United States of Entropy

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So what happened to the great empires and powers of the past? Were they conquered by invaders from beyond their borders or did they decay into moral decadence, bankruptcy, ethnic polarization and economic stagnation and fall at the hand of civil war and revolution from within?

It's funny to bring up the fall of empires and moral decay. In a little over 100 years after converting the Christianity, the Western Roman Empire crumbled. Is that what you're referring to?
 
faith in God above all else, individual initiative, a strong work ethic, personal responsibility, thrift, pride in the goodness of the country and our unique role in the preservation of liberty (American exceptionalism) and a belief in limited government.

The absurdity is that Barack Obama trumpets all of the above all the time (with the exception of "limited government" but that's probably as much because the right has co-opted the term and corned the definition of what constitutes limited government.) If you're going to promote Obama as the harbinger of the end of America as we know it you have to at least concede that he pays at least lip service to the ideals you mention.

My concerns with the state of the country have more to do with the extent to which we have come to be defined and shaped by entertainment. The highest value is "Is it fun" and "Am I being entertained?" And the right-wing media outlets are chief among sinners in this regard. They have perfected the art of news as entertainment. The appeal to the emotions, the framing of the news like an action movie with "good guys" and "bad guys", the heightened drama, the mining of fears, the manipulation--all of it eclipses rational thought about the important issues of our day. To be fair the "left" tries to do it as well, but they are just not as good at it. As a result we have a whole segment of the country--good, decent, and otherwise intelligent folk--who have completely lost touch with reality, at least in the realm of politics.

I am saddened when I hear conservative friends who I otherwise respect parroting the nonsense they are hearing from these "news sources." They need to hold suspect news reports that "resonate" too strongly. News isn't supposed to "resonate", it's supposed to inform.

This is the standard I hold myself to, and I immediately question sources of news that use inflammatory language and strong appeals to emotion, especially when the source is espousing a view I AGREE with.
 
I agree with most of Digitize's excellent post, though I don't believe we always have to be in the sway of such a corrupt system. The structural economic problems are likely just at their beginning. As has been mentioned automation essentially drives people out of work. What happens if once everything that can be automated is? Everyone can't be an engineer whether software or electronic? How many more baristas and shop sales people could we support? Then again even the retail sector isn't doing great, digital sales and all that. Unemployment is going to become a much bigger problem. growth is predicated on new emerging markets but also keeping labour cheap, hence why China is where Apple and Samsung go. But as standards of living go up in China and India, with expectations of better wages and a more 'western' life style, labour won't be so cheap. Where do they go then? Africa? Then maybe after Africa the economies in the West will have stagnated so much we will be ripe to be exploited ourselves with crap labour laws (another reason companies love these countries) and what we would probably formerly describe as third world conditions. I don't see the emerging economies as a solution to the current malaise just the continuation of a tired unjust system.

I don't believe that's exactly how it will play out as we are not on a continuous stream of progress in regards to technology and what not things do happen that slow progress down or stop parts of the world in it's tracks, but I do believe this is the course we are though I have no idea how long it will take.

Lastly what deeply saddens me is that our political discourse is so deeply and childishly stunted. The various forms of media do not see it with their remit to bring up the level of it within the general population, its why web get antagonistic groups like the tea party and even the occupy movement. They are both dumb but they are both expressions of actual issues with the system, they just both lack the knowledge and political intellect to express themselves adequately or see what they should be lashing out at, instead of things like gun control, homosexuals, or on race ( not exactly occupy issues, they are more just dumb with how childishly they have approached most of the issues I actually agree with them on).
 
To be happy, we must admit women and men aren't 'equal'
By Suzanne Venker
Published February 05, 2013
FoxNews.com


A war on men?

Norman Vincent Peale, author of "The Power of Positive Thinking," once wrote these words: “Change your thoughts, and you change your world.”

His statement is highlighted at the beginning of my new book, "How to Choose a Husband and Make Peace with Marriage." Its premise is that if women want to be successful in love, they should reject the cultural script they’ve been sold and adopt a whole new view of men and marriage.

As products of divorce, the modern generation has few role models for lasting love. That alone is a problem. But young women have an added burden: they’ve been raised in a society that eschews marriage. They’ve been taught instead to honor sex, singlehood and female empowerment.

Consider this statement by Rebecca Traister in Marie Claire: “The world as we’ve known it for a very long time—one in which a woman’s value was tied to her role as a wife—is ending, right in front of us. It is now standard for a woman to spend years on her own, learning, working, earning, socializing, having sex, and yes, having babies in the manner she—and she alone—sees fit. We are living through the invention of independent female adulthood.”

