Youtube hearted comments of Curious Crow (@CuriousCrow-mp4cx).

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  33. If only money was the problem. Europe could step up their defence production in the short term within a year. But... - Hungary and Italy are chummy with Putin; not all Europe countries are as committed to perceiving Putin as much as an existential threat as those on Russia's door step; - the role of NATO vs the EU's is not a settle matter, as the EU has no distinct defence policy, and some favour NATO taking the lead rather than the EU; - there are political hurdles to overcome because the difficulty of not sacrificing social spending for defence spending, as well as liberal democratic parties being anti-war. The only way to tie all these threads together into a usable rope is for Europe to quickly develop a vision for Ukraine's future which also has to offer some security guarantees to Ukraine. Why? Putin doesn't really want to negotiate, and will use any ceasefire to refresh and reset his forces, to get the rest later. So, there must be credible consequences to Putin's regime if he attacks again. Wagging a finger won't cut it. And Europe has to accept that: - there can be no rapprochement with Russia, but must completely transition away from Russian oil and gas, and develop alternative sources of energy generation. - Europe must also start a fully fledged defence industry, not just to supply arms and offensive vehicles, and air craft but also start a up a defensive cyber industry of its own. - Finally, it must strengthen it's own and Ukraine's democracy, and assist in its reconstruction, and industrial and agricultural policy, because the prospect of losing control of Eastern Ukraine will damage agricultural production, and alternative supply chain routes for Ukrainian exports must be found through other routes by land, rail and sea. Failure to do will impact World prices for wheat and cooking oil, and other commodities Ukraine supplies, and Putin wants. All this cannot be done next week. A lot of serious thinking has to be done, and faily quickly. Money is not the problem. It's the perception of the threat which is not shared, and which in the context of an epidemic of economic contraction, and the subsequent rise of populism, plays into Putin's hand. He doesn't believe in ideology. He's a might makes right guy. But we in the West are very idealistic and perhaps too ideological and technocratic about things. Our current leaders have zero experience of how the 20th century was destined to be an hiatus rather than a paradigm shift, and they think they can talk Putin down and they can go back to getting rich. Not anymore. Welcome to the end if an empire, whose passing leaves gaps that must be filled, or something most undesirable will take their place
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  35. Finding between £6000 to over £9000 upfront to complete an offshore spousal visa application is a policy decision that won't impact non-dom. That's for sure. He has his own family to prioritise, and with his qualifications, and honed language skills, he could find work in the Private Security or intergovernmental field as an analyst in Italy. Good luck to him. Until the UK faces upto some home truths, immigration is going to be an itch that turns into an abscess, ably assisted by political entrepreneurs. You want to stop immigration? Then get real about what that means to an aging workforce who expect to get a state pension and a sustainable income in retirement. What will that mean for the birth rate in the UK, that's below replacement level now? Partially as a result of policies - economic, political, and cultural that surpress the desire and ability to have children, who would grow up to pay the taxes to support you in retirement? What happens because of the shortfall? A declining population, higher labour costs to business which will pass them onto the consumer. Yes, they will be some innovation, but a declining population means a shrinking market for goods and services. So profits will fall. Add to that increasing wealth inequality, immigration is the only response to deeply embedded short-sighted and short-termist policies, based on Ideological and logical fallacies that bring undesirable consequences like a falling birth rate. And we're not helping ourselves by clinging on to them. That's why our junior doctors were leaving the NHS and migrating aboard. In total, since 2021, over 500,000 British people have migrated from the UK. And the real debate is why? Why are they leaving? We need them, especially now, as the consequences if the failed experiments of the last 5 decades come home to roost. Why don't people want to start families? What is it about our country that makes living here an effective contraceptive for workers of child-bearing age. What are we doing wrong? And until we're willing to look hard at our priorities regarding family life in Britain, we won't stop immigration.
