I totally agree that France is admirable for having such a clean (nuclear) electricity grid so it's much better to be on-grid especially there.I am a fan of rejecting consumerism though. Buying loads of clutter etc isn't a prerequisite for having a decent health care system or police etc.
No it isn't a prerequisite, but the sad reality is most western economic growth which funds the societies we benefit from being a part of is founded in fairly mindless consumerism. [...]
Sorry for derailing way off topic...But I totally reject that notion that somehow public services etc get "funded" by consumerism.If anything, the reason why we get told we can't have decent health care etc is because so much of the real resources (ie people's work efforts) get directed to making/marketing consumerist fodder rather than doing hip replacements, washing dementia patients or whatever.
I thought it did not matter much what kind of consumption we do? Seeing an opera or hiring a an lawyer has more or less the same impact on the economy? Same as building a solar-farm or a coal-powered powerplant is more or less the same for (short- to mid-term) growth?Calling consumerism mindless is more about what we value in society rather than about consumerism in general.
Argentina's problem is down to them having USD-denominated government debt. Why they have that is a mystifying tragedy. They don't have an excessive ratio of spending on public services compared to their GDP though.https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/exp@FPP/USA/FRA/JPN/GBR/SWE/ESP/ITA/ZAF/INDNordic countries do give an example of where they have a higher proportion of their economy directed towards public services than we do in the UK. They have higher taxes and so wouldn't be able to buy as much consumerist fodder as we do were it not for the fact that they also have better productivity, labour force participation etc.
From that IMF link:Government expenditure, percent of GDP:Argentina 37.83%UK 44.87%Denmark 50.81%Iceland 49.23%Finland 55.31%Sweden 49.86%Norway 48.19%
Wonder how he travels between Font and Saleve?
My only Charles Albert anecdote is that I heard from a friend, who was there at the time, that when Charles went to Rocklands he was staying in a cave. I've no idea if it's true but it wouldn't surprise me at all.
washing dementia patients or whatever.
Quote from: Bradders on November 14, 2023, 09:55:25 pmMy only Charles Albert anecdote is that I heard from a friend, who was there at the time, that when Charles went to Rocklands he was staying in a cave. I've no idea if it's true but it wouldn't surprise me at all.No idea how true this is, but I heard on the grapevine that some american wads were incredulous when they heard he'd climbed Monkey Wedding. Some of them had had a session with him, and apparently he spent the entire time feeling the holds, looking quizzically at the line and, very occasionally, trying single moves. Good job there's a vid of him making it look piss
Quote from: stone on November 14, 2023, 12:14:28 pmwashing dementia patients or whatever.This more of an educational post in general. Having been a clinical lead for a complex dementia unit and seen how the disease impacts people, I have a strong stance about the term dementia patient. Please don’t refer to people as dementia patients. They are people first and foremost and remain that way until they die. Reducing their worth to a term of a disease is degrading and dehumanising. It’s tragic when dementia impacts on a person’s life and that of their loved ones, let’s keep recognising that they are a person with a life story, not a refer to them as a disease. Language is powerful