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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
China as a world power
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 12:41 PM
KHYRON
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 2:45 PM
REAVERMAN
Quote:Originally posted by Khyron: Is China as a world power something you want to see? For those of us that are sceptical and cynical of the US's meddling in world affairs, is a Chinese superpower something you'd prefer?
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 3:23 PM
CHRISISALL
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 3:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: But if we really want to strike a blow for freedom, and the American way, China would be the one to invade. Dark Chrisisall
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 3:36 PM
FREDGIBLET
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 4:32 PM
GLUEMAN
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 4:58 PM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:Kids in school should drop the french classes and pickup chinese instead...
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 6:13 PM
SASSALICIOUS
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: The only way I really see that happening anytime soon, though, is if they decide (and they will, just wait) to "annex" Taiwan, which they view as an illegitimate government and a province that's rightfully theirs
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 7:01 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: That's a damn good idea. And if I remember correctly, MOST of China speaks Mandarin - but the financial centers in old Hong Kong still use mainly Cantonese. So which way to go?
Quote: A baby seal walks into a club...
Friday, April 28, 2006 3:40 AM
HAZE
Sunday, April 30, 2006 3:50 PM
MERCHANTMARINE1
Thursday, May 4, 2006 10:12 PM
MARGINALREVOLUTION
Quote:Originally posted by Merchantmarine1: China as a world power, guess no one has travelled to china? They built their own nuclear fast attack submarine, already penetrated japanese waters, TRIED to penetrate our naval base on Guam but our sub detection was active and it was tracked. They are building their Navy which included a guided missile frigate and an underway replentishment ship which made a port visit to Guam. China insisting the spratley islands off Philippines was theirs, the U.N. insisted in holding a conference in who actually holds claim, you know what China, did, sent fishing boats and their amphibious fleet and took the islands.. why, Shell Oil Co. found huge oil deposits. Now, Oil, since Chinese President Hu's visit, he has travelled to Saudia Arabia, Africa and NOW signed a Multi BILLION DOLLAR deal with Cuba to start oil exploration in the GULF OF MEXICO.. Lou Dobbs said it best, we have been so side tracked, our SO CALLED friends or allies have blind sided us... we have out sourced all or some of our manufacturing for cheaper means in China. Our larger companies pander to China. In 2001, China made an attempt to rattle their sabres at us when one of their Jets collided with our EP-3 Orion surveillence aircraft, the plane was forced down on chinese soil or one of their islands, what happend, the crew was interned for two weeks, finally, GWB, cut ties, including trade, stopping all contracts for goods coming from China, making all incoming or arriving goods contraband, and payments to china halted. China recalled their president whom was in South America and voted him out replacing him with the present, President Hu. Can the same threats hurt China? try traveling abroad and see for yourself. China now is into Singapore, Mayalasia, Philippines and Korea. The Chinese are developing into Indonesia and attempts to Thailand and Burma. Since they cannot corner any markets in Taiwan or Japan, they can now create manufacturing in those listed countries, which they are, and still compete against with cheap labor costs. Oh, lets not forget, travel to Panama, look who and how much is bought along the panama canal? Give you a guess and its a 5 letter word as for the name of the country? China doesn't have to be a military power to take over, they are doing it.. Stop buying or importing Chinese manufactured goods, no problem, almost everything else in the Asian region is almost bought and owned by China. We ignored reports and warnings from Taiwan and Japan and now, China is cornering the Oil market and Why, because they can. China has a human rights problem, life is worthless, thus, they do not care about what dictator they deal with just as long as they can DEAL. Now the creator of this blog asks? China as a world power, well they are a military power... The Shanghai defense triad was formed and guess who is a part of it.. no kidding.. CHINA, RUSSIA, TWO FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS AND NOW IRAN.. Ask that question again. two members which were against the war in Iraq, against any resolutions against Iran on its nuclear program, never mind if Iran has already said numerous times.. "ISREAL NEEDS TO BE WIPED FROM THE FACE OF THE EARTH." The reports that Russia may have helped Iraq with removing any remaining weapons of mass destruction.. with the Help of Brazil.. whom by the way has big partnership with China in natural resources trade and manufacturing.. Brazil has the largest commerical fleets in the northern and southern hemosphere and China has access. It is reported that Brazilian ships, sailed through our blockaids with much of the WMD's and since Brazil is an allie, we did not stop. Soon, our shelves will be bare, gas stations dry and we have no one to blame but ourselves, our greed for more profits has sold us out and soon there will be nothing left. In closing... JUST WAIT.. IN 5 YEARS WITH THE CUBA/CHINA OIL EXPLORATION, THERE WILL BE AN ACCIDENT ON THEIR PART WHICH WILL RUIN OR DESTROY THE ECO SYSTEM AROUND THE FLORIDA PAN HANDLE IN THE GULF OF MEXICO AND THERE WILL BE NOTHING WE CAN DO ABOUT IT. CHINA WILL SHRUG IT OFF, CUBA WILL BE CUBA AND THE PEOPLE OF FLORIDA WILL HAVE SUNNY SKIES AND OILY BEACHES. That is not hype.. Merchantmarine1
Thursday, May 4, 2006 11:02 PM
Friday, May 5, 2006 2:54 AM
CITIZEN
Quote:Originally posted by MarginalRevolution: But let's be honest, oil is on it's way out as the main factor input for most modern economies...
