REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

It's not all about Trump. Or, at least, it shouldn't be.

POSTED BY: SIGNYM
UPDATED: Saturday, October 16, 2021 09:18
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Tuesday, October 5, 2021 5:27 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:


UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881


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Tuesday, October 5, 2021 5:37 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

6IXSTRINGJACK:
lol
Your 1930's cartoonish view of weed smokers is hilarious.
You're the dick at the family parties that everybody else hides the weed from.
My god, you'd end up having to cut off more than half your family if you ever knew the truth.

JSF: The really cartoonish view of potheads is recognizing that they all get really, really defensive and offended in their denial, whenever reasonable folk point out any facts regarding their abused substance of choice.
Oh, wait......



JSF, how do you feel about coffee-drinkers getting defensive about their coffee habits? Or tobacco smokers getting defensive about smoking? Or soda-guzzlers getting defensive about sugar? Same category as pot smokers, or different?

Yanno, people have been drinking coffee and tea, smoking tobacco, drinking alcohol, chewing coca leaves, eating magic mushrooms, chewing betel, smoking hash and opium, starving or steaming themselves into hallucinations, drinking yohimbe, ingesting mescaline, chewing salvia divinorum, and in general messing with their brain chemistry for.... millenia.

Where do you draw the line between the commonplace (such as coffee) and the problematic (such as oxycodone), and why?

I have not seen coffee drinkers getting nearly as defensive as illegal drug abusers.



But Cigarette smokers sure as shit do. Try telling an alcoholic they shouldn't drink anymore too.

Both products are 100% legal and both products are 100,000,000% more dangerous to the person consuming them as well as to others.

The only reason that coffee drinkers aren't defensive is because there aren't any assholes going around telling them everyday that they shouldn't drink coffee.


Quote:

ETA: perhaps my primary dividing point is the physical ailments resulting from drug abuse.
Coffee = HBP, is that right? If you die from it, you win the Darwin Award for your end of the genetic line.
Sucralose = diabetes, HBP, migraine headaches, and a myriad of other health failures. But some folk demand to consume it.
Isn't most of the classification of drugs by our government based upon the permanent physical injury thy can produce, even if the injury is in the brain?



Not one single person has died of THC either. No matter how much was consumed.

Your argument is invalid.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Tuesday, October 5, 2021 6:43 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

SIGNYM:

SECOND? You have a lot of criticisms which [might] mean that you also have a picture of your ideal government policies (or, at least, your "better" government policies).

SECOND: Signym, you might have noticed that I don't think in generalizations and abstractions. Here is a very specific example, but there are a million things only the Federal government can do, but does not because too many Americans and Congressmen think in abstractions blinding themselves to the million things an engineer sees:

Ike Dike. It would protect property around Galveston Bay. It is an enlargement of the Galveston Seawall, which could only been built with Federal money, BUT CONGRESS WAITED UNTIL AFTER 7.000 DROWNED IN THE 1900 HURRICANE. America tends to wait too long to react to all problems, large or small or specific to one area. But if it doesn't react immediately, America forgets until a new disaster reminds Congress/America for a week or two what it had forgotten.
https://www.google.com/search?q=ike+dike+congress

Actually, you Do think in abstractions and generalities, you just don't recognize that you do.
Here are some generalizations embedded in this specific example:

Property loss is a bad thing, protecting property is a good thing.

Loss of life is a bad thing, saving lives is a good thing.

Protecting property and saving lives is the business of government (not business, religions, other NGOs or individuals) and (especially) Federal government. (I'm curious as to why you think the Federal government should construct a dike protecting Galveston Bay, since it's an intrastate problem and not a Federal one. Is it the size of the project that places it in Federal hands, or some jurisdictional issue?)

Solving "problems" (however defined) is a good thing, proactively solving them is better.

Americans (and I suppose people in general) are bad at recognizing and responding to potential pitfalls.

Congress only responds to immediate political pressure on hot-button issues, and doesn't take a responsible managerial (or, if you will, engineering) approach. That is therefore a flaw in democracy.

See?

I think there really are abstractions driving your thoughts, which run in both directions (from assumptions to conclusions). Do you agree, in general, with my description of your values and assumptions so far?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


Signym, for most people, problems are abstractions, unless the problem is happening to them. When dealing with abstractions, it is very simple to say that you don't comprehend the problem or why the other person is so upset about such an abstract notion and would they please be quiet and listen to my very concrete problems. In America, there are many people shouting that other people should just shut the hell up so that the government can hear me-me-me. The result is that 99% are ignored, leaving the 1% be heard clearly in Congress. They didn't get to be the 1% by calmly waiting until the other 99% finish their chaotic and incoherent bickering over whose problem is more important.

The ridiculous cycle could be broken by Congress fixing everybody's problem, but that won't happen because there is huge faction in Congress that has never seen a problem worth fixing.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, October 5, 2021 7:50 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


You should probably worry about your own problems first dude. You've got 5 years at least before you get them sorted out.



--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 1:35 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:

Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:


UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881




Incorrect. That's an example of baseless government platitude.

Pure fantasyland given in trade for votes.

We'll revisit this one in 14 years and see how it's going.



P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 1:39 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
The other thing I've learned over the years is that children believe what you tell them over what they see with their own lying eyes. What you tell them becomes their reality. (How does a mystery box work ... if you show a monkey a wrapped box and all the steps they need to get to the reward, once you unwrap the box they'll quickly figure out how it works and ditch the unnecessary steps. Children will keep doing what you taught them, even when they can see that all but 1 step is bogus.)



That's how dumb children do it, at least.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 2:00 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

SIGNYM:
SECOND? You have a lot of criticisms which [might] mean that you also have a picture of your ideal government policies (or, at least, your "better" government policies).

SECOND: Signym, you might have noticed that I don't think in generalizations and abstractions. Here is a very specific example, but there are a million things only the Federal government can do, but does not because too many Americans and Congressmen think in abstractions blinding themselves to the million things an engineer sees:

Ike Dike. It would protect property around Galveston Bay. It is an enlargement of the Galveston Seawall, which could only been built with Federal money, BUT CONGRESS WAITED UNTIL AFTER 7.000 DROWNED IN THE 1900 HURRICANE. America tends to wait too long to react to all problems, large or small or specific to one area. But if it doesn't react immediately, America forgets until a new disaster reminds Congress/America for a week or two what it had forgotten.
https://www.google.com/search?q=ike+dike+congress

SIGNY: Actually, you Do think in abstractions and generalities, you just don't recognize that you do.
Here are some generalizations embedded in this specific example:
Property loss is a bad thing, protecting property is a good thing.
Loss of life is a bad thing, saving lives is a good thing.
Protecting property and saving lives is the business of government (not business, religions, other NGOs or individuals) and (especially) Federal government. (I'm curious as to why you think the Federal government should construct a dike protecting Galveston Bay, since it's an intrastate problem and not a Federal one. Is it the size of the project that places it in Federal hands, or some jurisdictional issue?)
Solving "problems" (however defined) is a good thing, proactively solving them is better.
Americans (and I suppose people in general) are bad at recognizing and responding to potential pitfalls.
Congress only responds to immediate political pressure on hot-button issues, and doesn't take a responsible managerial (or, if you will, engineering) approach. That is therefore a flaw in democracy.

