Message from @Jay1532
Discord ID: 485937701007392768
they are planning on nuking the petro-dollar behind the scenes
Xi is basically neo-mao, have fun trying to convince it's popular to rebel
and if turkey and others are any indication, they are receiving an audience thats listening
China will never be a sole superpower, they will follow the path of the soviet union
@Doctor Anon government contracts doesn't drive the kind of innovation that leads to more prosperity though. Most of that innovation is expensive and not practical until the market gets to improve upon it
@campodin It does get to improve on it, most contracts are for military, which almost always translates into civilian tech
Oh, in regards to contracts for military tech I'm all in favor of it.
What's expensive and impractical on the market shouldn't be a consideration for defense
idk though, theres a compelling argument that free trade can also hinder research
since it creates a climate of long term uncertainty for certain products
Im 50/50 on free trade
I'd support national free trade, but not global free trade
look how ford and other american car companies bought outsourced vehicle parts in the 90s to compete on PRICE, not to innovate on quality
and theyve been playing a losing game ever since
A nation should always strive to be able to sustain itself with *0* imports
i dont know if id go that far. The best case scenario is import what we cant make well ourself, and export what we excel at
and make sure that important industries are protected
I didn't say no exports, i meant no imports
anyone that thinks we could wage war without domestic steel production is probably a commie infiltrator
as for the 0, i mean in terms of goods needed to sustain a country, for example during a war so supply lines cant be cut off
There are some things that are not economically good short-term, such as protectionism, but are necessary
- Protectionism sacrifices the benefits of comparative advantage for BOTH countries, but it encourages localized production of goods, which is essential if you ever go to war, because once you go to war you can't use the other country's industrial capacity anymore.
- I would argue that a libertarian "free market" actually doesn't make sense unless there is protection against trading with non-free markets. This kind of trade favors the non-free market, which is likely controlled by an authoritarian power actively seeking to undermine neighboring libertarian societies.
- The hidden benefit of protection is that when companies are producing locally, it becomes MUCH easier for independent citizens to compete in the marketplace, because they can work for themselves for free, whereas larger companies must pay relatively high wages. So while we might be theoretically "poorer" by not producing in the cheapest way across country lines, the protection creates a situation in which the protected market has more competition and relative equality.
saving this
The Chinese government, for example, limits how wealthy its people are getting by producing most of our goods through extreme inflation of their money - that is to say, they're using the money supply to confiscate most of that wealth. So rather than companies having to increase their wages for Chinese workers and rather than Chinese workers being able to afford goods and services from the United States, the price of their labor is kept artificially low and the proceeds go to funding the expansion of Chinese power.
By allowing trade with China, we make it so that the most powerful corporations in the United States are the ones that use Chinese slave labor. Meanwhile, these same companies that do all of their business with China lobby for higher regulations in the United States, either to virtue signal or to cripple competitors who try to produce domestically within the United States. If their production is oversees then environmental and labor regulations here don't apply - if they did, it wouldn't be so much cheaper to ship everything from China. This is why you don't see corporations giving any funding to libertarian political candidates, even though they could easily justify giving some proportion of what they give to Democrats and Republicans. Free markets aren't in the benefit of international corporations - they want politically protected profits.
I would also surmise that we're hearing 10-100x more negative news about Donald Trump than we otherwise would because national borders and traditional values are also inconvenient impediments to the supremacy of international corporations. It is in their financial interest to water down our political consensus and to lower our wages through H1B skilled immigration. This is the major scam of progressivism - capitalists scamming socialists into dis-empowering their workers relative to capital in the name of solidarity.
Workers
Better Workers
Without workers
better workers, the point of schools is to educate kids not brainwash them
No point in loyalty
i think there are problems with both approaches
if i had to pick one i'd say better workers
Loyal
I'll take the other side on this one
better workers obviously
The problem with the question is that you assume loyalty cannot be taught while also teaching how to be better workers
In fact, it usually comes hand in hand
The most disciplined and skilled children are also usually the most loyal.
For example, the Hitler Youth.
😬
Well, there's no denying the Hitler Youth were skilled as well as loyal.