Quote:In fact, China, along with the US and 2 - 3 other countries are part of the IAEA project to create a fusion reactor. The Chinese have already started a parralel project reffered to as EAST, based partly on Russian technology and those tehy have developed on their own.
Quote:Anyone who studies Economics knows what will likelly happen is as factor costs goes up for oil, firms and consumers will slowly switch to alternatives which were comparteively expensive durring the high time of the cheap Oil economy, but now are comparatively cheap. This will create more demand for altenrative fuel, which will propell the development of said resources.
Quote:So which one is more socialist, to me Europe is 10:1. In Germany the goverment has just past alaw to give money to families if the father stays at home for at least 2 months to take care of the family. Northern Europe is way worst...
Quote:Ultimitly, words like "freedom" and "democracy" are meaningless. All that matters is that you can satisfy your needs via the market. Further, it was proven that democratic elections never can lead to socially optimal solutions, this is the famous Arrow Theorem. As Economist say, only market equalibriums are "Pareto Optimal." Thus, any goverment meddling of that, will be ineffecient. If I had my way, there would be no goverment, and to espouse the superiority of one goverment form to another is stupid. Goverments are better or worst depending on how much emphasis they put on market orientated solutions and markets in society.
Quote:Anything else other then this is just propoganda to me.
Quote:IT should not be the case that our mentality stagnates to that of a distant point of glory, that is what Islam did.... They still view things along "Crusader" glasses.
Friday, May 5, 2006 5:19 AM
Quote:Then why is the demand for oil in modern economies increasing, not decreasing as it would have to be if your claim were to hold water.
Quote:What do you use to base this assertion? Alternate fuels? Even *IF* there was an alternate fuel that could replace oil in its various guises and applications what about oil's material applications? Oil underpins our society to a much greater degree than the liquid you pump into your car.
Quote:I think you mean The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), not The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). ITER is a collaboration to produce a large scale experimental Reactor, situated in France I believe. The collaboration is amongst The European Union, the United States, Russia, Japan, South Korea and China. The Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokomak (EAST) is not designed to produce power. It is a research device only. We've built Tokomak Fusion reactors before; the first operational Tokomak was built in Russia in the 1960's. Currently the largest Fusion reactor is the Joint European Torus (JET) in Oxfordshire in the UK, which was completed in 1983. The big thing about the ITER is that it is designed to produce more power than it consumes, but it's still experimental and a working power plant is still some way off. However none of this replaces the need for Oil. There is still many of the fuel, material and manufacturing applications that can not be addressed with Oil (many that can't be addressed with 'alternate fuels' either).
Quote:Anyone who studies Human history can see the few times when a society has run out of a resource that it is almost exclusively dependent on (like we are with Oil) that society collapses. Modern Economics has no parallel to draw from when it comes to our modern dependence on Oil. The "we'll find alternatives" and "economic forces will dictate a switch" is a theory and something hoped for, not a definite.
Quote:And yet their economy is very strong. How do you account for this? Also China is not Socialist, it is Communist and the two are not the same thing.