See?
I think there really are abstractions driving your thoughts, which run in both directions (from assumptions to conclusions). Do you agree, in general, with my description of your values and assumptions so far?

SECOND: Signym, for most people, problems are abstractions, unless the problem is happening to them. When dealing with abstractions, it is very simple to say that you don't comprehend the problem or why the other person is so upset about such an abstract notion and would they please be quiet and listen to my very concrete problems. In America, there are many people shouting that other people should just shut the hell up so that the government can hear me-me-me. The result is that 99% are ignored, leaving the 1% be heard clearly in Congress. They didn't get to be the 1% by calmly waiting until the other 99% finish their chaotic and incoherent bickering over whose problem is more important.

The ridiculous cycle could be broken by Congress fixing everybody's problem, but that won't happen because there is huge faction in Congress that has never seen a problem worth fixing.

SECOND, are you drunk-posting? Congress solving EVERYONE'S problems???? There is not enough money to do that.

And why is it Congress' job to fix problems that others (for example, businesses) created?

I have not a clue as to what you're getting at.

The Magic Eight Ball says Please try again

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 2:31 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

6IXSTRINGJACK:
lol
Your 1930's cartoonish view of weed smokers is hilarious.
You're the dick at the family parties that everybody else hides the weed from.
My god, you'd end up having to cut off more than half your family if you ever knew the truth.

JSF: The really cartoonish view of potheads is recognizing that they all get really, really defensive and offended in their denial, whenever reasonable folk point out any facts regarding their abused substance of choice.
Oh, wait......

SIGNY: JSF, how do you feel about coffee-drinkers getting defensive about their coffee habits? Or tobacco smokers getting defensive about smoking? Or soda-guzzlers getting defensive about sugar? Same category as pot smokers, or different?
Yanno, people have been drinking coffee and tea, smoking tobacco, drinking alcohol, chewing coca leaves, eating magic mushrooms, chewing betel, smoking hash and opium, starving or steaming themselves into hallucinations, drinking yohimbe, ingesting mescaline, chewing salvia divinorum, and in general messing with their brain chemistry for.... millenia.
Where do you draw the line between the commonplace (such as coffee) and the problematic (such as oxycodone), and why?

JSF: I have not seen coffee drinkers getting nearly as defensive as illegal drug abusers.
And yes, abuse of pot is currently defined as smoking more than one tenth of one small joint per day. At the time of that line being established, the pot was 1/30 as strong as today, and the measure was 3 joints per day. Anything more causes permanent damage to the Immune System.

links please
Quote:

JSF: I have seen coffee drinkers compete, wager, bet on who has the highest BP each day.
Coffee, sugar, chocolate, tobacco, are currently legal substances.
I recently have been consuming 2 aspirin per day, almost every day. It bothers me, but nobody else has been annoying me about it.
Consumption of unfrozen meats drenched in chemicals is currently legal, but for folk who want cancer, that is their choice.
Not long ago, absinthe was in some way legalized in the US, but there seems to be some vastly weakened version which is now available. I don't recall the permanent long term side effects of that - whether physical or mental.


If individuals are choosing to be criminals, knowingly perpetrating crimes, then that is different than the legal choices they could make. There is no legal limit on the amount of sugar, chocolate, or coffee one cna have possession of - but you can still overdose on too much caffiene.
Food makers pour poison like sucralose into foods currently, and this is still a legal activity.
Maybe I'm rambling too much right now. I am distracted. And have not had enough chocolate. Geez, just realized I had a Coke for lunch - maybe that is it.

ETA: perhaps my primary dividing point is the physical ailments resulting from drug abuse.

Coffee = HBP, is that right? If you die from it, you win the Darwin Award for your end of the genetic line.
Sucralose = diabetes, HBP, migraine headaches, and a myriad of other health failures. But some folk demand to consume it.
Isn't most of the classification of drugs by our government based upon the permanent physical injury thy can produce, even if the injury is in the brain?



There are a lot of things that can cause permanent physical damage, all of them perfectly legal and (in many cases) even generally useful.

Starting with the useless, damaging, legal drug - cigarettes - now THERE is a drug that (as far as I can tell) does no good at all, but causes addiction and lung cancer. According to the CDC, tobacco causes approx 1 in 5 deaths every year. So if something should be banned, maybe that would be a good start.
https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/health_effects
/tobacco_related_mortality/index.htm


Alcohol. A drug that may have SOME potential health benefits in moderation ... a drink (or two, for men) a day ... but causes approx 95,000 deaths per year.
https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/features/excessive-alcohol-deaths.html

Properly prescribed drugs are the third leading cause of death in the USA, sometimes because of side effects and sometimes because of error.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25355584/ This amounts to an estimated 100,000+ deaths per year.

By contrast, according to some studies, people who use pot have THE SAME life expectancy as those who don't.
https://www.newhealthadvisor.org/How-Many-People-Have-Died-from-Weed.h
tml
Marijuana can cause traffic accidents and so forth, so it's not entirely harmless but it doesn't generally cause the permanent damage that you fear so greatly, especially in the same rates as tobacco, alcohol, and properly presribed drugs.

In reality, marijuana as been MIS-CLASSIFIED by the Federal government to be as dangerous as heroin ... which hardly makes sense.
https://healthmed.org/what-schedule-is-marijuana-on-and-why/

As I posted, I'm not a big fan of marijuana, and I'm not a big fan of decriminalizing all drugs. Also, the THC concentration now is way too high, and it's easy to OD. (Edibles are another big problem) So maybe it should be treated like alcohol: sold in standard concentrations and not available to young people. It's not a perfect solution because we know kids can get their hands on cigarettes and booze, but it's better than what we have now.




-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 2:35 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

1KIKI:

Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:
UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881



SIX: Incorrect. That's an example of baseless government platitude.
Pure fantasyland given in trade for votes.
We'll revisit this one in 14 years and see how it's going.

P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".



I haven't been following this. YOU may be past calling things "public goods" but KIKI isn't, and neither am I.

My question, SIX, is: do you recognize that government has ANY beneficial function?
If so, what would you call it?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 5:30 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

SIGNYM:
SECOND? You have a lot of criticisms which [might] mean that you also have a picture of your ideal government policies (or, at least, your "better" government policies).

SECOND: Signym, you might have noticed that I don't think in generalizations and abstractions. Here is a very specific example, but there are a million things only the Federal government can do, but does not because too many Americans and Congressmen think in abstractions blinding themselves to the million things an engineer sees:

Ike Dike. It would protect property around Galveston Bay. It is an enlargement of the Galveston Seawall, which could only been built with Federal money, BUT CONGRESS WAITED UNTIL AFTER 7.000 DROWNED IN THE 1900 HURRICANE. America tends to wait too long to react to all problems, large or small or specific to one area. But if it doesn't react immediately, America forgets until a new disaster reminds Congress/America for a week or two what it had forgotten.
https://www.google.com/search?q=ike+dike+congress

SIGNY: Actually, you Do think in abstractions and generalities, you just don't recognize that you do.
Here are some generalizations embedded in this specific example:
Property loss is a bad thing, protecting property is a good thing.
Loss of life is a bad thing, saving lives is a good thing.
Protecting property and saving lives is the business of government (not business, religions, other NGOs or individuals) and (especially) Federal government. (I'm curious as to why you think the Federal government should construct a dike protecting Galveston Bay, since it's an intrastate problem and not a Federal one. Is it the size of the project that places it in Federal hands, or some jurisdictional issue?)
Solving "problems" (however defined) is a good thing, proactively solving them is better.
Americans (and I suppose people in general) are bad at recognizing and responding to potential pitfalls.
Congress only responds to immediate political pressure on hot-button issues, and doesn't take a responsible managerial (or, if you will, engineering) approach. That is therefore a flaw in democracy.