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  37. Pushback is to be expected from those interested in keeping people ignoring the inevitable effects of not distributing wealth fairly enough to keep those mostly producing it just surviving, nevermind thriving. What people don't really understand is that this is nothing new. I was reading a piece by Gore Vidal from July 1961 about the willingness of the "Conservatives" in the USA to embrace the ideas of Ayn Rand, who argued that altruism and justice were immoral, and that the Cult of "I" should replace Christianity, and other religions, and values. Then I watched Philiosphy Tube's latest video that described how the powerful encourage those they need to keep compliant and cooperative in keeping their gravy train running, to see those harmed by their hoarding and exploitation as not worthy of being cared about. The people, lives, and livelihoods ruined and being cut short by wealth inequality are to be ignored. Or not grieved over. In that, Boris' Johnson's attitudes towards the deaths in Covid were not an aberration. His response to the real damage done by Brexit to business and people's, was not the ramblings of a functional alcoholic - the only personal characteristic he shared with Churchill - but his real belief. They want us to stop feeling that injustice is wrong. That wealth inequality to that extent means that the damaged caused is swept under the carpet, devalued, or seen as not worthy of being grieved at it is destroying the capacity of people and their families to survive, is not inevitable, natural, or virtuous, but a deliberate and calculated harvesting and hoarding of asset wealth to benefit the few. It is the world of "Soylent Green". (Google it.) Where those worthy of consideration as determined by the needs of the powerful are treated are seen as worthy of our consideration, and are granted privilege, whilst those who aren't, are marginalised, seen as inconvenient problems, and their suffering is ignored. This is nothing new. Class and Caste define who gets looked after. And who ends up rioting. And who is blamed and scapegoated. The current form comes from the failure of Neoliberal economics to maintain the postwar economic settlement in the West, and to ignore the social, cultural, economic, and political dislocations and insecurities caused by it, occurring everywhere, and all at once in this present time. People everywhere, except the winners in this rigged game, are pissed at the outcome, and rightfully so. But the wealthy winners, are largely are using their profits to prevent the pitchforks coming for them. They know their fantasy has crashed to earth, to the extent it has created more instability and more frictions. To the extent the fallout is capable of damaging the earth. But, like any addict, they're not ready to give up. So they will not admit their failure, but instead, will double down. Hence, there's more political polarisation, because when people are busy hating each other, they don't notice their pockets being picked. It doesn't have to be that way. Capitalism can work in ways that focus on efficient and effective distribution of asset wealth and resources, instead of beggar thy neighbour. It can work in ways that are safer, cleaner, and that can keep the planet in habitable for humans. But we have to do capitalism differently. Capitalism has to prioritise the basic needs of people and communities before profit. Simply, profit returns to being the means rather than the ends. Capitalism has to pay its way. Simply, the costs of doing business have to be borne by those doing business. Socialism for the rich, and unmitigated capitalism for everyone else is no longer acceptable or desirable. The rich should clean up their own messes, such as pollution, and societal and cultural impacts of their activities. If Capitalism did only those two things, wealth inequality would eventually disappear. Wealth would not disappear. On the contrary, it might even grow in size, with more people being able to access the means of building it. It just would be hoarded by a minority.
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  54. This speech was mostly directed toward Veep Vance's base, and therefore does not accurately reflect nor serve the interests and the welfare of anyone else. However, despite Vance's hypocrisy, we must accept that Democracy can only die not from the actions of external actors alone, but with the complicity and neglect of those within. That means it has to be actively maintained as events happen in and around democratic communities. And each community must decide for itself what are the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats it must adapt to, and how. Values have to evolve to meet the challenges change always presents, but the decision cannot be forced in one direction or another. It must be consented to, and that consent must be proactive. It cannot rely on passive consent or apathy for legitimacy. And it cannot be forced by flooding the zone, and obscuring reality either, as that is exploitation. Veep Vance has a huge burden, as his speech shows. Carrying around that huge beam in his eye is bound to cower his stature toward complicity with the corporate exploitation of his base. And our elites too cannot stand straight exactly either. Both sides of the Atlantic are suffering from myopia, as their elites struggle to square eroding the social contract with the people for personal and political gain. In this, the beams in their eyes bang into each other, creaking like great trees bending in the wind as corporations and plutocrats push to assert their will on the people. That is the pressure democracy is under most, from those who neglect democracy because it's hard to be patient and responsive when it's inconvenient and you're impatient. So, let us strive to remove the beams in our eyes, and clean our own Augean Stables. There's plenty of work to go round. The work never stops in a place that is home.