This message is not an anomaly; the idea that women don’t need men or marriage is palpable. It began in earnest more than forty years ago, with the modern feminist movement. Feminists assured women their efforts would result in more satisfying marriages, but the result is something else altogether. It looks something like this:

1. Women postpone marriage indefinitely and move in and out of intense romantic relationships, or even live with their boyfriends for years at a time. Eventually, their biological clocks start ticking and many decide they better hurry up and get married to provide a stable home for their yet-to-be-born children. Trouble is, their boyfriend’s not willing to commit.

2. Marriage becomes a competitive sport. The complementary nature of marriage—in which two people work together, as equals, toward the same goal but with an appreciation for the qualities each gender brings to the table—has been obliterated. Today, husbands and wives are locked in a battle about whom does more on the home front and how they’re going to get everything done. That’s not a marriage. That’s war.
It’s time to say what no one else will: Feminism didn’t result in equality between the sexes – it resulted in mass confusion. Today, men and women have no idea who’s supposed to do what.

Prior to the 1970s, people viewed gender roles as as equally valuable. Many would argue women had the better end of the deal! It’s hard to claim women were oppressed in a nation in which men were expected to stand up when a lady enters the room or to lay down their lives to spare women life. When the Titanic went down in 1912, its sinking took 1,450 lives. Only 103 were women. One-hundred three.

Compare that with last year’s wrecked cruise line, the Costa Concordia. It resulted in fewer deaths, but there was another significant difference. “There was no ‘women and children first’ policy. There were big men, crew members, pushing their way past us to get into the lifeboats. It was disgusting,” said passenger Sandra Rogers, 62.

The captain of the ship agrees. In USA Today, Francesco Schettino was asked about his New Year’s resolution. He responded, “Bone up on the parts about ‘women and children first’ and ‘the captain goes down with his ship.’”

You see, the problem with equality is that it implies two things are interchangeable – meaning one thing can be substituted for the other with no ramifications. That is what feminists would have us believe, and anyone who contradicts this dogma is branded sexist.

But the truth must be heard. Being equal in worth, or value, is not the same as being identical, interchangeable beings. Men and women may be capable of doing many of the same things, but that doesn’t mean they want to. That we don’t have more female CEOs or stay-at-home dads proves this in spades.

Unless, of course, you’re beholden to feminism. In that case, you’ll believe the above is evidence of discrimination. You’ll believe what feminists taught you to believe: that gender is a social construct.

Those of us with children know better. We know little girls love their dolls and boys just want to kick that ball. This doesn’t mean men can’t take care of babies or women can’t play sports. It just means each gender has its own energy that flows in a specific direction. For God’s sake, let it flow.

The battle of the sexes is over. And guess what? No one won. Why not try something else on for size? Like this: men and women are equal, but different. They’ve each been blessed with amazing and unique qualities that they bring to the table. Isn’t it time we stopped fussing about who brought what and simply enjoy the feast?


Read more: To be happy, we must admit women and men aren't 'equal' | Fox News

For the sake of laughs, I just wanted to post this:

Allison Hope: Fox News Doesn't Know Equality When It Looks It in the Face

Nice research, FNC!
 
Another potential structural issue that seems somewhat more likely to exist to me is globalization. I hesitate to call this an issue, honestly, because I tend to be fairly staunchly pro-free trade. Globalization has actually wrought enormous equality along with growth around the world. The rich have gotten richer, the developing world has actually become closer to the developing world (in past years, that word tended to be much more of a euphemism for "third world" than anything), and the middle and lower-middle classes in the developed world have gotten poorer. So what we see in the US is more inequality, and more economic stagnation for significant swathes of people, but what has happened around the world is somewhat different. For more than half a millennium, European peoples more or less oppressed what is now (for the most part) the developing world, and in the past half century, that has been largely removed. Ironically, Western ideas and believes penetrate the developing world more strongly than they did in colonial days, to an extent, as the developing world plays the game of capitalism to catch up to the West. Perhaps that's a major structural issue in the United States. But there's no inherent reason why Americans deserve jobs and development and people in the developing world don't. I like globalization. Theoretically, in the very long run, things should equal out. The lump of labor fallacy (there are x number of jobs and the world would be better off if there was less competition for them) is generally absurd, and, once the developing world is more developed, international demand should be the source of growth that pulls the United States out of our current economic issues. But that's potentially quite a long distance away.
I think this is a very important point to make. All of these comparisons between the current job market and, say, Ronald Reagan's job market are comparisons that act as if economies are happening in a vacuum. The impact of the global economy cannot be understated.