See?
I think there really are abstractions driving your thoughts, which run in both directions (from assumptions to conclusions). Do you agree, in general, with my description of your values and assumptions so far?

SECOND: Signym, for most people, problems are abstractions, unless the problem is happening to them. When dealing with abstractions, it is very simple to say that you don't comprehend the problem or why the other person is so upset about such an abstract notion and would they please be quiet and listen to my very concrete problems. In America, there are many people shouting that other people should just shut the hell up so that the government can hear me-me-me. The result is that 99% are ignored, leaving the 1% be heard clearly in Congress. They didn't get to be the 1% by calmly waiting until the other 99% finish their chaotic and incoherent bickering over whose problem is more important.

The ridiculous cycle could be broken by Congress fixing everybody's problem, but that won't happen because there is huge faction in Congress that has never seen a problem worth fixing.

SECOND, are you drunk-posting? Congress solving EVERYONE'S problems???? There is not enough money to do that.

And why is it Congress' job to fix problems that others (for example, businesses) created?

I have not a clue as to what you're getting at.

The Magic Eight Ball says Please try again

You wrote: "why is it Congress' job to fix problems that others (for example, businesses) created? I have not a clue as to what you're getting at." Signym, did you already forget that the problem was building the Ike Dike to protect property around Galveston Bay from Category 5 Hurricanes? Senator Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) can vote NO for the Ike Dike, then quip that the Liberals in Houston should not have built on Galveston Bay. If McConnell votes NO and Houston is destroyed in a hurricane, what does he care? Kentucky doesn't have hurricanes.

McConnell can vote NO for anything without him worrying he made a wrong decision that kills Americans. A less specific example than the Ike Dike is health care. McConnell can vote NO and justify it by saying he has health insurance and if you don't, that is your problem to solve, not McConnell's. He actually did say that, many times.

Senator McConnell always votes NO for solving problems that only the Senate can solve. As a matter of fact, there is a huge faction in Congress that always votes NO, with absolutely no consequences for themselves. (The same faction always votes YES for military expenditures, also with no consequences for themselves when the military creates a fiasco and loses yet another war.)

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, October 6, 2021 9:15 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

1KIKI:

Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:
UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881



SIX: Incorrect. That's an example of baseless government platitude.
Pure fantasyland given in trade for votes.
We'll revisit this one in 14 years and see how it's going.

P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".



I haven't been following this. YOU may be past calling things "public goods" but KIKI isn't, and neither am I.



Public Good is a misnomer that is purposefully used to manipulate stupid people into thinking that the function of the Federal Government is a lot of things that it isn't.

There is no but after that statement.

Quote:

My question, SIX, is: do you recognize that government has ANY beneficial function?


Police and military. Shutting down monopolies. Protecting constitutional rights.

That's about it, and they're fucking terrible at all four of them.

Our problem now is that they've cemented themselves into doing so many things that they've never had any business doing in the first place, that if we were to simply pull the plug on all of them now everything would devolve into chaos.

Quote:

If so, what would you call it?


Government functions.


--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Thursday, October 7, 2021 7:12 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

6IXSTRINGJACK:
lol
Your 1930's cartoonish view of weed smokers is hilarious.
You're the dick at the family parties that everybody else hides the weed from.
My god, you'd end up having to cut off more than half your family if you ever knew the truth.

JSF: The really cartoonish view of potheads is recognizing that they all get really, really defensive and offended in their denial, whenever reasonable folk point out any facts regarding their abused substance of choice.
Oh, wait......

SIGNY: JSF, how do you feel about coffee-drinkers getting defensive about their coffee habits? Or tobacco smokers getting defensive about smoking? Or soda-guzzlers getting defensive about sugar? Same category as pot smokers, or different?
Yanno, people have been drinking coffee and tea, smoking tobacco, drinking alcohol, chewing coca leaves, eating magic mushrooms, chewing betel, smoking hash and opium, starving or steaming themselves into hallucinations, drinking yohimbe, ingesting mescaline, chewing salvia divinorum, and in general messing with their brain chemistry for.... millenia.
Where do you draw the line between the commonplace (such as coffee) and the problematic (such as oxycodone), and why?

JSF: I have not seen coffee drinkers getting nearly as defensive as illegal drug abusers.
And yes, abuse of pot is currently defined as smoking more than one tenth of one small joint per day. At the time of that line being established, the pot was 1/30 as strong as today, and the measure was 3 joints per day. Anything more causes permanent damage to the Immune System.

links please
Quote:

JSF: I have seen coffee drinkers compete, wager, bet on who has the highest BP each day.
Coffee, sugar, chocolate, tobacco, are currently legal substances.
I recently have been consuming 2 aspirin per day, almost every day. It bothers me, but nobody else has been annoying me about it.
Consumption of unfrozen meats drenched in chemicals is currently legal, but for folk who want cancer, that is their choice.
Not long ago, absinthe was in some way legalized in the US, but there seems to be some vastly weakened version which is now available. I don't recall the permanent long term side effects of that - whether physical or mental.


If individuals are choosing to be criminals, knowingly perpetrating crimes, then that is different than the legal choices they could make. There is no legal limit on the amount of sugar, chocolate, or coffee one cna have possession of - but you can still overdose on too much caffiene.
Food makers pour poison like sucralose into foods currently, and this is still a legal activity.
Maybe I'm rambling too much right now. I am distracted. And have not had enough chocolate. Geez, just realized I had a Coke for lunch - maybe that is it.

ETA: perhaps my primary dividing point is the physical ailments resulting from drug abuse.

Coffee = HBP, is that right? If you die from it, you win the Darwin Award for your end of the genetic line.
Sucralose = diabetes, HBP, migraine headaches, and a myriad of other health failures. But some folk demand to consume it.
Isn't most of the classification of drugs by our government based upon the permanent physical injury thy can produce, even if the injury is in the brain?



There are a lot of things that can cause permanent physical damage, all of them perfectly legal and (in many cases) even generally useful.

Starting with the useless, damaging, legal drug - cigarettes - now THERE is a drug that (as far as I can tell) does no good at all, but causes addiction and lung cancer. According to the CDC, tobacco causes approx 1 in 5 deaths every year. So if something should be banned, maybe that would be a good start.
https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/health_effects
/tobacco_related_mortality/index.htm


Alcohol. A drug that may have SOME potential health benefits in moderation ... a drink (or two, for men) a day ... but causes approx 95,000 deaths per year.
https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/features/excessive-alcohol-deaths.html

Properly prescribed drugs are the third leading cause of death in the USA, sometimes because of side effects and sometimes because of error.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25355584/ This amounts to an estimated 100,000+ deaths per year.

