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As the trade dispute heats up, one continues to hear
about
empty -- empty -- cities being built in China to continue
to
stimulate local employment, a fixture of planned
economies.
In the meantime, we apparently have a major enough
housing crisis in the United States that Senator Sanders
is
proposing to create a colossal social housing program, at
god knows what cost, to provide "affordable" housing for
all.
The solution it seems, is staring right at us. Bring in all
those Chinese workers (through Chinese companies) to
work and build affordable housing all over the United
States. This way there won't be empty cities being built
in China, and our housing shortage is fixed.
What a great way to resolve the trade dispute!
Ordos City, a famous "ghost city", now with 150,000 residents
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordos_City Of the 40,000 apartments that had been built in the new district since 2004, only 500 are still on the market. [Voice, Jun 05 2019]
Ghost Estates in Ireland
https://www.irishce...-82080852-237681461 300,000 empty houses at the peak [xenzag, Jun 07 2019]
Homelessness in LA jumps due to housing prices
https://www.google....ml%3foutputType=amp Guessing a similar story could be told in sky-high SF. [RayfordSteele, Jun 07 2019]
Income vs. Cost of living
https://www.investo...re-20-years-ago.asp Inflation rate doesn't begin to describe the true jump. [RayfordSteele, Jun 07 2019]
10 families were put into that appartment
https://arzamas.academy/materials/597 When the soviets decided people who owned those apartments don't need all that space. Who needs two bathrooms? [theircompetitor, Jun 07 2019]
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Um... gut says no. Not sure why gut says no yet... |
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Is there a reason the homeless people can't go and live in the empty cities? |
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I think that might violate any number of UN conventions.
Are you suggesting something along the lines of "why don't
you socialist loving scum go and see what it actually means
to live in a socialist country?" I'm pretty sure that's been
suggested already. |
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If the USA were to invade China and annex the territories that the empty cities stand on, then the homeless people could go and live in the empty cities without leaving US territory. |
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//gut says no. [...] Need more input// |
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I recognize that feeling. Let me get you some breakfast. |
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The housing shortage isn't real. It's an artifact of price manipulation. There are more than enough houses for everyone but by manipulating land prices and rent our overlords get to extract more money. Stop it, [Max]! |
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The Chinese "empty cities" are being filled up almost as fast as they're built, and they have been these past 10 years we've been hearing about them. The stories about them are propaganda and attempts at global currency manipulation through disinformation. |
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so, you're suggesting upping the immigration numbers? will children of the workers be welcome? |
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I doubt very much if the Chinese would want the
Americans to be able to copy their superior
building techniques and technology. How would
they even communicate when the Chinese would
be using their G5 network and advanced Huawei
phones that America is banned from using by their
Stable Genius? |
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//manipulating land prices and rent// |
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yeah, ok, that's how markets work. |
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Planned economies can do a lot, including make people
move. I certainly have no first hand knowledge of
occupation rates of cities being constructed. |
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[po], this was not a serious idea, it was a comment on the
absurdity of the current situation, which includes the
President thinking tariffs is a switch he has on his desk,
and a presidential candidate despite being 77 hasn't
learned from the history of the Soviet block, the amazing
in your face counterfactual of East and West Germany and
North and South Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, and the even
more amazing fact that a substantial portion of the
population thinks that magically it would be different this
time. |
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incidentally, there is a relatively large population of
Chinese descent in California as they were originally
brought in to build it up. |
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[xenzag] -- I know you'd probably prefer to start earning
credits in the Chinese compliant society member
database, but most of us would prefer to stay off it. |
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I'd bet you right here and now -- ten years from now the
top communication device (if phones are it or not, hard
to know) would be an American brand device, and it will
NOT be running on a network made in China unless China
undergoes a very big change. |
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Hard to beat China on sheer numbers of course -- if
everyone in China buys a Huwawei phone. But the
network people will want to be on is not a Chinese one. |
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I know which phone the Dalai Lama would want -- and I
don't even need to ask him. |
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Is it possible, [theircompetitor], that the range of conceivable
economic systems is slightly wider than (a) the US status quo
vs. (b) communism? |
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haven't stood on too many slippery slopes, have you
[pertinax] |
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the reality is that the debate in the US is still being
positioned as being over the size of the welfare state --
which I suppose is debatable -- but in fact, at the point
that
leading candidates are calling themselves socialists, and
at
the point that candidates in the primary are booed for
saying socialism is not the answer, the slippery slope is
very, very concerning. |
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This "democratic" socialism get out of jail free card does
not give me any comfort. |
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When "democratic" socialists run the government, and fail
to deliver services -- would they take the blame, or be
even more likely to blame the 1%, the rich, various
industries for their failures? If they have the legislative
ability, and being philosophically inclined to believe that
adding laws is how you fix problems, would they be more
or less likely to take actions that would have profound
effects on the economy? And if those failures
accumulate, Atlas Shrugged style -- and that is exactly
what would happen -- what then -- the capitalist party
would win? When money and advertising is restricted and
union rolls have swelled to say 5 to 10 times their current
size? |
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Nationalizing banks was discussed during the recession, at
least by left wing economists, and Sanders has already
proposed having the post office offer banking services.
