rwtwm

joined 1 year ago
[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 1 points 4 days ago

I think the author comes to the same conclusion as you, but then rules it out because Labour themselves seem unwilling to do it.

 

Went to All Points East in Victoria park today. Nia Archives was on at 5:45. An absolute 10/10 zero notes perfect set. If you haven't caught her live and you like her music it's well worth it.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 8 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Reece Shearsmith and Sanjeev Bhaskar are pretty much UK comedy royalty. Looking forward to Sanjeev in particular, as I think he's gonna really throw himself at it.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 5 points 2 months ago

'Hold my beer' I believe

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 1 points 2 months ago

Yeah but these are often accompanied by us flying all of our military aircraft over London. I think the analogy holds, even if ours is a bit eccentric.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 4 points 2 months ago

I'm not American (but we do get a lot of US Pol foisted on us), so forgive me if I'm missing something... I thought the US democratic party was basically everyone more left wing than Joe Manchin. There are 'third parties', but in general the broad church argument applies... Anyway aren't USians able to actually pick the candidates that stand for those parties? So wouldn't you use the generals to vote 'against' Republicans, but then use the primaries process to vote for the shape of D you wanted? Here that's not an option, the party puts up candidates. But you have the ability to pressure the candidates even after they are elected. Might be a long shot, but is inherently less fatalistic than just giving up, or even (as seems disturbingly popular these days) calling for some form of civil war.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 3 points 2 months ago

You've worded it best.

My version of the take is; The world will be on average easier if more people are pleasant to each other. You can't make everyone join in, but you can make the world better on average, which surely is good enough?

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 12 points 2 months ago (5 children)

I'm not a 'we won't be friends' person. But I do think this is a really poor response. Who you work for is one of the biggest ethical decisions you make. You take years of training and skills and you use them for 40+ hours a week to... Well, support the actions of an industry that brings misery to millions of people.

Getting a job is hard, but it's not impossible. And you're choosing avoiding that discomfort over making life worse for people. You may be but a tiny cog in a giant machine, but if that cog has to turn you're part of the problem.

I know this is gonna come off as aggressive. I have no beef with you personally, and you are but one of hundreds of millions of people shrugging and working in destructive of unethical enterprises. But that shrugging is the system. Collectively the system doesn't work without you all dedicating half your waking life to it.

I do wish you the best, but hope you'll eventually do the hard thing. Because it's the right thing.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

What was the Sheriff of Nottingham doing in St Albans?

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I think a lot of people in this thread are overstating the suspicion of outsiders. International trade has existed for thousands of years. There was even limited tourism in the middle ages. It would be rare to encounter people that you couldn't communicate with, but I don't think you'd be automatically sacrificed.

I'm in London, so would fare better than most as they would definitely be familiar with outsiders. That said people in many of the old European cities would likely be able to blag their way to local universities. Oxford definitely already existed 650 years ago so I'd start by heading there.

I think all scholarly writing was in Latin at the time, so I'd need somebody to translate, but (with luck) I could move maths on a couple of hundred years. I reckon I could get basic electricity going too. Obviously the more you said upfront the more suspicious people would be, but if you drip-fed knowledge over a few years, trying to let the steps rest upon each other you could probably share a lot of what we know today.

 

I'm only really sharing this to give me somewhere to voice my bewilderment. Economists and financial reporters strike me as among the most gullible uncritical people on the planet. Reeves had a panicky Spring statement because of a missing £10bn in the projections for 5 years time!

Now it seems the forecasts were £15bn out at a lead time of a single quarter. Yet I bet come autumn we'll be soberly reviewing the OBR report and talking about how tax changes might impact the final year of the projections.

BTW financial forecasting is hard. Most models are wrong but some are less wrong than others and all that. I'm not arguing against using the best info we have. I'm just astounded by the level of precision we work to at these sorts of lead times, given the evidence before our very eyes of how wide the error bars are.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Isn't that a 'necessary but not sufficient' condition though? I'm thinking principally of the struggles in Zimbabwe here.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 5 points 4 months ago

It's been 15 years and I'm still not sure if MMT is an accurate description of Economics, a persuasive analogy, or convincing bunkum.

[–] rwtwm@feddit.uk 4 points 4 months ago

This isn't a comment in support of the actions described, but a comment about unintended consequences...

If you reclassify putting stickers on a car as domestic terrorism, you're somewhat removing the disincentive for some in doing an actual terrorism.

 

This popped into my mind the other day, and I've been distracted by it since.... You know when you're trying to recall something, and a wrong answer pops into your head, but you know it's wrong. Like how does that work? E.g. if you're trying to remember who made a song, and your brain can almost simultaneously go - oh it's that band, and then oh no not them. It feels like there has to be two (at least) parts of the brain working on it at the same time.

Maybe I'll be lucky and a neuroscientist will drop in and link me to a paper. More likely it's something to discuss with wild speculation. Either way, I'm hoping writing it down will stop it distracting me.

 

I'm learning the piano. I think the development is aimed at those a little above my skill level, but it's interesting about what it implies about how we learn physical skills.

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