The most significant problem with this misinterpretation is that it then causes people to mistakenly presume that the primary subject matter of Being and Time is the meaning of being.
It is not.
Instead, the primary subject matter of Being and Time is an explication of Dasein in its average everydayness. — Arne
Wherever his doctrines have been employed there has been nothing but moral and systematic failure on a grand scale. — NOS4A2
what is inherently wrong with owning the means to produce products and services if you got it with your own money or a loan? — schopenhauer1
The way that "wage slavery" works today in a practically non-unionized work force is that employers, whether capitalists, governments, or non-profits have control of the economy and of the workforce. [workers are not unionized for a reason: employers have been waging a continuous war against unions. Put it this way: unionism didn't die out, it was murdered.] — Bitter Crank
If we address what should be the case, instead of what is the case (I assume we are doing that), I can think of no reason why relatively few people should make and retain huge amounts of money while others do not, and in fact have much less. There's no basis for the belief that a person is virtuous, or admirable, or worthy, or good in any moral sense because they make or have a great deal of money, unless making or having a great deal of money is considered to be morally virtuous, admirable, worthy or good by definition.
If it isn't, though, we have to consider the worthiness of having a great deal more money and assets than others in a world of limited resources with an increasing population. I think that the very rich are the equivalent of gluttons or hoarders in such a world--in our world--because their conduct is so selfish that they strive to possess and retain much, much more than they could possibly need to live comfortable lives (not just survive) where others merely survive, or live in need and want. Gluttons and hoarders aren't admirable; they aren't moral. We should stop thinking they are. — Ciceronianus
How about a food truck driver that starts a restaurant and then a chain, and then franchises and becomes a multimillionaire? He will say that he used his capital and wits to do this and employs people who voluntarily sell him their labor as a result. — schopenhauer1
...and the 80/70%? You think they've made their decision rationally because...? It happens to be the same as yours? — Isaac
Corporate science says everyone must take the vaccine and you unquestioningly fall in line. They say 'jump' you say 'how high?' — Isaac
So? That doesn't therefore mean it's in their interests to provide those facts to us, unfiltered. What they themselves benefit from knowing and what they benefit from us thinking are two completely different things. — Isaac
Where's your impartial, non-media, evidence of the 'overwhelming consensus' you keep referring to? — Isaac
I assume then, you're in favour of people doing their own research? — Isaac
When someone like Vinay Prasad speaks out against promoting vaccines for children, he's obviously concerned about the suffering of the children. What makes you think you've the monopoly on concern? — Isaac
No insisting that any mention of the word 'politics' must refer to your party ties is what assumes that. — Isaac
Hospitals are government and media?
— Xtrix
Absolutely. — Book273
Oh but I forget. There's a crisis on, so we all must pretend that hospitals are all run by Dr. Kildare. He wouldn't massage any figures would he? — Isaac
No. I mentioned (bolded for your reading pleasure).
The idea that 20-30% of people's failing to take the vaccine is problematic is something you've repeated because it's been told to you by government agencies and media.
— Isaac — Isaac
Your argument that it's a problem (the low vaccination rates), relies on studies and data produced by exactly the corporations and governments (and presented in the exact media) you've condemned for 'leading us astray'. — Isaac
You trusted governments, media and corporations to do those things for you and decided to believe the results you were thereby handed. — Isaac
Yes. you said you trusted the hospital data. I assume you're polling them yourself. Otherwise it's not the hospital data you're trusting is it, it's the data of whomever tells you they've polled the hospitals. — Isaac
You were earlier imploring that we not 'do our own research'. Now you're saying we should listen directly to the experts. Which is it? — Isaac
I seriously doubt you have even close to the expertise to judge the accuracy of an article in the Lancet. — Isaac
This idea that you're just impartially constructing an opinion by listening, unfiltered, to the experts is transparently bullshit. — Isaac
You choose the experts you're going to listen to on the basis of whether they're supporting the message your politics inclines you to believe. — Isaac
Because there’s no evidence whatever to believe these numbers are inaccurate.
— Xtrix
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356756711_Latest_statistics_on_England_mortality_data_suggest_systematic_mis-categorisation_of_vaccine_status_and_uncertain_effectiveness_of_Covid-19_vaccination
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/355437113_Discrepancies_and_inconsistencies_in_UK_Government_datasets_compromise_accuracy_of_mortality_rate_comparisons_between_vaccinated_and_unvaccinated
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/04/we-could-be-vastly-overestimating-the-death-rate-for-covid-19-heres-why/ — Isaac
None of those publications record death rates. — Isaac
Hospitals are government and media? Medical journals are government and media?