What would happen in a Sanders presidency if there was a
big economic downturn? Obama pushed Obamacare
through having 60 senators -- but nowadays with the
frayed fillibuster -- who knows if they'll even bother with
the super majority. |
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A downward spiral is very easy to envision even without
dictatorship. |
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Mind you a fascist downward spiral is also easy to envision
and in fact is on TV all the time in various
dystopias. Star Trek is pretty communist though. Let's
hear it for the repeal of scarcity. Maybe then. |
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There's a lot I don't understand about US politics (read:
everything). In particular I don't understand the frame of
reference you're using when you say "socialism". Does it
mean, in essence, existence of welfare support? |
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Here in the UK, we're no more on a "slippery slope" than you
are in the US, but our piece of level ground is evidently
different from yours. In general, people in the UK believe
that basic necessities like healthcare and education up to
some level should be provided by the state from taxes; and
that anyone wanting different or (arguably) better
healthcare or education is free to pay for it.
Likewise, we believe that the state should give a level of
financial support to people who are genuinely in need,
whilst at the same time encouraging them to change and
support themselves if they can. |
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Of course we have endless debate over how big the welfare
state should be and what levels of support it should provide
and at what level (if any) you should have to pay for higher
education, but the basic idea of supporting those in need is
not disputed by anyone on the political spectrum. Does this
make us what Americans would call a "socialist country"? Or
am I missing something? |
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In the USA, society is organised around the
encouragment and satisfaction of greed. Any
attempt at creating a more equal, caring society is
seen a sign of either weakness or an attempt to
realise a communist state. Greed is seen as a self
regulating system, via a 'survival of the fittest'
ethos. Thankfully the UK has a much more
moderate version of a capitalised system, as
evidenced in the brilliant NHS, good examples of
social housing and a generally caring ethos. We
won't ever get as rich as Americans, but who wants
to get rich through uncontrolled, unsustainable,
utterly relentless, planet destroying
greed? |
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Max, I suspect that the difference is in the fact that
you live in a comparatively small country that values
education, whereas ours arguably flounders and is
populous enough where our workforce runs against
the edge of the demand optimum for managers,
financial executives, scientists, doctors, lawyers, and
other highly-paid positions. Somebody's got to flip
the burgers, mow the lawns, work the factories, and
clean the toilets, and here, that's a lot more
somebodies I suspect. |
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<Insert standard libertarianism vs. socialism vs.
moderated capitalism argument here, starting in
5...> |
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first of all, he asked me :) |
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[xenzag], oh poor Victorian England whose efforts we still
see everywhere from Palestine to Afghanistan to Kashmir,
to South Africa, Northern Ireland(am I missing like a
dozen or so fuckups)? and who only ceded control of the
world currency to the dollar because it could not control
all world shipping after WWII, that one, and who know
can't pick it's ass from it's elbow via it's venerable
electoral system, that one? |
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[Ray doesn't need a response from me, he's gotten plenty
of those] |
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[Max] -- for the avoidance of doubt, I'm neither the type
of libertarian that espouses sovereign citizenship, nor one
that presumes that
all taxation is theft and, while I lament the income tax, I
agree that with the
shoved through amendments, it is constitutional. |
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Nor am I the type that argues there should be no
governmental safety net. I disagree with how Medicare
and Social Security are implemented, I disagree with the
minimum wage, but I do not want people to starve or live
on the streets because they are not successful enough. |
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So when I am concerned about socialism, I'm largely
concerned about the government controlling the means of
production, ever larger swaths of the economy and the
magnitude of restrictions on business and private
property. The classical Marxist kind. |
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The problem is that the people that are inclined to vote
for "liberal socialist" or "democratic socialist" candidates
are mostly completely uninformed about what real
socialism actually is, despite all evidence to the contrary. |
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They believe that elections will solve it -- the people that
voted for the Duma
after the Russian Revolution also believed it. |
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To the extent I debate it, it's mostly
a Quixotic effort to stop the windmill such that the
American Engine which is powering the world does not
stop. |
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Do I believe that someone like Sanders is more dangerous
than someone like Trump? No, I do not. |
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Do I believe that Sanders is a better human being than
Trump? Yes I do. |
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Authoritarianism is bad whatever direction it comes from.
