Callatoroy
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As she should. Having to live live with an 8 just isn't the same.If that's what you think of as a solid 8.5, your wife has my undying sympathy.
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As she should. Having to live live with an 8 just isn't the same.If that's what you think of as a solid 8.5, your wife has my undying sympathy.
Then why doesn't it bother you that education is the modern Republican party's greatest enemy? If people had seen through all the misinformation. Trump would not have won. He rode to victory on the less educated, the misguided and the people that use them.Because it has such a rich and successful history. Anything, literally anything that dumbs down innovation and de-incentivises people to work hard and be imaginative is a losing system. That includes everything from education to business. That concept is so simple that literally elementary students can grasp it in its basic form.
You are leaving out a couple of important variables when trying to compare the US to european countries that I think makes those comparables moot, both in 1934 and today. 1) european countries didn't, and don't have our level of racial diversity. That can't be overlooked in your discussion and is one of the things that makes it almost impossible to compare the US to europe today. It has a tremendous impact on our society. And 2) the existing governmental structures in europe (germany) in 1934 vs the US structure is also relevant to your discussion as it makes any comparison tenuous.Ok, I'll take this on.
1. The reaction to Mangione is a good case study. I have no sympathy for UHC. Brian Thompson may have been a terrible person. But the embrace of Mangione as some kind of populist hero is extremely disturbing to me. Violence begets violence, and it almost never begets anything other than more violence.
2. I'll pose a question to you -- what did you think about the CHIPS Act? That might be the most anti-populist bill passed by a Dem-controlled Congress in recent memory. It will use taxpayer dollars to support an industry that is highly automated and unlikely to reinvest much capital in American communities. It may even have the effect of increasing the cost of "necessities" like phones and cars for working class Americans. But in my view, it's one of the most important bills passed under Biden's stewardship. Would a populist-controlled Dem Party support legislation like that?
3. I've written about this on here in the past, but in my view, populism can only be supportive of democracy in social structures characterized by relatively high levels of trust and low levels of partisanship. Scandanavian countries, for example, can employ populist policies to great effect. Same with Switzerland. In countries with relatively low levels of social trust and high levels of partisanship, populism is far more likely to lead to authoritarianism. It's easy to remember that Hitler came to power based largely on populist rhetoric, but so did Lenin. And I don't see any way you could argue that the US circa 2024 is more socially aligned with Denmark or Switzerland than it is with 1934 Germany.
education is not. there was a tremendous amount of misinformation coming from the left. I would make the same argument back to you.Then why doesn't it bother you that education is the modern Republican party's greatest enemy? If people had seen through all the misinformation. Trump would not have won. He rode to victory on the less educated, the misguided and the people that use them.
But you'd be wrong. Look who Trump won with. The so called Christian Right, the high school educated and the rich grifters.education is not. there was a tremendous amount of misinformation coming from the left. I would make the same argument back to you.
I don't think it's tangential at all. I cannot imagine an alternative history in which the chip manufacturing that is largely concentrated in Taiwan today would instead be concentrated in the US because the "people working in the factory" wanted that to be the case. The only way that would happen, absent the economic incentives afforded by legislation like the CHIPS Act, would be direct government command over economic decision-making, Which gets us back to the Lenin example. I'm just not going to agree with you that model would be better for America. And when America suffers, working class America suffers the most of all.Well, take it in context with the rest of my answer. Populism in the United States is a movement dedicated to average, working people making decisions about how the economy should be run.
Let’s think back to a time when the U.S. actually had a lot of good paying manufacturing jobs. The decision to ship those jobs overseas wasn’t made by the people working in the factory, that’s for sure.
Having chip manufacturing in the United States is a net positive for working Americans because it creates good paying jobs (despite the automation, which would also be good for workers under worker control) and creates a domestic supply of chips.
I can’t say for sure whether an economy controlled by the people working it would create this though, that’s why I said it’s my opinion. We can look at what happened under our current system, however. That is, we went decades without significant investment in domestic chip manufacturing because the economic system was controlled by immediate profit motives. It took a global pandemic and burgeoning left-wing populist movement to force the hand on chips.
This is tangential to the rest of the post, which I hope you’ll address.
