Nope. Again you missed the point.Can I put you on the record as being against common sense? Maybe "defund the police"?
Nope. Again you missed the point.Can I put you on the record as being against common sense? Maybe "defund the police"?
Yep. I guess so.Nope. Again you missed the point.
It can pay to be aware of religious niceties. I have new neighbours, an Indian family, whom I have invited to a party next month. But if I did not know whether they were from India or from Pakistan (from their appearance and accents it had to be one of the two), and hence whether they are likely to come from a Hindu or a Muslim background, I might offer them food they cannot eat or something inappropriate to drink. (Or I might make some remark about geopolitics which would go down the wrong way.) There is also an Irish/Ukrainian family coming and another Irish couple from N Ireland. I happen to know the Irish/Ukrainian family are Catholic, from where their girls go to school. The N Irishman I suspect, from his Scottish-sounding name, will be Protestant. So there may be a few issues to tiptoe around there. No Jews coming, but then I live in S London rather than N.It's not. If they follow up with the "really", you can interpret it as a 'roots' question - like it was any of their business. But that would usually be phrased, "Yeah? And where are your people from originally?" (A stranger on casual first encounter has no right to anything past the initial "Where are you from?" )
As to having a clue to your religion taken into consideration, I certainly take exception to that, unless it comes from the pastor of a church I'm attending.
yes. So, when it comes to closer connections, such as inviting one another to dinner, you ask. Do you have dietary restrictions?" "are there subjects we need to avoid?" "Is there anything I should be aware of?" like that. You don't start ferreting for clues on first meeting; that's just intrusive.It can pay to be aware of religious niceties.
I have actually made that argument, at another forum. I was more pushing back on the idea that calling people on racism is a "lecture." I agree that people can shrug off well-meaning questions. In the US, unfortunately, where are you really from morphed into something less friendly than what you describe in UK. No one asks pale me where I'm really from ( Ireland, Sweden, Ukraine, Yorkshire). Not that I care for the term micro aggression - again it is the way that a useful observation on how people experience certain words becomes framed as a lecture/liberal kneejerk. Or advocating a fair taxation is framed as some mindless "eat the rich" scapegoating.Well up to a point. I do think, actually, that some of the expert-sounding labelling that goes on is counterproductive. Your “ micro-aggression” example is a case in point. Who the fuck knows, on the proverbial Clapham omnibus, what micro-aggression is? “Cultural appropriation” is another one. There can be a tendency to lay a sort of minefield for ordinary people, with normal areas of ignorance and no ill intention, to stumble into and blow themselves up.
Asking where you “are really from” is not usually an act of aggression. All it is is a clumsy and thoughtless assumption that a person is a 1st generation immigrant, when they may well not be. Or it may be an expression of the innocent and reasonable idea that people have ancestry they take pride in.
Only its epistemological weaknesses.OK, you're against common sense?
yes. So, when it comes to closer connections, such as inviting one another to dinner, you ask. Do you have dietary restrictions?" "are there subjects we need to avoid?" "Is there anything I should be aware of?" like that. You don't start ferreting for clues on first meeting; that's just intrusive.
We’re probably on the same page. I just think some tolerance and understanding should be extended to people who are not quite up to speed with where the big cities are, culturally. And some of US academia seems to be quite mad, when it comes to social issues. Identity politics is a terrible curse.I have actually made that argument, at another forum. I was more pushing back on the idea that calling people on racism is a "lecture." I agree that people can shrug off well-meaning questions. In the US, unfortunately, where are you really from morphed into something less friendly than what you describe in UK. No one asks pale me where I'm really from ( Ireland, Sweden, Ukraine, Yorkshire). Not that I care for the term micro aggression - again it is the way that a useful observation on how people experience certain words becomes framed as a lecture/liberal kneejerk. Or advocating a fair taxation is framed as some mindless "eat the rich" scapegoating.
I had a friend who has survived breast cancer twice. She's had a mastectomy by now. And when she hears people say "Save the boobies!" (a popular slogan as the result of a fundraiser here) she gets annoyed, because the goal should really be to "save the woman." Which I hadn't thought about it until she pointed it out.Recently I had a conversation with someone about the BLM movement, and they trotted out the "well, all lives matter". They weren't being overtly racist - after all, it is a truth that all lives do matter. But it was an example of racial micro-aggression: to say something without understanding the purpose and context of what you're responding to, without understanding, and even unintentionally denying the experiences of others.
I'm in neither camp. I'm a transplant from a cosmopolitan city to cattle country, so I've learned the cultural differences and try generally shrug off what I consider the intrusive, intolerant and sometimes downright rude discourse that prevail here. I've also learned which groups of people to stay away from and which are more likely to be pleasant company. But then, I'm the quintessential blender-in: nobody notices me, so I have little occasion to be offended.We’re probably on the same page. I just think some tolerance and understanding should be extended to people who are not quite up to speed with where the big cities are, culturally. And some of US academia seems to be quite mad, when it comes to social issues. Identity politics is a terrible curse.