By contrast, according to some studies, people who use pot have THE SAME life expectancy as those who don't.
https://www.newhealthadvisor.org/How-Many-People-Have-Died-from-Weed.h
tml
Marijuana can cause traffic accidents and so forth, so it's not entirely harmless but it doesn't generally cause the permanent damage that you fear so greatly, especially in the same rates as tobacco, alcohol, and properly presribed drugs.

In reality, marijuana as been MIS-CLASSIFIED by the Federal government to be as dangerous as heroin ... which hardly makes sense.
https://healthmed.org/what-schedule-is-marijuana-on-and-why/

As I posted, I'm not a big fan of marijuana, and I'm not a big fan of decriminalizing all drugs. Also, the THC concentration now is way too high, and it's easy to OD. (Edibles are another big problem) So maybe it should be treated like alcohol: sold in standard concentrations and not available to young people. It's not a perfect solution because we know kids can get their hands on cigarettes and booze, but it's better than what we have now.

Yeah, links to that study have become harder and herder to hunt down. I did read the study in full, and I may still have a hard copy around somewhere. But the search engines have become useless in finding it, and each time I try it becmes harder.

What I recall: The study was conducted by the University of Wisconsin at Madison. I recall the early 1970s - like 1970-1973 (but maybe a little outside that). Those would have been the year that the study concluded.
The conclusion was that, at the strength of pot at the time, 3 joints per day was found to not permanently damage the immune system, and was deemed "casual use". But more than 3 joints per day was found to cause permanent damage to the immune system, and was deemed "abuse".
It was a government authorized study, because at the time only government authorized projects could legally possess marijuana. Wisconsin had a history because it was the government's largest supplier of hemp in WWII.

If you can chase it down, please share. It has been a while since I have re-read it.

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Thursday, October 7, 2021 8:18 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

1KIKI:
Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:
UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881


SIX: Incorrect. That's an example of baseless government platitude.
Pure fantasyland given in trade for votes.
We'll revisit this one in 14 years and see how it's going.

P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".

SIGNY: I haven't been following this. YOU may be past calling things "public goods" but KIKI isn't, and neither am I.

SIX: Public Good is a misnomer that is purposefully used to manipulate stupid people into thinking that the function of the Federal Government is a lot of things that it isn't.

But just because the phrase is misused doesn't mean it's irrelevant or inherrently deceitful.

Quote:

SIX: There is no but after that statement.

SIGNY: My question, SIX, is: do you recognize that government has ANY beneficial function?

SIX: Police and military. Shutting down monopolies. Protecting constitutional rights.
That's about it, and they're fucking terrible at all four of them.

those are critical functions but not the only ones.

Adjudicating or regulating interstate problems, like
a) states recognizing other states' laws (for example, a marriage that would normally be considered underage in one state is recognized as legal; or recognizing gun registrations interstate)
b) cross-border problems like air and water pollution (one state is not allowed to pollute the other downwind/downstream)
c) cross-border resources like water, migratory animals and birds, and navigation

Other border issues like imposing tariffs and regulating immigration, citizenship, tariffs, and foreign ships and plane.

Security and policy issues like negotiating trade agreements, alliances and peace treaties; and managing foreign security threats (cyber, spying)

Creating currency and managing the overall money supply and regulating banks (a job which it has illegally devolved to The Fed and private lenders)

Managing Federal property, such as the exclusive economic zone offshore

Arguably, building and maintaining interstate infrastructure such as higways, locks and dams, electrical grids and communications networks etc

Maintaining embassies abroad


*** These are just off the top of my head. The Federal government is fucking terrible at these, too.

Quote:

SIX: Our problem now is that they've cemented themselves into doing so many things that they've never had any business doing in the first place, that if we were to simply pull the plug on all of them now everything would devolve into chaos.


Agreed. People depend on their Social Security and Medicare. All of that goes back to the days of FDR when the USA was falling into crisis (which was arguably created by banks and business).

I'm of two minds as to whether it is properly the business of government to respond to these crises, or to set policies which avoid these crises in the first place.
Sometimes unforeseen shit happens and you need to patch the problem before you can fix it. But it seems our government has been patching and patching and patching ... like bad software. Maybe just bite the bullet as rewrite the damn code.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Thursday, October 7, 2021 8:21 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

1KIKI:
Oh, btw Signy, here's another example of a government-created public good:
UK pledges to hit all-renewable electricity by 2035
https://apnews.com/article/climate-change-business-england-europe-bori
s-johnson-46ec6751e3f32cb998e8ae24a038a881



SIX: Incorrect. That's an example of baseless government platitude.
Pure fantasyland given in trade for votes.
We'll revisit this one in 14 years and see how it's going.

P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".



I haven't been following this. YOU may be past calling things "public goods" but KIKI isn't, and neither am I.

SIX: Public Good is a misnomer that is purposefully used to manipulate stupid people into thinking that the function of the Federal Government is a lot of things that it isn't.

But just because the phrase is misused doesn't mean it's irrelevant or inherrently deceitful.



It's not irrelevant.

It IS inherently deceitful.

Quote:

Quote:

SIX: There is no but after that statement.

SIGNY: My question, SIX, is: do you recognize that government has ANY beneficial function?

SIX: Police and military. Shutting down monopolies. Protecting constitutional rights.
That's about it, and they're fucking terrible at all four of them.

those are critical functions but not the only ones.


Adjudicating or regulating interstate problems, like
a) states recognizing other states' laws (for example, a marriage that would normally be considered underage in one state is recognized as legal; or recognizing gun registrations interstate)
b) cross-border problems like air and water pollution (one state is not allowed to pollute the other downwind/downstream)
c) cross-border resources like water, migratory animals and birds, and navigation

Other border issues like imposing tariffs and regulating immigration, citizenship, tariffs, and foreign ships and plane.

Security and policy issues like negotiating trade agreements, alliances and peace treaties; and managing foreign security threats (cyber, spying)

Creating currency and managing the overall money supply (a job which it has illegally devolved to The Fed and private lenders)

Managing Federal property, such as the exclusive economic zone offshore

Arguably, building and maintaining interstate infrastructure such as higways, locks and dams, electrical grids and communications networks etc

Maintaining embassies abroad

These are just off the top of my head.



And they fail miserably at every single one of these. Maybe none of this should be their job anymore.




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Thursday, October 7, 2021 8:31 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Sorry, I added to the above post and I agree with you.
And I agreed that they suck at most of it.
But the problem is, most of these issues CANNOT be handled at the state level.
State-by-state citizenship? State-by-state money creation? State-by-state peace treaties?
So even tho the Federal government sucks at almost all of these functions, there is no other institution equipped to handle them.

Also, AFA "public good" ... I suppose you can call them "government functions" so that people don't fall into the trap of thinking that "public bad" is some sort of "public good". Using the phrase "public good" to shoehorn "public bad" policies in place is a matter of propaganda.

But all successful propaganda has to have some truth in it. There really ARE (or, can be) government functions that are conducted for the general welfare (public good). It's too bad our government does so few of them.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Thursday, October 7, 2021 8:40 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


They excel at doing the bad and calling it "good".