The ideal American economy is one where US companies are competing against each other to sell to both the US and the world. There is no competition coming from companies outside the US in this scenario. It's a massive market where competition serves the interests of American businesses only. The closest we came to this ideal was in the post-World War II era, when the rest of the world was rebuilding and the US was thriving off of that. I'm not sure we're ever going to see a comparable situation moving forward, which makes the pining for the good old days all the more bizarre to me.

Globalization's impact on the American economy cannot be understated.
 
As has been mentioned automation essentially drives people out of work. What happens if once everything that can be automated is? Everyone can't be an engineer whether software or electronic? How many more baristas and shop sales people could we support? Then again even the retail sector isn't doing great, digital sales and all that. Unemployment is going to become a much bigger problem.

Exactly. A lot of customers who come into the bookstore I work at often comment on how happy they are that a bookstore still exists in the area. So many of the big chains have been closing down partially or entirely. Ours is a small chain strictly relegated to the Upper Midwestern states, and so far we seem to be doing okay. Knock on wood that continues.

I have much respect for technology, and certainly support using it to help make our world better and make things easier and all that good stuff. It obviously does provide benefits to society at large, and besides that, progress in the way we do things in business and in life in general is inevitable.

But I also do worry sometimes about when technology does replace human activity. For example, so many kids today use technology to do math, because that's easier than actually learning how to do it in their minds. I should know, I'm among those who rely on calculators and such. If all our technology failed us in that regard and we have people who can barely add up numbers on their hands, what then?

No matter how up to date or brilliant or whatever some piece of technology is, it's still likely to fail temporarily or permanently. In those cases, if we've relied too much on it to help us and save us, and haven't worked to strengthen our own mindpower as a result...then what? We're going to be in a bit of trouble.
 
Contra Digitize (though I agree with much in that post), I don't think deep automation is a weak or second-order phenomenon. I think it is the elephant in the room. It will shake society and civilisation as presently constituted, to their very bones. The simple fact is that 'knowledge industries' can only ever be the basis for a tiny minority of the livelihoods needed to sustain something resembling mass employment. And that furthermore, a great many people have no aptitude for such careers. Where then shall they find dignity? Serious question.

And that even more furthermore, there is no reason why the high hanging fruit won't fall too. Surgery could be entirely automated. So could legal practice. Given time, and maybe not even all that much. Creative industries I'm more sceptical of the claims for.

Some people do think about this stuff, I read occasionally about pie-in-the-sky notions of a Guaranteed Basic Income, and indeed of things like Digitize noted, spreading ownership and equity far more widely. You'd have to think that these ideas are radically at odds with the quasi-feudal society we are presently on the road to becoming.

All this shadowboxing about republican virtue and morality and self reliance is like the first birds scooting inland ahead of a storm front. You want self reliance? Give everyone a couple of acres, give the game away, and become the nation of smallholding subsistence farmers you were at your founding.
 
No, INDY. I meant you never once blamed the decreasing marriage rate in America on the poor economy. Copy and pasting those numbers was totally pointless, and it took what I said out of context.

You are now heading toward your usual tricks of playing victim and refusing to participate in a debate..

Only because I thought it was a given and obvious. I can't mention every cause and every symptom plus the usual qualifiers about generalizations, exceptions, etc. Of course people are putting off marriage to pay tuition bills, etc, etc. But marriage clearly is not viewed the same manner that it was 2 or 3 generations ago either.

But the main point about marriage I was making is about the incentives government programs have put in place that actually discourage it in lower income groups. It doesn't matter if it's solar panels or out-of-wedlock children, if you subsidize it you will get more of it. That's not heartless conservatism that's economics 101.

I thought this would be a good chance to discuss the future of America, but I was wrong

I'm kinda a one man army with very little spare time dealing with very complex issues so I'm gonna:

1) Spend my time arguing points others aren't
2) Have some fun doing it
 
Marriage today is better than it has ever been.

People are doing it for the right reasons as or becomes more and more a partnership of equals.

Also, you can't best your wife and rape her anymore. Plus, she can earn a living with or without you.
 
It's been awhile since I've written a long FYM post, so... here we go.

I appreciate your post but its length makes it kinda hard to respond so I'll just comment on a few of your thoughts.

I tend to believe that the government can't do much to affect structural crises, aside from long-term investment in education and whatnot
What if government policy is a structural impediment? Our corporate tax structure, over-regulation and inefficient labor unions all make us less competitive on the global stage. What if Obamacare and the higher taxes and mandates really is the job killer the GOP has been calling it?

The subprime mortgage needn't happen, but it did,

The fact that you describe it as a "bubble" tells me you understand the housing market was artificially pumped up, by both parties. Interest rates at historic lows (they still are but they shouldn't be), government guarantees of mortgages and their derivative that were never going to be paid off. No, the subprime fiasco had to happen after the government got involved with the Community Reinvestment Act.

