Youtube comments of BVargas78 (@BVargas78).
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For me it was worse at age 14-16, a combination of exam pressure and teenage angst/heart ache was the main factor. I used to deliberately go running and do lots of excercisethrough the day before 7pm to try fight the insomnia. I would run to school, i would run back. I would start working out once i got home, all the time with a fear of the insomnia. I worst hated it on the rare times i was falling asleep, but a sudden noise from a family member, or even them calling me 'have you gone to bed yet?' (at around 11pm) woke me up, and then anger and stress would keep me up until 4-5am, then 2 hours sleep, then up for school, then not being able to concentrate, especially after lunch time.
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@jeffsterling2809 Is being against mass migration really such a far right thing though? I used to think it was a good thing back in the 90's as it would open people to other cultures and promote friendship and understanding. But the negatives it has bought have far outweighed the positives. The negatives are pressure it puts on social services and housing (it pushes up housing costs) it keeps wages low which is one of the reasons the elites who dont have to put up with the negatives support it. It creates what are effectively ghettos that become hot beds of crime and anti social behaviour. One could even argue it adds to the carbon footprint of the country, when many of these european countries would otherwise have had a stabilized or even declining population which would have created a lower carbon footprint. And trying to police the borders, process the paper work the appeals in the courts, the seaborne rescues is sapping away at any surplus wealth a country may have generated for that year, making the nation states more dependent on loans to make ends meet, which will one day hit a ceiling and contribute to a big economic crash. Most countries assume the economy will grow and make it easier to pay the debt in the future but we're reaching a change where that will no longer be the case.
And the other problem is it doesn't stop, it's going to get worse because in the future some countries like sudan and others around the sahara, maybe even the arabian peninsular will be no longer conducive towards sutaining human life due to reaching temperatures of 60 celcius, and no longer having any ground water. What will happen then? It will be entire nations on the march yet there is no plan on how to deal with this coming age of catastrophe.
To me far right is when you see your country as supreme over others and its ok to invade them and steal their resources. I'm against that, every country should strive to be self sufficient and look to safeguard it's future, not just deal with major crisis as they come. That's why we need to look to other solutions such as genuinely assisting these poorer countries with a development plan and development aid so that they too can be self sufficient and better placed to deal with the climate change era which is going to be really bad from 2050 onwards.
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It's just their hobby i guess. It's all because of the present youtube format, where thumbs down doesnt work properly (you can only thumb down your own thumb up) And conservative trolls, they are a close knit group, ideologically motivated with the most powerful (in the raw sense of the word) of negative energies, hate! They band together, if one has taken the extra time to check out a progressive site and be negative, i'm sure the others will thumb it up instantly.
Liberals on the other hand will generally check other liberal sites and if someone says something kind or agreeable it's generally the norm. Therefore they'll only thumb up particular comments that stand out. Something worth bearing in mind as well, people that love trolling may have gone that far as to make extra accounts to seem more popular. It's easy enough to do, just time consuming and kinda sad really that people have nothing better to do.
Now, my theory is that perhaps being part of the TYT network draws this close knit group of trolls here. And because the audience of David Pakman show is smaller than TYT (no offence, TYT is a massive show, David Pakman show is quite respectable) the troll comments and their support seems to make more impact proportionally.
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+Fat Sack I know of the armenian genocide and i do think Cenk should stop being evasive about it. But whilst the historical young turks did begin as a liberal reform movement in the autocratic, corrupt and incompetent Ottoman goverment, it eventually got taken over by right wing nationalists like Enver Pasha in particular, who was a bit of a nutter and all round nasty piece of work.
But the thing is, in the 20th century the term 'The Young Turks' came to mean a reformist, usually a rebellious or radical one at that and the historical movement largely fell out of popular consciousness. But in recent times the armenian genocide has become more known and talked about and recognised internationally. Which is a good thing of course.
Yet as late as the 90's the term 'The Young Turk' of the party was bandied about in british media particularly those that covered current politics of the day. It was used to describe Tony Blair and his 'New Labour' project to move the party away from socialism which was increasingly seen as anachronistic. 10 years earlier it was used to describe Margaret Thatcher and her supporters who wanted to move the conservative party in an economically more neo-liberal direction as opposed to the more statist conservatives like Edward Heath.
At the time Cenk came up with the name for the show he obviously had the latter in mind for the most part. As his goal is to reform American politics in a more liberal/progressive direction, a so called 'young turk' of the democrats. But keeping it real, he probably still thought the Armenian genocide was exagerrated and didn't happen around that time he came up with the name, but all accounts seem to indicate he has changed his mind now, but remains evasive, perhaps he feels it protects his family in Turkey from repercussions under an increasingly authoritarian and conservative government under Erdogan. Most turks are very nationalist and take offence really easily and Cenks family could end up getting harassment if he put out a video on the subject.
