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Scientists Predict There's 90% Chance Civilization Will Collapse Within 'Decades'
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2020-08-14 at 10:28 PM UTC
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2020-08-14 at 10:35 PM UTC
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2020-08-14 at 10:46 PM UTCOne-Third Of New York City Residents Have Lost Their Jobs, Report Says
https://www.wnyc.org/story/third-new-york-city-residents-are-unemployed-report-says/ -
2020-08-14 at 10:52 PM UTC
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2020-08-14 at 11:02 PM UTC
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2020-08-14 at 11:11 PM UTC
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2020-08-14 at 11:15 PM UTC
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2020-08-15 at 12:21 AM UTC
Originally posted by ORACLE That's not how the labour market works jackass.
You may've studied the labour market in college. But I've actually worked as a labourer and currently operate my own business where I have to compete with Mexicans, among others, for contracts. The Mexicans live in their vans, causing them not having to pay rent, and being able to undercut our contracts because they can live on so much less. Even up here in Canada! Not to say white people don't do it as well. But that's in order to now compete with the Mexicans! A good portion of the trades people up here in this small town live in their vehicles. It's ludicrous. Or maybe living out of vans is the way of the future and we should just get used to it? -
2020-08-15 at 12:43 AM UTC
Originally posted by Splam You may've studied the labour market in college. But I've actually worked as a labourer and currently operate my own business where I have to compete with Mexicans, among others, for contracts. The Mexicans live in their vans, causing them not having to pay rent, and being able to undercut our contracts because they can live on so much less. Even up here in Canada! Not to say white people don't do it as well. But that's in order to now compete with the Mexicans! A good portion of the trades people up here in this small town live in their vehicles. It's ludicrous. Or maybe living out of vans is the way of the future and we should just get used to it?
The future is grim. -
2020-08-15 at 1:25 AM UTCAnyone who thinks that increased labour supply doesn't lead to lower wages is at odds with the mainstream of economic thought.
Companies and governments want increased labour supply as it keeps wages lower.
If people believe that increased supply of a good or service results in an increased price of that good or service, they are in a whole new area of microeconomics, analogous to Veblen goods, and they need to supply a good explanation of the phenomenon so they can claim their nobel prize in economics. -
2020-08-15 at 4:11 AM UTC
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2020-08-15 at 11:29 AM UTC
Originally posted by Splam You may've studied the labour market in college. But I've actually worked as a labourer and currently operate my own business where I have to compete with Mexicans, among others, for contracts. The Mexicans live in their vans, causing them not having to pay rent, and being able to undercut our contracts because they can live on so much less. Even up here in Canada! Not to say white people don't do it as well. But that's in order to now compete with the Mexicans! A good portion of the trades people up here in this small town live in their vehicles. It's ludicrous. Or maybe living out of vans is the way of the future and we should just get used to it?
1. Your anecdote enhancemented through your shitty lens doesn't equal data.
2. Someone is willing to be more productive and efficient than you, you are a lazy nigger, stop crying. All you want is to be paid more for doing nothing more.
3. There is literally zero dispute that whatever you've been supposedly lost out on because of immigrants, you've gained many orders of magnitude more than that in purchasing power due to market growth.
4. You can defeat this with a price control AKA a minimum wage raise, and make this whole point moot as they literally cannot go lower past a certain point. Which the Republicans have done more to suppress. -
2020-08-15 at 11:36 AM UTC
Originally posted by MORALLY SUPERIOR BEING 2020 IV: Intravenous Soyposting Anyone who thinks that increased labour supply doesn't lead to lower wages is at odds with the mainstream of economic thought.
Companies and governments want increased labour supply as it keeps wages lower.
If people believe that increased supply of a good or service results in an increased price of that good or service, they are in a whole new area of microeconomics, analogous to Veblen goods, and they need to supply a good explanation of the phenomenon so they can claim their nobel prize in economics.
Classic example ^ of a retarded pseud who has never once studied economics. You can tell he didn't even take a 101 course in a college setting, or failed it.
Only mongoloids with subnormal brain function would say this who never read/understand/remember the CONSTANT reminder of "ceteris paribus" in Econ 101 courses whenever they explained simple supply curves, which is supposed to remind you that everything being explained is just a series of toy models that are being used to explain isolated concepts and NONE of which apply in real markets, because no, you can't hold everything else constant.
But actually learning to model markets would take hard work and study. So just substitute actual knowledge with parroting some retarded alt right YouTuber's less-than-101 take on economy. -
2020-08-15 at 2:10 PM UTC
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2020-08-15 at 2:22 PM UTCI can't even imagine the mindset that thinks going to college to study finance is a good idea.
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2020-08-15 at 2:29 PM UTC
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2020-08-15 at 2:30 PM UTC
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2020-08-15 at 3:50 PM UTC"Canary in the coal mine": Greenland’s ice sheet may have shrunk past the point of return, with the ice likely to melt away no matter how quickly the world reduces climate-warming emissions, new research suggests.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-climate-change-arctic-idUSKCN25A2X3 -
2020-08-15 at 3:56 PM UTC
Originally posted by Obbe "Canary in the coal mine": Greenland’s ice sheet may have shrunk past the point of return, with the ice likely to melt away no matter how quickly the world reduces climate-warming emissions, new research suggests.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-climate-change-arctic-idUSKCN25A2X3
Greenlands ice core data:
http://serendipity.li/climate/3000bc-present.gif
I wonder how much the ice shrunk 1000 years ago when the global warming was worse than today despite no climate-warming emissions from us.
surely it must have been worse, yet the ice returned anyway. i think greenland will be fine. when the whole planet becomes like greenland, you wont be bitching about CO2 anymore, i guarantee you that. -
2020-08-15 at 4:15 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kev Greenlands ice core data:
http://serendipity.li/climate/3000bc-present.gif
I wonder how much the ice shrunk 1000 years ago when the global warming was worse than today despite no climate-warming emissions from us.
surely it must have been worse, yet the ice returned anyway. i think greenland will be fine. when the whole planet becomes like greenland, you wont be bitching about CO2 anymore, i guarantee you that.
Thread isn't about the earth being ok thousands of years from now, it is about civilization collapsing.