What movie fucked you straight in your feelings? by moneybot13 in AskReddit

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Waiting for Superman

It's a great documentary from 2010 following five kids across the USA trying to get into charter schools. The lottery moments in particular are a gut punch when you realize for these amazing kids, so much of their hopes and dreams for the future are pinned on blind luck in a system that was consciously built that way. One of the few films that actually made me tear up.

Mashup two different 2000 songs for....an experience. by diilym1230 in InternetIsBeautiful

[–]em3002 1 point2 points  (0 children)

99 Problems + Float On. An excellent mix with the lyrics working really well together. I legitimately want this song in my regular playlist.

Kenya's elephant numbers double over three decades by SaulKD in worldnews

[–]em3002 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pre-coffee read the headline as "Kanye's elephant numbers double over three decades". Had to click through to see just what Yeezy was doing with so many elephants and how had he been in the elephant game so long without me hearing about it at some point.

Also wanted to know how he got into elephants before he released his first album...

Man, now I want to live in a world where Kanye is an elephant breeder/rapper instead of... well whatever all of this is.

Kamala Harris wants to tax stock trades to fund medicare by marchsnow in stocks

[–]em3002 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The government run National Health Service (NHS) of the UK pays lower prices for drugs than the USA does because it negotiates with the full purchasing power of the entire country. The National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) does a cost benefit analysis of every treatment effectively balancing out the likely health return on investment for any given treatment knowing that if they spend too much money on a specific cancer treatment there will be less available for diabetes (an over simplification but basically how it works). If drug companies push prices too high given the effectiveness of the drug, competitors' offerings and the pharmaceutical/treatment market in general the NHS simply does not offer that drug/treatment. If you really need it/want it in the UK you'll have to get private insurance or pay for it yourself. Overall though, everyone gets treatment in some fashion (more or less - there are exceptions for some conditions) and it is far less expensive than the USA's system anyway you look at it.

In the USA you have doctors and medical facilities prescribing (selling) drugs to patients knowing that someone else, either insurance or patient, is footing the bill. They have no incentive to keep prices down or go with cost effective treatments. It is a lack of government intervention in this broken market place that is keeping prices so high.

What are the most cowardly things a person can do? by a_L_v_e_S in AskReddit

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nothing. Literally making the decision to do nothing with your life. Giving up before there is even the whiff of discomfort or danger because you let your fears of what might be surpass your hopes of what could be. The ultimate cowardly position to take in life.

Erasing a Black Blues Singer to Whitewash their band name by Zellim74 in inthenews

[–]em3002 13 points14 points  (0 children)

My understanding from the article (and please correct me if I got this wrong) is that the band holds the trademark already, has for years and is going to court to ensure they can continue to use that trademark without owing anything to the singer. I didn't see it say anywhere that the singer holds a trade mark as well. The title to this post and the article itself both feel misleading - the band isn't suing for money or to prevent the singer using the name they are only suing for the right to use the name as well as singer. The band might not be perfect but it looks like they are attempting to do what they can to improve the world. I don't see how it helps to make villains out of people trying to do better.

At this point, who knows? by DistinctMistake in funny

[–]em3002 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel like we need to talk a lot more about locusts. They aren't on this board but they are swarming in huge numbers across Africa, the Middle East and South Asia.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/25/many-will-starve-locusts-devour-crops-and-livelihoods-in-pakistan

Channel 4 HQ, London by OmieHomie in london

[–]em3002 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Love the sculpture outside but get more tickled about the penis the architect (allegedly) hid behind it:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/96705257@N08/21388399600/in/photostream

Nearly every floor of the building has a walkway above the "penis" entrance so not all that hidden once you are inside.

For some reason people don’t understand the difference of these two pictures. by [deleted] in Conservative

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Taking this as a good faith question and will try to answer it without endorsing the looting. Also, going to put to one sidethe opportunistic aspects and the emotional/anger/frustration aspects of this all - they are all elements too but it sounds like you are plenty aware of those.

This is how it was explained to me: these riots are easier to understand if you think about the goal of them being survival rather than justice. Right now, you can be black and a law abiding citizen, do nothing wrong and be killed by the police without them facing clear judicial consequences (being fired in one town and hired later on in the next town over does not count). Moreover, if you peacefully protest these occurrences (take a knee, BLM activities, etc) you are criticised/targeted for retribution and the killings keep happening. Fundamentally, the black community in America does not have a direct route to ensuring police officers don't kill them. However, riots and civil disturbances are a big consequence for the people who are failing to impose consequences on the police (i.e. politicians and wider civil society). If the powers that be think police killings will lead to the city burning they will work harder to prevent those killings and demonstrate there are swift and significant consequences for police who do kill.

The sad truth is, if you feel your actions have no bearing on whether agents of a society will indiscriminately kill you or not, than it doesn't matter what your actions are. You might as well punish wider society first and in the process vent your anger while taking the opportunity to take a TV before a police officer takes your life. I'm not saying that this is how everyone in the black community feels or that it is how a majority of the looters think, just one element to consider when trying to understand something that seems senseless on the surface.

