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Thread: Revolution in America's Northeast

  1. #31
    Dread, entertain the notion that "America's Revolution" may not start in one particular region, but around public policy.

    If we consider the dairy belt, farm belt, rust belt, Bible belt....alongside east and west coasts (commonly called right or left coasts)....the Times they are a'changing.

  2. #32

  3. #33
    Quote Originally Posted by Dreadnaught View Post
    Uh, okay. Your point being?
    What's that, some quiet reply before you go to sleep?

    My point is the same now as it was then (at Atari). For those who believe, almost like it's a religion, that freee markets expand the greater pie.....explain why the pie's cuts have shrunk for 90-98% of the pie's laborers.

  4. #34
    Hope is the denial of reality

  5. #35




    Underlying social contracts can't be placed in graph form, can they?

    Loki, your graph is using 2007 income, before the big "crash" and its aftermath. Got any newer data?

  6. #36
    Quote Originally Posted by GGT View Post
    What's that, some quiet reply before you go to sleep?

    My point is the same now as it was then (at Atari). For those who believe, almost like it's a religion, that freee markets expand the greater pie.....explain why the pie's cuts have shrunk for 90-98% of the pie's laborers.
    I'm sorry, but this is completely irrelevant to what was being posted about (unionized state employees in the northeast).

  7. #37
    Quote Originally Posted by Dreadnaught View Post
    I'm sorry, but this is completely irrelevant to what was being posted about (unionized state employees in the northeast).
    I'm not sorry to point out, that this "Revolution" (as you call it) began in 2010, in the midwest.

  8. #38
    Quote Originally Posted by GGT View Post
    Loki, your graph is using 2007 income, before the big "crash" and its aftermath. Got any newer data?
    So your entire point is based on only the last 4 years?
    Hope is the denial of reality

  9. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  10. #40
    De Oppresso Liber CitizenCain's Avatar
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    j00000dens! Or whatever language that graph is in.

    'Course, even that awful graph makes the free market point. In 60 years, those poor bottom 5% have ~tripled the height of their line. God damn evil kapitalists, giving the poor progressively more money.
    "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them."

    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

    -- Thomas Jefferson: American Founding Father, clairvoyant and seditious traitor.

  11. #41
    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    Would you like to put this graph into context?
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  12. #42
    Quote Originally Posted by GGT View Post
    What's that, some quiet reply before you go to sleep?

    My point is the same now as it was then (at Atari). For those who believe, almost like it's a religion, that freee markets expand the greater pie.....explain why the pie's cuts have shrunk for 90-98% of the pie's laborers.
    I fail to see how your earlier post about things starting in other places around public policy would have led ANYONE here to what you just laid out.
    Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"

  13. #43
    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    j00000dens! Or whatever language that graph is in.
    Couldn't have picked a more appropriate smilie there.

    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    'Course, even that awful graph makes the free market point. In 60 years, those poor bottom 5% have ~tripled the height of their line. God damn evil kapitalists, giving the poor progressively more money.
    Funnily enough, the top of the blue part of the graph marks the bottom of the top fifth percentile. Which makes the free market point, certainly, but perhaps with slightly different connotations. Not that you'd have anything against those, either, but there you go.
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  14. #44
    Quote Originally Posted by Nessus View Post
    Funnily enough, the top of the blue part of the graph marks the bottom of the top fifth percentile. Which makes the free market point, certainly, but perhaps with slightly different connotations. Not that you'd have anything against those, either, but there you go.
    So. . . in 1947 the bottom of the top fifth percentile was at about what, $40k annually? If I'm correctly parsing this graph whose non-numeric terms are gibberish to me? So what it is predominantly doing is showing us the gap through the massive distortion of non-normalized terms?
    Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"

  15. #45
    Quote Originally Posted by LittleFuzzy View Post
    So. . . in 1947 the bottom of the top fifth percentile was at about what, $40k annually? If I'm correctly parsing this graph whose non-numeric terms are gibberish to me? So what it is predominantly doing is showing us the gap through the massive distortion of non-normalized terms?
    We're all about dishonest tactics and discussion without exchanging information or ideas here at TWF, don'tcha kno'. Graphs made to shock viewers of a TV show are good for that.

    The point they're making is that the bottom of the top 0.1% has rather escaped the growth-rate of everybody else. If you actually want to see what they're saying (and who is the one saying it), google the citation (Piketty and Saez). You might not want to waste your time though, as in a few hours you'll probably get to read a very witty and "j99"-riddled debunking of it, so you get educated and entertained. Imagine the efficiency the Invisible Hand will be able to do once Michele wins!
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  16. #46
    De Oppresso Liber CitizenCain's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Would you like to put this graph into context?
    It was in context. The context was Nessie's ridiculous, distorted graph.