However, in the socialist kind, starving comes faster, and
prosperity drains faster. |
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I am concerned that when the boogeyman is always the
1%, the banks, the wealthy, etc, and as their speech is
restricted, the odds of swinging the government the other
way will decrease. And so you won't need a bloody
revolution to stop the engine. Just a whittling away aka
Atlas Shrugged, all with proper elections. |
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Well, good grief. Everyone is being fucking reasonable (apart from
[xen], obvs). How are we meant to have an argument under these
circumstances? |
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As for government controlling the means of production, well,
governments have always been crap at running businesses. In the UK,
there was nothing worse than state-run businesses (like the rail
network, for instance) until privatisation came along. |
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I do believe that there are some activities a country should protect,
rather than leaving it purely to competition (and especially
international competition). Examples include education, healthcare
and national infrastructure such as transport, electricity and the
postal system. Also perhaps some industries where it is dangerous to
rely on fickle overseas suppliers, such as steelmaking and agriculture. |
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That said, a new model needs to be developed for nationalized
industries that gives them some incentive to do well. I'd suggest
giving huge performance-related backhanders to the people in charge
of them - this would have negligible cost in the grand scheme of
things, but would give them some skin in the game. As Peter Sellers
once said, people will swim through shit if you throw a bob in it. We
should have them swimming through our shit for our bob. |
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Now, there's plenty of things to start a really good argument about. |
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I would love to compensate politicians based on national
performance, not through subterfuge -- which already
happens -- but directly, and with clawbacks. |
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But unfortunately, that's not in the cards. |
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??How are we meant to have an argument under these circumstances?// You can argue with me till the cows come home. You'll just buckle, crumple, capitulate and give up completely like always! ha If you promise to wear a suit made entireley out of tin-foil, feathers, and burnt matchsticks, all held together using small balls of chewing gum, I'll let you win for once. :-) |
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I have news for you [xenzag]. The cows are not coming
home. |
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Peter Thiel looks to compare the pace of innovation to
level of regulation industry by industry. The tradeoffs to
no cars falling from the
sky is no flying cars. Often it's worth it, sometimes it's
not. |
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It's not particularly fair to compare private businesses to
govt efforts in similar areas if the level of regulation and
unionization in the industry gives it the appears of private
with the headache of public. |
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On the other hand, in some things the govt has to have a
monopoly at a given moment in time (as in the post office
in the 1800s) or policing, probably always. |
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//who wants to get rich through uncontrolled, unsustainable, utterly relentless, planet destroying greed?// |
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Well if you're going to twist my arm... |
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// The problem is that the people that are inclined to vote for "liberal socialist" or "democratic socialist" candidates are mostly completely uninformed about what real socialism actually is, despite all evidence to the contrary.// |
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Not at all. I just know a hefty sprinkling of socialist candidates won't bring about a purely socialist state, and the leavening will greatly improve our current system. |
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Said the people who voted in the Duma elections of
November 25th, 1917 -- generally recognized to be the
first
free elections in Russian history. |
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Look, some people worry Trump <obligatory invocation of
Goodwin Law>. I worry about this. Can't stop worrying
about it, like cannot doubt that I'm doubting. |
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When people in power need someone to blame, they can
blame 1. the opposition, 2. some group of external
entities, 3. some of their constituents. |
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When a left-wing regime fails to deliver housing to all or
worse, something really bad happens to the economy
(their fault or not), is
it going to "do something about the banks"? Housing? it
just might. We almost did after 2008. |
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What we need to do is invest in a way off of this
rock. That will be the most expensive thing we do
but also the largest payoff by literally an infinite
amount. |
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You're right, [theircompetitor], that slippery slopes are a real risk.
However, the slippery slope we're on now is not a smooth
inclined plane with a socialist swamp at the bottom. |
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I suggest, instead of a slippery slope, a slippery shai-hulud. |
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It's easy to fall off, either to the left or to the right, and the really
tricky part is to glance up from time to time, in a direction
perpendicular to the left-right axis, to see where the damned
thing is taking you. |
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[pertinax] I must say I've always realized Herbert was
drawing on bedouin culture, but I until I read your
annotation I somehow never thought about oil as melange
until I read your annotation, not that it had anything to
do with that. Cool. |
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You are correct, there is risk to both sides. The risk to
the left appears to me to be increasing faster, at least in
the States. |
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[Ray] which is why we really need our Moonraker
billionaires. It won't happen without them. |
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[bigsleep] on 5G, I must say as much as I understand the
dislike if not hatred for Trump in
Europe, I shudder at the public (on Facebook) displays of
affection for Huawei ads in
Longdon newspapers as a way to tweak Trump. |
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The primary use case will more likely be the AR cloud, so
you already know what will
happen, god knows we've seen enough distopias. |
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In any case all we need to do is get to sense realistic VR
(probably not 10, but more like
25 years), and then all our problems our solved as the
addicted population pedals the CO2
out of the atmosphere :) |
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My view is that the worm is becoming more nattow
and steep-sided and harder to ride. You worry about
the left taking over when we've had 10 years or more
of McConnellism, the most conservative court in
decades, utterly ridiculous higher education costs
not kept in check by comon sense markets or ethics
or social
control, white nationalist fervor not seen since the
early 70's, and Roe v. Wade nearly choked to death?
Are we living in the same universe? |
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yes [Ray] we are in the same universe, we are just
wearing different color glasses. |
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The Tea Party was obviously a reaction to the President,
so yes those forces emerged, and perhaps culminated in
Trump (who as [bigsleep] points out, may be a comic book
supervillain but at least says what he thinks (at the
moment)) . But it's not as if the economy was not being
forced into low gear, we weren't building that, Occupy
Wallstreet wasn't out there, etc. |
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I evaluate the risk somewhat differently. Of course once
<godwin> happens, it's very, very bad, and perhaps even
somewhat worse than when <stalin> happens, although by
count Stalin is ahead. |
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But if there is one thing that overwhelmingly
differentiates fascist regimes from socialist regimes, it is
this: there is food in the grocery stores. |
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So when I say I don't want the engine that is America
broken, yes, I don't want interment camps, or any erosion
of the Bill of Rights, but I really, really worry about the
Atlas Shrugged scenario the slow but inevitable decay into
socialist hell. |
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You are free to worry about The Handmaiden's Tale more. |
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It has ever been the choice of the individual as to whether
they worry about what is affecting them now, or what might
affect them later. |
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As to the idea, I am not sure why the US can't use its
prisoners for construction projects. They would likely be
significantly cheaper than the Chinese imports. |
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yes, but you see, China has a problem and we have a
problem, so the idea is to solve both those problems :) |
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And incidentally, despite our current bull in the china shop.
plenty of things done between 2008 and 2016 are affecting
me now. |
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No, wait hear me out. Step one: the US pressgangs its
able bodied
prisoners into the construction industry (thereby
removing the
reliance on labour from the fruit-hatted nations to the
south),
leaving the prisons otherwise empty. Step two: the
prison service
providers then lease their facilities to the Chinese, so
that the 1-
3m incarcerated troublemakers of Xinjiang get nice new
homes far
away from the ability to further damage their social
credit scores.