But the economy still suffers, growing less than it structurally should... or does it? If we assume that the US economy is still cyclically dragging behind, then there are a few (not mutually exclusive) considerations.
You are quite right to talk about cyclical downturns and cycles but if there has always been a truism it is that the deeper the recession the stronger the recovery. It was true in the 40's after the Depression and it was true after the recession in the early 80's. So I'll ask, though it would have been more painful in 2009 and 2010 would we be better off today, would the economy truly be in a recovery, if Barack Obama had not followed his policies of massive spending through stimulus, increased baseline government spending and QE monetary policies? Tarp whatever you think about it predates Obama so I don't buy for a moment that Obama saved us from a depression. Officially the recession was over 6 months into his term yet the recovery barely has a pulse.The workforce participation rate is lower than his first day in office. The whole thing seems to teter on government spending, there is no true private sector recovery.

If there are other factors involved that didn't exist in the 40's and 80's like globalization and our smaller manufacturing base (which are factors no doubt about it) then how is amnesty for 12 million or more largely low-skill workers a boon for our 2013 economy? A boon for Democratic voter roles sure...

Is the deficit an issue? I'm not really sure. If the economy is in a cyclical downturn, then inflation really shouldn't be an issue of money creation, because newly printed money should be matched by new production in real term.
The money supply is one of the factors I am comparing from Obama's first day in office to now and again in 4 years I guess. You tell me if a 27% increase is warranted? It's doubled the price of gold from his first day in office if that tells you anything.

U.S. money supply, M2, in billions, not seasonally adj. (current = Dec '12)
Beg. of 1st Term
$8,249.3
Beg. of 2nd Term
$10,475.6
% change
27.0%

our new structural norm, which is much worse than it used to be, and can't really be affected by the government or... anything, really.

We weren't told about "a new structural norm" during the election speeches and debates. When did this happen? When did European-like dismal GDP growth and chronic unemployment become our new norm? I missed that.

And on top of that, there are more minor structural issues, such as demographic issues in the United States, Europe, and Japan. INDY seems to have a propensity to attribute this to some sort of moral failure. I attribute it more to a lessened sense of reliance on children combined with a stronger need to be educated into ones thirties to be able to pay for a stable household. I'm not sure what to do about that. Immigration is probably a good idea, and it's the best that I can think of, but the issue of not being able to start a household until parents are in their thirties is... formidable. This appears to be one of the larger long-term deficit issues. Deficit spending to deal with cyclical crises doesn't bother me very much, but demographics could be an issue that is much deeper than the deficit, and just affects the deficit in a very negative way.
I can't help where people take a thread and what they wish to ask me about but I never said lower birthrates was solely a moral issue. Education, wealth, urban rather than rural life, a higher survival rate of children all contribute to the birthrate... but so does secularism. Religious people have more children than non-religious people. Europe, Russia and Japan have negative birthrates. Poorer Catholic and Muslim countries have babies. So does America but we're slowing down too.

You may think this is a good thing but Western Civilization has built up these huge welfare states with their wealth that are actually just Ponzi schemes requiring a growing population to maintain and fund. Hence the open borders of Europe and America -- culture be damned.

Religion... yawn. Peoples' morals don't come with it. Societies' morals have a fairly strong positive correlation between progressiveness and economic activity, regardless of religion.

Explain why Israel prospers while Arab states with more natural resources live under oppression. How a mountain range between Haiti and the Dominican Republic separates a thriving country from a 3rd world country. Why Mexicans risk life to get to Texas but Texans don't leave everything to sneak into Mexico. Who the Berlin Wall was meant to contain.

No, you have it backwards, strong economies don't produce values -- values produce strong economies. Liberal, free societies don't produce values -- values produce free, liberal societies.
 
Marriage today is better than it has ever been.

People are doing it for the right reasons as or becomes more and more a partnership of equals.

Also, you can't best your wife and rape her anymore. Plus, she can earn a living with or without you.

Boy!, do you have to leave children out of the equation and believe marriage is primarily about the emotional health and needs of adults to come up with that.
 
What if government policy is a structural impediment? Our corporate tax structure, over-regulation and inefficient labor unions all make us less competitive on the global stage. What if Obamacare and the higher taxes and mandates really is the job killer the GOP has been calling it?
The reason companies leave the US is because they employ work forces who get paid way less, is it not? Is your solution to the unemployment rate creating more jobs with wages that people cannot live on? Honest question, because this post seems to avoid a tougher question.
 
And I haven't seen one argument in here that actually ties "values" to the economy. And I would argue that donating money to religious organizations so that they can fund bigger buildings and buses to march on Washington against abortion to be very fiscally irresponsible behavior.
 