    Quote Originally Posted by Nessus View Post
    Funnily enough, the top of the blue part of the graph marks the bottom of the top fifth percentile. Which makes the free market point, certainly, but perhaps with slightly different connotations. Not that you'd have anything against those, either, but there you go.
    Well, it is funny, but not for that reason. "0,1%" is 0.1%, and I see that just fine, no matter the language. So the silly point your distorted, non-normalized graph is making is that the richest thousandth (by annual income) are making an average(?) of 1.4 million dollars a year now? ZOMG, teh h0rr0z!@!!!1 That sure shows all us evil kapitalists a thing or two about... how much we have to make to be in the top tenth of the top percentile in annual income.

    Or, to be more succinct, like I said originally, "j00000dens!"
    "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them."

    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

    -- Thomas Jefferson: American Founding Father, clairvoyant and seditious traitor.

  17. #47
    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    It was in context. The context was Nessie's ridiculous, distorted graph.
    From the other thread way back when? Mine was a glib response to his.

    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    Well, it is funny, but not for that reason. "0,1%" is 0.1%, and I see that just fine, no matter the language. So the silly point your distorted, non-normalized graph is making is that the richest thousandth (by annual income) are making an average(?) of 1.4 million dollars a year now? ZOMG, teh h0rr0z!@!!!1 That sure shows all us evil kapitalists a thing or two about... how much we have to make to be in the top tenth of the top percentile in annual income.

    Or, to be more succinct, like I said originally, "j00000dens!"
    Are you accusing me of anti-Semitism?
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  18. #48
    Quote Originally Posted by Nessus View Post
    The point they're making is that the bottom of the top 0.1% has rather escaped the growth-rate of everybody else.
    Except we can't actually see anything of the sort with that graph. Even if they had stayed roughly proportional when adjusted for inflation, the graph when unadjusted will still look more like the one you displayed.
    Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"

  19. #49
    Quote Originally Posted by LittleFuzzy View Post
    Except we can't actually see anything of the sort with that graph. Even if they had stayed roughly proportional when adjusted for inflation, the graph when unadjusted will still look more like the one you displayed.
    Then the post is just noise, and time would be better spent discussing how stupid unions are, non?
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  20. #50
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Would you like to put this graph into context?
    The context is that the top three quintiles (60% of the population) have shown consistent and significant improvement in their standards of living virtually every decade for the last 70 years. Even the two lowest quintiles have seen their inflation-adjusted income increase significantly over that time period. So the rich are getting richer, but so is everyone else. And the middle class that everyone always whines about has seen sharp increases in income every decade but the '70s.
    Hope is the denial of reality

  21. #51
    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    It was in context. The context was Nessie's ridiculous, distorted graph.
    Er. Look, neutrinos may be going faster than light but for most of us time and causality are still the way they've always been
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  22. #52
    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    The context is that the top three quintiles (60% of the population) have shown consistent and significant improvement in their standards of living virtually every decade for the last 70 years. Even the two lowest quintiles have seen their inflation-adjusted income increase significantly over that time period. So the rich are getting richer, but so is everyone else. And the middle class that everyone always whines about has seen sharp increases in income every decade but the '70s.
    Okay but the complaint, from what I've gathered, is mostly that the richest are getting richer far faster than they should be while the less rich aren't, and, in the end, less and less of your nation's assets are staying in the hands of people in those lower quintiles.



    Wrt context would it be fair to assume that a great deal of the increase in income is related to college attendance rates?




    Re. standards of living and inflation adjusted income, how do things look if you adjust for eg. costs of housing and healthcare and the like?
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  23. #53
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Okay but the complaint, from what I've gathered, is mostly that the richest are getting richer far faster than they should be while the less rich aren't, and, in the end, less and less of your nation's assets are staying in the hands of people in those lower quintiles.
    Just how quickly should the rich be making money? Should they try and make money at a slower rate than they currently are?

  24. #54
    Quote Originally Posted by Enoch the Red View Post
    Just how quickly should the rich be making money? Should they try and make money at a slower rate than they currently are?
    I don't know, you tell me. What are the pros and cons of increasingly rapid growth in inequality? Who's served by it other than those who directly benefit from having the most $$$? I'm sure economists and sociologists etc. have looked at that question.

    When I said "should" I didn't mean it in the moral sense. You can read it as "far faster than we might expect".
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  25. #55
    Stingy DM Veldan Rath's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Enoch the Red View Post
    Just how quickly should the rich be making money? Should they try and make money at a slower rate than they currently are?
    Don't worry Enoch, it will decend into class warfare and wealth envy soon enough...
    Brevior saltare cum deformibus viris est vita

  26. #56
    Quote Originally Posted by Veldan Rath View Post
    wealth envy
    This just makes me sad
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  27. #57
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Okay but the complaint, from what I've gathered, is mostly that the richest are getting richer far faster than they should be while the less rich aren't, and, in the end, less and less of your nation's assets are staying in the hands of people in those lower quintiles.
    What should they be? Why does it matter how much richer they become as long as everyone is better off? Do you prefer the communist model where everyone becomes equally poor? The reality is that we now have an informational economy, and those who have access of that information or make use of it quicker or better than others are going to make huge profits. The rich weren't making so much money before because there's only so much money to be made from manufacturing or agriculture.