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Is society really getting better though? I'm not saying eugenics would save us or is a good thing, i just don't think society has improved. All i see is a world where virtue signalling elites get richer every year while common people are more miserable than they've ever been in the last 50 years. Once, you could leave school with no particular great grades, get a job for life and support a family, with your own house and kids providing your were a punctual and diligent worker. With money left over for savings, or a family holiday abroad, something like that. Even for working class people. Nowadays wages are stagnant, and you're only going to be able to work at mcdonalds or as a delivery driver, or some horrible job for an agency with unsteady hours and poor pay (i.e. meat processing). And struggle to pay all your bills month by month. If you leave school in that way, which was common 30-50 years ago. Rather you need a very high standard of education and training and even it's a bit of a lottery, you may still end up in a bad job. So I think we've regressed, yet our elites love to virtue signal their progressive stances more than ever, it's not actually benefitting society in the greater sense very much at all.
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A million years? I thought modern humans only came to be about 150,000 years ago, a fraction of a million years.
Nonetheless, the first humans in britain seem to have come from north africa, via the iberian peninsular. So the pre-celtic british, the first british share a link with the ancestors of the spanish/portuguese, and the berbers.
It's no coincidence that the megaliths, which are pre-celtic, such as stonehenge, are also found in spain, and morocco. Though stonehenge is the coolest of the megaliths.
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@RazvanMihaeanu But there is more to it than being internationalist or not, or even racially focused or not. At it's most rudimentary, the difference in outlook is that one group believes in a natural order, and see's it as a good and virtuous thing. The strong get their position at the top, the weak gets their position at the bottom, or is done away with if seen as useless or a burden.
The other group seeks to do away with that or turn it on it's head even, normally by putting a burden on the strong, to the benefit of the weak, until it's done away with and theoretically balances itself out.
Now i'm not saying I subscribe to one of these views or the other, my point is that they are very much at loggerheads, they are opposing views. Even if they may borrow some similar tactics and methods to achieve their ends.
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I think it's the case that he believes that the NWO/Illuminati are devil worshippers, and this small elite cabal is not only enslaving humanity but stunting/mutating it's development in a bad way, perhaps an allusion to gm foods and adding unnecessary chemicals to stuff. And that this combined with all the other stuff they do is holding humanity back, from it's ideal destiny, to be given the freedom to reach and travel to the stars, of it's own accord and not under the command of this NWO/Illuminati.
Yeah it's pretty kooky, and laughable. But GM foods and monsanto, fluoridisation and the 1 percent banking elite are bad, m'kay. But Jones connects it all to a supposed master plan of the NWO/Illuminati, led by Satan himself, who i guess he may see as a type of malevolent multi dimensional being, that through perverted science wants to physically manifest himself on earth as a machine god? I dunno, makes a good yarn though doesnt it? :)
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I think its normal for humans to have a somewhat low attention span, particularly when it comes to certain tasks. Our ancestors didnt have to read through wades of text books at a college, sometimes for subjects they werent really interesting in. Neither did they have monotonous desk jobs, but went out to hunt or cultivate as a matter of survival. Ethics aside, hunting is not boring in the way farming is, but if its down to survival your going to do either of them. I'll take boring over going cold and hungry but it can be tricky to remain focused when having to do a menial but necessary tasks, or when breaking down walls of academically dry walls of text. Worst case scenario for me is you fall into reading without absorbing information mode, and then you have to backpedal a bit.
Good rest is key, but i used to suffer from insomnia as a teenager, even from an early age like 14. As a result i'd wake up feeling bad, but by 9am i felt ok and i generally focused well in the mornings. Then in the afternoon i just would feel really tired and would sometimes struggle to focus in lessons. By 5pm i'd have like a second wind for a couple of hours but feel tired by 8pm yet it tended to be tired without being able to get to sleep which was not pleasant.
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I'm more sympathetic toward action vs ISIS but opposed the invasion of Iraq 2003 because that was an invasion. Most iraqis didnt want to be 'liberated' as they knew how much death and suffering they'd have to endure in the process. But here we are helping allies. Most Iraqi's don't want IS, that is why they had voted a Shia majority parliament. By aiding the new Iraqi goverment we are possibly saving thousands of civilians, maybe tens of thousands who would be excecuted by IS.
I wouldnt want to send masses of troops however, only to get bogged down doing ultimately futile policing duties. But strategic air strikes is a good move, always provided that we don't get all trigger happy. If IS fighters take cover in civilian areas, the answer is simple, we don't attack. If they are advancing on Baghdad through the open, then we attack.
If the Iraq goverment still can't beat ISIS then, so be it. They fail but at least we tried to help. But i'm sure with the aid of the kurds, and the shia people, which makes up the majority of Iraqi people we can win it. Sadly the Sunni soldiers can't be trusted, they don't have the will to fight IS and they may even jump ship in some cases.