Step three: once the US prisoners have completed their
tours of
duty on building sites, they get transported to outsourced
re-
education camps in, yes! you guessed it, Xianjang. |
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I think that this is the sort of all encompassing policy
which would
be popular with the current US administration, not least
because it
involves swapping out a predominantly black population
for a
population which is, well, much less black. |
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//And incidentally, despite our current bull in the china
shop. plenty of things done between 2008 and 2016 are
affecting me now// Well, yeah? I mean, plenty of
things done in the UK in the same time frame are
affecting me now, too. If the there weren't any effects,
the politicians wouldn't want to be politicians. The point
I was making was that the slippery slope may be a worry,
but for others the issue is that they are already at the
bottom of that slope. Not me, like, I'm white, male,
educated, able bodied and bourgeois as fuck, so I can
afford to be concerned about the slippery slopes, cos I'm
not living hand to mouth, not having to choose between
eating and heating my home. The critical thing - at least,
from the point of view of the discussion on this thread - is
that
the bottom of the slippery slope I am concerned about is at the
top of the slippery slope you're worried
about. |
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And yes, I do live in a gingerbread house, before any of the
pedants zoom in on my sloppy writing. |
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[calum], I'm going to make an effort to not resent the
implication that this is some sort of ethnic cleansing or
racist idea. |
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You are right. There are absolutely people that are
worried about what they are going to eat today. On a
percentage basis, that number is significantly lower than
for those in Venezuela. |
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And while being at least slightly less white than your self
described status (certainly to the white supremacists), I
was growing up in a mud house with an outhouse. I was
never hungry, because my dad was a truck driver for the
Moldovan state owned farm trucking company -- those
kind of ties insured I even knew what oranges and
bananas were. But I know what it means when the joke
of the week is a sexual reference to the grocery store
because
the shelves are naked. That's not a "food desert". That's
not you can only get McDonalds for a $1 but it's not good
for you. Empty. |
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You have no idea -- no matter how
many movies, no matter how many books, no matter how
many annotations from someone like me -- you have no
idea of the soul sucking despair that people experienced
in that country, for 75 years. It is literally a devastating
experience for me and others like me to see how people
are becoming enamored with this. |
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When we were all immigrating, those of us that were
teens
had show trials in front of other students where we were
shamed for betraying our patriotism and leaving the
Soviet Union. Those show trials are just a little bit like
being shamed on Facebook, only in person in Invasion of
the Body Snatchers fashion. At Sheremetievo, our
parents had to undergo body cavity searches to make sure
they're not taking out anything valuable. |
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I'm sorry, I guess it is a goodwin law kind of thing for me. |
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//I'm going to make an effort to not resent the implication
that this is some sort of ethnic cleansing or racist
idea// Your idea is not racist or to do with ethnic
cleansing - it clearly involves the importation of Not White
people into America. I thought I had been sufficiently
careful not to make that implication but I was not.
Apologies. |
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BTW -- whether you see my facebook feed or not, or see
ideas here, I am not kidding. |
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For those of us that left, especially those of us that left in
the 70s and 80s, before the collapse -- it is all we talk
about. It is no less serious a threat than losing Roe or
something like that -- it is kind of overwhelming. |
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Perhaps we're paranoid. Perhaps we are even to smug in
our own immigrant success -- some of us certainly are,
and it's a shame given we were actually refugees.
But this is a very serious thing for us |
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yes, [bigsleep], post automation and scarcity, it is
conceivable that market allocation would not be as
necessary. |
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Having said that, it all hinges on this -- is it possible to
have sufficient self-awareness without sentience, and is it
possible to have sentience without self preservation and
"selfishness". At the point that the robot refuses to be a
barista and wants to be a poet, you haven't moved
towards communism, and you may have activated Skynet
:) |
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//hand the profits over to people who bought shares ... just
because they could afford shares//
I've never liked the idea of "shares" and the "share market",
and that sums it up nicely. Whatever happened to, I dunno,
giving the profits back to the WORKERS who created them? |
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The thing with giving the profits to the workers, is what pays for the factory to be built? |
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When nearly all of the GDP increase goes to the very
tip top
wages, the system that we currently have doesn't
work right now. Can we at least say that much? |
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The Duma rules here, too. They just do it with
greenbacks instead of guns. |
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Education, healthcare, some stock shares, peace,
land,
and breadlines... can that be so hard? |
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[Whatever happened to, I dunno, giving the profits back
to the WORKERS who created them] |
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OK, so let's say, [neutrino], that I even entertain this
idea. But you do understand that most --
practically all -- of the wealth being created is software,
and the workers are already highly paid,
and get profit sharing in options -- when Facebook IPOd
closed to 3000 people became
millionaires? |
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Do you know that the government restricts profit sharing
because (after Enron and Y2K) you can
have a pension worth millions that can poof dissapear if
the company goes bankrupt, so you're
NOT allowed to have all your salary/pension/benefits in
stock? |
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Who else but shareholders? They put money at risk? |
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I've started more than a half a dozen ventures in my life,
many of these were financed by
investors. In one of my ventures, investors lost $10
Million dollars in 4 years. I was making a 6
figure salary, and so were most of the 35 employees I
hired over that timespan. So if by chance we
became Zynga -- we almost sold to them, but didn't
ultimately, and then social gaming kind of collapsed --
why shouldn't the investors have
made money, what kind of logical nonsense is this? In a
situation when unemployment is low,
what is the employee even risking by giving his time in
exchange for salary? Opportunity cost to
work at Target instead of Walmart? |
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[Ray] you will not get a dispute from me that things need
fixing. |
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We could have been 10 years past immigration reform in
Obama passed it in 2008. We could have
it now if Dems realized that some deals do require a deal
with the devil. Obamacare never had a
chance to meaningfully help any meaningful number of
people. But I would support a compromise
that directs more people towards Medicare in exchange
for making it easier to self-insure and
health-save. You really need to buy like 50 years,
Medicine is impossible to predict beyond that
anyway. |
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As to upward mobility and education, it's like this: |
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1. Presuming the hottest jobs are in technology, and
specifically in software and that stays that
way, is there a single person that is actually capable of
coding that cannot learn to code without
spending one dime? Literally?
