Form: Quote Commentary

  • What Is My Spending in Ukraine per Month?

    Cost of living in Ukraine. My monthly expenses youtube.com -Olga Reznikova, Kiev, Ukraine (curt: my point in sharing this is to illustrate what it is possible for monthly costs to be in a big city.) How much does life in Ukraine cost? How much does life in USA or Germany, hehe? It so much depends on the lifestyle, but today I will explain to you exactly by example. Let me give you input. My expenses consist of my family with kid + my parents (5 people). So how much I am spending?

    1. Rent of apartment in Kiev – 400$ per month. Bills for apartment – around 40$ in warm season and 150$ in heating season.
    2. Bills for my parent’s apartment – 30$ per month + 50$ heating.
    3. Internet – 15$ per month for both apartments
    4. Mobile bills – 10$ per person per month, with 20 GB data plan.
    5. Kindergarten – 15$ per month, but it is governmental. State kindergarten would cost around 400$ per month.
    6. Food – my family spend around 400$ per month for food, and my parents need around 250$ per month.
    7. Car – 250$ per month for loan.
    8. Fuel – 200$ per month, if drive only in city.
    9. 3rd party car insurance – 15$ per year
    10. Full car insurance – @1000USD per year.
    11. Entertainment – around 200$ per month (kid’s playground, festivals etc).

    So in total every month for bills and mandatory payments I need approximately $1,200 USD every month or $14,400/yr for a family of five, or 3k/per person, per year.

  • What Is My Spending in Ukraine per Month?

    Cost of living in Ukraine. My monthly expenses youtube.com -Olga Reznikova, Kiev, Ukraine (curt: my point in sharing this is to illustrate what it is possible for monthly costs to be in a big city.) How much does life in Ukraine cost? How much does life in USA or Germany, hehe? It so much depends on the lifestyle, but today I will explain to you exactly by example. Let me give you input. My expenses consist of my family with kid + my parents (5 people). So how much I am spending?

    1. Rent of apartment in Kiev – 400$ per month. Bills for apartment – around 40$ in warm season and 150$ in heating season.
    2. Bills for my parent’s apartment – 30$ per month + 50$ heating.
    3. Internet – 15$ per month for both apartments
    4. Mobile bills – 10$ per person per month, with 20 GB data plan.
    5. Kindergarten – 15$ per month, but it is governmental. State kindergarten would cost around 400$ per month.
    6. Food – my family spend around 400$ per month for food, and my parents need around 250$ per month.
    7. Car – 250$ per month for loan.
    8. Fuel – 200$ per month, if drive only in city.
    9. 3rd party car insurance – 15$ per year
    10. Full car insurance – @1000USD per year.
    11. Entertainment – around 200$ per month (kid’s playground, festivals etc).

    So in total every month for bills and mandatory payments I need approximately $1,200 USD every month or $14,400/yr for a family of five, or 3k/per person, per year.

  • Economics Is Just Physics with Debits and Credits (memory)

    Jan 4, 2020, 10:38 AM

    —“Women crave privilege and license. Men desire liberty and justice. Prove me wrong.”—Joshua Fox

    Turn that statement into economic language: women desire consumption and men desire opportunity for production – the consequence of which is trading sex and reproduction for resources: a division of labor organized by voluntary exchanges.

    —“To the root!”–Joshua Fox

    Human behavior is all physics. It has to be. Economics is just physics with debts and credits. Our consciousness is just a vehicle for negotiating terms of cooperation. Cooperation is just a means of obtaining higher returns on investments of time and calories. Marriage – especially universal marriage – is the optimum compromise and the optimum means of calculating reproduction. The feminists are under the impression that men will behave by current means if the compromise of marriage and therefore exchange disappears. But if universal marriage and exchange of productivity for sex and offspring without imposing costs on others no longer exists, men will either invent new ways or revert to old ways that do not require cooperation. Women choose individually. Men choose collectively. Marriage and family is the compromise.

  • Economics Is Just Physics with Debits and Credits (memory)

    Jan 4, 2020, 10:38 AM

    —“Women crave privilege and license. Men desire liberty and justice. Prove me wrong.”—Joshua Fox

    Turn that statement into economic language: women desire consumption and men desire opportunity for production – the consequence of which is trading sex and reproduction for resources: a division of labor organized by voluntary exchanges.