Explain why Israel prospers while Arab states with more natural resources live under oppression. How a mountain range between Haiti and the Dominican Republic separates a thriving country from a 3rd world country. Why Mexicans risk life to get to Texas but Texans don't leave everything to sneak into Mexico. Who the Berlin Wall was meant to contain.

Please elaborate on how religion ties into all of this. I'm dying to hear it
 
Boy!, do you have to leave children out of the equation and believe marriage is primarily about the emotional health and needs of adults to come up with that.


I don't even know what you are talking about. Are you calling me Boy?

Are you remotely concerned about the 1000 gun deaths since Newtown?
 
INDY, I am not sure if I should respond to your most recent post, but this...

Explain why Israel prospers while Arab states with more natural resources live under oppression. How a mountain range between Haiti and the Dominican Republic separates a thriving country from a 3rd world country. Why Mexicans risk life to get to Texas but Texans don't leave everything to sneak into Mexico. Who the Berlin Wall was meant to contain.

No, you have it backwards, strong economies don't produce values -- values produce strong economies. Liberal, free societies don't produce values -- values produce free, liberal societies.

Holy crap. Talk about bigotry and severe superiority complex.

BTW, Mexicans are primarily Catholic - is that an inferior religion in your eyes? And what about the Persian Gulf states? They have high GDPs and successful economies, and - shock! - they're Muslim countries. India's economy is developing quickly and they're mostly Hindu. And let's not forget Japan.

I'm just disgusted, and I feel really sorry for you having such narrow, heartless views.
 
Boy!, do you have to leave children out of the equation and believe marriage is primarily about the emotional health and needs of adults to come up with that.

So, it is OK for a man and a woman to be incompatible and be miserable together, and raise children is such a household? And you wonder why divorce is common these days.
 
Only because I thought it was a given and obvious. I can't mention every cause and every symptom plus the usual qualifiers about generalizations, exceptions, etc. Of course people are putting off marriage to pay tuition bills, etc, etc. But marriage clearly is not viewed the same manner that it was 2 or 3 generations ago either.

But the main point about marriage I was making is about the incentives government programs have put in place that actually discourage it in lower income groups. It doesn't matter if it's solar panels or out-of-wedlock children, if you subsidize it you will get more of it. That's not heartless conservatism that's economics 101.

Have you actually done any extensive research into why marriage is less common these days? If you did, you'd find it is because many don't want to deal with the possibility of divorce and all it's heartaches and headaches.

You seem to get your beliefs based on one or two angles, and gear them toward every issue in this country. The welfare system is not the sole reason why America is not the way it was in the 1950s, nor is the increasing secularism. You make it sound so black and white when there is so much gray going on.
 
I appreciate your post but its length makes it kinda hard to respond so I'll just comment on a few of your thoughts.

Thanks for your thoughtful response, and welcome back to FYM. :)

What if government policy is a structural impediment? Our corporate tax structure, over-regulation and inefficient labor unions all make us less competitive on the global stage. What if Obamacare and the higher taxes and mandates really is the job killer the GOP has been calling it?

I was thinking about this issue, and I should have talked about. Whether this fits into the structural category or the cyclical category is debatable, but that doesn't really matter too much. Regarding labor unions... I'm most sympathetic with your beliefs there, and I'm uncertain of my own beliefs on the matter, so I'm not going to get into a debate about them. Regarding the government... you are right, in a sense. Higher taxes, higher regulation, more demands on businesses, all things equal, all have negative impacts on job creation. What also has a negative impact on job creation? Lack of demand. Corporations create jobs to satisfy demand, and if there is cyclically depressed demand, job creation isn't helped either. So there's a careful balancing act to play. I tend to not ideologically believe that there is a correct level of taxes or regulation; rather, that taxes and regulation should be lower, and spending should be higher, when the economy is struggling. The Affordable Care Act brings a new long-term semi-structural, semi-cyclical dynamic into play. Inequality of opportunity is sorely lacking in this country, and it will probably help with that. Like I said, all things equal, mandates on businesses and whatnot hurt job creation. But so does inequality. A society of better equality of opportunity is one that can create new ideas, new products, new demand, and new opportunities that create new jobs. So, like I said, it's a balancing act.

The fact that you describe it as a "bubble" tells me you understand the housing market was artificially pumped up, by both parties. Interest rates at historic lows (they still are but they shouldn't be), government guarantees of mortgages and their derivative that were never going to be paid off. No, the subprime fiasco had to happen after the government got involved with the Community Reinvestment Act.

