Test19s
Test19s t1_jeg7o9c wrote
Reply to comment by Throwaway08080909070 in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
Which is why the current skepticism of trade scares me, and why bad actors like Trump, Putin, and Xi need to be fought.
Test19s t1_jeg76p6 wrote
Reply to comment by Throwaway08080909070 in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
And unfortunately such a breakdown in global trade would likely reward (relatively speaking) those nations that are a) xenophobic and b) already well-off.
Test19s t1_jeg65h4 wrote
Reply to comment by Throwaway08080909070 in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
Yeah. Regions are interdependent. But still, most of Asia and much of Africa and Native America have been able to sustain great civilizations more or less independent of Western aid and have much more fresh water and agricultural potential than the Arab world does.
Test19s t1_jeg21zd wrote
Reply to comment by 2000feetup in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
African fertility is declining, though, and Russia, Canada, and northern China have mind-boggling amounts of land and resources available. World population as a whole is expected to stabilize this century without catastrophic mass death, which is a good thing unless the growing African (and Latin American and to an extent South Asian) populations are completely untrainable.
Test19s t1_jefntiu wrote
Reply to comment by 2000feetup in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
Which is why I welcome the birth rate collapse in the West and East Asia. Unless ethnic groups are fundamentally unequal, those populations bloodlessly shrinking means more land, water, resources, and employment opportunities for the rest.
Test19s t1_jefncsg wrote
Reply to comment by Throwaway08080909070 in Tunisia to cut off public water supplies overnight due to drought by Throwaway08080909070
Humanity has two settings:
Massive, likely unsustainable population growth
Disorderly, also likely unsustainable population decline (at best, due to an unplanned baby bust as we’re seeing across East Asia and to an extent Europe, and at worst due to famine or war)
Test19s t1_jeat7a9 wrote
Reply to comment by Fenix42 in It's becoming increasingly clear that fintech has a fraud problem by marketrent
Working age populations in developed western countries are historically low when compared to the amount of elders they must sustain, and the ratios may be even worse in developed Asia. Furthermore, lately a lot of developing countries have been struggling with infrastructure and skill issues. Look at population pyramids. Or articles like https://www.reuters.com/markets/davos-2023-talent-shortage-rules-tight-labour-markets-manpowergroup-2023-01-20/
If you have the same number of mouths to feed but fewer prime-age workers relatively speaking, there are going to be issues unless you can convince the elders to retire overseas or in low-cost areas.
Test19s t1_jea9xfs wrote
Reply to comment by ethervillage in It's becoming increasingly clear that fintech has a fraud problem by marketrent
1920s, 2000s, 2020s
Each saw a massive property boom centered in Florida that spiraled into a massive global downturn
Test19s t1_jea7fgv wrote
Reply to comment by mizmoxiev in It's becoming increasingly clear that fintech has a fraud problem by marketrent
In 2008 we learned that huge chunks of the American economy were fraudulent (mortgages). I don’t think that fintech has the potential to be nearly as damaging, but we on Earth also have less access to natural resources, fewer young skilled Westerners in the labor pool, and a lot more debt than we did in ‘08.
Test19s t1_jea6zh1 wrote
Reply to comment by semimodestmouse in It's becoming increasingly clear that fintech has a fraud problem by marketrent
We could easily go back to mid-2000s housing bubble levels where it’s impossible to tell how much of the economy is actually legit vs fraudulent.
Test19s t1_jea6paq wrote
I just hope we don’t encounter another 2008 situation where there is so much systemic fraud that it becomes impossible to tell how much of the global economy is legit.
Test19s t1_je9onot wrote
Reply to comment by YooYooYoo_ in The age of average - Is the world becoming an echo chamber ? by Atienon44
This is why I don’t get ethnic nationalism. Native cultures are endangered more by mass media than they are by migration. Maybe if there are fundamental differences between peoples or extreme resource scarcity that requires people to localize they have a point, but the Internet has done more to erode local differences than anything else.
