Are you writing from an alternative universe? Your government budgets have expanded over the last 10 years, that is certainly not "fierce austerity". And "local and district councils and public services" can never go "bankrupt", since they are funded by tax money. Maybe what you want to say is you wish taxes here higher.Well our country is still reeling from the correction in 2008. Following 10 years of fierce austerity, most of our local and district councils and public services are teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. — Punshhh
Stock markets are too high, and need a correction. However, a stock market fall is not the same as an "economic collapse".If we get, or need any other correction now, we will begin to feel widespread economic collapse. — Punshhh
I don´t know what you mean by "bash the poor", and I certainly do not see how "Brexit is driving us of a cliff". It is not the end of the world, when a country leaves the undemocratic EU project. In fact, the best countries in Europe are not members of the EU.We really don't need a rightwing populist government right now. Who are going to bash the poor some more. Not to mention one which is going to drive us of a cliff with Brexit. — Punshhh
I think you are confusing short term and long term trends. A correction in overheated economy is a good thing, that is what the Corona thing brings, that is a good thing.Economic shrinkage = economic decline, in our current capitalist system. — Punshhh
The bubble is still there, and will eventually need to be deflated..[/quote]The wealth we had been enjoying before the sub prime mortgage crash was built on a vast bubble. — Punshhh
The much maligned (by the so-called mainstream media) populism is a reaction the elitist globalism that has been sweeping the world and is a healthy reaction. Do you seriously want to live in the globalist world envisioned by the likes of George Soros?The world economy has been staggering along since and the chaos of populism sweeping the world at the moment — Punshhh
A much-needed correction, not a decline, if you talk about economics. You can not have continuous expansion without corrections.oh and not to mention the pandemic, economic decline is pretty much inevitable at the moment. — Punshhh
Can you tell is why you know that the e-mails were damaging if you did not see them, and why we should not see them if they are damaging?who he lied about his efforts to obtain damaging emails related to Hillary Clinton’s — 3017amen
Can you tell us who these "Russian agents" are and how one "steals e-mails"?that were stolen by Russian agents. — 3017amen
That is a rather naive view, has it occurred to you that capitalism requires endless growth and expansion? You are advocating economic decline, or at least shrinkage. — Punshhh
An interesting scenario would be a world wide pandemic with a mortality of between 1and 2%. Presumably before this point, some countries would shut their borders. We would have massive economic disruption. The stock markets are having a hissy fit already. — Punshhh
Oh, it would certainly have an impact on policy.... i.e. China taking advantage of the US hobbling its economy, and African dictators gathering at the trough of "climate" subsidies for vague promises. It would NOT have an impact on the worlds climate.The US is a world leader, the wealthiest and most powerful country on Earth. To believe its climate policies and involvement in global agreements on climate change has little impact is mind-numbingly ignorant. — Xtrix
I do not buy the premise that we are all "doomed" because of some US political decisions. I am fully in favour of reducing the dependence on fossil fuels and on subsidizing research in alternative energy sources.But regardless -- what is your point, exactly? We should do nothing, since we're doomed anyway? Common attitude among deniers, but no less ridiculous. — Xtrix
If you never said that, why are you arguing? The only reason I jumped in here was because of the hysterical claim that "civilization" would not survive another 4 years of Trump.I never said Trump is responsible for climate change. Not once. — Xtrix
You can get lots of gold and lots of sex just by being a bit more "unfriendly" than usual. So, why on earth would you politely ask for anything if it obviously works much better by slamming that person with your bare fists? Give me what I want, or else !!! — alcontali
Difference in what, exactly? Firstly, It is not all clear what you mean, and secondly, 15% difference is a far cry from the "end of civilization" that was claimed here, evil orageman Trump would produce.For starters, the US doing 100% of what it originally promised, it would make about 15% difference. — Benkei
Nothing wrong with reducing pollution, however "moving to alternative fuel sources" is easier said than done, seeing that currently the only viable alternative to fossil fuels is nuclear, and currently gen 4 nuclear technology is not fully developed yet.Second, locally it makes sense as well as it will lower pollution significantly if you move to alternative fuel sources and improve air quality (particularly due to reduced particulates). Investing in energy saving measures is even better as it will result in long term benefits freeing up resources (both money and fossil fuels) for other uses. — Benkei
Not as a father but as a father-figure, someone to look up to and treat like a father. I’m not saying this is true of everyone. I personally see the president as a man doing a job. — NOS4A2
People become aggressive usually as a response to social conditions. — Bitter Crank
To argue "Well, climate change would exist without Trump" is, at best, childish to the point of embarrassment. — Xtrix
I think it's worth noting that the term "incel" means a bit more than just being involuntarily celibate. The term "incel" tends to refer to the people who form an online community to talk about their celibacy, and quite often are toxic and complain about women and life and whatnot, — Michael
If you were correct, then conditions of prisoner relations in female prisons would not be so similar to those in male prisons. — god must be atheist
A work of fiction, not a documentary. — Michael
So being aggressive has nothing to do with celibacy, it just has something to do with being male? — Michael