When intelligent people like you and I use the term "public good" the way they want us to, we're just helping them help themselves.



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Friday, October 8, 2021 4:31 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Aside from the concept and phrase, which you have a animus against, what are the OTHER essential Federal government functions that I might have missed?

My way of viewing it is to substitute "state" or "local" into the "government function" to see if it can be handled at a lower level. Or perhaps dispensed with completely.

If neither of those happen, the we can call them essential Federal government functions and then discuss how they can be improved.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 8, 2021 5:25 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Government should get out of the politics of Medicine, Science.


NASA was a worthwhile endeavor. Some might dispute the validity of the stated reasons, but the resulting reasons are harder to argue. And no nukes were required to accomplish the goals. But, in terms of money, it was the best investment for the American taxpayer. Second place went to Department of Defense.


Already brought up, the governance of navigable waterways is a valid purpose, even if they do it so badly.


FEMA disaster funds rebuilding towns in flood plains so they can get more funds on the next flood, that is a waste. Same for rebuilding mansions on mudslide mountainsides, or burned down homes in wildfire country. A few, sturdy, viable, public service buildings would be reasonable.

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Friday, October 8, 2021 6:06 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


You'd get an argument from me about DoD spending being a worthwhile investment. The idea was to DEFEND OUR BORDERS, but our borders do not include all of Central and South America, and all of the Middle East or any part of Europe (or, indeed, any other part of any other continent). We have well over 800 military installations around the world.

I understand the radar stations in Iceland bc of ballistic missile detection, but ...


So what parts of DoD spending do you think is a good investment, and why?

Also, do you have a problem funding medical research? Bc you don't seem to have a problem funding space and possibly weapons research.

SOME disasters can only be responded to at a level higher than individual states can bear. Earthquakes in major cities. Hurricanes that wipe out cities in more than one state. Virtually every state is exposed to one form of natural disaster or another: tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, blizzards, floods ... even volcanoes! It's like insurance: everybody pays into it even tho the probability of gacing catastrophe is small. But people like the assurance that they would be covered if catastrophe happened. Maybe consortia of states?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 8, 2021 6:59 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Aside from the concept and phrase, which you have a animus against, what are the OTHER essential Federal government functions that I might have missed?

My way of viewing it is to substitute "state" or "local" into the "government function" to see if it can be handled at a lower level. Or perhaps dispensed with completely.

If neither of those happen, the we can call them essential Federal government functions and then discuss how they can be improved.




You could probably be more objective than I could about this. Perhaps you should come up with more and make your argument why they should be under the umbrella of "shit the Federal Government should do".

I'm so far the other way now that I want it all gone.

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Saturday, October 9, 2021 1:38 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Quote:

P.S. I thought we were past calling it "public good".
Some people called it the 'general welfare'. Sen called it the 'public good', and acknowledged it in formal economic theory he created. Back in the days of kings and knights in a place called Europe through early America it was called the 'commons'. European immigrants would tell their children 'and if everybody did that what kind of place would this be?'. Chinese embodied the concept in Confucianism.

It's a concept that's been around for a long time all around the globe. And there are a lot of different synonyms one can use for it. I prefer 'public good'. Even though, as I've mentioned more than once, one needs to judge whether or not the the phrase fits the results.

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Saturday, October 9, 2021 4:21 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
You'd get an argument from me about DoD spending

shockers.
Quote:

being a worthwhile investment. The idea was to DEFEND OUR BORDERS, but
Democrats did not do so well with Pearl Harbor.
Quote:






So what parts of DoD spending do you think is a good investment, and why?

Of all of the spending government does, there were 2 departments which gave back to the public, the economy, more than what was spent.
One was NASA, with $1.21 benefit per tax dollar spent.
The only other one was DoD, with $1.06 benefit per tax dollar spent.
At the other end of the spectrum, some Social Service department came in at $0.31 of value or benefit per tax dollar spent.

One might think of NASA creations like Velcro, Tang, etc. But for both, it is really the advancement of technology, which would not have been funded any other way. Additionally, this funding of advancing technology kept the US ahead of other nations in tech industries. Democrat ideas like funding the Japanese to siphon off our Submarine technology was not a good example of this.
As returns on investment, these were the only 2 departments.
Quote:



Also, do you have a problem funding medical research? Bc you don't seem to have a problem funding space and possibly weapons research.

SOME disasters can only be responded to at a level higher than individual states can bear. Earthquakes in major cities. Hurricanes that wipe out cities in more than one state. Virtually every state is exposed to one form of natural disaster or another: tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, blizzards, floods ... even volcanoes! It's like insurance: everybody pays into it even tho the probability of gacing catastrophe is small. But people like the assurance that they would be covered if catastrophe happened. Maybe consortia of states?

Disaster RESPONSE is reasonable. Rebuilding a town in the same exact place where it got buried by a volcano or flooded is not reasonable.
It is already known where the flood plains of the Mississippi are - not in Arizona. Don't use government funds to build in the flood plain. Where tornados are going to strike is far less predictable. Earthquakes are more predictable, some building are not allowed on fault lines

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Saturday, October 9, 2021 7:47 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.




I'm referring to the concept generally. One needs to be able to make distinctions when discussing abstract concepts. So just because there are evil people in the world doesn't negate using the term 'good' when discussing the concept 'good'. And just because there are bad governments doesn't mean there is no concept called the 'public good'.

When discussing the US in particular, I'll be looking at results before I apply a term because I think any term needs to be proven in particular instances. So, I'm not saying that everything the US government does, or that any government does, is a 'public good'.

Anyway, this should probably be n a different thread, so I'm x-posting there.

x-posted from
Biden wants Americans to Report All Transactions Over $600 to IRS Under Fed Plan?
http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=64611&p=1

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Saturday, October 9, 2021 8:08 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:


I'm referring to the concept generally. One needs to be able to make distinctions when discussing abstract concepts. So just because there are evil people in the world doesn't negate using the term 'good' when discussing the concept 'good'. And just because there are bad governments doesn't mean there is no concept called the 'public good'.

When discussing the US in particular, I'll be looking at results before I apply a term because I think any term needs to be proven in particular instances. So, I'm not saying that everything the US government does, or that any government does, is a 'public good'.

Anyway, this should probably be n a different thread, so I'm x-posting there.

x-posted from
Biden wants Americans to Report All Transactions Over $600 to IRS Under Fed Plan?
http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=64611&p=1



I don't have a problem with the word "Good". I have a problem with using "Public" as a prefix for it.

It's not too far away at all from when they use the word "White" as a prefix for the word "Nationalist". In that case though, they're intentionally conflating Nationalism with Racism. Nationalism is NOT Racism. Nationalism is a good thing. It's the same bad people that throw around the term "Public Good" that try to make you think that Nationalism is a bad thing.


Public means government. Public good means Government Good. In the end, they are the only ones that benefit.

I don't care if you disagree. You're wrong. The term is wrong. Anybody using the term is wrong.

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Sunday, October 10, 2021 4:26 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Of all of the spending government does, there were 2 departments which gave back to the public, the economy, more than what was spent.
One was NASA, with $1.21 benefit per tax dollar spent.
The only other one was DoD, with $1.06 benefit per tax dollar spent.
At the other end of the spectrum, some Social Service department came in at $0.31 of value or benefit per tax dollar spent.

