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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 TM | 
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 Re: Calling Dr. Ty, Dr Adder Quote: 
 I'd proposed discussing the capriciousness of our judicial system and how randomness could be better limited in the processes. I still think that study is out there - a sort of modern version of The Death of Common Sense. And there are great tie-ins to criminal justice reform and our appallingly lax use of dubious expert opinions and their expert-in-a-box authors. His logic would be well employed in exposing the flaws in our stone age adversarial legal system. ...But he'd probably look into it for a few weeks and deem it terminal. Anyway, you've made my day. ______ * Actually, it's further down the list. Not hooking up with this utterly gorgeous chick in Boston in the 90s, deciding against living in Australia during college, and going to law school, are the top three. | 
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 He's right. And Shapiro and French and everybody else who argues that "personal responsibility" dictates life outcomes are deluded. They're also quite unlearned regarding the modern economy. There are fewer and fewer paths to prosperity in this country for those born affluent and middle class, let alone poor. If you're born poor, you have to pitch a near perfect game, and be incredibly lucky along the way, to ascend several rungs on the class ladder. You've no margin for error at all. You're likely leveraged with debt, and one slip starts a spiral of adverse reinforcing impacts. It has not always been this way. This is a result of financialization. Carlson nails it when describes Bain Capital's model as predatory. Too much of the increase to the 1% has been created by eliminating the wage costs historically providing income to the lower 40%. And our worship of financialization is amazing. We actually consider consultants and financiers to be among the best and brightest. But ask yourself, "How hard is it to buy a business, lard it with debt, pare labor costs, and then sell it?" Any of us here could do that. It's not rocket science. How hard is it to make a boatload running a fund where you're getting 2 and 20? The hard part is getting into the game. Once you're in it, it's a joke. The system is rigged to protect the interests of those with a few bucks. The poor kids are priced out of the high paying jobs. And as more and more of the wealth funneled into the financial sector, as no one gives a shit about anything but that and tech anymore, it sucked all of the cash out of the other professions. Nothing in this country will be fixed until we start looking at corporations and economies wholistically, over the longer term. If all we fixate on is cost cutting by removing or arbitraging labor abroad, all of the money will continue to drift into the financial sector (until it succeeds in then eliminating itself with algorithms, which it's doing to an extent already). There are two options as I see it: Rein in finance and create a new "Contract with Labor" in which corporations are charged with benefiting society as a whole rather than just meeting quarterlies. (If corporations are people, then they should be strongly compelled to act decently, as people are, no?) This would allow for workers to earn decent pay and organically grow the economy. Option two is let everything go to shit and live in one of two dystopias: DemocratLand: Where the half of society that's eliminated from economic activity is managed with a mix of safety nets. GOPLand: Where the half of society eliminated from economic activity is ignored and subsists in hellish conditions with minimal safety nets. I fear the people doing alright at the moment (the top 20%) favor the second option. They like the way things are going and don't really want change. They just disagree about what form of dystopia the economic losers degrade into over the coming decades. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 Yes, trusting the free market is not working. Yes, it's hard to find good ways to foster shared, robust economic growth. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 OTOH, the GOP offers minimal safety nets and scoldings on "personal responsibility." That's hugely fucking productive. Perhaps if they just finger wag hard enough all those couch surfers will finally get off their asses and finish their graduate degrees. The free market hasn't failed. The free market has been hijacked by the finance industry. And the reason why isn't complex. Financing things is easy, there's minimal overhead, and it's never hard to get yourself paid, well. As a friend who works in institutional sales once explained to me, "The closer your job is to lots of money, the more money you're likely to get." Our culture is completely warped with this thinking. Everything's a hack to get around the slow and steady and often hard work it takes to make money, say, building things, or providing useful services. Too many people with brains with have decided to seek asymmetrical returns, or easiest guaranteed returns, by working with money rather than doing something for which they truly have a talent. If not for tech, I think innovation would be utterly flat, as Cowen cites in The Great Stagnation. | 
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 I think that AOC and new colleagues are approaching things VASTLY differently than their predecessors. And people are listening. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. How many Republican Senators got Russian money laundered through the NRA in 2016? | 
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 It's like trying to buy something to take your family to the mountains on ski trips, and choosing between a boat and a Range Rover. The boat is designed to not do that job. The Range Rover is going to be in the shop a lot. So neither is perfect, but the differences between them are quite different. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 You mean who is listening to AOC *besides* Politico, the NYT, the WaPo, Fox News, 60 Minutes, and every thirsty* GOP operative/politician out there? Shit, even the gals on The View are talking about her. You can barely spend 5 minutes on Twitter without seeing some bro telling her to go to Venezuela yo see why socialism is bad. (Why not a kibbutz? Or Scandinavia?) In contrast, no one outside of certain neighborhoods in NYC ever gave a shit about Vito Marcantonio back in the day. *I love how the kids are using “thirsty” these** days. ** I feel like I should put the YouTube link to MTV’s “The Death of Bling” here, but I am too lazy. | 
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 And a kibbutz? Really? The new dems hate Israel don’t they? | 
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