Liars, hypocrites, and morons.
dajo9 said:What is bad about negative population growth? I understand that usually the underlying reasons for negative population growth are bad (disease, famine, etc.) but absent a bad underlying reason, I think negative population growth for the world would be a good thing. I think the promotion of population growth comes from the capitalist notion that permanent growth in all things is good. I care more about GDP per capita than I do GDP - but a big company cares more about overall GDP growth because that drives earnings growth.concordtom said:
Article discusses the impact on Russia population (births) the war is having.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russias-catastrophic-missing-men-problem-095508987.html
Basically, you need 2.1 kids per woman to remain a stable population size. But with men leaving for war or to flee war the # or births is 1.2, matching a low achieved on 1999 2000.
Putin is not setting Russia up for future success. People are emigrating, not immigrating. And women left behind are left to compete for the dummies who didn't flee already.
The population decline situation is also affecting Ukraine.
My wife is doing her part. Only 2 kids.
Big C said:dajo9 said:What is bad about negative population growth? I understand that usually the underlying reasons for negative population growth are bad (disease, famine, etc.) but absent a bad underlying reason, I think negative population growth for the world would be a good thing. I think the promotion of population growth comes from the capitalist notion that permanent growth in all things is good. I care more about GDP per capita than I do GDP - but a big company cares more about overall GDP growth because that drives earnings growth.concordtom said:
Article discusses the impact on Russia population (births) the war is having.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russias-catastrophic-missing-men-problem-095508987.html
Basically, you need 2.1 kids per woman to remain a stable population size. But with men leaving for war or to flee war the # or births is 1.2, matching a low achieved on 1999 2000.
Putin is not setting Russia up for future success. People are emigrating, not immigrating. And women left behind are left to compete for the dummies who didn't flee already.
The population decline situation is also affecting Ukraine.
My wife is doing her part. Only 2 kids.
100% agreement on this, even the two kids part. The earth cannot sustain more human beings long term, especially with most of them aspiring to live an American-type lifestyle. Maybe scientific advancements will help us, but it'd have to be some things that would seem miraculous.
Unit2Sucks said:
…the GOP's plan is to force birth and to restrict birth control because many of them believe in the great replacement theory.
movielover said:
President Trump is the most popular politician now in South Florida, 70% Latino.
We aren't in Usenet anymore,Toto.movielover said:
Goodwin's Law: the thread is finished and whoever made the comparison to Hitler loses whatever debate is in progress. This principle is itself frequently referred to as Godwin's law.
movielover said:
Prior comment: The GOP solution is to prevent all immigration and to reduce social security and other entitlements which will exacerbate poverty.
Movielover response: False. Legal immigration. Not 2 Million illegal immigrants, gang members, human traffickers and drug Mules per year!
movielover said:
China supposedly really overplayed the one child policy and some people claim will lose 2/3 of their population in a few decades.
dimitrig said:
It would help if we stopped destroying things and building weapons to destroy things. Imagine if all those resources being spent in Ukraine right now were going to build infrastructure there instead of destroying it
movielover said:
Goodwin's Law: the thread is finished and whoever made the comparison to Hitler loses whatever debate is in progress. This principle is itself frequently referred to as Godwin's law.
dajo9 said:What is bad about negative population growth? I understand that usually the underlying reasons for negative population growth are bad (disease, famine, etc.) but absent a bad underlying reason, I think negative population growth for the world would be a good thing. I think the promotion of population growth comes from the capitalist notion that permanent growth in all things is good. I care more about GDP per capita than I do GDP - but a big company cares more about overall GDP growth because that drives earnings growth.concordtom said:
Article discusses the impact on Russia population (births) the war is having.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russias-catastrophic-missing-men-problem-095508987.html
Basically, you need 2.1 kids per woman to remain a stable population size. But with men leaving for war or to flee war the # or births is 1.2, matching a low achieved on 1999 2000.
Putin is not setting Russia up for future success. People are emigrating, not immigrating. And women left behind are left to compete for the dummies who didn't flee already.
The population decline situation is also affecting Ukraine.
My wife is doing her part. Only 2 kids.
Hey folks, we took the paywall off this story to open it up to the, like, 40 million people it concerns. Take a look!
— Conrad Swanson (@Conrad_Swanson) November 4, 2022
“It’s going to be ugly. The bottom line is there just isn’t going to be enough water available.” https://t.co/fgq9b2gnSs
concordtom said:movielover said:
Goodwin's Law: the thread is finished and whoever made the comparison to Hitler loses whatever debate is in progress. This principle is itself frequently referred to as Godwin's law.