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whyamimrpink78 It's not rocket science. Let's keep standards low. Water bills, electric. Rent. Transport costs. As we are keeping standards low in order to be more business friendly, let's say a one bedroom flat/apartment for one person. And paying two bus trips a day for a 5 day 40 hour week.
If someone cannot pay those overheads on a minimum wage, its too low.
Now i'm going to up the stakes. I think they should also have enough to pay for internet, which has become a basic need, more important than a television or telephone. It can in fact, replicate those things. And to go even futher. After paying for all that, they should have a little bit left over that they can either use for leisure or to save for a rainy day in case their shoes or clothes wear out, or they have to go to the dentist, or an eye test.
I dont think I am being unreasonable, when i say that this does not amount to much. Any less than that, it's pretty poor for a developed country.
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@wixoss9893 Loyalty, and charm, even if fleeting is a thing. Despite your position which i agree with to a point, this does happen. And the relationship can be mutually beneficial. In most cases (from what i've seen), provided the woman who goes out to work does not leave the guy, the relationships tend to work out and in my books, I'd take it over a divorce and the anguish that puts on the kids. Provided it's not an unpleasant job (raw strength is rarely a requirement these days), and no sexual harassment occurs at workplace (which is uncommon in 2022, we are not in the 1970's anymore, at least not in the developed world) it can provide a happy, homely environment.
Also, remember that women make up half of the population, if they are only going to seek meaningful relationships/marry someone who is better than them in terms of talent and intelligence, you're going to have very few married women, now that equality is enforced more strongly in the labor place. And this will lead to very few happy stable relationships for children to grow up in, which will have a knock on effect for society in general.
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fa q That's because overeating is bad for health while many Cubans have to make do with a spartan diet. Which while good for you, is not what most people would choose if they could choose plenty instead. And yes, the US sanctions are a big factor, I believe there is a fear that if they raise the sanctions and conditions improve, the island may actually become an alternative beacon of sorts for the worlds poorest countries and that would rock the boat. So it's not going to happen.
This means that the only alternative is to embrace a mutli-party democracy, something they should have done in the late 90's. I can see Cuba becoming a well off social democracy within a capitalist system. Or at least become better off than Chile, which is going through a rough patch, perhaps indefinitely. Social cohesion has fallen apart pretty badly of late. But back on point, Cuba has an enviable geographic position ideally suited for this era of globalised trade and capitalism. Investment would flood the island. And given the people's higher than average standard of education, i think they would vote for their own interests. Rather than the interests of the communist party, i don't think anyone is going to pull the wool over their eyes easily.
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@DEVOPS_R_US A lot of that evidence is anecdotal though. i.e. "I heard he did this, i saw him do that". I'd take some of it with a pinch of salt, because it can be very easy way for political enemies to disparage someone they don't like by throwing shit and seeing what sticks.
That being said, there could be some truth to it also, but without hard evidence i'm always a bit skeptical of a lot of things like that whether it be vs the left or vs the right. That being said, when he left Congo, after a failed revolution he partook in, he had a low opinion of Africans, i think it was reflected in his diaries of the time. And i have read of him shooting a new recruit in cold blood once because he fell asleep on guard duty. So he was no saint, and the whole personality cult around him in the left is pretty stupid. The man was a bad example too, because he didn't like responsibility. When he got the opportunity to build socialism in Cuba, and made head of the national banks, he quit the job because it was too boring for him.
I don't think he would have liked Pol Pot though. Pol Pot broke one of the central tenets of marxism. In Marxism the countryside has to support the cities in order to further industrialisation. Pol Pot was the opposite of this, he saw cities as a parasite and only wanted a society of countryside peasantry. In the end it took other (actual/orthodox) communists to oust Pol Pot, that being communist Vietnam.
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The way I see it World War 2 was pretty much a win for communists. They found themselves at the helm of a powerful empire, their mortal enemy destroyed. Yet today in 2023 that empire is gone, echoes remain in modern Russia but Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Bulgaria, all of the slavic states went on to become sovereign countries. Post independence, some like Poland became very prosperous with the people thriving, though in other cases such as with the current war between Russia and Ukraine, problems remain in part because of issues of the Soviet legacy. Yet here is my point. Had the nazis and not the communists won/gotten a good result from World War 2, all these slavic countries would not exist, at the very best they would be 2nd class citizens of the thousand year Reich, at worst the nazis would have actually enslaved, sterilised and genocided them. To me this clearly shows that the communist victory in world war 2 which helped shape the world of 2023 is preferable to how the year 2023 would have been if the nazis had won. Thus Nazism is worse than Communism, as a lot of people today would either have been denied the right to exist or have had their identities erased.