2. Presuming the jobs coming after that are STEM (or rest
of STEM) is there a single person that
wants to get an electrical or mechanical engineering
degree in the US, who is actually capable of
doing so, that could not get an excellent education in the
state university, where between Pell
Grants, state grants, scholarship and the rest it might
even be a free ride, and if it's not, the type
of job he could get would afford him to payoff the
student loan within a decade? |
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No, what we're talking about are bourgeois children
taking English and journalism and history
degrees, or teaching degrees but then wanting to work
only in affluent suburbs, who, despite
everything that their parents told them, decided to go
ahead and go to a liberal school and drink
non stop for four years, do I have that basically right?
What needs fixing for them is going to work. And
lowering their expectations -- no, not that they can't have
a nicer life than their parents -- they already do. No, the
expectations they have to lower is that not everyone can
make money making youtube videos or rapping. |
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What and how are you proposing to fix that with
redistribution? |
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so what is the actual problem? that while this is
happening Bezos is getting rich enough to build private
spaceships? That Gates is quixotically fighting malaria?
Or even that some asshole billionaire is getting Beyonce to sing
for him at a birthday party? What is this major income
inequality problem doing to actually make life more
difficult for any identifiable human being? |
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So then let's get down to the main thing -- the Koch
brothers are single handedly warming the planet. Not the
people driving their SUVs. Not the people who have to
make sure their iPhone is always charged. Not the
politicians that fly do Davos, the Koch Brothers. And
because of this, they work really hard to make sure that,
what exactly...? |
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that we don't tax energy more? That's helping inequality? |
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that we keep those 100% efficient engine patents hidden? |
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that we won't sign on to a treaty that a veto proof
minority of the population does not want to sign, and if
we signed, it won't matter because of China? |
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Zuckerberg put 100M into Newark schools. Did they even notice? |
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Jesus, sorry I'm ranting here, but I just don't fucken get
it, sorry. |
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Please give me some specific examples of how "getting
money out of politics" would improve things in any
sustainable way. I would honestly like to know. |
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I think you're underestimating the cost of STEM
education these days. In 2009 the average
engineering degree cost was just under 100k, and it
has just gotten much sillier since. I have 2 young
coworkers who have 130k in student debt after the
usual assemblage of Pell grants, a bit of ed savings
plan money, and scholarships. One is a mechanical
engineer, the other is an EE. Neither can afford a car
and both live with their parents, at age 27ish. |
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The system is accidentally rigged anymore. |
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What are CS majors going to do when the bulk of
software goes neural net and starts writing itself? |
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When the cost of living has risen so much but the
mean salary hasn't, that's the problem. Someone has
to be a teacher, officer, and day care provider. When
the GDP so greatly outpaces salary levels because
of top-heavy distortion such as our new gilded age
features, the cost of living goes through the roof. |
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You don't get it because you choose not to see it. |
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Reversing Citizens United would be a good start.
That much money distorts politics in favor of
kleptocracy. |
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Build this housing as a contiguous block of
townhouse on the Southern border (with doors and
windows on the North side only) and call it a Wall. |
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No need to go to China...... There are (were at
one
time) 300,000 empty houses in Ireland in the form
of the so called Ghost Estates. (see link) |
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[cost of STEM education]. Ray, I've paid nearly a million dollars in college
and graduate school tuition for my children, my partner has 5 kids four of
which
wound up going to Ivy League schools, it is unlikely I underestimate it. I've
seen with my own eyes how over a period of 10 years tuition in private
schools
went from $30,000 a year to $60,000 a year -- and this is ONLY happening
because student loans are available in the first place. Certainly the
quality of
education did not improve, and the availability of free information
increased what -- hundred fold? million fold? How can this be? |
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But the reason the loans are as big as they are for people is because they
choose to live on campus -- basically live in a lousy hotel for 4 years, and I
stand by
the 4 years party -- and take loans to "feel independent". |
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These are lifestyle choices these kids make -- aided by "peer pressure" and
the expectation that everyone has to go to college, to be sure -- but they
are
getting themselves into that debt. |
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When you don't have the money, you go to a local school, and god forbid
commute. A commuting degree at Rutgers would cost $60K, versus $120K
in Penn
State if you come from Jersey. I mean these are asinine decisions being
made by kids and parents -- why should the state cover it. |
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All these discussions are moot past the singularity. My daughter went to
law school where job volume already shrank significantly because of
software and
availability of doc templates online. You'll find annotations to ideas from
me on HB where I talk about what happens when millions of drivers don't
have work,
long before Waymo or Tesla were a thing. I don't have a magic wand for it,
and I don't think creative destruction is a magic wand for people's
suffering, what
happened to taxi medallion holders is a good precursor. The Johnie Depp
version of Charlie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory gave the kid's father a
robot
repair job after the robot took his job -- let's just say I'm skeptical of that.