Concordtom's Law: whoever supports Trump or his policy is booted from the internet forever. The principle is itself frequently referred to as Concordtom's law.
You are excused now.
Cal88 said:
It's kind of OT, but China is engineering a fairly successful demographic soft landing, their population is going to go from 1.4 billion to around 900 million this century, which is a good number for them. The reason why they can do this is that they still have a large pool of rural population that they can tap to replenish their urban labor pool.
Bringing back this thread to its topic, Russia has successfully addressed its demographic problem, following the collapse in the 1990s. It 's showing some success with their fertility rate rising above 1.8, which puts it at the top of European and industrialized nations.
Big said:
Asking out of semi-ignorance on this, but aren't a lot of people trying to get the hell out of Russia this year? I don't see that changing any time soon. Not exactly feeling sorry for them right now, but they used to have a strong tradition in literature, the arts, science, etc. Sad, what they are devolving into.
2/ First, this announcement was made by the military and not Putin. Ceding territory should be a political decision; this is more evidence of Putin is clearly setting up the military as the fall guys for the Russian debacle in Ukraine.
— Mick Ryan, AM (@WarintheFuture) November 9, 2022
4/ Third, the pace and organization of any Russian withdrawal - given this should be a deliberate activity - will tell us much about the morale and capability of the Russian forces in the south.
— Mick Ryan, AM (@WarintheFuture) November 9, 2022
Cal88 said:Big said:
Asking out of semi-ignorance on this, but aren't a lot of people trying to get the hell out of Russia this year? I don't see that changing any time soon. Not exactly feeling sorry for them right now, but they used to have a strong tradition in literature, the arts, science, etc. Sad, what they are devolving into.
You have had a lot of military age males skipping town, somewhere around 300k-400k, mostly somewhat affluent big-city types, who could afford to move to Dubai, Turkey, or Greece. For the average Russian though, the economic situation is getting better at home than in that of their potential emigration destination, with the cost of energy and basic staples being much lower at home. Gas is 3 times cheaper in Russia than in Germany, same with food etc.
As far as Russia devolving, people need to realize where they were in the 1990s in order to understand that country's mindset today, and why Putin has been very popular. Back then, Russia was a complete economic and social dystopia, with half the population being driven down from a Soviet lower-middle class status into third-world like abject poverty, where millions of people couldn't feed themselves.
This is an excellent read on Russia in the 90s:
https://paullikoudis.wordpress.com/2011/03/24/the-plunder-of-russia-in-the-1990s/
Russia has been on the ascent this century, they are the richest country in the world in terms of natural resources, and even if they only manage a small fraction of their potential as a country, they are going to be well off. Unlike Ukraine, which started out as the richest, most advanced province in the USSR and was 3 times poorer than Russia before the war even started, Russia has reined in their oligarchs and completely weeded out foreign economic dependence, investing in their infrastructure, going from dependency on imports for their food, to self-sufficiency and outright dominance of the global wheat market.
Russia is not a panacea, but with the rest of Europe on the verge of economic collapse, it's starting to look better, even for the locals.
bearister said:
"Ukrainian officers describe these recruits as untrained, clueless and easy to kill. "They are cannon fodder. One of them went to the toilet in the middle of the night using a flashlight. We identified their tank position and destroyed it," said Lt Oleh Zelinskiy, a spokesperson for the 63rd Brigade.
"They try to shoot down our drones with automatic weapons. They don't understand that drones can drop bombs. They are idiots."
Russia kaput!': Ukraine brigade eyes victory as enemy retreats from Kherson
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/09/ukraine-brigade-russia-retreat-kherson-frontline?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
dajo9 said:Cal88 said:
Looks like a solid win for Ukraine in the north, and a loss in the south. Overall though, it's been the best week for Ukrainian armed forces since Spring, it's a big boost for their morale.
If you want a solid, neutral and up to date picture of frontline movements, this is a good channel, run by a military geek from Singapore:
https://www.youtube.com/c/DefensePoliticsAsia
This is Cal88 tipping us off that Russia is about to be humiliated in the south also
More than 100,000 Russian troops — and about as many Ukrainian troops — are estimated to have died or been injured in the war so far, according to Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. https://t.co/GNcRwJrzxX
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 10, 2022
Cal88 has been wrong about everything else that would happen for Russia so far, but hey . . . maybe THIS time he'll be right!Big C said:Cal88 said:Big said:
Asking out of semi-ignorance on this, but aren't a lot of people trying to get the hell out of Russia this year? I don't see that changing any time soon. Not exactly feeling sorry for them right now, but they used to have a strong tradition in literature, the arts, science, etc. Sad, what they are devolving into.
