day dream.What economist seem to more or less agree on too, is that there is a problem with environmental and also social costs being externalised when the economy is left to its own devices. This is where I would try to find effective ways of regulating it. — ChatteringMonkey
What disturbs me is when people just mix math with reality in general and forget the model part.. It’s the use of actual infinity to stand real world quantities that disturbs me. Statements like space or time maybe actually infinite... nonsense. — Devans99
OK, so I'm a troll and you will diss me now for giving some critique. But fine, seems you really didn't get my point and obviously don't care, so enough of that. I won't bother anymore.Going to ignore you from this point on, since it is clear you're a troll — chatterbears
Usually what is officially reported is the U3 unemployment figure (in the US). If you want to know what the actual unemployment rate is, better look what the U6 unemployment figure is. That tells the unemployment rate that includes 'discouraged' workers who have quit looking for a job and part-time workers who are seeking full-time employment. Even if the U6 has part-time workers, I assume it's better than U5 as government allways tends to make the statistics better than they are.So actually, it is even worse than it looks: Maybe twice as many people as are officially counted could work if there were appropriate work at appropriate wages offered. — Bitter Crank
Then I have to say no. A lot of things can be modelled by using infinity in some way or another, but I don't see it in reality as applied to real world entities. Modeling is one thing, reality another. The number 3 or pi don't physically exist, even they are extremely useful in modeling reality.I mean actual infinity in the context of the physical sciences. I.e. when it is applied to real world entities. — Devans99
I think that experiment would be deemed as cruelty to animals. But I bet it did have an effect on you.When I was in 6th grade, one of the high school home economics classes raised several white rats on different kinds of foods. — Bitter Crank
This can make the gap severe if the quality of schooling is truly totally different. In Third World countries this is an even bigger problem.Those students whose parents are reasonably affluent will locate themselves in school districts where their children will get a good education. Usually those school districts are suburban. The quality of education in a good, college-tracking high school is going to be altogether different than the experience that will be received in a run-down 'fuck'em' school where it is assumed the children have no future. — Bitter Crank
I rest my case.When a species of animal, in nature, creates things for its own survival out of necessity, it is deemed as natural. Humans do nothing of the sort. Almost everything humans create is unnatural. - Yes, all of our food is unnatural. And your point is? — chatterbears
Simply because there are so many of you. We just have the equivalent population of Minnesota. That leaves +320 million other Americans that don't live in Minnesota, so I guess there are ample amount of smart kids for the Ivy League colleges.We do boast the most esteemed colleges in the world, so I wonder too how is that possible given such a dismal primary and secondary education system. Why is there such a discrepancy here in the States with regards to primary and secondary schools and universities? — Posty McPostface
But those are encompassed into the subjects themselves, which you only notice afterwards (and not as a child). In biology from 1st grade they tell ypu how harmful it is to through away a plastic bag into the wild. Later it's shown the harm that smoking does to lungs when the kids are young teens. My boy who is 10 years had to read a book about climate change in the polar region (with penguins and polar bears on opposite poles). Just to give examples. They aren't overtly political subjects, but some on the right (or the left) can see a bias (if they want to see).How to encourage people who care about the environment, politics, the drug war, and crime, should be topics worth pursuing and talking about in schools. — Posty McPostface
If they can prepare 18 year olds for work or for the university, then they have been successful. And that doesn't give much other time than to school math, foreign languages, chemistry, physics, biology, etc.Posty, you're asking the schools to bear unreasonable levels of responsibility. Schools do well (not just to day, but at any time) if students leave being able to read, write, do sums; know their basic history, have some understanding of science, and know how to carry on a civil discussion. — Bitter Crank
Well, I've gone through the Finnish education system up to a Masters degree in the University and have had a brief contact with the American educational system (2nd grade in Primary School and briefly in Junior High). What I noticed is that the American system was easy and had far lower objectives in math, history, nearly everything than in Finland. It was like designed to create mediocre students for higher education.Most West European and Scandinavian countries, in my mind. — Posty McPostface
Wonder what those would be that wouldn't be 'touched'. Perhaps the problem is that everything is only touched in the US system.So, why do we not instill values in the youth? Why aren't those all important topics 'touched' in the American education system or anywhere else, as you say? — Posty McPostface
What countries would be like this?I have a strong suspicion that people who are raised in societies that put a great emphasis on interpersonal relations, spiritual growth, and the happenings of society tend to flourish and produce more social oriented/conscious individuals. — Posty McPostface
Yet is this what the education system educates us? I think what you are talking about is more about the American attitudes towards work, career and values in general and perhaps about social cohesion. Things that I think aren't so much touched in the education systems anywhere. It's more about math, science, languages etc. in the education system.By fail I mean to imply that we are creating a future where acts of charity or altruism are viewed as irrational or non-rational pursuits and the gratification of personal needs and wants is placed on a pedestal. — Posty McPostface