How have you defined and measured "benefit"?

For example, what is the "benefit" of designing new nuclear missiles or tanks? What is the "benefit" of maintaining over 800 military installations across the globe?

Who benefits? In what way?

The only research that I can think of that came out of DARPA was the concept of the internet, but that was DEVELOPED by others, not the military.

Perhaps there is some benefit to satellite technology for things like weather prediction, forest and land use assessment, water resources etc. but that comes as much from NASA as the military.

AFA the Democrats not defending Pearl Harbor, rumor has it that the top echelong knew the attack was coming but LIHOP (let it happen in purpose... like 9-11) because FDR wanted to get into the war. But that's just a rumor.




-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Sunday, October 10, 2021 4:32 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


SIX: I think "public good" is a valid concept and phrase, even tho it's been used and abused throughout its lifetime. After all, you would probably accept the term "public bad" so clearly its opposite also exists, if only in theory.

But let me get to perhaps a more essential question:

provide for the common defense
promote the general welfare
and secure the blessings of liberty for us and our posterity

Even governments that I believe work reasonably well ... NOT OURS ... achieve the top two, but not the third. It seems to me that, over time, most governments become more centralized and authoritarian.

SO is this inevitable? Can it be reversed without revolution, or external force being applied?

What do you think?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Sunday, October 10, 2021 6:57 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
SIX: I think "public good" is a valid concept and phrase, even tho it's been used and abused throughout its lifetime. After all, you would probably accept the term "public bad" so clearly its opposite also exists, if only in theory.



All "public bad" means is Government Bad. No Duh. But that's not the equal and opposite to Public Good. Because Public Good is an intentional misnomer.

How many times do I have to explain to you that they're changing the meaning of words by using a 2nd word as a prefix to it?

The opposite of a White Nationalist wouldn't be a Black Nationalist, would it?

Quote:

But let me get to perhaps a more essential question:

provide for the common defense
promote the general welfare
and secure the blessings of liberty for us and our posterity

Even governments that I believe work reasonably well ... NOT OURS ... achieve the top two, but not the third. It seems to me that, over time, most governments become more centralized and authoritarian.

SO is this inevitable? Can it be reversed without revolution, or external force being applied?

What do you think?



It is inevetable. It cannot be reversed without revolution or external sources applied.

The only difference between every other society that has fallen and ours is that ours has figured out a way to push the envelope so slowly that the will of the people will be subverted without any real resistance until there isn't any will left.

At least, that's what I would have said 10 years ago if you asked me. Maybe just 5 years ago, even.

They've seemed to have thrown that tactic right out the window right now, and they're blatantly throwing American citizens under the bus left and right every single day while bending over backwards for anybody and everybody who comes here that wasn't one. They're destroying the meaning of words... Not just on the level of "Public Good" and "White" Nationalism, but by calling Mothers the fucking "Birthing Parent" when speaking in Congressional chambers.

They might not know it yet, but the "Progressives" (another intentional misnomer) might be America's saving grace in the long run. The "external force", if you will. They're trying to force 100 years of so-called "Progress" down everyone's throats overnight. That's 100 years of slow anger that would have just been swallowed down with a beer and Netflix binge every night that is impossible for a lot of people to swallow all at once.

We don't vet Afghani terrorists that we're relocating all over the country. We'll destroy the lives and livelihoods of citizens who will refuse a vaccination while allowing hundreds of thousands of illegal alien invaders into our borders without even testing them. The FBI has zero records collected on BLM/Antifa or any other left-wing activists that have broken laws in the last 2 years. We have State's Attorneys releasing 10's of thousands of criminals without pressing charges because of the color of their skin.

But we're going to send the FBI after mothers and fathers that are vocal with their schools about brainwashing their kids with CRT?

And all of this while the world got rocked by an extreme overreaction to a pandemic that doesn't kill anybody.

Clown World.


You can't threaten this many people with this many things all at once. It's amazing to me that nothing has happened yet. But when you look at the amount of mental anguish you've inflicted among your citizens over the last two years with the studies that have come out showing how poor our collective mental health and drug abuse has spiked in that time, it doesn't take a psychic to see where we're headed.

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Sunday, October 10, 2021 3:56 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Of all of the spending government does, there were 2 departments which gave back to the public, the economy, more than what was spent.
One was NASA, with $1.21 benefit per tax dollar spent.
The only other one was DoD, with $1.06 benefit per tax dollar spent.
At the other end of the spectrum, some Social Service department came in at $0.31 of value or benefit per tax dollar spent.

How have you defined and measured "benefit"?

Who benefits? In what way?

The only research that I can think of that came out of DARPA was the concept of the internet, but that was DEVELOPED by others, not the military.

Have you ever used a computer? Owned a computer? Used or owned a cellphone? Seen an operating lazer device, scanner, infrared, ultrasound operating in your environment?
IBM decided in the 1970s that individuals would never want to have a computer, use a computer, they were only for business.
In the 1960s, the first Integrated Circuit Chips were made. Each one cost millions of dollars to make - just for the first one. Only one customer could fund such development, for chips which nobody would ever be able to utilize.
In the 1970s, Chips which had failed the MilSpec were in bins at Radio Shack for 16 cents apiece. This is where the first chips used in personal computers come from. Apple was started in a garage, using these 16 cent chips.
But you are right, nobody in America has ever benefited from the development of computers, software, electronics.

Even today, if chips were not made, nobody would be able to fund such a fantasy as IC Chip manufacture. The military needed the computers and electronics, to win at war. NASA mostly just follow on the coattails of the military. The first mission to the moon space vehicle had less circuitry on it than the average car made in 2000.


Quote:


AFA the Democrats not defending Pearl Harbor, rumor has it that the top echelong knew the attack was coming but LIHOP (let it happen in purpose... like 9-11) because FDR wanted to get into the war. But that's just a rumor.

Yes, that is true. FDR desperately needed, wanted to get into the war, but had campaigned against it in order to get re-elected. He knew about the upcomng attack on Pearl and did not let anybody know, on Pearl or in the pacific. He sacrificed those lives at Pearl for politics.
FDR was not only a Democrat, but the quintessential Democrat.

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Sunday, October 10, 2021 4:27 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



The first transistor was demonstrated at Bell Labs. The first integrated circuit was demonstrated at Texas Instruments. The first monolithic IC was demonstrated at Fairchild Semiconductor.

The US military wasn't any part of the research, discovery, and invention process.

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Tuesday, October 12, 2021 8:08 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
The first transistor was demonstrated at Bell Labs.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_transistor
"The Bell Labs work on the transistor emerged from war-time efforts to produce extremely pure germanium "crystal" mixer diodes, used in radar units as a frequency mixer element in microwave radar receivers."
War-time, RADAR Units, and RADAR Receivers must have nothing whatsoever to do with military. You so smart.

"After the war, Shockley decided to attempt the building of a triode-like semiconductor device. He secured funding and lab space, and went to work on the problem "
"After the war" must have nothing whatsoever to do with the military, and it's needs during wartime.



Quote:

The first integrated circuit was demonstrated at Texas Instruments. The first monolithic IC was demonstrated at Fairchild Semiconductor.

