Miscellaneous News

supersnoop

Major
Registered Member
Western universities are just brand names bar a few (like MIT) and while their STEM is generally OK in quality, stuff like "Liberal Arts" and so on are hilariously bad. The sooner people realize this and stop giving them money, the better.

Normally I do not pay attention to internet comments too much, but I read one that was very enlightening. This was a guy who said he worked in education policy. He said that one of the big issues with STEM education at the university level is simply cost to provide it.

There is a lot of additional overhead cost such as lab classes, equipment, staff, maintenance, software licensing, computer labs, etc. that do not exist with most arts/humanities subjects. As such there is a big economic incentive to attract more students into these programs.

This doesn’t mean that the promotion of these programs is taking away students or funding from actual STEM programs, but it does take away from vocational programs and create more powerful faculties that impact decision making.

More trolling of this kind is needed.

Funny but ultimately pointless. The western media cycle is built towards outrage, exaggeration and celebrity gossip, not facts and figures. How often do you actually see retractions? The guy still doesn’t remove his tweet because he knows 99% of the outraged western followers don’t read or care about the truth.

As an aside, this is why we see so much failure in these so-called “China Policies”. They are not rooted in facts. A lot of the policies are made by old white guys who can’t read reports in Chinese, so they ultimately rely on the reports and news written by the old white men that came before them. This is why it seems like the US policy is formulated towards 1980’s China. Although I despise Pottinger, and I don’t think he made coherent policy, but at least he learned Chinese.
 

emblem21

Major
Registered Member
L
Back to the colonial master that fed our ancestors opium for more than a century at gunpoint because 'muh free trade'. Hanjians.

Like the UK can do anything at this point. Not only did the UK piss off China but they are utterly pissing of Russia as well with the whole Ukraine thing. Instead of China, these idiots from HK should worry a lot more about whether a missile will be sent their way from Russia because the UK is crossing all the red lines with Russia with all those idiot troops being built up near the Russia borders. Honestly if many of these people do die from such a thing, I cant see this as anything less than a fate well deserved because the UK is no longer a global power and in the event that Russia has finally had enough of all the provocations from the west, then the UK ought to really suffer the consequences.
 

Phead128

Captain
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Funny but ultimately pointless. The western media cycle is built towards outrage, exaggeration and celebrity gossip, not facts and figures.
I noticed this too after 30 years... It's all outage, exaggeration, and gossip. The substance and accuracy doesn't really matter, it's to elicit an emotional response or feeling.
he knows 99% of the outraged western followers don’t read or care about the truth.
Yep, a lie is way easier to spread than the truth. It's easier to spread lies too if they repeat it enough.
As an aside, this is why we see so much failure in these so-called “China Policies”. They are not rooted in facts. A lot of the policies are made by old white guys who can’t read reports in Chinese, so they ultimately rely on the reports and news written by the old white men that came before them. This is why it seems like the US policy is formulated towards 1980’s China.
Yea I noticed that they think China is incapable of innovation and servile like Japan. Their understand of China's political system sounds like it's from 1980s too. It's outdated thinking...but as Sun Tzu said, don't interrupt an enemy while they make a mistake. Their lies allow them to sleep at night while China leapfrog them
 

windsclouds2030

Senior Member
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

I can't read this article because of the paywall but Fareed Zakaria was talking about it this morning on his CNN show. In it he used China's Made In China 2025 plan as one example. It wasn't domestic politics that drove Made in China 2025. It was the US attempt to deny China technology that drove it. That's what the US does to rewrite history books. They don't want history looking back at all the stupidity in the US that drives their policies like believing Chinese are too dumb to produce semiconductors themselves so they bet that China will surrender to every US demand because the Chinese have no other choice because that was the objective not that they just didn't want China to have any. China's mistake was believing the US wasn't that stupid and racist or else they would've built up these domestic industries earlier. The US spins what China does isn't driven by US actions so they don't take the blame as usual. Also that way they can spin it as Chinese aggression out of nowhere to scare everyone of China. Americans calls for stopping dependence on foreign countries has been going on for decades yet when China does it, it's an act of unprovoked aggression. It's naturally human to start to looking at other ways when being denied on another but the unnatural thinking of Americans get outraged when China looks elsewhere for something they're trying to deny from China. That's because it wasn't about denying things from China from the start. It was about holding it hostage with the goal of making China submit to every demand of everything else. Now the US is going to lose it all so they're trying to spin this as China's fault and not the US's thirst for power and control over everything...
Opinion: Politics is trumping economics. It might end badly.