— Xtrix
So you're polling hospitals directly yourself? And yes, journals are media. — Isaac
Uh huh, and "thankfully you’re here to weed it all out for us." — Isaac
I see no reason to distrust the figures from hospitals and medical establishments on this particular issue.
— Xtrix
Yes. That's clear from what you've already written, but since you're not the Oracle of Delphi we expect reasoning or justification for your beliefs. Its a discussion forum. It gets a bit boring if it's just an exchange of pronouncements. I'm not interested in your opinion, I'm interested in your reasons. — Isaac
There's no contradiction. They've simply created a monster, as I said before, that now they cannot subdue.
— Xtrix
Again, reasons please, not just opinion. — Isaac
to.
I'm not using information from the sources I mentioned. I don't get my information from social media or corporate media (NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, MSNBC, CBS, etc).
— Xtrix
So where do you get your information from? — Isaac
So corporate media is prepared to steer society off a cliff, encourage mass deaths and leave no habitable earth for our grandchildren, but apparently infusing actual news stories with bias is one step too far for them? Who are these people? — Isaac
But the data you're basing your conclusions on doesn't come from medical experts. It comes from the government and the media. — Isaac
I'll try and make the distinction really simple for you... — Isaac
I really don't know how much more gently I can break this to you, but governments lie. — Isaac
Filters largely controlled by corporate or political interests, filters with their own personal biases. — Isaac
If most of the money is going to stock buybacks and dividends, my question is why do they do that? who decides, the CEO? You mentioned that it hasn't always been that way....how and why was it different? — John McMannis
You said...
we're losing the battle of education, knowledge, facts, information, communication, etc.
— Xtrix
...then said...
Our powerful corporate and political (but I repeat myself) masters, through their ownership and control of media and their infiltration of the education system, have really done a number on the populace.
— Xtrix
Since the most powerful group in that list are the pharmaceutical companies themselves, who are pushing the pro-vaccine agenda. So it's hard to see how you're blaming them for ignorance (wherein I assume - perhaps wrongly - you're referring to anti-vaccine sentiment) — Isaac
My point wasn’t about the anti-vax movement. It was about the divided, confused, and completely irrational state of affairs we’re living in. Vaccine irrationality, like election irrationality, is but one symptom. I do indeed blame the powerful for this — they’ve created this monster that they can no longer control. As I said before, it’s due to 40 years of policies that have decimated the populace and years of brainwashing/cultivating irrational attitudes. — Xtrix
The idea that 20-30% of people's failing to take the vaccine is problematic is something you've repeated because it's been told to you by government agencies and media. — Isaac
Corporate media and social media (but I repeat myself) are leading more and more people into conspiracies and bogus beliefs and into silos. That is clear.
— Xtrix
... you can't then use the information you've acquired from the very sources you've just accused of misleading, to argue that they're not (on this occasion) misleading. — Isaac
The data you're basing such assessments on comes from the very organisations you've just indicted in leading us astray. — Isaac
People who take 18th century values seriously are against concentration of power. After all the doctrines of the enlightenment held that individuals should be free from the coercion of concentrated power. The kind of concentrated power that they were thinking about was the church, and the state, and the feudal system, and so on, and you could kind of imagine a population of relatively equal people who would not be controlled by those private powers. But in the subsequent era, a new form of power developed — namely, corporations — with highly concentrated power over decision making in economic life, i.e., what’s produced, what’s distributed, what’s invested, and so forth, is narrowly concentrated.
The public mind might have funny ideas about democracy, which says that we should not be forced to simply rent ourselves to the people who own the country and own its institutions, rather that we should play a role in determining what those institutions do — that’s democracy. If we were to move towards democracy (and I think “democracy” even in the 18th century sense) we would say that there should be no maldistribution of power in determining what’s produced and distributed, etc. — rather that’s a problem for the entire community.
And in my own personal view, unless we move in that direction, human society probably isn’t going to survive.
I mean, the idea of care for others, and concern for other people’s needs, and concern for a fragile environment that must sustain future generations — all of these things are part of human nature. These are elements of human nature that are suppressed in a social and cultural system which is designed to maximize personal gain, and I think we must try to overcome that suppression, and that’s in fact what democracy could bring about — it could lead to the expression of other human needs and values that tend to be suppressed under the institutional structure of private power and private profit.
The principle of voluntary cooperation, wherever found, but especially in trade, is morally sound. — NOS4A2
CEOs/business owners provide incomes, healthcare, and even vacations for their employees. They can move to a new CEO/business owner's domain (business) if they want. — schopenhauer1
The basis for technology is businesses interacting with other businesses to gather the goods/services to create products that sell and sustain their workers. — schopenhauer1
They themselves are a part of the government, of course, but they're given this special privilege.
