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sj_zero | @sj_zero@social.fbxl.net

Author of The Graysonian Ethic (Available on Amazon, pick up a dead tree copy today)

Also Author of Future Sepsis (Also available on Amazon!)

Admin of the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Video, FBXL Social, FBXL Lotide, FBXL Translate, and FBXL Maps.

Advocate for freedom and tolerance even if you say things I do not like

Adversary of Fediblock

Accept that I'll probably say something you don't like and I'll give you the same benefit, and maybe we can find some truth about the world.

Ah... Is the Alliteration clever or stupid? Don't answer that, I sort of know the answer already...

There's a good saying: "History is written by those who show up". At some point somebody somewhere has to do something. We are in a world filled with people who try to get someone else to do something, so it's an extraordinary act to actually do something you want done.

guys dont worry im an expert

the key is the clitoris. you just walk up to a sexy lady, touch her clitoris, and its on.

there are no limitations to this technique definitely walk up to random women and try this this is legal advice

It's the transition so they can start to gaslight us and pretend they didn't act like a bunch of literal nazis for the past 2 years next time they need to act like a bunch of sanctimonious pricks.

I'm sort of sad that Mr. "Hitler did nothing wrong" won't own a social media site.

I mean, that's frickin hilarious!

Not Canada, just Trudeau.

Because he's a bitch.

Ironic since Canada is led by der fuhrer Trudeau who wants nothing more than butt pats from California.

https://home.treasury.gov/data/troubled-assets-relief-program

According to the treasury, The TARP bank bailout was ultimately a program in the green by 7 billion dollars.

That's not including all the other haywire stuff mind you, just TARP itself.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUEF47CWYHQ

My son is one, and raising him has become the meaning of our lives. Accumulating wealth is meaningless by itself. The idea that you would pay the state to encourage people to give up on a chance to raise their kids to accumulate more wealth is getting everything completely backwards.

I think I'd like the wording as "Back to The Twitter" because then it has additional boomer appeal

It can for a while, but not forever. We've got a real crisis brewing, because the few productive people that are left are dying of old age. Those immigrants are going to turn right back around more and more as they realize they're not going to get ahead coming here.

Automation is a big topic, but let me just say this: It can be useful in spots to reduce labour, but it's not nearly as straightforward as proponents would have you believe. You need a bunch of highly productive people to make the highly productive machines and to make them work and keep working. The promise of fractal automation is a lie.

It's really weird, video games are like that yogi berra quote: "Nobody goes there anymore, it's too busy"

Everyone I know is less interested in video games than ever before and more disappointed with what's released, yet somehow they're making unimaginable amounts of money every year.

der Fuhrer Trudeau says: "Everyone deserves the right to protest, except the people who disagree with me!"

It doesn't really end up sustainable though. Within a generation the kids of that immigrant are living the same as everyone else.

The Amish is a different beast, because they're completely outside of the system we've built. Certainly seems to be evidence that there is another way.

I expect big changes in the next couple generations. The whole world looks different when populations start to shrink, starting with a massive improvement in quality of life for the working class. That's why governments and corporations are so terrified of a shrinking population.

We're told a lot of things.

One interesting thing you hear from immigrants is that they're shocked at how expensive just living is. Many move back after realizing it isn't actually the land of milk and honey they've been promised.

It's a combination of many factors. Tiny income growth often not keeping up with inflation is one, high cost of living in terms of finding a stable place to live is another, both the drive to get women into the workforce and the requirement that they get into the workforce to be able to maintain a reasonable quality of living is yet another.

My wife really felt a peer pressure not to be a stay at home wife and mother. That's what our culture is doing to women. She rejected society's demands because that's what she wanted, and I feel our family is happier for it. The thing is, not only did she have to reject society's pressure to go fail to become a CEO, but we also have to walk an economic tightrope to be able to attain the ability to have such a lifestyle.

The fact that the number of kids collapsing I think has a core economic basis. If people feel like they can, they inherently *want* to procreate -- that's a fundamental of life. The problem is that entire generations have felt like they can't for various reasons.

The Millennials were actually a relative population boom, that's why the generation is called "Echo boom" by some sociologists. But then those kids grew up into situations where they didn't feel they could have kids of their own, and so there's serious problems

[sauce on "echo boom"] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-echo-boomers-01-10-2004/

The attached image demonstrates that the working class is getting a short end of the stick. Everyone is working harder and harder for less and less. In times where disparities like this add up, there's often bad times for everyone ahead. The French Revolution was one such time in history, for example.

The half application of Keynesianism is one of my biggest pet peeves in economics and politics.

We just finished having the longest economic recovery ever, and everyone everyone everyone went "we need to spend more money!" the whole time, despite under Keynes the right thing to do was to suck some of the air out of that recovery to save for tomorrow.

A lot of economists get government spending wrong because telling the government spending too much money and not taxing enough is the right thing to do is a great way to stay employed by the government. Politicians love it, they want to be able to promise all things to all people.

Reality is much more complicated. There's a reason why the workforce labour participation rate is at record lows, labour productivity is plummeting, fertility is below replacement, and so on and so forth.

No matter where the government money goes, it takes up real resources that would have otherwise gone elsewhere. If the government is hiring, then those people get soaked up doing non-productive work. If the government gives money to companies that don't necessarily have the capcity to use it, then either you get stock buybacks or you get companies that get huge and are filled with non-productive or anti-productive people because there's money for it and spending tends to expand to fill budgets. If the government gives money to regular people, then some of those people will decide they don't need to be part of the productive economy.

In all 3 cases, you have people sucking up productivity but not producing any. That might make the numbers go up, but it doesn't improve quality of living for people as a whole.

Now, government spending *can* help improve productivity, but it has to be extremely carefully calculated because government cannot create wealth, it can only pull wealth from one spot and injected it into another spot. Medical doctors often pull something out of one part of the body and inject it into another part of the body and it results in positive results, but if you just do it randomly you'll kill the patient dead.

Liptak volume 2 is the bible...

I looked at telegram early and saw "Dubai" -- oh yeah, the free speech haven of Dubai. Passed.

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