Gullible Jones wrote:
Seriously though, as bad as the modern world is, it often alarms me how much worse the bulk of human history has been.
Gullible Jones wrote:Mostly because a large number of people these days seem fixated on how evil technology is, and how much better things were of old. At one point I fell into that pattern, too. It's an attractive meme, and extremely dangerous IMO.
Rommie wrote:Similarly, I'm certain in our older years people will wax nostalgic about our Internet-free childhoods, never stopping to think how great it is you no longer get pissed off because the article in the encyclopedia doesn't have enough information on the topic you like (or, egad, skips it altogether).
SciFiFisher wrote:There is always a tendency to blame technology for the woes that society faces. Look at the Luddite movement for example.
Part of the reason I am slowly beating the drum of doom is that power is almost never transferred peacefully. the 1% are not going to willingly change the course of events.
SciFiFisher wrote:And it isn't helped by the fact that more and more of the worlds wealth is being concentrated into a smaller and smaller percentage of the population.
Woof wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:And it isn't helped by the fact that more and more of the worlds wealth is being concentrated into a smaller and smaller percentage of the population.
More and more of the world's wealth is not being concentrated into a smaller and smaller percentage of the population; it is being spread out over a larger and larger percentage. Nearly all of this effect is due to the rapid industrialization of China in the last few decades. Previously, much wealth was concentrated in a few countries which contain only a small percentage of the world's population; as China, and some other Asian countries, industrialize, it is spread out more and more.
Woof wrote:Within some countries, like the one which includes the location listed in your profile, wealth is more concentrated than it used to be, although the figure I found in a post by one of the board members is a quite a bit more extreme than what comes from any source I can find; that member did not mention where he got his numbers (although I think I can guess).
woof wrote:The intra-country concentration is obviously something that bothers some of your members quite a bit; two of them in particular make very shrill shrieking noises about the greed which results in the concentration of wealth in the hands of people who are in the top 1% or so of the world's economic distribution, at the expense of ordinary people like themselves, who are only in the top 10% or 20%. It doesn't seem to be concentration of wealth which per se bothers them, as I don't see them railing against the privileged positions on the international stage which they themselves occupy. In fact, these ferocious critics of other people's privileges are equally ferocious defenders of their own privileges - witness the blistering attacks on the movement of jobs from industrialized countries to industrializing countries. In one instance, I can find this simultaneous love of and revulsion by wealth concentration, depending on the identify of the beneficiary, in the same post.
woof wrote:I'm sure this flexibility is completely ideologically motivated, and the near perfect alignment with the self-interest of those bearing this message must be a source of much embarrassment for them; they are probably appalled at the possibility that others might view them as shameless mercenaries, instead of the big noble fellows that they are.
woof wrote:But, being new here, I will try to fit in, at least for a little bit. As such, I propose a new rallying cry for a commonly found ethic at this board. It is to be found in my signature.
FZR1KG wrote:Woof wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:And it isn't helped by the fact that more and more of the worlds wealth is being concentrated into a smaller and smaller percentage of the population.
More and more of the world's wealth is not being concentrated into a smaller and smaller percentage of the population; it is being spread out over a larger and larger percentage. Nearly all of this effect is due to the rapid industrialization of China in the last few decades. Previously, much wealth was concentrated in a few countries which contain only a small percentage of the world's population; as China, and some other Asian countries, industrialize, it is spread out more and more.
If individual wealth is a grain of sand and a pile sits in one corner, does spreading the sand spread the wealth?
If we halve the number of grains but double the size, then spread them out, is that being distributing or concentrating?
Rommie wrote:
Nitpick: your argument doesn't really work IMO because it implies there is only a finite amount of wealth in the world (I would argue the same for Woof's comment- hi!- as well as FZ's).
Sorry, just an economic pet peeve of mine.
That's consolidated from 50 companies back in 1983.
SciFiFisher wrote:If someone were to create a practical economical form of energy that could power the grid, cars, etc it would either create a world wide golden era or cause the collapse of modern civilization.
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