Greenleaf

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 38 points 10 months ago (2 children)

I highly recommend the Electronic Intifada’s live broadcast on YouTube on Wednesdays. It keeps my burning hatred of the US and Israel going. John Elmer is great for talking about the actual fight going on.

[–] [email protected] 35 points 10 months ago

Early thirties, sure. Yes… that will do side-eye-1

[–] [email protected] 22 points 10 months ago

I try to stay informed on this sort of thing and this is the first I’ve heard of it.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 10 months ago

Wompty dompty dom

[–] [email protected] 15 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Please let us know any further news on this if you hear it, and hope that you and everyone you know stays safe.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 10 months ago (1 children)

She won’t, but more because 98% of Americans don’t care about Epstein and those that are even familiar with it mostly write it off as crank shit. Not to mention you don’t have any hard evidence with Trump, so ultimately it’s not gonna move the needle anyway.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 10 months ago

I swear two-thirds of my ebook library comes from recommendations on hexbear.

[–] [email protected] 44 points 10 months ago

I’ve had the 2008 film Hunger in my queue for some time now, maybe I’ll watch it this week in honor of COTW. Fassbender plays Bobby Sands, apparently it’s very good.

98% of Americans know absolutely nothing about the IRA or the Irish struggles for liberation writ large. The other 2% think they know about it because they watched Sons of Anarchy.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

The person I would most like to have in an AMA isn’t one specific person with a name. I would like it to be with someone reasonably high up in the CPC who could help understand and explain the details of how socialism is implemented in the Chinese economy, and what they see as the plan in the coming decades.

Evo Morales would also be good.

[–] [email protected] 41 points 10 months ago

This is honestly one the best short explainers of Marxism’s relationship to religion I have ever seen.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

“They hated him because he told the truth”

[–] [email protected] 22 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Because their mothers, wives, and kids aren’t actually under any real threat from the Russian military? Meanwhile, if you join up with the Ukrainian armed forces now there is a strong possibility your family won’t have a primary income earner when it all eventually ends and life in Ukraine becomes immeasurably harder once the west comes to collect on their debt. Any Ukrainian who cares about their family will avoid getting conscripted at any cost.

 

This is some amazing art. I mean, the book sounds great so I’ll buy it anyway, but even if it wasn’t, this is gorgeous. I might even have to make a poster out of it.

 

So many libs keep telling me if I don’t vote for Biden that Trump will pass all these anti-trans laws that Biden and the Democrats would of course have stopped. I tell them my trans comrades on Hexbear all say I shouldn’t vote for Biden but these libs just keep asking for the proper documentation.

 

This comment made my day, just felt it was something more people should see. Thank you, @[email protected]

https://hexbear.net/comment/4673355

 

I was looking up economic data on the former Eastern Bloc and came across this table on the Statista website. Let’s unpack this a bit, shall we?

This chart compares GDP per capita of various Eastern Bloc countries versus the European Union at three different points: 1950, 1989, and 2000. GDP is an incredibly flawed metric for measuring an economy. It is tailor-made to make capitalist, imperialist economies look better and to make exploited and socialist economies look worse; so already, by comparing GDP figures we are spotting the capitalist countries a bunch of points. For more information on the flaws of GDP, check out John Smith’s Imperialism in the 21st Century. And of course, GDP per capita completely ignores how income and wealth are distributed within a country. In a more equal country (like the USSR), the median person will have a much higher standard of living than the median person in a country with the same GDP per capita but is much more unequal (like the USA). GDP per capita doesn’t mean much if a small number of people hold all the wealth.

I’m not sure how much useful information we can take away from comparing the changes from 1950 to 1989. Some of the communist countries improve versus the EU, some do worse, and some (USSR) basically tread water. Given how much larger the Soviet economy was compared to the others, I’ll make a couple notes here. The period 1950-1989 means you have only about 6 years of the more “Stalinist” economy and then 33 years of the economy after Khrushchev’s “reforms”. So this data says, despite the economic problems that occurred under Khrushchev and Brezhnev, the USSR still held their own against the EU. Further, the 1989 end point feels a bit like cheating. At that point Gorbachev’s death drive was in full swing. I suspect if you chose say 1985 or even 1986, the USSR comparison point might actually have been higher than in 1989, again despite all the problems that were going on in the Soviet economy. But then again, the 1989 data point only further reinforces how bad things would get. According to Growth Crystal, GDP growth from 1956-1991 was still 4.9%.

The comparison between 1989 and 2000 is truly staggering to wrap your head around. Every country except Poland sees a massive decline in GDP per capita relative to the EU (and not like things really improve much in Poland, they more or less hold steady). In the span of just 11 years, for the USSR this comparison goes from 49% to 24%! And remember, that 49% is already a little “deflated” in that it includes a lot of Gorby’s fuck ups. This incredible drop in GDP also does not show the incredible amount of human suffering tied to that drop - over a million lives lost, countless others broken and destroyed.