The US military wasn't any part of the research, discovery, and invention process.


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Tuesday, October 12, 2021 8:38 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



I hope you realize that germanium diodes as rectifiers have nothing to do with transistors except they both used germanium - right? As for 'after the war' - you're right! Just because work on developing transistors happened to be after the war, it didn't have anything to do with the military. At least you got THAT right!


JSF is an idiot. It's that simple.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2021 2:00 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


JSF: You seem to resent people knowing more than you. Maybe if, instead of locking your brain down 30-ish years ago and making it impermeable to new information, you had spent that time learning instead, you wouldn't be so ignorant.

BTW ... LEARNING doesn't just mean "reinforcing what you already know", it means advancing into new, possibly challenging and uncomfortable areas, and questioning your knowledge and (occasionally) admitting you were wrong and changing your mind.

Unless you can do that, you're not really learning.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, October 13, 2021 7:40 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
The first transistor was demonstrated at Bell Labs.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_transistor
"The Bell Labs work on the transistor emerged from war-time efforts to produce extremely pure germanium "crystal" mixer diodes

I'm not sure what part of fairly clearly spoken American English you are unable to understand. Perhaps revisit your Russian teachers about how to translate English.




Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
I hope you realize that germanium diodes as rectifiers have nothing to do with transistors

You just so much smarter than the interwebs.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2021 7:53 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
JSF: You seem to resent people knowing more than you.

possibly revealing perspective of yours, if not interesting. As a conservative living Free in America, I like and enjoy giving the less fortunate a hand, helping out when possible. When I encounter folk who are at a loss for information, I try to help out there too. When I help folk, I often ask if they want me to do it for them, or if they want the explanation for the solution. If they only want the work done by me, then I forego the explanation. For those who want the info, I try to explain at a level I think they can understand, and use in the future.
I can understand that you do not like such an attitude, perhaps you only want to keep the information to yourself, instead of share.
When I find folk who know more than me on a subject, I an eager to learn from them. Sadly, this does not happen much anymore, in personal life or in professional life.
I sometimes look at what you and kiki post, if I think you seem to know about a subject. Obviously, this does not apply to tech knowledge with you two. Knowing how to utilize tech and how the tech works are not the same thing, and I am not even sure you understand even that basic concept.
Quote:


BTW ... LEARNING doesn't just mean "reinforcing what you already know", it means advancing into new, possibly challenging and uncomfortable areas, and questioning your knowledge and (occasionally) admitting you were wrong and changing your mind.

Unless you can do that, you're not really learning.

Yes.
You should try to read what you just wrote. And then try it.
Just because you have been wrong for the past 55 years and become entrenched in your delusions does not inherently mean that you cannot try to learn, even then learn from your mistakes. But I don't really beat on those topics because I have seen no evidence that you will learn from your mistakes.

Of course, now that Sol is orbiting Terra, we should re-evaluate our assumptions because the facts have obviously changed. I understand the Jenners are leading the charge. But I am more likely to believe millennia of facts rather than your revisionist data and opinion of the past few years.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2021 9:09 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

SIGNYM:
JSF: You seem to resent people knowing more than you.

JSF: possibly revealing perspective of yours, if not interesting. As a conservative living Free in America, I like and enjoy giving the less fortunate a hand, helping out when possible. When I encounter folk who are at a loss for information, I try to help out there too. When I help folk, I often ask if they want me to do it for them, or if they want the explanation for the solution. If they only want the work done by me, then I forego the explanation. For those who want the info, I try to explain at a level I think they can understand, and use in the future.
I can understand that you do not like such an attitude, perhaps you only want to keep the information to yourself, instead of share.
When I find folk who know more than me on a subject, I an eager to learn from them. Sadly, this does not happen much anymore, in personal life or in professional life.
I sometimes look at what you and kiki post, if I think you seem to know about a subject.

But you revel when you can 'splain to the uninformed and demonstrate your "superior" knowledge.
Quote:

JSF: Obviously, this does not apply to tech knowledge with you two. Knowing how to utilize tech and how the tech works are not the same thing, and I am not even sure you understand even that basic concept.
There are a lot of different kinds of "tech" out there, from medicine to statistics to electronics to chemistry to programing.

I'm not claiming to be the master of ALL tech. I know the areas I specialized in and some others as well. But you seem to be lumping ALL "tech" together and claiming vast universal knowledge. To me, nothing shrieks ignorance like lumping different "techs" together.

So, is that what you're doing? Are you claiming to be an expert in everything?

Quote:

SIGNY: BTW ... LEARNING doesn't just mean "reinforcing what you already know", it means advancing into new, possibly challenging and uncomfortable areas, and questioning your knowledge and (occasionally) admitting you were wrong and changing your mind.
Unless you can do that, you're not really learning.

JSF: Yes.
You should try to read what you just wrote. And then try it.
Just because you have been wrong for the past 55 years

On what?
Quote:

and become entrenched in your delusions does not inherently mean that you cannot try to learn, even then learn from your mistakes. But I don't really beat on those topics because I have seen no evidence that you will learn from your mistakes.
I've changed my mind about a lot of things in the past 15 years, on thing like gun control, the role of government, why "efficiency" isn't a good metric, and so on.

What about you? Any new thoughts come into your head in the past few years? Or is it kinda dusty in there?

Quote:

JSF: Of course, now that Sol is orbiting Terra we should re-evaluate our assumptions because the facts have obviously changed. I understand the Jenners are leading the charge. But I am more likely to believe millennia of facts rather than your revisionist data and opinion of the past few years.
I have no idea WTF you're going on about here

You seem overly anxious to whip your dick out for measurement and call people "libtards" even when they're not.

I'm not a libtard. But YOU are a jerk. And I'll show you how in another thread.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, October 13, 2021 9:40 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



JSF doesn't seem to know anything from this millennium.

I'd say it's REALLY dusty in there.

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Thursday, October 14, 2021 5:33 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


In what way do you think efficiency is not a good metric?

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Friday, October 15, 2021 12:54 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
In what way do you think efficiency is not a good metric?



It's a bad metric if you use it as the ONLY metric.

First of all, let's look at what "efficiency" means: It's maximum amount of [something] per [amount of something else].

You need to understand what is being measured for both the numerator (top number) versus the denomintor (divisor, bottom number)

The way things are run today, the numerator and denominator are usually money, or some surrogate of money.
Amount of profit for investment.
Amount of widgets per labor hour.

"Efficiency" is usually only paid attention to FROM THE POV OF THE CAPITALIST, NOT SOCIETY AT LARGE.

So here is an example of "efficiency" creating an inefficient situation:
Generally, the larger an enterprise, the more efficient it becomes. [unless it becomes a completely bureaucratized mess, but that's another story]

It takes just as many accountants, shipping clerks, schedulers, maintenance, stock people, etc to run a business of 10 employees as it does 100. So those "administrative" costs tend to be reduced (per employee) for medium-sized business than for a small one.

Even more importantly, it takes FAR more time, (per part), for one part to be produced than for 1000 parts. That is partly due to division of labor and partly due to automation: making one plank of wood doesn't justify the setup it would take to cut 1000 planks of wood.