I don't think so. Even the physical book isn't going to fade away: it's simply still so useful and handy. If one argues that the hey-day of book reading is over, that less people read books than earlier, I'm not sure about that.Has literature finally lost its privileged place in our culture, pushed to the role of “the other,” of the embodiment of old things, old beliefs, and old values? — Number2018
It's just that people have through urbanization grown apart from countrylife. They don't see how much care farmer can give to their domesticated animals. Farmers are a small minority today.Good farmers have always been able to reduce the amount of stress experienced by their animals. — "VagabondSpectre
No. It is you that is totally contradicting yourself all the time and are quite illogical.The word 'natural' is defined as: " existing in or caused by nature; not made or caused by humankind. " - So maybe you should define what you think the word 'natural' even means. You seem to be confused. — chatterbears
Never have I seen anyone contradict himself in PF like you do. You go on and on about torture chambers, the suffering of animals, the inhumane treatment animals when they are killed, but then you declare it has NOTHING to do with your moral outlook! Nothing. You're even confused where would I get this kind of idea.It has nothing to do with my moral outlook, so I don't even know where you got that from. — chatterbears
Science is a method, which tells how things are. Not how things ought to be. You should teach yourself the definition of science.science supports a Vegan lifestyle — chatterbears
Seems you don't have any idea what is the philosophical question about humans being part of nature. OK, I'll try to explain my point better.When did I ever say we are not part of nature? What even gave you that impression. Humans are animals, just as dogs, sheep, cows and chickens are animals. We are all a part of nature. But breeding animals into existence, while torturing and slaughtering them on a mass scale, is not natural. Factory farms are not part of 'nature'. — chatterbears
I still think that animal cruelty is a different question than veganism. Or to think that being against animal cruelty means that you have to be a vegan is simply illogical.As for care, the plant I worked at had received a lot of negative feedback concerning cruelty, so the government had actually forced the company to accept having an permanent inspection officer on location to prevent abuse. Even that didnt stop much, in my opinion. — Akanthinos
And would they eat more meat, if they would be better hunters? It's absolutely logical for an omnivore to eat meat than things like grass.We no longer need to eat animals to survive. And we really never did, as even our closest ancestors (gorillas, chimpanzees, etc) are 95% vegetarians (plants and fruits). Chimpanzees rely heavily on fruits and plants, but sometimes eat insects and smaller mammals. — chatterbears
OK, I'll answer. But why assume I'll come to your conclusion?Read the last part of my initial post, and you'll come to the same conclusion. Or I will paste it here again: — chatterbears
Of course not! If I live in a city, it's still quite good to know basic survival skills like which berries or mushrooms you can pick and eat from the forest. I really don't need the skills for survival as I can buy everything from the supermarket (and be rather confident that nothing there is poisonous to me). I really like to go with my children to the forest, pick up mushrooms and make great food.- Do you think actions become unnecessary when they are not required for our survival? — chatterbears
And this brings us to the philosophically important question: why do you think that we basically aren't part of nature?Not to mention, an animal of prey dies in the wild, naturally. — chatterbears
Likely an animal of prey is slaughtered far more violently and suffers more long when it is killed by a pack of wolves than how their domesticated relatives meet their death in the industrialized slaughter house. And the reason for us to farm animals is quite logical: there is so many of us.Humans being meat eaters isn't what is wrong. It is that we actively impose on Nature the nightmare that is industrialized mass breeding and slaughter. — Akanthinos
Yep.Almost a billion people speak romance languages which are decidedly gendered. Life is not an unendurable hell of gendered words in those language areas. If women's options are limited in a province of romance language, then it's discrimination based on something much more material than a pronoun. — Bitter Crank
Fine, sidestep it, but just to note that Marx has basically a theory of commodity money (just as you put it, taxes in terms of raw goods, and elsewhere) and this is very important to notice. This commodity money was a typical theory for the 19th Century as the gold standard reigned back then. Marx was obviously a child of his era at least in this case.Money has always been intimately tied to debt. EG, owing the ruling body taxes in terms of raw goods. I'm going to sidestep this for now. — fdrake
Well, people are using less and less of paper money anyway. Try going to a bank a getting a larger sum in cash: it's difficult. But as long as governments make it legal tender and do make people to pay taxes, there is a credibility behind that fiat money. Now we don't even have to have that as we have all these various invented cryptocurrencies.If everyone just stopped using that worthless piece of paper it wouldn't have any value! The psychology of treating it, and information money, as the representative of value equivalence classes is only part of what makes it work. There's the level of heritable tradition which also needs to be analysed, and also that paper money still has a use as a means of circulation of relatively small amounts of money. It's not just psychology, paper money and information money are a self-reinforcing system that occurs in reality, not just in the minds of us plebs. — fdrake
