EAllusion wrote:"The weird thing with these guys who post here they post as if they have the moral high ground, but we all know what they really are. They're intolerant control freak bullies who hide behind their professed tolerance, but they don't really believe what they post outside of more socialism."
Yeah, that does seem to be a really apt description of someone here.
I mean. You can try and hide what you are, but it's patently obvious to me that you don't care about activism. What YOU care about is
acting out the delusion of caring about the things you say. You've absolutely inflated your own ego by pretending to care about the problems of the world to the point of arguing every_single_thing_anyone_says into the ground, buddy.
What's up with that?
Getting back to the OP. If we're talking about dealing with people who deal with complex systems, and then making them better, then I guess I'd have to ask what have the people in our country, who are in charge of policy, done to address the complex challenges
of their constituents that makes our system better or worse? The fact of the matter is we're just fundamentally going to look at our system through our filter of good and bad. Markk has his filter. You have yours. I have mine.
So. I think in order to move this conversation forward we'd have to hammer out (no pun intended in a second) a particular agreement to settle on a particular point, say, what should the average person in SoCal who is a basic carpenter be making per hour. Once we agree to discuss a singular issue then we can discuss the current and historical policies that have led to the current wage-per-hour and figure out how to move to what we can agree is a fair and equitable wage for a carpenter in SoCal. Otherwise the complexity of what we're talking about lends the conversation to uselessness and it ends up as a virtue signal to one's ideological side.
- Doc