Originally posted by EternalOptimist
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Chavonomics
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostIndeed. It's all so predictable.
What happens is that institutions and ideas that are fine in peace time are suddenly seen to be dangerous. You might want to muddle through in peace time, you dont really want to upset too many people, but when when national survival is at stake, these thing can be suspended or even swept away.
It sounds to me to be very similar to what you are describing.
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("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View PostIf you study history , acedemically, you learn about a concept called 'the test effect of war'.
What happens is that institutions and ideas that are fine in peace time are suddenly seen to be dangerous. You might want to muddle through in peace time, you dont really want to upset too many people, but when when national survival is at stake, these thing can be suspended or even swept away.
It sounds to me to be very similar to what you are describing.
Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostRemember you heard it here first.
I have defined a new term "Chavonomics". This is when a country becomes a chav and borrows money till the next pay day (if that ever happens) to fund stuff it cannot afford.
I suppose t'was inevitable.
I wonder how many people realise this country is really bankrupt. It simply does not generate enough in products and services to sustain it now, or in the future.
Example: "we have a longer workweek than the French. That's because they are lazy, but we don't mind putting in a bit of work".
Translation: Our productivity is lower, that's why we have to work more hours for the same GDP/cap.Comment
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Posttime to read 'decline and fall of the Roman empire' to see what happens next eh?
Ever higher taxes to support a bloated centralized bureaucracy, which is ever more complicated, ineffective, and corrupt. Also price controls. Someone suggested mortgages capped at 3* earnings, which some might applaud, but before you know it the Government will be trying to cap the price of everything by decree, including food.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostNot sure I understand you. Do expand ....
You have a situation where women are agitating for the vote, equal status, equal job opportunities etc they get tolerated, but dont get anywhere near what they want, and they never will.
Then you have a war, it becomes a total war. Everything is now up for grabs, all the barriers to women are ditched, temporarily, so that men can join up and women can take their place on the land.
After the war, you can't get the genie back into the bottle, and the upshot is that the womens cause has made a gigantic leap in a short amount of time, without too much aggro at all.
Other institutions have been tested to destruction, but, as you say, not neccesarily by war.
Serfdom/ plague.
Napoleon/national revenue.
WWI/education
What you seemed to be saying(in my mind) is that a lot of our 'infallible' systems and institutions are about to be revolutionised because they do not work any more, (and because we are now skint)
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("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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Originally posted by zeitghostIs it the Goths and the Visigoths?
Or throwing Christians to the lions?
Lord Mandelson ousts the idiot Gordon Brown and becomes Caligula.Comment
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[QUOTE=zeitghost;698794]Is it the Goths and the Visigoths?
QUOTE]
Something like that I suppose. Anyway, whats the difference between a Welshman and a VisiWelshman ?
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("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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[QUOTE=zeitghost;698813]Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
I dread to think...
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("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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Originally posted by expat View PostExample: "we have a longer workweek than the French. That's because they are lazy, but we don't mind putting in a bit of work".
Translation: Our productivity is lower, that's why we have to work more hours for the same GDP/cap.
Or take Italy; OK, so in the south they have a crime problem, but otherwise they have even better food, even better weather, no shortage of attractive women, all that wine, cool little cars, relaxed traffic police and a football team that actually wins things; who cares about GDP?
Maybe the French and the Italians are right.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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