But we're a ways off from that level of automation, and besides, climate
change
will put us all out of our misery either earlier, or just about at the same
time. |
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"The dollar experienced an average inflation rate of 2.22% per year during
this period, meaning the real value of a dollar decreased. In other words,
$100 in
1994 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $161.95 in 2016, a
difference of $61.95 over 22 years." |
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Cost of living has not increased dramatically. Inflation is at one of the
lowest trends in history. Housing did increase dramatically and we're still
paying the
price for that. But most of these houses are owned by the parents of those
kids. |
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[someone has to be a teacher] |
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Teacher pension funds are the largest shareholders of Big Tech. Bringing
big tech down would guarantee that those pensions go bust.
New Jersey teacher median income is $67K. New Jersey median
HOUSEHOLD income is $72K. Teachers are not suffering in New Jersey. No
one HAS to be a
teacher, and I suppose we have to worry about the day teachers are robots
too. |
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Government money is like a black hole. Distorting gravity around it, it
reliably attracts pigs from all directions that want to feed on it. But it is
an absurdity
to think that any non-capitalist approach would make things better -- it
simply replaces one set of pigs with another set of pigs. |
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I've yet to see any evidence how "getting money out of politics" would
help. |
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The fundamental assumption seems to be: people vote against their own
self interests because they are dumb and can be persuaded by 30 seconds
ads that
the world is not ending unless we tax carbon, that it's ok to lose Net
Neutrality (incidentally, your Internet still ok? it's been a year. Now check
Roku's stock
price over that time -- it's dependent on streaming, so one would think if
streaming becomes more expensive, kaput), or that the Congresswoman
that wants
to really just wants the best for them did not just screw their
neighborhood out of billions of dollars of investment? That's what
overturning Citizen's United
would do? |
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You cannot expect entities that are affected by the state to not attempt to
influence the state, and it is not reasonable to assume that they wouldn't.
If you
don't want "bought" politicians, you should have more billionaires run for
office. |
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We need to revv up the engine of the economy -- this is why the tax reform
was a great idea, and the tariffs are an idiotic idea. The difference
between 2% and 3% is ENORMOUS to the benefit of every citizen. And we
need to keep trying to make the economy MORE dynamic, not less. That is
the best way to create prosperity for the largest # of people. And we do
need to continue to automate so that needless human labor is taken out. |
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Things cost more -- we've taken (in the US) over a trillion pictures in the last twelve months. |
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How much money would we have paid to develop them? How about the guy with the encyclopedia britannica to run up to us
and whisper the answer to every question? |
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Life, and the access to a truly wonderful life, has never been this available. |
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[xenzag] yes, in the States in some cases whole
developments were abandoned after the housing bust |
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We have to make sure that housing is being legislated as a human
right, Ocasio-Cortez said. What does that mean? What it means
is that our access and our ability and our guarantee to having a
home comes before someone elses privilege to earn a profit. |
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//These are lifestyle choices these kids make// |
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Yeah! why don't they just cash in some of their trust fund like I did? Oh wait, you literally said pretty much the same thing. The joke falls flat when you're responding to a real life joke. Get some perspective. Most people in college can barely or not at all afford it and most people in college don't have any financial support from their parents. Poverty is not a vice, it's not a lifestyle choice, and it's not fun. Your heart is three sizes too small and ten shades too dark. |
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1. //Poverty is not a vice, it's not a lifestyle choice, and it's not
fun// - mostly agree |
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2. //Your heart is three sizes too small and ten shades too
dark.// - mostly disagree |
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Could we in general focus more on propositions like #1, and less
on propositions like #2? |
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[voice] -- I am not implying that poverty is a vice. I don't begrudge help for those who need it. I
stand by the fact that
when you choose to either pay double or triple by going to a private school than a
state school it is a choice, and often a choice that parents can ill afford but are feeling unable to
deny their kids. I'm
not sure what age you are -- I am a grandfather, I've gone to college, and I've put
three kids to college and one through graduate school in suburbia -- let me assure you I know
exactly what I'm talking
about. |
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As to me personally -- trust fund -- lol -- I grew up in poverty as discussed earlier, and when I got
to the States -- at 15,
alone -- I lived with relatives I basically didn't know in a slum in Brooklyn. The high
school was on the line of white flight from Brooklyn in the 80s, which meant constant riots and
fights in the parking
lot, but the benefit of getting high by the time you got to the second floor because of
the stench of pot in the stairwells. I bought my first car for $200 earned delivering groceries and
washing dishes at an
old folks home, and by the time I was 19, I was married with a kid on the way, and
when the kid wound up in the hospital for a week I was presented with a bill for $3000, which I
didn't pay until years
later when my bank account was arrested by the sheriff. Me and my family had no
medical insurance until I was 23 and got my first full time job. I worked night shift and odd jobs
to put myself through
college, which took 5 years, and my wife gave up the dream of medical school. |
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Poverty certainly sucks, and I don't need any education on how it can trap you. But the marxist
sympathies I'm hearing
lately are not coming from Appalachia -- they are coming from folks already with
college degrees, already with jobs, and I find that blindness to history incredibly frustrating and
dangerous. No less
dangerous than the blindness of those who think authoritarianism carries no danger
when the President is of your "tribe", as someone put it above. |
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|
Student debt sucks. But the average student borrower has borrowed $37K. The average salary of
a college graduate is
$50K. Any family with less than $50K in annual income qualifies for federal aide. |
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|
"According to the College Board, the average cost of tuition and fees for the 20172018 school
year was $34,740 at
private colleges, $9,970 for state residents at public colleges, and $25,620 for out-of-
state residents attending public universities." |
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|
that last figure is unbelievable -- yet I know folks in NJ who went to Penn State and not Rutgers
because of "school
spirit" -- that's not a lifestyle choice? |
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|
City University of NY is $6,500 a year and you can commute. California has 15 school where
tuition is under $10K a
year. And on top of all of that there is Pell Grant and scholarship, veterans go free.
