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jonbon2 commented on Quantum weirdness isn’t weird – if we accept objects don’t exist   newscientist.com/article/... · Posted by u/jonbaer
ca98am79 · 4 years ago
The most interesting thing, to me, is that if you abandon materialism, what does it say about Consciousness?

Consciousness can't come from material if it doesn't really exist. So is material "created" by Consciousness?

jonbon2 · 4 years ago
People have proposed the idea that consciousness is the building block of the universe and not matter. See Itzhak Bentovs book Stalking The Wild Pendulum.
jonbon2 commented on Terraria on Stadia cancelled after developer's Google account gets locked   twitter.com/Demilogic/sta... · Posted by u/benhurmarcel
warent · 5 years ago
I've been considering getting a new email address on a personal domain so it can be more portable and I can change providers.

Does anyone recommend any alternate providers with custom domains, or some OSS? Is it possible to host your own email server on a NAS or RPi something?

jonbon2 · 5 years ago
Take a look at migadu.com
jonbon2 commented on The Real Class War   americanaffairsjournal.or... · Posted by u/arcanus
simonh · 6 years ago
This is all driven by globalisation, and don't get me wrong I'm a globalist, but this is just a fact. First manual labour in manufacturing was outsourced abroad, then higher tier tech jobs in software and product engineering. Now big firms from former third world countries are muscling in on markets at every level of the economy, creating competition at every level of business.

You can't add hundreds of millions of Chinese people to the global work force, now at every level of the global economy, without affecting the market for that labour.

I said I'm a globalist, yes I am. My wife is Chinese, I've been going there regularly since 2001. When I first went private car ownership was near unheard of. It's a different country now, near-empty streets with a few donkey drawn carts are now choked with commuter traffic.

The result has been a pause in income growth in the western world. We've benefited from cheap imported goods, but lost out in domestic growth. The upside is that hundreds of millions of people, not just in China but in plenty of other places too, have been elevated out of poverty. I've seen that for myself and it's done an incalculable amount of good, it's just that all the benefits haven't been evenly distributed.

Could we in the west have benefited more if we'd had less globalisation? I really don't know. We have benefited I think, and we've had opportunities to invest and sell into those markets we wouldn't have otherwise had. I don't know, it's hard to evaluate what could have been as it's such a radically different shape for the world economy. Maybe we'd have ended up even worse off, who knows? But we might have been better off, I can't deny it.

For the future, we can already see incomes in China have shot up. Low level manufacturing jobs are moving out of China, because Chinese labourers have more skills now and can command high enough wages in more upmarket jobs that they don't need the low end work any more. I suspect that's why the employment rate in the US and elsewhere, at the bottom end of the economy, is picking up. I hope that continues, and in future growth will be more balanced across the economic and wage spectrum.

jonbon2 · 6 years ago
The author talks about this in another of his articles called "The tree fusions"[1]

[1]-https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2018/08/the-three-fusions...

u/jonbon2

KarmaCake day6November 26, 2019View Original