Now, a liberal who’s going through this may say sure, the 90s were rough. But that was just some necessary structural adjustment in the transition from inefficient socialism to efficient capitalism. And sure, 2000 was now 24 years ago and that is a lot of time. But also according to Growth Crystal (ibid), economic growth in Russia since 1999 has been 3.8% per year. That’s… fine. But not exactly world-beating. Importantly, when comparing “what might have been”, you have to take into account the economic collapse of the 90s that was entirely due to capitalism. I did some very rough math, and the total average annual rate of economic growth in the USSR (using the Russian Federation as a proxy post-1991) since the fall of the USSR has been around 1%. That’s about as bad as a country can possibly be over a sustained period of time.

I think this last point is very important. Libs will compare the present-day situation in the former Eastern Bloc to what it was in 1991, as if they would be frozen in time from that point on. But that is far from what could be reasonably expected had the USSR not collapsed. Yes, even before Gorbachev, the USSR had some serious problems in the economy. You know who also has problems in their economy? Literally every country. There’s no economy out there that just runs perfect - capitalist, socialist, and everything in between. The US has problems. The EU has problems. Even China has problems.

What those countries don’t always have is leadership (hey, let’s not pin all of this on Gorbachev alone) that through some combination of incompetency, corruption, and misguided ideals that takes dramatic steps to wreck their own economy. So let’s come up with a very conservative, plausible alternate path for the USSR post-1985 or so.

Really, we just have to assume Gorby doesn’t get a chance to screw things up. But let’s assume instead, Soviet leadership in the late 80s just does some very basic course correcting. Like, a lot of the problems can still be not totally addressed. But assume leadership does get some of the “low-hanging fruit” like accomplishing some anti-corruption initiatives and adopting some tech-driven solutions to economic planning. Just enough to stabilize things a bit.

In this scenario, all that the Soviet Union has to do is beat that ~1% economic growth figure, and then the people of the former USSR are better off today if the USSR never collapsed. This is such a low bar to clear, I don’t see how the USSR doesn’t achieve this. It’s frankly sandbagging to assume a socialist country that achieved solid economic growth for decades even in bad times couldn’t see 2-3% growth over 30-35 years. Even if you’re a lib and think a socialist economy is fundamentally flawed, you can’t reasonably think this scenario would not likely be achieved. Personally, I think had the USSR survived, they would have eventually stabilized by following a more Dengist path or going all-in on cybernetic central planning once the power of computing was fully realized. Either way, the Soviet economy eventually stabilizes.

And it bears repeating, we’re just talking about per capita GDP. Even if alternate universe USSR only saw 1% growth and overall the economies of the two Russias were the same, communist Russia will have a much more equal distribution of wealth, meaning the average worker is much better off under socialism even under the same aggregate outcome.

Of course, it’s not just about economic growth. Had the USSR not been murdered, all the human suffering that occurred in the 90s could have been avoided. None of this had to happen. Even if you think socialism is flawed and even if the USSR didn’t fix all of their problems, the present world is a worse world than if socialism in the Eastern Bloc was not murdered (and it most definitely did not die of natural causes, it was murdered).

 

Hate that it’s Ted Cruz, though.

 

To clarify something, I’m not some boug. I worked at a job for years where they put money into a 401k as part of the benefits, and I was there long enough that it vested. So I have a few grand that’s locked up in an IRA that I can’t get into until I retire.

Here’s my simple strategy: I’m putting everything into Chinese index funds / stonk ETFs.

My rationale: it’s all about the emotional risk management.

What I mean by that statement is, in the past when one of my sports teams I root for has made it into the final round of the playoffs, I would place a small bet against them. Because if they win, I won’t care that I lost some money. But if they lose, I’ll at least have a bit more $$$ in my pocket, it’s a small consolation but it helps.

So how does this relate to China and investing? The way I see it, there’s likely one of two scenarios for where the Chinese economy will be a few decades from now when I can take that money out. Either A.) the CPC more or less just continues on with what it’s been doing since Deng. Continue to develop the productive forces, continue to rack up W after W while the west implodes on itself, and the Chinese corporations I’m invested in will do great - stonks go up and I have a nice little savings built up.

Or B.) CPC pushes the communism button in 2050 or so, they nationalize all the corporations, and I lose the whole investment. But you know what, WHO CARES?! THEY PUSHED THE BUTTON! That would literally be the best thing that I could ever see happen in my lifetime, and the last thing I would care about would be my IRA.

Seems like no matter what, I end up a winner 😎

 

For this hypothetical, let’s say it’s not aliens actually visiting earth. But let’s say JWST finds a planet maybe a few hundred light years away, and we can see lights and cities and maybe spaceships or stuff like that around it. So no contact, but 100% proof there’s intelligent life out there. How would humans (and different groups of humans, like conservative Christians) react to this?

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