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Re: Four more years! | |
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by Daryl » Thu Jan 03, 2013 11:05 pm | |
Daryl
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Just released survey results from the EIU.
Eleven criteria including - national wealth, life expectancy, crime rates, weather, family ties and political freedom to what today's newborns can hope to earn in 2030 BEST PLACES TO BE BORN 1 Switzerland 2 Australia 3 Norway 4 Sweden 5 Denmark 6 Singapore 7 New Zealand 8 Netherlands 9 Canada 10 Hong Kong 16 United States 27 Britain 34 Greece 66 India 80 Nigeria |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by JimHacker » Fri Jan 04, 2013 8:30 am | |
JimHacker
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Sorry, just noticed it was thinkstoomuch who said that (and then i think you quoted him). You said pretty much the reverse. Maybe Americans are over-optimistic, or perhaps they are all delusional (perhaps as a result of all that Cold War propaganda I was discussing earlier). As to the socialism and aspirations to wealth thing it really depends on what socialism you're talking about. Socialism as defined by Marx, the modern use of socialism in europe, socialism that the socialists fantasise about, the socialism the anarcho-socialists fantasise about, the socialism which is actually communism or the by communism through state-controlled capitalism version of socialism. And a nation where true, pure capitalism is going on today is Somalia. I keep on pointing this one out to my ultra-libertarian, anarcho-capititalist and anarch-socialist friends. Warlords who succeed (by having more and better guns and better trained men) generally bring stability to their area, improve roads, improve farming conditions (reduce the farmers' chances of getting shot by roving mercenaries), making it more prosperous allowing them more funds to buy more and better guns to bring more stability and expand in an ongoing cycle. Liberterianism at work! Its a sustainable system! You just wouldn't want to live there. Or, alternatively, it isn't liberterianism at all and what you've got is merely a group of highly authoritarian micro-states competing to fill a vacuum and re-establish the monopoly of government! If you can't tell I don't really approve of pure ideologies. They tend to go round and round in circles. I'm more of a pragmatist. But I would be interested to here anything you can come up with about the current politcal status quo in Italy that's good (for the Italians, not just those onlookers with a sense of humour). Last edited by JimHacker on Fri Jan 04, 2013 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Happiness is not having what you want Nor is happiness wanting what you have Happiness is believing that tomorrow you shall have what you want today ..//^ ^\\ (/(_•_)\) .._/''*''\_ .(,,,)^(,,,) |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by Spacekiwi » Fri Jan 04, 2013 6:18 pm | |
Spacekiwi
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Its like the saying: I want to go live in Theory. after all, everything works in Theory.....
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ its not paranoia if its justified... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by Tenshinai » Mon Jan 07, 2013 10:43 pm | |
Tenshinai
Posts: 2893
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That certainly helped screw things up yeah. It gets rather odd when "back in the old days"(well mostly at least) there were lots of people that actually believed that "The russkies are coming to invade us!"... While at that time, i was sitting less than 2 hours away from where USSR kept airborne units specifically active among other things, to be able to invade any of the Nordic countries if the shit hit the fan(or if someone got drunk enough to think it was a magnificent idea). And yet, while the threat here was 100% real, there was no propaganda shouting about how it would happen, and there was very little serious worry. People didn´t run around building shelters or play with guns because of it. USA, where the threat of invasion was just ridiculous, people seriously worried, people even panicked or went nuts over it... So yeah, the propaganda crap really messed USA up badly.
But of course. I generally define it as the rough amalgamation of what the most popular and realistic socialist leaning parties around the world would prefer. Yes, a very flimsy definition, but it usually means you get a rather nice political combination. And there are just about no parties or "true believers" in regards to any theoretical, strictly defined "socialism" anyway.
Mmm, the case can certainly be made either way. Or even both ways at the same time.
Good choice. Pragmatic idealist i think i can call myself, or perhaps an idealistic pragmatic. First you make sure things run well, then you go about making things better, as much as you can.
I´m not a miracle worker you know? Actually, on second thought, there is one very simple answer for Italy. Go back to a national currency. The euro is horribly overvalued for Italy, not as bad as for Greece, but it hurts their economy waaay too much. Aside from that, shredding the mafia influence might be the single biggest difference that could be made. |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by JimHacker » Fri Jan 11, 2013 8:24 pm | |
JimHacker
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I've moved Knick's post here as I said I would. I hope people don't mind me doing this, but as I said before I think it's important that in a mod-lite section of the forums we should try to avoid derailing threads. -------------------------------
Happiness is not having what you want Nor is happiness wanting what you have Happiness is believing that tomorrow you shall have what you want today ..//^ ^\\ (/(_•_)\) .._/''*''\_ .(,,,)^(,,,) |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by KNick » Fri Jan 11, 2013 9:06 pm | |
KNick
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I put that post in the Guns, guns, Guns thread (which I started) because the people cited are trying to use these two incidents in New York as a platform to tighten gun control laws. The fact that neither incident would have been prevented by stricter laws is part of my point. I am sorry that was unclear. When politicians attempt to use incidents to take away the rights of law abiding citizens while ignoring the causes of those incidents, it is shameful. If Mayor Bloomberg was advocating longer prison sentences for a crime where a gun was used and there was a chance that they would actually be enforced, I would have no beef with him. _
Try to take a fisherman's fish and you will be tomorrows bait!!! |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by Daryl » Sat Jan 12, 2013 2:00 am | |
Daryl
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KNick, another way to illustrate your point is to look at road fatalities and speeding. On a good road posted at a low 100kms per hr there will be an accident that kills five drunk teenagers driving at 200kms per hr at 3am. The authorities will then reduce the speed limit to 80kms per hr as it has been proven on that road that speed kills, even though those who died paid no attention to any posted speed and it will have no effect.