I don't disagree with your basic ideas here. The government (primarily Democrats, though Republicans deserve some blame, and Alan Greenspan deserves a ton) made policies that were major causes for the subprime community (although I think that both the business community and the American populace deserve blame, as well). Interest rates being low... that's something that I disagree with in strong times, and agree with in not-so-strong times. Now is clearly the latter, although I do worry about the Fed's promises to keep rates this low into 2015. But you and I probably fully agree that expansionary monetary policy and acts like the Community Reinvestment Act that are in effect when the economy is booming can have... rather negative consequences.

You are quite right to talk about cyclical downturns and cycles but if there has always been a truism it is that the deeper the recession the stronger the recovery. It was true in the 40's after the Depression and it was true after the recession in the early 80's. So I'll ask, though it would have been more painful in 2009 and 2010 would we be better off today, would the economy truly be in a recovery, if Barack Obama had not followed his policies of massive spending through stimulus, increased baseline government spending and QE monetary policies? Tarp whatever you think about it predates Obama so I don't buy for a moment that Obama saved us from a depression. Officially the recession was over 6 months into his term yet the recovery barely has a pulse.The workforce participation rate is lower than his first day in office. The whole thing seems to teter on government spending, there is no true private sector recovery.

If there are other factors involved that didn't exist in the 40's and 80's like globalization and our smaller manufacturing base (which are factors no doubt about it) then how is amnesty for 12 million or more largely low-skill workers a boon for our 2013 economy? A boon for Democratic voter roles sure...

It's silly to doubt that, all things equal, stimulus creates jobs and economic activity in a recession. Would we have gone into absolute depression without it? Maybe not, but it's hard to say. However, stimulus is historically quite useful for battling down cyclical components of recessions, when recession is more or less happening because money vanished. The recovery does not teter on government spending, anymore at least. Government employment is down as of late. Government stimulus helped create private sector employment, yeah, but stimulus isn't happening anymore. The employment-population ratio (probably the best measure of employment) is down from January 2009, but the falls in that number were more or less before the stimulus. The stimulus stopped the fall. Did it inspire a huge rebound? No. But I've seen no evidence that stimulus is the cause of any structural woes, and I can think of nothing in Economics that would make that the case (Ricardian Equivalence would say that it's useless, but that's empirically denied). The fact that the economy isn't rebounding as quickly as it did after previous cyclical downturns points to structural issues more or less out of the government's hands.

Amnesty is a rather conservative economic position, Indy. It is economically much the same as free trade; anything else is protectionism. Its long-term impacts (a new base of workers to support our aging population, a new group of people hungry for success who can grow our economy, cheaper labor allows company to invest more in products that take more expensive labor to engineer and develop) are probably very good, and similar to the effects of free trade. I don't see you rushing out for protectionism, and for good reason. Lump of labor is a fallacy.

The money supply is one of the factors I am comparing from Obama's first day in office to now and again in 4 years I guess. You tell me if a 27% increase is warranted? It's doubled the price of gold from his first day in office if that tells you anything.

It's absolutely warranted, because of the amount of money that disappeared with the subprime crash. The price of gold increasing so much is pretty much meaningless. I've seen people such as Ron Paul try to link increases in the price of gold to some massive devaluation of the dollar as of late, but that's ridiculous, because gold has increased at a far faster rate than CPI and GDP Deflator. If the value of our money is decreasing so much, why is everything (expect for oil and gold) not seeing its price soar? Gold is so expensive probably because paranoid inflation hawks are investing in it enough to create a gold bubble.

We weren't told about "a new structural norm" during the election speeches and debates. When did this happen? When did European-like dismal GDP growth and chronic unemployment become our new norm? I missed that.

I addressed this at length in my post, and I'm not entirely sure what you're asking. I'm suggesting that a new structural norm may be the case, and, furthermore, that the government probably can't do much to affect it.

I can't help where people take a thread and what they wish to ask me about but I never said lower birthrates was solely a moral issue. Education, wealth, urban rather than rural life, a higher survival rate of children all contribute to the birthrate... but so does secularism. Religious people have more children than non-religious people. Europe, Russia and Japan have negative birthrates. Poorer Catholic and Muslim countries have babies. So does America but we're slowing down too.

You may think this is a good thing but Western Civilization has built up these huge welfare states with their wealth that are actually just Ponzi schemes requiring a growing population to maintain and fund. Hence the open borders of Europe and America -- culture be damned.