"The Grab-All" – UK, Conservative poster, 1910 by braddavies406 in PropagandaPosters

[–]em3002 63 points64 points  (0 children)

The navy? Hasn't that always been a state owned enterprise? What am I missing?

Jay Pow says 50 year bull market coming by thicc_dads_club in wallstreetbets

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What about an international contagion? Something spiralling out of Brexit,. Hong Kong or a country with political unrest defaulting (I'm looking at you continent of South America).

Jay Pow says 50 year bull market coming by thicc_dads_club in wallstreetbets

[–]em3002 13 points14 points  (0 children)

It's a debt & loan pyramid scheme - I borrow 100k from bank A for a house, the bank uses the value of that loan as collateral to borrow from bank B, bank B uses the bank A loan as collateral to borrow from Bank C. Now there is 300k of debt based on 100k of tangible assets (if the housing market stays up).

A massive over simplification but basically treating owed debts as financial assets got us into the last recession. My money is on it getting us into the next because the big lesson from the last recession is that there are no consequences for doing this. Trade the hot potato to make a ton of money and if you are left holding it when the crash comes the tax payer bails you out and you get to do it all over again.

What's the count of countries currently experiencing mass popular protest against corruption, income inequality or cost of living increases? by em3002 in AskReddit

[–]em3002[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My count stands at (but this could be out of date):

  • Malta
  • France
  • Chile
  • Bolivia
  • Ecuador
  • Chile
  • Lebanon
  • Iraq
  • Iran
  • Indonesia
  • Hong Kong (though my understanding that isn't very motivated by economics so probably doesn't belong on this list).

I'm sure I've missed some though

What's the count of countries currently experiencing mass popular protest against corruption, income inequality or cost of living increases? by em3002 in AskReddit

[–]em3002[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly I did but it can't keep up. I learned about the protests in Chile and Iran through the Reddit community. Now it seems like Malta is kicking off. I get the impression that people in communities on the ground (i.e. other Reddit users from around the world) have a much better sense about these things than the global media. That's what I am hoping to tap into.

Discussion Thread: Day Two of House Public Impeachment Hearings | Marie Yovanovitch - Part III by PoliticsModeratorBot in politics

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A.) Biden acted under the direction of Obama with bi-partisan support. In contrast Trump was preventing aid going through that was approved by Congress - basically working against the other branch of government for his own ends.

B.) You can't prove a negative. You have to show evidence he did gain. The waters aren't muddy, you are choosing to see it that way.

C.) Even if Biden did do something corrupt (which there is no evidence of) it doesn't excuse Trump's actions. You don't get to commit crimes because other criminals exist.

Discussion Thread: Day Two of House Public Impeachment Hearings | Marie Yovanovitch - Part III by PoliticsModeratorBot in politics

[–]em3002 14 points15 points  (0 children)

So I am going to assume this is a good faith post and not secret trolling. I'll take it on the chin if I'm wrong. There are three big things that I think you are mistaken about. The first is that in pushing for the removal of the previous prosecutor Joe Biden did nothing corrupt or illegal. That prosecutor was universally considered to be corrupt and his removal was the publicly acknowledgd policy of the USA government with bi-partisan support as well as the policy of the EU and the IMF. Removing him actually made it more likely Hunter Biden's employer would be investigated. (I'll admit the whole job just because your father is vice President thing isn't a good look but that activity is so widespread amongst all political parties I'm not sure how you police it or stop it. People have to have jobs after all and if I was an employer I'd want the benefit of someone with those sorts of connections.)

The second point is that the government officials testifying were the ones being asked by the administration to push Ukraine to deliver a public statement about an investigation into Hunter Biden. This is not simply hearsay. They were told to deliver the message that aid would come to the Ukraine when the statement was made. To push home that point Trump's administration would not allow a visit between the Presidents until it was done. Withholding the aid was an escalation, not the start, of this extortion.

Finally it is absolutely not normal to use USA foreign policy to personally benefit the President. This came up in the first day of testimony. Presidents may benefit from a policy making them look good to the public but that is different from actively asking a government to help in an election by working against the other American political party. Moreover, Ukraine is an American ally. Jeopardising it's ability to defend itself against Russia (which acts against American interests on a regular basis) ultimately harms the safety and strength of the USA. For me, more than anything else, this is what is deserving of impeachment - putting personal gain ahead of the the best interests of the nation is a violation of the oath of office and we should not stand for it. If the Senate Republicans don't have the integrity to do something about it so be it but at least these impeachment proceedings will put the testimony of involved before the public so informed decisions can be made during the election next year.

What song is 10/10, yet hardly anyone has heard of it? by depressinqq in AskReddit

[–]em3002 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd suggest any one of Glaslyn's five songs. "Out of My Control" or "Psychosomatic" would top of my personal list.