By Fareed Zakaria |
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
- 16 JAN 2022

As we watch inflation spike to a pace not seen since the 1980s, experts are debating whether this phenomenon is worrying and long-term or benign and transitory. I’m not an economist, but as a student of history, I do wonder whether the return of inflation is part of a larger shift that has taken place across the world. To put it simply, for decades in country after country, economics trumped politics. But now, from China to Turkey to the United States, politics is trumping economics.

The conquest of inflation is one of the most far-reaching changes of our times. Countries used to think that they simply had to live with and manage escalating prices and wages. When inflationary trends got out of hand, they often had severe political consequences. Unlike unemployment, which affects just the small percentage of people who don’t have jobs, inflation affects everyone. And unlike unemployment, which shrinks what you might earn in the future (if you have a job), inflation shrinks what you have now by eroding the value of your savings. That’s why high inflation has been so often associated with political turmoil, from Germany in the 1920s to Iran in the 1970s to Latin America in the 1980s.

We forget now, but as recently as the 1980s, inflation was rampant across much of the world. Countries such as Brazil, Argentina and Peru had inflation rates that were measured in the thousands of percent. The United States kicked off the decade with over 12 percent inflation. In some European countries, such as Italy, it surged above 20 percent. In most of these countries, the causes were some combination of large government deficits, lax central bank policies and external shocks such as the oil crises of the 1970s.

These crises produced a policy revolution. Central banks became more independent and focused on taming inflation. Governments in the developing world became more fiscally responsible. In some cases — Chile and Mexico — they briefly tied their currencies to the dollar. One crucial reason that countries such as Italy were willing to give up their currency in favor of a common European one was that they believed that essentially merging their monetary policy with Germany’s would enable them to fix their inflation problem.

In large measure, it worked, and by the early 2000s, countries were congratulating themselves for having won the war. It all seemed part of a paradigm in which governments recognized the power of free markets and free trade. Thomas Friedman used the metaphor of the “golden straitjacket” to explain what happened. Governments placed themselves in a situation where their policy options were tightly constrained by markets, and as a result, their politics shrank but their economies grew.

Over the past few years, it has seemed as if the opposite is happening almost everywhere. Look at Turkey, which by the 2000s had become a model developing country, taming inflation and spurring growth. Its policymakers were lauded across the world. Today, Turkey’s president has abandoned even the pretense of rational economic policy, using policy to reward friends and punish foes and advocating monetary policy that is the opposite of what most experts believe would work. Chile, which was considered the most fiscally prudent country in Latin America, now appears to have taken a path toward a more familiar left-wing populism.

Or consider the poster child of developing countries, China, where economic growth was the north star of policymaking. Today, President Xi Jinping pursues policies that often attack the private sector in key growth areas such as technology. As scholar Elizabeth Economy has pointed out, it is China, not the United States, that began the move to decouple the two economies and embraced protectionism and economic nationalism when Xi announced his “Made in China” strategy. India, for its part, has mirrored this with its own protectionism and subsidies.

The Western world has followed suit. Driven by an understandable concern about middle-class wages and inequality, economic policy is no longer oriented toward growth. Tariffs, subsidies and relief packages all reflect the fact that politics has trumped economics. Central banks everywhere have rushed in over the past decade to take extreme measures in response to the two big shocks of the age — the financial crisis and the pandemic. As Ruchir Sharma notes, in the mid-1990s not one country in the world had a ratio of debt to gross domestic product above 300 percent. Today, 25 countries have exceeded this mark.