This isn't an academic site. I'm not going to put that much work into it. Do you really need a citation for raising wages contributing to inflation?
There is nothing "pseudo" about my arguments. Rising wages, costs, rent is all inflationary. No citation needed for that. If you need one for that it's simply due to a knowledge gap on your part.Since you're constantly arguing pseudo, sometimes a citation helps clarify what you actually mean.
For instance, let's take a look at some of your arguments about inflation:
• "People like to complain about the minimum wage, for example, and they want it raised, this will also raise most other wages (why would someone do construction if they can make the same handing someone a cup of coffee?) and then they will turn around and complain about inflation."They are causing inflation." (#459↑)• "Raising the prices/cost of anything without increasing productivity more than that contributes to inflation." (#462↑)• "That's because the CEO has much more to do with the success of the corporation." (#481↑)• "Inflation doesn't have much to do with CEO pay." (#483↑)
All those points are fallacious, or depend on fallacy. #459, for instance, leans on presuppositions about "most other wages", worker motivation, and causes of inflation. #462, assessed in tandem with #459 further exposes the underlying fallacy: It's especially dubious coming from you, who lives in a region subject to repeated artificial inflation of housing costs inflicted not by hourly workers, but by landlords and real estate agents. The workers are not causing inflation (#459) by needing more money to pay for the increased rent (#462).
Which brings us around to CEOs. "Inflation doesn't have much to do with CEO pay" (#483), is a fallacious distraction. The more important point has to do with the CEO's relationship to the "success of the corporation" (#481). We encounter a familiar question↗ of what passes for success¹:
This part comes back to a basic question about how we define success in business. This, too, is part of "freedom". If you start a business, and it is successful, except there remains a question of what that means. Manipulating numbers to raise real estate values, increasing rent at extraordinary rates; hiring children to long hours and dangerous jobs; wage theft; overprescribing addictive drugs: Are these the behaviors of successful businesses?
For instance:
Expensive Big Mac meals and fears of surge pricing at grocery stores have put food chains and consumer product companies in politicians' crosshairs.Walmart, McDonald's and Kroger are just a few of the companies that have found themselves in the debate over high inflation in the 2024 election.On Monday, Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Bob Casey, D-Pa., sent a letter to Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen that questioned the grocer's rollout of electronic shelf labels, arguing the technology could make it easier to increase the price of high-demand items. The letter also noted that the supermarket chain could become bigger, depending on whether it closes its pending $24.6 billion acquisition of rival Albertsons.CNBC↱)
It's almost like part of managing inflation will require a president to have some direct influence over how private companies behave, which in turn would require transformative Congressional authorization and empowerment. You, yourself, have said↗, "Sometimes it's best to have a little less 'freedom' for the sake of society," and, yes, realtime price-gouging is probably one of those behaviors a successful business can survive without. Y'know, the sort of thing it's a CEO's job to decide, but also a "freedom" a CEO ought to be able to succeed without.
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Notes:
Repko, Melissa and Amelia Lucas. "As inflation fury lingers, politicians join customers in pushing companies to cut prices". CNBC. 7 August 2024. CNBC.com. 9 August 2024. https://www.cnbc.com/2024/08/07/2024-election-inflation-grocery-prices-a-top-issue.html
There is nothing "pseudo" about my arguments. Rising wages, costs, rent is all inflationary. No citation needed for that. If you need one for that it's simply due to a knowledge gap on your part.
There are plenty of things which are "not part of free market forces". When the government intervenes and raises minimum wages, this is presumably to counter those non "free market forces" influences.The key is to try to control inflation. The government determining how much an employer will pay is not part of free market forces. The larger part of inflation these days is due to monetizing the debt. It reduces the purchasing power of the dollar and contributes to all of the above.
(No, I mean besides rounding up and arresting the black shirts that tried to stage a coup.)
My town is really boring, no sights, no events, no attractions at all; completely unsuitable for tourism.They were just harmless tourists. Whenever I'm in tourist-mode I make certain to be heavily armed, carry a noose, and smear crap on the walls.
My town is really boring, no sights, no events, no attractions at all; completely unsuitable for tourism.
Afaic, you're welcome to the decoration of your choice on any statues of Winston Churchill and John. A. MacDonald.For some reason, people these days have gotten all uptight about people carving their initials into historic landmarks.
Start to really address spending and then get out of the way. Pass some laws to make it harder for the next Trump to succeed.So, what should be the top priorities of the incoming US government next January?
(No, I mean besides rounding up and arresting the black shirts that tried to stage a coup.)
Not very specific, legislation-wise.Start to really address spending and then get out of the way.