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  64. Prof Wilson is right. Entrepreneurs are making money and gaining power from outrage that they deliberately provoke in groups susceptible to being manipulated. It's not stupidity or a lack of intelligence that makes them susceptible. Everyone has a trigger, because the oldest and most automatic parts of our brain are those that focus on fear, anxiety, and safety. That where the biases come from, and they can override the intellect through emotion. Put people under pressure, and their defence mechanisms kick-in far more easily, which override and dominate their intellect. It's not about intelligence, or who is "smart" or "stupid". It's the way our brains have evolved. Everyone is susceptible to falling back on their biases, when put under pressure. When emotions like anxiety, fear, greed, or desire flow in, thought and reason tend to be pushed out. And we react, and act out based on those emotions rather than reason It's an age old problem, because we evolved to be like this in a time when sabre-toothed tigers roamed the earth. Those reactions made it more likely we could identify dangers and escape, but this tendency has become more problematic the larger and more complex our environment has become. We don't come equipped with the knowledge and skills to deal with media or people wanting to provoke us and capture our attention for money or power on an industrial scale. We may not know when we are being led by our nose. So, perhaps we need to think more before we react. Perhaps we need to ask Cicero's question of "Qui bono?" "Who benefits? " when we read, watch, or listen to media that seems designed to evoke strongly negative emotions in us? That isn't something easy to do, but we need to question more before we commit to investing on, or identifying with any particular point of view based on information you aren't personally familiar with. The professor is right, and the Internet companies know he's right too, because there are teams outside this ckuntry competing to manipulate you. If you have the time, look up online articles about media literacy. There's also free resources for children and adults, about how to use the Internet safely. Finland do this in schools because they have been the target of certain political ambitions. We need to do that here too. And we need to give every one access to the knowledge and tools how to use the Internet safely.
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  73. Nigel Farage is a symptom, not the cause. He's a representative of a class of people that want to install a compliant government who are opportunistically exploiting the valid concerns of UK voters. He proves most of all that anger, fear, and resentment can neuter commonsense if ignored and allowed to fester and grow over decades, as it has been. Richard J. Murphy argues much as Professor does that Top-down technocrats are divorced from the realities of the citizens at the bottom. And unless they can meet together in the middle - by the top down relinquishing their isolation, detachment, arrogance, and listening to and learning from, and acting on the valid issues of people the bottom - then they are making room for the Farages of the world and their powerful donors to take this country over and hollow it out even more. The "growth" desired by the well-meaning is being needed out by the long disease of nothing working effectively or efficiently for people at the bottom. Not only are they impoverished and sometimes hungry and homeless, they are verging on the desperate in many cases as they struggle to get the real help they need. The people in control of this country are clueless to the extent they know a lot of information, but don't know or have the wisdom understand when they are failing everyone else but themselves. And their complacency then shifts into incompetence. That why Farage is steamrolling the two main parties. He is filling the credibility gap left by the unimaginative, the incurious, and the complacent. "Growth" is not what ordinary people are talking about at their kitchen tables. "Growth" doesn't pay their bills, or stops them from spending hours in A+E, or having someone to care for a relative while they have to work, or deal with impenetrable bureaucracy. By insisting on "growth" as being the issue you are not actively listening to the people at the bottom, or addressing their immediate concerns, and they know it. They are not being heard or treated with respect. They are being talked down to. They are being stereotyped, scapegoated, and being policed, but not being dealt with as people. And if you think Nigel Farage is bad, you haven't seen the people behind him, and who will come after. If you don't fill in that credibility gap, they will come and hollow out this country even further than it is already.
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  88. The commodificatiin of education has created a tendentious link between economic value and the subjects studied. Only if you believe that the dominant ideology of the wealthy and powerful should determine everything, including how to understand reality, would you take this seriously. If you want to do that, you should critically examine the academic disciplines that the asset owners favour, and then consider the reality that the world that they have consciously create is one where no-one is guaranteed a job, or a. livelihood. There's a channel called "How Money Works" and they uploaded a video on "Manufactured Uncertainty" that discusses that point. Moreover, it's ironic also that these same people are interested in academic disciplines that claim to understand why and how society produces too many educated people, which in turn creates problems in society... I can't remember the name of this niche area of study, but it's big amongst the Big Wigs in the US, so that thinking will in time trickle down to the wannabes in the UK... Oh yes, that's why this nonsense has popped up now on the agenda... Culture Wars... Thank God for my time in the Social Sciences, because it's made it easier to see where such the diversion of the politics of envy is leading us, and it's into another manufactured moral panic, which is quickly becoming irrelevant if the Big Wigs get their way. They've already shifted the goal posts, because they can, and it's not for our benefit. One could repackaged education and training as the Germans did, where vocational education and academic education were given equivalence far, far earlier in the United Kingdom, to the extent one could take vocational education and study it upto undergraduate levels and beyond. It was less socially divisive. And probably explains why their productivity has far better than ours. We're still trying to pigeonhole people and control them, instead of building on their potential. And in the attempt creating more disappointment and alienation in the process.