Quote:Said like a true free market capitalist economist, your lecturer must be very proud . I bet you believe trickle down works as well. There's more to life than money and economics, if there wasn't we'd all be economist . There is a term for the type of society you suggest, it's called Corporo-Fascism.
Quote:Well so is what you just said really.
Friday, May 5, 2006 7:25 AM
FLETCH2
Friday, May 5, 2006 7:41 AM
Quote:1) Resources. Everything you say about oil is true in the long term. America still have significant domestic oil resources, just that it's expensive to exploit them. Going forward as the price of crude increases the economic case for pumping that American oil improves so it will be exploited. Further along, newer renewable technologies will become economic to use. The problem? This all presupposed sustained high oil prices and with it high energy costs. A lot of our current economy presupposes low enery costs, as costs rise there will be economic impacts, some of which we can adapt to, some we wont.
Quote:The assumption is that we will adapt to it but that's not always the case. Nineteenth century Britain was a coal economy its industrial sector fed by cheap local coal. Consequently it was slow to adapt to the new oil economy and the associated technologies. America is an oil economy, it is likely to be slow to adapt to newer fuel technologies than countries with a lower level of oil infrastructure and lobbying.
Quote:2) The purpose of life is not economics but the creation of a stable environment for the raising of children.
Quote:If German children's survival and quality of life are improved by fathers spending more time at home that strikes me as being a reasonable priority.
Quote: As for those nasty "socialist" northern Europeans, they kick your ass in just about every economic indicator you can look at.
Friday, May 5, 2006 9:06 AM
Quote:Originally posted by MarginalRevolution: No.... If it's quite simple, if there is a limited supply of something, obviouslly it'll have to be used up eventually. As there is less of it, the more expensive it'll become to find it and drill it up, the higher the factor cost of using it up..... The less people will want to use it.....
Quote:Actually at most all you could say is that there does ot exist evidence now. Your statement is just as *bias* I highly doubt realit/science conforms to your ability to forsee it.
Quote:It is the case however, that humans expand their ability to do things when given the proper incentive. In this case it'll be high prices. It's all quite simple, either an alternative will be found, or people iwll just consume less.... and I know altenrtives exist now (such as electric) which do not yet have practicality because of lack of infastructure.
Quote:I was on the impression the IAEA was somehow directing this. In any event, perfecting this technology will relieve oil burden in energy production. I never said it will reduce the the total burden for oil. That really is the point really, the increase in factors for oil consumption is creating incnetives for firms and govermetns to react and look for altnerative methods....
Quote:No, because demand will go down gradually, it won't be a a one time event.... therefore the chances of a catastrophic "collapse" is unlikelly. As most economist now, most alarmist end up being wrong because people adopt, quite reasonablly, therefore things usually don't happen as badly as people forsee....
Quote:One of the biggest problems facing the IEA, the EIA and a host of analysts and "experts" who claim that "high prices cut demand" either directly or by dampening economic growth is that this does not happen in the real world. Since early 1999, oil prices have risen about 350%. Oil demand growth in 2004 at nearly 4% was the highest in 25 years. These are simple facts that clearly conflict with received notions about "price elasticity". World oil demand, for a host of easily-described reasons, tends to be bolstered by "high" oil and gas prices until and unless "extreme" prices are attained. Andrew Mckillop
Quote:Actaully the German economy has stagnated....
Quote:in fact all the European econommies save England, who have reformed early on have stagnated...
Quote:well-fare state (which provides inferior gov't service)
Quote:And actaully the Chiense are not communist, at least not in anything other then name. They were always at least a "command" economy, or a "planned" economy.... but not "communist" in any pure or real sense.
Quote:"trickle down" you see I actually study Economics, not political bull shit, that is not a term we use in any formal sense. You'll have to explain what that means before I comment on that.
Quote:As for "Corpo-Facism" lol. Right, I'm sorry, I'm speaking like a beorgeouis here. I shoulnd't taint the forums with my captitalist pig-dog notions.
Quote:If you ar ereffering to my notinos that market equalibriums are the most socially effecient soslutions, then no ti isn't. Since Economics is dependent on actual things, it has to be shown rigoriouslly.
Quote:The mathematical proof that shows this elmentary fact was shown 40 - 50 years ago....