The old obsession with economics over politics was overdone. It achieved great successes but created other problems, such as wage stagnation. But the current emphasis on politics over economics seems more dangerous. It allows politicians to engage in patronage policies, protectionism and short-term gimmicks to prevent ordinary people from feeling the pain of a crisis. In the long run, however, one wonders if it is these same ordinary people who will have to pay the price.

Fareed Zakaria writes a foreign affairs column for The Post. He is also the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and a contributing editor for the Atlantic.


-----------------------------------

So many words, so little substances... if anything, it's more deviation, covering the tracks... confusing his readers about what really happen... the more people read pieces like this, the more confused they are... but that's the purpose of the corporate media like this one, and the author is employed for that function.

If FED created at least $6,000,000,000,000 within 18 months as of SEPTEMBER 2019, what impact may the USA and world expect from such massive creation of the the digital USD, the Petrodollar reserve currency? It's a theft from the entire world by the ruling elite living near the giant printing press quarter so-called the Fed... they use much of the newly created money for buying assets incl M&A around the globe... then socialize the INFLATION in US domestic and the ROW! The planned pandemic serves as a good cover for this massive digital USD creation! Without the pandemic there would not be any excuse to "print" such massive amount, which is even more than the Lehman Moment! See Egon von Greyerz, Alasdair Macleod, Martin Armstrong, Prof. Fabio Vighi, Peter Schiff, and so on.

-------

Yes, it's Napoleon

“Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” — Napoleon Bonaparte
 
Last edited:

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
The thing is you can tell Americans what mistakes they're making and they'll stick to keep making those same mistakes because they have to save face and make sure no ones tells them what to do hence acknowledging somebody knows better than them. Look at anti-vaxxers. Most of them discourage vaccinations just to defy Democrats. They don't want to make it they were right.
 

weig2000

Captain
Opinion: Politics is trumping economics. It might end badly.

By Fareed Zakaria |
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
- 16 JAN 2022

As we watch inflation spike to a pace not seen since the 1980s, experts are debating whether this phenomenon is worrying and long-term or benign and transitory. I’m not an economist, but as a student of history, I do wonder whether the return of inflation is part of a larger shift that has taken place across the world. To put it simply, for decades in country after country, economics trumped politics. But now, from China to Turkey to the United States, politics is trumping economics.

The conquest of inflation is one of the most far-reaching changes of our times. Countries used to think that they simply had to live with and manage escalating prices and wages. When inflationary trends got out of hand, they often had severe political consequences. Unlike unemployment, which affects just the small percentage of people who don’t have jobs, inflation affects everyone. And unlike unemployment, which shrinks what you might earn in the future (if you have a job), inflation shrinks what you have now by eroding the value of your savings. That’s why high inflation has been so often associated with political turmoil, from Germany in the 1920s to Iran in the 1970s to Latin America in the 1980s.

We forget now, but as recently as the 1980s, inflation was rampant across much of the world. Countries such as Brazil, Argentina and Peru had inflation rates that were measured in the thousands of percent. The United States kicked off the decade with over 12 percent inflation. In some European countries, such as Italy, it surged above 20 percent. In most of these countries, the causes were some combination of large government deficits, lax central bank policies and external shocks such as the oil crises of the 1970s.

These crises produced a policy revolution. Central banks became more independent and focused on taming inflation. Governments in the developing world became more fiscally responsible. In some cases — Chile and Mexico — they briefly tied their currencies to the dollar. One crucial reason that countries such as Italy were willing to give up their currency in favor of a common European one was that they believed that essentially merging their monetary policy with Germany’s would enable them to fix their inflation problem.