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  99. Professor, I like Taoist philosophy because it accepts that nothing that is dynamic is purely one thing. It always has the seeds of its opposite within it and vice versa. Accordingly, frustration with bureaucracy is symptomatic of something else, and to judge Felon Musk's efforts as purely one thing or another is unhelpful. I would say, judge it by it's fruits. Likewise, when dealing with private or public bureaucracy, our fetishisation of efficiency is itself inefficient, because often outsourcing essential services to the private sector, is driven by cost cutting, which in turn often doesn't the total costs that come from cost cutting. Needs and wants don't disappear, they just get deprioritised in order to seem do more with less. But the results tell a different story. CEOs and buresucrats just do enough to meet the targets they are given. If they can't do it, they will try to survive, or leave. So I would say that despite nearly a century of organisational theory, organisations still cannot change their cultures easily or quickly. And that's down to human nature. And I bet even in Musk's own fleet of enterprises there are latencies, because he is one himself. So, unless we really start to take the human element seriously in the world of work, nothing will change. Motivations are key, and unless those are tackled, there will be no real change happening. What we have now is Political Theatre, where we can't see what's happening backstage. Enjoy the show, because it is theatre, and wait and see.
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  118. Not really. Universities are not just factories for stuffing facts into people's heads, it's also a network. University makes finding talent more efficient, because it locates what is needed all in one place, and provides relatively easy access to it. How any subject is taught in universities is efficient, including the contacts you make going into the field. And sadly, fame and talent aren't always together. Talent is a fuzzy concept at the best of times, because especially in the creative arts, talent might not be recognised until after you're dead. Even worse, those called talented and get recognised as such while alive may fall out of fashion. So talent is fine, but university is more about keeping the practice of creative expression alive and functioning within a capitalist society. Capitalism destroys what it considers useless. So quality isn't a driving motivation under capitalism, but what return one can get. That's precarious for something that is more about creative quality than quantity of wealth it produces. Talent doesn't guarantee a living sadly. Luck does play a part. I mean, the talents of someone like Pablo Escobar and Al Capone didn't need university to flourish, but imagine if they hadn't really needed to embark on a life of crime to get access to wealth, power, and influence? These people were talented, but their talents were misplaced. (In fact, the idea that evil is a force, energy, and expression misplaced is one that has intrigued me. The existence talented people doing bad things is very human.) in human societies a lot of things float to the top. Whether those things are good or bad, is a matter of their legacy, and impact in their field. I mean, poop floats to the top, but gold does not. Who's really to say?
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  128. After watching Conclave, I am finally convinced of the transformative power of Art. It's exploration of matters of faith, in the forms of certainty and doubt, was a relevation in understanding the mystery that is central to faith, but also a challenge to it because it challenges us. The human tendency to tidy things into pigeonholes, to stereotype, and to order things is a human defence mechanism but on an existential scale. Not because it needs to be ordered, but because it's how our brain evolved to work. Anything outside some framework or hierarchy demand more processing time and resources, so we resort to heuristics as shortcuts to more efficiently and effectively manage the flow of data through our senses and into our brains. We live through models. But, I am minded that as a famous British statistician said, that all models are wrong but, some are useful. That is the case because we as humans are limited in our capacities, so certainty can never be abdolute, and there is always mystery, uncertainty, and doubt. A person of faith knows this. To be a person of faith, is to have it tested by the sheer experience of living in an existence where the only constant is change. Like the muscles in your legs are challenged, but grow stronger, and contribute more to your overall health, one's faith must be stress-tested and be dynamic and responsive to grow stronger. Otherwise, our faith, captured in a prison of certainty, atrophies, weakens, and withers away. We should not succumb to fear. We should not fear doubt, because that shows that our faith is a living faith, that is geared to being open to the lessons that can be learned by living fully, and contemplate the mysteries of being human. Yes, the Church's policy is to hasten slowly, and to leave the door open to new knowledge. Thus, there will be eager debate between the shepherds and the managers, between the spiritual and the worldly within the Church. What is definitely certain is, that the Church will find its own way, in its own time, as everyone must, to find a useful model to shape its way forward.