    Wrt context would it be fair to assume that a great deal of the increase in income is related to college attendance rates?
    There has been a drastic transformation of the economy, likely due to technological innovation and increased globalization. As a result, more jobs require the kind of skills that a college education provides. If we had more college graduates 50 years ago, it's far from certain whether there would be enough jobs that would demand their skills (this is a common problem in Asian and Middle Eastern countries today). So yes, a college education is increasing people's income, but the utility of that education must be viewed in the larger context of a new global economy that privileges services/information to manufacturing/agriculture. It's interesting to note that the same people complaining about the fate of the middle class would have us go back to a manufacturing-oriented economy that has much lesser need for education.

    Re. standards of living and inflation adjusted income, how do things look if you adjust for eg. costs of housing and healthcare and the like?
    This is adjusted for inflation...housing and healthcare are part of prices, and are therefore adjusted for. Think of it like this: what does your median household have today compared to 50 years ago? The median household still has a house, a large amount of food, and clothes. But now everyone has TVs, computers, cell-phones, internet, refrigerators, etc. I really don't understand how anyone can claim that people today aren't better off than their grandparents, who had far fewer household appliances, fewer cars, would never leave their state to go on vacation, etc.
    Hope is the denial of reality

  28. #58
    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    What should they be? Why does it matter how much richer they become as long as everyone is better off?
    That's a question that deserves to be examined. What are the consequences of [increasing] economic inequality? I've personally only seen the question approached from political and moral angles. Economists never content with answers like "it's good enough because everyone's better off" when there are possible scenarios in which everyone might be even better off. Surely some great economic thinkers have looked at the consequences of eg. income inequality...??

    There has been a drastic transformation of the economy, likely due to technological innovation and increased globalization. As a result, more jobs require the kind of skills that a college education provides. If we had more college graduates 50 years ago, it's far from certain whether there would be enough jobs that would demand their skills (this is a common problem in Asian and Middle Eastern countries today). So yes, a college education is increasing people's income, but the utility of that education must be viewed in the larger context of a new global economy that privileges services/information to manufacturing/agriculture. It's interesting to note that the same people complaining about the fate of the middle class would have us go back to a manufacturing-oriented economy that has much lesser need for education.
    Thanks for some more context I just realised that most of those college graduates are probably not in the 20th percentile in that graph. I have no idea why GGT would want you guys to go back to a manufacturing-oriented economy, we should ask her.
    This is adjusted for inflation...housing and healthcare are part of prices, and are therefore adjusted for. Think of it like this: what does your median household have today compared to 50 years ago? The median household still has a house, a large amount of food, and clothes. But now everyone has TVs, computers, cell-phones, internet, refrigerators, etc. I really don't understand how anyone can claim that people today aren't better off than their grandparents, who had far fewer household appliances, fewer cars, would never leave their state to go on vacation, etc.
    I realise that it's adjusted for inflation, but I know that the costs of healthcare and education have been rising faster than inflation, and last I heard housing prices in many areas have been rising pretty fast as well. It's been identified as one of the most important reasons for your homelessness problem.

    It's great that people have two cars and five ipads but I can't help but feel as if it might be even better if people also had more quality time with their kids and less stress in their lives
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  29. #59
    De Oppresso Liber CitizenCain's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nessus View Post
    Are you accusing me of anti-Semitism?
    Depends... would it make for a more interesting thread? Well, if it would make for a more interesting thread, you can run with that assumption, but no... really just a knee-jerk to a baldly distorted bunch of shit about rich people and something about having money being bad for no particular reason and blah blah whatever.

    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    I really don't understand how anyone can claim that people today aren't better off than their grandparents, who had far fewer household appliances, fewer cars, would never leave their state to go on vacation, etc.
    They don't claim that. They're just jealous whiners who don't like that someone else has it better than them. That's what this shit about "income inequality" being inherently bad really is - pure, unadulterated, jealousy. Whining and bitching that other people got lucky and fell backwards into piles of monies (well, combined working their asses off, intelligence and luck) and they didn't. Waaaaa, boohoo, life is unfair.

    What's particularly unfair is that such people have the enormous wealth and freedoms of the 1st world wasted on their petty selves. Want "equality?" Go work on a farm in some 3rd world shithole for just enough to survive so you can get raped, brutalized and executed if you bitch about income disparity. That's fair, according to world standards, but no one seems to complain much about that... only about the people better off than them, because the root issue is jealousy, and not anything actually related to equality.
    "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them."

    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

    -- Thomas Jefferson: American Founding Father, clairvoyant and seditious traitor.

  30. #60
    Quote Originally Posted by CitizenCain View Post
    blah blah whatever.
    Oh my
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

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