I want an untouched view from my mountain. No more people.I can’t remember the exact stat, but if the entire world had the population of density of Japan we could fit inside Texas.
I want an untouched view from my mountain. No more people.I can’t remember the exact stat, but if the entire world had the population of density of Japan we could fit inside Texas.
Not sure what you’re asking here.To what end? Why?
Are you arguing for depopulation or maintaining current numbers? I’m against depopulation. As for the benefits of more people, more innovation is a major reason. Another reason is the alternative is very likely much worse, depopulation. For example, I’d much rather have 25 billion people on the planet in the year 2100 than 2 billion. I don’t think population trends are something governments can just turn off or on. Ideally, we would have a population rate of 2.1 to 2.5, but life isn’t ideal.Why do we need more people?
In a resource-scarce environment - which is real life - there is no moral or ethical argument for a massive population boost. There is no argument for mass global population needing to increase as we get nothing for it except a faster drain on the scarce resources.Not sure what you’re asking here.
Are you arguing for depopulation or maintaining current numbers? I’m against depopulation. As for the benefits of more people, more innovation is a major reason. Another reason is the alternative is very likely much worse, depopulation. For example, I’d much rather have 25 billion people on the planet in the year 2100 than 2 billion. I don’t think population trends are something governments can just turn off or on. Ideally, we would have a population rate of 2.1 to 2.5, but life isn’t ideal.
Also, you can’t have a debt based monetary system with depopulation. It will cause all sorts of societal issues. As Crazy pointed out above, someone needs to pay for his SS. The perfect example is Europe. They’re no longer growing enough through national birth rates or innovation, so they’re resorting to large immigration to bridge the gap. The problem is the immigrants aren’t net producers on average and it’s only going to compound the financial issues and add new societal issues. Unfortunately, governments are self serving and it’s the path they’ll choose. Biden’s administration already did it the past 4 years.
For the record, yes, Bitcoin does fix most of these issues, because it’s the best f#cking money ever invented by humans😁
There is a moral argument for it: what is good is what increases human happiness. If human happiness=# of happiness utiles in the aggregate, then more people=more happiness=more good.In a resource-scarce environment - which is real life - there is no moral or ethical argument for a massive population boost. There is no argument for mass global population needing to increase as we get nothing for it except a faster drain on the scarce resources.
Capital markets won’t matter if WW3 breaks out over resources which it will assuredly do in a 25B population scenario.
Bitcoin doesn’t solve a food and water resource limitation. You’re tilting at windmills. The world is just fine somewhere between 4 and 8B people. If we can get low-income countries to reduce their bit to rate we approach a more optimal solution.
No thanksI can’t remember the exact stat, but if the entire world had the population of density of Japan we could fit inside Texas.
Good decision. That’s how you get tentacle porn.No thanks
This conjecture on your part. You have no idea how much human life the world can sustain. It may be 8 billion, 25 billion, or 100 billion. Also, it seems you’re arguing more for maintaining population (I’m fine with by the way).In a resource-scarce environment - which is real life - there is no moral or ethical argument for a massive population boost. There is no argument for mass global population needing to increase as we get nothing for it except a faster drain on the scarce resources.
Capital markets won’t matter if WW3 breaks out over resources which it will assuredly do in a 25B population scenario.
I was trying to help your argument out with mentioning Bitcoin. If we have depopulation the financial system will collapse on it's self with debt.Bitcoin doesn’t solve a food and water resource limitation. You’re tilting at windmills. The world is just fine somewhere between 4 and 8B people. If we can get low-income countries to reduce their bit to rate we approach a more optimal solution.
I can’t remember the exact stat, but if the entire world had the population of density of Japan we could fit inside Texas.
I strongly doubt an argument that fetuses are entitled to the protections of the 14th amendment will ever be accepted by the courts.If they want to do it, they'll come up with some study that shows the lack of uniformity in abortion laws is affecting interstate commerce in some way (female availability in certain labor markets?) Or try to ground it to the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause.
