Theme: Productivity

  • The US and Europe spend the same percentage of public funds on research and deve

    The US and Europe spend the same percentage of public funds on research and development. The difference is private sector investment, and private sector work hours, and lower private sector productivity.

    In my work I prefer to separate public, private, and ‘family’ or… https://t.co/omNaCeLD1x


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-22 17:32:47 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1848779549238300929

  • Humans were too cheap until the plague

    Humans were too cheap until the plague.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-18 20:22:50 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1847372790959399055

    Reply addressees: @patriciamdavis

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1847353151432905208

  • OIL AND THE MILITARY – THE 20th Century (Worth Reading) (Understanding The Churc

    OIL AND THE MILITARY – THE 20th Century
    (Worth Reading) (Understanding The Churchill Factor)
    – In evolutionary terms all progress consists of increases in per capita transformation (consumption) of energy.
    – In economic terms all progress consists of increases in per capita organization (consumption) of energy.
    – In technological terms all progress consists of increases in per capita transformation (consumption) of energy.
    – It is possible to see the 20th as nothing more than the geostrategic consequences of the discovery of petroleum, and its conversion from the production of light to the production of electrical work.
    https://t.co/FpSr9XQeai


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-18 17:52:13 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1847334885452894211

  • RT @ThruTheHayes: IT’S SILLY REALLY All y’all are out there scrambling for sheke

    RT @ThruTheHayes: IT’S SILLY REALLY

    All y’all are out there scrambling for shekels when trust, explanatory power, core competence, skills…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-16 20:51:22 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1846655197441151228

  • Smart. Probably the incentive for the temporality of returns combined with the c

    Smart. Probably the incentive for the temporality of returns combined with the consumer credit capital misdirection. Used to be GOV used Mil to private sector pipeline. Hard to see private sector make the shift. Probably require private-public partnership. Great topic for…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-08 15:53:31 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1843681136092070165

    Reply addressees: @bryanbrey @porterstansb

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1843677197053415441

  • 1. To the OP I have explained the “epistemic” (science of) feminine left consumi

    1. To the OP I have explained the “epistemic” (science of) feminine left consuming in-time, masculine right capitalizing over time;

    2. –“Okay but what makes your “theory” more factual than this persons”–
    I answered your use of postmodern sophistry of relativism by stating a fact requires a theory – a hierarchy of theories.
    I provided the foundations of the theory of political differences as largely genetic, or like religion, by indoctrination.
    I suspect the depth of those two statements might be non obvious to you and require explanation.

    3. –“… use ad homin attacks and appeal to intellect …”–
    Because you begin with false premises of wants and your opposition begins with the masculine premise of demonstrated behavior, both of you think the other is lacking in intelligence, while you think them oppressive and they think you thieves (parasites). (BTW: no criticism, but it’s ad hominem, oft shortened to ad hom.)

    In summary its easy to call one another stupid when ones premises about the universe and mankind are polar opposites.

    However conservatives are demonstrably correct in human behavior, the four sets of laws of the universe, economics, and Law. Progressives are only correct about ambitions and feelings. Why? masculine systematizing over time vs feminine empathizing in time.

    ie: genetics.

    Reply addressees: @matherspolitico @NotKLM @Will63541 @KaleWontSaveYou @LittleMammith


    Source date (UTC): 2024-10-07 08:50:00 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1843212168285548545

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1843205340352938170

  • Q: CURT: “THE MYTH OF ENDLESS GROWTH?”– Yes, the left is dependent on the false

    –Q: CURT: “THE MYTH OF ENDLESS GROWTH?”–

    Yes, the left is dependent on the false promise of the end of scarcity by the false promise of endless growth. The net is that we are always and everywhere merely increasing the energy consumption per capita.

    The “fallacy of the…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-28 00:30:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1839825025513468150

  • Q: CURT: “THE MYTH OF ENDLESS GROWTH?”– Yes, the left is dependent on the false

    –Q: CURT: “THE MYTH OF ENDLESS GROWTH?”–

    Yes, the left is dependent on the false promise of the end of scarcity by the false promise of endless growth. The net is that we are always and everywhere merely increasing the energy consumption per capita.

