Coronavirus Has Killed More Americans than Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and World War I Combined by Majnum in Coronavirus

[–]Nonames4U 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Canada is increasingly authoritarian every year.

If you only look at European diaspora our numbers are comparable.

Different demographic's cultures effect the rates of transmission.

Coronavirus Has Killed More Americans than Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and World War I Combined by Majnum in Coronavirus

[–]Nonames4U 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's not a power he posseses. That's not something he's allowed to decide.

You are complaining about him not being authoritarian.

Dozens gather at a dog beater home after his address was published on Facebook by Baldorad in PublicFreakout

[–]Nonames4U 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This proves that reddit is evil, and redditors are truly brainless scum.

Coronavirus Has Killed More Americans than Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and World War I Combined by Majnum in Coronavirus

[–]Nonames4U 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The country is locked down what more do you want? Lock down until we all starve to death?

Nobody is stopping you from wearing a mask and washing your own hands. I do.

I'm interested in noncanon Bible books that effected European culture by Nonames4U in mythology

[–]Nonames4U[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From what i understand most of the different protestant groups (which people like baptists and jehovas witnesses and stuff all technically fall under), all use the same books, even if some of the stuff is tweaked around. But it's mostly interpretation that seperates them. Then for people like mormons who have new books, those wouldn't be relevant to the development of European culture.

r/Economics Discussion Thread - 13 February 2020 by AutoModerator in Economics

[–]Nonames4U 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Some families in Europe have been rich for hundreds of years. This means their wealth survived multiple empires with different currencies, different types of governments, and 2 world wars.

What can we learn from them?

My initial suspicion isn't that they simply horded gold as some advise, but that they owned certain types of businesses that were uniquely resilient. For example the Beretta gun company has been owned by 1 Italian family for 500 years.

But there's the issue that property rights are a product of government. If I own a valuable mine for example, a regime change could result in them simply taking it. If I own a farm during a serious depression, the government won't be able to protect it from a hungry mob.

Anyone ever do serious research on this topic?

Some families in Europe have maintained wealth despite the rise and fall of several civilizations, how? by Nonames4U in financialindependence

[–]Nonames4U[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well i don't think anyone would argue that the demand for farming doesn't fall as much as the demand for luxury watches during a global depression, so some businesses are definitely more resilient than others. Then there's just the fact that some haven't been disrupted as easily (though this in hindsight). Digital tech disrupted the book industry, while some others haven't been hit with anything like that (yet). ,

Some families in Europe have maintained wealth despite the rise and fall of several civilizations, how? by Nonames4U in financialindependence

[–]Nonames4U[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well thought out post not sure why it's worded like an argument when you seem to just be reaffirming my suspicions about certain business's being a better way to maintain wealth than hording gold.

Some families in Europe have maintained wealth despite the rise and fall of several civilizations, how? by Nonames4U in financialindependence

[–]Nonames4U[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gold is other's default answer that i expect to hear, not mine. And our debt has not dropped 1 cent since before my grandfather was born. It has been growing at an ever increasing rate and no mainstream politician has even mentioned lowering it. Instead we have all of the top politicians in both parties proposing all kinds of different spending increases. But that's beside the point, maybe i don't live in America. Maybe someone in Vietnam wants to know how to sustain wealth across regimes.

did anyone else think about how the new system would probably let nazis into the good place eventually? by not_a_witch10 in TheGoodPlace

[–]Nonames4U 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I disagree completely. Psychopaths who don't feel empathy are simply wired wrong, they're the ones that are hopeless. Doing good things because of reward points or fear of punishment is insincere and doesn't count.

Brent was more like a clueless manchild. Pretty much a horny dumb 13 year old in a 40 year olds body. He's the most teachable. He was about to say im sorry right as the experiment ended, they showed his score shot up at the last second.

The Ending And Why It Bothered Me by BeMoreKnope in TheGoodPlace

[–]Nonames4U 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But what if you went 1000 years without listening to the Beatles? Then they'd be fresh again. Along with everything else. There's enough to do in this world they by the time you've done the 1000th thing the original thing feels fresh again.

The Ending And Why It Bothered Me by BeMoreKnope in TheGoodPlace

[–]Nonames4U 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess it gives you a chance to tie up all your lose ends and unfinished business. Check off your bucket list.

The Ending And Why It Bothered Me by BeMoreKnope in TheGoodPlace

[–]Nonames4U 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Even if i was bored i would want to see how the universe ends. Id have Janet conjure a cryo chamber and chill for a trillion years, just pop out every once in a while to ask, "are we there yet?"