Friday, May 5, 2006 9:31 AM
Quote:Originally posted by MarginalRevolution: Uhm... no? Why wouldn't the cost of energy production increase in a petro-based economy if its increasgnily more expesnvie to extract petrol from the Earth?
Quote: Further, be specific as to what you forsee the United States "Can't" adapt to in terms of changing hte energy infastructure..... in the long term, there IS NO SUCH THING as fixed capital investement.....
Quote: Quote:The assumption is that we will adapt to it but that's not always the case. Nineteenth century Britain was a coal economy its industrial sector fed by cheap local coal. Consequently it was slow to adapt to the new oil economy and the associated technologies. America is an oil economy, it is likely to be slow to adapt to newer fuel technologies than countries with a lower level of oil infrastructure and lobbying. Uhm... obviouslly the British have adapted.... in the long term nothing is fixed....
Quote: Quote:2) The purpose of life is not economics but the creation of a stable environment for the raising of children. I'm glad that you have decided the purpose of life for everyone. I merely state the purpose of life is to satsify your utiltiy, whatever that may be.....
Quote: Quote: As for those nasty "socialist" northern Europeans, they kick your ass in just about every economic indicator you can look at. All except for market competetivness in just about every industry, especially medical.... and GDP growth.... oh and unemployment.... so basically, we have more people working and the workers have more capital per worker to use with.... that means we're more effecient by defintion. The only European nation that has similiar growth rates are either implementing market liebralization or its England. France and Germany the two most socialist of the European economies are stagnate.
Friday, May 5, 2006 11:34 AM
Quote: http://www.forbes.com/business/2005/09/28/wef-gci-finland-cx_pm_0928gci2005.html] Now let's take a little quote from this supposed index: Quote:All indexes reflect their components. The WEF's GCI has three main legs: the overall quality of a country's economy at the macro level (e.g., budget surpluses, good; deficits, bad); the state of its public institutions, which includes such measures as the independence of the judiciary and the level of public-sector corruption; and the level of its technological innovation. So this isn't even actually based on GROWTH as defined by Economist. "State of its public institions" how do they measure that exadtly?.... The vitality of the court system has very little to do with real GDP growth... http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/1999/07/art3full.pdf#search='Labor%20per%20capita' US productivity is the highest in the world, so is our labor participation rate. Further, even your link admits US technoglocial innnovation is the hgihest, and we arn't even at a Pareto Optimal point... the US gov't meddles enough with the economy and directs research that the market is not totally able to behave naturally. If the US were to totally liberalize, it would be that much higher. The only argument you can give me is that the4 Solow Growth model does not link economic well-being with productivity; but since you don't nkow anyo of the theory you deem to criticisize I'll leave it at that. Quote:No, you are an animal, your purpose is to reproduce your genes, that is why your genes made you -- the same way a plant makes a flower. Everything else you do in life is to support that function. The money you make, the posessions you amass everything else you do is just there to support that purpose. Few things you build, own or create in your lifetime will still be here in 1000 years except your decendants. If you made $200B and died childless, you will be a loser. According to the defintion of biological fitness. I'm glad you took Bio 101, but that is merely saying "my defintion is better then yours." Sociey runs smoother if people are satisfied, in whatever way they wish to be. That is why command economies and socialism dosn't work, and that's why it must be left to the own devices of individuals to determine what will satsify their utility..... We can't just direct people to be "biologically fit" and expect society to run properly. People obviosully don't care about this notion of biology, since by defintion, there are many "unfit" individuals (people who remain childless) and that is their right. Quote:No I said you assumed it would adapt and I'm saying that's not a given. I'm not saying they won't adapt just that "don't worry about it-- we'll adapt" is poor science.... Yeah I suppose your right, if we assume people start to behave totatlly unlike what they normally do, then yes, tehy won't adapt and they will just die. That's very realistic. If your given a choice of a consumble and a inferior substittue, and both will satsify your needs, but you wish to have the superior good because of whatever, its irrelvent, if its beyond your budget constraint, you WILL purchase the inferior good if its truly needed. Unless you can stave off consumption for future consumption. But to talk about this in any real detail we have to introduce macroeconomic models of arbitrary periods. Quote:It will and that's the point. Let's assume that electricity generated by oil is 3c per Kwh. Now let's assume that the cost of solar generated electricity is 10c per Kwh. Based soley on economic principles there is little justification for building solar plants in most cases while oil energy costs remain low. If oil costs rose until oil derived electricity hit 12c/Kwh and stayed that way, the position changes. So it is with the US oil Bidness, there is US dommestic oil reserves but right now the cost of foreign crude is so low that it would not be economic to exploit it. If the price of foreign sources becomes high enough then the US oil becomes economic to exploit. What's the problem with that? Wheres is elctrcity generated by oil directly in the United States? I'm not aware of any, but maybe i'm misreading you. Anyways, I don't get the point of your statment; yes, when it becomes viable to purchase domestic crude that will happen, when doemstic crude production becomes unberable, in the long term, consumption will fall and an alaternative good will be sought... which will move the market to look for those altenratives.