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by pokermind » Sat Jan 12, 2013 8:52 am | |
pokermind
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What's the political quote, "Bad examples make for bad laws," or some such. Can't remember who said it. Poker CPO Poker Mind and, Mangy Fur the Smart Alick Spacecat.
"Better to be hung for a hexapuma than a housecat," Com. Pang Yau-pau, ART. |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by JimHacker » Sat Jan 12, 2013 9:24 am | |
JimHacker
Posts: 298
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@Tenshinai
I don't know, perhaps shedding the Berlusconi influence is the biggest practical difference they could make. Italy's corruption problem is very bad: Italy currently wouldn't qualify to join the EU due to its corruption and Berlusconi's influence. @Knick, yes your post was on topic. I anticipated that my response to it and some others however would not. Which is why I pre-emptively (i may have been getting ahead of myself )copied it here, to give context to my off topic response: America does have a crime problem. But can that be solved with more police spending, building more prisons and increasing sentences even more? Something to consider is that, in first world countries, the shorter and more lenient sentences are (and incidentally, the more spent per prisoner) the lower the crime rate. Now it could be argued that instead of cause and effect this is simply effect and cause (ie, naturally lower crime rates due to culture lead to less popular demand for higher sentences, punishment etc) but I think it is a mixture of both. If I might list the 5 widely given reasons for incarceration: punishment, protection of the community, rehabilitation, deterrence and definition (society making a stand and saying 'we define this as wrong'). The USA certainly takes care of the punishment aspect with the longest sentences and lowest quality of life in prisons in the first world. But does this protect the community or deter others from committing crimes? And what about rehabilitation? And what effect does all this have on culture? Long sentences look like a good deterrent against people committing an offence. Unfortunately, they normally aren't. First of all, a very significant number of crimes (esepcially homicides) are committed on the spur of the moment with no forethought whatsoever so deterrence doesn't enter the equation. On the face of it though people should be deterred from committing crimes considered in advance. However, crimnal psychology has pretty well estalished that crimes planned in advance can be placed into two categories: those where the person has on the surface considered being caught but subconciously assumes all along that they're too clever/sneaky/lucky to be caught and those who feel they're in such a hole anyway that they've got nothing to loose. The concept of deterrence does seem to prevent people from committing some crimes (especially fraud) but even then the deterrence effect comes from the thought of loosing their job, going to prison, social judgement etc rather than the length of sentence itself. Protection of the community (ie, putting criminals in prison prevents them from committing other crimes because they are not at large) is more complicated. Obviously a person in prison is not committing crimes against society whilst they are in prison so it works to that extent. But here it crosses over with rehabilitation, as it has been found that generally the longer you imprison someone (beyond a certain point), they more likely they are to commit a crime upon being released. This is especially true when prison conditions are poor as rather than scaring a criminal into reforming it hardens them and submerges them in criminal culture. It will also make it harder to find a job upon release, potentially leading them back to crime whatever their original intent. So while giving a life sentence obviously prevents a person from commting more crimes against society, imposing a harsher sentence (ie 3 years instead of 1) may simply increase the liklihood of reoffending. While a solution to that might be to give everyone who ever commits a crime a life sentence, this would be impractical (let alone immoral) and give rise to 'might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb'. While the chances of rehabilitation ca be harmed by longer sentences, the chances of rehabilitation can be improved spending on programmes such as vocational traning, drug addiction treatment etc. Something the USA seems to loathe to do. Currently 0.75% of the American population is in prison at any one time (or 1.7% of the adult male population). Slightly over 10% of males will be incarcerated in a state or federal penitentiary at some point in their lives (and incidentally, 10% of those will be raped, which means that a minimum of 1% of american males will be raped during their lifetime!). When you combine all this with the difficulty to get a job with a criminal record and the criminalisation of social problems (yes europe has the 'war on drugs too', just not as bad as in the USA) it's no surprise that a criminal subculture has emerged and it's also no surprise that harsh sentences to prisons with poor conditions immerse offenders in that subculture, hardening them and causing that culture to take hold and spread even more. Longer sentences are not the solution to the USA's crime problem. If people really want to move this back to the guns thread, feel free. -------------------------------
Happiness is not having what you want Nor is happiness wanting what you have Happiness is believing that tomorrow you shall have what you want today ..//^ ^\\ (/(_•_)\) .._/''*''\_ .(,,,)^(,,,) |
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Re: Four more years! | |
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by pokermind » Sat Jan 12, 2013 10:07 am | |
pokermind
Posts: 4002
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Ugh,
There is a lot of criminal on criminal crime in prison, murder, assaults, rapes (yep same sex rape), and even internet crime on the public at large. Prison computers should be read only, but NO thanks to liberal courts. Poker CPO Poker Mind and, Mangy Fur the Smart Alick Spacecat.
"Better to be hung for a hexapuma than a housecat," Com. Pang Yau-pau, ART. |
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