The above statistic, especially for Africa, but also for other continents cannot be anything else that extremely positive! It shows how life is actually improving in the poorest nations. This is no sign of a collapse. You simply cannot disregard the improvements that have happened in the last 20 years. — ssu
I think it would be proper to list just what are those tipping points 2000-2020 that haven't been around earlier. And I presume that for what you have in mind there are already lengthy threads on this site. And when we look at them, each one specifically, then it gets difficult really to pinpoint it to now. — ssu
What if everyone collectively decided they did not want their money to be in the bank or in the financial and stock markets, and collectively decided to keep their energy consumption to an absolute minimum, grow their own food, only travel when absolutely necessary and so on? — Janus
Quite the opposite. Global inequality has been going down the last decade or so, and at a decent clip. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The question I have is whether the financial elites would allow it and/ or whether the populace can ever manage to unify itself sufficiently to defy them and their cronies (the politicians). — Janus
But anyway, I do think the statistics show there are fewer deaths from war now than historically, but I don't think they support your thesis that there was a war holiday the past couple of decades. — Hanover
Thinking that this is the best it will get and everything is downhill from here is an extremely popular, extremely long-standing idea that has been with us actually for Centuries now, if not longer. People find comfort in it. — ssu
When everything goes to hell in a handbasket, the hope is that voters will once again wake up and become engaged, and cause democracy to function better. — Tzeentch
At least Sunak did understand that the economic policies of Truss were risky in this situation. — ssu
The market manipulation continues with the disaster budget. Expect more crises. It would have been so easy to make a deal with the EU, by simply agreeing to the trade rules - but no, we were so desperate to have the US's chlorinated chicken and fake cheese. But then we couldn't even make that deal, because we 'forgot' the Irish border. I say sabotage! — unenlightened
Elections have to be had only in 2025, so likely three years feels so long that Conservative party can have a pipe dream that the economy has "a brief rough patch" and walz through it. Otherwise it could be better to be in the opposition and have the Labor now to be in charge when the train wreck happens. — ssu
The most important development will be the end of the tradition of people from the privileged upper middle classes being groomed for a life in politics. Eton and Oxford are responsible for perpetuating this.
It looks as though this might now be happening. — Punshhh
When I witness someone violating a moral norm, I feel obligated to punish the evil-doer, even - and this is crucial - if that punishment entails some disadvantage for me. Why ? Because I feel loyal to the norm / rule / value, not necessarily to this very person that is harrassed by the evil-doer. This identification with moral norms and values is typical for human beings as moral animals. — Matias66
In a moral world, you should not do X, and you should do Y, just because it is the right thing to do, not because it somehow benefits you. — Matias66
Whether we like certain countries' policies and actions or not, their strategic interests are extremely revelant for world peace and that understanding seems to be completely lacking in this thread. — Tzeentch
how can any radical change be effected when a member affected can veto it? — Tim3003
Who wants radical change? To benefit whom? It serves as a means of bridging gaps and has helped some situations. It is not a government nor an independent body with its own needs and wants. — I like sushi
Ro cap it off, people are depressed because they treat themselves poorly. They drink too much, they don't work hard enough, they don't educate themselves, they surround themselves with non-compatible people, they don't search for meaning, they hate society, they are motivated by greed, they are too wealthy, they lie too much, they sleep with too many people, they value the opinions of others more than themselves, or they engage in all other forms of thought and behavior that negates their own homeostasis- or their parents (or other kids at school) do such to them. You'll be hard pressed to find me someone that sits outside this paradigm, but I welcome your thoughts. — Garrett Travers
Does "evolutionary theory" tell us a moral tale? Evolution just took place. Is compassion a "building block" of an "advanced" society? Seems to me that the advantage of one people is the disadvantage for others so how you determine which is the right moral? By reference to evolution theory, like the holy bible teaches the morals as intended by the creator? — HKpinsky
Don't kid yourself, why do you care? To improve society as to better facilitate your needs? This would be a quite ineffective method — InvoluntaryDecorum
Yes. But what makes the act count? I mean most states have a social system, which is funded by the money produced from taxes off the people. Is that not charity? — Hermeticus
Charity as a moral principle quickly undermines the moral act in itself. — Hermeticus
Why? Because anyone giving must be doing it to seem charitable, rather than because they are? — Tim3003
No. But that's not what I said. — Hermeticus
1) Morals are individual and differ from person to person.
2) Charity as a moral principle quickly undermines the moral act in itself.
3) Social norms for charity as a moral principle is impossible due to the different ideas and interpretations about morals. — Hermeticus
But why do you care to donate? To seem moral? Doesn't sound very moral at all — InvoluntaryDecorum
From an idealistic viewpoint I think, the appropriate question is not "How much do I give?" but "How much do I need"? — Hermeticus
One possible solution to counteract hate speech/disinformation/misinformation would be to teach people how to use the internet (digital safety): a baloney detection kit à la the late Carl Sagan's should be put together and made hypervisibile so that people can learn how to separate the wheat from the chaff online. I found one :point: Internet Safety 101. — Agent Smith
Part of the challenge in defining a random number. We all kind-of know informally what one is, but what it actually is, in the sense of this or that number being random, is more difficult. — tim wood
The fact that 100 randomicals have their randomic aspects in common, doesn't make them less random. Patterned randomity is still random. — Raymond
There are more rules/laws/regulations now than in the past is the premise I'm working with. Given so, doesn't it look like democracy is a sham? After all, our freedoms have been drastically curtailed over the timespan between the very first proto-governments and the current "democratic" zeitgeist. Typically, the average person living in a democratic country today has less freedom than the average person living under an authoritarian regime a thousand years ago. — Agent Smith