Quote:All indexes reflect their components. The WEF's GCI has three main legs: the overall quality of a country's economy at the macro level (e.g., budget surpluses, good; deficits, bad); the state of its public institutions, which includes such measures as the independence of the judiciary and the level of public-sector corruption; and the level of its technological innovation.
Quote:No, you are an animal, your purpose is to reproduce your genes, that is why your genes made you -- the same way a plant makes a flower. Everything else you do in life is to support that function. The money you make, the posessions you amass everything else you do is just there to support that purpose. Few things you build, own or create in your lifetime will still be here in 1000 years except your decendants. If you made $200B and died childless, you will be a loser.
Quote:No I said you assumed it would adapt and I'm saying that's not a given. I'm not saying they won't adapt just that "don't worry about it-- we'll adapt" is poor science....
Quote:It will and that's the point. Let's assume that electricity generated by oil is 3c per Kwh. Now let's assume that the cost of solar generated electricity is 10c per Kwh. Based soley on economic principles there is little justification for building solar plants in most cases while oil energy costs remain low. If oil costs rose until oil derived electricity hit 12c/Kwh and stayed that way, the position changes. So it is with the US oil Bidness, there is US dommestic oil reserves but right now the cost of foreign crude is so low that it would not be economic to exploit it. If the price of foreign sources becomes high enough then the US oil becomes economic to exploit. What's the problem with that?
Friday, May 5, 2006 12:13 PM
Quote:You said we are now, at this moment, moving away from Oil.
Quote: We are, at this moment INCREASING our demand for Oil, therefore at this moment we are not moving away from Oil, we are becoming more dependent on it, despite the prices currently going up. It really is as simple as that.
Quote:An important line here is "the higher the factor cost of using it up..... The less people will want to use it..... ". You can not want to use something all you want, but if you have no choice you have no choice.
Quote: But reality/science does conform to your ability to forecast we'll suddenly get a whole new societal/manufacturing/fuel/transport infrastructure within the time period forecast for peak Oil (some forecasts put it in the next decade)?
Quote:Let me put it like this, in the US every one calorie of Food requires ten calories of Oil. Firstly just taking Oil as a fuel:
Quote:There are a few experimental prototypes but these would have to be commercially viable at the time of peak Oil, people can't eat less, no matter how much economics wants them too. Food storage devices such as refrigerators are made from Oil, made in factories powered by Oil, and run on electricity derived from Oil.
Quote:We can't simply use less it doesn't work like that in the real world, in an economics text book perhaps but not the real world. We have to find an alternative to ALL of Oils uses, some alternatives exist yes but not for all applications.
Quote:The laws of supply and demand alone are not enough to prevent an economic meltdown.
Quote:Add to this prices rising staggeringly in the 70's with the Oil crises. Demand did not decrease,
Quote:Let me sum it up, if prices of food go up, people don't stop eating, despite what the economic laws of supply and demand say they should do, they just pay more. Civilisations have collapsed before because of economic reasons. Your Economic formula leaves out the most important variable: Human reaction.
Quote:As scarcity of a vital resource increases demand does not decrease and people don't necessarily find alternatives. What they often do is riot and have civil wars. All Civilisations are three meals away from revolution, after all.
Quote:The German economy is undergoing a period of weak growth, they don't have a weak economy there's a difference. Its economic growth is also recovering quite nicely, your information is out of date.