Both sides might try to use the 14th. One for equal protection of women's healthcare the other for equal protection of the unborn.
Fair point.Or the people. Don't forget those last four words.
I don't think it's ever been used, and I'm not sure it's been discussed much. I did read an article from several years ago which tried to make the case that it implied certain powers were kept from both the states and the feds, and delegated only to the people themselves, but that, ironically, under our system of government, the best way for the people to exercise those powers would be through the House of Representatives. That seems logically incoherent to me.Fair point.
But, I have to say, I’ve always wondered what the practical upshot of that clause is. Has it ever been cited as playing an operative role in the interpretation and application of the law?
Which powers do we recognize as being reserved by “the people” and how do we exercise them?
You’re back! In fine fashion, and with none other than a Jim Crow comment, classic!Nothing good comes from the States right. They will send us back 70 years to the Jim Crow days.
I agree that the argument made in the article you reference is incoherent. In fact, it’s probably even worse than that.I don't think it's ever been used, and I'm not sure it's been discussed much. I did read an article from several years ago which tried to make the case that it implied certain powers were kept from both the states and the feds, and delegated only to the people themselves, but that, ironically, under our system of government, the best way for the people to exercise those powers would be through the House of Representatives. That seems logically incoherent to me.
However, it seems to me that we can never dismiss a clause of the Constitution as superfluous. If, therefore, we accept that the the 10th Amendment explicitly keeps non-delegated powers out of the hands of the feds, then we also must accept that it also explicitly places some of those powers with the people, rather than the states, and that this distinction, whatever it actually is, must in some way be meaningful.
I agree it's unclear. I'm only stressing that if we're going to start extolling the importance of the 10th Amendment, it's incumbent upon us to understand and extoll all of it, not just the obvious half.I agree that the argument made in the article you reference is incoherent. In fact, it’s probably even worse than that.
I hesitate to use the term superfluous for this or any other ratified language. But it’s certainly unclear when and how it would ever apply in a practical sense.
II agree that the argument made in the article you reference is incoherent. In fact, it’s probably even worse than that.
I hesitate to use the term superfluous for this or any other ratified language. But it’s certainly unclear when and how it would ever apply in a practical sense.
I agree it's unclear. I'm only stressing that if we're going to start extolling the importance of the 10th Amendment, it's incumbent upon us to understand and extoll all of it, not just the obvious half.
The Courts have never used the 10th to find a substantive right, as far as I know. It’s used as an interpretive/structural device as you’ve already mentioned.I agree that the argument made in the article you reference is incoherent. In fact, it’s probably even worse than that.
I hesitate to use the term superfluous for this or any other ratified language. But it’s certainly unclear when and how it would ever apply in a practical sense.
The Courts have never used the 10th to find a substantive right, as far as I know. It’s used as an interpretive/structural device as you’ve already mentioned.
Some at the time of the drafting thought the Bill of Rights was not needed and afraid that by delineating some rights, people would interpret those as the only Constitutional rights people have. I think the 10th was thrown in to alleviate those concerns.
Moderate voters want: decoupling from China, benefits for Working families, some tariffs to reverse perceived harm, acknowledge benefits of blue collar labor, limit low-wage immigration, rebuild American manufacturing via industrial policy.This is EXACTLY why they're in the process of losing the Union vote!! They suck!
I'll give you abortion, but for the most part, it wasn't Democrats talking about reparations and DEI.Moderate voters want: decoupling from China, benefits for Working families, some tariffs to reverse perceived harm, acknowledge benefits of blue collar labor, limit low-wage immigration, rebuild American manufacturing via industrial policy.
Democrats want to talk about reparations, DEI, and abortion.
They’ve lost their way
Then who was it?I'll give you abortion, but for the most part, it wasn't Democrats talking about reparations and DEI.
Democrats brought those to the forefront…Republicans kept it there. Highlighting Democratic ideasI'll give you abortion, but for the most part, it wasn't Democrats talking about reparations and DEI.