Companies like Walmart and Starbucks, numerous others have education assistance programs. |
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|
no -- it's not peanuts. But the average American family spent $3,000 a year eating out in 2017. If
you know any recent
college graduates or college students, ask them about how often do they eat out or GrubHub or
UberEats it versus
cook. Ramen noodles, sure. $5.5B a year is spent on alcohol by students. My guess is at least $1K a year
per
student. We won't count pot. |
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47% of college students have a car. The average price of a car is $34,000 |
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|
The top 5 suggested degrees (by some website) |
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5. CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
4. NURSING
3. PHYSICAL THERAPY
2. AERONAUTICS AND AVIATION TECHNOLOGY
1. PHARMACOLOGY |
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|
1. Nursing
2. General Psychology
3. Criminal Justice and Corrections
4. Business Administration & Management
5. Communication & Media |
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incidentally -- state burden licensing and certification plays a huge role in debt -- pharmacists
need a PhD now? Nurses
effectively a Master's Degree? why? |
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|
Here's a 2017 degrees breakdown: |
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|
business (381,353)health professions and related programs (238,014)social sciences and history
(159,099)psychology
(116,861)biological and biomedical sciences (116,759)engineering (115,640) |
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|
Well -- we certainly don't lack people who want to be "in business" -- but what are all those social
science and
psychology people going to do? That's not a lifestyle choice? |
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|
Incidentally, 8% of foreign students are in social sciences. A large percentage of the STEM degrees above
is
going to
foreigners. Probably
even larger for children of immigrants. Still think it's not a lifestyle choice for Americans? |
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|
student tuition has skyrocketed because of the increased emphasis on college and the easy
availability of loans, to pay for degrees that are not directly relevant to how much money they're
going to earn. |
|
|
By thinking about college like an investment, and not some god given right, you can properly size
how much you ought to spend and will the investment be worth it. If there are basic things we
think every member of society ought to have learned, we should shift those to high school. |
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|
Purdue university has done some really interesting work in bringing sanity to tuition. Mitch Daniels would
be a great President, if he should ever decide to run. |
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//less on propositions like #2// |
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|
You've completely misunderstood my annotation and also you've never heard the word "blackhearted". Unless you're saying I shouldn't have manufactured a personal attack, in which case you have my reluctant apology. |
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|
//I am not implying that poverty is a vice. I don't begrudge help for those who need it.// |
|
|
I disagree. If you meant to say something else you would have. |
|
|
//when you choose to either pay double or triple by going to a private school// |
|
|
That choice is far, far less common than "should I use student loans or not go to school at all" |
|
|
//a choice that parents can ill afford// |
|
|
Parents pay for their children's school far less frequently than you think. |
|
|
// I am a grandfather, I've gone to college, and I've put three kids to college and one through graduate school in suburbia -- let me assure you I know exactly what I'm talking about.// |
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|
Allow me to counter your anecdote with my own: I'm a middle aged recent graduate and I also know what I'm talking about. |
|
|
//As to me personally -- trust fund -- lol -- I grew up in poverty as discussed earlier, and when I got to the States -- at 15, alone -- I lived with relatives I basically didn't know in a slum in Brooklyn. The high school was on the line of white flight from Brooklyn in the 80s, which meant constant riots and fights in the parking lot, but the benefit of getting high by the time you got to the second floor because of the stench of pot in the stairwells. I bought my first car for $200 earned delivering groceries and washing dishes at an old folks home, and by the time I was 19, I was married with a kid on the way, and when the kid wound up in the hospital for a week I was presented with a bill for $3000, which I didn't pay until years later when my bank account was arrested by the sheriff. Me and my family had no medical insurance until I was 23 and got my first full time job. I worked night shift and odd jobs to put myself through college, which took 5 years, and my wife gave up the dream of medical school.// |
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|
So you had to work your way through school, but you can't imagine anyone else had had to? Or has been unable to get a job because they don't have a degree? |
|
|
//marxist sympathies...are coming from folks already with college degrees, already with jobs, and I find that blindness to history incredibly frustrating and dangerous.// |
|
|
I assure you my Marxist sympathies are very well-informed and based on a very solid historical perspective. |
|
|
// No less dangerous than the blindness of those who think authoritarianism carries no danger when the President is of your "tribe", as someone put it above.// |
|
|
I agree with this wholeheartedly, and am glad you're able to distinguish authoritarianism from socialism |