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  131. No, it doesnt. It never has worked well in two party systems. People cannot be corralled into two choices. If individualism has any worth at all, then corralling people into a binary choice is actually anti-democratic. And, you not realising that is very weird. Doing that denies choice. And democracy is about having a meaningful choice about what happens in your community. Majoritarian politics is a convention, and a binary choice leaves many people politically alienated. That's the irony. So much propaganda about parliamentary democracy being the only solution is itself incompatible with individual choice. And we don't talk about that enough. We don't talk about the issues with party politics. We don't talk about the problem of the power hungry incompetent gaining power. There's a lot we don't talk about. Modern life is itself a compromise on behalf of maintaining the status quo. It's not a natural thing. It is an artifice. And as long it met the need of the people, it was OK. But, now that the Age of AI plans to destroy the economic order, our compromises are wearing thin. And the chancers and crackpots both rich and poor, are striving to climb to the top of the greasy pole. Neoliberal economics is failing us, and so, everything is beginning to be questioned. Our delegated democracy form of politics is being questioned because whom we delegated it to are failing to deliver. I mean, in the 21st century, we've had a long time to fix poverty, to prevent economic hardship and apartheid arising. But those in charge were too busy enriching themselves. Oops. Human nature put a spanner in the works. Who would have thought that so much BS was the glue holding things together. Hence the attraction of Behavioural Science and Misinformation to manipulate the plebs. Now the BS is failing, things are being questioned,and the efforts to patch up the leaking ship are becoming more extreme. And opportunist will take advantage of that. If you want to scotch that tendency, it would mean actually giving power to the people, instead of delegating to rich and powerful chancers and crackpots who are totally in ignorance of and cut off from how the ordinary masses live in the system they control. And the Pandemic was a magnifying lens that concentrated the heat to show how unsatisfying things really were. How dumb ideas permeated our world to our detriment. We haven't yet evolved to dismantle the rot. Future generations may do it, but for now, it's all melting, like wax under a flame, as the impossibility of the current economic system succeeding for anyone but the very asset wealthy minority is being laid bare.
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  132. This reminds me of those sad villains who need to be acknowledged as such. No self-awareness of the fact that he was an utterly bad judge of character to choose a windbag spiv like Johnson whose shortcomings were so obvious to undermine any hope of political longevity or stability as most time was spent putting out the fires he so casually kept lighting, instead of being focussed even on his and Cummings' supposed shared goals. It was a clown show where Cummings was the straight guy. But unlike Morecambe and Wise, or any other great double acts, there was no shared sense of duty. Just ambition and self-indulgence. And as for his dream of revolutionising government, we'll a broken clock can be right twice a day, but be useless otherwise. Cummings intelligence is like a crevasse - a very deep niche body of knowledge in a very narrow area, that becomes hazardous for others to negotiate because it has no regard for anything but itself. A nerdy teenager without restraints, and a too narrow focus create hubris. He could have done some good if he had aligned himself with good. But he didn't. And surprised pickachu face, he failed. Whether you are an eminence gris puppet master in the shadows or a great man wannabe leader, your your competence is determined by your knowledge of human nature and your judgment about people. Why? No ruler rules alone. To get anything important in life done you have to do it with the help of other people. And you have to pick the right people for the job. Unless you can do that, your hopes and dreams will collapse like a house of cards. Cummings is naive, and not in a good way, because his ambition far outweighs his strategic capacity, and patience to find the right people to work with, so he could build a legacy worth building. Instead, what has he got? More "consulting" for people who want to run countries like businesses, with them as the CEOs. Clueless, inflexible, unempathetic, and unethical people, who best achievement is to underline the risks we run tolerating capitalism, and how important it is for democracy to be strengthened, and government needing stronger guiderails to neuter rich people with too much time on their hands.
