The underlying economic problem is profit-price inflation. It’s caused by corporations raising their prices above their increasing costs.
Corporations are using those increasing costs – of materials, components and labor – as excuses to increase their prices even higher, resulting in bigger profits. This is why corporate profits are close to levels not seen in over half a century.
Corporations have the power to raise prices without losing customers because they face so little competition. Since the 1980s, two-thirds of all American industries have become more concentrated.
The desire to increase profit margin is the only cause of inflation.
Wage increases are post hoc corrections for inflation. When the same goods and services cost far more than they used to, people cannot afford them any longer when and if they have the same earnings. To blame wage increases for inflation is to blame the bandaid for the bleeding cut. — creativesoul
The rapidly ballooning field, combined with Mr. Trump’s seemingly unbreakable core of support, represents a grave threat to Mr. DeSantis, imperiling his ability to consolidate the non-Trump vote, and could mirror the dynamics that powered Mr. Trump’s takeover of the party in 2016.
It’s a matter of math: Each new entrant threatens to steal a small piece of Mr. DeSantis’s potential coalition — whether it be Mr. Pence with Iowa evangelicals or Mr. Scott with college-educated suburbanites. And these new candidates are unlikely to eat into Mr. Trump’s votes. The former president’s base — more than 30 percent of Republicans — remains strongly devoted to him.
Paul Volcker, where are you? The current feds are too timid, IMO. — jgill
We should abolish the debt ceiling. — GRWelsh
Military Spending Emerges as Big Dispute in Debt-Limit Talks
President Biden has offered to freeze discretionary spending, including for defense. Republicans want to spend more for the military, and cut more elsewhere.
From what I have heard of incels, I am reasonably comfortable to write them off - the way I would virulent racists or any other vile bigotry. — Tom Storm
Given that the expected value of the unchosen envelope is greater than the value of the chosen envelope, it is rational to switch. — Michael
Having chosen an envelope at will, but before inspecting it, you are given the chance to switch envelopes. Should you switch?
Where I personally differ is the assumption humans will be able to deflect the consequences to any substantial degree. — jgill
The Earth's movement in our galaxy is beyond our present abilities to alter. — jgill
Unlike you I have zero interest in convincing anyone of anything. — Varnaj42
Sure the climate is changing. I disagree about the causes though. — Varnaj42
Several of these, in their normal movements, affect the atmosphere which, in turn, causes changes. — Varnaj42
We humans are a fear based species. — Varnaj42
Many are echoes from the echo-chamber of partisanship and would evaporate if they were ever examined in the light of honest reflection. Which is why the partisan propaganda-machine so strenuously opposes reading, critical thinking and contemplation. — Vera Mont
I cannot empathise with people who become aligned to one set of doctrines and cannot defend any other position or question their own. — Andrew4Handel
Alot of climate denialism often boils down to dumb politics. Oh, and rich oil lobbyists who profit off nothing being done (for very obvious reasons) who manage to dupe the former into fighting for their interests. — Mr Bee
You think maybe short term self-interest plays a part? — Vera Mont
All your examples are from a left point of view. There should be some from both sides. — noAxioms
the abortion issue — noAxioms
it's pretty darn bad, which is why the links I provided, contribute to such damning conclusions, that we are in very deep shit. — Manuel
No US Default -– come hell or highwater! – is my prediction. — 180 Proof
You can't negotiate with extortionists without emboldening them to keep doing it. — Wayfarer
If I'm to say, what do I think is the biggest contributor to the potential for human extinction going towards the future? Then climate change, no doubt. — Luke Kemp
Antinatalism preaches that we are all better off dead than alive because it avoids suffering.
However the dead cannot suffer. Nor have they any agency, choice, power, authority or intellect to subvert suffering. So the goal of antinatalism is one of irrelevance and impotence.
Secondly, life, albeit harmful and treacherous indeed at times, is also full of beneficial/benevolent phenomena like love, nurturing, support, care, joy, peace, prosperity, triumph, opportunity, optimism, kindness/generosity, control, choice and agency.
Antinatalism declares that life is the greatest of impositions. But to the living, and especially to those that enjoy life, antinatalism is the greatest of impositions. Not to mention that the state of livinghood was imposed on all by abiogenesis. The universe brought about life whether one likes it or not. This imposition applies to everyone, and yet not everyone feels "imposed" upon by that fact. Many indeed feel grateful instead. Myself included.
Who has more choice? The living or the dead? And thus who has the most authority and capacity to engage and diminish suffering; the living or the dead?
The dead do not impose, control nor have a say. The living do. And because the living are the only faction that can suffer, perhaps the decision to endure it or opt for an escape, is for the living not the dead.
The final statement, is that the living are the only faction that can be antinatalist. There are two things their views must be reconciled with: a). Why do they continue to live if their sole objective in argument is total mass anhilation?This seems hypocritical. You're living to tell people not to.
And secondly, how do they reconcile those that enjoy their lives, and wish to be benevolent, or contribute benefit to the living status, with their beliefs that everyone is better off dead, just in case any suffering should occur.
This gives little to know autonomy to those that accept a bit of suffering in their endeavours to improve and progress the condition of living towards a state of diminished harm.
Anti-natalism is pointless. It's not like mother earth wouldn't reestablish life if it was snuffed out, as it has many times before. Mass extinctions occur. But life as a whole, persists.
Possible answer: because the material conditions for US citizens are conducive to him getting a platform. If the USA didn't have so many poor, didn't have so many people one healthcare invoice away from being poor, then nobody would take Trump seriously. — Benkei
If economic issues were the concern then they'd be voting for Democrats.
It's clearly social issues (the "culture war") that elicit support for Trump and the Republicans. — Michael
If a word is a symbol holding meaning, and a molecule is a symbol holding meaning — Benj96
I would see it as foolish to conceive that "language" is restricted to/ only the purview of humans. — Benj96
Another inept Trumpian apologetic. Michels supported Mussolini, you support Trump. Same difference. One fascist autocrat or another. Rather than the rule of a few, the rule of one. — Fooloso4