You just betrayed your ignorance of other countries. I've had kids living in Europe. It's worse...Other nations seem to be able to manage said standardizations but I reckon it is all because of comm’nism.
You just betrayed your ignorance of other countries. I've had kids living in Europe. It's worse...Other nations seem to be able to manage said standardizations but I reckon it is all because of comm’nism.
nevermindOther nations seem to be able to manage said standardizations but I reckon it is all because of comm’nism.
i was painting with a broad brush.It was me as much as him.![]()
It is what it is.Well, rgw didn't take a warning well and has dared me, in a scatological way, to suspend him, so no choice...
Ask and ye shall receive. The rule around here for decades...It is what it is.
Yep - the US is bigger than all of Europe by a significant margin.The sheer geographical size of the country demands a good deal of local rule.
Imagine, for a moment, that the robots have won.
The year is 2049—the same year researchers once pegged as the one in which A.I. would become smart enough to pen a bestselling book more adeptly than a human author could. Technological advancements have upended the transportation, manufacturing and retail sectors, rendering nearly half of the U.S. jobs that existed in the year 2020 obsolete.
In this automated world, there are fewer jobs available. To be clear, experts aren’t totally convinced that the coming robot revolution will render all jobs outmoded at any point in the future, near or far. But imagining a post-work society is a useful gateway into thinking about how to preserve dignity and stay afloat in the capitalist soup that unfettered neoliberalism has made in the 21st century, and how to address yawning inequality and wage stagnation as an increasingly automated future takes root.