You are very right on your last paragraph. Immigration is a sort of solution, but the welfare states for retirees absolutely have to be cut down. In my mind, the best way to do this is by raising the retirement age... significantly. But I'm 19 years old, so maybe that's a bit of agism coming out. One concern that I have, that reaches far beyond a debate about government, is that lifespan may be rising, but I'm not entirely sure that years of productive life are rising. In other words, if people now live to 85 instead of 75, but can still only work until they're 65, and will require a lot of expensive medical care for the last ten years of their lives... that's a rather huge structural problem that I don't know how to solve. Even if secularism is contributing to declining birthrates, there are many other economic factors that are absolutely contributing too, and those aren't really possible to turn around.

Explain why Israel prospers while Arab states with more natural resources live under oppression. How a mountain range between Haiti and the Dominican Republic separates a thriving country from a 3rd world country. Why Mexicans risk life to get to Texas but Texans don't leave everything to sneak into Mexico. Who the Berlin Wall was meant to contain.

No, you have it backwards, strong economies don't produce values -- values produce strong economies. Liberal, free societies don't produce values -- values produce free, liberal societies.

It goes in both directions. Obviously, a government that values liberal democracy and generally free markets over theocracy, fascism, communism, or whatever, is going to produce a stronger economy (and a society that I would much rather live in) than a government that values autocracy. I am more interested in why societies adopt certain beliefs. I hope we are beyond Social Darwinism here... you are probably smart enough to believe that there is not some sort of gene in non-white peoples that makes them inherently inferior to white people. So where are we left?

There are tons of empirical examples of economic situations affections societies' outlooks and values. For example, Glasnost. The Soviet Union was obviously struggling before Glasnost, but commercial openness to the West suddenly wrought more political change to the USSR than any politician could have. Or take post-WWI Germany. The Entente caused economic disaster in Germany, and... surprise! Resentment grew in Germany, and resulted in one of the worst governments ever to exist! That's a very common theme in places economically hurt by the West... a prime example of which is the Middle East. Identical religions manage to create wildly different value systems through the ages. Again, compare Europe today versus Europe in 900 CE, or the Middle East today with the Middle East in 900 CE.
 
INDY, I am not sure if I should respond to your most recent post, but this...

Holy crap. Talk about bigotry and severe superiority complex.

Whoa, I hit a nerve didn't I? Must have said one of your buzzwords.

Where is the bigotry in contrasting E German culture with W German culture? Where is the bigotry in noting that American Hispanics don't try to become Mexican citizens but Mexican Hispanics will risk their life to become an American? Forget about economics are you telling me there is no difference between the culture of Israel and its neighbors regarding personal freedom, religious tolerance, the justice system, the arts, the value of life or intellectual curiosity?

This isn't about race its about culture. Blacks can have good values, Mongolians can have good values. Whites can have terrible values and many have and do. It's about culture and behavior. Is culture determined by values or is culture determined by economic conditions and politics.

Question. Generally speaking, are American values superior to most other cultures? If no, is that because you believe all cultures are relatively equal? If yes, what is wrong with believing that and sharing those values with others or passing them on to future generations.
BTW, Mexicans are primarily Catholic - is that an inferior religion in your eyes?
No. This isn't about theology per say either it's about values. Atheists can have good values. Muslims can have good values. Christians can have terrible values but America is great because of the values it has stood for and most Americans have tried to live by all these years. They are not exclusive but neither are they permanent. And they have largely been influenced by Judeo-Christian values and you'd have to be a college professor or ignorant of history think otherwise. In God We Trust is the national motto for a reason.

And what about the Persian Gulf states? They have high GDPs and successful economies, and - shock! - they're Muslim countries.

Quick poll, does anybody agree with this statement?

I don't in any manner. From Northern Africa to the Persian Gulf the Arab States are a economic mess and a societal backwaters. High GDPs? Who? Successful economies? Which of these monarchs, despots, kleptocrats or theocracies are you deeming a "successful economy"?

Yes, and they are Muslims. I have no problem with Islam or its followers, I do have a problem with the values inherent in theocracies and Sharia Law as interpreted by Islamists. Do you see those values as equal to American values? Compatible with Western democracy, individual liberty or equality before the law?

India's economy is developing quickly and they're mostly Hindu. And let's not forget Japan.

Capitalism :up:

I'm just disgusted, and I feel really sorry for you having such narrow, heartless views.

I'm not worried about "will it hurt anyone's feelings?", I am only worried about "Is it true?"

Is it true that some values are better than others?

Is it true Western values historically been derived to a large part from the Bible?

Is it true that values determine culture and economic prosperity or is it the other way around?

Is it true America is prosperous because of our values or is it because of slavery, killing off the Indian tribes, imperialism, greed and our exploitation of 3rd world countries?

Is it true disco still sucks? (Just seeing if anyone made it to the end)
 
And they have largely been influenced by Judeo-Christian values and you'd have to be a college professor or ignorant of history think otherwise. In God We Trust is the national motto for a reason.