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  152. That simply is not the case. There is no such thing as can't. No Parliament can be bound by it's predecessor. And if a future government is given the mandate to become a full member of the EU in the future, so be it. And frankly, it's more likely than not, because WTO lite, which we have now is not working for us. And there are sound, realistic reasons why it isn't. If you think that Brexit would give us control in the sense you mean, you are sorely mistaken. Of it was all about control, ask yourself this question: why was Johnson's negotiation with the United States for a trade deal made a state secret? That is, the Public were excluded from knowing the details. Why? How can we the public have control over something we are prevented from knowing about? Because we could only find out after it was signed and a done deal where we would have had no say at all. You talk of control, but you don't understand the realities of control. Size and economic gravity, as being able to influence the economies we do deals with matters. Call it clout. And who do you think has more clout between the EU, the US, and the UK? It certainly isn't us, simply because our economy is smaller, and we are, by necessity, a net importer of goods. So who needs who more? Why were we having to send people to Washington to ask for a trade deal? Why did Boris bury the terms he was offering to the US, and what they wanted? Because the reality of control versus the rhetoric means we are not in the driving seat. The US could walk away, and did because they didn't get what they wanted. And you can bet your bottom dollar it was the NHS privatised completely, and an alternative dispute adjudication court manned by adjudicators chosen by the Americans, and in secret. How I know? Look up the terms of the trade deals the US has done with Mexico and Canada. Ask yourself why they backed out of the Asia Pacific Trade Partnership. The Americans take no prisoners. So, in that context, where is the control you're looking for? That's why Kemi Badenoch can't dig a trade deal worth it's name that isn't a cut and paste job from the deals done while we were in the EU. That's the sad irony. We literally have less control, less influence, and less credibility because of Brexit as a trade partner. It wasn't the EU's fault that we deindustrialised and were frankly inept at replacing those jobs with ones worth the name. And whole communities were left to wither on the vine. It's not the EU's fault that our governments were ideologues who believed stupid things like Austerity could grown an economy. Or that a pandemic was the perfect opportunity to raid the public purse, and let the taxpayer foot the bill. Etc, etc. Or that everything the EU did, the UK was at the table and influencing them to do it. Read Phillip Hammond's entry into the Brexit Witness Archive where he described how Teresa May talked herself into a corner, because there was no consensus about what Brexit meant or what it should look like. But she talked to the wrong people and threw away any chance of a rational Brexit by pushing ahead when she should have held a royal commission or a public inquiry to inform and identify what the best form of Brexit could be. We could have then debated it, and put that to another referendum. But she lacked imagination, and followed her ambition instead. And it blew up in her face, in Boris' face, in Truss' face, and in Sunak's face. Why? Because what they promised could not be delivered, and they did not own up to that. And if Farage ever came near to leading this country, it would blow up in his face too, because reality is a harsh mistress when you don't pay attention to her. And our establishment hasn't for quite some while. The truth is uncomfortable, but necessary. So, it will be future generations which will decide. Not us. We've blown it. All we can do is clean up the mess. That's the least we can do, but we have to deal with reality, and that nothing to do with our worth, or who we think we are. Good politics is the art of the possible, and if our current and future leaders do tell us what is really possible, we going to stay in the Slough of Despond we've dug ourselves into.
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  157. Is this comment helping? Not really? It's really missing the issue that Vlad Vexker and other academics have noticed, which is that the economic and social experimentation the UK has been subjected to over the last few decades has unforeseen consequences. Britain is not alone in that. Any country subscribing to neoliberal economics and politics have gone through the same issues. And it is rooted in a struggle to cope with the failures, that have impacted the world. In developed countries like are own, we subscribed to beliefs that facilitated those experiments, but provided no safety margins. And the consequences have been a massive transfer of asset wealth away from both the masses and the state to corporations, banks and plutocrats. And they don't want to pay their fair share of the clean up costs. Indeed, they are so wealthy that they can capture governments, but funding politicians. Because they are now influenced by wealthy plutocrats, they have stopped listening to the people. That's why authors like Mark Blyth describes the rise of populism as basically being Angrynomics. The masses have been the losers, and the winners don't want to give up their games. What the problem really is that neither the populists nor the plutocrats have any real plan what to do about it. The decisions taken decades ago, cannot be fixed quickly, but neither can the populist avoid being bought by the plutocrats. Hence the lurch into outrage politics, and the influx of political entrepreneurs who wish to take advantage of the crisis to get the opportunity to sell out their followers to the plutocrats in return for getting very wealthy after they leave politics. The traditional parties are being neutered as opposition to the plutocrats, and the plutocrats are spending money to distract us from turning against them. Hence social media toxic influence. The masses honestly don't know the depth and extent of the mess they are in, and frustrated and resentful they are falling for the wrong solutions. They want the clock turned back, but you can't step into the same river twice. What to do? 1) Hold your hands up and admit to the the problems, 2) and then address the wealth gap between workers and capital; 3) decentralise political power by increased devolution. 4) modernise the practices in democracy. 5) Nationalise politics to remove private money from the process, including regulating media. 6) Ensure government at all levels is more responsive to the public. 7) Train our leaders differently. But make no mistake, it will take as long as it did to create the problems to repair them. We need to return to mixed economies, we need to tackle corruption and we need to be honest about how we make our wealth. You see, imperial colonisation was replaced with economic colonisation after World War II. And that is not healthy. Exploitation of the poorer countries and peoples of the world can't be the foundation of our prosperity anymore. That dirty little secret has to confronted. It's not about destroying capitalism l, but making it work to fairly distribute it's gains in a sustainable and effective way. If we don't, we will suffer for fudging the realities we face.
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