|
|
//...the average student borrower has borrowed $37K. The average salary of a college graduate is $50K. Any family with less than $50K in annual income qualifies for federal aide.// |
|
|
That's just not true. And "getting any form of federal aid" is miles and miles from being able to pay your kids through school. |
|
|
//I know folks in NJ who went to Penn State and not Rutgers because of "school spirit" -- that's not a lifestyle choice?// |
|
|
I submit that as a wealthy fellow your friends do not represent the populace at large. |
|
|
//City University of NY is $6,500 a year and you can commute. California has 15 school where tuition is under $10K a year. And on top of all of that there is Pell Grant and scholarship, veterans go free. Companies like Walmart and Starbucks, numerous others have education assistance programs.// |
|
|
None of this proves student loans are unnecessary or unhelpful. |
|
|
//...the average American family spent $3,000 a year eating out in 2017. // |
|
|
The average student is not the average American. Your friends kids certainly are not the average student |
|
|
// ask them about how often do they eat out or GrubHub or UberEats it versus cook.// |
|
|
I am one, so I can answer for myself: never. When I was in school I was happy to have beans and rice. |
|
|
//$5.5B a year is spent on alcohol by students. My guess is at least $1K a year per student. We won't count pot.// |
|
|
I guess I shouln't have said "the average student" earlier since I now have to point out that you can't use average expenditures to say anything about the people these programs are meant to help. |
|
|
//47% of college students have a car. The average price of a car is $34,000// |
|
|
Yes, but your typical college student's car cost $2-10,000 |
|
|
State burden licensing and certification plays a huge role in debt -- pharmacists need a PhD now? Nurses effectively a Master's Degree? why? |
|
|
I couldn't agree more. It's preposterous. |
|
|
//(Are degree choices) not a lifestyle choice?// |
|
|
They certainly are. But what does that have to do with whether people should be helped to get degrees at all? |
|
|
//Still think it's not a lifestyle choice for Americans?// |
|
|
These kids have been told their whole lives by every counselor to get a college degree. With an enormously uncertain future as to what knowledge will be important and with the reality that meeting people in college has as much impact on future success as which degree you have, I think a business degree is a fine choice. But again you're saying "people are making degree choices I disagree with and therefore I don't think anyone should get student loans" It's a nonsequitor. |
|
|
//student tuition has skyrocketed because of the increased emphasis on college and the easy availability of loans, to pay for degrees that are not directly relevant to how much money they're going to earn.// |
|
|
//By thinking about college like an investment, and not some god given right, you can properly size how much you ought to spend and will the investment be worth it. If there are basic things we think every member of society ought to have learned, we should shift those to high school.// |
|
|
Never heard of him, but if he, like you seem to, thinks we should build gutters for the poor to rot in instead of giving them a hand up I would never vote for him. |
|
|
it's not that no one needs student loans. What I said was
that the easy availability of loans is one of the things that
enables bad choices -- after all, that's why student loans are marketed -- and yes, fewer people
would get
art degrees if there are no student loans, and that's a good thing. Otherwise, cost of college will
continue
to go up with no end in sight. |
|
|
You make a point about counselors. And parents. Well, if you can't buy liquor, or cigarettes until
you're 21, how the hell can you be allowed to borrow 160K for school spirit? How is this program
anything but predatory lending? |
|
|
Art. Degree. Art. Degree. Is that something that Michelangelo could get? Or he'd need to pass
a
core
curriculum first? |
|
|
Making public and state schools completely free risks
creating a completely
unaffordable new entitlement for completely useless
degrees, while nicely
expanding opportunity for professors who preach
Marxism. And costs will continue to go up -- just shifted to taxpayers (who are already paying
for
college) -- the overlap is pretty significant. Maybe private liberal art schools would shrink and
that would be a good thing |
|
|
OK, you're bent on assuming I'm Scrooge, it is what it is,
I'm not going to waste time worrying about it. |
|
|
The bottom line from my perspective is that were folks
like Sanders and AOC to get a magic wand that could get
their proposals come true we would be facing a Venezuela
type situation within a few decades. That, in my view, is
not up for debate. It's built into the human condition
(again, all caveated versus some future repeal of scarcity
scenario). And so we will wind up solving inequality the
way it's always being solved, by making sure that most
have nothing. That is not a scenario I welcome, and that
is one I resist in any way I can, including ideas here. |
|
|
And as to real solutions to problems -- from education, to tuition, to taxes, etc, it's not as if I've
presented none, most no doubt are nonsense like most generally are, but I do think about it all
the
time. And I try to avoid magical thinking and WIBNI approaches to them. |
|
|
//Here's a 2017 breakdown// That's pretty scary. |
|
|
(IIRC) "Business" was a product of the '80s ; bloated up (assuming it had preexisted) for kids who had no real reason to go to a university, but believed that a post-secondary degree was a must-have (true, since the HR industry was generating the hype). |
|
|
I'm not sure when it was the social sciences' turn to get all bent out of shape... 90's ? |
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| |