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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...

Surprised to see the cuck media posting something like this, since they're all sucking off his teet.

In the 11th century, the song dynasty lost northern china to the Liao people despite outnumbering them in population 100 to 1. Instead of reforming their military they say in the capital writing poetry about how great it would be if they could only win. At the same time, Muslims from modern-day Afghanistan invaded modern-day India. The Indians outnumbered them in population by 100 to 1, but instead of improving their military they built nicer temples to the gods so they could be granted victory.

Making videos about how great apprenticeships are to get more people into apprenticeships instead of actually do something to make more apprenticeships feels extremely similar.

https://www.blogto.com/film/2023/02/get-paid-2500-campaign/

Every time I see something like this, I get so incredibly pissed off.

Imagine how offensive this is to all the kids who want an apprenticeship and can't get one because there are none. Pretty much everyone in my generation has to go to college, that's how you get your apprenticeship. And these Ivory Tower morons don't realize that.

"earn while you learn" how about stop lying?

Maybe instead of handing all this money to filmmakers to make movies about how great being an apprentice would be they use it to try to create some apprenticeships? Most places aren't approaching labor crisis, they're there. And nobody is doing anything about it but making movies about how great it would be if people were employed in jobs that don't exist.

One problem is that there's a lot of politics tied to such job postings. For example, a company might want to have a US IT job posting stay unfilled so they can bring in an H1B.

"Didn't you know that our Fuhrer's Pomeranian lapdog condemned you?"

Dark fedi in the streets, Asian fedi in the sheets. :(

In the event of an emergency, secure your own oxygen mask before attempting to assist others.

Back in the day we had Newtonian physics and we liked it! Quantum mechanics is degeneracy! Go to hell with your insane quantum nonsense and give us back our clockwork universe!

Here's hoping southern Ontario gets their heads out of their asses.

The rest of Canada got with the program some time ago.

It annoys me that of all the extraordinary beers we have, this one would call itself "the" premium beer.

https://wolfballs.com/post/108026?scrollToComments=true

RIP wolfballs. :(

Sort of an odd name, but it was a great lemmy site (and there's a limited number of those) with a fun community.

So you fundamentally misunderstand the history of the world.

Ok, not my problem. You got a definition of capitalism. Even a pithy one. The fact that you don't like it sounds like a you problem.

Yeah, that's how it works. When you're wrong about underlying facts, your conclusions will as a consequence come out wrong most of the time. Even when your conclusions are correct by accident, if the means by which you came to the correct conclusion is flawed, then the correct conclusion is less useful.

It all goes back to the establishment of legally property rights and how it can be regarded as one of the key moments to the establishment of what we consider capitalism, since without private property rights there cannot be capitalism even though there can be wealth, because ultimately ownership and control of property wasn't private.

Which brings us to the other incorrect part of your post.

To keep it short: The concept of sharing resources and working collectively is prevalent in early human tribes and predates humans. Tribe and clan exist in primates. The concept of property as we understand it today is a more recent development in human societies. It can be argued that humans developed property as societies evolved from tribal communities to more complex forms of social organization, and the concept of private property as we understand it is quite modern.

So given all this, saying "This my rock. You no take. Me stab." is not an accurate way to look at the concept of property in prehistory.

You're proving my original long definition was required after all, and the problem was that I actually didn't make it long enough.

The thing is, you're wrong, and because you're wrong, you're wrong.

My post proves you're wrong because the US court system still utilizes English decisions to protect people's civil rights, therefore your conclusion that the way English common law regards human rights doesn't matter to American courts is incorrect.

The US, Canada, and the UK share common roots in the common law system characterized by the concept of precedent and of lower courts being held to decisions by higher courts. Of course, that doesn't necessarily mean they share every precedent, but they are all based on the same common law system, and cases in each jurisdiction sometimes make use of precedent set before the legal systems split off.

As an example of this, in Batson v. Kentucky (1986) the US Supreme Court considered the issue of racial discrimination in jury selection. The Court relied on English common law to establish the principle that excluding prospective jurors on the basis of race is a violation of the defendant's right to an impartial jury. The Court specifically cited the case of Straud v. State (1670) from the English common law tradition as evidence of this principle.

Unfortunately, no group has a monopoly on evil.

Actually, that's the opposite of reality. French legal systems are based on the civil law system, which is fundamentally different than the common law system. Quebec in Canada shares that, but english speaking canada is also based on common law like US law.

America's legal system is based on the common law legal system.

The difference between capitalism and wealth is that for most of the history of the world, protection of private ownership wasn't really a core concept of law. For most of human history, although an individual may accrue wealth, ultimately ownership and control fell to the tribe, or the community, or the king, or the gods (through the priest class).

It wasn't until very recently that private ownership was a concept, particularly in law, and that concept of private ownership ended up becoming a cornerstone of liberalism. Once the state protected your ownership stake in a thing, it opened the door for protecting other rights, which is why many human rights in common law are conceptualized as a property right.

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