Too often the president is regarded as a father-figure. — NOS4A2
OK, but how does that entail that men are made aggressive by celibacy? — Michael
ou should get some beer, man. You're spinning out on withdrawal. Either that, or you're getting slushed. I sense a lot of anger and lashing out in your replies, with no reason attached to your angry outbursts. — god must be atheist
If you can't see the difference between republicants and democrats, then I can see your point. — god must be atheist
I reckon that only a minority of people who are involuntarily celibate are aggressive. And of those that are, I doubt having sex is going to calm them down. — Michael
The biological FACT here is what exactly? — Possibility
I dispute that societal norms must be BASED on this interpretation of ‘biology’. That’s my point. — Possibility
]But surely you’re more than just a bunch of animals ‘forced’ to comply with the socio-political framework of the day? — Possibility
Well yes, but whatever societal norms you have are BASED on biology.Frankly, if we consider ourselves to be human beings, then our ‘default’ should NOT be biology. — Possibility
Trump's Presidency has been relentless in undoing climate and environmental protections and fostering the interests of fossil fuel corporations. He has dismissed climate science as a hoax, taken the US out of the Paris Agreement, and overturned protections against drilling in environmentally-sensitive national parks, amongst many other things. — Wayfarer
Take a look at his position on climate change and the policies enacted under his administration. How his administration isn't a unique existential threat for this alone, I really don't understand. — Xtrix
Who do you think appoints Supreme Court justices? — Relativist
That is to be expected from the system, so I fail to see what the problem is. What applies to one party should apply to the other, unless you you want a one-party system. China, anyone?My guess would be that a Republicant president would appint Republicant-leaning judges, and a Democratic president would appoint a Democratic-leading judge. — god must be atheist
What? Looking from the outside, I don`t see much religion in the US political brouhaha, and secondly, what is this "evangelist religion" anyway?America is the same. Everyone hates murder, drugs, bombing of innocent people abroad, the skyracketing price of medicare, and they all want prosperity, equal chances for everyone, etc etc but for some reason the evangelist religion hijacked the Spirit of America and got it by the balls, and it never stops squeezing it. — god must be atheist
Evangelicals aren't smarter than everyobe else, they're just focused on abortion. Abortion became legal (nationally) by court action, and it's clear that court action can undo it. This provided a political lever. Pro-choice people (a strong majority of the populstion) aren't nearly as focused. Sure, they'd prefer women have choice, but it isn't a sine qua non for choosing whom to vote for, as it is with many pro-life people. — Relativist
I am an agnostic who has clearly stated my agnostic position — Frank Apisa
If it is in the constitution, shouldn`t it be "recognized" by everyone?That power was recognized by evangelical Christians — Relativist
Since every president has this power, what does it matter?- that's why they voted for Trump, and will do so again. — Relativist
The President appoints federal judges. That is a tremendous power, with the potential to have impact that lasts decades. — Relativist
I do not really really see that, but OK, lets just assume it.He's a threat, because he constantly attacks the legal system and uses the justice department in the pursuit of his own political ends (which are his personal ends, he sees no distinction.) IN addition he treats the Constitution, Congress, the State Department, and many of the other organs of government with obvious contempt. So he's a threat to constitutional democracy and the rule of law. — Wayfarer
OK, so you imagine "hugely damaging consequences for the Western democratic order".If he's voted in for another term, this might end up having hugely damaging consequences for the Western democratic order, at a time when numerous other crises, economic, political and environmental, are reaching a peak. — Wayfarer
If you can't see it, there's no point trying to explain it. — Wayfarer
another four years of Trump could just f*** civilization to the point of no return. — Wayfarer
Should the BBC continue to receive public money?
That would only happen in a theoretical situation in which the entire population decided to stop having children, and in practice, as opposed to pure abstraction, that has never happened.
So you're talking about territorialism, not "culture".
I still have no idea what that has to do with "birth rates", a nation could become "annexed" by another nation, such as through war or colonization, even then I fail to see what "population" or birth rates have to do with this.
True, but how much "population" is needed and in the context of what goals, and how does "aggregate" population take into account other social or economic factors, such as populations of families relative to their means, and so on and so forth?
Actually, it will. Simple demographic fact.Unless something akin to the "voluntary human extinction movement" or a nihilistic worldview in which "no one" should have children was relevant, then the "entire" population would not disappear. — IvoryBlackBishop
No, simply pointing to reality. In the short term (which you seem preoccupied with) demographics means nothing. In tne long term, it means everything. Populations which do not reproduce disappear, populations which do, take over. How do you think Kosovo went from being a Serbian province to an Albanian territory? (Just a random example)So, honestly, I don't see what the point in aggregate population comparisons between America, Europe, or Africa are, unless this is just some type of "population measuring contest"; can you provide any more depth to this issue?
What are the living conditions in Africa (I'm assuming sub-Saharan parts of Africa where polygamy and child marriage are practices); why would you want to emulate that? This isn't just about "race" is it? — IvoryBlackBishop