— Xtrix
Technically they aren't. — ssu
but basically what already Adam Smith and Maynard Keynes noted. So this isn't a purely monetarist view here. — ssu
But remember not long ago there was a surplus, not a deficit.
— Xtrix
When? During the Clinton era? — ssu
How they operate is that they simply will continue with the same old ways until we have a crisis. — ssu
. And it's capitalism that is crushing us and will, in all probability, be terminal for us. The Fed plays a large role in all of that, no doubt -- but it's not completely their fault.
— Xtrix
Likely it isn't so terminal. Just look at us now in the midst of global pandemic where millions have died an the World has been locked down in spectacular ways. Things go on. — ssu
But my point is that we can't get very far if we don't identify the root of the problem, if for no other reason than to prioritize attacking it.
— Xtrix
But it's already been identified, more times than can be counted. At this point it's just shuffling papers around, a temporary catharsis. — _db
I'm not sure what you mean by "technique" here. Technology?
— Xtrix
Technique is the totality of methods rationally arrived at and having absolute efficiency [...] in every field of human activity. — _db
I am skeptical that sociological problems can be fully explained by the behavioral habits of the elite. I would argue that even the elite feel the coercive pull of technique. It is technique that is the puppet master. — _db
I don't hate them, they just never moved me. But I'm not fan of pop or rock music in general. I know almost nothing of my own generation's music except what I was exposed to by osmosis (films, advertisements, etc). — Tom Storm
Insofar as one pays attention to one's own attention during and after one "trips", the grip (habit) of ego-other (self-morethanself) duality reflectively loosens. — 180 Proof
I have found that caffeine helps with clear rational thinking and, this was initially through taking caffeine tablets when I was a student. I sometimes took more than the recommended dose and my thoughts were racing. I was using it like a form of speed and it was during this time that I stopped going to church and questioned religion. — Jack Cummins
But, swallowing morning glory seeds was great in the sense that I could see images on the door but was not completely stoned and was able to sketch the images. The biggest problem with morning glory seeds is that they are coated in poison to deter people from eating them. I had stomach ache during the night after taking them and, perhaps, 2 packets of seeds are somewhere inside me still. — Jack Cummins
Absinthe is a bit tempting to try but I am not sure that it such a good idea.. — Jack Cummins
I did find heroin and morphine to provide the best experience of overall wellbeing and peace I've every felt, but there was no concomitant insight or clarity. — Tom Storm
I have one high-CBD strain that seems to facilitate hyper-focus, great for reading and writing. I find I read a little slower, but I really squeeze every last drop of meaning out of every sentence; often I'll anticipate upcoming developments in the text. — Pantagruel
Listening to music (classical) is the only experience that's ever felt transcendent or epiphanic — Tom Storm
listening to music (jazz) — 180 Proof
I also have the music going constantly. Renaissance classical or instrumental jazz. — Pantagruel
Mostly though, for the last +two decades, sober clarity via vigorous activity (e.g. daily walks, frequent hikes, less frequent bike rides) has been the thing that really does it for my head. — 180 Proof
Strong black coffee in the morning, usually half a pot. An IPA or two in the evening. Both paired with a book. Larger amounts of alcohol make me sleepy and irritable. — _db
9/10 times marijuana will give me a panic attack. I experienced a terrifying sort of ego death one time with a concentrate, but it might have been spiked with something else; it was kind of a stupid decision on my part to take it. I'm curious about acid and mushrooms, but I don't know how I would handle it based on my previous experiences. — _db
But central banks providing money for governments for wars and stuff is a historical fact, which one cannot disagree with (and I think you agree with me on this). — ssu
Which takes us back to the fundamental question: the US is uncapable of doing anything else than deficit spending and now it's own central bank has had to buy a huge share of that new debt. Furthermore: nothing, absolutely nothing will happen before there is a huge crisis. The Republicans spent as there's no tomorrow (let's remember that it was Dick Cheney who said "deficits don't matter") and so do the Democrats. The Republicans just bitch about the issue when they are in opposition, and hence leftist people think I'm a Republican if even talk about the same issue.
The whole fucking system is built on these cards. It can blow up some day. And then we all have some expedient narrative fed to our tribe that it was the fault of the people in the other side of the political spectrum. — ssu
The point is, the corporate interest driving government, media and scientific responses is overwhelmingly pro-vaccine. — Isaac
Either way, the idea that the anti-vax movement is the major player here, — Isaac
Our powerful corporate and political (but I repeat myself) masters, through their ownership and control of media and their infiltration of the education system, have really done a number on the populace.