You have had a lot of military age males skipping town, somewhere around 300k-400k, mostly somewhat affluent big-city types, who could afford to move to Dubai, Turkey, or Greece. For the average Russian though, the economic situation is getting better at home than in that of their potential emigration destination, with the cost of energy and basic staples being much lower at home. Gas is 3 times cheaper in Russia than in Germany, same with food etc.
As far as Russia devolving, people need to realize where they were in the 1990s in order to understand that country's mindset today, and why Putin has been very popular. Back then, Russia was a complete economic and social dystopia, with half the population being driven down from a Soviet lower-middle class status into third-world like abject poverty, where millions of people couldn't feed themselves.
This is an excellent read on Russia in the 90s:
https://paullikoudis.wordpress.com/2011/03/24/the-plunder-of-russia-in-the-1990s/
Russia has been on the ascent this century, they are the richest country in the world in terms of natural resources, and even if they only manage a small fraction of their potential as a country, they are going to be well off. Unlike Ukraine, which started out as the richest, most advanced province in the USSR and was 3 times poorer than Russia before the war even started, Russia has reined in their oligarchs and completely weeded out foreign economic dependence, investing in their infrastructure, going from dependency on imports for their food, to self-sufficiency and outright dominance of the global wheat market.
Russia is not a panacea, but with the rest of Europe on the verge of economic collapse, it's starting to look better, even for the locals.
Your penultimate paragraph, hey, I can't refute it with facts off the top of my head, but I feel like it's painting a far rosier picture of Russia than actually exists. Regarding their resources, there are plenty of countries that are rich with resources that aren't using them to pull themselves up. From my vantagepoint, Russia looks like it is turning into what Trump refers to as a "feces-hole" country, rapidly worsening.
I tried. Whatever else it may be, I would not call it an "excellent read" in the slightest. The words that come to mind for me are trash and rambling.Cal88 said:Big said:
Asking out of semi-ignorance on this, but aren't a lot of people trying to get the hell out of Russia this year? I don't see that changing any time soon. Not exactly feeling sorry for them right now, but they used to have a strong tradition in literature, the arts, science, etc. Sad, what they are devolving into.
This is an excellent read on Russia in the 90s:
https://paullikoudis.wordpress.com/2011/03/24/the-plunder-of-russia-in-the-1990s/
Don't forget his careful statistical analysis with charts and graphs and quotes from "leading experts" is unquestionable and he told us precisely that there were only three possible outcomes that he carefully described and pinned a date to, and I am sure he will stand by those and not asterisk or move goalposts or just act like "that's not what I meant."dajo9 said:
Has there ever been worse analysis put forward than that which Cal88 has put forward in this thread?
Russian TV host Andrei Norkin's realisation that his country lacks freedom of speech:
— Francis Scarr (@francis_scarr) November 10, 2022
If I back the decision to withdraw from Kherson, I'm going to jail for questioning Russia's territorial integrity
And if I oppose it, I'm going to jail for discrediting the armed forces pic.twitter.com/KRj0RsI00i
More than 100,000 Russian troops — and about as many Ukrainian troops — are estimated to have died or been injured in the war so far, according to Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. https://t.co/GNcRwJrzxX
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 10, 2022
I think extremist on both sides (including the embarrassing mistake from the progressive wing) have tried to dent our support for Ukraine.Unit2Sucks said:
Maybe some pro-Putin US conservatives can call into this guy's show and explain to him why Russia is really so awesome and on the ascent. Seems like the propaganda machine has a few cracks in it.Russian TV host Andrei Norkin's realisation that his country lacks freedom of speech:
— Francis Scarr (@francis_scarr) November 10, 2022
If I back the decision to withdraw from Kherson, I'm going to jail for questioning Russia's territorial integrity
And if I oppose it, I'm going to jail for discrediting the armed forces pic.twitter.com/KRj0RsI00i
Also, new info on Russian and Ukrainian losses. Contrast this with the deluded people still clinging to discredited propaganda that says Ukr losses are like 3x or more Russian losses.More than 100,000 Russian troops — and about as many Ukrainian troops — are estimated to have died or been injured in the war so far, according to Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. https://t.co/GNcRwJrzxX
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 10, 2022
My opinion:blungld said:
Here are some very simplistic questions that pop to mind every time I hear these Putin apologist Republicans or those saying we need to stop supporting Ukraine:
1) What is the purpose of the US military if it is not to assist in a case like this? * * *
2) How can people who probably would have universally supported our intervention overseas in WWI & WWII for principles of democracy and assistance to allies, * * *
3) Why would any American want Putin to have a victory (real or perceived) in Ukraine? * * *