Can you elaborate a bit on how our racial diversity impacts our society with respect to the economic issues we're discussing here?You are leaving out a couple of important variables when trying to compare the US to european countries that I think makes those comparables moot, both in 1934 and today. 1) european countries didn't, and don't have our level of racial diversity. That can't be overlooked in your discussion and is one of the things that makes it almost impossible to compare the US to europe today. It has a tremendous impact on our society. And 2) the existing governmental structures in europe (germany) in 1934 vs the US structure is also relevant to your discussion as it makes any comparison tenuous.
And set up foundations to get large donations from entities outside of the US.Anywhere it’s legal to write bestselling books?
French Revolution???By the way, eat the rich has been around long before the UHC killing. Young(er) people have been saying it since at least 2015. This isn’t a new thing. And from my experience, the sentiment tends to hold across ideological/partisan lines among young people. We’ve been radicalized but nothing has set it completely off yet.
I'm not trying to be obtuse but I'm not sure I follow your question. Its in every facet of our society in ways that other societies don't have to deal with.Can you elaborate a bit on how our racial diversity impacts our society with respect to the economic issues we're discussing here?
1. Natural resourcesWhy is chip manufacturing concentrated in China and Taiwan today?
That doesn't answer the question. How does our racial diversity impact the economic issues we're discussing in this thread?I'm not trying to be obtuse but I'm not sure I follow your question. Its in every facet of our society in ways that other societies don't have to deal with.
Fairly sure that the millennium long feuds between the various nationalities strewn across Europe by the wars inspire hate for each other with a fervor unmatched by anyone in the US outside of White Christian Nationalists. Poles in Germany, Germans in Poland, Russians anywhere not to mention all the vestiges of people like the Basques and you got some long term mad going on.I'm not trying to be obtuse but I'm not sure I follow your question. Its in every facet of our society in ways that other societies don't have to deal with.
most folk I know do not do IT for the money unless you are talking about whores and drug dealersBecause it has such a rich and successful history. Anything, literally anything that dumbs down innovation and de-incentivises people to work hard and be imaginative is a losing system. That includes everything from education to business. That concept is so simple that literally elementary students can grasp it in its basic form.
The most famous examples of left wing populists in the U.S. are AOC and Bernie Sanders. Do you think people of this ilk would not support legislation that reshores certain domestic industries? That’s kind of their whole brand, so that would be weird if they didn’t.
You must have really hated Trump’s first term then. It’s curious why you would vote for him again given that he is promising more of the same in his second term.Because it has such a rich and successful history. Anything, literally anything that dumbs down innovation and de-incentivises people to work hard and be imaginative is a losing system. That includes everything from education to business. That concept is so simple that literally elementary students can grasp it in its basic form.
there is no way for average working people to develop a semiconductor mfg policy. 0%. i don't think you understand why the chip fab business went abroad, and if you don't, what chance does a starbucks barista have? lack of investment in chip mfg was not because of "immediate profit motives."Well, take it in context with the rest of my answer. Populism in the United States is a movement dedicated to average, working people making decisions about how the economy should be run.
Let’s think back to a time when the U.S. actually had a lot of good paying manufacturing jobs. The decision to ship those jobs overseas wasn’t made by the people working in the factory, that’s for sure.
Having chip manufacturing in the United States is a net positive for working Americans because it creates good paying jobs (despite the automation, which would also be good for workers under worker control) and creates a domestic supply of chips.
I can’t say for sure whether an economy controlled by the people working it would create this though, that’s why I said it’s my opinion. We can look at what happened under our current system, however. That is, we went decades without significant investment in domestic chip manufacturing because the economic system was controlled by immediate profit motives. It took a global pandemic and burgeoning left-wing populist movement to force the hand on chips.
Even still, the chip package passed by our liberal government was just a massive giveaway to the profitable companies who dominate the industry. A populist chip plan would be much different.
This is tangential to the rest of the post, which I hope you’ll address.
You kind of take the same approach with "neoliberals" that you disparage them for with populists. Routinely, you've devolved into acting as if the majority of the board is simply too arrogant or dumb to understand the world and what got us here.Why is chip manufacturing concentrated in China and Taiwan today?
Regarding experience and expertise, you’re actively disparaging the experience and expertise of workers in this post while claiming that you don’t think they’re too stupid to make their own economic decisions. Left wing populists deride experts and expertise when they try to dress up their expertise as being above the fray of criticism, which happens quite often in America.
Once again, conflating left wing populism with right wing demagoguery services no one other than the ruling class. Words have meaning.