Quote: Anyway I'm surprised you don't know what "trickle down" is, you managed to quote the rest of the Capitalist manifesto word for word Trickle down is the concept that by the rich getting richer, everyone gets richer.
Quote: Most efficient social solution? What exactly is an efficient social solution? What qualifies as an efficient social solution? What is efficient in a society?
Quote:The mathematical proof that shows what?
Friday, May 5, 2006 1:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by MarginalRevolution: Quote: http://www.forbes.com/business/2005/09/28/wef-gci-finland-cx_pm_0928gci2005.html] Now let's take a little quote from this supposed index: Quote:All indexes reflect their components. The WEF's GCI has three main legs: the overall quality of a country's economy at the macro level (e.g., budget surpluses, good; deficits, bad); the state of its public institutions, which includes such measures as the independence of the judiciary and the level of public-sector corruption; and the level of its technological innovation. So this isn't even actually based on GROWTH as defined by Economist. Growth isn't everything, piracy has wonderfully fast growth, the fitness of an economy for business has far more factors than how hard you push your workforce. You should study more. Quote: "State of its public institions" how do they measure that exadtly?.... The vitality of the court system has very little to do with real GDP growth... Do you want to protect your interlectual property? Do you want contracts you enter into to be enforced by law? Do you want to operate in a free market or one that goes to the guy that offers the biggest bribe?...... scratch that you're American, you have the best government money can buy..... Do you want your competitors to win contracts more on corruption than merit? If so then all of that depends on the vitality of the court system. I can get great productivity by kidnapping kids of the street at gunpoint and working them in sweatshops, but if I lived in a place where I can get away with that I can be murdered in my bed just as easily. Rule of law is important to business. Quote: http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/1999/07/art3full.pdf#search='Labor%20per%20capita' US productivity is the highest in the world, so is our labor participation rate. Further, even your link admits US technoglocial innnovation is the hgihest, and we arn't even at a Pareto Optimal point... the US gov't meddles enough with the economy and directs research that the market is not totally able to behave naturally. If the US were to totally liberalize, it would be that much higher. Yes Americans like GDP/Capita even though it's a worthless statistic. I suppose it's like Baseball, easy to win a world series when only Americans play. GDP/Capita includes various other factors including direct foreign investment, so everytime China or Europe buys a US company your GDP improves. Congratulations. [quote} The only argument you can give me is that the4 Solow Growth model does not link economic well-being with productivity; but since you don't nkow anyo of the theory you deem to criticisize I'll leave it at that.
Quote: http://www.forbes.com/business/2005/09/28/wef-gci-finland-cx_pm_0928gci2005.html] Now let's take a little quote from this supposed index: Quote:All indexes reflect their components. The WEF's GCI has three main legs: the overall quality of a country's economy at the macro level (e.g., budget surpluses, good; deficits, bad); the state of its public institutions, which includes such measures as the independence of the judiciary and the level of public-sector corruption; and the level of its technological innovation. So this isn't even actually based on GROWTH as defined by Economist.
Quote: "State of its public institions" how do they measure that exadtly?.... The vitality of the court system has very little to do with real GDP growth...
Quote: http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/1999/07/art3full.pdf#search='Labor%20per%20capita' US productivity is the highest in the world, so is our labor participation rate. Further, even your link admits US technoglocial innnovation is the hgihest, and we arn't even at a Pareto Optimal point... the US gov't meddles enough with the economy and directs research that the market is not totally able to behave naturally. If the US were to totally liberalize, it would be that much higher.
Quote: Quote:No, you are an animal, your purpose is to reproduce your genes, that is why your genes made you -- the same way a plant makes a flower. Everything else you do in life is to support that function. The money you make, the posessions you amass everything else you do is just there to support that purpose. Few things you build, own or create in your lifetime will still be here in 1000 years except your decendants. If you made $200B and died childless, you will be a loser. According to the defintion of biological fitness. I'm glad you took Bio 101, but that is merely saying "my defintion is better then yours."
Friday, May 5, 2006 1:47 PM
Quote:No I said its on its way out, then I clarified in my response and said that any one can observe the finitness of the resources will cause people to look for altenratives (And indeed several altenratives have been found and are continue to being researched... their just not comparatievly sound economically... yet).
