This is probably the single most positive thing he could do for his image.If he's really that worried about public opinion, he could just retire.
--Patrick
This is probably the single most positive thing he could do for his image.If he's really that worried about public opinion, he could just retire.
It really only teaches kids not to trust you and outright fear you even being around, depending on how severe you are.Frankly, corporal punishment never worked on me, so I kinda have a dim view of its purported effectiveness.
U.S. Economy Contracted at Record Rate Last Quarter; Jobless Claims Rise to 1.43 Million
The economy contracted at a record rate last quarter and July setbacks for the jobs market added to signs of a slowing recovery as the country faces a summer coronavirus surge.www.wsj.com
Holy shit, who would have thought the economy is in such shambles? How could this happen? How does consumer spending drop so precipitously? I DON'T UNDERSTAND. I bet the stock market is somehow higher next week because Wallstreet is bullshit.
I also used to say things like "somebody's parents didn't beat them enough when they were a kid" when an adult was doing something dumb.I used to be on the whole "corporal punishment is okay" thing but have changed my views 180 degrees in the last few years. The science just didn't support my views. Anecdotally, my generation was "fine" even though we experienced it, but looking around now, I'm not sure that repressed anger and hurt were actually something that were positive. In fact, it was not anything acknowledged. I believe I've even said on this very board that I was for it.
I've actually softened on that as I got older, not hardened in my views.
I am glad you changed your views on this, but it really brings up something that really bugs me.I used to be on the whole "corporal punishment is okay" thing but have changed my views 180 degrees in the last few years. The science just didn't support my views. Anecdotally, my generation was "fine" even though we experienced it, but looking around now, I'm not sure that repressed anger and hurt were actually something that were positive. In fact, it was not anything acknowledged. I believe I've even said on this very board that I was for it.
I think it's *slightly* more nuanced than that.. more along the lines of, exponential-growth-at-any-cost is a dangerous way to be capitalist, and having a business model where even the slightest disruption in cash flow means disaster... well... means disaster.It's almost like Captialism doesn't work when you don't have an infinite amount of bodies to toss into the furnace or enough force to make people toss themselves in for you.
I know it's a trite comparison, but it does have some apt parallels to the crash 100 years ago brought on by the craze of buying stocks on margin.I think the metaphor with the trains works well but a different way.
For years our trains have been moving faster and faster to shave time off of the route and save money. But now a storm made the rails slippery and...well...the whole thing is derailing.
It's almost like Captialism doesn't work when you don't have an infinite amount of bodies to toss into the furnace or enough force to make people toss themselves in for you.
Right now the clouds have all the water, the ground has no more to give...and something else has to, otherwise [more] people gonna die. Or else they're going to realize they have nothing to live for, and do something desperate.If you can imagine an economy as being represented by the water cycle, there's only so much water that can be evaporated from the surface before some of it starts falling back to Earth. If something upsets this cycle and inhibits or even prevents this return (global warming, CO2, whatever), then this cycle slows down as there is less and less water to evaporate. Insisting that something must be wrong with the dirt since it isn't giving up as much moisture as it used to blindly ignores the fact that it hasn't rained.
[If] the number of incredibly wealthy entities is very small (e.g., due to consolidation), or the time between these events is very long (e.g., wealth held by semi-immortal corporations rather than by individuals), then droughts become very severe and very painful for anyone who does not live amongst the clouds.
...I think the metaphor with the trains works well but a different way.
For years our trains have been moving faster and faster to shave time off of the route and save money. But now a storm made the rails slippery and...well...the whole thing is derailing.
Context, for everyone else:Jesus Christ Alan Dershowitz
Is that why everyone was "Tebow'ing" all over the place?Oh man, these guys are dumb as bricks: