

The observation is that capitalism isn’t any good at efficiently allocating resources
The observation is that capitalism isn’t any good at efficiently allocating resources
They run a large budget deficit each year which Denmark subsidises out of historical obligation, since they subjugated Greenland. Fair enough I say.
Greenland is largely independent on internal policies and have their own laws, but still technically part of Denmark.
This is my laymen’s explanation.
“Slams”. Look at what journalists did to our boy!
Oh don’t get me wrong. The strong adherence to pacifism is laudable. But they have not reckoned with their atrocities committed during and prior world war II. They practically deny them ever happening.
Your whataboutism is not appreciated.
Japan has never really reckoned with its past. They were just pacified.
I judge the country as a whole for this, since they keep electing politicians who continue to do very little to reckon with their past.
I feel a lot could be gained by apologising to the people and nations for the past, and nothing lost, other than nationalistic pride, bring forced into self reflection, and being genuinely sorry on behalf of the country.
People who think they shouldn’t apologise because it wasn’t them personally are stupid, frankly, and standing in the way of reducing tensions.
Will it fix everything in the region? No. Will it take some of the steam out of the war machine? Probably.
Ugh. They’re probably worse than a lot of them.
Abducting extremely young children into their cult. Teaching them to suppress their emotions, telling them to cut all families ties.
Someone ought to order their temples shut down to bring peace and stability to the galaxy world.
And when you’re the US president, they let you do it
DEI is just something they’re using as a dog whistle. It’s always about class first.
She’s rich, so he’s an honourary white
Though, really shows what an absolute wanker JD Vance is, since under his administration is certainly going to be way worse be to of indian decent in his country.
What a shit husband and father.
It’s absolutely wild they expect you to pay taxes when you don’t live there, and I’m pretty sure not widly practiced by other countries.
I find Australia’s travel advice contradictory.
No offence to people living in the US, but I’d say most people in Australia would think many places in the US are not generally as safe as here.
For political reasons (we are the US’ vassals, see $300 bn submarines), we will likely hold out a long time before heightening headline travel advice, but to me some of the advice given does not fall under the category of exercising “normal safety precautions” as is claimed by DFAT:
Violent crime is more common in the United States than in Australia. Gun crime is also prevalent. If you live in the United States, learn and practice active shooter drills.
There is a persistent threat of mass casualty violence and terrorist attacks in the United States. Be alert, particularly in public places and at events.
Practicing active shooter drills isn’t normal. At all.
https://www.smartraveller.gov.au/destinations/americas/united-states-america
I think we know he’ll do the opposite. Him being a Russian asset is practically accepted fact at this point
We need to be moving before technology becomes profitable. This is one of the major downsides of capitalism. We temper it somewhat with government investment and regulation, but buy-in-large, the profit motive is what drives practically all economic questions.
We simply do not have time.
We need to building more energy storage, like yesterday.
It just hasn’t made much financial sense to build it, because fossil fuels were cheap, now we’re slowly getting started.
If the profit motive wasn’t the motive above all else, we could get a whole bunch more done in the fight on climate change.
We can’t wait for capitalism. It’s just not fundamentally aligned with our preservation, it’s aligned with profit motive.
We’re lucky it’s becoming more profitable. But we’re still massively reliant on fossil fuels. It’s way, way, way, way not fast enough.
And yes, capitalism is the problem. If governments weren’t so afraid of being criticised for how they run something we’d bring back more state run organisations and just start building, even if it runs at a “loss”.
Or at the very, very least, we should be directly contracting private companies to build and maintain the infrastructure, but WE own it. Not them.
Conclusion, capitalism isn’t the only economic system we can imagine. We already temper it. We used to even temper it more than we do now (post-world war II in the anglosphere, as an example, until the neo-libs privatised practically everything).
The neo-liberal experiment has been a colossal failure.
Capitalism isn’t the end of history.