HackerLangs
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

ClumsyPilot

18,710 karmajoined 9 anni fa

comments

ClumsyPilot
·13 ore fa·discuss
> Producing something novel and valuable is HARD

I disagree, producing something valuable is common, and it’s common for scientists / inventors / artists / composers to die poor.

Selling, Capturing the value, and building businesses on top is hard.
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
> EU is toothless and lacks the spine

They don't even negotiate well, you need to play both sides.

Give US a choice -> either you reinstate support for Ukraine or we close half the bases in Europe. Because if US is unwilling to help with Russia, why do we need US bases?

Offer Russia peace deal in exchange for closing some US bases, they would probably treat it as a great victory.

If US obliges and helps -> that's a win. If US denies, then you can't trust Trump anyway, win. And probably war in middle east ends because without EU bases it's logistically unsustainable.
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
> - Its relationship with China is also rapidly deteriorating

For which there is no good reason and which is extremely stupid

There has been zero aggression from China towards Europe and zero chance of military confrontation.

Most of the sanctions that were implemented under pressure from Us have backfired on Europe (but not so much on US)

European politicians are going around the world and telling India not to trade with Russia while Israel trades with Russia, etc.
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
We seem to be good at combining the worst of both sides -> rightwing trickle down economics, left-wing social policy plus boomerism sprinkled on top
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
This narrative is a fabrication.

EU spends 33% of World’s military spending, once you exclude US. EU spends more on military than China.

How much do you need to spend to defend yourself, 60% of the world?

Mind you, many western weapons, like stinger and javelin, cost more than their weight in silver. Sounds like a scam
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
> They didn't anticipate…the Middle East blowing up again

Yes, interesting that the People dropping bombs did not anticipate blowing up.

Our elites have revealed many flaws recently, but one I did not expect is that they have surprisingly limited intelligence.
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
> at a breakneck pace for no apparent reason

So many reasons: unpopular wars in the Middle East, repeated embarrassments in international arena, domestic unrest, decadent elites…
ClumsyPilot
·ieri·discuss
That’s even worse
ClumsyPilot
·l’altro ieri·discuss
> Politicians and all their communication are to be excluded, for they have decided it is obvious that we can trust them

What’s the point of criticising USSR and China only to reinvent it
ClumsyPilot
·l’altro ieri·discuss
Famously law enforcement don’t commit crimes and don’t need to be held accountable
ClumsyPilot
·l’altro ieri·discuss
>> would be addressing the "for the children" motivations seriously rather than fully dismissing them

Like actually finding and arresting Eipstein clients?

There’s no need to protect children when it’s higher ranking people doing the crime I guess
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Sounds like something you should test rather that just rely on heuristics
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Hard to tell one old man with dementia from another
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
I am just saying that it would be good if we could have more precise discussion about corruption because different types of it are not equal, and we have more precise terminology.
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> So of course it would be viewed as corruption by any country with such institutions

It’s not viewed as corruption. US gov made numerous public statements condemning IP theft, and never even once classified it as corruption - it’s simply a different crime.

Furthermore, you suggested a benchmark is: “How wealthy are the ruling elites”

Well let’s see - the richest man in the world is American, 70% of 100 richest people are American, American has higher inequality than China.

By what robust quantitative measurement does this effort look less genuine than American one?

Are you accessing any objective facts or you simply are unable to accept that a country you are opposed to is making genuine progress?
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
I like how you are unable to separate actual crimes from government policies you disagree with.

>> corruption is an institution

>> Or for example, how has IP theft policy changed?

Another country may decide to have no IP protections, that’s not a crime.

Furthermore Intellectual property is legal fiction, some people and countries don’t believe in it.

Apparently Anthropic don’t believe in IP either, they are stealing everything that isn’t nailed down, but cry wolf when someone does it to them. And they are asking for legal immunity on IP theft.
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
I am pointing out the whole ‘losing face’ thing exists in the west too.

If you cause certain people to lose face, you will get China-like response.

In fact it’s a core conservative value and you can observe it in interactions with police - if a victim embarrasses the police they will prosecute the victim instead of the perpetrator
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> Naming someone who reportedly gets a harsh sentence is not evidence.

And if I show you official statistics you will say statistics out of China can’t be trusted.

Folks like yourself will only realise when it’s too late
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> we had shame back then

The collapse of our standards has been heartbreaking to see and I am observing that most are simply in denial.
ClumsyPilot
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Facilitation payment are usually considered the less egregious kinds of bribery, some may be considered acceptable in a culture, and there can be a whole etiquette to it.

In some countries, doctors or surgeons are severely underpaid and it would be customary for a well off citizen to bring them a gift or a cash summ before an important surgery.

That’s quite different from Kickbacks (rampant in UK leaseholds by the way), etc.