Quote: Yeah bitching about syntax is stupid. I'm sorry you continued to be misinformed on my meaning even after I clarified it in the previous response.
Quote:Actually in the long term people do adapt. Guess what, if year after year, you can't afford fuel, you'll take the bus, the train, if that dosn't work, you'll have no choice but to relocate your job if its to far away..... but by then infastructure of the altenratives (whatever it may be) will have been estalbished or demand to be established....
Quote:I should piont out the theory for the oil peak is also dubious, but lets assume its totatlly accurate, the US has peakce 2 decades ago and the world will follow within the next decade...
Quote:I mean I"m not using anything beyond principles level micro theory, because analysis of this situation dosn't require it; unless we have hard data... But you havn't provided any so I can't comment.
Quote:Really? How did you reach this profound conclusion? By reasoning in your head?
Quote:SO you're prepared to show me proof that no alternative exists to petrol fertlizers?
Quote:Right, prove this statement..... Your doing what you accuse me of doing, except whereas I have viable theory you just have words. I also note that all you have done is claim to "work in real life" but at hte same time ommited any real life examples that abides by your claims. In any event, since you have no theoretical freamwork you couldn't do the former anyways.
Quote:That is not a theory... that's merely a statmeent. There is no such thing as "Capitalist Manifesto" But what should I expect from someone who obviouslly is influenced by Political "Science."
Quote:Isn't it funny that you obviouslyl don't know a thing about rigorious Micro or macro theory yet you feel you can comment on it? Why don't you look up the phrase "Pareto Optimal" and "Walrasian Equalibrium."
Quote:Yeah sorry, I assumed you had some clue on what you were talking about hwen it came to Micro or Macro theory. The proof is for the existence of the competeive general equalbirium and that this equalibrium is pareto optimal. Maybe you'll undersatnd onc eyou actually learn what those terms mean. In any event, if you've taken some Real Analysis, you should be able to piece the proof together, I think the only prerequistie you need is the Banach fixed point theorem.
Friday, May 5, 2006 2:38 PM
Friday, May 5, 2006 2:57 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Sassalicious: China has historically been imperialistic regarding Vietnam (though it was more Vietnamese people than the country seeing as it didn't really exist as we know it today) and in present day it's imperialistic in Tibet. It's possible that imperialistically China is not as bad as other countries, but given that serious human rights violations are occurring in Tibet (which is a sovereign nation in my opinion) as a direct result of Mao Tse Tung's invasion in 1949/1950, I think the fact that the Western world is getting so friendly with China is a problem.
Friday, May 5, 2006 3:30 PM
Quote:Originally posted by citizen: Quote:Originally posted by Sassalicious: China has historically been imperialistic regarding Vietnam (though it was more Vietnamese people than the country seeing as it didn't really exist as we know it today) and in present day it's imperialistic in Tibet. It's possible that imperialistically China is not as bad as other countries, but given that serious human rights violations are occurring in Tibet (which is a sovereign nation in my opinion) as a direct result of Mao Tse Tung's invasion in 1949/1950, I think the fact that the Western world is getting so friendly with China is a problem. If I may usurp our resident economics whizz kid for a second: Well what you fail to understand is that it's cost effective and makes extra profit, which is good economically speaking. Which is all that matters, economics is all there is, there are no Human rights, they have nothing to do with economics. More insane ramblings by the people who brought you beeeer milkshakes! And as you know, these are open forums, you're able to come and listen to what I have to say.
Friday, May 5, 2006 3:34 PM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Friday, May 5, 2006 3:42 PM
Friday, May 5, 2006 4:10 PM
Quote:Originally posted by AnthonyT: What is this? Extreme Point of View Week?
Saturday, May 6, 2006 12:50 AM
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Tuesday, November 22, 2022 8:28 AM
JAYNEZTOWN
Tuesday, November 22, 2022 3:13 PM
THG
Quote:Originally posted by Sassalicious: Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: The only way I really see that happening anytime soon, though, is if they decide (and they will, just wait) to "annex" Taiwan, which they view as an illegitimate government and a province that's rightfully theirs The Chinese government has a bad habit of thinking that everything in Asia is a province that is rightfully theirs.
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