In large measure, it worked, and by the early 2000s, countries were congratulating themselves for having won the war. It all seemed part of a paradigm in which governments recognized the power of free markets and free trade. Thomas Friedman used the metaphor of the “golden straitjacket” to explain what happened. Governments placed themselves in a situation where their policy options were tightly constrained by markets, and as a result, their politics shrank but their economies grew.

Over the past few years, it has seemed as if the opposite is happening almost everywhere. Look at Turkey, which by the 2000s had become a model developing country, taming inflation and spurring growth. Its policymakers were lauded across the world. Today, Turkey’s president has abandoned even the pretense of rational economic policy, using policy to reward friends and punish foes and advocating monetary policy that is the opposite of what most experts believe would work. Chile, which was considered the most fiscally prudent country in Latin America, now appears to have taken a path toward a more familiar left-wing populism.

Or consider the poster child of developing countries, China, where economic growth was the north star of policymaking. Today, President Xi Jinping pursues policies that often attack the private sector in key growth areas such as technology. As scholar Elizabeth Economy has pointed out, it is China, not the United States, that began the move to decouple the two economies and embraced protectionism and economic nationalism when Xi announced his “Made in China” strategy. India, for its part, has mirrored this with its own protectionism and subsidies.

The Western world has followed suit. Driven by an understandable concern about middle-class wages and inequality, economic policy is no longer oriented toward growth. Tariffs, subsidies and relief packages all reflect the fact that politics has trumped economics. Central banks everywhere have rushed in over the past decade to take extreme measures in response to the two big shocks of the age — the financial crisis and the pandemic. As Ruchir Sharma notes, in the mid-1990s not one country in the world had a ratio of debt to gross domestic product above 300 percent. Today, 25 countries have exceeded this mark.

The old obsession with economics over politics was overdone. It achieved great successes but created other problems, such as wage stagnation. But the current emphasis on politics over economics seems more dangerous. It allows politicians to engage in patronage policies, protectionism and short-term gimmicks to prevent ordinary people from feeling the pain of a crisis. In the long run, however, one wonders if it is these same ordinary people who will have to pay the price.

Fareed Zakaria writes a foreign affairs column for The Post. He is also the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and a contributing editor for the Atlantic.


-----------------------------------

So many words, so little substances... if anything, it's more deviation, covering the tracks... confusing his readers about what really happen... the more people read pieces like this, the more confused they are... but that's the purpose of the corporate media like this one, and the author is employed for that function.

If FED created at least $6,000,000,000,000 within 18 months as of SEPTEMBER 2019, what impact may the USA and world expect from such massive creation of the the digital USD, the Petrodollar reserve currency? It's a theft from the entire world by the ruling elite living near the giant printing press quarter so-called the Fed... they use much of the newly created money for buying assets incl M&A around the globe... then socialize the INFLATION in US domestic and the ROW! The planned pandemic serves as a good cover for this massive digital USD creation! Without the pandemic there would not be any excuse to "print" such massive amount, which is even more than the Lehman Moment! See Egon von Greyerz, Alasdair Macleod, Martin Armstrong, Prof. Fabio Vighi, Peter Schiff, and so on.

-------

Yes, it's Napoleon

“Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” — Napoleon Bonaparte

Well, that's what the west's ruling class and intellectuals are today. Endless posturing, framing, arguing, spinning, which create a rehoric wall so thick that not only the plebs are brainwashed and prevented from sneaking out but also elites themselves are imprisoned within it and can't break free to see the reality.

It's sad.
 
Last edited:

xypher

Senior Member
Registered Member
The thing is you can tell Americans what mistakes they're making and they'll stick to keep making those same mistakes because they have to save face and make sure no ones tells them what to do hence acknowledging somebody knows better than them. Look at anti-vaxxers. Most of them discourage vaccinations just to defy Democrats. They don't want to make it they were right.
Indeed. Westerners love to project that "saving face" is very important in China but in reality, they are the ones most obsessed with that phenomenon.
 
Top