Your mistrust of educational institutions betrays your preference for horseshit over facts. When unbiased facts don't give you the answers you wish were true, you decide it must be the schools problem and not yours. It's a little pathetic, if I'm being completely honest

And what's the reason for your national motto? Please share with us. Include the religious leanings of your founding fathers
 
Is it true Western values historically been derived to a large part from the Bible?

no. Unless you're only picking and choosing certain values that fit with your bible's values. If the values in the bible were the basis for American society, it would be a shithole indeed.

What are Judeo-Christian values exactly? Can you list some for us? I wonder which ones you'll leave out.
And why combine Jewish and Christian values? Are they the same thing? They're far from the same holy books. Do you know when that phrase came into existence? You might as well call them Pagan-Christian values. It would make a lot more sense, but giving credit to a non-Abrahamic culture wouldn't fit your world view and make your team feel less important and icky

Is it true that some values are better than others?

Yes. But do you really think your xenophobic, homophobic, anti-intellectual values are good? I think they're shit. And you keep talking about "American Values". What makes you think you're representative of American values?
 
INDY, when you mentioned those countries initially, it sounded prejudiced to me. Even other posters are voicing that sentiment. You also seem to be backtracking on what you said and acting like I read something wrong or read a "buzzword".

Cute. :rolleyes:

The Persian Gulf countries have very good economies and even some of the highest GDP per capita in the world. Qatar ranks first, Kuwait is at 16th and the United Arab Emirates rank 13th. Even Brunei in Southeast Asia, which primarily Muslim, ranks 11th.

Don't believe me? https://www.cia.gov/library/publica...ok/rankorder/2004rank.html?countryName=United Arab Emirates&countryCode=ae&regionCode=mde&rank=13#ae

Also, many Europeans are relocating to Dubai and Qatar because of the opportunities there. Yes, those places have human rights abuses, their economies are based on oil, and there's not a lot of freedom and their governments are theocratic, but it is just inaccurate to say:

...to the Persian Gulf the Arab States are a economic mess

Furthermore...

Compatible with Western democracy, individual liberty or equality before the law?

I may be changing the subject, but I can't ignore this. You value the above so much, yet you don't believe in same-sex marriage, which is part on individual liberty and equality before the law. So, you are completely - and openly - contradicting yourself.
 
Yes. In God We Trust....only took nearly 200 years for America to realize what the Founders wanted right? (And only took nearly half century after to put it on our coins first).

Take the treaty of tripoli "the gov of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion" and signed by George Washington

Please stop trying to rewrite history. A majority of the founders appeared to be deists and not Christian. And had atheism been a term then, it's fair to say a few would have adapted it.

The original constitution had one reference to religion and it was "no religious test shall be required".

All this under god stuff was adapted by congress many, many years later (1954) and its primary reason was to combat the fear of communism
 
Indy said:
Question. Generally speaking, are American values superior to most other cultures? If no, is that because you believe all cultures are relatively equal?

No and no. Not all cultures are equal. And not all of them worship money.

Capitalism :up:

I am a capitalist too. Truly. But there are different types of capitalism.
Generally speaking here...I don't think those countries are unabashed soulless consumers and capitalists (like the U.S. has become) just yet. I don't know but perhaps they are more empathetic cultures. I am unsure. I do know they still care about the elderly and prioritize family and care about things such as integrity and morality and helping their fellow man...while the US is largely becoming more and more a superficial materialistic society. I am not religious but it is no secret that there is a large movement away from those kinds of values. I am talking more about the Golden Rule, generically, than any specific Christian value (although that is one). Maybe that's a discussion unto itself.

So, I think you are wrong in your evaluations of our current "values".
You keep talking about these Biblical Western values as if they still apply.
We would do better to emulate some of those older values, as long as they promote true equality and a separation of church and state. It's just too hard to keep the extremists in line.

Again, I am not religious and haven't been in MOONS but I believe in many of those values still. And I do not see them reflected in much of our society.

Is it true America is prosperous...

Not any longer. Wasn't that the point of this entire thread? "America" is the vast majority of us. We aren't that prosperous. "America" as the military industrial complex? Or the Banking/Corporate leviathan? We're doing great!

Hope I didn't jump into a conversation and fail to grasp the context.
It is an interesting discussion to have.
 
Jesus Jumping Jehosapha there is some serious horseshit going on in this thread. The teachings of Christianity are 100% opposed to a phenomenon like capitalism in its modern form. American civilisation is a hybrid with a little bit of protestant Christianity, a little bit of Enlightenment self-improvement, a little bit of plain old gold-digging, a dash of romance... it's no one single thing.

FUCK!
 
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