Rommie wrote:FZ, yes, eventually the sun is going to run out too I hear.
There are finite resources on our planet for sure, but I think it's a stretch to say we have reached a point to say they are definitely finite. Just look at the tar sands in Alberta- we knew they were there for decades, just had no good way to refine the oil. Look at Japan, which basically started an expansionist policy a century ago because of the lack of resources in their own country- not growing as much as in the early 90s (when I remember "teach your kids Japanese!" was the "teach your kids Chinese!" battle cry you hear today), but still plenty going on in the knowledge economy.
So we agree that resources are finite, now it's more a question of when they will run out not if they will.
Just to be different because it's me, I propose that the resources themselves are not the only issue.
There is only a finite amount of CO2 we can dump in the atmosphere before we change climate to our own detriment.
We can have as much oil reserves as we want but, once the point is reached where it would be devastating to the ecology of our little planet if we use it, we can either, no longer use it, destroy the climate by ignoring it, or we have to limit its use.
Suddenly those huge reserves don't seem to be that large anymore and we hit the wall of what it mean to have finite resources.
Rommie wrote:Speaking of Asia, it's a very neat place to visit lately that reminds me of visiting Hungary after communism ended- everywhere building, everywhere things are "new" and people excited to join the middle class. Just because a family in China can now afford a motor scooter doesn't mean there is a finite number of them in the world and you took that scooter away from another family, right? That would be a bizarre school of economics.
See above.
Like my little sarcasm about aliens, I actually want there to be fair access to the resources for everyone.
My issue is that it is not being done, but how it's being done.
Right now, money is treated like a weapon. It has been for a long time. It's a weapon of the rich and powerful and a form of control for others.
That's not to say I want it gone or have some crazy radical scheme that involves bartering.
It means there is always a shift of power that comes with the shift of money. Major power. The type of power that destroys countries or rebuilds them depending on who wields it.
If one looks at it from that pov, and IMHO large transfers of wealth and money should be treated that way, then shifting money and wealth is basically handing weapons to others.
There is no problem with that if one actually understands that's what they are doing and trust the people (read government) they are transferring to.
So there comes the irony in all this.
The USA for so long has been the "champion of democracy", they have indirectly fought wars with the USSR and China over that and even had (possibly still have) laws against selling things to them such as computers and high technology (night vision) etc. Selling a PC to them years ago was treason.
Yet, if we consider money as a weapon, what the USA and other countries have done is basically hand over their largest most deadly weapons to the same people they have been in an ideological war with.
The reason the USSR collapsed is the lack of funds it had. It could no longer sustain itself while controlling the people. That's what got rid of communism there.
China is still a communist country. One with human rights violations and many other issues relating to the people that represent it.
All it takes is one crazy getting in power there to change their view on the USA or Europe for example and, suddenly they not only have the man power, the technology, the resources but also the funding to do anything they want.
The balance of power is being handed to them, willingly, almost exclusively in the name of short term profits by large multinational companies.
Now if that's what the world actually want to do, that's fine, but most people are ignorant about it.
They won't think that way till it's too late and then they will wonder what went wrong.
What would have gone wrong is that the transfer of power came too fast to people who really didn't earn the trust to wield, nor the experience to manage it and, it would have come to fruition because the nature of capitalism not only allowed it but encouraged it, to it's own demise.
That's not to say the worst will happen. It may turn out to also be the breaking point for communism in China.
It may turn out that China knows how to handle the power better than the rest of the world.
My issue isn't with what could happen, it's with our governments and corporations leading the way while wearing blindfolds and hoping for the best.
That's no way to run a country or an economy.