Moderate voters want: decoupling from China, benefits for Working families, some tariffs to reverse perceived harm, acknowledge benefits of blue collar labor, limit low-wage immigration, rebuild American manufacturing via industrial policy.
Democrats want to talk about reparations, DEI, and abortion.
They’ve lost their way
The Dems didn't even bring them to the forefront. The Repubs went and got them and drug them out into the limelight.Democrats brought those to the forefront…Republicans kept it there. Highlighting Democratic ideas
They championed the causes of the few by demonizing the many. But guess what. They weren’t good at math. Men weren’t buying that men for Harris/walz after four years of stupid shit. Men vote and they did so for DONALD JOHN TRUMP!!!!Democrats brought those to the forefront…Republicans kept it there. Highlighting Democratic ideas
Nonsense. The genesis was alllllll Dems. From blm at the convention. Biden and the uswnt. Dei. Crt. Pronouns. Woke. Dems and Dems alone. That they tried to disavow same at the 11th hour just made them look that much more full of shitThe Dems didn't even bring them to the forefront. The Repubs went and got them and drug them out into the limelight.
I'm not saying Dems didn't come up with the ideas. Or at least Dems were the first ones to champion them. I'm saying very few if any Dems played any role in bringing them to the forefront. The Repubs did that. And smartly so, of course, because doing so was politically damaging to the Dems.Nonsense. The genesis was alllllll Dems. From blm at the convention. Biden and the uswnt. Dei. Crt. Pronouns. Woke. Dems and Dems alone. That they tried to disavow same at the 11th hour just made them look that much more full of shit
I think a lot has to do with time and place. The things I listed I agree with broadly but the devil is always in the details. Each policy should be examined carefully and individually. I would have to see each policy in its final form before agreeing or disagreeingIs there anything moderate voters want that you disagree with?
There certainly is for me. I’ve always very strongly agreed with Barry Goldwater’s old mantra:
“Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.”
Of course, people are always going to have different definitions of liberty and justice. And you’ll never find anybody who won’t claim to be pursuing those ideals. But I’ve always favored good policy over popular policy.
Many a country has ended up in a bad place because of popular policies.
I don’t know how much I agree with that. But, to whatever extent it’s true, Republicans had plenty of videos, writings, and such.The Dems didn't even bring them to the forefront. The Repubs went and got them and drug them out into the limelight.
I'm not saying the Repubs made it up. They just blasted the Dems for what the Dems actually said. Like with trans issues. Lots of Dem politicians swallowed that pill whole-heartedly. Only a few of them made it a pillar of their campaign strategy. But the Repubs made damn sure the many Dems who wanted to downplay it would find doing so very difficult.I don’t know how much I agree with that. But, to whatever extent it’s true, Republicans had plenty of videos, writings, and such.
You can’t extoll and promote ideas while people aren’t paying attention and then just act like that never happened when they are.
Harris certainly wasn’t flaunting her former advocacy of taxpayer-funded transition treatments for prisoners. But she had earlier video where she was amenable to it. Of course the Trump campaign is going to flog that video.
(I still think it was a very distant reason #2 for the bad Dem performance, behind cost of living, of course.)
Let me put it this way: I think the reaction to wokeism earned Trump a lot of extra votes, but when it comes to why he won, I think only the cost of living crisis clearly passes the but-for test. In other words, if Woke didn't exist, I think Trump still wins easily. If the cost of living crisis didn't exist, I think it's actually a close thing.I agree with this - at least that it was #2. But I wouldn’t downplay it…especially wrt Trump’s relatively strong performance among younger voters. They’re exposed to wokesters every day.
What is wrong with DEI when you have legacy?Moderate voters want: decoupling from China, benefits for Working families, some tariffs to reverse perceived harm, acknowledge benefits of blue collar labor, limit low-wage immigration, rebuild American manufacturing via industrial policy.
Democrats want to talk about reparations, DEI, and abortion.
They’ve lost their way