    The “fallacy of the presumption of endless growth” refers to the flawed economic assumption that continuous economic growth can be maintained indefinitely, without limits. This presumption underlies much of mainstream economic theory and policy, yet it disregards fundamental constraints imposed by both the physical world and human behavior. Here’s a detailed explanation:

    1. Misunderstanding the Nature of Growth: (Energy conversion and consumption per capita)
    Growth is often measured in terms of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or other financial metrics, which track the increasing production, consumption, and transaction volume in an economy.
    The presumption that GDP can grow indefinitely assumes that resources, energy, and human capacity are infinitely expandable or substitutable, ignoring constraints like:
    … Resource Scarcity: Natural resources (e.g., water, minerals, fossil fuels) are finite and become harder to extract and utilize as they are depleted.
    … Energy Limits: Economic growth requires energy, and while technology can improve energy efficiency, the second law of thermodynamics imposes absolute limits.
    … Ecological Capacity: Continuous growth leads to environmental degradation, loss of biodiversity, and increased pollution, which can undermine the systems that support economic activity.

    2. Exponential Growth Fallacy:
    Many economic models rely on compound growth rates, which imply exponential growth. Exponential growth means that the rate of growth accelerates over time.
    An example of this fallacy is the belief that a 3% annual growth rate can be sustained forever. In reality, even small exponential growth rates lead to massive increases over long periods.
    For instance:
    At a 3% growth rate, an economy doubles in size every 23 years. In 100 years, the economy would be 16 times larger than it is today, requiring an equivalent increase in resources, energy, and consumption.
    This exponential function eventually reaches limits, as physical systems cannot support unbounded exponential scaling without collapse or degradation.

    3. Ignoring Externalities and Non-Monetary Costs (Failure of Full Accounting):
    Growth-oriented models typically ignore or undervalue externalities—costs imposed on the environment, public health, and social well-being that are not reflected in market prices.

    Examples include:
    … Environmental Damage: The degradation of ecosystems, air and water pollution, and climate change are all externalities of economic growth.
    … Social Consequences: Growth can lead to social inequality, as the benefits of growth are not equally distributed.
    By ignoring these costs, growth models create an illusion of endless benefits, while the hidden negative consequences accumulate over time.

    4. Misalignment with Human Needs (Behavior):
    Economists often assume that higher GDP equates to improved quality of life, yet this is not necessarily true.
    Beyond a certain point, increasing material wealth no longer translates to increased well-being. Studies have shown that subjective happiness and life satisfaction plateau in affluent societies, even as GDP continues to rise.
    The fallacy of endless growth assumes that consumption is always desirable and ignores diminishing returns on human happiness, leisure, and social cohesion.

    5. Capitalism’s Growth Dependency:
    Modern economies, particularly those based on debt and capital markets, are structurally dependent on growth to function.
    Without growth, debt cannot be serviced, profits decline, and investments stagnate, potentially leading to economic crises.
    This growth dependency creates a structural bias toward pursuing growth at any cost, even when it is unsustainable or harmful in the long run.

    Examples and Consequences:

    Finite Resource Depletion:
    The presumption of endless growth ignores the depletion of critical resources, such as oil, water, and arable land. As resources become scarcer, extraction becomes more expensive, limiting future growth.

    Pollution:
    Economic activities based on fossil fuels contribute to pollution. The assumption that economies can continue expanding without addressing the environmental impact leads to long-term ecological instability.

    Financial Instability:
    Financial markets are built on growth expectations. When growth slows, it triggers financial instability, as seen in recessions, debt crises, or the bursting of speculative bubbles.

    Limits to Technological Substitution:
    Some economists argue that technology can replace or mitigate resource constraints. While this is partially true, it ignores the diminishing returns on technological innovation and the fact that technology itself relies on material resources and energy inputs.

    Conclusion:
    The fallacy of endless growth is rooted in a misunderstanding of both economic and natural systems. It assumes that growth is always beneficial, indefinitely scalable, and devoid of negative consequences, failing to account for the real limits imposed by resource availability, ecological capacity, and the law of diminishing returns on human welfare.
    Recognizing these limits and redefining growth to focus on sustainable development, human well-being, and resource efficiency is essential to avoid the catastrophic consequences of persisting with the current growth paradigm.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-28 00:30:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1839825024875933696

  • RT @Claffertyshane: @AutistocratMS @queen_calder @RollofNormandy @FromKulak @cur

    RT @Claffertyshane: @AutistocratMS @queen_calder @RollofNormandy @FromKulak @curtdoolittle If you manage to escape local markets, you will…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-24 20:35:37 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1838678699622973800

  • RT @ItIsHoeMath: Let me see if it makes any more sense to people this way… Mas

    RT @ItIsHoeMath: Let me see if it makes any more sense to people this way…

    Masculinity creates stuff. Chopping wood, building homes, dri…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-09-24 03:30:13 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1838420648076661004