Comment Lets build fusion reactors on the Moon (Score 1) 74
Comment Re:Mind-boggling (Score 0) 72
Comment Similar news in the past (Score 1) 57
<2000-03-20 Mon>
Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past
<2007-01-18 Thu>
Snowdon will be snow-free in 13 years, scientists warn
<2007-12-12 Wed>
Arctic Sea Ice Gone in Summer Within Five Years?
<2007-12-12 Wed>
Arctic summers ice-free ‘by 2013'
<2008-06-20 Fri>
North Pole May Be Ice-Free for First Time in Summer
<2009-12-14 Mon>
Gore: Polar ice cap may disappear by summer 2014
<2017-06-12 Mon>
Alpine glaciers 'gone' by 2020.
<2012-09-05 Wed>
'End of Australian snow' by 2020.
<2012-09-20 Thu>
Arctic Summer Sea Ice Gone By 2015?
<2012-04-23 Mon>
Arctic Ocean may open to regular shipping by 2017
<2013-12-09 Mon>
US Navy predicts summer ice free Arctic by 2016.
<2014-05-13 Tue>
French Foreign Minister says: We have 500 days before climate chaos
<2017-03-28 Tue>
World has three years left to stop dangerous climate change, warn experts
Comment Why do anything (Score 2) 43
Why do anything when standing closest to the money printer, will get you money with which you can buy anything in the world?
Other countries need to export (export human resources sometimes) to get money, but USA can mint money with global purchasing power.
So industries adjacent to money minting, like NGOs, politics, law, finance, high margin biotech, high margin SaaS will prosper.
Low margin stuff like manufacturing and energy intensive capex intensive stuff is better done outside US mainland by exporting USD.
Comment China Bad mmmkay? (Score 0, Offtopic) 36
Comment Fake News (Score 1) 109
Comment It is a trap (Score 2) 110
Comment Goosebumps and Gamechangers (Score 1) 91
Comment Re: 1 in 2 Indians work in tax free agriculture (Score 1) 35
Comment Re:1 in 2 Indians work in tax free agriculture (Score 1) 35
Comment Re:How do Puritan Calvinist Athiests work? (Score 1) 180
There’s a pretty striking family resemblance between modern “woke” moral-political culture and early Puritan Calvinism. Not the theology, obviously—but the moral style and social dynamics. A few parallels:
- Moral absolutism and social discipline: Both treat everyday behavior as subject to rigorous moral scrutiny, with strong communal pressure to conform to norms.
- Purification and heresy-policing: Boundary maintenance via denunciations, excommunications, and rituals of orthodoxy—today it’s call-outs and deplatforming; then it was church courts and shunning.
- Austere seriousness: A shared ethos that prioritizes rectitude over levity; suspicion of frivolity as complicity in vice or injustice.
- Confession and penance: Formal repentance and re-education after transgression—think struggle sessions or DEI remediation echoing Protestant public discipline (different metaphysics, similar mechanics).
- Predestination-adjacent status anxiety: Puritans looked for “signs of election”; today’s activists signal moral standing through continual self-examination and public proofs of rectitude.
- Early moral socialization: Instruction impressing sin/privilege, depravity/complicity, duty/allyship—pedagogies aimed at shaping conscience from a young age.
- Political-theological fusion: Morality fused with a program for social order—using policy and discipline to engineer a righteous commonwealth.
- Apocalyptic register: Eschatology then, existential crisis now; urgency amplifies intolerance for deviance in the face of perceived catastrophe.
- American genealogy: Much of U.S. moral culture (across factions) still runs on Puritan software, so the resemblance is part continuity, part convergence.
Important caveat: they diverge on metaphysics (grace, God, salvation), institutions (church vs. HR/academia/media), and telos (otherworldly vs. this-worldly). But as a civic religion—with catechisms, rituals, sacraments of confession, and excommunication—the parallels are hard to miss.
Comment Puritan Calvinist Athiests Took Over (Score 0) 180
Comment Re:Petition (Score 1) 9
Comment 1 in 2 Indians work in tax free agriculture (Score 0) 35
The latest World Bank modelled estimate for 2023 shows Sierra Leone’s agricultural workforce share (43.0%) is effectively identical to India’s (43.5%), differing by less than half a percentage point—closer than any other country reporting recent data.
G20 Countries Ranked by Agricultural Employment Percentage
Based on recent data, here’s a sorted list of G20 countries by the proportion of their workforce in agriculture:
- India: 43.51%
- Indonesia: 28.77%
- China: 22.33%
- Turkey: 14.64%
- Mexico: 12.64%
- Brazil: 8.20%
- Argentina: 7.21%
- Russia: 5.66%
- South Africa: ~5.50%
- South Korea: 5.43%
- Italy: 3.79%
- Japan: 3.01%
- Saudi Arabia: 2.88%
- France: 2.59%
- Australia: 2.20%
- Canada: ~2.00%
- United States: 1.57%
- Germany: 1.20%
- United Kingdom: 0.99%
Observation: Despite the stereotype of populated entirely by doctors and engineers, India is the least urbanized and least industrialized nation in G20. Expecting India to be the factory of the world is like expecting Sierra Leone to be the factory of the world. Probably possible in a hundred years. For now the best bet IMO is Indonesia.