Konstantin however refers to Fascism and not Nazism, as in the ideology of Mussolini or Mosely, so it does leave it more open to debate. But what is certain is that we would be in a very different world today had a fascist power emerged dominant in the post ww2 times, and I think a worser world. Remember, for all the problems we have today it's undeniable that as a modern civilisation we did make great social-economic progress in second half of the 20th century (especially the 50's and 60's). And were still doing well even in the early 00's despite of 9/11 and the war on terror. It's only in more recent times that things have been going off the rails, but I think the roots to todays problems lay in part with the Bush/Cheney administrations actions combined with globalist corporate driven capitalism being overly empowered and having a negative effect on national economies and thus hurting a countries sovereignty over the long term.
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He is but he wants to work within the system. I don't think he's doing a very good job though. Yet, don't you think trying to go full socialist in a heavily globalized and capitalist world is economic suicide? Chile relies a lot on trade in the set up, and were you to go full socialist the first thing the IMF global banking system will do is wreck the value of your currency. And then it becomes really difficult to import things you have grown dependent on, and also to retain highly educated technical specialists like engineers, scientists and doctors. Many of whom will leave to to go to greener pastures. Moreover, the powers that be would look to place more obstacles, they could organise worker strikes within a nationalised copper industry, and even sanctions at some point down the line. And it would lead to an even worse spike in extreme poverty. This is partly what happened to Venezuela, when it lost its technical specialists, it's oil production plummeted. It is highly important to retain such people.
But i digress a little. Boric is a socialist in my opinion but he is not practicing full socialism because he is somewhat realist to his credit. I'm no fan of his, but I hope things pick up for him and what he's doing. For the good of Chile and the Chileans.
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@destruction1928 I think that if you have a bad level of education (lazy or low iq) it's fair that you will probably never be able to afford a fancy house and fancy car. Jetsetting around the world on holidays in Japan or Europe will in all likeliness not be an option for people in this situation. But on an unskilled workers wage, provided you are diligent and actually turn up for your contracted hours, you should be able to afford rent for a basic apartment home, use of public transport and have a bit of money left spare at the end of the month (after paying all your living costs) that you can save for a rainy day, and perhaps even put together to buy a more luxury type product one day. Maybe after saving for a while they can afford a playstation 5, or a 4k Television. Or nicer clothes, footwear. Maybe go to a restaurant time to time. That kind of thing, it would be their choice how to spend their surplus.
But currently even such a modest expectations are becoming hard to achieve, even in the developed world. Partly because there's not enough affordable homes and people are getting fleeced by private landlords. And this then put's pressure on employers to increase wages, or for government to open the doors to immigraton from poorer countries, all creating more social discord. I think social housing (non profit but not run at a deficit) is key to winning this fight. Otherwise we are going to continue on the slippery slope to anarchy and unrest. Things for people on the lower strata are actually so bad for last few years, you can actually work hard all week/month and run at a loss not a surplus, that's why people in that situation voted for brexit which ended up dragging the british economy down for the majority. Treat people well/fairly and they are unlikely to resort to extreme positions.
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@bluewater454 Your post i was responding to seems to have been removed, bluewater454, so anyone stumbling onto my post might find it a bit random, or think its a reply to your earlier comment. But anyway, i just wanted to state in reponse to your reply to me, that we already have societies where people get their basic needs met without even working, it's called unemployment benefit in first world countries that are not the United States. People on unemployment benefit in such countries still have access to universal healthcare, optical care, dentistry, help paying rent for social housing. Yes the money they receive is very little but at a global level, where you get people working for less than a dollar a day and barely scraping a survival wage, you could say the basic needs are being met and quite comfortably by comparison.
If we can already afford to sustain such a system, imagine if there was a socialist sector instead, where people would not only have an opportunity to earn better than that, through the product or service generated by their labor, but it would also reduce the tax burden on the private capitalist sector because the socialist sector would strive to be self sufficient and not run off subsidies to bail it out all the time. It could be a win/win.
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@comment sense China has a different kind of dependency on external markets. It's economy is built on on selling cheaper to produce product around the world, in vast numbers. It needs to sell, without access to the market Chinese business lose most it's revenue and the country will have to try reform to be more focused on the domestic market. For America however, the global financial system is mostly focused around the USA, it doesn't depend so much on selling product. But on appreciation of assets. Hey, i don't like it either but it's the way it is. I think global finance is a bit crooked to be honest. But if they have to revert back to producing their own product, they'll either look to other countries, or within their own countries. A lot of people in the west would welcome factories returning to their own countries. It's more likely though they'll look to set up in poorer countries.
Will they lose out from this? Yes they will because China can make things cheap, but has a reliable work force and good social order. In third world it can be chaotic, you set up a factory there? You don't know what might happen next. But nontheless, it does give them an advantage over China that needs access to first world markets more, than the west needs access to cheap chinese products.
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