BadFish
Huge Member
- Oct 19, 2003
- 18,223
Any chance of a link for your graph?
Or a balance somehere in the middle? Allowing the entreprenneurial and risk takers not to be penalised with spite taxes.
That they are all both "free", and unsustainably falling apart, and will continue to be.
Any chance of a link for your graph?
Angus Deaton, the Nobel-prize winning economist (who also sits on the advisory board of HumanProgress.org), recently reiterated his belief that on the whole the world is getting better – if not, as he accepted, everywhere or for everyone at once. Perhaps that comes as no surprise, but the idea that the world is getting better in regards to poverty is actually a deeply unpopular view.
Ask most people about global poverty, and chances are that they’ll say it is unchanged or getting worse. A survey released late last year found that 92 per cent of Americans believe the share of the world population in extreme poverty has either increased or stayed the same over the last two decades.
Americans aren’t alone in that belief. Across all surveyed countries, an only slightly smaller majority – 87 per cent – believe that extreme poverty has risen or remained an intractable problem.
There are a number of cultural and psychological explanations for the persistence of such pessimism. Bad news makes for good headlines, and tends to dominate media coverage. Psychologically, people tend to idealize the past, and recall dramatic and unusual events more easily than steady long-term trends. They may also use pessimism as a means of virtue signalling[*].
Indeed, of those rare people who realize that extreme poverty has declined, almost all underestimate the extent of that decline. In fact, global poverty has halved over the past 20 years – but only one person in 100 gets it right.
How are you defining poverty? How do you know it is lower under capitalism than under another system? You make some wild claims from nowhere there.
Fact is that Capitalism requires consumerism BUT the planet cannot sustain the present consumption let alone an ever increasing population. Something has to give and I don't think it will be humanity. Fast forward 20/30 years I think nature will have the final say. Humanity either learns to live within it's means and stop consuming and reduce or nature will reduce humans.
Shirley Communism was also a relentless devourer of natural resources, with the means of production very much including raw materials and energy? The Eastern Bloc was a sea of polluting factories, deforestation and coal mines.
The way forward championed by the likes of Green Party, is inherently a rejection of both economic models on the resources side.
There has not been another system used in a global scale to compare it with. How do we now these reductions are faster and will stay lowest with this system? You don't, you are making a wild guess.
It isn't a wild guess.
What kind of system do you imagine would have any chance of producing any prosperity, other than a free market system?
For us to have anything we need, someone somewhere needs to produce it. What other system could provide an incentive for the farmer to grow their crops and milk their cows? Or the machine worker to run their machines? or the electrician to keep the lights on?
A completely new way has to be found. Its not capitalism or communism or democratic socialism. I think its about living in harmony with nature, not taking more than it can provide and producing goods that don't have a negative impact. Its all about taking no more than the planet can give. It requires a completely new mind set to the one we have now. For that to happen though humanity has to learn a lesson and that's going to have to happen so the populations move away from materialism.
The earth’s finite resources necessarily aren’t going to last forever, especially with exponential population growth. So ultimately, you are correct. Unfortunately, it will only when it reaches a crisis, that real actions might be taken.
In the mean time, all the hypocrite consumers such as myself, will continue to drive a car, buy food in wrapping, heat a home when not wearing thick clothing, consume, fly on holidays.
I do recycle almost everything possible above and beyond the BHCC wheelie bin stuff and create mini wildlife havens, but it isn’t enough.
There has not been another system used in a global scale to compare it with. How do we now these reductions are faster and will stay lowest with this system? You don't, you are making a wild guess.
Capitlalism fundamentally is flawed. We have to find a new system. It is based on cpnstant growth, that can not happen as it is physically impossible, it breaks all sorts of physical laws.
Communism has not been tried on a global scale so you can not fairly compare the two. Capitalism wouldn't work in cpuntroes which are isolated from the rest of the world either. I am not saying communism would be better, just that we don't know really.
Plus can you really say capitalism works? In parts of the world people do ok, in huge areas they don't. That is not working in my book.
Good that all is coming along well -I took much longer after both my hip jobs. I notice on the other reply that you advocated a broader approach straddling the parties which might have been better, and yes, on hindsight, that may well have been the case. Or would it? Labour and Tory are now meeting, and by all accounts can not agree, and quite frankly, I could never have envisaged the likes of Rees Mogg, McDonnell Soubry Sturgeon and the DUP to name a few ever coming to an acceptable compromise. It sounds good, but would it have yielded anything?
Hip exercises you say? Tantric marimba? Microbrew pilates?
Africa? All I am saying is that for a system to work it should not have ANY person in poverty.
Africa? All I am saying is that for a system to work it should not have ANY person in poverty.