hobbsyoyo
Deity
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2012
- Messages
- 26,575
The top brass, yeah there's still a lot of 'Nam vets around.Do you genuinely believe that the US military is staffed by disgruntled Vietnam veterans?
The top brass, yeah there's still a lot of 'Nam vets around.Do you genuinely believe that the US military is staffed by disgruntled Vietnam veterans?
Sure am looking to more and more folks working out that endlessly bailing out private companies like Boeing don't actually do much for the economy.
I’m wondering whether visa-free travel between countries will become a thing of the past, and if we’re headed towards more the way it used to be except with more thorough health inspections.
Please be wrongI hope that the strain on political systems becomes acute, leading to their collapse and revolution, similar to what happened to the Tsarist government of Russia at the end of World War I. But what I think will actually happen is a prolonged period of economic depression as the pace of growing inequality only quickens. Much higher unemployment and much lower standard of living for the poor will be accepted as the new normal. The rich retreat further into metaphorical and physical isolation.
Only if the virus stays, I'd say.
Because if not, then there's just no good reason, and it's easier after all without checks.
Please be wrong
if only because democracy is still operational
If governments do try to pull another 2008, I don't believe they'll be lucky this time.
I thing the one outcome that grantees the scenario Lexicus mentioned will be a Biden/Clinton victory. Neither a still possible Sanders victory not even a Trump victory would, one genuinely wants to change things, the other will do whatever it takes to preserve himself in power by being just enough populist. But a Biden victory will place in power an "Obama 3" administration bent on imposing the same crap that was done post-2008. In a situation and population that just can't take it. It's not a matter of not wanting to take it, it's a matter of survival - they can't take that again.
I hope that the strain on political systems becomes acute, leading to their collapse and revolution, similar to what happened to the Tsarist government of Russia at the end of World War I. But what I think will actually happen is a prolonged period of economic depression as the pace of growing inequality only quickens. Much higher unemployment and much lower standard of living for the poor will be accepted as the new normal. The rich retreat further into metaphorical and physical isolation.
Sudden, violent revolutions rarely (read: almost never) lead to objectively better governing styles in the long-run.
Cuba.
Easier usually also means unsafer, and that is the case here. The system of easy international travel built on lack of checks was what allowed the easy and quick spread of this virus all around the world. The inertia of the existing system was what prevented effective measures being taken early.
It is unfit for use because this can and will happen again. Should be changed. The cost if its failure modes is too great compared to the advantages.
Cuba.
What this crisis will reveal is how hollowed out our state has become, under successive GOP governments, as well as the failure of democrats to repair and stem the systemic rot ushered in by the Republicans.
That is because people have been trained to see things in binary terms. Yes, China's actions are the cause of this catastrophe. But also in the individual countries otuside of China the actions of the local authorities, who wanted to keep the same social interactions that enable transmission of the disease going ‘because economy! don't panic!’ and are now trying to backtrack and stem the damage are equally guilty. But I see many operations designed to convince the respective local populations that a certain ‘other’ is to blame (former governments, foreigners, ideologies, etc., see my dean of social science in the main virus thread) and people are idiots.I think that revealed long ago to anyone with a brain, there's a certain sense of denial. That said, there's nothing that'll stop the denial from returning after the whole mess is over. The most crippling blame will likely be put elsewhere (like China would be an easy target to the drooling masses who drink up scapegoating techniques).
Yeah, its dehomosexualisation camps worked out for the best.Cuba.
It's a full reconstruction in terms of a few decades at least.If you want to see actual repairs we are going to have to put the Democrats in control for an extended period, even if they are not our "favorite" democrats. I mean, full control; house, senate, white house. And I mean a really extended period. A few years to put out the infernos, followed by a few more years to dismantle the structures of long term damage production, followed by a few more years to install some quality structures for moving forward.
I hope that the strain on political systems becomes acute, leading to their collapse and revolution, similar to what happened to the Tsarist government of Russia at the end of World War I. But what I think will actually happen is a prolonged period of economic depression as the pace of growing inequality only quickens. Much higher unemployment and much lower standard of living for the poor will be accepted as the new normal. The rich retreat further into metaphorical and physical isolation.
It's a full reconstruction in terms of a few decades at least.