Yes, but the question is that why hasn't then money lost it's value? Or (perhaps this is ventures way off from the topic) why didn't we get a massive inflation after all the pumping up that happened after the last financial crisis?Also, ironically, abandoning the gold standard occurred after so many 'reclaimable bonds' (money) were issued that their total value far outstripped any gold reserves. Capital grew until it expanded past a limitation, then it kept functioning in much the same way ceteris paribus - though it's no longer beholden to manifesting in any currency denomination's paper money (because it's now a real valued variable, like it always wanted to be in the ordered field), that's part of what was undermined before the switch. It doesn't care about the physical process of division of the money commodity any more. — fdrake
The EU has responded with a trying establish “control centres” across the bloc – at locations still to be decided, and only in countries that volunteered to have them. Then it has decided to tighten border controls and give money to Morocco and Turkey, which have to deal with the immigrants. Billions of euros.- Changes to migration-policies : This is presumably only going to get worse with population growth in Afrika and climate change, so how will the EU handle this? — ChatteringMonkey
What I think is notable that after all the tweets, tantrums and excesses of Donald Trump,- Changes to foreign policies : What's going to be the impact of the shift in geopolitical balance of power on the foreign-policy of the US. Will the US become more isolationist again? And will the EU finally devellop a foreign policy of it's own (unlike the last 50 years or so), and start faring a seperate course? — "ChatteringMonkey
I think that could happen if in the US a post-Trump administration turns to the left. The popularity of Bernie Sanders tells that is a possibility. That would have big consequences.Changes to economic policies : Will free-market capitalism be limited by protectionism again? And will policies be put into place that limit multinationals floating their money between and over nation states to avoid taxation, or how will be dealt with that? — ChatteringMonkey
EU's problem is that it is inherently a confederacy of independent states that is desperately trying to become a federation... as if the process would be possible to be done just by bureaucrats in Brussells. You can make a confederation act like a federation up to a point. But just up to a point.Institutional changes : In which direction will the EU go? The people seem to oppose further integration, yet geopolitics and a host of other issues seem to point in the direction of a more integrated EU. — ChatteringMonkey
Well, the immigration crisis of 2015 had a profound effect on politics in Europe.And sure there are differences in Europe, they all have their particular history. But the similarities are striking, it's all about immigration, they are reactionary (they all want to return to some time and values gone), they are nationalist and want to fall back on their borders etc... — ChatteringMonkey
Are they? You see "populist" parties are quite different.The difference with the left/right split is that populist don't really engage with current existing order and institutions. It's not just some policy changes left and right, they are advocating going beyond it, sanctioned directly by the people. — ChatteringMonkey
Well, Vlad the annexer and Agent Trumpov seem to be best buddies. Why worry about the two?Please explain how you know that something like the following quote below won't happen again later today.
Like most people, you may be coming to your position based on the current geo-political situation. You may not be taking in to account that the current geo-political situation may be totally irrelevant. In fact, I know you're not taking that in to account, or you wouldn't be posting as you are.
Speaking of which, let's remind ourselves who has control over 90%+ of the world's nukes. Putin, the world's leading gangster, and Trump, a wacko in the White House whose own employees are scrambling around trying to figure out how to get rid of him before he does something insane. — Jake
And how are you doing yourself? Because your line is what I've been hearing from the 80's myself personally and this goes to an earlier discourse. Straight from a large group consensus that various authorities starting with Bertrand Russell among others presented to us: the utter doom that nuclear weapons present to us and the World.Like almost everybody, you aren't using reason and thinking for yourself, but are instead referencing authority in the form of the group consensus. You look around you and see that all the big shots of various flavors are complacent, and so you understandably feel it's ok for you to be complacent too. — Jake
This all seems a little too abstract to me. What split are you talking about? What are the examples? — angslan
A somewhat biased and simplistic view, I have to say.Populism and extrimist parties vs establishment parties generally.
As examples, Trump vs Hillary and the rise of populist parties all over Europe. — ChatteringMonkey
And what about the typhoons that don't ever make landfall?That's just going too far. There's nothing subjective about a Typhoon hitting Japan. Of course there is a selection process on what constitutes events worth reporting. And that's what tends to attract viewers. Disasters, conflicts, controversies and scandals are always good bets, because most people who pay attention to general news want to hear that stuff. — Marchesk
And that it isn't entirely neutral doesn't mean objectivity, truth or the facts have been totally lost or don't exist at all. That is just something reeking to post-modernism in it's extreme.We structure our facts into coherent narratives that communicate much more (including about us) than objective reality. So, what's important in my view is the basic recognition that communication, of whatever form, is never entirely neutral. — Baden
I think it goes something like that.I think what we mean by 'free-will' is the potential to develop and evolve past limitations. However, since there is no end to that progress, our 'free-will' becomes an ever-changing circumstance. — BrianW