— Xtrix
Bullshit. — Isaac
People don't want to give up power, or perceived status in society, even if it would make the world a better place. As long as we care more about status than the people around us, we will keep making the same primitive mistakes that lead to many of the world's preventable ills. — Philosophim
In my opinion, the root disease for climate change and political corruption is capitalism and all of the contradictions associated with it. — Albero
As to whether to address symptoms first or the disease itself, the answer is both! Simply because symptoms can themselves be a problem and severe enough become the problem. — tim wood
Capitalism has already been mentioned, and this should be obvious (identifying the problem is a lot easier than solving it). — _db
In addition to this, or maybe beyond this, there is the expansion of technique into every domain of human life. Technique is, after all, what engendered capitalism in the first place (though it is an imperfect technique for the demands of efficiency, since the pursuit of profit is not always compatible with the pursuit of efficiency). When humans become totally dependent on (helpless without) technology and techniques, there will be no real freedom, and therefore no real happiness, and ultimately no need for humans at all. — _db
And I think they have for a long time bought corporate debt and were directly involved in helping other entities than banks. — ssu
I do admit that thanks to the covid pandemic lockdowns have created supply chain problems, but those really, just as with toilet paper or masks, do get solved. They do get fixed and do go away. As we agree, the financial crisis never went away and the stock market was boosted by monetary policy. And this is why this is far more serious than just supply chain problems or a temporary bout of inflation. — ssu
The Fed has nothing to do with the fiscal policy of last year or this year. Nothing.
— Xtrix
Isn't the actor who is the biggest buyer of US government debt a major player here? I think so. The Federal Reserve is already the biggest owner of Treasury debt. Not China. — ssu
Information about Covid-19 will continue to be valuable for people who are interested in being vaccinated and just need more data. But that may be only a small portion of the unvaccinated population now. If disbelief in the importance of vaccination is the primary barrier to reaching the country’s vaccination goals, more information is unlikely to work.
Our past research has also shown that more information often isn’t enough to change behavior. A classic example is doctors who struggle to follow the same medical advice that they give to patients. Despite doctors’ extensive training and access to medical information, as a group, they are barely better than patients at sticking to recommendations for improving their health. This includes vaccinations. Rates of chickenpox vaccination among doctors’ children, for example, are not meaningfully different from the rates among children whose parents are not doctors. While most parents vaccinate their children against chickenpox, you would expect the rates among doctors’ families to be especially high.
What interventions might work? Behavioral science research suggests that one of the best ways to motivate behavior is through incentives, either positive or negative. Incentives work because they do not force people to change their beliefs. A customer might switch cellphone providers not because he believes the new provider is better, but because the new provider is offering a free iPhone to switch (a positive incentive). A teenager might come home before curfew on a Saturday night not because she believes it’s dangerous to be out late, but because she knows her parents will take away her car keys if she stays out past midnight (a negative incentive).
While small positive incentives such as free doughnuts or entries into statewide lottery programs may have motivated some people, those and similar methods don’t seem to motivate people to get vaccinated on a scale large enough to close the vaccination gap.
The incentive that seems to work especially well is the employer vaccine mandate, a negative incentive. “Get vaccinated or get fired” has shown to be an effective message. United Airlines, which mandated the coronavirus vaccination for its employees this past summer, reported in November that 100 percent of their customer-facing employees were vaccinated, and that only about 200 of their 67,000 employees had chosen termination over vaccination. Similar stories have played out among private and public sector employers that enforce mandates, with vaccination rates approaching 100 percent (including at our own hospital).
By now, it’s clear that the public health system does not know how to change people’s beliefs about vaccines. Until we do, America’s leaders should focus on other strategies, especially the ones we already know are effective.
Your argument boils down to, absence of evidence is evidence of absence — TheMadFool
So how long are you going to believe the official "supply chain" argument? — ssu
First, no, not in this way. The alphabet soup of programs they went through wasn't at this level and intensity — ssu
AND the money basically went to uphold the banks, which sat on the money like Scrooge McDuck. Banks sitting on money doesn't create inflation. — ssu
Now the money is going directly to consumers, which does put the money into circulation. — ssu
But of course, if you print so much money, you will get inflation. — ssu
Now if there indeed needs to be made a choice between those two, then the choice should be pretty clear, because without a livable planet you can have no economy. — ChatteringMonkey
Honestly I have more faith that Elon Musk will come in and save the day and I wish I were joking. — Mr Bee
The problem with climate action is that if the appropriate steps were taken, the result would be a global economic meltdown. — Agent Smith
Really makes me question the point of the Dems winning the Georgia runoffs if what we're gonna get from all this was a bipartisan bill that could've passed anyways. — Mr Bee