It takes just as much time for a truck/plane/ship to go from point "a" to point "b" with one part as it does for 1000 parts.

So companies that can take advantage of mass production will have an advantage over companies that use and produce, items in small numbers.

Think: making one car versus making 100,000.

That's called "economies of scale".

Given that larger enterprises are more "efficient" than smaller ones [can purchase/produce/make more widgets than smaller ones per labor-hour/dollar invested] larger enterprises will tend to dominate production.

That leads to two things:

Concentration of labor in large cities, where employers can gather large number of people into large factories. But large cities are not a "natural" environment for people (long story) and not necessarily sustainable bc they, too, need large imported supplies (water, food) and exports (trash, sewage, pollution) as well as social control. And, when I look at the traffic jams on our LA freeways, there is a tremendous amount of frustration and time and gasoline wasted (inefficiency in society as a whole) ... but these "inefficiency" costs don't show up on the employers' balance sheets, thanks to the narrow definition applied. Cities are BTW inherently fragile.

Supply chain fragility:
Eventually , if a globally-traded system is geared towards greater "efficiency" (maximum widgets/cost) the system pares down to just a few global suppliers with "just in time" inventories, and that creates extremely long and complicated supply chains.

which, as we can see, is unravelling today.
Ports, shipping, and supply chain issues
http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?tid=64593 (At one point there was only ONE factory in Japan that made a specialized plastic for memory chips. when that factory caught on fire, chipmakers were hosed for 6 months).

*****

There is another metric called "robustness" which, while not exactly the opposite of "efficiency" (as currently used) has an opposite effect.

"Robustness" means the resilience of a system to shock or disruption. Robustness would imply that there be multiple stockpiles of surplus inventory; multiple, smaller manufacturers/farmers; and multiple means of transportation. This, of course, means more supplies/materiel AND PEOPLE (per widget) than a highly "efficient" system, but of course withstands shock better than highly "efficient" ones.

The Mormons in Utah have this religious "thing" about storing a year's-worth of food at home. I don't know how many Mormons actually do that (maybe they store a month's-worth at home) but I know the church does that institutionally, so when Covid first came along and the shelves were bare in many places (Just-in-time inventory meets panic-buying) they sailed thru.

That's robustness.

Resilience to natural disaster; and resilience to shipping, production, and communication woes.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 15, 2021 1:04 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So, it occured to me while I was noddling on the whole concept of "government", there is one function that society (or its surrogate, government) MUST provide and that is internal security and organization.

It is impossible to produce sophisticated goods at a high level when everyone is running around "doing their own thing".

If you have a society of completely atomized individuals (or factionalized groups) who have no binding ethics and understanding of the world, you wind up like ... say .... Mexico. Religion used to tie people together, but that seems to have gone the way of the dodo.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 15, 2021 2:23 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


We've outsourced literally everything.

How do you suppose that's going to be done without creating a one world government now?

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Friday, October 15, 2021 3:22 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
We've outsourced literally everything.

How do you suppose that's going to be done without creating a one world government now?

"That"?
Not sure what you're referring to.
You mean, rebuild a robust economy?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 15, 2021 3:50 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
We've outsourced literally everything.

How do you suppose that's going to be done without creating a one world government now?

"That"?
Not sure what you're referring to.
You mean, rebuild a robust economy?



THAT

Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
So, it occured to me while I was noddling on the whole concept of "government", there is one function that society (or its surrogate, government) MUST provide and that is internal security and organization.

It is impossible to produce sophisticated goods at a high level when everyone is running around "doing their own thing".

If you have a society of completely atomized individuals (or factionalized groups) who have no binding ethics and understanding of the world, you wind up like ... say .... Mexico. Religion used to tie people together, but that seems to have gone the way of the dodo.



--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Friday, October 15, 2021 6:22 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh, that.

Well, there are nations what are actively resisting being absorbed into one world government.

China and Russia are the most important; both Xi and Putin are striving mightily to preserve their economic, financial, poltical, military, religious, ethnic and cultural independence.

Russia is the clearest example, since it has made Fortress Russia a priority since 2000 and made all of its development (manufacturing, technical etc) independently.

China's history is more clouded, since it gave up on independent d toevelopment under Deng Xiaoping and decided to follow the Japan/ S Korea model and invite non-Chinese investment in exchange for goods production, starting with the cheap Walmart crap and working their way up to sophisticated technology. But they had a change of heart and policy in 2008 when western demand collapsed due to the great financial crisis. Xi Jingping became party secretary in 2012 and has sought a more independent path. (I don't agree with his "belt and road" plan, it's too ambitious. Also, not a big fan of his internal control, but I don't live there. His focus on being an exporting nation is, I think, misplaced.)

So there two industrially and technologically advanced nations who are charting a different path from one world government, but there are others that, because of isolation from the west, are required to chart a different course: Cuba, Iran, NKorea, Iran, Venezuela, Syria, etc.

Brexit was a voluntary split from the EU. The next two nations that may succeed are Hungary and Poland, bc neither adopted the Euro currency. (Just goes to show that the real leverage lies with finance and the military.)

One world government is a runaway train. It may not split apart on its own, but will probably need external force to break it apart.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 15, 2021 6:49 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


One World Government means we're all Mexico. Or even worse, China or Russia.

There's no scenario where everyone is lifted up to whatever we tell the world our standards are. Everybody falls down to the lowest common denominator.

--------------------------------------------------

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Friday, October 15, 2021 10:34 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

One World Government means we're all Mexico. Or even worse, China or Russia.
No, One World Government is where the tiny elite represented by the Davos Crowd controls the entire world: a monolith.

But as long as there are splits and schisms between power structures, people will be able to find freedom.

Remember how you pointed out that the USSR wouldn't have "voluntarily" abdicated power if not for pressure from the west? With pressure on them from the west, both Xi and Putin have to maintain popular approval. They have to do SOMEthing for their people. For China, it's raising the remaining people out of poverty.

Did you know that China raised 850 million out of extreme poverty in the past 30 years? That seems to be their goal. Not a big fan of their internal control, but the Chinese culture seems all about fitting in and I guess it doesn't grate as hard on them as it would on me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poverty_in_China

Well, One World Government will also have to do SOMEthing for western people ... or die ... under reverse pressure from the Russia/China combine. That's the idea, anyway.

And I think you have an entirely wrong notion of Russia, that it's still stuck in the gray stifling bureaucracy of old. It's a dynamic place where people can create their own future.


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, October 15, 2021 11:10 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

One World Government means we're all Mexico. Or even worse, China or Russia.
No, One World Government is where the tiny elite represented by the Davos Crowd controls the entire world: a monolith.



No shit.

And the rest of us get to live in One World Mexico. Or even worse, One World China or One World Russia.

WTF is your problem today?

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Saturday, October 16, 2021 2:50 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Because One World Government applies to a specific faction (financiers) taking over the world government for maximum profit and control. There are other Big Governments but they don't have the same goals.

Remember how I said that even governments that function well only manage the first two (provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare) but not do so well on the third (secure the blessings of liberty)? How about a government that actually works to make its people less secure, poorer AND less free?

That's One World Government by the Davos crowd.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Saturday, October 16, 2021 9:18 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Yeah. Were talking past each other here. All of your arguments I'm in agreement with.

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