    —“To the root!”–Joshua Fox

    Human behavior is all physics. It has to be. Economics is just physics with debts and credits. Our consciousness is just a vehicle for negotiating terms of cooperation. Cooperation is just a means of obtaining higher returns on investments of time and calories. Marriage – especially universal marriage – is the optimum compromise and the optimum means of calculating reproduction. The feminists are under the impression that men will behave by current means if the compromise of marriage and therefore exchange disappears. But if universal marriage and exchange of productivity for sex and offspring without imposing costs on others no longer exists, men will either invent new ways or revert to old ways that do not require cooperation. Women choose individually. Men choose collectively. Marriage and family is the compromise.

  • Great example of Moral Prose (bad) vs Legal Prose (good):

    Jan 9, 2020, 9:14 AM

    Scapegoating vs Accountability – vs – Plausible Deniability vs Warranty.

    by James Lyons Sr.

  • Great example of Moral Prose (bad) vs Legal Prose (good):

    Jan 9, 2020, 9:14 AM

    Scapegoating vs Accountability – vs – Plausible Deniability vs Warranty.

    by James Lyons Sr.

  • We Can Learn Something from The Soviets – but Not the Communists

    Jan 15, 2020, 8:51 AM

    —” (with irony) Today’s Youth explains that the economic failures of communism didn’t have much to do with the Soviet Union’s demise.”—Steve Sailer @Steve_Sailer

    The Soviets used the fact that Russians had been serfs only decades before – and most still lived like serfs – and migrated them to a militarized labor force – saving the cost of market prices for labor, redirecting that savings to the funding commons. Then the people adapted to incentives: black markets in all. They reverted to serf behavior: minimum production. But Soviet education, science, and commons production were far ahead of USA’s. The error is probably on both sides in that the market and private production are optimums for the middle and up, and non-market for physical commons better for working-class and down: serving each other. We (economists) know perfectly well why the socialist and communist systems don’t and can’t ever work: (a) incentives produce declines in production in exchange for increases in corruption free riding and rent. (b) economic calculation of investment is impossible. ( c) “Humans”. We can end the monopoly(equality) presumption of the economy. Historically we used barbarian > “slave” > serf > freeman > citizen > sovereign, as progressions of market independence (not power). We don’t think of these as different economies, but they were. We need 3+ economies. We’ve tried to force too many people at the bottom into the middle class because that was the reason for european success – culling the lower classes. We’ve bred and imported vast underclasses undermining european market majoritarianism. And we’ve recreated demand for “serfdom”. There are plenty of people who would exchange voting rights for economic dependency and some sort of equality while maintaining access to the goods and services produced by market goods.

  • We Can Learn Something from The Soviets – but Not the Communists

    Jan 15, 2020, 8:51 AM

    —” (with irony) Today’s Youth explains that the economic failures of communism didn’t have much to do with the Soviet Union’s demise.”—Steve Sailer @Steve_Sailer

    The Soviets used the fact that Russians had been serfs only decades before – and most still lived like serfs – and migrated them to a militarized labor force – saving the cost of market prices for labor, redirecting that savings to the funding commons. Then the people adapted to incentives: black markets in all. They reverted to serf behavior: minimum production. But Soviet education, science, and commons production were far ahead of USA’s. The error is probably on both sides in that the market and private production are optimums for the middle and up, and non-market for physical commons better for working-class and down: serving each other. We (economists) know perfectly well why the socialist and communist systems don’t and can’t ever work: (a) incentives produce declines in production in exchange for increases in corruption free riding and rent. (b) economic calculation of investment is impossible. ( c) “Humans”. We can end the monopoly(equality) presumption of the economy. Historically we used barbarian > “slave” > serf > freeman > citizen > sovereign, as progressions of market independence (not power). We don’t think of these as different economies, but they were. We need 3+ economies. We’ve tried to force too many people at the bottom into the middle class because that was the reason for european success – culling the lower classes. We’ve bred and imported vast underclasses undermining european market majoritarianism. And we’ve recreated demand for “serfdom”. There are plenty of people who would exchange voting rights for economic dependency and some sort of equality while maintaining access to the goods and services produced by market goods.

  • Rights

    Jan 24, 2020, 6:34 PM

    —“Rights are an insurance, insurance is a service, some services can be commons, some commons are necessary, rights among them.”—Martin Štěpán

    (flawless)

  • Rights

    Jan 24, 2020, 6:34 PM

    —“Rights are an insurance, insurance is a service, some services can be commons, some commons are necessary, rights among them.”—Martin Štěpán

    (flawless)