General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Animal Farm
Sabine Hossenfelder
comments
Comments by "Animal Farm" (@animalfarm7467) on "Capitalism is good. Let me explain." video.
It will be interesting to see how Sabine backpedals next video. Or maybe she will continue as if nothing happened.
27
Sabine must be taking some of these criticisms seriously; my most critical comment has been removed. And it could not be considered hate speech.
3
I wonder who paid Sabine to give this talk? Could this have been the Mont Pelerin Society and its think tanks?
2
Sabine giving credibility to the mathematics of "Economics" - extremely embarrassing. The credible tools of mathematics are used by the capitalists to sell the Neoliberal exploitation scam to the ignorant. And sadly, that's the majority. How many of you remember the Laffer Curve? LMAO
2
I would like to inform Sabine that "socialist" countries like Cuba, Laos, and North Korea are under US sanctions; a point she appears to have forgotten. Cuba has been under sanctions since February 3, 1962. This is why Cubans are driving cars made in the 1950s. Even capitalist countries like Venezuela that tend towards using their natural resources to help their own people usually wind up in the capitalist's crosshairs.
1
@di4mgaming115 : Don't speak so generally; anyone would think you were afraid to discussing the detail of the sanctions. The US controls everything from trade to how much Cuban's in the US can send home. And when considering non-socialist countries like Venezuela, the US tried everything from sending mercenaries to kill Maduro to funding a puppet (Guiado) and forcing much of the west to "recognize" Guiado as the legitimate president? Understand, US sanctions have resulted in the deaths of nearly 100,000 Venezuelans. The US must be trying to break what I call its "Madeline Albright - Iraq" record. Where Albright bragged about killing half a million Iraqi children through sanctions in the early 1990s. If you condone this imperial tactic of sanctioning countries and causing pain and death in an attempt to overthrow a government unwilling to bend to the demands of Washington; maybe your not a very nice person?
1
In a capitalist system eventually the psychopaths and sociopaths, with their finely honed Machiavellian skills, are pushed to the top of the heap. They quickly learn the best investment they can make is to own the government and its executive, legislative, and judicial elements. They soon learn that limiting the choice of political parties and controlling the binary choice is the best way to maintain control. If you look at the data, the return on investment of buying a government is truly amazing. When they own governments, they own the power of the state and its military might. This is beneficial when they look to foreign lands to expand their wealth through corruption and theft. They quickly learn they can easily install puppet governments in states (Ukraine) they intend to sacrifice on their imperial alter. They quickly learn they can buy other puppet governments (Germany, Poland) to do their bidding in their imperial wars. They can buy sycophantic government puppets (Olaf Scholz) to do as they are told, and be assured these puppets will just stand silent while that state's critical infrastructure is destroyed to benefit their own geopolitical agenda. They can get their puppet government officials (Annalena Baerbock) to commit to their imperial wars while leaving their own people in the cold. And by owning the state, they can rewrite history to reflect their own narrative pushing aside those pieces to text that exposes their intent. Zbigniew Brzezinski - "Ukraine is an important space on the Eurasian chessboard. Eurasia is the center of the world and that he who controls Eurasia controls the world." The outcomes of capitalism aren't as benign as Sabine would have you believe.
1
Maybe physicists should stick to selling the scam of String and Membrane Theories instead of trying to sell the scam of the Mont Pelerin Society and the University of Chicago's Austrian economics.
1