Test19s t1_je9grg3 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The age of average - Is the world becoming an echo chamber ? by Atienon44
This isn't about "average quality" but about everything from architecture to fashion to branding converging on a pseudo-midcentury modern, upper-middle class American aesthetic, due in great part to mass/social media.
Test19s t1_je9gn55 wrote
Reply to comment by Atienon44 in The age of average - Is the world becoming an echo chamber ? by Atienon44
Break up mass media and consumerism.
Test19s t1_je9fi8c wrote
Reply to comment by futatorius in Reddit cracked down on revenge porn, creepshots with twofold spike in permabans by thawingSumTendies
Hopefully the IPO cleans that up too.
Test19s t1_je4ob5k wrote
Reply to comment by LastResortFriend in Aggregate measure of financial misreporting for nearly 2,000 companies in the U.S. suggests that the collective probability of fraud across major companies is the highest in over 40 years by marketrent
World debt is several times GDP, and that increased fast between 2008 and the COVID stimuli.
Test19s t1_jdxccmx wrote
Reply to comment by Megawoopi in Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
Again, MENA problem only. Geographic balancing and recruiting deeper in Asia and Africa (as well as the Americas) would help unless those regions really are a desert of culturally compatible talent.
Test19s t1_jdxag4m wrote
Reply to comment by Megawoopi in Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
In Europe, and only because asylum seekers outnumber labour migrants. That’s a geographic balancing problem, not a problem of mass migration per se. And I acknowledge religious extremism as an exceptional circumstance, at least until the Near East gets out of its Thirty Years War phase.
Test19s t1_jdwpxc2 wrote
Reply to comment by VoidAndOcean in Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
But in a mixed society you wouldn’t get homophobic echo chambers. Native Indians Hindus and Thais and Chinese don’t have religious homophobia. Still there better not be a genetic component to culture. That would be full 1930s.
Test19s t1_jdwoj3g wrote
Reply to comment by VoidAndOcean in Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
But in many cases it is one that comes from existing power structures and would likely be disrupted by mass emigration. Brain drain has a way of forcing reforms, as can be seen in most Eastern EU members as well as some of the more developed Asian countries.
And I’m glad you are willing to shoot down the argument of genetic impact on culture. That would be unthinkably bad on a finite planet.
Test19s t1_jdwn9u0 wrote
Reply to comment by VoidAndOcean in Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
Many of the problems with bad places are due to institutional corruption that’s decades or even centuries old, natural resources (either shortages of them or curses due to fighting over oil and diamonds), or overcrowding. A lot of those problems won’t follow the migrants.
Test19s t1_jdv6r99 wrote
Reply to Germany is overhauling its immigration rules to bolster a rapidly shrinking workforce by yash13
People being able to live where they want should generally be a right with exceptions (criminal record, endangered native language, high levels of religious extremism). Hopefully this works and Germany is able to clean up its bureaucracy and open its housing and supply chains.
Test19s OP t1_jdkmyaq wrote
Reply to comment by Shalrak in What do you see as outlooks for trade, tourism, and immigration in the coming decade? by Test19s
I just hope we don't see them go after immigration (beyond essential skills) and even international trade. Increasingly locally-bound populations reduce contact between countries/cultures and civilizations and can spawn tensions and stereotypes.
Test19s OP t1_jdiskzk wrote
Reply to comment by jfcarr in What do you see as outlooks for trade, tourism, and immigration in the coming decade? by Test19s
Mass immigration between continents is something I really hope we can make work. I’ll never accept the possibility that national culture/ethnic makeup matters except to the extent that it reflects political and mass-media influences. The last time Western and Northern Europeans were convinced of their superiority, we saw the rise of literally the worst civilization since the fall of the Aztecs.
Test19s t1_jeh1ztf wrote
Reply to comment by CentJr in U.S. Extends Carrier Deployment After Syria Attack by Kimber80
Still, we in the USA literally stabbed Iran in the back under twice-impeached criminal defendant Donald Trump, so it’s pretty rich to talk about invading them. Best to stick to targeted sanctions and humanitarian aid to dissidents and refugees.